Christopher
D. Wallis, Oxford graduate in Comparative Religion and assistant professor of
Sanskrit in Berkeley, treats us to a very well-written book: Tantra Illuminated. The Philosophy, History
and Practice of a Timeless Tradition (Anusara Press, The Woodlands TX,
2012). It is academically sound yet stands out among the dry academic works by
being very engaged with the theme of the book.
The writer
defines himself as a scholar-practitioner, initiated while a teenager. First
off, he goes through a lengthy exercise of defining his subject, drawing on
external and internal understandings of Tantra.
The word, literally “weaving-loom”, means “system”, “handbook to a system”, and
then simply “book”. It is a class of scriptures written in the second half of
the first millennium and the beginning of the second. Its topic is how to
achieve liberation and other things besides.
A necessary
explanation here is that Tantra has nothing to do with the Kāma Sūtra and very little with sexuality. (And to the extent it
has, it teaches intercourse with retention of semen, so what most men look for
in the sex act is the one thing to be avoided.) Of course, New Age channels and
the internet are full of disinformation on the matter, and for some more time
we will have to live with the Western conception of Tantra as related to sex.
Sometimes workshop on Tantra are announced by teachers unconnected with the
legitimate tradition: “If you feel like testing them, you can ask them what
Tantra [scripture] they are drawing on (…) and which Tantric mantra they use in
their daily sādhana [regular
spiritual practice].” (p.432) But at least this gives the writer the
opportunity to unchain his devils against the internet, an endless source of
false claims about Indian religions.
At the end
of it, he clarifies that he will limit himself to one specific tradition within
Tantra, one that he knows intimately by practice: Śaiva Tantra as (once) practised in Kaśmīr.
A priceless compendium
The book contains
a number of appendixes detailing the master-pupil lines of the different
branches of Shaivism and Tantra. The height of this tradition was in the 10th
century, with the Kashmiri polymaths Utpaladeva
and Abhināvagupta. A quarter of the
book (p.191-320) consists of a necessarily incomplete but already very detailed
history of Kashmiri Shaivism and its offshoots in South India, Indonesia and
Tibet.
To get a
vivid picture of this tradition and of Indian asceticism in general, these
biographical glimpses of its major figures are unsurpassed. Nine different
traditions within Śaiva Tantra are
described. Opposite poles are the orthodox or right-hand path, now still known
as Śaiva Siddhānta, and the
deliberately transgressive left-hand path of Kaula Tantra. Some of its
schools were imposing institutions, but “like [the Buddhist university of] Nālandā, they were destroyed in the
Muslim invasions”. (p.196) However, Shaivism’s loss of ascendancy was not only
due to Islamic destruction: there was a spontaneous shift to the devotional
Bhakti movement (which teaches surrender to the deity rather than autonomy
through techniques) and the rise of the Nāth
Yogis with their simplification of Shaivism known as Haṭha Yoga.
Another
quarter (p.321-420) is devoted to the practice of this path. At length the writer explains the
concepts and actual performance of initiation (dīkṣā) and transmission of energy (śaktipāta), and all the other practices, including
the devotional ritual before a likeness of the deity and the meditative
visualization (dhyāna) that is so
typical of Tantra. Ideally, one
pictures the deity in detail, with all the iconographical information depicted
nowadays on dog-posters, and then identifies completely with the chosen god. We
also learn that Abhināvagupta already
taught what we know as “affirmations” of “positive thinking” under the name of śuddha-vikalpa (“pure resolve”): if you
are dogged by a negative thought or self-image, carefully formulate its
opposite and then repeat it mentally as a mantra.
But first
the author gives us an enlightening summary of the philosophy of Śaiva Tantra (p.45-191). The teachings
are at once related to lived reality. Thus, the four states of consciousness
(waking, dreaming, sleeping and meditation) are not only explained, as they are
in many books, but their occasional combinations are elaborated on:
dreaming-in-waking, meditation-in-dreaming etc. Everything east of the Indus is
counted, so we get the 36 Tattva-s
(“substance”, “thatness”), the 12 goddesses or Kālī-s, the 4 levels of language, etc. But the overriding feature
of this worldview is the couple Śiva
and Śakti, and what they signify.
Theism
Like the
devotional tendency (Bhakti),
Kashmiri Shaivism is quite popular with Indophiles from a Christian background,
because its God-centredness feels so familiar. The fourth-highest of the 36 Tattva-s, “substances”, in the Kashmiri
Shaiva system is Īśvara, “the Lord”.
