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A Sanskrit Book, if “Words Read in Correct Direction, it is Ramayana” and “if Read in Reverse, it is Bhagwat”!!

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1 of 3:

Can you imagine? Is it ever possible? But before that here is a hint: It is about Sanskrit language; it is about the genius of a 17th century Sanskrit scholar from South India – from Kanchpuram; it is about the greatness of Sanskrit language; also incidentally it is about the meanness of those fake or ignorant Indologists who are out to prove to the world that Sanskrit language has been the vehicle in the hands of ‘kings’s sycophant poets’ to lend legitimacy to the power of those kings; it is about correcting the misconception created by such Indologists – like American Indologist Sheldon Pollack – about the true value and beauty of Sanskrit language.

There is a Sanskrit book titled “Raghavyadviyam” written by “Venkatadhwari” living in 17th century in Kanchipuram situated in South India, which has an unheard of quality. If one reads in this book words in the normal direction – from left to right – it is about the life of Lord Rama and if the words are read in the reverse direction – from back to front – it is about Lord Krishna. It contains  30 Sanskrit Slokas and when you read the words of of each Sloka in the reverse direction, they become 30 more. In all, thus, there are 60 Slokas. This book is also called “Anulom-Vilom Kavya”, that is, a “poem that is read in right and reverse”.

2 of 3:

By: Sanjay Vaidya

Amazing Sanskrit verses: It is so dismaying that we live in ignorance of our own wonderful literary heritage. I wonder how many of us have heard of the following mind blowing book.

The sentence ‘Able was I ere I saw Elba’ is often quoted as a great example of a palindromic sentence in English as it can be read in reverse too. This is said to be created in the 17th century.

Now, consider the following:

A Sanskrit poet by name Daivagjna Surya Pandita wrote a Sanskrit work by name “Ramakrishna Viloma Kaavyam” in the 14th century (English-equivalent of the word ‘viloma’ is ‘inverse’). This book is supposed to have 40 slokas (a sloka is a Sanskrit poem). Each sloka makes sense both when read in from the beginning of the sloka to the end AS WELL AS from the end to the beginning of the sloka (a sort of palindrome).

Now comes the best part. When each sloka is read in the forward direction, the book deals with the story of Ramayana and when each sloka is read in the reverse direction, the book deals with the story of Maha Bharata.

One sloka is given below (in devanagari font)

तां भूसुता मुक्ति मुदारहासं
वंदेयतो लव्य भवं दयाश्री

The same sloka, read in backward direction is given below:

श्री यादवं भव्य लतोय देवं
संहारदामुक्ति मुता सुभूतां

In the first sloka, भूसुता implies Sita and hence, Ramayana story and in the second sloka, श्री यादवं implies Lord Krishna.

The meaning of the first sloka is “I pray to Sita, the incarnation of Lakshmi who is affectionate towards a smiling Lava (Sita’s son)”.

The meaning of the second sloka is “The teachings of Gita, bestowed upon us by Lord Krishna who draws people towards him with his benevolence, destroy evil and are close to our heart”

And there are 39 more shlokas like this.

Need one say more about Sanskrit or the people who created many wonders in ancient India?

3 of 3:

By: Vaibhav K. Vashishtha

क्या ऐसा संभव है कि जब आप किताब को सीधा पढ़े तो रामायण की कथा पढ़ी जाए और जब उसी किताब में लिखे शब्दों को उल्टा करके पढ़े तो कृष्ण भागवत की कथा सुनाई दे।

जी हां, कांचीपुरम के 17वीं शदी के कवि वेंकटाध्वरि रचित ग्रन्थ “राघवयादवीयम्” ऐसा ही एक अद्भुत ग्रन्थ है।इस ग्रन्थ को ‘अनुलोम-विलोम काव्य’ भी कहा जाता है।

पूरे ग्रन्थ में केवल 30 श्लोक हैं। इन श्लोकों को सीधे-सीधे पढ़ते जाएँ, तो रामकथा बनती है और विपरीत (उल्टा) क्रम में पढ़ने पर कृष्णकथा। इस प्रकार हैं तो केवल 30 श्लोक, लेकिन कृष्णकथा के भी 30 श्लोक जोड़ लिए जाएँ तो बनते हैं 60 श्लोक।

पुस्तक के नाम से भी यह प्रदर्शित होता है, राघव (राम) + यादव (कृष्ण) के चरित को बताने वाली गाथा है “राघवयादवीयम।”

उदाहरण के तौर पर पुस्तक का पहला श्लोक हैः (Example – first Sloka):

“वंदेऽहं देवं तं श्रीतं रन्तारं कालं भासा यः ।
रामो रामाधीराप्यागो लीलामारायोध्ये वासे ॥ १॥”

अर्थात:
“मैं उन भगवान श्रीराम के चरणों में प्रणाम करता हूं,

जो जिनके ह्रदय में सीताजी रहती है तथा जिन्होंने अपनी पत्नी सीता के लिए सहयाद्री की पहाड़ियों से होते हुए लंका जाकर रावण का वध किया तथा वनवास पूरा कर अयोध्या वापिस लौटे।”

(Meaning): “I bow myself with reverance in the feet of Lord Rama, in whose heart is seated Sitaji and who had, by crossing the mountains of Sahayadri, gone to Lanka, killed Ravana and (who) on completing the exile had come back to Ayodhya.”

विलोमम्: (Reverse):

“सेवाध्येयो रामालाली गोप्याराधी भारामोराः ।
यस्साभालंकारं तारं तं श्रीतं वन्देऽहं देवम् ॥ १॥”

अर्थात:
“मैं रूक्मिणी तथा गोपियों के पूज्य भगवान श्रीकृष्ण के
चरणों में प्रणाम करता हूं, जो सदा ही मां लक्ष्मी के साथ
विराजमान है तथा जिनकी शोभा समस्त जवाहरातों की शोभा हर लेती है।”

(Meaning): I bow myself with reverence in the feet of Lord Sri Krishna, who is worshiped by Rukamani and Gopis, who is always seated along with Mother Laxmi, and whose beauty is more than the beauty of all the jewels.”

” राघवयादवीयम” के ये 60 संस्कृत श्लोक इस प्रकार हैं:- (60 Slokas from ‘Raghavyadaviyam’):

राघवयादवीयम् रामस्तोत्राणि
वंदेऽहं देवं तं श्रीतं रन्तारं कालं भासा यः ।
रामो रामाधीराप्यागो लीलामारायोध्ये वासे ॥ १॥

विलोमम्:
सेवाध्येयो रामालाली गोप्याराधी भारामोराः ।
यस्साभालंकारं तारं तं श्रीतं वन्देऽहं देवम् ॥ १॥

साकेताख्या ज्यायामासीद्याविप्रादीप्तार्याधारा ।
पूराजीतादेवाद्याविश्वासाग्र्यासावाशारावा ॥ २॥

विलोमम्:
वाराशावासाग्र्या साश्वाविद्यावादेताजीरापूः ।
राधार्यप्ता दीप्राविद्यासीमायाज्याख्याताकेसा ॥ २॥

कामभारस्स्थलसारश्रीसौधासौघनवापिका ।
सारसारवपीनासरागाकारसुभूरुभूः ॥ ३॥

विलोमम्:
भूरिभूसुरकागारासनापीवरसारसा ।
कापिवानघसौधासौ श्रीरसालस्थभामका ॥ ३॥

रामधामसमानेनमागोरोधनमासताम् ।
नामहामक्षररसं ताराभास्तु न वेद या ॥ ४॥

विलोमम्:
यादवेनस्तुभारातासंररक्षमहामनाः ।
तां समानधरोगोमाननेमासमधामराः ॥ ४॥

यन् गाधेयो योगी रागी वैताने सौम्ये सौख्येसौ ।
तं ख्यातं शीतं स्फीतं भीमानामाश्रीहाता त्रातम् ॥ ५॥

विलोमम्:
तं त्राताहाश्रीमानामाभीतं स्फीत्तं शीतं ख्यातं ।
सौख्ये सौम्येसौ नेता वै गीरागीयो योधेगायन् ॥ ५॥

मारमं सुकुमाराभं रसाजापनृताश्रितं ।
काविरामदलापागोसमावामतरानते ॥ ६॥

विलोमम्:
तेन रातमवामास गोपालादमराविका ।
तं श्रितानृपजासारंभ रामाकुसुमं रमा ॥ ६॥

रामनामा सदा खेदभावे दया-वानतापीनतेजारिपावनते ।
कादिमोदासहातास्वभासारसा-मेसुगोरेणुकागात्रजे भूरुमे ॥ ७॥

विलोमम्:
मेरुभूजेत्रगाकाणुरेगोसुमे-सारसा भास्वताहासदामोदिका ।
तेन वा पारिजातेन पीता नवायादवे भादखेदासमानामरा ॥ ७॥

सारसासमधाताक्षिभूम्नाधामसु सीतया ।
साध्वसाविहरेमेक्षेम्यरमासुरसारहा ॥ ८॥

विलोमम्:
हारसारसुमारम्यक्षेमेरेहविसाध्वसा ।
यातसीसुमधाम्नाभूक्षिताधामससारसा ॥ ८॥

सागसाभरतायेभमाभातामन्युमत्तया ।
सात्रमध्यमयातापेपोतायाधिगतारसा ॥ ९॥

विलोमम्:
सारतागधियातापोपेतायामध्यमत्रसा ।
यात्तमन्युमताभामा भयेतारभसागसा ॥ ९॥

तानवादपकोमाभारामेकाननदाससा ।
यालतावृद्धसेवाकाकैकेयीमहदाहह ॥ १०॥

विलोमम्:
हहदाहमयीकेकैकावासेद्ध्वृतालया ।
सासदाननकामेराभामाकोपदवानता ॥ १०॥

वरमानदसत्यासह्रीतपित्रादरादहो ।
भास्वरस्थिरधीरोपहारोरावनगाम्यसौ ॥ ११॥

विलोमम्:
सौम्यगानवरारोहापरोधीरस्स्थिरस्वभाः ।
होदरादत्रापितह्रीसत्यासदनमारवा ॥ ११॥

यानयानघधीतादा रसायास्तनयादवे ।
सागताहिवियाताह्रीसतापानकिलोनभा ॥ १२॥

विलोमम्:
भानलोकिनपातासह्रीतायाविहितागसा ।
वेदयानस्तयासारदाताधीघनयानया ॥ १२॥

रागिराधुतिगर्वादारदाहोमहसाहह ।
यानगातभरद्वाजमायासीदमगाहिनः ॥ १३॥

विलोमम्:
नोहिगामदसीयामाजद्वारभतगानया ।
हह साहमहोदारदार्वागतिधुरागिरा ॥ १३॥

यातुराजिदभाभारं द्यां वमारुतगन्धगम् ।
सोगमारपदं यक्षतुंगाभोनघयात्रया ॥ १४॥

विलोमम्:
यात्रयाघनभोगातुं क्षयदं परमागसः ।
गन्धगंतरुमावद्यं रंभाभादजिरा तु या ॥ १४॥

दण्डकां प्रदमोराजाल्याहतामयकारिहा ।
ससमानवतानेनोभोग्याभोनतदासन ॥ १५॥

विलोमम्:
नसदातनभोग्याभो नोनेतावनमास सः ।
हारिकायमताहल्याजारामोदप्रकाण्डदम् ॥ १५॥

सोरमारदनज्ञानोवेदेराकण्ठकुंभजम् ।
तं द्रुसारपटोनागानानादोषविराधहा ॥ १६॥

विलोमम्:
हाधराविषदोनानागानाटोपरसाद्रुतम् ।
जम्भकुण्ठकरादेवेनोज्ञानदरमारसः ॥ १६॥

सागमाकरपाताहाकंकेनावनतोहिसः ।
न समानर्दमारामालंकाराजस्वसा रतम् ॥ १७ विलोमम्:
तं रसास्वजराकालंमारामार्दनमासन ।
सहितोनवनाकेकं हातापारकमागसा ॥ १७॥

तां स गोरमदोश्रीदो विग्रामसदरोतत ।
वैरमासपलाहारा विनासा रविवंशके ॥ १८॥

विलोमम्:
केशवं विरसानाविराहालापसमारवैः ।
ततरोदसमग्राविदोश्रीदोमरगोसताम् ॥ १८॥

गोद्युगोमस्वमायोभूदश्रीगखरसेनया ।
सहसाहवधारोविकलोराजदरातिहा ॥ १९॥

विलोमम्:
हातिरादजरालोकविरोधावहसाहस ।
यानसेरखगश्रीद भूयोमास्वमगोद्युगः ॥ १९॥

हतपापचयेहेयो लंकेशोयमसारधीः ।
राजिराविरतेरापोहाहाहंग्रहमारघः ॥ २०॥

विलोमम्:
घोरमाहग्रहंहाहापोरातेरविराजिराः ।
धीरसामयशोकेलं यो हेये च पपात ह ॥ २०॥

ताटकेयलवादेनोहारीहारिगिरासमः ।

हासहायजनासीतानाप्तेनादमनाभुवि ॥ २१॥

विलोमम्:
विभुनामदनाप्तेनातासीनाजयहासहा ।
ससरागिरिहारीहानोदेवालयकेटता ॥ २१॥

भारमाकुदशाकेनाशराधीकुहकेनहा ।
चारुधीवनपालोक्या वैदेहीमहिताहृता ॥ २२॥

विलोमम्:
ताहृताहिमहीदेव्यैक्यालोपानवधीरुचा ।
हानकेहकुधीराशानाकेशादकुमारभाः ॥ २२॥

हारितोयदभोरामावियोगेनघवायुजः ।
तंरुमामहितोपेतामोदोसारज्ञरामयः ॥ २३॥

विलोमम्:
योमराज्ञरसादोमोतापेतोहिममारुतम् ।
जोयुवाघनगेयोविमाराभोदयतोरिहा ॥ २३॥

भानुभानुतभावामासदामोदपरोहतं ।
तंहतामरसाभक्षोतिराताकृतवासविम् ॥ २४॥

विलोमम्:
विंसवातकृतारातिक्षोभासारमताहतं ।
तं हरोपदमोदासमावाभातनुभानुभाः ॥ २४॥

हंसजारुद्धबलजापरोदारसुभाजिनि ।
राजिरावणरक्षोरविघातायरमारयम् ॥ २५॥

विलोमम्:
यं रमारयताघाविरक्षोरणवराजिरा ।
निजभासुरदारोपजालबद्धरुजासहम् ॥ २५॥

सागरातिगमाभातिनाकेशोसुरमासहः ।
तंसमारुतजंगोप्ताभादासाद्यगतोगजम् ॥ २६॥

विलोमम्:
जंगतोगद्यसादाभाप्तागोजंतरुमासतं ।
हस्समारसुशोकेनातिभामागतिरागसा ॥ २६॥

वीरवानरसेनस्य त्राताभादवता हि सः ।
तोयधावरिगोयादस्ययतोनवसेतुना ॥ २७॥

विलोमम्
नातुसेवनतोयस्यदयागोरिवधायतः ।
सहितावदभातात्रास्यनसेरनवारवी ॥ २७॥

हारिसाहसलंकेनासुभेदीमहितोहिसः ।
चारुभूतनुजोरामोरमाराधयदार्तिहा ॥ २८॥

विलोमम्
हार्तिदायधरामारमोराजोनुतभूरुचा ।
सहितोहिमदीभेसुनाकेलंसहसारिहा ॥ २८॥

नालिकेरसुभाकारागारासौसुरसापिका ।
रावणारिक्षमेरापूराभेजे हि ननामुना ॥ २९॥

विलोमम्:
नामुनानहिजेभेरापूरामेक्षरिणावरा ।
कापिसारसुसौरागाराकाभासुरकेलिना ॥ २९॥

साग्र्यतामरसागारामक्षामाघनभारगौः ॥
निजदेपरजित्यास श्रीरामे सुगराजभा ॥ ३०॥

विलोमम्:
भाजरागसुमेराश्रीसत्याजिरपदेजनि ।स
गौरभानघमाक्षामरागासारमताग्र्यसा ॥ ३०॥

॥ इति श्रीवेङ्कटाध्वरि कृतं श्री ।।

(English part by: Shreepal Singh)


Enter Rajinikanth: What to Expect in Tamilnadu Politics?

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By: R. Veera Raghvan

(Written at the eve of new year 2018)

As 2017 was closing, Tamil actor Rajinikanth let the thunder out of the clouds, having led the people of Tamil Nadu to expect the big sound for over two decades.

Rajinikanth, or Rajini as he is well known, firmly announced last 31stDecember that he was entering politics. He further declared he would contest all the 234 TN assembly seats at the next polls – due in 2021 – and would form a political party prior to that election.

DMK and AIADMK, the two major Dravidian political parties – as also a few active smaller ones – of Tamil Nadu, now fear that some support ground is slipping under their feet. They know that Rajinikanth has captured the imagination of Tamil moviegoers and the Tamil public, more than any other actor, and that it could yield him huge votes. They know that their leaders have no great attraction about them and that Rajini’s fans and admirers are unlikely to switch camps – at any rate in significant numbers. As for DMK leader Karunanidhi who had for long charmed his party men with his communication skills and guttural oratory, he has now lost sheen with old age and illness.

By his announcement, Rajini has also served an advance warning to all other political parties functioning in TN – that Rajini’s new party would oppose all their candidates in each of the 234 assembly constituencies in the state. He has clearly messaged all other parties: “I enter politics not to align with any of you, but to fight and defeat all of you in all assembly seats at election time and keep you out of government”.  This warning and message are specially meant for DMK and AIADMK.

Rajini’s December 31 disclosure has disheartened leaders of other political leaders or groups in TN who are aiming to be the chief minister or some other influential player in the next state government, and beyond. Being out of power in Tamil Nadu could also mean a huge financial deprivation for some aspirants who know the scale of their potential loss.  Facing ill luck and lesser hope, they have good reason to wish Rajini had kept away from politics.

After late MGR parted ways with Karunanidhi and founded his political party AIADMK in 1972, Tamil Nadu votes have been largely shared between DMK and AIADMK.  At the last 2016 TN assembly polls, AIADMK secured a vote percentage of nearly 41%, DMK got about 32% and the balance was split between more than fifteen other parties along with independents and NOTA. With Rajinikanth now entering the fray, even this should be seen as an exaggerated picture of the popular backing for DMK and AIADMK in the changed political scene. In 2016, Rajinikanth was not present on TN’s political landscape, nor did he lend support to any party during that assembly election.  So his fans and admirers had given their votes to other parties, mostly to DMK or AIADMK.  Those Rajini votes, at least most of them, are hence built into the 2016 vote share percentages, viz., AIADMK’s 41% and DMK’s 32%. These two major parties should now witness an erosion in their 2016 score of votes, with Rajini poised to claim much of the votes of his fans, supporters and admirers.  But the woes of DMK and AIADMK, and some smaller parties, do not end here.

In the personality-cult based DMK and AIADMK, their chiefs Karunanidhi and Jayalalithaa were the principal vote gatherers for their parties.  With Karunanidhi out of action and Jayalalithaa not alive, many supporters of the two parties who fancied those leaders more than their parties – especially those of AIADMK – could be looking elsewhere.  For those drifting voters, Rajinikanth will be more beckoning than DMK’s M. K. Stalin and certainly more alluring than the lackluster leaders left in AIADMK.  In fact, one reason why Rajinikanth announced his party at this time, is the comfort of nil competition from Karunanidhi and Jayalalithaa in harvesting votes during elections.

There are also some broader facts about a nation’s or region’s political life, and some hard realities close to its ground, which Rajinikanth will be aware of.  Let’s take a look.

Voters elect their leaders, but they can choose only from men and women coming forward to lead. Voters do not themselves create a good stock of leaders and then make their pick. So luck plays a key role in people getting a good political leader in a democracy to head their government.

In a mature democracy, a chosen state leader may turn out to be extraordinary or just good or an also-ran, but as the country’s CEO he generally guards its financial resources and interests and does not deviously squander them or divert national funds into private hands. This is because a mature democracy largely produces vigilant citizens and nurtures a decent crop of leaders, and ensures law enforcement. In an evolving democracy like India, for lack of choice in leaders and out of ignorance too, people often end up electing leaders who do their worst for public welfare and the very best in self-interest, sycophants’ interest and in their family interest, law enforcement always remaining slack. Indians have greatly suffered in this manner in the recent past. For decades, Tamil Nadu has taken the worst beating on this front, and Rajinikanth knows this well.  While declaring his entry into politics he also spoke on the sorry plight of Tamil Nadu, as directly as he wished when he said, “In the name of democracy political parties that come to power are looting people in different ways, different modes and different methods…… This needs to change”.

If Rajinikanth had felt that DMK was all good and AIADMK alone was guilty of serious wrongdoing in TN, he need not form a new party and could have stopped with lending his support to the ‘good DMK’, and if it was the other way he could have stopped with backing the ‘good AIADMK’.  It is clear that he viewed both these parties, being in power alternatively over the past fifty years in Tamil Nadu, as incorrigibly bad on key issues of governance, making a mockery of democracy – and so he felt both of them must be kept out of power.

