2. Samsara is a clean escape from the karma-run wheel of birth, death and rebirth (samsara). The importance of Samsara is it's what makes everything work. If there was no cycle of life and death than you would only get one shot to enlightenment, and since many people aren't destined to achieve that in this life time.
3. Vedas is an ancient scripture revered by Hindus. Vedas are considered the sacred books in Hinduism. There are four Vedas: Rig Veda, Yajur Veda, Sama Veda, and Atharvana Veda.
Vedas contain complete knowledge of life and beyond. Most of the Hinduism's rituals, beliefs and practices are based on these Vedas
4. Moksha refers to liberation from the cycle of death and rebirth. Every person must strive hard and perform good deeds, so that his soul may rest in peace after his death. A person, who attains Moksha, gets freedom from all sorts of sufferings and pain.
5. Mahayana is known as the “Great Vehicle.” Followers of all these traditions are in general agreement about the Four Noble Truths, the Noble Eightfold Path, and the teachings about karma, samsara, and nirvana.
6. Dharma/karma: Dharma refers to a broad complex of meanings encompassing duty, natural law, social welfare, ethics, health and transcendental realization. The purpose of dharma is not only to attain a union of the soul with the supreme reality; it also suggests a code of conduct that is intended to secure both worldly joys and supreme happiness. Karma means action and the consequences of action. Every act we make, and even every thought and every desire we have, shapes our future experiences. Our life is what we have made it.
7. Vishnu is beloved as the tender, merciful deity. The role of