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Women in Hinduism

Hindu texts present diverse views on the position of women, ranging from feminine leadership as the highest goddess, to limiting gender roles. The Devi Sukta hymn of Rigveda, a scripture of Hinduism, declares the feminine energy as the essence of the universe, the one who creates all matter and consciousness, the eternal and infinite, the metaphysical and empirical reality (Brahman), the soul, (supreme self) of everything.[1][2] The woman is celebrated as the most powerful and the empowering force in some Hindu Upanishads, Sastras and Puranas, particularly the Devi Upanishad, Devi Mahatmya and Devi-Bhagavata Purana.[3][4][5]

Ancient and medieval era Hindu texts present a diverse picture of duties and rights of women in Hinduism. The texts recognize eight kinds of marriage, ranging from father finding a marriage partner for his daughter and seeking her consent (Brahma or Devic marriage), to the bride and groom finding each other without parental participation (Gandharva marriage) and paishachik (against God's blessing) marriage by force against woman, not following varnashram dharm and without parents blessing.[6][7] Scholars state that Vedic-era Hindu texts had practice Dowry or Sati if .[8][9] These practices likely became widespread sometime in the 2nd millennium CE from socio-political developments in the Indian subcontinent.[10][11] Throughout history, Hindu society has seen many female rulers, such as Rudramadevi, religious figures and saints, such as Andal, philosophers, such as Maitreyi, and female practitioners/ conductors of Vedic Hindu rituals.[12][13]

Hinduism, states Bryant, has the strongest presence of the divine feminine among major world religions, from ancient times to the present.[14] The goddess is viewed as central in Shakti and Shiva Hindu traditions.[15][16] Matriarchal theology is quite prevalent in Sanskritic traditions and village Hinduism relating to the worship of Shakti, and there are numerous Hindu communities that are matriarchal.[13]

Ancient texts

Vedic literature

Ancient texts of Hinduism expound a reverence for the feminine. The 10th chapter of the Rigveda, for example, asserts the feminine to be the supreme principle behind all of cosmos, in the following hymn called as Devi Sukta,[1][2]

I am the Queen, the gatherer-up of treasures, most thoughtful, first of those who merit worship.
     Thus Gods have established me in many places with many homes to enter and abide in.
Through me alone all eat the food that feeds them,-each man who sees, breathes, hears the word outspoken
     They know it not, yet I reside in the essence of the Universe. Hear, one and all, the truth as I declare it.

I, verily, myself announce and utter the word that gods and men alike shall welcome.
     I make the man I love exceeding mighty, make him nourished, a sage, and one who knows Brahman.
I bend the bow for Rudra that his arrow may strike and slay the hater of devotion.
     I rouse and order battle for the people, I created Earth and Heaven and reside as their inner controller.

On the world's summit I bring forth the Father: my home is in the waters, in the ocean.
     Thence I prevade all existing creatures, as their Inner Supreme Self, and manifest them with my body.
I created all worlds at my will, without any higher being, and permeate and dwell within them.
     The eternal and infinite consciousness is I, it is my greatness dwelling in everything.

— Rigveda 10.125.3 - 10.125.8, The Vedas have several hymns accredited to women scholars who were known as "Brahmavadinis". There were many learnt women who could defeat men with their skills and intellect. These include Gargi, Ahalya, Maitreyi, Lopamudra, Ghosha, Swaha, Haimavati Uma , Gautami, Hemalekha, Sita etc. [1][17]

At the same time , the Rigveda states contradictory views on women:

"Indra himself hath said, The mind of woman brooks not discipline.

Her intellect hath little weight."[18]

"With women there can be no lasting friendship:

hearts of hyenas are the hearts of women."[19]

Upanishads

The Devi Sukta ideas of the Rigveda are further developed in the relatively later composed Shakta Upanishads, states McDaniel, where the Devi asserts that she is Brahman, from her arise Prakṛti (matter) and Purusha (consciousness), she is bliss and non-bliss, the Vedas and what is different from it, the born and the unborn, and the feminine is thus all of the universe.[3] She is presented as all the five elements, as well as all that is different from these elements, what is above, what is below, what is around, and thus the universe in its entirety.[20] This philosophy is also found in the Tripuratapani Upanishad and the Bahvricha Upanishad.[1]

The early Upanishads are, however, generally silent about women and men, and focus predominantly on gender-less Brahman and its relation to Atman (Soul, Self). There are occasional exceptions. Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, composed about 800 BCE, for example, in the last chapter detailing the education of a student, include lessons for his Grihastha stage of life.[21] There, the student is taught, that as a husband, he should cook rice for the wife, and they together eat the food in certain way depending on whether they wish for the birth of a daughter or a son, as follows,[21]

And if a man wishes that a learned daughter should be born to him, and that she should live to her full age, then after having prepared boiled rice with sesamum and butter, they should both eat, being fit to have offspring.

And if a man wishes that a learned son should be born to him, and that he should live his full age, then after having prepared boiled rice with grain and butter, they should both eat, being fit to have offspring.

— Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 6.4.17 - 6.4.18, Translated by Max Muller[22]

Women are mentioned and are participants in the philosophical debates of the Upanishads, as well as scholars, teachers and priestesses during the Vedic and early Buddhist age.[23] Among women acknowledged in the Upanishads are Gargi and Maitreyi.[23] In Sanskrit, the word acharyā means a "female teacher" (versus acharya meaning "teacher") and an acharyini is a teacher's wife, indicating that some women were known as gurus.[citation needed]

Female characters appear in plays and epic poems. The 8th century poet, Bhavabhuti describes in his play, Uttararamacharita (verse 2 - 3), how the character, Atreyi, travelled to southern India where she studied the Vedas and Indian philosophy. In Madhava's Shankaradigvijaya, Shankara debates with the female philosopher, Ubhaya Bharati and in verses 9 - 63 it is mentioned that she was well versed in the Vedas. Tirukkoneri Dasyai, a 15th-century scholar, wrote a commentary on Nammalvar's Tiruvaayamoli, with reference to Vedic texts such as the Taittiriya Yajurveda.[citation needed]

The Hindu historical epics

 
The Mahabharata is a legendary Hindu epic reflecting the Hindu Dharma based social beliefs and culture in ancient India. In its first book, Dushmanta asks Sakuntala (above) to marry him for love, in Gandharva-style marriage, initially without informing their parents.[24] The texts also describes seven other forms of marriage, and when they were appropriate with parents blessings withing varnashram dharm or inappropriate out of varnashram dharm or against woman's wish.[24]

In the two Hindu historical epics, Ramayana and Mahabharata, the role of women is multiple. The main female character in the Mahabharata, Draupadi is married to all the five Pandavas due to Mata Kunti directive to distribute without seeing what has been brought by Pandavas, thus had five husbands. She is insulted by Duryodhana, one of the main reasons for the great war in restoring the honor of their woman. In the Ramayana, the historical epic on shri Ram's life composed eight lakh years BC in tretayug, Sita is respected, honored, wise and seen as inseparable beloved but lived as a homemaker, the ideal wife and partner to Rama. In the Hindu dharma, women's oral readings of the Ramayana at home bring piece, happiness, good progeny, good health and relives family from bad luck and bad health. The Epics are divinely ordained to Rishis and seen thru divinely vision , and carry precepts of dharma embedded in them, suggesting perceived notions about women in Sanatan Hinduism at the time the Epic history were composed. The Mahabharata, in Book 1, for example, states,

No man, even in anger, should ever do anything that is disagreeable to his wife while upholding dharm; for happiness, joy, virtue and everything depend on the wife. Wife is the sacred soil in which the husband is born again, even the Rishis cannot create men without women.

— Adi Parva, Mahabharata Book, 1.74.50-51[25]

The Anushasana Parva of the Hindu epic Mahabharata has several chapters dedicated to the discussion about duties and right of women. It gives a mixed picture. In chapter 11, the goddess of wealth and prosperity Lakshmi asserts, that she ( her divinity) lives in those women who are truthful, sincere, modest, organized, devoted to their husband and children, health conscious, patient and kind to parents, parent in laws and guests.[26] The goddess asserts she does not reside in woman who is sinful, unclean, always disagreeing with her husband, has no patience or fortitude, is lazy, quarrelsome with her neighbors and relatives.[26]

In chapter 47, as Yudhishthira seeks guidance on Dharma from Bhishma, the Anushasana Parva compares the value of daughter to a son, as follows,

The daughter, O king, has been ordained in the scriptures to be equal to the son.

— Bhishma, Anushasana Parva, Mahabharata 13.47.26[27]

In Udyoga Parva of Mahabharata, states misogynists and bigots are sinners. "Assertion of one's own superiority, the avaricious [lolupa], those who are unable to tolerate the slightest insult, the bad tempered, the fickle, those who neglect the protecting of those who seek it. One who thinks only of his own sexual satisfaction, the bigoted, the arrogant, one who gives and then regrets it, one who’s parsimonious, one who admires power/wealth and pleasure, and the misogynist these are the 13 types of sinners. " (M.B.Udyoga Parva 43:18,19) The duties of women are again recited in Chapter 146, as a conversation between god Shiva and his wife goddess Uma, where Shiva asks what are the duties of women. Devi Uma (Parvati) proceeds to meet all the rivers, who are all goddesses that nourish and create fertile valleys.[28] Uma suggests that the duties of women include being of a good disposition, endued with sweet speech, sweet conduct, and sweet features. For a woman, claims Uma, her husband is her god, her husband is her friend, and her husband is her high refuge. A woman's duties include physical and emotional nourishment, reverence and fulfillment of her husband and her children. Their happiness is her happiness, she observes the same vows as those that are observed by her husband, her duty is to be cheerful even when her husband or her children are angry, be there for them in adversity or sickness, is regarded as truly righteous in her conduct.[28] Beyond her husband and family, her duty is to be cheerful of heart and humble with friends and relatives, do the best she can for friends and guests. Her family life and her home is her heaven, tells goddess Parvati to Shiva.[28] Anushasana Parva has served as a source for modern era texts on women in Hinduism. For example, Tryambakayajvan of Thanjavur, in the 18th-century CE, published Strīdharmapaddhati (or "Guide for a Dharmic Woman"). Tryambaka, according to Julia Leslie,[29] selectively extracts verses from many chapters of Anushasana Parva. He selectively extracts verses from other books of the Mahabharata as well, and other ancient Indian texts, for Strīdharmapaddhati, choosing those he preferred, omitting verses from the Mahabharata that represent its characteristic style of presenting many voices and counter-arguments.[30]

Shastras and Smritis

 
The Vedas and Shastras of Hinduism mention Brahmacharini (women) studying the Vedas.[31] The word Brahmacharini is also revered in Hinduism as a goddess (above).

The characterization and treatment of women is mixed in Shastras and Smriti texts of Hinduism. Scholars have questioned the later date insertions, corruption and authenticity of the texts, as dozens of significantly different versions of the Smriti texts have been found. Patrick Olivelle for example, who is credited with a 2005 translation of Manusmriti published by the Oxford University Press, states the concerns in postmodern scholarship about the presumed authenticity and reliability of Manusmriti manuscripts.[32] He writes (abridged),

The MDh [Manusmriti] was the first Indian legal text introduced to the western world through the translation of Sir William Jones in 1794. (...) All the editions of the MDh, except for Jolly's, reproduce the text as found in the [Calcutta] manuscript containing the commentary of Kulluka. I have called this as the "vulgate version". It was Kulluka's version that has been translated repeatedly: Jones (1794), Burnell (1884), Buhler (1886) and Doniger (1991). (...)

The belief in the authenticity of Kulluka's text was openly articulated by Burnell (1884, xxix): "There is then no doubt that the textus receptus, viz., that of Kulluka Bhatta, as adopted in India and by European scholars, is very near on the whole to the original text." This is far from the truth. Indeed, one of the great surprises of my editorial work has been to discover how few of the over fifty manuscripts that I collated actually follow the vulgate in key readings.

— Patrick Olivelle, Manu's Code of Law (2005)[32]

Arthashastra, in chapter 1.21 describes women who had received military education and served to protect the king; the text also mentions female artisans, mendicants, and women who were wandering ascetics.[33][34]

One of the most studied about the position of women in medieval Hindu society has been a now contested Calcutta manuscript of Manusmriti. The text preaches chastity to widows such as in verses 5.158-5.160.[35] In verses 2.67-2.69 and 5.148-5.155, Manusmriti preaches that as a girl, she should obey and seek protection of her father, as a young woman her husband, and as a widow her son; and that a woman should always worship her husband as a god.[36][37]

In other verses, Manusmriti respects and safeguards women rights. Manusmriti in verses 3.55-3.56, for example, declares that "women must be honored and adorned", and "where women are revered, there the gods rejoice; but where they are not, no sacred rite bears any fruit".[38][39] Elsewhere, in verses 5.147-5.148, states Olivelle, the text declares, "a woman must never seek to live independently".[40]

Divorce

The text declares that a marriage cannot be dissolved by a woman or a man, in verse 8.101-8.102.[41] Yet, the text, in other sections, allows either to dissolve the marriage. For example, verses 9.72-9.81 allow the man or the woman to get out of a fraudulent marriage or an abusive marriage, and remarry; the text also provides legal means for a woman to remarry when her husband has been missing or has abandoned her.[42]

Arthashastra which is one of the sastras in Hinduism says

A woman, hating her husband, can not dissolve her marriage with him against his will. Nor can a man dissolve his marriage with his wife against her will. But from mutual enmity, divorce may be obtained (parasparam dveshánmokshah). If a man, apprehending danger from his wife desires divorce (mokshamichhet), he shall return to her whatever she was given (on the occasion of her marriage). If a woman, under the apprehension of danger from her husband, desires divorce, she shall forfeit her claim to her property; marriages contracted in accordance with the customs of the first four kinds of marriages cannot be dissolved.[43][44]

Varna

The text in one section opposes a woman marrying someone outside her own (varna) as in verses 3.13-3.14.[35] Simultaneously, states Olivelle, the text presupposes numerous practices such as marriages outside varna, such as between a Brahmin man and a Shudra woman in verses 9.149-9.157, a widow getting pregnant with a child of a man she is not married to in verses 9.57-9.62, marriage where a woman in love elopes with her man, and then grants legal rights in these cases such as property inheritance rights in verses 9.143-9.157, and the legal rights of the children so born.[45] The text also presumes that a married woman may get pregnant by a man other than her husband, and dedicates verses 8.31-8.56 to conclude that the child's custody belongs to the woman and her legal husband, and not to the man she got pregnant with.[46][47]

Property rights

Manusmriti provides a woman with property rights to six types of property in verses 9.192-9.200. These include those she received at her marriage, or as gift when she eloped or when she was taken away, or as token of love before marriage, or as gifts from her biological family, or as received from her husband subsequent to marriage, and also from an inheritance from deceased relatives.[48]

Inconsistency and authenticity issues

Scholars state that less than half, or only 1,214 of the 2,685 verses in Manusmriti, may be authentic.[49] Further, the verses are internally inconsistent.[50] Verses such as 3.55-3.62 of Manusmriti, for example, glorify the position of women, while verse such as 9.3 and 9.17 do the opposite.[49] Mahatma Gandhi, when asked about his view about the Smriti, stated, that "there are so many contradictions in the printed volume that, if you accept one part, you are bound to reject those parts that are wholly inconsistent with it. (...) Nobody is in possession of the original text [of Manusmriti].[51]

Flavia Agnes states that Manusmriti is a complex commentary from women's rights perspective, and the British colonial era codification of women's rights based on it for Hindus, and from Islamic texts for Muslims, picked and emphasized certain aspects while it ignored other sections.[52] This construction of personal law during the colonial era created a legal fiction around Manusmriti's historic role as a scripture in matters relating to women in South Asia.[52][53]

Puranas

 
Devi Mahatmya, a Hindu Sanskrit manuscript from Nepal 11th-century (above), helped crystallize the goddess tradition where the creator God is a female, but neither feminine nor masculine, rather spiritual and a force of good.[54]

The Puranas, particularly the Devi Mahatmya found in Markandeya Maha-Purana, and the Devi-Bhagavata Purana have some of the most dedicated discussion of Devi and sacred feminine in late ancient and early medieval era of Hinduism.[3][4][5] However, the discussion is not limited to these two major Hindu Goddess religion-related texts. Women are found in philosophical discussions across numerous other Puranas and extant era texts. For example, Parvati in a discussion with her husband Shiva, remarks:

You should consider who you are, and who nature is.... how could you transcend nature? What you hear, what you eat, what you see – it is all Nature. How could you be beyond Nature? You are enveloped in Nature, even though you don't know it.

