The Scientific Worldview of The Vedic Science

From: srinandan@aol.com

Namaste,

In this issue of the VFA Journal, we include Dhan Rousse’s article on “The Scientific Worldview of the Vedic Science.” It gives an overall look at how we can use the Vedic knowledge to understand the higher truths available behind the world’s view through science. It is a lesson on how to apply the Vedic science in the world around us.

Hari Om,

Stephen Knapp

The Scientific Worldview–Truth or Consequences?
Dhan Roussé

FINDING THE TRUTHS WITH SCIENCE

In a relative world, such as the one we live in, how does one find truth? That quest is undertaken by many young adults as they try to make sense of the world, and I was one such seeker in my youth. My experiences in college played an important role in guiding my search, providing a proving ground on which to test different concepts as I came across them. The “Arts” almost immediately failed my litmus test, as learning and attending to the subjective prejudices of my instructors were more important to getting a good grade than was any attempt to find or discuss universal truths. Nobody there seemed to be interested in such ideas, so I quickly abandoned the arts for engineering.

Engineering college seemed to be illumined in high contrast “black and white”— the confusing shades-of-gray missing. Test questions were either right or wrong and not influenced by the instructor’s daily biorhythms or other unknown or unknowable ephemeral influences too subtle for my developing understanding. I liked the fact that in engineering college 2+2 always equaled four, the second law of thermodynamics was as applicable on all continents, and that from theory one could extract principles that had the real-world results of dependable bridges, heavier-than-air flight, and communication using the electromagnetic spectrum. Here, I thought, I could find the genuine truths that applied everywhere-and-every-time, upon which to develop a reliable understanding of the world.
Likewise, I think that many people, probably even most, also consider science as that branch of study that has become the most powerful tool to discover and know the truths of our world.

THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD
Derived from the philosophy of rationality, and the principles of logic, scientific principles assert that the external world is real, that there is but one single reality, and the goal of science is to understand that reality. The scientific method requires the testing of ideas or postulates that are collected in a hypothesis, which will predict certain outcomes based upon logical deduction and known scientific principles. The hypothesis is then tested rigorously, and attempts should even be made to disprove it. After it withstands these challenges and its predictions are demonstrated to be correct, and as or even more importantly, not proven incorrect, the hypothesis may then be elevated to the status of a theory. Thus challenges, critiques, and testing of hypotheses are an integral and inseparable part of bona fide science.

At the time I felt reassured with such an ideal understanding of science. I also pursued graduate school as much as my own personal quest for the truth. However, not only was I learning more about material science, I was also maturing and developing my understanding of the world around me. In fact, I learned as much or more about people and the world in those years as I did about science, and there was one lesson that combined both that had a major impact on me. The research that I was engaged in was meant to replace a much older, and factually inaccurate, method of determining the physical properties of metals. Somewhere along the line, however, I was able to reason that just as my professor and I were working to upset a long-standing theory and assert a better one, someone at some future time would likely come along and unseat our theory with something better. Thus, I began to see that certain aspects of science were not rigid or fixed truths, but more practically they were a collection of facts that best represented what people at any given time could understand.
In fact, it is flatly stated in scientific theory that no aspect of “knowledge” can be considered as the conclusive or absolute truth, for exactly the same reasons as I was able to discern—at any time a better idea may come along that will disprove the earlier ones.

This developing perception created an existential crisis in which I felt myself floundering in a Nietzschean-like world that was not grounded by any fixed principle. Where then do we find truth, or do we find any at all? The world of “science” now seemed as uncertain as the Arts and seemed to afford little to no shelter or succor in an increasingly relative and uncertain world.
Serendipitously, however, it was just at this time that I was becoming acquainted with another approach to the truth—that of the Vedic perspective. Having learned about Vedic wisdom from a friend, I had acquired and began studying the Bhagavad-gita As It Is by A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami. The timing couldn’t have been better. As the scientific rug was being pulled out from under me, I seemed to step onto a magic carpet that carried me to an epistemological firmament, and at the same time provided a meaning to life that superseded everything I had known. And all this despite the fact that I couldn’t even pronounce many of the words within it. Over the years my continued study of the Bhagavad-gita has allowed me to better understand the nature of this world.

It is said that understanding a problem is 90% of its solution. And the great Einstein has instructed us that “problems cannot be solved at the same level of thinking that created them.” This is the advantage of the Bhagavad-gita, or Vedic worldview—it provides a perspective that is distinctly different from Western experience, and allows problems to be reframed in such a way that solutions are more readily apparent. Further, it’s a worldview that can account for all of the myriad experiences of human life. It is from theistic Vedic perspective that I have learned to view the world and its events, activities, and problems. In this paper I report on some of the deviations in the sciences and other areas of academia.

Although most non-scientists generally think that science is relatively straight forward in its approach, in many of its practices it is becoming increasingly at odds with its own bona fide methods. Social scientist Karl Popper1 has analyzed the methods of science and his philosophical approach, called the hypothetico-deductive method, is widely accepted as the best approach to scientific logic. Despite the fact that the best practices are well-known they are not always used. Harvard Professor Emeritus Dr. Ernst Mayr, in his 1997 biology textbook writes that even among scientists there actually is a fair amount of confusion about what science really is, or how it should be practiced.2 Some say that science is limited to that which can be known by observation and experiment. Yet others say that by its influence science consists not simply of the true facts of the world, but also includes what scientists may say about the world—regardless of what the true state of the world may be—because their mere assertions carry great legitimacy due to the authority that science has achieved within society.3

These ideas imply that science may be or is being used for purposes other than a search for truth. Indeed, some consider that beyond its usefulness in allowing us to create items helpful for our lives, science is being used as a system of power4 and means of social control.5 These uses of science are decidedly controversial, and are considered by many, especially in a democratic society, to exceed its legitimate boundaries. I share fully in this opinion and it is my premise in this article that science, especially within academia, flagrantly violates the legitimate limits of its domain and this has resulted in serious sociological consequences that go mostly unobserved by the general public.

SCIENCE AS A LEGITIMIZING TOOL

The foundations of every culture largely rest upon existential stories (worldviews) that explain how the world was created, who mankind is, and what our purpose is in this world. It is important that such existential explanations be offered because almost every individual requires answers for them. Every indigenous culture has a creation story that answers existential questions, and practically without exception these are theistic-ally-based worldviews presented as historical truths within the culture itself. An intelligentsia, or priestly class, traditionally had the role of their interpretation for their general public. The creation story and nature of the answers to existential questions influence what types of activities are allowable, how the economies of the culture function, as well as the motivations and relationships of its people. Notably, many cultural religious worldviews that include a hierarchy of gods are often considered nothing more than myths by today’s condescending anthropologists. As we shall see, there is a motivation for such an interpretation.

It is worth noting that in more recent years, in both the east and west, the authority of the intelligentsia lies not with qualified individuals as was formerly the case, but has become established within institutions through which it can be passed on to others: the authority of the institution now replacing the qualification of the individual, with significant consequences to the body politic. Thus we now often find that instead of through qualification, positions of authority are achieved by inheritance or through some other mechanism of transfer of power. All too often these posts are acquired by persons unqualified for the position, and who may have ulterior motives for power and control. In the Roman church power was held by and transferred to the popes in repeated succession. Their declarations, issued as papal bulls, were the authoritative conclusions regarding any important matter. During the latter half of the second millennium the locus of authority and source of the dominant worldview shifted from the Roman church and its popes to science and scientists respectively. Today it is the scientists and other academicians who have taken on the priestly role of defining the “true” nature of reality, and their declarations of today’s truths are passed on to the rest of us through their professional journals.

An important difference exists between our scientific and previous authorities. The scientific worldview is not derived from a theological source, but is in fact a socially constructed concept of reality, thus it requires legitimization that is unnecessary for religions. This legitimization is possible if it assumes the mantle of transcendence inherent in religion. Harvard University Professor and geneticist Richard Lewontin describes how an institution may do so in his book Biology As Ideology.

First “the institution as a whole must appear to derive from sources outside of ordinary human social struggle. It must not seem to be the creation of political, economic, or social forces, but to descend into society from a supra-human source” . . .second “the ideas, pronouncements, rules, and results of the institution’s activity must have a validity and a transcendent truth that goes beyond any possibility of human compromise or human error. Its explanations and pronouncements must seem to be true in an absolute sense and to derive somehow from an absolute source. They must be true for all time and all place” . . . and third  “the institution must have a certain mystical and veiled quality so that its innermost operation is not completely transparent to everyone. It must have an esoteric language, which needs to be explained to the ordinary person by those who are especially knowledgeable and who can intervene between everyday life and mysterious sources of understanding and knowledge.”6

It is not too difficult to deduce that these characteristics have actually been derived from religious worldviews and ideologies and applied to science. Consider that science claims to be objective, impartial, and nonpolitical, and that most scientists believe that science operates in an atmosphere free from political intrusion. The sciences such as physics and chemistry, are also seen to be universally true in all times and places, and the methods of science are constructed in such a way that they create a product or knowledge thought to be free from the ordinary human foibles of greed, envy or deceit. The scientific method (when properly practiced) is thus thought to result in universal truths, which we afford the title of laws, and which we must all accept simply as facts of life with nothing leftover to argue about. Science also uses an opaque language that is inaccessible to all but its members and which requires interpretation for the common man.
Writing with rare candor and openness for a highly recognized scientist, Lewontin unabashedly tells us that besides providing explanations of how the world works, and even irrespective of the practical truth of its claims, science has served this purpose of social legitimization with remarkable success. He explains that science can be seen as a social institution whose job is to fight an ideological battle within people’s minds, for the purpose of peacefully maintaining the existing social order.7
The fact is that Lewontin is not making idle claims because in many respects mainstream science is being used to support a political agenda. Scientific establishments both in academia and industry have settled into a fixed perception of reality that is not supported by scientific fact. Further, reputable and competent scientists are discovering and presenting sound scientific evidence that is being ignored and even suppressed. Where there should be controversy and debate we hear only the sounds of silence. And scientists who challenge this agenda are dealt with by derision, as well as loss of respect, jobs, and even careers. Next let’s look at just some of a vast amount of evidence that demonstrates the deviations of science from its pure purpose of pursuing the truth.

THE FAILURES AND TRANSGRESSIONS OF
MODERN COSMOLOGY

In modern cosmology a great deal rests upon what is called the red shift. Light from distant stars is shifted toward the red end of the visible spectrum. In physics this is called the Doppler effect and with sound it is the result of the increased frequency (higher tone) of the sound of an approaching object, and decreasing (lower tone) as it passes. In astronomy it is assumed that this shift of frequency is also the result of velocity, and a lot is riding on this assumption since the red shift figures prominently into many astronomical calculations. These include among others the distance of stars and planets, the expansion of the universe, and the age of the universe since the Big Bang.

So what’s going on in the field? That depends on where you look. Inside of academia and other establishment institutions the Big Bang and the red shift are presented as final conclusions with only some minor details to be worked out. But look elsewhere and you will find a controversy raging over both the interpretation of the red shift and the Big Bang itself.
Astronomer Halton Arp was pushed out of his position at the Mt. Palomar observatory because he dared to challenge the prevailing interpretation of the red shift. He speaks to both the lack of professionalism in science as well as the limits on debate in his book Seeing Red: Redshifts, Cosmology and Academic Science. He says there, “What could be done, and is not done, however, is to use the observations to rule out a 75-year-old model [the Big Bang] which is presently unquestioned dogma. The mission of academia should be to explore—not perpetuate myth and superstition. Today, any newspaper, science magazine, or discussion of scientific funding, will take for granted that we know all the basic facts: that we live in an expanding universe, all created in an instant out of nothing, in which cosmic bodies started to condense from a hot medium about 15 billion years ago. The observations are not used to test this model . . .  It is embarrassing, and by now a little boring, to constantly read announcements about ever-more-distant and luminous high-redshift objects, blacker holes, and higher and higher percentages of undetectable matter… For those who have examined the evidence on redshifts, and decided that redshifts are not primarily velocity… the important question arises as to how a disproved assumption could have become so dominant.”8

These challenges come from many directions. In his article in 21st Century Science & Technology, Grote Reber writes mockingly about the assumptions of the Big Bang Theory and how they are being handled: “The whole business of Big Bang Creationism is very shaky and based upon dubious assumptions. The underlying questions have become lost in the sands of time and are no longer taught—even in astronomy schools! Lately, Big Bang Creationists have far overplayed their hand, making themselves look like fools. However, because the old-line scientific trade journals are also dominated by reactionary fuddy-duddies, there is not much opportunity for readers to examine the underlying issues.”9

Are these examples of bona fide science that we thought our institutions were engaged in, or are these examples of propaganda and manipulation of public perception? Clearly they are the latter, and we are forced to wonder why. Nor are these two alone. There are many top-notch scientists who join in chorus with them challenging the reigning paradigm, but the public, and even students, hear nothing about the controversy. Further evidence of the deliberate false portrayal is provided by examining the Physics Department websites of many universities—none indicate any serious conflict surrounding the Big Bang Theory (BBT).

To be fair, the problems are mentioned by cosmologists, but almost without exception they are dismissed as being of little consequence, insignificant aberrations that will be cleared up with a little more tinkering, or else the theory is amended to accommodate what should be there, but isn’t (such as the “dark matter” that we hear so much about). But the almost unlimited tinkering involved to adjust a theory that does not allow or provide for scientific observations cannot be considered sound science. Scientific method says that theory must be established based on observation, and that it is not good science to continually amend theory that does not initially provide for subsequently observed phenomena. Any hypothesis or theory that does not adequately provide for observation is generally thrown out after a while, and a fresh theory developed that can accommodate all of the observations. Another way of saying this is that in science and philosophy the rule is that postulations are not to be made beyond necessity, yet the long list of problems of the BBT indicates that at least some concepts have been postulated beyond necessity. William Mitchell, in his book Cult of the Big Bang, thoroughly-documents more than thirty significant problems of the Big Bang hypothesis that are minimized by the academic establishment.10

So why is all of this being allowed to masquerade in the name of science? Mitchell says that enormous effort had been spent, and continues to be spent, in support of the Big Bang in a way that is not the method of impartial research, the supposed hallmark of pure science, and he questions how could good and talented men participate in these endeavors. His conclusion is that other forces must be at work to corrupt the process. I couldn’t agree more. Science is losing its scientific character, taking on the look and feel of belief. Geoffrey Burbidge, Professor of Physics at the University of California, San Diego, for one, is willing to admit it: “Big bang cosmology is probably as widely believed as has been any theory of the universe in the history of Western civilization. It rests, however, on many untested, and [in] many cases, untestable assumptions. Indeed, big bang cosmology has become a bandwagon of thought that reflects faith as much as objective truth.”11
We wonder if these practices of “science” are unique to cosmology. Would that it were true. Manipulation of science can, unfortunately, be found everywhere—especially where the origins of life are concerned.

ARE CHEMICALS THE ORIGIN OF LIFE?

After the Big Bang resulted in the construction of the planets, the next major feature of the scientific worldview is that life arose spontaneously from the “primordial soup”, a sea of chemicals that offered the unique circumstances for the constituent parts of living cells to self-assemble by chance combination. Darwin’s ideas of evolution have subsequently achieved the same dogmatic status as the Big Bang Theory: an established fact that all scientists accept and over which there is little remaining controversy (allowed).

The suggestion is simple enough, but can chance chemical combinations actually form living cells? What is a cell? When Darwin first published Origin of the Species very little was known about biological systems and their complexity. One of Darwin’s great admirers during the nineteenth century, Ernst Haeckel, expressed the prevailing idea that cells were a “simple little lump of albuminous combination of carbon,” something molecular biologist Michael Behe says we might liken to a homogeneous blob of Jell-O. Given the limitations of the microscopes of the time it was an entirely reasonable deduction that the cell could easily have been produced from inanimate material and simply come together by a chance combination of chemicals. It’s easy to assume something when you have no idea of the implications of the assumption. Much harder, however, when you actually understand what lies behind the assumption.

In the interim since the idea of evolution was first established, especially in the past twenty years, great advances have been made in understanding the inner-workings in the microscopic world of the living cell. The field of Molecular Biology has opened up the cell and exposed its fantastic workings, and we have learned that cells are made mostly of proteins, which are in turn made of amino acids. The twenty amino acids combine in chains of several hundred up to a thousand in very specific arrangements to form thousands of types of proteins, and in cells this is what we find—hundreds of thousands of proteins of hundreds of types—a typical cell contains ten million million atoms.

Since Darwinian theory assumes that life forms were created by the chance interaction of chemicals, how reasonable is it to assume that just one single protein molecule “self-assembles” by chance combination? By chance combination we mean that if the required amino acids were in the proximity of each other they would combine to form proteins. And now that we know the number of cell components that must be specifically ordered, this becomes a rather easy statistical calculation. Consider that even if all the atoms on the earth’s surface, including water, air, and the crust of the earth were made into conveniently available amino acids and 4 to 5 billion years were allowed, the odds are l0161 (1 with 161 zeros after it) to one that not one usable protein could have resulted from chance combinations, and it becomes even more impossible when we estimate the probability to develop a cell.12

Morowitz has determined the probability for the origin of the organic precursors for the smallest likely living entity by random processes . . . The chances for producing the necessary molecules, amino acids, proteins, etc., for a cell one tenth the size of the smallest known to man13 is less than one in (10340)6 or 10 with 340 million zeros after it.14 Noting that mathematicians consider that any event with odds of less than 1 in 1050 to be flatly impossible, people such as Nobel Prize winner Francis Crick, who, along with James Watson, determined DNA’s molecular structure, have come to this conclusion:

“If a particular amino acid sequence was selected by chance, how rare an event would this be? . . . Suppose the chain is about two hundred amino acids long; this is, if anything, rather less than the average length of proteins of all types. Since we have just twenty possibilities at each place, the number of possibilities is twenty multiplied by itself some two hundred times. This is conveniently written 20 and is approximately equal to10260, that is, a one followed by 260 zeros. This number is quite beyond our everyday comprehension. The great majority of sequences can never have been synthesized at all, at any time.” (emphasis added)15

Now, either the mathematical science of statistical probability is wrong, or else chemicals did not self-assemble by chance alone to create proteins, or cells or life. Since statistical probability is one of the most well-developed and tested sciences, we then come to the conclusion (if we are going to use the scientific method) that life did not arise from the chance combination of molecules. It can’t have happened by chance. Period. Full stop. Something else then must have been involved. That something is pointed to again and again in dozens of books over the past decade that demonstrate the impossibility of the now Neo-Darwinian theory. But has establishment science considered this evidence to throw out a discredited theory? No, biology walks in lock-step with cosmology in denying any scientific evidence that can upset the ruling paradigm that matter alone is the cause of all causes.

Amazingly, the controversies within biology follow the same pattern of obfuscation and denial that is found in cosmology. Like the Big Bang, Darwinian evolution has plenty of controversy, but it is not given an adequate intellectual or scientific response from the biology establishment. Instead of addressing the issues they are dismissed with scant attention often simply because of the source—Behe, Dembski and others are Christian creationists. It is falsely claimed that their ideology influences their science too much. Thus their arguments are shunted to the “fringes” of science and are given short-shrift in academic and professional journals. The only time that these challenges get a fair hearing is when the authors take their case to the public via the popular press, and now scores of books offer legitimate and sound scientific challenges to evolutionary theory.
Any intelligent individual who reads the above arguments can reasonably conclude that the chance evolutionary creation of this world and its immense biological diversity is impossible. One need not have a long list of letters after his name to understand these concepts. Yet, although the controversy has been raging for decades, very little is changing. Even as far back as 1986 chemistry professor Robert Shapiro criticized several aspects of research on the origin of life. “We have reached a situation where a theory has been accepted as fact by some, and possible contrary evidence is shunted aside”. He concludes that “this is mythology rather than science”.16

SCIENTIFIC MAKE-BELIEVE

What to speak of discounting scientific challenges, it has been found that the biology community actually participates in scientific fraud by perpetuating and teaching evolutionary concepts in college textbooks that have long since been proven false. In Icons Of Evolution author Jonathon Wells demonstrates that even advanced college textbooks, and publications from such esteemed institutions as The National Academy of Sciences, contain patently false and deliberately misleading statements about evolution. In his introduction he writes: “The following chapters compare the icons of evolution with published scientific evidence, and reveal that much of what we teach about evolution is wrong. This fact raises troubling questions about the status of Darwinian evolution. If the icons of evolution are supposed to be our best evidence for Darwin’s theory, and all of them are false or misleading, what does that tell us about the theory? Is it science, or myth? . . . The implications for American science are potentially far-reaching.”17 More than you probably knew.

In discussing what science does and how it does it, Lewontin describes how science is being used to legitimate an entirely fictitious story—that of human sexual preference. It is worth quoting him at length. He says: “Thus, the entire discussion of the evolutionary basis of human sexual preference is a made-up story, from beginning to end. Yet it is a story that appears in textbooks, in courses in high schools and universities, and in popular books and journals. It bears the legitimacy given to it by famous professors and by national and international media. It has the authority of science. In an important sense, it is science because science consists not simply of a collection of true facts about the world, but is the body of assertions and theories about the world made by people who are called scientists. It consists, in large part, of what scientists say about the world whatever the true state of the world might be.

“Science is more than an institution devoted to the manipulation of the physical world. It also has a function in the formation of consciousness about the political and social world. Science in that sense is part of the general process of education, and the assertions of scientists are the basis for a great deal of the enterprise of forming consciousness. Education in general, and scientific education in particular, is meant not only to make us competent to manipulate the world but also to form our social attitudes.” (emphasis added)

I am willing to bet that you didn’t know that the function of a scientific education was to convince your children that sexual preference, a disingenuous way of saying homosexual inclinations, is written in their genes, and therefore such inclinations must be “normal”.

E. O. Wilson is the father of a theory called sociology which says that sexual and other human behaviors are determined only by our genes. This tells us that “human beings are absurdly easy to indoctrinate. They seek it.” Further he says that they are characterized by blind faith: “Man would rather believe than know.”18 I ask then, who is it that has given science (including Wilson) permission to determine what social attitudes we should be indoctrinated with? It certainly is not ‘mom and pop’ because the overwhelming majority of people in most cultures consider homosexuality a social deviation and unacceptable. Who then is making such socially significant decisions in the name of science?

It becomes easier to see where this is all going by examining the conclusions of several fields of study together, so we’ll look at just a few more.

BOTANY

The story of prehistory from the field of Botany offers another interesting arena where we find lots of evidence of scientific make-believe. Since evolutionary theory demands that everything can only have evolved from a common ancestor, wild plants must have been the precursors of domesticated ones. When asked to explain the origins of our current domestic grains, botanists offer the miraculous solution that with time and patience Neolithic farmers created them by crossbreeding wild species over hundreds of generations. That’s an entertaining answer, especially since doing so even defies our current bio-engineering abilities. The Botanical Garden Bin Ras in St. Petersburg, Russia, has not been able to cultivate wild rye into a new form of domestication in more than 165 years of effort, even with the tools and understanding of modern biology.19 Their rye has lost none of its wild traits, especially the fragility of its stalk and its small grain. The hypothetical suggestion of Neolithic bioengineers is science? In the hypothetical-deductive scientific method it isn’t. It is simply a speculative story with many unscientific assumptions. As in biology, the “science” of botany attempts to go beyond the limits of its domain to explain events that cannot be tested. In this manner both fields are using the authority afforded them by their bona fide scientific findings to present a philosophy of life and legitimate a particular worldview.

LINGUISTICS

Not only do the “hard” sciences give evidence of a fixed worldview, but the social sciences are pressed into service to support the scientific worldview as well. In the field of Linguistics languages are traced by what is called etymology, or the history of words through time and cultures. Uses of a particular word can be traced to their earlier counterparts from neighboring cultures. In this way changes in all languages are recorded—except for one—the language of ancient India, Sanskrit. It is a well recognized fact that the phonology (the speech sound) and morphology (the science of word formation) of the Sanskrit language is entirely different from all of the languages of the world, and that changes noted in all other languages are not to be found in Sanskrit. This is the actual history.

Yet, on 2nd February, 1786 Sir William Jones, in his Presidential speech for the Asiatic Society, presented a fabricated theory about a “proto-language” that was supposed to have been the mother of all languages. This unknown language, “Indo-European” in origin, was designed to provide ancestry to Sanskrit language, and to provide a cover-story for the theory of the Aryan invasion.

It was Franz Bopp (1791-1867), a German linguist, and close associate of Jones who was the main person to popularize the term ‘Proto-Indo-European’ or ‘Indo-European’. Bopp rejected the arguments of earlier linguists who considered Sanskrit to be the original language of the world. He was an active member of the Asiatic Society, and interestingly, the London Magazine gave excellent reviews of his works. The Proto-Indo-European language, despite the fact that it has never been shown to exist, is accepted today by academic linguists as the root of languages in Europe, the Middle East, and India.

INDOLOGY

The history of India as presented in its Puranas and other texts such as the Mahabharata or Ramayana, is accepted as truth by hundreds of millions of India’s native population, but academia regards them simply as superstitious myth. In place of this history, British ‘Indologists’ have created a history for India suggesting that there were simply barbarians in the subcontinent before the hordes of the Aryan Invasion brought culture along with them. The attempt was made to have the Aryan invasion turn India’s ancient Vedas into little more than primitive poems of uncivilized plunderers. The articles of the Asiatic Researches were intentionally derogatory and presented false descriptions of Indian society, its history and religion. In 1828 an atheistic society was formed in Calcutta, and its founder and coworkers received great appreciation by the British. They were welcomed in England and praised by the writers of the Asiatic Society. In 1847 Max Müller was appointed by the East India Company to misinterpret the theme of the Vedas and construct a false history of India.

Recent scholarship is gradually correcting these attempts at revisionist history, so much so that even establishment scholars are now beginning to question the whole idea. In fact, there was no Aryan Invasion. India’s culture is the oldest on the planet, and the mother of all other civilizations as supported by recent archaeological finds in Orissa. On the banks of the Subarnarekha River was found evidence of a continuous culture extending from 2 million years ago to 5,000 BCE without a break.20 Why then all of the revisionist history? Because the history of India as the seat of the world’s theistic culture had to be altered if the materialistic worldview was to become the dominant paradigm of thought.

ARCHAEOLOGY

As reported elsewhere in these pages by Michael Cremo, a great deal of evidence demonstrating the great antiquity of human existence has been discarded from acceptable academic discussion and even hidden from public knowledge. This has been necessary to support the idea that mankind is the recent result (the last 25-50,000 years) of evolution. The fossil record in fact not only challenges that theory, it destroys it—if the evidence is admitted into academic consideration, which it is not.
Cremo and associates collected over 900 pages of evidence formerly published in professional journals, but allowed to slip into oblivion by the establishment archaeology community. Remarkably, where establishment archeologists restrict human presence in the Americas to the last 15-20,000 years only, there is abundant evidence of older human presence. In the Americas evidence of human presence has been found from 125,000 years (the Sheguiandah, Canada artifacts) to over 600 million years (Dorchester, Massachusetts metallic vase).21

Of course, the immediate question that comes to mind is that if Cremo and team, a two-person research organization, have uncovered so much bona fide evidence of extreme human antiquity,22 then why hasn’t the remainder of the entire archaeological profession acknowledged the same? Why, as in the case with cosmology, is there no debate within the profession about this evidence and the failure of the accepted theories to accommodate it?

