Black Rose Spiritual Center, Inc :  Belief Systems
India is the home of the world's oldest major religious heritage,
Hinduism. In its oldest forms, Hinduism is prehistoric in origin, but has
undergone numerous developments, attempted reforms, and  changes due
to varying local pressures. The history of Hinduism  begins with the
Indo European Invasion of India in waves dating to 5000 B.C. During
this period the Rig Veda, the oldest of India's sacred books, was written.
The faith was a vigorous,  worldly religion with a very positive view of
the afterlife.

The second stage of Hindu history centers on the production of the
Upanishads, the major collection of Hindu religious writings,  and the
rise of the ruling Brahman class. During this period, beginning about
1000 B.C., a change from the positive attitudes of the Vedic period to a
generally pessimistic view of life occurred, and the ideas of karma and
reincarnation came to the fore. Reincarnation, the concept that a person
may go through a succession of earthly lives, in its more extreme forms,
teaches that a soul may return as an animal or even a plant. The
rationale for reincarnation is karma, the principle of retribution, a law of
justice which brings upon individuals the inevitable consequences of
their actions.

Escape from karma and the wheel of reincarnation is by absorption into
Brahma, the world soul. This absorption is most frequently accomplished
by practicing yoga, a discipline designed to lead first to self integration
and then integration with Brahma.

There are four main groups of yoga disciplines -- bhakti, jnana, karma,
and raja. (What is commonly taught in the United States as yoga, hatha
exercises, is not technically yoga but exercises for body integration prior
to practicing yoga.) Bhakti yoga is the way to God through devotional
service. Jnana is the discipline of ideas and knowledge. Karma is work,
and raja or royal yoga approaches Brahma through meditative exercises.
Indian Heritage Groups
The types of yoga are to accommodate the different types of individuals emotional, scholarly, active, and
mystical. Besides the four main types, there are numerous techniques such as japa yoga which involves
the repetition of one or more words (termed "mantrum") over and over again. Other yogas go under the
names prana, kriya, siddha, and integral

During the Brahmic period, the several major schools of Hinduism, each related to different aspects of
Brahma (deities), emerged. The Vaishnavas worship Krishna as the primary aspect of Brahma. As a
whole they follow Patanjali, the ancient teacher of yoga. A third group follow Shakti, Siva's female
consort, often called "kundalini."

The Brahmic era was disrupted by the conquest of India by Great Britain. An initial defensive reaction
to British rule and Christian missions was followed by the creative Hindu Renaissance, the third stage of
Hindu development. Led by a number of outstanding leaders such as Ram Mohan Roy and Sri
Ramakrishna, reformed Hindu movements emerged. Almost all American Hindu groups represent either
older groups which have been restructured by the Renaissance or new groups produced by it.

The first Hindu teacher in the United States, P. C. Mozoomdar, arrived in 1882, but Hinduism's real
history in America dates to 1893 and the appearance of several spokespersons at the World's Parliament
of Religions in Chicago. Swami Vivekananda, a disciple of Ramakrishna who spoke at the Parliament,
became a nationally known figure because of his oratorical ability and vibrant personality. After the
Parliament he established the Vedanta Society, America's first Hindu group. Over the next decades,
several additional Hindu teachers came to the United States, most notably Swami Yogananda, who
founded the Self Realization Society.  Only after World War II, however, did Hinduism begin to make a
major impact. The growth of modern Hinduism was undergirded by the increased study of comparative
religion in colleges and universities, the cross-fertilization occasioned by American visitors to India, and
(after 1965) the increasing number of gurus (i.e., teachers) who migrated and settled in America. It
greatest period of growth in the United States has come as a direct result of the rescission of the Oriental
Exclusion Act with a new immigration quota bill in 1965.

The five groups included in this section are among some 75 Indian Heritage bodies in the United States.
They are among the group which have been most successful in their recruitment and conversion of non
Asian Americans to Hinduism. It is to be expected, as a result of the significant increased quotas on
immigration from Asia passed by Congress in November 1990, that Hinduism will continue to increase
significantly through the 1990s.

[Editor's note: There has been continuing controversy regarding the practice of Transcendental
Meditation (TM), a practice brought to the West by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Asserting that TM is not a
religion, the World Plan Executive Council has accepted large grants to teach TM in the public schools
and armed forces.  A group claiming that transcendental meditation is in fact a religion arose to challenge
the Council's status. They contend that because of the historical use of japa yoga, the initiation ceremony
which includes prayers to Vishnu and Siva, and the theology implicit in the "Science of Creative
Intelligence," TM is in fact a religion and the World Plan Executive Council a religious body. Resolving
this controversy, including related court actions, has had a marked impact on TM.]
Please click on the links below to
learn more about the various
Indian Heritage belief groups
listed.  The introduction gives a
basic history of the belief systems.  
Please note that we have not
listed the more well known belief
systems.  When looking at Indian
Heritage Belief systems one must
consider the literally hundreds of
belief systems or sects.  Here we
present some of the groups whom
are more active in the United
States  The wider held belief
systems will be added at a later
time.  We opted to focus on the
more esoteric belief systems at this
time.
INDIAN HERITAGE
GROUPS:
Introduction  
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Integral Yoga International
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International Society for
Krishna Consciousness
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Sri Chinmoy Centres
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Syda Yoga Dham
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World Plan Executive
Council
2007 Black Rose Spiritual Center, Inc.      1-800-496-3114