Thursday, September 25, 2008

Role of mandir in Indian society

Indian society had unique value based system which was evolved through family-gurukul-mandir over the time. Destruction of all of these axes in modern life due to various reasons leads to demoralization of Indian society on each step. Mandir was very active in maintaining live communication and played a pivotal role in continuation of idea called India over the period. Hence we still exist in spite of Semitic onslaught all over the world.

Political system was never a backbone of our society and today we seek solution to each and every problem through political system where it is easy to play blame game and our social responsibility is limited only for casting a vote. Systematically common man is kept away from the governance and only few inspired are following the path of social work in their capacity. There are innumerable NGOs and other religious/cultural organizations which are working along with governmental system but the fact remains that average citizen is indifferent towards the situation. He expects someone else should take care of his social/cultural problems. By and large our education and modern social system has failed miserably to involve each and every citizen in the nation building.

Our educational system is the mix of worst from the both the worlds. It is only utilitarian and does not inculcate any social responsibility. Compulsory social or military service in western world after schooling ensures more responsible citizens. Even though the system was applied due to complex family and political problems, it is proved beneficial for disciplined and organized urban society. Indian society never faced a need for such system due to its healthy family structure. But rapid westernization and urbanization of India is making things beyond control of any governmental set up, especially if one considers the size of the population it has to deal with.

Population is our strength if we would able to channelize the resources. We need energetic youth as well as experienced citizens to participate for social well being without political or cultural prejudices. A society can flourish only when the basic needs of all the people are addressed and not when a certain section is exploiting the rest. By and large a common Indian is attached to a place of worship irrespective of his faith. Mandir could play very effective role in organizing the society. There is hardly any possibility that mandir will turn in to power center due to hindu mindset. But we cannot keep this experiment restricted to it. We have to involve worship places of other faiths as well to ensure effective internal security. Assertive and caring majority will help so called minorities to get internalized in to mainstream and not the politics of appeasement.

At educational level, we should make one year compulsory social work for everyone anytime before getting degree with his/her convenience in his/her area of interest. Taxpayers should pay for that service. We can easily devise mechanism to make this functional.
At social level each citizen should be attached to local mandir/ gurudwara /vihar mosque/church. Each one should get registered at the nearest place of worship and should spend at least one hour per week for social cause in his/her area of expertise.

We have to solve our problems necessarily with Indian perspective. Existence of Indian society since time immemorial proved that we have this inherent capacity to mould ourselves as per the situation. We should believe in our values and stop copying western model of development but at the same time we should be open to all beneficial aspects of other cultures. But it cannot be a one way process. We too have something to offer to mankind.
Mandir revolution will help Indian society to come out of the inferiority complex which is systematically inculcated by the British education system over the years.

Let Swami Vivekananda’s inspiring words guide us in our endeavor
Arise! Awake! And stop not till the goal reached

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Indian connection behind big bang experiment

IBNLive, 10-09-08
Of the three main past and present physicists behind the landmark proton-smashing experiment in Geneva on Wednesday 10th sept 08, one has a Nobel Prize, the other is waiting to find out if he has one, and the third never got one.

The third man is the Bose of the Higgs-boson experiment - Satyendra Nath Bose.

It is Bose after whom the sub-atomic particle ‘boson’ is named - probably the only noun in the English language named after an Indian (and therefore never capitalised).The $10 billion Large Hadron Collider experiment in Switzerland on Wednesday could not have happened without Bose and Albert Einstein. In 1924, Bose sent a paper to Einstein describing a statistical model that eventually led to the discovery of the Bose-Einstein condensate phenomenon.
The paper laid the basis for describing one of the two categories of the elementary particles that make up an atom - one was boson, and the other came to be known as fermion, after the Italian physicist Enrico Fermi. Einstein had already won the Nobel in 1921 for services to theoretical physics and the discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect, and Fermi won it in 1938. Decades later, in 1964, the British scientist Peter Higgs returned from a walk in the Scottish mountains to tell his colleagues that he had just experienced his “one big idea,” which could hold a clue to how matter in the universe got its mass in the billionth of a second after the Big Bang. Higgs eventually came up with his theory of the Higgs boson, a boson that gives mass to all other subatomic particles that happen to interact with it in a ‘Higgs field’.The more they interact, the heavier they become. And the ones that don’t interact don’t gather mass.The theory could not only throw further light on the creation of the universe, but also help explain the shape of it.

