RajeshG wrote:Shivji
The thrust (or assumption) behind your statement is that hinduism needs to be sold to new customers. My boss talks about a 30 second elevator pitch and when he is drunk he calls it showing-some-skin. If convincing hindus that they are under threat is x units tough then convincing hindus that they have to "convert" somebody and prepare an elevator pitch for that is 10x units (if not more) tough.
But then perhaps you are right. Perhaps we were wrong all along when we claimed ekam-sat.... Perhaps we do need to show-some-skin and tell them ours is the way onlee..
I dont know, its a tough call, I cant make up my mind - have been chewing on this for a long time (and doing nothing) and i have not been able to make up my mind.
JMT.
This is an insightful post from a Hindu mind.
I think that Hindus in 2007 are behaving mentally exactly like I believe they did when faced with the first organized religious zealots 1000 or more years ago.
They were happy with what they had within themselves but did not have clue about what to say if they were asked to do describe what they "believed" by people who came pre-primed to "believe" in one of the monotheistic religions.
For 1000 or more years the Hindu has never spent time developing a description of his own system that can be easily understood by someone outside the system. The Hindu gets tied up in knots the minute someone asks him what his belief system or his philosophy is all about.
Hindus never have to describe themselves to each other. There is an automatic assumption of knowledge and automatic understanding of what the other Hindu is talking about.
The Hindu worldview has never developed a thought process or strategy for a force that says "I am XYZ and nothing else. What the hell are you?"
Even on this thread there is a paucity of people who are able to describe what Hinduism is all about. I was saddened to see that a one paragraph description made by me in an earlier thread was the subject of some praise. Does it take a faulty half-wit Hindu like me to describe Hinduism to people who I thought had great knowledge and understanding. Even more sadly, I have been asked, in this series of threads "What are the strengths of Hinduism that you keep talking about?" Do I have to tell people that???
I have been characterized as a pant-shirt wearing dhimmi whose mind has been brainwashed by a conspiracy to defeat Hinduism. If a person such as I has to be considered some kind of repository of knowledge of the strengths of Hinduism and if some people are hanging on to my words - Hinduism is under more serious threat from within than anyone dares to admit.
The Hindu self image assumes that others understand the complexity of Hindu belief. In fact most Hindus accept it but do not understand it. And the ratio of understanders to accepters is decreasing. When Hindus don't understand what their system is about, blaming EJ and Islamists is a fatal diversion.
There is a deep degree of degeneration in the system that has not been addressed. Rot in the system is being praised and upheld as Hinduism. Hindu minds with cobwebs inside need to wake up.
You need to sell Hinduism to *Hindus* first, so they are able to grasp by a slogan or paragraph what is great and what is their own and help propagate it without criticizing the next Hindu as being faulty, dhimmi or brainwashed.
If we can get 75% of educated Hindus to do that, the tide would have been stemmed and the rot replaced by new life.