Terror in
Kashmir: Plight of Kashmiri Hindus
A film on
the exodus of Kashmiri Hindus
from their homes after militancy took over the Valley brings out
the tragedy of a community that has been living as refugees in
its country.
Called
And the World Remained Silent, the 25-minute film
by producer and director Ashok Pandit
is a product of compiling video footage that he has been taking
during the last ten years – right from the frenzied
demonstrations led by Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF)
leader Shabir Shah in 1990 to the pathetic conditions of refugee
camps in Jammu where the Kashmiri Pandits or Hindus now live.
The
stark images of brutality committed on
Hindus to drive them out of Kashmir evokes not just
sympathy but reveals the kind of trauma and hardship that the
community has undergone with little help from the Indian
government or citizens.
Noted film maker Mahesh Bhat,
who was also present at the press meet, severely criticised the
apathy of the nation towards the plight of the Pandits.
"Answers to our problems of
terrorism cannot come from the white man who cannot solve his
own problems," he said.
Refer
to Genocide and
Ethnic Cleansing of Kashmiri Hindu Pandits - And the World
Remained Silent - Movie http://www.jaia-bharati.org/films/and-the-world.mpg
***
Pandits in camps die of diseases
Neglected by
their country and rest of the world, lakhs of Kashmiri Pandits
live a life of misery in virtually inhuman conditions in refugee
camps and they are now falling victim to rising incidence of
diseases leading to a higher death rate.
Ever since
their forced exodus from the valley, Kashmiri Pandits have been
subjected to psychological and metabolic stress, leading to rise
in diseases and deaths as well as low birth rates in the camps
at Jammu, Kathua and Udhampur.
(source:
Pandits
in camps die of diseases - Tribuneindia.com June 3' 2202).
For more see Plight
of Kashmiri Pundits and Ethnic
Cleansing in Jammu and http://ikashmir.org/).
Refer
to Kashmir Holocaust http://www.hinduhumanrights.org/kashmirspecial.pdf
Refer
to Genocide and
Ethnic Cleansing of Kashmiri Hindu Pandits - And the World
Remained Silent - Movie http://www.jaia-bharati.org/films/and-the-world.mpg
Refer to
My
People, Uprooted: "A
Saga of the Hindus of Eastern Bengal"
- By Tathagata Roy
***
Robert
Hathaway (of The
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars,
a famous think tank in Washington DC)
takes no interest
whatsoever in India's main terrorist
problem, Islamic armed separatism in Kashmir. He
merely warns Hindus not to use Kashmir as an excuse for Gujarat,
and denies that Hindu exasperation at Muslim violence in Kashmir
has anything to do with the Hindu reaction in Gujarat, as if he
had investigated the matter. Yet, it is precisely on the
Kashmiri frontline that America is most directly concerned, for
it has provided indirect support to the terrorists for more than
a decade. Many Hindus have been killed with American-made
weapons and bombs. The
practical bottom-line of Hathaway's paper turns out to be a plea
for cutting off the flow of donations to Hindu charities such as
the Ekal Vidyalaya
scheme of
village schools. US-based Indian
Communists (FOIL) have
recently opened a campaign against Hindu
charities......The Indian people are not
financing movements violently disrupting American society. By
contrast, American
citizens are financing Church activities in India which often
shade over into armed separatism, social disruption of tribal
societies and ethnic cleansing.
(source:
A
reply to Robert Hathaway - By Koenraad
Elst -
rediff.com and
Dr
Hathaway's patronising conclusions - By Koenraad Elst -
rediff.com).
The U. S must ask itself why other religious
minorities in India, the Parsis, the Sikhs, the Buddhists and
Jains never face the problems that Christians and Muslims in
India face at the hands of ‘Hindu extremists? Why did the normally gentle Hindus take to
extremism? Christian missionaries and Islamic terrorists
threaten Hindus and Hindu society. The right to revenge is as
much the prerogative of Hindus as it is of the U.S.
(source:
Christianity's
compulsive need to homogenize the world - vigilonline.com).
Refer
to Genocide and
Ethnic Cleansing of Kashmiri Hindu Pandits - And the World
Remained Silent - Movie http://www.jaia-bharati.org/films/and-the-world.mpg
Refer
to Kashmir Holocaust http://www.hinduhumanrights.org/kashmirspecial.pdf
***
A
community which has suffered the maximum due to Islamic
terrorism is the Hindus of Kashmir and the Pandits in particular.
In 1989, a mass exodus took place in the
Kashmir Valley, due to relentless persecution by Islamic
terrorism, and 300,000 Pandits became refugees in their own
homeland. The left-liberals did not even shed crocodile
tears on the plight of these unfortunate citizens of our
country. In fact, they have become the forgotten people
for the English media.
Even
today, while copious tears have flowed from the eyes of the
English media in context of the Muslim refugees in Gujarat, it
has not found it necessary to deal with the predicament of the
Kashmiri Pandits. There has not been any detailed
reporting about the miserable conditions in the refugee camps,
which are in existence for more than 13 years. No
one talks about the trauma and the psychological scars borne by
these Kashmiris, whose only fault was that they were Hindus.
(source:
The
English media in India - Hindu Vivek Kendra). Refer
to Genocide and
Ethnic Cleansing of Kashmiri Hindu Pandits - And the World
Remained Silent - Movie http://www.jaia-bharati.org/films/and-the-world.mpg
Refer
to Kashmir Holocaust http://www.hinduhumanrights.org/kashmirspecial.pdf
"Gujarat and Kashmir represent two faces of the same
coin. When Pandits were killed and thrown out of Kashmir, no one
in India gave a damn. Now Muslims were butchered in Gujarat, and
no one in India gave a damn. Yet there are differences between
the situation with Pandits and hapless Muslim victims in Gujarat
- not in what happened, but in the manner how the social
conscience in India reacted. "Very
few humanists in India came to the aid of Kashmiri Pandits.
No one linked militant Islam to growing
fundamentalism in the National Conference, and almost no one
blamed the State government for its ineptitude or demanded the
CM should be declared a criminal.
"Gujarat, on the other hand, has become the hollowed ground
for Indian humanists, who are eager to link berserk Hindus to
the party in power, want the CM's head on a platter and see the
"dubious hand" of the Center in the tragedy. "
(source: Going
Home - By Ajay Raina - outlookindia.com).
The Kashmiri Pandits are
refugees
in their own country for the last 13 years. Except for the Hindu
organisations, their plight is of no concern to anyone else -
political or secular organisations. According to Ashish
Nandy of the Centre for the Study of Developing
Societies, secularists have been foolishly soft on minority
communalism. He said:
"When Hindus
began to be exterminated systematically in Kashmir
and to leave in large numbers, our secularist friends said then
governor Jagmohan had deliberately organised the forced
migration. I would like to see people leaving their ancestral
homes with a sack in hand just because the governor of the state
asks them to do so! When questioned later as to how the killings
of Hindus were not condemned strongly enough, some of them said
newspapers had refused to carry their statements." (source:
Bhushan, Ranjit, "A Dangerous Symbiosis", Outlook,
April 1, 2002.).
(source:
On
Kashmir Pandits - Hindu Vivek Kendra). Refer
to My
People, Uprooted: "A
Saga of the Hindus of Eastern Bengal"
- By Tathagata Roy
It
is a pity that the West, particularly the USA, with all its loud
claims on human rights, has failed to express serious concern at
this great tragedy of our times. It is too glaring an omission
on the part of the West to be forgiven by history.
(source:
Will
Pandits’ plight ever end?
- tribuneindia.com).
Refer
to Genocide and
Ethnic Cleansing of Kashmiri Hindu Pandits - And the World
Remained Silent - Movie http://www.jaia-bharati.org/films/and-the-world.mpg
A Forgotten Ethnic Cleansing
It's over 13 years now, but
political rhetoric aside, we as a nation have become immune to
the plight of the Kashmiri Pandits, who remain largely
irrelevant in the political discourse -both within and outside
the country
January 19
marked thirteen years since what is generally recognized as the
beginning of the process of ethnic cleansing by which the
Kashmiri Pandits (descendents of Brahmin priests) were hounded
out of the Kashmir Valley. Confronted
with the spectre of cultural
extinction, incidence of problems such as insomnia,
depression and hypertension have increased and birth rates have
declined significantly.
(source:
A
Forgotten Ethnic Cleansing - by Kanchan Lakshman -
outlookindia.com).
It is quite
ludicrous that the Congress and other opposition parties who cry
themselves hoarse over the recent incidents in Gujarat have
tended to neglect half a million Kashmiri refugees who were
hounded out of their homes, their houses burnt and properties
looted and were forced to live a life that voilates all
standards of human diginity. While TV channels and newspapers
are full of reports about Gujarat carnage, the hardships faced
by Kashmiri refugees hardly find a mention anywhere. Are there
any answers for this step-motherly treatment ?
(source: Refugees
in State Vs Refugees in Country - by Sunita Vakil - The
Kashmir Telegraph).
Kashmir Holocaust
and the Human tragedy
The goal is to present to the
public in India and abroad the huge human tragedy, the killings
of Kashmiri Pandits over two decades, the decimation of their
community, the ethnic cleansing and their forced expulsion from
the Valley, the destruction of Kashmiri culture as the original
inhabitants of Kashmir are forced out, the plight of the Pandits
in exile in refugee camps, the impact on Kashmiri Shaivism, a
unique member of the Hindu family which is now threatened with
extinction and the temples now properly tended and ancient
rituals and traditions are terminated by the terrorist gun; the
environmental degradation of Kashmir as a result of inhuman
violence. This is a human tragedy of colossal proportions taking
place in our time in independent India, of which adequate
awareness needs to be generated across the world.
An
audio-visual Exhibition will be held in New Delhi on June 16,
2003 at the India Habitat Centre in tribute to the victims of
violence.
(source: Kashmir
Holocaust and the Human Tragedy: Campaign against Terrorism -
Sponsor: Francois Gautier Co-Sponsors:
Foundation against Continuing Terrorism,
Indic Journalists Association International).Refer
to Genocide and
Ethnic Cleansing of Kashmiri Hindu Pandits - And the World
Remained Silent - Movie http://www.jaia-bharati.org/films/and-the-world.mpg.
Refer
to Kashmir Holocaust http://www.hinduhumanrights.org/kashmirspecial.pdf
Refer to
My
People, Uprooted: "A
Saga of the Hindus of Eastern Bengal"
- By Tathagata Roy
The selective amnesia of the
English media in India is simply breathtaking. There
appears to be a cardinal rule: Never publish anything that would
be in the least bit negative about Muslims in general and
Pakistanis in particular; or about Christians; or about Marxists
in general and the Chinese in particular. For instance, the Chinese
genocide in occupied Tibet is glossed over, and an
Indian English magazine's famous editor goes on a
China-sponsored tour there and writes a glowing account of how
life is beautiful.

Shabana Azmi and Kuldeep
Nayyar and Human Rights Watch and the rest of the human rights
cottage industry were very quiet. The US Council on
International Religious Freedom was thunderously silent, too,
which shows yet again that their definition of 'religious
freedom' is rather unique: It means the freedom of American
cults to propagate their bizarre ideas.
Refer
to Genocide and
Ethnic Cleansing of Kashmiri Hindu Pandits - And the World
Remained Silent - Movie http://www.jaia-bharati.org/films/and-the-world.mpg
***
The
atrocities committed by Islamic terrorists, including ethnic cleansing of Hindus in Kashmir, and attacks all over India
killing Hindus -- note the latest attacks just before Diwali and now on the Indian Institute of Science -- are trivialised by the
chatterati with the usual cant about how the terrorists are
misguided youths frustrated by lack of opportunities.
It appears axiomatic that to
the media, the only good Hindu is a dead Hindu.
This is why the attack on a
Hindu temple in Dera Bugti in
Balochistan in March last year got absolutely no
coverage in the Indian media and did not disturb Indian society
in general.
Shabana
Azmi and Kuldeep
Nayyar
and Human Rights Watch
and the rest of the human rights cottage industry were very
quiet. The
US Council on International Religious Freedom
was thunderously silent, too, which shows yet again that their
definition of 'religious freedom' is rather unique: It means the
freedom of American cults to propagate their bizarre ideas.
(source:
Ignore
this genocide, we're secular - By Rajeev Srinivasan -
rediff.com).
Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
Refer
to Genocide and
Ethnic Cleansing of Kashmiri Hindu Pandits - And the World
Remained Silent - Movie http://www.jaia-bharati.org/films/and-the-world.mpg
Top of
Page
Ram
Sethu - World Heritage Site
Floating
stones found in Rameshwaram
Do
stones float in water? The answer would be a certain no. But in
the island of Rameshwaram in Tamil Nadu, stones, it seems, do
float in water. Difficult to believe-but it's a reality.
Floating
stones of Rameshwaram have a mythological twist to it. According
to the Hindu mythological epic Ramayana, which was supposed to
have taken place over 17 million years ago, Lord Rama and his
army of monkeys used stones to build a bridge across the Palk
Strait to link Rameshwaram to Sri Lanka. Legend as well as
archaeological findings indicate the first signs of human
inhabitation in Sri Lanka date back to the primitive age and it
is assumed that the bridge's age is also
almost equivalent.

***
G.
Mohan Das,
a local historian and caretaker of the stones in the temple,
said that these stones could have been the kind used to build
the mythological bridge.
"The
history of these floating stones is that when Lord Rama made a
bridge to trek to Lanka to bring back his consort Sita, these
are the same stones used. But today's educated people do not
agree to it. They believe it is a coral which is in Australia,
Chennai, in small islands. We believe there is no difference in
these stones. Both the stones do not have air in them. The
composition is the same and it has 40 kinds of chemicals,"
he said.
Space
images taken by NASA reveal a series of rock outcrops in the
Palk Strait between India and Sri Lanka. Some historians say
these could be the part of the mythological bridge linking
Indian peninsula with Sri Lanka island.
***
NASA
Photos Reveal Bridge to Lanka
According to the Ramayana,
Lord Rama built a bridge to Lanka in
ancient times, and the new photos greatly intrigue Hindus.
Space
images taken by NASA reveal a mysterious ancient bridge in the
Palk Strait between India and Sri Lanka. The recently discovered
bridge currently named as Adam´s Bridge
is made of chain of
shoals, c.18 mi (30 km) long.
The bridge´s unique curvature
and composition by age reveals that it is man made. The legends
as well as Archeological studies reveal that the first signs of
human inhabitants in Sri Lanka date back to the a primitive age,
about 1,750,000 years ago and the bridge´s age is also almost
equivalent.
This information is a crucial
aspect for an insight into the mysterious legend called
Ramayana, which was supposed to have taken place in tredha yuga
(more than 1,700,000 years ago).
In this epic, there is a
mentioning about a bridge, which was built between Rameshwaram
(India) and Srilankan coast under the supervision of a dynamic
and invincible figure called Rama who is supposed to be the
incarnation of the supreme.
This information may not be of
much importance to the archeologists who are interested in
exploring the origins of man, but it is sure to open the
spiritual gates of the people of the world to have come to know
an ancient history linked to the Indian mythology.
According
to encyclopedia.com (rä´me)
or Rama's Bridge, chain of shoals, c.18 mi (30 km) long, in the
Palk Strait between India and Sri Lanka. At high tide it is
covered by c.4 ft (1.2 m) of water. A steamer ferry links
Rameswaram, India, with Mannar, Sri Lanka. According to Hindu
legend, the bridge was built to transport Rama, hero of the
Ramayana, to the island to rescue his wife from the demon king
Ravanna.
(source: http://www.indolink.com/Religion/r091702-130924.php
and Floating
stones found in Rameshwaram).
Watch video on Save
Ramsetu
Watch History
of Ayodhya - videogoogle.com.
- Hugh
Joseph writes:
-
- "I read the story
headlined above with great interest. This is a story of
major significance, as understanding its implications will
turn the entire world of Science and History on its head.
This bridge, according to accounts in the Ramayana and
the Srimad-Bhagavatam, was constructed in the age know
as Treta, over 2 million years ago.
-
- How
did the writers without super space-ranging satellites know
about the existence of this bridge? In these
ancient accounts, written over 5,000 years ago, we find
discussions of, among other things, space travel, inter
planetary travel, what we call UFOs and what we mistakenly
call ETs. This is not only the History of the planet Earth,
but also of this Universe, (a mediocre universe among many
millions of universes).
-
- Here one can also learn the
real undisguised and uncontaminated truth about God. Our
man-made religions are of little or no value when compared
to the stunning and breathtaking revelations found in the
pages of the Srimad-Bhagavatam, Ramayan, Bhagavad-gita, etc."
(source:
rense.com.
For more refer to chapter on Vimanas).
***
UPA
Government destroying India's Ancient Heritage?
Sir Monier Williams (1860-1888) an Indologist
and head of the Oxford's Boden Chair has identified Nalasetu as the
present day's
Adam's Bridge
(or what we call Ramar-Setu). Here is the description of the
term as found in the Monnier
Williams Sanskrit-English dictionary.
Nalasetu - setu m. 'Nala
bridge', the causeway constructed by the monkey Nala for Rāma
from the continent to Laṅkā (the modern
Adam's Bridge
)
***
The Ram
Sethu (Adam's bridge)
causeway must have been a major engineering feat for its thin
trace is still so clearly visible on the present day satellite
images (Joseph 2004). It has resisted the relentless erosion of
the sea for almost 2 million years and it attests to the great
engineering skills of the ancient Indian people. It is the
earliest and largest carbon-fibre reinforced civil engineering
structure known to man and should be protected as a world
heritage site.

Ram
Sethu - A great engineering skill of ancient Indian people.
Construction
of such a long bridge is a marvel in itself. Even the longest
bridges of today, dwarf against the Rama’s bridge which is
30Kms. It should be regarded as an eight wonder, much
significant than the Pyramids and all others, due to the
bridge’s age as well as it’s longevity which stays to this
day.
(image
source: madhoo.com).
***
A shallow
seismic survey could be used to detect the strong reflection
acoustic signal of lignite formed from decayed wood in the
framework of the causeway and this will guide later drilling
programs where the actual structure of the causeway could be
investigated.
(source:
Correlations
between Hindu Cosmology, Sea Level Curves and African -Asian
Hominid Dating -
By
Malcolm P.
R. Light).
***
Don't
Touch Rama's Bridge
Historical
facts

Map
showing Ram Setu
***
This
structure of close to 48 kilometers which is 3 to 30 feet deep
through its course and was well above the sea level till the
15th century. The oldest recorded map that mentions of Rama’s
Bridge is the Malabar Bowen Map of
Netherlands which is supposed to have been made in
1747, where the map mentions no name to the bridge but has
mention about a place Ramencoil. Further, the same place is
mentioned again in a 1788 Map of Hindoostan available in the Sarasvathi
Mahal Library, Thanjavur.
This
bridge has also been mentioned by James
Rennel (1742-1830), was the First Surveyor General of
the East India Company, in his earliest maps of
India
1788 as Rama’s Bridge. However, Rennel carefully and tactfully
renamed the bridge as
Adam’s Bridge
in his 1804 version of the map.

Ram
Sethu bridge.
On
the basis of Hindu scriptures, it is a widely held opinion that
Rama Setu is the formation to facilitate Vishnu Avatara Maryada
Purushottama Sri Rama and his army to cross the Palk Strait, as
described in detail in Valmiki Ramayana and other scriptures.
This
bridge has also been mentioned by James Rennel in his earliest
maps of
India
1788 as Rama’s Bridge. However, Rennel carefully and tactfully
renamed the bridge as
Adam’s Bridge
in his 1804 version of the map.
Watch
Video on Save
Ramsetu
***
Lying dormant under the waters, the bridge again came into light
after the NASA’s satellite
pictures released in the early 1990s created curiosity among
historians and excitement among Dharmics. Tales started going
around on the date of Rama’s Bridge starting from 1.75 million
years to 3500 years. NASA though accepted the authenticity of
the pictures, however refused to comment on the dating.
Few
dating attempts have been made after that. While
the Sri Lankan Archeological Department dates the bridge to
close to 2 million years old, Centre For Remote Sensing,
Bharathidasan
University
dated it close to 3500 years old.
Few
questions need to be asked:
1)
First and foremost question is that whether the said bridge is man-made or
a geological phenomenon.
2) If it were a geological
phenomenon it would assume a great importance for geologists and
scientists, making it very important for us to preserve it. It
would probably become the oldest natural rock formation in
India
and the biggest and oldest natural rock formation of the world
and the only one under the sea.
3) If it were man-made but not
built by Rama, still it is of extreme importance as an
archeological site. Probably it would classify as one of the
man-made wonders of the world and the oldest ever man-made
bridge to exist.
4) If archeologists and
theologists can prove it to be anywhere closer related to Shri
Rama, the importance would be the greatest, since it has a
religious connotation and probably the biggest find relating the
religion (especially Dharmic) and also of archeological
importance attached with religion.
Answers
to these questions would certainly direct us to only one
conclusion – the Rama’s Bridge should not be touched for
demolition. It might/might not be a religious site, but it is
certainly beyond even what we call as “precious”. It is a
natural phenomenon which has surprised scientists and geologists
by its sheer existence.
If Indian government tries demolishing Rama’s bridge for
enabling a shipping canal project, I might probably even think
that the government might take Qutab Minar off the place because
it disrupts traffic. I do not think the UPA
government would want themselves to be equated with
the Taliban who destroyed Bamiyan Budhas while the whole world
witnessed.
In
both cases of Taliban and UPA government the action is the same,
destroying of world heritage, while only the motive is
different.
(source: Don't
Touch Rama's Bridge - By Ashwin Kumar Iyer -
haindavakeralam.org).Refer
to UPA
planned destruction of Rama Sethu bridge
- By V Sundaram - newstodaynet.com. Refer
to SSCP
- A monument of fraud and infamy-III - By V Sundaram -
newstodaynet.com. Watch Video
on Save
Ramsetu
Top of
Page
India's
staggering heritage is in serious physical danger
India has one of
the world’s richest and most continuous of cultures. Since
millennia it has been one of the main contributors of
achievements in fields as diverse as medicine, mathematics, the
sciences, technology, philosophy, theology, literature,
linguistics, not to forget the graphic arts, music, dance and
innumerable other disciplines.
Unfortunately,
much of India's staggering heritage is in serious physical
danger. For instance, one of the main forms of Indian
heritage tradition is the palm-leaf book. Much of India's
written heritage has been passed on in the form of specially
treated palm leaves, with writing in ink
or engraving. According to a conservative estimate by the
Oriental Department of the German
National Library (Berlin),
there is a minimum of 1 million such
palm-leaf books, most of them unpublished. If we add
all the other Indian materials (printed books, paper
manuscripts, inscriptions, birch-bark texts, etc.), the Indian share of
the world's written heritage as of today comes up to roughly 20%
in terms of sheer quantity. It comes as a shock that this
awesome heritage is materially, physically falling apart at an
absolutely alarming rate. Paper, palm leaves and birch bark are
organic materials with a natural life span. German scientists
have determined that most Indian palm-leaf books will naturally
decay within the next 50 to 100 years. In about 150 years, there
will be practically none left whatsoever.
This is a rapid, gradual,
unstoppable process. Every day, a part
of it disappears forever. The process is accelerated
by floods, fires, wars, inadvertent loss. Already an immense
amount has been lost. For every Indian,
in fact for every human being, this must be a truly shocking
discovery.
