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Negative Stereotyping of Hindus

Negative Stereotyping of Hindus We are not alone in denigration by the dominant culture. A rite of passage for all the immigrant groups. Prejudice is a universal expression of humanity’s primal fear of the different and there is nothing reasoned about it. (Blasenstein)

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Negative Stereotyping of Hindus

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  1. Negative Stereotyping of Hindus • We are not alone in denigration by the dominant culture. A rite of passage for all the immigrant groups. • Prejudice is a universal expression of humanity’s primal fear of the different and there is nothing reasoned about it. (Blasenstein) • People are motivated to have negative stereotypes because they enhance their self-esteem – we are better than them. Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  2. Specific Reasons for Hindus • Little personal contact of Americans with Indians before the 60s. • Views before the 60s were shaped our history of colonization. Conquering races always denigrate the conquered - the vanquished were vanquished because they were inferior. • The Christian missionaries demonized Hinduism. • The post independence pro-soviet policies of the Indian government. • As an open society India allowed access to the western journalists to scoop sensational but negative stories about India. • The liberal Indian media validated the American’s negative views by constantly berating Hinduism for all the social and economic evils in the Indian subcontinent. Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  3. Become an Agent of Change • Educate yourself about yourself and those whom you are going to educate • Clear, concise and relevant message • Package the message in an appealing way • Concise books with basic tenets of Hindu dharma • Market the message to the dominant group • Deliver the message Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  4. The Message • Clear, concise and consistent answers to theological questions • What is Hindu dharma /Hindu theology • Concept of God, self, genesis (creation), revelation (Vedas), eternal life through reincarnation, atonement through karma, ethics through 10 yama/niyama, purpose of life, salvation by self-evolution with help from a guru • Relevant • Separate culture, history and politics - Gandhi • Do not get caught up in how old we or whence we came are but talk of what we are today and where we are today Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  5. The Message (Cont.) • Not fuzzy or vague – Hinduism is a way of life • Hinduism is universal, all religions are the same • Spirituality is universal, religion is not • Intellectually convincing • Not too academic/pedantic • Substantive, not demonstrative – we are not holier • Not over sanitized – practice is not perfect Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  6. Message (cont.) • Prioritize what needs to be told • Simple booklets • Encyclopedia for reference • Do not use too many allegories, stories, fables, parables Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  7. Message should be Grounded in American Contextual Reality • For example, when I wrote about Christian missionaries I conjured up a Jehovah’s Witness trying to convert me in Brooklyn. • When I wrote about Diwali I talked of the importance of lighted lamps in all religions. Remind the Jew of Chanukah and the Christian of the votive candle. • Talking about the submerged bridge of Rama or city of Dwarka is irrelevant in America. Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  8. Delivery • In English – expository/persuasive writing • Informative, not reactionary • Not in angry tone • Not chauvinistic or jingoistic • Become a trained missionary or point guard of Hindu dharma who can educate others efficiently without reacting defensively Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  9. Audience • Know about other religions • Hindu-Jewish dialogue • The Sanskrit word for soul is self. Soul is true self according to Hinduism. I believe that the Hebrew word for soul, “nepes” also can be translated as self. • Just as burial (k'vod ha-met), should take place within 24 hours, cremation should be done within 24 hours. • Ritual of vidu'I ("confession") prayer or the Shema ("Hear, O Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is one") is recited by the dying person, as in Hinduism, to be close to the Lord after death, one should meditate on Him by uttering the one-syllabled Om. (Yam yam vaapi smaran bhavam tyajtyante kalevaram) (Eighth chapter of Gita). Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  10. Learn about Indophile America • The founding fathers – their belief in one overarching supreme force – Deism • Thomas Paine, Jefferson, Washington, Adam Smith • Boston Brahmins • Thoreau, Emerson • Others • Keats, Isherwood, Jung, Ericson, Walt Whitman • Sermon on the Mount according to Vedanta • Be eclectic – aa no bhadra kritvo yantu vishawatah • Gandhi – Ruskin, Tolstoy, Thoreau Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  11. Points of Contact Seek out places to deliver the message. • Find agents of change in your community. • Schools. • Workplace • Local and town newspapers. Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  12. Points of Contact (cont.) • Be friendly with your neighbors. Through them speak in local churches and synagogue. • Put yourself in contact with the mainstream. Attend town meetings, school board meetings, Veteran Day parade, and Memorial Day parade. • Join local interfaith communities. • Get involved in the local community through seva. Show that you are good and care. Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  13. My debt to Maharishi Dayananda Saraswati • Arya Samaj tradition promotes curiosity, and swadhayaya, a willingness to be self-critical and to change/evolve if necessary. • Simple, rational, and social spirituality. • Freedom at personal level, but an active and proactive approach at the collective level • Swamiji took the common denominator and gave a common agenda in the ten principles Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  14. TAKE HOME • Learn what you are going to tell. Become knowledgeable about them and you. • TELL • SHOW • That you are good by good behavior and actions of seva for a superordinate goal. Behavior changes attitudes. • Do not have holier than you attitude. Do not try to prove that you are better, just as we do not want others to feel that they are better. • Old habits die hard. As more and more Americans see us and intermingle with us, they will see our behavior as good citizens, our openness, and integrity, their opinion will change. Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  15. Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  16. Simple Spirituality One God, or an overarching Brahman One overarching religious book – the Vedas Make the Vedas more appealing through an index, through reproduction of individual hymns, and appealing translation But respect explanatory secondary scriptures such as Gita Simple service including short yagna, bhajans, yoga, and meditation Service in colloquial language with explanation of Vedic mantras and rituals Using an eclectic group of mantras which are more meaningful Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  17. Rational Spirituality • A reasonable mixture of bhakti and gyan • Not too pedantic • Emphasis on dissertation than on disputation • Not they versus us, but they and us, LOVE • Show and not tell • Production of books for the common grihstha or a brahamchari in the USA • Speak sweetly (VAACHAM NAH SVADATU) Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  18. Social Spirituality • Communitarian spirit • Sabbath, day of God • Temple, a hub of social activity • A session devoted to asking about each others problems and holding hands in love • Identify issues facing the community and address them • Social and national issues • Discuss and develop positions on issues such as death penalty, abortion, domestic violence, dowry Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  19. Packaging Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  20. Jigyasa(urge to know – a human trait) Vedanta: athato brahmjignasa Then therefore the enquiry into Brahman Purva-mimamsa: Then therefore the enquiry into dharma Cognito ergo sum Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  21. Saadhana • Striving to know the truth • Finding the right teacher: • uttishtat jagrit praapya varaanih bodhat • Learning to decide what is true • Learning from the right sources Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  22. Knowledge • By which the true nature of things and phenomena is known – proofs of nyaaya • Universal truths, things that are common to all religions • Both metaphysical (vidya) and physical (avidya) knowledge Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  23. Faith and reason are not mutually exclusive. • Shradha in the words of the guru and in the shastra, through whom the truth is realized. • Shradha, contrary to viswas, is not passive/ static but a yearning to convert belief into truth and conviction. • Shradha is astikyabudhi or positive-attitude-oriented reason, a conviction that the Truth can be unearthed or realized by aspiration, discipline and sadhana. • Shradha urges one to reason. It is a passion for truth. The two are complimentary and not contradictory. Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  24. Knowledge Alone is not Enough • It is a person who performs good deeds, not a knower or a believer, who never has an abysmal fate. Na hi kalyaankaari kaschit durgatim taata gacchat, (Gita). • Knowledge is not enough without righteous action • Righteous Conduct • Only a person of character is entitled to knowledge Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  25. Shravana Chatushya Shravana (hearing or reading) - manana (thinking/ analysis) – contemplation - dharana (intuition/assimilation) • “Worship and rituals and other religious practices form useful aids, they are instruments of spiritual growth, not ends by themselves.” • Mere chanting of Veda mantras will not lead to realization, understanding their meaning and applying it in our life might. • Mere reading of Veda mantras without knowing their meaning is like being the beast of burden that merely carries the load without enjoying it. Nirukta Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  26. Dynamic Realism • Faith is not a belief in a bunch of facts • No absolutes, only constructions • It is an onwards march of self evolution through many life cycles • Change, evolve Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  27. Realism • Hinduism is not other-worldly • The world is not mithya or illusory • Vedic philosophy is rooted in life • The purpose of life is not release from the cycle of life of death or jivan mukti • The purpose of life is to become (Manurbhav) a noble person (Arya) - humanism Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  28. Social Spirituality • X principle - individuals should restrain themselves to follow the rules of society to promote the well being of all; while in following the rules of individual welfare, all should be free. • “We are one of multitude, and when we prefer ourselves so shamefully to others, we become the proper objects of resentment. Resigning thegreatest interest of our own, for the yet greater interest of others is love of what is honorable and noble.” A virtuous man is always willing to sacrifice his personal interest to that of the society and the nation. • (Adam Smith, the founder of American Capitalism, in his book, The Moral Sentiments, VI.2.46) Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  29. Global Trade • Chapter X, article 9 • “Nothing can be expected except misery poverty and misery when our countrymen trade only in their own country.” • Religious imposters impose restrictions on inter-dining, fashion of clothes, and foreign trade for fear of losing their importance. Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  30. Summary • Simple spirituality • Rational spirituality • Social spirituality Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  31. OBJECTIVES • To promote simple spirituality • To promote rational spirituality • To promote social spirituality • To promote a holistic approach to life –personal, social, and spiritual growth • Pragmatic balance of ethics and spirituality Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  32. GOAL AND MISSION Krinvanto vishvum aryam TO MAKE A COMMUNITY OF NOBLE PEOPLE & TO PROMOTE PHYSICAL, SPIRITUAL AND SOCIAL WELL BEING OF PEOPLE Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  33. IDENTITY DIFFUSION • WE ARE A HINDU DENOMINATION • WE ARE IDENTIFIED AS HINDUS, HISTORY HAS CREATED AN IDENTITY FOR US – DO NOT DISTURB THE APPLECART-IT WILL CAUSE AN IDENTITY CRIRIS IN OUR ALREADY CONFUSED YOUTH • CONTRADICTION IN UNIVERSALISM, HUMANISM AND RELIGIOUS IDENTITY Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  34. How to achieve the above objectives? • Organization - APEX • A secretariat with fulltime paid staff • Permanent office with necessary tools • Apex leadership with clearly assigned responsibilities and accountability • An R and D office • Printing press for book production • A PR officer for marketing • A web master • An attractive quarterly magazine Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  35. What is True? (Proofs) • Pratyksha pramana (reflection of the reality upon mind) Sensation- perception • Upmana (analogy) - What is inferred from prior knowledge or from a universal truth (vyapti) • Shabda (testimony) - scriptural testimony or verbal testimony (Apta) • Anumana (inference) - what can be inductively inferred based upon the evidence or empirical observations. It can be purvavat, from cause to effect, sesavat, fromeffect to cause,and samayato drista, from common characteristics Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  36. ARYA SAMAJ IN THE NEXT MILLENIUM • MESSAGE • PACKAGE • SYSTEMS • TOOLS • RECEIVER/AUDIENCE • MARKETING • MILIEU Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  37. Proofs • Itihas (Tradition) - what was true in the past is likely to be true. This proof is based upon past experience, not upon hearsay. • Sambhav (Probability) - scientifically plausible • Arthapati (Presumption) – To infer something logically from previous knowledge • Abhaav (Negation) - To prove that something is true by proving that the converse is false. This is similar to the scientific null hypothesis. Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  38. ARYA SAMAJ IN THE NEXT MILLENIUM • Uniform curriculum for adults and children • Train the priests and teachers • Franchising • Electronic teaching of the Vedas • Good books • A good journal Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  39. Organization - Local • Local chapters in each state • Leadership training seminars • A key arya samaj with a building and a library in each state • Paid priest in the key temple • Priests to be trained as managers, PR persons, and to deliver the sermon in English Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  40. A few don’ts • Do not criticize, respect other beliefs • Avoid getting embroiled in controversies • Do not overemphasize on havan • Do not overemphasize attire, food, Hindi • Do not criticize Max Mueller and western scholars all the time • Do not tell, show Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  41. “I do not approve of the mutual differences that have sprung up between different religions. It is these different religions, it is these different votaries who by emphasizing differences have made man the enemy of man. I wish that these differences be removed, unanimity secured, aversion abandoned and love restored.” Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  42. Europeans (XI, 134-135) • The advantages of Europeans are: • Absence of early marriage, good education of boys and girls, marriage according to the choice of the couple, learned preachers, acting by mutualk consultation, patriotism, hard work, discipline • Religion does not depend upon eating or drinking • Virtue is in doing good to others and vice in doing harm to others. Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  43. Vaisheshika Nyaya Samkhya Yoga Purva mimamsa Uttar mimamsa or Vedanta Anatomy and chemistry Pathology Physiology/evolution Medicine Surgery/action Philosophy Integration of the Six SystemsKnowledge, Rituals, and Empirical Experience Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  44. EclecticismAa no bhadra kritvo yantu vishwatah • “I neither accept the demerits of different faiths, nor reject what is good in them.” • “At present there are many learned men in all religions. If they give up prejudice, accept those broad principles on which all religions are unanimous, reject differences, and behave affectionately, much good can be done to the world” • “All those things that are common to all religions are obviously true and must be accepted.” Vidya Bhushan Gupta

  45. Some Do’s • Be Eclectic – aa no bhadra kritvo yantu vishavatah. “I neither accept the demerits of different faiths whether Indian or alien, nor reject what is good in them.” • Emphasize the process of becoming noble or dharma, not the form or ritual. • Keep dogma or creed to minimum –remember that Arya Samaj has only ten articles of faith Vidya Bhushan Gupta

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