Wallis holds it equal to the monotheistic Deity, meaning Yahweh or Allah, but
also Kṛṣṇa or Avalokiteśvara, “the Lord who looks down (on the people below)”,
the Buddhist personification of compassion. “Īśvara is a generic, non-sectarian form of God”. (p.142) He also
equates idam aham, “this I am”, with
the Biblical Ehyeh asher ehyeh, “I am
who I am”.
“This I am” encapsulates the Upanishadic
worldview in which everyone is a drop in the ocean of Brahma, and as such also
related to one another. Thus, I am equal to the one in the sun: “Him am I”, So’ham. It has nothing to do with the
Biblical concept of one jealous God. By contrast, “I am what I am” is what Moses
imagines God answers to him when he asks for God’s name. The way the expression
was used in similar contexts, it really means: “I don’t need to answer you, I
can be anyone I want”. Many Christian theologians falsely translate it is “I am
that I am”, which can be understood philosophically as “my essence is the fact
that I exist”, at once an instant proof of God’s existence. They, and the Bible
context itself, link it with a folk-etymology of the name Yahweh as “the being
one”, “He Who is”, related to the verb form ehyeh.
We have to get away from these exegetical concoctions and submit to the
scientific approach of these texts. A century ago already, the Orientalist
Julius Wellhausen showed that Yahweh
comes from a Semitic root still preserved in Arabic and means “the blower”,
“the storm”.
According
to Wallis, the pre-Tantrik “Śaivas of
the Atimārga were complete
monotheists, some of the earliest monotheists in Indian ‘religion’.” (p.200)
Well, no. It is already questionable whether they really worshipped strictly
one God; but even if they did, it would not make them “monotheists”. The prefix
mono- does not mean “one”, it means
“alone”, and that is why Biblical scholars chose this term to describe the
worship of a “jealous God” who tolerates no one beside Himself. No Śaiva text is quoted as calling on its
readers to smash the idols of Viṣṇu.
Moreover, we learn: “Some of them believed that Śiva had many lower emanations, called the Rudras, divine beings that ruled the
various dimensions of reality.” (p.200) So, by Biblical standards, they were
still polytheists. Note that many fashion-conscious anglicized Hindus claim
that Hinduism is monotheistic, quoting the Ṛg-Vedic phrase: “The wise ones call
the True one by many names.” This too will fail to satisfy Biblical
monotheists, but it proves that Wallis only follows a widespread trend when he
claims monotheism for his cherished tradition.
Kashmiri
Shaivism is profoundly different from the Biblical religions, yet it has at any
rate the element “theism” in common with them. But even this is not certain: a
few scholars consider Kashmiri Shaivism as an atheistic system at heart. At any
rate, the substance “God” is only number 4, and is crowned by three higher
essences: Sadāśiva, “always/still Śiva”, Śakti, “energy, power”, and the highest, Śiva. Strictly, Śiva
means “the auspicious one”, an apotropeic euphemism with which to flatter the
terrible Vedic stormgod Rudra, “red
(in the face)”, “angry”. But “Śiva is
not the name of a god. Rather, the word is understood to signify the peaceful,
quiescent ground of all reality.” (p.144)
At most, Śiva is a deus otiosus, “less likely to attract worship in a spiritual system
that is focused primarily on the empowerment
of its adherents.” Therefore, “it is usually Śakti who is worshipped as the highest principle”. (p.145) The role
division is: “While Śakti is
extroversive, immanent, manifest, omniform and dynamic, Śiva is introversive, transcendent, unmanifest, formless and still.
Śiva is the absolute void of pure
Consciousness.” (p.144) Typically, Śiva
is depicted as masculine, Śakti as
feminine. In some schools she totally eclipses her consort and acts as the
first principle; this is called Shaktism.
God and Her Son
One thing
is insufferable about this book, and another one deserves to be noted because
it is not so innocent. Firstly, the politically desirable use of “she” when a
person of unspecified gender is meant, and where proper English would require
“he”, e.g. “each individual must decide for herself” (p.433), is already bad in
general. Regularly, even for the Supreme Being “She” is used. Thus, in the
middle of a discussion on Śiva, he
speaks of “Her power”, and how we can “realize Her as formless”. (p.187) By contrast, the goddess Kālī is properly
described as “She”. (p.189) Sometimes, the writer seems to realize the
awkwardness of this practice of his (hers?), so we suspect some self-irony in a
sentence like: “merely a temporary part He played, a dance She danced”. (p.162)
If
anything, tinkering with God’s gender should take the Germanic etymology into
account, which used the word God,
meaning “worthy of worship”, “the sacred” (corresponding to Sankrit huta), as a neuter noun. Christianity made it masculine, as a translation of Deus/Theos. The Bible, both in its
Hebrew and in its Greek parts, and every known religion that pays respect to
it, exclusively uses the word “God” as masculine.
