Hinduism, The Eternal Tradition

Some Paragraphs From
Hinduism, The Eternal Tradition
(Sanatana Dharma)
by David Frawley
American Institute of Vedic Studies:   http://www.vedanet.com/

(Dr. Frawley,) ARE YOU A HINDU?

I have studied various teachings originating in the Hindu tradition for over twenty years including Yoga, Vedanta, the Vedas, Ayurveda, and Vedic astrology and found immense benefit in all of them. I have also practiced these teachings and made them the basis of my spiritual life. Hinduism was something I discovered in myself through the pattern of my deeper aspirations and my search into the nature of consciousness itself. It was never imposed upon me from the outside. I did not become ~ Hindu so much as discover that I already was one.

I am happy to belong to this ancient and unending tradition of spiritual knowledge, whose impressions upon the soul cannot be removed even by death. Hinduism has a rich field of knowledge and culture, like the lap of the Divine Mother, in which the soul can freely unfold its infinite capacities. To enter into this teaching is a great blessing to all.

Yet becoming a Hindu is not a matter of taking on some divisive identity. It means recognizing Sanatana Dharma or the universal tradition. It does not require joining a church but recognizing the universal religion that comes from the Self of all.  It is to embrace all human aspirations and all that  has beauty in life, but centered on a path of self-realization, not merely vaguely accepting everything as good.

However, I am sad that many Hindus today have little real appreciation or understanding of their tradition.  To me it is a sign of ignorance to abandon such a profound spiritual system for modern political ideologies, or to spiritually cripple oneself by following regressive religions which are devoid of any real way of developing higher consciousness.  Expressing the value of Hinduism as a Westerner, I hope I can get modern Hindus to reexamine their roots.

Common Questions About Hinduism

 Close to a billion of the over five billion people in the world are Hindus by religion. India with its vast river system and subtropical climate has always contained a relatively large proportion of the human population. The Hindu religion has been going on for more than five thousand years, long before the other world religions came into being. In this respect perhaps more people have been Hindus through the course of history than have belonged to any other religion. All of us, during the course of our many births, have been Hindus during one life or another, particularly those of us who have had lives on the spiritual path, which has generally been a greater concern in India than in other countries. The Hindu Dharma is therefore ingrained within our samskaras, the deeper impressions of our souls which we can all access if we look within.

There now exists a significant Hindu minority in the Western world, particularly the United States, Canada and Great Britain, but also such peripheral areas as Trinidad and Guyana. This Hindu minority consists both of immigrants from India, many from the past few decades, and Westerners who have adopted Hindu teachings (who may not all formally call themselves Hindus). There are nearly a million Indo-Americans and a larger number in Great Britain.

What does a modern Hindu say, particularly when questioned by those who may know little about their religious tradition, to explain what Hinduism is? A Hindu in the West is often confronted with simplistic and derogatory ideas about Hinduism — that it is pagan, polytheistic, idolatrous, unscientific, socially backward or merely no more than a cult. Though more educated people in the West may not accept these opinions they may still be influenced by them, and may not have consistent alternative views. Modern Hindus are often not educated ill their own tradition. They may not have any real understanding of it or its global relevance as Sanatana Dharma, a universal teaching. They may not know how to present it to others under any circumstances.

As Hindus are generally tolerant and retiring, they may say nothing or even apologize for their religion rather than try to correct wrong ideas about it. The thoughtful among them have sought to communicate their tradition better, particularly seeing the popularity of Hindu practices in the West, like Yoga and meditation, once presented in a universal light. But many Hindus have so diluted their tradition with statements like “all religions are the same,” that they have failed to give Hinduism any character of its own. Instead of telling others what Hinduism is in its own right, they use Hinduism to give credit to other religions, whose beliefs and practices may not be regarded as the highest by the great Hindu sages of history. On the other hand, they may tolerate or even accept negative judgments against Hinduism by other religious groups, and not offer any Hindu critique of other religions so as not to appear offensive to anyone. They think that making Hinduism accepting of everything done in the name of religion is the best way to communicate its universality. This, however, does not lead to a better understanding of Hinduism but gives the impression that Hindus have no clear teaching like :he other religions of the world.
Hindus in India — under the domination of Western culture in education and communication — may have encounters with missionaries or with Christian and Muslim minorities in India, similar to those that Indo-Americans have with Christian religious groups in America. They tend to feel that their culture is inferior to that of the West which is more modern and affluent, and therefore their religion must be inferior to those of the West as if spirituality were a function of material abundance). Young Hindus trying to answer questions put to them about their tradition face these problems more keenly as they are as yet unsure Is how to communicate what they think and are more under the influence of Western culture than their parents.
However, a revival in Hindu consciousness is now occurring throughout the world. Hindus are no longer willing to stand silent when faced with misrepresentations of their venerable tradition. A pride in being Hindu is arising, not as a religious arrogance, but as a recognition of the value of this vast and ancient spiritual heritage for the whole world. Such new Hindus are willing not only to affirm their tradition but to express its teachings, even when it may call into question other belief systems. They are willing to give a Hindu point of view on religious and social issues, which is not simply to agree with everyone but to point out the deeper wisdom that the Hindu sages have gathered through millennia of yogic practices. Along similar lines, a number of Westerners are beginning to recognize that there is a greater spiritual tradition — including such teachings as Ayurveda, Vedic astrology, and Sanskrit — behind the yogic and meditational practices they have adapted and that the entire system has relevance.

The following section has been devised to deal with the problems of expressing Hinduism in the modern age, which requires affirming its universality without losing its character. It requires fostering a pride in Hinduism without making it into another sectarian belief. It requires redefining what Hindu means and connotes to people, above all for so-called Hindus themselves, so that hearing the word Hindu evokes the Himalayan majesty of the great yogis, not the timidity of a kind but defeated people.

ARE ALL RELIGIONS ONE?

There is only One Truth behind all religions, whether the so-called world religions or primitive beliefs. The different arts and sciences also represent various attempts, though they may be indirect, to connect with the One Reality. Recognizing such a Universal Truth, we should strive to develop a universal religion which includes not only what is good in religion, but what is good in art and science, and in all human endeavors to know Reality. All ways of connecting with Truth — whether formulated as religions or not — are like various rivers that flow to the ocean of Truth. They all have a common goal, though not each singly can reach it.

Yet to reach that Truth we must follow a path that leads to Self-realization, Few religious teachings regard Self-realization as the goal of life. Therefore they cannot take us all the way to it, though they may be of preliminary benefit. And religion is sometimes a mask for adharmic activities, for attitudes that do not enlarge our minds and hearts but narrow them down to some dogma or opinion. Such religion cannot take us even part of the way to Truth, which is universal.

Sanatana Dharma is not meant as another one of these streams but as an attempt to portray the reality of the ocean, which accepts all streams without being limited to any of them. For this reason all the spiritual practices that can be found in other religions — like prayer, ritual, mantra and meditation whether devotional or knowledge-oriented – exist within the greater Hindu tradition.

AREN’T ALL RELIGIONS THE SAME?

Because there is a unity of Truth behind all religious seeking and, above all, because there is a commonality in the religious experience, some people have come to the conclusion that all religions are the same — that it doesn’t matter if one goes to a temple, church or mosque, or whether one prays, fasts or meditates — that as long as one is doing something that can be called religious, one will get to the same goal only along a different route.

Let us compare this with the field of art. Because there is a unity of the human creative experience behind all art does not mean that all art is the same, and it certainly does not mean that all that is called art is good art. Similarly that there is a unity of scientific inquiry behind all scientific pursuits does not mean that all science is the same, that all scientific theories are correct and lead to the same conclusions, or that it does not matter what experimental procedures we employ.

There is a tremendous gap between organized religion, which divides people, and the religious experience, which unites them. And the religious experience itself has different stages, levels and variations. All religious experiences are not merely equal or the same. There are many gradations between ordinary human consciousness and Self-realization, which should not all be lumped together as the same thing. Religious experiences can also occur in an impure or untrained mind and be mixed with egoism and delusion. Moreover, there is a diversity of spiritual practices, like the Yogas of knowledge and devotion, which proceed by different lines and have their own characteristic experiences. While we should recognize the unity of the religious experience, we should also acknowledge its diversity and multi-leveled nature.

That all religions are one is a statement similar to that all water is one. This does not mean that all water is the same or that all water is fit to drink. That all water is one does not mean that it is not necessary to carefully consider the quality of the water we drink. There are religious doctrines and practices, which are outward or of preliminary value and others which are limited or even wrong. To discover the real truth of religion requires a great deal of discrimination, a discerning of the essence, not merely an acceptance of all forms.

AREN’T ALL RELIGIONS MERELY ALTERNATIVE APPROACHES?

