Vedic Veils: Women in Hindu Scriptures
(2025)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Alok Barman, 2025
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (217 pages)

ISBN/ISSN
9798227784216 MWT18154610, 18154610
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Women in India have been suffering for ages. Hindu scriptures treat women as commodities and often equate them to animals. Even a Brahmin woman is considered equivalent to a Shudra, according to these scriptures. Hinduism deprives women of their basic rights. For instance, during Karva Chauth, only the wife is required to fastnever the husband. The wife has to wear a mangalsutra and apply sindoor to signify that she is the "property of someone," much like how a board is placed on a piece of land to indicate ownership. However, the husband is not required to wear any such symbol.If a girl is born in an "inauspicious" month, she is labeled as Manglik. Due to this superstition, it is believed that her husband will die early, and as a remedy, she is sometimes married off to a peepul tree or even a dog. According to Hindu scriptures, a wife must either live a life of celibacy after her husband's death or mount his funeral pyre (sati), while there is no such obligation for a husband. A man is free to marry another woman after the death of his wife, and in many cases, even while his wife is still alive.Only a son is allowed to light the funeral pyre of his parents; daughters are barred from performing this final rite. Hindu culture is male-dominatedmen are portrayed as assertive and powerful, while women are expected to remain submissive

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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