Wednesday’s experiment at the European Centre for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Switzerland, where protons will be smashed against each other at great speed, will be the first attempt to actually observe the Higgs boson - nicknamed the ‘God particle.’ So far, it is the last undetected elementary particle, also called a fundamental particle, going by the standard theory of particle physics.

Higgs, who is professor emeritus at Edinburgh University, is now widely tipped to win the Nobel, particularly if the Higgs boson is detected. The first Nobels for physics in the 21st century went jointly to three Americans - Eric Cornell, Carl Wieman and Wolfgang Ketterle. The won it for creating the ‘condensate’ - a new type of matter - that Bose and Einstein had postulated. According to Bose’s grandson Falguni Sarkar, six other physicists have won the Nobel for work in the area of Bose statistics.

However, for some reason, Satyendra Nath Bose himself never won the Nobel.

Sharon Ann Holgate, a British science writer and broadcaster who made an acclaimed radio documentary on Bose for the BBC some years ago, said she had no doubt the Indian deserved a Nobel. “I certainly do think he deserved the Nobel. When I was researching my documentary I was outraged that this man was so brilliant, yet so overlooked, perhaps because of institutionalised racism. No one gave a damn because he was an Indian,” she said.

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Development model for India

R K Pachauri, Ph.D
Director-General, TERI

India is at a stage when it must make some critical choices. The easiest choice would be to follow the example of the developed world and to proceed on a path of increasing consumerism without due regard to impacts on the environment and the good health and conservation of the country’s natural resources. This would prove disastrous in the long run and would lead to major inequities in income and wealth distribution. It would also lead to degradation of the country’s ecosystem and natural resources with harmful consequences for the economy and for Indian society as a whole. Such a path would also add to the problem of climate change that the world has now to deal with on an urgent and serious basis.

The other choice, which is undoubtedly superior and would have major consequences for the world and all of humanity, is to ensure that our laws, regulatory institutions and practices as well as human behaviour uphold the primacy of nature as an important determinant of human welfare. The world is in urgent need for a different model of development that is truly sustainable. It is for a country like India to establish a path that creates such a model. We have to use our intrinsic belief, traditions and values to move towards such a model. Then only would the world see the merit of such action and emulate us for the benefit of all mankind and other living species on this planet."

Sunday, August 10, 2008

British Caste-System

Edward Hamala
http://worldmonitor.wordpress.com/2007/11/27/militants-set-france-ablaze/

In response to the letter by Roger Williams captioned "The Rig Veda does refer to caste" (07.07.23) I thought I might share a few points with your readers. The Indian "caste system" that has so outraged Mr. Roger Williams, makes me wonder if he is equally outraged by the British "caste system" that is even more prevalent, although it is well hidden and "invisible" in the British and some European societies, where the nobility still exist, than it is in India today, where all noble titles have been abolished.

I would like to ask Mr. Williams when objecting to birthrights why has he failed to raise the same objection to the British Nobility and the Landed Gentry's birthright, inheriting their title, social status while they are also guaranteed perpetual political power by inheriting a peer-ship and a seat in the British House of Lords, the highest legislative body of the land?

Few of us believe the existence of a truly egalitarian society in the west today or anywhere for that matter!When was the last time that Mr. Williams had a drink at the local pub with Lord Spencer? Or had tea with Prince Phillip?

