HINDUISM Hinduism: a guide
to U.S. experts and organizations
The United States’
Hindu population is estimated to have tripled in just over 15 years, to around
1 million. As Hindus’ numbers grow and as new generations are born here, journalists
can find rich stories to tell about the many ways Hindus are engaging in U.S.
society and culture. Hinduism is the third-largest organized religion in the
world. ReligionLink offers a guide to Hindu experts and organizations, along
with story ideas that can be reported in any region of the country.
How to use this
guide
This guide is organized
into several topics. Scholars may be listed under more than one area, depending
on their expertise. Click to jump to:
If you would like
to be added to this source list or request a change in the information, please
email hindus@religionlink.org.
If you are requesting a change in the wording of your listing, please state
the reason for the change. ReligionLink reserves the right to decide which listings
to include.
• For organizations,
include the name, mission, Web site and a contact name with phone number and
email. Also include any specific areas of interest and expertise.
• For individuals,
include name, title, organization, city and state, Web site, areas of expertise,
phone number and email.
Major
issues in Hinduism in the U.S.
As with any immigrant
group, the question of how much to assimilate into American society and culture
is a major one for Hindus born overseas. Below are some issues involving assimilation
that are of concern to Hindus in America:
• Working to get Hindu holidays recognized by school districts and businesses.
New York now takes religious holidays, including Hindu ones, into account when
scheduling exams. New Jersey schools recognize Diwali as a holiday, but Tampa,
Fla., recently did away with school off-days for religious holidays altogether,
prompting angry responses from many parents.
• Determining what it meansto be Hindu in America. Raising their
American-born children in their faith has forced immigrant parents to define
Hinduism’s beliefs and doctrines to an extent that they would not have had to
do in India or other places where the religion is indigenous.
• Responding to insensitivity, intolerance and hate crimes. Hindus are
joining together to defend their faith and educate others in response to temple
vandalism (in Minnesota) and recent remarks by public officials, including then-Sen.
George Allen, R-Va., (who in August 2006 called a man of Indian heritage a “macaca”)
and then-U.S. Rep. Katherine Harris, R-Fla. (who the same month said that to
elect non-Christians would be to “legislate sin”). These efforts to educate
communities have resulted in growing interfaith contact.
• Becoming politically involved. As with other immigrant groups, Hindu-Americans
feel pulled in two directions politically. Those who are American citizens know
that becoming involved in American politics is a major path to assimilation.
But most also feel deep political ties to their country of origin. Striking
a comfortable balance can be difficult. The Hindu
American Foundation divides its resources among a number of political causes,
lobbying American Congress members on a range of issues, from human rights in
India to wider recognition of Diwali as a holiday.
• Constructing temples. Issues concerning the construction of Hindu temples
in the U.S. have to do with freedom of religion, land use and the challenges
of satisfying the religious needs of a diverse Hindu-American population. One
U.S. temple may have to serve Hindus from Northern and Southern India, Guyana
and the Caribbean, as well as their American-born children. Conflict can arise
over style of architecture, selection of temple deities and priests. Temples
in America also serve a range of purposes that Indian temples do not, with many
functioning as community meeting halls, cultural resource centers and religious
education schools as well as places of worship. In June 2006, the first national
meeting of Hindu mandir (temple) executives was held in Atlanta. Executives
came from 57 temples in more than 20 states, Canada and the Caribbean Islands.
They passed resolutions on pan-Hinduism in North America, textbooks and community
service. See the group’s Web
site.
• Monitoring textbooks. This has been a growing concern among American
Hindus since 2005, when California proposed the adoption of nine school textbooks
that some Hindus felt misrepresented their religion and were otherwise discriminatory.
In September 2006, a California judge ruled that the state did not have to withdraw
the textbooks but agreed that the process by which they are adopted is unfair.
Out of the conflict, the Hindu
Education Foundation was formed, and it now holds educational seminars for
educators and parents in other states.
• Promoting language. There is a small but growing move to promote the
speaking of Sanskrit, the classical language of India and the liturgical language
of Hinduism, among the Hindu diaspora, especially in America. The move was started
by a group of students at the University of Maryland and young professionals
from the same area. They launched a Web
site in July 2006.
Demographic
information
There is disagreement
about the number of Hindus in the U.S. Temples do not require membership, so
there is no official count. There have been few surveys, and results have varied
depending on the way information was collected and how questions were phrased.
Current estimates range from three-quarters of a million to 1.2 million.
• The 2001
American Religious Identification Survey conducted by the Graduate Center
of the City University of New York reported religious affiliation of adults
in the United States: Although less than 1 percent – 766,000 adults – reported
themselves as Hindu, that represents a more-than-threefold increase over the
227,000 in 1990. Fifty-two percent of Americans said they are Protestant, .5
percent are Catholic, 14.1 percent "no religion," 1.3 percent Jewish
and 0.5 percent Muslim or Islamic.
• The World
Christian Database at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary estimates that
there are slightly more than 1.1 million Hindus in America.
• The Pluralism Project
of Harvard University maintains a page on religious
statistics and relies on various sources to count 1.2 million Hindus in
the U.S. The project lists Hindu
temples and centers in the U.S.
