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Hinduism contains numerous references to the worship of the divine in its Vedas, Upanishads, Puranas, Sutras, and other sacred texts. Millions of Hindus recite Sanskrit mantras daily to revere their rivers, mountains, trees, animals, and the Earth. Although the Chipko (tree-hugging) Movement is the most widely known example of Hindu environmental leadership, there are centuries-old examples of Hindu action for the environment.
Hinduism is a remarkably diverse religious and cultural phenomenon with many local and regional manifestations. Within this universe of beliefs, several important themes emerge. The diverse theologies of Hinduism and Jainism suggest that.
- The Earth can be seen as a manifestation of the goddess and must be treated respectfully.
- The five elements (space, air, fire, water, and earth) are the foundation of an interconnected web of life.
- Dharma, often translated as “duty”, can be reinterpreted as our responsibility to care for the Earth.
- Simple living is a model for the development of sustainable economies.
- Our treatment of nature directly affects our Karma.
Gandhi exemplified many of these teachings, and his example continues to inspire contemporary social, religious, and environmental leaders in their efforts to protect the planet.
The following are ten essential Hindu and Jain teachings on the environment:
1. Pancha Mahabhutas
The Pancha Mahabhutas — the five significant elements — create a web of life shown in the structure and interconnectedness of the cosmos and the human body.
Hinduism teaches that the five great elements (space, air, fire, water, and earth) that constitute the environment are all derived from Prakriti, the primal energy. Each element has its own life and form. The elements are interconnected and interdependent.
The Upanishads explain the interdependence of these elements concerning Brahman, the supreme reality, from which they arise:
“From Brahman arises space, from space arises air, from air arises fire, from fire arises water, and from water arises earth.”
Hinduism recognizes that the human body is composed of and related to these five elements and connects each of the elements to one of the five senses. The human nose is associated with earth, the tongue with water, the eyes with fire, the skin with air, and the ears with space. This bond between our senses and the elements is the foundation of our human relationship with the natural world.
For Hinduism, nature and the environment are not outside us, not alien or hostile to us. They are an inseparable part of our existence and constitute our very bodies.
1. Pancha Mahabhutas
The Pancha Mahabhutas — the five significant elements — create a web of life shown in the structure and interconnectedness of the cosmos and the human body.
Hinduism teaches that the five great elements (space, air, fire, water, and earth) that constitute the environment are all derived from Prakriti, the primal energy. Each element has its own life and form. The elements are interconnected and interdependent.
The Upanishads explain the interdependence of these elements concerning Brahman, the supreme reality, from which they arise:
“From Brahman arises space, from space arises air, from air arises fire, from fire arises water, and from water arises earth.”
Hinduism recognizes that the human body is composed of and related to these five elements and connects each of the elements to one of the five senses. The human nose is associated with earth, the tongue with water, the eyes with fire, the skin with air, and the ears with space. This bond between our senses and the elements is the foundation of our human relationship with the natural world.
For Hinduism, nature and the environment are not outside us, not alien or hostile to us. They are an inseparable part of our existence and constitute our very bodies.
2. Ishavasyam
Divinity is omnipresent and takes infinite forms.
Hindu texts such as the Bhagavad Gita (7.19, 13.13) and the Bhagavad Purana (2.2.41, 2.2.45), contain many references to the omnipresence of the Supreme divinity – including its presence throughout and within nature.
Hindus worship and accept the presence of God in nature. For example, many Hindus think of India’s mighty rivers, such as the River Ganga, as goddesses.
In the Mahabharata, it is noted that the universe and every object in it have been created as an abode of the Supreme God meant for the benefit of all, implying that individual species should enjoy their role within a larger system in relationship with other species.
For Hinduism, nature and the environment are not outside us, not alien or hostile to us. They are an inseparable part of our existence and constitute our very bodies.
3. Protecting the environment is part of Dharma
Dharma, one of the most important Hindu concepts, has been translated into English as duty, virtue, cosmic order, and religion. In Hinduism, protecting the environment is an important expression of Dharma.
In past centuries, Indian communities – like other traditional communities – did not understand “the environment” as separate from the different spheres of activity in their lives.
Several rural Hindu communities, such as the Bishnois, Bhils, and Swadhyaya, have maintained strong communal practices to protect local ecosystems such as forests and water sources. These communities carry out these conservation-oriented practices not as environmental acts, per se, but as expressions of Dharma.
When Bishnois protect animals and trees, when Swadhyayis build Vrikshamandiras (tree temples) and Nirmal Nirs (water harvesting sites), and when Bhils practice their rituals in sacred groves, they express their reverence for creation according to Hindu teachings, not “restoring the environment.”
These traditional Indian groups do not see religion, ecology, and ethics as separate arenas of life. Instead, they understand that they should treat creation respectfully as part of their Dharma.
4. Our environmental actions affect our Karma
Karma, a central Hindu teaching, holds that our actions create good and bad consequences that constitute our karma and determine our future fate, including the place we will assume when we are reincarnated in our next life. Moral behavior creates good karma, and our behavior toward the environment has karmic consequences. Because we have free choice, even though we may have harmed the environment in the past, we can choose to protect the environment in the future, replacing environmentally destructive karmic patterns with good ones.