In deciding to fight both DMK and AIADMK, Rajinikanth must have taken heart from the experience of another Tamil actor, Vijayakanth, who also entered politics and formed his political party, DMDK, in 2005. DMDK contested the 2006 assembly elections in Tamil Nadu, in 232 constituencies without any alliance partner.  His party won just one seat, but scooped an impressive 8.5% of votes polled.  That showed there was a large of body of voters who were against both DMK and AIDMK, and so Vijayakanth tapped their votes.  Three years later he exposed the continuing keen preference a good many voters had for him, and their sustained distrust of DMK and AIADMK.  That was in the 2009 Lok Sabha elections when Vijayakanth’s party contested, again without an alliance partner, across all 39 seats in Tamil Nadu (equivalent to 234 assembly seats) and captured a good 10% of votes polled in the state, though his party did not win any seat.

Vijayakanth could not, however, build on his laurels because he lost focus, faltered and ultimately aligned with AIADMK in the 2011 state elections in Tamil Nadu. He has other leadership deficiencies too, and of late his health has fallen – he is moving about but is less active. In comparison, Rajinikanth speaks and behaves in a mature way, has better composure, and has a greater potential to take on both DMK and AIADMK.

Vijayakanth has his fan base, but it is certainly much less than Rajinikanth’s.  One measure of their current reach to people and people’s present hopes on them, could be their Twitter following.  It is 44 lakhs for Rajinikanth, and 47 thousand for Vijayakanth.

There are questions whether Rajinikanth will be up to the demanding role of a chief minister. As the head of a state government, will he wisely choose his advisors? Can he appreciate and handle intricate issues of development and governance? Can he keep a check on his ministers and party MLA’s to ensure they don’t go wayward?  Well, surely these are not easy tasks, and Rajinikanth also does not look naive. He is capable of learning, correcting and improving.  But first things first.

There is none visible in our midst, or in the near future, except Rajinikanth, with the best of capacity, goodness and daring to halt both DMK and AIADMK on their continuous march to the seat of power –  an action for which TN’s people in sizeable numbers gave a hearty thumbs-up when Vijayakanth attempted it in 2006 and in 2009.  Let the poisoned body politic of Tamil Nadu be first detoxified and rescued. It could then be nursed to better health, step by step.  Tamils, if you love your land welcome Rajinikanth and wish him well.

(This article is originally published HERE)

Copyright © R. Veera Raghvan

Escapism of many Hindu Swamis and Gurus!

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https://twitter.com/hhrLondon (Heavily edited by Shreepal Singh)

Even though it looks that most of the Hindu Gurus, Swamis, preachers and teachers do a great job by serving fellow humans and show them the correct – spiritual – path, nevertheless one would not fail to notice that what they preach is most often escapism and impractical. Surely, they teach and encourage ‘seva’ or service in the society but hardly would one hear them – from the Hindu point of view – talking about the subject of ‘real threats’ extended to their faith and this faith’s followers, let alone teaching these followers about the way to thwart such threats to their faith.

Without doubt, this approach of these Hindu Gurus and preachers is sheer timidity and escapism. Because of such timid attitude and approach of these Gurus and preachers, the ordinary mass of Hindus gets confused. These ordinary Hindus think that any talk, act or effort on their part to defend Hindus or Hinduism against any attack against their faith is nothing but a political thing, which Hinduism does not teach. Most of us have witnessed – and at the most of times – this attitude of these Hindu Gurus and preachers and, the resultant, Hindu mind-set of the ordinary followers of this faith.

If one confronts these Gurus and preachers with the absurdity of this approach towards their Dharma, he or she most often would get a curt response from these faith leaders in somewhat this style: Well, if you wish to do some service of Hinduism, why should you be an activist? Why do you not put your life on the spiritual path, renounce this world and become a ‘sadhu’ instead?

Many young Hindus, because of such teachings of these Hindu Gurus and preachers, often would say that their parents discourage them in taking interest in Hinduism for the reason of the fear of their children becoming ‘sadhus’!

One may look around on twitter or face book to find out what kind of Hinduism is mostly being promoted by such Gurus, Swamis and preachers. On their blogs and websites too, one would never fail to find such escapist attitude in interpreting Hindu Dharma. There they, in their writings and speeches, would often just go in ‘verbose’ deep philosophy about the inner self and of the things beyond this world. They sound utterly impractical for the realities of this world and hardly ever promote Hindu scriptures – like Gita – to teach how to deal with the threats and dangers extended to their faith or how to defend Hindus and Hinduism at the hands of the enemies of their faith.

One cannot but wonder at the way in which the holy Hindu book Gita is taken by these Gurus, Swamis and preachers out of its context (the context that Gita was narrated by Krishna to Arjuna at the momentous event of war of Mahabharata to confront the reality and fight without attachment or fear for the just cause) and turned into an escapist holy book teaching only the search for ‘inner self’! These Hindu religious teachers would just love to gloss over the hard fact that Lord Krishna taught Arjuna in the battle field (of Kurukshetra) to bring Arjuna out of his mental turmoil by making him understand that the ‘inner self’ of a human being never dies and to teach him (Arjuna) to do his duty, as a Kshtriya, to fight in the war without any attachment or ill will to his opponents for the right cause against the injustice.

Do you ever hear Hindu Gurus or Swamis bring this aspect of Gita to their audience? Hardly ever!

We asked a few Gurus about the justification of their pitiable stand in this respect. They came out with confusing answers like the Mahabharata is really about the inner Mahabharata.

We asked them further: So, according to you, Krishna stopped Arjuna from renouncing everything to avoid war in the battlefield of Kurukshetra simply because he (Krishna) actually wanted him (Arjuna) to renounce everything!! Again their answer was like: The teaching of Gita is ‘inner Dharma Yuddha’ or ‘inner Jihad’!

Such answers of these Gurus do not make any sense in this world – the world which is a battle field, where the war is going on and where there are ‘right cause’ and ‘wrong cause’ to fight for and to fight against!

We can see how much confusion is being promoted in Hinduism today and because of this confusion so many Hindus – who want to be active in the way of Gita to defend Hindus and Hinduism – take such war for the ‘right cause’ and against the ‘wrong cause’ as only ‘a politics’ and ‘being unlike Hindus’.

It is here where the ‘inner self’ ends up! It is here where this world becomes an illusion! It is here where one is prompted to renounce the world, become a ‘sadhu’ and get ‘Moksha’! This is the Hinduism being promoted today by a large number of Swamis and Gurus.

At a Hindu event that we attended a Guru was telling a whole crowd of young Hindus that they should only focus on ‘Bhakti’, do the `Mala’ and chanting the Mantras; that they should not be taken in by the material world; and that they should rather reject it!!!

We asked him, ‘What are his views on the ‘Kashmiri Hindus’ who were killed in and kicked out of Kashmir, which is the Abode of Shiva?’

Amazingly, he did not like the question. As if this was not enough, one of his chief followers jumped in the dialogue and said, ‘This is not the place to ask such questions’. According to the Guru this question was not about the Dharma!

How divorced from reality this Guru is!!

We insisted that this is the proper place to put such question and seek answer from the teacher of Hindu Dharma. He suddenly started saying: Well, Indian soldiers have caused too many problems there. We objected: What nonsense it is to say so! Why are you avoiding the question about the Kashmiri Pandits?

Then he started  blurting:  Well, don’t get attached to the material world, if you want to evolve spiritually. We said: Pass over your bank accounts, your flash car parked outside and give your house over to prove how unattached from the material world you are and how spiritually evolved you are!!

Now the whole place turned into a commotion. We said in the face of large number of people gathered there that if there is no India left any more, which India these soldiers protect with their lives, this kind of Gurus would not be able to visit Hindu holy places; set up their Ashramas; or enjoy the Hindu mass following like the present one.

This is one incident of a Hindu Guru but there are many more such Gurus, Swamis and preachers to experience of. Today much of the Hinduism being promoted by such persons is distorted and the most confusing to ordinary Hindus. It inflicts an immense injury to the cause of Hinduism and this Hinduism’s struggle to survive in the face of the onslaught on it by many belligerent religions.

Surely, many Gurus, Swamis and preachers do good work also but what they preach often turns many Hindus into lambs waiting to be slaughtered. This is why the enlightened Hindu intellectuals should focus on the correct teachings of Hinduism, as it is here (its correct interpretation) where the real power of Hinduism lies.

Sri Aurobindo on Gita: Duty to Fight – Against ‘Unjust’ and For ‘Just’ Cause!

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Sri Aurobindo was no exception to the rule. But before writing his famous Essays on the Gita in his monthly Arya between 1916 and 1920, he had had a long acquaintance with the Song of the Lord. That was no mere intellectual or philosophical inquiry, for, in the true tradition of yoga, Sri Aurobindo always was an experimenter before anything else—he even rejected the label of “philosopher” : “[Modern] philosophy,” he said, “I consider only intellectual and therefore of secondary value. Experience and formulation of experience I consider as the true aim of philosophy.”[1]

From his return from England to India in 1893, at the age of twenty, and until 1905, Sri Aurobindo worked in the Baroda State Service. That left him enough leisure to immerse himself in Sanskrit scriptures, since, having had a completely Western education, he wanted to rediscover his roots. Among his favourites were the two Epics, the Upanishads, and Kalidas.

He translated large portions of the Ramayana and Mahabharata into English, though only a few survived his later tribulations. Romesh Chandra Dutt, whose own adaptations of the Epics were popular in those days, asked to see Sri Aurobindo’s translations at Baroda, and remarked that had he seen them earlier, he would never have published his own..[2]

In that very first study of the Gita before he was even thirty, the one thing that struck Sri Aurobindo was its bold “gospel of action”.[3] and its stress on the Kshatriya’s “duty to protect the world from the reign of injustice,”[4] a virile and distinctive Indian message as he immediately saw :

“The Christian and Buddhistic doctrine of turning the other cheek to the smiter,” he scribbled in his notebooks, “is as dangerous as it is impracticable. [It is] a radically false moral distinction and the lip profession of an ideal which mankind has never been able or willing to carry into practice. The disinterested and desireless pursuit of duty is a gospel worthy of the strongest manhood ; that of the cheek turned to the smiter is a gospel for cowards and weaklings. Babes and sucklings may practise it, because they must, but with others it is a hypocrisy.”[5]

The Gita and the Nationalists

The Gita’s stress on true manhood and “desireless duty” or nishkama karma was to be Sri Aurobindo’s prime inspiration during his revolutionary days. It is little known that Sri Aurobindo was, in 1906, the first Indian to openly call for complete independence from the British Empire,[6] at a time when the Congress Moderates were busy praising the “providential character” of British rule in India and swearing their “unswerving allegiance to the British crown.”

Through the pages of the English daily Bande Mataram and in his speeches, Sri Aurobindo exhorted his countrymen to find in themselves the strength to stand up to their colonial masters. He soon became the leader in Bengal of those whom the Moderates contemptuously called the “Extremists.” In April 1908, a few days before his arrest in the Alipore Bomb Case, he wrote :

A certain class of minds shrink from aggressiveness as if it were a sin. Their temperament forbids them to feel the delight of battle and they look on what they cannot understand as something monstrous and sinful. “Heal hate by love, drive out injustice by justice, slay sin by righteousness” is their cry. Love is a sacred name, but it is easier to speak of love than to love…. The Gita is the best answer to those who shrink from battle as a sin and aggression as a lowering of morality.[7]

Clearly, Sri Aurobindo anticipated here the rise of non-violence as a creed ; but he took Sri Krishna’s admonition of Arjuna literally and, like Swami Vivekananda, put his faith in strength, not in ahimsa. Shortly after his release from jail the following year, Sri Aurobindo developed this point in a speech on the Gita at Khulna :

The virtue of the Brahmin is a great virtue : You shall not kill. This is what Ahimsa means. [But] if the virtue of Ahimsa comes to the Kshatriya, if you say “I will not kill,” there is no one to protect the country. The happiness of the people will be broken down. Injustice and lawlessness will reign. The virtue becomes a source of misery, and you become instrumental in bringing misery and conflict to the people.[8]

The teaching of the Gita, he said in his concluding words, “means perfection of action. It makes man great. It gives him the utter strength, the utter bliss which is the goal of life in the world.”[9]

Indeed, the revolutionaries in Bengal and Maharashtra drew such inspiration from the Gita that the colonial authorities came to regard it as a “gospel of terrorism,” and it became one of the most sought-after pieces of evidence in police raids ; it is also one of the chief influences cited in the 1918 Rowlatt Sedition Committee Report, side by side with Swami Vivekananda’s works.[10] Sri Aurobindo himself is said to have given initiation to several revolutionaries by making them swear on the Gita that they would do everything to liberate India from the foreign yoke..[11] But in the columns of the Karmayogin, he took objection to this summary characterization of the Gita :

We strongly protest against the brand of suspicion that has been sought to be placed in many quarters on the teaching and possession of the Gita—our chief national heritage, our hope for the future, our great force for the purification of the moral weaknesses that stain and hamper our people..[12]

The Yoga of the Gita

Though he drew strength from the Gita, Sri Aurobindo knew better than to see in it “a mere gospel of war and heroic action, a Nietzschean creed of power and high-browed strength, of Hebraic or old Teutonic hardness.”[13] During his year-long solitary imprisonment in the Alipore jail, he intensively practised the yoga spelt out by Sri Krishna. Soon after his unexpected acquittal in May 1909, in his famous speech at Uttarpara he recounted something of his experience :

He placed the Gita in my hands. His strength entered into me and I was able to do the Sadhana of the Gita. I was not only to understand intellectually but to realise what Sri Krishna demanded of Arjuna and what He demands of those who aspire to do his work..[14]

To “realize,” let us note again. And what he first realized was the divine Oneness described in the Gita : “The man whose self is in Yoga, sees the self in all beings and all beings in the self, he is equal-visioned everywhere. He who sees Me everywhere and sees all in Me, to him I do not get lost, nor does he get lost to Me.” (VI.29, 30) In Sri Aurobindo’s words :

I looked at the jail that secluded me from men and it was no longer by its high walls that I was imprisoned ; no, it was Vasudeva who surrounded me. I walked under the branches of the tree in front of my cell but it was not the tree, I knew it was Vasudeva, it was Sri Krishna whom I saw standing there and holding over me his shade. I looked at the bars of my cell, the very grating that did duty for a door and again I saw Vasudeva. It was Narayana who was guarding and standing sentry over me.

Or I lay on the coarse blankets that were given me for a couch and felt the arms of Sri Krishna around me, the arms of my Friend and Lover…. I looked at the prisoners in the jail, the thieves, the murderers, the swindlers, and as I looked at them I saw Vasudeva, it was Narayana whom I found in these darkened souls and misused bodies.

When the case opened … I was followed by the same insight. He said to me, “When you were cast into jail, did not your heart fail and did you not cry out to me, where is Thy protection ? Look now at the Magistrate, look now at the Prosecuting Counsel.” I looked and it was not the Magistrate whom I saw, it was Vasudeva, it was Narayana who was sitting there on the bench. I looked at the Prosecuting Counsel and it was not the Counsel for the prosecution that I saw ; it was Sri Krishna who sat there and smiled. “Now do you fear ?” He said, “I am in all men and I overrule their actions and their words.”[15]

Such was the supreme experience Sri Aurobindo received in jail, which never left him afterwards. And such is the supreme paradox of the Gita, that we must act and act boldly and sometimes fiercely, knowing and seeing all the while that all is He, that there is nothing in this entire universe that is not essentially the Divine.

I stress the word “essentially,” because there lies, according to Sri Aurobindo, the key to the apparent paradox : all is essentially divine, but until it is manifestly so, this creation will remain a Kurukshetra and it will be our duty to fight for the truth. For the Gita is not concerned with our shallow and too often hypocritical “human rights” ; it deals rather with our human duties : we are human beings only if we are prepared to fight for the truth, not otherwise.

In his Essays, Sri Aurobindo expounded at length, and never in a dry metaphysical manner, every aspect of the Gita, ethical and spiritual : its stress on action, its karma yoga based on true equality, non-attachment and renunciation of the ego, culminating in the abandonment of all dharmas, its broad synthesis of Vedanta, Sankhya, Jñana, Bhakti and even Tantra, its deep insights into the workings of Nature, into human nature with its divine as well as diabolical possibilities, its call to go beyond morality and the three gunas to the supreme truth…. I cannot even outline here these profound expositions which go to the roots of almost every problem of life and yoga which Indian thought and practice has faced.

But, at the cost of incompleteness, there is one core teaching of the Gita we need to look into, one that Sri Aurobindo lays particular stress on, and the very one that had inspired him during his revolutionary days—that is, the problem of action and the use of force to defend dharma.

The Gita, the Gospel of Strength, and Non-Violence

It is customary nowadays to hear that Hinduism is at bottom a “message of tolerance and non-violence”—that has become a kind of slogan which our politicians and media people alike are fond of mouthing without even stopping to think about it. Let us for now pass over the question of tolerance, except to recall these words of Sri Krishna : “Even those who sacrifice to other godheads with devotion and faith, they also sacrifice to Me…. I am equal in all existences, none is dear to Me, none hated” (9.23, 29)—this, along with the famous Vedic affirmation about the many names of the One Existent, contains much more than what is ordinarily meant by “tolerance,” and it is an assurance we are not likely to encounter in any Scripture of the three Semitic religions.

But let us rather dwell on the point of non-violence. Our first observation is that, unlike Buddhism or Jainism, Hinduism never made a universal doctrine of ahimsa, which remained limited to the Brahmin’s dharma, even then with qualifications. True, we have in the Mahabharata the maxim ahimsa paramo dharmah, “ahimsa is the highest law,” but that is never intended for the Kshatriya. There is even a very sensible observation made to the Brahmin Kausika : “When the earth is ploughed, numberless creatures lurking in the ground are destroyed…. Fish preys upon fish, various animals prey upon other species, and some species even prey upon themselves….

The earth and the air all swarm with living organisms which are unconsciously destroyed by men from mere ignorance. Ahimsa was ordained of old by men who were ignorant of the true facts. There is not a man on the face of the earth who is free from the sin of doing injury to creatures.”[16] Then there is the humorous episode in the Devi Bhagavata (skanda 4), in which Brihaspati (in the guise of Sukracharya) preaches ahimsa paramo dharmah to the Asuras and enjoins them “not to injure even those who come to kill you”—but this he preaches to the Asuras so as to disarm them, not to the Devas !

Finally, let us note that even Jainism, which made the maxim one of its central teachings, allows monks to attain liberation by fasting to death—an undeniable act of himsa. There is clearly nothing absolute about the much-abused saying.

There is also nothing non-violent about the wars in the Ramayana and the Mahabharata, about some of the Veda’s fierce gods, or Durga’s and Kali’s pitiless destruction of Asuras. Sanskrit texts, as also the Sangam literature and folk legends, resound with heroes and heroic deeds, and Sri Krishna echoes them when he declares : “I am the strength of the mighty” (10.36).

As was his wont, Sri Aurobindo faced this central problem squarely :

Unless we have the honesty and courage to look existence straight in the face, we shall never arrive at any effective solution of its discords and oppositions. We must see first what life and the world are…. Our very bodily life is a constant dying and being reborn, the body itself a beleaguered city attacked by assailing, protected by defending forces whose business is to devour each other….War and destruction are not only a universal principle of our life here in its purely material aspects, but also of our mental and moral existence…. It is impossible, at least as men and things are, to advance, to grow, to fulfil and still to observe really and utterly that principle of harmlessness which is yet placed before us as the highest and best law of conduct.[17]

Significantly, this passage from his Essays was published in the December 1916 issue of the Arya, in the middle of the First World War, but also when Mahatma Gandhi had joined the national movement and started propagating his doctrine of ahimsa. Sri Aurobindo continues :

This world of our battle and labour is a fierce dangerous destructive devouring world in which life exists precariously and the soul and body of man move among enormous perils, a world in which by every step forward, whether we will it or no, something is crushed and broken, in which every breath of life is a breath too of death.

To put away the responsibility for all that seems to us evil or terrible on the shoulders of a semi-omnipotent Devil, or to put it aside as part of Nature, making an unbridgeable opposition between world-nature and God-Nature, as if Nature were independent of God, or to throw the responsibility on man and his sins, as if he had a preponderant voice in the making of this world or could create anything against the will of God, are clumsily comfortable devices in which the religious thought of India has never taken refuge.

We have to look courageously in the face of the reality and see that it is God and none else who has made this world in his being and that so he has made it.

