Is
Yoga Debased by Secular Practice?
BY
DRU SEFTON
c.2005 Newhouse News Service
Millions
of Americans are practicing yoga to improve flexibility, strengthen
muscles and relieve stress. But they also are co-opting an ancient
spiritual philosophy, many yoga experts contend. A sacred practice, they
complain, is increasingly being debased and commercialized.
Yoga is a lucrative and growing business. About 16.5 million Americans
now spend nearly $3 billion annually on classes and products, a February
poll by Harris Interactive and Yoga Journal magazine revealed. Compare
that with two basic tenets of yoga -- that it is unethical to charge
money to teach it, and that you need nothing but your body to learn it.
The sun salutation, perhaps the best-known series of asanas, or
postures, of hatha yoga -- the type most commonly practiced in
America
-- is literally a Hindu ritual.
"Sun salutation was never a hatha yoga tradition," said Subhas
Rampersaud Tiwari, professor of yoga philosophy and meditation at Hindu
University of America in
Orlando
,
Fla.
"It is a whole series of ritual appreciations to the sun, being
thankful for that source of energy." To think of it as a mere
physical movement is tantamount to "saying that baptism is just an
underwater exercise," said Swami Param of the
Classical
Yoga
Hindu
Academy
and Dharma Yoga Ashram in
Manahawkin
,
N.J.
What Americans are doing -- practicing everything from hip-hop yoga to
yoga with pets, using Hindu deities as knickknacks -- is "hurtful
and insulting" to the 5,000-year-old tradition, Param said. The
debate has intensified among yoga scholars and teachers as yoga practice
has grown in popularity.
Between 1998 and 2005 alone, the circulation of the 30-year-old Yoga
Journal tripled. Now there are yoga cruises, yoga book clubs, yoga
dating services, yoga snacks ("created specifically for
yoga"), yoga music ... the list goes on. Todd Jones, senior editor
of Yoga Journal, explained the evolution. Yoga "did start primarily
as a meditative-spiritual practice. But it's gone in so many different
directions." There are so many styles practiced in
America
, he said, it's nearly impossible to describe a "typical" yoga
class.
"We live in a market-driven culture," Jones said. "If
you're a yoga teacher, there's pressure to separate yourself in some way
from the hundreds of others." Instructors often do this by
"emphasizing whatever feels most compelling and authentic to them,
and that differs from person to person."
But
when Swami Param, now 56, was curious about yoga as a 16-year-old in
New Jersey
, it was by no means ubiquitous. So he turned to a dictionary. "I
still keep that Webster's with me," he said. "I looked up yoga
and it said, `Sanskrit, Hinduism.' That's what it is. Just look at the
facts." Sanskrit is the language of sacred Hindu writings.
"Every Sanskrit word these teachers are saying in yoga classes,
they are using a religious language," he said.
Imagine the outcry if Christian, Jewish or Islamic prayers were commonly
and casually used in nonreligious contexts, Param said. The word yoga is
most often defined as a yoking, or union. Its practice strives to unite
the individual soul with the "greater soul" of the universe,
traditionally through four main paths: karma (action), bhakti
(devotion), jnana (wisdom) and raja or ashtanga (mental and physical
control).
Hatha yoga, which most Americans call simply "yoga," is in
fact just one aspect of ashtanga. The physical postures of hatha yoga
are practiced by Hindu yogis to enable them to more comfortably meditate
for hours, freeing the mind from the distracting pains of the body.
"A yoga master in
India
is a highly evolved spiritual being, not a gymnast," said David
Frawley, director of the American Institute of Vedic Studies in
Santa Fe
,
N.M.
, who writes and lectures on the controversy.
But Americans tend to focus on fitness alone, perhaps because "as a
culture we are extremely physically oriented," as
Hindu
University
's Tiwari put it. "We are enamored by the physical aspect of who we
are. Some of us even worship our bodies." Everyone agrees that yoga
is physically beneficial. "It's a very nice exercise
activity," said Cedric Bryant, chief exercise physiologist for the
American Council on Exercise in
San Diego
,
Calif.
"It improves muscle strength and endurance levels, joint range of
motion and flexibility, and balance."
The Yoga Journal's Jones believes these physical benefits can ultimately
draw participants into a deeper, more spiritual understanding of the
practice. "I'm more peaceful, I have more energy and more patience
-- but I certainly didn't go into it looking for that," he said.
Even that is unacceptable to Swami Param. "Why be covert?" he
asked. Participants should be invited upfront to "come study
Hinduism," which is what they're doing when learning hatha yoga, he
said.
His
New Jersey
ashram does offer one non-spiritual class called "Stretch and
Relaxation Based on the Hatha Yoga of Hinduism." He urges other
hatha yoga teachers to explain to participants that they're taking a
fitness class based on a religious practice. "Then, they could even
charge money," he said.
July 15, 2005
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