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Agama Hindu Dharma is the formal name of Hinduism in Indonesia. It is practised by 93% of the population of Bali, but also in Sumatra, Java (especially by the Tenggerese people on the east), and Kalimantan. Although, officially, only about 3% of Indonesian population is Hindu, those following Hindu traditional beliefs together with their nominal religion is more than 30%. This group lives mainly in Java, which forms the majorty of the Javanese Muslims, are known as Abangan or Santri which means " Easy-going muslims".

The advent of Soeharto's 'new order' resulted in an increasing Indonesianisation of both Hindu Dharma and Parisada Hindu Dharma , partly due to the fact that every Indonesian citizen was now required to be a registered member of one of the five acknowledged religious communities (Islam, Christianity [i.e. Protestantism], Catholicism, Hinduism and Buddhism). Inspired by the glorious Hindu Javanese past, a large number of Javanese converted to Hinduism in the 1960s and 1970s. When the adherents of the ethnic religions Aluk To Dolo (Sa'dan Toraja) and Kaharingan (Ngaju, Luangan) claimed official recognition of their traditions, the Ministry of Religion classified them as Hindu variants in 1968 and 1980. Due to Hindu missionary work by Balinese and Indians living in Medan, several members of the Karo in North Sumatra started to embrace Hinduism in 1977. Having become a truly national representative of Hinduism, the Parisada Hindu Dharma changed its name to Parisada Hindu Dharma Indonesia in 1984.

Practitioners of Agama Hindu Dharma share many common beliefs, which include:

The sacred texts found in Agama Hindu Dharma are the Vedas. Only two of the Vedas reached Bali in the past, and they are the basis of Balinese Hinduism. Other sources of religious information include the PuranasHindu mythology bases more on its eighteen Puranas six each are rendered to each of the Hindu Trinity, Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva. Vishnu Puranas: # Vishnu, # Bhagavata, # Naradeya, # Garuda, # Padma. Brahma Puranas: # Brahma, # Brahmanda, # Brahma Vaivarta and the ItihasaItihasa ( Sanskrit: thus verily happened refers collectively to the more epic Hindu scriptures, detailing the actions of divine incarnations on earth while interspersing them with often large sections of philosophical and ethical discourse. They are often (mainly RamayanaThe Ramayana ( Sanskrit: vehicle of Rama) is part of the Hindu smriti, written by Valmiki (c. This epic of 24,000 verses tells of a Raghuvamsa prince, Rama of Ayodhya, whose wife Sita is abducted by the rakshasa, or demon, Ravana. The Ramayana had an impo and the MahabharataThe Mahabharata ( Devanagari: , phonetically Mahbhrata see note), sometimes just called Bharata, is the great religious, philosophical and mythological epic of India. It is a keystone text of Hinduism. It is the second longest literary work in the world ().

1 Conversion to Hinduism

It is interesting to study conversion to Hinduism in two close and culturally similar regions, the YogyakartaYogyakarta is a city, province, and sultanate in Indonesia, Southeast Asia. Yogyakarta is located in the south-central part of the island of Java, and is surrounded by the province of Central Java (Jawa Tengah). History The sultanate of Yogyakarta was for region, where only sporadic conversions to Hinduism had taken place, and the Klaten region, which has witnessed the highest percentage of Hindu converts in Java. It has been argued that this dissimilarity was related to the difference in the perception of Islam among the Javanese population in each region. Since the mass killings of 1965-1966 in Klaten had been far more awful than those in Yogyakarta, in Klaten the political landscape had been far more politicized than in Yogyakarta. Because the killers in Klaten were to a large extent identified with Islam, the people in this region did not convert to Islam, but preferred Hinduism (and Christianity).



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