Home Asiatica IJTS JSAWS Projects Links
IJTS Logo
ISSN 1084-7553

IJTS
Vol. 5, No. 1
March 30, 2001
Table of Contents
Abstracts
Editorial Note
The Realm of the Divine...
New Titles - 1
New Titles - 2

IJTS Sections
IJTS Home
About the Editors
Aims of the IJTS
Editorial Policy
Distribution Policy
Copyright Policy
Current Issue
Back Issues
How to Submit
Members' Benefits
Members' Login
 
 
New Titles 

Meditation Revolution:
A History of Theology of the Siddha Yoga Lineage

by Constantina Rodhes Bailly, Douglas Renfrew Brooks,
Swami Durgananda, William H. Mahony,
Paul E. Muller-Ortega, S. P. Sabharathnam

New York, Agama Press, 1997
ISBN: (pbk) 0-9654096-0-0; (hc) 0-9654096-1-9

This book traces the history of the Siddha Yoga movement from its origins in the obscure Tansa Valley of Maharasthra up to the Constitution of the Siddha Yoga composed by Swami Muktananda in 1961. Each essay of this book claims "to take up an aspect of the Siddha Yoga that is crucial for understanding its origins, development, teachings, and practices".

It is divided into two parts, the history of the movement, and its theology. The first part of the book is written by Swami Durgananda, a monk of the SarasvatI Order who took vows in 1982, who edited a few Muktananda's books and is one of the principal Siddha Yoga teachers.

The second part of the book is written by scholars and deals with the movement, the guru-disciple relationship, the canons, the concept of the Self, the Fall of Power on disciples, kuNDalinI, Siddha Yoga as MahAyoga and the Ashram, under theological point of view.

Nevertheless, besides more informative articles such as "The Canons of Siddha Yoga: The Body of Scripture and the Form of the Guru" by Douglas Renfrew Brooks, which devotes half of the pages to the actual oral and written sources of the movement, and "The Ashram, Life in the Abode of a Siddha" by William H. Mahony, which, though devoting paragraphs on ashrams as centres of spiritual discipline, on the implications of the word Azram (spelled in the Sanskrit original), and on "The Ashram as Indian Religious Institution", is very instructive, the second part of the book is generally vague and superficial, giving general information that any 1st year college student of a Hindu class after a few months knows (and any good traveller knows).

In this second part outstands for superficiality the paper by Paul E. Muller-Ortega titled "Shaktipat: The Initiatory Descent of Power" who not only writes on well-known facts, already written by him in his book and papers, but uses a study bibliography only focused on the works by editors of the editorial board of the SUNY, and writers of the same press.

The context of the book is religious, and footnotes -- inconveniently placed all together at the end of the book as endnotes -- should be integrated in the text itself to give some more realia and references on something a bit too talkative.

In the bibliography some name is misspelled -- such as Sheldon Pollock, which has become Pollack! -- and the bibliography itself, with the exception of the French M. Biardeau and L. Dumont, the Italian M. Falk and R. Gnoli, the Dutch T. Goudriaan and a few others, is rigorously in English and mainly American. The books in (translated) languages other than English are old and well-known. There is a complete lack of a more recent scholarship, even though I should admit that, talking of Tantra/Siddha/Yoga, every recent bibliography is essentially the same and could be copied from one book to another.

The book can be valuable to college students of the first religion class but its first mistake is to be too long: the same things could have been written without getting readers bored in half of the pages and, strange enough, the redundant pages are concentrated in the second part of the book written by scholars!

