Hindus Applaud Depauw University for New Course
For immediate release
Hindus have applauded
prestigious DePauw University in Indiana (USA) for approving
a new 300-level class on Modern Hinduism in its Religious
Studies Department.
Founded in 1837 by the Methodist
church, DePauw already offers courses titled "Religions of
India" and "Hinduism". Its students come from 41 countries
and 42 states of USA. It is a private, selective,
coeducational, and residential university where selection
rate is about 17 percent and annual charges per student
$42,070.
Acclaimed Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a
statement in Nevada (USA) today, described DePauw’s action
as “a step in the right direction”.
Zed, who is
president of Universal Society of Hinduism, argued that
religion was a complex element of our lives and religion
comprises much more than one’s own individual experience
or specific tradition. God, as a sign of God’s munificence
and benevolence, constructively wished presence of different
faiths.
Rajan Zed urged the schools/departments of
religion of other major American universities to strengthen
their Hinduism sections. Hinduism being the oldest religion
with rich philosophical thought and a vast array of
scriptures needed more exploration. Zed especially asked the
Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, Columbia, Brown
universities and University of Pennsylvania to further
enrich their Hinduism resources.
According to the
latest edition of the university newspaper “The DePauw”,
the students in this course will examine "the rise of Hindu
modernity from the colonial period to the present day." The
main objective is to "encourage an understanding of the
embedded nature of modern Hinduism within the historical
matrices of culture, society, politics and economics in
South Asia."
Girls outnumber boys by about 14 percent
in DePauw, which is spread over 695 acres in Greencastle and
offers 45 majors and “teaches its students values and
habits of mind”. It boasts of alumni like former US Vice
President Dan Quayle, Nobel Prize winner Ferid Murad, many
Chief Executive Officers of major companies, prominent
authors, etc. President is Brian W. Casey; Board of Trustees
chair is R. David Hoover; and chair of Religious Studies
Department is Professor Paul Watt.
ENDS