We have to see that Nature devouring her children, Time eating up the lives of creatures, Death universal and ineluctable and the violence of the Rudra forces in man and Nature are also the supreme Godhead in one of his cosmic figures.[18]

In these days when, again, easy and noisy slogans have taken the place of thinking and discerning, and when we are constantly told that “All religions are the same and speak the same truth,” mark how Sri Aurobindo never fails to point out the distinctive traits and contributions of the Indian genius :

It is only a few religions which have had the courage to say without any reserve, like the Indian, that this enigmatic World-Power is one Deity, one Trinity, to lift up the image of the Force that acts in the world in the figure not only of the beneficent Durga, but of the terrible Kali in her blood-stained dance of destruction and to say, “This too is the Mother ; this also know to be God ; this too, if thou hast the strength, adore.” And it is significant that the religion which has had this unflinching honesty and tremendous courage, has succeeded in creating a profound and widespread spirituality such as no other can parallel. For truth is the foundation of real spirituality and courage is its soul.[19]

Bracing words these, but lest one might imagine that Sri Aurobindo is advocating some blood-thirsty cult, let me add this conclusion of his :

A day may come, must surely come, we will say, when humanity will be ready spiritually, morally, socially for the reign of universal peace ; meanwhile the aspect of battle and the nature and function of man as a fighter have to be accepted and accounted for by any practical philosophy and religion.[20]

Examples from India’s Recent History

Note the word “practical.” It should now be clear that Sri Aurobindo radically differed from the Mahatma on the practice of non-violence, and as this difference is glossed over in conventional scholarship, I think we should examine it, since such differences, far from being awkward, are in fact fecund if faced honestly.

It is true that in April 1907, Sri Aurobindo had exposed in a series of brilliant articles in the Bande Mataram his “Doctrine of Passive Resistance” intended to become a mass movement against British rule, and that the series, which was read throughout the country in those days, seems to have influenced Gandhi on his return from Africa.

But Sri Aurobindo never made a cult of ideology either, and in those same articles he had also spelt out the limits of non-cooperation and passive resistance, which he saw as the only practicable policy of the day in the face of the rulers’ crushing military superiority and the Congress Moderates’ lack of support for the ideal of independence :

Every great yajña has its Rakshasas who strive to baffle the sacrifice…. Passive resistance is an attempt to meet such disturbers by peaceful and self-contained brahmatejas ; but even the greatest Rishis of old could not, when the Rakshasas were fierce and determined, keep up the sacrifice without calling in the bow of the Kshatriya. We should have the bow of the Kshatriya ready for use, though in the background. Politics is especially the business of the Kshatriya, and without Kshatriya strength at its back, all political struggle is unavailing.[21]

Nevertheless, considerable similarities in the practical aspects of the two leaders’ policies prompted some scholars to paint them with the same brush. When, at the time of Independence, a biographer of his fell victim to such facile parallels, Sri Aurobindo protested in the following note (written in the third person) :

In some quarters there is the idea that Sri Aurobindo’s political standpoint was entirely pacifist, that he was opposed in principle and in practice to all violence and that he denounced terrorism, insurrection, etc., as entirely forbidden by the spirit and letter of the Hindu religion. It is even suggested that he was a forerunner of the gospel of Ahimsa. This is quite incorrect. Sri Aurobindo is neither an impotent moralist nor a weak pacifist.

The rule of confining political action to passive resistance was adopted as the best policy for the National Movement at that stage and not as a part of a gospel of Non-violence or pacifist idealism.

Peace is a part of the highest ideal, but it must be spiritual or at the very least psychological in its basis ; without a change in human nature it cannot come with any finality. If it is attempted on any other basis (moral principle or gospel of Ahimsa or any other), it will fail and even may leave things worse than before…. Sri Aurobindo’s position and practice in this matter was the same as Tilak’s and that of other Nationalist leaders who were by no means Pacifists or worshippers of Ahimsa.[22]

It may appear hard to accept that the gospel of Ahimsa “may leave things worse than before.” But can we for a moment picture what would have happened if, in the middle of the Second World War, with much of Europe including France under German occupation, Britain had given way to the Nazi wave ?

And yet that is exactly what the Mahatma exhorted the British to do in his famous 1940 open letter “to every Briton,” in which he called for the British to lay down their arms “because war is bad in essence,” “to fight Nazism without arms or … with non-violent arms,” and to “invite Herr Hitler and Signor Mussolini to take … possession of your beautiful island.”[23] No doubt Hitler would have been delighted had Britain followed such advice, just as Duryodhana would have been highly pleased to see Arjuna lay down his bow. But in both cases, what would have been the result for mankind ?

By contrast, in September 1940, Sri Aurobindo sent the Governor of Madras a contribution and a message in support of the Allies during the War :

We feel that not only is this a battle waged in just self-defence and in defence of the nations threatened with the world-domination of Germany and the Nazi system of life, but that it is a defence of civilisation and its highest attained social, cultural and spiritual values and of the whole future of humanity. To this cause our support and sympathy will be unswerving whatever may happen…[24]

Or let us consider the case of the 1942 Cripps mission. Harried by Germany, increasingly pressured by the U.S.A., a proud and reluctant Churchill, who had sworn ever to protect the Empire, was compelled to present to India on a gold platter an offer of dominion status, so as to secure her support during the war. (That was the third such offer since the start of the War, but in more explicit terms than ever.)

In spite of messages from Sri Aurobindo to the Congress urging them to accept the proposal which amounted to virtual independence at the end of the War, and although others (including Nehru and Rajagopalachari) favoured it, Gandhi told Sri Aurobindo’s messenger he found it unacceptable, once again “because of his opposition to war.”[25] (Churchill also, I should add, forbade Sir Stafford Cripps to show the slightest flexibility.) The result of Gandhi’s dogmatic stand on the evil nature of war—a dogma Sri Krishna rebuffs in the Gita—was to be tragic for India.

It not only meant an unnecessary postponement of Independence, but it made India’s bloody vivisection unavoidable, even as the Mahatma promised it would happen only “over his dead body” ; it also meant three wars with our neighbour and the continuing war of attrition and terrorism in Kashmir.

In his History of the Freedom Movement in India, the distinguished historian R. C. Majumdar was forced to reject “the generally accepted view which gave Mahatma Gandhi the ‘sole credit for the freedom of India’.[26] He noted :

It has been my painful duty to show that … the popular image of Gandhi cannot be reconciled with what he actually was…. It will also be seen that the current estimate of the degree or extent of his success bears no relation to actual facts.[27]

Today we find that more and more scholars are rallying to those views and, while giving due respect to the Mahatma, are beginning to whisper that his rigid insistence on an impracticable non-violence may have cost the country dear.[28] Such a reassessment can only be healthy, for there is nothing more debilitating than to draw a righteous veil over errors of the past.

Still, we should note that Gandhi did try to understand Sri Aurobindo’s viewpoint ; in 1924, for instance, he sent his son Devadas to Pondicherry to sound him on non-violence. Sri Aurobindo simply replied, “Suppose there is an invasion of India by the Afghans, how are you going to meet it with non-violence ?”[29]

We all know what happened when Kashmir was invaded immediately after Independence, or when Chinese troops poured into India in 1962, or even ( 1999) when Pakistani troops occupied peaks in Kargil. And I am afraid there are more Kargils to come. It is a moot point what the Mahatma’s advice would be in such cases : to lay down arms and meet the enemy with non-violence ?

The following words of Sri Aurobindo, written in December 1916 in his Essays on the Gita, appear prophetic in retrospect :

We will use only soul-force and never destroy by war or any even defensive employment of physical violence ? Good, though until soul-force is effective, the Asuric force in men and nations tramples down, breaks, slaughters, burns, pollutes, as we see it doing today, but then at its ease and unhindered, and you have perhaps caused as much destruction of life by your abstinence as others by resort to violence…[30]

Non-Violence and Shakti

If, therefore, we mean the Gita’s teaching to be a practical one, which is what Sri Aurobindo did, we have to reject non-violence as a creed—it may remain an individual’s choice, for every individual is free to follow his preferred path, but anyone who has to wage a battle for dharma or for the truth—which comes to the same thing—will find a better ally in the use of shakti which the Gita advocates.

Arjuna is of course something of all of us, the symbol of “the struggling human soul,” in Sri Aurobindo’s words, and Kurukshetra is the “battle of life,” even of our humdrum everyday life if we take the trouble of living for a purpose. Resist a corrupt official and a Kurukshetra opens in front of you ; let a women’s group take on liquor barons and you can hear the twang of the Gandiva ; if a few villagers or tribals oppose a timber mafia, you will see a hundred Kauravas rise ; or simply try to keep your street clean and learn what ghoram karma is all about !

Now, a frequent misconception is that if we reject non-violence, we must fall into violence—there is no alternative beyond those two opposite poles. That is a terrible and costly confusion, which the Gita goes to great pains to dispel : between blind, asuric violence and noble but impotent non-violence, there is conscious, detached shakti, which can remain powerfully still or also wage war, as circumstances demand.

True, in the world’s history, most aggressive expansions, especially the Christian and Islamic, followed the asuric path and washed the earth with blood—there is at least one notable exception, though, and that is India, whose sole weapon of conquest was always her culture.

Yet she was by no means non-violent. Alexander was confronted by Paurava’s armies ; the Pratihara empire, the last Hindu empire of Northwest India, checked the progress of Islam into India for three centuries ; we know well enough the great deeds of a Shivaji or a Lakshmibai and countless other heroes of this land, including those who fought and often died for India’s freedom. Sri Krishna’s injunctions as to the Kshatriya’s dharma were therefore no dead letter in India’s past.

As to the present, it is a frequently heard complaint that Mahatma Gandhi’s teaching of non-violence is no longer followed in India ; but it rather seems to me that it has penetrated the collective Indian consciousness deep enough to make it wince at the very thought of force and put a brake on its use even when and where it is patently needed.

Certainly no other country would have tolerated with so little reaction the amount of aggression India has suffered since Independence, and at what terrible cost.

India’s one tragedy is that she has not had the courage to put to effective use the elements of strength in her heritage. The Gita provides a telling case in point. Here is a brief and accessible text, with nothing esoteric to it, which has evoked the admiration of countless thinkers outside India, from Emerson to Aldous Huxley and André Malraux, here is the best possible guide of ethics (though not merely that), which disentangles with miraculous ease some of the most knotty questions humanity has asked—and, except for a course or two of philosophy, our schools and colleges will not teach it to our children. And why not ? Because, so far as I have been able to make out, it is a “religious” text.

A more thoughtless aberration would be hard to come by, and I wonder how those who drafted India’s education policy arrogated the right to deprive young Indians of their heritage. No, the Gita is not a “religious” or even a “Hindu” scripture, it belongs to all humanity and its very text repeatedly makes this universality plain :

“I am the path and goal,” says Sri Krishna, “the upholder, the master, the witness, the house and country, the refuge, the benignant friend ; I the birth and status and destruction of apparent existence, I the imperishable seed of all and their eternal resting-place…. I am the silence of things secret and the knowledge of the knower…. Nothing moving or unmoving, animate or inanimate in the world can be without me.” (9.18, 10.38, 10.39)

Is this a sectarian declaration ? Moreover, the Gita is about dharma and dharma is not religion, it is ethics in the deepest sense. If we decide that education is only intended to prepare children for getting jobs and has nothing to do with making better human beings out of them, then we admit that there is no more meaning to a man’s life than to an ant’s.

The Gita’s message is a practical tool : it gives a purpose in life, and a purpose is something practical ; it gives strength, and strength is something practical ; it gives self-confidence, elevation in thought, a broader view of life, a deeper understanding of human nature, and those are all practical things.

I believe India would be in a better shape today had the Gita not been kept out of sight and hearing of young Indians, except for some abstract study of the Sankhya philosophy or a few slokas for burials and other ceremonies. Was Sri Aurobindo’s depiction of the Gita as “our chief national heritage, our hope for the future” just so many empty words ?

Permit me to quote Swami Vivekananda too, in whose name we are gathered today. Speaking in Calcutta to a few young aspirants, he said :

In order to remove this delusion which had overtaken Arjuna, what did the Bhagavan say ? As I always preach that you should … draw [a man’s] attention to the omnipotent power that is in him, in the same way does the Bhagavan speak to Arjuna : “Thou art that Atman imperishable, beyond all evil… Yield not to unmanliness.” If you, my sons, can proclaim this message to the world, “Yield not to unmanliness,” then all this disease, grief, sin and sorrow will vanish from the face of the earth in three days…. Proclaim to the whole world with trumpet voice, “There is no sin in thee, there is no misery in thee ; thou art the reservoir of omnipotent power. Arise, awake, and manifest the divinity within !”[31]

Because they insisted on building a new, rejuvenated India on the great truths of her ancient heritage and not on the fleeting destructive values of the West, neither Sri Aurobindo nor Swami Vivekananda are in favour with current thinking, if it can be called that. In fact, today they would probably be labelled “revivalists” by our hypnotized intelligentsia, and they would certainly find themselves swimming against the cheerless tide, at loggerheads with almost every direction the country has taken since Independence, and with the educational system in particular.

They would never have imagined that education in free India could have rejected anything having to do with Indian culture, preferring to go on with Macaulay’s denationalizing methods. Is Indian culture then something so shameful, so ignoble that it has to be concealed from our children, except in the privacy of the home ? Well, perhaps it is after all, but if it is, let us have the courage to declare so openly and have done with it rather than brandish it just to attract foreign tourists to a few temples and ruins.

I cannot resist the temptation of mentioning a case in point : it is significant that none of our successive education ministers thought it worthwhile to give Swami Vivekananda’s or Sri Aurobindo’s names to just one out of the 216 universities spread over the country ; Mahatma Gandhi has two universities in his name, one of which is of course this one here ; Dr. Ambedkar has six, Jawaharlal Nehru three, and a number of much lesser Indians have one.

But no “Swami Vivekananda University,” no “Sri Aurobindo University”—Swami Vivekananda who shook India awake, Sri Aurobindo who in 1906 became the first principal of the newly opened Bengal National College, Sri Aurobindo the Nationalist leader, the editor and chief writer of Bande Mataram and Karmayogin, Sri Aurobindo who laid the foundations for an original Indian perspective in so many fields of yoga, thought, action, and life.

This omission may be a small thing in itself, but it is revealing of the unease the establishment feels towards these awkward personalities. Which Indian student ever learns anything of substance about Swami Vivekananda or Sri Aurobindo ? Either we find them worthy of being taught to our children for their greater benefit as human beings, in which case we should roll up our sleeves and set to work, or there is no point in making them objects of hollow praise as is too often the case.

Sri Aurobindo had and still has a message for his country, and a practical one, for he was no effete dreamer. Whether calling for India’s independence, supporting the Allies, urging acceptance of Cripps’ proposal, he practised what he called “spiritual realism.”[32] It is India’s misfortune that he was not heard, and her continuing misfortune that he and Swami Vivekananda are shoved aside like museum pieces.

Of course, it would be a mistake to equate Sri Aurobindo’ entire teaching and yoga with the Gita. As he said,

I regard the spiritual history of mankind and especially of India as a constant development of a divine purpose, not a book that is closed and the lines of which have to be constantly repeated. Even the Upanishads and the Gita were not final though everything may be there in seed….[33]

But in all his actions, Sri Aurobindo faithfully followed the spirit of the Gita. His life is, in my opinion, the best commentary on the great Scripture.

“If one is among the … seekers of [the] Truth,” he once wrote to a disciple, “one has to take sides for the Truth, to stand against the forces that attack it and seek to stifle it. Arjuna wanted not to stand for either side, to refuse any action of hostility even against assailants ; Sri Krishna, who insisted so much on samata, strongly rebuked his attitude and insisted equally on his fighting the adversary. ‘Have samata,’ he said, ‘and seeing clearly the Truth, fight.’ … It is a spiritual battle inward and outward ; by neutrality and compromise or even passivity one may allow the enemy force to pass and crush down the Truth and its children.”[34]

By Michel Danino

Keynote address delivered by Michel Danino at a seminar on  Relevance of Bhagavad Gita in the New Millennium  on January 12, 2000, at Kottayam s Mahatma Gandhi University. This seminar was part of Vivekananda Jayanthi and National Youth Day celebrations, as a valediction of the Vandematharam programme of the Department of Culture, Government of India, and was organized by the Mahatma Gandhi University unit of the Bharateeya Vichara Kendram.)

References
N.B. : In references to Sri Aurobindo’s works (‘Centenary Edition,’ Pondicherry : Sri Aurobindo Ashram, 1972), the first number refers to the volume, the second to the page number.

Sri Aurobindo’s India’s Rebirth (3rd ed., 2000; also in Hindi, Malayalam, Telugu, Oriya, Tamil and Gujarati translations) is co-published and distributed by:

[1] Evening Talks recorded by A. B. Purani (Pondicherry : Sri Aurobindo Society, 1982), p. 105
[2] Mother’s Chronicles—Book Five : Mira Meets the Revolutionary by Sujata Nahar (Mysore : Mira Aditi, 1997), p. 97
[3] Notes on the Mahabharata, 3.169.
[4] Ibid., 3.178.
[5]Ibid.
[6] See India’s Rebirth (Mysore : Mira Aditi, 3rd edition, 2000), p. 19.
[7] FrIbid., p. 46.
[8] Karmayogin, June 25, 1909, 2.427.
[9] Ibid., 2.430.
[10]See Sedition Committee 1918 Report under Hon’ble Mr. Justice Rowlatt (reprinted Calcutta : New Age Publishers, 1973), p. 17 & 23.
[11] R. C. Majumdar, History of the Freedom Movement in India (Calcutta : Firmal KLM, vol. 3, 1988), vol. I p. 408.
[12] Karmayogin, 12 January 1910, 2.401.
[13] Essays on the Gita, 13.52-53.
[14] Uttarpara Speech, 30 May 1909, 2.3.
[15] Ibid., 2.4-5.
[16] Mahabharata, Vana Parva, Ch. 207, adapted from K. M. Ganguli’s translation (Delhi : Munshiram Manoharlal, 2000), vol. I p. 431-432.
[17] Essays on the Gita, 13.38-39.
[18] Ibid., 13.367-368
[19] Ibid., 13.42.
[20] Ibid., 13.45.
[21] Bande Mataram, 23 April 1907, 1.122.
[22] On Himself, 26.22.
[23] Amrita Bazar Patrika, “Method of Non-violence—Mahatma Gandhi’s appeal to every Briton,” July 4, 1940. See a longer extract and Sri Aurobindo’s reaction to the open letter in India’s Rebirth, p. 227.
[24] On Himself, 26.393.
[25] See India’s Rebirth, p. 235-236.
[26] R. C. Majumdar, History of the Freedom Movement in India, vol. 3, p. xiii.
[27] Ibid., p. xviii.
[28] See for instance N. S. Rajaram, Gandhi, Khilafat and the National Movement (Bangalore : Sahitya Sindhu Prakashana, 1999).
[29] Evening Talks, p. 53
[30] Essays on the Gita, 13.39.
[31] The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda (Almora : Advaita Ashrama, 1948), vol. IV, p. 105-106.
[32] The Human Cycle, 15:228
[33] On Himself, 26.125.
[34] Letters on Yoga, 23.665-666.

(This matter was originally posted by HHR at THIS place)

Indian Genius: ‘Decimal’ and ‘Place Value’– Used in Math and Language, Both!

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By: Shreepal Singh

Sanskrit is an ancient language – really very ancient one. It is regarded as the mother of all the so-called ‘Family of Indo-European languages’. Which are these European and Indian languages today?

Almost all the languages of Europe are included in this family. All these languages have some surviving traces of their Mother Language – Sanskrit or Proto (the original) Sanskrit– still available in them. The abysmally low amount of these traces available in these languages indicate that none of the European languages could preserve their mother language as its body part.

But it is not so with the Indian part of this family. Which are the languages of the Indian part of this family? Almost all the modern Indian languages are included in this family. While the European languages have these little traces in some of their words only in the form of phonetic similarity with Sanskrit words, in the case of Indian languages it is not so.

In the Indian languages still a large number of words are used in their either pure or impure Sanskrit forms. Apparently these Indian languages are the descendants of the Sanskrit, founded on Sanskrit roots with some distortion. However, there is one exception in this descent: None of these Indian languages uses the Sanskrit grammar. In the resemblance of derivative words, Hindi language is the most notable and widely spoken in India.

‘Decimal’ and ‘Place Value’ in Numbers:

Let us first consider the application of the concepts of ‘Decimal’ and ‘Place Value’ in mathematics since ages – since the very origin of Sanskrit language itself, which is shrouded in the mist of past. We all use the system of ‘Decimal’ in our day today life, without realizing the genius of ancient Indians who invented this system.

We know ‘decimal’, an English word, is derived from the Sanskrit word ‘Dashamlav’ (दशम् लव), where दशम is ‘Ten’ and लव is ‘Positioning or Placement’. दशम लव is the system of ten. Decimal system in mathematics is the incremental gradation of anything from 1 through 9, with an additional number as 0 (Zero). What is the purpose and intent of this incremental gradation? For example, what is the meaning of 1 and 2? It simply means that whatever quantum 1 holds, twice of that quantum is held by 2. Likewise, it goes on increasing always in relation to 1, up to 9 in count. Plainly, numbers 2 through 9 is a comparison with 1. It is a relation of 2 through 9 with 1. Conceptually, number 1 may have in it an amount, a quantity.  Whatever this amount or quantity may be, is immaterial. Numbers 2 through 9 are only a comparison with what number 1 holds. It is a relation, where 1 is the unit.

