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April 1983
The New Frontier
Hinduism in America; After Decades of Pioneering, 400,000 Hindus Are Settling Down on U.S. Soil
Suburban America 1983: stylish
houses, sprawling shopping malls and modernistic churches. Not the place
to expect to run into a Hindu temple gopuram's upsweeping lines and folds.
But like a well-tooled buckle on the Southern U.S.'s "Sun Belt" the Sri
Meenakshi Temple is stopping traffic in Pearland, a suburb outside
Houston. In downtown Houston's skyscrapers, Asian Indian Hindus go to
their corporate, law and medical offices for a typical day's work. Not too
far away, on the arid Southwestern plains, one can see the temple's walls
glow red in a Texas sunset. Setting aside his business reports while
gazing out the window, Mr. Raj Devamurthy, an economic advisor,
reminisces: "That, to me, is Hinduism in America. A temple you would
normally see on the Ganges standing on the red earth of Texas. Like a
dream!" It is a part of the American dream. That picture succinctly
captures the New Saivite World's close-up investigation of Hinduism in
America - the seeming "dichotomy between living in the world's richest
nation and practicing the world's richest religion," as one American-born
swami put it. U.S. Hinduism is close to 400,000 Indo-American Hindus
living, working, raising families and, like all American, looking to
improve the quality of their lives. The number one priority of that quest
is now improving their religious lives.
"Now when my American
friends ask about my religion...I can hold up my head and say, I am a
Hindus!" - Ami Heda, a 13-year old Hindu wrote after her experiences at
Sri Rajarajeshwari Peetham's Hindu Heritage Summer Camp. The lack of
religious background Hindu kids born in America and their natural
proclivity to be mainstream American is a sticky if not thorny issue. To
tackle it and other similar challenges, the U.S. Hindu community is
unleashing some of its collective power. Over a dozen full-scale temples
dot the American landscape with more on the way. Hindu educational
programs and facilities are coming out of the idea stage into textbooks
and concrete reality.
Hindu temples are being planned or erected in
major population centers throughout America. The future looks bright as
leaders ponder the implementation of high quality schools for Hindu
American children and a joint national council or federation of autonomous
temple societies. One fascinating trend is America's role change from an
importer to an exporter of Hindu wisdom, religious leaders and facility
blueprints - an exchange which would have been almost inconceivable ten
years ago. Hindus in America, like the pioneers of other faiths who
migrated here long ago, are carving out a new frontier for themselves on
the vast US landscape. But pioneering isn't easy. It's the American spirit
come to life - tough, challenging, day-to-day work, demanding stamina and
drive. "It really takes blood, sweat and tears to successfully build
something which has no precedent, like our Hindu temples. We are the first
wave. Later we might see some glory in that. But now it's hard work," said
one West Coast Hindu.
SWAMI VIEKANANDA'S HISTORIC VISIT
It
has been hard work from the start. Hinduism and America shook hands about
90 years ago. Discounting the arrival of a handful of Indians in the U.S.
in the 1800's, Hinduism's first real wave crashed on American shores in
1893 when the dynamic Swami Vivekananda electrified a Parliament of
Religions audience in Chicago with the high-altitude flights of Vedanta.
Swamiji imported the rudiments of Hinduism, and more than any other person
met head-on the initial Christian resistance to what was considered an
assault on their Protestant promised land.
Crisscrossing America on
the lecture tour circuit, Swamiji once wrote: "Here in America are no
ashramas. Would there was one! How I would like it, and what an amount of
good it would do in this country!" Of course, he was responsible for
introducing the first ashram-like institutions through the Vedanta Society
(now numbering 13 with over one thousand members), but there were no
markers pointing to today's richly diverse panoply of Hindu institutions.
Swamiji might have taken a carriage ride down Bowne Street in Queens, N.Y.
(a street founded on the idea of religious tolerance), but we will never
know if he could foresee the current Bowne Street's Hindu Temple of North
America with its gopuram rising against the New York skyline alongside
Catholic spires, Protestant steeples and Jewish Stars of David.
Ironically, India's industrialization was more or less self-born, while
the real exodus of brains has been from the East to West as Asian Indians
left India and Sri Lanka in search of professional fulfillment and
financial success. In the process they have added significantly to
America's reservoir of industry, high-tech and service sector
talent.
