The Hindus (119 page)

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Authors: Wendy Doniger

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POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS
 
ABVP: Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (All-India Students’ Council)
BJP: Bharatiya Janata Party (Peoples’ Party of India)
RSS: Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (National Volunteers’ Organization)
VHP: Vishwa Hindu Parishad (World Hindu Council)
GLOSSARY OF TERMS IN INDIAN LANGUAGES AND NAMES OF KEY FIGURES
Abhinavagupta:
philosopher of Kashmir Shaivism, 975-1025 CE
Aditi:
“Infinity,” name of a Vedic goddess of creation, mother of the Adityas, solar gods
Adivasis :
“Original inhabitants,” indigenous inhabitants of India, tribal peoples
Advaita:
nondualism, a philosophical school, propounded by Shankara
Agastya:
a mythical sage said to have brought Sanskrit south to the Tamil land and also established Tamil there
Agni:
Vedic god of fire (
ignis
)
agrahara:
“taking the field,” a grant of temple land to Brahmins
ahimsa:
nonviolence, literally “a lack of the desire to harm”
akam:
word used in Tamil poetry for the interior world, the world of love
Akbar:
Mughal emperor, 1556-1605, noted for his religious pluralism
Alvars :
Tamil Vaishnava saints
Amba:
“Mother,” name of a woman in the
Mahabharata
who was reborn as a man; also the name of a goddess
Ambalika:
“Dear Little Mother,” name of the mother of Pandu in the
Mahabharata
Ambika:
“Little Mother,” name of the mother of Dhritarashtra in the
Mahabharata
apad-dharma:
the permissive religious law that prevails in time of emergency
Apala:
a woman who pressed soma in her mouth for the god Indra in the
Rig Veda
Appar:
one of the first three Tamil Nayanmar saints, sixth to eighth century
Apsarases :
“Gliding in the Waters,” celestial nymphs and courtesans
Arjuna:
one of the five sons of Pandu in the
Mahabharata
, fathered by the god Indra
Artha-shastra:
textbook of political science
Arya Samaj:
a religious movement founded by Dayananda Sarasvati in Bengal in 1875
Aryas :
“nobles,” name by which the Vedic people referred to themselves
Ashoka:
Mauryan emperor, 265-232 BCE, author of the first surviving writing in India, edicts in stone
ashrama:
a hermitage; also a stage or way of life (there are four: chaste student, householder, forest dweller, renouncer)
Ashvaghosha:
a first century CE poet, author of a life of the Buddha
Ashvins :
“Horsemen,” twin half horse gods, sons of Saranyu and the sun
Asuras :
antigods, enemies of the gods in heaven; originally, the older gods
Atharva Veda:
the fourth Veda, largely devoted to magic spells
atman:
the self, the individual soul, identical with the world soul (atman or
brahman
)
Aurangzeb :
a Mughal emperor, 1658-1707 CE, noted for his chauvinism
avatar:
a “descent” of a god, particularly an incarnation of the god Vishnu
Avesta:
the sacred text of the ancient Iranians
Ayur-veda:
the Veda of long life, the science of medicine
Babur:
the first Mughal emperor, 1483-1530
Backward Castes:
one of many names for the lowest and most oppressed castes
Bali:
a demon undone by his generosity to the god Vishnu, who had become incarnate as a dwarf
Bana:
a poet in the court of Harsha, author of a biography of Harsha
banyan:
a sacred tree that puts down multiple roots
Basava:
a Brahmin who founded the Virashaiva movement, c. 1106-1167 CE
Bhagavad Gita:
a philosophical text, spoken by the god Krishna to the prince Arjuna, in the
Mahabharata
Bhagavan:
a name of god, Vishnu or Shiva
Bhagavata:
a worshiper of the gods Vishnu or Shiva
Bhagiratha:
a sage who brought the Ganges down to earth from the Milky Way
bhakta:
devotee of a god
bhakti:
passionate devotion to a god who returns that love
Bharata:
younger brother of Rama; also the name of the son of Shakuntala and Dushyanta and an ancient name of India
Bharata-varsha:
the land of India
Bhil, Bhilla:
name of a tribal people
Bhima:
one of the five sons of Pandu in the
Mahabharata
, fathered by the god Vayu, the wind
Bhishma:
celibate son of Satyavati in the
Mahabharata
Bhrigu:
a powerful sage
Brahma:
a god, responsible for the task of creation
brahman:
the divine substance of the universe
Brahmanas :
texts, from c. 800 to 600 BCE, explaining the Vedic rituals
Brahmin:
the highest of the four classes, the class from which Vedic priests must come
Brahmo Samaj:
a reform movement founded by Rammohun Roy in 1828
bride-price:
a reverse dowry, paid by the groom to the family of the bride
Buddhification:
casting a non-Buddhist as a Buddhist
Campantar:
one of the first three Tamil Nayanmar saints, sixth to eighth century
Cankam:
(from Sanskrit
sangham
): early Tamil literary assembly
Chaitanya:
Bengali saint, 1486-1533 CE
Chamars :
a Dalit caste, leatherworkers
Chandalas :
a Dalit caste, workers in cremation grounds
Chandidas :
a fourteenth-century CE Bengali poet
Chandika:
“The Fierce,” a name of the Goddess
Chandra Gupta I :
founder of the Gupta Empire in 324 CE
Chandragupta Maurya:
founder of the Mauryan Empire in 324 BCE
Charaka:
author of a medical textbook
Charioteers (Sutas):
a caste of charioteers and bards
Charvakas :
Materialists, regarded as the paradigmatic heretics; also called Lokayatas
Cheras :
an ancient South Indian kingdom
Cholas :
an ancient South Indian kingdom
Clive, Robert:
governor of Bengal from 1755-1760 ; chancellor from 1765
Cuntarar:
one of the first three Tamil Nayanmar saints, sixth to eighth century
Dadhyanch:
a Vedic sage whose head was replaced with a horse head
Daksha:
a Vedic patriarch, father of Sati, who foolishly refused to invite the god Shiva to his sacrifice
Dalit:
preferred contemporary word, derived from the Marathi/Hindi word for “oppressed,” for the lowest castes, formerly known as Untouchables
Dalitification:
the process by which castes claim to be Dalits; the reverse of Sanskritization
darshan:
“seeing,” the exchange of powerful gazes between god and worshiper, or king and subject
Dasa:
“slave,” the word that the Vedic Aryas applied to their enemies
Dasyu:
another word for “slave”
Deshification:
the process by which the Sanskritic tradition absorbs local traditions
Devaki:
royal mother of Krishna
dhamma:
Pali for the Sanskrit term dharma; Buddhist law, and Ashokan law
dharma:
religious law, justice, righteousness.