One may recognize the differences that exist between various religions but consider them to be merely different alternatives, just as different roads may all lead to the same goal. This is true of religious teachings that have inner values and practices of meditation and Self-realization, but differ only in outer factors of name and form, like different enlightenment or Self-realization traditions. We can consider these to be different approaches to the same Truth. But we also observe that there are religious teachings which differ in fundamental values, goals and practices, not merely in superficial names and forms. These cannot be merely different ways to the same reality. For example, we can recognize that there are many different names for fire. Calling fire by a different name does not mean that one does not understand the nature of fire. But this is not to say that fire can differ in its essential nature and qualities, that Hinduism – The Eternal Tradition – for some people fire is hot and for other people it can be cold. While formal differences can be reconciled, substantial differences cannot. Truth must be the same. It cannot differ according to the different beliefs and opinions of human beings.

Where religious differences are merely a matter of words or forms, we can recognize a common truth behind them. If one religion calls the ultimate reality love, another calls it truth, another calls it the infinite, we can accept a common reality behind all these formulations. But when religious teachings have differences of a substantive nature we cannot accept their varying views as equally true. For example the law of karma and rebirth leading to bondage or liberation cannot be equally true as that of sin or salvation leading to heaven or hell, as the two views are substantially different. Such views may be reconciled into lower and higher, or outer and inner truths but they cannot be given equal validity. This does not mean that we must insist that only one religious belief is valid but that we must maintain an inquiry into Universal Truth and find out the real nature of things. The goal is to discover the Truth of things, not merely to uphold religion as we know it, which is a very mixed affair, as Truth. Religion, after all, is an expedient measure to aid us in the pursuit of truth. It should never be made an end-in-itself.

ISN’T IT WRONG FOR RELIGIOUS PEOPLE TO DISAGREE?

Each one of us sees the world differently. The very beauty of life is that each being is unique and has his or her own unique perspective. Such differences need not be a problem. We should honor and respect them. Through them each person provides a new vision of the universe. Such differences only become a problem when we insist that one perspective is correct for everyone. For example, there is an underlying unity of all human beings but we all have different faces. To arrive at human unity it is not to make all people have the same face, but to see the common humanity behind and through all different human forms.

It is not wrong for us to disagree with one another. After all, no opinion of any human being can be regarded as the absolute truth that no one can question, and no verbal formulation is final or incapable of being distorted. We must hold to the truth that we perceive, even if no one in the world agrees with us. To find truth we must express how we see things and compare it with how other people see them, and try to find out what is really there. This clash of inquiry leads us to discovery. But we should not promote disagreements or refuse to recognize common truths merely to uphold a particular identity or belief as opposed to others.

We must recognize the right of others to see things differently than we do. We must create a culture that honors many different points of view. This does not mean that we should create a culture in which all things are permitted. We must base our lives on higher universal values, like non-violence, truthfulness, compassion, and self-discipline, But this should allow any number of names and forms for the spiritual life and its activities. Universality is not a matter of agreement, which may be no more than a social consensus or blind uniformity, but of integration in which one goes beyond all dualities.

CAN I BE A FOLLOWER OF ALL SPIRITUAL PATHS?

One should recognize the validity of all true spiritual paths, though only a part of what is called religion is a spiritual path. There are a number of spiritual paths which provide meditation practices that can, if applied with the proper background and guidance, lead to union with the Divine or the inner Self. Moreover, it is good to know something about a number of the world’s spiritual traditions in order to broaden one’s mental horizon, just as it is good to know something of the different cultures and customs of various lands and peoples.

However, life is limited. One does not have the time to follow out in depth the practices of all teachings, which require a certain period to work properly. For one’s actual meditation practice one has to choose a certain line of approach, and a connection with specific teachers, generally within the same tradition.

We can compare this with any field of learning. One can recognize the validity of all true artistic approaches, but one cannot practice all techniques of art. One cannot be simultaneously a sculptor, painter, musician and dancer, in ancient, medieval and modern styles. In one’s actual practice one will have to make a choice and follow it out. Moreover, the goal of a spiritual practice is not to learn various traditions but to know oneself, and for this the teaching is a guideline, not the end. To be a true artist one does not need to study all forms of art but to discover one’s own creativity. If we spend our time exploring different teachings and traditions, rather than looking into who we really are, we have missed the point. The different teachings are aids to Self-realization. The important thing is to reach the goal, not to explore the different paths.

WHAT DO ALL HINDUS BELIEVE?

Hinduism as a universal tradition does not emphasize a particular code of beliefs that divides humanity into believers and non-believers. It does not begin with the assertion “I believe in God” but with the recognition “God or Truth and myself are one.” It does not state that only those of our faith can find God but that God or Truth is the nature of all beings. It does not have articles of faith, like the belief in various miracles or special revelations, but directs us to discover the nature of Truth, which we can experience in our own consciousness as clearly as we can see the sun rise in the morning.

Hinduism is not centered in a particular name or form but on Truth which lies behind all names and forms. It is an open tradition that encourages a diversity of approaches, not a monolithic religion consisting of a standard creed. Its emphasis is Dharma or Universal Truth that one can perceive, Rot belief, which appears contrary to the nature of things. Hinduism recognizes not only the unity of the Divine but the infinity of Truth.

The principles which all Hindus accept are not articles of faith but dharmas or natural laws. Such are the law of karma, rebirth, the existence of a cosmic Lord (ishvara) and universal intelligence, the beneficence of the world of Nature, and Self-realization as the ultimate goal of life. Hindus similarly share common practices like ritual, prayer, pilgrimage, charity, Yoga and meditation but there is no prescribed system of activities that all Hindus must follow. There are common Hindu values and attitudes like non-violence, truthfulness, self-discipline and control of sexual energy, which are even more important than these practices.

These approaches are employed as ways of finding Truth, not as dogmas that tell us what that truth is supposed to be. Sanatana Dharma tells us that it is more important to give people the means to find Truth, than it is to tell people what Truth is supposed to be, which becomes a dogma. As Truth is our own nature, we need only let it come forth by no longer trying to impose any external influences upon it.
We see therefore that many people, who may not formally regard themselves as Hindus, may have a Hindu view of reality. This is because the Hindu view is not a sectarian view but the view of the whole, which is that One Self is All.

WHY ARE HINDUS APOLOGETIC ABOUT BEING HINDUS ?

First, Hinduism as the formulation of a universal tradition is not an aggressive system. It encourages humility and respect for all peoples and all religions. It promotes itself through peace and love, not through preaching and condemnation. In the modern world, which has little of spirituality in it, many Hindus find that their tradition appears out of place. This has caused them to feel apologetic about their practices as part of an attempt to accommodate others. On the second level, the Hindu social system contains various regressive social customs, like untouchability, which Hindus feel ashamed of in the face of modern humanitarian political values.
Only those Hindus who don’t understand the real meaning of their tradition as Sanatana Dharma and the centrality of its yogic approaches to world spirituality can be dominated by either of these views. In fact Hinduism, through Vedanta or the science of Self-realization is the teaching of lion-hearted souls. It is for the fearless and independent, for those who are willing to transcend the external view of reality.
Yet not all Hindus are apologetic about being Hindus. The apologetic Hindu may soon be a thing of the past, as the great value of Yoga, Vedanta, Ayurveda, Vedic knowledge and Sanatana Dharma spreads throughout the world.

SHOULD HINDUS BE MORE AGGRESSIVE?

Hindus suffer from passivity and disunity. These are their main enemies. They are not only not aggressive in asserting themselves, they are generally apologetic if they assert themselves at all. A more positive, expansive self-confident spirit in their religion is essential. This does not require that Hindus become militant or violent, but it does require that they wake up and become active. Perhaps in this process some Hindus may become temporarily over assertive but that is better than being overly passive. The present crisis in the world today, and in India, demands action both individually and outwardly.  Let us all rise to the occasion and bring the light  of Truth and Self-realization into the world.

Hinduism (a way of life?)

Hinduism (a way of live?)

Dear Prof Hebbar,

 

This is an excellent piece. Thank you so much for bringing this important message to our attention. I have also added item#12 as rightly suggested by Vijay Kumar.

I hear this a lot from so many people that, well, Huinduism is a way of life (and not a religion).


I wish your message gets a wide publicity. I’ll be mailing out to all my email lists.

Would you kindly also permit me to include this in the Hindu Dharma Summit Souvenir.

 

If you or Vijay Kumar want to elaborate on each of the concepts for the paper, I can

include an expanded article in the souvenir.