Did you know that the English nobility are distinctly noticeable by their education and grooming in institutions such as Wetherby, Ludgrove, and Eton or the Royal Academy at Sandhurst? They even speak a different language, the King's English, free from colloquialism and dialects distinctly separating them, and distinguishing them from ordinary commoners, as soon as they open their mouths. May I also remind you that the Indian Social Structure as it was depicted in the Vedas Millenniums ago, made it an edict to leave Tribals and Adivasis alone and not to impose Hindu religion, culture or values on them.The word "caste" my friend is an English word! The Sanskrit word for "caste" is "Varna" and it means vocation or occupation and does not mean "caste" as it does in the English interpretation or translation of the term!Likewise, "untouchable" meant not to go near them, don't touch them, don't intermarry with them and don't corrupt their culture don't try to conform them. Leave them alone!The unfortunate thing was that Mahatma Gandhi was also British educated, trained as a lawyer and had little or no knowledge about the ancient Vedic philosophy, history or culture. What little Gandhi knew about Vedic philosophy was mostly thought to him by Vinoba Bhave, an avid freedom fighter, a devoted supporter of the Mahatma who was a Hindu monk and a highly educated Brahman who among other things spoke 14 languages.It was Vinoba Bhave who connected Gandhi's political views with Vedic values and philosophy that gained such a wide appeal and the support of the Indian masses. If Gandhi would have had a better grasp of Vedic Philosophy he would have been able to counter many of these British myths and instead of being an apologist he could have challenged and defeated the British, the most classist society, at their own game.Let me ask you, Mr. Williams, what modern country that you know of today still have primitive tribals living undisturbed, "uncivilized" and untouched by their society living around them? As they do in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands of India? Did you know that these islands are off limits to all Indian citizens, to protect these tribals?Is it done to discriminate against the tribals as "untouchables" or is it done to protect them?The State of Assam, was a similar tribal area until it got overran by zealous Christian Missionaries that have destroyed their social fibre and their culture.

Westerners can't seem to resist the temptation of trying to impose their political and social values and religions on other cultures!How many societies does Mr. Williams know, where a group of refugees arrived and sought refuge as the Jews did in Kerala, India in 70 AD and were given sanctuary and freedom to practice their religion. This community lived and prospered in India without anyone trying to convert them and many returned to their homeland when the State of Israel was created!The same holds true for the Parsi refugees arriving from Persia when the forceful Muslim conversion was taking place there and they are still practicing their own ancient religion as Zoroastrians and no one tried to convert them.Recently, a large number of Tibetians arrived in India along with the Dalai Lama and they were all received graciously and were given sanctuary.I suggest Mr. Williams should ask the Australian aboriginals or the American Indians if they would prefer to be untouched by their foreign invaders or if they preferred to be forced to conform to an alien culture that was imposed on them, by forcefully removing their children to place them into Christian institutions where violence and sexual abuse was rampant.It has destroyed their self esteem, traditions and culture. The Eastern Indian social structure was designed that different castes served each other, each with a distinct duty to perform for the benefit of the whole of society.It was a farmer's duty to teach his son to be a good farmer and the merchant's to teach his son his craft, while the warrior was trained to be the protector and defender of all………..It is also noteworthy that governance was the duty of the Kshatryas not to rule by whims and despotism as it was the rulers privilege in the "civilized west" but to rule in accordance with the Vedic principles.

Yet the highest caste, above them all was not the Kings who were given the highest social position. It was the Brahmans who were the custodians of all the Vedic Sciences and knowledge and their duty was to teach and to preserve the knowledge of Vedas.The teachers, the priests, the doctors, the scientists and philosophers the poets and the writers were all Brahmans whose duty also included giving moral guidance to the Kings! It is simplistic to believe that a farmer or a potter would be capable to teach their children nuclear science or medicine or the Vedas!This educational system assured the proper training and apprenticeship of all with a life time of gainful employment for all the participants.

This, Mr. Williams, has established an interesting value system in India, alien to the west! The most valuable asset was not money or power as it is today in the western value system! It was knowledge and wisdom that took decades to learn and a life time to acquire! And it was the society's duty to support the Brahmans to afford their study providing food, clothing and shelter to them.

I am sure Mr. Williams is familiar with the existence of the "unwashed" wretched underclass in Dickens's Britain or Victor Hugo's France as it did exist in most of Europe……… Well, such a thing did not exist in India and these facts are well documented by historians all the way back to Alexander the Great's visit to India and was minutely recorded by Greek Historians such as Arrian, Diodorus, Plutarch and Strabo, accompanying Alexander. One thing these historians also commented on, was the absence of slavery that was an integral part of Hellenic culture!

