For
many people, the main concern in a yoga class is whether they are
breathing correctly or their legs are aligned. But for others, there are
lingering doubts about whether they should be there at all, or whether
they are betraying their religion.
Farida
Hamza, a Muslim woman living in the US (pictured above), had been doing
yoga for two or three years when she decided she wanted to teach it.
"When
I told my family and a few friends, they did not react positively," she
recalls. "They were very confused as to why I wanted to do it - that it
might be going against Islam."
Their
suspicions about yoga are shared by many Muslims, Christians and Jews
around the world and relate to yoga's history as an ancient spiritual
practice with connections to Hinduism and Buddhism.
Last
year, a yoga class was banned from a church hall in the UK. "Yoga is a
Hindu spiritual exercise," said the priest, Father John Chandler. "Being
a Catholic church we have to promote the gospel, and that's what we use
our premises for." Anglican churches in the UK have taken similar
decisions at one time or another. In the US, prominent pastors have
called yoga "demonic".
One
answer to the question of whether yoga really is a religious activity
will soon be given by the Supreme Court in the country of its birth,
India.
Last
month, a pro-yoga group petitioned the court to make it a compulsory
part of the school syllabus on health grounds - but state schools in
India are avowedly secular. The court said it was uncomfortable with the
idea, and will gather the views of minority groups in the coming weeks.
So is yoga fundamentally a religious activity?
"Yoga
is such a broad term - that's what causes a difficulty," says Rebecca
Ffrench, the co-founder YogaLondon - a yoga teacher academy - and the
philosophy tutor at the school.
There
are different forms of yoga, she says, some of which are more overtly
religious than others. Hare Krishna monks, for example, are adherents
of bhakti yoga, the yoga of devotion. What most people in the West think of as yoga is properly known as hatha yoga - a path towards enlightenment that focuses on building physical and mental strength.
But
what "enlightenment" means also depends on tradition. For some Hindus
it is liberation from the cycle of reincarnation, but for many yoga
practitioners it is a point where you achieve stillness in your mind, or
understand the true nature of the world and your place in it.
Whether that is compatible with Christianity, Islam and other religions is debatable.
To those in the know, for example, the yogic asanas, or positions, retain elements of their earlier spiritual meanings - the Surya namaskar is a series of positions designed to greet Surya, the Hindu Sun God.
The Surya Namaskar or Sun Saltutations
"It's
got a trace from history of a religious pathway," says Ffrench.
"However, is something religious if you don't have the intention there?
If I was to kneel down does that mean I'm praying - or am I just
kneeling?"
This was what Farida Hamza anxiously asked herself while she was doing her yoga training, which was held in a Hindu temple.
"I felt very guilty but in the end, I had to trust that Allah understood my intentions," she wrote on her blog. "I let them know I did not want to take part in any rituals and they were so respectful of how I felt."
Yoga
classes vary. While some feature the chanting of Hindu sutras, others
will make vaguer references to a "life force" or "cosmic energy". A
session might end with a greeting of "namaste" and a gesture of prayer.
There will probably be a moment for meditation, at which point
participants may be encouraged to repeat the sacred word "Om", which
Buddhists and Hindus regard as a primordial sound which brought the
universe into being.
But other classes may make no overt reference to spirituality at all.
That's
the way things are in Iran, where yoga is very popular. It has managed
to flourish in a country with Sharia law and an Islamist political
system, by divesting itself of anything that could be construed as
blasphemy. Yoga teachers are careful to always refer to "the sport of
yoga" and are accredited by the Yoga Federation, which operates in the
same way as a tennis or football organisation.
Classes
tend to be slower than in the West with much discussion about the
physical benefits of each position. As with other sports, yoga
competitions are held, judged by specially invited international yoga
teachers.
Similar
prohibitions on spiritual yoga exist in Malaysia, where a 2008 fatwa - a
religious ruling - resulted in a yoga ban in five states. In the
capital Kuala Lumpur, the physical activity is permitted but chanting
and meditation are forbidden. Clerics in the world's most populous
Islamic nation - Indonesia - make a similar distinction.
Yoga has been repackaged in the US as well.
Children at nine primary schools in Encinitas, California, take part in classes twice a week based on a style of yoga called ashtanga yoga.
After some parents complained - US schools, like Indian ones, are
secular - the Sanskrit names for the postures were replaced with
standard English names and some special child-friendly ones, such as
"kangaroo" "surfer" and "washing machine". The lotus position has been
rebranded "criss-cross apple sauce", the Surya namaskar has become the
"opening sequence" and the organisers insist that it is all just a form
of physical exercise.
Some
parents remained unconvinced though, and a Christian organisation, the
National Center for Law & Policy (NCLP) took up their case. In
September this year, the San Diego County Superior Court ruled that
although yoga's roots are religious, the modified form of the practice
is fine to teach in schools.
The
NCLP is appealing. Dean Broyles, the organisation's president and chief
counsel sees movements like the Surya namaskar, regardless of what
they're called, as "deeply symbolic rituals that express and instil
religion through repetition".
The
reason many people in the West think yoga is non-religious, Broyles
says, is that it falls into a theological blind-spot. "Whereas
Protestant Christianity focuses on words and beliefs, ashtanga yoga's
focus is practice and experience," he says. Religious intentions may not
be there to begin with but practising yoga might lead them to develop.
To
an extent, this point of view is endorsed by Hindus themselves. The
Hindu American Foundation recently ran a campaign called "Take Back
Yoga". Sheetal Shah, from the organisation, says someone raised in an
"exclusivist" tradition like Islam or Christianity who becomes very
interested in yoga may eventually experience some conflict with their
religious beliefs.
So, for American Christians who don't like the idea of yoga, there are alternatives, including PraiseMoves.
This
exercise regime combines Christian worship with stretching exercises.
As the class adopts a posture, they recite a verse from the Bible. In
this way, bhujangasana or the cobra
pose becomes the vine posture, with a corresponding verse from John
15:5. "I am the vine and you are the branches. If you remain in me and I
in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing."
"The
word yoga is a Sanskrit word that means 'union with god' or 'yoke',"
says Laurette Willis, the founder of PraiseMoves. "And as a Christian,
it's a different yoke - Jesus said: 'My yoke is easy, my burden is
light.'"
For
someone who has set about drawing people away from yoga, Willis
couldn't have a clearer idea of the opposition's terrain. Her mother was
a yoga teacher and she started doing it when she was seven, often
acting as a demonstration model for the class. She did yoga for 22
years, eventually becoming a teacher herself.
Laurette
Willis in the Jars of Clay position "But we have this treasure in
earthen vessels, that the excellence of the power may be of God and not
of us" (2 Corinthians 4:7)
But
she says that on 25 February, 2001, at 10:35 in the morning, while she
was working out to a video tape, God gave her the idea for PraiseMoves.
She sees it as a process of redeeming or "buying back" yogic postures
for God. Just as a musical scale can be used to make good or bad music,
so the repertoire of positions in yoga can be put to Christian use.
Despite the similarities between PraiseMoves and a yoga class, Willis says she wants her classes to ruminate, not meditate.
"People
leave yoga classes saying 'I feel so good. I feel so tranquil.' Well I
believe that tranquillity is not peace - the peace that God gives - but
it's almost a numbness.
"You've
been told the whole time to 'Empty your mind! Empty your mind!' And
what we do instead is fill your mind with the word of God."
But
for some Muslims, Christians and Jews, yoga is attractive precisely
because it supplies a mysticism they feel is lacking in their own
religion.




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