(source: Preserving
India's Heritage For
more information refer to Palm
Leaf Manuscripts).
Top of
Page
Reporting Bias?
asks Francois Gautier
Why
is it that in this country, when for decades Saudi Arabia has
been funding madarsas which are openly preaching sedition and
are often dens of terrorism, the Indian Press finds nothing to
say? Why is it that when foreign Christian organisations are
pouring billions of dollars to deviously convert innocent
Harijans and tribals, teaching them to hate their own culture
and country, the media here keep quiet? And why is it
that when a few Hindu organisations collect funds for a harmless
programme like Ekal Vidyalaya - which are doing a wonderful job
for tribal children - they are attacked as fundamentalist by
most Indian publications?
Particularly targeted nowadays by some US-based Christian and
Muslim organisations, such as "The Campaign to Stop Funding
Hate", is the India Development
and Relief Fund (IDRF), a Maryland-based charity
which has denied allegations that it is raising millions of
dollars from non-resident Indians and American corporations and
using the money to fund a "hate campaign" in India. Yet, the Federation of
Indian American Christian Organisations of Northern America,
Teesta Setalvad and Javed Anand's Sabrang Communications, have
demanded a probe by the US Congress into IDRF and also asked the
IRS to blacklist it and withdraw its tax exemption status. Biju
Mathews, the president of the Federation of Indian
American Christian Organisations of Northern America, a very
little known group, has accused IDRF
This has infuriated
many Cisco employees, such as Shyam
Palleti, who wrote that "there is a malicious
campaign against work done by some Indians for the benefit of
Indian causes. All the money collected in Cisco went to right
causes, like the Orissa cyclone of 1999, and was accounted and
reported to IRS".
"The word 'duped' is insulting
to employees who build innovative networking products and
because of whom we can communicate with ease. I don't think the
articles published in the Indian Press cause anybody to reduce
their help to IDRF, but only incense them to think that their
own media is not India-friendly".
(source: Reporting
bias
-
By Francois
Gautier
- pioneer.com).
Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
Top of
Page
The Soul of India
program on PBS - just another sensational show?
The
PBS webpage had made defamatory
statements on their web site ‘Hindu Fundamentalist’ which
was later changed to Hindu nationalist. Wide Angle’ episode is
the best example of how this "Biased Western Media"
goes on with its mischievous reporting about Hindus and Indians
without a shred of evidence.
Use of derogatory
terms like "Monkey God
Brigade" - Hanuman.
In 1992 Hindu activists destroy Ayodhya mosque".
It was not a mosque. It was a Ostructure
- because nobody was using it.
The program has led to great
anger amongst viewers for its simplistic portrayal of the
Gujarat tragedy.
Many
people have canceled their subscriptions to the PBS.
Their argument is that this documentary presents a one-sided,
leftist-colonialist view of the events.
The
leftist-colonialist view has been fostered by consultants who
know little of real India, an area of much layered
complexity across time and space. These consultants look at
India from a Eurocentric position,
using categories which confound and confuse.
Gujarat
Facts - Fifty Eight Hindus, mostly women and children
were burnt to death by a mob of 2000 fanatic Muslims at Godhra,
about 200 miles from Ahmadabad in Gujarat. For
24 hours the world did not react because they were Hindus,
the inevitable victim of Islamic terrorism in India. It was only
after Gujarat started burning that the so called human rights
activists started crying. Total death toll in the aftermath of
Godhra was around 850. About half of this number comprises
Hindus, but this fact is overlooked because it does not fit into
the disinformation campaign of the biased media. There
are/were about 30,000 Hindu refugees in the aftermath of the
Gujarat riots. Their plight is not mentioned.
Gujarat state has seen communal
clashes earlier too like the one in 1992. The
world failed to take notice when Kashmir was ethnically cleansed
of its five hundred thousand Hindus who are living in camps at
present after losing about 5000 members of their community to
various forms of barbarism.
(source: The
Soul of India Debate - By Subhash Kak -
sulekha.com and Gujarat
Facts - By P N Razdan -Indiacause.com).
Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com. Watch History
of Ayodhya - videogoogle.com. PBS/Wide
Angle aired a documentary on Sept 19 2002 titled
"Soul of India".
Top of
Page
Indian Science and Technology in the
18th Century
The
Process of Making Ice in the East Indies - By Sir Robert Barker
published in 1775
Following is the method that was used to make ice in India as
it was performed at Allahabad and Calcutta. On a large open
plain, 3 or 4 excavations were made, each about 30 feet square
and two deep; the bottoms of which were strewed about eight
inches or a foot thick with sugar-cane, or the stems of the
large Indian corn dried. Upon this bed were placed in rows, near
to each other, a number of small shallow, earthen pans for
containing the water intended to be frozen. These are unglazed,
scarce a quarter of an inch thick, about an inch and a quarter
in depth, and made of an earth so porous, that it was visible,
from the exterior part of the pans, the water had penetrated the
whole substance. Towards the dusk of the evening, they were
filled with soft water, which had been boiled, and then left in
the afore-related situation. The ice-makers attended the pits
usually before the sun was above the horizon, and collected in
baskets what was frozen, by pouring the whole contents of the
pans into them, and thereby retaining the ice, which was daily
conveyed to the grand receptacle or place of preservation,
prepared generally on some high dry situation, by sinking a pit
of fourteen or fifteen feet deep, lined first with straw, and
then with a coarse king of blanketing, where it is beat down
with rammers, till at length its own accumulated cold again
freezes and forms one solid mass. The mouth of the pit is well
secured from the exterior air with straw and blankets, in the
manner of the lining, and a thatched roof is thrown over the
whole.

Ice making in India. It was made in open pans.
Refer
to chapter on Hindu Culture.
***
The spongy nature of the sugar-canes, or stems of the Indian
corn, appears well calculated to give a passage under the pans
to the cold air; which, acting on the exterior parts of the
vessels, may carry off by evaporating a proportion of the heat.
The porous substance of the vessels seems equally well qualified
for the admission of the cold air internally; and their
situation being full of a foot beneath the plane of the ground,
prevents the surface of the water from being ruffled by any
small current of air, and thereby preserves the congealed
particles from disunion. Boiling the water is esteemed a
necessary preparative to this method of congelation.
In effecting which there is also an established mode of
proceeding; the sherbets, creams, or whatever other fluids are
intended to be frozen, are confined in thin silver cups of a
conical form, containing about a pint, with their covers well
luted on with paste, and placed in a large vessel filled with
ice, salt-petre, and common salt, of the two the last an equal
quantity, and a little water to dissolve the ice and combine the
whole. This composition presently freezes the contents of the
cups to the same consistency of our ice creams, etc. in Europe;
but plain water will become so hard as to require a mallet and
knife to break it. The promising advantages of such a discovery
could alone induce the Asiatic to make an attempt of profiting
by so a very short a duration of cold during the night in these
months, and by a well-timed and critical contrivance of securing
this momentary degree of cold, they have procured to themselves
a comfortable refreshment as a recompence, to alleviate, in some
degree, the intense heats of the summer season, which, in some
parts of India, would be scarce supportable, but by the
assistance of this and many other inventions.
(source: Indian Science and
Technology in the 18th Century - By Dharampal p.
169-173).
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Page
Ancient
India vs. Cultured (?) Europe
When merchants
sailing from India brought delicious spices, aromatic perfumes,
incense, fine silk, precious stones set in delicate and rare
jewelry, complex craftsmanship of ivory, muslin, and many other
goods never seen before by Europeans, the riches and mystique of
the land captivated them. The stories told by many navigators
about that land of wonder, where the palaces were built of
varieties of marble rather than rush stone, decorated with
beautiful sculptures and wooden inlay, made the Queen of Spain
so covetous that she provided Columbus with all necessities for
his famous journey. Columbus had heard of India's riches through
the writings of Marco Polo. Polo had written that India
"was the richest and noblest country of the
world."
Europe, after
Gutenberg's invention of the printing press, wasted no time in
announcing the discovery of the New World. It was at this time
that European historians began to present to the rest of the
world that their land was the center of culture and
civilization. In comparison to Indian society, however, the
Europeans were rather crude. The
ominous age of the Inquisition, with its persecution and
fanaticism, the use of mechanical devices to insure the
"chastity" of its women, the exploitation of the
serfs, and self-destructive habits, such as indiscriminate
eating and alcoholism within the higher classes, are all
evidence of this.
The original Palace
of Versailles in Paris,
although certainly a unique architectural creation requiring
genius, was built without a single
bathroom. Louis XIV
(1638-1715) (the Sun King) and
his court are said to have evacuated behind curtains, cleaning
themselves with the same. The king, was in the habit
of substituting soap with Indian perfume and awaited until his
35th birthday before he took his first complete bath.
While Europe
was still uncivilized, Indian culture, as well as American
culture, was highly advanced. When Europeans were still cave
dwellers and nomads wandering from place to place subsisting
through hunting, some American people were plowing fields and
baking bread and dressing in cotton, the seeds for which came
from India. (Please refer to chapter - India
on Pacific Waves?). The subtlety of Indian
society, both eastern and western, marks its superiority to
Europe. It was a subtlety of spiritual outlook that Europeans
failed to appreciate.
The Industrial
Revolution of Europe was prompted by India's cotton, which
competed with European wool. Later when the popularity of cotton
products imported from India increased, the Europeans began to
manufacture cotton in mills. Thus it was even an Indian resource
that prompted Europe's claim to fame - the beginning of modern
technology.
(source: Ancient
Wisdom for Modern Ignorance - By Swami B V Tripurari p.
35-37). For more refer to
chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred Angkor
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Page
Denigration of Hinduism in American Academia
The so called current
Indologists have fared no better than their earlier British counterparts. They have continued the same tradition of
denigrating Hindu traditions and religion.
Wendy
Doniger - holds
doctorates from Harvard and Oxford Universities. She is Mircea
Eliade Professor
of History of Religions in the Divinity School
part of RISA
(Religion in South Asia) author of several books, including Siva:
The Erotic Ascetic; Hindu Myths; The Origins of Evil in Hindu
Mythology; Textual Sources for the Study of Religion; and
Dreams, Illusion, and Other Realities, said, in a
lecture titled The Complicity of God in the Destruction of
the Human Race.
She
has said: "The Bhagavad Gita is not as nice a book as some
Americans think," "The Gita is a dishonest book;
it justifies war," Wendy Doniger told the audience of 150,
and later acknowledged: "I'm a pacifist. I don't believe in
'good' wars."
“The Bhagavad
Gita is not as nice a book as some Americans think…Throughout
the Mahabharata ... Krishna goads human beings into all sorts of
murderous and self-destructive behaviors such as war.... The
Gita is a dishonest book …”
--
Wendy Doniger, Professor of History of Religions, University of
Chicago as quoted in Philadelphia Inquirer, 19 November, 1999.
(source:
Risa
Lila: 1: Wendy's Child Syndrome - By Rajiv Malhotra -
sulekha.com).
Jeffrey
John Kripal, student of Wendy Doniger, and a regular
Hindu
bashing Indologists, author of several books, including the
infamous book, Kali's
Child writes:
"Sri
Ramakrishna, the 19th century Hindu saint,
has been declared by these scholars
(?) as being a sexually-abused homosexual, and it has become
“academically established” by Wendy Doniger's students that
Ramakrishna was a child molester, and had also forced homosexual
activities upon Swami Vivekananda."
(For more on the
Jeffrey Kripal and his insinuating translations, refer to Kali's
Child: Psychological And Hermeneutical Problems - By Prof.
Sommath Bhattacharya - sulekha.com).
Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
The Hindu
Goddess is described by these scholars as a sex
maniac, with a variety of pathological conditions. Other conclusions by these
well-placed scholars include: Ganesha's
trunk symbolizes a “limp phallus”; his broken tusk is a
symbol for the castration-complex of the Hindu male; his large
belly is a proof of the Hindu male's enormous appetite for sex. Shiva,
is interpreted as a womanizer, who encourages ritual rape,
prostitution and murder, and his worship is linked to violence
and destruction. Hindus are being profiled by
these scholars, potentially setting them up for denial of the
same human rights as the “civilized West.” For instance,
anthropologists have concluded that nursing Hindu mothers do not
bond with their babies the way white women do, that Hindus lack
a sense of individuality because of their inability to perceive
separation in space or time, and that the Mahabharata is best
seen as Krishna's Genocide.
Sarah
Caldwell - Recently, Caldwell has published another book titled, Oh
Terrifying Mother: Sexuality, Violence and Worship of the Mother
Kali. Caldwell supports Jeff Kripal's work, but
she adds another important dimension to it: she interprets all
complaints from the Hindu community as a sign of psychological
disorder of the Hindu community, something that she strongly
feels needs to be psychoanalyzed, in order to find out what is
wrong with Hindu people.
Dr. Antonio T. de Nicolas Professor
Emeritus of Philosophy SUNY, at Stony Brook, N.Y.
“Nothing of what
RISA scholars claim of yoga or "Hindu Religion" has
much to do with Indic texts and the practice of religion in
India. Notice also, that you are dealing mostly with the
University of Chicago. My personal experience with them in
philosophy is as bad as yours in religion. According to these
scholars, Indic texts have no rationality, they are mythical and
therefore not historical and therefore false or irrational.
I was told that it was impossible for a Hindu, mythic
text to be philosophical for it was not historical and therefore
irrational. My answer is that to proclaim one single rationality
as rational is sheer irrationality and conceptual imperialism.”
(source:
Risa
Lila: 1: Wendy's Child Syndrome - By Rajiv Malhotra -
sulekha.com).
Rajeev
Srinivasan points out: "In
particular, he pointed out that the den-mother of Indology
studies, Wendy Doniger (formerly O'Flaherty) of the University
of Chicago and her band of acolytes have a strangle-hold on the
academic representation of Hinduism. Alarmingly, they
also have a supremely Orientalist and dismissive, unabashedly
racist, attitude towards Hinduism. And they do not agree that
those in the tradition, the believers, could possibly have a
valid opinion on said representation."
(source:
Fear
of Engineering - By Rajeev Srinivasan - rediff.com).
Refer to chapter on Aryan
Invasion Theory and First
Indologists.
Question to Ponder? Why does the western culture
systematically portray Hinduism and India in these terms? Is this a case of a
warped world views
or Eurocentrism? It
is the misrepresentation
of Hinduism that is going on in elite Western universities under
the guise of "scholarly" work.... where great Hindu
saints like Paramhans Ramakrishna are made out to be homosexual,
homoerotic Tantrikas and Hindu epics are reduced to pornography.
This is not an isolated phenomenon,
there is a fundamental flaw in the way the West approaches the
study of India and Hinduism.
(For
more on gods and goddess please refer to chapter on Symbolism
in Hinduism). For
more refer to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor
Top of
Page
Phallus
worship; prepuce worship
In
an undergraduate textbook authored by Paul
Courtright,
author of Ganesa:
Lord of Obstacles, Lord of Beginnings,
a Professor of Indian
Religions at Emory University, Ganesha's stories and rituals are
depicted from various perspectives including the following
psychoanalysis. "From
a psychoanalytic perspective, there is meaning in the selection
of the elephant head. Its trunk is the displaced phallus, a
caricature of Siva's linga. It poses no threat because it
is too
large, flaccid, and in the wrong place to
be useful for sexual purposes. ... So Ganesa takes on the
attributes
of his father but in an inverted form, with an
exaggerated limp
phallus-ascetic and benign - whereas Siva's is hard,
erotic, and
destructive."
It
is amazing that while Western Indologists like Courtright have
written volumes on the "Cult of Phallus Worship" in
the Indian tradition, the same academics scrupulously avoid any
reference to a similar cult and practice in their own religious
tradition.
(For
more on gods and goddess please refer to chapter on Symbolism
in Hinduism). Watch An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
The
Holy Prepuce of Jesus
Holy
relics are an under-reported aspect of Christian history.
In
the diocese of Chartres, France, in the abbey church of Coulombs
was said to reside the relic of the foreskin of Jesus. It was said that the Sacred
Relic gave off a sweet perfume which, when whiffed, made sterile
woman fertile and helped pregnant women with easy
delivery.
The Holy Prepuce, not
surprisingly, became much in demand. The problem was, churches
all over Europe claimed to possess it.
With so many Holy Prepuces clamoring for respectability, the
church fathers finally had to question the authenticity of them
all. Some argued that Christ must have taken his foreskin with
him. A theological debate ensued: "Has Christ a foreskin in
Heaven, or has He not?" Another debate followed: "Was
the foreskin necessary or not?" A consensus emerged that
the prepuce was no more necessary than the hair that had been
cut from Jesus' head, or his nails or umbilical cord.
On March 5, 1997,
London Channel 4's arts program, "Without
Walls," presented a show of interest to the
purposes of this Board. It was an account of British newspaper
columnist Miles Kington's trip to Italy in search of the Holy
Foreskin. This peculiar relic, or relics as it were, was the object of
great veneration in Voltaire's time. Yet civilized Christians in
Voltaire's day carried the holy foreskin in processions and paid
sacred homage to it!" Almost equally lucrative was the
prepuce of Jesus Christ, which was carried in a glass case at
the head of processions. Its value as a money getter never
diminished.
At least 12 examples of "Jesus' foreskin" were
revered as holy relics at different churches. One Parisian
church had the "Virgin Mary's vaginal lips" enshrined.
All of these relics were brought back to Europe by the
Crusaders. The Church attempted
to legitimize open worship of the phallus by replacing the penis
of Priapus and substituting the supposed foreskin of Jesus
- the only part of his body which did not ascend to
heaven. The foreskins still
extant, of the Saviour, are reckoned to be twelve in number. One
was in the possession of the Monks of Loulombs; another at the
Abbey of Charroux; a third at Hildesheim, in Germany; a fourth
at Rome, in the Church of St jean-de-Latran; a fifth at Antwerp;
a sixth at Puy-en-Velay, in the Church of Notre Dame, etc.
(source:
The
Holy Foreskin,
The
foreskin of Christ and
Venerations
of Foreskins).
For some strange reason,
however, the Vatican grew less and less supportive of relics,
particularly foreskins. In 1900 the Vatican suggested that
foreskins encouraged "irreverent curiosity" and that,
somehow, this was a bad thing. Generally the foreskin fever died
down with the lack of official encouragement, although it didn't
disappear entirely. One
church in Italy kept up the worship right through the 1980s - and each year the relic
was exposed to the adoring crowds during the Feast
of the Circumcision.
But
in 1983, thieves broke in the stole the 300 year-old
jewel-encrusted reliquary and the holy flesh it contained.
Maybe
Steven Speilberg should look upon this as a movie idea: Indiana
Jones and the Quest for the Holy Foreskin!
(source:
Christian
relics - atheismabout.com).
Top of
Page
Ayodhya's
2000 year-old connection with South Korea?
A
princess of Ayodhya became queen
of the Kaya kingdom 2000 years ago. Do
you know that Ayodhya has a 2000-year-old connection with South
Korea?
A princess of Ayodhya sailed to the Kaya kingdom (now Kimhae
city) in Korea and married the ruler of the place, King
Kim
Suro.
And the Koreans, who discovered the connections with Ayodhya,
are over the moon about it.
The
Korean legend of the Indian princess is narrated in Samguk
Yusa, a Korean text written by a monk, Iryon (1206
AD-1289 AD). In the text, the princess says she is a 16-year-old
princess of Ayuta in India,
and that her family name is Ho and her name, Hwang-Ok (yellow
jade in Korean). The princess narrates the circumstances leading
to her marriage to king Suro thus: "In May this year, my
father and mother said, ÔWe had a dream last night, in which we
saw a God who said, ÔI have sent down Suro to be king of Kaya.
Suro is a holy man, and is not yet married. So send your
daughter to become his queen'. Then he ascended to heaven. My
daughter, bid farewell to your parents and go."
Kaya
was a city-state located on the banks of the Naktong river. In
the sixth century, it was absorbed into the Shilla kingdom of
Korea.
It was the Hwang-Ok legend that prompted Kim Jong-Pil to invite
Mishra for the memorial ceremony. The letter of invitation,
dated March 26, 1999, read thus: "Being the 72nd-generation
descendent of king Suro of the Kaya kingdom, I would like to
invite descendants of the Ayodhya royal family to the memorial
ceremony for king Kim Suro to be held this spring." The
Koreans regard Mishra as the descendent of Hwang-Ok because his
family, like the Kaya royal family, has two fishes as the
insignia.
Mishra finds the Korean version difficult to believe. His family
history is only 300 years old, and it is traced back to Sadanand
Pathak, a landlord in Bhojpur, Bihar. Pathak's son Gopal Ram
migrated to Ayodhya, and Mishra is his 11th-generation
descendent.
The Koreans, who believe that Hwang-Ok was the ancestor of
Mishra's family, are not impressed by Mishra's knowledge of his
family history. Mishra is not complaining. "It will lead to
the progress of Ayodhya and I am happy," he said. "The
fact that it's associated to our family makes it special."
For Ayodhya, the developments could
well herald a change in focus. From Mandir-Masjid to the Land of
the Morning Calm.
(source:
Korean
Connection - By Ajay
Uprety). Watch History
of Ayodhya - videogoogle.com. For
more refer to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor
Korean memorial to Indian princess
http://newsvote.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/asia-pacific/newsid_1205000/1205728.stm
In the
northern Indian city of Ayodhya, a visiting Korean delegation
has inaugurated a memorial to their royal ancestor, Queen Huh. More than
a-hundred historians and government representatives, including
the North Korean ambassador to India, unveiled the memorial on
the west bank of the River Saryu. Korean historians believe that
Queen Huh was a princess of an ancient kingdom in Ayodhya. She went to
Korea some two-thousand years ago and started the Karak dynasty
by marrying a local king, Suro. Today, the historians say, Queen
Huh's descendants number more than six-million, including the
South Korean president - Kim Dae Jung. According to a history book
written in the 11th century in Korean language,
“The History of Three Kingdoms”, the India-Korea
relationship started in 48 AD when a princess from Ayodhya,
Queen Hur Hwang-ho went to Korea and married King Suro
Kim.
http://meadev.nic.in/foreign/korea.htm
http://www.the-week.com/20feb27/events4.htm
A Princess from Ayodhya
India’s early contacts with
Korea date back more than 2000 years. Two thousand years ago, a
16 year old princess from Ayodhya, accompanied by her brother,
sailed from India for Korea. We only know her by her Korean
name, Huh Wang-Ock. There she wed King Kim Suro, founder of the
ancient Korean kingdom of Karack. The King himself received her
upon her arrival, and later built a temple at the place where
they had first met. She is said to have died at the grand old
age of 189. Her story is narrated in the ancient Korean history
books, "Samkuksaki" and "Samkukyusa".
Her tomb is located in Kimhae and
there is a stone pagoda in front of the tomb. The pagoda is
built with stones, which the princess is said to have brought
with her from Ayodhya. They have engravings and red patterns.
They are believed to have a mysterious power to calm stormy
seas. The Kimhae
kingdom's influence is still felt in modern-day South Korea.
Kimhae Kims and Kimhae Huhs trace their origins to this ancient
kingdom and Korea's current President Kim Dae Jung and Prime
Minister Jong Pil Kim are Kimhae Kims.
In February, 2000, Kimhae Mayor
Song Eun-Bok led a delegation to Ayodhya. The delegation
proposed to develop Ayodhya as a sister city of Kimhae and there
are plans to set up a memorial for Queen Huh. Note:
Ayodhya is the modern Faizabad in Uttar Pradesh. It was the
capital of the kingdom of Lord Ram, the seventh incarnation of
Lord Vishnu.
