-
Main menu
- Sign in
Tulsi is a plant of considerable religious and cultural importance within Hinduism, and is widely encountered in domestic, temple and ritual contexts across the Indian subcontinent. The term refers both to the plant itself and to the personification of the plant as a sacred figure in Hindu tradition. Tulsi is commonly grown in household courtyards, often in a dedicated raised structure, and is associated with daily devotional practices in many Hindu communities. The plant is also referenced in Ayurvedic and traditional medicinal literature, although the scope and specifics of such references should be checked against authoritative sources before inclusion in any final article.
This draft has been prepared as a starting point for IndiaWiki editors and is not intended for public release. It avoids dates, named individuals, region-specific customs, attributed quotations, and figures, since these require verification from reliable secondary sources. Editors are requested to treat the present text as scaffolding: it is intended to map out the likely scope of the topic, identify common areas of conflation or dispute, and outline a structure that the final published article may follow once properly sourced. Sections below indicate where verified material should be inserted, expanded, or pruned.
Tulsi sits at the intersection of botany, religion, ritual practice, folk tradition, household custom and traditional medicine. As a religious subject within the Hinduism cohort, the topic typically encompasses the plant's role in worship, its symbolic associations with particular deities, the narratives and legends in which it appears, and the ceremonies in which it features. Editors should note that there are multiple textual and oral traditions concerning Tulsi, and these traditions are not always mutually consistent. Variants exist across linguistic regions, sectarian communities and devotional schools.
The plant has both botanical and devotional identities, and care is needed when moving between the two registers. Botanical descriptions, taxonomy, cultivation practices and pharmacological claims should be sourced separately from religious and ritual material, since they belong to different evidentiary traditions. Similarly, mythological narratives, scriptural references and ritual prescriptions should be sourced with care to avoid synthesising disparate traditions into a single, falsely unified account. The background section in the published article should make these distinctions clear to general readers, while remaining neutral about contested matters of doctrine, regional practice or interpretation.
The significance of Tulsi within Hindu religious life is broad and multi-layered. It is associated with household devotion, with temple ritual, with seasonal festivals, and with rites that mark transitions in personal and family life. The plant features prominently in everyday acts of veneration in many Hindu households, and is also used in offerings during specific ceremonies. Beyond the strictly religious, Tulsi is part of a wider cultural vocabulary in literature, music, devotional poetry and visual art.
For a general readership, the significance of Tulsi can be presented along several axes: as a sacred plant in domestic religion, as a figure within mythological narratives, as an element of festival calendars, and as a substance featuring in traditional medicinal systems. Editors should resist the temptation to flatten these dimensions into a single explanation. The significance of Tulsi is likely to vary by community, region and sectarian affiliation, and the published article should acknowledge plurality rather than imply a uniform tradition. Specific claims about prevalence, frequency or universality require sourcing.
The following list identifies areas where editors are likely to encounter material requiring careful verification. Each item should be checked against reliable secondary sources, and contested points should be presented with attribution rather than as settled fact.
Where reliable sources disagree, the article should present the disagreement neutrally rather than choose a side.
Editors may wish to consider the following structure for the published article, adapting it to the material available from verified sources:
Each section should be written in neutral, encyclopaedic prose, with citations placed close to specific claims rather than aggregated at the end of paragraphs. Images, where used, should have clear provenance and licensing, and captions should avoid asserting contested interpretations as fact.
This draft deliberately refrains from supplying specific dates, named individuals, attributed quotations, statistics, regional case studies or therapeutic claims, since none of these can be verified from the title and cohort alone. Editors are asked to populate each section using reliable secondary sources, and to flag any material drawn from primary religious texts as such, with appropriate translation attribution.
Particular care is recommended in three areas. First, sectarian variation: practices and beliefs concerning Tulsi differ across communities, and the article should not present one tradition as normative. Second, medical claims: traditional usage should be described historically and culturally, and modern therapeutic assertions should be sourced from peer-reviewed literature rather than promotional material. Third, regional generalisation: customs that are common in one region may be uncommon or absent in another, and the article should reflect this rather than generalising from a single context. Editors should also review the article for tone, ensuring that devotional language from sources is paraphrased into neutral encyclopaedic prose, and that culturally sensitive material is handled with respect and accuracy.
References to be added by editors. Suggested categories of source material include: standard reference works on Hinduism; scholarly editions and translations of relevant primary texts; peer-reviewed academic studies on ritual, regional practice and cultural history; authoritative botanical references for taxonomy and description; and reputable works on Ayurveda and traditional medicine for historical context. Promotional, devotional and self-published sources should be used with caution and clearly attributed where retained.