In Sanskrit language, the scheme of ‘Decimal’ deals with ‘relationship’ only and, incidentally, the scheme therein of alphabets coupled with sounds deals with ‘things’ only. So far as this material world – ney, universe – is concerned, from the human perspective it is only a bundle of things and their relations. Beyond this, there is nothing here. Sanskrit language is so perfect an instrument in the hands of humans that it takes care of their concern of things and these things’ relations with one another. In fact, Sanskrit is the embodiment of human speech and mathametical numbers!

In decimal system, one can go on increasing this gradation comparing 1 with any number up to the infinity and still it will be only a relation with 1 of all those individual numbers up to infinity.  But if you want to record this relationship by using some signs – or numerical script – up to any significantly high number, let alone up to infinity, you would be forced to invent a very large number of symbols in that script – or, at least, using the symbol of 1 as many times as you want to count. We know the difficulty of writing numbers by Romans numerals, which we still use for a few special purposes. It is a crude method of writing numerals. It needs a large number of symbols or, alternatively, large amount of space to put a few numerals!

We all know it.

To circumvent this difficulty, India invented a device ages ago, not only the relational concept of 1 with 2 through 9 but also an additional symbol of 0 (Zero). This 0 also is nothing but again a relation with 1. The purpose and intent of 0 is to compare it with 1. This comparison states that whatever amount or quantity (of anything) this 1 contains in it, this amount or quantity is absent in 0. It is simply a relation of 1 with 0. In the decimal system invented by the genius of ancient Indians, the only material number is 1. Rest of the numbers – up to infinity – are only the individual comparison – relation – with 1. This number 1 is the only definable entity, which could be anything, and all the rest of the numbers are relational with this number 1. You can compare this 1 with any number up to infinity.  The number 1 is a unit.

But how does one record these relational numbers in a script? Here again ancient India excelled in its genius. Its genius invented another use of 0, in addition to its (zero’s) use as a relation with 1. This 0 was utilized to denote a specific place to these numbers 2 through 9. For example, number 2 is not only a relational quantum, that is, 2 is not always twice in amount or value of 1. In relational value, number 2 is always twice the value of number 1 but by assigning a definite place to this 2 in the script with respect to other numbers used there, this 2 changes its value. Depending upon the place assigned to this 2 in a sum, this 2 may be increased or decreased in its relational value with 1.

This place value used in numerals is itself a sum, which was invented by India.

‘Decimal’ and ‘Place Value’ in Sanskrit Language:

Another wonder of the genius of ancient India is the utilizing these concepts of decimal and place value in the Sanskrit language.

Sanskrit language is written in Devanagari script. In the matters of the descent from the Sanskrit language and the popularity in modern India, Hindi language inherits the legacy of Sanskrit. Hindi is spoken by millions of people in India. Hindi, like Sanskrit, is too written in the Devanagari script. Hindi is recognized as the national language of India by the Indian Constitution. Let us consider Sanskrit and how this language utilizes the concepts of ‘decimal’ and ‘place value’ in its alphabets. While considering these aspects of Sanskrit language, to highlight these specialties, the author will compare the position of English language in this respect.

Sanskrit alphabets have classes and categories. The classes are: क च ट त प and the alphabets of conjunct-ed voice. The categories of the former class of alphabets are: Soft, Hard and Swift. The Soft category, and followed by the Hard category, of these classes of alphabets are:

Soft: क Hard: ख

Soft: ग Hard: घ  (Next note of sound in musical ascendance of क and ग ): ङ
Soft: च Hard: छ
Soft: ज Hard: झ (Next note of sound in musical ascendance of च and ज ): ञ
Soft: ट Hard: ठ
Soft: ड Hard: ढ  (Next note of sound in musical ascendance of ट and ड ): ण
Soft: त Hard: थ
Soft: द Hard: ध
Soft: प Hard: फ

Soft: ब Hard: भ

The Swift category of alphabets is made by making them ‘Half’ for sounding them swift when written in conjunction with the next following alphabet, like this: ग्वाल, कथ्था, मक्खन, चमच्च, क्लास, ख्याल, पत्थर; This is the way of Sanskrit to make the sound of an alphabet Swift. But it is made possible by writing an alphabet ‘half’ and then reading it in ‘conjunction’ with the next following alphabet. But if there is an alphabet that needs to sound swift but not in conjunction with any other alphabet but independently, how do you do it? For this ‘halant’ symbol is used, like क् ; ह् ; etc.

The class of alphabets of the conjuncted voice are: क्ष ॠ त्र ज्ञ श्र and they respectively pronounced as in:  क्षत्रप ॠषि त्राटक ज्ञानी श्रीमान .

In addition to these divisions, this language creates fine nuance to the sound of र by adding it as a sound or ‘Matra’ above, below or with a alphabet, like this: वर्तमान, पृथ्वी, प्रयोग, वृक्ष, कर्म, प्रथम;

The genius of ancient Indians, who crafted Sanskrit language, lies, firstly, in the fact that there is a certain relation of frequency (or pitch) of sound contained in each alphabet of these classes and its categories to the next following alphabet. For example, a) क has frequency or pitch relationship with ख b) क has again a relation with ग c) By finding the pitch relation with क and ग one can assess the pitch of the last alphabet of this class, that is, ङ . The same holds true for all the other classes and categories, viz.: च छ, ज झ  and ञ; ट ठ, ड ढ and ण; त थ, द ध; प फ, ब भ;

Incidentally, this property of phonetically two classes of Sanskrit alphabets can be exploited in computer compilation program by assigning one extra digit to the Soft class or Hard class.

In English language, there is no knowledge of such difference of the ‘Soft’, ‘Hard’ and ‘Swift’ categories of its alphabets. Also, in English there is no awareness of the ascendance of the musical notes in the sequence of its alphabets. For example, a, b, c, d, e, f etc. have neither pitch connection and difference nor any sense of ascendance of sound. In this language, these alphabets look unconnected, at random and crude in sound. For example, b of English is ब of Sanskrit; but English has no alphabet भ of Sanskrit (which is Sanskrit’s ‘Hard’ category of ‘ब ‘). English has to somehow make do this deficiency by joining k and h like: ‘kh’ etc. In Sanskrit language, there is a difference in pronouncing पृथ्वी, प्रयोग and कर्म, in all of which र (or R) is used, but English cannot make out this fine difference of the pitch of sound.

In addition to these alphabets of Sanskrit, this language has ‘Short’ and ‘Long’ sounds or vowels.

The ‘Short’ sounding vowels are: अ इ उ ए ओ अं

The ‘Long’ counterpart of these ‘Long’ vowels are: आ ई ऊ ऐ औ अः

These ‘Short’ and ‘Long’ sounding vowels can be used in two ways: Firstly, as independent alphabets. Secondly, for giving a particular sound to ‘Soft’ and ‘Hard’ alphabets.

However, the sound of अ by default is already integrated with each of the alphabets. Thus, for example, ट is  ट +  अ;  ल is ल + अ; etc. This addition of  अ  to every alphabet by default gives them the stability and depth of sound and provides a word made out of these alphabets a sonorous or musical tone. To add the tonal effect of ’emphasis’ to an alphabet, the sound of vowel  अः is put to the front of an alphabet, like चः कः नः; etc.

The genius of ancient Indians, while crafting Sanskrit, lies, secondly, in the fact that all the sound vowels available in Devanagari script are added by utilizing the space available above, below, back and front of these alphabet while hanging with their head from the top of limiting straight line. In Sanskrit, alphabets are not written by putting them one after another in a row, as is done in English. For utilizing the available space above, below, back and front of an alphabet, alphabets in Devanagari script are written like ‘hanging down at their head’ from a top straight line. Every alphabet, as a rule, has to be written below this line. The space above this line is reserved for adding a ‘Sound’ or ‘Matra’ to the alphabet hanging just at that point below the line.

Thus, for example, the sound of इ  is added to the alphabet क by going above the limiting line – just above this क – to make it look like, कि or to add another sound of उ by going just below the limiting line, like: कु

All the sounds are added to the alphabet: like प – प पा पि पी पु पू पं पो पौ पे पै; like त – त ता ति ती तु तू तं तो तौ ते तै; etc.

The advantage of this scheme is that, in Sanskrit language employing Devanagari script, one can write and pronounce any alphabet, word or sentence of any language of the world with the mathematical accuracy. But the reverse of this not true. There is perhaps no language in the world, except the Sanskrit language, that can accurately write and pronounce all the possible sounds of alphabets, words or sentences so accurately.

For example, in Sanskrit one can accurately write and pronounce: रावण; तट; तत् सत;  त्रोटक; षौडष; सिहं, शीस, सीसा, शशिकला etc. But in English there is no way to accurately write or pronounce these words. In English these words would be written like this: Ravana, tat, tat sat, trotak, shodash, singh, sheesh, sheesha, shashikala, which in Sanskrit would be read as रावणा, टट, टरोटक, शोडाश, सिघं, शीश, शीशा, शाशिकाला etc. (which words have meanings different from their original Sanskrit counterparts!)

Sanskrit language is mathematically accurate and precise in its scheme of the arrangement of these alphabets. This accuracy and precision of the Sanskrit’s scheme of arranging alphabets contributed to the discovery of the Periodic Table of Elements by Mendeleev. In making his discovery of the Periodic Table of Elements Mendeleev was inspired by the arrangement of alphabets in Sanskrit.

Sanskrit Language is Music:
 

Sanskrit is a music producing language. It has everything to do with ‘दशम लव’ or the number 10. In this language there are only 10 alphabets each in its two categories, viz, soft and hard. The alphabets in soft category, as stated above, are  क ग च ज ट ड त द प and ब. Each one of these 10 alphabets in Soft category has its equivalent in the Hard category, thus adding 10 more alphabets. These 10 hard counterparts of their Soft cousin are: ख घ छ झ ठ ढ थ ध फ and भ.

Now, there are 10 more alphabets that have no Soft or Hard categories. These are:  न म य र ल व श ष स and ह. Thus, in all there are 10 basic alphabets in the Soft category plus 10 as their counter part in the Hard category and 10 more alphabets without category. In all they become 30 in number.

Apart from these alphabets, as stated above, Sanskrit language has 5 vowels of Short sound and 5 vowels of Long sound: अ इ उ ए ओ (of the Short sound); आ ई ऊ ऐ औ (of the Long sound). Apart from these, there 2 more sounds or vowels, which have no Short and Long forms, viz.: अं अः . When these Short or Long sounds are added to the Soft or the Hard alphabets, they produce a peculiarly accentuated kind of sound for every Sanskrit word. In addition to the joining of these sounds to Soft and Hard alphabets, these sound are also used as independent alphabets.

The tone, nuance and sound vibration of every alphabet and word of the Sanskrit language is so precise that learning and speaking this language is the best speech therapy.

The wonderful thing that one finds in this language is that, when spoken, these notes of sounds embedded in Sanskrit words and sentences produce a rhythmic sound or music, apart from the meaning that these words – producing such music – convey.

What is a musical sound? A strongly regular waveform of any sound is a musical sound. The pitch of a sound is determined by the frequency of the vibration of that sound.

If one is able to recite the Sanskrit prose or poem accurately, it is a music. Now, music creates a positive impact on human mind. It has been found that if Sanskrit text – prose or poem in Slokas – is spoken regularly by a person for a sufficiently long period, it produces a change in the biological structure of the brain of that person. A neuroscience researcher conducting experiment on the effect of Sanskrit speaking on the human brain has found that regular Sanskrit speaking enhances one’s memory and the concerned part of the human brain is biologically changes its shape by increasing its area. This research paper is published in the Scientific American HERE.

The musical impact of Sanskrit speaking nourishes the human brain and enhances its memory retention power.
Sample of Sanskrit speaking:

Emphatic No to Togadia! We Stand United With Modi

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  • By: Name withheld

The hatred of Praveen Togadia for our honorable Prime Minister Narendra Modi is not new. I would just come to the current issue and, for that, recall some facts.

  1. In 2002, after Narendra Modi won the elections and became the CM, the first thing he did was sidelining Praveen Togadia (PT) by removing Gordhan Zadafiya (the closest aide of PT) as Home Minister. Modi ensured that there was not even the slightest interference of PT and VHP when it came to official works of the government and issues related to ministries. This was the beginning.
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  2. With time, PT was sidelined and his influence on Gujarat government literally became zero due to strong governance of Modi.
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  3. In 2005, about 300 VHP leaders who had gathered to protest and create chaos in cities of Gujarat were lathicharged on the orders of Home Ministry (Gujarat Government) to ensure there was no bandh, curfew and chaos. This had angered Togadia and he wanted to teach Modi a lesson.
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  4. In 2007, Praveen Togadia, other VHP leaders and workers were dealt with very strongly when they interfered with government’s anti-encroachment drive and other development programs. More than 200 VHP workers were beaten when they tried to stop demolition of illegal structures.
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  5. Also, police used to beat and arrest VHP members who created chaos in cities of Gujarat during Valentine’s day in the name of moral policing. In 2011, Praveen Togadia had alleged that Modi was pursuing “secularism” and had dumped the Hindus.
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  6. In 2012 elections,Praveen Togadia and Gordhan Zadafia fielded more than 50 candidates to split the Hindu votes in order to teach Modi a lesson. The trick did not work, and Modi won 2012 elections comfortably. Once a strongman, Togadia had no influence left whatsoever. Modi and Shah had made sure that there was no external interference when it came to running government.
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  7. CCTV footage has emerged and it exposes all the lies peddled by Togadia since yesterday. The CCTV footage shows Togadia silently entering the house of his friend.
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  8. Senior Congress leader Arjun Modhwadiya and Hardik Patel met Praveen Togadia yesterday. Soon after meeting them, today he made a claim that the central and state governments are planning to get him killed. This is another well scripted drama.
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  9. Congress is using every single person who has personal difference with Modi to polarise and split the Hindu votes – first it were the Patidars (loyal supporters of Modi) and now it is supporters of Togadia. They are all being used by Congress to split.
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  10. This is the strategy of turning the so called “Hindu extreme right” against Modi by portraying him as anti-Hindu and secular.

  11. Praveen Togadia is just trying to divide Hindus for his personal interest in power and ego clash with Narendra Modi. Wake up and see through his evil game.

An idea that Can Destroy the Humanity!

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There was recent news that in Varanasi – a holy Hindu city of India and the electoral constituency of the Indian Prime Minister – the police have discovered the activity of constructing a vast underground facility near a mosque – known as Langda Masjid. The underground area of the complex is quite wide: about 4000 square yards. It may be a small news but a few big questions arise: Why was it an underground complex? Why was it being constructed secretly? Obviously, the authorities were not informed, let alone seeking permission to construct the facility. Why was it being constructed? What was the intended use and purpose of this complex? Why was it being constructed clandestinely?

The answers to these questions could be: It was being constructed underground because there was scarcity of land over ground. But the answer could well be: It was to be used to store arsenal – dynamite, rifles, tenguns, rocket launchers and the like. Then, it was being constructed secretly because money by way of illegal gratification would have been demanded by the authorities to allow this construction. But the answer could well be:  It was being constructed secretly because the persons responsible for this construction did not want the police to know this complex.

To find out the correct answer out of the two alternatives, one has to look around to find out what is happening in many neighboring countries today; and to look into the past to know what had happened because of such illegal activities and preparations, to assess the likelihood for future.

And, if one is to err, it is better to err on the right side.

There is also recent news that China in one of its Muslim populated areas has banned the students from attending religious programs and even banned the reading of the religious books. Why China did so ban its students? The answer could well be: China so banned its students from attending religious activities because it is a Communist country, which ideology does not permit the belief in any religion. But the answer could as well be: China so banned its students because its authorities thought that such religious teachings and gatherings spread dangerous ideas.

Our world is a fast changing small village today and to survive one must learn from everywhere and quickly.

In the case of Varanasi, was it a preparation for civil war propelled by an idea? It is more probable than not. And the preparations propelled by such an idea are not confined today to one city or one country alone. Almost the whole world – U. S. England, France, Russia, China, almost all the peaceful countries of the world – is within its sweep.

We human beings live in the world of ideas. An idea can be more lethal than a weapon.

Every man is like another man. All the people are alike. All persons are equal. There should not be any discrimination between person and person. Equality is the buzz word in our civilized world today.

But are all persons alike? Let us come to the real world.

All the persons are alike but they have different ideas. It is the idea that makes them different. It is as plain as it could be. All ideas are not alike and so are the persons holding them.

It is only an idea that makes a person – holding a gun in his hand, braving the vagaries of weather, heat and cold, hazards of crawling snakes and security forces chasing him in the Naxal infested Chhattisgarh – different from another person carrying on his daily life – being happy or unhappy – in a peaceful way. It is an idea that makes all the difference between person and person in our world where we humans live.

It is an idea that you must believe, what I believe. It is immaterial whether this idea is true or not.

It is an idea that I must force all those others – who do not believe in what I believe in – to believe in what I believe.

It is an idea that if those others do not succumb to my demand, they must be killed by me.

It is an idea that if I succeed in my attempt to kill those others, I will be rewarded for this act.

It is an idea that if I – in making such an attempt – am killed, I will be rewarded, rewarded not in this world but in the next world to which I am dispatched by the victor in the duel.

All persons are good. But all ideas are not good. One should be aware that killing is not done today by swords only but also by atom bombs – and certainly by atom bombs, if this duel reaches to its logical conclusion.

If one compares the idea that propels a human being waging war in the Chhattisgarh forests to the idea that propels another human being carrying his war in every nook and corner of this world, one would find that the later idea is more lethal in its capacity to destroy our peaceful world. We know that the idea homing in the mind of the Chhattisgarh’s person offers reward only if he succeeds in killing his enemy to the last man – reward in the form of a State of his Communist idea, in which event he could be at the top in that dispensation. But the idea finding home in the mind of the person of the second category offers reward even if that man dies attempting to fulfill his idea.

It is really a very dangerous idea. But all persons are good – it is only the idea that is dangerous.

But how would one spot the difference between a person and a person holding that idea?

In the instance of the Chhattisgarh thing, one can identify a person holding that idea by spotting a red flag hoisted atop his house, which eventuality is almost always absent; for, holding that idea is not a fool. Nobody holding that idea would hoist a red flag atop his house – for the red flag would connect him to his idea. For the security forces it would be really difficult to spot a person holding that idea.

In the case of the second instance, it is not so. One who holds that idea must – as a mandate – display that idea by flaunting the symbols associated with that idea. It is like hoisting a red flag atop one’s house to certify that he holds that idea. No one needs any effort to spot the beholder of that idea.

The world must come to its senses to grasp this reality and find out the ways and means to deal with this reality without much delay. The terrible events taking place around the world in the recent past indicate that our world is coming to its senses but still hesitant to deal with the danger facing it.

It is not the human beings but the idea that the world should find ways and means to deal with. All human beings are born innocent – and they come to hold ideas later on.

All nations throughout the world must protect their children and their innocence against the onslaught of such dangerous idea. How can children – the next generation of humanity – be protected from the poison of such an idea?

It can be done and must be done by the world to avert the possibility of a fearful destruction of humanity. The world must unite to outlaw the teaching to children of only one religion in segregated gatherings – and promote teaching of all religions to them simultaneously in the common gatherings – or, alternatively, prohibit the religious education to them before they become of an adult age and of the mature thinking mind.

 

 

A Prophesy about India and Modi

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[Note: This article was published on October 1, 2014. It is a repeat publishing]

By: Shreepal Singh

October 1, 2014]:

What is the worth of a prophecy! Is it not a nonsense exercise indulged in by crooks since ages? Prophecy is foretelling what would happen in future. Is it ever possible for a human being to tell in advance about the events that are going to take place in future? And more than this, is it possible to foretell about a nation, which is composed of crores of individuals? Any rational person would say it is never ever possible; it all is humbug!

Let us have a second look about this subject as a rational person. Can one foretell what would happen to a thing at a given time in future?

We all do it daily. We board a train bound to a destination, foretelling it would reach by the appointed time its destination. It does reach so in 99% of the cases. We calculated and foretold about one year in advance that India’s Mars Orbiter Mission/module would reach its destination; and, it did reach so.

In a way, we plan all our activities for today determined by our foretelling about what would happen tomorrow. Life’s all activities are goal oriented and the goal is always an object lying in the unknown future. Unless we are able to foretell, and foretell correctly, it is not possible for life to plan in the present so that progress is achieved in the future.

This type of foretelling is called prediction; and it is based on our scientific calculations, of which accuracy is vouchsafed by our uninterrupted human experience. It is not prophecy. What is the difference between a prediction and a prophecy? Let us see the difference.

All kinds of forecasting or foretelling involve an exercise that is akin to processing. This processing is nothing but the cumulative outcome of the inter-action of all the parametric conditions influencing an “object”, about which the foretelling is made. We can very well say that prediction, foretelling, forecasting and prophecy, all the four, have these elements in common: one – ascertaining “all the parametric conditions” (that would influence the object); two – knowledge or information about the “inter-action” of those conditions with the object (about which forecast is made); three – calculation of the “cumulative outcome” (of such inter-action).

