
A revelatory and original contribution to our understanding of the role of religion in society and politics.
India's leading public intellectual, Shashi Tharoor, lays out Hinduism's origins and its key philosophical concepts, major texts and everyday Hindu beliefs and practices, from worship to pilgrimage to caste. He is unsparing in his criticism of extremism and unequivocal in his belief that what makes India a distinctive nation with a unique culture will be imperiled if Hindu "fundamentalists"--the proponents of "Hindutva," or politicized Hinduism--seize the high ground. In his view, it is precisely because Hindus form the majority that India has survived as a plural, secular democracy.
A book that will be read and debated now and in the future, Why I Am a Hindu, written in Tharoor's captivating prose, is a profound re-examination of Hinduism, one of the world's oldest and greatest religious traditions.
Shashi Tharoor served for twenty-nine years at the UN, culminating as Under-Secretary-General. He is a Congress MP in India, the author of fourteen previous books, and has won numerous literary awards, including a Commonwealth Writers' Prize. Tharoor has a PhD from the Fletcher School, and was named by the World Economic Forum in Davos in 1998 as a Global Leader of Tomorrow.
"The Hinduism Tharoor proudly asserts and defends is universalist, liberal, and syncretic...this deeply informative book is a must-read for Americans interested in Hinduism and the world's largest democracy." STARRED REVIEW
-Booklist
"A thoughtful celebration of Hinduism as a potentially unifying force."
-Kirkus Reviews
"Shashi Tharoor is the most charming and persuasive writer in India. His new book is a brave and characteristically articulate attempt to save a great and wonderfully elusive religion from the certainties of the fundamentalists and the politicization of the bigots."
William Dalrymple
"[An] important book: it is about the dangers that lie in India's future as well as the woes and glories of the past...one of India's most articulate liberals and a leading voice of those who reject the aggressively fundamentalist strains of Hindu nationalism."
-Financial Times