I extend my heartfelt gratitude to Indic Academy for sending this book through their amazing initiative for reviewer’s club. Very fortunate to be a part of “Thousand reviewers club”.
Hindu Rites and Rituals is a book authored by K.V Singh that is quite a winding one. I am sure everyone at some point of their lives would have questioned their parents, grandparents about the reasoning behind Hindu rituals, be it during festivals or on regular days. Like why Hindus observe fasts, why cooking and consumption of food during eclipse is prohibited, why there are 108 beads in japmala, what is the significance of placing kalash during the pooja, what is the significance of wearing tilak/kumkum on forehead, so on and so forth.
The book is divided into six parts that tries to address the queries; reasoning & importance related to each area. They are something like this.
1.Gods, Goddesses & Nature
2.Important Hindu Dates
3.Rituals: Pujas and Yagnas.
4.Temple Rituals
5.Traditions
6.Miscellaneous
Initially the book intrigues the reader with its title and content, but going forward, author fails to add up and substantiate it with proper scientific backing and reference. Being born in a Hindu family that spared no effort to follow all the rituals and rites religiously, I for one was looking forward to gain more insight into the origin and meaning behind the rituals, traditions and rites. My expectations came crashing down after a few pages into the book.
While a few points made by the author is good but majority of them are in vain and very superficial. The reasoning behind all rituals and rites have been presented in a way that seems like all the rituals Hindus follow are superstitious. The extensive use and stress on vibrations, energy and good atmosphere throughout the book for almost every ritual reflects on the poor research skills of the author and also puts the Hindu rituals and rites under the veil of superstition. Thus, this will give out a wrong picture for the readers or for someone who is looking for answers. Of course, some rituals cannot be chained and explained under the pretext of scientific explanation, but not all of them are followed for the vibrations either, and that needs to be highlighted to avoid the misinformation.
The book gives metaphysical argumentation rather than logical answers. Also, if there was one major thing that encouraged my distaste for the book was that the author at multiple places brings up rituals from other faiths in comparison to Hindu rituals very often. As the books title is quite clear on what it comprises, I find it very insulting to even compare Hindu rituals to those of the other faiths. Somewhere it starts to sound like the author is trying to seek validation and be at par.
I would have liked if there were references and citations mentioned after presenting each fact, making it really transparent and reliable for the readers. I would avoid recommending this book to any uninformed or misinformed people/youth on Hinduism. It could have been a better book with extensive stories and research.