Wednesday, 23 December 2015

Evolution of Hinduism from Many Indian Religions

Evolution of Hinduism from Many Indian Religions

Dr.Krishnan Nallaperumal, Professor, MS University, Tirunelveli

Introduction: The sixth sense prevailing in Man has kindled in him the questions of “What is life?”, “Where do I come from?”, “What will happen to me (as a soul) after I leave the body?”, “Who created the world and the worldly materials and other lives?”, “What am I supposed to do here?”, so on and so forth; these enquiries transformed man into a social human being. The inquisitive nature of thirst for truth made him to look for ‘The God’ beyond the tangible Science at his reach. This thought process got evolved into different culture, faiths, religions and philosophies in different forms and expressions, albeit on the God and His creations. Science is only that dimension of understandings and discoveries of Man related to the worldly materials and those connected with it externally; Man’s spiritual journey beyond science enabled him to leaps and bounds of the Universe and the Ultimate truth and happiness, namely the salvation at the floral feet of The God.

However, only a few enlightened individuals could achieve salvation as many in the world fall prey to the attractions of worldly enjoyments alone. Science and technologies have ensured that there is no meaningful separation among social, economic, political, environmental, cultural and spiritual dimensions of life; hence,  many faith communities are struggling to come to terms with the threat of ‘consumerism’ due to globalization.
Under these backdrops, this article would revisit the development of Hinduism as a religion evolved from many Indian religions. This article would also evaluate how the Hinduism so evolved from different faiths could address the issues of cultural and ethnic diversity. Further, it will also discuss how the process of exchanges of experience of the supreme reality among different religious beliefs and traditions has led to the strengthening of the spiritual life and moral values of individuals and societies in pluralistic ancient India. Finally, it will trace how the pre-colonial India, despite being ruled by several dynasties across the sub-continent, had demonstrated the holistic art of living together happily and peacefully.  The concluding remarks would focus on what need to be done to change the present explosive situations in India that have become a threat to the pluralistic life and how could we work together as living religious faiths towards justice and peace so that people can live together under the horizon of the divine.

1. Defining Hinduism as a Religion
Any religion has a prophet whose preaching based on his/her experiences becomes the Holy Scripture/Text or Bible to the followers of that religion and the philosophy that defines the creation of souls, lives, world and worldly materials and the Creator of these, namely the GOD and His connections with the former entities. Let us try to understand Hinduism as a religion within this definition by identifying the supreme God of Hinduism, the Holy Scripture of Hinduism and the Philosophy of Hinduism that defines the creation of souls, lives, world and worldly materials and the Creator of these, namely the GOD and His connections with the former entities.

1.1. The Supreme God of Hinduism
If one searches the Supreme God for all Hindus from the perspective of the definition of a religion, the individual encounters an ever expanding list … Shiva, Vishu, Brammah, Ganapathy, Subramanya, Durga, Kali, a lot many number of Native Mother Goddesses and Gods, leaving the individual in awe and desperation. Some of these Gods are named Supreme Gods and others as folk deities. Is it fair to call some as Supreme and some as folk deities? A village bound Mother Goddess is the supreme God to those folks in the village; the temple history (purana) of that Mother Goddess proclaims that the universe was created by Her besides creating Shiva, Vishnu, Brammah and other Devas. Differences do exist among the followers of religious sects such as South Indian Saivaites and South Indian Vaishnavites headed by the concerned Supreme Gods Shiva and Vishnu. Worship rules and rituals vary substantially among Saivaite brahmins, Smartha Brahmins, Saivaite vellalas and Saivaite native groups; This is the case with Vaishnavaites; brahminic vatakalai Vaishnavaites, brahminic thenkalai Vaishnavaites, yadava Vaishnavaites, nayudu Vaishnavaites etc. As no one is agreeing upon the Supreme God of Hinduism, identifying ‘The Supreme God of Hinduism’  becomes a task impossible.

1.2 The Holy Scripture of Hinduism
Having failed to identify the supreme God of Hinduism, let us move onto identify ‘The Holy Scripture’ of Hinduism.

Holy Hindu scriptures are many manuscripts with several diverse traditions within India. A few scriptures are shared resources across these traditions, for instance, the Vedas and the Upanishads. Vedhas have oral and texual traditions - the Shruti, that is heard(oral), and Smriti, that is remembered(texual). The Śruti refers to the body that is most authoritative, ancient religious texts, with unknown authors, claims the central canon of Vedic Religion. It contains the four Vedas including its four types of embedded texts - the Samhitas, the Brahmanas, the Aranyakas and the early Upanishads. The Upanishads are widely influential among a section of Vedic Hindus, and their central ideas got influenced by the thoughts and traditions of other Indian philosophies. The Smriti Hindu texts are specific bodies of texts attributed to several named authors. They include Vedaangas, the Hindu epics, the Sudras and Shastras, the texts of Hindu philosophies, the Puranas, the Kaavya or poetical literature, the Bhasyas, and numerous Nibandhas(digests) covering politics, ethics, culture, arts and society.

For Vedic Brahmins, Vedas are the Holy Texts; however, scholars hesitate to name them as Holy Texts given the diverse nature of Hinduism, which claims components from many other philosophies including Jainism, Buddhism and Sikhism born in the Indian sub-continent.  Many try to include Bhagavad Gita and Agamas as Hindu Holy Scriptures. Here again, we find the Bhagavad Geetha of Lord Krishna is the Holy Scripture for one sect of Vaishnavaites only; another sect of vaishnavaites  holds Bhagavata Purana and Yagnavalkya Smriti to the list of Hindu Holy Scriptures. While Saivaites and Vaishnavaites of south Indian Temple traditions hold their respective Saiva and Vaishnava Agamas as Holy Scriptures, they are outcastes for Advaitis of Adi Sankara smartha Brahmins. For the non-brahminical Saivaites in Tamilnadu, the twelve Holy Scriptures (Panniru Thirumurais) are the Holy Texts while the 4000 Prapandhas are the Holy Scriptures for their Vaishnavaite counterparts. For the folklore based Mother God followers, the Holy Texts happen to be several Puranic stories and songs on their Goddesses, preserved and transmitted orally through generations in the forms like Villuppaattu, which describe the creations of Gods, world and every mystical component. They have no idea about Vedas, Agamas, Bhagavad Geettha, Panniru Thirumurais and 4000 Prapandhas. Under these circumstances, it is very clear that no single ‘Hindu Canon’ could be named as ‘The Holy Scripture of Hinduism’.

1.3 Hinduism represents Many Religions other than Islam and Christianity
The inability to name ‘The Supreme God’ and ‘The Holy Scripture’ of Hinduism explicitly indicates one fact – That Hinduism is not about one single religion. Hinduism is an attempt to depict the culture of several co-existing religions born in the Indian sub-continent as one faith and way of life; The word ‘Hinduism’ is being used to extract social and political mileage by different rulers and the Indian politicians before, during and after India’s independence. For the colonial rulers, Hindus were non-Christians and non-Muslims of Hindustan from the governance point of view. For the pre-independent freedom fighters, colonial definition of Hinduism came in handy to fight the colonial rulers united. For the independent Indian politicians, Hinduism became a vote-bank politics. From time to time, these forces have done a lot of damage to the interfaith fabric that existed several centuries across this sub-continent ruled by many monarchs and rulers.

