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Since at least the eighteenth century,
India has been associated in the European
imagination as preeminently a land of religion.
By the late nineteenth century, Europeans (and
increasingly Americans) were coming to India as
a landthat promised spiritual release from the
weariness of the material life. In the twentieth
century, this reputation appeared to be
solidified. The struggle for independence came
to be waged under the leadership of Gandhi,
whose unflinching advocacy of non-violence
endeared him to admirers as a man of religion
and peace; and in the 1960s, when the enduring
image of India was as a land suffused
spirituality, Westerners flocked to India to
avail themselves of the spiritual advice and
teachings of countless number of Indian gurus.
This image has taken something of a battering in
recent years, and today Westerners, when they
think at all of India, think of the country as
engulfed by religious 'wars' and hatred, as
ensnared by perpetual Hindu-Muslim conflict;
meanwhile, the gross materialism of middle-class
Indians, given naked encouragement by the state,
indigenous and foreign corporate interests, the
culture of modernity, and international finance
organizations such as the IMF and the World
Bank, has all but eroded the image as a land of
sublime spirituality.
What is indubitably unique about India as a
'land of religions' is that it is the birthplace
of several major world religions. Three-fourths
of the people describe themselves as adherents
of Hinduism, the oldest continuous faith in the
world. Though today Hinduism has spread to all
parts of the world, taken there by Indian
migrants, Hinduism has, and will continue to
have, an indelible association with India; and
perhaps in no other case is the association
between a faith and a land so close as it is
with Hinduism. This religion produced a vast
corpus of texts: preeminent among them have been
the Rig Veda, the Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita,
the Ramayana, and the Bhagvata Purana; and the
commentaries of Shankaracharya; modern-day
classics include the Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna,
the Gita-Rahasya of Tilak, and Conversations
with Sri Ramana Maharishi.
India is equally a land of other faiths: the
world's second largest population of Muslims,
nearly 130 million in number, is to be found in
India, and there are also some 25 million
Christians. Indian Islam has enjoyed a
relationship that is at once syncretistic and
agonistic with Hinduism, and the fruits of this
encounter have been many, extending from the
more obvious vocal and classical music of India,
Mughlai cuisine, and Indo-Mughal architecture,
to the lived practices common to adherents of
both these great faiths. In antiquity, Buddhism
flourished in India, and it is in Bodh Gaya that
the Buddha gained enlightenment; his great
contemporary, Mahavira, is the founder of
Jainism, also uniquely Indian. Today Jains are
among India's most distinguished trading and
business communities; and the legacy of Jain art
and culture is just as profound. Sikhism,
another Indian faith, is often imagined as the
Protestantism of Hinduism: today there are
nearly 15 million Sikhs in India, and perhaps as
many as 2 million outside India, whose practices
and precepts may well change the nature of the
faith in India. India also has the largest
community of Zoroastrians, also known as
Parsees, and though in recent years the
once-thriving and very old Jewish community of
Cochin has all but disappeared, the small Jewish
community of Bombay still makes its presence
felt in the public realm.
But all these are only the institutionalized
forms of religious worship in India, and a
bewildering array of other religious practices,
both outside the faiths and within the faiths,
are encountered all over India. Various
devotional poets, religious mendicants, renowned
men and women of spirituality, and local holy
men and women wear no religious tags, and their
teachings and lives continue to be an example to
the common realm of humanity. From the 9th
century to the 16th century, from the Deccan to
the north, and from Bengal in the east to
modern-day Gujarat and Maharashtra in the West,
India was swept by the fervor of bhakti, or
devotion. The songs, lyrics, and religious
compositions of the bhakti poets Nammalvar,
Jnaneshvar, Kabir, Tulsidas, Surdas, Tukaram,
Vidyapati, Chandidasa, Mirabai, among others
are still sung to popular and classical music
alike, and scarcely any kind of literature
resonates more with Indians than do their
compositions. Similarly, though the
institutionalized religions are associated with
great architectural monuments, such as the Hindu
temple cities of South India (Kanchipuram,
Rameswaram, Chidambaram, and many others), the
Mughal splendors of Delhi, Agra, and Fatehpur
Sikri, or the Golden Temple at Amritsar, the
roadside monuments and shrines are even more
indicative of the manner in which these faiths
interweave with the lives of their adherents.
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