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Namaskaram is a traditional form of greeting and respectful salutation associated with the cultural and religious traditions of the Indian subcontinent, and it features prominently in Hindu social, devotional and ceremonial life. The term is widely used across several Indian languages, with cognate forms appearing in Sanskrit, Malayalam, Telugu, Tamil and other regional tongues. As a greeting, it is generally accompanied by the gesture of joining the palms together in front of the chest, a posture often described in English as the folded-hand salutation. The word and its variants carry connotations of reverence, humility and acknowledgement of the inherent sacredness of the person being greeted.
This draft is a starting body for IndiaWiki editors and is intentionally cautious. It avoids attaching specific historical dates, attributions, regional statistics or doctrinal claims that have not been verified against authoritative sources. Editors are encouraged to retain the neutral framing, replace placeholder phrases with sourced material, and prune any section that cannot be supported by reliable references. The article should ultimately treat Namaskaram both as a linguistic item — a word with etymology and regional variants — and as a cultural and religious practice with devotional, social and ritual dimensions within Hinduism and the wider Indic sphere.
The cohort for this entry is Hinduism, which situates Namaskaram within a broad religious and cultural framework rather than a narrow sectarian one. In general usage, the greeting is exchanged between individuals upon meeting or parting, offered to elders and teachers as a mark of respect, and directed towards deities, sacred images and consecrated spaces during worship. The accompanying gesture is widely understood as a non-verbal expression of the same sentiment that the word conveys.
Linguistically, Namaskaram is related to a family of words that include Namaste, Namaskar, Namaskaara and Pranam, all of which appear in different registers of Indian languages and in differing ritual or social contexts. Editors should treat the relationships among these terms carefully, since regional usage, register (formal versus colloquial), and ritual context can alter meaning and appropriateness. Some forms are more commonly used in devotional contexts, while others have entered everyday social exchange.
Beyond its linguistic identity, Namaskaram is embedded in a wider matrix of bodily practices that include bowing, prostration and circumambulation. These practices appear in temple worship, household rituals, classical performing arts and traditional pedagogy. Editors should describe these contexts in measured terms, drawing on scholarly references rather than generalised assertions.
The significance of Namaskaram in Hindu life can be discussed at several levels. At the social level, it functions as a courteous and culturally rooted alternative to handshakes or other tactile greetings, and it is often used across age groups, genders and class lines. At the devotional level, it is part of the everyday vocabulary of bhakti, used to address deities, gurus and sanctified persons. At the ritual level, the greeting and its accompanying gesture appear within structured sequences of worship, including temple darshan, household puja and life-cycle ceremonies.
The greeting also has a wider symbolic resonance that has been discussed in popular and scholarly writing alike, including the idea that it acknowledges a shared inner reality between the greeter and the one greeted. Such interpretations vary across traditions and commentators, and editors are advised to attribute particular interpretations to the writers and traditions that articulate them rather than presenting any single explanation as universal. Namaskaram has also acquired visibility in diasporic and intercultural settings, where it is sometimes adopted as a culturally respectful alternative greeting.
The following topics are commonly addressed in articles on Namaskaram and adjacent terms. Each should be checked against reliable, citable sources before inclusion. Editors should avoid copying claims from informal websites without corroboration.
Where verification is not possible, the topic should either be omitted or framed as an area requiring further research rather than presented as established fact.
Editors may consider organising the final article along the following lines, adjusting headings as the available sourcing dictates:
This structure should be adapted to the strength of the available sources. If certain sections cannot be substantiated, they should be reduced or removed rather than padded with unsourced material.
This draft is intended for internal editorial review and should not be published in its present form. Several caveats apply. First, no specific dates, named authorities, scriptural quotations or statistical claims have been included, because these have not been verified for this draft. Editors should add such material only with proper citations to reliable sources such as peer-reviewed academic works, established encyclopaedias of religion, recognised dictionaries of Indian languages, and reputable institutional publications.
Second, contributors should maintain a neutral point of view and avoid devotional or promotional language. Interpretations of the greeting's deeper meaning should be attributed to specific traditions, teachers or scholars rather than presented as universally accepted truths. Third, regional and linguistic claims should be cross-checked, as usage of "Namaskaram" varies and informal sources sometimes conflate it with other forms. Finally, any comparative material involving other religions or cultures must be handled with care to avoid misrepresentation. Editors are encouraged to use this draft as a scaffold, replacing its placeholders with verified content and pruning sections that cannot be supported.
References to be added by editors. Suggested categories of sources include: scholarly works on Hindu ritual and practice; peer-reviewed studies on greetings and gesture in South Asian cultures; authoritative dictionaries of Sanskrit and major Indian languages; and reputable encyclopaedic entries on related terms such as Namaste and Namaskar. Each factual claim added to the article should be paired with an inline citation to a reliable, independently verifiable source.