— Skanda Purana 1.1.21.22, Translated by Nicholas Gier[55]

Feminine symbolism as being sacred and for reverence were present in ancient Hindu texts, but these were fragmentary states Brown, and it was around the sixth century CE,[56] possibly in northwest India, that the concept of Maha-Devi coalesced as the Great Goddess, appearing in the text of Devi Mahatmya of Markandeya Purana.[57] This development of the divine woman was not theoretical, according to Brown, but has impacted "self understanding of Hindus to the present day" and "what it means to be human in a universe that is infinite and yet is pervaded by the very human quality of a woman's care and anger".[57] Devi Mahatmya, also called Durga Saptasati (or 700 verses to Durga), has been enormously popular among Hindus through the centuries, states Coburn.[58] Devi Mahatmya does not attempt to prove that the female is supreme, but assumes it as a given and its premise. This idea influenced the role of women in Hinduism in the Puranic texts that followed for centuries, where male-dominated and female-dominated couples appear, in various legends, in the same religious text and Hindu imagination.[59]

The Devi Mahatmya presents the idea, states McDaniel, of a divine she who creates this universe, is the supreme knowledge, who helps herself and men reach final liberation, she is multitasking who in times of prosperity is Lakshmi brings wealth and happiness to human homes, yet in times of adversity feeds and fights the battle as the angry woman destroying demons and evil in the universe after metamorphosing into Durga, Chandika, Ambika, Bhadrakali, Ishvari, Bhagvati, Sri or Devi.[60][61] However, notes Brown, the celebration of the goddess as supreme in Devi Mahatmya is not universal in Hindu texts of 1st millennium CE, and other Puranic texts celebrate the god as supreme, while acknowledging supreme goddess in various chapters and presenting the female as the "effective power behind any male" either in mythological sense or theological sense or both.[59]

The ideas of the 6th-century Devi Mahatmya are adopted in 11th-century text of Devi-Bhagavata Purana,[56] another goddess-classic text of Shakti tradition of Hinduism. However, this text emphasizes devotion and love as the path to her supreme nature as goddess.[62] In the latter text, Devi appears as a warrior goddess destroying demons, a world-mother nurturing the good, as the creator, the sustainer and the destroyer as different aspects of her, the one supreme.[63]

Gender of God

 
 
 
Goddesses in Hinduism are very common.[64] Other ideas found include androgynous concept such as Ardhanarishvara (a composite god that is half Shiva-male and Parvati-female),[65] or as formless and genderless Brahman (Universal Absolute, Supreme Self as Oneness in everyone).

In Hinduism, the impersonal Absolute (Brahman) is genderless. Both male gods (Deva) and female gods (Devi) are found in Hinduism. Some Hindu traditions conceive God as androgynous (both female and male), or as either male or female, while cherishing gender henotheism, that is without denying the existence of other Gods in either gender.[66][67]

Bhakti traditions of Hinduism have both gods and goddesses. In ancient and medieval Indian mythology, each masculine deva of the Hindu pantheon is partnered with a feminine devi.[68] Followers of Shaktism, worship the goddess Devi as the embodiment of Shakti (feminine strength or power).[69]

There is a popular perception that there exist millions of Hindu deities.[70] However, most, by far, are goddesses (Shakti, Devi, or mother), state Foulston and Abbott, suggesting "how important and popular goddesses are" in Hindu culture. Though in general, they are smaller, there are far more goddess temples than those of gods. Goddesses are most of the time, if not always seen as powerful, and when unmarried, seen as dangerous. Despite the patriarchal nature of Hindu society, women are seen as powerful alongside the Gods, and at certain times, dangerous.[64] No one has a list of the millions of goddesses and gods, but all deities, state scholars, are typically viewed in Hinduism as "emanations or manifestation of gender-less principle called Brahman, representing the many facets of Ultimate Reality".[64][70][71] In Hinduism, "God, the universe, all beings [male, female] and all else is essentially one thing" and everything is connected oneness, the same god is in every being as Atman, the eternal Self.[71][72]

Ancient and medieval Hindu literature, state scholars, is richly endowed with gods, goddesses and androgynous representations of God.[73] This, states Gross, is in contrast with several monotheistic religions, where God is often synonymous with "He" and theism is replete with male anthropomorphisms.[73] In Hinduism, goddess-imagery does not mean loss of male-god, rather the ancient literature presents the two genders as balancing each other and complementary. The Goddesses in Hinduism, states Gross,[73] are strong, beautiful and confident, symbolizing their vitality in the cycle of life. While masculine Gods are symbolically represented as those who act, the feminine Goddesses are symbolically portrayed as those who inspire action.[73] Goddesses in Hinduism are envisioned as the patrons of arts, culture, nurture, learning, arts, joys, spirituality and liberation.[73][74]

Dignity

Hinduism does not regard Women as lacking dignity, therefore there are not many specific quotes about affirming women's dignity. However, there are many references in the primary and secondary Hindu texts that affirm the dignity of women. Many stories from the Upanishads of female scholars, such as Jābālā’s tale, Maitreyi, Gārgī, Lopāmudrā, and Haimavatī Umā, demonstrate the dignity accorded to Women. According to verse 6.4.17 from the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, the birth of a female child who would be scholar is desired. The quote prescribes the specific rituals for obtaining a learned daughter.

Verse 6.4.17 Brihadaranyaka Upanishad:

अथ य इच्छेद्दुहिता मे पण्डिता जायेत, सर्वमायुरियादिति, तिलौदनं पाचयित्वा सर्पिष्मन्तमश्नीयाताम्; ईश्वरौ जनयितवै ॥ १७ ॥

atha ya icchedduhitā me paṇḍitā jāyeta, sarvamāyuriyāditi, tilaudanaṃ pācayitvā sarpiṣmantamaśnīyātām; īśvarau janayitavai || 17 ||

"One who wishes that a daughter should be born who would be a scholar and attain a full term of life, should have rice cooked with sesamum, and both should eat it with clarified butter. Then the creators (would-be parents) would indeed be able to produce such a daughter."[75]

Will Durant (1885-1981) American historian says in his book Story of Civilization:

"Women enjoyed far greater freedom in the Vedic period than in later India. She had more to say in the choice of her mate than the forms of marriage might suggest. She appeared freely at feasts and dances, and joined with men in religious sacrifice. She could study, and like Gargi, engage in philosophical disputation. If she was left a widow there were no restrictions upon her remarriage."[76][77]

Practices

Marriage

 
 
 
A wedding is one of the most significant personal ritual a Hindu woman undertakes in her life. The details and dress vary regionally among Hindu women, but share common ritual grammar. A Meitei Hindu bride in Manipur (left), an Amla Hindu bride in Madhya Pradesh (middle) and a Himalayan Hindu bride in Nepal (right).

The Asvalayana Grhyasutra text of Hinduism identifies eight forms of marriages. Of these first four – Brahma, Daiva, Arsha and Prajapatya – are declared appropriate and recommended by the text, next two – Gandharva and Asura – are declared inappropriate but acceptable, and the last two – Rakshasa and Paishacha – are declared evil and unacceptable (but any children resulting were granted legal rights).[7][78]

  1. Brahma marriage - considered the religiously most appropriate marriage, where the father finds an educated man, proposes the marriage of his daughter to him. The groom, bride, and families willingly concur with the proposal. The two families and relatives meet, the girl is ceremoniously decorated, the father gifts away his daughter in betrothal, and a Vedic marriage ceremony is conducted. This type of wedding is now most prevalent among Hindus in modern India.[7]
  2. Daiva marriage - in this type of marriage, the father gives away his daughter along with ornaments to a priest.
  3. Arsha marriage - in this type of marriage, the groom gives a cow and a bull to the father of the bride and the father exchanges his daughter in marriage. The groom took a vow to fulfill his obligations to the bride and family life (Grihasthashram).
  4. Prajapatya marriage - in this type of marriage, a couple agree to get married by exchanging some Sanskrit mantras (vows to each other). This form of marriage was akin to a civil ceremony.
  5. Gandharva marriage - in this type of marriage, the couple simply lives together out of love, by mutual consent, consensually consummating their relationship. This marriage is entered into without religious ceremonies, and was akin to the Western concept of Common-law marriage. Kama Sutra, as well as Rishi Kanva - the foster-father of Shakuntala - in the Mahabharata, claimed this kind of marriage to be an ideal one.[78]
  6. Asura marriage - in this type of marriage, the groom offered a dowry to the father of the bride and the bride, both accepted the dowry out of free will, and he received the bride in exchange. This was akin to marrying off a daughter for money. This marriage was considered inappropriate by Hindu Smriti-writers because greed, not what is best for the girl, can corrupt the selection process.[78] Manusmriti verses 3.51 and 3.52, for example, states that a father or relatives must never accept any brideprice because that amounts to trafficking of the daughter.[79]
  7. Rakshasa marriage - where the groom forcibly abducted the girl against her and her family's will. The word Rakshasa means 'devil'.
  8. Paishacha marriage - where the man forces himself on a woman when she is insentient, that is drugged or drunken or unconscious.

James Lochtefeld finds that the last two forms of marriage were forbidden yet recognized in ancient Hindu societies, not to encourage these acts, but to provide the woman and any children with legal protection in the society.[7]

"A woman can choose her own husband after attaining maturity. If her parents are unable to choose a deserving groom, she can herself choose her husband." (Manu Smriti IX 90 - 91)[80]

Dowry

The concept and practice of dowry in ancient and medieval Hindu society is unclear. Some scholars believe dowry was practiced in historic Hindu society, but some do not.[8][81] Historical eyewitness reports (discussed below), suggest dowry in pre-11th century CE Hindu society was insignificant, and daughters had inheritance rights, which by custom were exercised at the time of her marriage.

Stanley J. Tambiah states the ancient Code of Manu sanctioned dowry and bridewealth in ancient India, but dowry was the more prestigious form and associated with the Brahmanic (priestly) caste. Bridewealth was restricted to the lower castes, who were not allowed to give dowry. He cites two studies from the early 20th century with data to suggest that this pattern of dowry in upper castes and bridewealth in lower castes has persisted through the first half of the 20th century.[81]

Michael Witzel, in contrast, states the ancient Indian literature suggests dowry practices were not significant during the Vedic period.[8] Witzel also notes that women in ancient India had property inheritance rights either by appointment or when they had no brothers.[8] Kane states ancient literature suggests bridewealth was paid only in the asura-type of marriage that was considered reprehensible and forbidden by Manu and other ancient Indian scribes. Lochtefeld suggests that religious duties listed by Manu and others, such as 'the bride be richly adorned to celebrate marriage' were ceremonial dress and jewelry along with gifts that were her property, not property demanded by or meant for the groom; Lochtefeld further notes that bridal adornment is not currently considered as dowry in most people's mind.[82]

Historical and epigraphical evidence from ancient India suggests dowry was not the standard practice in ancient Hindu society. Arrian of Alexander the Great's conquest era, in his first book, mentions a lack of dowry, or infrequent enough to be noticed by Arrian.[83]

They (these ancient Indian people) make their marriages accordance with this principle, for in selecting a bride they care nothing whether she has a dowry and a handsome fortune, but look only to her beauty and other advantages of the outward person.

— Arrian, The Invasion of India by Alexander the Great, 3rd Century BC[84]

Arrian's second book similarly notes,

They (Indians) marry without either giving or taking dowries, but the women as soon as they are marriageable are brought forward by their fathers in public, to be selected by the victor in wrestling or boxing or running or someone who excels in any other manly exercise.

— Arrian, Indika, Megasthenes and Arrian, 3rd Century BC[85]

About 1200 years after Arrian's visit, Al-Biruni a Persian scholar who went and lived in India for 16 years in 11th century CE, wrote,

The implements of the wedding rejoicings are brought forward. No gift (dower or dowry) is settled between them. The man gives only a present to the wife, as he thinks fit, and a marriage gift in advance, which he has no right to claim back, but the (proposed) wife may give it back to him of her own will (if she does not want to marry).

— Al-Biruni, Chapter on Matrimony in India, about 1035 AD[86]

Widowhood and remarriage

Widows were traditionally expected to pursue a spiritual, ascetic life, particularly the higher castes such as Brahmins.[87] There were restrictions on remarriage as well. The Hindu widows were not allowed to wear jewellery, they had to consume tasteless food, and they had to wear a white coarse saree without choli or blouse covering their breasts.[88] Such restrictions are now strictly observed only by a small minority of widows, yet the belief continues that "a good wife predeceases her husband".[87][88][clarification needed]

During the debate before the passage of the Hindu Widows' Remarriage Act, 1856, some communities asserted that it was their ancient custom that prohibited widow remarriage. Hindu scholars and colonial British authorities rejected this argument, states Lucy Carroll, because the alleged custom prohibiting widow remarriage was "far from ancient", and was already in practice among the Hindu communities such as the Rajbansi whose members had petitioned for the prohibition of widow remarriage. Thus, it failed the "customary law" protections under the British colonial era laws.[89][90] However, this issue lingered in colonial courts for decades, because of the related issue of property left by the deceased husband, and whether the widow keeps or forfeits all rights to deceased Hindu husband's estate and thereby transfers the property from the deceased husband to her new husband. While Hindu community did not object to widow remarriage, it contested the property rights and transfer of property from her earlier husband's family to the later husband's family, particularly after the death of the remarried widow, in the 20th-century.[91]

Sati

 
Sati where a Hindu woman committed suicide by burning herself with the corpse of her husband.[92]

Sati is an obsolete Indian funeral custom where a widow immolated herself on her husband's pyre, or committed suicide in another fashion shortly after her husband's death.[92][93][94] Michael Witzel states there is no evidence of Sati practice in ancient Indian literature during the Vedic period.[8]

David Brick, in his 2010 review of ancient Indian literature, states[9]

There is no mention of Sahagamana (Sati) whatsoever in either Vedic literature or any of the early Dharmasutras or Dharmasastras. By "early Dharmasutras or Dharmasastras", I refer specifically to both the early Dharmasutras of Apastamba, Hiranyakesin, Gautama, Baudhayana and Vasistha, and the later Dharmasastras of Manu, Narada, and Yajnavalkya.

