Trust Center

Sources

HinduAI draws on widely known Hindu texts, traditions, and educational references to support clearer learning. This page explains the platform's approach to sources and where users should apply extra care.

Source Approach

How HinduAI uses sources

Primary reference areas

HinduAI may draw from texts and traditions such as the Bhagavad Gita, Ramayana, Mahabharata, Upanishads, Puranas, dharmic teachings, festival observances, Panchang-related practices, and familiar devotional traditions. These references are used to support understanding, reflection, and practical explanation.

Educational use, not institutional claim

HinduAI is an educational platform, not a formal religious institution. When a page refers to a scripture, teaching, or festival, that reference should be understood as part of a learning experience rather than a binding ruling or universal interpretation.

Variation matters

Many Hindu practices vary by region, sampradaya, family tradition, temple practice, calendar method, and local Panchang. HinduAI aims to mention that variation when it matters, especially for dates, vrat timing, muhurat, tithi-sensitive observances, and ritual details.

Citations and practical transparency

Not every page will include academic-style citations, but HinduAI should still aim for honesty about what kind of source is being used: scripture-inspired explanation, festival guidance, practical summary, or general educational interpretation. When exact timing or local ritual details matter, users should verify them with a trusted Panchang, temple, or knowledgeable guide.

Ongoing improvement

As the platform grows, source framing may improve over time through clearer citations, better explanations, and better separation between interpretation, tradition, and practical advice. If a user notices unclear sourcing or a misleading claim, HinduAI welcomes respectful correction and review.