These traditional Indian groups do not see religion, ecology, and ethics as separate arenas of life. Instead, they understand that they should treat creation respectfully as part of their Dharma.
5. The Earth is a goddess and our mother and deserves our devotion and protection
Many Hindu rituals recognize that human beings benefit from the Earth and offer gratitude and protection in response. Many Hindus touch the floor before getting out of bed every morning and ask Devi to forgive them for trampling on her body.
Millions of Hindus create kolams daily – artwork consisting of bits of rice or other food placed at their doorways in the morning. These kolams express Hindus’ desire to offer sustenance to the Earth, just as it sustains itself.
The Chipko movement – made famous by Chipko women’s commitment to hugging trees in their community to protect them from clear-cutting by outside interests, represents a similar devotion to the Earth.
These traditional Indian groups do not see religion, ecology, and ethics as separate arenas of life. Instead, they understand that they should treat creation respectfully as part of their Dharma.
6. Hinduism’s tantric and yogic traditions affirm the sacredness of material reality and contain teachings and practices to unite people with divine energy
Hinduism’s Tantric tradition teaches that the entire universe is the manifestation of sacred energy. Yoga ( derived from the Sanskrit meaning “to yoke” or “to unite”) refers to a series of mental and physical practices designed to connect the individual with this divine energy.
Both these traditions affirm that all phenomena, objects, and individuals are expressions of the sacred. And because these traditions both envision the Earth as a Goddess, contemporary Hindu teachers have used these teachings to demonstrate the wrongness of the exploitation of the environment, women, and indigenous peoples.
7. Belief in reincarnation supports a sense of the interconnectedness of all creation.
Hindus, Jains, and Buddhists believe in the cycle of rebirth, wherein every being travels through millions of cycles of birth and rebirth in different forms, depending on their karma from previous lives. So, a person may be reincarnated as a person, animal, bird, or another part of the wider community of life. Because all people are understood to pass through many lives on their pathway to ultimate liberation, reincarnation creates a sense of solidarity between people and all living things.
Through belief in reincarnation, Hinduism, Jainism, and Buddhism teach that all species and all parts of the Earth are part of an extended network of relationships connected over the millennia, with each part deserving respect and reverence.
8. Ahimsa (Nonviolence)
Nonviolence is the greatest Dharma. Ahimsa to the Earth improves one’s karma. For observant Hindus, Jains, and Buddhists, hurting or harming another being damages one’s karma and obstructs advancement toward moksha (liberation).
To prevent the further accrual of negative karma, Hindus, Buddhists, and Jains are instructed to avoid activities associated with violence and to follow a vegetarian diet.
Based on this doctrine of ahimsa, many observant Hindus, Jains, and Buddhists oppose the institutionalized breeding and killing of animals, birds, and fish for human consumption.
9. Asceticism represents a path to liberation and is good for the Earth
Hinduism, Jainism, and Buddhism teach that sannyasa (asceticism) – restraint in consumption and simplicity in living – represents a pathway towards moksha (liberation), which treats the Earth respectfully.
A well-known Hindu teaching Tain tyakten bhunjitha is translated as “Take what you need for your sustenance without a sense of entitlement or ownership.”
One of the most prominent Hindu environmental leaders, Sunderlal Bahuguna, inspired many Hindus with his ascetic lifestyle. His repeated fasts and strenuous foot marches, undertaken to support and spread the message of the Chipko, distinguished him as a notable ascetic in our own time. In his capacity for suffering and his spirit of self-sacrifice, Hindus saw a living example of the renunciation of worldly ambition exhorted by Hindu scriptures.
10. Gandhi is a role model for simple living
Gandhi’s entire life can be seen as an ecological treatise. This is one life in which every minute act, emotion, or thought functioned much like an ecosystem: his small meals of nuts and fruits, his morning ablutions and everyday bodily practices, his periodic observances of silence, his morning walks, his cultivation of the small as much as of the big, his spinning wheel, his abhorrence of waste, his resorting to basic Hindu and Jain values of truth, nonviolence, celibacy, and fasting. The moralists, nonviolent activists, feminists, journalists, social reformers, trade union leaders, peasants, prohibitionists, nature-cure lovers, renouncers, and environmentalists are inspired by Gandhi’s life and writings.
Acknowledgement: Adapted from the essays by Christopher K. Chapple, O. P. Dwivedi, K. L. Seshagiri Rao, Vinay Lal, and George A. James in Hinduism and Ecology: The Intersection of Earth, Sky, and Water and Jainism and Ecology: Nonviolence in the Web of Life, both published by Harvard University Press. Thanks also to the essays by Harold Coward and Rita Dasgupta Sherma in Purifying the Earthly Body of God: Religion and Ecology in Hindu India, published by SUNY Press. I am also indebted to the kind comments by Reverend Fletcher Harper.
Professor Pankaj Jain is the Director of the Indian Centre and Head of Humanities and languages at FLAME University. He has taught Indian Films, Sanskrit, Hindi/Urdu languages, and literature at the University of North Texas, North Carolina State University, Rutgers, Kean University, Jersey City University, and the University of Iowa. In his scholarship, he connects the ancient Indic traditions of Hinduism and Jainism with contemporary issues, particularly the environment.