— David Brick, Yale University[9]

The earliest scholarly discussion of Sati, whether it is right or wrong, is found in the Sanskrit literature dated to 10th- to 12th-century.[95] The earliest known commentary on Sati by Medhātithi of Kashmir argues that Sati is a form of suicide, which is prohibited by the Vedic tradition.[9] Vijñāneśvara, of the 12th-century Chalukya court, and the 13th-century Madhvacharya, argue that sati should not to be considered suicide, which was otherwise variously banned or discouraged in the scriptures.[96] They offer a combination of reasons, both in favor and against sati.[97] However, according to the textbook, "Religions in the Modern World", after the death of Roop Kanwar on her husband's funeral pyre in 1987, thousands saw this as cruel murder. Committing sati was then made a crime, with consequences worse than murder.[98]

Another historical practice observed among women in Hinduism, was the Rajput practice of Jauhar, particularly in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh, where they collectively committed suicide during war. They preferred death rather than being captured alive and dishonored by victorious Muslim soldiers in a war.[99] According to Bose, jauhar practice grew in the 14th and 15th century with Hindu-Muslim wars of northwest India, where the Hindu women preferred death than the slavery or rape they faced if captured.[100][101] Sati-style jauhar custom among Hindu women was observed only during Hindu-Muslim wars in medieval India, but not during internecine Hindu-Hindu wars among the Rajputs.[102]

The Sati practice is considered to have originated within the warrior aristocracy in the Hindu society, gradually gaining in popularity from the 10th century AD and spreading to other groups from the 12th through 18th century AD.[103] The earliest Islamic invasions of South Asia have been recorded from early 8th century CE, such as the raids of Muhammad bin Qasim, and major wars of Islamic expansion after the 10th century.[104] This chronology has led to the theory that the increase in sati practice in India may be related to the centuries of Islamic invasion and its expansion in South Asia.[10][11] Daniel Grey states that the understanding of origins and spread of sati were distorted in the colonial era because of a concerted effort to push "problem Hindu" theories in the 19th and early 20th centuries.[105]

Education

The Vedas and Upanishads mention girls could be a Brahmacharini, that is getting an education.[106] Atharva Veda, for example, states[106][107]

ब्रह्मचर्येण कन्या युवानं विन्दते पतिम् |

A youthful Kanya (कन्या, girl) who graduates from Brahmacharya, obtains a suitable husband.

— Atharva Veda, 11.5.18[107]

The Harita Dharmasutra, a later era Hindu text states there are two kind of women: sadhyavadhu who marry without going to school, and the brahmavadini who go to school first to study the Vedas and speak of Brahman. The Hindu Sastras and Smritis describe varying number of Sanskara (rite of passage). Upanayana rite of passage symbolized the start of education process. Like the Vedas, the ancient Sutras and Shastra Sanskrit texts extended education right to women, and the girls who underwent this rite of passage then pursued studies were called Brahmavadini.[108][109] Those who didn't, performed Upanayana ceremony at the time of their wedding. Instead of sacred thread, girls would wear their robe (now called sari or saree) in the manner of the sacred thread, that is over her left shoulder during this rite of passage.[108][110]

Dress

 
Sari in different styles (shown) has been traced to ancient Hindu traditions. In modern times, Sari is also found among non-Hindu women of South Asia.

Information on ancient and medieval era dressing traditions of women in Hinduism is unclear. Textiles are commonly mentioned in ancient Indian texts.[111] The Arthashastra (~200 BCE to 300 CE) mentions a range of clothing and plant-based, muslin-based, wool-based textiles that are partially or fully dyed, knitted and woven.[112][113] It is, however, uncertain how women wore these clothing, and scholars have attempted to discern the dress from study of murti (statues), wall reliefs, and ancient literature.[114] In ancient and medieval Hindu traditions, covering the head or face was neither mandated nor common, but Ushnisha – a regional ceremonial occasion headdress is mentioned, as is Dupatta in colder, drier northern parts of Indian subcontinent.[113]

Regardless of economic status, the costume of ancient Hindu women was formed of two separate sheets of cloth, one wrapping the lower part of the body, below the waist, and another larger wrap around piece called Dhoti (modern-day Saree) in texts. Although in some part of India, lower caste women have to keep their breast uncovered in front of upper caste people which signifies lower status.Upper caste women too used to bare their breasts in front the deity as respect.[113] Some Murti and relief carvings suggest that pleats were used, probably to ease movement, but the pleats were tucked to reveal the contour of the body. However, where the pleats were tucked, front or side or back varied regionally.[115] The predominant style observed in the ancient texts and artwork is the wrapping of the excess of the Dhoti from right waist over the left shoulder, in the Vedic Upanayana style.[108][115] The breasts were covered with a stitched, tight fitting bodice named Kurpasaka (Sanskrit: कूर्पासक)[116] or Stanamsuka (Sanskrit: स्तनांशुक),[117] but this was not common in extreme south India or in eastern states such as Orissa and Bengal.[118] Regional variations were great, to suit local weather and traditions, in terms of the length, number of pleats, placement of pleats, style of bodice used for bosom, and the dimension or wrapping of the upper excess length of the Dhoti.[118] Greek records left by those who came to India with Alexander the Great mention that head and neck ornaments, ear rings, wrist and ankle ornaments were commonly worn by women.[119]

 
A Hindu woman, with Sindur in her hair and Bindi on forehead, customs also found among women in Jainism.[120]

Usually, the sari consists of a piece of cloth around 6 yards long, wrapped distinctly based on the prior mentioned factors.[121] The choice of the quality and sophistication of the cloth is dependent on the income and affordability. Women across economic groups in colonial era, for example, wore a single piece of cloth in hot and humid Bengal.[122] It was called Kapod by poorer women, while the more ornate version of the same was called a Saree.[122] The material and cost varied, but nature was the same across income and social groups (caste/class) of Hindu women.[122]

Sindoor or Kumkum has been a marker for women in Hinduism, since early times.[123] A married Hindu woman typically wears a red pigment (vermilion) in the parting of her hair, while a never married, divorced or a widowed woman does not.[123][124] A Hindu woman may wear a Bindi (also called Tip, Bindiya, Tilaka or Bottu) on her forehead.[125] This represents the place of the inner eye, and signifies that she is spiritually turned inwards.[125] In the past, this was worn by married women, but in the modern era, it is a fashion accessory and has no relation to the marital status for women in Hinduism.[125]

 
 
A 1st-century BCE Indian sculpture showing female Yakshi dress (left). Earrings from India, 1st-century BCE (right).[126] Greek texts suggest ancient Hindu women wearing ornaments.

Cultural customs such as Sindoor are similar to wedding ring in other cultures. Regionally, Hindu women may wear seasonal fresh flowers in their hair, during festivals, temple visits or other formal occasions. White color saree is common with aging widows, while red or other festive colors with embroidery is more common on festivals or social ceremonies such as weddings.[127] These Hindu practices are cultural practices, and not required by its religious texts.[128] Hinduism is a way of life, is diverse, has no binding book of rules of its faith, nor any that mandate any dress rules on Hindu women. The choice is left to the individual discretion.[128]

Other ornaments worn by Hindu women are sometimes known as solah singar (sixteen decorations): "bindi, necklaces, earrings, flowers in the hair, rings, bangles, armlets (for the upper arm), waistbands, ankle-bells, kohl (or kajal – mascara), toe rings, henna, perfume, sandalwood paste, the upper garment, and the lower garment".[129][unreliable source?][better source needed]

Bernard Cohn (2001) states that clothing in India, during the colonial British era, was a form of authority exercised to highlight hierarchical patterns, subordination, and authoritative relations. Hindus in India were subject to rule under a range of other religious reigns, therefore influencing clothing choices. This was exemplified by a change in attire as a result of Mughal influence and later European influence resulting from British rule.[130]

Arts: dance, drama, music

 
 
Many classical Indian dances such as Bharathanatyam and Kathak were developed by women in Hinduism.

Hindu religious art encompasses performance arts as well as visual art, and women have been expressed in Hindu arts as prominently as men.[131] Sanskrit literature has contributed to religious and spiritual expression of women, by its reverence for goddesses. The deity for arts, music, poetry, speech, culture, and learning is goddess Saraswati in the Hindu tradition.[132] Baumer states that the resulting Sanskrit Theater has its origins in the Vedas, stemming from three principles: “The cosmic man (purusha), the self (atman), and the universal being (brahman)".[133] Some of the earliest references to women being active in dance, music and artistic performance in Hindu texts is found in 1st millennium BCE Taittiriya Samhita chapter 6.1 and 8th-century BCE Shatapatha Brahmana chapter 3.2.4.[134] In religious ceremonies, such as the ancient Shrauta and Grihya sutras rituals, texts by Panini, Patanjali, Gobhila and others state that women sang hymns or uttered mantras along with men during the yajnas.[134]

 
A Hindu woman in a dance pose Bali Indonesia

Music and dance, states Tracy Pintchman, are "intertwined in Hindu traditions", and women in Hinduism have had an active creative and performance role in this tradition.[135] While aspects of the Hindu traditions curtailed the freedoms of women, they also gave opportunities to create and express arts.[135] The historical evidence, states Pintchman, suggests that the opportunities to create and participate in arts were available to women regardless of their caste or class.[135] Classical vocal music was more prevalent among women upper classes, while public performances of arts such as dance were more prevalent among women in matrilineal Hindu traditions, particularly the Devadasi.[136][137]

The Devadasi tradition women practiced their arts in a religious context.[136] Young Devadasi women were trained in the arts of music, theater, and dance, and their lives revolved around Hindu temples. In south India, some of these women were courtesans, while others chaste.[136] In 1909, the colonial government passed the first law banning the Devadasis practice in the state of Mysore; however, an attempt to ban Devadasis tradition in Tamil Nadu Hindu temples failed in Madras Presidency in 1927.[138] In 1947, the government of Madras passed legislation forbidding Devadasi practices under pressure from activists that this was a 'prostitution' tradition.[139] However, the tradition was revived by those who consider it to be a 'nun' tradition wherein a Devadasi was a chaste woman who considered herself married to God and used temple dance tradition to raise funds as well as helped continue the arts.[139]

In poetry, 9th-century Andal became a well known Bhakti movement poetess, states Pintchman, and historical records suggest that by 12th-century she was a major inspiration to Hindu women in south India and elsewhere.[136] Andal continues to inspire hundreds of classical dancers in modern times choreographing and dancing Andal's songs.[140] Andal is also called Goda, and her contributions to the arts have created Goda Mandali (circle of Andal) in the Vaishnava tradition.[140] Many other women, such as Nagaatnammal, Balasaraswati, and Rukmini, states Pintchman, were instrumental in bringing "Carnatic music and Bharat Natyam to the public stage and making the performing arts accessible by the general public" by the 12th-century.[140] Gathasaptasati is an anthology of Subhashita genre of poetry, from the first half of 1st millennium CE, many of which are attributed to Hindu women in central and western India.[141]

Menstruation

In Hinduism, menstruating women are traditionally advised rules to follow. Menstruation is seen as a period of purification, and women are often separated from place of worship or any object pertaining to it, for the length of their period. This forms the basis of most of the cultural practices and restrictions around menstruation in Hinduism.[142] The origin of the myth of menstrual impurity originated in the Vedic period, linked to Indra's slaying of Vritras;[143] in the Veda that "guilt", of killing a brahmana-murder, appears every month as menstrual flow of women had taken upon themselves a part of Indra's guilt.[144][145]

Context: historical and modern developments

The role of women in Hinduism dates back to 3000 years of history, states Pechelis, incorporating ideas of Hindu philosophy, that is Prakrti (matter, femaleness) and Purusha (consciousness, maleness), coming together to interact and produce the current state of the universe.[146] Hinduism considers the connection, interdependence, and complementary nature of these two concepts – Prakriti and Purusha, female and male – as the basis of all existence, which is a starting point of the position of women in Hindu traditions.[146]

Although these ancient texts are the foundation upon which the position of women in Hinduism is founded, Hindu women participated in and were affected by cultural traditions and celebrations such as festivals, dance, arts, music and other aspects of daily life. Despite these liberating undercurrents emerging in its historical context, Sugirtharajah states that there is some reluctance to use the term "feminism" to describe historical developments in Hinduism.[147]

In the colonial era 1800s, Hindu women were described by European scholars as being "naturally chaste" and "more virtuous" than other women.[148]

In 20th-century history context, the position of women in Hinduism and more generally India, has many contradictions.[149] Regional Hindu traditions are organized as matriarchal societies (such as in south India and northeast India), where the woman is the head of the household and inherits the wealth; yet, other Hindu traditions are patriarchal.[150] God as a woman, and mother goddess ideas are revered in Hinduism, yet there are rituals that treats the female in a subordinate role.[151]

The women’s rights movement in India, states Sharma, have been driven by two foundational Hindu concepts – lokasangraha and satyagraha.[152] Lokasangraha is defined as “acting for the welfare of the world” and satyagraha “insisting on the truth”. These ideals were used to justify and spur movements among women for women's rights and social change through a political and legal process.[152] Fane remarks, in her article published in 1975, that it is the underlying Hindu beliefs of "women are honored, considered most capable of responsibility, strong" that made Indira Gandhi culturally acceptable as the prime minister of India,[149] yet the country has in the recent centuries witnessed the development of diverse ideologies, both Hindu and non-Hindu, that has impacted the position of women in India.[153] The women rights movement efforts, states Young, have been impeded by the "growing intensity of Muslim separatist politics", the divergent positions of Indian Hindu women seeking separation of religion and women's rights, secular universal laws (uniform civil code) applicable irrespective of religion, while Indian Muslim community seeking to preserve Sharia law in personal, family and other domains.[154]

Western scholarship

There has been a pervasive and deeply held belief in modern era Western scholarship, states Professor Kathleen Erndl, that "in Hinduism, women are universally subjugated and that feminism, however, it might be defined, is an artifact of the West".[155][156] Postmodern scholars question whether they have "unwittingly accepted" this colonial stereotype and long-standing assumption,[155][157] particularly given the emerging understanding of Hindu Shakti tradition-related texts, and empirical studies of women in rural India who have had no exposure to Western thought or education but assert their Hindu (or Buddhist) goddess-inspired feminism.[155][158]

Western feminism, states Vasudha Narayanan, has focussed on negotiating "issues of submission and power as it seeks to level the terrains of opportunity" and uses a language of "rights".[159] In Hinduism, the contextual and cultural word has been Dharma, which is about "duties" to oneself, to others, among other things.[159] There has been a gap between Western books describing Hinduism and women's struggle within the Hindu tradition based on texts that the colonial British era gave notoriety to, versus the reality of Hindu traditions and customs that did not follow these texts at all.[157][160] Narayanan describes it as follows (abridged),

Many [Western] scholars point out quite correctly that women are accorded a fairly low status in the Hindu texts that deal with law and ethics (Dharma Shastra), what is not usually mentioned is that these texts were not well known and utilized in many parts of Hindu India. Custom and practice were far more important than the dictates of these legal texts. There were many legal texts and they were not in competition with each other; they were written at different times in different parts of the country, but all of them were superseded by local custom. (...) There is a sense of dissonance between scripture and practice in certain areas of dharma, and the role of women and Sudras sometimes falls in this category. Manu may have denied independence to women, but there were women of some castes and some economic classes who endowed money to temples. It is important to note that there is no direct correlation that one can generalize on between these texts and women's status, rights or behavior.