GENERAL
• Sajida S. Alvi
is a professor of Urdu at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. She has written
about classical and modern Hindu thought. Contact 514-398-2587, sajida.alvi@mcgill.ca.
• Lawrence
Alan Babb is a professor in the department of anthropology and sociology
at Amherst College in Amherst, Mass. He teaches a course on religions in South
Asia and has studied Hinduism as practiced in India. He has also written about
modern interpretations of Hinduism. Contact 413-542-2131, lababb@amherst.edu.
• Edwin F. Bryant
is an associate professor of religion at Rutgers University in New Brunswick,
N.J., where he teaches courses in Hindu philosophy and religion. He specializes
in the Krishna tradition and the Hare Krishna movement. Contact 732-932-3289,
edbryant@rci.rutgers.edu.
• Richard H. Davis is a professor of religion at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson,
N.Y. He is an expert in the Shaiva traditions of India. He can discuss the rise
of Indian nationalism and how it makes itself felt in the U.S., as well as provide
background information on the textbook debate. Contact 845-758-7364, rdavis@bard.edu.
• Diana
L. Eck is a professor of comparative religion and Indian studies at Harvard
University in Cambridge, Mass. She is one of the foremost scholars of Hinduism,
having traveled and written widely about India and its religions. She is also
the director of Harvard’s Pluralism
Project, which explores the religious diversity of the U.S. Contact 617-495-5781,
dianaeck@fas.harvard.edu.
• Nancy Auer Falk is a professor emeritus of the department of comparative religion
at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo. She is the author of Living
Hinduisms: An Explorer’s Guide (Wadsworth Publishing, 2005). Contact 269-387-4393,
nancy.falk@wmich.edu.
• Anne
Feldhaus is a professor of religious studies at Arizona State University
in Tempe. She specializes in folk Hinduism. Contact 480-965-4749, anne.feldhaus@asu.edu.
• Ariel Glucklich is an of professor of theology at Georgetown University in
Washington, D.C. He teaches a course in Hindu religious traditions and has written
several books on Hindu dharma. Contact 202-687-4513, glucklia@georgetown.edu.
• Daniel
Gold is a professor of South Asian religions at Cornell University in Ithaca,
N.Y. He specializes in North Indian devotional traditions. Contact 607-255-1339,
drg4@cornell.edu.
• Brian
A. Hatcher is a professor of religion and humanities at Illinois Wesleyan
University in Bloomington. He teaches courses in the Hindu religious tradition.
Contact 309-556-3160, bhatcher@iwu.edu.
• John
Stratton Hawley is a professor of religion at Barnard College at Columbia
University in New York, N.Y., where he maintains a Hindu studies Web
site. He is a specialist in the devotional traditions of North India and
Krishna. Contact 212-854-5292, jsh3@columbia.edu.
• Pankaj Jain is
a Sanskrit scholar who is among the professors who will open the new summer
courses in Hinduism at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J., in 2007. He
teaches courses in general Hinduism and is completing his doctoral dissertation
at the University of Iowa. Contact 908-229-0372, pankaj-jain@uiowa.edu.
• John Llewellyn is professor of religious studies at Missouri State University
in Springfield. He is the editor of DefiningHinduism: A Reader (Routledge,
2005), a volume of essays. Contact 417-836-6681, jel807f@missouristate.edu.
• William
K. Mahony is a professor of religion at Davidson College in Davidson, N.C.
He is an expert in contemplative and Vedic Hinduism. Contact 704-894-2258, bimahony@davidson.edu.
• Vasudha Narayanan
is Distinguished Professor of Religion at the University of Florida in Gainesville,
and she helped found the universitys Center
for the Study of Hindu Traditions, of which she is director. She is a noted
scholar of Hinduism and a past president of the American Academy of Religion.
Contact 352-392-1625, vasu@ufl.edu.
• Anantanand
Rambachan is a professor of religion at St. Olaf College in Northfield,
Minn. His areas of expertise include classical Hinduism, especially Vedanta.
Contact 507-646-3081, rambacha@stolaf.edu.
• Robin Rinehart is an associate professor in religious studies at Lafayette
College in Easton, Pa. She is an expert in Hinduism and Hindu saints. Contact
610-330-5179, rineharr@lafayette.edu.
• Arvind Sharma
is a professor of comparative religion at McGill University in Montreal, Canada,
and specializes in modern Hindu thought. He is the author of author of Classical
Hindu Thought: An Introduction (new edition, Oxford University Press, 2001).
Contact 514-398-4123, arvind.sharma@mcgill.ca.
• Gene
Thursby is an associate professor of religion at the University of Florida
in Gainesville. He co-edited The Hindu World (Routledge, 2004). Contact
352-392-1625.
ART,
MUSIC AND ARCHITECTURE IN AMERICA
• Guy L. Beck is a visiting professor of religion at the University of North
Carolina in Wilmington. He is the author of Sonic Theology: Hinduism and
Sacred Sound (University of South Carolina Press, 1993). Contact 910-763-1116,
beckg@uncw.edu.
• Linda B. Hess is a lecturer in religious studies at Stanford University in
Stanford, Calif. She is an expert in the poetry of 15th- and 16th-century
Hindu saints and can discuss their continued influence. Contact 650-725-9732,
lionda@stanford.edu.