The cross-pollination Swami Vivekananda touched off between
Hinduism and America has grown into a multi-branched tree that stretches
across the entirety of American mainstream life. Karma, reincarnation,
yoga and guru are household words and concepts. Meditation techniques form
a regular part of millions of American's lives. Holistic havens combine
hatha yoga physiology, breath control, vegetarian nutrition, yogic
psychology and biofeedback machines to rejuvinate and remake America's
overstressed and over-indulged bodies and minds. Astro-and nuclear
physicists alike have employed the awesome Dance of Sivanataraja and other
Hindu theological concepts as singularly telling metaphors for their
cosmic and microcosmic explorations. Millions of Americans came face to
face with Shiva's deistic imagery through the Philadelphia Art Museum's
1981/82 "Manifestations of Shiva" cross-country exhibition. And millions
more are being deeply moved by the stunning film, "Gandhi." A California
Senator recently even introduced a bill legislating for a declared Gandhi
Day. Ravi Shankar, sitarist, played with Yehudi Menuhin, classical
violinist, and more recently L. Shankar, virtuoso violinist from South
India, has fused the power of Karnatic improvisation with American "fusion
jazz's' multidimensional electronic harmonies.
TV'S 'DALLAS' VS.
EPIC, 'MAHABHARATA'
These are some of the peripheral effects of
intersecting cultures, and in fact the Indian Hindu influence is apparent
in more facets of American society than any other minority including Black
and Hispanic. The gravitational hub of Hinduism in America though lies
with the approximately 400,000 Hindu Asian Indians residing in America who
have immigrated from India over the past two-plus decades and are raising
families. They are now fully cognizing that their children are Americans,
not Indians, and are Hindus, not Christians, or irreligious agnostics. Her
Holiness Swami Saraswati Devyashram, spiritual head of the Holy
Sankaracharya Order, U.S.A., and other members of the Order have closely
and objectively observed the American Hindu children's situation.
"Firstly, these children are born Americans. They were born here. And they
very much want to fit in as Americans, to be accepted. They are puzzled
about Christianity and there is a definite resistance to looking to Indian
as a cultural and emotional base." For some children, given a tossup
between the TV show "Dallas" and the scripture Mahabharata they will take
"Dallas" and probably tell you there is as much intrigue in both so what's
the difference. Most have not waivered that far, but as Swami Saraswati
noted, "They are embarrassed...mostly because they don't have the
background to understand and explain the depths of their
religion."
AMERICA'S "BLUE-EYED" HINDUS
And then there are
the "blue-eyed" Hindus, as Mr. Jerry Madden, an American self-converted
Saivite Hindu, coins them. Telling a story of when he was an Army Ranger
during World War II, Mr. Madden recounted how he had told the
quartermaster issuing his dog tags that he was a Hindu (A section of the
dog tags notes by initial - P for Protestant, etc. - the soldier's
religion). The quartermaster was rudely indignant, and rather than argue,
Mr. Madden accepted a substitute initial. Such were the sentiments in the
1940's. Mr. Madden's "blue-eyed" Hindus are born American citizens who
have either self-adopted Hinduism or have formally entered, say, Saivism,
through an orthodox ceremony. In every sense of the word they are Hindus,
except they weren't born into the religion. As H.H. Sivaya
Subramuniyaswami, the American-born spiritual leader of Saiva Siddhanta
Church, observed, "They are Eastern souls in Western bodies - Hindus from
the inside out, rather than outside in." Unofficial estimates of the
numbers of this group run in the tens of thousands including the
I.S.K.C.O.N. Hare Krishna adherents who are the most visible
representatives of Hindu adoptives. Combined with the born Hindu populous,
that's about 450,000 Hindus in the U.S., or 1 out of every 555 Americans,
making Hinduism the second largest minority religion in America, trailing
behind Islam with its substantial American Black
constituency.