— Vasudha Narayanan, Feminism and World Religions[160]

Ancient and medieval era Hindu texts, and epics, discuss a woman's position and role in society over a spectrum, such as one who is a self-sufficient, marriage-eschewing powerful Goddess, to one who is subordinate and whose identity is defined by men rather than her, and to one who sees herself as a human being and spiritual person while being neither feminine nor masculine.[161][162] The 6th-century Devi Mahatmya text, for example, states Cynthia Humes, actually shares "the postmodern exaltation of embodiedness, divinizing it as does much of the Western feminist spirituality movement".[163] These texts are not theoretical nor disconnected from the lives of women in the historic Hindu society, but the verses assert that all "women are portions of the divine goddess", states Humes.[164] The Hindu goddess tradition inspired by these texts has been, notes Pintchman, one of the richest, compelling traditions worldwide, and its followers flock villages, towns, and cities all over India.[165] Yet, adds Humes, other texts describe her creative potential not in her terms, but using the words of male virility and gendered dichotomy, possibly encouraging the heroic woman to abandon her female persona and impersonate the male.[164]

Postmodern empirical scholarship about Hindu society, states Rita Gross, makes one question whether and to what extent there is pervasiveness of patriarchy in Hinduism.[166] Patriarchal control is real, and the Hindu society admits this of itself, states Gross, yet the Hindu culture distinguishes between authority – which men hold, and power – which both men and women hold.[166] Women in the Hindu tradition have the power, and they exercise that power to take control of situations that are important to them.[166] The Goddess theology and humanity in the Hindu texts are a foundation of these values, a form that isn't feminist by Western definition, but is feminist nevertheless, one with an empowering and self-liberating value structure with an added spiritual dimension that resonates with Hindu (and Buddhist) goddesses.[166][167]

Kathleen Erndl states that texts such as Manusmriti do not necessarily portray what women in Hinduism were or are, but it represents an ideology, and that "the task of Hindu feminists is to rescue Shakti from its patriarchal prison".[168] Her metaphor, explains Erndl, does not mean that Shakti never was free nor that she is tightly locked up now, because patriarchy is neither monolithic nor ossified in Hindu culture.[168] The Shakti concept and associated extensive philosophy in Hindu texts provide a foundation to both spiritual and social liberation.[169]

See also

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  152. ^ a b Young, Katherine (1994). Today's Women in World Religions (Editor: Arvind Sharma). State Univ of New York Press. pp. 77–92. ISBN 978-0791416877.
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  155. ^ a b c Kathleen Erndl (2000), Is the Goddess a Feminist?: The Politics of South Asian Goddesses (Editors: Alf Hiltebeitel, Kathleen M. Erndl), New York University Press, ISBN 978-0814736197, page 91-92, 95
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Bibliography

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External links

  •   Media related to Hinduism and women at Wikimedia Commons
  • Women and the Hindu Tradition, Susan S. Wadley (1977), Signs, Vol. 3, No. 1, pages 113-125
  • New Age Hinduism, New Age Orientalism, and the Second-Generation South Asian, Rachel Fell McDermott (2000), Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Vol. 68, No. 4, pages 721-731
  • History and Anthropology in South Asia: Rethinking the Archive, Saloni Mathur (2000), Annual Review of Anthropology, Vol. 29, pages 89–106