References: Times of
India. 15
May 2000, India Abroad 14 May 2000.
http://www.geocities.com/arunsinha2000/doc/indias_contacts_with_korea.html
http://www.hinduunity.org/articles/politics/koreaseeksties.html
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Page
Ancient
Arabs regard for Hindustan
Another
indifference to the expansion of Islam into India may well have
been the approval of Indian faith by the Prophet
himself, who is reported to have once said: "I get cool
breezes from the side of Hind."
In Sahih
Muslim, Abu Horaira
says that the Prophet mentioned certain rivers as belonging to
heaven and one of them was a river of India. Two Indians,
Sarmanak and Ratan, who collected the Prophet's sayings, Al
Rataniyab, are reported to have visited Arabia during
his time. Many Islamic traditions support the high standing of
Indian culture with the Arabs: Ibni Ali
Hatim relates on Ali's authority that the Valley of
Hind where Adam descended from Heaven, and the Valley of Mecca,
which had the tradition of Abraham, were the best valleys in the
world."
(source: Hindu
Muslim Cultural Accord - By Syed Mahmud p. 18).
Certain words occurring
in the Koran, such as tooba, sundas, and ablai, are of Sanskrit
origin. A common legend suggests that after the
Deluge some of Noah's sons settled in India. A son of Adam,
Shees (Seth in the biblical form), was born in India and is now
said to be buried in Ayodhya. The fourth
Caliph is reported to have said: "The land where
books were first written and from where wisdom and knowledge
sprang is India."
Caliph
Umar was opposed to attacking India, even when he was
told that "Indian rivers are pearls, her mountains rubies,
her trees perfumes," for he regarded India as a country of
complete freedom of thought and belief where Muslims and others
were free to practice their faith." Indeed, he rebuked
Usman Sakifi for dispatching a military expedition.
(source: India
and World Civilization - By D. P. Singhal p.
161-162).
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Page
Plato was more
of a Hindu than a Greek
Plato was more of a Hindu than a
Greek, because of all nations, the Greeks were the least
ascetic. Professor Edward Howard Griggs
(1968-1951), in his lecture on the "Philosophy of
Plato" before the Vedanta Society of New York also admitted
this:
"Plato's belief of attaining
true knowledge, was preeminently Oriental and non-Greek."
Moreover, if we study Plato carefully, comparing his ideas with
those of the Upanishads and other Vedic writings, we find that
his well-known figure of the man chained in the cave is merely
an allegorical presentation of the Vedantic doctrine of Maya,
that the phenomenal world is like a dream; while his other
figure of the chariot was favorable theme of the Vedic writers
who lived centuries before Plato. In the Katha
Upanishad, for instance, we read: "This body may
be compared to a chariot, intellect to the charioteer, mind to
the reins, the five senses to the horses, whose path is the
object of senses."
Sir
William Jones, the first eminent Sanskrit scholar
among the English, confirming the fact, writes that "it is
impossible to read the Vedanta, or the many fine compositions in
illustration of it, without believing that Pythagoras and Plato
derived their sublime theories from the same fountain with the
Indian sages."
Max
Muller and other Oriental scholars maintain that the
logic of Aristotle was perhaps a Greek presentation of the Hindu
logic. Professor Edward
Washburn
Hopkins (1857-1932) writes, in his The
Religions of
India, that Thales and Parmenides were both
anticipated by the sages of India, while the Eleatic School
appears merely a reflection of the Upanishads. He even suggests
that the doctrines propounded by Anaximander and Heraclitus
might not have been known first in Greece.
(source: India
And Her People - By Swami Abhedananda p. 223-226). For
more refer to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor
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Page
India
and her adaptability
India, however, in spite of its great resources and
advantageous geographical position, was a monument to human
adaptability and endeavor. Only in India did mankind conquer the
tropics. The lowlands of India are hot and humid. On the central
plain, eight months of the year are rainy and hot, the remaining
period pleasant and dry. The Deccan is humid and very warm. The
tropical climate of India has always impressed and confounded
European visitors. Francis Bernier,
in the 17th century, declared, “The sun is but just
rising, yet the heat is insupportable. There is not a cloud to be
seen nor a breath of air to be felt. My horses are exhausted; they
have not seen a blade of grass since we quitted Lahore. The whole
of my face, my feet, and my hands are flayed. My body too is
entirely covered with small red blisters, which prick like
needles. I feel as if I should expire before night.”
The Indian people, on the other
hand, glorified the exuberant sunlight in which they lived.
This spirit of victory felt by the sun-browned conquerors of the
tropics seems to find expression in the Vedic Prayer of the Sun: “O
Sun! fire is born of you, and from you the Gods derive their
splendor; You are the eye of the world and the light of it. Glory
to Brahma, Supreme Being!”
(source:
India
and British Imperialism - By Gorham D. Sanderson p.
13).
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Page
Psychological
colonization
The English speaking elite, by
contrast, and its mediatic and academic segments in particular,
are the cultural heirs of the colonial system and consequently
the enemies of Hindu Revivalism.
One aspect of psychological
colonization is the demonization of native
civilization:
"The Indian press, like most of its Third World
counterparts, put a premium on all that is modern and condemns
as degenerate all that is traditional....In order to put the
stamp of legitimacy on modernization, we have to believe that
the traditional civilization was inhuman." Instilling guilt
about the "evils of Hindu society" is indeed a
favorite weapon of the secularist elite.
Educated Hindus are confident
that a confrontation with rational thought will cost Hinduism
only some deadwood, some superstitious accretions, but that the
core of Hinduism is capable of surviving the exposure to the
light of reason. As Shrikant Talgeri writes: "Hindus should
adopt as open an attitude to pantha-chikitsa ("diagnosis of
sects") of Hinduism as to that of Islam and Christianity:
there is nothing to fear, since Hinduism in its essence will
shine out white and pure in comparison with Islam and
Christianity in their essence. It will only be cleansed of
impurities which stand on its own way."
Many are openly hostile
to Hindu
revivalism, including, Praful Bidwai,
a Marxist scholar at the
Nehru Memorial Library, whose assessment of Hindu revivalism,
is: "utterly despicable, base and crass."
Hindu
revivalism is a broad trend in the 19th and 20th century India
which seeks to revitalize Hinduism after a millennium of
political, ideological and psychological subjection to Islamic
and Western hegemony.
(source: Decolonising
The Hindu Mind - Ideological Development of Hindu Revivalism - By Koenraad
Elst p.48-588). For more
refer to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor. Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
Top of
Page
Exhibition of
Hindu Bronzes Opens in Washington D.C.
In
an exhibit billed as "The Sensuous and the Sacred,"
the Smithsonian Institution
will introduce the American public to Chola
bronzes. The show, opening Sunday at the Arthur M.
Sackler Gallery, includes a 28-inch bronze statue of
Manikkavachakar, a poet-saint of South India who lived 1,200
years ago. This is the first time an exhibit devoted to Chola
bronzes has been assembled in the United States, said guest
curator Vidya Dehejia, professor of art history at Columbia
University. Icons of Siva, Parvati and other Hindu Gods are
included in the statues on display that were made by unknown
sculptors during the Chola Dynasty in South India.
The Chola kings ruled the
southeastern area of India, now known as Tamil Nadu, from 850 to
1300 CE. "For the artist, and also for the viewer, the
external beauty of form is almost a condition for inner
spiritual beauty," said Vidya. "The two have to go
hand in hand." Artists molded the figures in beeswax and
surrounded it with clay that took the form of the wax. Heated
from outside, the wax melted, was poured out and replaced with
molten bronze. A video at the exhibit will show how this
"lost wax" process is used today to create works of
art in India. Additionally, live demonstrations will be
scheduled. After the exhibit closes in Washington on March 9, it
will travel to the Dallas Museum of Art, April 4 to June 15, and
to the Cleveland Museum of Art, July 6 to September 14.
HPI adds: Some
Hindus consider the title of this exhibit, "The Sensuous
and the Sacred," as an unfortunate description of these
bronzes, which are regarded by Hindus as sacred and intended for
temples. The title seems intended to increase attendance at the
exhibit by implying an element of sexuality not present in the
images.
(source: Hindu
Press International). For more information refer
to Bronze
Beauties - By Paul Richard). For
more refer to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor
Top of
Page
UK
Upgrades Ayurveda Medicine
UNITED
KINGDOM, September 26, 2002: The United Kingdom has agreed to
upgrade Ayurveda
from single drugs category three to one, thus accepting its
scientific base. The UK government has also set up a Herbal
Medicines Regulatory Working Group to consider the possibility
of suggesting enhancement of law to regulate drugs and practice
in herbal medicines, including Ayurveda, a government release
said here Wednesday. British authorities have worked out a
tentative curricula of 2,560 hours, in which Ayurveda has been
allotted 1,150 hours. However, this is inadequate and, in the
given situation, only two options remained -- either to be left
out of the herbal medicine regulation course or have a foothold
with a dominant Ayurveda content, it said. To promote Ayurveda
at the international level, the Department of Indian Systems of
Medicine and Homeopathy forwarded to the British authorities a
core curricula covering 1,700 hours of teaching of Ayurveda. The
Indian Government is also trying to get a recognition for the
five-and-half year Ayurveda BAMS course and registration of
India-qualified physicians in the UK.
(source: UK
Upgrades Ayurveda Medicine - sify.com).
Top of
Page
Harvesting
raindrops and ancient wisdom
In India,
environmentalists have launched a campaign to
revive an ancient water conservation method to meet
growing scarcities of this crucial resource.
It's
called rainwater harvesting, or as conservationists term it
"catching the raindrops."
For
centuries, it was a popular system in South Asia where the
annual rainfall comes in intense spells of just 100 hours every
year. To save this precious resource, villages, forts and
palaces built networks of tanks and wells that stored virtually
every drop.
The system
is simple, slope the land towards a well or a pit, pave the
surrounding area, and capture rain that would otherwise have
been lost. But water harvesting was mostly forgotten as the
government began to harness rivers to build large dams, provided
piped water to cities, and irrigation facilities to villages.
However, the
country's steadily-growing population made it impossible to keep
pace with demand. Rivers and lakes began to shrink. In the hot
summer season, water supplies to cities and villages became a
trickle. In rural areas, women started walking miles for a pot
of water. In urban areas, people began to tap underground water.
Some
years ago, environmentalists from a public policy institute, The
Center for Science and Environment, undertook a survey to study
the impact of growing water shortages and drought that had hit
parts of the country. Eklavya Prasad from the center says
experts came up with an unusual answer, tap
into the wisdom of ancient civilizations to mitigate
critical water shortages.
Savita
Gokhale is one of several volunteers at the Center for Science
and Environment promoting the system. She said water harvesting
is vital for cities where paved surfaces prevent rainwater from
percolating into the ground.
"It
helps you to replenish the groundwater. And groundwater storing
is the safest and the most economical way of storing it. Once
you are storing it in the ground, it is not lost due to
evaporation, it is not contaminated," Ms. Gokhale said.
The campaign to harvest rainwater is picking up
gradually in several Indian cities. Non-government organizations
are spreading awareness in villages. The federal government is
installing the system on new government buildings, including the
stately presidential palace in New Delhi. Several state
governments are offering city residents incentives to adopt the
system. Environmentalists
say the need for traditional water storage systems will be
highlighted this year when monsoon rains have been deficient in
large parts of the country, and millions of people across India
are battling acute water scarcities.
(source: voanews.com).
For
more refer to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor
Top of
Page
Where there's no
will to reform - there's extinction
Let's look at Biju Mathews --
promptly given so much space by Rediff's Josy Joseph.
(Question: Why hasn't Joseph investigated Evangelical groups
that collect money in the name of charity and spend it on
printing tracts to convert Hindus...?) Mathews is a fixed
feature in pinkodom, often writing for puke-sheets like "Rethinking
Marxism" and with a presence on every pinko
website. So of course, the garden variety Hindu
"secularist" has accepted him as an atheist/secularist
with nothing but the good of oppressed humanity in his noble
heart...
The Federation of Indian American
Christian Organisations of Northern America has demanded a probe
by the US Congress into IDRF and also asked the IRS to blacklist
it and withdraw its tax exemption status. Meaning, World Vision,
Southern Baptist, Seventh Day Adventists, and hundreds
of other Christian missionary groups which seek to obliterate
Hinduism from India can keep funding their nefarious activities
here -- but IDRF can do nothing to offset it.
And guess who's the prime sponsor
of the report: Teesta and Javed Anand's Sabrang Communications,
of course! Take a look at their India-Pakistan friendship
forum's logo on the Aman
page: Observe the relative scaling of the two countries. Note
the drawing of India -- with the State of Jammu & Kashmir
lopped off. Not pushing towards Balkanisation...?
According to Mathews, IDRF has
raised funds for Bangladeshi Hindu
victims of Muslim violence, Kashmiri Hindu victims of
Islamic terrorism, and relief efforts following the Islamic
terrorist attacks in the US. Er...
what's evil about that? Does raising money for the victims of
Islamist crimes amount to spreading hatred...?
(source: Where
there's no will to reform, there's extinction - By Varsha
Bhosle - rediff.com). For
more read Attack
on IDRF: Little Method to Their Madness - By Prof.
Beloo Mehra - sulekha.com).
Top of
Page
Ayurveda
offers hope to Chernobyl victims
There is a new buzz in Russia these
days, and it is Ayurveda. 16 years after the worst nuclear
disaster, in Chernobyl, now in the Ukraine, hundreds of its
victims are being treated by India's biggest Ayurved company, the
Arya Vaidya Sala at Kottakal in Kerala. The ayurvedic preparations
AVS doctors use on the radiation fallout victims have been so
effective that the Russian government has recognized ayurveda as a
medical science.
Two years ago, AVS's work among the
victims led the Russian government to recognize Ayurveda as a
medical science. The Russian government signed a memorandum of
understanding with India's health ministry to promote Ayurveda
clinics and textbooks across the Russian Federation.
(source: India
Abroad - July 5, 2002 p. 26).
Top of
Page
Anti-Conversion
law - By Hilda Raja
If
the Tamil Nadu CM showed an inexplicable hurry in ushering in such
a law the Dalit organisations are exposing their eagerness to use
this as a tool to gain political mileage and the Minority church
leaders are revealing their heartburns, because for them their
`targets' for each year will be affected - this
will affect the flow of funds too.
What
is puzzling is why the church leaders while saying that they do
not indulge in forced conversions are so worked up and demand the
revocation of the law?
Sad
reality
So
when conversion from one faith to another is being discussed I
fail to understand how it can be an escape route to equality and
dignity. No religion including Hinduism
sanctions oppression and discrimination. The Dalit
leader Ambedkar opted for Buddhism because he found Christian
religion too practised discrimination and Dalits were oppressed
within its fold. So to state that in
Christian churches they find dignity is far from truth and that
makes it a misleading inducement - to promise equality and then
deny them that.
It
is a sad reality that the Dalits come in handy for exploitation
in every field and in any cause by the politicians, the church
leaders and those who are involved in the business of conversion
to suit their own vested interest. The protest against the law
which prohibits forced conversions is a telling example. For
one thing the Christian churches do practise discrimination even
in death, and continue to bury the Dalits in separate cemeteries
even today.
(source:
Anti-Conversion
law - By Hilda Raja
The Hindu December 3
'02). For
more refer to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor
Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
Top of
Page
Ramayana
in Poland
The first Polish contact with India goes back to the
Renaissance. At that time several Polish travelers visited India.
Among them were Erazm Krethkowski, Pawel Palczowski, Krzysztof
Pawlowski and Gasper da Gama, who was not Portuguese, as one might
think hearing his name, but a Polish merchant from Poznan. The
first description of India in Polish, recorded in a letter from
Krzysztof Pawlowski dated 20 X 1569, was one consequence of these
voyages and soon Indian echoes could be heard in Polish
literature. As early as 1611 a priest, Stanislaw Grochowski (b
1542, d. 1612), published a book entitled Cudowne wiersze z
indyjskiego jezyka (Wonderful Verses from the Indian Language). It
was nothing other than a translation of the Bhagavad Gita, which
was first translated from Sanskrit into Latin by an Italian poet,
Francisco Benci (b. 1542, d. 1594), and then from Latin into
Polish by the priest Grochowski.
The Ramayana had to wait for its first translation till 1816.
In that year Walenty Skorochod Majewski (b. 1764-1835) presented
his work, Rozprawa o jezyku sanskryckim (A Dissertation on the
Sanskrit Language) two fragments from Ramayana written in prose
were introduced.
At the turn of the 20th century a new artistic and
literary movement known as Young Poland came into being. At that
time an interest in India was nothing unusual in intellectual and
artistic circles. During the Young Poland period, many authors
drew their inspiration and theme from Indian literature. One of
them was, Antoni Lange
(1861-1929) was obviously an interesting person. The Ramayana was
the work that enchanted him. He was ravished by its beauty. He
knew this India poem from Fauche’s French translation. Lange
translated and published the abbreviated version of Fauche’s
work into Polish in 1886, adding a preface in which he declared
his admiration for this genuine poem. He
wrote in his introduction that the Ramayana was a real masterpiece
of human spirit, surpassing even the Illiad. He studied
Sanskrit continuously, and soon he was able to read his beloved
poems in the original. Lange recited with enchantment Sanskrit
verses from the Ramayana to his friends.
Jan Kasprowicz was another poet connected with the Young
Poland movement and influenced by the Ramayana. During his studies
at the University of Wroclaw he had an opportunity to attend
lectures on Indian philosophy and this experience impressed him
very much. One literary critic mentioned that whenever Kasprowicz
wanted to express a state of ecstasy or wrote about spiritual
matters, he took his symbols from India.
Around 1907 he wrote Sita, Indyjski
Hymn Milosci (Sita, The Indian Hymn of Love). It was a
libretto to a musical drama in three acts. The drama ends with a
hymn in honor of Sita’s pure salutary love. He was followed by
other Polish authors like, Stanislaw Franciszek Michalski
(1881-1961) and Stanislaw Schayer (1899-1941).
(source: Indian
Epic Values: Ramayana and Its Impact - By G. Pollet
89-93. Refer to Lange's poem on Brahma).
Top of
Page
Priest
says yoga anti-Christianity - English
vicar bans yoga classes in church hall
An English vicar's decision to ban yoga classes from his church
hall has underlined the fragility of Britain's continuing
experiment with a multi-cultural society. The vicar in question
is Reverend Derek Smith, who is in charge of St Michael's Church
in the parish of Melksham in Wiltshire.
Rev Smith says his decision to stop
the classes is because of yoga's association with Hinduism. His
wife Sue told rediff.com that the decision was taken
after extensive consultations with the local parish church
council. Yoga is one of the fastest growing extra-curricular
activities in the United Kingdom with a following among all
sections of society. A decade ago, it was actively promoted by
one of India's most popular diplomats in Britain, High
Commissioner Apa Pant, who delighted his friends by balancing on
his head.
In London a spokesman for Britain's
Anglican Church backed the right of clergymen to take a stand
against any practices which "do not square with Christian
teachings". He said other vicars share the concerns about
the spiritual basis of some versions of the exercise regime,
since many church halls across the UK accommodate yoga classes.
The spokesman added: "Yoga is
used as a kind of generic term for exercise and stretching, but
there are many different types of yoga. Some have a more
spiritual basis as handed down from Eastern religions.
"It's reasonably
understandable that someone can say so if they don't want
something with a spiritual basis taught in their church
hall."
The Church of England was keen to
promote good relations with other religions, he said, but that
did not involve being "wish-washy or mealy-mouthed"
about distinctions in faith. Although there are no plans to call
for a blanket ban on yoga classes in church halls nationwide,
yoga enthusiasts are angered by the move, which appears to be a
growing trend.
Last November another vicar in a
different part of the country in Henham, Essex, took the same
step. The British Wheel of Yoga, the governing body recognised
by Sport England, condemned Rev Smith's action as
"ignorant".
Spokeswoman Jane Hill said:
"It's not a religion and it doesn't push any version of
one. I don't think it will affect his flock. He should have a
bit more of an open mind." Hindu spiritual leaders have
also criticised Smith for his narrow-minded approach, while
agreeing that every place of worship needs guidelines about what
may be permitted on its premises. "I don't think there
would be a problem if we opened our temple premises to our
Christian brothers," said Bimal Krishan Das, secretary of
the National Council of Hindu Temples.
"We Hindus are broadminded and
it is surprising for us to hear a Christian vicar say he will
ban yoga classes.
"Most people practise yoga for
health benefits, but even if they were aware of the links with
Hinduism, what is the harm? There are many paths to God."
Meanwhile, Rev Smith has called upon Christians who practise
yoga to examine their consciences.
The 50-year-old vicar said he had
no regrets about his church hall's ban on the weekly yoga
classes, which were incompatible with Christianity. On the other
hand, he admitted that the decision to axe the sessions, which
had been running since March, had upset at least one woman
parishioner. Rev Smith said that even if followers in the West
used it just for fitness, spiritual leaders in the East insisted
it was inseparable from Hindu devotional practice. Speaking from
his rectory in Melksham, he said: "I would ask people who
do yoga to think about whether they believe they were in breach
of their faith or not. "If they genuinely believe what they
are doing is acceptable -- and I know people that do -- of
course, I would ask them to follow their consciences." He
added that he would never consider trying the exercise regime
because it would be wrong.
(source: rediff.com).
Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
Yoga new
‘mantra’ for pilots
Yoga
may soon become the new “mantra” for Indian Air Force (IAF)
pilots to cope with the stress of flying fighter planes.
The
proposal for introducing yoga in the IAF has been mooted by none
other than the IAF Chief, Air Chief Marshal S Krishnaswamy
himself. Addressing the International Conference on Aerospace
Medicine in Delhi recently, the Air Chief, noting that yoga is a
great stress reliever, lamented the fact that it was not being
used as extensively as it should be in India to grapple with
various mental and psychological problems.
Quoting
examples from some Western Air Forces manuals, the Air Chief
said they had included yoga as a stress buster. “India,
which gave this scientific art to the world, is unfortunately
neglecting it”, he added. Air Chief Marshal
Krishnaswamy felt it was high time that the IAF pilots practised
the “asanas” to combat gravitational pull related problems.
(source: Yoga
new ‘mantra’ for pilots
-
Tribuneindia.com). For
more on Yoga refer to chapter Yoga
and Hindu Philosophy).
Top of
Page
Smallpox
inoculation started in Ancient India - and Reaction in the West
One of these curious facts was the
inoculation against small-pox disesase, practiced in both north
and south India till it was banned or disrupted by the English
authorities in 1802-3. The ban was pronounced on
“humanitarian” grounds by the Superintendent General of
Vaccine (following Dr. Jenner’s discovery in 1798).
Small pox has a long history: it is discussed in the Hindu
scriptures and even has a goddess (Sitala, literally “the cool
one") evoted
exclusively to its cause. It seems therefore almost natural to
expect an Indian medical response to the disease. The
inoculation treatment against it was carried out by a particular
tribe of Brahmins from the different medical colleges in the
area. These Brahmins circulated in the villages in groups of
three to four to perform their task.
