Review
Flip side? No way! When you browse through Narayan's brilliant account of what he considers the non religious symbolism of Hindu religious practices, you end up admiring the practices all the more. He takes you expertly through the steps in the evolution of this vibrant way of life, telling you here how its own adherents and rebels modified it, and there how non-Hindu cultural threads too found themselves woven into its texture, without affecting its basic qualities. The impression gained is of a religion whose hoary past included its future and whose distant future will have to include its past. The philosophical enquiry of the Upanishadic era, the emotional interplay of the Bhakti cult with the telling of puranic stories, and the renewal of interest in the historic content of the religion in the minds of modern world citizens born into it seem to form a continuous web. You marvel at ancient minds which could build Darwinian evolution concepts into divine descent on earth.
You wonder at the ease with which good ideas from outside the religion too quickly got absorbed into the Hindu mosaic and became indistinguishable from the mosaic. You enjoy the retention of Hindu practices in Indian families converted to other religions, with no offence meant to either side. And Narayan conducts the entire tour through symbolisms, which speak more eloquently than religious texts can do. His work is definitely not religious. But then, Hinduism itself is just sanathana dharma, an ancient way of life flowing perennially but allowing dynamic inputs into it all the time.
A must read for every modern student of Hinduism. -- P.Desikan, Bangalore
About the Author
M.K.V. Narayan born in Chennai in 1933 had his schooling and engineering studies at Coimbatore, Poona and PGDBM at XLRI Jamshedpur. He had worked in executive positions at Jubbulpore, Bombay and Jamshedpur in Production/Industrial Engineering field. After retirement he lives with his son at Hyderabad, and visits his children in India and US. He had published many articles in technical journals and authored a book for executive training in "TATA STEEL". He has been publishing many articles on the Internet through Sulekha, Bharatwaves and Megadoot portals on socio-religious themes. He has deep interest in the sociological side of Hindu culture.