CONNECTING THE DOTS

In each of the areas reviewed above, the conclusions of all academic studies and research have something in common. That is, they all attempt to squeeze a square peg into a round hole in their efforts to support the scientific worldview, or dominant paradigm. Let’s remember that the scientific worldview follows something along these lines:

In an instant after the Big Bang all matter was created and the stars and planets gradually coalesced as matter cooled. On our planet only, by the sheerest of chances, chemicals self-assembled from a chemical primordial soup to spontaneously generate simple living creatures. Over vast spans of time and by individual chance mutations, one-at-a-time, one living thing gradually gave rise to another until the planet was filled with millions of varieties of life—fish, birds, plants, insects, animals, and ultimately, in only the last 25-50,000 years, your ancestors—homo sapiens sapiens—human beings. At first hardly distinguishable from animals, we gradually became more and more civilized.  We now stand at the pinnacle of evolution, and it doesn’t get any better than this. Remember—enjoy it as much as you can, because when you die, that’s it—game over.
This worldview is thought to be created in a composite manner, with the conclusions of all areas of study added together to complete the general picture. Cosmology tells about the beginnings of creation and planetary formation. Biology tells us about how life was formed and how life processes work. The archaeological record tells us how species evolved from one another and where and when mankind appeared and how he populated the planet. History gives us the story of various civilizations and tells us about our social evolution, and this picture is aided by the study of linguistics which map the social intercourse of civilizations. Anthropology (including Indology) tells us about primitive peoples and how they became civilized. Add it all up and the equal sign after it will tell you who we are, how we got here, and where we are going. It’s the modern West’s answer to the existential questions.

What’s wrong with this picture? It’s a Myth. Each field of study has somehow amended its conclusions to conveniently fit with this worldview, and irrespective of the practical truths of their claims, academia legitimizes this story. If you are an educated person who lives in the ‘real’ world, and have given up other ‘myths’ of life, this is what you are supposed to believe. However, it would appear as though academics have, as of yet, only convinced themselves, since 90% of Americans still believe in a creation story involving God. People tolerate this being taught to their children because of the authority of science, yet they continue to take them to church. However, it appears that the relentless indoctrination campaign is showing results and that Americans are becoming sociological schizophrenics in an effort to reconcile science with religion. In a Gallup survey 38% of Americans believe that man has evolved from lower species but that this process was guided by God, and college indoctrinated students favor the story of godless evolution by 2 to 1.23

If each field of study were to include all of its findings (that are now suppressed or re-interpreted) to create the composite picture, we would have a very different story.

ESTABLISHMENT DENIAL AND CONTROL

There are a number of methods used in controlling the debate, none of which in the least fall into the category of bona fide science. Brian Martin, a senior lecturer in the Department of Science and Technology Studies, University of Wollongong, Australia has studied what happens to scientists who challenge the dominant paradigm, and has written extensively on the subject. Rather than look at their actual findings and discuss their work on its own merit they become labeled as dissidents, and he says there is a standard set of ways for dealing with them: “Methods include denial of tenure, blocking publications, withdrawal of research grants, official reprimands, referral to psychiatrists, ostracism by colleagues, spreading of rumors, transfer to different locations or jobs, and dismissal . . .  Initially I hadn’t even thought of suppression as a problem in science. Now I realize that it is pervasive.”24
It can be argued that suppression, while effective in silencing individual dissidents, is even more effective in signaling to others what they might face if they step out of line. Observation of the treatment meted out to dissidents is enough to make most university professors and professional researchers use ‘professional discretion’, or ‘balanced judgment’ in choosing their research topics and how they write about their findings. Over time they internalize their fears of loss of status, income or career in a way that leads to self-intimidation. Real restraints, such as external prohibitions, are then simply replaced by the ‘agreements of academic gentlemen’.25
A specific example of such un-scientific treatment is provided by the response science writer Richard Milton received upon publication of his book Shattering the Myths of Darwinism. The book set about challenging the evidence presented for evolution in establishments such as natural history museums all over the world. He writes in the preface to the 1997 reprint: “I didn’t expect science to welcome an inquisitive reporter, but I did expect the controversy to be conducted at a rational level, that people would rightly demand to inspect my evidence more closely and question me on the correctness of this or that fact.” He was shocked that although a leading article in the London Times praised the book saying that it could shake the ‘religion of evolution’, a review elsewhere by the Darwin evolutionist Richard Dawkins painted a darker picture: “the book is ‘loony,’ ‘stupid,’ ‘drivel’ and its author a ‘harmless fruitcake’ who ‘needs psychiatric help.’” 26 Milton replies that “these intemperate responses betoken more than a squabble between an inquisitive journalist and a couple of reactionary academics. They raise a number of important questions of general public interest.”

Indeed they do. They bring into question the ability of establishment scientists to practice bona fide science, as well as the motives for such reactionary treatment of scientists, or others, who present ideas that appear to lie outside the boundaries of acceptable debate. They also raise questions about what those limits protect or defend.

FAILURES OF MODERN SCIENCE

Looking deeply into these issues, the following points show themselves: 1) sound scientific evidence is being ignored in many fields, especially when it threatens the dominant scientific worldview and/or established powerful interests; 2) acceptable debate within each discipline is limited to that which supports the established “scientific” worldview, which appears to have become a rigid dogma. These are implications that the principles of pure science are being subordinated to support a political agenda. This dynamic also appears to be operative in many of the social sciences; 3) going beyond their legitimate domain of knowing nature, people of the scientific profession are introducing many assumptions that are scientifically untenable and fall outside of legitimate scientific method. They also bring conclusions in the name of Theory, that have no scientific basis in fact, being only unsupported speculations and mere assertions; 4) in many cases science is exceeding its legitimate boundaries of determination of facts of material nature and is being used to legitimate a worldview, and promulgate its philosophy—even to indoctrinate an unsuspecting public.     Exactly who is determining that philosophy is unknown; 5) knowledge of such uses of science are generally unknown by the general public, and it is doubtful that they would approve of such efforts; 6) the acceptable limits of debate are those that result in or promulgate an ideology that is implicitly atheistic: academic and “scientific” discussions allow no room for discussion of a spiritual element. Moreover there appears to be an orchestrated attempt across all branches of study to deviate from correct and true research, findings, or history, in order to give mutual support to the atheistic scientific worldview. Such efforts may be seen as attempts to control the thinking and understanding of the populace and may thus be considered propaganda of special interests.

The above issues are serious breaches of the authority and legitimate boundaries of science. In these cases science is indeed being used to support a social agenda as Lewontin claims. As this behavior becomes more widely recognized, the institutions of science will be seen in the same light as the Roman church formerly was at the advent of the Reformation—as a means to restrict the understanding of people and to impose a dogmatic and false reality. In other words, science is being used to support a political agenda. As people begin to understand the facts behind science’s actions, the worldview of science will lose its position in the eyes of many people. Due to the above causes I predict that the failure of the atheistic scientific worldview looms on the horizon.

People want the truth and they don’t like being controlled. When they find out that this is going on they will throw off the ideology of science and seek adequate alternative ways of understanding this world. If understanding the problem is 90% of the solution, we now stand at the threshold of the solution. The problem of the modern Western worldview is that it is artificially contrived to lead to and support atheistic conclusions. The solution is a worldview that can accommodate the theistic and spiritual concepts and forces that are present in the world and which make their effects known through a variety of phenomena. I suggest that the Vedic worldview is the only candidate that has the necessary complexity and depth to explain all of humankind’s experience.

CONTROLLING THE DEBATE—TO WHAT END?

While biologists may claim chance in all affairs, practically speaking there is little experience of chance in human society. In law, commerce, and industry, all activities of strictly human endeavor, we get results only when a group of people set out with the intention to achieve them. Tell any lawmaker that the laws that he just passed happened simply by chance and he is likely to think that you are daft. He knows how hard he had to work to get the job done. Tell a businessman that he has been successful by chance and he’ll laugh in your face. He’s likely worked 80-hour weeks to make his business what it is, and at least he’s convinced that that definitely didn’t happen by chance. Similarly, since academia is an institution composed of people and managed by people, it is equally unlikely that any result happens there simply by chance. Therefore, I assert that it is not by chance that each field of study has developed limits on what is considered acceptable debate. These uniform results have been achieved only by the deliberate efforts of certain people. Who? And what is their motivation? Those are the next questions we want answered.

Interestingly for our case a similar phenomenon has been revealed in another area of human endeavor—the media. Just as we have trusted science to bring us the truths of the physical world, we have trusted journalists to investigate the matters of human affairs and bring us the truths of those events. Sad to say, it seems that our trust has been misplaced on both accounts.
A penetrating analysis of the media is told by Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky in their book Manufacturing Consent. Drawing on decades of criticism and research they report that the media, far from being impartial in presenting the news, defend the economic, social and political agendas of the privileged groups that dominate domestic society, the state, and the global order.

In the opening paragraphs they write: “It is our view that, among their other functions, the media serve, and propagandize on behalf of, the powerful societal interests that control and finance them. The representatives of these interests have important agendas and principles that they want to advance, and they are well-positioned to shape and constrain media policy. This is normally not accomplished by crude intervention, but by the selection of right-thinking personnel and by the editors’ and working journalists’ internalization of priorities and definitions of news-worthiness that conform to the institution’s policy.”27
The authors make no attempt to identify the powerful societal interests they speak of, yet we can take it that these are moneyed interests since money equates with power in our society. And why would the money interests want to control the media and scientific ideology? Again Lewontin gives us a clue. Throughout his book he claims that biology serves the purpose of legitimating a social order, and several times makes it clear that this is done intentionally to maintain the status quo. He frankly states that story of biology is meant to convince the public that the situation we now find ourselves in is inescapable since “the political structures of society—the competitive, entrepreneurial, hierarchical society in which we live and which differentially rewards different temperaments, different cognitive abilities, and different mental attitudes — is also determined by our DNA, and that it is, therefore, unchangeable.”28 (emphasis added)
That is, genes make culture. As Lewontin puts it, “when we know what our DNA looks like, we will know why some of us are rich and some poor, some healthy and some sick, some powerful and some weak. We will also know why some societies are powerful and rich and others are weak and poor, why one nation, one sex, one race dominates another.”
The implication is that whatever our station in life is, we are all born this way, so just accept it, since it’s the natural order of things. Of course this is nothing more than a rigid caste system that justifies inequity and social discrimination by the religion of science.

WHAT IS MATTER AND WHAT IS LIFE?

Even assuming the self-assembly of atoms into amino acids, proteins, and cells, the sciences artfully avoid the discussion of what life actually is with yet another assumption—this time it is that life arises from the combination of chemicals alone. The scientific worldview would have us fully equate matter with life. This, perhaps, is the most grandiose assumption and it has even tripped up many Christian creationists who have bought into the idea. The question remains: can life arise from matter? In fact, while there is scant evidence that this is the case, there is a great deal of evidence that life exists independently of the material body.

Vedic knowledge does not sidestep this issue, but tackles it head-on, explaining that life stems from a transcendent source, and although temporarily encased within material bodies while on this earth, life has another dimension. Human beings having free will can choose in which dimension they want to live.

Presenting a fully developed philosophy that includes God, the living entity, karma, reincarnation, the material energies and world, etc. the Vedic worldview accounts for all of the many phenomena of this world, many of which are simply dismissed by materialistic science. Understanding these many dimensions of life puts us in a much better position to make informed choices about how to live in this world.

Failure to know our own nature and live accordingly has very real effects on the human condition, creating what the father of sociology, Emile Durkheim, has termed ‘anomie’ by which he means a situation that might be described as a sort of ‘social emptiness or void’. Under such conditions suicide, crime and disorder are social behaviors that can be expected because our existence is no longer rooted in a stable and integrated social milieu, and our lives thus lose purpose and meaning.29 We are already there. Suicide is the leading cause of death among teenagers in the U.S., and many millions, including children, take daily doses of psychotropic medication simply to be able to function under such conditions.

This condition is also predicted in the Vedic literature and is described as sunyavadi, or voidism, which indicates a purposeless existence or void. The consciousness and nature of persons absorbed in such a worldview is described by Lord Krishna in the sixteenth chapter of the Bhagavad-gita, as asuric, or demonic. The asuras, Krishna says, think that there is no God in control, and that the world has no personal or spiritual foundation. It has come about from sex only. Following such conclusions, the asuras, lost to themselves, engage in unbeneficial and horrible works that gradually destroy the world. Being bewildered by insatiable lust, pride and false prestige, they are attracted only by the impermanent material things of this world for sense gratification, which is taken as the ultimate goal of human civilization.
On the other hand, the Bhagavad-gita also describes the sura, or divine being, as a person who has purified himself by spiritual understanding and controls his mind with determination. Remaining free from lust, anger and false prestige, he becomes fixed in spiritual consciousness. In that state he is freed from hankering and lamentation, is equally disposed to every living entity, and is done with attachment, fear and anger. Being thus situated he achieves the highest stage of life—the realization of the transcendent Self, and the Supreme Brahman.

According to the Vedic worldview human life and consciousness is specifically created for achievement of this spiritual perfection, and a civilization arranged to facilitate this goal of life can as well realize peace and prosperity for each of its members. Such conditions have in fact been achieved by past civilizations as described in Vedic literatures. This is not a utopian dream, or a fanciful future never to be realized, nor a nostalgic idea of times gone by. This height of civilization can again be achieved in cultures whose members are committed to these principles, but this will never be achieved by cultures that deny their very nature.

WHAT PATH WILL WE TAKE TO THE FUTURE?

E. O. Wilson, while suggesting that there is a biological basis for morality, has written, “the choice between transcendentalism and empiricism will be the coming century’s version of the struggle for men’s souls. Moral reasoning will either remain centered in theology and philosophy, or shift toward a scientific material analysis. Where it ultimately settles will depend on which worldview is more widely perceived to be correct.”30
Will the atheistic scientific worldview finally wipe-out all other theistic notions of life and purpose, or will the understanding of the spiritual dimension of mankind and the goal of his release from material bondage become the dominant paradigm? Will we bequeath to future generations the transcendent truth of the Vedas or the consequences of a bankrupt and dead-end, materialistic ideology?

NOTES
1. The Logic of Scientific Discovery (1968) and Conjectures and Refutations (1972)
2 Chap. 2 This is Biology: The Science of the Living World Belknap Press, Boston, MA 1997
3 p. 103, Richard C. Lewontin, Biology As Ideology: The Doctrine of DNA, Harper Perennial, NY 1992
4 Brian Martin. From his website: www.SuppressionOfScience.com
5 Lewontin, p. 9
6 Lewontin, p. 7
7 Lewontin p. 6-7
8 p. 257 Seeing Red: Redshifts, Cosmology and Academic Science Halton Arp, Apeiron, Montreal, 1998
9 p. 43-49 The Big Bang is Bunk, March-April 1989,
10 p. 220 William C. Mitchell, Cult of the Big Bang—Was There A Bang? Cosmic Sense Books, Carson City, NV 1995
11 Scientific American, February 1992, p. 96
12 p. 376 Harold Coffin, Origin by Design, Review & Herald Publishing, Hagerstown, MD 1983
13 Mycoplasm hominzs H. 39
14 p. 68 James Perloff, Tornado in a Junkyard: The Relentless Myth of Darwinism, Refuge Books, Arlington, MD 1999
15 p. 51-52 Francis Crick, Life Itself: Its Origin and Nature, Simon & Schuster, NY 1981
16 quoted on p. 27 Icons of Evolution: Science or Myth, Jonathon Wells, Regnery Publishing, Wash DC, 2000
17 Wells, p. 8
18 E.O. Wilson,  Sociobiology: The New Synthesis Harvard University Press 1975; as quoted by Lewontin p. 91
19 from: www.lloydpye.com/A-literal.htm
20 United Press International, Calcutta, India, Sept. 8, 2003
21 p. xxix, Forbidden Archeology: The Hidden History of the Human Race, Michael A. Cremo and Richard L. Thompson, Bhaktivedanta Book Trust, Los Angeles, CA 1996
22 Forbidden Archeology, over 900 pages in length, offers dozens of examples of extreme human antiquity.
23 Gallup survey for Christianity Today, July 1982.
24 Article Suppression of Science by Brian Martin. From his website: www.SuppressionOfScience.com
25 Deyo, Richard A., Bruce M. Psaty, Gregory Simon, Edward H. Wagner, and Gilbert S. Omenn. 1997. “The Messenger under Attack: Intimidation of Researchers by Special-Interest Groups.” New England Journal of Medicine 366 (16 April): 1176-1180.
26 p. ix Shattering the Myths of Darwinism,  Richard Milton, Park Street Press, Rochester, VT, 1997
27 p. xi Manufacturing Consent, Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky, Pantheon Books, NY, 2002
28 Lewontin p. 87
29 p. xxi, Ideology and Utopia, An Introduction to the Sociology of Knowledge, Karl Mannheim, Harvest Books, NY 1936
30 pages 53 – 70, E. O. Wilson, The Biological Basis of Morality, from The Atlantic Monthly; April 1998; Volume 281, No. 4.

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अरब की प्राचीन समृद्ध वैदिक संस्कृति और भारत

From: prakriti.pune@gmail.com

अरब की प्राचीन समृद्ध वैदिक संस्कृति और भारत

अरब की प्राचीन समृद्ध वैदिक संस्कृति और भारत अरब देश का भारत, भृगु के पुत्र शुक्राचार्य तथा उनके पोत्र और्व से ऐतिहासिक संबंध प्रमाणित है, यहाँ तक कि “हिस्ट्री ऑफ पर्शिया” के लेखक साइक्स का मत है कि अरब का नाम और्व के ही नाम पर पड़ा, जो विकृत होकर “अरब” हो गया। भारत के उत्तर-पश्चिम में इलावर्त था, जहाँ दैत्य और दानव बसते थे, इस इलावर्त में एशियाई रूस का दक्षिणी-पश्चिमी भाग, ईरान का पूर्वी भाग तथा गिलगित का निकटवर्ती क्षेत्र सम्मिलित था। आदित्यों का आवास स्थान-देवलोक भारत के उत्तर-पूर्व में स्थित हिमालयी क्षेत्रों में रहा था। बेबीलोन की प्राचीन गुफाओं में पुरातात्त्विक खोज में जो भित्ति चित्र मिले है, उनमें विष्णु को हिरण्यकशिपु के भाई हिरण्याक्ष से युद्ध करते हुए उत्कीर्ण किया गया है।
उस युग में अरब एक बड़ा व्यापारिक केन्द्र रहा था, इसी कारण देवों, दानवों और दैत्यों में इलावर्त के विभाजन को लेकर 12 बार युद्ध ‘देवासुर संग्राम’ हुए। देवताओं के राजा इन्द्र ने अपनी पुत्री ज्यन्ती का विवाह शुक्र के साथ इसी विचार से किया था कि शुक्र उनके (देवों के) पक्षधर बन
जायें, किन्तु शुक्र दैत्यों के ही गुरू बने रहे। यहाँ तक कि जब दैत्यराज बलि ने शुक्राचार्य का कहना न माना, तो वे उसे त्याग कर अपने पौत्र और्व के पास अरब में आ गये और वहाँ 10 वर्ष रहे। साइक्स ने अपने इतिहास ग्रन्थ “हिस्ट्री ऑफ पर्शिया” में लिखा है कि ‘शुक्राचार्य लिव्ड टेन इयर्स इन अरब’। अरब में शुक्राचार्य का इतना मान-सम्मान हुआ कि आज जिसे ‘काबा’ कहते है, वह वस्तुतः ‘काव्य शुक्र’ (शुक्राचार्य) के सम्मान में निर्मित उनके आराध्य भगवान शिव का ही मन्दिर है। कालांतर में ‘काव्य’ नाम विकृत होकर ‘काबा’ प्रचलित हुआ। अरबी भाषा में ‘शुक्र’ का अर्थ ‘बड़ा’ अर्थात ‘जुम्मा’ इसी कारण किया गया और इसी से ‘जुम्मा’ (शुक्रवार) को मुसलमान
पवित्र दिन मानते है।
“बृहस्पति देवानां पुरोहित आसीत्, उशना काव्योऽसुराणाम्”-जैमिनिय ब्रा. (01-125)
अर्थात बृहस्पति देवों के पुरोहित थे और उशना काव्य (शुक्राचार्य) असुरों के। प्राचीन अरबी काव्य संग्रह गंथ ‘सेअरूल-ओकुल’ के 257वें पृष्ठ पर हजरत मोहम्मद से 2300 वर्ष पूर्व एवं ईसा मसीह से 1800 वर्ष पूर्व पैदा हुए लबी-बिन-ए-अरव्तब-बिन-ए-तुरफा ने अपनी सुप्रसिद्ध कविता में भारत भूमि एवं वेदों को जो सम्मान दिया है, वह इस प्रकार है-
“अया मुबारेकल अरज मुशैये नोंहा मिनार हिंदे।
व अरादकल्लाह मज्जोनज्जे जिकरतुन।1।
वह लवज्जलीयतुन ऐनाने सहबी अरवे अतुन जिकरा।
वहाजेही योनज्जेलुर्ररसूल मिनल हिंदतुन।2।
यकूलूनल्लाहः या अहलल अरज आलमीन फुल्लहुम।
फत्तेबेऊ जिकरतुल वेद हुक्कुन मालन योनज्वेलतुन।3।
वहोबा आलमुस्साम वल यजुरमिनल्लाहे तनजीलन।
फऐ नोमा या अरवीयो मुत्तवअन योवसीरीयोनजातुन।4।
जइसनैन हुमारिक अतर नासेहीन का-अ-खुबातुन।
व असनात अलाऊढ़न व होवा मश-ए-रतुन।5।”
अर्थात-(1) हे भारत की पुण्यभूमि (मिनार हिंदे) तू धन्य है, क्योंकि ईश्वर ने अपने ज्ञान के लिए तुझको चुना। (2) वह ईश्वर का ज्ञान प्रकाश, जो चार प्रकाश स्तम्भों के सदृश्य सम्पूर्ण जगत् को प्रकाशित करता है, यह भारतवर्ष (हिंद तुन) में ऋषियों द्वारा चार रूप में प्रकट हुआ। (3) और
परमात्मा समस्त संसार के मनुष्यों को आज्ञा देता है कि वेद, जो मेरे ज्ञान है, इनके अनुसार आचरण करो।(4) वह ज्ञान के भण्डार साम और यजुर है, जो ईश्वर ने प्रदान किये। इसलिए, हे मेरे भाइयों! इनको मानो, क्योंकि ये हमें मोक्ष का मार्ग बताते है।(5) और दो उनमें से रिक्, अतर (ऋग्वेद, अथर्ववेद) जो हमें भ्रातृत्व की शिक्षा देते है, और जो इनकी शरण में आ गया, वह कभी अन्धकार को प्राप्त नहीं होता।
इस्लाम मजहब के प्रवर्तक मोहम्मद स्वयं भी वैदिक परिवार में हिन्दू के रूप में जन्में थे, और जब उन्होंने अपने हिन्दू परिवार की परम्परा और वंश से संबंध तोड़ने और स्वयं को पैगम्बर घोषित करना निश्चित किया, तब संयुक्त हिन्दू परिवार छिन्न-भिन्न हो गया और काबा में स्थित महाकाय शिवलिंग (संगे अस्वद) के रक्षार्थ हुए युद्ध में पैगम्बर मोहम्मद के चाचा उमर-बिन-
ए-हश्शाम को भी अपने प्राण गंवाने पड़े। उमर-बिन-ए-हश्शाम का अरब में एवं केन्द्र काबा (मक्का) में इतना अधिक सम्मान होता था कि सम्पूर्ण अरबी समाज, जो कि भगवान शिव के भक्त थे एवं वेदों के उत्सुक गायक तथा हिन्दू देवी-देवताओं के अनन्य उपासक थे, उन्हें अबुल हाकम अर्थात ‘ज्ञान का पिता’ कहते थे। बाद में मोहम्मद के नये सम्प्रदाय ने उन्हें ईष्यावश अबुल जिहाल ‘अज्ञान का पिता’ कहकर उनकी निन्दा की।
जब मोहम्मद ने मक्का पर आक्रमण किया, उस समय वहाँ बृहस्पति, मंगल, अश्विनी कुमार, गरूड़, नृसिंह की मूर्तियाँ प्रतिष्ठित थी। साथ ही एक मूर्ति वहाँ विश्वविजेता महाराजा बलि की भी थी, और दानी होने की प्रसिद्धि से उसका एक हाथ सोने का बना था। ‘Holul’ के नाम से अभिहित यह
मूर्ति वहाँ इब्राहम और इस्माइल की मूर्त्तियो के बराबर रखी थी। मोहम्मद ने उन सब मूर्त्तियों को तोड़कर वहाँ बने कुएँ में फेंक दिया, किन्तु तोड़े गये शिवलिंग का एक टुकडा आज भी काबा में सम्मानपूर्वक न केवल प्रतिष्ठित है, वरन् हज करने जाने वाले मुसलमान उस काले (अश्वेत) प्रस्तर खण्ड अर्थात ‘संगे अस्वद’ को आदर मान देते हुए चूमते है।
प्राचीन अरबों ने सिन्ध को सिन्ध ही कहा तथा भारतवर्ष के अन्य प्रदेशों को हिन्द निश्चित किया। सिन्ध से हिन्द होने की बात बहुत ही अवैज्ञानिक है। इस्लाम मत के प्रवर्तक मोहम्मद के पैदा होने से 2300 वर्ष पूर्व यानि लगभग 1800 ईश्वी पूर्व भी अरब में हिंद एवं हिंदू शब्द का व्यवहार ज्यों का त्यों आज ही के अर्थ में प्रयुक्त होता था।
अरब की प्राचीन समृद्ध संस्कृति वैदिक थी तथा उस समय ज्ञान-विज्ञान, कला-कौशल, धर्म-संस्कृति आदि में भारत (हिंद) के साथ उसके प्रगाढ़ संबंध थे। हिंद नाम अरबों को इतना प्यारा लगा कि उन्होंने उस देश के नाम पर अपनी स्त्रियों एवं बच्चों के नाम भी हिंद पर रखे।
अरबी काव्य संग्रह ग्रंथ ‘ सेअरूल-ओकुल’ के 253वें पृष्ठ पर हजरत मोहम्मद के चाचा उमर-बिन-ए-हश्शाम की कविता है जिसमें उन्होंने हिन्दे यौमन एवं गबुल हिन्दू का प्रयोग बड़े आदर से किया है । ‘उमर-बिन-ए-हश्शाम’ की कविता नयी दिल्ली स्थित मन्दिर मार्ग पर श्री लक्ष्मीनारायण मन्दिर (बिड़ला मन्दिर) की वाटिका में यज्ञशाला के लाल पत्थर के स्तम्भ (खम्बे) पर काली स्याही से लिखी हुई है, जो इस प्रकार है –
” कफविनक जिकरा मिन उलुमिन तब असेक ।
कलुवन अमातातुल हवा व तजक्करू ।1।
न तज खेरोहा उड़न एललवदए लिलवरा ।
वलुकएने जातल्लाहे औम असेरू ।2।
व अहालोलहा अजहू अरानीमन महादेव ओ ।
मनोजेल इलमुद्दीन मीनहुम व सयत्तरू ।3।
व सहबी वे याम फीम कामिल हिन्दे यौमन ।
व यकुलून न लातहजन फइन्नक तवज्जरू ।4।
मअस्सयरे अरव्लाकन हसनन कुल्लहूम ।
नजुमुन अजा अत सुम्मा गबुल हिन्दू ।5।
अर्थात् –

(1) वह मनुष्य, जिसने सारा जीवन पाप व अधर्म में बिताया हो, काम, क्रोध में अपने यौवन को नष्ट किया हो।

 

(2) अदि अन्त में उसको पश्चाताप हो और भलाई की ओर लौटना चाहे, तो क्या उसका कल्याण हो सकता है ?

(3) एक बार भी सच्चे हृदय से वह महादेव जी की पूजा करे, तो धर्म-मार्ग में उच्च से उच्च पद को पा सकता है।

 

(4) हे प्रभु ! मेरा समस्त जीवन लेकर केवल एक दिन भारत (हिंद) के निवास का दे दो, क्योंकि वहाँ पहुँचकर मनुष्य जीवन-मुक्त हो जाता है।

 

(5) वहाँ की यात्रा से सारे शुभ कर्मो की प्राप्ति होती है, और आदर्श गुरूजनों (गबुल हिन्दू) का सत्संग मिलता है ।
– विश्वजीत सिंह ‘अनंत’

So, how does it help in making Islam non-violent and tolerant against the kafirs?

