Swami Dayanand Saraswati (स्वामी दयानन्द सरस्वती) (1824 - 1883) was born in Gujarat, India. The Arya Samaj, a great Hindu reform movement, was founded by him in 1875. He was a sannyasin (renouncer) and an original scholar who believed in the infallible authority of the Vedas. Dayananda advocated the doctrine of Karma and rebirth, and emphasized the ideals of brahmcharya (chastity) and sanyasa (renunciation). Swami Dayanand had a great impact on the people of Haryana, and some notable personalities of the time, including Lal Lajpat Rai, Sir Chhotu Ram and Seth Chhaju Ram became his followers.
Far from borrowing concepts from other religions, as Ram Mohan Roy had done, Swami Dayananda was fiercely critical of Islam and Christianity as may be seen in his book Satyartha Prakasha. He was against what he considered to be the corruption of the pure faith in his own country. Unlike many other reform movements within Hinduism, the Arya Samaj's appeal was addressed not to the educated few but to the Indian nation as a whole.
The Arya Samaj unequivocally condemned idolatry, animal sacrifices, ancestor worship, pilgrimages, priest craft, offerings made in temples, the caste system, untouchability and child marriages, on the grounds that all these lacked Vedic sanction. It aimed to be a universal "church" based on the authority of the Vedas.
Dayananda’s concept of
Dharma is succinctly set forth in his
Beliefs and Disbeliefs. He says "I accept as
Dharma whatever is in full conformity with impartial justice, truthfulness and
the like; that which is not opposed to the teachings of God as embodied in the
Vedas. Whatever is not free from partiality
and is unjust, partaking of untruth and the like, and opposed to the teachings
of God as embodied in the Vedas - that I hold as adharma." Again he says "He,
who after careful thinking, is ever ready to accept truth and reject falsehood;
who counts the happiness of others as he does that of his own self, him I call
just."
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