 

Thanks again,

Ved


Ved P. Chaudhary, Ph.D.
General Secretary,
Hindu Collective Initiative (HCI) – North America
PO Box 291 Englishtown, NJ 07726
732-385-0060
www.HCINA.org

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: B. N. Hebbar <bnhebbar@gwu. edu>
Date: Jul 18, 2007 9:00 PM
Subject: [eshi] Hinduism  [a  way  of  life?]
To: “B. N. Hebbar” <bnhebbar@gwu. edu>

The  Pitfalls  of  calling  Hinduism  a  “way  of  life”  only

 

It  became  hip  and  fashionable  among  some  Hindus  a  few  decades  ago  to  say  that  Hinduism  is  a  way  of  life  and  not  a  religion.  And  this  has  been  parroted  by  many  without  thinking,  ever  since.  Unfortunately,  religions  that  do  not  wish  the  Hindus  well  have  used  this  to  its  detriment  by  saying  “So,  Hinduism  is  a  way  of  life.  This  means  you  Hindus  don’t  have  a  religion.  Your  religion  then  can  be  our  religion.  Why  don’t  you  adopt  ours.  You  may  keep  your  way  of  life.”

 

It  is  thus  important  to  insist  that  Hinduism  is  a  religion,  philosophy  and  way  of  life,  all  rolled  into  one.  These  three  are  not  mutually  exclusive  categories.  A  tradition  can  be  all  three  at  once  as  it  is  in  the  case  of  Taoism  [Dao-de  jiao  as  the  Chinese  call  it]  in  China  and  Shintoism  [Kami-no-michi  as  the  Japanese  call  it]  in  Japan.  Usually,  nationally  based  religions  tend  to  be  all  three  at  once  than  missionary  religions.

 

Why  are  some  Hindus  hesitant  to  call  Hinduism  as  a  religion  when  it  has  all  the  elements  that  characterize  a  religion?  Let’s  check  each  of  these.

 

1.  Scriptures:  Hinduism  has  them.

2.  Doctrines:  Hinduism  has  them.

3.  Sacred  Space:  sanctified  places  of  worship  and  pilgrimage.  Hinduism  has  them.

4.  Sacred  Time:  feasts  and  fasts.  Hinduism  has  them.

5.  Sacred  Persons:  priests  and  monastics.  Hinduism  has  them.

6.  Rituals:  Hinduism  has  them.

7.  Sacraments:  sanctification  of  the  important  stages  of  life.  Hinduism  has  them.

8.  Mysticism:  Hinduism  has  it.

9.  Code  of  Ethics:  Hinduism  has  it.

10.  Contemplative  practices:  Hinduism  has  them.

11.  Humanism:  Hinduism  has  it.

12. Notions of Salvation.  Hinduism has them.

 

The  cultural  part  makes  Hinduism  more  than  a  religion.  It  is  here  that  it  is  also  a  way  of  life.  One  need  not  exclude  the  other.  Hindus  should  [as  the  Taoists  and  Shintoists  have]  celebrate  their  faith  as  all  three  [religion,  philosophy  and  way  of  life]  rolled  into  one.

 

B.N.Hebbar

 

 

Book: Hinduism Under Siege: The Way Out

Book: HINDUISM UNDER SIEGE: THE WAY OUT

By Subramanian Swamy

Copied from the Book’s jacket:

The author argues that today, as never before, Hinduism is under an invisible multi-dimensional siege; and that the manifestation of this siege can be seen by those alerted to it. The author suggests that the siege against Hinduism today is visible in four dimensions:

Religious, in the denigration of Hindu icons;

  1. Psychological – e.g. in the fostering of a fraudulent version of our history;
  2. Physical – e.g. the Islamic terrorist-driven ethnic cleansing of Hindus in Kashmir and Bangladesh, and money-induced conversions of Hindus to Christianity.
  3. Cultural – e.g. through globalization of tastes, dress and interpersonal morality that are determined in the Anglo-Saxon white Christian world (The “West”).

The author argues that Hindus must collectively acquire a new mindset, to meet the growing challenge from a highly multi-dimensional siege which is international in character–otherwise run the risk of perishing like the ancient Greeks, Egyptians or Babylonians.

Please mail a check for $10.00 made payable to KKSFUSA and mail to Sri Guruvayurappan, 502 Justin way, Neshanic Station, NJ 08853. His tel. no. is

908-369-1644. Sincerely, Raghunath, KKSF USA [kksfusa@hotmail.com]

Are All Religions Same?

Are All Religions Same?

Some Hindus think that all religions are same, some say Jainism Buddhism and Hindu dharma are same. Here I share what I understand.

 

  1. Those who (mostly the so called Hindus) say that the Vedas says that all the paths lead to the same god. Therefore all religions are same. This is their misinterpretation of the Vedic words. When the Vedas talked about “all the paths,” there was no other dharma than the Vedic dharma on this planet. Therefore, “all the paths” in the Vedas mean all the Vedic paths like karma yoga, gyan yoga, bhakti yoga, dhyaan yoga, worship of the devas (Indra, VaruNa, etc but mainly Shiva, Uma, Ganesh, sUrya, Hanuman) and Vishnu (Krishna) ultimately lead to the same god.

 

    1. The behavior of different people with different religions is quite different. If you study the real history of these groups you will notice stark difference. For example, Christians think that god is jealous and he has a competitor – Satan. If all religions lead to same god, then the history of these groups should be similar. It is not. Some are aggressive, some are tolerant, and some are totally intolerant to other faiths.

 

    1. Those who say all religions are same are mostly the so called Hindus, and they say it to the Hindus only. They do not take the responsibility to convince it to the Christians or the Muslims. And they do not give up Hindu dharma. If all religions are same, then there should not be any denial to give up one religion and accept another.

 

    1. No Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, Jain, or Jew etc says all religions are same. So, then why the Hindus show should say it when it is not true? To say it is sheer foolishness. They sing asato maa sat gamaya, but they lie when they say all religions are same, and they do not know it is a lie.

 

  1. Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism are the offshoots from Hindu dharma (Vedic dharma). Being so, there is a lot common among them and the Hindu dharma. However, the differences should be understood.

 

    1. Buddha is accepted as an incarnation of Vishnu. The avatar is predicted in Bhagavatam, and it happened. In the time of Buddha, the brahmanas were misinterpreting the Vedas and were doing violent yagnas, killing animals in yagnas and eating meat. Buddha said this is adharma. He revolted against them. They would not listen, saying it is in the Vedas. So, finally, Buddha said, “I do not accept the authority of the Vedas.” Forget the Vedas, he said. Ahimsa paramo dharma, he said. Give up animal killing, he said. Sri Prabhupada explains that one cannot advance spiritually if one eats meat. Therefore, becoming a vegetarian is the first essential step if one wants spiritual advancement.

 

    1. However, Buddhism failed in two ways:

 

  1.                                                                i.      In his time and after it spread so much in Bharat, that even the children boys and girls began becoming Buddhist monks intending to live in celibacy in monasteries. This is hard, and male and female monks in math would engage in sex secretly. Also, the social system of the nation began to crumble. Then came Adi Shankaracharya. He propagated advaita vada (also known as gyan yoga) described in the Vedas. It spread in Bharat and thus Buddhism died in Bharat. It however spread out of Bharat – in orient.

 

  1.                                                              ii.      Today we see that no Buddhist country is without having an army. If ahimsaa paramo dharma, then no army is required. Dalai Lama, a Buddha incarnate, as is believed, ran out of his homeland Tibet in 1959, and lives exiled in Bharat. China forcibly occupied Tibet, and is killing Buddhism there. Dalai Lama cannot do anything. He the Buddha cannot stop China (the communist) from killing and occupying Tibet. He cannot do it with ahimsaa. He requests the “international community” to help stop China. So, note that ahimsa cannot solve the problem against China, Russia, Saddam Husain’s, Ben Ladins, or Hitlers. It works against the Hindus and Paarsis (Zoroastrians). So, ahimsa is not paramo dharma, not an absolute principle. If it were, it should be able to solve the problem of Dalai Lama. In contrast Hindu dharma includes kshatriya dharma. Therefore, Krishna recommends Arjun to fight, even when Arjun says (in Gita) he does not want to fight.

 

    1. Jainism is perverted version of the dharma given by the Rishabh Dev incarnation of Vishnu. Srimad Bhagavatam talks about it in detail. The Jains originally were Hindus who were vaishyas (traders, baniyas). Trading or business is not possible when there is fighting and fear or anarchy in the society. They chose not to fight, and want to avoid himsa at all costs. The first Vaishnav aacharya – Ramanuj – challenged Jain siddhanta. The greatest Jain aacharyas of his time came to debate with him. The debate continued in the darbaar of a king in South India for days. The Jains could not win the debate. Instead of giving up Jainism and accepting Ramanuj as their guru per the Vedic tradition, they just waked out of the debate. (Now I saw that some Jains in Vadodra have formally become Vaishnavas.) Jains choose to live in the Vedic land and with the Vedic people. No Jain opens his shop or business in a Muslim country like Saudi Arabia or Afghanistan. They say there is no god, just follow and live like arihantas (the great personalities.) They say the particles of bad karma stick with the soul permanently and there is no way out except following ahimsa and fasting. They do believe in re-incarnation like Buddhists. Because there is no god for them, their sins cannot be washed out. They need to suffer the reactions of their sins.  In contrast, the Vedic dharma has god. God or His advanced devotees can wipe out sins of one who surrenders to them completely. Now a days I see that Jains tend to accept Krishna as one of their arihantas. This is good, going back to the roots.