Why does many a times a train bound for a destination not reach its destination; a space rocket programmed to hone in at a particular station not reach its desired spot; or, a person making efforts to achieve a goal in life not secure the same?

The answer is simple: There are too many parametric conditions out there in Nature under which events happen; it is not within the human-capacity to know all these conditions (even with the aid of all the available Super-Computers). Moreover, in laboratory these conditions may be ‘controlled’ and ‘duplicated’ again and again to test their cumulative effect; but it is not possible to do so in Nature.

We are not always able to “ascertain” all the parametric conditions (e.g., railroad may be broken, flooded; rocket may be pulled off way by an unknown gravitational pull; a person may miscalculate about his or her prospect; etc.). And / or, we may not know about the “inter-action” that may be involved (e.g., there may be outbreak of war disrupting train’s movement; cosmic radiation may damage navigational panels of the rocket; a person may fall ill making him or her fail in the goal). And / or, we fail to calculate the “cumulative outcome” of the influencing elements (e.g., broken or flooded railroad may even kill the passenger; rocket may be lost in the outer space; a person may win a fabulous lottery / be robbed and injured).

We know so much about these conditions and calculation and, still, we know almost nothing about them.

Here lies the mystery of prophecy and its efficacy. The correctness of a prediction is tested by its fulfillment and, likewise, the accuracy of a prophecy is tested by its coming true in the future as foretold.

Science knows the truth about many things; and it admits also that it does not know about many things yet. It is only because of this admission that science is still searching and progressing. What is the ratio between the things that science knows and the things that it does not know?

Science does not have any answer on this point.

The reasonable speculation is that science knows very little in comparison to what it does not know.

Opposite to science, there are Yogis who claim they know the secrets of this creation visible to us as universe. They claim that they can see the “parametric conditions”, “inter-action” of the elements involved and the “cumulative outcome” of this whole processing.

There is no way to verify the truthfulness of this claim of Yogis except by testing them through the realization of their prophecy in concrete reality.

It is very interesting to refer to a prophecy made about the future of India by the Mother of Sri Aurobindo Ashram, Pondicherry.

Those who have read Sri Aurobindo and the Mother need no introduction of them. To those who have not heard about them, it is suffice to say that Sri Aurobindo represents the soul of spiritual India in our modern materialist age and the Mother, a disciple of Sri Aurobindo, was a Divine instrument to fulfill the assigned work of her Guru and Master. Great yogis, like her, completely identify their consciousness with that of the Divine and get vision of three dimensions of time, that is, past, present and future.

Yogis, like them, are able to envision the kaleidoscopic possibilities of events in the life of a nation depending upon the choice of acts/moves, which the people of that nation make on the crucial things and at the crucial moments.

The Mother saw the future of India. She told this vision to her secretary Sri Udar Pinto, who is now no more. The date of this vision about the future of India is not known, as Sri Pinto did not indicate it. But we can guess and make some rough estimate of it. The Mother left her body in 1973 and Sri Pinto revealed the prophecy after her physical death. It might have been made some time before her death in 1973.

It is what Sri Udar Pinto says: “I will try to give here what the Mother has said about this in Her own words, as far as I can…

“The Mother said that India would pass through a very difficult time. One Government after another would come but each would fail in solving the problems that would face the country in greater and greater intensity.

“One party after another would fail.

“There would be an attempt at a sort of dictatorship but this too, would fail and the people would become desperate.

“Then, finally, there would come the breaking point and at that time, if the people were not given the right lead they would take a wrong turn and India’s soul would suffer for centuries.

“So they must be correctly guided at that point.

“This is more or less in Mother’s own words and so we can see how what she said is happening and how important it is for us to be ready. (Unquote of Sri Udar Pinto)”

We can identify certain important points in time in the recent history of India and co-relate events that took place since then.

This spiritual vision was seen by the Mother before 1973 and at that time there was no possibility of speculating about the instability in Indian national life (which took place thereafter) or the desperate act of ‘attempting at a sort of dictatorship’ in India (which was done by Smt. Indira Gandhi by imposing an emergency in 1975).

Perhaps we may be justified in saying that India as a nation has seen instability, on one after another occasions; has seen our political leaders taking desperate steps by way of moving towards dictatorship.

Also, perhaps, we may be justified in saying that, in spiritual significance, a breaking point had been reached in the life of India as a nation during the ten-year long UPA regime when this nation was sought to be put by its political leaders on to the path of cultural and political debauchery.

Did it not amount to India “taking a wrong turn” as envisioned by the Mother? As usual, some will not agree.

In the vision, there is a warning: “At that time, if the people were not given the right lead they would take a wrong turn and India’s soul would suffer for centuries”!

What do you make of these words? Where do you put Modi, after his getting a stunning victory over the UPA?

Is Modi giving a right lead in the life of this nation? One may again disagree.

But one thing is certain, and perhaps there cannot be any disagreement on this, that if India, as a nation, had a culture rooted in spiritualism; if India, as a nation, had a soul; it certainly would have suffered for centuries had the UPA got its way; got its “India is an idea” imposed on this nation.

But mercifully that eventuality has been warded off.

It is because the people of India are being given the right lead by Modi.

(Addition on January 22, 2018: By taking into accounts of all the efforts that Modi has put in since 2014, this prophesy seems to be mercifully fulfilling.)


Make Military Service Compulsory – Why His Sons Only?

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By : Wing Comdr Venki Iyer (with addition by: Shreepal Singh)

The helicopter appeared over the late morning horizon. We were to receive Mr Lachhman Singh Rathore who was visiting our Flight Unit to perform the last rites of his son, Flying Officer Vikram Singh.

Only the day before, I had sent the telegram, “Deeply regret to inform that your son Flying Officer Vikram Singh lost his life in a flying accident early this morning. Death was instantaneous.” It was the first time for me to meet and manage the bereaved next of kin, in this case the Father of the brave officer.

While most of the desolate family members insist on seeing the body, many a time there isn’t a body to show !! Flying Officer Vikram Singh’s remains were only a few kilos – scrapped from what was left in the cockpit. We had to weigh the wooden coffin with wood and earth.

The pilot brought the helicopter to a perfect touchdown. Soon Mr Lachhman Singh Rathor was helped down the ladder. A small and frail man he was, maybe of 80 years, clad in an immaculate dhoti.

As I approached him, he asked in a quiet and dignified whisper, “Are you Venki, the Flight Commander?” “Yes Sir.” “Vikram had spoken to me about you. I’d like to speak to you alone for a minute.”

We walked to the edge of the concrete apron. ‘I have lost a son, and you have lost a friend. I’m sure that you have taken great care in arranging the funeral. Please tell me when and where you want my presence and what you want me to do. I’ll be there for everything. Later, I would like to meet Vikram’s friends, see his room and, if it is permitted, visit his work place. I then would like to return home tomorrow morning.”

A commander couldn’t have given me clearer instructions.

The funeral, with full military honours, was concluded by late afternoon. After the final echoes of the ‘Last Post’ faded away, Lachhman Singh spent the evening talking to the Squadron Pilots. Vikram’s roommate took him to see Vikram’s room. Lachhman Singh desired to spend the night in his son’s room instead of the guest house we had reserved for him. Early next morning after a tour of the squadron area, my boss took him to his office.

A while later, the staff car took Lachhman Singh to the civil airfield two hours away.

As the car disappeared round the corner, I remarked to my Boss, “A brave man he is. Spoke to me like a General when he told me exactly what he expected from us during his stay here. I have never seen a more composed man on such an occasion. I admire him.”

“Yes, Mr Lachhman Singh Rathore is a warrior in his own way. He sired three sons and has laid to rest all three of them.

His first son Captain Ghanshyam Singh of the Gurkha Rifles was killed in Ladakh in 1962 War. His second son, Major Bir Singh, died along the Ichogil Canal in 1965 in an ambush. His youngest, Vikram Singh, who had the courage to join the Air Force, is also gone now.

It is more to our country’s defence than All of us combined.”

Yes, he is indeed a brave Indian; in fact he is more Indian than anyone else. His sacrifice can never ever be repaid by the country !! He is almost a martyr himself !!

But our Great Nation does not know this simple Giant — India only knows that super rich cricketers need to be conferred BHARAT RATNA while a bunch of actors and actresses need to be conferred PADMA VIBHUSHANs and PADMASHREEs !!

But what about the ‘ Losers ‘ ? Those who have SIMPLY LOST their EVERYTHING to the nation. Like this Father of Three Brave Soldiers.

Addition by: Shreepal Singh

India – that is we all together – can never repay for what Lakshman Singh Rathore, besides his three sons, has done to serve this nation. Shaming cricketers and the government that conferred Padam Bhushan and other Bhushans on them is simply not enough. The question is: Why should we be allowed to live in peace and Lakshman Singh Rathore’s sons be deployed to guarantee our peace? Why should we all be not forced to contribute our lives and our dear sons’ lives to guarantee the peace that we enjoy?

To lessen the pain of Lakshman Singh Rathore, to repay for the services of the likes of his sons and to do justice to the brave sons and daughters of Mother India, my suggestion is this:

Make the military service for every Indian for a few – 2 or 3 – years compulsory. It should be made a precondition for getting the Right to Vote and the Right to Contest Election. Our forces are not “Bhade ke Tattoo (available to give their life only for money)” but the proud sons and daughters of Mother India. One who does not dare to sacrifice his life for peace and security, does not have the right to enjoy his life in peace at the cost of somebody else life. Justice demands it.

There are many persons in this country who enjoy their life in peace and make it a mission of their life to destroy India – remember JNU slogans ‘India Tere Tukade Honge Hazar’, politicians sympathisizing with China or Pakistan, anti-national inhabitants of this country. They have no right to enjoy peace unless they pay for this peace.

The voting Right is the most valuable right of a citizen and the most valuable duty of a citizen is to guarantee the peace and security in this country – even if one has to sacrifice his or her life to secure this guarantee.

Untenable Narrative of Islam: A Video

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What is the “Narrative of Islam”? Is this narrative tenable? Does it not breed terrorism? If this narrative is pushed as an Islamic Agenda, will the world not come to war? If the war is to be fought, will it not be fought with the atomic weapons, with which many countries are armed today? If this narrative is not quickly changed into some peaceful alternative narrative, is it not a matter of “short time” that this war will be thrust upon the humanity? Watch this video and decide yourself the answers to these questions.

VID-20180130-WA0039.mp4

Indians Living Under False Impression, “India is Invincible!”

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By: Tanmay Patil

There was a question put in an assured tone by an elderly person from the audience in a conference addressed by Sri Rajiv Malhotra, “For the last 700-800 years, we got a lot of onslaught of foreign invasions in India, but we still survived and in the last 20 years we seem to be reviving and coming up”.

Rajiv Malhotra answered his question thus:

Disagree with the question. We commonly like to say that we are invincible because we have survived. Nothing can happen to us, we are 5000 years old civilization. This all is NOT true.

Until 2000 years ago there was no Christianity, there was no Islam, who combined are 50% of the world today. Between Hinduism and Buddhism, there was all of Asia. If you consider even Hinduism alone, from Afghanistan to Bali (end point of Indonesia) was all Hinduism. From Lanka to not just Mount Kailash, but also the Kazakhstan, some part of China also has Shiva temples, Mongolia, Japan.

If you take that space or area, we  are currently 15-20% of that area; so we have shrunk 80%. ‘doobe nahi, bus 80 pratishat shrink ho gaye’ (English: Did not drown, but only shrunk by 80%).

If you work in a company and a man comes to you and says ‘Sir, we are still not bankrupt, our market share has gone down by 80%, but good news is we are not bankrupt’, I do not think that you would appreciate that and say it’s good news.

You will have to look that, we (India and Hindus) have lost 80% of their territory. Even, as recently as in 1947, we have lost so much of our territory.

After shrinking so much, we are not safe within India as ‘Hindus’ even today, there may be more partitions. There may be partition about the North-east, which means a lot of Brahmaputra river water. There may be partition about Kashmir, so Indus valley water, which means Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan water gone. Nepal could be going to Maoists (China), which means all the Ganga water.

So, all the main three rivers are in threat because of these insurrections, separatists movements and my book ‘Breaking-India’ writes about these separatist identities like Dravidian vs Aryan.

So, we are hardly safe and secure even within India. We cannot say that ‘humko kuch nahin hua, humko maar pit kar, kisine humaari ek banhh todh di, we are happy that hamari ek banhh to hai. Ek aankh le li, we are happy that en aankh toh hai, hum andhe thode hi na hue’ (English: We have lost nothing. Somebody has beaten us and broke our one arm, we are happy that we have our one arm intact. Our one eye is destroyed but we are happy that we have our one eye intact; we have not been blinded.)

This is NOT a success story, but a story of ‘Slow Death’. I agree that it is not a fast death, as we have not been killed, but certainly we have got setbacks.

And (we have got) setbacks in the ‘Siddhantas’ (in the matter of philosophies), which are not more advanced than our ‘Siddhantas’, which are not of more merit than ours.

So, people often say to me that, ‘Devta ne kaha tha kuch nahin hoga, sab theek ho jayega’ (Diety or God has assured us there is nothing to worry, everything will be fine), but for last 1000 years, Devta or God did not save us. I don’t know, but it is true.

I would like to quote Bhagwat Geeta here. During the war of Mahabharata at Kurukshetra, Krishna told Arjuna that both ‘Dharma and Adharma’ always remain here, and you (Arjuna) have to fight Adharma without any excuse. You cannot say, ‘I will stay at home, everything will be done right on its own’). Arjuna tried to give that argument, but Shri Krishna had to explain to him that things won’t work that way, and that Arjuna had the duty to go out in the battle-field and fight against Adharma.

So, Adharma is still there today, it has NOT gone. The Krukshetra is the ‘Global Intellectual theater’ today. All over the world there is a battle of ideas; ‘Siddhantas’ (Philosophies) and different world views are in contest with each other. Some can be seen in physical wars and other are fought psychologically and intellectually.

So, I see history differently, I see the battles are still going on and we (India and Hindus) have been loosing, more than winning. And we are shrinking even today, even within India.

See the video here : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xZkmwHMe7RA

Indian History at a Glance

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(हिंदी By: Ajay Mandyal + English version by: Shreepal Singh)

Events that happened before Christ (BCE):

■ 385 000 – 172 000 years ago ‘Early Middle Paleolithic’ culture found in India (Source: https://www.nature.com/articles/nature25444 )

■ Nothing much is known about the people who lived in India (which must have had altered geography in this remote antiquity because of Earth’s geological activities) between 385 000 – 172 000 and about 9000 years ago. But tools have been excavated in India, which are 74 000 years old. (source:

https://ramanan50.wordpress.com/).

Also sculpted artefacts of a ‘half lion – half human’ (Narasimha Avatar) have been unearthed from a cave in Germany, which was lying 1.2 meter deep, estimated about 32 000 years old. (source: https://detechter.com/lord-narasimha-idol-discovered-in-southern-germany/)

■ ? Rigveda compiled in pre-historic time by Rishis over a long period on the bank of Sarashwati & or Ganges Rivers.

■ 7000 : Rakhi Garhi Bhirrana (recently excavated in Hissar district of Haryana) people lived in planned cities.

■ 3000 : Mohenjo Daro Harrapa people lived on the bank of Sindhu River in planned cities.

■ ? Rama ruled in Ayodhya

■ ? Krishna lived in Vrandavan Mathura

►563 : गौतम बुद्ध का जन्‍म (Birth of Gautam Buddha)

►540 : महावीर का जन्‍म (Birth of Bhagwan Mahavir)

►327-326 : भारत पर एलेक्‍जेंडर का हमला (Alexander invades India in Sindh; battle with Porash; Alexander seriously injured; his army protested against further advance into India and Alexander retreats back to Alexandria in Egypt)

►313 : चंद्रगुप्‍त का राज्‍याभिषेक (Coronation of Chandra Gupta Maurya)

►305 : चंद्रगुप्‍त मौर्य के हाथों सेल्‍युकस की पराजय (Seleucus Nikator comes to Punjab / Sindh (which area had fallen to his share in inheritance from Alexander) to reclaim it from Chandra Gupta Maurya; Maurya defeats Selucus; treaty concluded between the two; Chandra Gupta marries Helena, the daughter of Selucus).

►273-232 : अशोक का शासन Reign of Ashoka

►261 : कलिंग की विजय Kalinga victory of Ashoka

►145-101 : एलारा का क्षेत्र, श्रीलंका के चोल राजा Elara, the Chola King of Sri Lanka, rules

Events that happened after Christ (CE or AD):

►58 : विक्रम संवत् का आरम्‍भ (Vikram Samvat Era started)

►78 : शक संवत् का आरम्‍भ (Shaka Samvat Era started)

►120 : कनिष्‍क का राज्‍याभिषेक (Coronation of Kanishka)

►320 : गुप्‍त युग का आरम्‍भ, भारत का स्‍वर्णिम काल (Start of Gupta period, the golden age of India)

►380 : विक्रमादित्‍य का राज्‍याभिषेक Coronation of Vikramaditya

►405-411 : चीनी यात्री फाहयान की यात्रा Fa Hiyan, the Chinese pilgrim, arrives in India

►415 : कुमार गुप्‍त-1 का राज्‍याभि‍षेक Coronation of Kumara Gupta -1

►455 : स्‍कंदगुप्‍त का राज्‍याभिषेक Coronation of Skandagupta

►606-647 : हर्षवर्धन का शासन Reign of Harshvardhan of Kannauj

►712 : सिंध पर पहला अरब आक्रमण  (First Arab attack – by Mohammad bin Qasim – on Sindh of India. Raja Dahir of Devala (Devalya), known as Karachi today, was defeated and his two daughters sent to the Caliph at Baghdad as gift; Mohammad bin Quasim was killed by the Caliph).

►836 : कन्‍नौज के भोज राजा का राज्‍याभिषेक Coronation of Bhoj Raja of Kannauj

►985 : चोल शासक राजाराज का राज्‍याभिषेक Coronation of Chola king Rajaraj

►998 : सुल्‍तान महमूद का राज्‍याभिषेक Coronation of Sultan Mahmud

A D 1000 – 1499:

►1001 : महमूद गजनी द्वारा भारत पर पहला आक्रमण, जिसने पंजाब के शासक जयपाल को हराया था (First attack of Mahmoud Gazani on India, when King Jaipal of Punjab was defeated)

►1025 : महमूद गजनी द्वारा सोमनाथ मंदिर का विध्‍वंस Mahmoud Gazani destroys Somnath Temple

►1191 : तराईन का पहला युद्ध (First war of Tarain, when Prithviraj Chauhan of Pithoragarh (Delhi) defeated Mohammad Ghauri and allowed him to go back free)

►1192 : तराईन का दूसरा युद्ध (Second war of Tarain, when Mohammad Ghauri defeated Prithviraj Chauhan, imprisoned, took him to Ghor of Afghanistan and killed him there)

►1206 : दिल्‍ली की गद्दी पर कुतुबुद्दीन ऐबक का राज्‍याभिषेक (Coronation of Kutub-Uddin Aibak as the King of Delhi)

►1210 : कुतुबुद्दीन ऐबक की मृत्‍यु Death of Kutub-Uddin

►1221 : भारत पर चंगेज खान का हमला (मंगोल का आक्रमण) Changise Khan of Mongolia invades India

►1236 : दिल्‍ली की गद्दी पर रजिया सुल्‍तान का राज्‍याभिषेक Coronation of Razia Sultana (daughter of Kutub-Uddin Aibak) as Delhi Queen

►1240 : रजिया सुल्‍तान की मृत्‍यु Death of Razia Sultana

►1325 : मोहम्‍मद तुगलक का राज Rule of Mohammad Tuglaq

►1327 : तुगलकों द्वारा दिल्‍ली से दौलताबाद और फिर दक्‍कन को राजधानी बनाया जाना Shifting of the Tuglaq capital from Delhi to Daulatabad in South India

►1336 : दक्षिण में विजयानगर साम्राज्‍य की स्‍थापना Founding of Vijayanagar Empire in South India

►1351 : फिरोजशाह का राज्‍याभिषेक Coronation of Feroz Shah Tuglaq

►1398 : तैमूरलंग द्वारा भारत पर हमला Taimur Lame attacks India

►1469 : गुरुनानक का जन्‍म Birth of Guru Nanak

►1494 : फरघाना में बाबर का राज्‍याभिषेक Babar assumes kingship in Fargana in Uzbekistan

►1497-98 : वास्‍को-डि-गामा की भारत की पहली यात्रा (केप ऑफ गुड होप के जरिए भारत तक समुद्री रास्‍ते की खोज) Vasco de Gama arrives to India for the first time via Cape of Good Hope

1500 से 1799

►1526 : पानीपत की पहली लड़ाई, बाबर ने इब्राहिम लोदी को हराया – बाबर द्वारा मुगल शासन की स्‍थापना First battle of Panipat, in which Babar defeats Ibrahim Lodhi and laid the foundation for Mughal rule in India

►1527 खानवा की लड़ाई, बाबर ने राणा सांगा को हराया Battle of Khanwa, in which Rana Sanga is defeated by Babar

►1530 : बाबर की मृत्‍यु और हुमायूं का राज्‍याभिषेक Death of Babar and coronation of Humayun

►1539 : शेरशाह सूरी ने हुमायूं को हराया और भारतीय का सम्राट बन गया Sher Shah Suri defeats Humayun and becomes king of India with capital in Delhi

►1540 : कन्‍नौज की लड़ाई War of Kannauj

►1555 : हुमायूं ने दिल्‍ली की गद्दी को फिर से हथिया लिया Humayun defeats Sher Shah Suri and regains the throne of Delhi

►1556 : पानीपत की दूसरी लड़ाई Second battle of Panipat

►1565 : तालीकोट की लड़ाई Battle of Talikot

►1576 : हल्‍दीघाटी की लड़ाई- राणा प्रताप ने अकबर को हराया Battle of Haldi Ghati, in which Rana Pratap defeates Akbar

►1582 : अकबर द्वारा दीन-ए-इलाही की स्‍थापना Akbar starts his new religin Din-e-Ilahi

►1597 : राणा प्रताप की मृत्‍यु Death of Rana Pratap

►1600 : ईस्‍ट इंडिया कंपनी की स्‍थापना East India Company incorporated in England

►1605 : अकबर की मृत्‍यु और जहाँगीर का राज्‍याभिषेक Death of Akbar and coronation of his son Salim as Jahangir

►1606 : गुरु अर्जुन देव का वध Murder of Sikh Guru Arjun Dev

►1611 : नूरजहाँ से जहांगीर का विवाह Jahangir marries Noorjahan

►1616 : सर थॉमस रो ने जहाँगीर से मुलाकात की Sir Thomas Roy meets Jahangir

►1627 : शिवाजी का जन्‍म और जहांगीर की मृत्‍यु Birth of Shivaji and death of Jahangir

►1628 : शाहजहां भारत के सम्राट बने Coronation of Shahjahan as Empror of India

►1631 : मुमताज महल की मृत्‍यु Death of Mumtaj Mahal

►1634 : भारत के बंगाल में अंग्रेजों को व्‍यापार करने की अनुमति दे दी गई English get permission to trade in Bengal of India

►1659 : औरंगजेब का राज्‍याभिषेक, शाहजहाँ को कैद कर लिया गया Aurangzeb imprisons his father Shah Jahan and declares himself as the empror of India

►1665 : औरंगजेब द्वारा शिवाजी को कैद कर लिया गया Aurangzeb invites Shivaji, breaks his solemn undertaking of Shivaji’s safety and arrests him

■ Shivaji escapes from Aurangzeb’s confine, arrives in Satara, assumes kingship and starts decapitating war against Aurangzeb’s Mughal rule.