How do the Muslims understand or react to this history in Bhaarat?

-Skanda987

 

On Mother Teresa and St. Xaviers

On Mother Teresa and St. Xavier’s

On Mother Terrasa: Read this by a Non-Indian..

http://www.secularhumanism.org/library/fi/hitchens_16_4.html

and read this

http://www.liberalslikechrist.org/Catholic/MotherTeresa.html

and this

http://www.amazon.com/Missionary-Position-Mother-Teresa-Practice/product-reviews/185984054X

and this

The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice

Watch these for what you St. Xaviers did to Hindus, I am sure you will like it ..

http://www.youtube.com/dharmaandethics
<http://www.youtube.com/dharmaandethics

http://www.youtube.com/dharmaandethics#p/c/5C36234C982635BD/0/GT9b8n_NKGk

 

What is tagged as idolatory is not really a worship of stones

All who oppose muurti puujaa do muurti puujaa

 

From: Gautam Chatterjee, g chattergee28@gmail.com

 

To: Mr. Bhavesh Merja.

 

Subject: Arya Samajis are also very much Moorti-Poojaks as are the Muslims and Christians!

 

Mr. Bhavesh Merja’s and for that matter the Arya Samaj’s is a doctrinaire approach to things spiritual and they have hardly anything to do with the Rishi-Nirdeshit realities such as ‘realization’ and ‘transcendental consciousness’, etc. Anyway the Arya Samajis are nevertheless Moorti-Poojaks as they do also salute, celebrate, worship (as any other Hindus do) the Vedic ‘flags’ of God such as the Surya (sun), Chandra (moon), the high lands, the flat lands, the flora, the fauna, the Water Bodies, e.g., wells, rivers, seas, oceans, etc., and the divine personalities such as Brahmaa, Vishnu, Mahesh, etc., during the performance of the Vedic Tri-Sandhyaa including the Gayatri Upasana in an effort to access the ‘Nameless’ through ‘Names’, the ‘Amoorta’ (unmanifest) through the ‘Moorta’ (manifest), the ‘unknown’ through the ‘known’ just as in mathematics we can arrive at the ‘unknown’ figure through two ‘known’ figures. By virtue of having specific personality as ‘Granth Narayan’ the Four Vedas themselves are nevertheless ‘Moortis’ (icons) and by extension of the same logic even each and every letter and word of the Vedas are ‘Moortis’ (icons) that are celebrated by ‘Mandana’ and not derided by ‘Khandana’ (iconoclasm).

 

The ‘Moorti Pooja’ by Arya Samaji Bandhus is also evident as they offer pooja=Upaasanaa=Praarthana to Ustaraa, Kushaa, Patelaa, Anjan, Shiishaa, Chhaataa, Laathii, Jootaa, etc., offer Arghya to Agnidev, Vaayudev, Sooryadev, Chandradev, etc., regularly worship the Earth with Chandan, Akshat, etc., and also concentrate their mind on a concrete thing, viz., the backbone/vertebral column that amounts to Murti-Pooja and not abstract Pooja. ONE NEED NOT CONVINCE them ABOUT THE VALIDITY OF MURTIPOOJA, BECAUSE they HAVE PRE-EMPTED ANY SUCH ATTEMPT BY ALREADY ACCEPTING THAT they themselves VERY MUCH, AND WITH ALL GUSTO, do perform Moorti Pooja. The form of ‘pooja’ may differ from person to person, but offering of reverence or veneration in any form whatsoever amounts to ‘pooja’ of a ‘moorti’ (individuality and personality).

 

Mr Bhavesh Merja has no problems with Christians doing Shava-Pooja (dead body dangling on a cross) and its Preta-Pooja, Muslims doing Pooja of the Black Stone [Shang-e-Aswad (‘Aswad’ is ‘Ashweta’ in Sanskrit, i.e., black)] and Maqam-e-Ibrahim [i.e., Makham-e-Brahma, i.e., the Ashtakoniya/octagonal Yagna-Kund of Brahmaa at Ka’ba (Garbha Grih) of Islam (Isaalayam/House of God)]. But strangely he has problems with Hindus offering worship to the ‘unknown’ through the ‘known’ Praan-Pratisthit Moortis and accessing the ‘Nameless’ through the thousands of ‘Names’ (Sahasranaama) of God. He surely knows that Hindus do not worship ‘idols’ but ‘ideals’ and the aim of a Hindu Poojari is not to remain a ‘poojari’ the whole of his/her life but to internalize the ideals and earn the blessings of his/her Ishtadev and transform to be a ‘poojya’ (responsible and adorable) individuality/personality in the service of the holistic, altruistic and syncretic worldview, e.g., a Poojari of Hanuman auto-suggests, invokes and cultivates in himself Hanumanji’s outstanding qualities such as ‘Bala, Buddhi, Vidya’ and prays Him to revoke any ‘Klesh and Vikaar’ from life. This is a good strategy of auto-suggestion in human psychology and at the end of the day enhances the qualities of life and living.

 

In any case Mr Merja has no locus standi in criticizing Hindus for Moorti Pooja as our Moortis and ‘flags’ of God have been the vanguards of our territorial integrity and national unity and centres of gravity for perennial mobilization of the belief, faith and reverence of people all over the country for thousands of years.

 

If the Preta-Poojaks can have 169 countries and the Ka’ba-Poojaks (they all offer Namaz to that direction) 52 countries on Planet Earth (7 billion population now), why should Mr Merja try to dissuade the 1/6th of the global population (viz., Hindus) from seeing their lone Hindu country in the world as ‘Maa Bhaarati’ (‘Bharat Mata’/‘Mother Bharat’ – a form of the Goddess of Combined Divine Power, viz., Durga personifying every profound thing that Bharat stands for) and celebrating/worshipping it with the Mantras ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai!’ or ‘Vande Maataram!’. If they dare to call it ‘Moorti Pooja’ then they surely are not ‘Aryas’ (noble) but (Anaaryas/ordinary/ignoble) and are in league with the Jihadists as they are incapable of understanding and appreciating the science of iconography and symbolism and cannot even read between the lines.

 

Hinduism is not idolatry. An idol is an external symbol that brings to the mind the living presence of the deity it represents, even as the photograph of a person does. The idol of a deity is prepared as per the directions given in the Dhyaanasloka (hymn of meditation) of the deity as revealed in the depths of mystical meditation, to the sages. Again, when an idol is consecrated by the process of Praanapratisthaa (infilling with life) it becomes ‘alive’ as it were, by the subtle presence of that deity. It can then be worshipped. It is something like connecting an electric bulb with the source of electricity and putting the switch on. In all such matters, the scriptures are the final authority. Anyway, there is enough evidence to believe that the science of murtisilpa or iconography did exist even in the Vedic period. The beautiful description of the bodies, limbs and weapons of the gods (vide Rgveda 8.29) and the clear mention of the sage Tvasta as a devasilpi (an architect of the gods) should lead us to the conclusion that there must have existed competent sculptors who could fashion the icons out of solid physical materials as per the visions of the sages. The Vajasaneyi Samhita (1.15.16) refers to the Sun as ‘hiranyapani’ (‘one with a golden hand’). The Kathaka Samhita (22.11) refers to a sage Devala who lived by preparing images. While the Samaveda (1.9.5) refers to an image, there is a reference to a temple in the Atharvaveda (2.2.2.). Other Vedic works like the Sadvimsa Brahmana (5.10), Taittiriya Brahmana and Taittiriya Aranyaka refer not only to the images of gods but also to the sculptors like Tvasta. By the time of the srautasutras and the grhyasutras, worship of deities through images in temples seems to have been fairly well-established (vide Bodhayana Grhyasutras 3.7).” Worship of images, both at home and in temples, as well as in public places of worship is widesprtead and popular in Hinduism. There is a mistaken notion that this is pure and simple idolatry. When in idolatry, the physical symbol itself is revered as God, in image worship, the reverence is offered to God in and through the image. Preparation of images of deities, worship to the deities through them, either in one’s own personal or in family shrines or even in temples seems to be an ancient custom. Reference to images is found even in the Vedas (vide Rgveda 4.24.10)(4.32.23?). Worship of deities through images is explicitly referred to in the Ramayana (Ayodhyakanda 20.14, 15) and Mahabharata (Adiparva 70.49; Anusasanaparva 10.20, 21). Often, the images are replaced by symbolical objects such as sivalingas, salagramas and yantras, and worshipped.

 

How can Mr Merja deny the following references to Moorti Pooja in the Vedas and the Ramayana, etc.?

 

(i) “Maa asi prabhaa asi Pratimaa asi.” (“Hey Mahaviir, Tum Ishwar ki Pratimaa Ho!”); -Taittiriya Pra. Anu. 5; (ii) “Sahasrasya Pratimaa asi” (Hey Parameshwar, Aap Sahasron kii Pratimaa (Moorti) haein.”) -Yaju. 15/65 ; (Thou art the Pratimaa of a thousand. Thou art the representative of a thousand. Thou art the measure/equivalent of a thousand. Thou art worth a thousand. Thee for a thousand.); (iii)“Archat Praarchat Priyamedhaaso Archat.” (Hey Buddhimaan Manushyo! Us Pratimaa kaa Poojan karo, bhalii-bhaanti poojan karo)-Rgved Ashtak 6, A 5, S 6, M 8, Anuvaak 7; (iv) “Mukhaaya te Pashupate ! Yaani chakshushi te bhava, twache roopaaya sandrishe pratiichiinaaya ten amah. Angebhyast udaraaya jihwaaya aasyaaya te dadbhyo gandhaaya te namah.” (Hey Pashupate Shiva! Aap ke mukh ko, tiin netron ko, twachaa ko, roop ko, angon ko, udar (pet) ko, daanton ko aur naasikaa ko namaskaar ho.)-Atharva 11/2/5-6 (Homage, O Pashupate, Lord of Beasts, unto thy face and all thine eyes, To skin, and hue, and aspect, and to thee when looked at from behind! We offer homage to thy limbs, thy belly, and thy tongue, and mouth we offer homage to thy smell.); (v) “Ehyashmaanmaatishthaashmaa bhavatu te tanuh, krinwantu vishwedevaa aayushte sharadah shatam.” (Hey Paramaatman ! Tum aakar ish paashaan (stone) mein viraajmaan ho. Yah aapkaa shariir ban jaawe aur sab devataa sainkaron varsh paryant ismein aapki vibhooti ko sthir karein.)- Atharva 2/13/4 (vi) “Etu praanaa etu manah etu chakshyoratho balam.” (Ish Pratimaa mein praan aayein, man aayein, netra aur bal aaye.)-Atharva 5/60/12;

 

(vii) “Rishiinaam Prastaro∫si namo∫stu devaaya prastaraaya.” (Hey Pratimaa ! Tu Rishiyon kaa Prastar/Paashaan (stone) hai, tujh divya Prastar/Paashaan ke liye namaskaar ho.)-Atharva 16/2/6 (viii) Salute God’s Flags also: “Ud u Tyam Jaat-Vedasam, Devam Vahanti Ketavah . Drishe Vishwaaya Sooryam.” (RgVed 1.50.1, Yaj. 7.41, 8.41, 33.31, Saam. 31, Ath. 13.2.16, 20.47.13) (His Flags/heralds bear him up aloft, the God who knoweth all that live, Sūrya, that all may look on him.) Ush Jaat-Vettaa, Sarva-gnya, Sarvavyaapak Sarvaprerak, Sarvaprakashak Dev Ko Hi Sabke Prati Darshaane Ke Liye (Ketavah) Dhwajaayein (Ut Vahanti) Uupar Fahraa Rahii Haein. Dhwajaayein kisii ke shaashan kii pratiik hotii haein. Soorya, Chandra, Nakshatra, aadi dhwajaayein aakaash mein uupar, bahut uunche, badii duur duur tak fahraa rahii haein. Wei sab usii sarvagnya, sarvavyaapak shaashak ke shaashan ka dyotan kar rahii haein. Kitnaa sundar, susajj, sudridh aur suvyavasthit hai uskaa shaashan! Sampoorna srishti aur samast praakrit deva usii ke shaashan aur usii kii mahimaa ko darshaa rahe haein. Saluting/worshipping said God’s Flags amounts to saluting God just as saluting the National Flag amounts to saluting the Nation. Hindus, therefore, respect and also worship Mother Nature and all creation – the labour of love of the Creator – with the full Aasthaa that the worship surely reaches the Creator/Supreme Lord who is Existence-Consciousness-Bliss. (ix) Stutiyogya Maanav: “Viitii yo devam marto duvasyed, agnim iiliitaadhwa+re havishmaan, Hotaaram satya-yajam rodasyor, uttaan-hasto namasaa vivaaset.” – RgVed 6.16.46 Stuto Ush maanav ko jo maanav kaamanaamayataa ke saath, saprem adhwa-r mein, jiivanyagnya mein paavak, daataa, satya-yaj paramaatmadev ko parichare, sewe, jo havih-maan hokar uttaan-hast (daan karne mein daani kaa haath upar hota hai. Atah uttaan-hast kaa arth hai dene waalaa), upar haath karne waalaa hai, jo maanav dyau-bhoo ke biich mein sa-naman, vinamrataa ke saath sarvatah seva kare. (x) Stutipaatra : “Tam u stuhi yo antah sindhou suunuh, Satyasya yuvaanam a+drodha-vaacham su-shovam.” – Atharva 6.1.2 Usi ko stut jo bhiitar sindhu mein, sansaar saagar mein prerak satya kaa, yuvaa, a-drohavaak susevaa dwaaraa sukhii karne waalaa. (Therefore a great man can also be Ibaadat ke laayak or cause célèbre.) (xi) Devon/Mahapurushon Kaa Stavan “Devaanaam nu vayam jaanaa, pra vochaama vipanyayaa, Uktheshu shasyamaaneshu, yah pashyaad ut-tare yuge.” – RgVed: 10.72.2 Hum stuti se, stutishiil vaanii se devon ke jiivanon ko avashya pra-kathan karein. Jo kathanon aur pravachanon mein, vaktavyon aur aadeshon mein uttar yug mein, bhavishya kaal mein, aane waale samay mein dekhe (hum uska bhi prakathan karein).

 

Besides the 33 Devatas, i.e., the 8 Vasus, 11 Rudras, 12 Adityas, Indra and Prajapati as described in the Vrihadaaranyakopanishad-9/2 and other celestial beings, Vijayshiil, paropakaari, tejaswi, prakashmaan, aanandii, sushobhaniiya, dhiir, viir, vidwaan, sadaachaari, vyaktiyon ko bhi dev kahte haein. Mantra mein shiksha dii gayii hai ki devon ke jiivanon kaa stavan karna chaahiye. Devon ke jiivanchariton kaa shraddhaa ke saath anushiilan kiijiye aur unkii gaathaaon kaa gaan kiijiye. (Hindu isi liye katha, pravachan aadi ayojit karte haein).

 

(xii) Saarvabhauma Saadhanaa “Swasti Maatra Uta Pitre No Astu, Swasti Gobhyo Jagate Purushebhyah, Vishwam Su-Bhootam Su-Vidatram No Astu, Jyog Eva Drishem Sooryam.” – Atharva Veda-1.31.4 Well be it with our mother and our father, well be it with our cows (also dishaa vidishaaon ke liye, disha vidhishaaon mein sthit raashtron ke liye), jagat ke liye, saarii prithivi ke liye, and people. Ours (Hamaaraa Vishva) be all happy fortune (Su-Sampanna/Su-Aishwaryashaalii) aur Su-GnaanSampanna, Sumatiyukta, grace, and favour. Long, very long may we behold the sunlight (Hum chira kaal hii, diirgha kaal tak soorya ko dekhein, soorya kaa darshan karein.). Vedmaataa yahaan vishwa ke sunirmaan ka ek shobhan chitra prastut kar rahi hai. Vishwa kaa sunirmaan na yogi aur na sannyaasi karenge, na adhyaapak aur upadeshak, na naayak aur gaayak karenge, na gnyaani aur dhyaani, na vedagnya aur shaashtragnya karenge, na shaashak aur saadhak. Wei sab to keval maargadarshan karenge aur pathpradarshan karenge. Vishva kaa sunirmaan to keval maataa aur pitaa karenge, wei maataa aur pitaa jinkaa jiivan sujiivan hogaa, jinkii jindagii jindaa aur paak jindagii hogii, jinkaa astitwa su-astitwa hogaa, jinkii hastii su-hastii hogii. Vishwa ke sunirmaan ke liye aadarsh maataa aur pitaa chaahiein, swachchha aur swasth jananii aur janak chaahiein. Jis prakaar bhavya bhavan banaane ke liye bhavya kaariigar chaahiein usii prakaar vishva ke sushobhan ke liye supaawan aur sushobhan maataa pitaa chaahiein.

 

Har taraf se vishva ke nirmaan kii aawaajein aa rahii haein. Har wah vyakti jise bolnaa aur likhnaa aataa hai vishvanirmaan kaa raag alaap rahaa hai, vishva ke sunirmaan kii dhwani gunjaa raha hai. Par kisii ko yah pataa nahiin hai ki vishva kaa sunirmaan hai kya vastu, aur kaun hai uska nirmaataa.

 

That is why Vighnahartaa Bhagwan Ganesh is the Pratham Poojya Devata because He taught the world the pivotal importance of parents to the life and upbringing of a child and by extension to human society.

 

3. The popular way of Hindu worship is also explicitly referred to in the Valmiki Ramayana, Ayodhyakanda 20.14-17, e.g., “At that time, Kausalya having spent the whole night with steadfastness, was performing worship to Vishnu at dawn, for the welfare of her son. Kausalya, who was interested in practising religious vows regularly, was appearing auspiciously in a white silk sari and was gladly performing sacrificial ceremony in a sacred fire, by reciting vedic hymns.

 

Then Rama entered his auspicious mother’s apartment and saw his mother performing sacrificial ceremony in a sacred fire there.

 

There, Rama saw the articles of worship kept ready for the purpose of the sacred ceremony like curd, unbroken rice, clarified butter, sweet meats, things fit for oblation, fried grain, garlands made of white flowers, rice boiled in milk, mixture of rice and peas with a few spices, sacrificial sticks, vessels full of water etc.”

—————-

Those who criticize or hate so called idolatry need to know that no act of idolatory is taking away the freedom of non-belivers in anyway. The so called idolator Vedics are never out there to convert anyone. It is a Vedic process. There is no good reason to hate it.

– skanda987

 

 

 

Ismaili method to convert Hindus

Ismaili method to convert Hindus

From: Vishal Agarwal, vishalsagarwal@yahoo.com

NOTE: See references at the end

 

Ismailis have been known to digest Hinduism and other religions for more than 1000 years now. It is surmized that they were responsible for spreading Islam in much of SW Punjab (Multan region), Sindh, Kutch, Gujarat, Rajasthan. Eventually, when the Qaramatian kingdom was smashed by Mahmud Ghaznavi (and after their kingdoms in Sindh also fell) who was a staunch Sunni, these half-Hindu and half-Ismailis became Sunnis, a notable example being the Sammas and Sumra dynasties of Sindh [Quereshi 1962: 49-51]. In many parts of India (Rajasthan and Gujarat) however, the Ismailis were re-absorbed into the dominant Hindu culture, although vestiges of the Ismaili past are still visible and are a sensitive issue in some Sampradayas today (e.g. the Pranamis, the mother of Mahatma Gandhi being a member of that that sect). Many of the so called Sunni sufis of Multan were actually Ismaili but their descendants found it inconvenient to retain their Ismaili or Shia heritage. The present day remnants of these Ismailis are Bohris, Khojas and Memons as well as the heretical Alawites in the middle east.

A considerably exaggerated account of Ismaili Dawa’a is contained in the works of Dominique Sila Khan who however tends to overstate the case of Ismaili influence. She unethically posed as a French tourist wwho pretended to be interested in converting to the Pranami faith. She concealed her intentions or the fact that she was a researcher who was interested in pushing the thesis that the Pranamis originated as Nizari Ismaili Muslims. Fearing violent Muslim retaliation, the Pranamis decided not to file a legal case against her. See Sharma (2006), p. 82, 96 below. One example of Sila Khan’s exaggeration is that she thinks that even the early Sikh Gurus were Ismailis but their Islamic heritage was suppressed by later Gurus!

 

Some tell tale descriptions of Ismaili tactics by Pakistani or Muslim authors –

 

“In those days the Ismailis had a tradition of posing as adherents of the faith within which they worked. They worked both among the Sunnis and the non-Muslims. There are several instances on record where an Ismaili missionary posed as a Brahmin or a Hindu priest and instead of flatly contradicting the doctrines of the faith he sought to subvert, he accepted its basic assumptions and introduced some of Ismaili beliefs in a disguised form and thus slowly and gradually paved the way for total conversion. Lack of total adherence has never worried the Ismailis because they are fully confident that the convert will ultimately accept the faith fully. This kind of conversion is achieved in a peculiar manner. In the beginning, the appeal is not on the basis of dogma or beliefs, but an attempt is made to convince the potential convert of the spiritual greatness of some person. In the early days, the missionary himself was a man of exemplary character. Very often, Ali was depicted as an incarnation of Vishnu among the Vaishnavites. In short, after some personal loyalty had been created, the disciple was taken through various stages into full-fledged belief in the teachings of Ismaili Islam. The Ismailis were here at an advantage compared to the Sunnis because the latter insist upon total conversion right from the beginning and are not willing to make the least compromise in the matter of doctrine. A change in the name of the convert also became common. The reason for this, in the beginning, was that the pagan names among the converts were often offensive to Muslim ideas of monotheism. Later, however, a change of name became almost obligatory in the popular mind. The justification has been that the convert is thus weaned away totally from his associations with the past which are rooted in a religious tradition. The Ismaili technique has been different. The inspiration has come from their insistence upon certain esoteric meanings of all exoteric institutions of religion. Because they could expand their influence in the world of Islam only by continuous propaganda, they were experts in the propagation of their views.” [Qureshi, 1962:45]
Another historian writes – “the reports sent by Ismaili missionaries from Multan and Sind to the Fatimid Caliph in Cairo are available in the works, compiled in Egypt during the Fatimid period. These reports shed interesting light on the Ismaili propaganda carried on by dais (missionaries). The missionary activity, known as dawa was the most characteristic institutions of Ismailism. Under it, the dai (missionary) was appointed by the Caliph to work in distant places and counties, attract people towards their faith and bring them under its fold. In the first instance the dai worked in the guise of a Hindu monk or a Sunni Muslim as the circumstances demanded of him and would change his method after he had won over a large number of converts to Ismailism. Unlike the Arabs, they (Unlike the Arabs who) were fanatics and hardly tolerated the shrines or places of worship belonging to non-Muslims. A letter dispatched by the dai of Sind in 962 AD to the Caliph tells us how the Ismailis made compromise with Hindu customs and rites in the beginning and then forced their own laws upon the converts. In the letter the dai, Halam mentions the victory “which he achieved in Sind. He writes that he had broken the idols, for the destruction he had previously asked the Imam’s permission”[Siddiqui 1987:38]

 

Sat Panth name is not a new, but an old name for Nizari Ismailis for several centuries now.

 

References:

Qureshi, Ishtiaq Husain. 1962. The Muslim Community in the Indo-Pakistan Subcontinent (610-1947). Mouten & Co (‘S-Gravenhage, W Germany).

 

Sharma, Chhavi Bhargava. 2006. Between the Two Worlds – Long Term Effects of Communal Violence on a Multi-religious, Marginalized Community. WISCOMP. New Delhi

 

Siddiqui, Iqtidar Husain. 1987. Islam and Muslims in South Asia: Historical Perspective. Adam Publishers and Distributers (New Delhi)

 

GET RID OF THE BLACK ISLAMIC BEAR (KASHMIR BELONGS TO INDIA)

From: Rashtra1947@aol.com

GET RID OF THE BLACK ISLAMIC BEAR

(KASHMIR BELONGS TO INDIA)

A Muslim writer wrote, “Kashmir is the jugular vein of Pakistan.” We wish to educate him.

If Kashmir is the “jugular vein” of Pakistan then pray, tell us, what are the INDIAN MUSLIMS? Are they simply a lethal appendix in Bharat? Do you not think that with the mutilation of India in 1947 it was ALSO the Muslims. the second nation, that was savagely cut and chopped into THREE fragments.

In that year from ONE fully integrated, secular and sensible INDIAN Muslim community (“Saare Jahan se achcha Hindusthan Hamaara!” – Poet Mohammed Iqbal) we saw THREE divided, broken, confused & rootless Muslim communities- one in East Pakistan, one in West Pakistan and one in the Middle, in (what was left of) India.

How foolish and treacherous of the Muslim leaders to inflict ISLAMIC calamity on the noble land that had given them birth and nourished them! Mohammed himself would have found peace in his soul had he come and stayed in Hindusthan like Jesus Christ.

25 years passed after Partition for the Islamic “way of life” based on the Book from Arabia to entrench itself deeper in the two wings of Pakistan that in 1971 came to blows with each other under the law of nature that says, “Death to the Fool!”

From the belly of Pakistan the new state of Bangladesh was born just as Pakistan herself was born after “caesarean” operation of (Mother) India in 1947.

May we inform you that the INDIAN Muslims, who were living happily, and refused to emigrate to the Land of their Allah, also now consider themselves to be the “jugular vein” of India. You can check up on this with Dr. Zakir Naik of “Peace TV” and Imam Bukhari of Jama Masjid, Delhi. How happy they are in the Land of Kafirs! They would rather die than go and live in Islamic Pakistan.

Perhaps the best place for all of you is Saudi Arabia where it all began with the “poison” of anti Kafir indoctrination that is still carrying on and will never end so long as you have the source- your anti Kafir, anti Pig & anti Dog Book of Provocation & Poison.

Do you really need that Book from alien Arabia when in India itself there are countless holy Scriptures and dozens of divine books that inspire people to live in peace, mind their own business, love all the animals and inculcate the love of nature & the entire mankind?

What sort of Pakistan do you wish Kashmir to join? Ask those Muslim criminals in England threatened with deportation to Pakistan. They describe it perfectly well when they plead upon their knees, “Please do not send us back to HELL.”

Your thinking would be very shallow if you did not think of the shattering effect on India if Kashmir, the cradle of Indian civilisation and the Land of ancient Rishis & Sages, is surrendered to the Devil. Here is the scenario:

The Muslims in India now regard themselves as Indians and will have great contempt for their country if they see India betraying Secularism again as traitor Nehru betrayed it in 1947 and his arrogant daughter Maimuna Begum (aka “Indira Gandhi”) turned her back on it in East Bengal in 1972. Their faith in Secularism and India will be irrevocably shattered for ever.

The Hindus will realize the futility of such Secularism that is deceitfully imposed on them only, and will rise against their rulers who are quick to surrender principles and territory to Islam.

Sikh patriots will look very sheepish in Bharat that has always surrendered territory to the Muslims but never gained an inch back. What will you tell these warriors who once defeated the Afghans and captured KHYBER PASS? Kashmir was part of the powerful Sikh Kingdom from 1819 until 1846 AD.

Finally, look at Pakistan itself.  What have Islam and Koran done to her? She now resembles a lawless wild country where abduction, rape, murder and bomb blasts are a daily occurrence? Why not ask the children of Liaqat Ali Khan, Zulfiqar Ali, Benazir Bhutto, Zia ul Haq and Salman Taseer as to what they think of the Pakistan of your Rasool Allah?

Can the Kashmiris NOT see with their own eyes that the restless & turbulent Pakistan, that was created in HIGH TREASON, is dying its natural death and will finally IMPLODE or DISINTEGRATE?

At this time you ought to be telling Sindh, Balochistan and Pakhtoon Khwa to love Pakistan, and ask TALIBAN & AL QAIDA to declare peace instead of “going” for ISLAMABAD, the jugular vein of Pakistan.