Exploding at a 400% increase, the total U.S. Asian
Indian population ballooned during the 1960's and then doubled again
during the 70's to a formidable 361,000. Add on the 20,000 per year Asian
Indian immigration quota for the past three years and the demographics top
420,000. (Between 10 and 15% of that figure is of other religious, eg.,
Sikhism) The net result: a noted burst in political and consumer clout; a
1982-awarded status as a minority eligible for startup business loans from
the federal Small Business Administration, and a micro baby-boom. It's the
baby boom which is the single most important driving force in American
Hinduism at this time. The kids are growing up fast, and "We don't know
what they are growing up to. There's a big unknown before us," commented
Dr. S. Sivasubramaniam, 37, a physician from the Potomac, Maryland, area
who also serves as a trustee for the Shree Siva Vishnu Temple Society of
North America (Washington D.C.).
DEAD-END DESTINATION : ATHEISTIC
MATERIALISM OR CHRISTIANITY
When American-born Hindu children began
arriving on the scene there was no built-in extended family unit-no
grandparents, no elder aunts and uncles, no family pundits, few swamis and
gurus, and no temples to forge a cohesive religion-cultural matrix. In a
country where the intensity of a lifestyle is characterized by freeway
lanes, the Hindu children found themselves on that freeway with no bumpers
and no way to get off. Their destination: stark materialism or
Christianity. TV bombards viewers with Western culture's one-life,
get-all-the-gusto-you-can model. A current Congressional debate involves
the introduction of Christian prayer in public schools. Drug and alcohol
abuse is a malignant cancer eating away at an alarming percentage of
America's youth. Teenage promiscuity is a rule, not the exception. A
recent nationwide Gallup poll showed that 44% of American Christian
teenagers go through a serious "crisis of faith" during late adolescence.
Teenage patterns in general are very consistent and American Hindu
teenagers have also been noted to go through a "crisis in faith." Many
simply become agnostic or atheistic.
NATION-WIDE MANDATE: BUILD
LIVING HINDU TEMPLES
Over the past ten years, "A slow-motion panic
set in. If we didn't start doing something concrete, we would have a
disaster on our hands and only ourselves to blame," said one Hindu family
man of Dallas. Ramesh Dewan, U.S. delegate, speaking at the 1982 Friends
of India Society conference in Bombay, warned, "The overseas Indians are
losing their Indian-ness very fast. By the next generation, the process
will be completed." But the issue is far more serious than a matter of
losing "Indian-ness." It's one thing to forego wearing a sari. It's
entirely another to relinquish the beauties and sensibilities of Hindu
womanhood. Many Hindu Americans feel the entire character makeup and moral
fibre is at stake. "We were scared of the thought of the children growing
up with no religious heritage," explained P. Vijayagopal, biochemistry
professor at Louisiana State University who is a committee member of the
New Orleans Temple Society. A very clear and persuasive mandate emerged
from community leaders across the U.S: start from the ground up and build
temples. In 1977 - almost within a year of each other, the Hindu
community's first orthodox temples, the Pittsburgh Venkateshwara Temple
and Hindu Temple of North America (Flushing, N.Y.) opened their doors to
the public. Grassroots Hinduism had arrived and the temple boom was on! In
the past six years a temple has been built or a temple site purchased for
every year Hindus have been in the U.S: over 20. In 1982 two more major
temples, the Sri Meenakshi Temple in Pearland, Texas, and the Sri
Viswanatha Temple in Flint, Michigan, held their opening ceremonies and
hooked into Hinduism's inner power line. This year a half-dozen more have
spring construction schedules lined up. From Hawaii to the West Coast
through the Sun Belt up the East Coast and across to "Smokestack America,"
temples are spread like a pioneer patchwork quilt.
THE GOOD AND BAD
OF SPLIT TEMPLE SOCIETIES
But this rapid expansion took its toll.
Division of interest in the trustee and officer level of many societies
have caused delays and in some cases a crippling stalemate or even an
early death. Most recently the Hindu Temple Society of Southern California
with its Malibu Venkateshwara Temple just going into actual construction,
went into Superior Court over a disputed election, and new elections were
ordered by the judge. In some cases the society splits in two, even
cloning itself, as in the case of the Siva Vishnu Temple Societies of
North America in Washington D.C. and Bethesda, Maryland. In this case the
division and healthy, like twins being born instead of a single child.
