Kirtan | Lit. ‘singing the praises of God’, usually in a devotional gathering |
Kshatriya | warrior caste. |
Kucha | Informal, rough |
Kufr | Infidelity, disbelief. |
Kumari | Sanskrit for ‘virgin’. Today the word often refers to |
Kumkum | A red powder (vermilion) emblematic of the sexual power of goddesses, given to women at temples and during festivals. |
Lathi | A bamboo staff, normally used by police and |
Lingam | The phallic symbol associated with Lord Shiva in his role as Divine Creator. |
Lota | A small copper water pot used for ablutions. |
Lungar | A free kitchen or distribution of food alms at a temple or during the religious festival. |
Lungi | A sarong-style loin-wrap; simplification of the |
Mahayana | Lit. ‘Great |
Mahasukha | The great bliss of the void. |
Mahotsav | Great festival. |
Malang | A wandering fakir, dervish or |
Mandala | A |
Mataji | A |
Math | A |
Maulana | A |
Maya | Illusion. |
Mazar | Lit. (in Arabic) ‘tomb or mausoleum’, but usually in practice the tomb of a saint, and hence a Sufi shrine. |
Mehndi | The application of henna patterns on the hands, usually at an Indian wedding. |
Mela | A gathering, meeting, festival or fair. |
Mihrab | A prayer niche indicating the direction of Mecca. |
Moksha | Enlightenment or spiritual liberation. |
Mudra | Symbolic or ritual gestures in Hinduism, Buddhism and |
Muni | A Jain monk or nun. |
Murid | A disciple. |
Murti | An |
Naan | Bread cooked in a tandoor. |
Naga Sadhus | A |
Nagashwaram | An |
Namaz | Muslim prayers, traditionally offered five times a day. |
Namaskar | Hindu words of greeting (lit. ‘I bow to thee’). |
Nath Yogis | A sect of ash-smeared Shaivite mystics who invented hatha yoga in the twelfth century, and who claimed that their exercises and breathing techniques gave them great supernatural powers. |
Navras | The nine essences of classical Hindu aesthetics. |
Nirvana | Enlightenment, state of spiritual revelation. |
Oran | A protected sacred grove, dedicated to a deity in Rajasthan. |
Paan | An Indian delicacy and digestive. It consists of a folded leaf containing (among other ingredients) betel nut, a mild stimulant. |
Padmasana | The Lotus position. |
Panjthan | The Five Sacred Personalities: the Prophet Muhammad, Hazrat Ali, Hazrat Fatima, Hasan and Husain. |
Paramatma | The Supreme soul, or absolute |
Parikrama | A pilgrimage circuit. |
Pashto | The language of the Pashtun people of the North-West Frontier of Pakistan and southern Afghanistan. |
Phad | A long narrative textile-painting, which serves both as an illustration of the highlights of |
Pir | A |
Prasad | The portion of consecrated offering – usually food or small white sweets – returned to the worshipper at a Hindu temple. |
Puja | A |
Pukka | A |
Pukur | A |
Pullao | Rice. |
Pundit | Brahmin (lit. ‘a learned man’). |
Purohit | A |
Rakhi | A band worn around the wrist as a sign of sisterhood, solidarity or protection. |
Rasa | Lit. |
Ravanhatta | A Rajasthani zither or spike fiddle with eighteen strings and no frets. |
Rinpoche | An honorific used for senior monks in Tibetan Buddhism. It means literally ‘precious one’. |
Qalander | A Sufi mendicant of Holy fool. |
Qawwal | A singer of |
Qawwali | Rousing poems and hymns sung at Sufi shrines. |
Rakhi | A thread tied around the wrist, usually by brothers and sisters as a symbol of sisterly or fraternal love and protection, especially on the festival of |
Rangoli | Decoration using coloured sand, paint or salt, usually on floors outside houses. |
Rani | Queen |
Rath | A chariot, esp. in Hindu temple festivals. |
Rishi | A poet-sage and scribe-ascetic through whom the ancient |
Roti | Bread. |
Rudraksh | A large evergreen broad-leaved tree whose hard, dried seed is traditionally used for prayer beads or rosaries in Hinduism, often on strings of 108 beads. |
Sadhu | A Hindu holy man. |
Sadhana | A spiritual, ritual or Tantric practice or discipline. |
Sahajiya | A spontaneous or natural form of Indian. spirituality. |
Salwar-kameez | A |
Samadhi | Detachment from the body, through fasting or concentrated prayer. For Jains the world has a more specific meaning of gathering to pray around a monk or nun who is undergoing |
Samsara | The illusory physical world and its cycle of rebirths. The word is derived from the Sanskrit for |
Sallekhana | The final renunciation for a Jain: the gradual, voluntary, intentional and ritualised giving up of all food and sustenance, until the monk or nun finally dies of starvation. Jains do not regard |
Sangha | A |
Sanyasi | A Hindu wanderer or ascetic. |
Sati | The old Hindu practice of widow burning, now illegal (lit. ‘a good woman’). |
Saz | A lute-like stringed instrument popular in the Middle East and Afghanistan. |
Shaheed | A Muslim martyr. |
Shakti | The personification of the creative power and energy of the divine feminine. |
Shakta | The denomination of Hinduism that concentrates on the worship |
Shamiana | An Indian marquee, or the screen formed around the perimeter of a tented area. |
Shastra | An ancient Hindu and Buddhist treatise or text; the word in Sanskrit means ‘rules’. |
Shenai | A North Indian wind instrument of the oboe family. |
Shirk | Heresy, polytheism or idolatry. |
Siddi | The Afro-Indians who settled on the coast of Sindh and Gujarat and usually engaged in fishing and coastal trading and sailing. |
Sishya | A disciple. |
Sindhoor | A red powder (vermilion) which is traditionally applied at the beginning of or completely along the parting-line of a woman’s hair. Similar to |
Sloka | A stanza in a Sanskrit poem. |
Sudra | The base of the caste pyramid, traditionally farmers, labourers and craftsmen. |
Svetambara | One of the two great sects of the Jain faith. The Sventambaran Jain monks do not go naked like the ‘Sky Clad’ Digambara Jains. |
Tabla | A pair of small Indian hand drums used as accompaniment in Hindustani music. |