EG


Looking for God: A Seeker's Guide to Religious and Spiritual Groups of the World
by Steven Sadleir

1st Perigee edition, New York: Penguin Putnam Inc., 2000
ISBN: 0-399-52643-9, Pp. XVII+426, US$ 15.95, Can.$ 22.99

"This is dedicated to those who seek God". And this is true: in a very concise and straightforward way, Sadleir leads us to a remarkable array of belief systems. We have a great choice of "gods" here: from that of "Eastern Religions" -- from Hinduism and Buddhism to Reiki and Feng-shui -- to the god of "Early Spiritual Paths" -- such as Druids, Freemasonry, Builders of the Adytum and the Rosacrucian Order. There is a the god of "Western and Middle Eastern Religions"-- such as Judaism and Christianity -- that of "Contemporary Spiritual Teachings" -- Theosophy, Scientology and so on -- and that of "Eastern Masters and Movements" -- Sri Ramaksrishna, Gurdjieff, Mother Meera, The International Sufi Movent, Kriya Yoga etc.

The Author gives for each religion a paragraph on its history, belief system, rituals and holy days (when possible), additional information such recommended contacts and bookstores, recommended and additional readings, recommended websites.

This book, though the poor quality of paper and the light paper cover, which are compensated by the very affordable price, is not a profound or scholarly book nor claims to be. It is not a theological book and does not gives analysis or disquisitions -- and how could it do it, if for each main religion no more than 6 pages are dedicated? It is too superficial for an academic study.

Nevertheless, it is a very useful and practical handbook including bizarre and semi-unknown religious groups, of which some of them, I guess, most people have never heard of. Moreover, it is a good guide and reference book to people who are not only curious about spirituality, but also want to start walking to find metaphysical bookstores, centres, temples, mandirs, mosques, churches and holistic healing centres of all kinds: in short, for people who want to find God on earth.

EG


Ananya: A Portrait of India
by S. N. Sridhar and Nirmal K. Mattoo, eds.

The Association of Indians in America, 1997
ISBN: 0-9659771-1-0, Pp. 927

This book was printed in celebration of the 50th anniversary of India's Independence on August 15, 1997. It was kindly given to me as gift and not as a review copy, therefore I feel a bit ashamed not have considered it before, but I should say that it is so thick that discouraged me at the beginning -- even though beautifully printed in Garamond characters on good paper, and well hard cover-bound.

The aim of the book is to offer a wide overview of India and Indian issues: "Historical Background" -- from the Indus Civilization to the "Colonial Impact on India" -- "Indic Religions and Philosophy" -- where only one paper is devoted to Jainism and Buddhism while six are devoted to orthodox Hinduism -- "Society and Politics" -- with only five papers, none of them dealing specifically with Indian Women but just one on Women's education in India -- "Science and Technology" -- including two papers dealing with the same subject, "Science in Ancient India" and "Science and Technology in Ancient India"! -- "Business and Economics", "Art and Architecture", "Language and Literature", "Performing Arts", "Makers of Modern India" -- including two papers on Gandhi and one on "Jawaharlal Nehru's Sense of History" -- "Identity and Diaspora" and "Epilogue".

It is the Epilogue, I think, that gives a clue on this book: it is written by V. S. Arunachalam, Scientific Advisor for the Defense Minister of India for more than ten years, covering so many honorary positions that this screen is not long enough to include all of them, and presently Distinguished Service Professor in the Dept. of Engineering and Public Policy, Robotics Institute of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh (PA). He writes very realistically on "This Time, A Tryst with Technology" and urges India "to become strong industrially and militarily". While not even one political matter is addressed in this book and is not made any political analysis of India, this seems to reveal the aim of Indians in America: To make their country similar, too similar to America.

The book does not address Indologists, is not thought-provoking and the choice of its authors is not always the best one, even picking only among Indians -- there are only four non-Indians out of thirty-six authors -- even though we learn from S. R. Rao, superintendent of archaeology of several circles of India and scientist for marine archaeology in the National Institute of Oceanography in Goa, that he has deciphered the Indus script written on Harappan seals. Nevertheless, the interest of this book is on the fact that is a good representation of what Indians think of themselves especially in the articles on and by Indians in America, giving news, diagrams and perspectives not easily found anywhere else.

EG