Neither Demon Nor Dread: The Hindu Vision of Wilderness and Wild Creatures In many cultures, forests and wilderness are portrayed as places of terror, chaos, and danger. Hinduism takes a profoundly different and nuanced view. The wild is not simply a threatening unknown. It is a living, breathing dimension of the cosmic order — as sacred, purposeful, and layered in meaning as any temple, city, or home. The forest is not the opposite of civilization in Hindu thought. In many ways, it is its spiritual superior. The ancient texts celebrate the forest as aranya — a word that carries no inherent dread. The Aranyakas, a body of sacred scripture composed and studied within forest settings, draw their very name from this word. Profound philosophical inquiry, the questioning of existence, the exploration of the self and the cosmos — all of this happened not in palaces or market squares but deep within the wild. The forest was considered the most appropriate space for the highest thinking....