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A questions and answers book all about Hindu philosophy (better known as Sanatana Dharma). I enjoyed the straight to the point simplicity to the answers, there were no fluff. Some of the answers I wasn't convinced by, instead of keeping the entire text religiously neutral I think the author tried to preach more dogmatic view points that essentially god (in this case Krishna), can and does what he wants because he's all knowing and perfect but is also immoral? and us peasants need to worship him to attain moksha. I also don't appreciate the analogy of being of service to Him which reminds me too much of Christianity and Islam, it's such a male-centric (and therefore chauvinist--masculine ego stroking) worship which is weird to me. At a mundane level it is woman who creates life, the creative life force is female, it makes more sense to me that the supreme being or life force is feminine or more feminine leaning.
There were neutral content in here overall about yoga philosophy and Hinduism but sadly the author let his specific path of Vaishnavism steer the theme of the book and I can't stand Proselytism, I don't like people shoving their religious path in my face.
Some great answers to questions surrounding Gaudiya Vaishnavism. My only issue is that the book is marketed as answers to questions on Hinduism, and Kripamoya prabhu mentions several times that this path is non-sectarian and that the tradition can be adhered to by followers, or non-followers, of any religion or faith path.
I feel that people looking for answers to questions on Hinduism might be misled by this title as they’d find all questions answered from the perspective of a devotee of Lord Krishna. Through this, they’d only get a peripheral view of what they might have set out to look for, such as worship of the demigods. I do understand why the book was marketed this way, though, as it casts a wide net and is bound to interest those seeking traditional Hinduism. However, devotees of Krishna will find much more value in the text.
So here’s the thing — Sanatana Dharma by Kripamoya Das doesn’t shout, it whispers. And somehow, that makes it hit harder.
This isn’t your average “spiritual self-help” kind of book — it’s more like sitting down with a very calm, slightly mischievous monk who starts dropping truth bombs while you’re still sipping your chai.
Kripamoya Das doesn’t lecture; he translates — turning something as vast and timeless as Hindu philosophy into bite-sized reflections on life, purpose, and peace that actually make sense in 2025 (yes, even between emails and existential dread).
It’s thoughtful, grounded, and surprisingly relatable. You’ll pause, reread, and probably highlight half the book. There’s no drama, no dogma — just simple clarity, wrapped in wisdom that feels… eternal.
Thank you Kripamoya for this nice read. The answers were great and concise. You covered a wide range of Hindu / Vedic topics and the answers were great and well written.