If Koran, Islam and the love of Arabian desert, dates & camels have not taken over your senses completely, you ought to be speaking up for “Akhand Bharat” where your ancestors were living happily so that we could all see a prosperous Hindusthan from Khyber to Chittagong and from Gilgit to Kerala in which everyone is an Indian, not Hindu, Muslim, Christian, Sikh or Buddhist.

You write, “KASHMIR IS THE JUGULAR VEIN OF PAKISTAN AND IT CANNOT ABANDON IT.” This reminds us of the drowning idiot in deep water who caught hold of the bear thinking it was a blanket. To the onlookers on the banks he shouted, “I want to leave it but IT DOES NOT LET GO OF ME!”

For God’s sake, please do get rid of the black Islamic “BEAR”.

Wish you sanity, wisdom and courage.

 

Kuru

PS: Hindus, too, ought to understand the Devil’s mind of their own pseudo-secular “Hindu bashing” Sarkar that desperately needs the Kashmir “dispute” to secure their own legitimacy to rule Bharat for ever. 

They will NOT repeal Article 370 of “Bandit’s Constitution” that ensures separate identity of Kashmir and Muslim majority there.

==========================

The secrets of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty

From: yogesh saxena

The Nehru-Gandhi dynasty

starts with the Mughal man named Ghiyasuddin Ghazi.

The Nehru-Gandhi dynasty starts with the Mughal man named Ghiyasuddin Ghazi. He was the City Kotwal i.e. police officer of Delhi prior to the uprising of 1857, under the Mughal rule. After capturing Delhi in 1857, in the year of the mutiny, the British were slaughtering all Mughals everywhere. The British made a thorough search and killed every Mughal so that there were no future claimants to the throne of Delhi. The Hindus on the other hand were not targeted by the British unless isolated Hindus were found to be siding with the Mughals, due to past associations. Therefore, it became customary for many Mohammedans to adopt Hindu names. So, the man Ghiyasuddin Ghazi (the word means kafir-killer) adopted a Hindu name Gangadhar Nehru and thus saved his life by the subterfuge. Ghiyasuddin Ghazi apparently used to reside on the bank of a canal (or Nehr) near the Red Fort. Thus, he adopted the name ‘Nehru’ as the family name. Through out the world, we do not find any descendant other than that of Gangadhar, having the surname Nehru. The 13th volume of the “Encyclopedia of Indian War of Independence” (ISBN:81-261-3745-9<tel:81-261-3745-9) by M.K. Singh states it elaborately. The Government of India have been hiding this fact.

City Kotwal was an important post like today’s Commissioner of Police. It appears from Mughal records that there was no Hindu Kotwal employed. It was extremely unlikely for a Hindu to be hired for that post. Compulsorily only Mohammedans of foreign ancestry were hired for such important posts.

Jawaharlal Nehru’s second sister Krishna Hutheesing also mentions in her memoirs that her grandfather was the city Kotwal of Delhi prior to 1857’s uprising when Bahadur Shah Zafar was still the sultan of Delhi. Jawaharlal Nehru, in his autobiography, states that he has seen a picture of his grandfather which portrays him like a Mughal nobleman. In that picture it appears that he was having long & very thick beard, wearing a Muslim cap and was having two swords in his hands. Jawaharlal Nehru also states in his autobiography that on their way to Agra (a seat of Mughal influence) from Delhi, the members of his grandfather’s family were detained by the British. The reason for the detention was their Mughal features. They however pleaded that they were Kashmiri Pandits and thus got away. The Urdu literature of the 19th century, especially the works of Khwaja Hasan Nizami, is full of the miseries that the Mughals and Mohammedans have to face then. They also describe how Mughals escaped to other cities to save their lives. In all probability, Jawahar Nehru’s Mughal grandfather and his family were among them.

Jawaharlal Nehru was a person that India adores. He was undoubtedly a very sound politician and a gifted individual. But, the Government of India has not built a memorial of Jawaharlal Nehru at his birth place 77 Mirganj in Allahabad, because it is a brothel. The entire locality is a well known red light area since long. It has not become a brothel recently, but it has been a brothel even before Jawaharlal Nehru’s birth. A portion of the same house was sold by his father Motilal Nehru to a prostitute named Lali Jaan and it came to be known as “Imambada”. If you have some doubt, you may visit the place. Several dependable sources and also encyclopedia.com & Wikipedia say this. Motilal Nehru along with his family, later shifted to Anand Bhawan. Remember that Anand Bhawan is Jawaharlal Nehru’s ancestral house and not his birth place.

M. O. Mathai of Indian Civil Service served as the Private Secretary to Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. Mathai has written a book “Reminiscences of the Nehru Age” (ISBN-13: 9780706906219).In the book Mathai reveals that there was intense love affair between Jawaharlal Nehru and Edwina Mountbatten (wife of the last Viceroy to India, Louis Mountbatten). The romance was a source of great embarrassment for Indira Gandhi, who used to seek Maulana Abul Kalam Azad’s help in persuading her father to be little discreet about their relationship. Also Nehru had love affair with Sarojini Naidu’s daughter Padmaja Naidu, whom Nehru got appointed as the Governor of Bengal. It is revealed that he used to keep her portrait in his bed room, which Indira would often remove. It caused some tension between father and daughter.

Apart from these ladies, Pandit Nehru had an affair with a sanyasin from Benares named Shraddha Mata. She was an attractive Sanskrit scholar well versed in the ancient Indian scriptures and mythology. When she conceived out of their illicit relationship, in 1949, in a convent in Bangalore, she insisted that Nehru should marry her. But, Nehru declined that because it could affect his political career. A son was born and he was kept at a Christian Missionary Boarding School. His date of birth is estimated to be 30th May, 1949. He may be in his early sixties now. Convents in such matters maintain secrecy to prevent humiliation of the child. Though Mathai confirmed the existence of the child, no efforts have ever been made to locate him. He must have grown up as a Catholic Christian blissfully ignorant of who his father was.

Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose and Dr. Shyama Prasad Mukherjee were competitors of Jawaharlal Nehru for the post of Prime Minister of India and both of them died under mysterious circumstances. Knowing all these facts, is there any meaning of celebrating Nehru’s birthday as Children’s Day? Presenting him as a different person to our children, and hiding the truth amounts to denying education to them.

As per the book “The great divide: Muslim separatism and partition” (ISBN-13:9788121205917) by S.C. Bhatt— Jawaharlal Nehru’s sister Vijaya Lakshmi eloped with her father’s employee Syud Hussain. Then Motilal Nehru forcefully took her back and got her married with another man named Ranjit Pandit.

Indira Priyadarshini perpetuated immorality in the Nehru dynasty. Intellectual Indira was admitted in Oxford University but driven out from there for non-performance. She was then admitted to Shantiniketan University but, Guru Dev Rabindranath Tagore chased her out for bad conduct.

After driven out of Shantiniketan, Indira became lonely as father was busy with politics and mother was dying of tuberculosis in Switzerland. Playing with her loneliness, Feroze Khan, son of a grocer named Nawab Khan who supplied wines etc to Motilal Nehru’s household in Allahabad, was able to draw close to her. The then Governor of Maharashtra, Dr. Shriprakash warned Nehru, that Indira was having an illicit relation with Feroze Khan. Feroze Khan was then in England and he was quite sympathetic to Indira. Soon enough she changed her religion, became a Muslim woman and married Feroze Khan in a London mosque. Indira Priyadarshini Nehru changed her name to Maimuna Begum. Her mother Kamala Nehru was totally against that marriage. Nehru was not happy as conversion to Muslim will jeopardize her prospect of becoming Prime Minister.

So, Nehru asked the young man Feroze Khan to change his surname from Khan to Gandhi. It had nothing to do with change of religion from Islam to Hinduism. It was just a case of a change of name by an affidavit. And so Feroze Khan became Feroze Gandhi, though it is an inconsistent name like Bismillah Sarma. Both changed their names to fool the public of India. When they returned to India, a mock vedic marriage was instituted for public consumption. Thus, Indira and her descendants got the fancy name Gandhi. Both Nehru and Gandhi are fancy names. As a chameleon changes its colour, this dynasty has been changing its name to hide its real identity.

Indira Gandhi had two sons namely Rajiv Gandhi and Sanjay Gandhi. Sanjay was originally named as Sanjiv that rhymed with Rajiv, his elder brother’s name. Sanjiv was arrested by the British police for a car theft in the UK and his passport was seized. On Indira Gandhi’s direction, the then Indian Ambassador to UK, Krishna Menon misusing his power, changed his name to Sanjay and procured a new passport. Thus Sanjiv Gandhi came to be known as Sanjay Gandhi.

It is a known fact that after Rajiv’s birth, Indira Gandhi and Feroze Gandhi lived separately, but they were not divorced. The book “The Nehru Dynasty” (ISBN 10:8186092005

<tel: 8186092005>) by K. N. Rao states that the second son of Indira (or Mrs. Feroze Khan) known as Sanjay Gandhi was not the son of Feroze Gandhi. He was the son of another Muslim gentleman named Mohammad Yunus.

Interestingly Sanjay Gandhi’s marriage with the Sikh girl Menaka took place in Mohammad Yunus’ house in New Delhi. Apparently Yunus was unhappy with the marriage as he wanted to get him married with a Muslim girl of his choice. It was Mohammad Yunus who cried the most when Sanjay Gandhi died in plane crash. In Yunus’ book, “Persons, Passions & Politics” (ISBN-10: 0706910176) one can discover that baby Sanjay was circumcised following Islamic custom.

It is a fact that Sanjay Gandhi used to constantly blackmail his mother Indira Gandhi, with the secret of who his real father is. Sanjay exercised a deep emotional control over his mother, which he often misused. Indira Gandhi chose to ignore his misdeeds and he was indirectly controlling the Government.

When the news of Sanjay Gandhi’s death reached Indira Gandhi, her first question was “Where are his keys and his wrist watch?”. Some deep secrets about the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty seems to be hidden in those objects. The plane accident was also mysterious. It was a new plane that nosedive to a crash and yet the plane did not explode upon impact. It happens when there is no fuel. But the flight register shows that the fuel tank was made full before take-off. Indira Gandhi using undue influence of PM’s office prohibited any inquiry from taking place. So, who is the suspect?

The book “The Life of Indira Nehru Gandhi” (ISBN: 9780007259304) by Katherine Frank sheds light on some of Indira Gandhi’s other love affairs. It is written that Indira’s first love was with her German teacher at Shantiniketan. Later she had affair with M. O. Mathai (father’s secretary), then Dhirendra Brahmachari (her yoga teacher) and at last with Dinesh Singh (Foreign Minister).

Former Foreign Minister K Natwar Singh made an interesting revelation about Indira Gandhi’s affinity to the Mughals in his book “Profile and Letters” (ISBN: 8129102358<tel:8129102358>). It states that- In 1968 Indira Gandhi as the Prime Minister of India went on an official visit to Afghanistan. Natwar Singh accompanied her as an IFS officer in duty. After having completed the day’s long engagements, Indira Gandhi wanted to go out for a ride in the evening. After going a long distance in the car, Indira Gandhi wanted to visit Babur’s burial place, though this was not included in the itinerary. The Afghan security officials tried to dissuade her, but she was adamant. In the end she went to that burial place. It was a deserted place. She went before Babur’s grave, stood there for a few minutes with head bent down in reverence. Natwar Singh stood behind her. When Indira had finished her prayers, she turned back and told Singh “Today we have had our brush with history.” Worth to mention that Babur was the founder of Mughal rule in India, from which the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty have descended.

It is difficult to count how many institutes of higher education are named after Rajiv Gandhi but, Rajiv Gandhi himself was a person of low calibre. From 1962 to 1965, he was enrolled for a Mechanical Engineering course at Trinity College, Cambridge. But, he left Cambridge without a degree because, he could not pass exams. Next year in 1966, he joined Imperial College, London but, again left it without a degree.

K. N. Rao in the above said book alleges that Rajiv Gandhi became a Catholic to marry Sania Maino. Rajiv became Roberto. His son’s name is Raul and daughter’s name is Bianca. Quite cleverly the same names are presented to the people of India as Rahul and Priyanka. In personal conduct Rajiv was very much a Mughal. On 15th August 1988 he thundered from the ramparts of the Red Fort: “Our endeavor should be to take the country to heights to which it belonged about 250-300 years ago. It was then the reign of Aurangzeb, the ‘jeziya’ master and number one temple destroyer.”

The press conference that Rajiv Gandhi gave in London after taking over as prime minister of India was very informative. In this press conference, Rajiv boasted that he is not a Hindu but a Parsi. Feroze Khan’s father and Rajiv Gandhi’s paternal grandfather was a Muslim gentleman from the Junagadh area of Gujarat. This Muslim grocer by the name of Nawab Khan had married a Parsi woman after converting her to Islam. This is the source where from the myth of Rajiv being a Parsi was derived. Mind that he had no Parsi ancestor at all. His paternal grandmother had turned Muslim after having abandoned the Parsi religion to marry Nawab Khan.

Surprisingly, Parsi Rajiv Gandhi was cremated as per Vedic rites in full view of Indian public.

Dr. Subramanian Swamy writes that Sonia Gandhi’s name was Antonia Maino. Her father was a mason. He was an activist of the notorious fascist regime of Italy and he served five years imprisonment in Russia. Sonia Gandhi have not studied beyond high school. She learnt some English from a English teaching shop named Lennox School at the Cambridge University campus. From this fact she boasts of having studied at the prestigious Cambridge University. After learning some English, she was a waitress at a restaurant in Cambridge town.

Sonia Gandhi had intense friendship with Madhavrao Scindia in the UK, which continued even after her marriage. One night at 2 AM in 1982, Madhavrao Scindia and Sonia Gandhi were caught alone together when their car met an accident near IIT Delhi main gate.

When Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi were Prime Ministers, PM’s security used to go to New Delhi and Chennai international airports to send crates of Indian treasures like temple sculptures, antiques, paintings etc to Rome. Arjun Singh as CM and later as Union Minister in charge of Culture used to organize the plunder. Unchecked by customs, they were transported to Italy to be sold in two shops named Etnica & Ganpati, owned by Sonia Gandhi’s sister Alessandra Maino Vinci.

Indira Gandhi died not because her heart or brain were pierced by bullets, but she died of loss of blood. After Indira Gandhi was fired upon, Sonia Gandhi strangely insisted that bleeding Indira Gandhi should be taken to Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital, in opposite direction to AIIMS which had a contingency protocol to precisely deal with such events. After reaching Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital, Sonia Gandhi changed her mind and demand that Indira Gandhi should be taken to AIIMS, thus wasting 24 valuable minutes. It is doubtful whether it was immaturity of Sonia Gandhi or a trick to speedily bring her husband to power.

Rajesh Pilot and Madhav Rao Scindia were strong contenders to the Prime Minister’s post and they were road blocks in Sonia Gandhi’s way to power. Both of them died in mysterious accidents.

There are circumstantial evidences pointing to the prima facie possibility that the Maino family have contracted LTTE to kill Rajiv Gandhi. Nowadays, Sonia Gandhi is quite unabashed in having political alliance with those like MDMK, PMK and DMK who praise Rajiv Gandhi’s killers. No Indian widow would ever do that. Such circumstances are many, and raise a doubt. An investigation into Sonia’s involvement in Rajiv’s assassination is necessary. You may read Dr. Subramanian Swamy’s book “Assassination Of Rajiv Gandhi — Unasked Questions and Unanswered Queries” (ISBN : 81-220-0591-8<tel:81-220-0591-8>). It contains indications of such conspiracy.

In 1992, Sonia Gandhi revived her citizenship of Italy under Article 17 of the Italian Citizenship Law. Under Italian law, Rahul and Priyanka are Italian citizens because Sonia was an Italian citizen when she gave birth to them. Rahul Gandhi’s Italian is better than his Hindi. Rahul Gandhi is an Italian citizen is relevant from the fact that on 27th September 2001 he was detained by the FBI at Boston airport, USA for traveling on an Italian passport. If a law is made in India that important posts like that of President and Prime Minister should not be held by a person of foreign origin, then Rahul Gandhi automatically disqualifies to contend for the post of Prime Minister. After finishing school education, Rahul Gandhi got admission at the St. Stephens College in New Delhi, not on merit basis but on sports quota of rifle shooting. After a brief stay there in 1989-90, he did his BA from Rollins College, Florida in 1994. Just for doing BA one need not go to the US. The very next year, in 1995 he got M.Phil. degree from Trinity College, Cambridge. The genuineness of this degree is questioned as he has done M.Phil. without doing MA. Amaratya Sen’s helping hand is thought to be behind. Many of you might have seen the famous movie “Munna Bhai MBBS”.

In 2008 Rahul Gandhi was prevented from using an auditorium of the Chandra Shekhar Azad University in Kanpur for a students’ rally. Subsequently, the Vice-Chancellor of the university, V.K. Suri, was ousted by the UP Governor. During 26/11 when the whole country was tense about how to tackle the Mumbai terror, Rahul Gandhi was lavishly partying with his friends till 5 AM. Rahul Gandhi advises austerity for all Congress members. He says it is the duty of all politicians to be austere. On the other hand he has a ministerial bungalow with a fully equipped gym. He is a regular member of at least two of the Delhi’s poshest gyms, one of which is 5-star rated.

Rahul Gandhi’s trip to Chennai in 2009 to campaign for austerity cost the party more than Rs 1 Crore. Such inconsistencies show that initiatives taken by Rahul Gandhi are not his own but, workout of his party men only.

During the 2007 election campaign in Uttar Pradesh, Rahul Gandhi said that “if anyone from the Nehru-Gandhi family had been active in politics then, the Babri Masjid would not have fallen”. It doubtlessly shows his Mohammedan affiliation as a loyalty to his ancestors. On Dec 31, 2004, John M. Itty, a retired college professor in Alappuzha district of Kerala, contended that action should be taken against Rahul Gandhi and his girlfriend Juvenitta alias Veronica for staying together for three days at a resort in Kerela. It is a criminal offense under Immoral Trafficking Act as they are not married. Anyway, one more foreigner daughter-in-law is waiting to rule the tolerant Indians.

The Swiss magazine Schweizer Illustrierte’s 11th November 1991 issue revealed that Rahul Gandhi was the beneficiary of accounts worth US $2 billion controlled by his mother Sonia Gandhi. A report from the Swiss Banking Association in 2006 revealed that the combined deposits of Indian citizens are far greater than any other nation, a total of US $1.4 trillion, a figure exceeding the GDP of India. This dynasty rules greater than half of India. Ignoring the center, out of 28 states and 7 union territories, more than half of them have Congress government at any point of time. Up to Rajiv Gandhi there was Mughal rule in India, with Sonia Gandhi, the Rome rule on India have started. The objective behind writing this article is to acquaint the citizens of India with their national leaders and show how a dynasty has misused the democracy of this country. Several prestigious national assets and schemes are named after these lose-character people to immortalize them. Many other shocking facts are not presented in this article because of lack of supporting evidence.

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Human Devolution: A Vedic Account of Human Origins

Human Devolution:

A Vedic Account of Human Origins

Michael A. Cremo

            In the Bhagavad-gita, the warrior prince Arjuna asks Lord Krishna about the fate of yogis who do not reach the stage of complete perfection. Lord Krishna replied that such souls, after taking birth again, will become automatically attracted to the yoga principles and make further progress. That appears to be the story of my life. I was born in 1948, and even though the place of my birth was America, as I grew up, I found myself attracted to essential aspects of the yogic way of life. I became a vegetarian. I felt much better, physically and mentally. I very much liked reading the Upanisads and the Bhagavadgita. These books were very satisfying to my intellect. I developed a strong desire to visit India. Over the past 30 years, I have visited India over a dozen times. My voyages have taken me throughout the entire country, from north to south, from east to west. I have felt like a person coming home after a long absence. I became attracted to the teachings of one of the prominent gurus from India, His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami, and became his initiated disciple, learning from him the practice of one of the ancient Indian yoga systems, bhakti-yoga, the yoga of devotion. In so doing, my initial attraction and curiosity have matured into the commitment of a practitioner who has found a deep spiritual satisfaction.

According to the bhakti-yoga system, one’s work can become one’s yoga, one’s transcendental connection to the supreme conscious personality behind all worldly phenomena. I have always had a tendency toward intellectual work, toward study, and writing, and speaking. I have always wondered about the origin and history of human beings. I am, of course, not unique in this regard. The question of human origins has always been a hot topic among philosophers and scientists. Today, most of them accept the Darwinian account that humans like us came into existence about 100,000 years ago, having evolved from more apelike ancestors.

I myself accepted that account during the early part of my intellectual life. And I probably would still accept it today had it not been for my encounter with the Vedic literature of India. Among this literature, one finds the Puranas, or histories. Had I not studied the Puranas, I would not have had any reason to question the evolutionary ideas I had grown to accept during my early education. In the Puranas I found another account of human origins. I call this account human devolution. To put it in its most simple terms, we do not evolve up from matter but devolve, or come down, from spirit.

The human devolution process, the process by which conscious selves enter human bodies on earth, has been going on for a very long time. According to the Puranas, or histories, humans like us have existed on earth for vast periods of cyclical time. The basic unit of this cyclical time is the Day of Brahma, which lasts for 4.32 billion years. The day of Brahma is followed by a night of Brahma, which also lasts for 4.32 billion years. The days follow the nights endlessly in succession. During the days of Brahma, life, including human life, is manifest, and during the nights it is not manifest. According to the Puranic cosmological calendar, the current day of Brahma began about 2 billion years ago. One of the forefathers of humankind, Svayambhuva Manu, ruled during that time, and the Bhagavata Purana (Shrimad Bhagavatam 6.4.1) tells us: “The . . .  human beings . . . were created during the reign of Svayambhuva Manu.”  Therefore, a Vedic archeologist might expect to find evidence for a human presence going that far back in time. In our book Forbidden Archeology, my coauthor Richard L. Thompson and I documented extensive evidence, in the form of human skeletons, human footprints, and human artifacts, showing that humans like ourselves have inhabited the earth for hundreds of millions of years, just as the Puranas tell us. This evidence is not very well known because of a process of knowledge filtration that operates in the scientific world. Evidence that contradicts the Darwinian theory of human evolution is set aside, ignored, and eventually forgotten.

For example, in the nineteenth century, gold was discovered in California. To get it, miners dug tunnels into the sides of mountains, such as Table Mountain in Tuolumne County. Deep inside the tunnels, in deposits of early Eocene age (about 50 million years old), miners found human bones and artifacts. The discoveries were carefully documented by Dr. J. D. Whitney, the chief government geologist of California, in his book The Auriferous Gravels of the Sierra Nevada of California, published by Harvard University in 1880. But we do not hear very much about these discoveries today. In the Smithsonian Institution Annual Report for 1898–1899 (p. 424), anthropologist William Holmes said, “Perhaps if Professor Whitney had fully appreciated the story of human evolution as it is understood today, he would have hesitated to announce the conclusions formulated, notwithstanding the imposing array of testimony with which he was confronted.” In other words, if the facts did not fit the theory of human evolution, the facts had to be set aside, and that is exactly what happened.

Such bias continued into the twentieth century. In the 1970s, American archeologists led by Cynthia Irwin Williams discovered stones tools at Hueyatlaco, near Puebla, Mexico. The stone tools were of advanced type, made only by humans like us. A team of geologists, from the United States Geological Survey and universities in the United States, came to Hueyatlaco to date the site. Among the geologists was Virginia Steen-McIntyre. To date the site, the team used four methods—uranium series dating on butchered animal bones found along with the tools, zircon fission track dating on volcanic layers above the tools, tephra hydration dating of volcanic crystals, and standard stratigraphy. The four methods converged on an age of about 250,000 years for the site. The archeologists refused to consider this date. They could not believe that humans capable of making the Hueyatlaco artifacts existed 250,000 years ago. In defense of the dates obtained by the geologists, Virginia Steen-McIntyre wrote in a letter (March 30, 1981) to Estella Leopold, associate editor of Quaternary Research:  “The problem as I see it is much bigger than Hueyatlaco. It concerns the manipulation of scientific thought through the suppression of ‘Enigmatic Data,’ data that challenges the prevailing mode of thinking. Hueyatlaco certainly does that! Not being an anthropologist, I didn’t realize the full significance of our dates back in 1973, nor how deeply woven into our thought the current theory of human evolution has become. Our work at Hueyatlaco has been rejected by most archaeologists because it contradicts that theory, period.” This remains true today, not only for the California gold mine discoveries and the Hueyatlaco human artifacts, but for hundreds of other discoveries documented in the scientific literature of the past 150 years, discoveries that contradict the Darwinian account of human origins..

There is also fossil evidence showing that the current Darwinian picture of the evolution of nonhuman species is also in need of revision. Beginning in the 1940s, geologists and paleobotanists working with the Geological Survey of India explored the Salt Range Mountains in what is now Pakistan. They found deep in salt mines evidence for the existence of advanced flowering plants and insects in the early Cambrian periods, about 600 million years ago. According to standard evolutionary ideas, no land plants or animals existed at that time. Flowering plants and insects are thought to have come into existence hundreds of millions of years later.

To explain the evidence some geologists proposed that there must have been a massive overthrust, by which Eocene layers, about 50 million years old and containing the plant and insect fossils, were thrust under Cambrian layers, over 550 million years old. Others pointed out that there were no geological signs of such an overthrust. According to these scientists, the layers bearing the fossils of the advanced plants and insects were found in normal position, beneath strata containing trilobites, the characteristic fossil of the Cambrian.

One of these scientists, E. R. Gee, a geologist working with the Geological Survey of India, proposed a novel solution to the problem. In the proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of India for the year 1945 (section B, v. 16, pp. xlv–xlvi), paleobotanist Birbal Sahni noted: “Quite recently, an alternative explanation has been offered by Mr. Gee. The suggestion is that the angiosperms, gymnosperms and insects of the Saline Series may represent a highly evolved Cambrian or Precambrian flora and fauna! In other words, it is suggested that these plants and animals made their appearance in the Salt Range area several hundred million years earlier than they did anywhere else in the world. One would scarcely have believed that such an idea would be seriously put forward by any geologist today.” The controversy was left unresolved.

In the 1990s, petroleum geologists, unaware of the earlier controversy, restudied the area. They determined that the salt deposits below the Cambrian deposits containing trilobites were early Cambrian or Precambrian. In other words, they found no evidence of an overthrust. The salt deposits were in a natural position below the Cambrian deposits. This supports Gee’s suggestion that the plant and insect remains in the salt deposits were evidence of an advanced fauna and flora existing in the early Cambrian. This evidence contradicts not only the Darwinian concept of the evolution of humans but of other species as well.

Aside from fossil evidence, from genetics and developmental biology also contradicts the Darwinian theory of human evolution. Although the origin of life from chemicals is technically not part of the evolution theory, it has in practice become inseparably connected with it. Darwinists routinely assert that life arose from chemicals. But after decades of theorizing and experimenting, they are unable to say exactly which chemicals combined in exactly which way to form exactly which first living thing. As far as evolution itself is concerned, it has not been demonstrated in any truly scientific way. It remains an article of faith. The modern evolutionary synthesis is based on genetics. Evolutionists posit a relationship between the genotype (genetic structure) of an organism and its phenotype (physical structure). They say that changes in the genotype result in changes in the phenotype, and by natural selection the changes in phenotype conferring better fitness in a particular environment accumulate in organisms. Evolutionists claim that this process can account for the appearance of new structural features in organisms. But on the level of microbiology, these structures appear to be irreducibly complex. Scientists have not been able to specify exactly how they have come about in step by step fashion. They have not been able to tell us exactly what genetic changes resulted in what phenotypic changes to produce particular complex features of organisms. This would require the specification of intermediate stages leading up to the complex structures we observe today. In his book Darwin’s Black Box (1996, p. 183), biochemist Michael Behe says, “In the past ten years, Journal of Molecular Evolution has published more than a thousand papers. . . . There were zero papers discussing detailed models for intermediates in the development of complex biomolecular structures. This is not a peculiarity of JME. No papers are to be found that discuss detailed models for intermediates in the development of complex biomolecular structures, whether in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, Nature, Science, the Journal of Molecular Biology or, to my knowledge, any science journal.”

