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wat are the impacts on Dadupanthis?​

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Answered by seenu70000
1

Answer:

Dadu (1544-1603) is the best-known of Kabir's followers. Dadupanthis, "they of the path of Dadu," no longer keep strictly to the teachings of Dadu.

Dadu said many times "I am not a Hindu, nor a Muslim. I belong to none of the six schools of philosophy. I love the merciful God." He wished for a unification of all religions and to this end founded the Brahma-sampradaya, the order of Brahma. In his order there was no ritual or image-worship.

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Answered by nandy1010101
1

Answer:

Dadupanthis

Doctrines Dadu (1544-1603) is the best-known of Kabir's followers. Dadupanthis, "they of the path of Dadu," no longer keep strictly to the teachings of Dadu.

Dadu said many times "I am not a Hindu, nor a Muslim. I belong to none of the six schools of philosophy. I love the merciful God." He wished for a unification of all religions and to this end founded the Brahma-sampradaya, the order of Brahma. In his order there was no ritual or image-worship. His doctrines and teachings are collected in the Bani, a poetic work of 5,000 verses containing hymns, poems, and aphorisms. There are 37 chapters on such subjects as The Divine Teacher, The Mind, Truth, The Good, Faith, and Prayer. The hymns are set to music and used in worship. The Bani contains the condemnation and rejection by Dadu of much in Hinduism. The Vedas and Quran and the Vedanta are rejected as ultimate truth. Ritualism, the corrupt priesthood, caste and caste marks, image-worship, use of the rosary, and pilgrimages are all rejected. Shiva, Vishnu, and Brahma were only saints.

Dadu rediscovered and taught much truth about God, man, and salvation. On transmigration he held that all possible rebirths occur in man's one life on earth. Maya, the world of matter, is not evil in itself. It is worldliness and not the world that is evil. To Dadu the soul is separated from God by sin and the longest poem in the Bani is "Separation," about a lovesick woman. He emphasised japa, repetition of the name of God. Dadu allowed people freedom to follow secular occupations and to marry, or to withdraw from the world. Meat-eating was prohibited. No pain should be caused to any living creatures.

With the Dadupanthis, Hinduism in a modified form has found its way among them. The rosary is used, the Bani is worshipped as an icon, and Dadu and his relics are worshipped in temples. As with the Parsis, the dead are exposed to be eaten by birds.

History Dadu was born in Ahmadabad in Gujerat. Like Kabir he had a miraculous birth. Tradition says Lodi Ram found him floating in a basket on the river and became his adoptive father. His parents were brahmans who converted to Islam and the family had Muslim names. Dadu is either from Daud (David) or an affectionate diminutive of Allahbad. His father was a cotton-carder and Dadu also followed this profession. When he was eleven he was miraculously initiated by an old mendicant. He married when he was young and had four children, but renounced when twenty-five and spent the rest of his life as a wandering preacher in north-west India. He visited Delhi and is said to have met Akbar at Fatehpur Sikri. For a time he lived in Sambhar and in Amber, the old capital of Jaipur. He retired to Naraini near Jaipur where he died.

Tradition says that Dadu left 152 disciples, of whom 52 founded the Dadvaras, "Doors of Dadu," in special settlements known as thamba. Most of these were in Rajasthan and many still survive. The Dadvaras have produced a great deal of literature written in the vernacular and in , India.

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