 

    1. Where as the merchants who had no ability to fight became Jains, the farmers of Punjab chose to fight with the invading Muslims. Sikh dharma was born thus. Guru Nanak was a great saint. The Hindus of Punjab had to fight constantly against the invading Muslims coming from northwest. Guru Nanak created a dharma that he thought will be more palatable to the Muslims. Muslims say Allah has no form. So, Nanak accepted advaita siddhanta  from the Vedas. And he accepted the kshatriya dharma from the Varnaasrama dharma. So, the Sikhs believe that God has no form, but god is all merciful in contrast to Allah that is not merciful to non-believers. They will fight with any one who does asuric things or tries to take away others’ rights or property. So, they are armed farmers. Now, Jains are unarmed traders. They rely on the Hindus for their protection. They donate to the fighters. Bhaamaashaa is an example.

 

This is all about knowing and understanding the truth. Truth is one, so it could unite when understood. Please see the videos (a pravachan by a swami) at these links:

 

Hindus : STOP preaching all religions are equal 1/2

http://youtube.com/watch?v=aM4GOARP6Mk&feature=related

 

Hindus : STOP preaching all religions are equal 2/2

http://youtube.com/watch?v=aQao9-e3qxU&feature=related

 

-SV

Jai Sri Krishna.

Three Realizations

Three Realizations
by Suresh Vyas

aahaara ni.ndraa bhaya maithunam cha .
saamaanyam etad pashubhir naraaNaam ..

आहार निंद्रा भय मैथुनम् च।
सामान्यम् एतद् पशुभिर् नराणाम्॥

This is the first realization of mankind found in Vedic literature.  It says eating, sleeping, self protecting, and mating are common between men and animals.  Animals do not do anything more than that.  So, if human being do that only, then they are animals too.  There are animal life or wild life programs coming on TV (promoted by insurance companies) that give the message of “survival of the fittest or strongest.”  They subtly give the message that man is animal.  Many people some how like to identify them selves as animals.  For example, each High School student in US identifies him or her self with the logo animal of their High School.

The second and higher realization of mankind found in Vedic literature is this:

saahitya sa.ngIta kalaa vihInaH .
saaxaat pashuH puchchha vishhaaNa hInaH ..

साहित्य संगीत कला विहीनः।
साक्षात् पशुः पुच्छ विषाण हीनः॥

It says:  A man without literature, music, and art is only an animal without a tail.  So, if man wants to be a man and not an animal, he has to have interest in literature, music, and art.  Animals do not have these things.  So, there is a variety of good and bad literature, music and art and many people are interested in these things.  Even then the sages and risis found that man is no much better than animals if he does not choose certain kind of literature music and art or use these in certain way.

So there was third and higher realization given in Bhagavad Gita and other scriptures like Bhagavata, Ramayana, etc.  This realization is:

  • You are not body, but a soul within it.
  • There is Supersoul or Bhagavan, and you have forgotten the eternal loving relation with Him.
  • The purpose of human life is to revive this eternal love for God.
  • To revive this love, Krishna says in Gita:  Whatever you do, do it as on offering to Me.  Bow down to Me.  Always remember Me.  Then you will come to Me.
  • Anger, lust, and greed are three gates to hell.  Control them.
  • Develop interest in the Vedic literature like Gita and Bhagavatam, Ramayana, Mahabharata, Puranas, Upanishads, etc.  Develop interest in music that is not like noise, and is used for singing prayers to God or pleasing Him.  Develop interest in art that helps to know God or His pastimes.  Give up interest in mundane literature, music, and art that is created by animals in the form of men.  It does not help to realize God.

A man with the third realization is man, and not an animal.
The realization of God also happens in three steps per Srimad Bhagavatam:

brameti paramaatmeti bhagavaan iti.

ब्रमेति परमात्मेति भगवान् इति।

  • In the initial stage one knows God as formless impersonal Brahman.
  • If one advances more spiritually, one knows God as the Supersoul within each living being as the companion to the soul.
  • If one advances even further, then one finally knows that God is the Supreme Personality of Godhead with a form of Vishnu or Krishna.

Jai Sri Krishna.

मेरा कविता- एक भारतीय का आवाज़

Below poem has some Urdu, and I do not know Urdu.

So, I have failed to pickup some words correctly, or I missed some lines when hearing the poem.

I request please provide correct words or provide any line I missed.

Thanks.