Attempts by scientists to use genetic evidence to demonstrate the time and place that anatomically modern humans have come into existence have resulted in embarrassing mistakes and contradictions. The first widely publicized reports that genetic evidence allowed scientists to say that all living humans arose from an African Eve who lived 200,000 years ago in Africa turned out to be fatally flawed. Researchers have attempted to correct the mistakes, but the results remain confused. Considering the complexities surrounding genetic data, some scientists have suggested that fossils remain the most reliable evidence for questions about human origins and antiquity. In an article in American Anthropologist (1993 v. 95, no. 11), David W. Frayer and his coauthors said (p. 19): “Unlike genetic data derived from living humans, fossils can be used to test predictions of theories about the past without relying on a long list of assumptions about the neutrality of genetic markers, mutational rates, or other requirements necessary to retrodict the past from current genetic variation. . . . genetic information, at best, provides a theory of how modern human origins might have happened if the assumptions used in interpreting the genetic data are correct.” This means that the archeological evidence for extreme human antiquity documented in Forbidden Archeology provides a much needed check on the rampant speculations of genetic researchers. This evidence contradicts current Darwinian accounts of human origins.

Although there is much evidence from archeology, genetics, and developmental biology that contradicts the current Darwinian theory of human evolution, it does not tell us anything about the actual origin of human beings. This contradictory evidence simply tells us that we need a new explanation for human origins. But that is also important. Why offer a new explanation, unless one is really required? In my new book Human Devolution, I set forth such a new explanation, an explanation based on information found in the Puranas and other Vedic literatures.

Before we ask the question, “Where did human beings come from?” we should first of all ask the question, “What is a human being?” Today most scientists believe that a human being is simply a combination of matter, the ordinary chemical elements. This assumption limits the kinds of explanations that can be offered for human origins. Inspired by my studies in the Vedic literature, I have proposed that it is more reasonable, based on available scientific evidence, to start with the assumption that a human being is composed of three separately existing substances: matter, mind, and consciousness (or spirit). This assumption widens the circle of possible explanations.

Any scientific chain of reasoning begins with some initial assumptions that are not rigorously proved. Otherwise, one would get caught in an endless regression of proofs of assumptions, and proofs of proofs of assumptions. Initial assumptions must simply be reasonable on the basis of available evidence. And it is reasonable, on the basis of available evidence, to posit the existence of mind and consciousness, in addition to ordinary matter, as separate elements composing the human being.

For the purpose of scientific discussion, I define mind as a subtle material substance associated with the human organism and capable of acting on ordinary matter in ways we cannot explain by our current laws of physics. Evidence for this mind element comes from scientific research into the phenomena called by some “paranormal” or “psychical.” Here we are led into the hidden history of physics (the knowledge filtering process also operates in this field of knowledge).

For example, every physics student learns about the work of Pierre and Marie Curie, the husband and wife team who both received Nobel Prizes for their work in discovering radium. The account is found in practically every introductory physics textbook. What we do not read in the textbooks is that the Curies were heavily involved in psychical research. They were part of a large group of prominent European scientists, including other Nobel Prize winners, who were jointly conducting research into the paranormal in Paris early in the twentieth century. For two years, the group studied the Italian medium Eusapia Palladino. Historian Anna Hurwic notes in her biography of Pierre Curie (1995, p. 247), “He saw the séances as scientific experiments, tried to monitor the different parameters, took detailed notes of every observation. He was really intrigued by Eusapia Palladino.” About some séances with Eusapia, Pierre Curie wrote to physicist Georges Gouy in a letter dated July 24, 1905: “We had at the Psychology Society a few séances with the medium Eusapia Palladino. It was very interesting, and truly those phenomena that we have witnessed seemed to us to not be some magical tricks—a table lifted four feet above the floor . . . All this in a room arranged by us, with a small number of spectators all well known and without the presence of a possible accomplice.” Pierre Curie reported that on such occasions, the medium was carefully physically controlled by the scientists present. On April 14, 1906, Pierre wrote to Gouy about some further investigations he and Marie had carried out: “We had a few new ‘séances’ with Eusapia Paladina (We already had séances with her last summer). The result is that those phenomena exist for real, and I can’t doubt it any more. It is unbelievable, but it is thus, and it is impossible to negate it after the séances that we had in conditions of perfect monitoring.” He concluded, “There is, according to me a completely new domain of facts and physical states of space of which we have no idea.”

Such results, and many more like them from the hidden history of physics, suggest there is associated with the human organism a mind element that can act on ordinary matter in ways we cannot easily explain by our current physical laws. Such research continues today, although most scientists doing it are concentrating on microeffects rather than the macroeffects reported by Pierre Curie. For example, Robert Jahn, head of the engineering department at Princeton University, started to research the effects of mental attention on random number generators. A random number generator will normally generate a sequence of ones and zeros, with equal numbers of each. But Jahn, and his associates who have continued the research, found that subjects can mentally influence the random number generators to produce a statistically significant greater number of ones than zeros (or vice versa).

Evidence for a conscious self that can exist apart from mind (subtle matter) and ordinary matter comes from medical reports of Out of body experiences (OBEs). During traumatic events such as heart attacks, blood stops flowing to the brain, and the subjects become unconscious. But some subjects report separating from their bodies at such times. They report consciously observing their own bodies. The reality of such experiences has been confirmed by medical researchers. For example, in February 2001, a team from the University of Southampton, in the United Kingdom, published a favorable study on OBEs in cardiac arrest patients in the journal Resuscitation (v. 48, pp. 149–156). The team was headed by Dr. Sam Parnia, a senior research fellow at the university. On February 16, 2001, a report published on the university’s web site said that the work of Dr. Parnia “suggests consciousness and the mind may continue to exist after the brain has ceased to function and the body is clinically dead.” This is exactly the Vedic conception. At death the conscious self leaves the body, accompanied by the subtle material covering of the mind, and then enters another body of gross matter. Memories from past lives are recorded in the mind, and may be accessed by the conscious self in its new body made of gross matter, as shown by psychiatrist Ian Stevenson’s extensive studies verifying past life memories of children.

If the human organism is composed of gross matter, mind, and consciousness (or spirit), it is natural to suppose that these elements come from reservoirs of such elements. This suggests that the cosmos is divided into regions, or levels, of gross matter, mind, and consciousness, each inhabited by beings adapted to life there. First, there is a region of pure consciousness. Consciousness, as we experience it, is individual and personal. This suggests that the original source of conscious selves is also individual and personal. So in addition to the individual units of consciousness existing in the realm of pure consciousness, there is also an original conscious being who is their source. When the fractional conscious selves give up their connection with their source, they are placed in lower regions of the cosmos predominated by either subtle material substance (mind) or gross material substance. There is thus a cosmic hierarchy of conscious beings. Accounts of this cosmic hierarchy of beings can be found not only in the Puranas but in the cosmologies of many other cultures. The cosmologies share many features. They generally include an original God inhabiting a realm of pure consciousness, a subordinate creator god inhabiting a subtle material region of the cosmos along with many kinds of demigods and demigoddesses, an earthly realm, dominated by gross matter, inhabited by humans like us.

This suggests that the universe of our experience should show signs that it was designed by a higher intelligence for accommodating human life and other forms of life. Modern cosmology does provide evidence for this. Scientists have discovered that numbers representing fundamental physical constants and ratios of natural forces appear to be finely tuned for life to exist in our universe. Astronomer Sir Martin Rees considers six of these numbers to be especially significant. In his book Just Six Numbers (2000, pp. 3–4), he says, “These six numbers constitute a ‘recipe’ for a universe. Moreover, the outcome is sensitive to their values: if any one of them were to be ‘untuned’, there would be no stars and no life.” There are three main explanations for the apparent fine tuning of the physical constants and laws of nature: simple chance, many worlds, and some intelligent providential creator. Many cosmologists admit that the odds against the fine tuning are too extreme for a simple chance to be offered as a credible scientific explanation. To avoid the conclusion of a providential designer, they have posited the existence of a practically unlimited number of universes, each with the values of fundamental constants and laws of nature adjusted in a different way. And we just happen to live in the one universe with everything adjusted correctly for the existence of human life. But for modern science these other universes have only a theoretical existence, and even if their existence could be physically demonstrated, one would further have to show that in these other universes the values of the fundamental constants and laws of nature are in fact different than those in our universe.

The Vedic cosmology also speaks of many universes, but all of them are designed for life, and beyond all of these material universes, with their levels of gross and subtle matter, is the level of pure consciousness, or spirit. Originally, we exist there as units of pure consciousness in harmonious connection with the supreme conscious being, known by the Sanskrit name Krishna (and by other names in other religious traditions). When we give up our willing connection with that supreme conscious being, we descend to regions of the cosmos dominated by the subtle and gross material elements, mind and matter. Forgetful of our original position, we attempt to dominate and enjoy the subtle and gross material elements. For this purpose, we are provided with bodies made of the subtle and gross material elements. The subtle material body is made up not only of mind, but of the even finer material elements, intelligence and false ego (for the sake of simplicity, I have in this discussion collapsed them into mind). The gross material body is made of earth, water, fire, air, and ether. Bodies made of these gross and subtle material elements are vehicles for conscious selves. They are designed for existence within the realms of the subtle and gross material elements. According to their degree of forgetfulness of their original nature, conscious selves receive appropriate bodily coverings. Those who are more forgetful receive bodies that cover their original consciousness to a greater degree. The original conscious being in the Vedic universe (aside from God) is Brahma, the first demigod. His body, manifested directly from Vishnu (the expansion of Krishna who controls the material universe), is made primarily of the subtle material elements. He is tasked with manifesting bodies for the other conscious selves existing at various levels of the cosmic hierarchy. From the body of Brahma come great sages, sometimes known as his mental sons, and also the first sexually reproducing pair, Svayambhuva Manu and his consort Shatarupa. The daughters of Manu become the wives of some of the sages, and they produce generations of demigods and demigoddesses, with bodies composed primarily of the subtle material energy. These demigods and demigoddesses, by their reproductive processes, through a kind of intelligently guided genetic engineering, produce the forms of living things, including humans, who reside on our earth planet.

In the devolution process, our original pure spiritual consciousness is covered by layers of subtle and gross material elements. But the process can be reversed. There is a kind of re-evolution by which we can free consciousness from its coverings, and restore it to its original pure state. Every great spiritual tradition has some means for accomplishing this—some form of prayer, or meditation, or yoga. In my own practice of bhakti yoga, I rely on the process of vibrating the transcendental sound of the Hare Krishna mantra to restore consciousness to its pure state. However, I will simply advise each person to look deeply within the spiritual tradition of his or her choice, and find the form or prayer, or meditation, or yoga that is there to help one make progress toward the ultimate goal of life.

 

FUNDAMENTALS OF HINDU UNITY AND THE CONCEPT OF HINDUSTAN

FUNDAMENTALS OF HINDU UNITY

AND THE CONCEPT OF HINDUSTAN


Following is the text of presentation made by Dr Subramanian Swamy at the Hindu Dharma Acharya Sabha, y/day:

Address of Dr. Subramanian Swamy.

Chairman, Center for National Renaissance, New Delhi

to Hindu Dharma Acharya Sabha Second Meeting

at Mumbai on October 18,2005.

FUNDAMENTALS OF HINDU UNITY

AND THE CONCEPT OF HINDUSTAN

His Holiness Dayananda Saraswati, and Heads of Mutts and Mandaleshwars and revered Acharyas. I thank His Holiness for the opportunity to address you all today.

I

Hinduism, known as sanatana dharma is uniquely world’s unbroken, continuous and longest in time, and is a religion constituted by its theology, cultural ethos, and civilizational history. India ‘s Hindu society is founded on the content of these three constituents. Hindustan, as India is known abroad even today[ e.g., Yindu guo in Chinese, Hind in Arabic], as a concept is defined as a nation of Hindus and those others in the nation who accept that their ancestors are Hindus and revere that legacy. Parsis, Jews, Syrian Christians come in a special category of Hindustanis, those who were welcomed by Hindus since they came to Hindustan seeking refuge from persecution in their own lands abroad, and who willingly accepted to abide by, and adopt certain cultural customs of Hindus. To the credit of Parsis, they have never demanded any special privileges as a minority. They had even rejected privileges and quotas offered to them by the British imperialists saying that they were comfortable with Hindus.

Over the last two millenniums, Hindu religion has been subjected to threats several times from other religious groups, but these threats have been met, the challenges faced and overcome.

Well before the birth of Christianity and Islam, Hindu religion had been intellectually dethroned by Hinayana Buddhism. But Adi Sankaracharya rethroned Hinduism through his famous shastrathas[religious debate] and caused a renaissance in Buddhism itself, which then came to be known as Mahayana Buddhism, conceptually in complete harmony with, if not indistinguishable from, Hindu theology. In south India , the azhwars and nayanmars also through shastrathas repositioned Hinduism after de-throning Jainism and Buddhism. Since then the Hindu dharmacharyas have always been looked up to when Hindu society faced a threat or crisis, for guidance to meet the challenge to the Hindu religion. Today, we again need the revered acharyas to show us the way. Hence this Sabha is of vital importance for the future of the nation.

II

Hindu ethos provided for sanctuary and home to those of other faiths fleeing from their countries due to religious persecution. As I stated earlier, Parsis, Jews and Syrian Christians are among those religious groups who had sought refuge in India , and survived because the Hindus looked after them. These three religious communities have had and have today a disproportionate share in power and wealth in Indian society, but Hindus have no resentment about it. These minorities had come to India in search of peace and found safe haven in the midst of Hindu society. Parsis migrated elsewhere in the world too, but disappeared as a community in those countries. Jews have openly acknowledged that India as the only country where they were not persecuted. Syrian Christians too are today completely integrated into India . Even early Arab Muslim travelers who came peacefully to settle in Kerala were taken into Hindu families, and hence called Mapillai[meaning son-inlaw– Moplah in English]. That is the glorious Hindu tradition, the ethos of compassion and co-option that is unparalleled in world history.

However, militant Islam and later crusading Christianity came to India , and aggressively challenged Hinduism. They seized power in sequence and established their own state in India . But despite state patronage to the ensuing onslaught, plunder and victimisation, those of Hindu faith could not be decimated, and Hinduism remained the theology of the vast Indian majority.

Defiant Hindus suffered persecution and economic deprivation during Islamic and Christian reigns, such as through differential taxation[e.g., jezia and zamindari land revenue appropriation] and plain brutality, but Hindus by and large refused to capitulate and convert. Even after almost a thousand years of such targeting by Muslims and Christian rulers, undivided India in 1947 was more than 75 % Hindu. This was partly because of the victorious Vijayanagaram, the Sikh reign, and Mahratta kingdoms, and later the Freedom Movement, each inspired by sanyasis such Sringeri Shankaracharya, Swami Ramdas, Guru Nanak, Swami Vivekanada and Sri Aurobindo, who by their preaching about the Hindu identity ensured that the flame of Hindu defiance never dimmed. It was also due to individual defiance of Hindus such as of Rana Pratap, Rani Jhansi, Rani Bennur, Kattaboman and Netaji Subhas Bose. These icons are admired not because they led us to victory[ in fact they were defeated or killed], or had found out a safe compromise[they did not], but because of their courage of conviction in the face of huge odds not to submit to tyranny. That courageous defiance is also is part of Hindus’ glorious legacy. But those who capitulated like Raja Man Singh or Jai Chand or Pudukottai Raja in order to live in pomp and grandeur are despised today by the people.

III

In 1947, temporal power was defacto restored to the Hindu majority. But the Indian state formally adopted secularism, which concept however was never properly defined or debated. For example, it left vague what an Indian’s connection was with the nation’s Hindu past and legacy. In the name of secularism, it was taboo for a public servant even to break a coconut or light a oil lamp to inaugurate an official function on the ground that religious symbols must not invade public life. Such orthodoxy was promoted by Jawarharlal Nehru and his Leftist advisers. But then government took over supervision of temples, legislated on Hindu personal laws, and regulated religious festivals, but kept aloof from the Muslim and Christian religious affairs. The secularism principle was foisted on the Hindu masses without making him understand why they had to abide by legislation but not Muslims and Christians.

As a result, the renaissance that had begun in the late nineteenth century to redefine the Hindu identity [in contemporary terms and norms valid in a pluralistic society], was aborted by the confusion thus created in Hindu minds by a vaguely understood concept of secularism.

Electoral politics further confounded the issues arising out of secularism, and hence the Indian society became gradually and increasingly fragmented in outlook and of confused perspective. Hindu society became divided by caste that became increasingly mutually antagonistic. Attempts were made through falsification in history texts adopted for curriculum in the education system to disconnect and disinherit the contemporary Indian from the past glory of Hindu India. The intrinsic Hindu unity was sought to be undone by legitimizing such bogus concepts as Aryan-Dravidian racial divide theory, or that India as a concept never existed till the British imperialists put it together, or that Indians have always been ruled by invaders from abroad. Incidentally, the Aryan-Dravidian myth has now been exploded by modern research on DNA of Indians and Europeans conducted by Professor C. Panse of Newton , Mass. USA and other scholars.

Modern India was sought to be portrayed by foreign interests through this curriculum as a discontinuity in history and as a new entity much as are today’s Greece , Egypt or Iraq . That curriculum is largely intact today. On the contrary efforts are afoot to bolster the disparagement of our past in the new dispensation today. A rudderless India, disconnected from her past has, as a consequence, become a fertile field for religious poachers and neo-imperialists from abroad who paint India as a mosaic of immigrants much like a crowd on a platform in a railway junction. That is, it is clandestinely propagated that India has belonged to those who forcibly occupied it. This is the theme around which the Islamic fundamentalists and fraud Christian crusaders are again at work, much as they were a thousand years ago, but of course in new dispensations, sophistication, and media forms. Thus the concept of intrinsic Hindu unity, and India ‘s Hindu foundation are dangerously under challenge by these forces. Tragically most Hindus today are not even cognizant of it.

The challenge today confronting Hindus is however much more difficult to meet than was earlier in history because the forces at work to erode and undermine Hindu faith, unlike before, are unseen, clandestine, pernicious, deceptive but most of all sophisticated and media-savvy. Tragically therefore, a much more educated and larger numbers of Hindus have been unwittingly co-opted in this sinister conspiracy directed by foreigners who have no love for India and who also see much as Lord Macauley saw in the nineteenth century, that the hoary Hindu foundation of India is a stumbling block for the furtherance of their nefarious perfidious game.

Adherence to Hinduism is also being sought to be diluted in the name of modernity and this dilution is made a norm of secularism. Religion, it is advocated, is personal. To be a good Hindu today is conceptually being reduced to just praying, piety, visiting temples, and celebrating religious festivals. The concept of a collective Hindu mindset is being ridiculed as chauvinist and retrograde, even fundamentalist.

IV

The concept of a corporate Hindu unity and identity however is that of a collective mindset that identifies us with a motherland from the Himalayas to the Indian Ocean and it’s glorious past, and the concomitant resolve of it’s representative leadership defined as “chakravartin” earlier by Chanakya, to defend that vision. It is this concept and resolve that is being discarded or is just evaporating under the onslaught of the Nehruvian secularists.

However pious a Hindu becomes, however prosperous Hindu temples become from doting devotees’ offerings, when the nation is in danger it is this collective mindset of the people that matters, and not the piety of the individual in that collective.

Hindu society today lacking a cohesive corporate identity, is thus in the process of becoming fragmented, and hence increasingly in disarray. This fission process is on simultaneously with the reality of millions of Hindus who go to temples regularly or walk to Sabarimalai or participate in Kumbh Mela. This is not what I mean when I speak of Hindu unity to this august gathering today.

I am instead referring to the Hindu consciousness which encompasses the willingness and determination to collectively defend the faith from the erosion that is being induced by the disconnect with our glorious past. What Swami Vivekananda, Bankim Chatterjee, Sri Aurobindo, and Subramania Bharati had achieved by raising Hindu consciousness to that end, has now been depleted and dissipated over the last six decades.

Even the patriotic and anguished writings of Dr. Ambedkar, and his oration in the Constituent Assembly for a strong united country have been vulgarized to advocate Hindu society’s disintegration. In his scholarly paper presented in a 1916 Columbia University seminar[and published in Indian Antiquary, vol. XLI, May 1917 p.81-95] Dr. Ambedkar stated : ” It is the unity of culture that is the basis of homogeneity. Taking this for granted, I venture to say that there is no country that can rival the Indian Peninsula with respect to the unity of it’s culture. It has not only a geographic unity, but it has over and above all a deeper and much more fundamental unity—the indubitable cultural unity that covers the land from end to end”. Ambedkar wrote several such brilliant books, but alas, Nehru and his cohorts so thoroughly frustrated him that in the end bitterness drove him to Buddhism.

Thus, if this degeneration and disconnect are not rectified and repaired by a resolve to unite Hindustanis[Hindus and those others who proudly identify with India’s Hindu past], the Hindu civilization may go into a tail spin and ultimately fade away like other civilizations have for much the same reason.

Of course, this sorry state has come about as a cumulative effect of a thousand years past of Islamic invasions, occupation and Imperialist colonization. But we failed to rectify the damage after the Hindus overwhelmingly got defacto power in 1947. For this transfer of power, we sacrificed one quarter of Akhand Hindustan territory to settle those Muslims who could not bear to live or adjust with the Hindu majority.

That is, by a failure to usher a renaissance after 1947 India lost her opportunity to cleanse the accumulated dirt and unwanted baggage of the past. The nation missed a change to demolish the birth-based caste theory as Ambedkar had wanted to do. The battering that the concept of Hindu unity and Indian identity has taken at the hands of Nehruvian secularists since 1947 has led to the present social malaise. Thus, even though Hindus are above 80 percent of the population in India , they have not been able to understand their roots in, and obligations to, the nation in a pluralistic Hindustani democracy.

Today the sacrilege of Hindu concepts and hoary institutions, is being carried out not with the crude brutality of a Ghazni or Ghori, but with the sophistication of the constitutional instruments of law. The desecration of Hindu icons, for example the Kanchi Kamakoti Mutt, is being made to look legal, thereby completely confusing the Hindu people, and thus making them unable to recognize the danger, or to realize that Hindus have to unite to defend against the threats to their legacy. We Hindus are under siege today, and we do not know it !! That is, what is truly alarming is that Hindu society could be dissembled today without much protest since we have been lulled or lost the capacity to think collectively as Hindus.

To resist this siege we first need Hindu unity. Numbers [of those claiming to be adherents to Hinduism] do not matter in today’s information society. It is the durability and clarity of the Hindu mindset of those who unite that matters in the forging of an instrument to fight this creeping danger.

For example, we had a near disaster in Ayodhya recently. Pakistan –trained foreign terrorists slipped into India and traveled to Ayodhya to blow up the Ram Mandir. Their attempt was foiled by courageous elements of the police. But did the representative government of 870 million Hindus of India react in a meaningful way, that is retaliate to deter future such attacks ? Did anyone raise it in Parliament and demand deterrent retaliation ? On the contrary, the Prime Minister assured Pakistan that the peace talks will not be affected by such acts. But what retaliation was there to be for the sponsors of those terrorists who dared to think about blowing Sri Ram’s birth place ?

Hindus are thus being today systematically prepared for psychological enslavement and conceptual capture. Indians are being subtly brain-washed. Hindus are being lulled, while Muslims and Christians are being subject to relentless propaganda that they are different, and are citizens of India as would be a shareholder in a company run for profit.

We Hindus cannot fight this unless we first identify what we have to fight. We cannot effectively respond unless we understand the nature and complexity of the challenge. What makes the task of defending Hinduism much more difficult today is that the oppressors are not obvious maraudring entities as were Ghazni, Ghori, or Clive. The means of communication and the supply of funds in the hands of our enemies are multiples of that available in the past, for camouflaging their evil purposes.

V

My contention here today is that Hindus are facing a four dimensional siege and this siege is pernicious, clandestine, deceptive and sophisticated. It requires an enlightened Hindu unity to combat the threats and get the siege lifted. We have to begin by first understanding the content and scope of the siege before we Hindus can unite to battle it. These four dimensions are:

[1] The clandestine defamation of Hindu symbols and institutions.

Making Hindus to lose their self esteem by disparaging their tradition, which also had been the strategy of British imperialists for the conquest of India . Speaking in British Parliament, Lord Macauley said on February 2, 1835 the following:

” Such wealth I have seen in this country[ India ], such high moral values, people of such calibre, that I do not think we would ever conquer this country unless we break the very backbone of this nation, which[backbone] is her spiritual and cultural heritage. And therefore, I propose that we replace her old and ancient education system, her culture, for if the Indians think that all that is foreign and English is good and greater than their own, they will lose their self-esteem , their native self-culture and they will become what we want them, a truly dominated nation”.

That basic strategy of those who want to see a weak and pliant India remains. Only the tactics have changed. Now the target is the Hindu institutions and Hindu icons, and the route is not the creation of a comprador class to subdue the nation, but fostering a psychological milieu to denigrate the heritage and to delink the Hindu from his past legacy thereby causing a loss of self esteem and a pride in the nation’s pa. There are already many examples of this happening.

A false murder case was foisted on the Acharyas of the 2500 year old Kanchi Mutt. Most Hindus have watched it as spectators, and with nagging doubts about the truth, and in fact about the Acharyas themselves. The Supreme Court has however held that the case has “no worthwhile prima facie evidence…” [Court records: (2005) 2 Supreme Court Cases 13, para 12, page 20] and that the alleged confessions of other accused persons implicating the Acharyas “have very little evidentiary value”[para 10]. The case thus is without basis and is bogus because since then the TN police has failed to uncover any further or new evidence to sustain the case. That the apex Court has found the foisted case as without prima facie merit should itself have galvanized the people against the offending authorities. It has not, because Hindus lack the mindset and guidance to retaliate against the willful and disguised defamation of Hindu symbols and institutions. Instead like parrots most Hindus mouth the phrase that “law must take it’s course”. Where is the law in this ? Nor did a single Muslim or Christian organization or their leaders condemn this atrocity, exposing secularism as a one-way obligation of Hindus.

That the obvious perpetrator of this blasphemous atrocity on Hindu religion’s hoary institution is the head of the TN state government, one who also claims to be a good Hindu because she regularly visits temples, has only helped to further confound the already confused Hindu mind from responding.

That this atrocity could not have been heaped on the Mutt without the aid and abetment, or even the instigation of the power behind the throne in Delhi , a devout foreign-born Catholic, has not even evoked any anger amongst the Hindus.

Instead the majority of Hindus have been just passive or satisfied discussing gossip i.e., whether there was some land dispute of the Mutt with the government that triggered it or a money angle row with a politician in power to motivate the misuse of state machinery to frame a Shankaracharya on a murder charge! It is incredible that in a nation of 80 percent Hindus, the democratically elected state government dared to foist a bogus case on a Shankaracharya, and without a spontaneous uproar and mass protest by Hindus. That this atrocity could be the beginning of further assault on the foundation of the Hindu religion to defame and discredit it, should have jolted the Hindus into a fierce protest.

Otherwise, the current Hindu apathy will encourage further assault on Hindu institutions. It is already happening and there is no time to lose. Further assault is also in progress. In July 2005, an uncouth official of the TN Government’s HR&CE Ministry blocked the Kanchi Shankaracharyas from entering the holy Shiva temple in Rameshwaram because, the official said, the acharyas had criminal cases pending against them. Leave aside the fact that anyone is presumed to be innocent until proved guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, or that Ms. Jayalalitha, the CM herself is clothed from head to foot in criminal cases, what is significant is the audacity of an official in a 80% Hindu populated country to block a Shankaracharya from performing his god ordained puja duties. His HR&CE counterpart In Andhra at Tirumala has pontificated recently that the Tirumala hills except a small portion do not belong to Lord Venkateswara, making a mockery of agama shastras.

