Shuddhi (Hinduism)
Shuddhi is a Sanskrit word meaning purification or cleansing. In the context of modern Hinduism, it describes a Hindu religious movement started by Arya Samaj, initially aimed at re-converting former Hindus who departed the religion for Christianity or Islam, but later expanded to convert non-Hindus altogether. This term is also present in some medieval smritis, as well as in later Sikh literature, also in the context of re-conversion.
Etymology
Shuddhi is derived from the Sanskrit word शुद्धि śuddhi, the past passive participle of the verb शुध् śudh. This word ultimately derives from Proto-Indo-European *ḱew-. Although the Sanskrit word शुद्धि was inherited into Hindi as सुध sudh and into Punjabi as ਸੁੱਧ suddh, both inherited words are generic and neither are used to refer to the shuddhi movement.Origins
The practice of shuddhi began by the 10th century AD as a response to Islamic incursions into the Indian subcontinent and the subsequent conversion of Hindus to Islam, and is credited with reversing the mass Islamic conversions in the wake of Muhammad ibn Qasim's [Arab Arab conquest of Sindh|conquest of Sindh|conquest] of Sindh. Some smritis were composed in Sanskrit during this time to promote shuddhi, such as the Devala Smriti, Atri Samhita, and Brihadyana Smriti, all of which were cited in Arya Samaji pandit J. B. Chaudhary's 1930 publication Shuddhi Sanatan Hai. The Devala Smriti is the most detailed of these texts, but it is lost and only partially survives in quotations from later writers. Multiple reconstructions have therefore been attempted throughout the 20th century, with the most extensive being done by Mukund Lalji Wadekar in 1982.The Devala Smriti prescribes shuddhi rituals for anyone from the ages of 11 to 80. This would even include women who were impregnated by Muslim men, who would have to undergo the santapana krcchra penance of consuming cow urine, cow dung, milk, ghee, and kusha grass, fasting for one day and night and cleaning their private areas with ghee. Additionally, such women would be considered half-mleccha until they gave birth, which is when they would regain their caste, but their child would be considered pratiloma and hence could not be retained. However, shuddhi rituals were usually not this strict, and were permissible for individuals who had followed Islam for less than 20 years. The author of the Devala Smriti tied Islamic conversion to caste contamination, which would require shuddhi; since Muslim Arab conquest was not yet seen as a full-fledged imperial project, but as another migration in a long line of barbarian mleccha incursions which ended in their eventual settlement and Hinduisation.
The author of the Devala Smriti is said to be highly unorthodox by the standards of the time. The historian Al-Biruni writes that his Brahmin informants did not accept the readmission of Hindu converts to Islam back into their caste and religion. The practice of shuddhi disappeared by the 12th century AD, and the idea that Hindus must be born into the religion took hold, as Hindu proselytisation activities gradually ceased.
[Arya Samaj] movement
The socio-political movement, derived from ancient rite of shuddhikaran, or purification was started by the Arya Samaj, and its founder Swami Dayanand Saraswati and his followers like Swami Shraddhanand, who also worked on the Sangathan consolidation aspect of Hinduism, in North India, especially Punjab in early 1900s, though it gradually spread across India. Shuddhi had a social reform agenda behind its rationale and was aimed at abolishing the practise of untouchability by converting outcasts from other religions to Hinduism and integrating them into the mainstream community by elevating their position, and instilling self-confidence and self-determination in them. The movement strove to reduce the conversions of Hindus to Islam and Christianity, which were underway at the time.In 1923, Swami Shraddhanand founded the 'Bhartiya Hindu Shuddhi Mahasabha' and pushed the agenda of reconversion, which eventually created a flashpoint between Hindus and Muslims as Hindus were the recipients of the violence.. Mahatma Gandhi made a comment on Swami Shraddhananda in an article titled 'Hindu-Muslim-Tensions: Causes and Resistance' in the May 29, 1922 issue of Young India.
Gandhi further wrote Dayanand that "he narrowed one of the most liberal and tolerant religions of the world." Swami responded to Gandhi's article that "If Aryasamaji is true to themselves, then the allegations of Mahatma Gandhi or any other person and invasions also cannot obstruct the trends of Arya Samaj." Shraddhanand followingly kept moving towards his goal.
The main point of contention was the reconversion of Malkana Rajputs in western United Province As a result, the movement became controversial and antagonised the Muslims populace and also led to the assassination of the leader of the movement, Swami Shraddhanand by a Muslim in 1926. After Swami Shraddhanand died this movement continued.
In the late 1920s, prominent Goan Hindu Brahmins requested Vinayak Maharaj Masurkar, the prelate of a Vaishnava ashram in Masur, Satara district; to actively campaign for the 're-conversion' of Catholic Gaudas to Hinduism. Masurkar accepted, and together with his disciples, subsequently toured Gauda villages singing devotional bhakti songs and performing pujas. These means led a considerable number of Catholic Gaudas to declare willingness to come into the Hindu fold, and a Shuddhi ceremony was carefully prepared. On 23 February 1928, many Catholic Gaudes in Goa were re-converted to Hinduism notwithstanding the opposition of the Church and the Portuguese government. The converts were given Sanskrit Hindu names, but the Portuguese government put impediments in their way to get legal sanction for their new Hindu names. 4851 Catholic Gaudes from Tiswadi, 2174 from Ponda, 250 from Bicholim and 329 from Sattari were re-converted to Hinduism after nearly 400 years. The total number of the converts to Hinduism was 7815. The existing Hindu Gauda community refused to accept these neo-Hindus back into their fold because their Catholic ancestors had not maintained caste purity, and the neo-Hindus were now alienated by their former Catholic coreligionists. These neo-Hindus developed into a separate endogamous community, and are now referred to as Nav-Hindu Gaudas.
However, in Northern India this movement faced stiff opposition from Islamic organisations such as the Barelvi movement's Jama'at Raza-e-Mustafa which attempted to counter the efforts of the Shuddhi movement to convert Muslims to Hinduism in British India. Beginning in the 1920s, Muslim organisations began seeking out new converts from the Chuhra caste in-response to the Shuddhi movement.