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For many Hindus, religion is a matter of practice rather than of beliefs. It's more what you do, than what you believe. Hindus believe in a universal soul or God called Brahman. Brahman takes on many forms that some Hindus worship as gods or goddesses in their own right. Hindus believe that there is a part of Brahman in everyone and this is called the Atman.Hindus believe in reincarnation - a belief that the soul is eternal and lives many lifetimes, in one body after another. The soul is sometimes born in a human body, sometimes in an animal body and sometimes in a plant body etc.. Hindus believe that all forms of life contain a soul, and all souls have the chance to experience life in different forms.Samsara means going through the cycle of repeated births and deaths (reincarnation). Hindus believe that existence of this cycle is governed by Karma.
The cycle of reincarnation means that if you are good and follow your dharma, you will have a good next life. But the real goal is to be spiritually successful enough as to achieve moksha, and escape reincarnation and join God. Aupmanyav: The real goal is that people do good deeds and keep away from evil deeds, so that the society prospers. Gods and Goddesses are optional and so is reincarnation and moksha, good if you believe, also good if you do not believe.
They want Moksha.
It means when you reincarnate, if you lead a perfect life, then you escape the cycle of death and birth and become one with Brahman. Brahman- the spiritual power Hindus believe lives in everything living
Moksha, which means emancipation or release, is freedom from Samsara in Hindu, the cycle of death and rebirth. One who achieves Moksha is one who has achieved total self realization and self knowledge. Moksha, along with Dharma, Artha and Kama, represents the four goals of human life.
The cycle of rebirth is referred to as samsara like the constant ebb and flow of the oceanic tide. ^ the answer above is too vague. Samsara is the cycle of life, death, and rebirth/reincarnation, and it is a Hindu concept as well as a Buddhist concept. Hindus and Buddhists believe that the soul wears the physical body like an article of clothing, and that there is no such thing as death. When the physical body "dies," the spirit leaves and moves onto the next physical body, reborn, dies, is reborn, and so on. It is an endless cycle, and the only way to escape the cycle (mokhsha) is to achieve nirvana (according to Buddhist philosophy), which is the absence of suffering. To do so, one must purge oneself of desires, for desires are what spawn suffering, and when one achieves this, the cycle is broken.
Better reincarnation means more spiritually matured life. It is a promotion towards god. Hence you can escape from material existence.
Moksha. This can be achieved by gaining good karma through doing good deeds and performing Hindu yoga. It is the release from samsara: the endless cycle of birth, life, death and rebirth. It is the ultimate reality, where you are one with Brahman (God).
It depends on what "accept" means. If the question is asking why Hindus permit Muslims to freely pray in India, Sri Lanka, and Nepal, the answer is that Hindus in those countries respect the rights and freedoms to worship any or no gods as provided in those countries' laws. If the question is asking why some Hindus convert to Islam, there are two general reasons: The first is that Hindus may find that they believe in the values, structure, or truth of Islam and the second is that Hindus from lower castes may wish to use Islam as a way to escape from the caste system. Although India has outlawed the caste system, discrimination continues in a general societal way.
no, no hindu likes the cycle of life an death. Every Hindu wants to escape this cycle.
And it's spelled 'nirvana' Well they try to reach nirvana because they want to escape the cycle of reincarnation.
hindus and buddhists now think that if they have a good life, they'll turn into something good.