• Timothy Lubin
is an associate professor of religion at Washington and Lee University in Lexington,
Va. He teaches a course on Hindu temples. Contact 540-458-8146, lubint@wlu.edu.
• Joanne
Punzo Waghorne is a professor of religion at Syracuse University in Syracuse,
N.Y. She has written a book about the construction of Hindu temples and their
internal organizations in urban areas, including Washington, D.C. Contact 315-443-5715,
jpwaghor@syr.edu.
ENVIRONMENT
• Christopher Key Chapple
is a professor of theological studies at Loyola Marymount University in Los
Angeles. He is the co-editor of Hinduism and Ecology: The Intersection of
Earth, Sky and Water (Harvard Center for the Study of World Religions, 2000).Contact 310-338-2846, cchapple@lmu.edu.
• Pankaj Jain is
a Sanskrit scholar who teaches Hinduism at Rutgers University in New Brunswick,
N.J. His specialty is in Hinduism and ecology, and he can discuss how the religion
is making itself felt in environmental/ecological policies in India and the
United States. He is completing his dissertation in the subject at the University
of Iowa. Contact 908-229-0372, pankaj-jain@uiowa.edu.
• Eliza
Kent is an assistant professor of religion at Colgate University in Hamilton,
N.Y. She specializes in Hinduism and the environment in South India. Contact
315-228-7688, ekent@mail.colgate.edu.
• Mary McGee is an adjunct professor in the religion department at Columbia
University in New York, N.Y. She has written about Hinduism and the environment.
Contact 212-854-6821, mm383@columbia.edu.
• Vasudha
Narayanan is a professor of religion at the University of Florida in Gainesville.
She is the author of Hinduism (Oxford University Press, 2004). One of
her specialties is Hinduism and the environment. Contact 352-392-1625, vasu@ufl.edu.
• Whitney
Sanford is an assistant professor of religion at the University of Florida
in Gainesville. She is an expert on Hindu narratives of agriculture and religion
and nature in South Asia. Contact 352-392-1625.
GANDHI
• Peter
Gottschalk is an associate professor of religion at Wesleyan University
in Middletown, Conn. He teaches a course in how religions resist modernity and
can discuss how Gandhi organized such resistance. Contact 860-685-2293, pgottschalk@wesleyan.edu.
• Lester
R. Kurtz is a professor of sociology at the University of Texas at Austin.
He is an expert in Gandhian thought. Contact 512-232-6316, lkurtz@mail.la.utexas.edu.
• Sushil
Mittal is an associate professor of religion and philosophy and the director
of the Gandhi Center
for Global Nonviolence at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Va.
He is an expert on Gandhian thought and a specialist in Indian studies. He is
the author of several books on Hinduism. Contact 540-568-6137, mittalsx@jmu.edu.
HINDUISM
IN AMERICA
• Loriliai Biernacki is an assistant professor of religious studies at the University
of Colorado at Boulder. Her research interests include Hinduism in the diaspora.
Contact 303-492-8041, loriliai.biernacki@colorado.edu.
• Christopher Key Chapple
is a professor of theological studies at Loyola Marymount University in Los
Angeles. He contributed a chapter on Gurani Anjali and her Yoga Anand Ashram
to Gurus in America (State University of New York, 2005). Contact 310-338-2846,
cchapple@lmu.edu.
• Corinne G. Dempsey is an associate professor of religious studies at the University
of Wisconsin-Stevens Point and the author of The Goddess Lives in Upstate
New York: Breaking Convention and Making Home at a North American Hindu Temple
(Oxford University Press, 2005), a profile of a South Indian community in
Rush, N.Y. Contact 715-346-2505, cdempsey@uwsp.edu.
• Thomas A. Forsthoefel is an associate professor of religious studies at Mercyhurst
College in Erie, Pa. He is the co-editor of Gurus in America (State University
of New York, 2005). Contact 814-824-2353, tforsthoefel@mercyhurst.edu.
• Michael J. Gressett is a graduate student at the Center
for the Study of Hindu Traditions at the University of Florida in Gainesville.
His research interests include Hindu traditions in America. Contact 352-392-1625,
saumya@ufl.edu.
• Daniel
Gold is a professor of South Asian religions at Cornell University in Ithaca,
N.Y. He specializes in modern Indian religious movements and has written about
the issues raised when Indian gurus gain large Western followings. Contact 607-255-1339,
drg4@cornell.edu.
• Cynthia Ann Humes is an associate professor of philosophy and religious studies
at Claremont McKenna College in Claremont, Calif. She is the co-editor of Gurus
in America (State University of New York, 2005), to which she contributed
a chapter on Transcendental Meditation and Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Contact 909-607-8713,
cynthia.humes@claremontmckenna.edu.
• Khyati Y. Joshi,
is an assistant professor of education at Fairleigh Dickinson University in
Teaneck, N.J., and she is the author of New Roots in America's Sacred Ground:
Religion, Race, And Ethnicity in Indian America (Rutgers University Press,
2006). Contact 210.692.2836, khyati@fdu.edu.
• Meena
Rani Khandelwal is an assistant professor of anthropology at the University
of Iowa in Iowa City. She has received funding from the American Institute of
Indian Studies to conduct a comparative study of Hindu ashrams in India and
in the United States that investigates issues of social change. Contact 319-335-2496,
meena-khandelwal@uiowa.edu.