The role
reversal with God as feminine is especially inept in the present context.
Tantra sets particular store by sexual symbolism and counts God/Śiva as male, his manifestation and
energy/Śakti as female. If I hadn’t read
that elsewhere, I could have learned it in this very book. In India, Śiva is always indicated as “He”,
eventhough he is the god who sometimes appears as one with his consort, Ardhanarīśvara, “the Lord who is half
woman”. Here, at any rate, we see him in another appearance: Śiva as the perfect male united with his
female counterpart. He gives a signal, she carries it out. It is like in
procreation, where the man performs ten minutes’ play while the woman goes
through all the motions of pregnancy, childbirth and suckling. Or if you
prefer, it is like in ballroom dancing, where the man indicates the moves and
directions while the woman does a lot more of the actual moving.
Overruling
a venerable Indian tradition thousands of years old, with a profound symbolic
structure, just to be on the safe side of a contemporary American fad, does not
show much respect. Serious practitioners of that same tradition will doubt the
writer’s assurance that he himself has hands-on experience of it. Rather, he is
one of those Westerners who stays in his comfort zone when tasting at elements
from an Indian tradition, which he adapts to his own (or his culture’s)
idiosyncrasies.
Hatred of Hinduism
Secondly,
many readers will overlook it, tucked away as it is in a half-sentence on p.112,
and otherwise not realize its broader ideological significance: “In mainstream
Hinduism – which incidentally has almost nothing to do with Śaiva Tantra except that it has
sometimes been influenced by the latter – destruction is considered the special
purview of Śiva when He is placed on
a par with Viṣṇu and Brahmā.”
Most
non-academic readers will be surprised to hear it, but the ruling convention
among India-watchers is to have and express a fierce hatred of Hinduism.
“South-Asian Studies” is one of the rare disciplines where the so-called
experts actively work for the destruction of their major object of study. So,
the one and only way of making the study of Śaiva
Tantra respectable, and to be seen practising it, is to distance it as far
as possible from “Hinduism”.
The
statement that “mainstream Hinduism has almost nothing to do with Śaiva Tantra” is ridiculously untrue.
The general Tantra and Yoga tradition is thoroughly Hindu, and most of Kashmiri
Shaivism’s concepts existed before in Hindu scripture and still exist in other Hindu
traditions. For instance, the central concept of the 36 Tattva-s (“elements”, “substances”) fully incorporates the older Sāṁkhya system of 25 Tattva-s without altering anything about
it. The remaining Tattva-s too are
familiar from other branches of Hinduism: rāgā
(non-specific desire), māyā (manifest
reality as the magic power of the deity), vidyā
(systematic knowledge), Īśvara
(Lord), Śakti, Śiva. Of māyā, he claims
that “in other tradition, māyā means
illusion” while in Tantra it means “”the Divine’s power to project itself into
manifestation” (p.140). In fact, “illusion” is the meaning specific to Śaṅkara’s Advaita Vedānta, while the general Vedic or “Hindu” meaning is “a
conjuror’s power to take any form”, and more precisely the alleged Tantric
meaning of “the Divine’s power to project itself into manifestation”.
From the
various definitions of Tantra which Wallis gives (p.33-34), the elements “theism”,
“kuṇḍalinī yoga”, “mantra-science”, “yantra-s/maṇḍala-s”, “the
gurū”, “bipolar symbology of
god/goddess”, “secret path”, “initiation”, “ritual, esp. evocation and worship
of deities”, “analogical thinking including microcosmic/macrocosmic
correlation”, “mudrā-s”, “linguistic
mysticism” and “spiritual psychology” will be familiar to practitioners of
other Hindu traditions than Śaiva Tantra.
Most of these components are already attested in the Veda Saṁhitā-s, the Upaniṣad-s
or the Mahābhārata. Similarly, the
four levels of understanding language and scripture, discussed at length on
p.163-174, are already part of the Vedic tradition. When Śaiva Tantra became a distinct school, it simply continued most concepts
and practices that it found. If Tantra must perforce be non-Hindu, fact remains
that it borrowed just about everything from Hinduism.