Before the institution called religion came into force, there were worships and rituals on both poles of Vedic and Indus Valley Civilizations(IVCs). The first orthodox Vedic school, Mimamsa (मीमांसा) showed little interest in systematic examination of the existence of God. Rather, it held that the soul is eternally omnipresent and inherently active spiritual essence; they focused on the dharma (rituals and social duties), not devas (gods); the Mimamsa school (also called the karmakaaṇḍa of Vedas) placed emphasis only on the Brahmanas(Vedic rituals). They held the spirituality-related texts of IVCs and Upanishads irrelevant. However, a major section of Aryans, pursued the school of Vedanta (Gnanakaṇḍa) Upanishads, dealing with the meditation, reflection and knowledge of Self, Oneness, Brahman to establish supremacy over the other IVC non-Aryans (having their own Supreme God).

Now, let us try to document the history of the excellent interfaith exchanges happened among different religions and philosophies of Hinduism in terms of the exchanges and evolutions, elevations and eliminations of certain Gods during their course of evolutions, the central issue of caste-ism that plagued all faiths in India including the Christianity and Islam.

2. Interfaith Exchanges among Indian Religions – B.C. Era
Broadly, Indian Religions may be classified as Vedic Religions based on Upanishad Vedanta (Advaita Vedanta, Vishishtadvaita, Dvaita, Dvaitadvaita, Achintya, Bheda, Abheda, Bhedabheda), Non-Vedic IVC Religions compromised with Vedas later on (Six sects of Saiva, Agamic Saiva of Nayanmars, Agamic Vaishnava of Alwars, Tantric Shakta, Saiva Sidhdhanta, VeeraSaivam, Shakism)  and Pure Non-Vedic Religions(Aajeevika, Jainism, Buddhism, Sikhism etc). Indian Philosophies could be identified as Pure Vedic, Non-Vedic (self-evolved philosophies that admit Vedas) and pure Non-Vedic philosophies negating the tenets of Vedas. The Vedic philosophy upholds Monism while all non-Vedic religions uphold Pluralism.

The early Vedic Civilization flourished along the river Saraswati, that belong to Haryana and Punjab. Researchers contradict the Vedic texts claiming astronomical dates that go back to the 5th millennium BC and specify them at 1500 BC.  The timeline of IVC, 3300 BC-1800 BC, happens to be the earliest civilization in Indian History. The Vedic Aryan Civilization and IVCs had two diametrically opposite culture and qualities.
The Vedic Aryans were always on the move in search of grazing land for their cattle; to know the time and directions, they had to look upon the sky. Therefore, all their Gods were sky bound like Indra, Agni, Maruts and Parjanya(rain god). As sky is apparently monistic, Vedic religion talks of monism. Vedas are the Holy Texts of Yagna based Sanathana dharma; Agni is the principal connector to Vedic Gods. Vedic religion believes that all offerings to Gods would reach them if they are burned in the Yagna Agni and Agni purifies all sins/evils.  (That is why King Rama asked his wife Seetha to enter into Agni(fire)  to prove her purity.)

The IVC and its variants that existed in south India were based on river water fed cultivation. Agriculture was their livelihood; their culture and worships including some form of worships on Siva and Mother Goddesses were connected with the plurality of the Earth and its prosperity. Their later cultural evolution could be traced in the agamic traditions of temple worships on Saivism, vaishnavism and saktha religions; for them, their respective Agamas are the Holy Texts. Water was used as the principal connection with the god and they believed that water would purify all including the idols of their deities; by doing a mild sprinkling of water on their offerings to god, they believed that the god has accepted their offerings and they distribute the god accepted offerings to the devotees of god with whom the god is believed to have communion; The first Tamil Agamic Veda of SaivaSiddhantha, Thirumandhiram of St.Thirumoolar, declares that to offer and pray God is to remove the hunger of human being:

The offerings you give to the Lord in the steeple temple
Reaches not His walking temples, the Human beings
The offerings to Human beings, His walking temples
That sure reaches the Lord in the steeple temple high.
படமாடும் கோயில் பகவர்க்கு ஒன்று ஈயில்
நடமாடும் கோயில் நம்பர்க்கு அங்கு ஆகா
நடமாடும் கோயில் நம்பர்க்கு ஒன்று ஈயின்
படமாடும் கோயில் பகவர்க்கு அது ஆமே.

They idolized god as the complementary completion of Man-Woman (arthaNareeshwar: half-Man and half-Woman idol of god).

Let us trace the religious and cultural history of the religions of Hinduism through these two opposite early cultures and how they had their impact on each other through exchanges and fusions of their concepts and their composite culture on the other religions of India throughout the history of Indian religions and philosophies.

2.1. Interfaith Engagement of IVC with Vedic Religions
2.1.1. Early Rig Vedic(RV) Gods
Our knowledge of the early Vedic Religion comes from the Rig-Veda, the earliest of the Vedas. The early RV Primary Deities by prominence as they appear in Rig Veda are the Chief Deity of Rig Veda, namely, Indra(289 dedicated hymns), Agni(218), Soma(123), The Aswins(56), Varuna(46), Maruts(38), Mitra(28), Ushas(21), Savitar(11), Rbhus(11), Pushan(10), Apris(9), Brhaspati(8), Surya(8), Dyaus(6), Prithivi(6), Apas(6), Adityas(6), Vishnu(6), Brahmanaspati(6), Rudra(5), Yama(3), Parjanya(2) and Vastopathi(2). From this compilation, it is very clear that Indra was the chief deity of Vedic Religion in its formative stages and the Agni down to others were their order of worship.

The mode of Vedic worship was essentially sacrifices and chanting of hymns. Some of the specific rituals and sacrifices of the Vedic religion include:
• The Soma cult described in the Rigveda and the Fire rituals.
• The Agnihotra or oblation to Agni
• The Agnicayana, the sophisticated ritual of piling the fire altar.
• The Agnistoma or fire sacrifice
• The Ashvamedha or horse sacrifice
• The Purushamedha, or sacrifice of the cosmic Purusha, cf. Purusha Sukta
• The rituals described in the Atharvaveda concerned with demonology and magic.

The Ashvamedha (horse sacrifice) in India continued till the 4th century AD. Killing cows for food was done as a sacrifice. Sacrifice was a regular practice. It is to be noted that the Early Vedic religious prayers were essentially for material gains, wealth, health and progeny. Early Vedic prayers were devoid of the concept of the supreme God and the communion of soul with the supreme God (salvation).

2.1.2 Monotheist Vedic Upanishads’ search for the Alternative Supreme God – Neti-sm.
As the Vedic religion confronted the well developed IVCs worshipping Lord Shiva as the Supreme God with implicit philosophies, Vedic philosophers decided to have a Supreme God and started debates on the search of supreme God in Upanishads. They named their Supreme God as “Brahman”, to retain their identity distinct from the IVCs. The Upanishads contain a lot of debates on ‘What is Brahman?”. The early answers were ‘Surya is Brahman’, ‘Sky is Brahman’ etc. In Upanishads, we witness many attempts to define an abstract formless one as ‘Brahman’. At the end of such attempts, the final answer to ‘What is Brahman?’ happens to be ‘Neti Neti’.

