Sacred Spaces  - Exploring Traditions of Shared Faith in India(English, Paperback, Sikand Yoginder)

Sacred Spaces - Exploring Traditions of Shared Faith in India(English, Paperback, Sikand Yoginder)

  • Sikand Yoginder
Publisher:Penguin Books IndiaISBN 13: 9780143029311ISBN 10: 0143029312

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Sacred Spaces - Exploring Traditions of Shared Faith in India(English, Paperback, Sikand Yoginder) is written by Sikand Yoginder and published by Penguin Books India Pvt Ltd. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0143029312 (ISBN 10) and 9780143029311 (ISBN 13).

A fascinating journey through the world of Sufi pirs, babas and rishis The politics of communal hatred in recent times has brought under attack the heterodoxy of our religious life. This book explores popular religious cults from various parts of the country that defy the logic of communities as neatly separated from and necessarily opposed to each other. Travelling from Kerala to war-torn Kashmir, and from Punjab to Madhya Pradesh, through twenty-five places of popular pilgrimage—dargahs, temples and shrines—Yoginder Sikand finds followers from different communities flocking together in common worship. At Hazrat Nund Rishi at Charar-e-Sharif, or the Wavar shrine at the Ayyappa pilgrimage of Sabarimala, at the temple of Goddess Elamma of Sauditti, or the dargah of Sarmad of Delhi, Sikand meets saints, keepers and devotees to discover how traditions associated with these places have historically challenged religious as well as secular elites, and offered their adherents a powerful and deeply humanist vision of the sacred, freed from the narrow boundaries of caste and creed. But it is also noteworthy that some of these shrines, such as the Swami Dattatreya Budhan Baba in Karnataka, have been transformed over time and become sites of communal contestation. Weaving together legend, history, ethnography and reminiscences with critical insights, Sacred Spaces affords us a rare glimpse of religious traditions outside the mainstream. This rich legacy could well be invaluable in promoting alternate ways of understanding religion and the notion of community identity, a need that has never been more urgent than it is today.