Disparaging Hinduism as non-existent
A very
common expression of this officially-sanctioned anti-Hindu attitude is the
denial that Hinduism even exists. This writer pretends to be very original when
he, predictably, takes this same position. For the benefit of the ignorant
reader he starts “clarifying the biggest misunderstanding: there is no such
thing as ‘Hinduism’”. (p.37)
Of course
“Hindu” is a foreign word not used by Hindus referring to themselves in the
classics. But it is not a “European” or “colonial” (meaning Portuguese or
British) term. This Persian geographical term, meaning “people living at or
beyond the Indus river”, was introduced by the Muslim invaders and already used
by the Muslim scholar Albiruni in the 11th century. It meant every
Indian Pagan, i.e. every Indian who was not a Jew, Christian or Muslim. That
same negative definition is used in the political definition by Vināyak Dāmodar Sāvarkar in his
influential book Hindutva (1924) and
in the Hindu Marriage Act (1955). Practitioners of Śaiva Tantra will therefore commonly be designated as “Hindus”,
whether they like it or not. And they like it enough when they solicit
donations from the Hindu public, though (like the Hare Kṛṣṇa-s) they claim to be non-Hindu before a Western academic
or Christian audience.
Moreover,
modern scholarship has acknowledged Hindu attempts at defining a common ground
since at least the 13th century. The several compendia of philosophies,
typically treating Buddhism on a par with Sāṁkhya
and other schools, served to see a common ground and aim in the different
schools of what is now called Hinduism.
It is not
necessary to espouse a common belief or ritual to share a common culture.
Wallis uses a Christian definition of “religion”, viz. a common truth claim
regarding the ultimate questions, and applies it to the Indian situation where
it has no relevance. This assumption of Christian categories is typical of
“Nehruvian secularism”, the state ideology in India and in the South-Asian
Studies departments of the West. It does profound injustice to the Indian
traditions (pantha) which share a
common respect for the sacred (dharma)
and a “live and let live” attitude to each other.
Conclusion
So, if the
writer is a man of honour, he will apologize for these two cases of abject
conformism. He will also correct them in a future edition. For, in spite of
these mistakes, it is still to be hoped that this pleasant book about a
momentous and little-known subject will go through many reprints.
23 comments:
Thanks Dr Elst, for the incisive review.
This author apparently hasn't read Sir John Woodroffe's authoritative (and authorized) translations of many Tantric texts, based on his also being a practitioner of sorts. Either that, or he quietly ignores it to serve the agenda of the "South Asian Studies" cabal in Academia.
I remember growing up having all sorts of negative connotations to the term "Tantra", frankly even mainstream Hindus(many fervent believers in occult) stray clear of this.
Mr Elst said:
Most non-academic readers will be surprised to hear it, but the ruling convention among India-watchers is to have and express a fierce hatred of Hinduism. “South-Asian Studies” is one of the rare disciplines where the so-called experts actively work for the destruction of their major object of study.
I find a number of elite Hindus and social activists who are "scientific" & "secular" find the Dalai Lama and Tibetan Buddhism fascinating but they regularly deride Hindusim.It is only when I started reading a few books on Tibet that this secular hypocrisy really hit me. The oracles of Tibet operate openly in India but similar happenings in local Hindu worship would invite derision. Fascinating indeed!
Thanks.
A good review. However, Elst may note that the Hare Krsnas no longer go out of their way to portray themselves as non-Hindu. That was a phase soon after the death of their founder Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada. The cabal that steered the organization then soon disgraced itself and has since been sidelined by the more traditional disciples. They have gone on to root themselves in the general Hindu milieu in India. The Hare Krishnas now define themselves, rightly or wrongly, as Hindu monotheists.
Too much damage has been done to the word Tantra in Western countries due to its association with sexuality.
Tantra simply means practice or action.
To paraphrase Rabbi Hillel Hinduism is Tantra,Mantra(recitation,prayer,pronunciation) and Yantra(technique,illustration,machine,drawing) .Everything else is commentary
Somewhat OT question for Dr Elst: I forgot to ask it in an earlier more relevant post(whose header I forget)
What did you think of the late Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh YSR Rajashekar Reddy who was a Christian?
Was it a bit disingenuous of him to bank of caste politics by using his influential caste name(Reddy) to gain power rather assume a name such as Samuel Vincent?
OTOH he had a Nixon goes to China moment when he ended Christian missionary activity of Tirupati.
Something the closet Hindutvadi TDP supremo Chandrababu Naidu would never do.
Furthemore despite being a Christian, YSR claimed to be devout worshipper of Lord Venkateswara at tirupati?
I dont think this is merely a matter of Christian or Hindu politicians visiting mosques and hosting Iftar dinners ala George W Bush,Obama and Manmohan Singh but a genuine belief in the efficacy in a god outside of his belief system.