Mera Kavita Ek Bhartiya ka Avaaz

by Sri Hari Om Pawar

Source: http://www.bharatswabhimansamachar.in/?p=1239

मेरा गीत चांद हे, न चांदनी है आजकल

न किसीके चांदकी ये रागनी है आज कल ॥1॥

मे गरीबके घरोंकी आंसूओकी एक आग हुं

भूखमे मजार पर जला हुवा चिराग हुं ॥2॥

मेरा गीत आरती नहिं है राज-पाठकी

कसम साती रे सोये राज् पाठ की ॥3॥

मेरा गीत गरीबोके आंसुओकी आवाझ है

मेरा गीत किसानोके दर्दकी आवाज़ है ॥4॥

भावनाका ज्वार भारी जिये जा रहा हुं मै

ईस क्रोध वाले आंसुओको पीये जा रहा हुं मै ॥5॥

मेरा देश खो गया है लहुके ऊबालमे

कैद हो कर रह गया हुं मै ईस सवालमे ॥6॥

आत्महत्याकी चित्तापर देखकर कीसानको

नींद कैसे आती है देशके प्रधान को ॥7॥

सोचकर ये शोक शर्म से भरा हुवा हुं मै

और मेरे काले धर्मसे (कर्मसे?) डरा हुवा हुं मै ॥8॥

मै तो इस हाथ गुनेगार पाने लगा हुं

ईसलिये मै भूखमरीके गीत गाने लगा हुं ॥9॥

गा रहा हुं इस लिये की ईनकिलाब ला शकुं

झोंपडीके अंधेरेमे आफताब ला सकुं ॥10॥

महेरबानो, भूखकी व्यथा कथा सुनाऊंगा

मेहेश तालीयों के लिये गीत नहीं गाऊंगा ॥11॥

चाहे आम चोच्ते हो ये हुं फिझुल है

किंतु देशका भविष्य हि मेरा उसुल है ॥12॥

क्युं कि आम भूखमरीके त्रासगीसे दूर है

आपने देखी नही है भुखे पेटकी तडप ॥13॥

कालदेवतासे भूखे पेटकी तदप ॥14॥

मैने ऐसे बचपनोकी दास्तान कही है

जहां मा की सुकी छातीयोमे दूध नहीं है ॥15॥

शर्म से भी शर्मनाक जीवन काटते है वे

कुत्ते चाटचुके है वे झुठन चाटते है वे ॥16॥

भूखे बच्चे सो रहे हैं आसमान ओढ कर

मा रोटी कमा रही है पथ्थरों को तोड कर ॥17॥

जिनके प्राण नंगे है जिनके पांव नंगे है

जिन सास सासां उकार्ख़ी उद्धार है ॥18॥

जिनके प्राण पिंदावारी मॄत्यु का गार है

आत्म हत्या कर रहे हैं भूखके शीकार है ॥19॥

भूख आदमीका स्वाभिमान छीन लेती है

भूख जब ली बागी होना खानेकी आवास की ॥20॥

भूख राजाओंके तख्त और ताज छीन लेती है

भूख जलकी बागि होना खानेके आवाम की ॥21॥

मुह की रोटी छीन लेगी देशके निझाम की ॥22॥

शर्मनाक हाथसे पर कोई नही उकारता

को अर्जुनका गांडीव भी नहीं टंकारता ॥23॥

कोईभी चाणक्य चोटी अपनी भी नही खोलता

कोई भीष्म प्रतीज्ञाकी भाषा नहीं बोलता ॥24॥

शर्मनाक हाथसे पर कोई नहीं ऊकता ॥25॥

कहीं कहीं गोदामोमें गेहुं सडा हुवा है

कहीं दाने दाने का अकाल पडा हुवा है ॥26॥

झीकी की झोपडीमे भूखे बच्चे बिलगिलाते है

जेलों मे आतन्कियोंको बिर्यानि खिलाते है ॥27॥

भूखका निदान झूठे वायदों मे नही है

सिर्फ पूंजीवादीयोके फायदोमे नहीं है ॥28॥

भूखका निदान जादु टोने से नहीं हुवा

दक्षिण और वाम दोनो पन्थोसे नहीं हुवा ॥29॥

भूखका निदान कर्णधारोसे नहीं हुवा

गरीबी हटाओ जैसे नारों से नहीं हुवा ॥30॥

भूख का निदान पैसा असंका कर्म है

बरीबोंकी देखभाल सिंघासन कर्म है ॥31॥

ईस वचनकी पालनामें जो किसीका चूक हो

उसके साथ मुजरीमोके जैसाही सलुक हो ॥32॥

भूखसे कोई मरे ये हत्याके समान है

हत्याओं के लिये मृत्यु दंडका विधान है ॥33॥

कानूनी किताबोमे सुधार होना चाहिये

भूखका किसीको जिम्मेदार होना चाहिये ॥34॥

भूखों के लिये हो कानून, मानता हुं मै

समर्थनमे जनताका झनून मानत हुं मै ॥35॥

खुदकुशिया मौतका जल भूखमरी आधर हो

ऊस जिल्लेका जिलाधीश सीधे जुम्मेदार हो ॥36॥

वहां कहे एम एल ए एम पी जिम्मेदार हो

क्योंकि हे जिमा रहे मे पहेरेदार हो ॥37॥

चाहे नेता अफसरोकी लोबीयां क्रुद्ध हो

हत्याका मुकदमा ईनकी नौकरी विरुद्ध हो ॥38॥

खुदा करे कि आज कोई खुदकुशी नहीं करे

दुवा करो कि आज कोई भूखसे नहीं मरे ॥39॥

==

Distinction between Dharma and Religion

Distinction between Dharma and Religion

Vishal Agarwal (17 June 2009)

 1. Religions are Proselytizing, Dharma is Self-Transformation: Why does Religion breed fanaticism whereas Dharma does not? This is explained very succinctly by David Frawley [1]:

“Perhaps nothing more so than religion that stimulates the passions of humanity toward either higher or lower actions. This is because religion introduces absolutes into human life. Religion sets up a standard of judgment that goes beyond life and death and all the limited values of our transient existence. Such a standard can deepen our sensitivity or can breed fanaticism and bigotry, depending upon whether we use these absolutes to provide a higher standard for our own behavior or to become harsher in our criticism of those who think differently than we do. True religion directs us to the Absolute, which requires that we cleanse our minds of our limited opinions and judgments. False or imperfect religion tries to make absolute these very prejudices, opinions and limitations.

To understand religion, we must look at religion as a whole, not as a belief system but as a way of life, a system of ethical, mental and spiritual culture – what is called in the Eastern world, dharma or the guiding law of our being. Otherwise we will be unable to extract the essence of religion from its mass of conflicting beliefs. This requires that we look at our own lives as a whole, and that we examine religion as a living phenomenon, as part of our greater human potential, our inner dharma, from whatever different land or culture it may arise. We must learn to look at religion as a way of connecting with Reality through our own consciousness, which is the view of the science of Yoga. This is the view of religion that India has given us, the land wherein human beings have spent the most time in pursuit of the sacred, not to convert others, but to realize the Truth.”

2. Religions demand belief, Dharma stands for Self-Realization

“In the Western world religion is associated with a belief in something unseen, miraculous, or perhaps even irrational. For the Western mind religion is something removed from ordinary existence, and apart from the world of Nature, something super-natural, like the miracle of Christ of turning water into wine. The fruits of our religious practice are gained after death, in heaven, and seem little related to the events of this life. Such religion is different than religion in the Eastern or Hindu sense, and appears artificial and imaginary, rather than the product of any profound meditation.”[2]

“There is no such term as religion in this sense in the teachings of India. The term for a spiritual teaching is Dharma, the natural law of Truth and its universal and eternal principles. The so-called religions of India – like Hinduism and Buddhism – are not religious belief systems but ways of cultivating dharma, ways of developing higher awareness. To follow the Dharma is possible only through direct perception, which requires freeing the mind from its conditioned responses. It does not rest upon belief or speculation. The cultivation of Dharma….means developing an awareness which is clear enough to perceive things as they are….”[3]

“We could say, therefore, that there are two basic types of religious teachings in the world.

The first (type) are the belief-oriented systems that predominate in organized Western religions, which emphasize sin and salvation leading to either hell or heaven. Their idea of cosmic law is something imposed from above by the will of God, which may appear to be arbitrary or even vengeful. The world of Nature is looked upon not as part of our own being but as a hostile reality to be controlled or conquered, or as a realm of temptation.

Second (type) are the dharmic traditions of the Eastern world which emphasize natural law, meditation and Yoga leading to Self-realization. Dharmic traditions seek to know the truth of things and do not set any dogma over our own enquiry….”[4] “Dharmic traditions are experiential rather than belief-oriented – as we see among Hindus, Buddhists and Taoists. They are open, creative and meditative in their approach, an attitude often shared by Western pagan religions and philosophies as well. Such experiential traditions have a great appeal to the inquiring spirit, with their knowledge of deeper levels or consciousness and extrasensory powers. They have a greater history of tolerance and respect for other beliefs, a necessary attitude in the multi-cultural world order in which we live today. Hinduism as Sanatana Dharma has always been able to accommodate many different religious and spiritual approaches. From its standpoint, religious beliefs are not absolutes but merely theories, working models, guides to practice, which must eventually be left behind.”[5]

3. Religions advocate Monolithic Beliefs, Dharma Accepts Diversity of Approaches to the Divine:

“Such [Abrahamic] religions identify religion with the belief in One God, one primary representative of him, and one book of revelation from him. The right belief is said to bring about salvation. The wrong belief is thought to be the worst of all sins and bring about damnation. Such religions are trying to convert the entire world to

While such monolithic belief systems can state their beliefs in clear and uncomplicated terms, they often sound more like slogans or stereotypes – absolute statements that appeal to an emotional need for certainty and security but fail to deal with the complexity of life itself. Is Truth really that simplistic or have we narrowed it down according to our own bias which, however well intentioned, falls short of what life in its abundance really is?”[6]

“A statement of such exclusive absolutes about religion is not possible for dharmic traditions like Hinduism, nor would Hindus find it desirable. Coming from a universal background such restrictions appear arbitrary. They appear not as a deep understanding of the Infinite but as the attempt to arrive at a mental or emotional formulation that satisfies not the soul’s longing to merge into the Divine, but the ego’s need for certainty, security and control.”[7]

“As part of Sanatana Dharma, Hindus are not restricted from studying other religions or respecting Truth wherever and in whomever they see it. Hinduism does not have any word like heretic, pagan or kafir. Hindus have never invaded any country and tried to force people to adopt their religion. There is no excommunication in Hinduism, nor do Hindus ever condemn anyone to eternal hell. Hindu leaders do not issue proclamations restricting the forms of worship that can be practiced by Hindus. Hindus do not have blasphemy laws that prevent anyone from criticizing Hindu teachings.

Hinduism does not require that we all have the same view of Divinity but encourages unique and diverse ways for the full unfolding of creative intelligence. It says that there is something unique about each person, which is their special connection with the Divine, and that there should be no standardized religion for all people.

Hindus are not required to agree with one another on religions matters but are encouraged to develop their own insights. Hindus respect original and honest thinking, rather than merely parroting what someone else, however great, has said. If two Hindus do not follow the same guru, worship the Divine in the same form, or study the same scripture, it is not a problem. They will not fight with or try to convert the other person. They respect their diversity as part of the great abundance of life.”[8]

“Hinduism is not merely a single religion, one among many, but a harmony of many different religious teachings that maintained a peaceful coexistence with each other as parts of a universal tradition. It has not forced or molded these different teachings into uniformity, in fact this diversity itself has manifested because of the universality of the Hindu view, which is that it is not the many who became One but the One that expresses itself as all. This recognition of the One in all and all in One is the basis of the creative and yet synthetic Hindu vision that can produce ever new teachings without losing track of the underlying eternality of Truth.”[9]

4. Religions divide Humans into Believers and Infidels, Dharma does not:

“Belief oriented religions, when they formulate themselves in an exclusive manner, project their own particular theological ethics which may be apart from, or even contrary to any universal ethics. They hold that if a person does not believe in a particular formulation of God, in one specific representative of him, in one book which contains his word, or other such particular dogmas, that person will suffer or go to hell, whatever else the individual may do – however good, kind, compassionate, generous, or selfless he or she may otherwise be. This is what could be called “theological ethics”, or the judgment of people not by their behavior but by their beliefs, which makes not having certain beliefs on par with doing good harmful actions……Sanatana Dharma does not accept any particular theological morality. It says that we raise ourselves by good actions and lower ourselves by actions which are bad. It does not matter what we believe in but how we live. Hinduism says that a person who leads a good life, even if he or she has never come into contact with any scripture, and has no religious beliefs at all, will come to a good end. On the other hand, a person who leads a bad or harmful life will come to a bad end even if he believes in what he thinks is the true religious.”[10] “Theological ethics divides humanity into the believers and the non-believers, which may be Christians and heathens, Muslims and Kafirs, or simply the people of God and those of the devil, or whatever the religion decides, including condemning different sects within one’s own religion as heretical. This division is equated with a real division in behavior between good and evil, holy and unholy, as if only the members of a particular religion can be truly good and those of other beliefs must be evil, however good they may appear.

