Cultural Hindu
A Cultural Hindu is a religiously unobservant individual who identifies with Hinduism, usually due to family background.[1]
Definition
Emory University professor John Y. Fenton defines the locution as follows:[1]
The term "cultural Hindu" generally refers to Desis with a Hindu family background who have low observance of religious practices and whose identification with the Hindu religious tradition is primarily cultural or communal.[1]
The term has come into vogue as a result of secularization.[2] Cultural Hindus, while not religiously devout, may still observe Hindu feasts, such as Diwali.[3] For these individuals, this commemoration of Hindu festivals, as well as occasional temple attendance, serve as a celebration of their heritage.[4]
gollark: Or `num % 2`, which is more common in high level languages.
gollark: You'll probably need some JavaScript on the client for this. You could either constantly refresh the page or have code fetch the values and update the HTML periodically.
gollark: Do you want to make it constantly run the check thing on the *server* or just have the *client* constantly refresh or something?
gollark: Wow, that's somehow half the speed of my home connection run over some ancient phone line.
gollark: This is mostly two-way, i.e. two threads per core, however some enterprisey ones go to 4 or 8; this has diminishing returns because more and more of the execution resources are already used.
See also
- Cultural Christian, Christian culture
- Cultural Judaism, Jewish culture
- Cultural Muslim, Islamic culture
References
- Fenton, John Y. (1988). Transplanting Religious Traditions: Asian Indians in America. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 59. ISBN 9780275926762.
The term "cultural Hindu" refers to Indians with a Hindu family background who have low observance of religious practices and whose identification with the Hindu religious tradition is primarily cultural or communal.
- Beit-Hallahmi, Benjamin (21 August 2014). Psychological Perspectives on Religion and Religiosity. Taylor & Francis. p. 307. ISBN 9781317610366.
Terms such as "cultural Christian," "cultural Moslem," or "cultural Hindu" express the reality of seculariztion, where labels imply family descent, but not any practices.
- "The Hindu Youth Research Project" (PDF). The Oxford Center for Hindu Studies. 2001. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
- Brosius, Christiane (12 June 2012). India’s Middle Class: New Forms of Urban Leisure, Consumption and Prosperity. Taylor & Francis. p. 240. ISBN 9781136704833.
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