• Jeffrey
J. Kripal is a professor of religious studies at Rice University in Houston.
His specialty is Asian religions in America, and he focuses on European and
American translations or adoptions of Hindu ideas and practices. He wrote a
chapter on Adi Da for Gurus in America (State University of New York,
2005) and has a forthcoming book (University of Chicago Press, 2007) about the
Esalen Institute’s countercultural translation of Hinduism. Contact via B.J.
Almond, Rice University News and Media Relations Office, 713-348-6774.
• James F. Lewis is a professor of biblical and theological studies at Bethel
University in St. Paul, Minn. He has written about Hindu New Religious Movements.
Contact 651-638-6400, j-lewis@bethel.edu.
• June McDaniel
is a professor of religious studies at the College of Charleston in Charleston,
S.C. She focuses on Hindu women’s religious rituals and mysticism and contributed
a chapter about Jayashri Ma to The Graceful Guru: Hindu Female Gurus in India
and the United States (Oxford University Press, 2004). Contact 843-953-5956,
mcdanielj@cofc.edu.
• Vasudha Narayanan
is Distinguished Professor of Religion at the University of Florida in Gainesville,
and she helped found the universitys Center
for the Study of Hindu Traditions, of which she is director. She is a noted
scholar of Hinduism and a past president of the American Academy of Religion.
Contact 352-392-1625, vasu@ufl.edu.
• Leslie C. Orr is an associate professor of religion at Concordia University
in Montreal, Canada. One of her areas of specialty is Hinduism in the West.
Contact 514-848-2424 ext. 2078, orr@vax2.concordia.ca.
• Norris W. Palmer is an associate professor of religious studies at St. Mary’s
College of California in Moraga, Calif. He wrote a chapter on Sai Baba for Gurus
in America (State University of New York Press, 2005) and contributed an
article
in 2006 to NovaReligioon how Hindus use their temples
to negotiate their identity in America. Contact 925-631-4799, rpalmer@stmarys-ca.edu.
• Karen Pechilis is a professor of Asian religions at Drew University in Madison,
N.J. She edited The Graceful Guru: Hindu Female Gurus in the United States
(Oxford University Press, 2004), which covers the American movements behind
Ammachi, Anandamayi Ma, Gauri Ma, Gurumayi, Jayashri Ma, Karunamayi Ma, Ma Jaya
Sati Bhagavati, Mother Meera, Shree Maa and Sita Devi. Contact 973-408-3124,
kpechili@drew.edu.
• Stephen
R. Prothero is a professor of religion at Boston University. He is co-editor
of Asian Religions in America: A Documentary History (Oxford University
Press, 1998). Contact 617-353-4426, prothero@bu.edu.
• Selva J. Raj is a professor of religious studies at Albion College in Albion,
Mich. He wrote a chapter on Ammachi for Gurus in America (State University
of New York Press, 2005). Contact 517-629-0400, sraj@albion.edu.
• Anantanand
Rambachan is a professor of religion at St. Olaf College in Northfield,
Minn. His areas of expertise include modern Hinduism and Hindus in the diaspora.
Contact 507-646-3081, rambacha@stolaf.edu.
• B.V.K. Sastry is a professor at Hindu University of America in Orlando, Fla.,
where he teaches courses in Hindu practices and principles. Contact sastry@hindu-university.edu.
• K.R.
Sundararajan is a professor of theology at St. Bonaventure University in
St. Bonaventure, N.Y. He is the co-editor of Hindu Spirituality II: Post-Classical
and Modern (Crossroads, 1997). Contact 716-375-2297, sundar@sbu.edu.
• Polly Trout is the author of Eastern Seeds, Western Soil: Three Gurus in
America (McGraw Hill, 2000). She lives in Seattle. Contact polly@seattleeducationaccess.org.
• Hugh
B. Urban is an associate professor of comparative studies at Ohio State
University in Columbus. He contributed a chapter about Osho to Gurus in America
(State University of New York Press, 2005). Contact 614-292-9855, urban.41@osu.edu.
• Joanne
Punzo Waghorne is a professor of religion at Syracuse University in Syracuse,
N.Y. One of her areas of study is guru-centered New Religious Movements in India
and abroad, including the U.S. Contact 315-443-5715, jpwaghor@syr.edu.
INTERFAITH
RELATIONS
• Brian
A. Hatcher is a professor of religion and humanities at Illinois Wesleyan
University in Bloomington. He specializes in Hindu-Christian relations and the
Hindu religious tradition. Contact 309-556-3160, bhatcher@iwu.edu.
• Eliza F.
Kent is an assistant professor of religion at Colgate University in Hamilton,
N.Y. She is the author of Converting Women: Gender and Protestant Christianity
in Colonial South India (Oxford University Press, 2004). Contact 315-228-7688,
ekent@mail.colgate.edu.
• Brian
K. Pennington is an associate professor of religion at Maryville College
in Maryville, Tenn. He has written about Hindu-Christian relations. Contact
brian.pennington@maryvillecollege.edu.