Is there a parallel to this elswhere in the world ie overlap between Biblical and Dharmic religions
Cross pollination between Dharmic/Oriental religions (Hindus worshipping Taoist gods or vice versa) is just another dog bites man story
Sir,
the explanatin for "Ehyeh asher ehyeh" was really good. To put it better , the god meant : “I don’t have a name, you name somebody and i will become him/her”, and this joker Moses misread it as : “I don’t have a name because there is none like me”. This is where the separation and isolation of his god happened. Is this the handiwork of his subconscious mind or the conscious one? I don’t remember whether it is Ram swarup or Sita ram goel who put it so beautifully : “Banishing the gods from their hearts to the skies, they are quarreling with the idols at the altar” !!!!!
It still beats me why the westerners are so obsessed with monotheism when they are simultaneously championing the cause of multiculturalism and pluralism. What is the psychology behind it ? Hope you would come out with some analysis on this.
[It still beats me why the westerners are so obsessed with monotheism when they are simultaneously championing the cause of multiculturalism and pluralism.]
This is like saying "It still beats me why Indians worship Krishna, Rama, Shiva, Hanuman, Ganesha, and all those others when they are simultaneously saying that there is no god but Allah and Muhammad is his prophet." The problem in both cases is an umbrella term so vast that it can only produce absurdities.
@ अश्वमित्रः :[This is like saying "It still beats me why Indians worship Krishna, Rama, Shiva, Hanuman, Ganesha, and all those others when they are simultaneously saying that there is no god but Allah and Muhammad is his prophet." The problem in both cases is an umbrella term so vast that it can only produce absurdities.]
Surprising !, which joker Indian is saying that? It is only Indian muslims and pseudo-secular Indians who say this, and even these haven’t understood islam or religion in general . Rama , Krishna , etc are all theories, likewise islam is also a theory which can exist side by side, doesn’t mean that Indians have accepted all. In fact it is Indians who have diluted islam when ghulam ahmed staked claim to Islamic prophethood and created a separate muslim sect which has been excommunicated by mainstream sunni islamists. Therefore every rigid theory has been analysed by Indians (hindus) and diluted at opportune times. It is quite the opposite with westerners. They are championing the cause of multiculturalism which simply means providing space for all theories, yet they are desperately trying to prove that Hinduism started off with monotheism and it is hindus who have wrongly diluted it as if some kind of grand truth exists in monotheism. This, in spite of knowing very well that prophetic monotheistic religions try to get rid of polytheism at the very first opportunity. So, this is neither an umbrella term , nor do I see any absurdities resulting out of it.
I thank Koenraad Elst for his review and, as the author, I have some corrections and discussion to ofter. First, my use of shifting gender pronouns was not an attempt to be fashionable but to reflect two things about the tradition I'm writing about: that it included female practitioners, and that its conception of deity included fluidity of gender (as expressed in the Ardhanarīśvara image). In fact, Śaiva authority Kṣemarāja writes, parā-śakti-rūpā citir eva bhagavatī śiva-bhaṭṭārakābhinnā which means "The Supreme Goddess, the Lady who is Consciousness, is non-different from Lord Śiva", clearly indicating that they are two names for one Divine. Abhinavagupta too talks about the paramam padam as Śiva in more exoteric contexts, and Devī in more esoteric contexts. Anyway, such shifting of gender, which after all is only a metaphor for these writers, is mimicked in my book, to Mr. Elst's dismay; and perhaps it doesn't work so very well. Thank you for the feedback on that.
Secondly, and more importantly, Koenraad Elst wrongly and unfairly uses the incendiary phrase "Hatred of Hinduism" in response to something I wrote in my book. To explain my views, I here post a conversation I had with a professor of political science from India on the topic of "Hinduism." He began with comments similar to Dr. Elst, and I responded:
CHRISTOPHER WALLIS:
As I explain in the book, Hinduism is not a concept that was known during the period of Shaivism that I cover, and no Shaiva during that period self-identified as Hindu. I would also say Hinduism as I experience it in India today is very dissimilar to classical Shaivism. As you may know, nondual Shaivas did not go to temples or celebrate the holidays that we now associate with Hinduism (not because the disapproved of them, but because the tradition encourged them to realize that nothing could be gained from temples and pilgrimages that could not be gained in inward practice). Also, the key concepts of Hinduism were not really a part of Shaivism: the earning of merit (punya, which Shaivas did not believe had anything to do with liberation), conformity to brahminical dharma, and belief in karma (though Shaivas did believe in karma per se, they held that all one's karma was destroyed in the diksha ritual [except the karma already fructifying in/as the current life] and therefore karma became a total non-issue in their spiritual lives). I could go on and on about the dissimilarities, but I will just say that the more I go deep into the study of Shaivism, the more dissimilar to Hinduism it seems to me. In certain ways it constitutes a radical deconstruction of the brahminical/Vedic worldview, though I don't talk about that in the book. Furthermore, I also don't see modern Hindus performing any of the practices of Shaivism. Of course Hinduism is flavored by the Shaiva teachings, but that is very different from undertaking a tantric practice.