The Sanskrit expression 'neti, neti'  means "not this, not this", or "neither this, nor that" (neti is the join from na-iti "not so"). Neti-sm tries to define the nature of 'Brahman' by first understanding what is 'not Brahman'. Neti-sm is the method of Vedic analysis of negation and is a key tool of Vedic inquiry. With the aid of ‘Neti-sm, the Upanishad Gnanis negate ‘all identifiable things which can be specified of’ in the universe from ‘Brahman’ to reach the non-identifiable, formless supreme ‘Brahman’. Some instances, Neti-sm is also explained in certain other words like ‘nirPrapanja’(not the universe), nirGuna, nirVishesh etc. Through this process Neti-sm keeps on negating the world, mind and all worldly experiences etc., till nothing remains but the ‘Self’. It tries to visualize the ‘Absolute Brahman’ in a platform where no worldly qualities are present; essentially, it seeks union with the 'Absolute Brahman' by denying the existence of body, name, form, intellect, senses and all limiting adjuncts and discovers what remains, the true "I" alone. Neti-sm is the tradition of inquiry in Vedic Philosophy. The concept of supreme God ‘Brahman’ in Vedic Tradition was necessitated due to the presence of Supreme God Shiva in IVCs.

Further, the Aryan ethnic groups felt the necessity of retaining their ethnic identity by defining their supremacy, holiness, specialty and existence at higher level with reference to the IVC ethnic groups. This was kept in their mind while they created Upanishads around 700 BC. Perhaps, the ethnic fear that existed within the Aryans that they should not get dissolved among the natives could have made them to establish their identities as Holy and their Supreme God ‘Brahman’ as the only permanent entity. ‘Brahman’ besides defining itself, defined its opponents as plurals, lower, inferior and unholy.

The concept of ‘Supreme God’ was an important interfaith exchange that happened from IVC to Vedic religion. The ‘Neti-sm’ of ‘Upanishads’ landed the Vedic Philosophy to ‘monism’ and ‘monotheistic Advaitha Vedanta’ Philosophy.

2.2 Polytheist Iti-sm of IVC
While Neti-sm tried to find its supreme God beyond the world, beyond the worldly concepts and beyond the worldly characteristics, the Iti-sm of IVC was following an opposite stand to Neti-sm;  'Iti, Iti'  means ‘is here’, ‘can be  this, can be this’, or ‘can be this, can be that’. The philosophers in search of ‘The Supreme God’ and ‘The Truth’ find them in this world, in this worldly materials and worldly characteristics through ‘Iti-sm’. The famous Saiva Sidhthantha Philosopher Thayumaanavar says பண்ணே னுனக்கான பூசையொரு வடிவிலே பாவித் திறைஞ்ச ஆங்கே பார்க்கின்ற மலரூடு நீயே யிருத்தி அப்பனிமலரெடுக்க மனமும் நண்ணேன் means “O God! To plug a flower to pray you is not coming forth to mind as I see You in this flower too!” is an embodiment of ‘Iti-sm’. The nucleus of ‘Iti-sm’ is that God is omnipresent in every worldly being and He lives within them; through the experiences of the worldly beings only one could reach the Supreme God is the philosophy Iti-sm. Neti-sm disowns the world and worldly beings to reach ‘Sanyas’.

Iti-sm says that the divine experience of each individual is a partial realization of the Supreme God and hence it proposes to combine such experiences to get a broader realization of the Supreme God. To emphasize this view, the story(purana) of unsuccessful attempts of the Lords Bramma and Vishnu to reach the crown and feet of the Supreme God Siva was created. If the experiences of the top two Lords on the Supreme God is partial, no need to talk about the rest. To explain further regarding the rest, a story of five blind men to figure out the Elephant is in vogue in India. The philosophy of the story is that all human beings are blind with respect to their knowledge on the Supreme God and hence their perceptions are as partial as the experiences of the blind men who groped the elephant at different parts of its body. Therefore, one needs to pool the experiences of many saints to get a broader realistic vision of reality; Iti-sm speaks of pluralistic inclusion and Pluralism is the central nerve of Iti-sm.

2.3 The Non-Vedic Polytheist Contemporaries of Upanishads on Pluralism
The Sankhya (सांख्य) is the oldest non-Vedic orthodox school of Indian dualistic philosophy founded by the St.Kapila. It is directly related to the Yoga school, and Tantric, Saktha and Saiva Siddhanta schools and religions. The existence of God or supreme being is not in Sankhya.  The Sankhya philosophy is, not only atheistic but also inimical to the Veda. The Advaita Vedanta philosopher Adi Shankara considered Sankhya philosophy to be inconsistent with the teachings in the Vedas, and considered the dualism in Samkhya to be non-Vedic. He had not only criticized Sankhya, but also declared that Sankhya is the first enemy of Vedanta.
Ironically Vedic Hinduism claimed Vedic authority for Sankhya due to its popularity and swallowed it into Vedanta School by creating 'Easwara Samkhya' and depicted St.Kapila, the founder of Sankhya as one of the incarnations of lord Vishnu; such attempts continued in Bhagavath Geeta too.
Sramaṇa (श्रमण) refers to non-Vedic Indian religious movements around 700 BCs, a variety of heterodox religious traditions like Jainism, Buddhism and Aajivika. The Sramaṇa movements in ancient India led to the development of Yogic practices and the popular concept like Saṃsaara (the cycle of birth and death) and moksha (liberation from that cycle). The Śramaṇic traditions range from accepting or denying the concept of soul, fatalism to free will, idealization of extreme asceticism to that of family life, wearing dress to complete nudity in daily social life, strict ahimsa (non-violence) and vegetarianism to permissibility of meat-eating.

The thinkers of Jainism and Buddhism belong to the royal families of these ethnic groups. Jainism spoke of non-violence and Pluralism (non-absolutism or anekantavada) and non-possessiveness (aparigraha); when truths are of many kinds, the relationships between the pluralistic entities need to be based on non-violence, tolerance, accommodative to different viewpoints and most importantly, one point of view should not overshadow the other view. The non-violence and pluralism of Jainism are opposing the power, dominance, monism and monistic viewpoints; essentially means that Jainism is opposed to the tenets of Vedic Tradition. Besides Jainism, Samnkhya (700 BC) Yoga (800 BC) and Vaishesika (200 BC) were also pluralistic in nature and were opposing the monistic Vedic tradition. Caarvaaka also known as Lokāyata, is the ancient school of Indian materialism(atheism).

In the Tamil culture, the tenets of worship of Supreme God along with the deities who carry out their assigned duties of creation, preservation and dissolution and other secondary nature were present much earlier to Vedic Period which are evident from the Tamil classic Sangha literature (1600 BCE or earlier). The Tamil Sangha literature reveals that the ancient Tamils had worshipped Lord Shiva as their supreme God; whenever they mentioned of the Supreme God, they used the alternate names of Lord Shiva, namely,பிறைமுடி(ChandraChud), முக்கண்(ForeHead Eyed), கறைமிடறு(NeelKant), etc. ‘People of Sangha Era held Lord Shiva as their Supreme God and other deities Mayon(Vishnu), Muruga(Subramanya), Vendhan(Indra), Varunan(Varuna), KotRtRavai(Durga) according to the five types of region (forest, hills, agrarian plains, sea coast and desert) they resided; the supreme god has no beginning or end; The sangam literature further reveal the concepts of Souls, Good and Bad Deeds(karma), fate, rebirth, salvation, heaven and hell and the associated rules governing them. Pluralism was their philosophy which is totally independent of Vedic tenets.

3. The Interfaith Exchanges among the Indian Religions
3.1 Interfaith Exchanges during BCE and Early CE

The mode of early Vedic Religion was chanting of hymns and performance of sacrifices. Rig Vedic poets and priests were free lancers doing physical work for their livelihood themselves besides chanting and performing Yagnas and rituals similar to the priests of IVCs and pujaris of folklore deities of present India. With the advent of Yajur Veda, the Vedic religion was born with the first ever caste of full time professional priests free from physical work; they earned their wealth  from others for doing Yagnas on their behalf. They defined the others to be at three lower social stages, Kshatriyas, Vaishyas, and the working class Sudras.

They wrote the Veda to suit their interest to say that the universe, human beings and other living beings were created from the Yagna when a Mahapurush was sacrificed in the Yagna; from the forehead of the Mahapurush came the Bramans and Kshatriyas, Vaishyas and Sudras came from the shoulders, the thighs and the foot respectively of the Mahapurush (PurushaSukta). They further defined the duties of these four classes as Varna(Sanadana) Dharma. It is to be noted that the Varna dharma was designed to be a religious, social and economic formulation so as to keep all other than the Vedic Brahmins in their lower strata forever. The Vedic Brahman priests performed the solemn rituals for the mighty Kshatriya rulers and wealthy Vaishyas levying charges from them. Brahmans conducted Yagnas on behalf of other  People for abundance of children, rain, cattle (wealth), long life and an afterlife in the heavenly world of the ancestors.

Vedic Brahmins wanted to control the numerically larger IVC non-Aryans; they understood that the ‘Supreme Brahman’ did not attract them and hence tried to snub the Shiva worship as ‘Phallic symbol worshiping sudra religion’; that did not prevent the majority non-Brahmins who continued to worship Shiva as the supreme God, leaving a larger section of the society out of the ambits of Brahman priests’ income generation zone.

This prompted the Vedic religion to adapt Siva, Vishnu and Shakthi worships and their philosophies into its fold by baptizing them under the banner ‘Saguna Brahmans’ (Gods with Gunas) and downgraded its Rig Vedic Gods; their primary deity Indra was relegated to the background who was belittled and cursed to have ‘thousand yoni female organs’ spread all over his body; and most of the Rig Vedic deities except Agni lost their positions to the Dravidian Gods; their Temple Agamas and rituals were Sanskritised; Yagnas based rituals were injected into Agamas; Agamic temple priests were taught to perform pujas in Sanskrit; Vedic priests kept their role specific to performing pure Vedic Yagnas for the temple festivals and consecrations. While doing all these interfaith exchanges, it retained the supreme God ‘Brahman’ as ‘Nirguna Brahman’ above all Gods with Gunas. Vedic Religion further accepted temples as the prime seats of Gods so as to influence and control the native non-Aryan majority population. These moves made the acceptance of Vedic rituals among most of the non-Vedic Religions barring a few like Buddhism and Jainism. The Varna dharma social strata evolved into several deep-rooted castes; the caste conflicts among the non-Brahmins were damaging the Indian society; this was the negative impact of Vedic religion with other religions in India.

In the last four centuries of BCE, the growing popularity of Sankhya, Yoga, Buddhism and Jainism due to their ahimsa or non-violent stands on shunning animal and human sacrifices of Vedic Yagnas to Gods, posed major threats to the very existence of Vedic religion. Survival compulsions made the Vedic religions to accept the ahimsa principle of Jainism. The rituals of Vedic Yagnas were redefined; food grains and vegetables were listed as the new sacrificial offerings to Gods in the Yagnas. Vedic priests converted themselves into vegetarians and even prohibited Onions and Garlic to Vedic Brahmins. Non-Violence and Vegetarianism were the two major interfaith exchanges between Vedic Hinduism and Jainism/Buddhism. Buddhism spread fast to South India followed by Jainism during the last two centuries of BCE and early two centuries of CE.

3.2 Interfaith Exchanges during 400 CE 1000 CE
400 CE and later in the Christian Era, bakthi movement gained momentum among the commoners throughout India. New Religious Gurus with no Vedic education emerged at different parts of India, reviving Pluralistic polytheistic culture. Many religions emerged with their own forms of Supreme Gods in different linguistic regions with distinct worship rituals and totems. They rejected the Vedic monopoly; questioned Vedic Sanskrit leadership on the holy aspect of Yagnas burning valuable food materials in Yagna fire. Tamil Saiva and Saiva siddhanta start with the Nayanmaars, and Tamil Vaishnava start with Alwars; Veerashaivam/Lingayatism of Karnataka starts with Basava in 12th century; it rejected the authority of the Vedas and the caste system. Sikhism is a non-Vedic monotheistic religion of the 15th century based on the spiritual revelations of Guru Nanak (the first Guru) and the ten successive Sikh gurus. Medieval India had Guru Ramanada, Guru Namadeva, Guru Ravidas and Guru Chaitanya of Bengal Vaishnavism. The Hindu-Muslim interfaith exchanges produced many Guru Babas who have sizeable number of followers in India.

Vedic Religion and all of the above Guru religions were opposed to each other. Even the word ‘Guru’ was a foreign word to the Vedic religion. ‘Achaaryaa’ was the Vedic terminology for ‘Guru’. Guru was a loanword to Vedic religion later on whose roots lie in the Tamil Language. The Kanchi Sankarachaaryaa distinguishes the ‘Acharya as one who preaches Vedic Dharmas and Vedas in Sanskrit to specific sects as per the established norms of Sanadana dharma’; He says further that the Guru, is an enlightened person with the ‘blessings of God’, preaches spirituals in any language to any person for the betterment of the souls. The ‘Gurukul’ method of teaching was the interfaith exchange to Vedic tradition from the Guru Religious tradition.

Contrary to Vedic, the Guru Religious traditions evolved alternative philosophies empathetic to Sudras involved in physical hard work. These philosophies were helpful to the Sudras to get social recognition and to move upwards in the social strata. Such philosophies which do not come under the ‘Vedic Subthapramaana’ (Vedic proof) are said to exist due to ‘the Bliss of God’. To overcome the complexities in the cultural conventions and to simplify and rationalize the blind beliefs that existed earlier, the new Gurus who appeared in the society used ‘The Bliss of God’ to substantiate their revolutionary cultural philosophies.