The person to be inoculated was obliged to follow a certain
dietary regime; he had particularly to abstain from fish, milk,
and ghee (a form of butter), which, it was held, aggravated the
fever that resulted after the treatment. The method the Brahmins
followed is similar to the one followed in our own time in
certain respects. They punctured the space between the elbow and
the wrist with a sharp instrument and then proceeded to
introduce into the abrasion “various matter”, prepared from
inoculated pistules from the preceding year. The purpose was to
induce the disease itself, albeit in a mild form: after it left
the body, the person was rendered immune to small-pox for life.
The Brahmins had a theory of their
operations. They believed the atmosphere abounded with
imperceptible animalculae (refined to bacteria within a larger
context today). They distinguished tow types of these: those
that are harmful and those not so.
The Brahmins therefore believed that their treatment in
inoculating the person expelled the immediate cause of the
disease. How effective was the inoculation? According to Dr.
J. Z. Holwell, FRS, who had addressed the College
of Physicians in London:
“When the before recited treatment of the inoculation is
strictly followed, it is next to a miracle to hear, that one in
a million fails to receiving the infection, or of one that
miscarries under it.”
A
later estimate by the Superintendent General of Vaccine in 1804
noted that fatalities among the inoculated counted one in 200
among the Indian population and one in 60 to 70 among the
Europeans. There is an explanation for this divergence.
Most of
the Europeans objected to the inoculation on theological
grounds.
Timothy
Dwight, a Presbyterian divine and the eighth
president of Yale University from 1795-1817, a acknowledged
religious leader and intellectual leader in US in his era
preached passionately against the newly developed invention
called vaccination.
He said: "If a
certain person should die of small-pox, it would be a frightful
sin, to avoid and annul that decree by the trick of
vaccination."
(source:
Decolonizing
History: Technology and Culture in India, China and the West
1492 to the Present Day - By Claude Alvares
p.66-67 and Why
Christianity must change or die: a Bishop speaks to believers in
exile - By John Shelby Spong p 1-8. For more
refer to chapter on Hindu
Culture - part 2)
Top of
Page
Book
Tries to Link Hitler with Buddhism and Hinduism
Hamburg, Germany, September 19, 2002: Adolf Hitler was
fascinated with Buddhism and Hinduism, and many of his henchmen
viewed him as a Krishna-like divine warrior who would cleanse
the Earth of "vermin" in a baptism of fire, according
to a headline-making new book. The book Hitler-Buddha-Krishna
is by a controversial Austrian husband-and-wife team of authors
who have generated publicity in Europe with a number of books
exploring what they call the "violence-
prone" side of Buddhism and Hinduism.
It was this
side of those Eastern philosophies - the image of the vengeful
demigod annihilating enemies without mercy to create a new
earthly order - which fascinated Hitler as a young man and which
continues to fascinate impressionable young neo-Nazis, say the
authors. In fact, there is little new in the book by Herbert
and Mariana Roettgen, according to this article in
the German press, who write under the pseudonym Victor
and Victoria Trimondi.
Beyond
linking the swastika with Hindu symbolism, the authors fail to
prove that Hitler himself actually had more than a brief
flirtation with Eastern philosophy in pre-World War I Vienna.
But this latest book has nonetheless drawn press attention in
Austria and Germany, with more- or-less serious interviews
appearing under invariably sensationalist photos of Hitler
superimposed over the Buddha. "Hitler was a Buddhist"
screamed a typical headline in Bild, Europe's biggest tabloid.
(source: Deutsche Presse-Agentur
- For more on Hitler, please refer to Free
thought Today and
nobeliefs.com
and Freethought.com).
"Christianity
had the capacity to stop Nazism before it came to power, and to
reduce or moderate its practices afterwards, but repeatedly
failed to do so because the principal churches were complicit
with—indeed, in the pay of—the Nazis.

Nazi-priests
Reinterpreting
the Gospels to shift blame for the Crucifixion from the Romans
to the Jews (the “Christ killer” story) courted favor with
Rome, an early example of Christian complicity for political
purposes. Added energy came from Christians’ anger over most
Jews’ refusal to convert. The first outright extermination of
Jews occurred in 414 C.E."
***
Most German
Christians supported the Reich; many continued to do so in the
face of mounting evidence that the dictatorship was depraved and
murderously cruel. Elsewhere in Europe the story was often the
same. Only with Christianity’s forbearance and frequent
cooperation could fascistic movements gain majority support in
Christian nations. European fascism was the fruit of a Christian
culture. Millions of Christians actively supported these
notorious regimes. Thousands participated in their atrocities.
Early Christian
sects promoted loyalty to authoritarian rulers so long they were
not intolerably anti-Christian or, worse, atheistic. Christian
anti-Semitism sprang from one of the church’s first efforts to
forge an accommodation with power. Reinterpreting
the Gospels to shift blame for the Crucifixion from the Romans
to the Jews (the “Christ killer” story) courted favor with
Rome, an early example of Christian complicity for political
purposes. Added energy came from Christians’ anger over most
Jews’ refusal to convert. The first outright extermination of
Jews occurred in 414 c.e." Anti-Semitic
practices pioneered by Catholics included the forced wearing of
yellow identification, ghettoization, confiscation of Jews’
property, and bans on intermarriage with Christians. European
Protestantism bore the fierce impress of Martin
Luther, whose 1543 tract On
the Jews and Their Lies was a principal inspiration
for Mein Kampf
(source:
The
Great Scandal: Christianity's Role in the Rise of the Nazis
- by Gregory S. Paul - secularhumanism.org).
Hitler's
Pope: Vicar of Christ or Instrument of the Devil?
The
revelations contained in John
Cornwell's new book Hitler's
Pope, The Secret History of Pope Pius XII, just
published by Viking, are a total vindication of our claims that
there was active Papal collusion with the Nazis in World War II.
Having
joined forces to exterminate their enemies, Fascism and Popery
have now come to each other's defence and are pretending that
none of it happened.
Hitler himself made it clear in his book Mein
Kampf that he both admired and modelled his tactics
on the Jesuits:
Above all, I have learned from the Jesuits. And so did Lenin
too, as far as I recall. The world has never known anything
quite so splendid as the hierarchical structure of the Catholic
Church. There were quite a few things that I simply appropriated
from the Jesuits for the use of the Party. [Adolf Hitler: Mein
Kampf, p. 478; see also pp. 485, 487, 882; my translation.]
The Concordat that Hitler signed with the Vatican in 1933 bore
the signatures of chief negotiator Cardinal Pacelli (who became
Pius XII, 1939-1958) and Hitler's Deputy (Vice-Chancellor of the
Reich) Franz von Papen, who was a leading Roman Catholic. In a
German newspaper called the Völkischer Beobachter of January
14, 1934, von Papen wrote the following: "The
Third Reich is the first power which not only recognises, but
puts into practice, the high principles of the Papacy."
What is this if it is not an unambiguous statement that the Nazi
régime used the Roman Catholic system as a model?
(source: Hitler's
Pope: Vicar of Christ or Instrument of the Devil? - By
Professor Arthur Noble).
Top of
Page
Druidism
and Hinduism: Sacred earth religions
The
Druids of the ancient Celtic world have a startling kinship with
the brahmins of the Hindu religion and were, indeed, a parallel
development from their common Indo-European cultural root which
began to branch out probably five thousand years ago. The
Druids were not simply a priesthood. They were the intellectual
caste of ancient Celtic society, incorporating all the
professions: judges, lawyers, medical doctors, ambassadors,
historians and so forth, just as does the brahmin caste. In
fact, other names designate the specific role of the
"priests."
Only Roman and later Christian propaganda
turned them into "shamans," "wizards" and
"magicians." The scholars of the Greek Alexandrian
school clearly described them as a parallel caste to the
brahmins of Vedic society.
The
very name Druid is composed of two Celtic word roots which have
parallels in Sanskrit. Indeed, the root vid
for knowledge, which also emerges in the
Sanskrit word Veda, demonstrates the similarity. The Celtic root
dru which means "immersion" also appears in Sanskrit.
So a Druid was one "immersed in knowledge."
Because
Ireland was one of the few areas of the Celtic world that was
not conquered by Rome and therefore not influenced by Latin
culture until the time of its Christianization in the 5th
century ce, its ancient Irish culture has retained the most
clear and startling parallels to Hindu society.
The structure of Old
Irish, says Professor Watkins, can be compared only with that of
Vedic Sanskrit.
The
vocabulary is amazingly similar. The following are just a few
examples:
Old
Irish - arya (freeman), Sanskrit - aire (noble)
Old Irish - naib (good), Sanskrit - noeib (holy)
Old Irish - badhira (deaf), Sanskrit - bodhar (deaf)
Old Irish - names (respect), Sanskrit - nemed (respect)
Old Irish - righ (king), Sanskrit - raja (king)
The
ancient Irish law system, the Laws of the Fénechus, is closely
parallel to the Laws of Manu. Many surviving Irish myths, and
some Welsh ones, show remarkable resemblances to the themes,
stories and even names in the sagas of the Indian Vedas.
.
Rivers were sacred in the
Celtic world, and places where votive offerings were deposited
and burials often conducted. The Thames, which flows through
London, still bears its Celtic name, from Tamesis, the dark
river, which is the same name as Tamesa, a tributary of the
Ganges.
Not
only is the story of Danu and the Danube a parallel to that of
Ganga and the Ganges but a Hindu Danu appears in the Vedic story
"The Churning of the Oceans," a story with parallels
in Irish and Welsh mytholgy. Danu in Sanskrit also means
"divine waters" and "moisture."
Celtic
cosmology is a parallel to Vedic cosmology. Ancient Celtic
astrologers used a similar system based on twenty-seven lunar
mansions, called nakshatras in Vedic Sanskrit. Like the Hindu
Soma, King Ailill of Connacht, Ireland, had a circular palace
constructed with twenty-seven windows through which he could
gaze on his twenty-seven "star wives."
(source: Hinduism
Today).
Druidism, Culdee,
Faerie Faith, Hinduism, and Wiccanism are very closely-related
religions. Druidism and Hinduism both sprung up around the same
time (around the first century ACE). They are thought to have
come from an Indo-European culture, and many things are similar,
like rebirth (although the Celts did not believe in karma), and
achieving a oneness with one’s self. Druids
and Hindus, and most of the Native Americans, all worshiped
the sun.
They
taught that the present universe came into being through the
activity between two distinct principles, one intelligent and
omnipotent, which was God; the other, inactive and inanimate,
which was matter. This reminds us of the Rajas and Tamas of the
Hindus, Rajas signifying activity and Tamas inertia.
Druids are a unique
spiritual phenomenon, their only counterparts are the rishi
seers and brahmins of ancient India. The Greeks, who managed to
bring yogis back from India to Athens, rarely saw, let alone
conversed with, druids. The Hindus had their triad
of Brahmä, Vishnu, and Siva, representing the sun at. morning,
noon, and evening; so the Irish Druids had their triad of Baal,
Budh, and Grian, and they called time May festival La Budha
na Baal tinne (the day of Buddha of the Baal fires).
Chrishna was another Hindu name for the sun, and the Irish had
Crias, a name for the sun likewise.
The belief in the cyclicity of life, was fundamental and
common with the Hindus and the Druids. They both believe in reincarnation.
Stonehenge
Long
considered a sacred site by the Druids,
these massive stone monoliths are three stories high and
arranged in a circle to form a perfect solar calandar, many with
equally impressive blocks placed on top of them ! Having
accurately marked the passage of time for centuries, each
gigantic "garage sized" block weighs in at many tons. Indian cosmogonic and astronomical systems, while developing
independently of western systems, bear remarkable affinities
with the latter. For instance, the calculation of the year in
both systems are very similar. The Arya Siddhanta and
Rajamriganka systems are in use even today.
And now, a quick look at the other major calendar systems of the
world. England`s Stonehenge, dating back to 2000 BC, is perhaps
the most famous.
Observations were made by lining up stones with a marker and
watching for the appearance of the sun or moon against that
point on the horizon that lay in the same straight line. Today
more than 600 structures, perhaps contemporaneous with
Stonehenge, have been discovered across Britain.
(For
more on connection between Druids and Aryans refer to chapters on
Nature
Worship and Aryan
Invasion Theory). For
more refer to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor
Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
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Jihad
and kafir in India
Are
the concept
of Jihad and Kafir, at least in their aggressive connotation,
are applicable to India, where more than 80
per cent of the population is Hindu?
Aggressive
monotheistic religions, like Christianity and Islam, divide the
world into believers and non-believers, with the former going to
heaven and the latter to hell. (While Christians and
Muslims agree that non-Christians and non-Muslims are
non-believers, they would exclude each other from the category
of believers.) This belief makes it incumbent on the follower to
convert others to his/her faith.
In Islam, the concepts of kafir and jihad are used to take this
scheme forward. A few years ago, a respected librarian in Bihar,
belonging to the Muslim faith, said that kafir is not applicable
to Hindus. The Muslim clergy raised a hue and cry on the issue,
and came out with a definitive statement that the librarian was
wrong
The
non-Muslims view the situation with trepidation.
It
is not easy for a Hindu to comprehend the concepts of jihad and
kafir. A Hindu believes that each person has to create his/her
own spiritual path to salvation. Thus, the Hindu has a lot of
freedom and is thus forever evolving.
A
Hindu has never made any demands on the host community. Even as
he/she has kept the Hindu identity alive and flourishing, there
is a total assimilation in the life of the host country. It is a
record that needs to be emulated by others.
The aggressive monotheistic faiths have caused a huge amount of
violence in their paths. It is time for them to determine how
they will look at those who refuse to accept that their way is
the only valid way. And having made a choice, if the
‘non-believers’ react in a manner not to their liking, they
should not be surprised.
(source: Jihad
and kafir in India - indiacause.com).
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Page
The powerful
Hindu psyche and Dharma
The power of the Hindu psyche
persists till long after a Hindu gets converted to Christianity
or Islam, and invites frowns and fierce lectures from the
missionary and the mullah. This power of the Hindu psyche is
illustrated by the story of a Hindu lady in Kerala who got
converted to Christianity for some reason. The missionary who
had presided over the conversion paid a visit to her home one
day, and found her worshipping the old Hindu Gods and Goddesses
of the family. The missionary was red in the face and rebuked
her in the name of the only True God.
The lady smiled and said,
"So what? My becoming a Christian does not mean that I have
renounced my Dharma!”
The Western
“Science” of Comparative Religion, which is only another
name for Christian theology, is trying to pooh-pooh this psyche
as a vestige of primitive animism which was at best only a crude
form of religious awakening.
A more serious
attack on this Hindu psyche is mounted by the Christian
missionary. He pronounces that Hindu psyche has been heavily
“polluted” by pantheism which sees a God or Goddess “in
every bug that bites, and every cockroach that crawls”. He
believes that Hindus can be “cured” of this “perverse”
psyche only by being baptised in the Christian Church, and by
accepting Jesus Christ as the one and only saviour. And the
missionary and the mullah are not mere preachers of some
distinct doctrines. They are also
crusaders and mujãhids who believe that Hindus should either be
converted to the “true faith”, or killed and consigned to
eternal hell-fire. Destruction and defilement of the
images of Hindu Gods and Goddesses, demolition of Hindu temples
and monasteries, desecration of Hindu places of pilgrimage, and
burning of Hindu shastras are the fundamental tenets of their
faiths.
(source: Defense
of Hindu Society - Hindu
Spirituality Versus Monotheism - By Sita Ram Goel).Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
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Page
The
History of Bharatavarsha
By
Rabindra Nath Tagore (1861-1941)
- Bhadra 1309 Bengal
Era (August 1903)
The
history of India that we read and memorize for our examinations is
really a nightmarish account of India.
Some people arrive from
somewhere and the pandemonium is let loose. And then it is a
free-for-all: assault and counter-assault, blows and
bloodletting. Father
and son, brother and brother vie with each other for the throne.
If one group condescends to leave, another group appears, as if,
out of the blue; Pathans and Mughals, Portuguese and French and
English together have made this nightmare ever more and more
complex.
However,
while the lands of the aliens existed, there also existed the
indigenous country. Otherwise, in the midst of all the
turbulence who gave birth to the likes of Kabir, Nanak,
Chaitanya,and Tukaram? It was not that only Delhi and Agra
existed then, there were also Kasi and Navadvipa. The current of life
that was flowing then in the real Bharatavarsha, the ripples of
efforts rising there and the social changes that were taking
place, the accounts of these are not found in our history
textbooks. But it is with the Bharatavarsha, which lies outside
our textbooks, that we have our real ties. If the history of
this tie for a substantially long period gets lost our soul
loses its anchorage. After all, we are no weeds or parasitical
plants in India. Over many hundreds of years, it is our roots,
hundreds and thousands of them, which have occupied the very
heart of Bharatavarsha. But, unfortunately, we are obliged to
learn a brand of history that makes our children forget this
very fact. It appears that in India, as if, we are nobody; as
if, those who came from outside alone matter.
It is the history of our country that
has kept our own land obscured to us. From the
invasion of Mahmud to the arrogant imperial declaration of Lord
Curzon, that is, all the historical annals till yesterday, are
only a mass of strange mist for Bharatavarsha. These accounts do
not help clarity of vision about our motherland. The ability to
perceive this oneness in diversity and to strive to extend unity
are the native characteristics of Bharatavarsha. It is this
quality that has made her indifferent to political glory. The
kind of unity that the European Civilization has opted
for is discord-centered; the kind of
unity that Bharatavarshiya Civilization has opted for is
concord-centered. Bharatavarsha knew the
secrets of integration. The French
Revolution had the haughtiness to think that it would wipe off
all differences among men with blood. But it has produced the
very opposite results. In Europe, the rulers and the
ruled, the wealthy and the common people, all the repositories
of power, are gradually becoming fiercely antagonistic to each
other. The goal of Bharatavarsha too
had been to tie everybody in a bond of unity; but the method she
adopted was different. Bharatavarsha tried to delimit
and demarcate each of the antagonistic and competitive forces of
the society and make the body- social fit for both
functional unity as well as diversities of occupations.
It is not only in
social organization, but also in the area of faith and belief we
notice the same trend of the building of unity and harmony. The
effort to establish harmony between knowledge, action and
devotion that we see in the Gita
is a trait that belongs especially to Bharatavarsha. It is
impossible to translate in Indian language the expression called
'religion' that exists in Europe, for within the domain of faith
Bharatavarsha has resisted the dividing of the mind. Our
intellect, our belief, our conduct, all that we hold dear in
this world and in the next, all of these together constitute our
Dharma. Bharatavarsha
has not divided the faith into the pigeonholes of 'everyday use'
and 'formal occasions'
Amongst the civilizations of
the world Bharatavarsha stands as an ideal of the endeavour to
unify the diverse. Her history will bear
this out. Amidst many travails and obstacles, fortunes
and misfortunes Bharatavarsha has been seeking to
experience the One in
the universe as well as in one's own soul and to place that One
in the variegated, to discover that One through
knowledge, to establish that One through action, to internalize that One through love,
to exemplify that One through one's own life. When
through the study of
her history we would be able to realize this everlasting spirit
of Bharata,
then the rupture of our present with the past will disappear.
(source: Translated
from Bengali by Sumita Bhattacharya and Sibesh Bhattacharya,
Indian Institute of Advanced Study, Simla India).
For
more refer to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor
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Page
Militant
Hinduism?
Mahatma Gandhi, a pacifist, was a great activistic Hindu
leader, perhaps the greatest this century has produced. It was
customary until recently to dismiss Gandhi’s assassin,
Nathuram Godse (1910-1949), as a fanatic and as one opposed to
the vigorous reform for Hinduism that Gandhi represented. Recent
developments in India reveal the shallowness of this assessment.
It would be fatal not to recognize the role of
partition in this context. It has not been sufficiently
emphasized in current discourse that the demolition of the
mosque in 1992 is a direct, if delayed, consequence of the
partition in 1947.
It
was six years after Godse left the RSS that he assassinated
Gandhi.
Godse killed Gandhi out of a resentment
and anger felt at the partition of the country in 1947 by almost
every Hindu. His target was wrong, but his aim was
right. The partition of India was a
tragedy for almost all Hindus; Godse only
intensified the tragedy by making Gandhi also its victim. His
own commitment to an undivided India is dramatized by the fact
that, though Gandhi’s ashes were immersed in the sacred rivers
of India, Godse’s ashes have been preserved, in accordance
with his will, to be immersed in the Indus River after what is
now Pakistan has once again become part of Mother India.
Moreover, by killing Gandhi, Godse was signaling to the Hindus
that Gandhi’s non-violence had failed to prevent partition. However,
the medium obstructed the message; Gandhi’s martyrdom loomed
larger in the Indian imagination than his failure – until
recently.
Opposition
to Gandhi came from all quarters Aurobindo, Annie Besant, people
within the Congress Party, etc., all opposed Gandhi on one issue
or the other. To claim that the RSS was inspired by European
fascism is yet another piece of nonsense which has been peddled
by Indian Marxists and those opposed to the RSS. Koenraad
Elst has
detailed how at the time in the mid to late 1920s very few
people had an idea of the nature of fascism and the consequences
that were to follow.
The British had disarmed India so
completely that, idealism apart, Gandhian methods
alone proved practicable. However, the Hindu militant (kshtriya
tradition) was kept alive by such organizations such
as the National Volunteer Corps” known by its Indian initials
as RSS, founded in 1925. The Hindu tradition avoids but does not
exclude violence. Even Gandhi preferred
violence to cowardice. Let us consider the test of
facing a robber. Gandhi pointed out that although ideally people
should allow themselves to be robbed rather than resist, “such
forbearance can only be exercised out of strength and not out of
weakness. Till that power is acquired they must be prepared to
resist the wrongdoer by force” for violence may be an evil
“but cowardice is worse than violence.”
(source: Our Religions - edited by
Arvind Sharma p. 18-20).
For
more refer to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor. Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
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Page
India Supreme
Court Decision on Textbook Changes
NEW
DELHI: The Supreme Court on Thursday
upheld the National Curriculum Framework
for Secondary Education - 2002 rejecting allegations that it was
an attempt to saffronise the syllabus for schools.
The
three-judge Bench comprising Justice M B Saha, Justice D M
Dharmadhikari and Justice H K Sema by a 2:1 majority held that
non-consultation with Central Advisory Board for Education
(CAB), in the framing of the NCFSE could not be held as a ground
to declare the national syllabus framed by NCERT as
unconstitutional.
Dismissing
the petition filed by Aruna Roy and others, the court vacated
the March 1, 2002 interim order of the apex court, which had
stayed the implementation of NCFSE across the country. In the
result, the new syllabus will become effective for the Secondary
Education in the country. Study
of religions could not be equated with imparting of religious
instructions, Justice Saha and Justice Dharmadhikari said while
delivering the judgement.
Holding
that NCFSE was framed by NCERT, an expert statutory body, the
judges said
"what is sought to be imparted in the new syllabus is value
education and the essence of all religions which is based on the
same principle of love for all".
***
"Saffronizing"
is a term used in a negative sense by the Indian press to mean
changing or adapting something to match the views and teachings
of Hindus in general.
Vajpayee said ever since his
government came to power, allegations were being leveled against
his government that it was "saffronising" education.
"It was good that the matter came up in the Supreme Court
which turned down the plea that the education was being
saffronised," Vajpayee said at a function organized by
Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan in memory of Swami
Vivekananda. Vajpayee in a lighter vein
wondered what was wrong with this. "If saffronisation is
taking place, what is wrong in it," he said amid laughter.