women, hinduism, this, article, about, position, women, religious, texts, hinduism, position, women, india, women, india, hindu, texts, present, diverse, views, position, women, ranging, from, feminine, leadership, highest, goddess, limiting, gender, roles, de. This article is about the position of women in the religious texts of Hinduism For the position of women in India see Women in India Hindu texts present diverse views on the position of women ranging from feminine leadership as the highest goddess to limiting gender roles The Devi Sukta hymn of Rigveda a scripture of Hinduism declares the feminine energy as the essence of the universe the one who creates all matter and consciousness the eternal and infinite the metaphysical and empirical reality Brahman the soul supreme self of everything 1 2 The woman is celebrated as the most powerful and the empowering force in some Hindu Upanishads Sastras and Puranas particularly the Devi Upanishad Devi Mahatmya and Devi Bhagavata Purana 3 4 5 Ancient and medieval era Hindu texts present a diverse picture of duties and rights of women in Hinduism The texts recognize eight kinds of marriage ranging from father finding a marriage partner for his daughter and seeking her consent Brahma or Devic marriage to the bride and groom finding each other without parental participation Gandharva marriage and paishachik against God s blessing marriage by force against woman not following varnashram dharm and without parents blessing 6 7 Scholars state that Vedic era Hindu texts had practice Dowry or Sati if 8 9 These practices likely became widespread sometime in the 2nd millennium CE from socio political developments in the Indian subcontinent 10 11 Throughout history Hindu society has seen many female rulers such as Rudramadevi religious figures and saints such as Andal philosophers such as Maitreyi and female practitioners conductors of Vedic Hindu rituals 12 13 Hinduism states Bryant has the strongest presence of the divine feminine among major world religions from ancient times to the present 14 The goddess is viewed as central in Shakti and Shiva Hindu traditions 15 16 Matriarchal theology is quite prevalent in Sanskritic traditions and village Hinduism relating to the worship of Shakti and there are numerous Hindu communities that are matriarchal 13 Contents 1 Ancient texts 1 1 Vedic literature 1 2 The Hindu historical epics 1 3 Shastras and Smritis 1 3 1 Divorce 1 3 2 Varna 1 3 3 Property rights 1 3 4 Inconsistency and authenticity issues 1 4 Puranas 2 Gender of God 3 Dignity 4 Practices 4 1 Marriage 4 2 Dowry 4 3 Widowhood and remarriage 4 4 Sati 4 5 Education 4 6 Dress 4 7 Arts dance drama music 4 8 Menstruation 5 Context historical and modern developments 5 1 Western scholarship 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 External linksAncient texts EditVedic literature Edit Ancient texts of Hinduism expound a reverence for the feminine The 10th chapter of the Rigveda for example asserts the feminine to be the supreme principle behind all of cosmos in the following hymn called as Devi Sukta 1 2 I am the Queen the gatherer up of treasures most thoughtful first of those who merit worship Thus Gods have established me in many places with many homes to enter and abide in Through me alone all eat the food that feeds them each man who sees breathes hears the word outspoken They know it not yet I reside in the essence of the Universe Hear one and all the truth as I declare it I verily myself announce and utter the word that gods and men alike shall welcome I make the man I love exceeding mighty make him nourished a sage and one who knows Brahman I bend the bow for Rudra that his arrow may strike and slay the hater of devotion I rouse and order battle for the people I created Earth and Heaven and reside as their inner controller On the world s summit I bring forth the Father my home is in the waters in the ocean Thence I prevade all existing creatures as their Inner Supreme Self and manifest them with my body I created all worlds at my will without any higher being and permeate and dwell within them The eternal and infinite consciousness is I it is my greatness dwelling in everything Rigveda 10 125 3 10 125 8 The Vedas have several hymns accredited to women scholars who were known as Brahmavadinis There were many learnt women who could defeat men with their skills and intellect These include Gargi Ahalya Maitreyi Lopamudra Ghosha Swaha Haimavati Uma Gautami Hemalekha Sita etc 1 17 At the same time the Rigveda states contradictory views on women Indra himself hath said The mind of woman brooks not discipline Her intellect hath little weight 18 With women there can be no lasting friendship hearts of hyenas are the hearts of women 19 UpanishadsThe Devi Sukta ideas of the Rigveda are further developed in the relatively later composed Shakta Upanishads states McDaniel where the Devi asserts that she is Brahman from her arise Prakṛti matter and Purusha consciousness she is bliss and non bliss the Vedas and what is different from it the born and the unborn and the feminine is thus all of the universe 3 She is presented as all the five elements as well as all that is different from these elements what is above what is below what is around and thus the universe in its entirety 20 This philosophy is also found in the Tripuratapani Upanishad and the Bahvricha Upanishad 1 The early Upanishads are however generally silent about women and men and focus predominantly on gender less Brahman and its relation to Atman Soul Self There are occasional exceptions Brihadaranyaka Upanishad composed about 800 BCE for example in the last chapter detailing the education of a student include lessons for his Grihastha stage of life 21 There the student is taught that as a husband he should cook rice for the wife and they together eat the food in certain way depending on whether they wish for the birth of a daughter or a son as follows 21 And if a man wishes that a learned daughter should be born to him and that she should live to her full age then after having prepared boiled rice with sesamum and butter they should both eat being fit to have offspring And if a man wishes that a learned son should be born to him and that he should live his full age then after having prepared boiled rice with grain and butter they should both eat being fit to have offspring Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 6 4 17 6 4 18 Translated by Max Muller 22 Women are mentioned and are participants in the philosophical debates of the Upanishads as well as scholars teachers and priestesses during the Vedic and early Buddhist age 23 Among women acknowledged in the Upanishads are Gargi and Maitreyi 23 In Sanskrit the word acharya means a female teacher versus acharya meaning teacher and an acharyini is a teacher s wife indicating that some women were known as gurus citation needed Female characters appear in plays and epic poems The 8th century poet Bhavabhuti describes in his play Uttararamacharita verse 2 3 how the character Atreyi travelled to southern India where she studied the Vedas and Indian philosophy In Madhava s Shankaradigvijaya Shankara debates with the female philosopher Ubhaya Bharati and in verses 9 63 it is mentioned that she was well versed in the Vedas Tirukkoneri Dasyai a 15th century scholar wrote a commentary on Nammalvar s Tiruvaayamoli with reference to Vedic texts such as the Taittiriya Yajurveda citation needed The Hindu historical epics Edit The Mahabharata is a legendary Hindu epic reflecting the Hindu Dharma based social beliefs and culture in ancient India In its first book Dushmanta asks Sakuntala above to marry him for love in Gandharva style marriage initially without informing their parents 24 The texts also describes seven other forms of marriage and when they were appropriate with parents blessings withing varnashram dharm or inappropriate out of varnashram dharm or against woman s wish 24 In the two Hindu historical epics Ramayana and Mahabharata the role of women is multiple The main female character in the Mahabharata Draupadi is married to all the five Pandavas due to Mata Kunti directive to distribute without seeing what has been brought by Pandavas thus had five husbands She is insulted by Duryodhana one of the main reasons for the great war in restoring the honor of their woman In the Ramayana the historical epic on shri Ram s life composed eight lakh years BC in tretayug Sita is respected honored wise and seen as inseparable beloved but lived as a homemaker the ideal wife and partner to Rama In the Hindu dharma women s oral readings of the Ramayana at home bring piece happiness good progeny good health and relives family from bad luck and bad health The Epics are divinely ordained to Rishis and seen thru divinely vision and carry precepts of dharma embedded in them suggesting perceived notions about women in Sanatan Hinduism at the time the Epic history were composed The Mahabharata in Book 1 for example states No man even in anger should ever do anything that is disagreeable to his wife while upholding dharm for happiness joy virtue and everything depend on the wife Wife is the sacred soil in which the husband is born again even the Rishis cannot create men without women Adi Parva Mahabharata Book 1 74 50 51 25 The Anushasana Parva of the Hindu epic Mahabharata has several chapters dedicated to the discussion about duties and right of women It gives a mixed picture In chapter 11 the goddess of wealth and prosperity Lakshmi asserts that she her divinity lives in those women who are truthful sincere modest organized devoted to their husband and children health conscious patient and kind to parents parent in laws and guests 26 The goddess asserts she does not reside in woman who is sinful unclean always disagreeing with her husband has no patience or fortitude is lazy quarrelsome with her neighbors and relatives 26 In chapter 47 as Yudhishthira seeks guidance on Dharma from Bhishma the Anushasana Parva compares the value of daughter to a son as follows The daughter O king has been ordained in the scriptures to be equal to the son Bhishma Anushasana Parva Mahabharata 13 47 26 27 In Udyoga Parva of Mahabharata states misogynists and bigots are sinners Assertion of one s own superiority the avaricious lolupa those who are unable to tolerate the slightest insult the bad tempered the fickle those who neglect the protecting of those who seek it One who thinks only of his own sexual satisfaction the bigoted the arrogant one who gives and then regrets it one who s parsimonious one who admires power wealth and pleasure and the misogynist these are the 13 types of sinners M B Udyoga Parva 43 18 19 The duties of women are again recited in Chapter 146 as a conversation between god Shiva and his wife goddess Uma where Shiva asks what are the duties of women Devi Uma Parvati proceeds to meet all the rivers who are all goddesses that nourish and create fertile valleys 28 Uma suggests that the duties of women include being of a good disposition endued with sweet speech sweet conduct and sweet features For a woman claims Uma her husband is her god her husband is her friend and her husband is her high refuge A woman s duties include physical and emotional nourishment reverence and fulfillment of her husband and her children Their happiness is her happiness she observes the same vows as those that are observed by her husband her duty is to be cheerful even when her husband or her children are angry be there for them in adversity or sickness is regarded as truly righteous in her conduct 28 Beyond her husband and family her duty is to be cheerful of heart and humble with friends and relatives do the best she can for friends and guests Her family life and her home is her heaven tells goddess Parvati to Shiva 28 Anushasana Parva has served as a source for modern era texts on women in Hinduism For example Tryambakayajvan of Thanjavur in the 18th century CE published Stridharmapaddhati or Guide for a Dharmic Woman Tryambaka according to Julia Leslie 29 selectively extracts verses from many chapters of Anushasana Parva He selectively extracts verses from other books of the Mahabharata as well and other ancient Indian texts for Stridharmapaddhati choosing those he preferred omitting verses from the Mahabharata that represent its characteristic style of presenting many voices and counter arguments 30 Shastras and Smritis Edit Main articles Smriti Dharmasastra and Manusmriti The Vedas and Shastras of Hinduism mention Brahmacharini women studying the Vedas 31 The word Brahmacharini is also revered in Hinduism as a goddess above The characterization and treatment of women is mixed in Shastras and Smriti texts of Hinduism Scholars have questioned the later date insertions corruption and authenticity of the texts as dozens of significantly different versions of the Smriti texts have been found Patrick Olivelle for example who is credited with a 2005 translation of Manusmriti published by the Oxford University Press states the concerns in postmodern scholarship about the presumed authenticity and reliability of Manusmriti manuscripts 32 He writes abridged The MDh Manusmriti was the first Indian legal text introduced to the western world through the translation of Sir William Jones in 1794 All the editions of the MDh except for Jolly s reproduce the text as found in the Calcutta manuscript containing the commentary of Kulluka I have called this as the vulgate version It was Kulluka s version that has been translated repeatedly Jones 1794 Burnell 1884 Buhler 1886 and Doniger 1991 The belief in the authenticity of Kulluka s text was openly articulated by Burnell 1884 xxix There is then no doubt that the textus receptus viz that of Kulluka Bhatta as adopted in India and by European scholars is very near on the whole to the original text This is far from the truth Indeed one of the great surprises of my editorial work has been to discover how few of the over fifty manuscripts that I collated actually follow the vulgate in key readings Patrick Olivelle Manu s Code of Law 2005 32 Arthashastra in chapter 1 21 describes women who had received military education and served to protect the king the text also mentions female artisans mendicants and women who were wandering ascetics 33 34 One of the most studied about the position of women in medieval Hindu society has been a now contested Calcutta manuscript of Manusmriti The text preaches chastity to widows such as in verses 5 158 5 160 35 In verses 2 67 2 69 and 5 148 5 155 Manusmriti preaches that as a girl she should obey and seek protection of her father as a young woman her husband and as a widow her son and that a woman should always worship her husband as a god 36 37 In other verses Manusmriti respects and safeguards women rights Manusmriti in verses 3 55 3 56 for example declares that women must be honored and adorned and where women are revered there the gods rejoice but where they are not no sacred rite bears any fruit 38 39 Elsewhere in verses 5 147 5 148 states Olivelle the text declares a woman must never seek to live independently 40 Divorce Edit The text declares that a marriage cannot be dissolved by a woman or a man in verse 8 101 8 102 41 Yet the text in other sections allows either to dissolve the marriage For example verses 9 72 9 81 allow the man or the woman to get out of a fraudulent marriage or an abusive marriage and remarry the text also provides legal means for a woman to remarry when her husband has been missing or has abandoned her 42 Arthashastra which is one of the sastras in Hinduism saysA woman hating her husband can not dissolve her marriage with him against his will Nor can a man dissolve his marriage with his wife against her will But from mutual enmity divorce may be obtained parasparam dveshanmokshah If a man apprehending danger from his wife desires divorce mokshamichhet he shall return to her whatever she was given on the occasion of her marriage If a woman under the apprehension of danger from her husband desires divorce she shall forfeit her claim to her property marriages contracted in accordance with the customs of the first four kinds of marriages cannot be dissolved 43 44 Varna Edit The text in one section opposes a woman marrying someone outside her own varna as in verses 3 13 3 14 35 Simultaneously states Olivelle the text presupposes numerous practices such as marriages outside varna such as between a Brahmin man and a Shudra woman in verses 9 149 9 157 a widow getting pregnant with a child of a man she is not married to in verses 9 57 9 62 marriage where a woman in love elopes with her man and then grants legal rights in these cases such as property inheritance rights in verses 9 143 9 157 and the legal rights of the children so born 45 The text also presumes that a married woman may get pregnant by a man other than her husband and dedicates verses 8 31 8 56 to conclude that the child s custody belongs to the woman and her legal husband and not to the man she got pregnant with 46 47 Property rights Edit Manusmriti provides a woman with property rights to six types of property in verses 9 192 9 200 These include those she received at her marriage or as gift when she eloped or when she was taken away or as token of love before marriage or as gifts from her biological family or as received from her husband subsequent to marriage and also from an inheritance from deceased relatives 48 Inconsistency and authenticity issues Edit Scholars state that less than half or only 1 214 of the 2 685 verses in Manusmriti may be authentic 49 Further the verses are internally inconsistent 50 Verses such as 3 55 3 62 of Manusmriti for example glorify the position of women while verse such as 9 3 and 9 17 do the opposite 49 Mahatma Gandhi when asked about his view about the Smriti stated that there are so many contradictions in the printed volume that if you accept one part you are bound to reject those parts that are wholly inconsistent with it Nobody is in possession of the original text of Manusmriti 51 Flavia Agnes states that Manusmriti is a complex commentary from women s rights perspective and the British colonial era codification of women s rights based on it for Hindus and from Islamic texts for Muslims picked and emphasized certain aspects while it ignored other sections 52 This construction of personal law during the colonial era created a legal fiction around Manusmriti s historic role as a scripture in matters relating to women in South Asia 52 53 Puranas Edit Devi Mahatmya a Hindu Sanskrit manuscript from Nepal 11th century above helped crystallize the goddess tradition where the creator God is a female but neither feminine nor masculine rather spiritual and a force of good 54 The Puranas particularly the Devi Mahatmya found in Markandeya Maha Purana and the Devi Bhagavata Purana have some of the most dedicated discussion of Devi and sacred feminine in late ancient and early medieval era of Hinduism 3 4 5 However the discussion is not limited to these two major Hindu Goddess religion related texts Women are found in philosophical discussions across numerous other Puranas and extant era texts For example Parvati in a discussion with her husband Shiva remarks You should consider who you are and who nature is how could you transcend nature What you hear what you eat what you see it is all Nature How could you be beyond Nature You are enveloped in Nature even though you don t know it Skanda Purana 1 1 21 22 Translated by Nicholas Gier 55 Feminine symbolism as being sacred and for reverence were present in ancient Hindu texts but these were fragmentary states Brown and it was around the sixth century CE 56 possibly in northwest India that the concept of Maha Devi coalesced as the Great Goddess appearing in the text of Devi Mahatmya of Markandeya Purana 57 This development of the divine woman was not theoretical according to Brown but has impacted self understanding of Hindus to the present day and what it means to be human in a universe that is infinite and yet is pervaded by the very human quality of a woman s care and anger 57 Devi Mahatmya also called Durga Saptasati or 700 verses to Durga has been enormously popular among Hindus through the centuries states Coburn 58 Devi Mahatmya does not attempt to prove that the female is supreme but assumes it as a given and its