►1680 : शिवाजी की मृत्‍यु Death of Shivaji

►1707 : औरंगजेब की मृत्‍यु Death of Aurangzeb

►1708 : गुरु गोबिंद सिंह की मृत्‍यु Death of Guru Govind Singh

►1739 : नादिरशाह का भारत पर हमला Nadir Shah invades India

►1757 : प्‍लासी की लड़ाई, लॉर्ड क्‍लाइव के हाथों भारत में अंग्रेजों के राजनीतिक शासन की स्‍थापना (Battle of Plassy and the victory of the English there starts their political subjugation of India)

►1761 पानीपत की तीसरी लड़ाई, शाहआलम द्वितीय भारत के सम्राट बने

►1764 : बक्‍सर की लड़ाई

►1765 : क्‍लाइव को भारत में कंपनी का गर्वनर नियुक्‍त किया गया

►1767-69 : पहला मैसूर युद्ध

►1770 : बंगाल का महान अकाल

►1780 : महाराजा रणजीत सिंह का जन्‍म

►1780-84 : दूसरा मैसूर युद्ध

►1784 : पिट्स अधिनियम

►1793 : बंगाल में स्‍थायी बंदोबस्‍त

►1799 : चौथा मैसूर युद्ध- टीपू सुल्‍तान की मृत्‍यु

1800 से 1900

►1802 : बेसेन की संधि

►1809 : अमृतसर की संधि

►1829 : सती प्रथा को प्रतिबंधित किया गया

►1830 : ब्रह्म समाज के संस्‍थापक राजाराम मोहन राय की इंग्‍लैंड की यात्रा

►1833 : राजाराम मोहन राय की मृत्‍यु

►1839 : महाराजा रणजीत सिंह की मृत्‍यु

►1839-42 : पहला अफगान युद्ध

►1845-46 : पहला अंग्रेज-सिक्‍ख युद्ध

►1852 : दूसरा अंग्रेज-बर्मा युद्ध

►1853 : बांबे से थाने के बीच पहली रेलवे लाइन और कलकत्‍ता में टेलीग्राफ लाइन खोली गई

►1857 : स्‍वतंत्रता का पहला संग्राम (या सिपाही विद्रोह)

►1861 : रबीन्‍द्रनाथ टैगोर का जन्‍म

►1869 : महात्‍मा गांधी का जन्‍म

►1885 : भारतीय राष्‍ट्रीय कांग्रेस की स्‍थापना

►1897 : सुभाष चंद्र बोस का जन्‍म

1900 से 1947

►1904 ~ भारतीय विश्वविद्यालय अधिनियम पारित

►1905 ~ बंगाल का विभाजन

►1906 ~ मुस्लिम लीग की स्थापना

►1907 ~ सूरत अधिवेशन, कांग्रेस में फूट

►1909 ~ मार्ले-मिंटो सुधार

►1911 ~ ब्रिटिश सम्राट का दिल्ली दरबार

►1916 ~ होमरूल लीग का निर्माण

►1916 ~ मुस्लिम लीग-कांग्रेस समझौता (लखनऊ पैक्ट)

►1917 ~ महात्मा गाँधी द्वारा चंपारण में आंदोलन

►1919 ~ रौलेट अधिनियम

►1919 ~ जलियाँवाला बाग हत्याकांड

►1919 ~ मांटेग्यू-चेम्सफोर्ड सुधार

►1920 ~ खिलाफत आंदोलन

►1920 ~ असहयोग आंदोलन

►1922 ~ चौरी-चौरा कांड

►1927 ~ साइमन कमीशन की नियुक्ति

►1928 ~ साइमन कमीशन का भारत आगमन

►1929 ~ भगतसिंह द्वारा केन्द्रीय असेंबली में बम विस्फोट

►1929 ~ कांग्रेस द्वारा पूर्ण स्वतंत्रता की माँग

►1930 ~ सविनय अवज्ञा आंदोलन

►1930 ~ प्रथम गोलमेज सम्मेलन

►1931 ~ द्वितीय गोलमेज सम्मेलन

►1932 ~ तृतीय गोलमेज सम्मेलन

►1932 ~ सांप्रदायिक निर्वाचक प्रणाली की घोषणा

►1932 ~ पूना पैक्ट

►1942 भारत छोड़ो आंदोलन

►1942 ~ क्रिप्स मिशन का आगमन

►1943 ~ आजाद हिन्द फौज की स्थापना

►1946 ~ कैबिनेट मिशन का आगमन

►1946 ~भारत की संविधान सभा का निर्वाचन

►1946 ~ अंतरिम सरकार की सथापना

►1947 ~ भारत के विभाजन की माउंटबेटन योजाना

►1947 ~ भारतीय स्वतंत्रता प्राप्ती

An Evolutionary Crisis on Earth!

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  By: Manoj Pavitran
Inspired by Auguste Rodin’s The Thinker. Visualisation by Hemant Shekhar

Our present civilisational cycle, which began with the scientific and industrial revolution in Europe, has come a long way passing through colonialism, the two world wars and a cold war that took us to the edge of a nuclear holocaust. We are now a global civilisation cast predominantly in the moulds shaped by science and its world view, a single marketplace, a single global village, with instant global access and awareness, a community of Nations competing for global resources to sustain an economic engine that seeks infinite growth on a finite planet.

While science doesn’t deal with the question of the purpose of life on earth, the global notions of social development has come to mean physical and psychological welfare practically translated into a culture of unbridled consumerism in the name of happiness. In the process we are destroying the very foundations of the natural ecosystem in which we live. Global warming, pollution and destruction of the Natural environment, species extinction, refugees of war and climate change, a fragile and volatile economic system and the breakdown of traditional cultures and values are building up into a serious systemic crisis in the world. Besides, the exponentially accelerating technological innovations driving rapid social changes are now entirely out of human comprehension and control. We are, globally, accelerating towards a future that is way beyond our cognitive faculties to fathom.

Where are we heading as a species?

The sixth mass extinction

The fossil records say that in the long evolutionary cycles spanning huge spans of time the Nature has flushed out most of her life forms on earth five times in the past, retaining only those life forms fit to move on to the next stage of her evolutionary creation. According to a peer reviewed scientific study published in 2014, earth is entering the phase of sixth mass extinction of species since the loss of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.

There is a natural rate at which species go extinct on earth but at present the extinction rate has accelerated way beyond the normal and there is a growing body of studies knitting together the unfolding story of mass extinction in which we are actively playing a role. We, as a species, were not in the picture during the previous mass extinctions on earth but this time we are in it and actively engaging in wiping out other species and in the process heading towards our own demise.

Are we, the humans, destined to be buried in the body of earth, along with thousands of other species that are going extinct now, as an evolutionary debris only to be retained as fossil evidence to be excavated by the future species on this planet? Are we flightworthy of the upcoming future of evolution on earth? It is not a rhetoric question, nor a religious doomsday fear-stick to beat the sheep to behave. There is a reality of the evolutionary process of which we are an integral part, and it seems Nature is poised towards something way beyond the limits we are currently able to perceive.

Our blundering ego and its appetites

Nearly a hundred years ago Sri Aurobindo wrote in his philosophical magnum opus The Life Divine:

“At present mankind is undergoing an evolutionary crisis in which is concealed a choice of its destiny; for a stage has been reached in which the human mind has achieved in certain directions an enormous development while in others it stands arrested and bewildered and can no longer find its way.” 1

“Man has created a system of civilisation which has become too big for his limited mental capacity and understanding and his still more limited spiritual and moral capacity to utilise and manage, a too dangerous servant of his blundering ego and its appetites.”2

There is an increasing mastery over the forces of Nature and a capacity to put these forces into practical utility in our daily life but at the same time the increasing complexity of the mechanical systems we have developed to manage our global civilization and the long term cumulative results of our collective action are now way beyond the limited mental capacity to fathom and manage. Besides the complexity and accelerating change, the engines of global financial market forces and its merciless competition is bringing forth the worst territorial instincts and predatory nature in us. We have harvested the power of rational intelligence and its tremendous creativity but these powers are at the service of selfish drives of clashing group egos and its covert and overt wars causing tremendous destruction to the life on earth. Our power of action has been scaled up for global operations and yet fundamentally the human nature has not changed.

“But because the burden which is being laid on mankind is too great for the present littleness of the human personality and its petty mind and small life-instincts, because it cannot operate the needed change, because it is using this new apparatus and organisation to serve the old infraspiritual and infrarational life-self of humanity, the destiny of the race seems to be heading dangerously, as if impatiently and in spite of itself, under the drive of the vital ego seized by colossal forces which are on the same scale as the huge mechanical organisation of life and scientific knowledge which it has evolved, a scale too large for its reason and will to handle, into a prolonged confusion and perilous crisis and darkness of violent shifting incertitude.” 3

The troubling truth about the human nature is, in spite of all our science and technological wizardry we are capable of, beneath our modern costumes and glittering technologies, we are still pretty much driven by our animal drives and its territorial claims served by a mental intelligence that has no better light than its heap of sensory data increasingly handed over to the machine intelligence to process and decipher. Within us are the demons and djinns lurking as greed, lust, insecurity, fear, anger, hatred, fighting instinct and violence breeding widespread destruction and death on its way.

Our weapons of conquest and mass murder may become perfectly organic and eco friendly, remotely controlled and managed, invisibly deployed and precisely targeted, especially now with the convergence of nano-tech, bio-tech and info-tech unleashing immense powers that are sweeping across the world. But we have to face the fact that there is an animal nature in us lurking just beneath the surface. Our technological prows is bringing out and amplifying all our inherent capacities and along with it are our evolutionary animal past and its instincts empowered by a mental intelligence that cannot foresee and manage systemic consequences of its local and isolated solutions. This demands an urgent need to transform the human nature to access a greater cognitive range and action if we are to navigate through the emerging complexity.

Upgrading the human beings

It is now a well established norm that the technologies will continue to evolve to become more and more efficient, invisible, intelligent and complex whether it is the mobile phones, self-driving cars, quantum computing, artificial intelligence, robotics, nano technologies or genetic engineering. However when it comes to upgrading the human beings our notions of education doesn’t go beyond few basic ideas of literacies and skills. Lifelong education is now increasingly recognised as a basic requirement but our capacity to continuously learn and adapt to a changing world remains a daunting task as our learning capacity decline with aging. While medical science is finding ways to extend the human lifespan, the psychological nature of human beings remains a pandora’s box which modern psychology is still in the process of mapping. Besides, it is not sufficient to have physical and psychological well being in a body with long life span, there is also a pressing need to review the very meaning and purpose of human existence in the context of rapidly evolving technologies that are surpassing human capacities.

In a short video called ‘Humans need Not Apply’ released in 2014 by C.G.P.Grey, the direction of emerging challenges from the Artificial Intelligence (AI) are well pointed out. In a world where the AI is rapidly taking over the intelligent thinking functions and the related jobs, both mundane and creative, the humans are quietly becoming obsolete as a work force.

It is expected that on the trails of exponential evolution of technology and self-learning machines, the power of Artificial Intelligence will exceed the intelligence of human beings. In January 2015, Stephen Hawking, Elon Musk, and dozens of artificial intelligence experts signed an open letter on artificial intelligence calling for research on the societal impacts of AI, particularly its existential risk to humanity.

The debate on AI can be seen spread in between two extreme views, the extinction of humanity or its immortality. Ray Kurzweil , Google’s Director of Engineering, a well-known futurist with a credible track record for accurate predictions, is upbeat about AI and the technological future of humanity foreseeing immortality and singularity ahead for our species. It was the mathematician John von Neumann first used the term “singularity” (c. 1950s), in the context of technological progress causing accelerating change:

“The accelerating progress of technology and changes in the mode of human life, give the appearance of approaching some essential singularity in the history of the race beyond which human affairs, as we know them, could not continue”. 4

At present we are exponentially accelerating towards such an unimaginable future. We are patching up the limitations of our cognitive and creative faculties by increasing augmentation with machine intelligence and the technology pioneers are dreaming of an increasing fusion with the machines to enhance human faculties. If it was the telescope that extended the range of vision for Galileo, modern man is dreaming of augmenting the mental capacity by linking the brain directly with a global brain of super intelligence in the cloud of Internet. It is as if we as a species is building a global brain through Internet that can potentially self-organise the entire species into a single global organism with individuals constituting its cells by linking the individual brain with the global brain. While this may sound like a wild science fiction fantasy there is a tremendous push to exceed the limits of our cognitive and creative faculties mediated by technology. Transhumanism and posthuman beings are part of the contemporary intellectual discourse.

However all these technological dreams are still based on the notion that the human being is ultimately an intelligent machine to be augmented and expanded by more intelligent machinery in a massively intelligent universe with some hacking of our biochemistry to experience an explosion of happiness. The biochemical pursuit for happiness is already well on its way along with the pursuit of immortality and the process of death is increasingly looked upon as a technical problem to be solved.

The genie is out of the bottle whether we like it or not and it cannot be rolled back, we can only go forward come what may.

Sri Aurobindo

More than a century ago Sri Aurobindo was grappling with this problem. Is humanity heading for self-destruction through its own technical wizardry like a child playing with fire burning down the house or is there a way forward, a greater wisdom and power that can avert the danger? He wrote:

“The evolutionary nisus is pushing towards a development of the cosmic Force in terrestrial life which needs a larger mental and vital being to support it, a wider Mind, a greater wider more conscious unanimised Life-Soul, Anima, and that again needs an unveiling of the supporting Soul and spiritual Self within to maintain it.”4

His life’s work was centred around this issue. The problems created by the power of thought and rational intelligence cannot be resolved at the same level of consciousness. Here in lies our fundamental difficulty. Nor does a spiritual liberation into otherworldly transcendence can have any impact on the evolutionary crisis unfolding on earth. That is why the mainstream traditional spirituality primarily dealing with individual liberation is of not much value to the future of the planet. It is here on earth the evolutionary process is accelerating and it must be here on earth and within the framework of matter the solution is to be established, not in any timeless existence beyond this material world.

“For the problem is fundamental and in putting it evolutionary Nature in man is confronting herself with a critical choice which must one day be solved in the true sense if the race is to arrive or even to survive.”5

This demands a clear vision of the process of evolution, its future course on earth and practical ways to engage with it. It is this factor that makes Sri Aurobindo a silent spiritual revolutionary whom the world is yet to discover.

He wrote:

“We do not belong to the past dawns, but to the noons of the future.” 6

Bibliography

1, 2, 3. Sri Aurobindo, The Life Divine, http://incarnateword.in/sabcl/19/the-divine-life

4. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technological_singularity

5. Sri Aurobindo, The Life Divine, http://incarnateword.in/sabcl/19/the-divine-life

6. Sri Aurobindo, Essays on the Gita, http://incarnateword.in/sabcl/13/our-demand-and-need-from-the-gita

Dealing with Terrorists: Chinese and Indian Way: and Law Courts!

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In Jammu and Kashmir Indian State has deployed its para-military forces to maintain law and order there and handle the situation created by the so-called ‘separatists’. These separatists want to separate the state of Jammu and Kashmir from the Union of India.

Why do they want to separate from India? They argue, they have their own separate religion, they have majority who follow this religion, they have democratic right to decide whether to live in India or separate from India, they want to separate from India and live under their religious law. If they are asked a question why they have massacred Pandits in Kashmir valley on the wholesale scale and forced the rest of them who escaped this massacre to flee out of the state, they have no answer.

Again, if they are told that the erstwhile J & K ruler Maharaja Hari Singh had acceded his state to Union of India, which is a secular Union; that those who considered their religion above everything else had been given a separate land (Pakistan); that if they thought similarly, they could have migrated to Pakistan, and for this reason they have no right to again demand a separate land on the basis of their separate religion, they have no answer.

The fact is that without repatriation and accounting of all Kashmir Pandits – killed and displaced, they cannot be said in majority in the state. The truth and justice are above all fraud and force tactics.

The tactics of fraud and force in the name of democratic and human rights is not being employed in India alone by such religious fanatics. It is being employed in China as well.

How does China deal with such tactics? And, how does India deal with such tactics? Indian para-military forces are not less competent than China to deal with such individuals.

But in India the courts of law, which have no experience or understanding of the circumstances under which forces have to work, have a different notions of human rights, and have upper hand in taking decisions. In China it is not so.

Courts will exist only when the state is not challenged and decimated by the terrorist armed bands.

Here are two videos, one of which show how China deals with such terrorists and another show how India deals with the terrorists. An Indian Army veteran has recorded this video and has written his impression about the unfortunate Indian circumstances. First watch these videos.

Video No. 1: Chinese forces deal with religious terrorists in its country’s Uighur province:

 

Video No. 2: Indian forces’ hands are tied down in the name of human rights of the terrorists:

(Note: This video is extremely disturbing and – on second thought – has been self-censured for this reason. In this video, the hooligans are punching Indian army men armed with automatic weapons, which can kill all these trouble makers. But the army personnel show extreme restraint and do not use their weapons. Shame on those who tie down their hands! Shame on those who allow such restraint and deploy sons of mother India, not to kill the ruffians but be killed or prosecuted! )

An Army veteran, who lost a family member to a militant’s bullet, has raised an agonising poser to the Indian courts, “How much do you know about the brutality of war?”

How many of you have sent your progeny to the armed forces?

Have you ever lost a family member in the defence of the country?

Do you know the pain of losing a young son or having a widowed daughter or seeing your grandchildren grow up without their father?

If not, please do not impede our war effort. Human rights sound very nice when you and your families are safely ensconced in secure air-conditioned homes but not when you are facing bullets and stone of an unruly religious fanatic mob.

Applying the Court directions to the Pulwama incident, a FIR will be lodged against the Gunner Rishi Kumar who risked his life and killed two terrorists despite being hit on his headgear.

Police investigations will carry on for years haunting him even when posted to other places in India.

Courts will issue summons and demand his presence. He will be accused of depriving the ‘innocent’ jihadis of their human rights and asked to justify the killings.

He will be queried, “Are you sure they were terrorists? They did not kill you, why did you kill them?”

He will be asked, “Did you give them adequate opportunity to surrender and reform themselves?” “Did you give them a fair chance to escape?” “Did you fire warning shots in the air?”

Instead of lauding his bravery, he will be subjected to judicial witch-hunt. What a disgrace for the nation!