Vajpayee went on to say "Bhagwa
(Saffron - Kesari) is a good color and it is associated with the
battlefields for ages. The color has a long history." The
Prime Minister said people in India must be made aware of the
country's rich cultural heritage.
An
indigenous Indian curriculum would celebrate the ideas of the
country's thinkers such as Sri Aurobindo, Vivekananda, Dayananda
Saraswati, Mahatma Phule, Gandhi, Tagore, Zakir Hussain,
Krishnamurthi and Gijubhai Badheka.
While
our children know about Newton, they do not know about
Arryabhatta; they do know about computer, but do not know about
the advent of the concept of zero (shunya) or the decimal
system.
Our ``secularists''
are nothing if not original and highly imaginative. They will
cry ``wolf'' even if they see a rabbit. Even if there is no
living thing anywhere, in sight. Crying wolf has become a habit
with them. The slightest move on the part of HRD Minister Dr
Murli Manohar Joshi to set education in India in the right
direction and our secularists will see red. Actually, not red
but saffron.
To
our secularists, the Vedas, the Upanishads, Yoga, Ayurveda etc.
are anathema. Most of them, in the first place would not have
read the Vedas, practized yoga or ever resorted to ayurvedic
medicine, the latter, incidentally,
getting more and more popular in the west, even as Yoga is.
But to our secularists Yoga is
synonymous with Hinduism, Hindutva and, yes, fascism!
It is to such a pathetic state that secularism has been reduced
to. Brought up to condemn everything that our ancient heritage
stands for, taught to laugh at our own culture, accustomed to
despise rituals and rites as representative of superstition,
accustomed to treat Sanskrit
as ``a dead language'' our secularists can only have words of
criticism.
For
more on the glory of Sanskrit, please refer to chapter on Sanskrit.
(source:
'Saffronisation'
of education? Court snub to secularists is the right answer
- By By MV Kamath samachar.com
For
more refer to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor. Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com.
For history of the flag, please refer to The
Ancient Dhvaja
(source: http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_65859,0008.htm
and Know
your valueabout NCERT controversy).
Top of
Page
Doctors
study the health benefits of yoga
Yoga is one of the hottest fitness
trends sweeping the country. Now many doctors think it can also
cure what ails you.
Physicians in the U.S. and abroad
are conducting a variety of studies gauging whether yoga offers
health benefits beyond general fitness and can relieve symptoms
associated with serious medical problems. Early results suggest
that a regular yoga regimen -- involving a variety of postures,
deep breathing and meditation exercises -- can offer relief for
patients suffering from asthma, chronic back pain, arthritis and
obsessive compulsive disorder, among other problems.
Yoga therapy hasn't been widely
studied in the U.S. Most of the research has taken place in
India where yoga originated 5,000 years ago. But today, several
reputable American doctors are pursuing randomized yoga studies,
and the National Institutes of Health is funding clinical trials
of yoga for treating insomnia and multiple sclerosis. For more
information, check www.clinicaltrials.gov.
Dr. Vad, who consults with the
men's professional tennis and golf tours, notes that in India,
where yoga is widely practiced, lower-back problems are
virtually unheard of.
Yoga has been shown to
relieve stress, lower blood pressure and heart rate and improve
cardiovascular endurance, she says. "We are on the cusp of
a big shift. I think what's changed is people are demanding it,
and they want to look at these alternatives."
(source: www.sfgate.com).
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Page
Of
girdles, sashes & patkas
Patka,
"that
long and elegant strip of textile which adorned nearly every
noble waist in India once",
continues to interest me. The names by which this costume
accessory was known vary, of course—pattika,
katitra, kamarband, sash, phenta,
cloth-girdle, and the like—depending so much upon period
and language and court and region, but it seems to have been
everywhere. One just has to look at early sculptures and
medieval paintings to become aware of its ubiquitous presence:
kings tied it around their waists as much as commoners did; we
see it worn by courtiers and sanyasis and cowherds and
foot-soldiers; it could be made of silk or cotton or wool; could
be plain or printed or intricately woven and brocaded or
embroidered. But, as I said, it was everywhere.
This
is why a note that I read recently on some Indian
patkas having once been in the wardrobe of King Gustavus
Adolphus of Sweden (ruled 1594-1632)
intrigued
me greatly. The
discovery of these textiles in the Swedish royal collection
makes for a fascinating story in itself. Agnes
Geijer who was cataloguing oriental textiles in Sweden came upon
these two textiles; knowing nothing about their origin, she
sought the advice of a Professor of Historical Studies at the
University of Princeton, who, in turn, advised her to consult
other scholars, among them an expert, Florence Day, working in
the Islamic Department of the Metropolitan Museum of New York.
It
was Day who noticed that the 'sashes', as they were being
referred to then, were not Arabic as first imagined, but Indian,
for there were some Hindi numerals or price marks entered in a
corner. Norman Brown, Oriental scholar at the University of
Pennsylvania, confirmed this, saying that they were indeed
inscribed with Hindi numerals: they gave in fact the exact price
of the object: "
four rupees, eight annas."
The
tracking of these objects down does not end here, and one is
astonished at the routes and channels that objects took as they
traveled half way across the world. Anyone would like to know, I
am sure, how these objects landed up in Sweden, of all places.
In style, as John Irwin observed, the two patkas were
"Indo-Persian", a term long since discarded, as it
happens, meaning that the motifs on them were Persian in
inspiration but the treatment and the weaving was Indian.
They
seem in fact to have been produced in Gujarat or Sind. From
here, it seems, the patkas or sashes were regularly being
exported: not only to Islamic countries in West Asia and North
Africa, where they were in great demand, but even as far as
Poland where they were much fancied by the nobility and by
military officials. But
these exports received a true fillip when the Dutch and English
East India Companies began trading from their bases in western
Indian ports, especially Surat. For, the route they took was not
overland, with all its attendant uncertainties and heavy duties,
but by sea. The English merchants were quick to see that large
profits were to be made by shipping such goods, first to
England, and then re-exporting them to Turkey, the Levant and
Poland. A flourishing trade seems to have been established,
availing of the imperial concessions granted to the East India
Company, especially from the 1620's onwards. One finds notes
made by the 'factors' of the company listing piles of sashes
which were purchased from Surat, and then sent further. Thus,
250 sashes at five shillings per piece; 100 of them at 8
shillings per piece; 25 of them at 20 shillings per piece.
Clearly, the price of the object bore a relationship to its
quality or its preciousness. No visual records are available,
but one can imagine guldar (flowered) or khashkhashi
(of the colour of poppies, perhaps also bearing poppy flower
motifs) patkas of the most beautiful kind being sent to
distant markets.
When
students of textile, or art historians, speak of patkas,
their natural concern is with matters relating to technique and
design, or cultural meaning and significance, especially in the
context of royal courts. Mercantile concerns, however, were
entirely different and all that one picks up from them are lists
and prices, and the like. But even these one is grateful for. Or
else how would one have known how Gujarati patkas found their
way around a royal waist in Sweden?
(source: Of
girdles, sashes & patkas Tribuneindia.com).
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Page
Target
Hindus: Bangla minorities
Hindus and other
religious minorities in Bangladesh were the target of widespread
violence before during and after the general elections in
October last year, in the Bangla Nationalist Party and Jamaat–e–Islami
led alliance’s successful bid to grab power. Perceived as
supporters of the ‘pro–minority’ Awami League, a large
number of Bangla Hindus were killed, women raped and their
property looted or destroyed, leading to their distress
migration to India.
A fresh round of
violence in recent months indicates that the minorities of
Bangladesh are being targeted with a vengeance yet again. In
early April, a report in the Far Eastern Economic Review
described the country under the new political dispensation as a
"cocoon of terror." But within days of the ban on the
April 4, 2002 issue of the magazine, a Buddhist monk and a Hindu
priest were killed in their monastery at Hingala (Raozan PS,
Chittagong district) and a temple at Manikchhari (Khagrachari
district) respectively.
Following a field
investigation and interviews with victims, Rabindra Ghosh, an
advocate and the Dhaka-based country co–ordinator of the
global organisation Human Rights Congress of Bangladesh
Minorities (HRCBM) reported gang rape of Hindu women and torture
of men in Palagram village in Chittagong district in separate
incidents on May 8 and May 14. In the assault on the night of
May 14 by an armed group whom the victims described as
"Islamic terrorists".
(source: Communalism
Combat). Watch
History
of Ayodhya - videogoogle.com.
Top of
Page
Perversity
of Indian secularism
For them, secularism means exclusion
of Hindu ideas, symbols and customs only. They have measured the
nearness to secularism by the extent of explicit distaste for
anything Hindu in origin.
That
is why pure secularists even scorn the idea of lighting lamps at
functions - because it is a Hindu symbol. But in the US, the
Government declares a whole year as `Bible Year' - that does not
make the Government unsecular.
Ronald Reagan was not charged with
imposing the Christian Agenda when he declared 1983 as the `Year
of the Bible' in the US.
When
he moved the resolution for the declaration, Reagan said:
"Now, therefore, I Ronald Reagon, President of the United
States of America, in recognition of the contribution and
influence of the Bible on our Republic and our people, do hereby
proclaim 1983 the `Year of the Bible' in the USA. I encourage
all citizens in his or her own way to re-examine and rediscover
its priceless and timeless message." His appeal was to all
citizens - not just to Christians.
But,
in India, even common traditional and national values, which
linked the different religions and communities are being
labelled as `Hindu values'. The result is that the minorities
are slowly and steadily drawn away from all points which
connected them by tradition with their mother Hindu society. The
"secularists" have convinced the minorities that
secularism means rejecting everything that has a Hindu
origin.
None of these great men - not to
mention the great woman from Italy who pontificates on
secularism to India - even know what role the Vedas, Upanishads
and the Gita have played in our national regeneration. And
in raising a mighty national awakening that transformed into the
movement for India's freedom.
Swami
Vivekananda and Maharishi
Aurobindo who built the intellectual foundation for
the freedom movement were influenced by all that our secularists
from India and Italy call unsecular - the Vedas, Upanishads and
the Gita. Balgangadhar Tilak wrote
the Gita Rahasya as the
guide for his participation in the independence movement.
Mahatma Gandhi said that but for reading the Gita he would have
committed suicide. Whether it is Guru Tegh Bahadur or Guru
Gobind Singh, who sacrificed everything, including their lives
to protect the Vedas and the Cow, or a Ravidas or a Surdas, a
Nandanar or Sri Narayana Guru, their inspiration came only from
ancient Indian thought.
In
fact, Dr.
Annie Besant
and Sister
Nivedita,
with whom the lady from Italy is often compared by her admirers
to indiginise her, upheld all that is Hindu in origin as the
main inspiration for them to serve India. Besant said: "Minus
Hinduism, India is irrelevant."
Yet for the "secularists", Hindu ideas and symbols are
anathema. This is the perversity of Indian secularism.
Marxist
Praful Bidwai,
writes: "Since 1998, Hindutva fanatics have relentlessly
pursued one agenda. They
tried to thrust Saraswati Vandana down our throats... "Saraswati
Vandana is unsecular," said the Marxists.
One
song Vande Mataram - turned into a war cry and sent thousands of
youths to the gallows and jails in the cause of freedom. The
idea of secularism which rejects the concept of Vande Mataram in
effect disowns all those who were inspired by it to fight for
our freedom.
Among those who approved
the singing of Vande Mataram at the Nagpur Congress was Mahatma
Gandhi.
Today those who claim to be the political
heirs of Mahatma Gandhi are boycotting Saraswati Vandana.
(source: Vande
Mataram then, Saraswati Vandana now - By Gurumurthy
and The
right to secular education - Praful Bidwai
- hindustantimes.com). Watch History
of Ayodhya - videogoogle.com.
The anti-Hindu nature of the
secularists/communist are well known (and therefore it's vested
interest in destroying Hinduism - as Koenraad
Elst puts it, their brand of
secularism isn't the co-existence of religion but the
annihilation of religion).
Mahatma
Gandhi said that he was proud to be a ‘Sanatani Hindu’. That
is an idol worshipping, rudimentary Hindu.
Today a former chief minister cites an encyclopaedia in Hindi,
the language he always held as imperfect, to say that Hindu
means a thief. Of course he will not look at the better-known
Encylopaedia of Britannica, which defines the very word
‘Hindu’ in glowing terms. This is what the Mahatma once
termed as gutter inspection. That is looking at the worst, not
the best.
Again,
a Mahatma Gandhi risked his life by a fast unto death to ensure
that the British did not separate Harijans from Hindus. Today a
lady congress leader tells a foreign TV channel that Harijans
and tribals are not Hindus. These characters define secularism
today.
(source: To
prove secular credentials, ridicule the Hindus - By S.
Gurumurthy).
Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
India's
"Succular" (sic) thinkers, writers, artistes and
politicians
Abuse of the word Hindu
So, one of our
new secular ministers tells us that the Sindhu
Darshan festival, started by the last government to
celebrate the river India gets her name from, will be made less
communal. Excuse me?
The
word Hindu is being used as a term of abuse. Hindu
fanatic, Hindu fundamentalism, Hindu nationalist, Hindutva.
Mostly, that is how the word Hindu gets used and nearly always
pejoratively.
It
bothers me that I went to school and college in this country
without any idea of the enormous contribution of Hindu
civilisation to the history of the world. It
bothers me that even today our children, whether they go to
state schools or expensive private ones, come out without any
knowledge of their own culture or civilisation. I
believe that the Indic religions have made much less trouble for
the world than the Semitic ones and that Hindu civilisation is
something I am very proud of. If that is evidence of my being
‘‘communal’’, then, my inner voice tells me, so be it.
(source:
This
inner voice too needs hearing - By Tavleen Singh -
indianexpress.com).
Top of
Page
A
Thai Rajaguru in quest of Vedic roots
He’s a man in search of his
Indian roots. After his ancestors left Indian shores for
Thailand centuries ago, he is back ‘home’ on a mission. To
find a suitable place where children of Thai Brahmins (“Brahmanas,”
he corrects) can learn ancient Vedic texts and scriptures.
Attired in white with his lock of
hair tied neatly behind in a bun, Var Rajaguru Vamadeva Muni is
a picture of serenity seated amidst his aides and well-wishers.
“I am here to scout for a suitable place to send Brahmana
children for pursuing Vedic studies. I want to send Brahmana
boys from Thailand so that they would learn more about priest
craft, philosophy, etc,” he says while sharing the overriding
purpose of his visit. “The root of Thai Brahmanas,” he says,
“is in south India, our ancestors come from that place, and
having their children study Vedic scriptures here would enable
the younger generation to go deep into their roots.”
The
Rajaguru (Royal Court Chief Brahmin) to King Bhumibal Atulyatej
of Thailand, Vamadeva Muni is the purveyor of all things
religious, as it were, for the Royal Family. The Rajaguru
coronates the King in a strictly Brahminical ceremony. Also,
presides over the ploughing ceremony when the land is tilled in
the presence of the King. In ancient days, says Var
Rajaguru Vamadeva Muni, the plougher was supposed to be King and
tradition has it that the King chooses the person who tills the
land for the ceremony. In India on a personal visit, the
Rajaguru on Sunday met with Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee.
On his itinerary are meetings with Union Minister of Home
Affairs L K Advani and Union Human Resource Development Minister
Murli Manohar Joshi. During his stay in India, the Rajaguru
would also call on Shankaracharya of
Kanchi Kamakoti Peetham Jayendra Saraswati. His aides
say visits to Tirupati, Mahabalipuram, Trichy, Chidambaram,
Rameshwaram and Thanjavur are also planned.
That Hinduism
still holds a special place in the religious and cultural
history of that country, he says, can be appreciated
by the fact that ceremonies like the Tiru Vempavai and Sankranti
have survived centuries and are observed to this day. While Tiru
Vempavai, or the Mundan ceremony, is observed for a fortnight
every January, Sankranti is celebrated nationwide on April 13
not only by the Brahmanas but by other sections of society.
Reminiscing
about his “umbilical cord” with mainland India, he says
there is a lot to be learnt from ancient Hindu traditions and
beliefs.
(source:
A
Thai Rajaguru in quest of Vedic roots - By Ramesh
Ramachandran
- tribuneindia.com).
Top of
Page
Christian Missionary
desperation?
Father
Bede Griffiths
(1905-1993) who has an "ashram" in South India, did
puja instead
of mass, wore the ochre vestments, used the "Aum"
symbol and called himself "swami."
It
is a remarkable fact," write Fr. Bede, "that the
Church has been present in India for over fifteen hundred years
and has had for the most part everything in its favor, and yet
in all this time hardly two in a hundred of the people has been
converted to the Christian faith. The position is, indeed, worse
even than this figure would suggest, as the vast majority of
Christians are concentrated in a very few small areas and in the
greater part of India the mass of people remains today untouched
except in a very general way by the Christian faith. It is
necessary to go even further than this and to say that for the
immense majority of the Indian people Christianity still appears
as a foreign religion imported from the West and the soul of
India remains obstinately attached to its ancient religion. This
may have been true in the past, but in recent times there has
been a remarkable revival of Hinduism, which is more or less
consciously opposed to Christianity, and the educated Hindu
regards his religion as definitely superior to
Christianity."
Decades
ago the Catholic bishops of India at their National Center in
Bangalore had figures of Brahma, Vishnu, Siva and the Nataraja
displayed on window grills of their church. The Hindu Astheega
Sangham took them to court and had the images removed.
The
plaintiff's attorney, Mr. Parasaran, argued,
"If you wish
to honor or respect Hindu deities, place them on your altars and
not on your window sills."
The
mission strategists are now making Christianity drop its alien
attire and get clothed in Hindu cultural forms. Christianity is
being presented as an indigenous faith. Christian theology is
being conveyed through categories of Hindu philosophy; Christian
worship is being conducted in the manner and with the materials
of Hindu puja; Christian sacraments sound like Hindu samskaras;
Christian Churches copy the architecture of Hindu temples;
Christian hymns are being set to Hindu music; Christian themes
and personalities are being presented in styles of Hindu
painting; Christian missionaries dress and live like Hindu
sannyasins; Christian mission stations look like Hindu ashrams.
(source:
Catholic
Ashrams
Sannyasins or Swindlers - By
Sita Ram Goel and
Hinduism Today). Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
Top of
Page
Tripura Hindus vow to oppose
Christian Terrorism
The
Background
There are at
least two large Christian terrorist
groups operating in Tripura, the ATTF(All tiger
tripura force) and the NLFT(National Liberation fron of Tripura).
These groups have announced their intention to "free
Tripura of Hindu rule" and establish a "country
for Jesus Christ". Thousands of
people have been killed by them and lakhs displaced, many have
been forcefully converted. Among other things, the NLFT has also
killed Hindu priests and banned Hinduism for the last 4 years.
These incidents have been covered up by the secular press,
sometimes under the guise that tribals in Tripura are not Hindus
and it is a tribal conflict. This article describes that the
tribals have declared that they always were Hindus and that they
will oppose this
terrorist might of the church in the North East.
Jamatia Hoda's no to `taxes', to carry
on resisting ultras
The State-level conference of the Jamatia Hoda, the highest body
of the community, has decided to ban payment of all kind of tax
to the militants. They also decided to carry on the struggle
against the insurgents, specially against the National
Liberation Front of
Tripura, who are interfering with the religious and social
affairs of the community.
The 410th conference of the Hoda, which the leaders claim was
established in 1,590 also resolved unanimously that the Jamatia
are Hindus and they will continue with this identity. Two Akra's
(leader) of the community Bikram Bahadur Jamatia and Hari Charan
Jamatia were re-elected in their posts.
The conference held at Hadupa village under Teliamura Police
Station in West Tripura district assumed special significance in
view of the present onslaught against the Hindu tribals by the
NLFT. They were forcing the tribals to convert into Christianity
and also was preventing them from performing their traditional
rituals.
The Jamatias, the most organized tribal
community in the State first revolted when the NLFT issued
notification imposing ban of performing of Garia Puja and Durga
Puja, last year. The Jamatia Hoda decided to defy the ban and
performed both the festivals.
Since then, the two Akra's are organizing a massive agitation
against the militancy. They also organized volunteer forces to
resist the entry of militants in Jamatia dominated villages. The
two-day conference on December 9 and 10 has approved it and
decided to
further intensify the agitation.
Inspired by the Jamatia's few other tribes like Reangs, Chakmas
and Uchoi's also launched anti-militancy agitation in villages
dominated by them.
(source:
Publication: Assam
and North-East Date: December 1-15, 2000 - URL: http://www.axom.faithweb.com/news/dec11.html).
Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
Top of
Page
Pratnakirtin-apavrnu, “know thy
past”
Pratnakirtin-apavrnu, “know thy
past”,
was the exhortation of the Vedas and the Upanishads of India
more than 5000 years ago.
Knowing
the past does mean knowing only the achievements and failures in
the material field but something more important and durable in
the spiritual field – the value system inherited by the
nation.
For
the Indian, the foundation of
inspiration are the Vedas, Upanishads and the Epics,
which are often discarded by scholars as mere myths and legends
or as purely religious texts of little historical value. This
mystical tradition is the foundation of Indian Civilization, its
culture and philosophy. It has withstood the tremors of foreign
invasions for thousands of years and absorbed some of the
philosophic concepts of the foreign thinkers. It is, however,
the Upanishadic thought and practice which has sustained the
core of Indian spiritualism.
(source:
The
Lost City of Dvaraka - S. R. Rao p. 2).
Top of
Page
India's
management skills deliver the Kumbha Mela
In India, world
history's largest ever people-event spread over six weeks,
passed off without fuss or incident. Perhaps it's a sign of
India's self-confidence that it doesn't chortle about what it
has just brought off. its of a piece with India's nonchalance
when criticism is heaped on it. India just does it and keeps
going!
The colour and the
theatre of the event have been well-covered by the world media.
Puzzled audiences the world over have been shown the strange and
varied lot called Indians -30 million of them- trudging up to a
river, without a prompt or any publicity, to take a dip and
assert a uniqueness all their own.
Sandipan Deb a columnist for
'Outlook' was there and notes of the pilgrims :"...two
unbelievable crore [20,000,000!] of them on one single day, the
holy Mauni Amavasya, and if all of them stood in single file the
line would have stretched from Allahabad to Miami."
'India Today'
called it the "Kleenex Kumbha" and said: "the
Kumbha has been a revelation of India's hitherto hidden skills
in civic management."
The Maha Kumbha
such as the one just passed occurs but once in 144 years. Long
before the next one arrives, India will have learnt to replicate
the Kumbhnagar success all across the country.
(source: goodnewsindia.com).
Top of
Page
Adivasis and
Christian Missionaries
Whether
Adivasis are Hindus or not has always been a question of great
controversy.
The Niyogi
Commission's Report of the Christian
Missionaries Enquiry Committee MP, Nagpur, 1956
(Vol I, Part I, Chapter I) states,
"The Missionaries have
throughout claimed that they are not Hindus. A continuous
attempt has been made by these organisations to foster a sense
of separateness amongst the Tribes from the rest of the Hindus.
Speaking about the separation of the aborigines from the mass of
the Indian population Gandhiji
remarked:
'We were
strangers to this sort of classification -- animists --
aborigines, etc, but we have learnt it from the English rulers.'
To the question put by Dr Chesterman whether Gandhiji's
objection applied to areas like the Kond hills where the
aboriginal races were animists, the unhesitating reply was, 'Yes,
it does apply, because I know that in spite of being described
as animists these tribes have from times immemorial been
absorbed in Hinduism. They are, like the indigenous medicine, of
the soil, and their roots lie deep there'." (I
wonder what our Gandhivadis have to say now.)