Today, most Indians are alienated and mostly ignorant about their culture, the Vedas and their history, and few understand the Vedic philosophy or its teachings or the highly advanced science it encompasses. They know little else about Hinduism, besides the ritualistic traditions. This Vedic social structure was put in place at the time when in the rest of the world slavery was rampant and pivotal to every European Empire!Don't forget slavery was widely practiced in the United States until the Civil War to the 1860's and desegregation only started in the 1960's and the prejudices still exist until today.

Friday, July 4, 2008

Hindu-Hindutva-Hinduism

Original text can be found at http://pseudosecularism.blogspot.com/2008/07/why-i-am-proud-to-be-hindu.html

I am proud to be a Hindu not because Hinduism claims that it is in any way better than any other religion. Nor does this pride I feel in being a Hindu arise from a feeling of being ‘holier’ than a non-believer. I am proud to be a Hindu because it is characteristically inclusive, liberal, pragmatic, egalitarian and individualistic. In a way it is not even a ‘religion’ in a stricter-sense, since it does not have a hierarchical structure of command-and-control. Neither does it have an office of the Pope, nor does it have a single Pan-Hindu scripture. It is rather an age-defying “way of life”—the ‘sanatana dharma’—which has been readily and generously welcoming, like an ocean, every stream of thought, into its organic whole, over several millennia.Hindutva never talks of kafirs and ‘infidels’ to inject xenophobic fervour, or missionary zeal into its believers. Hindutva is rather a spiritual and socio-cultural umbrella which accepts, and happily so, even its staunchest critics as part of its larger whole. So inclusive is this way of life that Buddha who used to be an ardent critic of prevalent Hinduism of his times, instead of being silenced, or being targeted by any fatwa or being burnt at stake, was Himself embraced as an avatara i.e. incarnation of Vishnu. Consequently Buddhist along with Jain teachings got assimilated into the then prevalent Brahmanical and Vedic Hinduism to bring out the later version of Vedantic Hinduism comprising of Upanishads, Puranas and the great Bhagwad Gita.This pragmatic and liberalistic attitude of Hindutva, is seen at its best in the Bhagwad Gita, where in the final Eighteenth Chapter, after all the prolonged and persuasive discourse, Krishna tells to Arjuna:
“Iti te jnanamakhyatam guhyaatguhyataram mayaVimrishyaitadasheshena yathaichhasi tathaa kuru.”(Hereby I have imparted to you the most secret and sacred of wisdom. Nevertheless you can apply your judiciousness of mind and then do whatever you wish to.)
Perhaps this degree of individualism, through openness and freedom given to the individual to choose his manner of living cannot be seen in any other religion, and for this very reason

Hinduism is more of a “way of life” than a mere institutionalised religious entity. Bhagwad Gita amply professes this concept of individualism as opposed to a codified and institutionalised religious system.
“Uddharedatmanaatmanamaatmanam avasadhayetAatmaiva hyaatmano bandhuaatmaiva ripuraatmana.”(It is the Self that could elevate the Self, and it is the Self that could denigrate the Self. The Self itself is its own greatest friend; the Self itself is its own greatest enemy)
When Swami Vivekananda quoted the great Sanskrit shloka in the World Parliament of Religions at Chicago, he underlined this great appreciation of Hindutva that all paths ultimately lead to the ‘One’.
“Aakashaat patitam toyam yathagacchati sagaramSarva deva namaskaaramkeshavam prati gachhatii.”(Just as rainwater falling from the sky takes different routes and channels but ultimately end up in the one same ocean, prayers directed at any god ultimately reaches that ‘One’ god.)
When Dr K.M. Munshi selected the great Vedic aphorism as motto of Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan he wanted to specifically highlight this inclusivism of Hindutva.
“Aa no bhadra kritavo yantuvishwata.”(Let noble thoughts come from all corners of this universe and fill my mind.)
And no religious discourse on Hindutva is complete without the much talked about shloka which hails the whole world as one single family.
“Ayam nijah paro vetti gananalaghu chetasaamUdaara charitanam tuvasudhaivakutumbakam.”(‘This is ours’; ‘that is other’s’ is being perceived by the narrow-minded. The magnanimous always sees this whole universe as one single family.)

