We have been asked this question enough times to want to
share the untold story behind the stories in Hinduism Today. Basically,
the magazine is a public service of a small monastic community based in
Hawaii, which does it for the same reason other orders run ashrams, free
eye-clinics or orphanages--for money and power. Not. But wait, that's just the beginning of understanding this until-now mysterious, international publication and doesn't explain why a select committee seeking the Hindu view on the ethics of human cloning for a report to US President Bill Clinton called our editorial offices in late March. So, here is a sneak peak at an unpublished article
about Hinduism Today, our major outreach service, recently written by a
leading Indian journalist.
by: Lavina Melwani - New York
As the new millennium approaches, the world's oldest
religions is donning shining new clothes. The age-old Hindu philosophy passed
from mouth to mouth in tiny villages across India is now going high-tech,
thanks to Hinduism Today, the preeminent global journal of Hindu Dharma.
This Hawaii-based publication is shedding its broadsheet image after 18
years and transforming into a sleek, easy-to-carry, full-color magazine.
Its on-line version is not quite as eye-catching but will bring every aspect
of Sanatana Dharma to millions of Internet users across the world. Hinduism,
which had always been the domain of unchanging swamis in far-off ashrams,
is now entering the computer age with Hinduism Today. Founded by Satguru
Sivaya Subramaniyaswami and published by the Himalayan Academy on the idyllic
island of Kauai in Hawaii, the magazine is totally service oriented.
Observes Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami (Gurudeva): "Hinduism Today
was created to strengthen all the many diverse expressions of Hindu spirituality,
to give them a single, combined voice because everywhere else their voices
were individualized. There was nothing that encompassed the whole Hindu
experience around the world. Every religious order has a mission and instead
of starting an eye-clinic or an orphanage, we created a global publication
to advance the cause of Hindutva." Hinduism Today's rebirth as a full-color
magazine is an idea whose time has come. According to Gurudeva: "It's
something we've wanted to do for a long time, so it's just a natural evolution."
It was indeed the logical outcome of an 18-year mission to give all Hindu
denominations and their lineages a voice to and thus Hindus as a global
community.
WHY Hinduism Today? While bookstores and newsstands are filled
with countless newspapers and magazines, it was apparent there was nothing
to satisfy contemporary Hindus, to articulate in modern language India's
ancient wisdom. As Acharya Palaniswami, editor of Hinduism Today, points
out, "Open up many books, and they are so cluttered with technical
terms, obscure references and other languages that the average seeker would
go about three pages and not pursue it further." Hinduism Today wanted
to say all the important things, the profound things, but in an interesting
voice which all could understand and appreciate. While Hindus living in
India are surrounded by their culture and faith, HT's mandate was to also
reach the millions of Hindus who are trying to keep their faith alive in
far-off places surrounded by different cultures. In isolated, alien townships
and cities, shared words can provide courage and enthusiasm, energy to keep
true to a faith. Hinduism Today is a voice for Sanatana Dharma's all-embracing
philosophy. It tells the world about India's cultural riches: ayurveda,
classical dance, literature and drama, the healing power of meditation and
yoga, and the virtues of vegetarianism. To those who are Hindu and to those
merely attracted by the principles of Indian spirituality, it offers a common
platform, a feeling of family, setting off good vibrations.
Mark Twain Meets HT: Few know that the author of Tom Sawyer and
Huckleberry Finn spent time in India, and fewer still that he was karmically
connected to Hinduism Today. That story begins decades ago. Starting life
as a black-and-white newsletter about the doings of Gurudeva's worldwide
fellowship on January 5, 1979, its founder's 53rd birthday, Hinduism Today
has evolved over the years to embrace everything of interest to a Hindu.
Before the newspaper appeared, Himalayan Academy was publishing books on
Hindu-related metaphysical topics as early as 1957, laying the groundwork
for Hinduism Today. Recalls Palaniswami, "We've gone from trudging
through 30-foot snowdrifts in our Nevada monastery in the 1960s to walking
under rainbow skies in Hawaii in the 1990s, so that's a good step forward."
Interestingly enough, the Academy's earliest books on yoga and meditation
were hand set by the young monks on the same wooden type Mark Twain used
as editor of the Territorial Enterprise, a Nevada newspaper. There was a
symbolic meaning for the editors of HT in this, and by coincidence the Hawaiian
island they settled on many years later was the very one, Kauai, Mark Twain
had visited on his way to India, a hundred years earlier.
