Bhakti and Sufi movements were known as reform movements. Explain
Answers
Answer+Explanation:
Definition of composite culture:
Composite culture is a heterogeneous mixture of multiple cultures meeting and co-existing in one single region.
India has been the birth-land of a dozen of religions. The teachings of each religion is based on the concept of dharma (moral duty) and karma (action). Another famously preached concept is that of Ahimsa, known as non-violence.
Religions are a part of Indian value system which provides direction to the way of living. India provides the right to choose whichever religion its citizen wants to follow and change into other religions that suit themselves at that point of time.This general tolerant nature of the society which finds its roots in the concept of secularism makes it easier to accept each other’s religion and live in peace and stability.
Examples of composite culture in medieval India:
Culturally medieval period marks the beginning of a new stage in the growth of India’s composite culture.
The establishment of the Delhi Sultanate which led to the assimilation of the Turkish, Arabic and Persian culture with Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism led to the development of new Indo Islamic culture.
Two new languages-Arabic and Persian became a part of India’s linguistic heritage.
Historical writings for the first time became an important component of Indian literature.
Under the influence of Persian, new forms of literature such as the ghazal were introduced.
Urdu language developed as a mixture of Persian, Arabic, Hindi and other regional languages.
The growth of a composite culture reached its zenith under the Mughals (16th and 17th centuries).
The Mughal painting developed into a distinct Indian style.
Various dresses, social amenities and festivals which were introduced by the Mughals in India were accepted by the people and became a part of the composite culture.
Islamic features introduced the concept of spaciousness, massiveness and width to the Indian architectural designs.
Verses from Quran were also engraved on the walls of the structures built.
The Turks and the Mughals borrowed Indian motifs like swastika, bell, lotus, etc.
The period saw two great religious movements – Sufi and Bhakti movements.
Now,
Bhakti and Sufi contribution in building composite culture:
Bhakti movement, came to be defined as “devotion to a personal deity”. It is a mystical tradition, as the focus is “devotion to god or the ultimate reality‟ through different forms of practices. The Bhakti movement has also been interpreted as a movement of dissent and of social reform.
The focus is not only on a personal experience of the divine, but also on the teachings of a personal guru. Within such traditions texts were transmitted orally. The chief exponents of this cult were Ramanuja, Nimbarka, Ramananda, Vallabhacharya, Kabir, Nanak and Sri Chaitanya.
The development of Bhakti started in South India between the 7th and 12th century. During this period the Shaiva Nayanars and the Vaishnavites preached personal devotion to God as a means of Salvation. They also disregarded the rigidities of the caste system and unnecessary rites and rituals of Hindu religion.
The Sufi movement was a socio-religious movement of 14th-15th century whose exponents were unorthodox Muslim saints who had a deep study of vedantic philosophy and had come in contact with great sages and seers of India. They could see the Indian religion from very near and realized its inner values.
It therefore was the result of the Hindu influence on Islam and provided a common platform for both the religions. Sufis believed in inner purity. The union of the human soul with God through love and devotion was the essence of the teachings of the Sufi Saints.
They realized God by the renunciation of the world and worldly pleasures. The leading sufi saints like Khwaja Muinuddin Chisti, Fariuddin Ganj-i-Shakar, Nizam-ud-din Auliya etc.