Dharmic traditions on the other hand, differentiate human behavior into dharmic and adharmic actions, actions which further the Truth and those which promote ignorance and illusion. There is no division of humanity into dharmic and adharmic souls because the soul, our inner nature is inherently dharmic. The soul is our dharma. The only division is between people who know their true nature and those who do not. Knowledge or ignorance is a capacity of all human beings, and we must all move from the ignorance to the knowledge, if not in this lifetime than in a future one. Hence Dharma can never divide people into warring beliefs.”[11] All this does not mean that Hindu Dharma has no place for faith and devotion.

“Sanatana Dharma accepts faith and devotion but not the limited form in which it is identified. Sanatana Dharma accepts all sincere efforts to find truth or to help other human beings. In this regard, Hinduism can honor atheists, if they are doing good or searching for the truth. Hinduism values doing good more than the mere (having) belief in God, which can be used as a mask for doing harm. It holds that a person who does good, be he an atheist or agnostic, is better than a person who does harm, be he a firm believer in God. Yet beyond valuing what is good, Hinduism values spiritual knowledge. It says that a single person of real spiritual perception is more significant than any number of mere believers or good people. All the good and bad actions of people are ultimately illusory as the Divine is the only true reality. One who knows that is the real teacher.”[12]

5. Religions are History Centered, Dharma is Eternal:

“The [Hindu] religion has no founder. Many of the scriptures are anonymous. Their dates vary several centuries, if not millennia, in scholar’s accounts. The Hindu ideal has always been to downplay the ego, and dedicate all action to the will of God. Thus, although authoring a book has been considered important, mentioning the name of the author has, many a time, not been seen as appropriate. With the offering of the little ego on the altar of the universal self, i.e., God, for centuries, the Hindu lost also his love for historical details. In spite of the drawbacks that the process might have had on him in history, he has not yet forgotten his goal of reaching to a universal unity beyond all differences, where the small ego falls off, as Sri Ramakrishna says, like the bark of the coconut tree, leaving only its mark of a past existence behind.”[13]

Hindu Dharma has a vast literature on philosophic disputations between different schools. In most cases, the author does not even mention the name of his philosophic opponent when criticizing him. Such a practice was considered against scholarly etiquette, and it also kept philosophic discussions depersonalized, and focused on ideas alone. In the Abrahamic religions however, there have been major conflicts and schisms on matters of historical events – matters which would be considered very trivial from the perspective of Hindu spirituality, and not worthy of generating such long-lasting hatreds and enmities.

6. Religions are Exclusivist, Dharma is Inclusivist:

“Sanatana Dharma as an open tradition does not exclude any useful way of approaching the truth of the vast universe in which we live. It does not define itself against something else but includes all that is useful to the spiritual life. Yet this does not mean that a universal tradition accepts other religions as they see themselves. This is not possible, as exclusive views which insist that their point of view alone is correct are mutually contradictory. In accepting the value of all sincere approaches to the Divine, Sanatana Dharma cannot sanction the exclusivism of any particular group. That Sanatana Dharma accepts Christ as a great saint, for example does not mean that it accepts the Christian claim that Christ is the only Son of God.

7. Religions are ‘Organized’, Hindu Dharma is ‘Disorganized’ (Unorganized):

“Hinduism is not an organized religion such as we ordinarily consider one to be. There is no Hindu church, no Hindu Pope, no Hindu messiah, or prophet all Hindus must revere, no one Hindu Bible all Hindus must read. Hinduism has no prescribed day of the week for worship, no one prescribed mass, ritual or call to prayer that everyone must do. The different sects within Hinduism have their different ashramas, temples, leaders, holy places, holy days and holy books, but there is no one set of these for all Hindus. We could say therefore that Hinduism is the greatest disorganized religion in the world. It has never organized itself along monolithic lines, with a set dogma and specific canon of beliefs. It has remained decentralized and localized, which is perhaps why of all the ancient imagistic and mystical religions, it alone has survived through the millennia. Therefore, Hinduism is an open tradition with a great diversity of teachings that does not require any exclusive loyalty. Hinduism is the religion of the individual and allows each person to choose his or her own approach to Divinity based upon various teachings that encompass all human capacities. However, Hinduism is organized in the sense that it contains systematic teachings for all manner of temperaments and all stages of life. As Sanatana Dharma it has teachings that encompass all of human life and culture from medicine and science, art and music, occultism, spirituality and Yoga. In this regard, Hinduism has probably the best organized and the most complete teachings of all religions and has addressed in details all aspects of our existence, including those considered to be outside the domain of religion in other cultures. The literature of Hinduism in these different fields is both much older and much larger that that of any other religion. Hinduism is not organized as a belief or social institution but as a vast set of teachings that we are free to approach from our own angle.”[14]

8. Religions are Monotheistic, Hindu Dharma is Monistic:

“Western religious thinkers generally identify universality in religion with monotheism – the idea that there is only One God and hold that all truly religious beings should worship this same Supreme Being. Yet this insistence on monotheism is exclusive, not universal. It rejects polytheism, pantheism, monism (the idea that there is only one Reality), and other forms of spiritual experience. Such extreme monotheism reduces the Divine to a single book for all people. Such a One God is not a truth of unity, which is universal, but the assertion of a single thing, which is opposed to all else. True unity is universality; it is not one thing as opposed to other, but the One that is everything.

The partiality of exclusive monotheistic belief is revealed in how it fragments itself further into warring monotheistic creeds….Not surprisingly, historically Western monotheism has appeared as the religious counterpart of political imperialism and empire-building, and its expansion to absorb all other countries and cultures. History has revealed how monotheism has been allied with invasions, colonialism and genocide, which may not be an accident but the very end result of a rigid, one-sided and therefore ultimately violent view of the Divine.

The One God becomes an abstraction to which actual people are sacrificed. He becomes jealous, wrathful and communal and promotes such action among his special followers. He is opposed to any creativity or spirituality and insists upon his law, ritual and theology as the unquestioned truth. While this may not have been the intention of the mystics who emphasized the One, it has often become the behavior of his literal-minded followers. Such monolithic views are out harmony with the cultural diversity of the modern world, and represent a medieval and authoritarian standard that usually has a patriarchal bias.

Hinduism, on the other hand, contains the diversity needed for a global age. Hinduism as Sanatana Dharma cannot be limited to belief in One God, but it acknowledges monotheism as an important approach to the spiritual life. In this regard Hinduism is also a monotheistic religion but not exclusively so and has created a number of wonderful monotheistic approaches including that of the Divine Mother. While accepting monotheism as one major approach, Hindus do not always regard it as the highest. Many Hindu teachings regard monism, or the idea that there is only One Truth, as the highest truth and as transcending any monotheistic or personal God.”[15]

[1] Frawley, p. 29        [2] Frawley, p. 40

[3] Frawley, p. 41        [4] Frawley, p. 45

[5] Frawley, p. 56        [6] Frawley, p. 46

[7] Frawley, p. 47        [8] Frawley, p. 74-75

[9] Frawley, p. 77        [10] Frawley, p. 49-50

[11] Frawley, p. 51      [12] Frawley, p. 57

[13] Sitansu S. Chakravarati. 1991. Hinduism a Way of Life. Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited (New Delhi). pp. 17-18

[14] Frawley, pp. 62-63          [15] Frawley, pp. 70-71

==

Vedas on Public Interest

Vedas on Public Interest

Common property, Information, Corrupt behavior

Atharv Veda 5/18.

 

नैतां ते देवा अददुस्तुभ्यं नृपते अत्तवे !

मा ब्राह्मणस्य राजन्य गां जिघित्सो जनाद्याम् !! अथर्व 5/18/1

 

O King the wise counsel by the learned has not been given to you be treated like fodder.

अक्षद्रुग्धो राजन्य: पाप आत्मप्राजित: !

सा ब्राह्मणस्य गामद्यादद्य जीवानि मा श्व: !! अथर्व 5/18/2

 

Kings/Rulers overpowered by their personal desires, who ignore the wise counsel by the learned are self defeated, they may have the present but they have no future.

आविष्टिताघविषा पृदाकूरिव चर्मणा !

