Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Main Tenets of Hinduism


Hinduism is the world's oldest living religion. Supposedly, it was brought to the Indian Subcontinent by Aryan invaders.  Perhaps it is even older than that, perhaps it started in the Harappan Civilization.  Either way, there is no single founder and the religion is between 5,000 -10,000 years old!




Even though there are may gods and goddesses associated with Hinduism, it is a monotheistic religion.  Confusing, right?  So, how is that so?  Hinduism is considered a monotheistic religion because all of these different gods are just ways to help people undertand the one higher power.  


Every religion has main texts.  Hinduism's main text is  The Vedas.  The Vedas are split into four books.  We will discuss the Upanishads, or the religious texts that explains the Hindu's moral code.

If you follow the moral code, you can be considered a Hindu.  That means that a Hindu can also be a Buddhist, a Christian, a Muslim or a Jew.  Being a Hindu does not exclude you from following other religions.
The four main parts of the moral code are: Dharma, Karma, Kama, and Moksha.


Dharma: These are the responsibilities you have.  Let's look at the responsibilities during different periods of your life:
  • Since you are too young to truly have responsibilities from birth through the age of 5, Dharma starts at age 5, with Balavstha, or "Child Time."  Your child time is from the age of 5-25.  Your primary responsibility: to gain knowledge.  This means that other issues should not get in the way of your studies.  Your focus should be school: elementary, middle and junior high, high school, college, graduate school.
  • Next comes "Married Life."  This is from age 25-50.  This is the time that you enjoy life. This enjoyment of life is called kama. You settle down, have a family, and just enjoy the gift that is life.
  • Next comes "Senior." This is from age 50-75.  At this point, you are a mentor.  You help others.  You also begin detachment from worldly possessions.  We often see people in our society mentoring and volunteering more as they get older.  They have knowledge and experience that is helpful to others.  Also, we all have objects, possessions, that we do not need and when we die, we can not take them with us.  So, at this point in life, we should give them to those who can make use of them. 
  • The last stage of life is Sanyasi, or "Hermit."  This is from the age of 75 - death.  At this point a person might choose to leave home to meditate.  This is when they would focus on their mind on the higher being.  This intense single-mindedness would keep their mind from focusing on bodily needs, such as hunger, thirst, cold, etc.  Eventually, the person would perish in this stage.  Most Hindus do not fulfill this last stage of dharma. 

Dharma also includes the responsibilities to your chosen profession. The police have the duty to protect and defend the people.  Doctors have the duty to treat their patients. Teachers have the duty to teach their students.  Soldiers have the duty to protect their country.  We all have duties and so we all have a dharma.  When we fulfill our duties, society runs so much more smoothly!


Sorry, Dogbert.  It doesn't work that way. 
Karma:  These are our actions.  
We have all heard of karma.  Simply put, it states that all actions have a reaction.  These consequences may be good or they may be bad.  Karma reminds you to be mindful in the things that you do.   Sometimes children do something and when asked why they did it, the response is: "I don't know."  If you do not know why you are doing something, then you should just to not do it.  Karma reminds us to always ask: "What are the consequences of my actions?" 


Kama: The pleasure of living (within the limits of Dharma and Karma)
Life is a gift.  We should enjoy it.  But Kama does not allow us to just do whatever we want.  It doesn't say that we can start daydreaming in class or stay up all night watching movies.  What is the consequence of daydreaming?  Perhaps it is that we don't know what an assignment is. That's Karma! And,  if our focus is gaining knowledge, then we are not following Dharma. What is the consequence of staying up all night watching movies?  Perhaps it is that we miss school and miss out on learning and socializing with our friends. This violates Dharma and produces negative Karma.

Moksha: Salvation or Spiritual Liberation
In spiritual liberation, once you die, your spirit becomes part of the higher power.  This is the end goal.  There are three ways that one may reach spiritual Moksha:

A perfect example of what not to do!
  • Knowledge:  You can gain salvation through disciplined study of the Vedas, ethical training and meditation.  But historically, those in India have been illiterate, and so this path has not been available to the majority of Hindus. 
  • Good deeds: You can gain salvation through the selfless performance of Dharma.  This means that you are fulfilling your duties because it is the right thing to do, and not for any reward.  In order to gain spiritual liberation through good deeds, you must be unattached to the outcome.  So, if I was to donate my time and money to curing cancer, that would be a good deed.  But, if I am doing it partially because people will see my name on a donor's list and I want people to know that I am donating my time and money to the cause, then this is self serving.  In this instance, I am attached to the outcome and it doesn't truly count as a good deed.
  • Devotion: complete surrender to the higher power.  This is the goal of the Hermit stage of life.  It is the most difficult to obtain.  

Take a look at the map below: 

Our symbol for Buddhism is a hot pink.  Very little of the map is actually this color.  This means that there are few places in the world where the majority of people practice Hinduism.  But, in India, most people are Hindus.

Since India is the 2nd most populous country in the world,
 Hinduism is still the 3rd largest religion,
 with 950 million followers!