3.3 Sanskritization of Guru Religions and Traditions
The Guru Religions and Traditions that emerged in the local regions and languages, mostly by Sudras, created their own Polytheistic, pluralistic Holy Scriptures and Holy Texts. The Twelve Thirumurais and 14 Meikanta Sastras of Saiva Siddhanta and 4000 Prabanthas of Tamil Vaishnava and in the north India, Guru Grant Sahib of Sikh religion are some examples. The sudra followers of such Guru religions, reached higher social status on a par with Brahmins; they disowned the monopoly of Vedic culture, refused to accept the Vedic leaderships and questioned the Holiness of Yagnas, its theory of creation of the Universe from the Yagnas. The Panjaratra sect of Vaishnavism believed that the universe was created in the five nights; many others believed that the Garpakgriha of the temple was the source of world creation. They aimed to unite all under one Baktha Caste by demolishing Varna dharma based social castes. The bakthi movement saints Thirumoolar, Appar, Sambandhar, Manicka Vachakar, Nammazhvar, Ramanuja belonging to the Saiva and Vaishnava Sects were preaching and following the ‘One Baktha caste’ formulation. The Vaishnavite Nammazhvar even declared that the food, water and chewing betal are all Lord Krishna and the Savaite Appar went even further to declare that a third grade rotten beef eating leper would be his God if He/She was a devotee of Lord Gangadhar(Shiva).

அங்கமெலாம் குறைந்தழுகு தொழுநோயராய்
ஆவுரித்துத் தின்றுழலும் புலையரேனும்
கங்கைவார் சடைக் கரந்தார்க் கன்பராகில்
அவர் கண்டீர் யாம் வணங்கும் கடவுளாரே  - Appar

The Vedic Religion that debarred the Sudras from studying Vedas lost the patronage of the Kings, wealthy traders and warriors who had converted to Buddhism and Jainism. They witnessed Guru religious movements with awe which were systematically bringing back the Kings and warriors into their fold from Buddhism and Jainism; the clever Vedic priests understood the danger of leaving the Guru religions grow independent of Vedic rituals that would ultimately change the Varna dharma based strong caste system leading to the loss of spiritual, economical and political powers they were enjoying without doing any physical work for generations together.

The circumstantial compulsions made the Vedic religion to move closer to these Guru religions highlighting to them the need to fight the atheistic Buddhism and Jainism, their common ideological enemies; with many compromises and adjustments, they accepted temple religions of sudra bakthi movements and in turn injected Vedic religious rituals into temple worship rituals. The sudra followers of early Guru Religions were happy that the Vedic Brahmans had accepted them; however, the tragedy was that implicitly they approved the monopoly of Vedic supremacy in their philosophies without knowing neither Sanskrit nor Vedas; they adopted the Vedic rituals in their religious life along with the social curse of Brahmanic untouchability and caste-ism; the upper class sudras (caste Hindus) created several  stages of lower caste sudras based on the level of physical works they do; to cite an example, within the washermen caste, those washing the clothes of upper sudra classes claimed superiority over the washermen subcaste who wash the clothes of lower sudra classes. Castes, subcastes within each caste and class differences were growing alarmingly to irrevocable dangerous levels inflicting irreparable damage to Indian societies at large.

3.4 Interpolation of Bhagavad-Gita
Out of the six recognized schools of thought in ancient India, four of them, namely,  Sankhya Darshan (700 BC), Yoga (400 BC), Nyaya (Buddha 500 BC), Vaisesika, were rational philosophies. Mimamsa and Vedanta were introduced in Upanishads. Next is Charvaka's Materialism in 550 B.C. Between 5th century B.C. up to 8th century A.D., there was decline in Vedic Brahmanism; Buddhism and Jainism ruled the roost during this period. Christianity came in with St.Thomas in AD 52 and Islamic invasion took place around 6th century AD. Vedic religion coexisted with all these powerful religions, and Brahmins lost their position and power.

During this period, the original Gita was interpolated and monotheistic concept was inserted into what is today known as Bhagavad-Gita  to establish the historical legitimacy to monotheism. For this purpose, chapters I and X to the Rig-Veda were added, the epics Ramayana and Mahabharata were restructured by identifying Rama and Krishna with The Supreme Being; several verses were added to Sankhya Karika to change the concept of Purusha and Prakriti, more than 100 verses were added to the Yoga Sutra of Patanjali to introduce the concept of Isvara (God) and to interpret Yoga as union with God. The original Gita had only 84 verses and the basic concept was based on Sankya philosophy. The Bhagavad-Gita now has 700 verses and that will mean that 616 verses were interpolated. The interpolated Bhagavad-Gita and other scriptures were corrupted between 800 and 1000 A.D. Research work concerning the interpolation of Gita was done by German scholars such as Richard Garbe, Rudolf Otto, JW Hauer, and others and their findings were later confirmed when copies of the original Gita was discovered in Bali, Indonesia and another one in Farukkabad. Both these versions had 84 verses only. Phulgenda Sinha argues in his book "The Gita as it was" that only the first three chapters of Gita are authentic, and the rest are interpolated around the year 800 BCE. He says that the Gita was written by Vyasa, under the influence of Kapilas sankya philosophy and Patanjalis yoga sutras. After Vyasa’s first three chapters, the Gita seems to have been interpolated by two entirely different authors, one of them monist and the other theist.

Only a Smartha (or follower of the Advaita philosophy), would have no problem worshiping every imaginable deity with equal veneration; he views these different deities as being manifestations of the same God. You don’t need to call it God, because that is the only reality. Everything else is an illusion or dream of that conscious being. In the twentieth century, Hindu religion, in the west, was identified with the Smartha. Other Hindu sects, such as Vaishnavism and Shaivism conform more closely to a Western understanding of what a monotheistic faith is. Vaishnavites consider Vishnu as being the one and only true God; but there is a blurring of the oneness with the concept of avatars – the incarnations.

According to Vaishnava doctrine, there are two types of avatars – Svarupavatars (Purna avatars of Full Form of Vishnu) and Amsa Rupa avatars (avatars of partial form). In the full avatars, the godhead himself incarnates while in the partial avatars only certain powers are manifested through certain creatures and persons.

"O brahmanas, the incarnations of the Lord are innumerable, like rivulets flowing from inexhaustible sources of water." - Srimad Bhagavatam 1.3.26.
Dasavatara as given in Garuda Purana lists Lord Buddha as the 9th avatar of Vishnu.

Theologically within Vaishnavism the many avatars have been categorised into a number of different types depending on their specific personality and role as described in scripture. Not all are recognized as 'full' or 'direct' incarnations of Vishnu. Some avatars are believed to be souls blessed with certain abilities of 'divine origin', although being a Jeeva themselves. Bhagavata purana lists over 22 such avatars.  It is still considered monotheistic since if you worship the partial incarnation, you are worshipping the Fullness. After all, you can worship a part and still be worshipping the full.

A more realistic monotheism very similar to Christianity is found in Saivism. Siva has no incarnation. Saivites believe God transcends form, and devotees often worship Siva in the form of a lingam (Formless Form), symbolizing all universe. Later other progenies of Siva were added which includes Mani and Ayyappa. Because of this exclusivism, Saivites and Vaishanavites were constantly at war with each other.

Great number of temples in south India were built during the thousand years between 600 and 1600 A.D. Buddhism had great influence in the down south, especially part of the present Tamil Nadu and Kerala. Saivism (Shiva Siddhanta) was more popular in the Dravidian South while Vaishnavism was more popular in the Aryan North. There are historical evidence for intense rivalry between the Saivites and the Vaishnavites. It is viewed that the dramatization of Sabarimala Ayyappa is a compromise between Buddha, Siva and Vishnu worshippers. The name, Dharma Shastha and the prayer song "Swamiye Saranam" are strong indications of the influence of Buddhism. The Vratham, Pilgrimage and associated rituals point to the influence of Advaita and Dwaita sects.