Whatever the Adivasis may have
been originally, there's no doubt that they were gradually
absorbed into the Hindu fold -- just like the pagans of Saudi
Arabia and northern Africa were into Islam, but only many, many
centuries earlier. So does that give Hindus poaching rights over
Arabs...? The Niyogi Report
states, "Where a tribe has insensibly been converted into a
caste, it preserved its original name and customs, but modified
its animistic practices more and more in the direction of
orthodox Hinduism. Numerous examples of this process are to be
found all over India and it has been at work for
centuries."
Besides,
what's the difference between Hindu forms of worship and the
Adivasis' "animism" anyway? Don't Hindus worship trees
on Vat
Savitri, snakes on Nag
Panchami, and cows everyday?

Refer to chapter
on Conversion.
***
In 1891, J
A Baines, the Census
Commissioner, considered as futile the distinction
between tribals who were "Hinduised" and those that
followed a tribal form of religion because, "every stratum
of Indian society is more or less saturated with Animistic
Conceptions but little raised above those which predominate in
the early state of religious development."
Ms B
Nivedita, of the Vivekananda Kendra at Kanyakumari,
writes, "The missionaries called the Gods and Goddesses of
these [north eastern tribal] communities 'spirits'...
First introducing and then popularising the use of 'spirits' for
the Devi-Devata of these communities, the missionaries
started their campaign for conversion. The people were told,
'You do not have God. You worship only spirits. What you have is
only primitive ideas of religion and a bundle of superstitions.
If you want to be saved then follow the Only True God'." In
the census of 1901,
Sir
Herbert Risley The People of India and commissioner
of the 1901 census, observed that "Hinduism itself was
animism more or less transformed by philosophy," and that
no sharp line of demarcation could be drawn between them as the
one melted away into the other (The People of India,
2nd edition). In 1931, the census commissioner, Dr
J H Hutton, admitted that the line between Hinduism
and tribal religion was difficult to draw and the inclusion of
tribals within the Hindu fold was easy (Census of India, 1931,
India Report, Vol I, Part I). The deputy commissioner of
Amravati, Mr Stent, sent a
note to the census officer saying that the educated Indian
officers maintained that Gonds, Korkus, Bhils, Gowaris and
Banjaras were Hindus, and that he himself conceded that when
members of these tribes settled in a Hindu village they became
Hindus. He commented on the tendency of Hinduism to absorb the
religion of other people, and also pointed out that the
aboriginals returned themselves as Hindus... (Census Report,
Central Provinces and Berar, 1931, Volume XII, Part I).
Sir Herbert Risley described
Hinduism as "animism transformed by metaphysics."
The
Niyogi Report states, "It is not easy to find
any sound reason for isolating the tribal people from the Hindus
in view of the repeated admissions made that the animistic or
tribal religion was hardly distinguishable from the Hindu
religion. The mystery is solved when we come to examine the
Missionary activities within these tribal areas."
(source: Towards
Balkanisation, V: Adivasis - By Varsha Bhosle rediff.com).
Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
Top of
Page
Rev.
William Adam and Ram Mohan Roy
On March 19th 1818, a missionary of the Mission
Society, Rev. William Adam(1796-1881),
joined the Serampore coterie and was soon entrusted
with the holy task of bringing Raja RamMohan Roy
(1772-1833)
the great Hindu scholar and reformer
to Christ.
His assignment inevitably brought Adam in frequent contact with
Ram Mohan Roy but subsequent events soon made it clear to Adam
that he had been given a formidable task and that he was no
match for Ram Mohan Roy. Rev.
Adam was so impressed with the arguments which Roy advanced in
support of Unitarianism as propounded by the Vedas and against
Trinitarianism of the Bible that Adam soon started having
serious doubts about the Christian cult of three Gods. In a
letter to a friend, N. Bright, he wrote: “It is several months
since I began to entertain some doubts respecting the supreme
deity of Jesus Christ…” In about three years of his joining
the Serampore Mission, Adam
had reached a point of enlightenment where he had begun to doubt
very seriously his earlier Christian convictions.
The conversion of a Christian missionary from biblical
Trinitarianism to Vedic monotheism, a heresy in the eyes of the
Church, created an unprecedented
commotion among Christian missionaries in London and
emotional turmoil in mission circles of the USA.
Most
Christian missions which were then operating in India for the
purpose of converting the heathens of
India to Christianity and their headquarters in
London suffered, in consequence, such psychological convulsions
that it nearly shook the entire missionary network in India down
to its foundations. The Church tried to keep the news of his
conversion and subsequent excommunication a closely guarded
secret.
Rev. William Adam had gone to gather wool but had returned
clearly shorn. As a first step, therefore, of reprisal against
Rev. Adam he was declared a heretic and a Socinian.
(Socinians, a sect of Unitarians taking their name from Faustus
Socinus. Besides denying the doctrine of the Trinity, they deny
divinity of Christ and the divine inspiration of the
scriptures). A statement appearing in the Annual London Report
of the Mission Society regarding Rev. Adam declared: “We
mention with deep regret that MR. Adam, late one of their member
had embraced opinions derogatory to the honor of the Savior,
denying the proper divinity, of ‘Our Lord Jesus Christ’ in
consequence of which the connection between him and the Society
has been dissolved.”
(source: Max
Muller – A Lifelong Masquerade – By Brahm Datt Bharti
p. 2-5)
Top of
Page
The
Positivism of the Dasabodha - Saint Ramdas and Shivaji
The Dasabodha by Ramdas
(1608-1681) is a work in 20 books. Each Book is furnished with
10 sections, and is therefore called a Dasaka. The sections are
called Samasas. So there are altogether 200 Samasas in the
entire treatise, each of which is furnished with a colophon. The
Samasas are of diverse sizes. The Dasabodha is described in
every colophon as Gurusisyasambada (conversation between the
master and the disciple). It is, however, throughout composed in
the form of the master’s sayings rather than in that of
interview, i.e. questions and answers.
The
sayings in these 200 Samasas deal with such topics as bhakti
(faith), rajoguna (activism), tamoguna (inertness), dukha
(pain), mrity (death), Brahma, moksa (liberation), atma (self),
anatma (not-self), yugadharma (duties or mores of the Kali age)
etc. It is necessary to observe that of politics there is hardly
anything in this treatise. There are but just a few references
to raja karun (king’s functions) in this work, voluminous as
it is. Its make up is non-political.
The work is mainly made up of ideas relating to man as an
animal and as a person. The verses are terse and epigrammatic
and simple enough to pass from mouth to mouth becoming thereby
the household words of the masses. Although the gods are
mentioned once in a while, the Dasabodha is not a treatise of
god-lore. It is principally a work of psychology and morals. Its
teachings are calculated to have a sober influence on the mind
and character of individuals.
As such
its spiritual significance is considerable. Like the Sanskrit
Gita and the Tamil Kurul, the Dasabodha is one of the greatest
classics of world literature.
Ramdas was one of the greatest saints of the world. He
was the inspirer of King Shivaji. He was born of Suryaji
Panth and Renuka Bai in Jamb, Maharashtra, in 1608 A.D. Ramdas
was a contemporary of Sant Tukaram. As makers of Maharastra and
remakers of Hindustan, Ramdas and Shivaji will always go
together as one ideological complex in the historical
scholarship of future generations.
(source: Creative India - By Benoy
Kumar Sarkar p. 399-400).
Watch History
of Ayodhya - videogoogle.com.
Top of
Page
Fear of NRIs ?
There
is also a collective 'Fear of NRIs. I think, along with the
irrational fear of engineering. The 'secular progressives'
realize that NRIs, and in particular NRI engineers, especially
those who made money in the high tech boom of the 1990s, are not
so likely to swallow their propaganda.
These
NRIs have seen the world and done well in fully competitive
circles, do not have inferiority complexes, and do
not need to suck up to some white academic like Doniger for
crumbs like travel grants, which the 'sepoys' of Indology in
India crave.
In other words, the NRI engineers are shouting from the
rooftops, 'The Emperor has no clothes!' This is, of course,
distressing to those who have been supplying non-existent
clothes to the Emperor and profiting mightily therefrom.
These NRI engineers have also come to realize that there is
something precious in India
that is under grave threat from the Sino-Islamic axis and
Christian fundamentalists.
And
they have begun to organize; and the results are beginning to
appear. Partly through NRI assertiveness, but mostly through
local strategy, the Hindu right wing is beginning to get its act
together regarding vulnerable Dalits
and Adivasis and about the leftist-missionary stranglehold on
education. Note the signal Supreme
Court ruling that has, finally after 50 years of Nehruvian
Stalinist fascism, allowed the school curriculum to
reflect some ground realities as well as the results of new
research. As a result of all this, it is getting to be a little
more difficult for Christian cultists to prey on unsuspecting
tribals or to brainwash children. Thus
the increasing 'secular' 'progressive' paranoia and fear of NRIs.
(source:
Fear
of NRIs, fear of numbers, fear of logic - By Rajeev
Srinivasan - rediff.com).
More
Tantrums
against NRIs ?
For
years Christian missionaries in India have received funds from
abroad to convert the poor Hindu heathens, but now new
allegations have been made by a group of Indian
leftists that Indian charities and NRIs....
Columnist
Varsha Bhosle writes:
"Why
hasn't Joseph investigated Evangelical
groups that collect money in the name of charity and spend it on
printing tracts to convert Hindus...?)
If
you read Chapter
4: Funding Hate of the "report," you quickly
realise that the only aim of the
campaign is to halt the funding of the Vanvasi Kalyan
Ashram, Vanvasi Kalyan Parishad, Vivekananda Kendra, Vanvasi
Seva Sangh, Sewa Bharati, and Ekal Vidyalays -- ALL being
educational institutions set up for the upliftment of Dalits and
Adivasis. Those whom the vultures
target...
(source:
We
are not duping NRIs, US firms: IDRF - rediff.com
and Where
there's no will to reform, there's extinction - By Varsha
Bhosle - rediff.com.
For more information on missionary activities in India, refer to
chapter on Conversion).
The Hidden Agenda - Rediff readers response to charges
against IDRF
Indian
news media ever eager to gulp down hook, line and sinker
anything they can beat up the Hindus with. The
hypocrisy - While the massive foreign and NRI funding of
proselytizing Christian missionaries who run schools in tribal
areas is deemed "secular" Why is that Hindu
bashers and Indian leftists in the US have of late been cranking
up campaigns against one teacher schools in tribal
areas? How many of the missionaries and evangelists use money
raised abroad to help Hindus/Muslims in distress in India -
without the intent of converting them - few aren't they, so why
selectively blame Hindu groups?
Christian
missionaries are engaged in charitable activities with the
ultimate goal of getting converts to Christianity. If Hindus do
it, is it a crime? If Indians and Hindus do not support Hindu
organizations, who else will? It is none of any
"Mathew"s business. Where did these 'Mathews' go when
Kashmiri Pundits were butchered and driven out of their own
land? Who else will voice for Hindus?
It is a fact that Christian missionaries working in India have
been getting huge funds from abroad for decades. All that they
have been doing is conversion. In tribal areas of Thane
district, missionaries clash routinely (physically) with
communist organisations. This has been never been bone of
contention. Madrassas have been getting huge amount of petro
dollars for years. No one complains. Now that Hindu support
organisations are able to get funds for the first time people
are nervous. The reporter of the news item and Mathew use the
words "violent, sectarian Hindu supremacist organisations".
May I ask who decides all this? Prof. Mathew should check
his own premises about what the Missionaries
in North-Eastern India are doing and where the money is coming
from. How about the Nagaland violence back in 60's
and 70's. Would he not know it was financed by the Churches? The
anti-IDRF crowd is acting on fear and prejudice and not on
facts. If devout Christian groups can
organize relief worldwide, why can't a Hindu group organize
relief in India?
(source: Reader
Responses
to rediff and http://www.letindiadevelop.org/).
For more on IDRF read Attack
on IDRF: Little Method to Their Madness - By Prof.
Beloo Mehra - sulekha.com. The
Foreign Exchange of Hate: IDRF and the American Funding of
Hindutva -- An Analysis - by Ashok Chowgule -
sulekha.com).
Narayan D. Keshavan, an award
winning former Washington Times journalist, says, "I have
been waiting for a long time for a report detailing who and how
much money is flowing into India from
various Christian organization and churches. I am
also waiting for a report on how much
money has flown from Middle Eastern organizations and
governments for proselytising purposes. Those are the
only reports that count because it is the money from these
organizations that is doing real, deadly harm to India and its
unity. The Mathew report is utter
gibberish and is of no importance."
(source: LetIndiaDevelop.org).
Yvette
C. Rosser Department of
Curriculum and Instruction The University of Texas at Austin
wrote:
"How
much does the Jehovah Witness church send every year to India?
What about the Southern Baptists and the Roman Catholics... how
much do they send to support their schools and clinics in India?
What about money from the Gulf States sent to support the many
Madrassas?
The amount coming in from these other sources is
exponentially, hundreds of thousands of times greater than the
measly amount raised so diligently by Mr. and Mrs. Prakash in
the past twelve years."
(source:
IDRF
Transparency vs. Sabrang/FOIL/FIACONA Tamasha - by Yvette C.
Rosser).
The Christian attack
on IDRF is not accident and has nothing to do with Gujarat. It
is to prevent Hindu welfare
organizations from reaching those tribals so that the
well-funded Church organizations have unfettered access to them
for their "harvest of souls".
(source: sulekha.com/newshopper).
Biju Mathew is a leftist and is
pushing a political agenda even if it goes against the poor and
backward people of India. Indian
American donor community is intelligent enough to understand
that propagation of education, development and health care in
the rural areas by IDRF supported NGOs, is hurting the evil
designs of these people," he adds.
(source: Community
leaders renew support to IDRF -
Indian Herald).
Christians
organizations get lion’s share of foreign funds -
By
Inder Sawhney
Christian
missionaries and allied groups continue to be largest recipients
of foreign funds. They received Rs 15.88 crore (75.69 per cent
of the total foreign funds) in April-June this year compared
with Rs 11.41 crore during the corresponding period last year
and Rs 12.67 crore in the first quarter. A study of the receipt
of foreign funds by religious/ non-political organisations and
other groups in April-June, based on Intelligence reports
gathered by the Home ministry, indicates a sharp increase to Rs
20.98 crore compared with Rs 14.02 crore during the
corresponding period in 1998. The US with donations of Rs 4.10
crore (as against Rs 2.26 crore during the same period in 1998)
displaced Germany as the leading donor. In the first quarter of
1999 also, the US was the highest donor with Rs 3.31 crore. In
the second quarter of this year, Kerala received the largest
amount (Rs 3.09 crore) followed by Himachal Pradesh (Rs 2.87
crore) , West Bengal (Rs 2.73 crore) Maharashtra (Rs 1.69 crore),
Andhra Pradesh Rs 1.3 crore and Karnataka Rs 1.2 crore.
Rajasthan was the lowest, accounting for a mere Rs 4,000.
Non-political organisations were the other major recipients of
foreign funds (Rs 1.38 crore) followed by Muslim
organisations which got Rs 64.13 lakh compared with
Rs 23.06 lakh received by them in the second quarter of 1998.
According to the study, there was a fall in the receipt of funds
by non-denominational organisations, including
``pseudo-religious'' bodies. They received Rs 22.99 lakh in the
second quarter of this year against Rs 70.99 lakh in the
corresponding period last year.
(source:
Publication: Times of India - Date:
August 16, 1999 ).
Top of
Page
Russians
join Indians in Janmashtami celebrations
In
keeping with a tradition in vogue for the past years, Indians
and Russians celebrated the birthday of Hindu god Krishna with
cultural programmes and religious functions here. The lone Hindu
temple, run by the International Society for Krishna
Consciousness (Iskcon) in downtown Moscow, was flooded with
devotees throughout Friday, even though it was a working day.
A
surprising fact was that Russian Hindus
outnumbered their Indian counterparts at the function
in a country that barely had any of its citizens claiming to
have converted to Hinduism before the Soviet disintegration
nearly a decade ago.
Artistes
from the Jawaharlal Nehru Cultural Centre (JNCC) under the
Indian embassy and child artistes from the Indian School
presented dances dedicated to Krishna on a huge stage especially
built for the occasion outside the temple. Dances that
celebrated the bond of love between Radha and Krishna, by the
JNCC artistes, had the audience spell-bound.
A
local theatre group, Gaurang, comprising only Russian artistes,
staged a drama on the life and love of Krishna and Radha.
The
festivities, which continued till midnight Saturday, ended with
'aarti' or a cleansing ritual.
'Prasadam',
or the holy offering, was continuously served to visitors and
devotees throughout the evening.
Janmashtami
for many Russians is an occasion to get acquainted with Indian
culture, art and food and to purchase exotic Indian souvenirs,
for which the organisers had made adequate arrangements.
(source: Russians
join Indians in Janmashtami celebrations
- By Arun
Mohanty, Indo-Asian News Service).
Top of
Page
Chitpavan
Brahmins
Pune,
capital of the Peshwas, the last great Hindu power before
British rule. The members of the Chitpavan caste are still
physically distinct by their taller and lighter features (some
even have blue eyes), pointing to their immigrant origins. They
are said to be Maga Brahmins whose original homeland was
Shakadwip, i.e. Central Asia. Apparently, they came
as refugees from Seistan (western Afghanistan) at the time of
the Muslim conquest in the 9th century (as would a
few centuries later the Saraswat Brahmins from Kashmir, now
largely settled in Goa).
According to their own traditions, laid down in the Sabyadri
Khanda, they were washed ashore as corpses but Vishnu’s
incarnation Parashuram “brought the corpses back to life” by
a reversal of the cremation process: the pyre (chita) merely
purified (pavanam) them, hence their name Chitpawan.
For a long time, they were looked down upon and used for
menial services by the native Deshashth Brahmins. But at the
turn of the 18th century, a Chitpavan clan shot to
prominence in the wake of the Maratha commander Shivaji’s
successful liberation of parts of Maharashtra from Moghul rule.
Shivaji’s progeny proved incapable of ruling and extending the
Maratha empire, and in 1713 effective control passed into the
hands of their Prime Ministers, the
Chitpavan Peshwas.
For half a century, Peshwa led armies scored victory upon
victory, until they overplayed their hand and
suffered a shattering defeat in the third battle of Panipat in
1761 against the Afghan invader Ahmed Shah Abdali. In spite of
this setback, they remained the main power center in India until
their decisive defeat by the British East India Company troops
in 1818.
At
the end of the 19th century, Chitpavan Brahmins like V.
K. Chiplunkar, G. K. Gokhale and B.
G. Tilak took a leadership role in the fledgling
freedom movement against British colonial rule.
The British rules considered them
the most dangerous caste in India; in jest, they abbreviated the
caste’s alternative name Konkanasth Brahmins as KoBra.
(source: Gandhi
and Godse: A Review and A Critique –By Koenraad Elst
p. 10- 12)
A
history of the Bene Israelis,
who settled in the Kolaba district of the Konkan, claims the
Chitpavans as fellow Jews who became separated from their
shipmates.
The
British distrusted the Chitpavans. Nanasaheb
Peshwa (18th century), from a portrait that is
available may be called best specimen of Chitpavan manhood.
Nanasaheb's son Vilasrao, when 18, was killed in the Third
Battle of Panipat (1761). Kashiraj has described him as the most
handsome among the Marathas; even in
death he looked so handsome that Ahmedshah Abdali ordered his
dead body to be brought before him - in order to have a look at
his handsome person.
For
more on Chitpavan Brahmins, visit Konkanastha.com
Top of
Page
Lata
voice for the Vedas?
Vedas, the texts which encapsulate
the essence of the ancient Indian Civilization, may have found
an evangelist in the nightingale of India, Lata
Mangeshkar. She promised efforts in this
direction while addressing the second three-day national Vedic
conference at the Y. B. Chavan auditorium here on Saturday.
Among the galaxy of dignitaries on
the occasion were Sandyojan Shankarashram Swami Maharaj,
spiritual head of the Chitrapur Math; Lok Sabha speaker Manohar
Joshi, conference convener Moreshwar Ghaisas of the Ghaisas
Guruji Vedpathshala, Ram Shevalkar and former city MP Anna
Joshi.
Joshi, who inaugurated the
conference, set the ball rolling in his speech, inviting the
celebrated singer to lend her voice to the preservation of the
Vedas, which incidentally, have been passed down millennia
through the oral tradition. Joshi also pledged central
assistance for such a project. The late Vinayak Bhatta Ghaisas
Guruji award worth Rs 25 lakh, instituted by the Ghaisas Guruji
Vedpathshala, was also presented to the Ratnagiri-based
vedpathshala (vedic school) on the occasion.
(source:
Times
of India November 10 '02).
Top of
Page
Abduction of
Turmeric - Pirates in the garden of India
The war began thus:
In May, 1995 the US Patent Office granted to the University of
Mississippi Medical Center a patent [#5,401,504] for "Use
of Turmeric in Wound Healing."
Well, well, well.
Some discovery, that. Indians grow up with a constant awareness
of turmeric. It permeates their life. It is an easy and generous
plant [curcurma longa] that grows throughout the sub-continent.
The tuber when dried keeps practically forever. Its decoction is
a stubborn dye. It is a condiment that adds character to Indian
food and helps digestion. Turmeric powder heals open wounds.
Drunk with warm milk, it stems coughs, cures colds and comforts
throats.
Indians paint doorways with turmeric
paste as an insecticide. Women in the south make a depilatory
skin cream with it. Add the juice of fresh lime to dry turmeric,
let it marinate for three days, dry it in the sun and grind it
to a fine powder and voila, you have the brilliant red kunkum
that 'dots' Indian women's foreheads and surrounds the gods in
the temples. Roots are exchanged between people as a formal
symbol of goodwill. Indians place freshly uprooted plants at the
altar during Pongal and offer worship .
For Indians turmeric is a benevolent
goddess. For sound reasons, it transpires. Indian physicians had
always packed their kits with turmeric. Now West's formal
research was confirming many of its virtues. It is now believed
to be able to treat dysentery, arthritis, ulcers and even some
cancers. It is also found to protect the liver. Turmeric's grace
is stunning cancer researchers. COX-2 inhibitor drugs have been
known to block an enzyme called cyclooxygenase-2 which
aggravates arthritis. Dr. Mitch Gaynor at the Strang Cancer
Prevention Center, New York uses these drugs in cancer treatment
to impede this undesirable enzyme. Turmeric goes one step
further: Dr. Chintalapally V. Rao of American Health Foundation,
Valhalla, NY believes that while COX-2 inhibitor drugs battle
the enzyme, the curcurmin element in turmeric prevents even the
formation of the enzyme. Consider the implication of 'turmeric
patent' #5,401,504. If an expatriate Indian in America sprinkles
turmeric powder -- just as her ancestors in India have done for
centuries-- on her child's scrape, she would in fact be
infringing US patent laws and was open to prosecution.
(source: Goodnewsindia.com).
Refer to chapter on Nature Worship.
Curry
Spice May Inhibit Tumor Growth A compound found in
the curry spice turmeric may suppress production of a protein
that spurs tumor growth in the body, researchers report. The
researchers mixed human pancreatic cancer cells with different
amounts of curcumin, which is the substance that gives turmeric
its yellow color.