We should now conjoin this lofty vision of ‘sanatana dharma’ into the geographical concept of Bharatvarsha as elucidated in Vishnu Purana.
“Uttaram yad samudrasyaHimadrischaiva dakshinamVarshtad Bharatam namaBharati yatra santati.”(That which is north of ocean and south of Himalayan ranges is the Bharatvarsha, and the progeny of this place are Bharatiya.)Here is a text that tells us of a geographical-identity devoid of any sectarian or religious differentiation. All people born and brought up in this Bharatvarsha are Bharatiya. We have to emphasise this identity of ‘Bharatiya’ as paramount to all others; and that the pronounced silence over any other religious or sectarian references is singularly because of Hindutva influence on the concept of Bharatiyata.‘Bharatiyata’ can be a more acceptable euphemism for ‘Hindutva’. Even while emphatically stating that one need not be least apologetic of calling oneself a Hindutva ideologist. But each time we try to point out that Hindutva is not just a religion or an exclusive sect but rather a “way of life”, the loud cries of “secular” brigade silences this point and prevents it from penetrating the masses. To get across to the larger public who hardly bothers to go deep into the semantics of this dialectic, and to bring to our fold the fence-sitters who wish to ‘appear’ more ‘secular’ than they actually are, we should propagate the concept of Bharatiyata as a Pan-Indian ideological furtherance of Hindutva.

The Hindu ideology of universal egalitarianism i.e. belief in inherent equality of all creations, leave aside merely amongst human beings, is put at its best in ‘Gita’.
“Vidya vinaya sampanne brahmanegavi hastiniiShuni chaiva shwa-pakechapanditaan sama-darshina.”(One who is ennobled by humility of real knowledge would see inherent one-ness in a Brahmin, cow, elephant, dog and a dog-eater.)There is a famous anecdote centering around Shankara’s life. Once when Shankara was going along the street with his pupils to take bath in the Ganga, he met a Chandala who was also passing along the street with his dogs by his side. The disciples of Shankara shouted and asked the Chandala to clear off the road. The Chandala asked Shankara: “O, Venerable Guru! You are a preacher of Advaita Vedanta and yet you make a great difference between man and man. How can this be consistent with your teaching of Advaitism? Is Advaita only a theory?” Shankara was very much struck by the intelligent query of the Chandala. He thought within himself, “Lord Shiva has assumed this form just to teach me a lesson”. He composed then and there five shlokas called the ‘Manisha Panchaka’. Every shloka ends thus: “He who learnt to look on the phenomena in the light of Advaita is my true Guru, be he a Chandala or be he a Brahmin”.

A major perversion of Hinduism owing to historical or socio-religious interpretations of scriptures, and deviant behaviour of certain followers, led to intra-Hindu classifications and discrimination on the basis of caste. Attempts were made to establish Brahmanical hegemony claiming scriptural legitimacy. It has to be clearly stated that scriptural concepts on varna and jati were more as mobilisation of cadre of common-professions based on inherent skills, inclinations and activities. Bhagwad Gita talks about ‘varna’ differentiation based on guna (inherent inclinations) and karma (activities).
“Chatur varnam maya sristumguna-karma vibhagasha.”(The four varnas are made by Me, differentiated on guna and karma.)
It should be clearly noted that it begins with guna and ends with karma and never was it envisaged based on janma. In other words, varna was not supposed to be acquired hereditarily.Equally important to state is that varna was a horizontal cadre-differentiation and not vertical classification, as it is often made to be shown. Inter-varna marriages were very common but its differentiation as anuloma and pratiloma was a later interpolation which wrongfully picturised varna as vertical classification. A sizeable number of Deities and heroes of ‘puranas’ and ‘itihasas’ are products of inter-varna marriage, or from non-Brahmin-Kshatriya varnas.
Purusa Sukta in the Rig Veda talks of Brahmins emerging from the face and Shudras emerging out of the feet of the Almighty and this is used by many as a scriptural justification of vertical classification. But this theory innocuously presumes that ‘head is holier than the feet’, which is a very misleading and incorrect premise. Perhaps the contrary can be argued more convincingly. And what is more important to note is that all are shown to be originating out of the same Almighty. I feel very ashamed and sad to see how the lofty Hindu ideal of universal equality has been misrepresented to legitimise and perpetuate caste-discrimination amongst the Hindus.For those ships lost in the turmoil of life, Hindutva acts as a spiritual light-house, the light-house that guides and offers direction, silently and ceaselessly, without the least expecting any ship to come over and anchor at the light-house. It rather assists them in reaching their own destinations.

