What is Dharma?

           If you grew up in India or if you were associated with Indian culture in any form – literature, music, dance, or films – you would have heard the word dharma. Most Indian languages have this word as is or at least have the concept (for example, in Tamil, we use the word aram, which is identical to dharma).

            Dharma is the universal principle that sustains and supports everything. It is the mechanism of Nature. It is a universal Virtue. It is Truth in action. It is Sustainable growth. Depending on the context, dharma can mean one of the following: ‘sustainability,’ ‘support,’ ‘law,’ ‘justice,’ ‘rule,’ ‘principle,’ ‘duty,’ ‘value system,’ ‘virtue,’ ‘way of life,’ or ‘state.’

            We have different types of dharmas. Sāmānya dharma applies to everyone (for example, being honest or being calm). Rāja dharma applies to kings and rulers (for example, punishing the wicked and protecting the good, maintaining law and order). Viśeṣa dharma applies to specific groups (for example, there are certain rules only applicable to doctors or to miners or to athletes, and not to the generality of the population). Āpaddharma applies only to emergencies (for example, if there’s a fire in a building, we should not take the elevator, while it is perfectly normal and safe at other times.) Mokṣa dharma applies to those on the path of liberation (for example, a monk sees no difference between a diamond and a stone; a diamond merchant cannot obviously have such a mindset).

            An essential feature of dharma is that it is holistic. It takes into consideration the larger picture. On the other hand, normative ethics, and the Western idea of morality in general, reduces the rules to specifics. Take for example one of the Ten Commandments, “Thou shalt not kill.” This appears in all the Semitic faiths – in Judaism (Exodus 20:1-17, Deuteronomy 5:4-21), Christianity (Matthew 19:16-19, Romans 13:8-10) and Islam (Qur’an 6:151). It also becomes clear from other sections in these Holy Books that every word found in them is uttered by God through the Prophets and has to be considered sacred.

How then do you explain another passage that goads you to kill infidels or traitors? How do you explain religious war in the wake of this Commandment? How do you explain the behaviour of the millions of soldiers who follow one of the Semitic faiths? And what shalt thou not kill? Humans, animals, plants, or insects? If abortion and euthanasia are unholy, then how is killing an infidel holy? These questions are impossible to answer within the Semitic framework because it comes from a place of absolutism and not relativity.

The idea of dharma is an affirmation that there are no absolute truths in the human world. There are only transient, relative truths. And since they are relative, they have to be understood in the context of a bigger canvas. Dharma doesn’t impose anything on us. All it requires us to do is to ask ourselves a simple question: “Is this action of mine sustainable?” By using the word sustainable, we automatically include the world at large. After all, I, as an individual, can sustain only as long as the world around me is sustained. If my family is unwell, how can I be healthy? If my friends are depressed, how can I be happy? If my workplace is filthy, how can I be clean? Therefore we ask ourselves if our present action will be sustainable in the long run, not just for us but for everyone concerned.

            When we put our actions through this filter, we automatically tend to become more natural – we become more honest, compassionate, clean, and gentle. After all, nature is the best example for sustainability. If humans don’t interfere, nature expresses itself so beautifully, for it is a self-sustaining organism.

            There is a beautiful verse in the Manusmṛti (8.15) about dharma:

 dharma eva hato hanti

dharmo rakṣati rakṣataḥ |

tasmād dharmo na hantavyo

mā no dharmo hato’vadhīt ||

            (Dharma destroys one who destroys it. / Dharma protects one who protects it. / Don’t violate dharma / lest the violated dharma destroys us!)

Violating dharma is like chopping off the branch of a tree on which we are sitting. It is like poisoning a well from which we drink water.

One way to understand dharma is to observe what we expect from others. Do we expect others to be honest? Or would we rather have people tell us lies? Do we expect people to be friendly? Or would we rather have them be hostile? Ideally, we should behave with others in a way that we would expect them to behave.

Now let us look it from another perspective. In an argument, if I use false statistics to build my case, I lose the right to call someone else’s bluff. As a part of a network of people, if I begin to make false promises, then over time I won’t be believed and will be eased out of the network. So if not for anything else, we need to adhere to dharma for our own good and for our own growth.

            In sum, just remember: if we smile at someone, usually s/he will smile in return. There’s no guarantee but there’s a good chance. And we feel happy about it. If we frown at someone, there is hardly any chance that we will get a smile in return. And we feel bad about it. Adhering to dharma is like that. If we are dharmik, there is a good chance people will be dharmik in their dealings with us. And we will feel happy about it. If we are not dharmik, we can’t expect dharma in return. And we will be miserable.

I think I’d choose happiness.

 – Hari Ravikumar

Brief Bio: I co-wrote The Complete Bhagavad-Gita, The Easy Bhagavad-Gita (buy the paperback or the ebook) and The New Bhagavad-Gita. I translated the Kannada monograph Samanyadharma into English. I write a weekly column called Commonsense Karma. I’m a member of the advisory board of Pramiti.

I gave two TEDx talks: one on Spiritual Identity in 2011 and another on Religion 2.0 in 2014. I was also invited to be a part of Shaale’s Sanskrit Podcast in 2015.

 

[In preparing this article, I have drawn heavily from my discussions with Śatāvadhāni Dr. R. Ganesh and from his monograph on dharma titled ‘Sāmānyadharma’ (2nd Ed. Hubli: Sāhitya Prakāśana, 2011). I have also benefitted from Dr. B. Mahadevan’s podcast on the subject.]

Image Credits: speakingtree.in

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