(source: Yahoo
News.com).
***
Hundreds of herbs used for centuries
by traditional healers in India could soon be on western
pharmacy shelves. Clinical trials have shown that herbal
remedies for asthma, diabetes and even sexually transmitted
diseases may be effective. may be effective. The council is
looking at treatments for a range of other conditions used for
over a thousand years by practitioners of Ayurveda and Siddha
medicine.
Professor Ranjit Roy Chaudhury, a
member of the council, said that in some cases the herbs may be
more effective than Western-style medicines. "We have
plants for bronchial asthma, hepatitis and arthritis," he
said.
(source: Doctors
investigate Indian herbs - BBC - Sept 30 2002).
Top of
Page
India
Losing on Patents ?
Indraprasth,
Dec 8 (UNI) - After Neem, turmeric and
jamun, now it is cow's urine, traditionally used for medicinal
purposes in India, which has been patented in the United States
as a distilled bio-enhancer.
The
government was aware of this fact and was considering the steps
to be taken in this regard, official sources said here.
Cow's
urine is a component of 'Panch Gawya,' a mixture of cow's milk,
curd, ghee, urine and dung, used from ancient times as a
component of food and medicine. It is also used in various
ayurvedic medicines.
Though
there was no separate strategy for popularizing use of Panch
Gawya, it was being popularised as part of the popularisation of
the Indian System of Medicine and Health medicines, they said. Now
with the patenting of Cow's urine has confirmed the belief of
naturopaths that it has got medicinal properties which enhances
the life span. Former Prime Minister Morarji Desai was among the
staunch supporters of cow' urine.
Earlier,
the patenting of turmeric and neem in the US had created a
furore in the country as people protested the patenting of
traditional Indian knowledge abroad.
Recently,
the Jamun fruits that has been widely
used in the Indian system for treatment of diabetes, has been
patented in the US.
(source: Cow's
urine patented in US as bio-enhancer -
The
Hindu
December 6' 02).
Now,
a US patent for atta chakkis
Patent
relates to method of producing flour used for rotis
New Delhi,
December 9: Now
it is the turn of atta chakkis. The traditional knowledge
of producing atta has become a victim of the patent rights
regime. Hundreds of atta chakkis and modern flour millers
and wheat exporters may fall into the trap being laid by a
Nebraska-based company, ConAgra.
The US
Patent Office has granted patent rights to ConAgra Inc for the
“method for producing an atta flour” vide no 6,098,905.
The patent
application filed by ConAgra said “the present invention
relates to a method for producing an atta flour, which is
typically used to produce Asian breads such as chapati
and roti. Deputy DG of ICAR, Dr Mangla Rai, said that not
only attempts should be made to
document and preserve our traditional knowledge but also we
should make innovations on the basis of our traditional
knowledge and patent the same.
Dr
O. P. Agarwal, advisor and head of R&D, CSIR said, “The
filing of such patents rights by foreign companies should be a
wake-up call for us to not only go for documentation of our
traditional knowledge on a war footing but also to immediately
identify areas of traditional knowledge which are likely to fall
as an easy prey to piracy in a fast growing industrial
economy.”
(source:
Now,
a US patent for atta chakkis - Indian Express
December 8 '02).
Vastu-
a registered trademark in Germany
After the patents of neem and
turmeric, it is now the turn of Vastu,
a popular ancient Indian architectural concept, which
has been found registered as a trademark nearly five years ago
by a German company.
This fact was recently uncovered by the Delhi-based Vastu
Shastra Institute, which is considering taking a legal recourse
against the registration. "We found out that the term vastu
is a registered trademark in Germany and under the World Trade
Organisation rules, companies in other countries cannot use the
word vastu in any comemercial venture. We are planning
to fight the registration and will examine what legal recourse
we can take under the German trademark law," Ashwini Bansal,
director of the institute, said in New Delhi. Bansal said no
Indian company has registered the term vastu, even
though the science has existed in the country since the Vedic
period. "We find the mention of
vastu in the Rig Veda," he said.
India has been fighting against patents granted for the use
of neem
and turmeric
by several countries. It has in the recent past also fought
patents granted to basmati rice.
(source:
Vastu-
a registered trademark in Germany - rediff.com).
Veda,
Ayurveda also registered in Germany
Forty Indian concepts including
Veda, ayurveda and Gayatri have been found registered as
trademarks in Germany, director of New Delhi-based Vastu Shastra
Institute Ashwini Kumar Bansal said. While Veda had been
registered as early as in 1984, Gayatri
had been registered very recently, he said.
(source:
Veda,
ayurveda also registered in Germany - rediff.com).
Top of
Page
Muslims join
in Ganesh celebration
Contrary
to popular belief that communal violence stems from the Old
City, it is this part of the city that is showing the peace path
during the Vinayaka festival.
One
of the oldest Vinayaka devotee groups in the city, Sri Balveer
Bhakta Samaj, which has been taking out a Ganesh immersion
procession for the last 93 years, has people from all
communities participating in it. In Hussaini Alam, in the heart
of the Old City, Hindus and Muslims come together every year to
celebrate Vinayaka chaviti. Muslims organise the ‘pujas’ and
‘aarti’ in the morning and evening as well as receive the
devotees.
“When
festivals are celebrated together it is more fun,” said Abid
Ali, one of the organisers. Most of the volunteers of the Sri
Balveer Bhaktha Samaj are members of Maithri Committees.
“After a few violent incidents occurred in the Old City after
the Gujarat riots, we decided to educate the people that peace
was necessary for coexistence. Violence will not help us get our
bread,” said Syed Hamiuddin, a member of the Hussaini Alam
Maithri Committee. Participating in the tradition of performing
Ganesha puja at Hussaini Alam, deputy commissioner of police
(South) Govind Singh said, “Residents should celebrate and
have fun but respect timings and limits.
If
we impose timings and limits it is not because we do not want
people to celebrate, but it is because one’s celebration
should not cause pain to others. Students have to study and aged
persons need to rest,” he said. Singh asked the organisers to
follow timings strictly and switch off the public address system
at 10 pm. “We have no problem if you want to have bhajans all
through the night.
But
do not use the speakers after 10 pm for the purpose,” he said.
Joint commissioner of police (security) Kaumudi said a large
number of additional security forces have been brought in for
the festival. “We hope we will not have to use them. They are
a deterrent to antisocial elements who do not want peace in the
city,” he said.
(source: Times
of India).
Top of
Page
A
revival of traditional Indian games
By Papri Sri Raman, Indo-Asian News Service
Chennai, Sep 5 (IANS) Tamil Nadu is rediscovering age-old
Indian games, thanks to an enterprising woman. People have
forgotten traditional Indian games," said Vinita Siddartha,
who has been working to revive interest in them.
The
desire to preserve a part of India's
rapidly vanishing heritage is what made her decide on
compiling and reviving some of the traditional games like 'ashtaa
chemma', a game like ludo, and 'aadu puli aatam', which is akin
to chess.
Vinita
has now re-created a set of 10 traditional Indian game kits that
can be used indoors.
The
kits, made of eco-friendly materials like recycled paper, wood,
seeds and shells, have already caught peoples' imagination here.
Traditional games are now so much in demand that Vinita has
started a small company called 'Kreeda' to convert these into
board games with an investment of less than 100,000 rupees.
The
prices of Vinita's board games range from Rs.40 to 175. The kits
have become popular because it is difficult to find the
materials needed to play traditional Indian games in urban
areas.
"Try
finding a collection of cowrie, or tamarind seeds, in a
metropolitan city like Mumbai or Chennai and you'll know,"
said Vinita. Vinita got into the games business almost
accidentally.
She
had an assignment to write about traditional Indian games for a
magazine. "I found that there were hardly any books on
traditional games in India. There were just a few small
references in some texts."
"If
you think the game of snakes and ladders had continental
origins, you are wrong," says Vinita. "The game was
developed from 'moksha patam' or 'param padam', as it is still
known in India. Victorians in India loved it and took it to
England.
"The
last rung of the ladder in the Indian version of the game represents
'Nirvana'. The good rungs for virtue and faith lead
you up towards emancipation. The bad rungs for vanity and theft
lead you to the snake's mouth. The
Victorians replaced the Indian virtues with their own like
thrift and industry."
She
plans to bring the Indian game to the market by October, before
the festival of Vaikuntha Ekadashi,
when this game was traditionally played in earlier days. In
Vinita's repertoire there are traditional games from many
regions of India. 'Chatti' is
a popular schoolgirls' game from Kerala, played with a pile of
stones. 'Daria bander' is
another outdoor game played by teams of six on the island of
Andaman. The game of 'chinesepiel'
is a proof of the intermingling of Chinese and Indian cultures
in northeast India. 'Palangudi'
is a popular southern Indian game, played with tamarind seeds, while
'pachisi' comes from Maharashtra. The material she
found during her research of traditional Indian games fascinated
Vinita. She and her team wrote several articles for the youth
section of a newspaper.
(source: yahoo.com).
Top of
Page
Manufacture
of Iron and Steel in India
The substance
which seems to have evoked the most scientific and technical
interest in the Britain of the 1790s was the sample of wootz
steel by Dr. Scott to Sir J. Banks, the President of
the British Royal Society. The sample went through thorough
examination and analysis by several experts.
It was found in general to match the best steel then available
in Britain, and according to one user, "purpose of fine
cutlery, and particularly for all edge instruments used for
surgical purposes."
After its being
sent as a sample in 1794 and its examination and analysis in
late 1794 and early 1795, it began to be much in demand, and
some 18 years later the afore-quoted user of steel stated,
"I have to use it for many purposes. If a better steel is
offered to me, I will gladly attend to it; but
the steel of India is decidedly the best I have yet
met with."
Till
well into the 19th Britain produced very little of the steel it
required and imported it
from Sweden, Russia, etc. Partly, Britain lag in steel
production was due to the inferior quality of its iron ore, and
the fuel, i.e. coal, it used. Possibly such lag also resulted
from Britain's backwardness in the comprehensive of processes
and theories on which the production of good steel depended.
Whatever may
have been the understanding in the other European countries
regarding the details of the processes employed in the
manufacture of Indian steel, the British, at the time wootz was
examined and analysed by them, concluded, "that it is made
directly from the ore and consequently it has never been in the
state of wrought iron." Its qualities were thus ascribed to
the quality of the ore from which it came and these qualities
were considered to have little to do with the techniques and
processes employed by the Indian manufacturers. In fact it was
felt that the various cakes of wootz were of uneven texture and
the cause of such imperfection and defects was thought to lie in
the crudeness of the techniques employed.
It was only
some three decades later that this view was revised. An earlier
revision in fact, even when confronted with contrary evidence as
was made available by other observers of the Indian techniques
and processes, was intellectual impossibility. "That iron
could be converted into cast steel by fusing it in a close
vessel in contact with carbon" was yet to be discovered,
and it was only in 1825 that a British manufacturer "took
out a patent for converting iron into steel by exposing it to
the action of caruretted hydrogen gas in a close vessel, at a
very high temperature, by which means the process of conversion
is completed in a few hours, while by the old method, it was the
work of from 14 to 20 days."
According to
J. M. Heath, founder of the Indian Iron and Steel
Company, and later prominently connected with the development of
steel making in Sheffield, the Indian process appeared to
combine both of the above early 19th century British
discoveries. He observed: "Now it
appears to me that the Indian process combines the principles of
both the above described methods. On elevating the
temperature of the crucible containing pure iron, and dry wood,
and green leaves, an abundant evolution of carburetted hydrogen
gas would take place from the vegetable matter, and as its
escape would be prevented by the luting at the mouth of the
crucible, it would be retained in contact with the iron, which,
at a high temperature, appears from (the above mentioned patent
process) to have a much greater affinity for gaseous than for
conrete carbon; this would greatly shorten the operation, and
probably at a much lower temperature than were the iron in
contact with charcoal powder."
And he added:
"In no other way can I account for the fact that iron is
converted into cast steel by the natives of India, in two hours
and half, with an application of heat, that, in this
country, would be considered quite inadequate to produce such an
effect; while at Sheffield it requires at least four hours to
melt blistered steel in wind-furnaces of the best construction,
although the crucibles in which the steel is melted, are at a
white heat when the metal is put into them, and in the Indian
process, the crucibles are put into the furnace quite
cold."
(source: Indian Science and
Technology in the 18th Century - By Dharampal).
For more on science in Ancient India refer to chapter on Hindu
Culture). For
more refer to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor
Top of
Page
Terrorists Attack
Akshardham Hindu Temple in Gujarat, 44 Dead
Forty-four people, including men,
women and children, were killed and another 100 seriously
injured in a deadly attack by terrorists on the Akshardham
temple complex here on Tuesday evening. The
dead included 11 women and four children. Some Hindu monks have
been reported among the casualties.
They
arrived in an ambassador car and climbed over the temple wall to
enter
the premises. The terrorists were armed with AK-47 rifles.
Armed to the teeth
terrorists stormed Gandhinagar's Akshardham temple, owned by
Gujarat's prosperous Swaminarayan sect, on Tuesday evening. They
had killed 30 people and injured at least 100.
The
terrorists,
entered the sprawling Akshardham temple complex at around 4:45
pm and started shooting indiscriminately at the visitors. Three
to four grenades were also hurled at the devotees.
Unidentified
attackers stormed into a popular
Hindu temple
in western India
on Tuesday, killing at least 23 worshippers in a shooting spree,
Deputy Prime Minister Lal Krishna Advani said. With the gunmen
still inside the
Swaminarayan
Temple, dozens of state commandos
were surrounding the sprawling complex in the city of
Gandhinagar in Gujarat state.
Twenty-six persons were feared
killed on Tuesday evening when gunmen stormed the famous
Akshardham temple in Gandhinagar, capital of Gujarat. The
suspected terrorists, believed to be four in number, first threw
grenades in the complex and then started firing
indiscriminately. The temple is a popular destination for people
of the Swaminarayan sect and others, including foreigners.
A government spokesperson said
that about 25 persons may have been injured in the attack.
Five hundred devotees have been
rescued.
***
The un-swept trail of blood on
white marble floor, unpicked turbans, handbags, shards of black
glasses and a grenade hole in front of Hall number 1 and
encircled bullet marks...These are enough in the revered
Akshardham temple here to reconstruct the terror unleashed on
innocent devotees on Sept.24. The monument dedicated to the
founder of Swaminarayan Samparaday, Lord Swaminarayan is located
in Sector 20 and is very close to the ministerial enclave. Akshardham
means the “Abode of God”. (source: rediff.com
and msnbc.com
and Tribuneindia.com).
Top of
Page
English
media in India and Pogrom, etc.
The
Editors Guild Report frequently uses words like pogrom,
massacre, ethnic cleansing, and genocide, in describing the
post-Godhra events in Gujarat. If
these terms are valid for Gujarat, would it not be fair to say
that it has an even greater validity in Kashmir, where the scale
of deaths and refugees is much higher? However,
the English media in India refuses to use the terms for Jammu
& Kashmir.
This
habit is nothing new. In March 1998, in context of the alleged
attacks on Christians on a communal basis, Arun
Shourie had narrated the following dialogue between
him and an American journalist.
“And
what about the pogroms that go on from time to time?,” the
caller asked. Late at night, an editorial writer with one of the
world’s best-known papers was calling from the USA. It was
becoming evident that the BJP would form the Government, he was
gathering background information. “What did you say?,” I
asked. Even though I had heard the word clearly enough, I wanted
to see if he would repeat it. “Pogroms,” he repeated.
“What
do you mean, ‘pogroms’?” “It is
an East-European term....,” he began. Now, even a
brown Asiatic like me knows the meaning of the word. The person
had lived in India for some time, as the India correspondent of
this important paper -- enough years to know that even we know
that it is a term which is used to describe the massacre of
millions of white Europeans by white Europeans.” (India
Connect, March 23, 1998)
In
an article in the Mid-Day, KR Sundar Rajan, wrote:
“After (December 6, 1992), many (foreign) journalist flew down
to report ... India’s impending collapse. But newsmen back
home were disappointed. One told me he expected a Bosnian-type
civil war between Hindus and Muslims.
‘We
were influenced by what your own government and newspapers said,
(who) painted a very depressing and unbalanced picture of India,’
he said.” (July 13, 1993)
It
would seem to us that hysterical
writings are a special feature of the English media in India.
(source:
The
English media in India - Hindu Vivek Kendra).
Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
Top of
Page
Indian
Goddesses Bound for Danish Museum
Clay
images of two Indian Goddesses, Durga
and Kali, selected for their mystical qualities and considered
representative of Hinduism, will find a permanent place in the
Danish National Museum in Copenhagen, Denmark. Shyamal
Kanti Chakraborty, curator of Kolkata's Indian Museum, said the
Danish foreign ministry had written to him about Copenhagen's
desire to promote understanding of Indian art, culture and
religion. "The Indian Goddesses will first be showcased in
an exhibition at the Danish National Museum under the Images of
Asia section. Thereafter the deities will find place in a
permanent gallery of the museum," Chakraborty said. Also on
display will be various materials and ingredients used in the
worship of the two Goddesses and the musical
instruments played while conducting the rituals. The worship of
Durga over a four day period in autumn constitutes the Bengalis'
biggest festival of Durga Puja. Two
Danish officials were in Kolkata during Durga Puja celebrations
last week studying the religious rites, while taking copious
notes for illustrations to accompany the clay images of the
Goddesses. The Danish museum will not only exhibit the images of
Durga and Kali, but also models of the various stages of making
of the icons.
(source: New
India Press - October 24'
02).
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Page
The
empire strikes back
The
Prince at the British Golden Jubilee Banquet held in London,
made some remarkable disclosures. First, he thanked India
for "its civilizing influence over Britain", then
proposed a toast for "real India, the enduring and
everlasting India", an India that had preserved its
identity through its experience of colonization, and
which must now fight the invasion of satellite television.
This is amazing. India having a
civilizing influence over
Britain? Where does that leave the white man's burden?
What
a volte face for a nation that systematically during its 300
years of rule, denigrated every aspect of the 'native' culture,
including its philosophy and spirituality, and supplanted it
with its own imperial values, attitude and approaches.
In
the same vein, he went on to congratulate us for having
withstood the experience of colonialism, a 'colonialism' his own
country imposed! Here is an implicit acknowledgement of the less
than salubrious impact of colonialism; a concession that their
conquest may have damaged us. Considering that his mother did
not have the bigness to apologize for the Jallianwallah
massacre, this is downright handsome of the son. On
the same occasion, the Prince
quoted Vedic
hymns, revealing his acquaintance with the heart of
India's philosophy and spirituality. His fondness for Indian
classical music, which derives its aesthetics from the same
philosophy, is yet another indication of the Prince's attraction
and affinity for our culture.
(source:
The
empire strikes back - By Author: Suma Varghese Free
Press Journal December 5 1997).
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Page
Maya,
maya ... secular maya!
'We
will not permit Sanskrit hegemony', thundered Congman Peter
Alphonse from the precincts of St. Andrew's Church,
the venue of the anti-ordinance protest a few days back....
Peter's Sanskrit-phobia virtually passed unnoticed, barring a
casual mention in some newspapers.
Now,
Sanskrit, as we all know, is no longer in vogue as a spoken
language. Its only relevance today is by virtue of it being the
language of the vedas and the Hindu scriptures. It is the sacred
tongue of the Hindu religion which values the antiquity of the
language as much as it does its literature for posterity. Now,
would it not be logical to conclude that any attack on Sanskrit
was meant to be an attack on Hinduism which is the real target?
Now,
how can a Peter call for ending Sanskrit hegemony, assuming it
exists? And
when this Peter targeted Sanskrit which is wholly Hindu and
nothing but Hindu, was he behaving like a secularist or like a
Christian?
Peter
Alphonse's tirade against Sanskrit is a direct and an uncouth
display of an evil intent that of striking at the very roots of
the Indian culture, and though he himself is a nonentity he is
indicative of a larger mass of anti-Hindu opinion harboured by
minorities and secularists. And
we all know what sort of a hegemony is sought to be put up as an
alternative to Sanskrit, read, Hindu, 'hegemony': An all too
familiar hegemony that would be perfectly fine with the Peters. The
history of the world over centuries stands testimony to the
destructive character of this hegemony that rides on
proselytization and its purveyors.
(source:
Maya,
maya ... secular maya! - By T R Jawahar
- newstodaynet.com).
Top of
Page
Divide
and Convert; Divide and Rule
French-born
Michel Danino has been
settled in Tamil Nadu for 25 years; he has given many lectures
in India and is co-author of
The Invasion That
Never Was.
He is also the convener of the International
Forum for India's Heritage. He has written on the
devastation caused by Christian missionary activities in the
North-East.
"The
last point was brought to us in sharp focus during our
interactions with a few tribals of Arunachal, who voiced the
same distress at the methods used to
secure conversions to Christianity: not only monetary
allurements, but psychological pressure on the sick, promises of
cure upon conversion, pressures to rope in the rest of the
family when the promises don't materialize, and finally to throw
out of the family those who continue to "worship
Satan".
In
fact some missionaries and Christian educational institutions
openly refer to tribals, Hindus, and Buddhists as Satan ka
bachcha (children of Satan) while Christians are Ishwar ka
bachcha (children of God).
We
heard several heart-rending tales of teenage boys or girls
having been thus expelled from their families when they refused
to convert, accused by their own parents of being
"Satan". Converted families are then instructed not to
have contacts with the non-Christians, as a result of which they
refuse to take part in traditional harvests and other aspects of
the community's collective life; the centuries-old harmonious
working of the community suddenly becomes divided, and indeed
division is a great way to secure conversions: "divide and
convert", until you can "divide and rule". That
ultimate step is already visible in the militant movements of
the North-East, most of which are rooted in Christian ideology.
Witness the conversions the militants secure at gunpoint in
remote villages at night, a fact asserted to us repeatedly. I
remembered a Don Bosco father in Tamil Nadu telling me a few
years ago how "tribes have no future within the Indian
Union" and explaining why he was exhorting them "to
take up guns". It all fell into place."
(source: Divide
and Convert; Divide and Rule - By Michel Danino - rediff.com).
Hate
Literature - by Christian Missionaries in India
Christian fundamentalists are aimed
at destabilising the Hindu society and also the state. Christian
fundamentalists’ literature is making rounds in the whole country, heaping
abuse on Hindu deities and mocking at the religious symbols and practices of the
Hindus. Apart from “aggressive harvesting” efforts this literary
insinuation against Hindu religion is one of the major causes of communal
disturbance in the country.
The magazine Indian
Messenger (September 1998) calls the great Kumbha Mela, which
attracts millions of Hindu devotees, a superstitious deception. “The belief
that the mud of sins in human souls can be purified for ultimate liberation
through Ganga, Yamuna and Saraswati is superstitious. The
Kumbha Mela represents this superstitious deception,” it says.
(source:
Hate
Literature - By Rajendra
Chadha).
Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com.Refer
to Genocide and
Ethnic Cleansing of Kashmiri Hindu Pandits - And the World
Remained Silent - Movie http://www.jaia-bharati.org/films/and-the-world.mpg
Top of
Page
Zorawar
Singh - The Unsung Hero
Just
how divorced our "secular" education system is from
our tradition and history became obvious...to me when, during my
recent trip to Kailash-Mansarovar, I expressed a desire to pay
homage to the memory of Zorawar Singh. I found most of my 10 odd
companions had no idea about the
gallant hero who had
integrated Ladakh, also known as "Little Tibet", with
India through his military expedition in 1841.