3.5 Interfaith Exchanges of Vedic Religion and Guru Religions in Tamilnadu: Case Study -  Saiva Sidhdhanta and Tamil Vaishnava
In Tamilnadu, Bakthi movement of Saiva Sidhdhanta started during third century to counter the other two dominant atheist pluralistic Guru religions Jainism and Buddhism which came into existence since 200 BCE and were popular till 500 CE. Karaikkal Ammaiyar and Thirumoolar were the two early Saivite Saints who accepted Vedas in general while sticking on to the Agamas (temple worships) in particular with the four tiered passage to salvation (sariya, kriya, yoga, gnana). Thirumoolar’s thirumanthiram was the first formal work on Saiva Sidhdhanta philosophy. Thirumandiram, while rejecting the meaning of Vedic Yagnas, Vedic rituals and Vedic Puranas as defined by Vedas, defines novel interpretations for the same in terms of Yoga and Saiva Sidhdhanta philosophies; such interpretations are not only revolutionary and rational, but also gave humane values to the hitherto irrational, inhuman, unpopular Vedic Yagnas and Puranas. For instance, in contrary to the four tiered Varnas(Brahmans, Kshaktriyas, Vysys, Sudras) based Manu Dharma, which prohibits Sudras from studying Vedas, St.Thirumoolar democratizes and confers the eternal happiness to everyone and declares that the bliss of Veda Mantras are not hidden in sky but intrinsically woven with everybody; on meticulous meditative inward journey and introspection, eternal bliss and salvation are well within the reach of everyone.

85. யான்பெற்ற இன்பம் பெறுக இவ்வையகம்
வான்பற்றி நின்ற மறைப்பொருள் சொல்லிடின்
ஊன்பற்றி நின்ற உணர்வுறு மந்திரம்
தான்பற்றப் பற்ற தலைப்படும் தானே.
85: Bliss To Humanity
Let all the world may attain the  Eternal Bliss and Happiness I have;
May I say on Who hold firm to the Heavenly secret
Whose hymns that thrills and swells the flesh and heart on chant,
They, sure, will all be yours on firm following.

Thirumoolar dismisses Varna based casteism; He declares all human beings belong to One Race called Human Race and The God is One; he assures that no one needs to travel elsewhere for salvation but can attain the salvation through consistent meditation on God through one’s mind.

2104. ஒன்றே குலமும் ஒருவனே தேவனும்
நன்றே நினைமின் நமனில்லை நாணாமே
சென்றே புகுங்கதி இல்லை நும் சித்தத்து
நின்றே நிலைபெற நீர் நினைந்து உய்மினே.
2104.One the family, One the God; Thus intense hold,
No more will death be; None Other is Refuge, With
confidence you can seek; Think of Him and be redeemed,
In your thoughts, holding Him steadfast.


Periyaazhvaar of Tamil Vaishnava tradition addresses all devotees of Lord Naaraayanaa(Vishnu) irrespective of their Varna based caste as “one Vishnu Bakth Race” (“தொண்டர் குலத்தில் உள்ளீர்”) “பண்டைக்குல வேறுபாடுகளைத் தவிர்த்துப் பல்லாண்டு பாட வாருங்கள்” – He invites all human beings to come together as one family forgetting their earlier castes to praise the Lord.

These saints declare that all those devotees of God belong to one family. Thirumoolar goes still broad based to include all living beings, irrespective of theist or atheist beliefs, irrespective of their race, religion and language, all in to One Family and One God. He further declares that Love is Lord Siva and Lord Siva is Love; they are one and the same. Further, Thirumoolar vouched that all can do some charity with prayer to God irrespective of their financial position by stating that just any green leaf offering suffices God, a handful of grass be the charity to a Cow, a handful of food be the charity to the needy, a couple of soothing words be the charity to everyone.

270.அன்பும் சிவமும் இரண்டு என்பார் அறிவிலார்
அன்பே சிவமாவது ஆரும் அறிகிலார்
அன்பே சிவமாவது ஆரும் அறிந்தபின்
அன்பே சிவமாக அமர்ந்திருந்தாரே.


270: Love and Siva are One
The ignorant prate that Love and Siva are two,
But none do know that Love alone is Siva
When known that Love and Siva are the same,
Love as Siva, they ever remained.


252:யாவர்க்குமாம் இறைவற்கு ஒரு பச்சிலை
யாவர்க்குமாம் பசுவுக்கு ஒரு வாயுறை
யாவர்க்குமாம் உண்ணும்போது ஒரு கைப்பிடி
யாவர்க்குமாம் பிறர்க்கு இன்னுரை தானே.

252: Charity is Within Reach of All
Easy to all to offer in worship a green leaf to the Lord,
Easy to all to give a mouthful grass to the cow,
Easy to all to give a handful food, sitting down to eat,
Easy to all, good, kind words on others to bestow.


Thirumoolar, besides being a complete Siva Yoga Guru, explains his Yoga system step by step in Thirumanthiram, first introduces Ashtanya Yoga (same as that of Patanjali's) and susequently adds details of the celestial powers, centres of consciousness, the divine force and the consummate mystic experience. Thirumanthiram is a compendium of the philosophy, the theory and the practice of Siva Yoga.

It is pertinent to note that Adi Sankara, one of the commentators of Vedanta belittled the Agamas as low grade tantric practices; he held that the Gnana kanda of Agamas is nowhere comparable with Vedanta Gnana.

The general acceptance of Vedic supremacy with interpreting and redefining the meaning of Vedas and Puranas from Saiva Siddhanta’s point of view while dismissing the inhuman Varna dharma, bakthi movement initiated by Thirumoolar, Karaikal Ammaiyar, Appar, Sambandar et.al, gained ground among the masses which decimated the presence of Buddhism and Jainism from Tamilnadu; the same trend continued till the beginning of 14th Century; the mass followers of Saiva Siddhanta, the hitherto 4th Varna caste Sudras of Vedic Manu Dharma(Vellalas and allied groups), gained social, political and economic powers on a par with Brahmans. Their social status and political power corrupted their mind; they used the Manu dharma caste discriminations against other sudra caste people; they claimed that the Meikanda Sastras(the 14 Canons of Saiva Siddhanta Philosophy) were the Philosophical extracts of Thirumurais (the 12 Bakthi Canons of Saivism), the vocabulary of Meikanda Sastras were mostly derived from the Vedic Sanskrit, just the opposite of the popular chaste Tamil based Thirumurais;

The 14 Meikanda Saiva Sidhdhanta sastras were devised more to conceal the Saiva Siddhanta philosophy than to reveal; only learned Pandits could understand and explain them as the Manipravala style(a mix of Tamil and Sanskrit) was incomprehensible to the majority Sudras who knew only Tamil. This way, neo-braminic castes were developed; these people kept the Saiva siddhanta Meikanda Sastras out of reach for the other socially, economically and politically weaker Sudras and even prohibited them from Temple entry and practiced untouchability too with them.

The same fate was meted out to the Tamil Vaishnava Bakthi movement; the upper caste Vaishnavites, mostly Brahmins, wrote commentaries for the chaste Tamil written 4000 Divya Prapandhas in Sanskrit-zed Manipravala syle while reciting the 4000 Divya Prapandhas in Sanskrit accent and style in Temple rituals; these activities alienated the masses from the Vaishnava traditions.