Editor in Chief Palaniswami notes: "Mark Twain was the author of
Following the Equator, which he considered his finest work, the pinnacle
of his career. He had visited India for three months, on the lecture circuit,
giving a one-man show called "An Evening with Mark Twain." While
in India he observed that all the world's religions are really paupers and
beggars, but India's Hinduism is the only millionnaire, because of its pantheon
of Gods compared to other religions which have to make do with just one
God! Of the home of Hinduism Today, the island of Kauai, Mark Twain had
this to say: "It was the most beautiful in the world." From the
hand-made wooden type sorts that Mark Twain used to set his headlines, to
the computer-generated font called Quantum Leap customized by the mathavasis
in a program called Fontographer, HT has come a long way. It was an unsung
pioneer in the desktop publishing revolution, embracing the microchip revolution
early and with gusto, presenting the ancient wisdom of Vedic Dharma in a
contemporary way. In fact, two decades ago Apple Computer, so impressed
by their efforts, sent a video team for three days to the Hinduism Today
ashram to capture the production of the journal by monks on Apple's Macintosh
computers. This film was later shown to Apple's 8,000 employees to demonstrate
how a small group of monks had constructed the world's first desktop publishing
network.
In October, 1996, Hinduism Today proved it's still on the cutting (veterans
call it the bleeding) edge of technology when the staff completed the CD-ROM,
called Dharma Graphics, containing over 1,500 illustrations representing
twenty years of graphic images drawn from village arts and crafts, now all
preserved in digital form. The CD-ROM, with its sophisticated imagery, is
available as clip-art for temple bulletins and children's books. In India
the pandits still sit on the ghats in Haridwar-nothing ever changes. But
Hinduism Today has embraced change with enthusiasm in full cooperation with
some of these same wisdom-laden pandits.
So, Who Reads Hinduism Today? Hinduism Today reaches millions
of Hindus in 39 countries. Besides Hindus in countries across the globe,
readers include seekers of every ethnic group and religion, attracted to
the sublime philosophies of Sanatana Dharma: ayurveda, yoga and the benefits
of the vegetarian lifestyle. Indophiles and all who have traveled to India
and been mesmerized by her magic count themselves among the readers of Hinduism
Today, and, perhaps surprisingly, the clergy and theological students of
other major religions form a strategic part of the HT family. A very vital
contingent of Hinduism Today is the second-generation Indians growing up
in foreign lands. For them, many who know the magazine only in its digital
version on the Worldwide Web, Hinduism Today provides answers to perplexing
questions in an intelligent and easily accessible way. These are the children
who have to deal with classmates who have formed misconceptions about Hinduism
from films like Indiana Jones in which Hindu sects are shown eating eyeballs
and cracking monkey skulls to eat the brain. Every Indian child living abroad
has had the distressing experience of peers asking "In India, do you
ride elephants and tigers and live in trees?" With its colorful graphics, comprehensive cover stories, and educational
Insight Sections with detailed descriptions of Indian traditions, rites
and customs, Hinduism Today makes religion contemporary, current and viable
for these young Hindus by birth. The Publisher's Desk and Editorial, the
Letters page as well as the My Turn column all conspire to set up a lively
dialogue between intelligent readers, academics and believers. Columns like
Trends to Watch and Diaspora keep readers abreast of the current events
affecting Hinduism. The Quotes & Quips humor page and Healing touch
upon many issues of interest to even non-Hindus, such as the dangers of
second-hand smoke or ways to alleviate menopause. Their goal was and is
to create a true Hindu renaissance by providing readers, browsers, believers
and non-believers alike a forum, a soapbox to vent their feelings and discuss
every aspect of Hinduism and how it effects modern life. HT has done this,
and Hindus worldwide wholeheartedly congratulate them for achieving their
goal of renewing a diminished sense of Hindu pride and presence in the modern
world. And now in its new magazine format, looking something like Newsweek,
only better, our Hindu front continues to promote the world's oldest relgion. Role Models for Today's Hindus: Unlike most religious publications
which focus narrowly on one sect or tradition, Hinduism Today uses the printed
words as a magnetic net to draw in all types of readers. Its editors realize
that Hindus-often stereotyped by the mass media as fundamentalists or swamis
living in mountains-are ordinary, everyday people in the swim of life, and
it is these millions that Hinduism Today tries to reach with stories of
spirit and courage. Especially abroad, where there are so few markers for
Hindus in mainstream life, the people profiles in Hinduism Today serve as
encouraging role models: famous scientists, artists and doctors who contribute
to the world around them and are proud Hindus. Hindus such as Kiran Bedi,
Pundit Athavale, Madhu Kishwar, Ram Swarup, Lata Mangeshkar and Pankaj Udhas.