Sources:
A very special thanks to Veejay Parashar.    After being told by her son that the text had it all wrong, she graciously answered my questions and set me straight on the main tenets of Hinduism.  It is from that conversation (and a little further research) that I teach from. 
http://www.religioustolerance.org/hinduism.htm
http://www.sanskrit.org/www/Hindu%20Primer/dharma.html


Pictures:
http://www.p12.nysed.gov/ciai/socst/grade3/geoimages/Image12.gif
http://wallpapers-junction.com/Images/Hindu_Gods.jpg
http://whmscomputerlab.wikispaces.com/file/view/vedas.jpg/126846943/vedas.jpg
http://dadsprimalscream.files.wordpress.com/2011/09/karma-large-msg-11401312842-2.jpg
http://school.discoveryeducation.com/clipart/clip/student1.html
http://www.co.campbell.va.us/depts/yacs/PublishingImages/sc_img1.jpg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/33/Bundeswehr_G36.jpg/250px-Bundeswehr_G36.jpg
http://www.learnnc.org/lp/media/collections/freeman/thai_ramayana/600/thai_rama_039.jpg
http://www.cartoonstock.com/newscartoons/cartoonists/pfi/lowres/pfin130l.jpg

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Translating Hieroglyphs

Battle of the Pyramids by Antoine-Jean Gros
For centuries all that was known about Egypt was what the Greeks and Romans had to say about them.  It was obvious, from the pyramids, that they had been a great civilization, but without being able to read their writing, the world knew little of them. 

In 1798, Napoleon Bonaparte's men landed in Egypt.  The military goal of the Egyptian campaign was to gain French domination in the east by capturing Egypt and Syria and disrupt England's trade routes.

The hall of the Institute of Egypt in Cairo, Egypt
But Napoleon did not view himself only as a military genius.  He saw himself as a scientist. Along with nearly 400 ships of soldiers, he also brought over 150 scientists. These scientists formed The Institute of Egypt.

Housed in several palaces in Cairo, they studied matters of engineering, geology, botany, zoology, and more.  It was made clear to all French soldiers that their eyes should be out for any curiosities of ancient Egypt.


A great discovery was made while the French were digging in, protecting their weakening hold on Egypt from attack by the British, the Ottomans, and the Egyptian Mamluk cavalry.


It was in Rosetta, Egypt that while a group of soldiers, under the command of Major Francois-Xavier Bouchard, were demolishing the city wall.  Built into the wall was a black stone.  Bouchard recognized that this stone might make it possible to decipher hieroglyphs.  And so the stone was carefully dug out and sent to the Institute.




With the black stone was in the scientists hands, it was immediately known that it was the most important object in their possession.  The scholars saw, like Bouchard, that the stone was bilingual.  At the top were hieroglyphs.  In the middle was an unknown language and at the bottom was Greek.

At first it had seemed a simple matter.  The stone was trilingual.  There were three languages on the stone that said the exact same thing.  It would stand to reason that if one of the languages  could be read, then so could the other two.  And as luck would have it, the third language on the stone was Greek.  And, of course, all of the scientists at the Institute of Egypt could read Greek.  But for some reason, they still could not read the hieroglyphs

The men at the Institute went to the task of making a print of what came to be known as the Rosetta Stone.  Using a few different methods, the stone was essentially used as a writing block.  In this way, copies of the stone were sent back to France and on to other countries rather quickly.  By the time that engravings of the Rosetta Stone were published in the Description de l'Egypte in 1822 (the books that were published of the findings of the Institute of Egypt), scholars had already spent years using the Rosetta Stone to try translate hieroglphyics.


A selection from Champollion's notebook
Within this time, the middle and at first unknown language was deciphered.  It was demotic, a more modern form of hieroglyphs. But scholars continued to be bogged down in the business of trying to translate hieroglyphs.

A young Frenchman, Jean-Francois Champollion, had been feverishly working to translate the lost language.  He worked with the engraving of the Rosetta Stone and well as rubbings of other sets of hieroglyphs.  He also collected cartouche, which were known to contain the names of Egypt's kings and queens.

In 1822, he discovered that Ptolemy's name appeared 5 times in the Greek section and that there were also 5 identical cartouche in the section of hieroglyphs.

He recognized five of the symbols in another cartouche.  Filling in the signs he recognized and leaving space s for unknown hieroglpohs, the new cartouche read:


- L E O P - T - -

This obviously was the Egyptian queen Cleopatra.  Champollion filled in the spaces.



(Ancient Egyptian had no C)



Had this been all there was to deciphering hieroglyphs, then the job would have been accomplished years earlier, but Champollion was to discover that not only did hieroglyphs include an alphabet of 24 letters, but also had hundreds of other symbols.  For hieroglyphs also includes a syllabary (symbols for syllables) and pictographs (symbols for whole words).

In 1822, 23 years after the Rosetta Stone was plucked from a city wall, the world could read about the world from the view of the ancient Egyptians.  And in 1824, after publishing a full explanation for deciphering hieroglyphs, Champollion visited the actual Rosetta Stone, which had been taken by the British at the end of the French Campaign in 1802.  Champollion had worked entirely from rubbings.





What two things were needed to translate hieroglyphs? 
1. The Rosetta Stone!
2. Cartouche 

(and the ingenuity of someone like Jean Francois Champollion!)


Cool Websites:
http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/aes/t/the_rosetta_stone.aspx
http://www.penn.museum/sites/egypt/writing.shtml


Sources:
http://www.lindahall.org/events_exhib/exhibit/exhibits/napoleon/
http://www.pbs.org/empires/napoleon/n_war/campaign/page_3.html
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/99/Baron_Antoine-Jean_Gros-Battle_Pyramids_1810.jpg/300px-Baron_Antoine-Jean_Gros-Battle_Pyramids_1810.jpg
http://www.bmj.com/content/327/7429/1461/F3.large.jpg
http://cojs.org/cojswiki/images/b/b9/Ptol_Mys.jpg
http://liology.files.wordpress.com/2010/01/rosetta-stone.jpeg
http://www.nndb.com/people/863/000104551/champollion-1-sized.jpg
http://images.wikia.com/deadliestfiction/images/2/20/Mamluk.jpg
http://webhost.bridgew.edu/moore/champollion%20book.jpg
http://library.thinkquest.org/10005/media/photos/RosettaStone.gif
http://www.touregypt.net/images/touregypt/photo1.jpg