The
"samadhi" of Zorawar Singh, "Sing-ba Ka Chorten"
to the locals, is located between Taklakot and Zaidi outside a
sleepy village, Toye. It is marked by mountainous topography of
Gurla Mandhata range. Oblong Rakshak Tal spans its western side
whereas vast Mansarovar spreads on to its East. Mount Kailash is
a distance glimmer on further north.
The
man whose memory rests here is actually Zorawar Singh Dogra, the
general in the army of Maharaja Gulab Singh. His
singular - and truly remarkable - contribution to history was
bringing Ladakh within the political domain of India.
In
40 years of his monarchy, the phenomenal Sikh ruler, Maharajah
Ranjit Singh, had galvanised the region from a hub of vying Sikh
chieftains into a strong unified Hindu nation. (All contemporary
records and correspondence refer to the Maharaja as a "Hindoo"
king). In 1834, five years before Ranjit Singh passed
away (on June 27, 1839, at Lahore), his favourite satrap Gulab
Singh's general, Zorawar Singh in Kishtwar, took advantage of
internal disorders in Leh, and demanded the restoration of an
estate supposedly held by a Kishtwar chief in former times.
Much
snow has melted in those hills since the establishment of People
Republic of China, the latter country's occupation of Tibet in
the 1950s, and China's border war with India in 1962. However,
if still the most spacious district of India, the "Little
Tibet", is with India, it is owing to the selfless
sacrifice of one man, Zorawar Singh. Grateful nations
normally salute the memory of such heroes.
Thanks
to our "secular" education, we are oblivious of
them.
(source:
The
Unsung Hero - Balbir Punj - pioneer.com).
Top of
Page
Why
is India intact?
Farrukh Saleem -
wonders how India, more diverse than
any other country in the world, has survived
undivided.
The
population comprises 800 million Hindus, 120 million Muslims, 25
million Parsis, 23 million Christians, 19 million Sikhs, besides
Buddhists and Jains. Hindus are further divided among 2,800
unique communities. The caste system has Brahman, Kshatriya,
Vashya, Sudra, Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Other
Backward Classes. The Scheduled Castes are further divided into
450 distinct communities. The Scheduled Tribes have 461 distinct
communities and Other Backward Classes are divided into 766
distinct communities.
This is a division like in no other country. All
the possible fault-lines exist: religious, ethnic, linguistic,
geographic and communal. And these divisions run deep. On top of
that, for the past half-century there have been at least nine
significant centrifugal movements seeking autonomy, secession or
independence from India.
Because
India
is democratic....
(source:
Why
is India intact? - By Farruk Saleem).
Top of
Page
Assault
at Akshardhama
By
Vikram Verma
The BBC reports still say "Gujarat witnessed widespread
religious violence earlier this year when Muslim mobs were
accused of setting fire to a train carrying Hindu activists", while it
has been established beyond doubt that a group of Muslims set
the train on fire at Godhra, though the official enquiry into
the incident is still on.
The
attack at Akshardhama, Swaminarayan Temple was an attempted
Godhra-II with similar intent of massacring Hindus. The silence
of the so-called secular forces in India, be it Arundhati Roy's
or the communist Sitaram Yechuri's is unexplainable.
Imagine a similar attack on Jama Masjid in New Delhi and it is held
under siege by some fictitious Hindu terrorist organization and
some thirty odd Muslims are slain by Hindu mercenaries. In such
a case, all kind of uninvited reactions would have poured in
from these very pseudo-secularists against the possible
involvement of RSS, VHP and the BJP and it would have started a
fresh debate against the burgeoning Hindu ultra-jingoistic
belligerence propelled by the BJP led government.
Though this attack at Akshardhama may be attributed as a
reciprocation of the Gujarat riots and may be blamed on Modi's
instigating remarks but nobody is concerned about the
provocative remarks of the Shahi Imam time and again.
The appeal of all the secularists right now is of restraint (read
and implied as Hindu Restraint Only) because Muslims have shown
no restraint in the past and I earnestly doubt that they ever
will. But if such dastardly acts of terrorism continue against
Hindus, such a fictitious Hindu terrorist organization may
actually come into existence to save the Hindus from this
planned pogrom.
(source:
sulekha.com).
Top of
Page
Ganesha
statue to be installed in Irish embassy
Lord
Ganesha has attracted new devotees in the capital and
surprisingly in the embassy of Ireland, a predominantly
Christian country.
``Let
Ganesha, considered to be a symbol of luck and prosperity instil
confidence and shower blessings on hundreds of visa
seekers who frequent the embassy'', said the Ireland Minister of
Trade and Commerce, Michael Adhern, unveiling the 3x4 ft. black
granite statue at the green embassy lawns today.
The Minister who is on a trade
visit said the installation of Ganesha will not only prove
auspicious for the Irish embassy, but also link the cultures of
India and Ireland.
The Ambassador of Ireland, Philip
Mc Donagh, who was instrumental in bringing the deity to the
consulate, said during a visit to Mahabalipuram in Tamil Nadu,
he was fascinated by the Ganesha statues made by Bhaskaran, a
sculptor and ordered one for the embassy.
He has already supplied shiploads
of Ganesha statues to many foreign countries.— PTI
(source:
Ganesha
statue to be installed in Irish embassy
- October 8, 2002). http://www.hvk.org/articles/1002/107.html
Top of
Page
Wishful
thinking ???
Hinduism Collapsing -
says Indian
Christian Evangelist Vishal Mangalwadi
Vishal Mangalwadi points to several key indicators that
India's spiritual makeup is changing.
Hinduism has never been stronger philosophically,
politically, and economically. The collapse of modernism in the
West and the consequent interest in mysticism, Hindu gurus,
Tantra, and Yoga have given unprecedented philosophical strength
to Hinduism. New Age proponents like Deepak Chopra and Shirley Maclaine are hugely
successful in India. Vishal says these writings are very
influential because these books have been paraphrased into the
everyday language of the people. The
environmentalists in the West argue that Christians are at the
root of the ecological problem because man has dominion over the
earth and man has made a mess of it. "Those who
read this say that nature worship is the way to go because man
will learn to respect nature when he worships it," he says.
When people buy into this thinking, that reinforces
Hinduism.
Vishal says the great majority of Indians don't realize that
their freedom is a fruit of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. When
William Carey, the first Protestant missionary from England,
came to India in 1793, he argued that the best way to change
India was to give them the Bible. It would change India as the
Word had changed Europe.
(source: http://www.cbn.org/700club/profiles/vishal_mangalwadi.asp
- 700 Club).
Top of
Page
14 foreigners
embrace Hinduism
Fourteen foreign nations who are
here to attend an international symposium on Vedic astrology
have embraced Hinduism. The conversion ceremonies were performed
at the office of the Arya Samajam here in the last two days. Two
of them later got married according to Hindu religious rites at
the Azhakodi Devi temple here.
The Arya Samajam 'purohit'
(priest), Indrajit Singh, who performed the rituals to initiate
the foreigners into Hinduism, told THE HINDU, that he had
received a few more similar requests. The foreign
nationals having the US and British passports have assumed Hindu
names.
(source: The
Hindu).
Top of
Page
Kanchi
Acharya worships at Dalit-run temple
The
Kanchi Acharya, Jayendra Saraswathi, offered worship at Thumbaipatti near
Melur in Madurai district last night. The temple, worshipped by people living in
18 villages, has a Dalit as the priest.
Addressing
a gathering at the Veerakali Amman temple after worship, he emphasised tht
Hindus were always living as a 'family', as brothers and sisters. The
religion did not entertain any discrimination and people all sections were
treated as equals.
Equality
was the hallmark of the Hindu religion though there were some differences
in society.
The
Acharya appealed to the people not to foster differences among themselves
as the strength of the religion was its unity.
The
visit of the Acharya, according to the organisers, was arranged in the
backdrop of the criticism that discrimination often forced Dalits to
embrace other religions. The rituals at the temple are performed by the family
members of the late Minister, P. Kakkan. But people from all castes offer
worship there. The temple at the birthplace of Kakkan is also a symbol
of communal harmony, as Muslims also participate in the annual
festival held in January.
The
Acharya presented shawls to representatives of the villages surrounding
Thumbaipatti.
(source: Kanchi
Acharya worships at Dalit-run temple - The Hindu November
12 2002).
Top of
Page
A Muted Hindu
political identity?
The
Religious Consequences of Freedom for Hindus in India
The British while ostensibly maintaining a secular stance,
embarked on a policy of keeping the Hindus and Muslims from
coming together, as these two constituted the major religious
groups. The British also tried to prevent the Hindus from
presenting a unified front as well by trying to separate the
untouchables into a distinct group.
Indian secularism did not possess as firm a wall of
separation between the Church and the state as in the USA,
ironically because Hinduism does not possess a church. The state
had to step in to take control of Hindu affairs at the national
level by default, and spearheaded many reforms, such as the
Hindu Marriage and Divorce Act. Hindu political identity, which
had so far remained submerged in the sea of an Indian identity,
is beginning to surface like a giant whale with unpredictable
consequences. While the government did not feel any scruples in
modifying Hindu practices through legislation, it was extremely
solicitous of the minorities. Such was the political legacy of
the Independence Movement in which Hindu
political identity was kept muted to encourage the
growth of Indian nationalism by making the minorities feel
secure. The bridge is now becoming a barrier. According to Article
30 of the Indian Constitution: “1. All minorities,
whether based on religion or language, shall have the right to
establish and administer educational institutions of their
choice. 2. The state shall not, in granting aid to educational
institutions, discriminate against any educational institutional
on the ground that it is under the management of a minority,
whether based on religion or language.”
This article actually confers more rights on the non-Hindu
minorities than to the Hindu majority.
This explains why a strange quirk of history, that
denominations of Hinduism, supposedly the religion of majority,
have sought and secured protection under these provisions from
interference by the state in running their educational
institutions, in those states of India where non-Hindu or
anti-Hindu parties have gained political power, sometimes by
claiming that they are not Hindu! The Arya Samaj won the status
of a minority religion first in Bihar and then in the Punjab in
1971, where Sikhs tended to win political power. The Ramakrishna
Mission won a similar recognition in 1987 in West Bengal with a
Marxist government in power.
This uneven nature of the Indian Constitution, which
functions with political checks in dealing with minorities and
without them in dealing with the Hindus, was already identified
by Donald Eugene Smith in 1963 as potentially problematical in
the secular context. The government has retreated from the
directive of framing a uniform civil code for all Indians as
required by Article 44 of the Constitution, by exempting the
Muslim community on grounds of protection of minority rights on
the one hand, while on the other, its interferences with Hindu
practices, sometimes well-intentioned, as symbolized by
enactments against the glorification of Sati passed in
1987-1988, continues unabated and feeds the feeling that Indian
secularism is increasingly being directed against Hinduism.
Essentially Hindu nationalism is the belief that “the Hindu
majority is a persecuted majority” and that India’s
minorities have “acquired privileges beyond their dues.”
(source:
Our
Religions - edited By Arvind Sharma p. p.48- 56).
For
more refer to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor. Watch
An
Invasion through Conversion
- videoyahoo.com
Top of
Page
Secular
Boomerang!
It
is heartening to know that secularism can fire both ways. If not
handled with care, it can blow up in the face of even its expert
proponents, like a bomb in the making. Of course, such occasions
are rare in this very tolerant' country, given the one-sided
secular-sermons that the people are customarily and consistently
subjected to, but a wonder has indeed happened.
The
Madras High Court while
ruling that the closure of schools and colleges run by
minorities in the State for a day is not clothed with legal
sanction', has also dropped a few pearls of secular wisdom that
the inveterate secularists can do well to pick. After declaring
that the Court knows no religion, the learned Judge goes on to
say: No student who is studying in minority institutions,
regardless of religion, shall be involved in this kind of
protest and we hope that they shall not be dragged into any kind
of controversies, religious or political, and be spared only for
the purpose of developmental activities like education, sports,
etc. so that they grow up as healthy secular students'. Note the
catch phrases: ...knows no religion' and ...secular students'. These
are normally hurled by the secularists and of course, the
minorities to hound and humble the Hindus. The
secular boomerang has struck at them with greater force than
they had unleashed it with. The Court had wanted to know from
the defendant secularists why at all the schools run by them
have to be closed when there were several other ways of
expressing their protest, particularly when the ordinance was
applicable only to conversions through force, allurement or
fraudulent means.
The
Christian community leaders and their secular sponsors were
obviously suffering from a high degree of presumptuousness -
that they can get away with anything. This in turn
has been wrought by decades of over-indulgence to them, their
whims and their religion, by everybody who is somebody, both in
politics and society. So, any step to rectify anomalies, balance
the scales or check their activities is met with stiff
resistance and dubbed as an anti-minority atrocity which has to
be shunned forcefully and shelved forthwith!
But
for once their bluff has been called with the State government
making it clear that if they went ahead with the closure of the
schools run by them, (and not wholly funded by them, mind you),
then the aid would be cut forthwith. Very
few people know that most of the so-called Christian-run
institutions are heavily aided by government doles. These
educational institutions and even those which are self-financed,
rely heavily on secular students for sustenance, charging them
fees that are in no way less than the market rates.
Rendering
of Saraswathi Vandhana was deemed a blashpemy in this secular
country, but day in and day out lakhs of students, majority of
them Hindus, studying in the thousands of schools that have
downed shutters today, are made to begin their day with an
invocation to the Holy Father and Holy-whateverelse.
(source:
Secular
Boomerang! - By T R Jawahar - newstodaynet.com). Watch History
of Ayodhya - videogoogle.com.
Archbishop Rev Aruldas James
threatens to close down all the Christian-run schools in protest
against the Tamil Nadu Government's
Ordinance against conversion brought about by fraud, allurement
and force. So far, the Christian missionaries were
saying that running of schools and hospitals was act of love,
charity, and service to humanity. If
their motive has not all along been securing conversions,
through schools, why should they now threaten to close down the
schools, because conversion is banned? It would be
good if the churches and missionaries in other States also make
their stand clear on this matter. Mahatma
Gandhi in his various discussions with missionaries had made it
very clear that the Christian schools and hospitals were
instruments for conversion and not solely for acts of
Christian love and charity and service to humanity.
Swami
Dayananda Saraswati Speaks Out on the Religious Conversion
Ordinance
Swami
Dayananda Saraswati: "I welcome the promulgation of the
ordinance by the Government of Tamil Nadu to ban religious
conversions 'by use of force or by allurements or by any
fraudulent means.' This is a
long-awaited step. A step that ensures for the citizens of Tamil
Nadu the most basic of human rights.
The
Universal Declaration of Human rights adopted by General
Assembly resolution 217 A (III) in December 1948, holds in
Article 18 that 'Everyone has the right to freedom of thought,
conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change
his religion or belief.'
While the article endorses each person's right to change his or
her religion, it does not in any way
allow for another person to change a given person's religion. On
the contrary, a systematic coercive effort to impose one's
religion on another 'by use of force or by allurements or by any
fraudulent means' is a clear violation of this basic human
right.
The
denigration of one's religion and the humiliation that
accompanies the conversion experience are violations of the
dignity ensured to every human being. With the conversion
experience come shame, isolation, deep personal conflict and
ultimately, the seeds for discord. History testifies to the
devastating loss of rich and diverse cultures, gone forever in
the aftermath of religious conversion. I appeal to
the political leadership of all other States in India to
promulgate similar laws and make sure that all possibilities of
religious conflict are avoided, and the tradition of religious
harmony in India is maintained."
(source:
The New Indian Express October
21, 2002).
Top of
Page
Nataraja - Lord
Shiva as a Scantly Clad Woman Hawks Shower Fixtures
American
Hindus Against Defamation issued a press release
today which reads in part, "Kohler Company, one of the most
prominent plumbing supply companies, is using Lord Nataraja (a
form of Lord Siva) in the form of a scantly clad woman and
taking a shower to hawk its new shower products. The image in
the Kohler advertisement appeared in The New York Times on
Sunday, October 13, 2002.
This image is unmistakably that
of Lord Siva as Nataraja. The dancing pose, multiple hands, the
hand gestures, the metaphor of water from shower too, resembles
the flow of river Ganga (Ganges) usually depicted as flowing
through Lord Siva. The tag line for the advertisement, 'There is
a Goddess,' clearly indicates that the advertisement is no
coincidence; it is an unequivocal indication that the image of
Lord Siva was distorted and adopted for the advertisement
purpose. AHAD is unhappy by the use of the image of Lord Shiva
in such a disrespectful manner. AHAD requests the Hindu
community to visit their web site and sign the protest book at
'source' above."
AHAD
is disgusted by the abuse of the image of Lord Shiva in such a
derogatory manner. Just as the scantly clad image of
Christ in shower selling shower fixtures would be offensive and
evoke strong resentment in the Christian community, this
advertisement image has enraged the Hindu community. Hindu
deities are worshipped, they are not exotic images to be
distorted, mutilated and abused.
(source: Hindunet.org
and Hinduism
Today).
Top of
Page
British
Parliament celebrates Diwali
In what they hope will be the most auspicious new political
season of them all, hundreds of British Hindus took agarbattis,
diyas, sweets and the spirit
of Diwali for the first time ever into the UK’s Victorian
houses of Parliament, only to be rebuked by a leading
government minister for political apathy.
With his mouth full of mithai,
Home Secretary David Blunkett chided Britain’s Hindus for
"not voting very much, for any party", a criticism
commentators said could imply an insularity and self-centredness
at the heart of one of the richest immigrant communities in
Britain today.
Leading community leaders privately admitted Blunkett was
right, but emphasized that change was in the air and Diwali’s
arrival in parliament was symbolic. Britain’s
largest Hindu students organisation said Blunkett’s remarks
came as they planned to launch a massive campaign to get Hindus
elected as local politicians. On being asked for statistics
by this paper, Blunkett’s office said he had meant voting
apathy in general.
Analysts said the rebuke, by the most senior of the 100
British serving MPs and politicians present at Westminster’s
first ‘festival of lights’
late on Thursday, summed up the predicament of Britain’s
roughly 500,000-strong Hindu community – prosperity without
political clout. It was arguably one of the reasons Diwali
had finally arrived at Westminster more than 30 years after
sizeable numbers of Indians got here from east Africa.
Blunkett’s criticism, which were the only fireworks around
in the safety-conscious British parliament, came as prominent
Indo-phile British MPs and those with Indian-dominated
constituencies, lit diyas and chanted
"Om shanti, shanti".
MP Piara Singh Khabra from Punjab said Diwali
had come to a building that symbolized colonial rule. This
then was the triumph of light over
darkness, but UK Hindus' politics remained the grey
area.
(source: British
Parliament celebrates Diwali Times of India).
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Non-
Brahmins can function as temple priests, rules SC
In a blow to those who advocated Brahmins only for priesthood, the
supreme court has ruled that non-Brahmins can also perform
religious ceremonies and work as temple priests as long as they
are well versed with the relevant rituals and rites.
Throwing
open all Hindu religious institutions including temples - to all
classes and sections of Hindus, the court said,
“Any custom or usage irrespective of even any proof of their
existence in pre-constitutional days cannot be countenanced as a
source of law to claim any rights when it is found to violate
human rights, dignity, social equality and the specific mandate
of the constitution and law by parliament”.
The court added: “No usage which
is found to be pernicious and considered to be in derogation of
the law of the land or opposed to public policy or social
decency can be accepted or upheld by courts in the country”.
Resolving a dispute over the
appointment of a non-Malayali Brahmin as the priest of an
ancient temple managed by the Travancore Devaswom Board, a Bench
comprising Justice S. Rajendra Babu and Justice Doraiswamy Raju
also sought to delve into various issues of vital
constitutional, social and public importance having certain
religious overtones.
Upholding a Kerala high court
judgment which held that it was not essential that only a
Brahmin, who was not qualified nor versed with the rituals,
could become the priest of the temple, the Bench recalled a 1966
judgment which had said: “Hinduism is
far more than a mere form of theism resting on Brahminism”.
The court also referred to Article
17 of the Constitution which abolishes untouchability and recalled
revelations made in the Gita and Mahatama Gandhi’s
dream that all distinctions based on castes and creed must be
abolished and “man must be known and recognised by his
actions, irrespective of the caste to which he may on account of
his birth belong”.
Emphasizing the importance of daily
rituals, poojas and recitations to maintain the sanctity of the
idol, the Bench said “no doubt only a qualified person well
versed and properly trained for the purposes alone can perform
poojas in the temple since he has not only to enter into the
sanctum sanctorum but also touch the idol installed there”.
The court further said that if
traditionally or conventionally, in any temple, all along a
Brahmin alone was conducting poojas or performing the job
priest, it may not be because a person other than the Brahmin
was prohibited from doing so.
(source:
Times of India - October 5, 2002
and rediff.com).
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Did
You know?
The
rust free iron pillar at Kodachadri in
Karnataka
The
historical iron pillars at Mehrauli, Delhi, and at Dhar, in
Madhya Pradesh, have attracted the attention of scientists for
over a century and have been the subject matter of many
publications. However,
a third iron pillar located in Adi-Mookambika temple at
Kodachadri village in a remote forest area of the Western Ghats
in Karnataka has not received much scientific attention so far,
partly because the concerned village is difficult to reach and
partly because the pillar itself is not as massive and imposing
as the Delhi and Dhar monuments.
Popularly referred to as the Dwaja-Sthamba
(flag-staff) of the
Mookambika Ambika temple,
the Kodachadri iron mast or pillar has long been associated in
the minds of most scientists, particularly metallurgists, with
the pilgrim centre of Kollur, a town located in the plains,
about 120 km north of the well-known port city of Mangalore
in South Canara District of Karnataka. This temple with claims
to be the original Mookamika temple is associated with
the killing of the dumb (mooka) demon Mookasura
by the lion-riding Mother Goddess in the adjoining
forests, where the demon was disturbing the penance of sages and
holy men devoted to the Goddess. Today Kodachadri can be reached
from Kollur by jeep on a 40 km long winding and slippery
mud road with many hair-pin bends, often submerged in water
during the rainy season lasting from April to November.
If local lore is to be believed,
this flag-staff is actually the top portion of the Tri-
(trident) with which the Mother Goddess nailed down the
wicked demon into the bowels of the earth!
The dry
desert-like climate in places like Delhi and Rajasthan helps
preservation. Since the corrosion rate is low when the humidity
is not high. However, rust proof iron has also been found in
very humid areas.
The Kodachadri hills in Karnataka are about
1450 metres above sea level. They receive an annual rainfall of
about 500 cm to 750 cm. and it rains for six to eight months in
the year. The hills are covered with dense forest. There is a
temple for the Goddess
Mookambika located in Kollur in this region.
There is a slender iron pillar on a hill near the temple which
has not rusted. The pillar is 9.76 metres high and 10 cm to 13
cm. square. The iron beams used in the temples at Puri and
Konark both being coastal areas are another classic example. The
temple of Lord Jagannath at Puri has huge iron beams as part of
the structure. The Konark temple also has large iron beams-their
length is about 23 ft. and the thickness ranges from 9 to 11
inches. The largest of them is a beam measuring 35 ft. 9 inches
in length and 7 inch square in cross section. These beams have
also resisted corrosion.
(source: http://www.iisc.ernet.in/~currsci/jun10/articles13.htm).
For more refer
to chapter on Greater
India: Suvarnabhumi and
Sacred
Angkor
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