Modi made an important distinction between the English word "religion" and the Sanskrit word "Dharma."
What Modi said
The essence of his statement was:
"Hinduism is not merely a religion in the Western sense. It is a way of life."
He then explained that Dharma is not adequately translated by the English word 'religion.' Rather, Dharma refers to the principles, duties, values, and way of conduct that sustain life and society.
What modification was he suggesting?
Modi's point was not to deny the existence of Hinduism as a faith tradition. Instead, he was asking listeners to modify their understanding of the word "Dharma."
He suggested moving from this:
Dharma = Religion
to this:
Dharma = That which sustains, upholds, and guides life
This broader meaning includes:
Duty (Kartavya)
Righteousness (Dharma)
Moral order
Social responsibility
Ethical conduct
Harmony with nature and society
The Sanskrit root "dhṛ" means "to hold, support, or sustain." Therefore Dharma is that which sustains the individual, family, society, and the cosmos. This understanding is widely found in Indian philosophical traditions.
Dharma in the Vedas
In the Vedas, Dharma is closely related to Ṛta, the cosmic order.
The sun rises at the proper time. The rivers flow. The seasons return.
All these operate according to Dharma.
The Vedic sages saw the universe as governed by an underlying order. Human beings flourish when they align themselves with that order.
Dharma in the Upanishads
The Upanishads take Dharma inward.
Dharma becomes truthfulness, self-control, compassion, and the pursuit of the Self.
The famous instruction from the Taittiriya Upanishad says:
"Speak the truth. Practice Dharma."
Here Dharma is not ritual; it is the art of living rightly.
Dharma in the Ramayana
The Ramayana may be called the great epic of Dharma.
Lord Rama is often described as:
"Rppamo Vigrahavan Dharma"
"Rama is Dharma embodied."
Rama repeatedly sacrifices personal comfort to uphold duty:
As a son, he obeys his father.
As a prince, he protects the kingdom.
As a husband, he remains devoted to Sita.
As a king, he places public welfare above personal desire.
The Ramayana teaches that Dharma is not always easy. Often it demands sacrifice.
Dharma in the Mahabharata
The Mahabharata explores the complexity of Dharma.
Unlike the Ramayana, where Dharma is usually clear, the Mahabharata presents situations where every option appears flawed.
Its recurring question is:
"What is Dharma?"
Bhishma, Vidura, Krishna, Yudhishthira, and others spend thousands of verses discussing this very question.
One famous verse says:
"Dharma protects those who protect Dharma."
(Dharmo rakshati rakshitah)
The Mahabharata teaches that Dharma requires wisdom, not merely rule-following.
Dharma in the Bhagavad Gita
The Bhagavad Gita presents Dharma as one's sacred duty.
Arjuna wishes to abandon the battlefield.
Krishna teaches him that true spirituality is not escape from responsibility but the performance of one's Dharma without attachment to results.
Thus:
Duty becomes worship.
Work becomes yoga.
Life itself becomes a spiritual path.
A Simple Illustration
Indian tradition often explains Dharma through examples:
The Dharma of fire is to burn.
The Dharma of water is to flow.
The Dharma of the tree is to give shade and fruit.
The Dharma of a teacher is to teach.
The Dharma of a ruler is to protect.
Likewise, every human being has a Dharma arising from truth, conscience, and responsibility.
This is the larger sense in which Modi was speaking: Dharma is not merely a set of beliefs; it is the principle that sustains both the universe and human life.
For a student of the epics, perhaps the finest summary is:
Religion may tell us what to worship.
Dharma tells us how to live.