Most community leaders attribute these birthing pains to human nature -
personality clashes, ego battles, etc. - and not to any specific issues
such as linquisitic differences or North/South India enmity. But they do
loom in the background as issues having been carried over from
India.
Ideas for a council or federation of Hindu temple societies
similar to the National Council of Churches (Christian) have been in the
air for years, but as yet no gavel has pounded the table bringing such a
council to order. Such a councils first purpose would be to act as a
clearinghouse of organizational experience, know-how and ideas between the
temple societies. Officially such a council doesn't exist, but unofficial
know-how is occurring between quite a number of societies. Particularly
the elder Pittsburgh and New York temples are offering their accumulated
expertise to other budding temples. What would it take to pull such a
council together? "Perhaps it would take some overshadowing,
highly-respected body in India that everybody mutually listens to - like
the Tirupati Temple," suggests Mr. A. Saravanapavan, a trustee for the
Siva Vishnu Temple Society of North America. Other look to a more
indigenous catalyst. "Some kind of financial or community crisis for a
particular temple might serve as a rallying-point for bringing forth an
official federation. They would need to come to the temple's aid in some
organized fashion, and that might involve an official position," observed
Dr. Sivasubramaniam.
"HINDUISM'S SPIRITUAL
SUPERMARKET"
Hinduism in American exists on two levels, the
community level and the organizational. If the baby-boom was motivating
the Asian Indian Hindu families, an incredibly sudden and explosive
interest in Eastern wisdom and ways fueled most of the yoga/neo-Hindu
organizations that flooded America in the late 60's and 70's and swept
away millions into mantrams, mediation and the mysteries of Hindu
philosophy. The explosion has long since dissipated, leaving in the U.S.A.
a remarkably India-like group of disparate institutions - what some
critics referred to as a "spiritual supermarket." From the very orthodox
to the very outrageous, yoga/neo-Hindu organizations are a colorful weave
of the American social fabric. Chronologically, the very first Hindu
spiritual leaders preceded by decades the emigration of Hindu families en
masse to America, and the first semblance of a Hindu temple in the U.S.
was built in San Francisco in 1959. By bearing the broadside of Christian
fire and brimstone they, in sense, cleared the land for later settlement
by born Hindus.
CAN AMERICANS BE PRACTICING HINDUS?
As a
so-labeled social experiment, the I.S.K.C.O.N. Hare Krishna movement is a
highly observed fishbowl that a lot of U.S. researchers have peered into.
Transplanting lock, stock and bullock cart a piece of feudal Bengali
religious and cultural life into urban and rural America has given
I.S.K.C.O.N. a sky-high but ambivalent profile. Ask a downtown New York
cab driver about Hinduism and predictably he will describe a Hare Krishna
devotee. Even the World Almanacs naively define the extent of Hinduism in
America by the Hare Krishna presence. With its often questionable fund
raising techniques and other negative image problems, I.S.K.C.O.N. has
been the target for many critics, including some Indo-Americans. In an
effort to defend the Indo-American Hindu community's efforts of religious
activity from the negative stigma of I.S.K.C.O.N. proselytization, these
critics have in effect said that Americans imitating Hindus are bad news
because they suggest to the American public that Hinduism is a
proselytizing religion. "Some sects," Mr. C.V. Narasimhan, a former United
Nations executive and now periodic advisor to Hindu temple societies, said
in a public statement, "have given Hindu names to American nationals who,
in turn, are taught to behave as though they have been converted to
Hinduism." Most people though, born India and born American Hindus alike,
see this attitude as unfounded and very misleading. At San Francisco's
Himalayan Academy, a Saivite Hindu educational facility that specializes
in schooling, preparing and counseling born Americans seeking formal
entrance into Saivism, a senior swami explained, "Though not a
proselytizing religion, Hinduism has historically always accepted into is
fold those few who sincerely sought admission. Adoption or conversion to
Hinduism is a scripturally sanctioned process." And as Hindu psychologist
in Reno, Nevada stated, "Native American Hindus are simply out-practicing
us at our own religion. It's almost humorous that we came to America for
material prosperity and have bumped into a depth of Hindu spiritually
which is even uncommon for India." Ironically, while some Hindus are
taking Mr. Narasimhan's defensive stand, some Christian Churches are on
the offense, doing their best to convert immigrating adherents of foreign
religious to Christianity. This includes not only Hindus, but Buddhists as
well. A case in point are the 18,000 Southeast Asia refugees who
immigrated to Oregon in the 1980's and are now subject to some-time
vice-like conversion pressures. Already 20% of one 1,600-member community
have become Christians - many simply as a way to become more American, or
to gain economic favor.
