FAMOUS HINDUS AND SCHOLARS ON HINDUISM


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Dr. Radhakrishnan, ex-President of India and an eminent

interpreter of Hinduism, as quoted in India: An Introduction by

Khushwant Singh, New Delhi, 1990.

[Hinduism is] "... a name without any content... Its content, if

any, has altered from age to age, from community to

community. It meant one thing in the Vedic period, another in

the Brahmanical, a third in the Buddhist [1] - one to Saivite,

another to Vaishnavite and Sakta." (Dr. Radhakrishnan was

the first President of independent India).

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Jawaharlal Nehru, The Discovery of India, New Delhi, 1983,

p.75.

"Hinduism, as a faith, is vague, amorphous, many-sided, all

things to all men. It is hardly possible to define it, or indeed to

say definitely whether it is a religion or not, in the usual sense

of the word. In its present form, and even in the past, it

embraces many beliefs and practices, from the highest to the

lowest, often opposed to or contradicting each other." (Pandit

Nehru was the first Prime Minister of independent India during

1947-64).

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M.K Gandhi, Hindu Dharma, New Delhi, 1991, p. 120.

"Hinduism does not rest on the authority of one book or one

prophet, nor does it possess a common creed - like the

Kalma [sic.] of Islam - acceptable to all. That renders a

common definition of Hinduism a bit difficult." (Mahatma

Gandhi is known as the Father of the Nation, India).

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Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, What Congress and Gandhi have done to

Untouchables?

"Hinduism is a veritable chamber of horrors. The sanctity and

infallibility of the Vedas, Smritis and Shastras, the iron law of

caste, the heartless law of karma and the senseless law of

status by birth are to the Untouchables veritable instruments

of torture which Hinduism has forged against untouchables.

These very instruments which have mutilated; blasted and

blighted the lives of the Untouchables are to be found intact

and untarnished in the bosom of Gandhism." (Dr. B. R.

Ambedkar was the first Law Minister of independent India. He

was the head of the committee that drafted the constitution of

India, and he is known as the Father of Indian

Constitution.).

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Swami Dharma Theertha, History of Hindu Imperialism,

Madras, 1992, p. 178.

"Frankly speaking, it is not possible to say definitely who is a

Hindu and what is Hinduism. These questions have been

considered again and again by eminent scholars, and so far

no satisfactory answer has been given. Hinduism has within

itself all types of religions such as theism, atheism,

polytheism, Adwitism, Dwaitism, Saivism, Vaishnavism, and

so forth. (emphasis added). It contains nature worship,

ancestor worship, animal worship, idol worship, demon

worship, symbol worship, self worship, and the highest god

worship. Its conflicting philosophies will confound any ordinary

person. From barbarious practices and dark superstitions, up

to the most mystic rites and sublime philosophies, there is

place for all gradations and varieties in Hinduism. Similarly,

among the Hindu population are found half barbarian wild

tribes, and depressed classes and untouchables, along with

small numbers of cultured, gentle natures and highly evolved

souls."

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Khushwant Singh, India: An Introduction, New Delhi, 1990, p.

19.

"Hinduism defies definition... It has no specific creed."

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Ardersir Sorabjee as quoted in Swami Dharma Theertha,

History of Hindu Imperialism, Madras, 1992, p. 178.

"Their (Hindus') religion is a standing travesty of ancient

Hinduism, consisting as it does of rank idolatry mixed with

superstition and fetishism of the most degrading type. They

believe in the worship of their innumerable devas or good

spirits and the propitiation of an equally large number of

demons and evil spirits, both of which they assume have their

resting places on earth in their idols of stone and marble, gold

and silver."

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Sir Alfred Lyll as quoted in Modern Hinduism by Wilkins,

London, 1975, p. 310.

"... the religion of the non-Mohamedan [2] population of India

is a tangled jungle of disorderly superstitions, ghosts and

demons, demi-gods, and deified saints, household gods, local

gods, tribal gals, universal gods, with their countless shrines

and temples, and the din of their discordant rites; deities who

abhor a fly's death; those who still delight in human

sacrifices."

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P. Thomas, Hindu Religion, Customs and Manners, p.21.

"Hinduism is not a religion established by a single person. It

is a growth of ideas, rituals and beliefs so comprehensive as

to include anything between atheism and pantheism.

(emphasis added). Having grown out of the practices and

speculations of various communities that were admitted into

the Hindu fold at different times, Hinduism, as it stands at

present, has very few set of dogmas. A formal recognition of

the Vedas as revealed wisdom is all that is required for a

Hindu to be known as such. But the latitude permitted in

interpreting the Vedas is so wide that the atheistic Sankhya

philosophy of Kapila and the polytheism of the Puranas are

both recognized as Orthodox."

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Percival Spear, India: A Modern History, Michigan, 1961,

p.40.

"The more Hinduism is considered, the more difficult it

becomes to define it in a single phrase... A Hindu may have

any religious belief or none; he may be an atheist or an

agnostic and still be an accepted Hindu... It is public opinion

working through the caste system which determines whether

someone shall or shall not be regarded as a Hindu."

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The Economist, June 8, 1991, p. 22, col. l.

"Hinduism is far more unstructured than most other religions.

It has no archbishops, chief rabbis, grand muftis. Each Hindu

decides for himself which manifestations of God are most

important to him, what scriptures to accept as authentic,

which holy man to follow. The one ineluctable certainty is a

person's dharma."

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[1] Buddhism founded by Gautoma Buddha is a religion

different from Hinduism but the Brahmans made Buddha an

incarnation of Hindu god Vishnu in order to make Buddhism a

part of Hinduism.

[2] There is no such thing as 'Mohamedan.' The name of the

religion is Islam and its followers are Muslims.



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