premise This idea influenced the role of women in Hinduism in the Puranic texts that followed for centuries where male dominated and female dominated couples appear in various legends in the same religious text and Hindu imagination 59 The Devi Mahatmya presents the idea states McDaniel of a divine she who creates this universe is the supreme knowledge who helps herself and men reach final liberation she is multitasking who in times of prosperity is Lakshmi brings wealth and happiness to human homes yet in times of adversity feeds and fights the battle as the angry woman destroying demons and evil in the universe after metamorphosing into Durga Chandika Ambika Bhadrakali Ishvari Bhagvati Sri or Devi 60 61 However notes Brown the celebration of the goddess as supreme in Devi Mahatmya is not universal in Hindu texts of 1st millennium CE and other Puranic texts celebrate the god as supreme while acknowledging supreme goddess in various chapters and presenting the female as the effective power behind any male either in mythological sense or theological sense or both 59 The ideas of the 6th century Devi Mahatmya are adopted in 11th century text of Devi Bhagavata Purana 56 another goddess classic text of Shakti tradition of Hinduism However this text emphasizes devotion and love as the path to her supreme nature as goddess 62 In the latter text Devi appears as a warrior goddess destroying demons a world mother nurturing the good as the creator the sustainer and the destroyer as different aspects of her the one supreme 63 Gender of God EditMain articles Devi God and gender in Hinduism and Hindu deities Goddesses in Hinduism are very common 64 Other ideas found include androgynous concept such as Ardhanarishvara a composite god that is half Shiva male and Parvati female 65 or as formless and genderless Brahman Universal Absolute Supreme Self as Oneness in everyone In Hinduism the impersonal Absolute Brahman is genderless Both male gods Deva and female gods Devi are found in Hinduism Some Hindu traditions conceive God as androgynous both female and male or as either male or female while cherishing gender henotheism that is without denying the existence of other Gods in either gender 66 67 Bhakti traditions of Hinduism have both gods and goddesses In ancient and medieval Indian mythology each masculine deva of the Hindu pantheon is partnered with a feminine devi 68 Followers of Shaktism worship the goddess Devi as the embodiment of Shakti feminine strength or power 69 There is a popular perception that there exist millions of Hindu deities 70 However most by far are goddesses Shakti Devi or mother state Foulston and Abbott suggesting how important and popular goddesses are in Hindu culture Though in general they are smaller there are far more goddess temples than those of gods Goddesses are most of the time if not always seen as powerful and when unmarried seen as dangerous Despite the patriarchal nature of Hindu society women are seen as powerful alongside the Gods and at certain times dangerous 64 No one has a list of the millions of goddesses and gods but all deities state scholars are typically viewed in Hinduism as emanations or manifestation of gender less principle called Brahman representing the many facets of Ultimate Reality 64 70 71 In Hinduism God the universe all beings male female and all else is essentially one thing and everything is connected oneness the same god is in every being as Atman the eternal Self 71 72 Ancient and medieval Hindu literature state scholars is richly endowed with gods goddesses and androgynous representations of God 73 This states Gross is in contrast with several monotheistic religions where God is often synonymous with He and theism is replete with male anthropomorphisms 73 In Hinduism goddess imagery does not mean loss of male god rather the ancient literature presents the two genders as balancing each other and complementary The Goddesses in Hinduism states Gross 73 are strong beautiful and confident symbolizing their vitality in the cycle of life While masculine Gods are symbolically represented as those who act the feminine Goddesses are symbolically portrayed as those who inspire action 73 Goddesses in Hinduism are envisioned as the patrons of arts culture nurture learning arts joys spirituality and liberation 73 74 Dignity EditHinduism does not regard Women as lacking dignity therefore there are not many specific quotes about affirming women s dignity However there are many references in the primary and secondary Hindu texts that affirm the dignity of women Many stories from the Upanishads of female scholars such as Jabala s tale Maitreyi Gargi Lopamudra and Haimavati Uma demonstrate the dignity accorded to Women According to verse 6 4 17 from the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad the birth of a female child who would be scholar is desired The quote prescribes the specific rituals for obtaining a learned daughter Verse 6 4 17 Brihadaranyaka Upanishad अथ य इच छ द द ह त म पण ड त ज य त सर वम य र य द त त ल दन प चय त व सर प ष मन तमश न य त म ईश वर जनय तव १७ atha ya icchedduhita me paṇḍita jayeta sarvamayuriyaditi tilaudanaṃ pacayitva sarpiṣmantamasniyatam isvarau janayitavai 17 One who wishes that a daughter should be born who would be a scholar and attain a full term of life should have rice cooked with sesamum and both should eat it with clarified butter Then the creators would be parents would indeed be able to produce such a daughter 75 Will Durant 1885 1981 American historian says in his book Story of Civilization Women enjoyed far greater freedom in the Vedic period than in later India She had more to say in the choice of her mate than the forms of marriage might suggest She appeared freely at feasts and dances and joined with men in religious sacrifice She could study and like Gargi engage in philosophical disputation If she was left a widow there were no restrictions upon her remarriage 76 77 Practices EditMarriage Edit Main article Hindu wedding A wedding is one of the most significant personal ritual a Hindu woman undertakes in her life The details and dress vary regionally among Hindu women but share common ritual grammar A Meitei Hindu bride in Manipur left an Amla Hindu bride in Madhya Pradesh middle and a Himalayan Hindu bride in Nepal right The Asvalayana Grhyasutra text of Hinduism identifies eight forms of marriages Of these first four Brahma Daiva Arsha and Prajapatya are declared appropriate and recommended by the text next two Gandharva and Asura are declared inappropriate but acceptable and the last two Rakshasa and Paishacha are declared evil and unacceptable but any children resulting were granted legal rights 7 78 Brahma marriage considered the religiously most appropriate marriage where the father finds an educated man proposes the marriage of his daughter to him The groom bride and families willingly concur with the proposal The two families and relatives meet the girl is ceremoniously decorated the father gifts away his daughter in betrothal and a Vedic marriage ceremony is conducted This type of wedding is now most prevalent among Hindus in modern India 7 Daiva marriage in this type of marriage the father gives away his daughter along with ornaments to a priest Arsha marriage in this type of marriage the groom gives a cow and a bull to the father of the bride and the father exchanges his daughter in marriage The groom took a vow to fulfill his obligations to the bride and family life Grihasthashram Prajapatya marriage in this type of marriage a couple agree to get married by exchanging some Sanskrit mantras vows to each other This form of marriage was akin to a civil ceremony Gandharva marriage in this type of marriage the couple simply lives together out of love by mutual consent consensually consummating their relationship This marriage is entered into without religious ceremonies and was akin to the Western concept of Common law marriage Kama Sutra as well as Rishi Kanva the foster father of Shakuntala in the Mahabharata claimed this kind of marriage to be an ideal one 78 Asura marriage in this type of marriage the groom offered a dowry to the father of the bride and the bride both accepted the dowry out of free will and he received the bride in exchange This was akin to marrying off a daughter for money This marriage was considered inappropriate by Hindu Smriti writers because greed not what is best for the girl can corrupt the selection process 78 Manusmriti verses 3 51 and 3 52 for example states that a father or relatives must never accept any brideprice because that amounts to trafficking of the daughter 79 Rakshasa marriage where the groom forcibly abducted the girl against her and her family s will The word Rakshasa means devil Paishacha marriage where the man forces himself on a woman when she is insentient that is drugged or drunken or unconscious James Lochtefeld finds that the last two forms of marriage were forbidden yet recognized in ancient Hindu societies not to encourage these acts but to provide the woman and any children with legal protection in the society 7 A woman can choose her own husband after attaining maturity If her parents are unable to choose a deserving groom she can herself choose her husband Manu Smriti IX 90 91 80 Dowry Edit The concept and practice of dowry in ancient and medieval Hindu society is unclear Some scholars believe dowry was practiced in historic Hindu society but some do not 8 81 Historical eyewitness reports discussed below suggest dowry in pre 11th century CE Hindu society was insignificant and daughters had inheritance rights which by custom were exercised at the time of her marriage Stanley J Tambiah states the ancient Code of Manu sanctioned dowry and bridewealth in ancient India but dowry was the more prestigious form and associated with the Brahmanic priestly caste Bridewealth was restricted to the lower castes who were not allowed to give dowry He cites two studies from the early 20th century with data to suggest that this pattern of dowry in upper castes and bridewealth in lower castes has persisted through the first half of the 20th century 81 Michael Witzel in contrast states the ancient Indian literature suggests dowry practices were not significant during the Vedic period 8 Witzel also notes that women in ancient India had property inheritance rights either by appointment or when they had no brothers 8 Kane states ancient literature suggests bridewealth was paid only in the asura type of marriage that was considered reprehensible and forbidden by Manu and other ancient Indian scribes Lochtefeld suggests that religious duties listed by Manu and others such as the bride be richly adorned to celebrate marriage were ceremonial dress and jewelry along with gifts that were her property not property demanded by or meant for the groom Lochtefeld further notes that bridal adornment is not currently considered as dowry in most people s mind 82 Historical and epigraphical evidence from ancient India suggests dowry was not the standard practice in ancient Hindu society Arrian of Alexander the Great s conquest era in his first book mentions a lack of dowry or infrequent enough to be noticed by Arrian 83 They these ancient Indian people make their marriages accordance with this principle for in selecting a bride they care nothing whether she has a dowry and a handsome fortune but look only to her beauty and other advantages of the outward person Arrian The Invasion of India by Alexander the Great 3rd Century BC 84 Arrian s second book similarly notes They Indians marry without either giving or taking dowries but the women as soon as they are marriageable are brought forward by their fathers in public to be selected by the victor in wrestling or boxing or running or someone who excels in any other manly exercise Arrian Indika Megasthenes and Arrian 3rd Century BC 85 About 1200 years after Arrian s visit Al Biruni a Persian scholar who went and lived in India for 16 years in 11th century CE wrote The implements of the wedding rejoicings are brought forward No gift dower or dowry is settled between them The man gives only a present to the wife as he thinks fit and a marriage gift in advance which he has no right to claim back but the proposed wife may give it back to him of her own will if she does not want to marry Al Biruni Chapter on Matrimony in India about 1035 AD 86 Widowhood and remarriage Edit Widows were traditionally expected to pursue a spiritual ascetic life particularly the higher castes such as Brahmins 87 There were restrictions on remarriage as well The Hindu widows were not allowed to wear jewellery they had to consume tasteless food and they had to wear a white coarse saree without choli or blouse covering their breasts 88 Such restrictions are now strictly observed only by a small minority of widows yet the belief continues that a good wife predeceases her husband 87 88 clarification needed During the debate before the passage of the Hindu Widows Remarriage Act 1856 some communities asserted that it was their ancient custom that prohibited widow remarriage Hindu scholars and colonial British authorities rejected this argument states Lucy Carroll because the alleged custom prohibiting widow remarriage was far from ancient and was already in practice among the Hindu communities such as the Rajbansi whose members had petitioned for the prohibition of widow remarriage Thus it failed the customary law protections under the British colonial era laws 89 90 However this issue lingered in colonial courts for decades because of the related issue of property left by the deceased husband and whether the widow keeps or forfeits all rights to deceased Hindu husband s estate and thereby transfers the property from the deceased husband to her new husband While Hindu community did not object to widow remarriage it contested the property rights and transfer of property from her earlier husband s family to the later husband s family particularly after the death of the remarried widow in the 20th century 91 Sati Edit Main article Sati practice Sati where a Hindu woman committed suicide by burning herself with the corpse of her husband 92 Sati is an obsolete Indian funeral custom where a widow immolated herself on her husband s pyre or committed suicide in another fashion shortly after her husband s death 92 93 94 Michael Witzel states there is no evidence of Sati practice in ancient Indian literature during the Vedic period 8 David Brick in his 2010 review of ancient Indian literature states 9 There is no mention of Sahagamana Sati whatsoever in either Vedic literature or any of the early Dharmasutras or Dharmasastras By early Dharmasutras or Dharmasastras I refer specifically to both the early Dharmasutras of Apastamba Hiranyakesin Gautama Baudhayana and Vasistha and the later Dharmasastras of Manu Narada and Yajnavalkya David Brick Yale University 9 The earliest scholarly discussion of Sati whether it is right or wrong is found in the Sanskrit literature dated to 10th to 12th century 95 The earliest known commentary on Sati by Medhatithi of Kashmir argues that Sati is a form of suicide which is prohibited by the Vedic tradition 9 Vijnanesvara of the 12th century Chalukya court and the 13th century Madhvacharya argue that sati should not to be considered suicide which was otherwise variously banned or discouraged in the scriptures 96 They offer a combination of reasons both in favor and against sati 97 However according to the textbook Religions in the Modern World after the death of Roop Kanwar on her husband s funeral pyre in 1987 thousands saw this as cruel murder Committing sati was then made a crime with consequences worse than murder 98 Another historical practice observed among women in Hinduism was the Rajput practice of Jauhar particularly in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh where they collectively committed suicide during war They preferred death rather than being captured alive and dishonored by victorious Muslim soldiers in a war 99 According to Bose jauhar practice grew in the 14th and 15th century with Hindu Muslim wars of northwest India where the Hindu women preferred death than the slavery or rape they faced if captured 100 101 Sati style jauhar custom among Hindu women was observed only during Hindu Muslim wars in medieval India but not during internecine Hindu Hindu wars among the Rajputs 102 The Sati practice is considered to have originated within the warrior aristocracy in the Hindu society gradually gaining in popularity from the 10th century AD and spreading to other groups from the 12th through 18th century AD 103 The earliest Islamic invasions of South Asia have been recorded from early 8th century CE such as the raids of Muhammad bin Qasim and major wars of Islamic expansion after the 10th century 104 This chronology has led to the theory that the increase in sati practice in India may be related to the centuries of Islamic invasion and its expansion in South Asia 10 11 Daniel Grey states that the understanding of origins and spread of sati were distorted in the colonial era because of a concerted effort to push problem Hindu theories in the 19th and early 20th centuries 105 Education Edit The Vedas and Upanishads mention girls could be a Brahmacharini that is getting an education 106 Atharva Veda for example states 106 107 ब रह मचर य ण कन य य व न व न दत पत म A youthful Kanya कन य girl who graduates from Brahmacharya obtains a suitable husband Atharva Veda 11 5 18 107 The Harita Dharmasutra a later era Hindu text states there are two kind of women sadhyavadhu who marry without going to school and the brahmavadini who go to school first to study the Vedas and speak of Brahman The Hindu Sastras and Smritis describe varying number of Sanskara rite of passage Upanayana rite of passage symbolized the start of education process Like the Vedas the ancient Sutras and Shastra Sanskrit texts extended education right to women and the girls who underwent this rite of passage then pursued studies were called Brahmavadini 108 109 Those who didn t performed Upanayana ceremony at the time of their wedding Instead of sacred thread girls would wear their robe now called sari or saree in the manner of the sacred thread that is over her left shoulder during this rite of passage 108 110 Dress Edit Sari in different styles shown has been traced to ancient Hindu traditions In modern times Sari is also found among non Hindu women of South Asia Information on ancient and medieval era dressing traditions of women in Hinduism is unclear Textiles are commonly mentioned in ancient Indian texts 111 The Arthashastra 200 BCE to 300 CE mentions a range of clothing and plant based muslin based wool based textiles that are partially or fully dyed knitted and woven 112 113 It is however uncertain how women wore these clothing and scholars have attempted to discern the dress from study of murti statues wall reliefs and ancient literature 114 In ancient and medieval Hindu traditions covering the head or face was neither mandated nor common but Ushnisha a regional ceremonial occasion headdress is mentioned as is Dupatta in colder drier northern parts of Indian subcontinent 113 Regardless of economic status the costume of ancient Hindu women was formed of two separate sheets of cloth one wrapping the lower part of the body below the waist and another larger wrap around piece called Dhoti modern day Saree in texts Although in some part of India lower caste women have to keep their breast uncovered in front of upper caste people which signifies lower status Upper caste women too used to bare their breasts in front the deity as respect 113 Some Murti and relief carvings suggest that pleats were used probably to ease movement but the pleats were tucked to reveal the contour of the body However where the pleats were tucked front or side or back varied regionally 115 The predominant style observed in the ancient texts and artwork is the wrapping of the excess of the Dhoti from right waist over the left shoulder in the Vedic Upanayana style 108 115 The breasts were covered with a stitched tight fitting bodice named Kurpasaka Sanskrit क र प सक 116 or Stanamsuka Sanskrit स तन श क 117 but this was not common in extreme south India or in eastern states such as Orissa and Bengal 118 Regional variations were great to suit local weather and traditions in terms of the length number of pleats placement of pleats style of bodice used for bosom and the dimension or wrapping of the upper excess length of the Dhoti 118 Greek records left by those who came to India with Alexander the Great mention that head and neck ornaments ear rings wrist and ankle ornaments were commonly worn by women 119 A Hindu woman with Sindur in her hair and Bindi on forehead customs also found among women in Jainism 120 Usually the sari consists of a piece of cloth around 6 yards long wrapped distinctly based on the prior mentioned factors 121 The choice of the quality and sophistication of the cloth is dependent on the income and affordability Women across economic groups in colonial era for example wore a single piece of cloth in hot and humid Bengal 122 It was called Kapod by poorer women while the more ornate version of the same was called a Saree 122 The material and cost varied but nature was the same across income and social groups caste class of Hindu women 122 Sindoor or Kumkum has been a marker for women in Hinduism since early times 123 A married Hindu woman typically wears a red pigment vermilion in the parting of her hair while a never married divorced or a widowed woman does not 123 124 A Hindu woman may wear a Bindi also called Tip Bindiya Tilaka or Bottu on her forehead 125 This represents the place of the inner eye and signifies that she is spiritually turned inwards 125 In the past this was worn by married women but in the modern era it is a fashion accessory and has no relation to the marital status for women in Hinduism 125 A 1st century BCE Indian sculpture showing female Yakshi dress left Earrings from India 1st century BCE right 126 Greek texts suggest ancient Hindu women wearing ornaments Cultural customs such as Sindoor are similar to wedding ring in other cultures Regionally Hindu women may wear seasonal fresh flowers in their hair during festivals temple visits or other formal occasions White color saree is common with aging widows while red or other festive colors with embroidery is more common on festivals or social ceremonies such as weddings 127 These Hindu practices are cultural practices and not required by its religious texts 128 Hinduism is a way of life is diverse has no binding book of rules of its faith nor any that mandate any dress rules on Hindu women The choice is left to the individual discretion 128 Other ornaments worn by Hindu women are sometimes known as solah singar sixteen decorations bindi necklaces earrings flowers in the hair rings bangles armlets for the upper arm waistbands ankle bells kohl or kajal mascara toe rings henna perfume sandalwood paste the upper garment and the lower garment 129 unreliable source better source needed Bernard Cohn 2001 states that clothing in India during the colonial British era was a form of authority exercised to highlight hierarchical patterns subordination and authoritative relations Hindus in India were subject to rule under a range of other religious reigns therefore influencing clothing choices This was exemplified by a change in attire as a result of Mughal influence and later European influence resulting from British rule 130 Arts dance drama music Edit Many classical Indian dances such as Bharathanatyam and Kathak were developed by women in Hinduism Hindu religious art encompasses performance arts as well as visual art and women have been expressed in Hindu arts as prominently as men 131 Sanskrit literature has contributed to religious and spiritual expression of women by its reverence for goddesses The deity for arts music poetry speech culture and learning is goddess Saraswati in the Hindu tradition 132 Baumer states that the resulting Sanskrit Theater has its origins in the Vedas stemming from three principles The cosmic man purusha the self atman and the universal being brahman 133 Some of the earliest references to women being active in dance music and artistic performance in Hindu texts is found in 1st millennium BCE Taittiriya Samhita chapter 6 1 and 8th century BCE Shatapatha Brahmana chapter 3 2 4 134 In religious ceremonies such as the ancient Shrauta and Grihya sutras rituals texts by Panini Patanjali Gobhila and others state that women sang hymns or uttered mantras along with men during the yajnas 134 A Hindu woman in a dance pose Bali Indonesia Music and dance states Tracy Pintchman are intertwined in Hindu traditions and women in Hinduism have had an active creative and performance role in this tradition 135 While aspects of the Hindu traditions curtailed the freedoms of women they also gave opportunities to create and express arts 135 The historical evidence states Pintchman suggests that the opportunities to create and participate in arts were available to women regardless of their caste or class 135 Classical vocal music was more prevalent among women upper classes while public performances of arts such as dance were more prevalent among women in matrilineal Hindu traditions particularly the Devadasi 136 137 The Devadasi tradition women practiced their arts in a religious context 136 Young Devadasi women were trained in the arts of music theater and dance and their lives revolved around Hindu temples In south India some of these women were courtesans while others chaste 136 In 1909 the colonial government passed the first law banning the Devadasis practice in the state of Mysore however an attempt to ban Devadasis tradition in Tamil Nadu Hindu temples failed in Madras Presidency in 1927 138 In 1947 the government of Madras passed legislation forbidding Devadasi practices under pressure from activists that this was a prostitution tradition 139 However the tradition was revived by those who consider it to be a nun tradition wherein a Devadasi was a chaste woman who considered herself married to God and used temple dance tradition to raise funds as well as helped continue the arts 139 In poetry 9th century Andal became a well known Bhakti movement poetess states Pintchman and historical records suggest that by 12th century she was a major inspiration to Hindu women in south India and elsewhere 136 Andal continues to inspire hundreds of classical dancers in modern times choreographing and dancing Andal s songs 140 Andal is also called Goda and her contributions to the arts have created Goda Mandali circle of Andal in the Vaishnava tradition 140 Many other women such as Nagaatnammal Balasaraswati and Rukmini states Pintchman were instrumental in bringing Carnatic music and Bharat Natyam to the public stage and making the performing arts accessible by the general public by the 12th century 140 Gathasaptasati is an anthology of Subhashita genre of poetry from the first half of 1st millennium CE many of which are attributed to Hindu women in central and western India 141 Menstruation Edit In Hinduism menstruating women are traditionally advised rules to follow Menstruation is seen as a period of purification and women are often separated from place of worship or any object pertaining to it for the length of their period This forms the basis of most of the cultural practices and restrictions around menstruation in Hinduism 142 The origin of the myth of menstrual impurity originated in the Vedic period linked to Indra s slaying of Vritras 143 in the Veda that guilt of killing a brahmana murder appears every month as menstrual flow of women had taken upon themselves a part of Indra s guilt 144 145 Context historical and modern developments EditThe role of women in Hinduism dates back to 3000 years of history states Pechelis incorporating ideas of Hindu philosophy that is Prakrti matter femaleness and Purusha consciousness maleness coming together to interact and produce the current state of the universe 146 Hinduism considers the connection interdependence and complementary nature of these two concepts Prakriti and Purusha female and male as the basis of all existence which is a starting point of the position of women in Hindu traditions 146 Although these ancient texts are the foundation upon which the position of women in Hinduism is founded Hindu women participated in and were affected by cultural traditions and celebrations such as festivals dance arts music and other aspects of daily life Despite these liberating undercurrents emerging in its historical context Sugirtharajah states that there is some reluctance to use the term feminism to describe historical developments in Hinduism 147 In the colonial era 1800s Hindu women were described by European scholars as being naturally chaste and more virtuous than other women 148 In 20th century history context the position of women in Hinduism and more generally India has many contradictions 149 Regional Hindu traditions are organized as matriarchal societies such as in south India and northeast India where the woman is the head of the household and inherits the wealth yet other Hindu traditions are patriarchal 150 God as a woman and mother goddess ideas are revered in Hinduism yet there are rituals that treats the female in a subordinate role 151 The women s rights movement in India states Sharma have been driven by two foundational Hindu concepts lokasangraha and satyagraha 152 Lokasangraha is defined as acting for the welfare of the world and satyagraha insisting on the truth These ideals were used to justify and spur movements among women for women s rights and social change through a political and legal process 152 Fane remarks in her article published in 1975 that it is the underlying Hindu beliefs of women are honored considered most capable of responsibility strong that made Indira Gandhi culturally acceptable as the prime minister of India 149 yet the country has in the recent centuries witnessed the development of diverse ideologies both Hindu and non Hindu that has impacted the position of women in India 153 The women rights movement efforts states Young have been impeded by the growing intensity of Muslim separatist politics the divergent positions of Indian Hindu women seeking separation of religion and women s rights secular universal laws uniform civil code applicable irrespective of religion while Indian Muslim community seeking to preserve Sharia law in personal family and other domains 154 Western scholarship Edit There has been a pervasive and deeply held belief in modern era Western scholarship states Professor Kathleen Erndl that in Hinduism women are universally subjugated and that feminism however it might be defined is an artifact of the West 155 156 Postmodern scholars question whether they have unwittingly accepted this colonial stereotype and long standing assumption 155 157 particularly given the emerging understanding of Hindu Shakti tradition related texts and empirical studies of women in rural India who have had no exposure to Western thought or education but assert their Hindu or Buddhist goddess inspired feminism 155 158 Western feminism states Vasudha Narayanan has focussed on negotiating issues of submission and power as it seeks to level the terrains of opportunity and uses a language of rights 159 In Hinduism the contextual and cultural word has been Dharma which is about duties to oneself to others among other things 159 There has been a gap between Western books describing Hinduism and women s struggle within the Hindu tradition based on texts that the colonial British era gave notoriety to versus the reality of Hindu traditions and customs that did not follow these texts at all 157 160 Narayanan describes it as follows abridged Many Western scholars point out quite correctly that women are accorded a fairly low status in the Hindu texts that deal with law and ethics Dharma Shastra what is not usually mentioned is that these texts were not well known and utilized in many parts of Hindu India Custom and practice were far more important than the dictates of these legal texts There were many legal texts and they were not in competition with each other they were written at different times in different parts of the country but all of them were superseded by local custom There is a sense of dissonance between scripture and practice in certain areas of dharma and the role of women and Sudras sometimes falls in this category Manu may have denied independence to women but there were women of some castes and some economic classes who endowed money to temples It is important to note that there is no direct correlation that one can generalize on between these texts and women s status rights or behavior Vasudha Narayanan Feminism and World Religions 160 Ancient and medieval era Hindu texts and epics discuss a woman s position and role in society over a spectrum such as one who is a self sufficient marriage eschewing powerful Goddess to one who is subordinate and whose identity is defined by men rather than her and to one who sees herself as a human being and spiritual person while being neither feminine nor masculine 161 162 The 6th century Devi Mahatmya text for example states Cynthia Humes actually shares the postmodern exaltation of embodiedness divinizing it as does much of the Western feminist spirituality movement 163 These texts are not theoretical nor disconnected from the lives of women in the historic Hindu society but the verses assert that all women are portions of the divine goddess states Humes 164 The Hindu goddess tradition inspired by these texts has been notes Pintchman one of the richest compelling traditions worldwide and its followers flock villages towns and cities all over India 165 Yet adds Humes other texts describe her creative potential not in her terms but using the words of male virility and gendered dichotomy possibly encouraging the heroic woman to abandon her female persona and impersonate the male 164 Postmodern empirical scholarship about Hindu society states Rita Gross makes one question whether and to what extent there is pervasiveness of patriarchy in Hinduism 166 Patriarchal control is real and the Hindu society admits this of itself states Gross yet the Hindu culture distinguishes between authority which men hold and power which both men and women hold 166 Women in the Hindu tradition have the power and they exercise that power to take control of situations that are important to them 166 The Goddess theology and humanity in the Hindu texts are a foundation of these values a form that isn t feminist by Western definition but is feminist nevertheless one with an empowering and self liberating value structure with an added spiritual dimension that resonates with Hindu and Buddhist goddesses 166 167 Kathleen Erndl states that texts such as Manusmriti do not necessarily portray what women in Hinduism were or are but it represents an ideology and that the task of Hindu feminists is to rescue Shakti from its patriarchal prison 168 Her metaphor explains Erndl does not mean that Shakti never was free nor that she is tightly locked up now because patriarchy is neither monolithic nor ossified in Hindu culture 168 The Shakti concept and associated extensive philosophy in Hindu texts provide a foundation to both spiritual and social liberation 169 See also EditDurga Puja Women in India Bhakti movement Shaktism List of female Hindu mystics Hindu Widows Remarriage Act 1856 Women in Buddhism Women in Sikhism Women in Judaism Women in Christianity Women in Islam Women in Mormonism Yoga for women YoginiReferences Edit a b c d McDaniel 2004 p 90 a b Brown 1998 p 26 a b c McDaniel 2004 pp 90 92 a b C Mackenzie Brown 1990 The Triumph of the Goddess State University of New York Press ISBN page 77 a b Thomas Coburn 2002 Devi Mahatmya The Crystallization of the Goddess Tradition Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120805576 pages 138 303 309 Rajbali Pandey 1969 Hindu Sanskaras Socio religious Study of the Hindu Sacraments ISBN 978 8120803961 pages 158 170 and Chapter VIII a b c d The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism A M James G Lochtefeld 2001 ISBN 978 0823931798 Page 427 a b c d e Witzel Michael 1996 Little Dowry No Sati The Lot of Women in the Vedic Period Journal of South Asia Women Studies 2 4 a b c d Brick David April June 2010 The Dharmasastric Debate on Widow Burning Journal of the American Oriental Society 130 2 203 223 JSTOR 23044515 a b Yang Anand A Sarkar Sumit ed Sarkar Tanika ed 2008 Whose Sati Widow Burning in early Nineteenth Century India Women and Social Reform in Modern India A Reader Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press pp 21 23 ISBN 9780253352699 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help a b Sashi S S 1996 Encyclopaedia Indica India Pakistan Bangladesh Vol 100 Anmol Publications p 115 ISBN 9788170418597 Liljestrom Marianne Paasonen Susanna 8 March 2010 Working with Affect in Feminist Readings Disturbing Differences Routledge p 122 ISBN 978 1 134 01789 8 a b Kramarae Cheris Spender Dale 16 April 2004 Routledge International Encyclopedia of Women Global Women s Issues and Knowledge Routledge p 1059 ISBN 978 1 135 96315 6 Bryant Edwin 2007 Krishna A Sourcebook Oxford University Press p 441 David Kinsley 2005 Hindu Goddesses Vision of the Divine Feminine in the Hindu Religious Traditions University of California Press ISBN 978 8120803947 pages 6 17 55 64 Flood Gavin ed 2003 The Blackwell Companion to Hinduism Blackwell Publishing Ltd ISBN 1 4051 3251 5 pages 200 203 The Rig Veda Mandala 10 Hymn 125 Ralph T H Griffith Translator for Sanskrit original see ऋग व द स क त १० १२५ The Rig Veda The Rig Veda McDaniel 2004 p 91 a b Paul Deussen Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814684 pages 534 539 Brihadaranyaka Upanishad VI Adhyaya 4 Brahmana 17 and 18 Max Muller translator Oxford University Press pages 219 220 a b Ellison Findly 2004 Women Religion and Social Change Editors Yvonne Yazbeck Haddad Ellison Banks Findly State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0887060687 pages 37 58 a b Adi Parva 1 LXXIII 6 1 LXXIII 14 Mahabharata Translated by Manmatha Nath Dutt page 105 Adi Parva Mahabharata Translated by Manmatha Nath Dutt Translator page 108 a b Anushasana Parva The Mahabharata Translated by Kisari Mohan Ganguli Chapter XI pages 41 43 Anushasana Parva The Mahabharata Translated by KM Ganguli page 264 a b c Anushasana Parva The Mahabharata Translated by Kisari Mohan Ganguli Chapter CXLVI pages 667 672 Tryambakayajvan trans Julia Leslie 1989 The Perfect Wife Stridharmapaddhati Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195621075 Leslie J 1992 The significance of dress for the orthodox Hindu woman in Dress and Gender Making and Meaning Editors Ruth Barnes Joanne B Eicher pages 198 213 Quote Stridharmapaddhati represents a bizarre mixture of reality and utopia S Jain 2003 Sacred Rights Editor Daniel C Maguire Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195160017 page 134 a b Patrick Olivelle 2005 Manu s Code of Law Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195171464 pages 353 354 356 382 Kautilya 3rd century BCE Kautiliya Arthasastra Vol 2 Translator RP Kangle 2014 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120800427 page 51 Patrick Olivelle 2013 King Governance and Law in Ancient India Kautilya s Arthasastra Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199891825 pages 77 79 96 254 262 392 396 477 479 a b Patrick Olivelle 2005 Manu s Code of Law Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195171464 pages 31 32 108 123 138 147 Patrick Olivelle 2005 Manu s Code of Law Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195171464 pages 98 146 147 Wadley Susan 1977 Women and the Hindu Tradition Signs 3 1 113 125 doi 10 1086 493444 S2CID 143210110 Patrick Olivelle 2005 Manu s Code of Law Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195171464 page 111 Macave P Hinduism its contribution to science and civilisation 1979 ISBN 978 0 7069 0805 3 Yatra Where women are worshipped there the Gods are delighted But where they are not worshipped all religious ceremonies become futile Mahabharata 13 45 5 and Manu Smriti 3 56 Patrick Olivelle 2005 Manu s Code of Law Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195171464 page 146 Robert Lingat 1973 The Classical Law of India University of California Press ISBN 978 0520018983 page 84 Patrick Olivelle 2005 Manu s Code of Law Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195171464 pages 190 207 746 809 Arthashastra Book III