(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/deepak-sarma) 


_Deepak  Sarma_ (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/deepak-sarma) 
Associate Professor of South Asian Religions and  Philosophy, Case Western 
Reserve University 



 
 
 
 








 
Diaspora Hinduism and the December Dilemma 
Posted: 12/18/11 10:00 PM ET  
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/deepak-sarma/diaspora-hinduism-december-dilemma_b_1146343.html?view=print&comm_ref=false)
 



 


 

 

There is no period in the Gregorian calendar more demanding and  
transformative for diaspora Hindus than the weeks leading up to and culminating 
 with 
Christmas. In daycares and schools, in workplaces and civic spaces, on  
television and in the digital media in North America, Hindus are constantly  
reminded about the holy days of Christians. Self-reflection is inevitable and  
inescapable when one is frequently enjoined to "Have a Merry Christmas" or 
even  to "Enjoy the Holidays" when one sees no reason to celebrate the birth 
of Christ  or when the days ahead are not considered holy.  
With all of the marketing of merriment and conspicuous consumption, it is  
hard for diaspora Hindus not to feel left out, lacking, or deprived. This is 
 especially true for the children of immigrants who are painfully aware of 
gift  exchanges in schools and classrooms before Christmas and the plethora 
of  presents that Christian classmates have received (made aware either 
after  Christmas vacation is over or by observing the curbside evidence the day 
after  Christmas). Christian classmates are stupefied that their "poor" and  
"downtrodden" Hindu friends have not received any gifts (confirming 
unfortunate  stereotypes about poverty in India), and (seemingly delinquent) 
Hindu 
parents  are forced to answer accusations of injustice and child abuse from 
their  confused children. 
Hindus have responded to the challenges of living in a Christian-centric  
society in many ways, though I will examine only two here.  
Ho Ho Ho!: hota hai (you have to do it) 
Many Hindus celebrate Christmas. Inundated by Christmas cheer and pressured 
 by their children, Christmas has become part of the lives of diaspora  
Hindus. 
Some have decided to celebrate Christmas superficially, as a mere 
commercial  holiday. They purchase Christmas trees, gifts for one another, and 
encourage  their children to enjoy the Santa Claus myth, in the same way that 
they 
may  encourage their children to enjoy (and benefit from) the tooth-fairy 
myth. They  classify Christmas as a secular, commercial, festival for 
children, in the same  way that Father's Day, for example, is a festival for 
fathers.  
Others utilize Hindu, specifically Vaishnava, theology to reconfigure  
Christmas to be a Hindu tradition. Vaishnavas believe that Vishnu has  avataras 
(incarnations). These avataras of Vishnu appear and act in the  world in 
order to defend dharma and his devotees. They characterize Christ to be  an 
avatara of Vishnu. By including Christ as just another avatara of Vishnu,  they 
indirectly make Christianity just another sect of Hinduism. 
It is not surprising that the retail world has reacted to these markets in  
North America by making available Hindu ornaments that can be used on 
Christmas  trees. Though the intended market is likely non-Indian, new age, 
yoga  
practitioners, it overlaps with diaspora Hindu families. The Christmas 
tree, a  popular symbol of Christmas in North America is re-appropriated by 
Hindus and  spiced with Hindu flavors. 
No matter what narrative is given about the relevance of Christmas, 
secular,  Vaishnava etc., many Hindu parents believe that they have to accept 
and  
celebrate it given the pressures of their immediate surroundings and shame 
that  they will likely feel if they do not permit their children to have fun 
in these  prescribed ways. Christmas celebration has become another dharmic  
obligation. 
Yuletide Yatras (Pilgrimages) 
Many diaspora Hindus make it a point to visit the local Hindu temple on  
Christmas Day. For those who see Christ as an avatara of Vishnu, a trip to the 
 temple is no different than a visit to celebrate Krishna-janmashtami (the 
birth  of Krishna). For those who do not envision Christ as a part of the 
Hindu  pantheon their trip to the temple may be a chance to take advantage of 
the  vacation day and to teach their children about Hinduism. Some temples 
even  include Christmas Day in their "Schedule of Events" even though no 
special event  is planned. The inclusion of a Christian holiday in their 
calendar signifies its  importance in diaspora Hinduism. 
This adaptation (or acceptance) of the Gregorian, rather than Hindu, 
calendar  is further exemplified by the importance that is placed in many 
temples 
on New  Year's Day (according to the Gregorian calendar). Many Hindu temples 
in North  America include celebrations of the god Gaṇesh on New Year's Day. 
Gaṇesh is  especially appropriate as he is worshipped as the god of 
beginnings and remover  of obstacles.  
In both of these cases, Hindus make pilgrimages to the local temples on 
days  that are holy in the Gregorian/ Christian calendar, and certainly not in 
the  Hindu calendar. Gregorian New Year's Day has been accepted, to some 
extent, as  the beginning of the New Year and as a moment when the Hindu god Gaṇ
esh should  be revered.  
Hinduism has become part of the North American landscape as has the 
reverse.  This is especially true if one examines the reactions of Hinduism to 
the  
Christian holy days that lead up to, and culminated with, Christmas and New 
 Year's. There are aspects of Hinduism that make it amenable to change and 
to  accommodation. The variety of Hinduism that is found in North America 
has  adapted to these new contexts and cultural environments. In the process 
diaspora  Hindus offer a desi (Indian) response to the December  Dilemma.


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