The state government of Karnataka for example, soon after the Kanchi acharyas’ arrest, blatantly patronized the congregation of a Benny Hinn who is under US Internal Revenue Service investigation. US Christian organizations such as the Trinity Foundation have exposed him as a fake. Yet in the admiring presence of the Karnataka Chief Minister with his Ministers in tow, and Central Government Ministers, Benny Hinn was allowed to usurp the Bangalore Air force campus and hold a rally to denounce Hindu concepts and demonstrate his “cure” of the hopelessly and terminally ill or handicapped persons just by placing his hand, in the name of Jesus, on their heads. Bangalore police officers later told the media that the whole exercise was a fraud since the “ailing ” persons were trucked in from Erode in TN a week earlier and trained to fake the ailments and the cry of being cured on stage. Of course they were well paid for this deception. Such obscurantism was however extolled by the Congress Party leaders, while mouthing secularism. Benny Hinn in the end publicly boasted that a “friend of Sonia Gandhi” had helped to clear the way to make the Bangalore event possible.

The existence of nexus had thus tumbled out. Taking a cue other foreign Christian missionaries in trouble with the law such as Mr. Ron Watts, made a pilgrimage to Delhi and received relief from law enforcers on the same patronage.

These visiting fraud Christian missionaries have the intellectual endorsement for proselytizing activities from well established Christian leaders. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now known as Pope Benedict of Vatican, which makes him an acknowledged leader of Catholics world over, had released a Vatican document in 1997 titled Dominus Jesus in which both Hinduism and it’s sister religion Buddhism have been denounced. While releasing the document, the Pope has been quoted as saying that Hinduism offers “false hope” and is “morally cruel” since it is based on the concept of reincarnation that resembles “a continuous circle of hell”. He denounced Buddhism as “auto erotic spirituality”. US based evangelist Pat Robertson has declared that to liberate Hindus from their bondage, “missionaries will seek to convert 100 million Hindus” over the next few years.

For achieving this goal, even tainted money is welcome for any missionary from abroad. Thus, Mother Theresa whose proselytizing activities was perhaps the most camouflaged of all foreign missionaries in India, once wrote to a US Court judge, Judge Ito of Los Angeles not to hold guilty one of her contributors by name Charles H. Keating Jr. who was on trial in his court for criminally defrauding nominees of 17,000 persons of $ 252 million[about Rs. 1200 crores]. Mother Theresa’ plea to the judge was that since Mr. Keating had donated millions of dollars to her Missionaries of Charity he should be let off and not be found guilty or even be prosecuted !

The judge asked the Deputy District Attorney[equivalent of assistant public prosecutor in India ] to reply to her letter. Mr. Paul Turley wrote back to her giving the details of the case[ by then Mr. Keating was found guilty and convicted of fraud]. Mr. Turley in his letter advised Mother Theresa as follows: “Ask yourself what Jesus would do if he were given the fruits of a crime ? I submit that Jesus would promptly and unhesitatingly have returned the stolen property to the rightful owners. You should do the same. Do not keep the money”. Mother Theresa did not in fact hesitate at all. She kept the ill gotten money and ignored the advice !

According to the Ministry of Home Affairs, in 2002-03 private bodies with FCRA permission had received Rs. 5046 crores as contribution from abroad. In 2005-06 it is estimated by insiders these contributions at Rs 7500 crores, of which two-thirds was going to Christian missionary organizations. This hefty sum has been used essentially for conversion and to defame Hinduism. Without defamation of Hinduism, conversion is not easy for these missionaries.

Another route to defame Hinduism is the textbook portrayal of Hindu society. Already Swami Ramakrishna Parmahans has been described in disparaging terms in government prescribed text books. Traitor Raja Jai Chand has been described as a hero, and Prithviraj as a coward ! Since English language provides a fast track channel to India from abroad for propagation of ideas, books rubbishing Hindu gods and goddesses, sanyasis, and other icons are being published abroad and imported for use in India ‘s public schools. Lord Ganesha has repeatedly been portrayed in most hurtful terms. Shiva linga has been ridiculed.

Hence this august Acharya Sabha assembled here in Mumbai should resolve to fight this and other such atrocities on Hindu symbols and institutions by aiding mass Hindu mobilization against it.

[2] Demographic restructuring of Indian society.

People of India who declare in the Census that they are adherents of religions born on Indian soil, that is Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, and Jains constituted 84.21% of the total Indian population in 2001. In 1941, the proportion adjusted for Partition was 84.44%. This figure hides the fact that Hindus resident in undivided Pakistan have migrated to post- Partition India which is why the share of Hindus and co-religionists have barely reduced since 1941. In the area now called Bangladesh , Hindus were 30% in 1941. In 2001 they are less than 8%. In Pakistan of today, Hindus were 20% in 1941, and less than 2% in 2001. Such ethnic cleansing has not been noticed by anybody. If the figures are adjusted for this migration, then in the five decades 1951-2001, Hindus have lost more 3 percent points in share of Indian population, while Muslims have increased their share by about 3%. What is even more significant is that Hindus have lost 12% points since 1881, and the loss in share has begun to accelerate since 1971 partly due to illegal migration from Bangladesh .

The lack of Hindu unity and the determined bloc voting in elections by Muslims and Christians has created a significantly large leverage for these two religious communities in economic, social and foreign policy making. Although uniform civil code is a directive principle of state policy in the Constitution, it is taboo to ask for it because of this leverage. Politicians fearing backlash anger of Christian and Muslim preachers are also unable to defend the need for continuation of a law to ban religions conversions that occur through inducements and coercion. In the case of Tamil Nadu, in 2004 the US Consul General in Chennai called on the Chief Minister to seek reversal of such a statute [ http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2004/35516.htm%5D. He had been empowered raise this issue by a 1998 Act of US Congress on religious freedom. Incidentally, the AIADMK was administered a blistering defeat in the 2004 Parliament elections by a total consolidation of Muslim and Christian votes against the party because it’s government had got passed such a law. After the elections, a humbled Chief Minister Ms. Jayalalitha capitulated and got the law annulled. I have now put the US administration to test by asking the Ambassador in New Delhi if the US would be even handed by asking the TN Chief Minister whether she will withdraw all the bogus cases foisted on the Kanchi acharyas.

The continued rise in the share of Muslims and Christians in the total population is a threat to the Hindu foundation of the nation. And we have to find ways and means to meet this threat. Kerala is a state where the Hindu population declined from 69% in 1901. In 100 years to 2001, the share has fallen to 56%. Muslims are now 25% and Christians 19%. But Hindus share in agricultural activities has fallen to 24%, while for Christians the share has risen to 40%. For Muslims it is 33%. In commerce and industry too the same proportions obtain, while in foreign employment, Hindus share is just 19%, Muslims 49.5% and Christians 31.5%.

In the land fertile districts of Western UP, from Rampur to Saharanpur , Muslims due to a much higher population growth rate are now 40% of the population. Six of the 14 districts of Assam in the northeast are already Muslim majority, and by 2031, all fourteen will be Muslim majority if present trends of differential population growth rate and illegal migration from Bangladesh continue.

In northeast India , minus Assam , 45.5% of the population is already Christian. Every one of the seven sisters states has a galloping Christian population. Arunachal which had zero Christian population in 1971, now has over 7%.

These two communities today fiercely safeguard their control of institutions spawned on public money besides receiving funds from abroad. Take for example the educational institutions. Jamia Millia Islamia University has been reognised as a central university with liberal government grants. But 88% of the faculty is Muslim. American College , Madurai ‘s faculty is 66% Christian. It’s junior faculty is 95% Christian. Union Christian College at Aluva, Kerala has 83% Christian faculty. There are no exceptions. All institutions run by Muslims and Christians have grossly disproportionate share of their religionists.

Thus, differential application of family planning, non-uniform civil code, illegal migration, and induced religious conversion have together created a serious looming crisis for the Hindu character of the nation. We see what Muslim majority will mean to Hindus when we look at the situation in Kashmir . We can learn from how Muslim majority will treat minorities or even women of Muslim faith when we look around the world and study Islamic nations. This is because Muslim believe the world is divided as Darul Islam where Muslims are in a majority and are rulers, and Darul Harab in which Muslims are in a minority and are entitled by the Koran and Shariat, by hook or crook to transform these countries to Muslim ruled and/or Muslim majority. At present India is viewed as Darul Harab, and unless the Hindu majority compels or persuades the Muslim minority to enter into a contract to live in peace, whence India becomes Darul Ahad, the Muslim population will always play host to fanatics bent upon creating upheaval in India . That is why I am emphasizing that Muslims in India must declare that their origin and ancestors are Hindus, and that Hindustan is their matrubhoomi and karmabhoomi. Christians too have their view of the world as divided between heathens who have to be ‘saved’ by conversion and followers of Jesus Christ. Now with the publication of Dan Brown’s Da Vinci Code and revelations about Opus Dei organization, Hindus have to go on high alert about Christian missionaries from abroad.

Hence, Hindus have to hang together or ultimately be hanged separately. This is no inflamed psychosis. Not long ago, despite being the overwhelming majority, Hindus had to pay discriminatory taxes to the Muslim and Christian emperors who were ruling India . Lack of unity was the reason, and not poverty. In fact when the onslaught and enslavement took place, India was the richest country in the world. Within 150 years thereafter we were reduced to the poorest in the world. Now if the demographic restructuring described herein goes on unchecked, then the danger becomes several fold than before. This Acharya Sabha may therefore please address this issue and give a guideline to the Hindu society.

[3] The Rise of Terrorism Directed at Hindus

If one were to study the terrorism in Kashmir and Manipur, it is apparent that Hindus have been the special target. The driving away of the Hindu population from the Kashmir valley by targeted terrorism of Islamic jihadis is the single biggest human rights atrocity since Nazi Germany pogroms against the Jews. Yet it has hardly received noticed in international fora. Why ? Hindu population in Bangladesh has declined from 30 percent to less than 8 percent of the total population by deliberate targeted ethnic cleansing by Islamic fanatics aided and abetted by their government[see Hindus in Bangladesh, Pakistan and India’s State of Jammu& Kashmir: A Survey of Human Rights, June 17,2005, http://www.hinduamericanfoundation.org] and yet there is no outcry. Why ? This is because of the lack of Hindu mindset to retaliate against atrocities against Hindus. When in 1949, anti-Hindu riots took place in East Pakistan, Sardar Patel had declared that if the government there could not control it, then India was quite capable of putting it down for them. Soon after the riots stopped. Terrorist attacks against India and Hindus in particular thus is growing because we seem today incapable of retaliating in a manner that it deters future attacks.

According to the well known National Counterterrorism Center, a US government body, in it’s report titled A Chronology of International Terrorism for 2004 states that: ” India suffered more significant acts of terrorism than any other country in 2004″, a damning comment. India is suffering on an average about 25 incidents of terrorism a month. India ‘s Home Ministry in it’s 2004-05 Annual report to Parliament acknowledges that 29 of the 35 states and union territories are affected by terrorism. Moreover, all India ‘s neighbours have become hot-beds for anti-Indian terrorists training.

Because of a lack of Hindu unity and a mindset for deterrent retaliation, terrorists have become encouraged. In 1989, the Indian government released five dreaded terrorists to get back the kidnapped daughter, Rubaiyya, of the then Home Minister. Kashmir terrorists got a huge boost by this capitulation. When the Indian Airlines plane with 339 passengers was hijacked to Kandahar , Afghanistan , the government again capitulated and released three of the most dangerous terrorists. Today three of the most murderous terrorist organizations in Kashmir are directed by these three freed terrorists. Then there is the case of the LTTE which murdered Rajiv Gandhi. We have made no effort to apprehend the leader of the LTTE who had ordered the assassination. On the contrary, those MPs[of PMK, MDMK, and DMK] who publicly praise that leader and hold the assassination as justified, have become Union Ministers in a coalition led by the widow of Rajiv Gandhi !

Terrorism cannot be fought by appeasement. But that precisely is what the government is doing. Tragically, innocent Hindus have invariably been the victims of this capitulation. To combat terrorism, there has to be a determination to never to negotiate a settlement with terrorists. Citizens of a country have to be educated that there will be hazards when faced with acts of terrorism, but that the goal of the government will always have to be to hunt down the terrorists and fix them. Only under such a zero tolerance policy towards terrorism, will the ultimate good emerge. For example in the Indian Airlines hijack case in order not to risk 339 passengers’ lives the government released Mohammed Azhar from jail. But Azhar went to Pakistan after his release and formed the Jaish-e-Mohammed which has since then killed nearly a thousand innocent Hindus and is still continuing to do so. How has the nation gained by the Kandahar capitulation then ?

Hence I appeal to this Acharya Sabha to call upon the national political leadership to treat the fight against terrorism as a dharmayudh, as fight to the finish and a religious duty not to negotiate, compromise or capitulate to terrorists. The government must also safeguard the nation by adopting a policy of “hot pursuit” of terrorists by chasing them to their sanctuaries no matter in which country they are located.

[4] The Erosion of Moral Authority of Governance

The well known organization Transparency International has graded about 140 countries according to the corruption levels from least to the most. India appears near the bottom of the list as among the most corrupt. Recently The Mitrokhin Archives II has been published wherein KGB documents have been relied on to conclude that shamefully ” India was on sale for KGB bribes”. If India is the one of the most corrupt countries today and purchasable, it is because the core Hindu values of simplicity, sacrifice and abstinence have been systematically downgraded over the years. Wealth obtained by any means has become the criteria for social status. There was a time in India when persons of learning and simplicity enjoyed the moral authority in society to make even kings bow before them. Not long ago, Mahatma Gandhi and later Jayaprakash Narayan without holding office were here exercising the same moral authority over political leaders. In a very short period, that Hindu value has evaporated. India is fast becoming a banana republic in which everything, person or policy is available to anyone for a price. The proposal, now implemented in some states, to have reservation in government employment for Muslims and “Dalit” Christians is one such sell-out. Reservation quotas are strictly for those whom the Hindu society due to degeneration had suppressed or had isolated from the mainstream. But those who were ruling classes in our nation, such as Muslims and Christians, and that too for a total of 1000 years, cannot claim this facility. But some political parties in reckless disregard for equity and history, have sold out for bloc votes the national interest by advocating for such a reservation proposal. In such a situation the nation’s independence and sovereignty slides into danger of being subverted and then rendered impotent. This has happened before in our history, not when the nation was poor but was the richest country in the world. India then was ahead in science, mathematics, art and architecture. And yet because the moral fibre weakened, all was lost. We had to struggle hard to recover our freedom. But by the time we did, we had lost all our wealth and dropped to the bottom of the list of countries in poverty.

In this time of creeping darkness in our society, there are still venerated souls who draw crowds of people who come on their own expense to hear such evolved souls and follow them. These are our dharmacharyas, many of whom are sitting here in this Hindu Dharma Acharya Sabha. Just as Rshi Vishwamitra picked his archers and hunters to put an end to asuras and rakshasas, the same way I urge and implore this Sabha to pick a political instrument to cleanse the body politic of the nation. It cannot be done without Hindu unity in our democracy, and hence formulating a code of ethics and moral principles is essential for creating a meaningful and purposeful Hindu unity. The nation looks to you all on this today, for guidance in this hour of need.

VI

Therefore my call today is first and foremost for the undiluted unity of Hindus, a unity based on a mindset that is nurtured and fostered on the fundamentals of a renaissance [see my website http://www.indiaright.org for a detailed elaboration]. Only then Hindus can meet the challenge of Christian missionaries and Islamic fundamentalists. I can do no better here than quote Swami Dayananda Sarasvati:

” Faced with militant missionaries, Hinduism has to show that its plurality and all-encompassing acceptance are not signs of disparateness or disunity. For that, a collective voice is needed.”

Non-Hindus can join this Hindustani unity, but first they must agree to adhere to the minimum requirement: that they recognize and accept that their cultural legacy is Hindu, or that they revere their Hindu origins, that they are as equal before law as any other but no more, and that they will make sacrifices to defend their Hindu legacy just as any good Hindu would his own. In turn then the Hindu will defend such non-Hindus as they have the Parsis and Jews, and take them as the Hindustani parivar.

India can be only for those who swear that Bharatvarsh or Hindustan is their matrubhoomi and karmabhoomi. Since the task to defeat the nefarious forces ranged today against Hindu society is not going to be easy, we cannot therefore trust those amongst in our midst whose commitment to the motherland is ambivalent or ad hoc or those who feel no kinship to the Hindu past of the nation. We partitioned a quarter of Hindustan to enable those Muslims who could not live with Hindus in a democratic framework of equality and fraternity. Hence only those are true children of Bharatmata who accept that India is their matrubhoomi and karmabhoomi.

As Swami Vivekananda said to Hindus: “Arise, Awake and Go Forth as Proud Hindus”. But what does being a proud Hindu entail ? The core of what it entails can be found by gleaning the writings of our sages and interpreting it in the modern context. I have tried summarizing the distilled wisdom in the following axioms:

First, a Hindu, and those others who are proud of their Hindu past and origins, must know the correct history of India . That history which records that Hindus have always been, and are one; that caste is not birth–based and nor immutable. India is a continuum, sanatana. That ancient Hindus and their descendents have always lived in this area from the Himalayas to the Indian Ocean , an area called Akhand Hindustan, and did not come from outside; and that there is no truth in the Aryan-Dravidian race theory. Instead Hindus went abroad to spread learning.

Second, Hindus believe that all religions equally lead to God, but not that all religions are equal in the richness of it’s theological content. Respecting all religions, Hindus expect from others that respect is two-way. If Hindus are to defend the right of others to adhere to one’s own religion, then other religionists have to stand up for Hindus too. Thus secular attitude, as presently defined, is a one-way obligation for Hindus, and hence Hindus must reject such a concept because of its implied appeasement. At the same time enlightened Hindus must defend and protect vigorously those non-Hindus who identify with the concept of Hindustan . A vibrant Bharatvarsh cannot be home to bigotry and obscurantism since that has never been Hindu tradition or history.

Third, Hindus must prefer to lose everything they possess rather than submit to tyranny or to terrorism. Today those in India who submit to terrorists and hijackers must be vehemently despised as anti-Hindus. They cannot be good Hindus just because they are pious or go regularly to the temple or good Hindustanis just because they are citizens of India .

Fourth, the Hindu must have a mindset to retaliate when attacked. The retaliation must be massive enough to deter future attacks. If terrorists come from training camps in Pakistan , Bangla Desh or Sri Lanka , Hindus must seek to carpet bomb those training camps, no matter the consequences. Today’s so-called self proclaimed “good” Hindus have failed to avenge or retaliate for the attack on Parliament, Akshaya Mandir, Ayodhya, and even a former Prime Minister’s[Rajiv Gandhi’s] assassination. On the other hand those who defend these assassins and praise the terrorist organization behind them are central government Ministers today.

Fifth, all Hindus to qualify as true Hindus must make effort to learn Sanskrit and the Devanagari script in addition to the mother tongue, and pledge that one day in the future, Sanskrit will be India’s link language since all the main Indian languages have large percentage of their vocabulary common with Sanskrit already.

These five axioms if followed will constitute the virat Hindu unity, a bonding that Hindus need to be in a position to confront the challenge that Hindu civilization is facing from Islamic terrorists and fraud Christian missionaries from abroad, who are also aided and abetted from confused Hindus within the country. Without such a virat Hindu unity and the implied mindset, we will be unable to nullify and root out the subversion and erosion that undermine today the Hindu foundation of India . This foundation is what makes India distinctive in the world, and hence we must safeguard this legacy with all the might and moral fibre that we can muster. In this we can get great moral support from Hindus resident abroad because of their sheer commitment to the motherland. Free from economic constraints, aching for an identity, and well educated, I have seen them organize effectively to challenge the attempts to slander Hindu religious symbols and icon. Overseas Hindustanis have contributed during our Freedom Struggle, the Emergency and in enabling our acharyas to spread the message of the Hindu religion abroad. This has been done without demeaning other religions.

I urge and implore this Acharya Sabha, that since in a democracy the battle is in fighting elections, therefore to resolve to foster a Hindu consciousness that leads to a cohesive vigorous Hindu unity and mindset, so that the Hindustani voter will cast his ballot only for those candidates in an election who will be loyal to a Hindu Agenda drawn up by the Dharmacharyas.

Thank you, I seek your ashirvad and offer my pranams to all the Acharyas present here.

HINDU DHARMA ACHARYA SABHA

Second Meeting, October 16,17,18, 2005

in Mumbai, Maharashtra

Text of the Speech

By  Dr. SUBRAMANIAN SWAMY Ph.D (Harvard)

Chairman, Centre for National Renaissance, New Delhi

Fmr.Union Cabinet Minister for Commerce, Law&Justice

e-mail: ilky@vsnl.net

web: http://www.indiaright.com

A-77 Nizamuddin East

New Delhi-11013, INDIA

Tel: 91 98101 94279

Vedic Dharma

Vedic Dharma

(Sanātan Dharma, Mānav Dharma or Hinduism)

Compiled by

Arun J. Mehta

 

श्री गणेशाय नमः

Vedic Dharma

(Sanātan Dharma, Mānav Dharma or Hinduism)

Compiled by

Arun J. Mehta

<amehta91326@yahoo.com>

Edited by

Dr. B. V. K. Sastry

International Vedic Hindu University, Florida, USA.

Lila Mehta

&

Angana Shroff

Distributed free to anyone who is genuinely interested in reading about Vedic Dharma.


Preface

 

Why write a book on ‘Vedic Dharma’?

 

“It is already becoming clear that a chapter that has a Western beginning will have to have an Indian ending if it is not to end in the self-destruction of the human race…At this supremely dangerous moment in human history, the only way of salvation is the ancient Hindu way. Here we have the attitude and spirit that can make it possible for the human race to grow together into a single family.”

Arnold Joseph Toynbee (1889-1975)

British historian

For some time I have been sending short e-mails to my friends and relatives about our culture.  Now I would like to share this with wider audience through this booklet.

 

I am not an expert in this field and am grateful to Dr. B. V. K. Sastry of International Vedic Hindu University, Florida, USA for very helpful suggestions.  He went over the draft for accuracy.  I also appreciate comments and suggestions by my wife, Lila Mehta and daughter Angana Shroff.  I have tried to present this material in language simple enough so that a busy high school or university student can understand.

 

In Vedic tradition knowledge is given free to all deserving students interested in learning.  There is nothing original in this booklet.  Hence there are no copy rights.

 

All Sanskrut words are in italics.  Plural version of Sanskrut words e.g. Vedas, is written with – before ‘s’, like Veda-s.  Ā & ā are pronounced as ‘bark’.  European spelling of Sanskrut words are written in parenthesis as (Sanskrit).  Attempt is made to spell Sanskrut words as they are spoken in Sanskrut.

 


Table of Contents

 

1.         Dharma

2.         ‘Vedic’ ‘Sanātan’ or ‘Mānav’ Dharma

3.         Origin of word ‘Hindu’

4.         Culture

5.         Essence of our Culture

6.         Goals or Purpose in Life

7.         Our Basic Beliefs

8.         Important Values

9.         How can we preserve our cultural heritage?

10.       Vedānta

11.       Four Stages of Life

12.       Four Pillars of the Society

13.       Four Paths

14.       Different Methods Prescribed for Personal Evolution

15.       Three Gunās

16.       Samskāra-s

17.       Viveka Buddhi

18.       Yathā Yogyam Tathā Kuru

19.       App. I – Some Interesting Quotes about India

20.       App. II – Great Reformers of India – A Timeline


1.  Dharma

 

The word “Dharma” has no equivalent word in English.  It takes many English words to describe Dharma.  The word ‘religion’ is commonly used but a religion is a specific system of institutionalized faith or worship.  “Sanātan Dharma” or “Mānav Dharma” is not a religion but a way of life.  Everything we do in life, including eating and sleeping, is done according to dharma.

 

The word Dharma is derived from the root word “Dhri” which means to hold together or support in SanskrutDharma supports or holds together everyone and everything.  Dharma is also described as ‘duty’ – one’s duty towards herself, her family, community, country, and the world.  Knowledge about Dharma – what is right and wrong – will help guide us through our lives.  This knowledge should be taught when a child is very young and not at the end of life, during retirement or on deathbed.  It is too late to know how to lead a life when we have gone through most of it.

 

Dharma is the universal code of behavior towards all living creatures and nonliving things.  It is in the best interest of all and includes all the virtues like truth, nobility, justice, nonviolence, compassion, faith, duty, modesty, steadfastness, control over senses, loyalty, honesty, etc.  Dharma is also absence of negative tendencies like selfishness, lust, greed, envy, anger, arrogance, etc.  A life according to Dharma is necessary for success in meditation.  Dharma sustains and supports life in general, and helps to hold the community together.

 

 


2. ‘Vedic’, ‘Sanātan’ or ‘Mānav’ Dharma

 

Sanātan and Mānav are two Sanskrut words used for our Dharma.

Sanātan = Eternal.  A Dharma that has been there from the beginning or one that has no beginning or end.

Dharma = Code of Ethics, Code of Behavior, Religion, virtues, beliefs, moral obligations, traditions, righteous actions that sustain and support life, and hold community together.

Sanātan Dharma = Dharma or code of ethics which has always existed.

Mānav = Man (includes woman).

Mānav Dharma = Religion or Code of Ethics, or Code of Behavior for the Mankind.

 

Dharma has two parts – 1.  Sāmānya Dharma – duties that are common to all people.

2.  Vishesha Dharma – is special duties of husband, wife, child, student, teacher, farmer, business person, king, soldier, etc.

All these duties are described in ancient Indian literature.

 

What happens when “Dharma” is not followed?  There are many examples in history of societies and civilizations that have fallen apart.  Even today we can see so many individuals, communities, countries wasting their resources after unethical projects and leading their families & people to disaster.

 

 


3. Origin of word ‘Hindu’

The word ‘Hindu’ is not found in the Veda-s, the ancient scriptures of India.  People living along the river Sindhu were called ‘Hindus’ by foreign invaders who probably had trouble pronouncing the letter ‘S’.  River Sindhu flows from Himalaya mountain in the North and through North Western part of what was India.  Most of the foreign invaders came to India from the North-West.  The religion followed by these people was called “Hinduism” by the foreigners.  This is similar to how the aboriginal people of North America were called ‘Indians’ by Europeans who were looking for ‘India’ and when they first arrived in America thought they were in India.

The original people of India were called Āryan-s or the ‘noble ones’ and the country was ‘Āryavarta’.  The Āryan-s did not come from anywhere but had lived there for millennia and had developed a well advanced civilization.  Other names for their religion were – Sanātan Dharma (eternal religion), Vaidika Dharma (religion of the Vedas), Ārya Dharma (religion of the Ãryans), or Mānav Dharma (religion of mankind).  The name of the country ‘India’ was also coined by foreigners.  The Indian names for India are ‘Āryavarta’ (the land of Āryan-s) or ‘Bhāratvarsha’ (the land of king Bharat).

 

Further Reading:

a.   “The Essence of Hinduism” by M. K. Gandhi.  Compiled and edited by V. B. Kher.  Pub. Navajivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad, 1987.

 

 


4. Culture

 

Culture has been defined in different ways.  In “Foundations of Indian Culture”, K. M. Munshi has defined culture as:

“It is a characteristic way of life inspired by fundamental values expressed through art, religion, literature, social institutions and behaviour”.

It may also include education, scientific and technological advances, customs of the people, and the way in which people interact with each other and live in a society.

 

He mentions that the ‘Indian’ culture is one of the very few cultures that has continuously survived for quite a few millennia inspite of multiple invasions, brutal occupations by foreigners, and systematic attempts to destroy it.  Very little of the original Egyptian, Babylonian, Syrian, Persian, Incas, or Mayan culture is visible now.

