Why Only Hinduism Mentions
The Universe But No Other Religion?
Did we ever notice that only Hinduism
mentions the universe? The reason is that only Hinduism knows about the vast
dimensions and the huge timeframes of the universe of which our earth is just a
speck. Ancient cultures like Maya, Inka, Sumeria, and others may also have
reached out to the stars, but they were all destroyed either by Christianity or
by Islam, and Bible or Quran were enforced as “the truth”.
Only Hindus have still preserved this
knowledge which in all likelihood originated in India itself. There are still
millions of valuable ancient texts in India, even though millions of others
were burnt by invaders on the premise that only one book is needed. In Greece
in contrast, there are estimated to be only some 20,000 texts.
Surya Sidhanta is a major text with
incredible knowledge about the universe dated – hold your breath – at least
10,000 years ago. The ancient Indians knew that the earth is round or rather
elliptical, that it goes around the sun, they knew the distance to the sun and
moon; they knew that the distance is 108 times the respective diameter – the
reason why sun and moon appear of the same size from the earth. Their knowledge
was truly inspired or ‘God-given’.
The Puranas (purana means old and
according to tradition were composed by Veda Vyasa around 5000 years ago),
which are often dismissed as mere myths, are also a treasure trove of
knowledge. They talk among other things about the creation of the universe (the
‘Big Bang’ and ‘expanding universe’ theory were in all likelihood inspired by
them) and about the periodic withdrawal after billions of years, about the
original, unmanifested One Source and the gods in charge of creation, sustenance
and dissolution, who evolved from the One Source. Clearly, the ancient Indians
were at home in the universe.
The Srimad Bhagavata Mahapurana even
claims that there are ‘myriads of universes’, a view which may now be taken
more seriously by science after certain experiments in Antarctica had strange
results. The timescales which the ancient Indians proposed are incredibly huge.
Now compare this with the Abrahamic
religions. Judaism, the parent religion, as it were, of Christianity and Islam
claims that the earth is some 6000 years old. Christianity and Islam didn’t
challenge this view. Both did not look beyond this earth and actually hold very
primitive ideas about it. Christianity taught that the earth is flat and static
and that the sun moves over it until 400 years ago. Giordano Bruno, an Italian
philosopher, was burnt to death in 1600 CE because he refused to disown the
theory that the earth goes around the sun. Imagine – he was brutally killed for
stating the truth and only 400 years ago…
Islam too considers the earth as flat
and mountains were placed to stabilize it (Q15.19). Like Christianity, Islam
also says that not the earth, but the sun moves, and runs to its resting place
at night. There was clearly no idea about the vastness of the universe, as Q
67.5. says “We have decorated the heaven of this world with lamps and we made
them as missiles for pelting the shaitans and thus prepared for them the
scourge of flames.”
So naturally, these religions don’t
mention the universe, because they had no clue about it. It is truly
unfortunate that they dumbed down the intelligence of the human race. They
destroyed the natural urge to discover the truth about us and the universe.
Only since Christianity lost its power to punish views which are not in tune with
the teaching of the Church, science took off in the West.
There is no doubt that the sudden
tremendous progress of science in the recent few centuries was greatly inspired
by Indian knowledge. Some western scientists themselves acknowledged this.
Einstein said “We owe a lot to the Indians.” Famous scientists like Heisenberg,
Schroedinger, Oppenheimer or Tesla studied India’s ancient wisdom. And Mark
Twain opined: “Our most valuable and most constructive materials in the history
of man are treasured up in India only.”
Even in the 1970s and 80s, India’s
wisdom had a rather good image, after the Beatles were inspired by Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi’s Transcendental Meditation. The contribution of India for example
to Transpersonal Psychology was also acknowledged at that time, yet was
meanwhile erased at least from Wikipedia.
However, in our modern times, this
has changed. Hindu Dharma and Hindus, especially Brahmins, who preserved the
knowledge system over many millennia, are unfairly vilified and ridiculed by
the mainstream religions. They are accused of ‘oppressing minorities’, of ‘rape
culture’ and even of terrorism. It happens rarely that anything positive is
said about the Hindu tradition, when it actually produces the most humane
mind-set, as it is based on Dharma, which means to do what is right under the
given circumstances.
Are the institutionalized religions
afraid that they lose their followers, if they come to know about the knowledge
still stored up in India?
By
Maria Wirth
These are the authors
personal views
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