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Hindu Spirituality refers, in broad terms, to the diverse body of contemplative, devotional, ethical and philosophical practices associated with the religious and cultural traditions grouped under the umbrella term "Hinduism". Because the subject is vast, internally plural and historically layered, an encyclopaedic article on it must be written with unusual care. This draft is intended only as a scaffold for IndiaWiki editors and is not suitable for publication in its current form. It deliberately avoids specific dates, named teachers, lineage claims, textual citations, demographic statistics or doctrinal assertions, since these require verification against reliable secondary sources.
The term "spirituality" itself is a modern English category, and its mapping onto Indic concepts such as adhyātma, sādhanā, bhakti, jñāna, yoga and dharma is not exact. Editors should be conscious that any single definition will exclude some traditions that legitimately fall within the field. The article ought to acknowledge this plurality at the outset rather than privileging one school. The Overview, when finalised, should give the lay reader a neutral, accessible sense of the scope of the topic without committing to any sectarian framing or implying that the tradition is monolithic.
Hindu spiritual thought has developed over a very long historical period and across a wide geographical range, primarily in the Indian subcontinent but with significant diasporic presence elsewhere. The traditions concerned draw upon a layered corpus of texts, oral teachings, ritual practices, temple cultures, monastic orders, householder disciplines, regional devotional movements, philosophical schools and folk religious forms. These elements have interacted with one another, and with other Indic traditions such as Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism, as well as with later Islamic and Christian influences, over many centuries.
For the purposes of this draft, no specific chronology, periodisation or attribution is asserted. Editors are encouraged to consult standard scholarly histories of Indian religion and philosophy when filling in this section. The Background should ideally indicate that "Hindu Spirituality" is best understood as a family of related but distinct approaches to questions of self, world, ethical conduct, liberation and the divine, rather than as a single doctrine. It should also note that the very category of "Hinduism" has itself been the subject of scholarly debate, and that internal practitioners use a range of self-descriptions including sanātana dharma and tradition-specific names. None of these characterisations should be presented as the single correct one.
Hindu spiritual traditions have shaped, and continue to shape, large areas of cultural, artistic, ethical and intellectual life in India and among Indian-origin communities abroad. Their influence is visible in literature, classical and folk performing arts, temple and domestic ritual, life-cycle observances, festivals, vegetarian and dietary practices, approaches to health and wellbeing, and contemporary movements concerned with meditation and self-enquiry. They have also contributed to global conversations on contemplative practice, comparative philosophy and inter-religious dialogue.
The significance section in the final article should treat this influence descriptively and avoid evaluative or promotional language. Editors should be careful not to attribute every aspect of Indian culture to Hindu spirituality, since Indian civilisation is genuinely composite, nor to suggest that contemporary global wellness practices are simple continuations of classical Indic traditions, since the lines of transmission are often complex and contested. Equally, the section should not minimise the lived importance of these traditions for practitioners. A balanced treatment will indicate both the historical depth of the field and its continuing relevance, while leaving precise claims about reach, numbers or impact to be supplied only when supported by reliable sources.
The following list is offered as a checklist of areas where unsupported claims commonly appear in drafts on this subject. Each item should be independently verified against reputable secondary scholarship before inclusion.
Where verification is not currently possible, the safer course is to omit the claim entirely rather than to retain it with a hedging adverb.
Editors may consider the following sectioning when developing the published article, adapting it as the available sources permit:
This structure is indicative; editors should not feel bound to it where sources suggest a different organisation.
This draft has been prepared deliberately without specific factual claims, in line with the instruction not to invent dates, names, statistics, allegations or institutional details. Reviewers should treat every paragraph as a placeholder that needs to be tested against reliable sources before any of it is carried into a published version. Particular caution is advised in three areas: first, attribution of doctrines to named individuals or schools, since misattribution is common in popular writing; second, characterisation of contemporary gurus, organisations and movements, where reputational and legal risks are significant; and third, generalisations about "Hindu belief" or "Hindu practice", which tend to flatten genuine internal diversity.
Editors are also asked to maintain a neutral point of view throughout, neither adopting devotional registers nor dismissive ones, and to use Indian English spelling conventions. Diacritics on Sanskrit and other Indic terms should be applied consistently once a house style is selected. Where a claim is important but cannot yet be sourced, it is preferable to leave a visible editor comment rather than to publish an unverified statement. Sensitive material relating to caste, gender, communal relations or living persons should be handled in line with IndiaWiki's biographies of living persons and contentious topics policies.
No references are cited in this draft, as it intentionally avoids specific factual claims that would require sourcing. Before publication, editors should add citations to reputable academic surveys of Indian religion and philosophy, peer-reviewed journal articles, established encyclopaedic reference works, and, where appropriate, primary texts in critical editions. Popular websites, self-published material, and partisan or sectarian sources should be used with caution and only where clearly attributed. A "Further reading" section may also be added once the article body has been substantively rewritten on the basis of verified material.