Interestingly the very term ‘Bharat’ means “one which is seized with and immersed in light”.Hindutva does not talk of its followers as superior in any way compared to its non-followers. What it stands for is according to Vivekananda “to make Hindu a better Hindu, Christian a better Christian and Muslim a better Muslim”. Religious bigotry, parochialism and xenophobia can never be part of Hindutva. And the very idea of ‘Hindu fundamentalism’ is a crude misnomer and inherently self-contradictory since a true Hindu cannot be a fundamentalist and a fundamentalist can never claim to be a true Hindu. And Bharatiyata is the carrier of this message, a living and vibrant Pan-Indian embodiment of Hindutva openness and reverence for the other.

Some people naively observe that Hindus are very tolerant. This is wrong. Tolerance means accepting the other person though you believe that he is wrong. Hindus believe that the ‘other’ is as much right as you are, and hence they are ‘understanding’, and not just ‘tolerant’. And the perversions and anomalies of other religions manifested at the social level are more out of misinterpretations of, and deviations from the core philosophy. At the foundation of Bharatiyata is this underlying respect for the ‘other’, the ideal of sarvadharmasamabhava. Bharatiyata that talks of vasudhaivakutumbakam—the whole world as one single family. Bharatiyata that prays for loka samasta sukhino bhavantu—welfare of the entire world.To respect others one has to learn to respect oneself first. Any feeling of mutual respect cannot be true and sustainable until that feeling sprout out of abundant self-respect. Otherwise a sense of insecurity would hinder true and boundless respect for the ‘other’.
While Hindutva should always be open to any criticism or correction or reformation, it should not end up being apologetic or defeatist, in front of its detractors. India is a secular country only, and only, because Hinduism is essentially secular. If ‘secularism’ is interpreted and practised as Anti-Hinduism, or forcefully pro-active minorityism to the extent of repeated Hindu-bashing, any self-respecting Hindu should stand up,and uphold his swaabhiman and Atma-gaurav.And that is why I wish to stand up and proclaim to the whole world: I am proud to be a Hindu!!!

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Terrorism in India

Dr Anil A Athale (Rediff News, 12.06.08)

After the Jaipur terror attacks on May 13, we saw the routine that happens after every attack. There were VIP visits, compensation announced to the victims, politicians spoke of 'zero tolerance', television channels held the usual debates, the police announced imminent breakthroughs. Soon everything is forgotten, till the next terror attack. At which time, I am sure the same sequence will be repeated. Here is my attempt to answer some of frequently asked questions.

Why are attacks by Islamic groups called Islamist terrorism? Other terror groups like the LTTE (Tamil Tigers) or the IRA (Irish Republican Army) have Hindus or Christians but are not called Hindu or Christian terrorists?

It is undoubtedly true that there are other terrorists as well, for instance the Naxalites or Maoists. The reason why the adjective 'Islamists' is used is that no other terror group invokes religious sanction or quotes religious texts to justify their acts. In fact, the Tamil Tigers has Hindus as well as Christians (their spokesperson for many years was Anton Balasingham, a Christian). Neither has the IRA nor Tamil Tigers ever quoted any religious scriptures to justify their actions, the Islamists have and continue to do so. The link between religious places and schools to these acts, is also well established. Finally, the Islamist terrorists themselves have time and again openly admitted the religious nature of their ultimate goal -- Islamisation. It would be dishonest if this reality is ignored.



What about State terrorism?