Subjecting active military operations to judicial review is an outlandish idea. Whereas all nations empower their soldiers to vanquish enemies of the state, India takes pride in shackling them.

While addressing the U.S. Naval Academy in April 2010, Secretary of Defence Robert M Gates of USA had said, “You have answered the trumpet call. For my part, I consider myself personally responsible for each and every one of you as though you were my own sons and daughters. And when I send you in harm’s way, as I will, I will do everything in my power to see that you have what you need to accomplish your mission – and come home safely.”

Apparently, Indian courts think differently. Human rights of the enemies of the state appear to be far more important than the security of the country.

Finally, as a serving officer commented wryly, “Our courts have given us two options – “get killed and the country will honour your martyrdom” or “kill the terrorist and face police/judicial investigations for years.”

His apprehensions are genuine and shared by the most. One wonders which soldier will look forward to serving in such antagonistic environment!

Everyone cannot fight for India on borders but one can fight for our Soldiers Betterment from the safety of our homes.

VID-20180204-WA0093.mp4

मोदी से नाराज लोग कौन हैं?

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भारत के प्रधानमत्री मोदी से कौन लोग नाराज हैं इससे मालूम हो जायेगा:

  1. आधार लिंक कराने से महाराष्ट्र में 10 लाख गरीब गायब हो गए!
  2. उत्तरखण्ड में भी कई लाख फ़र्ज़ी बीपीएल कार्ड धारी गरीब ख़त्म हो गए !

  3. तीन करोड़ (30000000 ) से जायदा फ़र्ज़ी एलपीजी कनेक्शन धारक ख़त्म हो गए !

  4. मदरसों से वज़ीफ़ा पाने वाले 1,95,000 फर्ज़ी बच्चे गायब हो गए!

  5. डेढ़ करोड़ (15000000 ) से ऊपर फ़र्ज़ी राशन कार्ड धारी गायब हो गए! ये सब क्यों और कहाँ गायब होते जा रहे हैं! चोरो का सारा काला चिटठा खुलने वाला है इसीलिए उनके परोकारो ने मिलकर माननीय सर्वोच्च न्यायलय में याचिका दायर कर दी कि आधार लिंक हमारे मौलिक अधिकारों का हनन है !
    सवाल है कि चोरों को प्राइवेसी का कैसा अधिकार?

  6. कंपनी के MD :मोदी ने फर्जी 3 लाख से ज्यादा कम्पनियां बन्द कर दी है!

  7. राशऩ डीलर नाराज़ हो गये!
  8. Property Dealer नाराज़ हो गये!
  9. ऑनलाइन सिस्टम बनने से दलाल नाराज़ हो गये है!
  10. 40,000 फर्जी NGO बन्द हो गये है, इसलिए इन NGO के मालिक भी नाराज़ हो गये !
  11. No 2 की Income से Property खरीद ने वाले नाराज़ हो गये!
  12. E-Tender होने से कुछ ठेकेदार भी नाराज़ हो गये!

  13. गैस कंपनी वाले नाराज़ हो गये!

  14. अब तक जो 12 करोड लोग Income टैक्स के दायरे मै आ चुके हैं वह लोग नाराज़ हो गये!
  15. GST सिस्टम लागू होने से ब्यापारी लोग नाराज़ हो गये, क्योकि वो लोग Automatic सिस्टम मै आ गये है!
  16. वो 2 नम्बर के काम बाले लोग फलना फूलना बन्द हो गये है!
  17. Black को White करने का सिस्टम एक दम से लुप्त सा हो गया है।
  18. आलसी सरकारी अधिकारी नाराज हो गये, क्योकि समय पर जाकर काम करना पड रहा हैं!

  19. वो लोग नाराज हो गये, जो समय पर काम नही करते थे और रिश्वत देकर काम करने मे विश्वास करते है।

दुख होना लाज़मी है, देश बदलाव की कहानी लिखी जा रही है, जिसे समझ आ रही है बदल रहा है, जिसे नही आ रही है वो मंदबुध्दि युवराज के मानसिक गुलाम ‘अंधभक्त’ कह कह कर छाती कूट रहे है! जो भी मोदीजी को गाली देता दिखे तो समझ लेना की चोट काफी लगी है!!

आज से 2200 साल पहले चाणक्य ने बिलकुल सही कहा था, “जब गद्दारों की टोली में हाहाकार हो तो समझ लो देश का राजा चरित्रवान और प्रतिभा संपन्न है और राष्ट्र प्रगति पथ पर अग्रसर है”.


How the Fraud of Punjab National Bank and Nirav Modi Took Place?

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First, facts about PNB Bank – Nirav Modi scam:

Loan taken 2008 – Scam Happened 2011 – Auditing Of Banks happen each year – PNB Oldest And Largest Bank after SBI – RBI under Raghuram Rajan, PM – Manmohan Singh , FM – Chidambaram and Pranav Mukherjee.

2008 – No Issue
2009 – Still No Issue
2010 – No NPA Red Alert
2011 – Scam No Red Alert
2012 – No News
2013 – No News
2014 – No News – RBI Governor changed
2016 – Demonetisation
2017 – RBI compelled and Banks compelled to give clear picture

Who is Culprit ?

Same Day after Scam Broke Out ED raided and sieged Rs. 5100 cr assets.

By: Deepak Shenoy

There is a huge “fraud” at Punjab National Bank, which involves a lot of lies by a lot of people. Here is where we come in to explain what we think had happened. But first, a few important things for you to know. There is no reason for you to pull your deposits or money out of Punjab National Bank. The bank may have to take a loss because of this fraud, but the government has a stated policy that no public sector bank will fail, so your deposits remain protected.

The fraud is not 11,000 crore (Cr). In this case the hit on Punjab National Bank (PNB) will probably be lesser in size. But it seems that this is a “standard practice” among all the public sector banks, which means it looks probably much more in size if you outrage against the practice! Also remember that if everyone is doing it, it’s easy to pretend it’s not a fraud.

The main culprits here are the top management of the bank and the auditors. How they could NOT have caught this is simply beyond rational imagination – and therefore points to people knowing it but letting it continue.

The Scam and How It Stands:

Punjab National Bank announced a big fraud of Rs. 11,000 cr.+ in a surprise letter to the stock exchanges.
And then, it apparently shot off a message to a bunch of banks, blaming a now retired employee for raising fraudulent Letters of Undertaking for over six years. And blaming the people who received the funds, companies owned by a jeweller named Nirav Modi, and in another case, those owned by Mehul Choksi, such as the publicly listed Gitanjali Gems. Nirav Modi is Choksi’s nephew. (As trivia: Nirav Modi’s brother, Nishal, is married to Ishita Salgaokar, who’s Dhirubhai Ambani’s grand-daughter through his daughter, Dipti). So what actually happened? Let’s start from the concept.

First, The Concept:

Let’s understand how things work. Some importer, let’s call him Nirav Modi or NM, wants to import pearls or diamonds and then sell them. The purchase requires money, so NM approaches a bank, say Punjab National Bank (PNB). PNB says look, I’ll give you a loan but it will be like at 10%. NM thinks hard and says, no, that’s too much. Wait, why don’t I take a foreign currency loan instead, after all I’m buying in dollars? Much lower interest rates, no? I can get at LIBOR+2% and LIBOR is like 1.5%; so I’ll have the money at 3.5%!

But who will give NM a foreign currency loan? A bank abroad? They don’t know NM. They don’t have any history of NM, so why will they give him money? SO NM goes to PNB and says, boss, you’re my banker, so please help some foreign bank give me some money to buy diamonds. Say that you will guarantee my loan by giving me a “Letter of Undertaking” (LOU). PNB now should be saying look, if you want me to give Rs. 100 cr. guarantee, you give me stuff worth 110 cr. at least. As collateral.

But PNB, for some strange reason, doesn’t ask for collateral. More on that later.

So now the foreign bank is ready to lend NM the money, because PNB will guarantee it. And the foreign bank trusts PNB. Why does it trust PNB? Because PNB sends a message on SWIFT – the banking message service – that PNB guarantees Rs. 100 cr. of money for 180 days for Mr. NM at an interest rate of, say, LIBOR + 2%. It’s like a message – written in stone, effectively – that says PNB will pay if NM doesn’t pay.

In fact the foreign bank trusts only PNB. So it gives the money to PNBs account with it, called by PNB as a “Nostro” – the account that PNB maintains with banks abroad, where the other bank will send money meant for PNB customers. PNB’s nostro account gets the money.

PNB then gives NM the money from the Nostro account, usually paid off to whoever NM is buying his diamonds from. This payment is to someone outside India usually, to fund a purchase of diamonds or whatever.

Note this carefully! The other bank gives money to PNB’s Nostro account, not to NM. They don’t care about NM. They only know that PNB has given a guarantee on the SWIFT channel.

Also note that the ‘other bank’ is nowadays mostly the foreign branches of Indian banks. Because the ‘phoren’ banks have realized something sinister – that PNB’s guarantee is a strange beast that isn’t backed with much, but we’ll come to that!

The foreign bank couldn’t care less about whether NM was buying diamonds or bitcoin – to them, PNB would pay back even if NM’s bitcoin wallet got stolen.

Why does PNB give a guarantee? Fees. Each year, a bank may charge upto 2% to give the LoU.

So what happens when it’s time to pay back? NM has to get the pearls in India, sell them, receive the money and pay PNB. On the due date written on the LoU. Then PNB will pay back the foreign bank saying okay, we got the customer’s money so we’re giving it back to you. With interest etc. That’s what is supposed to happen. But in reality, things went a little berserk, it seems.

The Reality: A Bit of a Ponzi:

NM might not pay back at all. NM might use the money to speculate in the markets. Or do something else. What if NM in the above example simply didn’t have the money to pay back? Instead, he asks a PNB official to open ANOTHER LoU. For the amount owed plus interest. So if we had the first LoU at $10 million the second one is $11 million to cover the interest on the first. The money from the second LoU is used to repay the first. It’s just rolling over of credit. Over and over. Standard definition of a ponzi scheme.

This can easily balloon into a larger amount, so large that it’s too much. In effect many such arrangements have turned into semi-ponzi schemes, with one LoU being opened to repay another and so on.

Which is what is likely to have happened. We don’t know the details, but it looks like this.

Nirav Modi took loans from foreign branches of Indian banks through an LoU issued by PNB. This was done through a SWIFT based LoU issued through a rogue employee (or many of them) at PNB. The orders never showed up in the core banking system for monitoring. LoUs were rolled over all the way since 2011, and possibly increased over time too.

The rogue official retired in 2017, and the replacement refused to roll over the LoU, which came due in Jan 2018 because he couldn’t find the past transactions in the system. No rollover means a default, since there was no money to pay. So PNB quickly files an FIR saying, ‘Oh goodness we have lost 280 cr. on the Jan LoUs’. Then someone said, “Abeyaar, is there more of these not-in-system LoUs? Someone check no?” Then someone checked.

‘Oh gawd. 11,400 crores’. That’s a lot of crores. Everyone in the bank panicked. Why couldn’t Nirav Modi just pay it back? He must have the original money, no? No, because if it was ever intended to be paid back, the rollovers wouldn’t have been required. At some point, things got so out of hand that rollovers were required in order to stay current.

Typically this would not be a problem. If PNB had done things right, they would have had collateral worth the amount of guarantee, and they would have sold that collateral and paid the foreign bank. But, and here’s the real issue: PNB didn’t have any collateral.

Why did PNB give a guarantee without collateral? If you and I go for a loan to a bank, they’ll ask us for income proof, and collateral. Only small tiny personal loans and credit card loans come backed without collateral. For something of the order of 11,000 cr. you would think they would ask for collateral.

Especially it should have been so after the scene with Mallya where loans to Kingfisher were given on nearly no collateral (though even there they had a house and some promoter shares pledged). Why did PNB give this guarantee then? It’s typical – banks give guarantees for more the amount you give as collateral. Because business relationships etc. And then, because nearly every bank is doing it.

The loan was not a “fund based limit”. In a fund based limit like a term loan, the bank pays out money. In non-fund-based limits, the bank will only pay if someone else defaults or an event happens – like a Bank Guarantee or an LC or an LoU.

Meaning, PNB assumed that the foreign bank was giving a loan directly to Nirav Modi and that PNB needed to pay only in case Nirav Modi defaulted. So in the eyes of PNB it was always an “non-fund-based” loan. But this is how a significant part of import financing works. They all rollover credit, and they all use LoUs for much higher than they can offer as collateral.

From my sources, the scale is huge. For every Rs. 100 that a bank has collateral, they will easily provide LOUs for upto 6x the amount. This is a real problem – that most public sector banks do not keep much collateral against non-fund-based limits given to importing customers.

So even if a bank has collateral, it’s nowhere near enough. And then, such unfunded liabilities are not even reported to RBI!

Basel Reporting: No Disclosure:

PNB has “unfunded” exposure of 11,000 cr. they say. But they don’t even reveal it in their latest Basel III disclosure! The funded exposure to “Gems and Jewellery” is shown at 1860 cr. Unfunded to the same sector: 842 cr. This doesn’t even add up. So, in effect, PNB didn’t reveal that it was funding massive quantities of “unfunded, contingent exposure”. They will of course pretend that they didn’t know, because the transactions weren’t in the core banking system.

Did employees hide it? Was PNB responsible or was it a fraud? Can employees be responsible? Could they have hidden the credit and the rolling over of LoUs? But honestly, how does a 11,000 cr. credit pass muster without top management realizing it?

Think of it – your nostro account with these other banks keeps getting big credits that add up to 11,000 cr. Will you not reconcile it in the accounting? The “why is this money even here?” question should have been asked by someone who audits accounts, one thinks?

And the SWIFT messages. It’s a specific kind of message. Why wouldn’t PNB audit the SWIFT trail? Reconcile it with the core banking system? How many more such skeletons will tumble if they do?

Their excuses are:

Data wasn’t entered into the core banking system. (Of course, otherwise you would have had to report it)
LOUs weren’t authorized. (Hard to believe, because the amounts are very large. Surely someone on the top would know?) The SWIFT system was illegally used. (Again, hard to believe that a bank like PNB would not audit its SWIFT messages regularly. Or its auditors. Or RBI). On the face of it, it looks like the ex-employee is being used as a scapegoat. It’s likely that a lot of people were in on this thing. And that it generated massive, fat fees for PNB all these years.

Consider fees wise! Imagine 11,000 cr. worth LoUs being renewed each year – that’s upto Rs. 200 cr. in fees that was all hitting PNB’s top line. You could bribe an employee to maybe give you a small increase – say 10-20 cr. but when you hit numbers like 11,000 cr. this is surely something the top management would know.

Scale of this scam and warning:

While PNB reported it as a 11,000 cr. scam, they filed an FIR with the CBI for only Rs. 280 cr. This has probably expanded since then but even if the total outstanding is as much as that, there’s a good chance that the actual loss amount will be lesser. All of it will be borne by PNB right now. Whether someone abused their SWIFT usage is not relevant, if PNB’s SWIFT message said they will pay, they have to pay if there is a default.

But think about the fallout. The problem was that some liabilities were not in the system. There could be more such LoUs. From the same branch or others. Other banks could have such LoUs too. It’s trivial to start looking – and we know that Nirav Modi will not be an isolated case.

Also, the issue was that the limits had no collateral behind them. If all banks are told to verify their non-fund-based limits and demand collateral against them (say at least 25%) then the scale would be absolutely massive. It’s not like this is happening only with Nirav Modi or Choksi. A very large number of importers of commodities have been doing this, and rotating credit. A change in the ‘Regulations’ here can change the game dramatically for every other bank (and import account) in the system.

The simple point is: this particular transaction will result in a lower loss than 11,000 cr. for PNB. Because of recoveries and such things. But if RBI asks all banks to pull up collateral on such lendings and stop such practices, the scale may be many times larger.

What about the PNB stock?

It’s fallen 17%. But note that it already has 60,000 cr. of gross NPAs. Another 11,000 cr. will hurt it but not kill it. It won’t die – the government will take it over. Shareholders might suffer, but come on as a shareholder of a public sector bank you’re used to suffering.

The problem really is: There is never just one cockroach. When you go deeper, you are likely to find more dirty, dark secrets, and none of them will be any good. PNB is gonna hurt for a while, but so are others who will find their books similarly tarnished once they investigate.

Will This Bring The Market Down?

Have you been living under a rock? Nothing will ever bring the market down, nowadays. But the one thing that does bring markets down is the outflow of liquidity. What if so much of the “ponzi” credit – essentially money that was rolled over very month – is being invested directly, or indirectly, into stocks? If RBI tightens up, liquidity will pull money out of stocks, and that will hurt.

Of course, this hurts the fiscal deficit since PNB has to be rescued. So bond yields are up to 7.6% and therefore we’d avoid any long term funds or bonds. Short term it will have to be. But overall, we wouldn’t worry too much. Just react, don’t predict. What would you do if stocks fell? Better to answer that than to say they will, or they will not. (And no, not buying PNB)!

Our View – Fix it:

This is the Indian public sector banking system. Fix it. How can you have transactions on SWIFT outside CBS? Fix it. Why would you not reconcile the nostro accounts? Suspend the auditors. Fire top management. Fix it. Closing the door behind Nirav Modi, who’s already left the country, is probably useless. If you find fraud, invoke their personal guarantees, and file cases to attach their personal properties. After that, file in NCLT to make these companies insolvent. Take the hit, and try to recover.

Find out more such instances where collateral cover is too low. Find out if the LoUs or LCs are just getting rolled over or is the customer actually paying back through the Indian current account. And if not, demand more collateral to avoid further spread of the ponzi.

But this is quite unlikely to happen because the banking system is going to take massive hits now, and we’re going to have to deal with the fallout of really horrible systems. It’s amazing that our banks have been this lax, but they have been allowed to; with no bankers being investigated, the rot inside the banks has been ignored and instead, industrialists have been the target of outrage. It’s time to look at banks as malicious players too, and to fix that rot.

Jallikattu: Komban the Bull, Tells You Something While Dying!

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By: R. Veera Raghavan (Advocate, Chennai)

A five-year old ‘jallikattu’ bull, called Komban, was in the news a week ago.

Jallikattu is termed a sporting event in which numerous young men surround and go after a fleeing bull, for one of them to grab and hold on to its hump with both his arms till the animal crosses the finishing line, a distance of about 50 feet. At the event, unwilling bulls are pushed into the open ground through a barricaded narrow passage – one at a time, so each bull may either run away from the arms and clutches of tamers to reach the finishing line and be counted a winner, or be subdued by one winning tamer before that line.

When Komban the Bull was let into the jallikattu arena at Thennalur, Pudukottai district, tamers had assembled outside the bull’s gate through which the animal must emerge. They were eyeing the bull and readying to grab its hump soonest as the creature came out. Tamers had nearly blocked all space for a comfortable passage-out for the bull at the gate line. It had to fiercely butt through the tamers swarming at the gate. It frantically lunged forward at the gate line, but rammed a cut trunk of a coconut tree planted like a post outside the gate. Komban instantly dropped to the ground and died on the spot in a few minutes.

Let’s not imagine Komban could not sight a high post in front of it, the one which has the girth of an elephant’s leg. The animal was somewhat blinded and disoriented in fright and so it violently hit a huge obstacle. It was like a tormented human running like hell, dashing on a wall and ending his life. Since poor Komban had no voting right and no group-leaders to speak out for it, the horrible death of Komban did not trigger any politically sponsored protest or mourning in Tamil Nadu. The beleaguered bull was owned by a politician, Tamil Nadu’s health minister C. Vijaya Baskar.

If you have a heart, you would know that jallikattu is not a sport, as sport is understood. It is sheer trauma for the poor bull forced into the event in which it desperately looks to disappear from the scene. That is not a sport for the harassed bulls. Not really one for the tamers also – 66 of them were injured, and 33 rushed to hospitals from the jallikattu venue that saw Komban last.

A citizen cornered by corrupt government officials for bribes will be keen to run away from his plight if he can, and can’t imagine he plays a sport with those blackguards. But the fleecing officials may relish such engagement with the citizen as a sport. Now fix who’s who in a jallikattu.

The ultimate power of a bull against a human was seen, like before, during the four weeks prior to Komban’s final outing. A bull that had crossed the finishing line at a jallikattu held at Palamedu, Madurai district, was still not out of tension and discomfort.  In that state it gored a spectator, a 19-year old boy, waiting at the collection point for bulls that had finished their run, and the poor boy did not survive. At two jallikattu events held in Tiruchi district, the bulls in the arena landed fatal kicks on the chest of two tamers, one of them a teen, who were challenging the animals. These are also tragic ends, resulting from our vanity, ignorance and unconcern for the gentle and majestic bull.

Komban is the latest to tell us that our society remains insensitive, not just to the dangers ignorant bull tamers take on themselves but also to the trauma and risks inflicted on innocent bulls.