• Anantanand
Rambachan is a professor of religion at St. Olaf College in Northfield,
Minn. His areas of expertise include Hindu-Christian dialogue. Contact 507-646-3081,
rambacha@stolaf.edu.
• Robin
Rinehart is an associate professor in religious studies at Lafayette College
in Easton, Pa. She is an expert in Hindu, Sikh and Muslim relations. Contact
610-330-5179, rineharr@lafayette.edu.
MYSTICISM
AND MYTHOLOGY
• Wendy
Doniger is a professor of the history of religions at the University of
Chicago. She is an expert on the mythology of Hinduism. Contact 773-702-8239,
don8@midway.uchicago.edu.
• Meena
Rani Khandelwal is an assistant professor of anthropology at the University
of Iowa in Iowa City. She is an expert on Hindu women ascetics. Contact 319-335-2496,
meena-khandelwal@uiowa.edu.
• Timothy Lubin
is an associate professor of religion at Washington and Lee University in Lexington,
Va. He teaches a course on the deities of Hinduism and another on yogis, ascetics
and monks. Contact 540-458-8146, lubint@wlu.edu.
• June McDaniel is a professor of religious studies at the College of Charleston
in Charleston, S.C. She is an expert in Indian folk religion, mysticism across
cultures and Hindu Shaktism, a form of deity worship. Contact 843-953-5956,
mcdanielj@cofc.edu.
• Rachel
Fell McDermott is an associate professor in Asian and Middle Eastern cultures
at Columbia University in New York, N.Y. She is an expert in the Hindu female
deity worship traditions. Contact 212-854-5416, rmcdermo@barnard.edu.
• Laurie
L. Patton is a professor of humanities at Emory University in Atlanta. She
is an expert in Hindu mythology. Contact 404-727-5177, lpatton@emory.edu.
• Tracy
Pintchman is a professor of theology at Loyola University in Chicago. She specializes
in women in Hinduism and is an expert on Shaktism, Hindu goddess worship. Contact
773-508-2372, tpintch@luc.edu.
SCRIPTURES
• Mandakranta Bose is a professor emerita at the University of British Columbia
in Vancouver, B.C., Canada. She is an expert on the Ramayana. Contact 604-822-6463,
mbose@interchange.ubc.ca.
• Edwin F. Bryant
is an associate professor of religion at Rutgers University in New Brunswick,
N.J. He teaches workshops in the Bhagavad-Gita and the Yoga Sutras. Contact
732-932-3289, edbryant@rci.rutgers.edu.
• Kuldip C. Gupta is a professor of Hinduism at Hindu University of America
in Orlando, Fla., where he teaches a course in the Bhagavad-Gita. Contact gupta@hindu-university.edu.
• Vasudha Narayanan
is Distinguished Professor of Religion at the University of Florida in Gainesville,
and she helped found the universitys Center
for the Study of Hindu Traditions, of which she is director. She is a noted
scholar of Hinduism and a past president of the American Academy of Religion.
Contact 352-392-1625, vasu@ufl.edu.
• Laurie
L. Patton is a professor of humanities at Emory University in Atlanta. She
has translated a forthcoming edition of the Bhagavad-Gita for Penguin Press.
Contact 404-727-5177, lpatton@emory.edu.
• Paula
Richman is a professor of religion at Oberlin College in Oberlin, Ohio.
She is an expert on the Hindu epics, especially the Ramayana. She is on academic
leave for 2006-07. Contact 440-775-8532, paula.richman@oberlin.edu.
• Bruce M. Sullivan
is a professor of religious studies at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff.
He teaches a course on the Hindu epics. Contact 520-523-0244, bruce.sullivan@nau.edu.
• Katherine
K. Young is a professor of Hinduism at McGill University in Montreal, Canada.
She specializes in comparative ethics between the religions of South India.
Contact 514-398-1511, katherine.young@mcgill.ca.
WOMEN
IN HINDUISM
• Carol
S. Anderson is an associate professor in the departments of religion and
women’s studies at Kalamazoo College in Kalamazoo, Mich. She wrote a chapter
about Gauri Ma in The Graceful Guru: Hindu Female Gurus in India and the
United States (Oxford University Press, 2004). Contact 269-337-7114, anderson@kzoo.edu.
• Loriliai Biernacki is an assistant professor of religious studies at the University
of Colorado at Boulder. Her research interests include Tantrism. She wrote about
Shree Maa for The Graceful Guru: Hindu Female Gurus in India and the United
States (Oxford University Press, 2004). Contact 303-492-8041, loriliai.biernacki@colorado.edu.
• Catherine Cornille is an associate professor of theology at Boston University.
She wrote about Mother Meera in The Graceful Guru: Hindu Female Gurus in
India and the United States (Oxford University Press, 2004). Contact 617-552-3896,
catherine.cornille@bu.edu.
• Kathleen
M. Erndl is an associate professor of religion at Florida State University
in Tallahassee. She has written about gender issues and the worship of female
deities. Contact 850-644-0207, kerndl@mailer.fsu.edu.
• Lisa Lassell Halstrom is a professor of religious studies at Mount Holyoke
College in South Halsted, Mass. She wrote a chapter on Anandamayi Ma for The
Graceful Guru: Hindu Female Gurus in India and the United States (Oxford
University Press, 2004). Contact through department assistant Anna May Dion,
413-538-2233, amdion@mtholyoke.edu.
