Patanjali's Yoga-Sutra, A Text On Samkhya, The Visnu-Purana, Several Other
The document discusses the origins and development of Hinduism. It argues that Hinduism was not invented by the British in the early 19th century as some scholars claim. While Hinduism changed in response to historical events like the Muslim conquests, it grew organically over many centuries out of interactions between ideas and local practices. The roots of Hinduism in its current form can be traced back to religious texts from 300-600 CE, though it continued to evolve since then in complex ways.
Patanjali's Yoga-Sutra, A Text On Samkhya, The Visnu-Purana, Several Other
The document discusses the origins and development of Hinduism. It argues that Hinduism was not invented by the British in the early 19th century as some scholars claim. While Hinduism changed in response to historical events like the Muslim conquests, it grew organically over many centuries out of interactions between ideas and local practices. The roots of Hinduism in its current form can be traced back to religious texts from 300-600 CE, though it continued to evolve since then in complex ways.
and used various Sanskrittexts in his research,including the Bhagavad-gita,
Patanjali's Yoga-sutra, a text on Samkhya, the Visnu-purana, several other
Puranas,and many texts on astronomy,astrology,geography,and chronology. Although the English translatorliberally uses the word "Hindu,"the original Arabic text appearsto only use phrasesliterallyequivalentto "[of] the people of India [hind]."40Nonetheless, al-Biruniclearly understoodthe differencebe- tween the people of India as a geographicalor ethnic entity and as a religious group. CONCLUSIONS The main purposeof this essay has been to show thatthe claim of many schol- ars-that Hinduismwas inventedby the British in the early nineteenthcentu- ry-is false. A largerissue, however,is also implicitlyinvolved.This is the ten- dency of many historiansof modern India-especially those associated with the subalternschool-to adopta postcolonialistperspectivethatprivileges the Britishcolonial period as the period in which almost all the majorinstitutions of Indiansociety and politics were inventedor constructed.As RichardEaton (1998) notes in a recent critiqueof these historians:"Thenotion of 'postcolo- niality' situatedall Indiantime in referenceto the Britishimperialperiod:time was either precolonial,colonial, or postcolonial." One postcolonialist historian, Nicholas Dirks (1989:43), has claimed that even caste, thatuniquelyIndianinstitution,was in some sense inventedby the British:"Colonialismseems to have createdmuch of what is now accepted as Indian 'tradition,'including an autonomouscaste structurewith the Brahman clearly and unambiguouslyat the head."AlthoughDirks is using hyperboleto makehis point, andhe does include some importantbuteasily overlookedqual- ifications, the argumentseems to me to be grossly overstated.41As the Hindi criticPurushottomAgrawalrecentlyquipped:"We Indiansmay well have been denied the capacityto solve our own problems,but are we so incapablethatwe could not even create them on our own?" Caste, like Hinduism,undoubtedly respondedto the Britishconquestwith significantchanges, but neitherinstitu- tion was so radicallytransformedduringthe colonial period that it makes any sense, even in termsof a transformationof preexistinginstitutionsor concepts, to claim thatthe Britishinventedthem. Whateverculturalgarmentsthe British stitchedtogether,caste andHinduismweren'tamongthem.At least in these re- spects, the Empirehas no clothes. If Hinduismis a constructor invention, then, it is not a colonial one, nor a Europeanone, nor even an exclusively Indianone. It is a constructor invention 40 This at least is the preliminaryconclusion of RichardEaton, who kindly looked throughthe Arabictext for the originalequivalentsat my request. 41 To this statement,from Dirks' essay "The Inventionof Caste: Civil Society in Colonial In-
dia" (1989) can be addedanotherambitiousclaim he makes in a more recenttext (1992:3): "Even
as much of what we now recognize as culturewas producedby the colonial encounter,the concept itself was in partinventedbecause of it." Both these passages are cited in Eaton 1998. only in the vague and commonsensical way that any large institution is, be it Christianity, Buddhism, Islam, communism, or parliamentary democracy. In other words, it is an institution created out of a long historical interaction between a set of basic ideas and the infinitely complex and variegated socio- religious beliefs and practices that structure the everyday life of individuals and small, local groups. In this interaction, both the basic ideas and the everyday beliefs and practices are constantly changing-sometimes slowly, sometimes rapidly. Major histor- ical changes in the economic and political institutions of India during the Tur- co-Afghan conquest, the Mughal invasion, the consolidation of the Mughal polity, and the establishment of the British colonial regime undoubtedly ef- fected important changes in the religious traditions of India, but the rapid changes of early colonial times never had such an overwhelming impact that they could have led to the invention of Hinduism. Hinduism wasn't invented sometime after 1800, or even around the time of the establishment of the Delhi Sultanate. What did happen during the centuries of rule by dynasties of Muslim sultans and emperors was that Hindus developed a consciousness of a shared religious identity based on the loose family resemblance among the var- iegated beliefs and practices of Hindus, whatever their sect, caste, chosen de- ity, or theological school. From the point of view of a modern observer, one can see the family resem- blance taking a recognizably Hindu shape in the early Puranas, roughly around the period 300-600 C.E. Although the religion of these Puranas displays many continuities with the earlier Vedic religion, its principal features and em- phases-particularly its greatly expanded mythology of the gods Vishnu, Siva and Devi-do, I think, justify marking this religion off as something new, as the beginning of medieval and modern Hinduism. This Hinduism wasn't in- vented by anyone, European or Indian. Like Topsy, it just grow'd. BIBLIOGRAPHY al-Biruni.1964.Alberuni'sIndia,Translatedby EdwardC. Sachau.Two volumes in one. Delhi: S. Chand& Co. Babb, LawrenceA. 1986. RedemptiveEncounters:ThreeModern Styles in the Hindu Tradition.Berkeley:Universityof CaliforniaPress. Basham,A. L. 1975. The WonderThatWasIndia. Calcutta:Rupaand Co. Based on the revised edition of 1967. Bayly, ChristopherA. 1985. 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