Having said all this, I should clarify that I have nothing against Hinduism. Konraad Elst's review wrongly characterizes me as hating Hinduism. In fact I've done a conversion ceremony and have a certificate that says I am a Hindu, which I use for getting into temples in India that otherwise forbid Westerners.
My studies at Berkeley, which were purely Sanskrit, had nothing to do with how I wrote the book. I may alter the section on Hinduism to avoid misunderstanding, but everything I'm saying here about the issue is solid, provable fact.
Anyway there are some thoughts. Since nondual Shaivism entirely repudiated the Veda as a source of spiritual information, its safe to say that that part of the tradition was not Hindu. --And brahminical authorities at the time said so as well, calling it Veda-bahya (outside the Veda and therefore, to them, invalid).
continued in next comment....
PROFESSOR FROM INDIA:
Thank you for writing. The word Hindu is of later coinage and is Persian in origin, as is well known. This does not mean that what we call Hinduism today did not exist in pre-Muhammadan era. The term “American Indian” is of European coinage. This does not mean that American Indians did not exist prior to Columbus, although they were not known by that name.
Hinduism is a pluralistic religion and includes Vaishnavism, Shaivism and Shaktaism. Even atheists are part of Hinduism. The Charvaka school and Lokayats represent the agnostic and atheistic traditions.
The term Hinduism has in the recent decades acquired a negative flavor, due in part to the works originating in the West. Many wish to distance themselves from Hinduism. This includes members of the Ramakrishna Mission, Sikhs, and Kabir Panthis. Swami Vivekananda, the Founder of Ramakrishna Mission, proudly declared that he was a Hindu. Sikh Gurus advocated reform but did not think of themselves as not-Hindu. Your book has an anti-Hindu flavor.
Other than that, your book is meritorious. As I said in my email, I learnt much from your exposition of Tantra which is misunderstood in the West.
CHRISTOPHER WALLIS:
"I am a philologist by training and by nature, which means in part that I do not use terms to refer to a people who do not use that term for themselves. But aside from this issue, there is no reason to lump together those religions that you name under the rubric of Hinduism other than the fact that they are now lumped in that way. In fact, the Buddhist tradition was much more influential on Shaivism than say Vaishnavism was, so if you speak of a Hinduism in the medieval period you must include Buddhism in it as well. If you do not wish to include Buddhism because it repudiates the Veda, well the nondual Shaivas also repudiated the Veda and were thus called Veda-bahya by brahminical authorities just as much as the Buddhists were. The only difference is that Shaivism had a sampradaya (the Siddhānta) that did accept the Veda, while Buddhism did not. I personally wouldn't want to define Hinduism in terms of the Veda, but that is how people define it.
I'm a bit surprised that as a professor, you simply assert that my book has an anti-Hindu bias without bothering to take up any of the arguments I present.
By the way, Sanderson has now shown that Shaivism specifically began as a way to free people from the brahminical worldview and its varnāshrama-dharma. Since it its origins, and later as well in the nondualist camp, it specifically deconstructed and stripped away the Veda-determined identity, it is at the very least problematic to call it part of Hinduism in the period in question. To become part of Hinduism as it later did, it had to strip itself of all its doctrines that were repugnant to brahminical authorities (post 1200), which is part of why you think Shaivism is not so dissimilar to mainstream Hinduism as it really was."
continued in next comment...
the PROFESSOR RESPONDED:
Shaivism and Hinduism have important differences, as you point out. From the perspective of world religions, Shaivism and Hindu Vedanta are similar. Both posit non-dual reality. The entire universe is nothing but consciousness (Chiti). We are nothing but Chiti. The goal is to remove our ignorance. Shaivism posits ultimate reality as Parashiva. Parashiva is beyond description. He is in all, unborn, undying, knowledgeable and full of bliss. This is Brahman of Vedanta. In the Bhagavad Gita, Krishna has a similar description of indwelling Godhead: Ajo Nityaha shasvato yam purano (2:20).