• Lindsey
B. Harlan is a professor of religious studies at Connecticut College in
New London. She is an expert on Hindu marriage. Contact 860-439-2167, lindsey.harlan@conncoll.edu.
• Meena
Rani Khandelwal is an assistant professor of anthropology at the University
of Iowa in Iowa City. She is an expert on Hindu women ascetics. Contact 319-335-2496,
meena-khandelwal@uiowa.edu.
• Rebecca
J. Manring is an associate professor of India studies and religious studies
at Indiana University. She contributed a chapter on Sita Devi to The Graceful
Guru: Hindu Female Gurus in India and the United States (Oxford University
Press, 2004). Contact 812-855-6756, rmanring@indiana.edu.
• Nancy M. Martin is an associate professor of ethics in the religious studies
department at Chapman University in Orange, Calif. She teaches a course in gender
in world religions and can discuss the role of women in Hinduism. Contact 714-997-6608,
nmartin@chapman.edu.
• Vasudha Narayanan
is Distinguished Professor of Religion at the University of Florida in Gainesville,
and she helped found the universitys Center
for the Study of Hindu Traditions, of which she is director. She is a noted
scholar of Hinduism and a past president of the American Academy of Religion.
Contact 352-392-1625, vasu@ufl.edu.
• June McDaniel
is a professor of religious studies at the College of Charleston in Charleston,
S.C. She focuses on Hindu women’s religious rituals and mysticism and contributed
a chapter about Jayashri Ma to The Graceful Guru: Hindu Female Gurus in India
and the United States (Oxford University Press, 2004). Contact 843-953-5956,
mcdanielj@cofc.edu.
• Vasudha
Narayanan is a professor of religion at the University of Florida in Gainesville.
She wrote a chapter on female gurus and deities in The Graceful Guru: Hindu
Female Gurus in India and the United States (Oxford University Press, 2004).
Contact 352-392-1625, vasu@ufl.edu.
YOGA,
MEDITATION, TANTRISM AND OTHER PRACTICES
• Loriliai Biernacki is an assistant professor of religious studies at the University
of Colorado at Boulder. Her research interests include Tantrism. Contact 303-492-8041,
loriliai.biernacki@colorado.edu.
• Douglas
R. Brooks is a religion professor at the University of Rochester in Rochester,
N.Y. He has written two books about Tantrism. Contact 585-275-9369, dbrk@troi.cc.rochester.edu.
• Edwin F. Bryant
is an associate professor of religion at Rutgers University in New Brunswick,
N.J., where he teaches courses in Hindu philosophy and religion. He also teaches
workshops in the Yoga Sutras. Contact 732-932-3289, edbryant@rci.rutgers.edu.
• Subhas R. Tiwari is a professor of yoga and meditation at the Hindu University
of America in Orlando, Fla. Contact tiwari@hindu-university.edu.
• Hugh
B. Urban is an associate professor of comparative studies at Ohio State
University in Columbus. He is working on a book about Tantrism. Contact 614-292-
9855, urban.41@osu.edu.
THINK
TANKS AND UNIVERSITY CENTERS
• The American Institute
of Indian Studies is a consortium of universities and colleges in the United
States at which scholars actively engage in teaching and research about India.
It is at the University of Chicago.
• The Center
for the Study of Hindu Traditions is at the University of Florida in Gainesville.
• Hindu University
of America in Orlando, Fla., is the only university in the West entirely
dedicated to the study of all things Hindu.
• The Oxford Centre for Hindu
Studies in Oxford, England, is one of the largest and most comprehensive
centers for the study of Hinduism in the West.
NATIONAL
POLITICAL, CULTURAL AND SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS
• The Hindu
American Foundation is a nondenominational human rights organization that
works with governments, media, think tanks, academia and the public on issues
of concern to Hindus around the world. It is based in Washington, D.C., and
the executive director is Ishani Chowdhury. Contact 877-281-2838 or 301-770-7835.
• The Hindu
Education Foundation is a nonprofit organization that promotes understanding
of Hinduism. The group was a major plaintiff in the California textbook controversy.
It maintains chapters
in several states. Contact Khanderao Kand, 408-737-7930, media@hindueducation.org.
• The Hindu Students Council
describes itself as “an international forum that provides opportunities to learn
about Hindu heritage through various activities, events and projects” on college
campuses in the United States and abroad. It maintains a chapter
list of member groups on various U.S. campuses.
• The Hindu Temple Society of North America is based within the Ganesh
Temple in Flushing, N.Y. Its president is Uma Mysorekar. Contact 718-460-8484.
• The Network of Hindu Minds
is an organization of professionals of various religions and backgrounds who
want to live their lives according to Hindu philosophy and ayurveda.
• The Vedic Foundation
is a nonprofit that works “to re-establish the greatness of Hinduism.” The foundation,
which is based in Austin, Texas, was a major plaintiff in the California textbook
controversy. Contact 512-965-4590, theteam@thevedicfoundation.org.