It is true that the State also uses force to deal with revolts and violence and against criminals. But in a democracy with a judiciary and rule of law, the use of force by the State is accountable and has to be within the bounds of law. At times individuals do transgress those limits, but those are aberrations. Use of force by a State to enforce law cannot be equated with State terrorism, unless that State has a policy of genocide or is dictatorial like Hitler's Germany or Stalin's Soviet Union.Unfortunately social activists and champions of human rights forget that it is the legitimate function of the State to use force. If the State abdicates this responsibility then we are inviting anarchy and in words of Hobbes, a 16th century English philosopher, a situation of war of every one against every one and human life 'nasty, brutish and short.



'You are biased, what about the terrorism of the Shiv Sena, Bajrang Dal etc?

These are indeed organisations that believe in violent means and must be dealt under the law. But at worst, these are extremists and militants, like militant trade unions for example. The shallow coverage by the media has created the confusion about definition of terrorism and who is a terrorist. There is tendency to lump together terms like militants, insurgents, extremists, fundamentalists and terrorists. While all the variety of people fighting for some cause or other may at times indulge in terrorism, a terrorist is one whose primary aim is to cause maximum destruction. In that sense strictly speaking, when a Kashmiri extremist attacks a soldier, it is wrong to call it a terrorist attack, it is part of an insurgency. We must be clear about this difference. A terrorist is an individual who carries out a terrorist act. A terrorist act is one in which totally unconnected persons are targeted and killed. Terrorism is random violence that makes no distinction between people and promotes fear. It is no accident that in the Jaipur attack as well as elsewhere, many Muslims lost their lives.It is a fallacy to claim that everything is fair in love and war. Even in war there are written and unwritten rules. The terrorists do not follow them. For instance in war, civilians are not deliberately targeted (they still die as collateral damage) while terrorists, for instance in Beslan in Russia chose a school or local trains in Mumbai.While there are groups and organisations that are militant, fundamentalist and violence prone, they have not yet graduated to earn the 'terrorist' tag. If the State fails to curb minority terrorism then the majority may well begin to have its own terrorist organisations.



If we use violence against terrorists then are we not betraying our Gandhian legacy?

Gandhian methods of non-violent struggle were successful against the British colonialists. But the British were a civilised people. British liberals like Edmund Burke were in favour of Indian independence as early as in 1773 (Burke's speeches in the British parliament on the Regulating Act). To assume universality of success of these methods for all times to come is false. Did the non-violent Jews survive Hitler? Closer home, in Gandhi's lifetime itself, in October 1947, it was force that saved the Kashmir valley from Pakistani-backed raiders. Even more telling, the same non-violent movement in the Portuguese colony of Goa, failed in 1956-1957. Goa was liberated by force in 1961.

An oft quoted Gandhian phrase is that if all were to follow an eye for an eye and tooth for a tooth, then the world would go blind. The counter to that is that if only some follow this and others don't then it is the non-violent who would go blind while the rogues will rule the world.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

125th Birth anniversary of V.D. Savarkar

India's debt to Savarkar
Priyadarsi Dutta (pioneer, 29.5.08)
His Irish admirers fondly misspelt him as 'Sawarkar', and politely declined to make amends when Shyamji Krishna Verma, his sponsor in England, clarified the point. It was difficult for his readers to imagine him without invoking imageries of war. His pen, dipped in blood, breathed so much fire that it was a wonder that "why the paper did not burn". In those days, India's freedom movement was not stricken with the phthisis of non-violence and obsessive compulsive disorder of Hindu-Muslim unity introduced by Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, whose 125th birth anniversary was marked on May 28, was 14 years junior to Gandhi. But he was years ahead of him on many counts. He set the goal of absolute independence for India in 1900; Gandhi asked for it in 1929. He performed a bonfire of foreign clothes in 1905, during the movement against Bengal's partition, an idea emulated by Gandhi for his noncooperation movement. India could have been spared of its emasculation had it abided by Savarkarite clarity rather than Gandhian absurdities. To Savarkar, as he succinctly put down in his last book, Six Glorious Chapters of Indian History, no nation could aspire for civilisational greatness without acquiring military strength. Savarkar lived to see the vindication of his proposition in contemporary India. Gandhi's policy of pacifism failed to buy peace with Muslims, leading to carnages and expulsion of Hindus and Sikhs from Pakistan. Jawaharlal Nehru's dream of "talking his way to leadership of the world", and forging Hindi-Chini brotherhood through slogans failed badly. Slapped hard by China, he was exposed for what he was -- a meek leader of a Third World country. Independent India scarcely realises the greatest debt it owes to Savarkar; turning a Muslim dominated Indian Army into a predominantly Hindu-Sikh Army with his whirlwind recruitment drive during World War II. If it were otherwise, Pakistan, even after partition, would have 60 per cent to 70 per cent of soldiers, enough to overwhelm West Bengal, East Punjab, threatening Delhi, let alone much talked about Jammu & Kashmir.

