«= Pame India National Geographic Society. Today's Problems in India 1921. + Qe GEOGRAPHIC NEWS BULLETIN ON TODAY *S PROBLEMS IN INDIA: PREPARED AND ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY (Founded in 1888, for the Increase and Diffusion of Geographic Knowledge) General Headquarters, Washington, D. C. ay Ao es es ee ee Release Immediately, Washington, D. C. "It is hard to visualize Christian missions in India because ‘the character of the problem and the. ways of meeting that problem dif- fer in different parts of a country which is two thirds as large as the United States, but which contains three times as many people," says a bulletin issued from the Weshington, D, C., headquarters of thie Nation- al Geographic Society, "Not only does the geographic enviroment of India vary from the deserts of Sind to the steamy coasts of Bombay or Madras presi-~ dencies, from the paddy fields of South India to the rocky gorges of ihe Chamba district, but the religious environment varies greatly as well and adds immeasurably to the complexity of the missionary progrem. Indian Temples Places of Confusion (Subhead) "The visitor to Indian temples will see more to remind him of the tfather's house made a house of merchandise! than he will of the spiritual sublimity of a true temple, Money changers flank the en-~- trances; the courts are crowded with sellers of cheap notions and toys; ‘the whir of sewing machines fashioning new garments drowms out the § mumbled prayers of the penitent; priestly palms are stretched forth in TODAY'S PROBLEMS IN INDIA {Page 2) search of alms more often than in benediction, Oniy in the Mohammedan mosques will one find a sincerity of worship and a Simplicity of re~- ligious service which compares favorably with Christian ceremonies, "The Mohammedan of the north mst be approached in an entire- ly different way from the Hindu or Dravidian peoples of the south with their thousands of gods and their degraded religion, The lordly Sikh requires a different aporoach from that which wins the love and respect of the outcaste of the Telegu region, Yet India is overburdened with jJoctrines and a Shristian life stands out the more plainiy herp in the native religions there is too loose a relation between piety and