 

How did it survive in India?  It was the unique system of dividing the society into four classes with assigned duties for education, defence, trade, and service (Varnāshram); maintainance of family traditions; and a system of ‘Gurukula’ schools that helped maintain the knowledge and culture in India.  Initially this (Varnāshram) was not a rigid system but depended on the capability of the individual.  As time went by this system became very rigid.

 

Knowledge of one’s cultural heritage is important for one’s self-esteem.  When people loose their self-esteem and self- respect, they do not do well in life.  It is very important  for the welfare of our future generations that they learn the positive aspects of our culture and heritage.

 

Further Reading:

a.   “Foundations of Indian Culture” by K. M. Munshi.  Pub. Bharatiys Vidya Bhavan, Mumbai, 1988.


5. Essence of our Culture

 

We can not possibly learn and pass on to our children all that can be included in our ‘culture’.  All of us may not agree what is essential and what is not.  The choice lies with the individual.

 

Our culture shows us how to live our life whether we are in India or North America or any where else.  It is therefore important to teach our children and grandchildren at the earliest age about their culture and heritage before their brains are filled with negative ideas about our ‘culture’.   Second reason for preserving cultural heritage is for the children to grow up having positive self-esteem, a good feeling about thmselves.  If children know that they are coming from a good, strong, and stable background they will have the confidence to handle any situation and do well in life.  If children learn at an early age that their culture, heritage, ancestors, were of inferior quality or that ‘they will burn in hell for eternity’ because of their religion then they are likely to have many problems.

 

“if all the Upanishads and all other scriptures happened all of a sudden to be reduced to ashes, and if only the first verse in the ‘Ishopanishad’ were left intact in the memories of Hindus, Hinduism will live for ever”

M. K. Gandhi, Harijan, 30-1-1937, p. 403-4.

 

“ॐ Ishãvãsya-idam sarvam yat-kincha jagatyãm jagat

Tena tyaktena bhunjithã mã grudah kasyasviddhanam

God lives in all this, the universe.

Enjoy what He gives you.  Do not steal wealth of others.

This shlolaka was composed more than 6,000 years ago.  For all the scriptures, full credit was given to the Lord and were called it His revelation.

Sources:

The Essence of Hinduism by M. K. Gandhi

Isãvãsya Upanishad by Swami Chinmayananda

Sri Isopanishad by Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupãda

 

The first part of the first shloka of ‘Ishopanishada’ tells us that ‘God lives in everything’ (in this universe).  If we accept that there is an ‘energy’ that forms the basis of all that exists in the universe, a ‘force’ that keeps us alive, something that can not be described nor can it be experienced by our senses (touch, smell, sight, hearing, and taste), ‘which’ can be addressed by any name or imagined to take up any form, and ‘that’ which has no beginning or an end (definition of God) THEN:

The Vedic values, Yama-s and Niyama-s will be easier to understand and accept.

Yama-s (Restraints)

Niyama-s (Rules)

1.   Satya (Truth) 1.    Mati (Discriminative intelligence)
2.   Ahimsa (Nonviolence) 2.    Tapa (Disciplined effort)
3.   Brahmacharya (mastery over all     senses) 3.    Santosha (Contentment)
4.   Asteya (Nonstealing) 4.    Svādhyāya (Listening to and study of                scriptures)
5.   Mitāhara (Moderation in appetite) 5.    Dāna (Charity)
6.    Dhriti (Steadfast) 6.    Japa (Repetition of Mantra)
7.    Dayā (Compassion) 7.    Āstikya (Faith)
8.    Arjava (Honesty) 8.    Ishwarapuja (Worship)
9.    Kshamā (Forgiveness) 9.    Vrata (Vows)
10.  Shaucha (Cleanliness of body and mind) 10.  Hri (Remorse)

 

 


6. Goals or Purpose in Life

 

“Our plans miscarry because they have no aims.  When a man does not know what harbor he is making for, no wind is the right wind.’

Seneca.

 

Our shāstra-s mention four goals in life:

  1. Kāma (desire) – fulfilling desires to satisfy senses e.g. thirst, hunger, sex, etc.  These are common to all in the animal kingdom.
  2. Artha (wealth) – earning money to buy food, shelter, etc.  This goal is considered higher than Kāma because it is not found in animal kingdom.
  3. DharmaKāma and Artha are achieved according to Dharma.  It is higher than both of them.
  4. Moksha – liberation from the cycle of birth and death or merging of Ātmā (soul) with Paramātmā (God).  This is the highest goal in life.  All activities in the fields of Kāma and Artha give temporary pleasure.  Moksha is permanent bliss.  According to Vedanta all human beings and even animals can achieve this goal.  One does not have to pray to a specific ‘God’ or belong to a specific religious sect.

Pranavah dhanuhu sharah hee ātmā

Pranava (mantra ॐ) is the bow, ātmā is the arrow

 

Brahma tat lakshyam uchyate

Brahman (God, Paramātmā) is the target (goal)

 

Apramattena veddhavyam

(With) steady (hand and focused mind) hit (the target)

 

Shara-vat tanmayah bhavet.

And like the arrow (ātmā) become one with the target (Brahman).

 

Mundakopnishad II.ii.4

 

Further Reading:

  1. “The Essentials of Hinduism” by Swami Bhaskarananda
  2. “The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Hinduism” by Linda Johnsen
  3. “Mudakopnisad” translation and commentary by Swami Chinmayananda.

 

 

 


7. Our Basic Beliefs

 

Hindus believe in many things – from one all pervading God to many Gods and even no God.  All views are accepted.  Everyone has the freedom to choose and nobody is permanently denied Moksha (salvation).  Following beliefs are some of the important ones:

a.       Ātmā (Self, soul, Jivātmā) and Paramātmā (Brahman, God)

 

The force or energy that keeps us alive is called Ātmā.  Our body becomes life-less when it leaves our body.  This energy can not be damaged or destroyed.  It is the same in all living things.  Paramātmā is the ocean of life-force from which all Ātmā-s originate.  After a process of evolution, all Āatmā-s merge with Paramātmā (God).  God can be worshiped in any form they wish to give Him or Her, any name he / she wants to call Her / Him / It.  All prayers are heard by one and the same Supreme Reality (God).

 

b.         Karma

 

Literal meaning of Karma is action.  However, Karma in scriptures includes the intentions behind the action, the means used in performing the action and the consequences of that action (Karma-phala).  The ‘action’ is good if the intention is unselfish and methods used are nonviolent.  We do not have any control over what follows the ‘action’ (the consequences).  Every act or even a thought has similar consequences.  We have choice only over our intentions and the means used to perform any action.  ‘Good’ thoughts and ‘good’ actions have ‘good’ consequences.  If we do something for others with good intentions and without expecting anything in return for ourselves, good things will eventually happen to us.  It is essential that we analyze our intentions continuously, do our best, work hard, perceiver, and leave the results to Him.

 

c.         Punarjanma (Rebirth)

“Vāsānsi jirnāni yathā vihāya

Just as we discard old clothes

Navāni gruhnāti naroparāni

Man takes new (clothes)

Tathā sharirāni vihāya jirnāni

In the same way (we) discard old bodies

Anyāni samyāti navāni dehi.

(And we) obtain new bodies.

Bhagawad Gitā, II. 22.

 

We believe that the soul leaves the body at the time of death and takes up another body (reincarnates).  We are all evolving spiritually and take many births until all our desires are fulfilled and karma-s resolved.  Then our ātmā (soul) merges with Paramātmā (Brahman, God) and attain liberation from the cycle of birth and death (Moksha).  Everyone, even animals, is entitled to moksha.

If at the time of death we have any unfulfilled desire or unresolved karma then we take birth in a new body.  We are born in a family and under circumstances according to our unresolved karmas and unfulfilled desires.  This gives us the opportunity to progress spiritually.

 

 


8. Important Values

 

Satya (truth), Ahimsa (nonviolence), and Brahmacharya (discipline, self-control) are some of the important values for people who follow Mānav Dharma.

 

Satyen labhyah tapasā hee eshah

 Samyak-gnānena brahmacharyena nityam

 

(The Self) is attained through constant practice of truth, self-discipline, and (life according to) the right knowledge (the highest wisdom, Dharma)

 

Antah-sharire jyotirmayah hee shubhrah

Yam pashhyanti yatayah kshina-doshaha.

 

(A person,) who has reduced all his faults (impurities) to the minimum (and purified himself), sees the luminous Self within himself.

 

Mundakopnishad, III.i.5 in commentary by Swami Chinmayananda

1.         Satya (Truth)

 

The official seal of India says:

 

Satyam eva jayate.

Truth (Satya) only prevails.

 

There are three meanings of the word ‘truth’:

 

a.   The dictionary meaning of truth is ‘what is real’.

b.   Second meaning of truth is ‘when our speech and actions are the same as our thoughts’.

c.   In Veda-s ‘Truth’ means what is real today, what was the same yesterday, a hundred years ago, and even a billion years ago, what will be the same tomorrow, a hundred years from today, and even a billion years from now.  In other words, some thing that does not change over time.  That ‘Truth’ is changeless, beginningless, endless, Paramātmā (God, the Supreme Power).

 

The first two (a & b) are to be practiced.  The third one is a goal to be achieved.  Different meanings of ‘Truth’ can cause confusion.

 

 

Satyam bruyāt, priyam bruyāt, na bruyāt satyam, apriyam.

Priyam cha nānutrum bruyād, esha dharmah sanātanah.

 

Speak the truth.  Say (use) pleasant (words).  Do not tell the truth in unpleasant words.

Do not say pleasant but untrue (words).  This is the Sanātana Dharma.

Manu Smruti, IV.138

 

Speak only that which is true, kind, helpful and necessary.  If we believe in ‘Ishā vāsya idam sarvam’ (God lives in all), how can we cheat anyone who has God within him by telling untruth?

 

2.         Ahimsā (nonviolence)

 

Ahimsā paramo dharma’

Nonviolence is the supreme dharma.

 

If we believe in ‘Ishā vāsya idam sarvam’ (God lives in all), how can we hurt anyone?

 

Nonviolence leads to the highest ethics, which is the goal of all evolution. Until we stop harming all other living beings, we are still savages.

Thomas A. Edison (1847-1931), American inventor

 

The practice of ahimsā includes not harming anyone in our thoughts, by words, or by our actions.  We can see all over the world that once the cycle of violence is started it is very difficult to control.  Ahimsā and universal love go together.  However, the greatest practitioner of nonviolence, Mahatma Gandhi, said that:

 

“My creed of non-violence is an extremely active force.  It has no room for cowardice or even weakness.  There is hope for a violent man to be some day non-violent, but there is none for a coward.  I have, therefore, said more than once…..that if we do not know how to defend ourselves, our women and our places of worship by the force of sufferings, i.e., non-violence, we must, if we are men, be at least able to defend all these by fighting.”

Mahatma Gandhi, Young India, 16 June 1927

 

Ahimsā paramo dharma, dharma himsā cha.’

Nonviolence is the supreme dharma, violence according to (the rules of) dharma (is a duty) too.

 

3.         Brahmacharya (self-discipline)

 

Brahmacharya means search for Brahman or moving towards Brahman, the changeless, beginning less, endless, God.  It can also mean moving around in the field of Brahman or behavior of some one who wants to attain Brahman.

 

Brahmacharya is learnt during first 25 years of life and practiced all through the life.  The main goal during this stage of life is to learn.  To achieve this we give up all the comforts and pleasures of life and concentrate only on our studies.  This training is like a ride in a hot air balloon.  To go up you need to get rid of all unnecessary baggage and just carry what is absolutely necessary.  The student learns to control all his/her senses (taste, smell, touch, vision and hearing).

 

It does not mean that later on in life, we do not enjoy good food or relationship between husband and wife but we try not to become slaves of these enjoyments and forget our duties or the ultimate goal in life.  The adults are expected to control all their senses because of their training during Brahmacharyāshram and set a good example for their children.

 

“Brahmacharya…means not suppression of one or more senses but complete mastery over them all…..Conquest means using them as my slaves.”

Mahatma Gandhi in Bapu’s Letters to Mira:  p.257

 

In computer jargon, it is ‘garbage in, garbage out’.  If we put in wrong data, the computer will give us wrong results.  We cannot expect anything good to come out of our mouths and in our actions if we put a lot of ‘garbage’ in to our minds through our eyes and ears (watching certain movies, listening to certain music, or reading trashy books, etc).

 

“Brahmacharya…..is purity not merely of body but of both speech and thought also.”

Mahatma Gandhi in Harijan:  February 29, 1936

 

 


9. How can we preserve our cultural heritage?

 

“Children have never been good at listening to their elders, but they have never failed to imitate them.”

                                                                                                   James Baldwin

 

a.   Learn, Practice, and Teach.  We, adults, have to set a good example by learning about our heritage and culture and put it in practice.

b.   Enroll children in Balvihar classes (Sunday schools that teach our languages, heritage, and culture).

c.   Pray or recite shloka-s in the early morning, evening and before meals.

d.   Read Indian classics like Rāmāyana, Mahābharat, Bhagawad Gitā, etc. to children.

e.   Speak and teach one Indian language.

f.    There are many CDs of devotional music available.  Expose children to these at home or while driving to school or on trips.  Teach children to sing classical or devotional Indian music.

g.   Bhāratnātyam dance is based on our heritage.  Encourage children to learn Bhāratnātyam.

h.   Perform simple Puja at home and explain the meaning of the ceremony.  Celebrate festivals and observe various Samskāra-s. Visit a local temple.

i.    Select healthy recipes, cook and eat nutritious Indian food.  Most of our spices in moderation and our dishes are being accepted as healthy alternatives to Western diet.

j.    Raise children with love and open lines of communication.  Treat little children like God with lots of love until they are four or five years old.  Get them to help in household chores from age three and as long as they are living with you, and when they are 16 years old treat them like a friend.

 

 


10. Vedānta

 

The word Vedānta is derived from the Sanskrut root word vid, which means to know or learn.  Veda means (sacred) knowledge.  There are four Veda-s: Roog, Yajur, Sāma, and Atharva.  The knowledge of Veda-s is timeless.  The end (anta) portion of Veda-s is called Vedānta (Ved + anta)Vedānta is also called Upanishad-s.

 

Veda-s were revealed to rooshi-s during meditation thousands of years ago.  The Upanishad-s are declarations of the highest spiritual truths and a guide for ‘How to live your life’.  Most of us ask our children to read Bhagawad Gitā when we are on the deathbed.  It is like reading the instruction manual for a super computer when we are ready to throw it in a junk yard.  Bhagawad Gitā is the cream of the Upanishad-s.  Pearls of wisdom are also found in Rāmāyan, Mahābhārat, Bhāgavat Purān, etc.

 

Further reading:

1.  “Sreemad Bhagawad Geeta” by Swami Chinmayananda. Pub. Central Chinmaya Mission Trust.

2.  “The Bhagavad Gita” by Eknath Easwaran. Pub. Niligiri Press.

3.  “The Teaching of the Gita” by M. K. Gandhi. Pub. Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan.

4.  “The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Hinduism” by Linda Johnsen. Pub. Alpha.


11. Four Stages of Life

 

Fortunately, for us our wise sages of ancient times had come up with a master plan for the whole life so that people will not loose sight of what they were supposed to do through different stages of life.  There was no reason to have midlife crisis on 40th or 50th birthday or when children leave home for University.  Life was divided in four stages or Āshram-s and definite duties ascribed to each stage.

 

1.         Brahmacharyāshram

 

The first stage of life is called Brahmacharyāshram.  It is up to the age of 25 years.  The main goal of this stage is to gain knowledge and practice self-discipline (Tapa).  Everyone devotes her/his time and energies to studying.  In the olden days, young children (boys and girls) used to live with their Guru or teacher.  The guru and his wife would look after them, feed them, and teach them – treat them same as their own children.  The students had to memorize all the knowledge taught by the guru and recite it when asked.  There were no books, no fancy libraries, TV, or computers with CD-ROM and internet.  This period was devoted to learning scriptures, literature, arts, math, and sciences.

 

Duties of a Student

 

The students respected their guru and gurupatni (guru’s wife) and followed all their instructions.  The guru, his family, and all the students lived a very simple life without any complaints.  The students helped in various chores including feeding and cleaning guru’s cows.  They all worked hard, ate simple food, lived a very simple life, and concentrated on their studies.  Even princes and sons of rich people were treated the same as other students.  They gave up pleasures of all sense organs (taste, touch, smell, etc.).  There was great emphasis on developing noble character (becoming an Āryan).  This helped the student lead a life of self-discipline.  There was no time to think about boy friend or girl friend, or worry about ‘who will go with me on the Prom night’.

 

Duties of a Teacher

 

The guru’s responsibility was to guide his students with love, kindness and affection 1000 times more than a father.  He had the patience to remove all doubts even if he had to answer the same question a hundred times.  The teacher lived by the highest moral, ethical, cultural, and spiritual values and the students learnt these by listening, observation, and practicing them in their own life.  In Vedantic tradition the teacher did not ask for any money for his services.  The king and voluntary contributions by the wealthy in the community supported the guru.

 

Today some studies go on well beyond the age of 25 years, e.g. Medicine.  If you decide to enter the next stage of life – Gruhasthāshram – before finishing your studies, then you may have to think about all the consequences.  One needs to consider his/her individual circumstances and decide.  If you look around you may see 18 or 20 year olds getting married.  Talk to them and see how difficult it becomes to study.  Rarely a supportive husband or wife can make a lot of difference.  Usually people are distracted from their studies because of increased responsibilities of family life.

 

Graduation Speech

The graduation speech by the guru outlines the duties of the next stage of life Gruhasthāshram (the householder).

 

Atha yat tapo dānam ārjavam ahimsā,

Satyavachanam iti tā asya dakshinā.

Chāndogya Upanishada, 3.17.4

The practice of disciplined effort, charity, ethical behavior, nonviolence, speaking the truth (by the graduates is the best) guru dakshina (payment to teachers).

 

Another graduation speech from Taittiriya Upanishad, I.9 is as follows:

 

Practice what is right.  (Live according to Dharma.)  Study the scriptures and teach them too.

Live up to the ideals learnt in Gurukula (boarding school).  Let the speech and actions be the same as the ideals accepted by the mind & intellect.

Personal sacrifice and disciplined effort are required of the householder.

The householder has complete control over his senses.

He works for peace and prosperity of the family and the community.

Fire signifies knowledge.  Fire in the kitchen is necessary for preparing food.  The householder works so that there is food in the house and knowledge in the family and community.

Daily puja (worship) is performed by the family as a reminder of the Dharma.

Guests are welcomed with warmth and treated generously.

Take care of the needs of the community, country, and the world.

Bringing children up is a major time consuming duty of the husband & wife.

In the olden days when world population was not a problem, having children was one of the duties too.

Protection of women, the weak, the elderly, and the country is also the duty of able-bodied adults.

 

Further reading:

1.  Discourses on Taittiriya Upanishad by Swami Chinmayananda

 

2.         Gruhasthāshram

 

After the age of 25, men and women get married, have children and earn money to support the family and the community.  This stage of life is called “Gruhasthāshram”.  It is a time for selfless service (Yagna).  Needs of the family are taken care of first and then it is extended to friends, community, and the country.  The husband and wife are expected to love and respect each other.  Their major responsibility is to bring up children who have noble (Āryan) characteristics and who in turn will become good citizens.

 

 

Yatra Nāryastu pujyante ramante tatra devatāhā

Yatraitāstu na pujyante sarvāstatrāphalāhā kriyāha

Gods rejoice where women are respected.

Nothing succeeds where women are not respected.

Manu Smruti, 3.56

 

Wealth is acquired and spent according to Dharma.  Support of children, elderly, and the community is also the duty of people in this stage of life.  Teachers are given the greatest respect and supported by generous contributions.  Dāna (charity) is given to deserving poor.  Any free time is spent in keeping up Abhyāsa (study) of scriptures and Satsanga (good company).

 

3.         Vānaprasthāshram

 

The next stage of life is “Vānprasthāshram”.  This starts at the age of 50 years and goes up to 75.  Main goal of this stage is Svādhyāya or serious study of scriptures and preparing for the ultimate goal in life – which is union (Yog) with God or Brahman.  One begins to devote more time for community service – again without expecting anything (money, position, or power) in return for your services.  Gradually all unnecessary material things and activities are reduced, life is simplified, and most time is devoted to sevā or service of community.

 

4          Sanyāsāshram

 

The last stage of life is called “Sanyāsāshram” – when we give up all desires and live like a homeless monk.  Any one can enter this stage at any time in life – like Gautam Budha did during Gruhasthāshram.  He left his wife, son, palace, and kingdom to find the real meaning of life.  Sanyāsi-s live under a tree on the outskirts of a town or in a temple, or in a jungle, and meditate.  They do not participate in activities of the family or society.  The main goal is to practice Tyāga or renunciation.

 

 


12. Four Pillars of the Society – the Caste System

 

The ancient society in India was divided in to four groups according to their capabilities, aptitudes, education, personal effort (sādhanā), and function they performed in the society.  These were the four pillars in four corners of a building supporting a roof overhead.  All four groups were all equally important and none was respected more than the other.  People were able to move freely amongst the groups.  Everyone was expected to live according to the dharma of their category.

 

This system was called VarnāshramVarna in Sanskrut means to describe.  It may also mean color, form, or quality – attributes that describe something.  When used for humans it may mean the person’s physical and mental ability and the function performed in the society.  Since there were four categories, this system of classification is also called Chatur (four) Varna.

 

Brāhmana-kshatriya-visham shudrānām cha Parantap

Karmāni pravibhaktani svabhāva-prabhaivah gunaihi

 

O Parantap (Arjun), the responsibilities (duties) of brāhmanas, kshatriyas, vaishyas, and shudras are distributed according to qualities they are born with.

Bhagavad Gitā, XVIII.41

 

Shamah, damah, tapah, shaucham, kshāntihi, ārjavam, eva cha

Gnānam, vignānam, āstikyam, brahmakarma svabhāvajam

 

Those with calmness, self control, disciplined effort, purity of mind and body, forgiveness, righteousness, knowledge, supreme knowledge (about Brahman), and faith in God are fit for the duties of a brāhman (brāhmin).

Bhagavad Gitā, XVIII.42

 

1.         Brāhmana-s (Brahmins)

 

Brāhmans were the intellectuals who became teachers and preachers.  They learn the scriptures and other arts and sciences, spent their lives running residential schools and performing religious ceremonies (yagna).  Preservation of Vedic traditions and knowledge was their duty.  Brāhmana-s were very spiritual and lived a simple life following the highest moral and ethical principles to set good example for the rest of the society.  They were supported by the king, the wealthy, and the parents of students.  There was no demand for any fees for their services.  Some selected few would seat in the court of the king to advise him on moral and ethical issues.

 

2.         Kshatriya-s

 

Shauryam, tejah, dhrutihi, dākshyam yuddhe cha api apalāyanam

Dānam, ishvaryabhāvah cha kshātram karma svabhāvjam

 

Kshatriyas are brave, (have) powerful personality, (can) make firm decisions, (have) ability to fight in war, (do) not withdraw from battle field, generous, and of royal behavior.

 

Bhagavad Gitā, XVIII.43

Kshatriyas were physically strong, well trained in the art of warfare, and use of weapons.  One of them would become the king.  In the days of king Bharat, the ruler was selected on the basis of his knowledge and capabilities.   The king’s primary responsibility was to protect the population, provide for necessities of life like food and water, schools, roads, etc.  Other Kshatriyas would be in the army.

 

3 &4.   Vaishya-s & Shudra-s

 

Krushi-gaurakshya-vanijyam vaishya-karma svabhāvajam

Parichayrātmakam karma shudrasyāpi svabhāvjam

 

Agriculture, taking care of cows, and trade are the responsibilities of

Vaishya-s.

Service is the duty of Shudra-s.

Bhagavad Gitā, XVIII.44

The third category was Vaishya-s who were farmers, businessmen, and other trades people.  The financial welfare of the society depended on them.

The fourth division was called Shudra-s.  They did all the hard jobs requiring unskilled labor and some very unpleasant ones.  They disposed off dead animals and removed garbage.  Gradually they became the untouchables because of the type of work they did and domination by other castes.  Many reformers have tried to improve their lot and now it is illegal to discriminate on the basis of caste in India.  One of the presidents of India was a Shudra.

 

 


13. Four Paths

 

“Each soul is potentially divine.  The goal is to manifest this divinity within by controlling nature, external and internal.  Do this either by work (Karma yog), or worship (Bhakti yog), or psychic control (Raj yog), or philosophy (Gnān yog) – by one, or more, or all of these – and be free.  This is the whole religion.  Doctrines, or dogmas, or rituals, or books, or temples, or forms, are but secondary details.”

Swami Vivekananda

 

The main goal of life is to experience the divinity within.  To achieve this union or Yog with the supreme, four major paths are prescribed.  We have the choice depending on our physical, mental, intellectual, and spiritual development, aptitude, opportunities in life, etc.  One can follow any one or a combination of more than one ways to achieve our goal.  Ultimately all paths end up in the same place.  The Yama-s & Niyama-s (values) are common to all the paths.

 

The four paths are:

  1. Bhakti Yog – path of devotion
  2. Karma Yog – path of action
  3. 3.            Gnāna Yog – path of knowledge
  4. 4.            Rāj Yog – path of Meditation

One may meditate in the morning, go to work in the afternoon, stop over for a bhajan session in the evening, and read scriptures before going to bed, all in one day.

 

1. Bhakti Yog

 

Is the path of love and devotion for a personal God.  Mind and emotions play predominant role in bhakti.  This is the path of total surrender to God.  God can be imagined as a mother, father, friend, child, wife, or husband.  Mirabai gave up her family, a life of luxury, and got completely immersed in devotion to Shri Krushna as if He was her husband.  In the end she was prepared to take poison rather than give up her devotion to Krushna.

 

Nine varieties of devotional activities are described in Bhāgavat Purāna:

  1. Shravana – listening to scriptures, bhajans, etc.
  2. Kirtana – singing bhajans, shlokas, etc.
  3. Smarana – remembering and recalling holy names e.g. Vishnusahastranām (thousand names of God)
  4. Pāda sevana – service at the feet of God in a temple
  5. Archanā – ritual puja
  6. Vandanā – complete surrender (prostration) in front of a murti
  7. Dāsya – being a servant of God
  8. Sākhya – intimate friendship with God.
  9. Ātmanivedana – total and continuous surrender to God or Samādhi merging with God.

 

2. Karma Yog

 

The literal meaning of karma is action.  Scriptural meaning of Karma also includes what precedes the action (intentions behind the action), the act – how it is performed and what means are used; and what follows the action (consequences of that action).  Every thought, word, and act has ripple effect.  All good thoughts, words, and actions have good outcomes.  This is the law of Karma.  We may not get the result that we were expecting or at the time when we were expecting it.  That is beyond our control.  The only control we have is on our thoughts, speech, and action – not on the result.  Karma (action) becomes Karma Yog when the action is performed without any desire for selfish gain, the action is performed according to Dharma, without anxiety for the result, and all credit for the outcome is give to Paramātmā in all humility.

 

The most frequently quoted shloka on Karma Yog from Bhagavad Gitā says:

 

Karmānyeva adhikārah mā phaleshu kadāchana

Mā karma-phala-hetur-bhuhu mā te sangah astu akarmani

 

Action is (your) only right.  (You) may not get the fruits (results that you expected or when you expected).

Do not work for the fruits of action.  Do not keep company of inaction (not doing anything is not an option)

Bhagavad Gitā Chap. II.47

Other shloka-s on Karma Yog are:

Yah tu indriyāni manasā niyamya ārbhate, Arjun

Karmendriyaihi karmayogam asaktah vishishyate

 

Whoever initiates actions after controlling all his sense organs with his mind (getting over his likes and dislikes) and without (selfish) attachment (to results), succeeds.

