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Editorial draft for internal review. This document is intended as a scaffold for IndiaWiki editors and is not suitable for public publication in its present form. Specific facts, names, dates and figures must be added and verified before any version goes live.
"Sanatan Culture" is a phrase commonly used to describe the body of customs, philosophical traditions, ritual practices, ethical codes and aesthetic sensibilities associated with what its adherents term Sanatana Dharma, an Indic term often rendered into English as "the eternal way" or "the perennial order". The phrase is broad and contested, and is used in different ways by religious teachers, social commentators, scholars of religion, and political actors. In some usages it is broadly synonymous with the lived traditions usually grouped under the umbrella of Hinduism; in other usages it is positioned more expansively as a civilisational ethos that informs literature, art, performance, cuisine, festivals and family life across the Indian subcontinent and the global Indian diaspora.
Because the term carries devotional, cultural and political weight at once, an encyclopaedic treatment must distinguish carefully between (a) doctrinal self-descriptions used by practitioners and traditional institutions, (b) academic descriptions used by historians and indologists, and (c) contemporary political and media usages. Editors should resist the temptation to harmonise these registers prematurely. The article should explain the term's plurality without endorsing or dismissing any particular interpretation.
The Sanskrit compound sanatana dharma appears in classical Indic literature in a range of senses, generally connoting an enduring or timeless order of right conduct. Its modern usage as a self-descriptor for a cohesive religious tradition gained prominence during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, in the context of reform movements, colonial-era classifications of religion, and emerging public debates about Indian identity. Editors are advised to treat the genealogy of the phrase as itself a topic for the article, rather than as background to be assumed.
"Sanatan Culture" as a phrase is broader than the doctrinal term and is often invoked to describe an interlinked set of cultural expressions: temple architecture and iconography; classical and folk performance traditions; oral and textual transmission of epics and Puranic narratives; samskaras or life-cycle rites; pilgrimage; vrata and festival cycles; classical languages and their literatures; and systems of thought such as the darshanas, including discussions of dharma, karma, moksha and related concepts. The article should also acknowledge regional, sectarian and caste-based variation within these traditions, including the perspectives of communities who have historically critiqued or reinterpreted received practice.
For many practitioners, "Sanatan Culture" names a continuous lived inheritance that organises personal devotion, family ritual, community festivals and ethical reflection. For scholars, it is a useful, if imprecise, label for a vast and internally diverse set of traditions whose boundaries shift across time and region. For public commentators, it is sometimes invoked in arguments about national identity, education, heritage conservation, and the public sphere.
An encyclopaedic article should therefore explain why the term matters to different constituencies without adopting the framing of any one of them. It should also note that the phrase enters contemporary debates that are sometimes contentious, including disputes over interpretations of texts, the status of social hierarchies historically associated with some practices, the relationship between religion and the constitutional framework of the Indian state, and the place of minority and reformist voices within and outside the tradition. The aim is to give readers a clear map of what is being discussed, by whom, and with what stakes, while leaving doctrinal and political conclusions to the reader.
The following items are frequently associated with treatments of "Sanatan Culture" and should be verified against reliable secondary sources before inclusion. Editors should not insert specific names, dates, figures or attributions until each is supported by a clearly cited source.
For each of the above, editors are requested to cite peer-reviewed scholarship, reputable encyclopaedias, or established journalistic sources, and to mark any contested claim as such in the prose.
A workable outline for the published version might proceed as follows, subject to revision by the editorial team:
This draft deliberately avoids specific names, dates, statistics, institutional attributions and quotations. Editors filling in the article are requested to observe the following:
To be added by editors. Suggested reference categories include: standard reference works on Hinduism and Indic religions; peer-reviewed academic monographs and journal articles; reputable encyclopaedias; primary text translations from established academic presses; and high-quality journalistic sources for contemporary debates. Each substantive claim in the final article should be accompanied by an inline citation. Devotional and partisan sources may be cited where relevant as primary material, but should not be relied upon for matters of historical or social fact.