Combined with the prevalent but erroneous
idea that all Americans are born Christian, this Americans-can't-be-Hindu
concept, if universally applied, has the potential of alienating born
Americans from born Indians who are practicing the same religion, who are
fellow Hindus. But the overall extent and depth of American adoption of
Hinduism does indicate a full-scale amalgamation is underway. Indeed,
American is the only country in the world where a non-Indian population
has so thoroughly adopted the Hindu way of life and worldview. Another
Himalayan Academy staff member went on to say, "Americans are not born
Christian. To be American doesn't mean you are Christian, just as to be
born in India doesn't mean you are Hindu. Many Americans are born in
families with no religious affiliation - they are still living morally
upright lives, just without a religious framework. These Americans come
into Hinduism as adoptives." As for Americans who did become Christians:
"They can enter Saivite Hinduism as converts, but only after rigorous
schooling and a formal severance from their former religion so there is no
overlapping of religious beliefs and loyalties."
LIKE A
THREE-DIMENSIONAL CHESS GAME
By far the large majority of Hindus in
America are not involved in the yoga/Hindu organizations. "Being born into
the religion, growing up with it, they may not want a strict methodology
or regimen," observed Dr. Sivasubramaniam. If they are involved, it is
usually with an organization that closely fits traditional Hinduism and
not the fad or ecumenical groups. As to their religious life at home, most
families are finding what fits their particular schedule and inclinations.
Although no figures are available, Mr. A. Saravanapavan, a Project Officer
with the World Bank, feels that the slim majority of America's Hindu
mother not joining the work force has greatly contributed to a growing
religious stability and dedication in the Hindu home. But there is a long
ways to go. Another source states that the number of Hindu women working
in the U.S. is twice that of the national average. And as Dr.
Sivsubramanian points out, there is considerable workload pressure on the
men and many don't have the time to practice the full depth of Hinduism,
although there is a building groundwell to congregate on Fridays and
weekends for religious activity.
Like a three-dimensional chess
game with two or three playing board levels, the interaction between the
U.S. Hindu community and the Hindu organizational presence has seen both
good moves by accident and by design. Factor in the hundreds of India
cultural associations and societies, and the interaction gets fairly
complex. The guidance systems, both practical and ideological, for
America's temple societies have mostly been imported from India, but a
number of the leading and more orthodox Hindu organizations in the U.S.
have been in there spade for spade as the foundations were and are
continuing to be dug. At the top of this list would be the Chinmaya
Mission, the Sri Rajarajeshwari Peetham and Saiva Siddhanta Church. And
the Hindu community movers and shakers are beginning to look more and more
to the American Hindu institutions for advice, particularly the orthodox
organizations where born Americans are the leaders and which themselves
are involved in temple building. Their reasoning: born Americans have the
know-how, the innate experience to guide Hindus and their affairs into a
smooth assimilation with Americans and the Christian
presence.
HINDU COMMUNITY IS BEGINNING TO FLEX ITS FINANCIAL
MUSCLE
Each year billions of dollars are tithed (giving 10% of
one's gross income) and donated by American Christians to the Catholic and
Protestant Churches to perpetuate and expand their religious facilities
and programs. By themselves the Methodists allocate almost $100 million
for international missionary work alone, including conversion activities
in India. How much are Asian-Indian Hindus taking out of their pockets for
their religion's well-being in America? The potential is considerable. As
a high-income group that (in relation to other minorities) dominates the
American professional-level job market, Hindus in America earn a lot and
spend a lot. If a tithe system was employed within Hindu America, a
commanding $320 million a year could be pumped into its bloodstream.
