In India, religion is not a split-off part of your life that you attend to on Sunday. It is integrated into every part of your life--you offer your food before you eat it, you probably have a daily meditation, you see holy men on the street, most houses have an altar, you probably are a vegetarian.
The key aspects of the Hindu lifestyle that influence daily practices and beliefs include the concepts of dharma (duty and righteousness), karma (the law of cause and effect), and moksha (liberation from the cycle of rebirth). These principles guide Hindus in their actions, rituals, and spiritual beliefs, shaping their daily lives and worldview.
It was originally founded by a Hindu who didn't agree with the way lower caste Hindus were treated, and it's practices and beliefs are very similar to those of Hinduism. Turning to Buddhism means a Hindu who previously was treated atrociously by members of their own religion and society can escape the discrimination they have been subjected to all their lives without changing their beliefs or lifestyle too much.
suck it...
Hindu beliefs about rebirth and karma are tied to the caste system. The Hindu people believe that a persons caste is a result of karma and that deeds in past lives are responsible for ones current position (in the caste).
Karma is what brings alot of people back to earth. To pay for thier sins
Akbar improved the lives of his Hindu subjects through a policy of religious tolerance and inclusivity. He abolished the jizya tax on non-Muslims, which alleviated the economic burden on Hindus. Additionally, he promoted interfaith dialogue and established the Din-i Ilahi, a syncretic religion that encouraged unity among different faiths. His efforts to integrate Hindus into the administrative framework further enhanced their social and political status within the Mughal Empire.
Muslims.
i suppose you mean 'whats kind of lifestyle a Hindu lives?'.A Hindu person is like any ordinary person ,doing the same things a person from any religon would do. Just like a devoted Christian ,Muslim ,Jew...Hindus are also closely attached to their beliefs and culture which gets reflected in their day to day lives.Their religon also sets a code which they cannot break otherwise it will be deemed as a sin.For egs.just as a Muslim or Jew is forbidden to eat pork since they consider it unholy , a Hindu cannot eat beef since they consider the cow to be holy.
It would affect them every day of their lives, because as a resource, their beliefs would show them the way to mummify their royalty, when to plant their crops, and how to re-direct the flow of the Nile River when it was necessary.
Two important Hindu beliefs presented in the Vedas are the concepts of karma, the principle that one's actions have consequences that impact future lives, and dharma, the moral duty and righteousness that each individual must follow in order to maintain balance and order in the universe.
Hindus believe in reincarnation, where the soul is reborn into a new body based on karma. This belief influences their daily lives and practices by encouraging good deeds to improve their karma for a better future life. It also shapes their attitudes towards death, as they see it as a transition rather than an end.
It would affect them every day of their lives, because as a resource, their beliefs would show them the way to mummify their royalty, when to plant their crops, and how to re-direct the flow of the Nile River when it was necessary.