Bhagavad Gitā, III.7

Niyatam kuru karma tvamkarma jyāyo hee akarmanah

Sharirayātrā api cha te na prasiddhyet akarmanah

 

Perform (your) prescribed duty.  Action is better than inaction.

Even maintenance of (physical) body is not possible without action.

Bhagavad Gitā, III.8

Evaluate every action.  Consider the intentions behind the action and the means used in performing the action.  The ‘action’ is good if the intention is unselfish and methods used do not harm others.  We have a choice in selection of our thoughts and actions.  We do not have any control over what follows the ‘action’ (the consequences).  Every act or even thought has similar consequences.  ‘Good’ thoughts and ‘good’ actions have ‘good’ consequences.  If we do something for others with good intentions and without expecting anything in return, good things will happen to us.  We do not have any control over when or what the consequences will be.  It is essential that we analyze our intentions continuously. Do our best, work hard, perceiver, and leave the results to Him.

 

“In regard to every action one must know the result expected to follow, the means there to, and the capacity for it.  He who, being thus equipped, is without desire for the result and is yet wholly engrossed in the due fulfillment of the task before him, is said to have renounced the fruits of his action.”

Mahatma Gandhi

 

Atho khalvāhuhu kāmamaya evāyam purusha eeti sa yathākrāmo bhavati tatkraturbhavati tatkarma kurutepatkarma kurute tad-abhisampadhyate.

Bruhadāranyaka IV. 4.5

 

Our strong desire is the basis for our decisions and driving force behind our actions.  We get results according to our actions.  Thus our desires and actions determine our destiny.

 

Karma yog is a way of life.  It purifies the mind by removing ‘vāsanā-s’ (strong, deep desires) and helps improve concentration in meditation.

 

3. Gnāna (knowledge) Yog

 

Is the path of intellectual inquiry.  The root word gna means ‘to know’.  Gnāna means knowledge.  Vignāna is used for special knowledge – something more than ordinary knowledge.  In scriptures Vignāna is used for the spiritual wisdom or knowledge about Brahman (God).

 

Like all other paths the person following this path has to practice all the Yamas & Niyamas (moral values) first.  Taking this path of Gnāna Yog without the moral values can be very misleading and dangerous.

 

We can deny the existence of everything and everyone but we can not deny the existence of our own self.  The intellectual inquiry starts with the question about “Who am I?”, “Am I my body, mind, or intellect?”, “What is consciousness?”, “What makes me aware of the world around me?”, etc.

 

There are three steps in acquiring this special knowledge:

  1. Shravana – listening to a guru and reading scriptures.
  2. Manana – contemplation on what guru and scriptures have taught and on questions like “What is the ‘Truth’?’, “Why am I here?”, “What is the ultimate goal in life?”, “How should I lead my life?”, “What is ‘soul’?”, “What happens after death?”, etc.  The knowledge gained from this self-analysis may ultimately lead to ‘Self-realization’.
  3. Nididhyāsana – the contemplation on above questions leads to deeper and deeper understanding of mind, ego, and the divine reality (Brahman).  Ultimately it may lead to the destruction of individual ego and union with the Brahman (the universal force).

 

4. Rāj Yog

 

is also known as Astānga Yog or Kriya Yog.  The goal of Rāj Yoga is to destroy the ego and develop intense concentration.  Patanjali has described eight steps in this yog which include:

 

  1. Yamas (restrains) – are nonviolence (ahimsa), truthfulness (satya), control over all senses (brahmacharya), not taking anything that belongs to others (aparigraha).
  2. Niyamas (rules or practices) – are cleanliness of body and mind (soucha), contentment (santosha), disciplined effort (tapa), study of scriptures (svādhyāya), search for God or surrender to God as the top priority (Ishwara Pranidhāna).

 

The first two steps (yamas & niyamas) are common requirements for all paths – Bhakti, Karma, Gnāna, & Raj yog.

 

  1. Āsanas – yoga postures that are now being taught all over the world is a part of this yog.
  2. Prānāyāma – control of breathing by various exercises and techniques.
  3. Pratyāhāra – is control of senses or reducing input from all sense organs and thoughts about external objects.
  4. Dhārana – is preliminary stage of meditation when the mind is trained to withdraw from all senses and concentrate on an idea or object you want to attain.  Intense concentration is achieved for a short period of time.
  5. Dhyāna – is second stage.  The mind is still aware of its separate existence from the object of meditation (Brahman).
  6. Samādhi – is the final goal of meditation in Rāj Yog.  In the final state of meditation the individual looses her individual ego and feels one with Brahman (God).

 

Further Reading:

Bhagavad Gitā, VI.10-25, VIII.28

 

 


14. Different Methods Prescribed for Personal Evolution

 

If we look at our traditions we can find many ways by which we can transform our lives and evolve.  Our choice depends on our aptitude, knowledge, background, circumstances, etc.  We can select one or more of the following:

1.      Āshrama-s (stages of life) – Performing duties prescribed for each stage of life.  Āshramas teach us:

  1. Tapa (disciplined effort) in Brahmacharyāshram – first 25 years of life.
  2. Yagna (selfless service) in Gruhasthāshram – age 25 to 50.
  3. Abhyāsa more detailed study of scriptures in Vānaprasthāshram – 50 to 75 years.
  4. Sanyāsa (tyāga or renunciation of all attachments to worldly things & people) in Sanyāsāshram – last stage of life.

2.      Four Paths – following one or combination of two or more paths

I.       Bhakti Yog – Path of Devotion

II.     Karma Yog – Path of Action

III.    Gnāna Yog – Path of Knowledge

IV.    Rāj Yog – Path of Meditation

3.      Gunā-s – (basic characteristics of each individual) trying to evolve from tamas to rajas to sattva.

4.      Sanskāra-s – there are some forty milestones throughout our life that we can celebrate.  They remind us of our duties as we progress from conception to death.

5.      Deva-s (deities) – each of our deity has some characteristics that we can emulate.   Depending on our weakness we can select appropriate deity.  For example if we need strength we can worship Hanumanji or Durgamātā and work towards the goal of getting strong and brave.

6.      Festivals – there is a meaning or reason for celebrating a festival.  Learning about this can show us a path to further evolution.

7.      Rituals – There are lessons behind each pujā or kathā.

8.      Abhyāsa – study of Bhagavad Gitā, Rāmāyana, etc. and learning from them.

9.      Satsanga – keeping good company and learning from each other.

10.    Japa – repetition of a mantra or holy name.

11.    Dhyāna – Meditation

l2.     Yātrā – visiting holy places.  Holy places have an effect of making us more spiritual.

13.    Vrata – is resolution.  Some resolve to ‘not eat salt’, or ‘fast’ or ‘not speak’ on certain days.  This practice improves our will power.

 

 


15. Three Gunā-s

There are three main characteristics or qualities (guna-s) to describe all our thoughts, speech, and actions.  They are called Sattva, Rajas, and Tamas.  There are no equivalent English words.  They may be very roughly translated as good (Deva, god-like), passionate (Rākshasa), and bad (Asura).  They are like three primary colors – when they are mixed in different proportions they can make all the other colors.  The three gunā-s exist in all of us in different proportions and create millions of different individual and unique personalities.

 

The other meaning of guna is rope, a rope that binds our ātmā down to our body, mind, intellect, and our sense of ego.  The spirit (ātmā), the unlimited power, begins to feel the pain and limitations of the physical body because of this bondage with guna-s.

 

Knowledge about gunā-s help us to analyze our own personality, determine our own weaknesses, and take corrective action so that each individual characteristic changes from tāmasic to rājsic to sātvic guna.  This can be a road map for our evolutionary path to Self-realization or Moksha.  All of us are capable of improving ourselves.  All of us have all three gunā-s in different proportions in our thoughts, speech, and actions.  No one is perfect and everyone is changing all the time.

 

Further reading:

Bhagavad Gitā, Chap. XIV.5-20, 22-24; Chap. XVII.8-22.

 

1.         Tamas

 

Water buffalo, who spends most of its time soaking in mud, is a good example for this category.  There is a lot of inertia, little interest in any activity, no ambition, dull and sleepy all the time.  All of us are tāmasic when we are born, spending all the time in sleeping, eating, and excreting.

 

People with this tendency are ignorant of spiritual knowledge or higher values.  This is described as total darkness (in the mind).  They arrive at wrong decisions in life because of this ignorance (avidyā) and disorganized thinking.  Tāmasic vrutti (tendency) includes laziness, carelessness, fear, hostility towards all, and uncaring attitude.  It also includes criminal thoughts of breaking laws or rules and violent actions.  The color for tamas is black.

 

2.         Rajas

 

A rājasic person has lots of selfish desires for acquiring worldly goods, ambition for wealth, power, and lot of energy for activities.  He is always busy trying to earn money, buy things, hoard and protect his possessions, and enjoy.  She has very strong likes and dislikes, and a strong sense of ‘I’, ‘me’, and ‘mine’ (ego).  He is also prone to some negative qualities like anger, arrogance, greed, jealousy, and passion.  He may employ unethical means to achieve his goals.  Her mood fluctuates and has hard time deciding.  He is not focused, worries a lot, and gets agitated.  The color for rajas is red.

 

3.         Sattva

 

A sāttvic person has great desire for spiritual knowledge, has love in heart for everyone, kindness, compassion, and faith in God.    She has clear goals, knows what is right and wrong, and what her duty is.  He works hard to help others without expecting anything in return.  There is great control over all speech and actions.  There is absence of all negative characteristics like anger, greed, arrogance, jealousy, selfish desires, etc.  She is described as ‘pure’ & ‘luminous’.  A sāttvic person is anxious for peace and happiness for all and desire for true knowledge and wisdom.  This desire, however noble, still creates attachment.  For Moksha one has to go beyond this attachment of sattva to happiness & knowledge.

 

Evolve from Tamas to Rajas to Sattva

 

All of us are working under one of the guna which is predominant and others are dormant.  Vedic Dharma suggests that we evaluate ourselves (not others), find our weaknesses, make necessary changes, and evolve from tamas to rajas and then to sattva in all our activities.  This gives us a road map of the path for personal evolution.

 

  1. The first step is to realize the need for change.
  2. Then we make a decision (sankalpa) to change and find ways about how to change.  Initially we try to change everyone other than ourselves.  That does not work.  Then we decide to change ourselves.
  3. Next step is to observe our daily activities, even our thoughts objectively, as if we are somebody else.  Find one or two characteristics which are of tāmasic variety and work on them to change to rājasic to sāttvic.

 

Activities according to Gunā-s

 

1.   Long term goals:

 

Tāmasic – Long term goals are to sleep, eat, & destroy others.

Rājasic – Long term goals are for personal pleasure, prestige, power, & wealth.

Sāttvic – Long term goals are for unity, love, & welfare of all

 

2.   Attachment to:

 

Tāmasic – has false beliefs and delusion.

Rājasic – is attached to action and desire to acquire worldly objects.

Sāttvic – would like happiness & ‘True’ knowledge for all.

 

 

 

3.   Actions:

 

Tāmasic – performs actions without due thought about the results, or how actions are carried out.  He denies all responsibility and may get involved in criminal or violent activities to harm others or himself.  He has no humility and often procrastinates.

Bhagawad Gitā, XVIII.25, 28

Rājasic – performs activities with arrogance, pomp & show; for selfish reasons to gain personal possessions, prestige, power, wealth.  These activities create anxieties, agitation, bitterness, conflict, & anger.  Later they may lead to sorrow & depression.

 Bhagawad Gitā, XVIII.24, 27

Sāttvic – actions are performed without likes & dislikes for the action or the people involved, or insistence on a particular result.  Activities are carried out according to dharma and for peace and welfare of all.  Sāttvic person remains calm in success or failure.

 Bhagawad Gitā, XVIII.23, 26

 

4.   Food ( Bhagawad Gitā XVII.7-10)

 

Type of food

Tāmasic – person eats stale, tasteless, decomposed, or polluted food.

Rājasic – prefers spicy, bitter, sour, salty, or very hot food.

Sāttvic – person eats nutritious food that increases life and strength and promotes purity of thoughts.

 

Feelings of the cook

Tāmasic – cook has negative feelings of anger, hate, etc.

Rājasic – thinks about ‘What will I get out of this activity?

Sāttvic – cook has love in her heart and wants to share the food with all

Place

Tāmasic – person eats in bar filled with smoke

Rājasic – person likes fancy restaurant

Sāttvic – person prefers to eat at home or in temple

Quantity

Tāmasic – consumes a lot of food

Rājasic – eats a lot only if he likes the food

Sāttvic – person will eat just enough to maintain healthy body

 

Time

Tāmasic – eats at irregular hours or eats lying down

Rājasic – eats while working or walking

Sāttvic – eats quietly, slowly, regularly

 

Drink

Tāmasic – individual takes recreational drugs and drinks alcoholic beverages

Rājasic – drinks excitable caffeinated beverages

Sāttvic – prefers water, fruit juice, etc.

 

5.   Sleep

 

Tāmasic – person sleeps during the day or while at work

Rājasic – has difficulty sleeping and has excitable dreams

Sāttvic – enjoys restful, sound sleep

 

6.   Speech

 

Tāmasic – individual talks without thinking, tells lies, complains about everything, criticizes, and uses obscene language

Rājasic – talks about ‘I, me, & mine’ all the time

Sāttvic – person thinks & then tells the truth (satyam) in pleasant words (priyam),   and what is beneficial to all (hitam).  Her speech is encouraging, uplifting.

 

7.   Buddhi (intellect):

 

Tāmasic – thinks that which is morally and ethically ‘right’ is ‘wrong’ & what is ‘wrong’ is ‘right’.

Rājasic – is confused about what is ‘right’ and what is ‘wrong’.  He cannot decide what to do when there moral dilemma.

Sāttvic – person knows ‘right’ from ‘wrong’, what is according to dharma, and what is good for all and brings long-term security.

 Bhagawad Gitā XVIII.30-32

8.   Pleasure is derived from:

 

Tāmasic – person feels happy after getting up late in the morning, after getting  intoxicating drinks, doing harm to others, and destruction of property.

Rājasic – individual feels happy during activities that give pleasure derived from sense gratification.  Activity feels like fun in the beginning but ends up in grief later (Preyas).

Sāttvic – person is involved in activities that are good for all.  This may be difficult in the beginning but brings long lasting pleasure & peace to all (Shreyas).

 Bhagawad Gitā XVIII.37-39

9.   Keeps company of:

 

Tāmasic – people prefer the company of criminals

Rājasic – individuals keep company of people who will help him achieve his selfish goals to become rich & famous.

Sāttvic – keep company of good people (satsang) who live according to Dharma

 

10. Reading, listening to music, watching movies

 

Tāmasic – like trashy, vulgar, and violent entertainment.

Rājasic – prefers exciting literature and movies

Sāttvic – read, listen, and watch value based entertainment

 

11. Rituals (Yagna):

 

Tāmasic – performs religious ceremony without faith and knowledge about meaning of mantras or rituals, to gain power over others, harm others, get strength or wealth to destroy others, to torture their own body, and without giving dakshinā (gift to Brahmin).

Rājasic – individual performs rituals to gain personal prestige, profit, or power.  Dakshinā is given to Brahmana-s to show off wealth.

Sāttvic – person performs obligatory rituals with proper understanding of the meaning of mantras, without expecting any personal gain, and resolve to put them in practice.  Generous dakshinā is given with love and respect.

 

12. Charity (Dāna):

 

Tāmasic – individual does not believe in giving any charity or it is given to unworthy cause or without love and respect.

Rājasic – person regrets when he has to give dāna or gives to gain something in return.

Sāttvic – gives willingly, with faith, to the right cause, as a sense of duty, and without expectation of getting anything in return.

 Bhagawad Gitā XVII.20-22

13. Knowledge:

 

Tāmasic – person does not have any understanding of the ‘Truth’ (God).

Rājasic – individual can not discriminate ‘right’ from ‘wrong’.  He feels that all life forms as separate from each other and different from himself.  Other life forms are created for his pleasure.

Sāttvic – person feels the same ‘Paramātmā’ (life force) living in the whole universe that is same for all.

 Bhagawad Gitā XVIII.20-22

14. Three characters (brothers) from Rāmāyana

 

Tāmasic – character is Kumbhakarna who sleeps for six months, eats for six months and fights against Rāma

Rājasic – brother is Rāvana.  He was very intelligent, knowledgeable, strong, and brave but had weakness for Sita who was married to Rāma.

Sāttvic – brother is Vibhishana.  He left Rāvana and joined forces with Rāma to fight with his brother Rāvana who had abducted Sita.

 

15. Tapa (Disciplined effort):

 

Tāmasic – individual performs tapa with the goal of doing harm to others or for torturing his self.

Rājasic – person performs tapa for gaining respect, power, or wealth.

Sāttvic – person performs tapa to worship devas with faith and unselfish motive.

 Bhagawad Gitā XVII.14-16

 

16. Temperament:

 

Tāmasic – individual is lethargic and vengeful

Rājasic – is restless and ambitious

Sāttvic – is calm and focused

 

17. Tyāga (renunciation of fruits of action)

 

Tāmasic – person does not carry out his duties out of ignorance or laziness

Rājasic – individual does not perform his duties because of fear of outcome of the action or if the task is unpleasant or difficult.

Sāttvic – persons do all their duties without expecting anything in return.

 Bhagawad Gitā XVIII.9-10.

 

18. Worship:

 

Tāmasic – worship ghosts.

RājasicYaksha-s and Rākshasa-s

Sāttvic – worship Devā-s

 Bhagawad Gitā XVII.4

 

 


16. Samskāra-s

 

Life is a sacred journey.  So each milestone is celebrated through sacred ceremony.  Family and friends get together, lending support, advice and encouragement.  Samskāra-s are sacraments or holy rites that guide us and remind us about our responsibilities in life, inspire family togetherness and invoke God’s blessings. There are 40 Sanskāra-s for different milestones in life from the rite of conception to the last rites.

 

Some of the important Sanskāra-s are:

 

Simantonayana is performed between the sixth and eighth month of pregnancy.  Family takes special care of expectant mother during pregnancy since physical and mental development of the fetus is dependant on mother’s health.  Simant ceremony is performed to invoke God’s grace for a healthy baby and to remind the family to take good care of the expectant mother.  The mother is advised to eat fresh, wholesome, nutritious food, read inspiring books, listen to good music and have good, positive thoughts.  She is encouraged to avoid negative feelings of anger, hatred, jealousy, violence.  What she eats, drinks, thinks, watches, hears, reads, affect the baby very much.

 

Nāmakaran

When the baby is between 6 – 11 days old, the father whispers the baby’s name in the right ear.  Baby’s aunt (father’s sister) has the honor to cradle the baby and announce the baby’s name.  Family and friends give gifts to the baby.  The aunt receives special gifts from baby’s parents for this ceremony.  Personal names have meanings or special significance.  The child is named after a mythological hero or a God’s name.  The selection of a name for a child is very important because the child will emulate the characteristics of the mythological hero or heroine he/she is named after.  The hero or heroine becomes an inspiration for the rest of his/her life.  Every child should know the meaning of his/her name and the legend behind it.  People living outside of India should select names that are easy to pronounce for the local people.

 

Upanayana

The sacred thread ceremony is also known as Yagnopaveet.  The sacred thread has three strands to remind the child of his/her responsibilities towards the Guru, parents, and the community or nation.  This ceremony is performed at the age 7 or 8 years when the child is ready to learn the scriptures (Vedas) and the child is introduced to Brahmacharyāshram.  He is given a sacred thread, and taught Gāyatri Mantra.

 

Vivāh

Ceremony teaches the responsibility towards husband, wife, children, community, and the country.  The groom holds hand of the bride and makes a promise that his wife will be the queen of his home and goddess of his prosperity.  He also promises to be firm like a rock in his love and affection for her.  It is very important to learn about the vows and Sapta padi (seven steps) ceremony before getting married.

 

Antyesti

Is the last samskāra, a farewell to the departed ātmā.

 

 


17. Viveka Buddhi

 

Is the ability to discriminate between good and bad, merit and demerit, moral and immoral, ethical and unethical.  It also helps us distinguish between the Self (Ātmā, indestructible, or permanent) and the non-Self (perishable).  No book or teacher can tell us ‘what to do’ under all circumstances and hence we need to develop our own ‘Vivek Buddhi’.  Some time teachers and books may give us conflicting advice.  That is the time when our own viveka buddhi helps.

 

The interaction between body, mind, and intellect are compared with prince Arjun sitting in a chariot with five horses driven by Shri Krushna.  The horses are our five senses.  If we do not have any control over our senses, we can be driven off a cliff.  The reins controlling the senses (horses) is our mind.  The reins are in the hands of Shri Krushna or our viveka buddhi or conscience.  He guides the senses through our mind.  We all can develop this vivek buddhi.  It takes in to consideration past experiences and a long-term view of possible outcomes of any action.  What looks like a pleasant (preyas) and easy path may not be in the best interest of all (shreyas).

 

Some of the factors that interfere with vivek buddhi are:

  1. Strong likes and dislikes for people and things.
  2. Negative feelings like fear, anger, hate, jealousy, selfish desires, and arrogance.
  3. Inability to see the ‘big’ picture or the final goal.

 

How to develop ‘vivek buddhi’?  (Bhagawad Gitā, II.62, 63; III.40 – 43).

  1. Have a vision – where do you want to be at the end of the journey.
  2. Give up personal likes & dislikes.  (Bhagawad Gitā, II.68,69;  III.34)
  3. Know your duties for your stage and station in life.
  4. Perform actions for the welfare of all (Bhagawad Gitā III.19, 20), according to dharma, and with an attitude of service
  5. Accept results as a ‘prasād’ (blessings from God), give credit to and dedicate them to the Lord (Bhagawad Gitā, IX.27).
  6. Analyze – why, how, what next, etc.

 


18. Yathā Yogyam Tathā Kuru

 

In the end do what you think is appropriate.

 

Uddharet ātmanā ātmānam na ātmānam avasādyet

Ātmā eva hee ātmanah bandhu ātmā eva ripuhu ātmanah

 

You can lift yourself up and you can degrade yourself.

You only are your (true) friend and you are your enemy.

Bhagawad Gitā, VI.5

Last advice by Shri Krushna in  Bhagawad Gitā to Arjun was:

“Vimrushya etat asheshana yathā icchasi tathā kuru”

Think (about) all that (I have said) and then do as you please.  The choice is yours.

 Bhagawad Gitā, XVIII.63

 

“Do not accept what I have said because it has been so said in the past;

Do not accept it because it has been handed down by tradition;

Do not accept it thinking it may be so;

Do not accept it because it is in Holy Scriptures;

Do not accept it because it can be proven by inference;

Do not accept it thinking it is worldly wisdom;

Do not accept it because it seems to be plausible;

Do not accept it because it is said by a famous or holy monk;

But if you find that it appeals to your sense of discrimination and conscience as being conducive to the benefit and happiness of all; then accept it and live up to it.”

Gautam Buddha

 

 

Best wishes for a very fruitful and enlightening journey.

Shantihi Shantihi Shantihi.


Appendix I.  Some Interesting Quotes about India

 

“In India I found a race of mortals living upon the Earth but not adhering to it, inhabiting cities but not being fixed in them, possessing everything but possessed by nothing.”

Appolonius Tyanaeus, Greek thinker and traveler 1st Century CE

 

“Whenever I have read any part of the Vedas, I have felt that some unearthly and unknown light illuminated me. In the greatest teachings of the Vedas, there is no touch of sectarianism. It is of all ages, climes and nationalities and the royal road for the attainment of the Great Knowledge.”

Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)

 American naturalist, philosopher and writer

 

“India was the motherland of our race, and Sanskrit the mother of Europe’s languages: she was the mother of our philosophy; mother, through the Arabs, of much of our mathematics; mother, through the Buddha, of the ideals embodied in Christianity; mother, through the village community, of self-government and democracy. Mother India is in many ways the mother of us all”

                                                            Will Durant, American Historian (1885 – 1981)

 

“The ancient civilization of India differs from those of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Greece, in that its traditions have been preserved without breakdown to present day.”

Arthur Basham, Australian Historian

 

“India is the cradle of the human race, the birthplace of human speech, the mother of history, the grandmother of legend, and the great grand mother of tradition. Our most valuable and most instructive materials in the history of man are treasured up in India only.”

Mark Twain, American author

 

“India conquered and dominated China culturally for 20 centuries without ever having to send a single soldier across her border.”

Hu Shih, former Ambassador of China to USA:

 


Appendix II. Great Reformers of India – A Timeline

Veda-s are timeless scriptures that were revealed to Rooshi-s (sages) and passed on from one generation to the next by repetition and memorizing.  Great Rooshi-s did not leave their names or claimed copyright.  Research scholars have developed new chronologies based on position of stars as described in Veda-s and Purana-s.   For example, a Roog Vedic verse describes winter solstice at Aries that correlates to around 6500 BCE (8,500 years ago).  Scholars, from East and West, now believe the Roog Veda people who called themselves Āryan were indigenous to India, and there never was an Āryan invasion.

 

There is evidence of travel, trade, and exchange of knowledge between China, Persia, South East Asian, Eastern Mediterranean countries and India since prehistoric times.

 

5000 BCE – Well planned cities developed along Sindhu and Saraswati rivers

 

3100 BCE – Mahābhārat war – Dharma is taught by Shri Krushna to Arjun and recorded by Ved Vyās as Bhagawad Gitā.  People were performing rituals to obtain wealth and power for themselves.  Some pandits were wasting time on philosophical and religious discussions.  Bhagawad Gitā emphasizes ‘selfless service’ for the benefit of the society and ‘performance of one’s own duty without expecting anything in return’.  It becomes a handbook on how to live one’s life.

 

2600 – 2000 BCE – Sindu-Saraswati river civilization reaches its peak.

 

2000 BCE – Saraswati river dries up and people migrate.

 

600 BCE – A unified Bhāratiya culture has developed.  Sushruta develops complex surgical techniques like reconstruction of nose.

 

599 to 527 BCE – Mahāvir Swami is born in a Hindu family.  He emphasized Ahimsā, Moksha, and Bhrahmacharya to address weaknesses in the society such as violence and sensuous pleasure oriented activities.

 

563 to 483 BCE – Gautam Buddha is born in a Hindu family.  He also addressed weaknesses in the society like violence, reliance on rituals to gain wealth & power, endless intellectual discussions on religious practices, etc. and suggested ‘eight fold path’ consisting of right thought, right speech, right action etc.

 

321 BCE – Maurya dynasty rules over whole of India.  Great advances in the fields of art, science, economy, music, dance, architecture, astronomy, etc. are achieved.

 

200 BCE – Tiruvalluvar writes ‘Tirukural’ – a treatise on ethics.

 

320 CE – Gupta dynasty rules over all of India.

 

800 CE – Shri Ādi Shankarāchārya revives Hinduism.

 

1469 CE – Guru Nānak is born in a Hindu family.  Hindus were divided by caste etc. and were being persecuted by Muslims.  He taught equality of all and his followers later advocated carrying Kirpan for self-defence.

 

1869 to 1948 – Mahātma Gāndhi – for the first time in the history of the world mighty British and other European empires are destroyed by civil disobedience movement based on truth and nonviolence and started by Mahatma Gandhi.  He lived according to the teachings of Bhagawad Gitā.

 

Further Readings:

a.   “A History of India and Hindu Dharma”, Hinduism Today, December 1994.

b.   Chronological Framework of Indian Protohistory-The Lower Limit by Dr. S.B. Roy, published in The Journal of the Baroda Oriental Institute, March-June 1983.

c.   “Gods, Sages and Kings by David Frawley Ph.D.

d.   “A Historical Atlas of South Asia” by Prof. Joseph E. Schwartzberg, Prof. Shiva G. Bajpai PhD., and Dr. Raj B. Mathur, Dept. of Asian Studies at California State University.