Worship of Poverty

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The East profits from Zen and the art of money-making, and the capitalist West from the consumerist spirit and Protestant work ethic. Why does South Asia totter?

Poverty has a strange status in South Asia: some of its forms are honoured while others are denounced. The ascetic with his begging bowl and avowed stand on poverty is respected, while the beggar with his commitment to get out of poverty is ignored or reviled. Ironically, the reasons why one form of poverty is esteemed and another is not, has less to do with Hindu/Buddhist attitudes toward poverty than with attitudes toward wealth. Both religions state clearly that wealth is necessary and that it is important for fulfilling one's economic needs. But they also point out that wealth is binding, and that it stifles a person who does not seek the ultimate, even as a vine chokes a plant. The Mahabharata says that wealth is both Laxmi, goddess, and a mound of earth. The great Hindu texts, however, never say that wealth, by itself, is harmful.

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