See also sadharana, sanatana
dog cooker
shva-paka:
ancient term of opprobrium for Dalit castes
Draupadi:
wife of the five Pandava brothers, heroine of the
Mahabharata,
later a goddess
Dravida:
Sanskrit word for South India
Dravidian:
a language group from South India that includes Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, and Malayalam
Drona:
the Pandavas’ tutor in martial arts in the
Mahabharata
Drupada:
father of Draupadi in the
Mahabharata
dualism:
the philosophical view that god and the universe, including the worshiper, are of two different substances
Durga:
“Hard to Get [to],” a goddess
Dvaita:
dualism, a philosophical school, whose most famous proponent was Madhva
Dvapara Yuga:
“The Age of the Deuce,” the third of the degenerating ages
Dyer, Major Reginald:
British officer who gave the command for the massacre at Amritsar
Ekalavya:
tribal (Nishada) prince who cut off his thumb at the request of Arjuna and Drona, in the
Mahabharata
Ellamma:
South Indian goddess with the body of a Brahmin woman and the head of a Dalit woman
Fs, the five:
elements of Tantric ritual (fish, flesh, fermented grapes, frumentum, and fornication),
see also
Ms, the five
Faxian:
Chinese visitor to India in 402 CE
Gandhari:
wife of Dhritarashtra, mother of Duryodhana and his brothers, the enemies of the Pandavas, in the
Mahabharata
Gandharvas :
demigods, musicians, associated with fertility and horses; consorts of the Apsarases
Ganga:
the Ganges River
Gargi:
a feisty woman who interrogates sages in the Upanishads
Garuda:
a mythical eagle, the mount of the god Vishnu
Gayatri:
name of a meter; of a particularly holy verse in the
Rig Veda;
and of a goddess
Ghasidas :
a Chamar who founded a branch of the Satnamis
Gita:
short name of the
Bhagavad Gita
Gonds :
a tribal people
Gondwana:
a mythical land thought to have been submerged long, long ago
Gugga
(also spelled
Guga
): a folk god, said to have been a historical figure; famous for his flying black mare
guna:
“quality,” term for the three strands of matter in Sankhya philosophy
Guru Nanak:
founder of Sikhism, 1469-1539 CE
Hanuman:
the monkey ally of Rama in the
Ramayana
Harappa:
ancient city in the Indus Valley, c. 2500 BCE
Harijan:
“People of God” (Hari, Vishnu), Gandhi’s name for the Dalits
Indra:
Veda king of the gods, god of rain, fertility, and war
Indrani:
wife of the Vedic god Indra
itihasa:
“that’s what happened,” history
Jabali:
a Brahmin who argues for atheism in the
Ramayana
Jagannatha:
“Lord of the Universe,” the name of a form of Vishnu, especially in a temple in Puri, Orissa
Jainas :
followers of the religion founded by the Jina, in the fifth century BCE
Jambu-dvipa:
“the plum tree continent,” the ancient name for the subcontinent of India
Janaka:
a king of Videha, father of Sita
Janashruti:
a king in the Upanishads
Jara:
“old age”; also the name of a hunter who kills the incarnate god Krishna
jati:
“birth,” caste
Jina:
Vardhamana Mahavira, founder of Jainism
jizya:
tax levied by Muslim rulers on subjects who did not perform military service
Kabir:
a poet, c. 1398-1448 CE, whose teachings bridged Hinduism and Islam
Kaikeyi:
mother of Bharata in the
Ramayana
, who insisted that Rama be exiled
Kalamukhas :
“Death Heads,” a sect of antinomian Shaivas
Kali (goddess):
“Time” or “Doomsday,” goddess of sex and violence and much more
Kali Age (Yuga):
the fourth and worst of the ages; the present age
Kalidasa:
a Gupta poet, author of
Shakuntala
Kalinga:
the ancient name of Orissa
Kalki:
the final avatar of Vishnu, a horse-headed warrior who will kill the barbarians
Kama-sutra:
textbook of pleasure, composed by Vatsyayana, third century CE
Kamsa:
king who devoted his life to the attempt to kill Krishna
Kannappar:
Tamil saint who tore out his eyes for Shiva
Kanphata:
“Pierced-Ear,” name of a sect of yogis
Kapala-mochana:
“The Release of the Skull,” the shrine in Varanasi where the skull of Brahma fell from Shiva’s hand
Kapalikas :
“Skull Bearers,” a sect of Shaivas who imitate Shiva’s wandering with Brahma’s skull
karma:
action, or the fruits of action
Karna:
illegitimate son of Kunti, raised by low-caste Charioteers, in the
Mahabharata
kathenotheism:
F. Max Müller’s term for the worship of one supreme god at a time
Kaula:
“belonging to the family [
kula
],” name of a Tantric sect
Kausalya:
mother of Rama, in the
Ramayana
Kautilya:
author of the
Artha-shastra
kavya:
poetry
Khandoba:
Maharashtrian god associated with dogs
kliba:
a sexually challenged man
Krishna:
an incarnation of Vishnu, a hero of the
Mahabharata
who grew up among cowherds

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