• The Vishwa
Hindu Parishad (World Hindu Council) of America is an organization that
works to promote Hinduism among transplanted Hindis and to educate others about
the religion. It maintains a number of chapters
throughout the U.S. Its president is Jyotish Parekh. Contact Shyam Tiwari, national
coordinator of public relations and media, 770-752-3358 (work), 770-232-0939
(cell), srtiwari@hotmail.com.
SUMMER
CAMPS AND OTHER YOUTH ACTIVITIES
• Hindu Heritage Summer Camp
is a summer camp program designed to help Hindu youth reconcile their religion
with what it means to be an American. The India Community Center in Rochester,
N.Y., runs it.
• Hindu Ideal Youth Camp is based in Stroudsburg, Pa. Contact 903-457-0200.
• The Hindu Students Council
runs a summer
camp for Hindu college students. Contact Darshan Soni, 574-329-4238, darshan.soni@hscnet.org.
• The Vishwa Hindu Parishad
(World Hindu Council) of America maintains a page of summer
camps of camps that feature the teachings of Vivekananda.
Leaders
and religious centers
GURUS
IN AMERICA
• A number of religious teachers have migrated from India to America, and a
few are American-born. Here is a list of the more prominent gurus who have roots
in Hinduism and have large followings in the United States as well as around
the world.
• Adi Da Samraj is the American-born
guru who founded Adidam, a New Religious Movement based on Hinduism.
• Ammachi is also
known as the “hugging saint.” Her main ashram is in New York City.
• Gurumayi Chidvilasananda
is the leader of Siddha Yoga, which was founded by Baba Muktananda. There are
ashrams and meditation centers around the world. In the U.S. there are ashrams
in New
York, Boston
and Oakland, Calif.
• Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
is credited with bringing Transcendental Meditation to the West. TM was a major
component of the counterculture movement of the 1960s and had many celebrity
adherents, including the Beatles and Mia Farrow. Since 9/11, the Maharishi has
been guiding his followers to create “the Maharishi effect,” a power they believe
can be found in collective meditation that can be used for good.
• Osho (formerly
known as Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh) was an Indian-born guru who taught a mixture
of Hinduism and other word religions and was known for developing forms of active
meditation. Before his death in 1990, he appointed several followers to run
about 20 ashrams around the world. Friends
of Osho lists Osho centers worldwide. Osho
World is a site devoted to the guru’s teachings.
• Bhagavan Sri
Ramana Maharshi was an Indian-born Hindu guru whose teachings of self-examination
influenced many modern teachers of Hinduism in the West. He died in 1950. The
main U. S. ashram is
in Jamaica, N.Y.
• Sai Baba is
an Indian-born guru who claims between 6 million and 100 million adherents and
130 centers around the world. He teaches the unity of all world religions as
different paths to the same God. Sai Baba’s followers credit him with many miracles.
• A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada was the founder of the International
Society for Krishna Consciousness, known as ISKCON. He died in 1977, but ISKCON
survives.
• Karunamayi
Ma is an India-based guru who travels in the U.S. She is next scheduled
to tour the U.S. from April through July 2007.
• Ma Jaya Sati Bhagavati
is a Jewish-born convert to Hinduism who is now a guru based in the Kashi
Ashram in Sebastian, Fla.
• Mother
Meera is an India-based guru with an ashram
in Colorado.
HINDU
TEACHERS AND CLERGY
• Pravrajika Vrajaprana is a nun at the Vedanta Society of Santa Barbara in
Santa Barbara, Calif. She says two issues confronting contemporary Hinduism
are how it is practiced differently outside of India, and how Hindus identify
themselves – as Hindus or Indians or citizens of the countries in which they
live now. Those answers can affect the way they practice the religion and how
they pass it on to their children. Contact info@vedanta.org.
• Gautam Jain
is a teacher of Vedanta based at the Vedanta Cultural Foundation in Somerset,
N.J. Contact 732-993-3358, gautam@vedantausa.org.
• Satguru
Bodhinatha Veylanswami is the spiritual leader of the Saiva Siddhanta Church
and publisher of Hinduism
Today, a magazine of global Hinduism, which is published at Kauai’s
Hindu
Monastery in Kapaa, Hawaii. Contact via the magazine’s editorial office,
808-822-7032 ext. 227.
• Venkatachalpathi Samuldrala is a priest at the Greater
Cleveland Hindu Shiva Vishnu Temple in Cleveland. He was the first Hindu
priest to deliver a prayer before Congress. Contact 440-888-9433.
• Utpala Balarama Krishnamacharyulu is a priest at the Hindu
Temple of Wisconsin in Pewaukee. Contact 262-695-1200.
• Naranji Durlabhji Pandya is the temple priest at the Hindu
American Religious Institute in New Cumberland, Pa. Contact 717-774-7750.
• Swami
Yogatmananda is the priest of the Vedanta
Society of Providence. Contact 401-421-3960.
• Sri Ramachandraji is a temple priest at the Bharatiya Temple of Metropolitan
Detroit. The temple broke ground on an expansion in fall 2006. Contact 248-879-2552.
• Yogindra
Vandana das Adhikari is president of the ISKCON
New Talavan Community in Carriere, Miss. Contact 601-749-9460, talavan@hughes.net.
DIRECTORIES
OF U.S. HINDU TEMPLES AND MONASTERIES
• IndiaNET.com maintains a state-by-state
directory of Hindu temples in the United States.
• HinduMandir.US
maintains a list of Hindu temples in the United States and features photographs
of the different American Hindu statues of deities.
• Harvard
University’s Pluralism Project
maintains a directory of Hindu
religious centers in the United States.
PHILOSOPHY
AND BELIEFS
• There is no single Hinduism. “Hinduism has never been a ‘creed’ with a set
of beliefs,” writes Harvard University’s Diana Eck, “but rather a culture and
way of life.” It is the third-largest organized religion in the world. Hindus
believe in one transcendent Supreme Being, reincarnation and karma. In the 1980s
and 1990s, the editors of Hinduism Today attempted to summarize nine
core beliefs of Hinduism for non-Hindu readers encountering the faith for the
first time.
• Beliefnet.com posts a summary
of the nine basic beliefs of Hinduism and the five obligations of all Hindus.
SCRIPTURES
Hindus hold a variety of writings sacred:
• Vedas – These are the primary texts of Hinduism and are among the oldest
sacred texts in all the world’s religions, with the oldest of them composed
about 1500 B.C. There are four Vedas: the Rig
Veda, the Sama
Veda, the Yajur
Veda and the Atharva
Veda.
• Upanishads – These are mystical texts often written in the form of
dialogues between deities and men. They were composed between 400 and 200 B.C.
Sacred-Texts.com has an online
translation by Max Müller.
• The Puranas – The Puranas are a narrative of the history of the cosmos
from creation to destruction. There are 17 or 18 divided into categories named
for the Hindu deities Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva. Sacred-Texts.com has an online
translation of the Vishnu
Purana by Horace Hayman Wilson, the Garuda
Purana by Ernest Wood and S.V. Subrahmanyam, the S’r
îmad Devî Bhâgawatam by Swami Vijnanananda, the Devî
Gita by Swami Vijnanananada and the Prem
Sagur of Lallu Lal by W. Hollings.
• The
Mahabharata is an ancient religious epic originally composed in Sanskrit.
It tells of the many adventures of Krishna.
• The Bhagavad-Gita – This epic is actually book six of the Mahabharata,
but often stands on its own. It is told as a dialogue between Krishna and the
soldier Arjuna on a battlefield before the fighting begins. It was composed
about 200 B.C. Sacred-Texts.com has an online
translation by Edwin Arnold.
• The Ramayana – An epic tale of the adventures of the deity Rama who
fights to free his love, Sita, from the hold of Ravan, the King of Ceylon. Sacred-Texts.com
has an online
translation y Ralph T.H. Griffith.
HINDU
SECTS
Scholars
categorize Hinduism into three or, sometimes, four groups:
• Vaishnavism
(worship of the deity Vishnu); Approximately 80 percent of the world’s Hindus
are Vaishnavites
• Shaivism
(worship of the deity Shiva)
• Shaktism
(worship of the deity Devi)
• and
sometimes Smartism.
NORTH AMERICAN
RESOURCES
• Bochasanwasi Shree
Shri Akshar Purushottam Swaminarayan Sanstha (BAPS) is asocio-spiritual
religious community with its roots in the Vedas and in the Gujarat region of
India. It has a directory
of congregations in the U.S.
• Chinmaya Mission
Westis the North American branch of the worldwide Vedanta movement
founded in 1975.
• Integral Yoga International
is aninternational yoga community based in the U.S. at Swami Satchidananda's
Yogaville ashram in Buckingham, Va.
• International Society
for Krishna Consciousness(ISKCON), or Hare Krishna, was founded in
1966. The group traces its religious heritage back 5,000 years ago to Krishna's
birth. They revere the 16th-century guru Caitanya Mahaprabu as an incarnation
of Krishna. Mahaprabu taught that Lord Krishna is the principle deity and that
everyone can regain a personal relationship with Krishna through sankirtana,
the group chanting of God's names, especially the Hare Krishna mantra. The Bhagavad-Gita
is their sacred text. They worship Krishna as the Supreme God. Jesus is revered
as a representative of Krishna. The group claims more than 1 million members
worldwide and has its head office in Los Angeles. It publishes a bimonthly magazine,
Back to
Godhead.
• Sri Vaishnava
is a Web site devoted to the deity Vishnu and his worship.
• Shaivam.org
is a Web site dedicated to all things regarding worship of the deity Shiva.
• Vedanta
is a philosophy founded on the Vedas, one of the sacred scriptures of India.
It was popularized in the west by Swami Vivekenanda in the late 19th
and early 20th centuries. The Pluralism Project features a report
by Clare Giles on the history and growth of Vedanta Societies in the United
States. It charts numerous changes within the societies since the influx of
South Asian immigrants since 1965. The Vedanta Society of Southern California
maintains a list
of Vedanta Centers throughout the U.S.
Background
• The Hindu
Students Council maintains a detailed page of descriptions of Hindu
saints and sages.
• Vasudha Narayanan of the University of Florida in Gainesville maintains a
Web site that
explains the beliefs and traditions of Hinduism and contains pictures and descriptions
of Hindu temples in the U.S. and around the world.
ARTICLES
• Read an Aug.
10, 2007, Chicago Tribune story (posted by the Houston Chronicle)
about a 2007 report that chronicles violence against Hindus worldwide.