HT's Hindutva Satya Sanga , an informal council of dynamic spiritual leaders,
has over 1,000 swamis within it, serving and preaching among all sects of
the Santanta Dharma daily to followers and the public at large. This creative
cooperation among leaders is one of HT's unique (and not easily achieved)
contributions to the varied of streams of Indian spirituality. To young people well-versed in computerese, Hinduism Today is especially
attractive. It's on the Internet, and its colorful, exciting graphics and
text provide many megabytes of hard-to-find information for seekers. The
new magazine format is even more attractive on the Internet, since it fits
perfectly with a color picture on each page. A whole generation of young
people, so used to the computer, will be able to read Hinduism Today on
their own, even without parental encouragement. For children growing up
abroad who have few role models and too many colorful distractions, HT shows
the best of Hinduism in a subtle, one could say a sneaky, way. Before they
know it, children and young adults are lured into the wonderful world of
Sanatana Dharma through computer graphics and colorful websites. Sanskrit
is a dead language which has little meaning for today's generation but English
translations of ancient Sanskrit classics and Tamil scriptures offered on
the HT Web Site open up a whole new wonderful world. Hinduism Today succeeds
in reaching a savvy young audience who may or may not visit the temple regularly
or attend religious meetings. Observes editor Palaniswami, "Gurudeva and the editors get e-mail
every day from Europe, America, Australia, Indian and Malaysia. Young Hindu
kids who are on the Internet site write to us and say, 'You know I've been
thinking about karma. My grandmother always talked about it but I never
really understood it.' The modern kid is much smarter than most people think,
asking all sorts of profound and personal questions. We answer them all."
Yes, Western technology can be used to advance the course of the Eternal
Truth. My Turn is a forum where young Indian Americans can vent their feelings.
Wrote Smita Patil, an intern for the Oregonian newspaper, "If Indian
women were truly treated in accordance with Hindu belief and teachings,
India would be a heaven on Earth. Instead, many Hindus have formed a convenient
duality where they worship women in temples but enslave them at home."
The Letters page encourages lively debate, often by e-mail. One reader felt
it was OK to eat meat as long as she lived the principles of the Vedas.
Another expressed that being vegetarian is not just a random decision but
a well-thought-out tradition, thousands of years old. "To give that
up is like regressing thousands of years." A Resource for Mainstream America: Hinduism Today has landed on
several lists around America as a place where people can find authentic
and reliable information on Sanatana Dharma, and its editorial team is often
called upon for hard-to-find answers that few other institutions seem inclined
to take the time to address. Houghton Mifflin, one of America's largest
publishers for children's textbooks in middle and high schools, asked Hinduism
Today to vet its chapters on Hinduism for a civilization series for American
sixth graders destined for school rooms where half a million 13-year-olds
will study it in the United States. Houghton Mifflin had called Harvard
to vet the chapters, and Harvard defered to the editors of HT. Recalls Acharya
Palaniswami, "The two chapters were awful, devastatingly bad, even
wrong in places. We ended up rewriting the whole thing, and also provided
graphics. All the chapters on other religions had really nice graphics,
but for Hinduism they had found a horrible, monster-looking Shiva for these
young children to study. We sent them elegant, graceful images that Hindus
would be proud to see." To the amazement of the HT team, the publishers
adopted in its entirety the rewritten chapters, and as a result American
kids will have a really authentic and compelling introduction to the world's
oldest religion, not some rehashed, demeaning stereotype. Harvard University is engaged in the production of a massive Pluralism
Project by which high school children will be taught about other cultures
and religions on CD-ROM. Prof. Diana Eck, head of the religion department
at Harvard, invited HT to participate in the Hindu expressions. Elsewhere,
the United Nations is developing the very strategic Earth Charter, a parallel
to the Human Rights Declaration. This official UN declaration will define
for the future how nations will look upon and treat the environment. Besides
scientific input, religious contributions are being called for from five
religions (Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism and Judaism), and the
project is being guided by Steven Rockefeller, one of the famed family,
who happens to teach comparative religions. The UN committee has approached
HT to help help develop the Hindu representation for a panel of spiritual
experts who can give voice to environmental ethics for the Earth Charter.
There is more. In early 1997 the ex-editor of Christianity Today, Terry
Muck, contacted Hinduism Today to have it collaborate on one chapter of
his new Doubleday book, A Guide to Religions in America. And another
scholar found their FAQs on the Web, and wrote to include it as one chapter
in a book on the six major faiths in the US, and.....well, you get the idea.
Time Magazine Has a Question, Swami: HT has also been getting
a lot of calls from religion editors in America, and was recently lauded
as a solid source of Indian spirituality in a book published by John Dart
of the Los Angeles Times called Deities and Deadlines. Time Magazine called
in August to verify a Hinduism-related story, an as yet unpublished feature
on Deepak Chopra's phenomenal success. Indeed, Hinduism Today has gained
a reputation for having credibility, access to authentic information and
a commitment to objective, unexaggerated reporting. Many religious journals walk a tightrope between propaganda and journalism,
but HT has always chosen the harder path of honest reporting. Says Palaniswami:
"Happily, we are not just another bhakti rag, as one reader observed.
