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Beginnings of Hinduism

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Beginnings of Hinduism pp. 142-9 All information in this PowerPoint is taken from Banks, James and all. World Adventures in time and Place. New – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Beginnings of Hinduism


1
Beginnings of Hinduism
  • pp. 142-9
  • All information in this PowerPoint is taken from
  • Banks, James and all. World Adventures in time
    and Place. New
  • York McGraw-Hill, 2001.

2
Vocabulary
  • Hinduism
  • Vedas
  • Caste system
  • Reincarnation
  • Dharma
  • Immortal
  • Brods over
  • Prey
  • subdued

3
Read aloud
  • Ancient Hindu writings tell the story of a father
    who used simple examples to teach his son about
    the meaning of life. One day he told his son to
    bring him a fig from a fig tree. The boy did
    so, and his father told him to split the fruit
    open.
  • What do you see?
  • These fine tiny seeds., replied the son.
  • Break one open! What do you see?
  • Nothing at all, sir!
  • His father said, Out of the finest element
    , which you cannot see-out of this finest element
    comes this big fig tree! The boy was similar to
    the tree, he said. The father was teaching his
    son the Hindu belief that all life is connect by
    an invisible force.

4
The Big Picture
  • Key part of Hinduism- link between a powerful,
    invisible force and everything in the world
  • Source Aryans
  • 800 million Hindus
  • Various ways of practicing this religion
  • Shared history extends back to ancient times in
    India

5
Writings of a New Religion
  • 1500 B. C. Aryans migrate to subcontinent and
    have little in common with the Harappans
  • Different language
  • Different cultures
  • Different way of living
  • Harappand lived in great cities
  • Aryans moved around
  • Aryans began to assimilate
  • Began to farm
  • Began crafts
  • Harappans
  • Learned holy songs
  • Oral tradition
  • Collected in books call Vedas or Books of
    Knowledge
  • Learned about the world

6
The Vedas
  • Vedas the building blocks of Hinduism (p. 143).
  • Told
  • How to live
  • Explained life
  • Polytheistic
  • How people were created into four different
    classes
  • Priest mouth
  • Princes arms
  • professionals and merchants - legs
  • Servants - Feet -
  • Different Vedas
  • Rig Veda

7
Hinduism and Culture
8
The Caste System
  • Four classes became the caste system
  • Organizes people
  • Hundreds of different levels
  • Determines persons place in society
  • Rank of the family
  • Priestly caste-highest
  • Study the Vedas
  • Teach others about the Vedas
  • Servant caste
  • - born to serve the other castes
  • People control their caste
  • People move in a constant circle of birth, death,
    rebirth REINCARNATION
  • Bad deeds of one lifetime must be paid for in the
    next life
  • Good deeds are rewarded in the next life

9
The Importance of Duty
  • Dharma the laws and duties of a caste
  • Each caste follows dharma from Vedas regarding
    their cast
  • Hundreds of rules for each caste
  • Examples
  • Servants must be cheerful when doing tasks
  • Merchant must produce and sell what they make
  • Priests had to work to support their families
  • Vedas told the jobs each caste could do
  • Purpose of Dharmas
  • To keep order in society
  • Disobeying resulted in ostracism or being
    outcastes
  • Outcasts were impure, untouchable and their
    shadow could not touch another (cleansing
    ceremony)
  • Children were likewise outside of social castes

10
Many Paths to Truth
  • Hinduism developed many forms
  • Special tasks
  • Vegetarianism
  • Non-Hindu experiences
  • Hinduism allows for different approaches
  • More than one god
  • More than one path of truth
  • Bhagavad Gita Vishnu says, Howsoever,approach
    me, even so do I accept them for on all sides,
    whatever path they may choose is mine.

11
Hinduism today
  • Many gods worshipped
  • Vishnu The One that is All
  • Shiva The God of Time and Destruction
  • Devi The Mother of All Creation
  • Favorite gods of a family worshipped today at
    home, in temples, and at special festivals.

12
A Changing of Religion
  • Holy books
  • Vedas
  • Epics
  • Adventurous stories
  • Changes in caste system
  • 1950 unlawful to mistreat outcastes

13
Why It Matters
  • Hinduism is followed by hundreds of millions of
    people
  • Began from a blending of cultures
  • Honors many gods and goddesses
  • Continues to combine different cultures
  • Most now live in Present-day India and Pakistan
  • Has influenced the arts, science and society
  • Became the starting point of another world
    religions

14
Main Ideas
  • Hinduism is practiced in many different ways. It
    is one of the worlds oldest religions and has
    nearly 800 million followers today.
  • Aryan newcomers to the Indian subcontinents
    introduced sacred songs written in the Vedas.
    They became the foundation of Hinduism.
  • The Vedas supported a way of dividing society
    into four major classes of people. These four
    classes developed into the caste system.

15
Main Ideas (cont.)
  • An important theme in Hinduism is reincarnation.
    This is the idea that people live in a constant
    circle of birth, death and rebirth.
  • By following the dharma, or instructions, of the
    case, Hindus believe that people can break free
    of the cycle of reincarnation.

16
Think About It
  • What is dharma? Is it the same for all Hindus?
  • Why was it important for Hindus to do the duties
    expected of their caste?
  • FOCUS. What are the Vedas? What role did they
    play in the shaping of Indian culture?
  • THINKING SKILL Make hree generalizations about
    what can happen when different cultures come into
    contact. Base your generalizations about what
    you have learned about each of the ancient
    river-valley civilizations.
  • WRITING Suppose you are interviewing a Hindu
    for a newspaper article. On a sheet of paper,
    write a list of question you would ask.

17
Indian Dance
  • Dance given to people from the gods, goddesses
  • Important part of Inadian life
  • Purpose
  • Story without words
  • Created for own sake
  • Natya means both dance and drama and both told
    stories of Hindu gods and heroes
  • Skills
  • Great skills required to perform these dances
  • Rules taught by Biharata a teacher who lived 1500
    years ago.
  • He even told dancers how to move their eyelashes.
  • Todays dance the same of 1000 years ago
  • Mudras- hand gestures often represent animals,
    plants or feelings

18
Hindu Terms
  • Hindu Terms
  • Atman The real self, the eternal life principle.
  • Brama The creator god
  • Brahman Ultimate Reality
  • Brahmin A member of the priestly caste, the
    highest class.
  • Dharma The teachings of virtue and principle
  • Karma The culminating value of all of one's life
    actions, good and bad, which together determine
    one's next rebirth and death.
  • Mahabharta One of the national epics of India.
  • Maya The power that produces the phenomena of
    physical existence.
  • Moksha The term for liberation from the bondage
    of finite existence.
  • Puranas Part of the Hindu scriptures consisting
    of myths and legends mixed with historical
    events.
  • Samsara The rebirth of souls passing on from one
    existence to another until release can be
    achieved, reincarnation.
  • Upanishads Part of the Hindu sacred texts
    containing treatises on the nature of ultimate
    reality and the way to achieve union with the
    absolute.
  • Veda The oldest of the Hindu scriptures,
    consisting of four collections of sacred
    writings.
  • Yoga The Hindu path of union with the divine. Any
    sort of exercise (physical, mental or spiritual)
    which promotes one's journey to union with
    Brahma.
  • References
  • McDowell, Josh and Don Stewart, Handbook of
    Today's Religions. Nashville Thomas Nelson
    Publishers, 1983. Twelfth printing, June 1992.
  • Written by Sara Wenner, 2001
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