Hinduism in Germany
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sri Kamakshi Amman temple in Hamm | |
| Total population | |
|---|---|
| c.130,000 (2017) | |
| Religions | |
| Shaivism (majority) Vaishnavism, Shaktism (minority) | |
| Scriptures | |
| Agamas, Bhagavad Gita and Vedas | |
| Languages | |
| Sanskrit (sacred) Hindi, Tamil, Pashto, Dari, Balinese, German, English (Majority) |
| Hinduism by country |
|---|
| Full list |
Hinduism is a minority religion practiced by an estimated 100,000 to 150,0000 people, or an estimated 0.12% of the population in Germany.[1]
It is the country’s fourth-largest religion after Christianity, irreligion, and Islam. The community is highly diverse, consisting primarily of Sri Lankan Tamil Hindus (refugees since the 1980s), Indian Hindus (post-1950s migrants and recent skilled workers), smaller Afghan Hindu and Balinese groups, and a modest number of German/European converts.[2][1]
Germany's encounter with Hinduism has a unique history. Unlike Britain's colonial relationship with India, Germany’s engagement with Hinduism grew mainly out of academic and philosophical fascination.[3]
German Indology and Hindu Philosophy
German interest in Hinduism first grew out of the Romantic movement's deep fascination with ancient India. Indian literature captured the imagination of writers and thinkers. In 1791, Georg Forster published the first German translation of Kālidāsa’s famous play Śākuntalā (based on William Jones's English version). This work captivated major literary figures, including Johann Gottfried Herder and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, who famously wrote an epigram praising the drama.[4][5][6] In 1808 Friedrich Schlegel’s Über die Sprache und Weisheit der Indier (On the Language and Wisdom of the Indians) argued that Sanskrit was the root of a shared Indo-European language family. This theory shaped European intellectual thought and helped drive the creation of formal academic departments for Indological research.[7][8]
Friedrich Max Mueller and the translation of the Vedas
Friedrich Max Müller (1823–1900), born in Dessau, was one of the leading scholars who introduced ancient Hindu texts to European audiences.[9] After studying Sanskrit under Franz Bopp in Berlin and Eugène Burnouf in Paris, he moved to England in 1846. With patronage from the East India Company, he produced the first critical edition of the Rigveda (including Sāyaṇa's 14th-century commentary), published in six volumes between 1849 and 1874. He later edited the Sacred Books of the East (1879–1910), a 50-volume series of English translations of major religious texts from Hinduism, Buddhism, Zoroastrianism, and other Asian traditions.[10][11]
Demographics
Indian Hindus
Hindu migration from India to Germany started picking up in the 1950s, continued at a fairly slow pace through the 1970s.[12] Most of the early arrivals were men, typically students and professionals, such as physicians and engineers.[13] They generally came from upper middle-class backgrounds and many have went on to build successful careers and businesses.[14] Even though plenty of them were financially comfortable, they didn’t leave much of a visible religious footprint. Most worship happened quietly in private homes, and the only Indian Hindu temple in Frankfurt at the time turned out to be short-lived.[15] By the 2000s, the Indian Hindu population in Germany had grown to an estimated 60,000–80,000.[1]
Sri Lankan Hindus
From the late 1970s, Sri Lankan Tamils formed another stream of Hindu migration to Germany. Unlike Indian migrants, the much of the Sri Lankan Tamil migration came primarily from asylum seekers amid the island’s escalating ethnic conflict and civil war. Around 74% of these asylum seekers were Hindu.[16] In 1978, approximately 1,300 Sri Lankans (mainly students) were living in Germany, however after the outbreak of war in 1983, arrivals increased sharply, with 17,400 Sri Lankan refugees applying for asylum in 1985 alone.[16]
Current estimates approximate around 42,000–45,000 Hindus in Germany were Sri Lankan Tamils.[1]
Hindus of other ethnicities
Besides Indian and Sri Lankan Tamil Hindus, there are approximately 7,500 white Hindus as well as 7,000–10,000 Afghan Hindus in Germany.[1]
In 2007, there were 6,000 Hindus in Berlin, and in 2009, around 5,000 Hindus lived in Lower Saxony.[17][18]
Temples
- Sri Muthumariamman Temple
- Britz Blaschkoallee Sri Mayurapathy Murugan Temple
- Sri Kamakshi Amman temple in Hamm
Denominations and organizations
Germany has over 50–100 Hindu temples and worship sites, the large majority are Tamil. Many began as makeshift spaces and evolved into purpose-built structures.[19]
ISKCON
The first Hare Krishna temple in Germany was built 1970 in Hamburg. The ISKCON guru Sacinandana Swami translated the Bhagavad Gita into German.[20]
Balinese Hinduism
There are about 700 Balinese Hindu families living in Germany,[21] with the one temple located in Hamburg in front of the Museum of Ethnology, Hamburg and the second, Pura Tri Hita Karana located in Erholungspark Marzahn, Berlin, which is a functioning Hindu temple located in the Balinese Garden of the park and it is one of the few Hindu temples of Balinese architecture built outside Indonesia.[22][23]