While remaining upbeat, we do try to tell readers even about the painful
underbelly of one-sixth of the human race's religion, Hinduism, to make
it real and not paint an unrealistic or Polyanna picture. It's important
to express things in that way; otherwise people stop listening." To
that, Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami adds: "We report the news after
verification, showing both sides. As someone said, We like to know all the
bad news, but put it in the back of the magazine." Even when the Ayodhya
riots took place in India, HT gave a clear and factual picture of the events
to document the resurgence of a controversial but emphatic Indian renaissance. Ancient Wisdom, Current Problems: Unlike most religious journals,
HT never preaches, giving too many should do's or to do's, nor does it become
overly moralistic in tone. The editors realize that the congregation in
diaspora has changed and the magazine must change with them, keeping pace
with its readers. So, one finds Hinduism Today broaching subjects such as
abortion, intercultural marriages, divorce, working mothers and adoption.
These are the subjects that pose problems for Hindus today, and HT is there
with the answers, be it cross-cultural parenting, sex before marriage or
bringing up adopted children. Not afraid to discuss tough social topics
like wife battering, bride burnings, child-abuse or the fact that Indian
girls have the highest suicide rate, Hinduism Today takes on all these issues
and tries to find solutions, especially pointing to insights found in the
Vedas. Interviews with strong Hindu women such as Madhu Kishwar, activist editor
of Manushi, animal-rights activist Manika Gandhi and prison reformer Kirin
Bede are part of the consciousness-raising features. While the core team
is composed of monks, Hinduism Today has over 100 reporters and journalists
and dozens of photograpers and artists working for it worldwide. These are
people who actually live in the communities being reported on and understand
the problems Hindus in a modern world face. It is interesting to note that
a majority of the columnists are Indian women. The editors are always on the look out for for fresh, new contemporary
voices. Over the years HT has picked up the cudgels on behalf of persecuted
Hindus in countries from Fiji to Dubai to South Africa to Afghanistan. Without
being highlighted in the press, these victims would have disappeared from
human memory. By headlining their stories in bold letters on the front page,
HT assures that the sacrifices of these people will not be in vain. There
have been stories about Nepal, the only Hindu nation, being stormed by foreign
missionaries: there were only 25 baptized Nepalese Christians in 1960. The
figure by 1994 had grown to 120,000. One rarely sees such stories in the
mainstream press, but these are facts. Is it possible to be a good Hindu
and a successful businessman? Time and again, with its countless success
stories of important CEOs, artists, dancers and intellectuals who are unabashedly
Hindu, HT has pinpointed role models for a whole new generation to follow.
There are stories of entrepreneurs, writers and artisans who have achieved
success but kept their core values of Hinduism, a beacon in the storms of
life. Through the Internet it's reaching millions of Hindus, and millions of
others who are intrigued by Hindu culture, spirituality and literature.
Elastic as Hinduism is, it's never tried to convert people, but opened its
treasures from the past to whoever wants to partake. Into the Future of Futures: There are numerous historians and
intellectuals, like Arnold Toynbee, who genuinely believe that the next
century is going to be the Asian Century. Observes Editor-in-Chief Palaniswami:
"I think we are a harbinger of that fact, that whether it's religious
content or artistic content or even cultural or literary content, Asia is
going to dominate the world scene. But in terms of means of dissemination,
tools of communicating that content-those tools all belong to the West and
will continue to belong to the West. What Hindus need to do is take their
rich, precious and incomparable content and use the tools of dissemination
that have been so masterfully crafted in the West. I think that's where
a marriage of Asian philosophy and culture and Western technology can do
something very special for India in the century ahead. But if we take the
Western content and the Western tools-like television has done-we are ruined.
We have to be very discriminating in that regard." Hinduism Today reaches many homes in many countries. It lands upon the
desks of physicians, scientists, artists, politicians, religious leaders
and entrepreneurs. The expansion continues to many countries-expansion not
of might but of mighty ideas. Hinduism Today keeps to the high writing and
production standards its readers expect from it, and while providing the
news in an entertaining way, it never lets the entertainment sink to triviality.
As publisher Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami explained to me: "We want
to inspire leaders who can go out and inspire others, not write to the lowest
common denominator. We feel Hinduism is a religion of love. Hinduism is
love of the one energy which comes from God and flows through all our bodies.
Our motto in dealing with all the differences and distinctions is : 'One
world. One God.' " It is this enlightened concept of Sanatana Dharma
that Hinduism Today--the colorful, computerized messenger of Indian paths
and experiences--takes to homes on every continent. Humanity could use a
lot more of this profound and tolerant view of our deepest urge--the spiritual
one we all share, however quietly.
They're based in Hawaii, so of course you can surf their great web site and catch some Big Waves!
Address:
Kauai's Hindu Monastery