The scheming Saiva Siddhantis scored a point above the Vaishnavaites by reciting the Thirumurais in Chaste Tamil Accent through a dedicated Oduvar community during Temple rituals; this retained many other sudras with saivism. While fighting the Brahmins supremacy with the support of other sudras on one side, they carefully nurtured Brahminic Varna approach innocuously with the other sudras.

They carefully avoided Thirumandhiram, the first Saiva Siddhanta philosophy work in chaste Tamil, as it strongly preached equality of all human beings, fought against untouchability and democratized temple institution in favour of the downtrodden; this was the reason for the naming of this 4th Century work as 10th Thitumurai after the 5th -9th Century Thevaram and Thiruvasagam etc. as 1-9 Thirumurais. Thirumandhiram is neither recited in Temple rituals nor discussed as Saiva Siddhanta Canon, though it finds a place in 12 Thirumurais.

The birth of Meikanda Saiva siddhanta Mutts were seen encouraging importing Sanskrit rituals into saivism. Even the most simple erstwhile Siva Dhiksha of initiating people in to Saivism by just administering the holy ash ‘Thiruneeru’ on the forehead of a devotee by the Guru was made into an expensive Vedic ritual driving the poor away from Saivism.

This way, the social alienation of lower ranked Sudras nurtured by the Smartha Vedic Brahmins, upper sudra caste Tamil Saiva Siddhantis and Tamil Vaishnavites provided a fertile ground for later religious conversions into Islam and Christianity in Tamilnadu.

3.6 Interfaith Exchanges between Hinduism and Islam Religions: Case Study – Tamilnadu
With respect to those people converted to Islam between 11th and 17th centuries, a lot of lower strata people moved upwards both socially and economically. Since Islam dismisses caste discrimination, those converted to Islam faith from different castes did not explicitly declared their castes after conversion; however, they remained distinct groups within Islam religion without mingling among the caste groups for marital purpose. Hence, caste remained a silent factor among Indian Muslims; however, lower caste Muslims were not prevented from entering into Mosques of upper caste Muslims. The philosophy exchanges of composite Hinduism with Islam have led to the Sufi movement - Baba saints followings - by a sizable section of the society. The converted Muslims of lower sudra castes were able to move upwards socially and economically. The composite Hindu-Muslim saints of Baba Movement have large followings in India.

3.7 Interfaith Exchanges between Hinduism and Christian Religions: Case Study – Tamilnadu
With respect to those people converted to Christianity during, before and after colonial era, a lot of lower strata people moved upwards both socially and economically. Christian mercenaries imparted education and health care to the under privileged needy people irrespective of their religion. This gesture made the Hindu Missionaries serve the people in the health care and education areas who were earlier confined to religious activities. Many Christian Reverent priests took pains to learn and master the Indian languages and contributed immensely to the growth of the Indian languages, wrote commentaries to the Indian religious Canons; notable among them are Rev.Fr.G.U.Pope who wrote the first ever commentary for the Tamil Saivaite eighth Canon Thiruvaasagam in 1900; His work not only popularized Thiruvaasagam but also took the greatness of Thiruvaasagam world over. Rev.Fr.Robert Caldwell’s work on Comparative Grammar established the supremacy of Tamil language as a classical language among the Dravidian languages. The involvement of saivaite scholars like Jaffna Arumuga Navalar in the Translation work of Early Tamil Bible saw the inclusion of many saiva siddhanta vocabulary and culture in to Christianity. Catholic Missionaries assimilated the Hindu culture and religious rituals with the Catholic churches changing just the Hindu deities with Jesus Christ; temple Car festivals became part of Catholic rituals with the customary temple flag hoisting for the church annual events. However, Christianity allowed the upper caste converts to retain their caste identity intact even after becoming Christians, hoping that such conversions would attract lower caste Hindus to Christianity. This was a fatal mistake committed by the Christian ideologues. In India, Christians remain divided along caste lines by creating separate Churches for each caste and ethnic groups irrespective of the geographical areas within India. Dalit Christians remained dalits and untouchables even after their becoming Christians. Further, they have also lost their social reservation benefits they were enjoying as Hindu Dalits. Rev.Fr.Rhenius who contributed immensely to the downtrodden people and the Tamil language was expelled from the church he founded for being firm on the view that all are equals before Lord Jesus and implementing common kitchen and common dining hall to all Christian inmates including the lower sudra caste Nadars and SC/ST students along with the upper sudra sect Vellalas and Brahmin Christians; Rev.Fr.Rhenius did not lose heart and continued his services for the lower strata people he loved; CSI church did not permit Rev.Fr.Rhenius’s body in to Church; The cemeteries of Rev.Fr.Rhenius, his wife and Son on the public road of busy Christian city of Palayamkottai in Tirunelveli district stand a testimony to the percolation of cancerous Vedic Hindu casteism into Christianity; this is a wrong side of Interfaith exchange Christianity had with the Varna based Manu Dharma; Christianity in India has become yet another Indian religion drowned in the casteism of Vedic Varna system.

4. Concluding Remarks
Hinduism is a composition of many Indian religions which emerged from the Vedic and Indus Valley cultures; however, during and after India’s Independence movement times, the monistic Vedic Advaita religion was projected as the face and core of Hinduism by renounced Scholars like Dr.Radhakrishnan and Swamy Vivekananda; it is pertinent to note that Vedanata as projected today has only about 30% of its original philosophy it inherited from the early Rig Veda; rest of the 70% philosophy, rituals and culture were borrowed from IVC and other earlier, contemporary and later Guru religions and philosophies like Samkya, Yoga, Buddism, Jainism, Saiva Siddhanta, Siddha, Sufi and Baba cults which evolved in this sub-continent independent of Vedic ideologies; instead of acknowledging and crediting their due, Vedic tradition assimilated them like the puranic Asuras as if they were part of them by sanskritizing and projecting such Gurus as the incarnation of Vishnu etc. For instance, Adi Sankara honestly declared the Sankya philosophy as the ‘Primary Enemy’ of Advaita Vedanta; however, later Vedantis sanctified the Sankya Guru Kapila as one of the incarnation of Lord Vishnu and modified Sankya with the concept of Eswar and claimed Vedic sanctity to the Sankya philosophy; a similar treatment was meted out to Yoga Philosophy and Buddism(Mahayana, by removing Balaram and inserting Lord Buddha in the Dasavadhar of Lord Vishnu). Such attempts are seen throughout the passage of Vedic tradition till date. This is nothing but robing the face of every other Indian religion with the mask of Vedic face; an intellectual impropriety and lack of integrity in granting due credits to them. Samsara(cycle of birth and death), non-violence and vegetarianism were innocuously copied from Jainism while claiming Vedic legacy for the same is the Vedic culture.