सा ब्राह्मनस्य राजन्य तृष्टैषा गौरनाद्या !! अथर्व 5/18/3

 

Such wise counsel ignored is like deadly poisonous reptiles in a leather pouch. These reptiles are blood thirsty, and once they start escaping due to hunger , from their hideouts they are impossible to hunt down.

(Can we not see the  failures of our Indian rulers in proper handling of problems of deprived tribal people and the present ‘Naxalite’ situation?)

 

निर्वै क्षत्रं नयति हन्ति वर्चोSग्निरिवारब्धो वि दुनोति सर्वम् !

यो ब्राह्मणं मन्यते अन्नमेव सा विषस्य पिबति तैमातस्य !! अथर्व 5/18/4

Rulers who believe in strength,  corner all wealth for personal gains, kill  sane voices  thinking that they are no  physical threat, and  banishes wise counsel , what they eat as food for their existence, is  but  a deadly potion that  engulfs the entire nation in fire of  an inferno. Such rulers earn hatred of every body.

 

य एनं हन्ति मृदुं मन्यमानो देवपीयुर्धनकामो न चित्तत् !

सं तस्येन्द्रो हृदयेSग्निमिन्ध उभे एनं द्विषो नभसी चरन्त्म् !! अथर्व 5/18/5

Greedy rulers who give importance to money, ignore and smother truth and the sane voices that oppose corrupt practices involved in  illegal amassing of personal wealth, by ignoring sane voices considering them   as soft and weak, do not realise that they stoking great violent fires.

 

न ब्राह्मणो हिंसितव्यो3ग्नि: प्रियतनोरिव !

सोमो ह्यस्म दायाद इ न्द्रो अस्याभिशस्तिपा: !! अथर्व 5/18/6

Knowledge and wisdom are like a beating heart in human body, and sustain the very life of a Nation. Ruler is duty bound to protect and promote growth of knowledge and think tanks. (Perform Som Yagya)

ष्ठां शतापा नि गिरति  तां न शक्नोति नि:खिदन् !

अन्नं यो ब्रह्मणां मल्व: स्वाद्वद्मीति मन्यते !! अ‍थर्व 5/18/7

These fools ( the short sighted rulers) who feast to enjoy  at the expense of public interests, do not realize that what they swallow down are not sweets but poisons with hundreds of  barbs, that will tear him  down.

 

जिह्वा ज्या भवति कुल्मलं वाङ्नाडीका दन्तास्तपसाभिदिग्धा: !

ते भिर्ब्रह्मा विध्यति देवपीयून्हृद्बलैर्धनुर्भिर्देव्जूतै: !! अथर्व 5/18/8

The tongue of the voice less public becomes like bow from which are shot the destructive arrows of  public speech very destructive arrows sharpened by the  teeth of the public whose  voice  is ignored.

 

तीक्ष्णेषवो ब्राह्मणा ब्राह्मणाहेतिमन्तो यामस्यन्ति शरव्यां3 न सा मृषा !

अनुहाय तपसा मन्युना चोत दूरादव भिन्दन्त्येनम् !! अथर्व 5/18/9

The invisible missiles of the curse of   ignored sane voices of the learned persons forming public, never goes astray. They annihilate to shatter the insensitive rulers, from behind.

 

ये सहस्रमराजन्नासन्दशशता उत !

ते ब्राह्मणस्य गां जग्ध्वा वैतहव्या: प्राभवन् !!अथर्व 5/18/10

There were thousands of  rulers among whom hundreds usurped public wealth and turned deaf ears to wise counsel, they have all met with their fate.

 

गौरेव तान्हन्यमाना वैतहव्याँ वैतहव्याँ अवातिरत् !

ये केसरप्राबन्धायाश्चरमाजामपेचिरन्!! अथर्व 5/18/11

Such  rulers are ultimately  destroyed by their own deeds  under  public pressures of gravely feeling the hurt of being ignored and exploited.

 

एकशतं ता जनता या भूमिर्व्यधूनुत !

प्रजां हिंसित्वाब्राह्मणीमसंभव्यं पराभवन् !! अथर्व 5/18/12

Hundreds of such rulers are known to meet this end.

 

 

देवपीयुश्चरति मर्त्येषु मर्त्येषु गरगीर्णो भवत्यस्थिभूयान्  !

यो ब्राह्मणं देवबन्धुं हिनस्ति  न स पितृयाणमष्येति लोकम् !! अथर्व 5/18/13

 

 

अग्निर्वै न: पदवाय: सोमो दायाद उच्यते !

हन्ताभिशस्तेन्द्रस्तथा तद्वेधसो विदु: !! अथर्व 5/18/14

 

Only remedy lies in highly organised intellectually driven positive public force to get mobilized in to action .

 

इषुरिव दिग्धा नृपते पृदाकूरिव गोपते !

सा ब्राह्मणस्येषुर्धोरा तया विध्यति पीयत: !! अथर्व 5/18/15

 

Immense fire power resides in the voice of the masses.

 

 

Subodh Kumar,
C-61 Ramprasth,
Ghaziabad-201011
Mobile-9810612898

 

Vedas on Anger on Asuras

subodh kumar to aryayouthgroup

show details Sep 5 (1 day ago)

मन्यु का महत्व

मन्यु का अर्थ  दुष्टों पर क्रोध है. इसी लिए यजुर्वेद 19.9 में प्रार्थना है .मन्युरसि मन्युं मयि धेहि, हे दुष्टों पर क्रोध करने वाले (परमेश्वर) ! आप दुष्ट कामों और दुष्ट जीवो पर क्रोध करने का स्वभाव मुझ में  भी  रखिये. भारत वर्ष  में महाभारत के पश्चात ऐसा लगता है कि समाज मन्यु  विहीन हो गया.  तभी तो हम सब दुष्टों के व्यवहार को परास्त न कर के , उन से समझौता करते चले  आ रहे  हैं . समाज राष्ट्र संस्कृति की सुरक्षा के लिए, मन्यु कितना मह्त्व का  विषय है यह इस बात से सिद्ध होता है कि ऋग्वेद मे पूरे दो सूक्त केवल मन्यु पर हैं. और इन्हीं दोनो सूक्तों का अथर्व वेद मे पुनः उपदेश मिलता है.

Rig Veda Book 10 Hymn 83 same as AV 4.32

यस्ते मन्योSविधद्वज्र सायक सह ओजः पुष्यति विश्वमानुषक |

साह्याम दासमार्यं त्वया युजा सहस्कृतेन सहसा सहस्वता || ऋ 10/83/1

(वज्र सायक मन्यो)  Confidence is  born out of  being competently equipped and trained to perform a job.

हे मन्यु, जिस ने तेरा आश्रयण किया है, वह अपने शस्त्र सामर्थ्य को, समस्त बल और पराक्रम को निरन्तर पुष्ट करता है.साहस से उत्पन्न हुवे बल और परमेश्वर के साहस रूपि सहयोग से समाज का अहित करने वालों पर  बिना मोह माया ( स्वार्थ, दुख) के यथा योग्य कर्तव्य करता  है.

मन्युरिन्द्रो मन्युरेवास देवो मन्युर्होता वरुणो जातवेदाः |

मन्युं विश ईळते मानुषीर्याः पाहि नो मन्यो तपसा सजोषाः || ऋ 10/83/2

मन्युदेव इंद्र जैसा सम्राट है. मन्युदेव ज्ञानी सब ओर से प्रचेत ,सचेत तथा धनी वरुण जैसे गुण वाला है  .वही यज्ञाग्नि द्वारा समस्त वातावरण और समाज मे कल्याण कारी तप के उत्साह से सारी मानव प्रजा का सहयोग प्राप्त करने मे समर्थ होता है. (सैनिकों और अधिकारियों के मनों में यदि मन्यु की उग्रता न हो तो युद्ध में सफलता नहीं हो सकती. इस प्रकार युद्ध में  मन्यु ही पालक तथा रक्षक होता है.)

 

अभीहि मन्यो तवसस्तवीयान् तपसा युजा वि जहि शत्रून् |

अमित्रहा वृत्र हा दस्युहा च विश्वा वसून्या भरा त्वं नः || ऋ 10/83/3

हे वज्ररूप, शत्रुओं के लिए अन्तकारिन्‌ , परास्त करने की शक्ति के साथ उत्पन्न होने वाले, बोध युक्त क्रोध ! अपने कर्म के साथ प्रजा को स्नेह दे कर अनेक सैनिकों के बल द्वारा समाज को महाधन उपलब्ध करा.

त्वं हि मन्यो अभिभूत्योजाः सवयंभूर्भामो अभिमातिषाहः |

विश्वचर्षणिः सहुरिः सहावानस्मास्वोजः पर्तनासु धेहि || ऋ 10/83/4

हे बोधयुक्त क्रोध मन्यु!

