Hindu Spirituality: Vedas through Vedanta.
Knipe, David M.
This is the first of two collections of essays on Hinduism in the
twenty-five-volume World Spirituality series. Its companion, volume
seven, scheduled to appear in 1996, intends to cover the
"post-classical" period to the present. Professor Sivaraman
has organized this first survey into eight parts. The first three
include eight essays discussing the topic of spirituality in the Vedic,
epic and sramanic periods, the last period confined to a single essay on
Jainism. (Two other volumes in the series have been allotted to
Buddhism.) Then follows part four, devoted to Yoga and the grammarians.
Parts five and six discuss Vedanta in four essays, while part seven
includes essays on "Spirituality and human life," concerned
with nature and health (Ayurveda). The concluding part eight is a leap
from Caraka into the twentieth century to promote Ramana Maharsi, Sri
Candrasekharendra Sarasvati and Anandamayi Ma as
"spokespersons" for "the classical spirit" in the
contemporary world.
The general impression of this reviewer is that World Spirituality is
on the whole an excellent series but this is not the strongest
contribution thus far. Fully a third of the authors are retired, a fact
that may explain a frequent innocence regarding current issues in Hindu
studies and the critical indological advances of the past thirty years.
While several essays are innovative, well written, and engaging, some
are lackluster and desultory, as if to admit there is nothing new to be
said on ancient subjects, while others are frequently uncritical,
hagiographic, or sermonizing. When one compares this with the first of
two volumes on Buddhist Spirituality, the energy, crispness and even
tone of the latter, as well as authorial ease with current lines of
inquiry, are entirely evident. Although the target readership of Hindu
Spirituality is "the non-specialist" (p. 59, n. 2), some
essays are densely laden with terms (all Sanskrit, classical Tamil
spiritual traditions being unconsidered). Non-specialists beware: one
essay drops thirty Sanskrit technical terms in three pages and not a one
is adequately defined in context.
Editorial design has favored Indian textual scholars associated now
or previously with universities in India or Canada. No European or
American authority on Hinduism is included. Only two of the twenty
authors are female, one a practitioner of homeopathic medicine in Italy
and co-author of a discussion of the Caraka Samhita the other an author
of a hagiographic encomium of Anandamayi Ma (1896-1982) that would seem
properly to have been saved for the companion volume on post-classical
and modern Hinduism. Perhaps it is not an accident that scant
representation of women scholars is accompanied by a complete absence of
discussion of goddess traditions in ancient, classical, and early
medieval India. "Goddess" does not appear in the index and no
Hindu or Jaina goddess is listed by name - unless one counts Sita as
"ideal wife" and the anachronistic Anandamayi Ma. Laksmi is
mentioned in one line as a Vedantic intermediary deity in the scheme of
Madhva. The classic Devimahatmya is not among the scores of texts
mentioned. Hindu theism means maleness in this volume, as though the
spiritual ethos of the Vedic samhitas had gone unchallenged by
alternative religious expressions throughout the formative classical and
early medieval periods.
Not only maleness, but also oneness is at issue, since
"God" and "Self" appear with great frequency here,
not Indra, Soma, Prajapati or Rudra-Siva. The book's conceptual
scheme has all but limited "spirituality" to the life of the
mind, right knowledge, speculation, a few great philosophical texts
sufficing to represent the religious expressions of South Asia for the
two millennia represented here. The Atharvaveda, to take but one
example, is cited only for evidence of sophisticated speculations on
cosmogony to keep pace with the tenth mandala of the Rgveda, with not
even passing mention to the worlds of spirituality articulated in
domestic rituals, non-srauta sacrifices, death and regeneration,
sexuality and body symbolism, prayer, possessions, charms, spells,
sorcery and everything on the dark side of spiritual experience that is
so commanding in Hinduism past and present. Later on, bhakti receives
two pages, puja none. This book is short of representing the cultural
diversity of South Asia in the formative periods of Hinduism and long on
"acharya"-ized Hinduism, concluding with recent acaryas as
perpetuators of the Hindu "mainstream," i.e., Vedanta.
There is no space here for nineteen critiques, but several essays
struck this reviewer as noteworthy. Wayne Whillier's contribution
on the Vedic tradition has many useful remarks, particularly on ritual
debates (brahmodya). An expanded version could have served as part one
since the two preceding essays are inadequate. The first attempted to
discuss Vedic spirituality apart from sacrifice and the second provided
a list of sacrifices with no appreciation for schools, textual variants
or the Vedic worldview. K. R. Sundararajan's essay on the Ramayana
is one of the best available short introductions to the epic, engagingly
written and full of insights. Ravi Ravindra and Arvind Sharma provide
brief overviews of Yoga, the latter on buddhiyoga of the Gita, but there
is little to relate the phenomena of yoga to themes of the preceding
eight essays. Yoga dates "from a period prior to the ascendancy of
the Aryans in India" (Ravindra), a lone remark that may leave the
reader wondering. There is an excellent piece by Harold Coward on
Bhartrhari's sphota theory of language. Other portions of the book
are illumined by his perceptions of "how the grammatically correct
use of words could be understood as generating moral power, spiritual
well-being, and the dawning of the mystical vision."
The core of the book is patently Vedanta. Sankara (not in the index)
receives little attention, but articles on Ramanuja, Srikantha, and
Madhva are by S. S. Raghavachar, the editor, and K. T. Pandurangi,
respectively. The first looks for the sources of Visistadvaita in the
upanisads, brahmasutras and the Gita, then perhaps overstates the case
with an observation (p. 263): "The great epics . . . and the select
Puranas function as elucidations, elaborations, and embellishments of
this weighty direction of spiritual advancement." The editor
presents Siva Vigistadvaita, Brahman (Siva) as non-dual, and the Madhva
review includes, briefly, the sole discussion of upasana, as well as
comments on bhakti supplementing those of Pandurangi's essay. Klaus
Klostermaier has a thoughtful piece on Samkhyan views of nature,
vis-a-vis Advaitin disinterest in the subject, and he concludes with
some comparative remarks on Western science.
The book has twenty-six photos, including four good ones for the
Jainism essay, but virtually all needed editorial control. For example,
the non-specialist reader may wonder about an unexplained second-century
sculptured "Scene of Worship," or photos of sculptures of
Brahman. i, Ganesa, Narasimha, "Ekmukhalinga," "Sesasaye
Visnu (sic)," and "Dakshinamurti (sic)" that one always
thought belonged to "Hindu spirituality" but are nowhere
referred to in the book. One photo included amid discussions of the
Vedas is labeled "Teaching the Holy Scriptures" and shows
teacher and pupil with their fingers on a written text, clearly not
Vedic instruction. Although puja is nowhere discussed -
"ritual" being confined to the early Vedic age - one photo is
an interesting one of "Lady offering worship to the Pipal Tree."
Finally, it should be noted in fairness to sruti that the translation
of Rgveda 10.129, the famous Nasadiyasukta that quite appropriately
begins this book, has curiously borrowed, without attribution, ten of
the sixteen verses of the Purusasukta, Rgveda 10.90.
DAVID M. KNIPE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN