Showing posts with label Caste System. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caste System. Show all posts

Monday, October 4, 2021

Blog Entry #2 Telling the Story of the Bhagavad Gita

Bhagavad Gita ; A Walkthrough for Westerner
In the story of the Bhagavad Gita by Jack Hawley it brings spiritual wisdom and inspiration through an event of which a man known as Arjuna is cornered in making an important decision. Through the help of a close friend, Krishna is able to guide him through this difficult stage in Arjuna's life making him "aware of his true reality" (Hawley 167). With series of spiritual knowledge given to Arjuna he is now able to  proceed with confidence unlike before.



                                        The Four Paths of Yoga, ways to be one with God                              

The story contains complex spiritual teachings that can pass as both religious and philosophical content. My first impression on the Bhagavad Gita was attention grabbing as it "is the bases, the source, the reservoir of practical spiritual knowledge from which others rise" (Hawley xii). This brings an important topic to the role of religion and how it shapes human society as it has been around for centuries.


As the Bhagavad Gita not only provide the teachings of spirituality but it also implement ranks and divisions amongst people in society. The people are divided into four groups called the Seers, Leaders, Providers, and Servers. As the text states "No particular group of people is superior to any other..." but the early civilization of the Indus shows differently (Hawley 159). 


It is evident that there was a caste system during the Vedic Age with similar ranks in correlation to the Bhagavad Gita but with the Seers at the top. Ranked at the top, the Seers are the gifted ones who can connect with God and this plays a crucial part in how important religion is during this time period. The Bhagavad Gita is impactful as people can not only use it for spiritual development but as a guide to social construction as well.

        

Bhagavad Gita, Krishna

 The Bhagavad Gita may appeal to readers as it brings multiple eye opening spiritual advices that can help benefit ones own spiritual journey. In the text it provides 4 pathways to obtain  unity with God which are known as Raja, Jnana, Karma, and Bhakti Yoga. 

 As all paths will lead you to unity with god it will teach one to   let go of their desires and worldly attachments. The text in depth   teaches one to how find true joy and peace by getting rid of desire, anger, and greed as those are the components that block us from reaching our True Self (Hawley 55). Achieving inner peace is anyones goal and can be beneficial to ones daily life. Overall, anyone can benefit from this book whether it be religiously or philosophically.






Works Cited

Blossom. (2020, August 2). Yotube . Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u3dbMlo971k.

Hawley, J. (2011). The bhagavad gita: A walkthrough for Westerners. New World Library.

Indus Valley Civilization Caste System. (n.d.). Retrieved October 5, 2021, from http://world-history-education-resources.com/indus-valley-civilization/system-civilization-indus-caste.html.

The four paths of yoga. Trinetra Yoga. (n.d.). Retrieved October 5, 2021, from https://trinetra.yoga/the-four-paths-of-yoga/#:~:text=There%20are%20four%20main%20paths%20of%20Yoga%20%E2%80%93,integrated%20if%20true%20wisdom%20is%20to%20be%20attained.

Monday, September 13, 2021

Blog Entry #1: Telling the Story of the Indus Valley Civilization

 

Indus Civilization

In this blog entry there will be a compare and contrast between the text Awakening by Patrick S. Bresnan and the video, Indus: An Unvoiced Civilization. In these two sources it goes over the topic of the Indus Civilization with various subjects at hand. With subjects varying from elements that make up the civilization to the writing system of the Indus, we get to explore how these two sources differentiate in covering the same topic.  

Something that I learned in the text that was not in the video was the structure of the Caste System. The Caste System portrayed discrimination towards the color of ones skin in the thought that having lighter skin is better. Although, the caste system "guaranteed a very stable social order" it was also a horrific and cruel one divided into 4 classes (Bresnan 17). This changed my perspective on the peacefulness of the Indus Valley Civilization built upon the fact stated in the video that there were simple weapons found in the Indus Valley (Indus: 35:05). This signify that there would be mutual peace amongst the civilization but the Caste System is contradicting to the point. 


Caste System (Varna)

For the subject of the Caste System also known as Varna, it is apparent that the two sources treated the topic differently. In the video it did not go over the spiteful Caste System but it instead talked about how the "organization was not so much hierarchical but heterarchical" (Indus: 35:40). In the text, it proved this statement false by stating, "during the Vedic Age, Indian society came to be divided into four great "caste"" (Bresnan 14). In the video it seems to ignore the cruel reality of the Caste System and the effects it had on the people within the civilization especially the people at the bottom classes. Using the argument that simple weapons were found creates a false narrative that there might have been peace in the Indus Valley but it is apparent that peace was only amongst the higher ups. Furthermore, as expressed in the text it is evident that the system forced unruly laws against the bottom classes known as the Shudras and the Untouchables. Keeping this in mind, the only people who would know of the writing system would be the people in the upper classes such as the priests and merchants as they would have prevented the people at the bottom from knowing such important information. For example, the seals that were found were used by merchants showing that they did know some sort of writing (Indus: 6:45). Having no knowledge of writing or the religion there was no peace nor justice for the lower class people. 


Works Cited 

“Aryans and the Caste System.” Civilization in the Ancient Indus River Valley, indusrivervalleyciv.weebly.com/aryans-and-the-caste-system.html. 

BRESNAN, PATRICK S. Awakening: An Introduction to the History of Eastern Thought. ROUTLEDGE, 2018. 

Indus: An Unvoiced Civilization



Blog Entry #7: Telling My Humanities Story

2021 Books in Review,   Hello! I haven't read that many books this year as the books that I have read are textbooks from classes that I ...