सब को परास्त कारी ओज वाला, स्वयं सत्ता वाला, अभिमानियों का  पराभव  करने वाला , तू विश्व का शीर्ष नेता है. शत्रुओं के आक्रमण को जीतने वाला विजयवान है. प्रजाजनों, अधिकारियों, सेना में अपना ओज स्थापित कर.

अभागः सन्नप परेतो अस्मि तव क्रत्वा तविषस्यप्रचेतः |

तं त्वा मन्यो अक्रतुर्जिहीळाहं स्वा तनूर्बलदेयाय मेहि ||ऋ 10/83/5

हे त्रिकाल दर्शी मन्यु, तेरे वृद्धिकारक  कर्माचरण से विमुख हो कर , मैने तेरा निरादर किया है ,मैं पराजित  हुवा हूँ. हमें अपना बल तथा ओज शाली स्वरूप दिला.

अयं ते अस्म्युप मेह्यर्वाङ्  प्रतीचीनः सहुरे विश्वधायः |

मन्यो वज्रिन्नभि मामा ववृत्स्व हनाव दस्यूंरुत बोध्यापेः || ऋ 10/83/6

हे प्रभावकारी समग्र शक्ति प्रदान करने वाले मन्यु, हम तेरे अपने हैं .  बंधु अपने आयुध और बल के साथ हमारे पास लौट कर आ, जिस से हम तुम्हारे सहयोग से सब अहित करने वाले शत्रुओं पर सदैव विजय पाएं.

अभि प्रेहि दक्षिणतो भवा मे Sधा वृत्राणि जङ्घनाव भूरि |

जुहोमि ते धरुणं मध्वो अग्रमुभा उपांशु प्रथमा पिबाव ||ऋ 10/83/7

हे मन्यु , मैं तेरे श्रेष्ठ भाग और पोषक, मधुररस की स्तुति करता हूं . हम दोनो युद्धारम्भ से पूर्व अप्रकट मंत्रणा करें ( जिस से हमारे शत्रु को हमारी योजना की पूर्व जानकारी न हो). हमारा दाहिना हाथ बन, जिस से हम राष्ट्र  का आवरण करने वाले शत्रुओं पर विजय पाएं.

********************************************************************************************

Rig Veda Book 10 Hymn 84 same as AV 4.31

त्वया मन्यो सरथमारुजन्तो हर्षमाणासो धर्षिता मरुत्वः |

तिग्मेषव आयुधा संशिशाना अभि प्र यन्तु नरो अग्निरूपाः || ऋ 10/84/1 अथव 4.31.1

हे  मरने  की अवस्था में भी उठने की प्रेरणा करने  वाले  मन्यु , उत्साह !  तेरी सहायता से रथ सहित शत्रु को विनष्ट करते हुए और स्वयं आनन्दित  और प्रसन्न चित्त हो कर  हमें उपयुक्त शस्त्रास्त्रों से अग्नि के समान तेजस्वी नेत्रित्व  प्राप्त हो.

अग्निरिव मन्यो तविषितः सहस्व सेनानीर्नः सहुरे हूत एधि |

हत्वाय शत्रून् वि भजस्व वेद ओजो मिमानो वि मृधो नुदस्व ||ऋ 10/84/2 अथर्व 4.31.2

हे उत्साह रूपि मन्यु तू अग्नि के समान तेजस्वी हो कर, हमें समर्थ बना. घोष और  वाणी से आह्वान  करता हुवा  हमारी सेना  को नत्रित्व प्रदान करने वाला हो. अपने शस्त्र बल को नापते  हुए  शत्रुओं को परास्त करा के हटा दे.

सहस्व मन्यो अभिमातिमस्मे रुजन् मृणन् प्रमृन् प्रेहि शत्रून् |

उग्रं ते पाजो नन्वा रुरुध्रे वशी वशं नयस एकज त्वम् || ऋ 10/84/3अथर्व 4.31.3

अभिमान करने वाले शत्रुओं को नष्ट करने का तुम अद्वितीय  सामर्थ्य रखते हो.

 

एको बहूनामसि मन्यवीळितो विशं-विशं युधये सं शिशाधि |

अकृत्तरुक त्वया युजा वयं द्युमन्तं घोषं विजयाय कर्ण्महे || ऋ 10/84/4अथर्व 4.31.4

(मन्यो एक: बहूनां ईडिता असि) (विशं विशं युद्धाय सं शिशाधि) (अ कृत्त रुक त्वया युजा वयं ) (द्युमन्तं घोषं विजयाय कृण्मसि)

विजेषकृदिन्द्र इवानवब्रवो Sस्माकं मन्यो अधिपा भवेह |

प्रियं ते नाम सहुरे गृणीमसि विद्मा तमुत्सं आबभूथ ||  ऋ 10/84/5अथत्व 4.31.5

( मन्यो इन्द्र: इव विजेष्कृत् ) (अनवब्रव: ) (इह अस्माकं अधिवा: भव)( सहुरे ते प्रियं नाम गृणमसि) ( तं उत्सं विद्म) (यत: आ बभूव)

आभूत्या सहजा वज्र सायक सहो बिभर्ष्यभिभूत उत्तरम |

क्रत्वा नो मन्यो सह मेद्येधि महाधनस्य पुरुहूतसंसृजि ||ऋ 10/84/6  अथर्व 4.31.6

संसृष्टं धनमुभयं समाकृतमस्मभ्यं दत्तां वरुणश्च मन्युः |

भियं दधाना हर्दयेषु शत्रवः पराजितासो अप नि लयन्ताम् || ऋ10/84/7  AV4.31.7

हे मन्यु ,  बोधयुक्त क्रोध , समाज के शत्रुओं द्वारा (चोरी से) प्राप्त प्रजा के धन को तथा उन शत्रुओं  के द्वारा राष्ट्र से पूर्वतः एकत्रित किये  गये  दोनो प्रकार के धन को शत्रु के साथ युद्ध में जीत कर सब प्रजाजनों अधिकारियों को प्रदान कर (बांट). पराजित शत्रुओं के हृदय में इतना भय उत्पन्न कर दे कि वे निलीन हो जाएं.

( क्या यह स्विस बेंकों मे राष्ट्र के धन के बारे में उपदेश नहीं है)

Subodh Kumar

 

 

Veda Qoutes for Ahimsa

 Breehimattam yavamattamatho maashamatho tilam
Esha vaam bhaago nihito ratnadheyaaya dantau maa hinsishtam pitaram maataram cha
ब्रीहिमत्तम् यवमत्तमथो माशमथो तिलम्

एश वाम् भागो निहितो रत्नधेयाय दन्तौ मा हिंसिश्तम् पितरम् मातरम् च।

Atharvaveda 6.140.2

O teeth! You eat rice, you eat barley, you gram and you eat sesame. These cereals are specifically meant for you. Do not kill those who are capable of being fathers and mothers.

Ya aamam maansamadanti paurusheyam cha ye kravih
Garbhaan khaadanti keshavaastaanito naashayaamasi
य आमम् मांसमदन्ति पौरुषेयम् च ये क्रविः।

गर्भान् खादन्ति केशवास्तानितो नाशयामसि॥

Atharvaveda 8.6.23

We ought to destroy those who eat cooked as well as uncooked meat, meat involving destruction of males and females, fetus and eggs.

Anago hatya vai bheema kritye
Maa no gaamashvam purusham vadheeh
अनगो हत्य वै भीम क्रित्ये

मा नो गामश्वम् पुरुषम् वधेः।

 Atharvaveda 10.1.29

It is definitely a great sin to kill innocents. Do not kill our cows, horses and people.

Aghnyaa yajamaanasya pashoonpahi
अघ् न्या यजमानस्य पशोन्पहि।

 Yajurveda 1.1

“O human! Animals are Aghnya – not to be killed. Protect the animals”

Pashunstraayethaam
पशुन् स्त्रायेथाम्।

Yajurveda 6.11

Protect the animals.

Dwipaadava Chatushpaatpaahi
द्विपादव चतुश्पात्पाहि

Yajurveda 14.8

Protect the bipeds and quadrupeds!

Urjam no dhehi dwipade chatushpade
उर्जम् नो धेहि द्विपदे चतुश्पदे

 Yajurveda 11.83

“May all bipeds and quadrupeds gain strength and nourishment”

Yah paurusheyena kravishaa samankte yo ashwena pashunaa yaatudhaanah

Yo aghnyaayaa bharati ksheeramagne teshaam sheershaani harasaapi vrishcha
यः पौरुशेयेन क्रविशा समन्क्ते यो अश्वेन पशुना यातुधानः।

यो अघ् न्याया भरति क्षीरमग्ने तेशाम् शेर्शाणि हरसापि वृश्च॥

Rigveda 10.87.16

Those who feed on human, horse, or animal flesh and those who destroy milk-giving Aghnya cows should be severely punished.