Hinduism
© Franz Lemmens/SuperStock
First Encounter
The plane that you have taken to Benares circles in preparation for landing at the Varanasi
airport. Looking down from your window seat, you can see the blue-white Ganges River, quite
wide here. Everything else is a thousand shades of brown. Beyond the coffee-colored city, the
beige fields spread out, seemingly forever.
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At the small airport, a dignified customs inspector with a turban and a white beard asks, “Why
have you come to India?” Before you can think of an appropriate response, he answers his own
question. “I know,” he says with a smile and a wave of the hand. “You people who come to
Benares are all the same.” He shakes his head from side to side. “You have come for
spirituality.” After pausing briefly, he adds, “Haven’t you!” It sounds more like a statement than
a question. It takes you a second to understand his quick pronunciation of that unexpected
word—spirituality. In a way, he is right. You have come for that. You nod in agreement. He
smiles again, writes something down on his form, and lets you through.
As you take the small black taxi to your hotel, you realize that you have just accepted—willingly
or not—the ancient role that the customs inspector has bestowed upon you. You are now just one
more pilgrim who has come to Mother India for her most famous product: religious insight. You
are now a Seeker.
After unpacking at your hotel, you walk out into the streets. It is dusk. Pedicab drivers ring their
bells to ask if you want a ride, but you want to walk, to see the life of the streets. Little shops sell
tea, and others sell vegetarian foods made of potatoes, wheat, beans, and curried vegetables.
Children play in front of their parents’ stores. Down the street you see a “gent’s tailor” shop, as a
thin cow wanders past, chewing on what looks like a paper bag. Another shop sells books and
notepaper, and others sell saris and bolts of cloth. From somewhere comes a smell like jasmine.
As night falls, the stores are lit by dim bulbs and fluorescent lights, and vendors illuminate their
stalls with bright Coleman lanterns. Because you will be rising long before dawn the next day to
go down to the Ganges, you soon return to your hotel. You fall asleep quickly.
The telephone rings, waking you out of a dream. The man at the front desk notifies you that it is
four a.m. Being somewhat groggy, you have to remind yourself that you are in Benares. You get
up and dress quickly.
At the front of the hotel you wake a driver sleeping in his pedicab. You negotiate the fare, climb
onto the seat, and head off to the main crossing of town, near the river, as the sky begins to
lighten. The pedicab drops you near the ghats (the stairs that descend to the river), which are
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already full of people, many going down to the river to bathe at dawn. Some are having
sandalwood paste applied to their foreheads as a sign of devotion, and others are carrying brass
jugs to collect Ganges water.
As you descend to the river, boat owners call to you. You decide to join the passengers in the
boat of a man resembling a Victorian patriarch, with a white handlebar mustache. Off you go,
moving slowly upstream. Laughing children jump up and down in the water as men and women
wade waist-deep and face the rising sun to pray. Upstream, professional launderers beat clothes
on the rocks and lay them out on the stones of the riverbank to dry.
The boat turns back downstream, passing the stairs where you first descended to the river. In the
bright morning light you see large umbrellas, under which teachers sit cross-legged, some with
disciples around them. Who, you wonder, are these teachers? The area near the shore is crammed
with people and boats. On a nearby boat, people shout, Ganga Ma ki Jai—“Victory to Mother
Ganges!”
The boat continues downstream. On the shore, smoke rises from small pyres, where bodies
wrapped in red and white cloth are being cremated. The boatman warns, “No photos here,
please.” The boat pulls in to shore downstream of the pyres, and everyone gets off. Walking up
the stairs, you see small groups of people quietly watching the cremations. At the pyres, a man
tends the fires with a bamboo pole, and a dog wanders nearby.
Later, as you make your way back to the center of town, you notice a pedicab with a covered
body tied onto the back. It cycles past women sitting beside the road, selling plastic bracelets and
colored powders. The pedicab must be on its way to the pyres, you think. The blend of opposites
fills your mind; on the banks of the very same river, laundry is washed and bodies are burned; in
the streets, life and death appear side by side—yet no one seems to notice the contrasts. Here, the
two are one.
The Origins of Hinduism
Looking at a map of India (Figure 3.1, p. 76) you can see that this subcontinent, shaped like a
diamond, is isolated. Two sides face the sea, while the north is bounded by the steep Himalaya
Mountains. There are few mountain passes, and the only easy land entry is via the narrow
corridor in the northwest, in the vicinity of the Indus River, where Pakistan now lies. It is the
relative isolation of India that has helped create a culture that is rare and fascinating.
Figure 3.1 India, Bali, and the area of Hindu influence.
India’s climate, except in the mountain regions, is generally warm for most of the year, allowing
people to live outdoors much of the time. Indeed, some people may even claim that the climate
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