Wikisource the free online library Page 224 https csboa com eBooks Arthashastra of Chanakya English pdf Archived 12 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine Patrick Olivelle 2005 Manu s Code of Law Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195171464 pages 31 32 194 207 755 809 Robert Lingat 1973 The Classical Law of India University of California Press ISBN 978 0520018983 pages 83 84 Patrick Olivelle 2005 Manu s Code of Law Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195171464 pages 182 193 659 706 Patrick Olivelle 2005 Manu s Code of Law Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195171464 pages 200 201 746 809 a b J Sinha 2014 Psycho Social Analysis of the Indian Mindset Springer Academic ISBN 978 8132218036 page 5 Arun Kumbhare 2009 Women of India Their Status Since the Vedic Times ISBN 978 1440156007 page 56 Mahatma Gandhi Hinduism According to Gandhi Orient Paperbacks 2013 Reprint Edition ISBN 978 8122205589 page 129 a b Flavia Agnes 2001 Law and Gender Inequality The Politics of Women s Rights in India Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195655247 pages 41 45 Abdullahi Ahmed An Na im 2010 Islam and the Secular State Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674034563 pages 149 289 Alf Hiltebeitel and Kathleen Erndl 2000 Is the Goddess a Feminist The Politics of South Asian Goddesses New York University Press ISBN 978 0814736197 pages 133 134 Nicholas Gier 1997 The yogi and the Goddess International Journal of Hindu Studies Volume 1 Issue 2 pages 265 287 a b Brown 1998 p 7 a b Brown 1990 p 2 Coburn 1991 pp 1 7 a b Brown 1990 pp 6 7 McDaniel 2004 pp 215 217 Coburn 1991 pp 17 21 Brown 1990 p 215 Brown 1998 p 8 a b c Lynn Foulston Stuart Abbott 2009 Hindu goddesses beliefs and practices Sussex Academic Press pp 1 3 40 41 ISBN 9781902210438 Ellen Goldberg 2002 The Lord who is half woman Ardhanarisvara in Indian and feminist perspective State University of New York Press ISBN 0 791453251 pages 1 4 John Renard 1999 Responses to 101 Questions on Hinduism Paulist ISBN 978 0809138456 pages 74 76 What is Hinduism p PR17 at Google Books Hinduism Today Hawaii The Concept of Shakti Hinduism as a Liberating Force for Women Mukherjee Prabhati 1983 The Image of women in Hinduism Women s Studies International Forum 6 4 375 381 doi 10 1016 0277 5395 83 90030 4 a b David Lawrence 2012 The Routledge Companion to Theism Editors Charles Taliaferro Victoria S Harrison and Stewart Goetz Routledge ISBN 978 0415881647 pages 78 79 a b Jeffrey Brodd 2003 World Religions A Voyage of Discovery Saint Mary s Press ISBN 978 0884897255 page 43 Christopher John Fuller 2004 The Camphor Flame Popular Hinduism and Society in India Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691120485 pages 30 31 Quote Crucial in Hindu polytheism is the relationship between the deities and humanity Unlike Jewish Christian and Islamic monotheism predicated on the otherness of God and either his total separation from man and his singular incarnation Hinduism postulates no absolute distinction between deities and human beings The idea that all deities are truly one is moreover easily extended to proclaim that all human beings are in reality also forms of one supreme deity Brahman the Absolute of philosophical Hinduism In practice this abstract monist doctrine rarely belongs to an ordinary Hindu s statements but examples of permeability between the divine and human can be easily found in popular Hinduism in many unremarkable contexts a b c d e RM Gross 1978 Hindu Female Deities as a Resource for the Contemporary Rediscovery of the Goddess Journal of the American Academy of Religion Vol 46 No 3 September 1978 pages 269 291 David R Kinsley 1986 Hindu Goddesses Visions of the Divine Feminine in the Hindu Religious Tradition University of California Press ISBN 978 0520053939 Wisdom Library The Bṛhadaraṇyaka Upaniṣad with the Commentary of Saṅkaracarya https www wisdomlib org hinduism book the brihadaranyaka upanishad d doc122237 html Hindu Wisdom Women in Hinduism www hinduwisdom info Retrieved 16 March 2018 R Kumar M Kumar 2009 Women Health Empowerment and Economic Development Their Contribution to National Economy Deep and Deep Publications p 124 ISBN 9788184501346 a b c Hindu Saṁskaras Socio religious Study of the Hindu Sacraments Rajbali Pandey 1969 see Chapter VIII ISBN 978 8120803961 pages 158 170 Patrick Olivelle 2004 The Law Code of Manu Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0192802712 page 47 Majumdar R C and Pusalker A D ed The History and Culture of the Indian People Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan Bombay 1951 Volume 1 The Vedic age p394 a b Tambiah Stanley Goody Jack 1973 Bridewealth and Dowry Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 68 9 James G Lochtefeld The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism A M Rosen Publishing ISBN 9780823931798 203 ページ出版 CV Vaidya Epic India Or India as Described in the Mahabharata and the Ramayana ISBN 978 8120615649 John Watson McCrindle Translator The Invasion of India by Alexander the Great as described by Arrian Archibald Constable amp Co Westminster UK 280 JW McCrindle Translator Megasthenes and Arrian permanent dead link Trubner amp Co London 222 Edward Sachau Translator Biruni Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad Alberuni s India Vol 2 Kegan Paul Trench Trubner amp Co London 1910 Chapter LXIX 154 a b Bowker J H and Holm J Women in religion Continuum London 1994 p79 ISBN 0 8264 5304 X a b Fuller C J The camphor flame popular Hinduism and society in India Princeton University Press Princeton New Jersey 2004 p 23 ISBN 0 691 12048 X Carroll Lucy 1983 Law Custom and Statutory Social Reform The Hindu Widows Remarriage Act of 1856 Indian Economic and Social History Review 20 4 363 388 doi 10 1177 001946468302000401 S2CID 145511713 Lucy Carroll 2008 Women and Social Reform in Modern India A Reader Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253352699 pages 92 93 Lucy Carroll 2008 Women and Social Reform in Modern India A Reader Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253352699 pages 93 96 a b Wendy Doniger 2013 Suttee Encyclopedia Britannica Arvind Sharma 2001 Sati Historical and Phenomenological Essays Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120804647 pages 19 21 On attested Rajput practice of sati during wars see for example Leslie Julia Arnold David ed Robb Peter ed 1993 Suttee or Sati Victim or Victor Institutions and Ideologies A SOAS South Asia Reader Vol 10 London Routledge p 46 ISBN 9780700702848 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Brick David April June 2010 The Dharmasastric Debate on Widow Burning Journal of the American Oriental Society 130 2 206 211 JSTOR 23044515 Sharma Arvind 1988 Sati Historical and Phenomenological Essays Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Publ p 102 footnote 206 ISBN 9788120804647 Brick David April June 2010 The Dharmasastric Debate on Widow Burning Journal of the American Oriental Society 130 2 212 213 JSTOR 23044515 Smith David 2016 Woodhead Linda Partridge Christopher Kawanami Hiroko eds Hinduism New York Routledge p 61 ISBN 978 0 415 85880 9 Arvind Sharma 1988 Sati Historical and Phenomenological Essays Motilal Banarsidass Publ ISBN 9788120804647 page xi 86 Mandakranta Bose 2014 Faces of the Feminine in Ancient Medieval and Modern India Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195352771 page 26 Malise Ruthven 2007 Fundamentalism A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199212705 page 63 Kaushik Roy 2012 Hinduism and the Ethics of Warfare in South Asia From Antiquity to the Present Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107017368 pages 182 184 John Stratton Hawley 1994 Sati the Blessing and the Curse Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195077742 pages 51 53 Andre Wink 1996 Early Medieval India and the Expansion of Islam 7th 11th Centuries Brill Academic Publishers ISBN 978 9004092495 Grey Daniel 2013 Creating the Problem Hindu Sati Thuggee and Female Infanticide in India 1800 60 Gender amp History 25 3 498 510 doi 10 1111 1468 0424 12035 S2CID 142811053 a b S Jain 2003 The Right to Family Planning in Sacred Rights The Case for Contraception and Abortion in World Religions Editor Daniel C Maguire Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195160017 page 134 Quote The Atharva Veda confirms a brahmacharini has better prospects of marriage than a girl who is uneducated The Vedic period girls like boys are also expected to go through the brahmacharya a b For source in Sanskrit Atharva Veda Wikisource Hymns 11 5 7 1 11 5 7 26 For English translation Stephen N Hay and William Theodore De Bary 1988 Sources of Indian Tradition Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120804678 pages 18 19 a b c PV Kane History of Dharmasastra Volume 2 1 1st Edition pages 290 295 Ram Chandra Prasad 1997 The Upanayana The Hindu Ceremonies of the Sacred Thread Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120812406 pages 119 131 Grihya sutra of Gobhila Verse 2 1 19 Herman Oldenberg amp Max Muller Translator The Sacred Books of the East Vol 30 Part 2 Oxford University Press page 44 L Gopal Textiles in Ancient India Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient Vol 4 No 1 BRILL pages 53 69 Patrick Olivelle 2013 King Governance and Law in Ancient India Kautilya s Arthashastra Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199891825 pages 125 126 533 534 a b c GS Ghurye 1967 Indian Costume 2nd Edition Luzac ISBN 978 0718922801 pages 65 68 76 Kax Wilson 1979 History of Textiles Westview ISBN 978 0865313682 pages 164 165 a b GS Ghurye 1967 Indian Costume 2nd Edition Luzac ISBN 978 0718922801 pages 76 77 क र प सक Sanskrit English Dictionary Koeln University Germany 2012 स तन श क Sanskrit English Dictionary Koeln University Germany 2012 a b GS Ghurye 1967 Indian Costume 2nd Edition Luzac ISBN 978 0718922801 pages 15 76 79 GS Ghurye 1967 Indian Costume 2nd Edition Luzac ISBN 978 0718922801 pages 16 22 68 73 74 KS Singh 2004 People of India Maharashtra ISBN 978 8179911006 pages 565 567 Bhatia Nandini 2003 Fashioning women in colonial India Fashion Theory 7 3 4 331 doi 10 2752 136270403778052050 S2CID 191567505 a b c SM Channa 2013 Gender in South Asia Social Imagination and Constructed Realities Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107043619 pages 57 58 a b A Eraly 2011 The First Spring The Golden Age of India Penguin ISBN 978 0670084784 pages 433 434 June McDaniel 2002 Making Virtuous Daughters and Wives State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791455661 page 117 note 52 a b c James B Robinson 2004 Hinduism Chelsea ISBN 978 0791078587 page 86 A pair of royal earrings ca 1st century B C The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York The Kronos Collections 1981 1981 398 3 4 Susan Bean 2002 South Asian Folklore An Encyclopedia Editors Peter Claus et al Routledge ISBN 978 0415939195 page 170 a b Tom Axworthy 2008 Bridging the divide Religious dialogue and Universal ethics Queen s University Press ISBN 978 1553392200 pages 153 154 The Heart of Hinduism Project ISCKON Educational Services Archived from the original on 1 September 2015 Retrieved 5 November 2015 Cohn Bernard 2001 Cloth Clothes and Colonialism Consumption The history and regional development of consumption 2 ed pp 405 418 ISBN 9780415242684 Retrieved 5 November 2015 Elgood Heather 2000 Hinduism and the Religious Arts A amp C Black Mandakranta Bose 2011 Women in the Hindu Tradition Rules Roles and Exceptions Routledge ISBN 978 0415620765 page 26 Baumer Rachel 1993 Sanskrit Drama in Performance Motilal Banarsidass Publication p 46 a b Mandakranta Bose 2011 Women in the Hindu Tradition Rules Roles and Exceptions Routledge ISBN 978 0415620765 pages 64 65 a b c Tracy Pintchman 2007 Women s Lives Women s Rituals in the Hindu Tradition Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195177077 pages 180 182 a b c d Tracy Pintchman 2007 Women s Lives Women s Rituals in the Hindu Tradition Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195177077 pages 181 185 Leslie Julia 1992 Roles and Rituals for Hindu Women Motilal Banarsidass Publications DE Smith 1963 India as a Secular State Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691030272 pages 238 240 a b Srinivasan Amrit 1985 Reform and Revival The Devadasi and her dance Economic and Political Weekly 1869 1876 a b c Tracy Pintchman 2007 Women s Lives Women s Rituals in the Hindu Tradition Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195177077 pages 185 187 MA Selby 2001 Grow Long Blessed Night Love Poems from Classical India Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195127348 pages 81 91 169 170 172 230 Dunnavant Nicki 2012 Restriction and Renewal Pollution and Power Constraint and Community The Paradoxes of Religious Women s Experiences of Menstruation Sex Roles 68 1 2 121 131 doi 10 1007 s11199 012 0132 8 S2CID 144688091 Johnson H 2019 Understanding and Debunking Menstrual Taboos in India On the Importance of Education and Activism New Views on Gender 19 6 13 Retrieved 27 January 2022 Anand Tanu Garg Suneela 2015 Menstruation related myths in India Strategies for combating it Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care 4 2 184 186 doi 10 4103 2249 4863 154627 PMC 4408698 PMID 25949964 Janet Chawla Mythic Origins of Menstrual Taboo in Rig Veda Economic and Political Weekly vol 29 no 43 Economic and Political Weekly 1994 pp 2817 27 Retrieved 27 January 2022 a b Pechilis Karen 2013 Women in Hinduism Encyclopedia of Psychology and Religion Springer pp 1922 1925 ISBN 9781461460855 Sugirtharajah Sharada 2002 Hinduism and Feminism Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion 18 2 97 104 Jean A and Dubois A Beauchamp H K trans Hindu manners customs and ceremonies Clarendon Press Oxford 1897 a b Fane Hannah 1975 The Female Element in Indian Culture Asian Folklore Studies 34 1 51 112 doi 10 2307 1177740 JSTOR 1177740 Fane Hannah 1975 The Female Element in Indian Culture Asian Folklore Studies 57 60 Fane Hannah 1975 The Female Element in Indian Culture Asian Folklore Studies 74 83 a b Young Katherine 1994 Today s Women in World Religions Editor Arvind Sharma State Univ of New York Press pp 77 92 ISBN 978 0791416877 Fane Hannah 1975 The Female Element in Indian Culture Asian Folklore Studies 60 73 83 109 Young Katherine 1994 Today s Women in World Religions Editor Arvind Sharma State Univ of New York Press pp 83 86 ISBN 978 0791416877 a b c Kathleen Erndl 2000 Is the Goddess a Feminist The Politics of South Asian Goddesses Editors Alf Hiltebeitel Kathleen M Erndl New York University Press ISBN 978 0814736197 page 91 92 95 Arti Dhand 2009 Woman as Fire Woman as Sage State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791471401 pages 3 7 a b Arti Dhand 2009 Woman as Fire Woman as Sage State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791471401 pages 4 5 Quote The unfortunate result of such scholarship was the creation of a monumental stereotype of the Hindu woman from which a critical reader could derive little substantive knowledge of the particular values undergirding Hindu women s lives in different eras and locales or the historical social political and legal strictures under which they labors at different periods of history These works however still condition the questions that scholars raise of Hinduism and the categories by which women s experience is analyzed and assessed Perhaps the biggest problem with many works on women in Hinduism is that they presuppose a general category of womanhood thus creating an essence where none exists Rita Gross 2000 Is the Goddess a Feminist The Politics of South Asian Goddesses Editors Alf Hiltebeitel Kathleen M Erndl New York University Press ISBN 978 0814736197 page 108 111 a b Vasudha Narayanan 1999 Feminism and World Religions Editors Arvind Sharma Katherine K Young State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791440230 pages 25 26 a b Vasudha Narayanan 1999 Feminism and World Religions Editors Arvind Sharma Katherine K Young State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791440230 pages 34 35 Rita Gross 2000 Is the Goddess a Feminist The Politics of South Asian Goddesses Editors Alf Hiltebeitel Kathleen M Erndl New York University Press ISBN 978 0814736197 page 104 111 Cynthia Humes 2000 Is the Goddess a Feminist The Politics of South Asian Goddesses Editors Alf Hiltebeitel Kathleen M Erndl New York University Press ISBN 978 0814736197 pages 132 134 for context see 129 138 Cynthia Humes 2000 Is the Goddess a Feminist The Politics of South Asian Goddesses Editors Alf Hiltebeitel Kathleen M Erndl New York University Press ISBN 978 0814736197 page 132 a b Cynthia Humes 2000 Is the Goddess a Feminist The Politics of South Asian Goddesses Editors Alf Hiltebeitel Kathleen M Erndl New York University Press ISBN 978 0814736197 pages 137 139 Tracy Pintchman 2001 Seeking Mahadevi Constructing the Identities of the Hindu Great Goddess State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791450086 pages 1 3 a b c d Rita Gross 2000 Is the Goddess a Feminist The Politics of South Asian Goddesses Editors Alf Hiltebeitel Kathleen M Erndl New York University Press ISBN 978 0814736197 page 108 110 Rachel McDermott 1998 Devi Goddesses of India Editors John Stratton Hawley Donna Marie Wulff Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120814912 pages 296 305 a b Kathleen Erndl 2000 Is the Goddess a Feminist The Politics of South Asian Goddesses Editors Alf Hiltebeitel Kathleen M Erndl New York University Press ISBN 978 0814736197 page 96 Kathleen Erndl 2000 Is the Goddess a Feminist The Politics of South Asian Goddesses Editors Alf Hiltebeitel Kathleen M Erndl New York University Press ISBN 978 0814736197 pages 97 100 101 Bibliography Edit McDaniel June 2004 Offering Flowers Feeding Skulls Popular Goddess Worship in West Bengal Popular Goddess Worship in West Bengal Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 534713 5 Brown C Mackenzie 1990 The Triumph of the Goddess SUNY Press ISBN 978 0791403648 Brown C Mackenzie 1998 The Devi Gita The Song of the Goddess A Translation Annotation and Commentary SUNY Press ISBN 978 0791439395 Coburn Thomas B 1991 Encountering the Goddess A Translation of the Devi Mahatmya and a Study of Its Interpretation SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 0445 4 Deussen Paul Bedekar V M tr Palsule tr G B 1997 Sixty Upanishads of the Veda Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1467 7 Meenakshi Jain 2016 Sati Evangelicals Baptist Missionaries and the Changing Colonial Discourse Aryan Books International ISBN 978 8173055522 Kane P V History of Dharmasastra ancient and mediaeval religious and civil law Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute Poona 1962 1975 Madhu Kishwar Women Bhakta Poets Manushi Manushi Publications 1989 ASIN B001RPVZVU Madhu Kishwar The Daughters of Aryavarta Women in the Arya Samaj movement Punjab In Women in Colonial India Essays on Survival Work and the State edited by J Krishnamurthy Oxford University Press 1989 Majumdar R C 2014 Great women of India Kolkata 2014 Editors Swami Madhavananda Ramesh Chandra Majumdar Russell R R Gender and jewellery a feminist analysis case study Indian wife and widow jewellery Create Space 2010 ISBN 1 4528 8253 3 Sugirtharajah Sharada 2002 Hinduism and Feminism Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion 18 2 97 104 Vasuda N Sharma A and Young K K eds Feminism and world religions power in the Hindu tradition SUNY Press Albany New York p25 7 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Women in Hinduism Media related to Hinduism and women at Wikimedia Commons Women and the Hindu Tradition Susan S Wadley 1977 Signs Vol 3 No 1 pages 113 125 New Age Hinduism New Age Orientalism and the Second Generation South Asian Rachel Fell McDermott 2000 Journal of the American Academy of Religion Vol 68 No 4 pages 721 731 History and Anthropology in South Asia Rethinking the Archive Saloni Mathur 2000 Annual Review of Anthropology Vol 29 pages 89 106 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Women in Hinduism amp oldid 1136609675 Widowhood and remarriage, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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