Within a decade several billion dollars would be circulating into trust
funds, educational facilities, grants and temple endowments. That's the
potential. The actual money flow is a drop-off-the cliff less, but still
strong. Tens of millions of dollars are now invested in temple land and
buildings. And the top four temples in the U.S. are receiving an estimated
$1.7 million a year in contributions and temple-earned income. In one
month alone, the Hindu Temple of N.A. (Flushing NY) garners close to
$20,000 from hundi offerings and puja income. Add in the contributions,
donations and other supportive funds going into the smaller temples and
the leading Hindu institutions, and the total monetary infusion per year
is in the tens of millions.
"E.T.'S" GOD AND GANDHI
As a
combined front, the Hindu community and Hindu institutions are now seeing
enough monetary overflow to begin investing in the future. Mortgages and
loans are, for the older societies, within sight of being paid back.
Maintenance is being easily met. With a foundation of temple worship laid,
Hindu community leaders are beginning to assess the educational picture
and put into motion small-scale, pilot programs. There have always been
isolated pockets of parochial activity as parents and concerned Hindus
would start classes in the home, or an Indian Society would offer periodic
linguistic/cultural instruction, but many Hindus are seeing that those
attempts have only been the starting spurt for a long four laps around the
track.
Almost as a surprise to the adults, this realization and
concern is also being echoed by Hindu adolescents themselves. "Teenagers
[Hindu] are asking: why aren't we being taught our religion and heritage?
They are really beginning to search for themselves," said Dr.
Sivasubramaniam. He also observed that they are now using Hinduism and
Indian civilization as subjects for their public school homework
assignments. "Only in the last two years have I seen this," he reported.
Growing almost organically within itself, this demand is beginning to be
met. Several temples have started regular Sunday School-type classes. Both
Chinmaya Mission and Saiva Siddhanta Church have developed special
correspondence courses for Hindu children and are instrumental in setting
up class structures around the U.S. But to date, the most popular and
perhaps most effective activity has been the crop of annual youth camps
springing up from coast to coast. Setting the benchmark, Sri
Rajarajeshwari Peetham of the Holy Sankaracharya Order, USA, offers a
comprehensive have-fun-and-learn camp in the Pocono Hills known as the
Hindu Heritage Camp. Begun in 1978, the camp's attendance has jumped from
12 to 238 in 1982. The curriculum spans puja performance, Vedantic
philosophy, spoken and written Sanskrit, hatha yoga, meditation and
special peer discussions for teenagers. Plans for the 1983 camp include a
final "Teen Super Session" focusing on "enlightened leadership." Swami
Saraswati Devyashram attributes the impact of the camp to the fact that
the camp staff relate to the Hindu kids in Western terms. Hindu
ceremonies, philosophy and practices are given a scientific credibility.
"And they relate to us well because we are born Americans just as they
are," she explained. "They think in the same patterns as Americans." The
camp staff uses "points of contact" between American culture or happenings
and Hinduism to spark a connection and depth of understanding in the
children. Discussions on who is "E.T.'S" God and about the movie,
"Gandhi," for example, are employed. The Peetham also jumped light years
ahead of everybody when in 1974 it bought 150 acres of Virginia
countryside and set it aside for the future "Hindu American University."
Envisioned as an open curriculum university, Swami Devyashram sees it
graduating some of future Hinduism's greatest leaders. But to get to that
future requires a lot of groundwork in the present. "Many Hindu families
are sending their children to Catholic schools for a better quality
education. Some children that come to our camp even go to Christian
born-again schools and are exposed to their creationist fundamentalism,"
the Swami explained. "Our target is to provide a viable alternative and I
forsee a great expansion in educational/parochial facilities in the
U.S."
U.S. HINDUS HAVE A COMPETITIVE EDGE
As a pioneering
people and a people sending roots into American soil, Hindus have a great
task before them. But American Hindus have a competitive edge - they are
historically one of the most recent emigrating groups from India and Sri
Lanka and therefore can draw on the successes, blunders and oversights of
previous emigrant groups in other countries, such as Trinidad and South
Africa. Hindus in America do have vast resources to build facilities that
reflect the faith and background brought over with them from the East. But
they run the risk of neglecting to balance out America's consuming
consumer prosperity. A balance is needed. Otherwise, as Swami Devyashram
states, "The temples will be museums with tour guides and the Hindu
children will be Americans with no religious conscience."
Article
copyright Himalayan Academy.
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