Catholics are different than Protestants. Thousands were killed in denominational warfare during the Thirty-Year War (1615-1648). Yet from a global perspective, both belong to Christianity. Both posit a single God, a single Savior, a single life and a single pathway to salvation. Both posit the idea of original sin.
Sunnis and Shias have killed each other in thousands in history and continue to do so presently. Yet both Sunnis and Shias are required to recite the same faith statement 5 times a day: “La ilaha il Allah, Wanna Muhammad Rasul Allah”-- “There is no God, but Allah. And Muhammad is the Prphet of Allah.” Other gods are false and even demonic. Both groups believe that Muhammad is final and the Seal of the Prophets. Salvation is possible only for Muslims; kafirs (non-Muslims) will be assigned to hell. Therefore, both Sunnis and Shias, although different in many ways, are Muslims.
Similar argument applies to Shaivism, Vaishnavism, Vedanta and several other branches of Hinduism. There are differences among them, yet these are of one piece. What label would you place on this family: Indic Traditions? Hinduism?
CHRISTOPHER WALLIS RESPONDED:
I would turn it around and say that the correct analogy is this: if people were to give a single name to Judaism Christianity and Islam, because they have so much in common--they share sacred texts, they spring from the same geographical region, and were practiced by the same general ethnic group originally (Semitic), that would be much like the constitution of the term Hinduism. people don't call those three religions as "Semitism," because that would be overly reductive of their differences, and the same problem of over reduction applies in the case of Hinduism, in the medieval period, which is all I am arguing for. perhaps you can open to the idea that you are projecting the present on to the past. Shaivas did not see Vaishnavas as co-religionists in this period, any more than they saw the Buddhists as co-religionists. Since you are not a scholar of religion and I am, at least be open to the idea that the bill of goods you have been sold vis-a-vis Hinduism is not what it seems to be. The main error in the first 75 years of Western scholarship on India was back projection of the present on to the past. this error was passed on to Western-educated Indians who became the founders of modern India. Only recently is scholarship coming to grips with how very different India's religious past was from what it is now. of course there are many common themes you can point to, but the term sanātana dharma misleads by implying changelessness, which is far from the truth. these are the problems you start to run into when you insist on using a word to designate a people that they did not use to refer to themselves, and further ignore evidence that contradicts your back-projection of the term.
hopefully I have nuanced the question for you somewhat. you continue to side step the central points in my argument, which does make me wonder if you are in fact open to learning something new about something that you think you already know. understandable, since the concept of Hinduism that has become the norm is very much a part of national identity for Indians. people don't like having that challenged but that is certainly part of what Tantra wants to do. Deconstruction."
continued in next comment....
So that was the conversation with the professor, which hopefully will serve to establish some of my views on the topic. Why Dr. Elst and others insist on calling people (like the medieval Shaivas) Hindu that did not think of themselves as Hindu, remains a mystery to me, explainable only by a desire to serve a modern agenda of Hindu identity. Dr. Elst says "Hindu" was not a colonial term, but colonial does not only denote European rule, it denotes foreign rule. He himself admits the term started to gain currency after the Muslim invasion. The first people to use the term Hindu in reference to themselves lived in the 14th-15th centuries, and they only used it when distinguishing themselves from the Muslim "Other". So the term and concept of Hindu as something other than a geographical designation is one that formed due to, and in relation to, Muslim rule. Before this date, the term Hindu would have to simply denote "all Indian religion and culture" and include Buddhists and Jains. (See my point above about Shaivas being equally Veda-bahya as the Buddhists.)
If this discussion convinces some that the question is more complex than they previously understood, then wonderful.
But I feel these comments are probably all a waste, since in Indian culture, whatever you learned as youngster from respected elders is not ever to be questioned in later life, and in India therefore I confront hermetically sealed closed-mindedness on this issue, and an absolute refusal to question one's opinion. It's an ideological and conceptual wall that I can bang my head against until I bleed without making a dent. This makes me sad. I have spent far more time reading Sanskrit texts that almost any Indian-born person I meet, and yet my opinion counts for nothing where it diverges from what they were programmed with at a young age. So if anyone reads this who is open enough to question what they've been told, the evidence is there. Don't take my word for it; cast aside what you think you know and learn to read the sources with a fresh eye, with beginner's mind, without assuming anything. You may reach very different, and rather more liberating, conclusions. It's hard, very hard, but worth it. Thank you.
p.s. the Indian scholars I know who have done that, i.e. read the sources independently of modern Hindu discourse about them, have similar views to my own. I don't mean in any of these comments to insult those who self-identify as Hindus -- being invited to question what you know is a part of the spiritual process regardless of your nationality. Tantra invites the deconstruction of your cultural identity, and that is hard for anyone. It strikes where we are most woundable -- our self-image. But, this philosophy says, only through such deconstruction can you truly realize your deeper identity with timeless spirit, that by definition has no race, caste, religion, nationality, etc. Hope that is clear and that no insult is intended. I was just pointing out this challenge in the context of modern Hinduism -- but it applies to anyone who undertakes the practice and the serious search for a truth beyond words.