We know that a man is no match for a muscled bull in physical prowess. Though stronger, the animal does not harm strangers who do not tease or disturb it. Though weaker, the bull-tamer is foolish in going at it. He is lucky the bull seldom takes on its pursuing men, unlike a lion or tiger. Those wild animals will also avoid contact with humans and slink away, but if a man closely obstructs or chases them they will maul him. This is where the gentle bull differs. With a robust neck and a sturdy pair of horns it can severely bruise and displace the flesh and bones of the onrushing tamer, but still it wants to slip out of his reach and be left alone rather than hurt him. It gores and maims or kills a man when many men totally hinder its escape and heighten its agony.

When Komban lost its life in a jallikattu, its owner Vijaya Baskar said he had cared for the bull “as if it were a member of our family”. That was not much of a humanitarian sentiment as it seemed. He probably felt like a corporate which advertised itself on an expensive race car that blew up on a racing track. But Komban would have viewed Vijaya Baskar as a member of its family, hoping he would not send it towards danger and death. Who was kind and gentle to the other?

(This article was originally published HERE)

Copyright © R. Veera Raghavan 2018

तेजी से बदलती दुनिया के साथ बदलो, नही तो खतम हो जाओगे!

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राकेश चोहान, एडवोकेट

 आज से 10 साल पहले ऐसी कोई जगह नहीं होती थी जहां PCO न हो। फिर जब सब की जेब में मोबाइल फोन आ गया, तो PCO बंद होने लगे.. फिर उन सब PCO वालों ने फोन का recharge बेचना शुरू कर दिया | अब तो रिचार्ज भी ऑन लाइन होने लगा है।

कया आपने कभी ध्यान दिया है..?

आजकल बाज़ार में हर तीसरी दूकान मोबाइल फोन की है। sale, service, recharge , accessories, repair, maintenance की।

अब सब Paytm से हो जाता है.. अब तो लोग रेल का टिकट भी अपने फोन से ही बुक कराने लगे हैं.. अब पैसे का लेनदेन भी बदल रहा है.. Currency Note की जगह पहले Plastic Money ने ली और अब Digital हो गया है लेनदेन।

दुनिया बहुत तेज़ी से बदल रही है.. आँख कान नाक खुले रखिये वरना आप पीछे छूट जायेंगे..।

1998 में Kodak में 1,70,000 कर्मचारी काम करते थे और वो दुनिया का 85% फ़ोटो पेपर बेचते थे.. चंद सालों में ही Digital photography ने उनको बाज़ार से बाहर कर दिया.. Kodak दिवालिया हो गयी और उनके सब कर्मचारी सड़क पे आ गए।

Uber सिर्फ एक software है। उनकी अपनी खुद की एक भी Car नहीं | इसके बावजूद वो दुनिया की सबसे बड़ी Taxi Company है।

Airbnb दुनिया की सबसे बड़ी Hotel Company है, जब कि उनके पास अपना खुद का एक भी होटल नहीं है।

US में अब युवा वकीलों के लिए कोई काम नहीं बचा है, क्योंकि IBM Watson नामक Software पल भर में ज़्यादा बेहतर Legal Advice दे देता है। अगले 10 साल में US के 90% वकील बेरोजगार हो जायेंगे… जो 10% बचेंगे… वो Super Specialists होंगे।

Watson नामक Software मनुष्य की तुलना में Cancer का Diagnosis 4 गुना ज़्यादा Accuracy से करता है। 2030 तक Computer मनुष्य से ज़्यादा Intelligent हो जाएगा।

2018 तक Driverless Cars सड़कों पे उतरने लगेंगी। 2020 तक ये एक अकेला आविष्कार पूरी दुनिया को बदलने की शुरुआत कर देगा।

अगले 10 सालों में दुनिया भर की सड़कों से 90% cars गायब हो जायेंगी… जो बचेंगी वो या तो Electric Cars होंगी या फिर Hybrid… सडकें खाली होंगी, Petrol की खपत 90% घट जायेगी, सारे अरब देश दिवालिया हो जायेंगे।

आप Uber जैसे एक Software से Car मंगाएंगे और कुछ ही क्षणों में एक Driverless कार आपके दरवाज़े पे खड़ी होगी… उसे यदि आप किसी के साथ शेयर कर लेंगे तो वो ride आपकी Bike से भी सस्ती पड़ेगी।

Cars के Driverless होने के कारण 99% Accidents होने बंद हो जायेंगे.. इस से Car Insurance नामक धन्धा बंद हो जाएगा। ड्राईवर जैसा कोई रोज़गार धरती पे नहीं बचेगा। जब शहरों और सड़कों से 90% Cars गायब हो जायेंगी, तो Traffic और Parking जैसी समस्याएं स्वतः समाप्त हो जायेंगी… क्योंकि एक कार आज की 20 Cars के बराबर होगी।

समय के साथ बदलने की तैयारी करो। जो चीजें गायब हो गई:-

HMT (घडी)
BAJAJ (स्कूटर)
DYNORA (टीवी)
MURPHY (रेडियो)
NOKIA (मोबाइल)
RAJDOOT (बाईक)
AMBASDOR ( कार)

इन सभी की गुणवत्ता में कोई कमी नहीं थी फिर भी बाजार से बाहर हो गए.!!
कारण…समय के साथ बदलाव नहीं किया.! इसलिए व्यक्ति को समयानुसार अपने व्यापार एवं अपने स्वभाव में भी बदलाव करते रहना चाहिए !!

‘How Dare You’, Indian Yells at ‘White Racist’ Seeking Segregation!

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By: Sooraj Kumar

1. This is an incident about White privilege and segregation in India’s most high-tech city. Bangalore Police have responded. Looks like a case of a White Christian evangelist group trying to act top dog among Indians. Read the incident.

2. At Indian Social Institute, Benson Town, Bangalore, a group of white Americans was asking Indians to leave lunch room & sit separately in adjacent room. A friend, who was staying there, yelled at them: “How dare u do this in India?” Stunned Americans apologised.

3. This happened at 1pm, February 13. Indian Social Institute is a Christian run organisation so the Americans may have been part of a church group. They were occupying the main dining room where catering was going on. Indians were asked to take their food and leave.

4. There was a couple sitting in the adjacent room. When my friend asked why they were sitting separately, they said: “We are black, they are white.” They later said they were Goan Christians.

5. My friend barged into the dining room, asked the Americans what the hell was going on. “This is India, don’t try your racist segregation in my country,” said. “Who are you to order us out of this room.”

Group went quiet. Courage disappeared when confronted by a proud Indian.

6. My friend then said, “I’m not going to sit with you people anyway. It is below my dignity to sit in the same room as you.”
Later the US group leader approached my friend and asked him to come in and sit in the main dining area.
My friend asked him to get lost.

7. My friend spoke to the director Selvaraj Arulnathan, Society of Jesuits: “How can you allow segregation at Indian Social Institute?”
Clearly a case where an Indian Christian organisation perceives whites as their masters.

8. Civil rights act 1964 outlawed segregation in US. Had these Evangelical Indophobic white chauvinists tried to racially segregate blacks in US right now, they would’ve had their arses sodomized esp. by BLM members and Antifa.

9. Let me quote from one of Adolf Hitler’s transcribed conversations, “The basic reason for English pride is India. Four hundred years ago English didn’t have this pride. The vast spaces over which they spread their rule obliged them to government millions of people and they kept these multitudes in order by granting a few men unlimited power.” It is we who gave colonials a sense of superiority and we continue to do so.

10. Our colonial education system imposed by Macaulay ensures that Hindustanis indoctrinated with Anglican education grow up to be under the servitude of West. This phenomenon is more so prevalent among Christians of Bharat. I shall also evoke the words of Polydoros of Sparta, “If you worship your enemy, you are defeated. If you adopt your enemy’s religion, you are enslaved.”

11. The ancestors of Goans Christians were either raped or converted by sword. They cannot rid themselves off this pernicious mind-warping effect without denouncing Christianity with the contempt it deserves since it is a byproduct of the religion itself. Christianity is scourge on the face of the earth imposed by colonials need to be thwarted out along with their narratives that pervades our academia. The newly revamped educational system should drive students with cultural zeal and nationalistic feelings.

‘Tamil versus Sanskrit’– Hey Jingoists, All Indian Languages are MY Own!

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By: Aditya Dhopatkar

Regarding the Tamil language statement of Mr. Modi, and the posts on Tamil, as a Savarkarian HindutvaVaadin, this is what I feel should be the national narrative:

  1. Whether the earliest language of India is Sanskrit or Tamil, both are MY Hindu languages. So the issue of which is older should be a matter of objective interest and not provincial ego. This can actually bind us together instead of feeding the Dravidianist-Dalitist Breaking India faultline.

  2. Tamil is definitely older than my own Marathi. And also older than the current standard Hindi or Gujarati or Assamese. But Kashmiri is also a very old language. The older the language, the more definitely it gets classical status (abhijaat bhasha अभिजात भाषा). Saying that supports the greatness of Tamil or Kashmiri but does not undermine the greatness of my own Marathi. Will the non-Marathi speakers not acknowledge the greatness of Marathi too?

  3. It is believed Tamil was created by Shiva and Agastya. Theistically speaking, all languages are formed through Shiva Mahadeva or Krishna or Sarasvati or Brahma. Also, Sanskrit is the language of the Devas and Devis, the Geervaanabhasha. Why cannot Northern Hindus be exposed to classical Sangam Tamil literature? Why cannot Tamil people study Sanskrit, the language of Perumal, Amman, Murugan and Sivan whom they (the Tamilians) worship?

  4. Let the Kashmiri and the Tamilian not quickly understand each other’s language; yet they both pray to Shiva. And this Shiva Bhakti defines our Hindu nationalism. Not some Ambedkar Smruti, sorry, constitution!

  5. Tamil culture is MY Hindu culture, Tamil glory is not just Tamilian glory but also MY heritage. So is Marathi culture, so is Hindi culture. So is Meitei culture and Chakma culture. We have a common heritage. But I won’t accept Urdu culture as Hindu culture, so what if Hindu singers sing Qawwalis and Sufi songs to get rich.

  6. Hindi and Tamil may be different language family groups but share a lot in common in structure. Hindi may shares family ties with English in the Indo-European family of languages that are not shared by Tamil, but Hindi and Tamil share family bonds in the Bharateeya Bhasha Parivaar as Subhah Kak has stated, and English does not belong to the Bharateeya Bhasha (whose definite commonalities go beyond just being geographically being one habitat). And I support Shri Kak’s assertion.

  7. There is a view that Sanskrit was actually created from a bedrock of many other existing languages, which is why Sanskrut has ‘Krut’. Am skeptical, but I commit to remain academically open to the thesis. Yet the Apa-Bhramsh Bhasha and Prakruts are still posterior to Sanskrit, cannot be anterior to it. By that standard, even Hindi was ‘created’ by the bhasha-mandal of the Northern Hindus from the substrate of languages that always existed. Implying, Hindi came much later while Awadhi, Vraj, Bhojpuri, Haryanvi, Maithili, Chhapraiyya, Madhubani, Maru-Gurjari, etc. are the ancient languages. Are the speakers of chaste Hindi ready to accept Awadhi as a pre-Hindi tongue, and accord Awadhi that status? What would the speakers of Khadi Boli (Merath / Meerut / old Hastinapur) say about whether they are the oldest extant dialect of standard Hindi? What would the Madhya Pradesh Hindi speakers say, as MP Hindi is supposed to be sweet, pure and least corrupted with Urdu (Gandhi’s silly syncretic Hindustani)? Also, for a Marathi person like me, understanding Hindi is far easier than understanding Maithili and Magahi. And understanding Kashmiri and understanding Maithili are equally difficult. I cannot follow Tamil. So, Hindi stays. I vote Hindi. But even if Tamil is made the national language, one must cheerfully learn it, if we could learn English, as Tamil is all said and done, MY language.

  8. Thulu or Tulu may be older to Tamil. But that will be opposed by Tamil jingoists. I see Tulu literarily being forgotten. Come on, so many Hindu Vidyaas may be locked in Tulu manuscripts awaiting rediscovery! And I see no initiative from Tulu speakers towards transliterating Tulu scripts, all plans stay trapped within Karnataka government red tape. But then, Tulu has no jingoists while Tamil as a language is full of them, with no fault of the Tamil language but of Tamil language speakers.

  9. If Hindus don’t watch out, Tamil heritage will be usurped by Christianity – what with fictions from the Church that Thirukkural is supposed to be inspired by Saint Thomas speaking to Thiruvallluvar on Marina beach. Ha Ha Ha! No Saint Thomas came to India. But would Tamil jingoists pay attention to a Hindu topic? Come on, a Tamil jingoist can remain a DMKist jingoist, not credit Tamil to originating from Sanskrit if he politically chooses to, but no Jew is responsible for the deep adhyaatma of the Thirukkural.

  10. Whether the national language is Sanskrit, Hindi or Tamil, my inconvenience is less important to nationalism. All Hindu languages are MY languages. But I cannot accept English being made the official national language, though one speaks it flluently.

  11. Pali, Ardhamagdhi also deserve attention. They too are classical languages. They were used by Boudhda and Jaina mata people, but there is nothing Vaidik or Jaina or Boudhda about Pali or Ardhamagdhi. Under the Hindu umbrella, Ardhamagdhi is mine, Pali is mine too. And so are Boudhda and Jaina matas. Let Ardhamagdhi and Pali too benefit from a revival. Let Ardhamagdhi and Pali be freed from the clutches of separatist Ambedkarites and Jain separatists and be studied by all. Also, Tibetan is spoken in Ladakh, Lahaul-Spiti (Himachal), Sikkim, Bhutan, Arunachal… and must be studied.

  12. The languages of the Andamanese tribals, the Nicobarese tribals, though not literary, are also my own. So also, the languages of the Mizos, Hazongs, Adi Mishmis, Digaru Mishmis, Angame Nagas, Kukis, Garos, Khasis, Jaintias, etc They are also the responsibility of the Indian Union, to be protected and nurtured, not the career of some Christtian missionary. I may not understand any word from them, but that their first book is the Bible and in some Roman-Latin alphabet is just not commendable to Hindu pride. Why not make Shiva Puraan, Ramayan, Krishan Bhajans, Jaina stories, Hitopadesha, Jataka Buddhist tales, Mahabharata and Thirukkural available in North Eastern languages with the Devanagari script? And also their local tribal folklore? So what if the bulk of their speakers are Christianised? They can learn the stories, it will help in deAbrahamisation and DharmaPunarPravesh.

  13. Chakmas, Meiteis, etc, actually have their ancient Burmese-like scripts. These languages are also literary. Let more literature be created there.

  14. The refusal to speak any language other than Hindi (and not learn Marathi) by Hindi speakers in Maharashtra or Gujarat, and the refusal to speak any language other than Tamil by Tamil Nadu residing Tamilians are both the same version of linguistic and regional chauvinism. The political opposition to learning Marathi by leaders of migrant Hindi speakers in Maharashtra is utterly anti-national politics. So is the bashing up of Hindi speakers in Maharashtra by MNS, which is still a reaction to the politics of Hindi speakers community leaders fanning hatred in Maharashtra. With the common Devnagari and the common origin in Sanskrit, there is just no excuse for the political opposition of Hindi speaker community leaders in Maharashtra, to not asking their migrant community members to take up learning Marathi. The ugliest turn to attacking migrants is killing of Hindi speakers in Assam by ULFA and the anti-Northeastern chauvimism in the rest of India. The blame is shared by us all.

  15. Nepali, Hindi are connected by ancient ties. So are Kumaoni and Nepali, Gadhwali and Nepali, Maithili and Nepali. Similarly, Bishnupriya Manipuri, Assamese, Bengali are also united by the same script. Bengali is quite a deep language. Then, Sanskrit, Hindi, Hindu Sindhi, Marathi, Konkani, Nepali, Pali, Ardhamagdhi are all also united by the Devnagari script. Sinhala, Marathi, standard Dhivehi (Maldives), Bahl dialect of Dhivehi (Minicoy – Southern Lakshadwip), Konkani are all Maharashtri Prakruts. Our unity factors run deep, we just have to recognise them. Lakshadwip got converted to Islam from a Buddhist identity, but the languages of Minicoy (a Southern island of Lakshdwip archipelago) and Maldives are a Maharashtri prakrut. Sinhala is also a Maharashtri Prakrut. Will the neo-Buddhist Ambedkarites – who speak Marathi – and who support the Buddhists of Sri Lanka, do research into the pre-Islamic status of Dhivehi on the basis of language and Buddhism? Can not the Secular Indian Union sponsor this research?

  16. We ought to weed out Urdu, Arabic, Persian, Turkish, European words from our Hindu languages. They are infiltrators into our collective national mindscape (मनोविश्व / भावविश्व) and will destroy our unity. They indicate colonisation and conquest over us, even mental colonisation. Has not Rajiv Malhotra spoken of non-intertranslatability? We should use Sanskrit words for native languages. Yet, Urdu and English may deserve objective respect. Let English be enjoyed in its Hinduised versions (like in Amar Chitra Katha or before the narration prior to a classical dance recital on Doordarshan or on the boards of Southern Indian temples).

  17. The extremism of a linguistic pride can support LTTE (Tamil) or ULFA (Assamese). Beware. No support and zero tolerance to separatism and jingoim, leave alone extremism. No division amongst regional states.

  18. According status of being a separate language can make a dialect speaking community demand a new smaller state. Odisha may either grow into greater Odisha (including Bastar, Purulia, Seraikela, Berhampur, etc.) or contract in size with secessionism from Kosali. We need to be watchful. Whenever provincial pride prevails over regional pride, there are careers for Leftists, Maoists and all types of anti-nationals. Wasn’t linguistic pride the domains of rightists? We need to rethink labelling, but we need to preserve unity even at regional levels. Seraiki language is the Southern Punjabi languge of Seraikistan, which has Baloch, Rajputana, Kutchchhi, Punjabi, Sindhi and Gujarati influences. Seraikistanism is a separatist movement within Pakistan, centred on Multan and Bahawalpur. Well, Seraiki has its own script used by traders. So this too is a case of separatism, but within Pakistan. India should pay attention. Yes, trader scripts exist too. For accounts. Used by mercantile groups. Can Sylheti pride be tapped to create instability in Bangladesh by Indian strategistst? The original extent of Bangla Bhoomi is from KarnaSuvarna (Islamic name Murshidabad) to Tripura.

  19. India’s diversity in all aspects, including languages is a treasure to be protected and practised. As long as a golden thread of Dharma and Rashtra do not unite Indic language speakers, the unity will keep getting undermined by Marxists. Let us snatch back the initiative and narrative from them.

  20. It remains the duty of Hindus to reHinduise scripts of languages like Sindhi or Pashtu or the Baloch languages. Their current status is of an Islamised script and vocabulary interpolating into an Indo-European language. We need to disconnect language from Chrislam. Will Tamil jingoists invest time to study Brahui, a Dravidian language of the Baloch? That too with deIslamisation and DharmaPunarPravesh in mind, as the अंतस्थ हेतु? We have the same undecided status of Konkani vis-à-vis Marathi. Flames fanned by the Roman Catholic Church which moots the Roman Script for Konkani. We also need to revive the Sharada script of Kashmiri. It is part of the struggle against Islamic fundamentalism and this point needs to be discussed a lot. There is a simillarity of scripts between pre-Arabic Sindhi, Kashmiri (Sharada), Punjabi (Gurumukhi), Tibetan and Seraiki.

  21. It is also a lesser known fact that Manipur has two official languages – Meitei and Bishnupriya – spoken by the eponymous communities and with both being recognised by the Indian Union. Bishnupriya is an Indo-European language and the easternmost language of the Indo-European family; Meitei is another language family. Its script is similar to that of Assamese and Bangla.
    In case of Bangla, Odia, Assamese and Bishnupriya, their phonetic pronunciations and vocabulary are similar. Let this be known by the jingoists of the speakers of Tamil and Hindi. Assamese speakers had to struggle to clarify, Assamese was a separate standalone language with its own grammar, script peculiarities and pronunciations, its own literary evolution and that Assamese was not a dialect of Bangla, and was not spoilt Bangla. But wait. While you sympathise with Assamese, Bishnupriya had to struggle to prove that it wasn’t Assamese either (to counter the objection of Assamese speakers who were intent on making Bishnupriya just a dialect of Assamese), while Bishnupriyas were struggling equally to not let Bishnupriya being called a dialect of Bangla, or a part of Bangla either. But Bishnupriya and Meitei together are part of the same. Besides, in the framework of a Bharateeya Bhasha Parivaar, both languages Bishnupriya and Meiteei have Vaishnav vocabulary, with loan word osmosis. Meitei suffered a Bangla-isation of its script, let the Burmese script of Meitei Manipuri be revived. Also, there is a provincial similarity between KokBarak (Kokborok), the language of the Tripura tribal communities (named after the Barak river) and Bangla, within the state of Tripura. Bangla is Indo-European, quite ancient, and deeply literary. But Kokborok uses the Bangle script. R D Burman, S D Burman etc spoke Kokborok as their mother tongue. Can the same model of amity be applied to Meitei-Bishnupriya and Kokborok-Bangla?

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