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The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hindusim vol 2

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Nibandha<br />

used to denote the “evil eye,” a malefic<br />

influence that is put on people<br />

through sight, particularly eye-to-eye<br />

contact. <strong>The</strong> existence <strong>of</strong> the evil eye is<br />

widely accepted among traditional<br />

Hindus. It is warded <strong>of</strong>f either by<br />

avoiding this sort <strong>of</strong> gaze, or by performing<br />

rites <strong>of</strong> protection. For further<br />

consideration see David F.<br />

Pocock, “<strong>The</strong> Evil Eye,” in T. N. Madan<br />

(ed.), Religion in India, 1991.<br />

Nepal<br />

A small Himalayan nation on the northern<br />

border <strong>of</strong> India that is deemed the<br />

world’s only Hindu kingdom. One basis<br />

for this claim is that almost 90 percent <strong>of</strong><br />

Nepal’s inhabitants identify themselves<br />

as Hindu; the other is that since 1769<br />

Nepal’s ruling house has been a Hindu<br />

dynasty, the Shah dynasty. <strong>The</strong> present<br />

monarch, Birendra Bir Bikram Shah (b.<br />

1945), was an uncontested absolute<br />

monarch until April 1990, when popular<br />

discontent led to a movement seeking<br />

the restoration <strong>of</strong> democracy in Nepal.<br />

<strong>The</strong> king was forced to accede to democratic<br />

reforms, and since May 1991 has<br />

governed as a constitutional monarch,<br />

with the Nepali Parliament wielding the<br />

real power.<br />

Although Nepal is a small country, it<br />

has great geographical diversity. Its three<br />

major geographical regions are the submontane<br />

lowlands, the Himalayan<br />

foothills, and the high mountains. <strong>The</strong><br />

country’s uneven topography further<br />

subdivides each <strong>of</strong> these regions. This<br />

rugged geography has a marked effect<br />

on the country’s economy, rendering<br />

agriculture impossible at anything more<br />

than a subsistence level. However, it<br />

provides the attraction for tourism,<br />

which is Nepal’s greatest source <strong>of</strong> foreign<br />

exchange.<br />

Such great geographical diversity<br />

promotes similar human diversity. <strong>The</strong><br />

people <strong>of</strong> Nepal are an amalgam <strong>of</strong><br />

many different groups, including people<br />

whose historical roots lie in India and<br />

indigenous hill tribes associated with<br />

particular parts <strong>of</strong> the country. Most<br />

Nepalese live in the fertile valleys <strong>of</strong> the<br />

foothills. <strong>The</strong>se are the most habitable<br />

regions, as the climate in the mountains<br />

is far too harsh for permanent habitation,<br />

while the lowland regions are<br />

rife with disease, particularly malaria.<br />

In general, Nepali culture shows<br />

many similarities with the adjoining<br />

areas <strong>of</strong> India, and thus from a cultural<br />

perspective is firmly fixed in the Indian<br />

cultural orbit. Nepal is also the home to<br />

several important Hindu pilgrimage<br />

places (tirtha), notably Pashupatinath<br />

in the Kathmandu Valley, and<br />

Muktinath, at the headwaters <strong>of</strong> the Kali<br />

Gandaki River.<br />

New Moon<br />

(amavasya) In northern India, the new<br />

moon usually marks the midpoint <strong>of</strong> the<br />

lunar month, whereas in southern India<br />

it <strong>of</strong>ten identifies the end. Unlike the full<br />

moon, whose associations with fullness<br />

and completion make it always auspicious,<br />

the new moon’s associations with<br />

darkness and emptiness make it a more<br />

ambiguous time. One <strong>of</strong> the most<br />

important festivals in the Hindu religious<br />

year, Diwali, falls on the new<br />

moon in Kartik (October–November).<br />

<strong>The</strong> new moon can also be highly auspicious<br />

on certain other occasions, such<br />

as a Somavati Amavasya, a new moon<br />

falling on a Monday. In general, however,<br />

the new moon is less clearly auspicious<br />

than the full moon. Not only are there<br />

fewer celebrations during the new<br />

moon, but there is also a proportionately<br />

greater number <strong>of</strong> holidays falling in the<br />

light, waxing half <strong>of</strong> the lunar month.<br />

<strong>The</strong> new moon and the dark, waning<br />

half are not in themselves inauspicious,<br />

they are simply deemed less auspicious<br />

than the light half and the full moon.<br />

Nibandha<br />

(“collection”) Genre <strong>of</strong> thematic commentarial<br />

literature that became prominent<br />

in medieval northern India. <strong>The</strong><br />

nibandhas were compendia <strong>of</strong> Hindu<br />

lore, in which the compilers culled<br />

471

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