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One flaw in Christopher Wallis reasoning : As per him (and also the fact) Shaivas existed before the word Hinduism was coined had difference with Vaishnavas philosophy - so he should have mentioned Vaishnavas or Veda instead of Hinduism - since the term did not exist at that moment. Hinduism was a later day word and it includes all traditions (including Shaivas) that existed in India - as Dr. Elst says.
Really enjoyed this article. We've recently posted a good article on Dynamic Meditation in Tantra
Your reply dear professor is as unconvincing as it can be. Like it or not u are trying to faithfully propagate the same anti hindu and more importantly ahistorical narrative of "neohinduism" prevailing now in the academia.
Your argument that no saivite would call himself Hindu back then therefore Hinduism didn't exist back then is ludicrous. Fact is Oxygen too back then was not known. Does that mean the same didn't exist back then.
The rest of your reply trying to show how Kashmiri Saivism is different from Hinduism based on minor differences in contrast to the overwhelming borrowing/building upon the concepts of brahminism as shown by KE is futile. First u are trying to equate Hinduism with the antique vedic brahminism which is incorrect. Hindusim encompasses everything from the orthodox vedic brahminism to transgressive heterodox kaula tantras. Secondly that there are two parallel paths within the Hindu fold is even accepted by traditional scholars like the opinion of commentator of Manavadharmashastra Medhatithi who says "vaidiki tantriki chaiva dvividha shrutih ". This is further proved by the fact that even in the heterodox kaula tantras which gullible scholars try to paint as reaction against evil brhamins has injunctions of brahmin bhojana after mantra anusthana.
Some minor differences from contemporary Hinduism doent deny them being Hindu. Kaula tantras are also different from conventional modern Hinduism does it make them any less Hindu?? Differences of opinion among different Hindu sects is natural but that doesn't remove the hinduness especially when the key conceptual doctrines are built upon earlier undoubtedly Hindu ideas like 24 tattvas , 4 levels of speech etc.
As to Buddhism pls refer to KE's articles on the same.
1. I don't try to call people what they themselves don't call themselves.
Reply - No professor what u do is the malicious attempt of trying to portray others as what they are not for ideological reasons rather than the truth. Catholics will deny that protestants are Christians does that mean they are not. Or Iskon and RKM use to at once call themselves Non Hindu does that mean they are so. The maliciousness of your practice gets more clear and intense when one realises that the saivites not calling themselves Hindus is entirely historical accident as the term didn't existed by then and as such they couldn't have identified with it. However if it did they would have done so as do the modern practices of Saivism. They definitely had an insider outsider distinction as Arya Mleccha and even if they called their fellow Hindu sects as pashandas(heretics) they would never call them mlechhas. What u are doing is an academic malpractice.
2. There is no reason to lump the various together
2. There is no reason to lump together the various traditions and secs etc.
Reply - This is ludicrousness beyond limit. Just confess that u have anti hindu bias and that u detest the hindutva grand narrative of India's history or culture.
Anyways here are the reasons why the various traditions should be clubbed together and infact there are no other alternative unless one wants to embrace falsehood :-
1) All these tradition venerate Hindu gods with Saivism veneration one of the Rgvedic gods Rudra as Shiva and without rejecting his vedic aspects. Even Mahayana and Vajrayana deities have undeniable Hindu influence(though it is a separate matter that they shouldn't be called non Hindu. See KE)
2) All use undeniably Hindu concepts and build upon them like in case of Kashmiri Savism 24 tattvas, 4 levels of speech etc etc.
3) All use the exclusively Hindu and vedic concept of mantra extensively.
4) All use Hindu (and many cases such as derived from similar vedic practices) rituals like home derived from yagna like rituals etc. Many yogic practices have precedents in Upansihads showing they drew upon common sources and often borrowing from each other thus strengthening their mutual connection.
4) All lay observers of these traditions follow the Hindu social customs like caste(though not unique to Hinduism or India). None of them including Buddhism and jainism protested against these but followed them vigorously. Bhakti saints even advised to not look at anyone's face who defile the vedas puranas and shastras.
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