A sincere effort has been taken in this paper to expose this misconception and to present Hinduism in its true pluralistic polytheist character, by exposing the designs of monistic Vedanta Advaita. It is pertinent to note that early Rig Vedic Brahmins were doing physical work to earn their livelihood. The lust for wealth, power and political control without doing physical work propelled them to device Varna based Manu Dharma system to maintain the four-staged caste system based on birth, relieving Brahmins from physical work forever and putting them on the top and pushing all physical works to Sudras and grounding them permanently in the name of Sanadhana Dharma and Religion. This move brought them abundant wealth for performing the Yagnas for others. The concept of never changing Supreme ‘Brahman’ and ‘Internal Marriage based Varna Caste System’ were created to safeguard their ‘Ethnic Sanctity’. This ethnic fear made them insist the same for the three Kshatriya, Vysya and Sudra castes; this system grew cancerously as several thousands of castes within every Varna, becoming a permanent curse for the Indian society. To the external world, they have created the impression that Hinduism is synonymous with Vedic Religion and maintained it consistently by compromising with every popular independent religion even to the extent of sacrificing their traditional deities like Indra, Mitra etc. to the non-Brahminic Gods Siva and Vishnu (Rama, Krishna etc). It is worth remembering that the very concept of ‘Supreme Nirguna Brahman’ was borrowed from IVC God Siva. Maya, Karma theory on Births and Deaths (Samsara), Malas or ‘Impurities’ naturally associated with the ‘Souls’, theory of Creation and Salvation of Souls from ‘Samsara’ were all ‘Non-Vedic Concepts’; only at later stages, they were assimilated into Vedic System.

Vedic Brahmins’ acceptance and interfaith exchanges with the Guru Religions of IVC tradition were done only to keep the non-Brahmins well under their spiritual and political control. Varna System of caste-ism worked simultaneously as the economic, the cultural and the spiritual frameworks. Therefore, it planted and percolated in to every influential religion that emerged in India at different points of times throughout the history of India. All revolutionary popular religions which emerged in the Indian subcontinent opposing the evils of Vedic religion accepted the Vedic supremacy happily the moment Vedic religion recognized them, their philosophies and religions; in return, Vedic Brahmins intruded and sanskritized their Agamic religious rituals to sanctify their temple consecrations and translated their prayers, archanas and pujas in Sanskrit; Vedic Brahmins also trained the non-Brahmanic sudra priests in such rituals; these Sanskrit trained sudra-priests (Sivacharyaas and Bhattacharyaas) later called themselves ‘Brahmins’ and followed Vedic Agamic rituals faithfully; however, Vedic Brahmins (now called Smartha Brahmins) did not get into marital alliances with the Sivachaaryaas and Bhattachaaryaas.

Through these efforts and compromises, Vedic System kept all non-Brahmins and their spiritual institutions under its control; like the tentacles of an octopus, Vedic Varna system intruded in to each and every religious system that emerged in India. All Bakthi movement religions come under this category. The rituals of Shridi Sai baba and Puttaparthi Sai Baba cults were very quickly Sanskritized by the Vedic Brahmins though they have nothing in common with Vedas.

During Indian Independence movement times Vedic Religion propagated Advaitha Vedhantha as a unifying philosophy by stating that ‘Advaitha philosophy’ considers all as equals. This way, Advaita Vedanta was shown as the face of the emerging Hinduism and its philosophy by the powerful Vedantis and the upper caste sudra neo-Vedantis, concealing several prominent religions and philosophies that existed in India.  Tamil Saiva Siddhanta Saivaites and Kannada Veera Saivaites fiercely opposed such moves; they declined to call themselves as Hindus to Swamy Vivekanada when he visited South India. However, their protesting voices were washed away in the nationalist movement as they wrote their views in the local languages.

The two prominent Islam and Christian religions were free from Vedic impacts; however, the Indians who embraced Islam and Christianity did not shed their caste-ism; In Islam, caste-ism was not exhibited explicitly, but was silently practiced at the marital levels. Islam did not spread much in Independent India due to the absence of influential knowledgeable popular Islamic scholars who could preach and convert the down trodden out-castes who are denied even the right to worship in the Temples controlled by caste Hindus, the erstwhile upper caste sudras. Caste-ism was blatantly open among Indian Christians; they practiced caste-ism not only at the marital level, but also used it at all levels of their social movements within the Churches.  CSI and Catholic Churches in many places in South India are plagued with rotten caste-ism. 

There are several notable, knowledgeable, well trained Christian Scholars available in India who can spread Christianity to the downtrodden out-caste sudras through their powerful speeches. However, they too are always known by their castes first rather than for their Christian scholarships and Christian values; this make them ineffective in their mission of carrying the message of Jesus. This would explain the lower percentage of Christian population in India. Most of the Church groups in India do not want to enroll outsiders in their Churches; rather they encourage the creation of new churches for the new converts. This approach makes Christianity into yet another one among the several religions in India.

In order to contribute meaningfully to the cause of building life affirming communities based on interfaith engagements, one needs to re-visit the cultural history, religious practices and philosophies of the Indian sub-continent with an interpretative mode of studies of early India and figure out the lessons learnt from them with concrete action plans to weed out the roots of damaging factors, particularly, the caste-ism, the India specific root cause of all our sufferings. We need to study and interpret the cultural, religious and philosophical legacies of this subcontinent through interrogation and interpretation of the past by integrating the study of ancient cultural and philosophical histories with sociology, social and cultural anthropology, geography and political science. Instead of just glorifying our rich cultural and philosophical past, we need to resort to introspective readings of the past action plans so that the results would be the solutions of several social evils we face. Only then life affirming interfaith engagements would yield the anticipated results.

References
1. Monier Monier-Williams, “श्रमण zramaNa, Sanskrit-English Dictionary”, Oxford University Press, page 1096
2. AL Basham (1951), “History and Doctrines of the Ajivikas - a Vanished Indian Religion”, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120812048, pages 94-103
3. James G. Lochtefeld (2002). “The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism: N-Z”, Volume 2 of The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism. The Rosen Publishing Group. p. 639. ISBN 9780823922871.
4.Samuel 2008, p. 8; “Quote: such (yogic) practices developed in the same ascetic circles as the early Sramana movements (Buddhists, Jainas and Ajivikas), probably in around the sixth or fifth BCE.”
5. Flood, Gavin. Olivelle, Patrick., “The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism. Malden: Blackwell.”,  pp. 273-4, 2003.
6. Padmanabh S Jaini (2001), “Collected papers on Buddhist Studies”, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120817760, pages 57-77
7. Padmanabh S Jaini (2000), “Collected papers on Jaina Studies”, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120816916, pp 3-14
8. Max Muller, “Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 4.3.22”, Oxford University Press, page 169
9. Gerald Larson (2011), "Classical Sāṃkhya: An Interpretation of Its History and Meaning", Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120805033, pp 67-70.
10. Johannes de Kruijf amd Ajaya Sahoo (2014), Indian Transnationalism Online: New Perspectives on Diaspora, ISBN 978-1472419132
11. Shankara, Student's Encyclopedia Britannia - India (2000), Volume 4, Encyclopaedia Britannica (UK) Publishing, ISBN 978-0852297605
12. Christophe Jaffrelot (1998), The Hindu Nationalist Movement in India, Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0231103350
13.  Shyama Kumar Chattopadhyaya (2000) The Philosophy of Sankar's Advaita Vedanta, Sarup & Sons, New Delhi ISBN 81-7625-222-0, ISBN 978-81-7625-222-5
14. KN Jayatilleke (2010), Early Buddhist Theory of Knowledge, ISBN 978-8120806191, pages 246–249

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