Friday, April 25, 2008

Why I write what I write?

By M.S.N. Menon (Organiser April 2008)

Is it because I am a Hindu bigot? Or, because I hate the minorities? More so, the Muslims? Dear Readers, if ever you thought so, you were mistaken. But I know that you have not seen me in this light. I am a nationalist. I love my country. I am proud of its past and of its great achievements. I am grateful to it all. And to my ancestors. They have given me pre-eminence among the peoples of the world. I am, therefore, concerned at the way the country is being led by a blind and ignorant leadership. For a thousand years we Hindus were under foreign rule. This is unprecedented in human history. The march of the greatest civilisation was arrested. Its roots were cut. And its people were silenced. Are we Hindus aware of the great damage that these thousand years of subjection have inflicted on us? We are not. Alas, even to enquire into it is taboo in our country! Why? Because, it is claimed, it will “offend” the minorities. Should we, therefore, falsify and prettify our history? It is time to break the silence that we have imposed on ourselves. We should lift the veil, as Tagore says. Silence did not save the country from Partition. The country was divided into two, leaving a bitterness that has festered to this day. Hindus are awake today. India is awake. The spell of a thousand years of subjection seems to have been broken. We have discovered our past. It is time to resume our journey. But the vast minority of Hindus—and that includes the upper and middle classes—know almost nothing of the greatness of their past. That is why they are ready to accept western leadership and the western way of life. So, are we condemned to remain the Caliban for ever? Can India never lead? Has it no message for mankind? It has. But we need a new generation to lead India again to its greatness—a generation that is profoundly inspired by nationalism, a generation that is aware of its great history. Destiny beckons India. History has chosen it for a special mission. It is already on the move. India must provide the moral leadership, they say. Says Father Peter Hans Kolvenbach, former Superior General of the Jesuit Order: “How in India people with many languages, religions and cultures live together is a lesson to learn. India has an important role to play in shaping the destiny of mankind.” Others agree. The point is: no other country in the world can take up this role. This task belongs to India alone, for it is only India that inspires the trust of mankind. But Tagore says, our people cannot go out into the world with an empty hand. We must carry our inheritance with us. But what is our inheritance? We Hindus do not know. As for Muslims and Christians, they reject the Hindu inheritance. I write what I write because I want Indians to think on these mental confusions. I want them to know their inheritance. And I want them to know the inheritance of others as well. What I write cannot be found in the media. The “Organiser” is an exception. We Hindus do not say, as Christians and Muslims do, that the “Gospel is the last word,” that “the Quran is the last word.” We say that the last word is with God. To know it is to know the mind of God! And to know the mind of God is to become God! The thought frightens me. The Hindu civilisation fascinates me. There is nothing like it in the world. It leaves you free. It consists of two streams—that of the mind and that of the senses. You can have your choice. The stream of the mind reached its apogee in Advaita. And that of the senses produced the richest material and sensual civilisation on earth. We call it “popular Hinduism.” Both are important. But the future belongs to the stream of the mind. Our journey is to super-consciousness. So says Aurobindo. The scientists agree. It was the mystery of the universe that set us on our quest. The Rig Veda wonders: “Who is there who truly knows, and who can say whence this unfathomed world, and from what cause!” We are still on the quest for an answer. That is the Hindu mission. The Christians and Muslims cannot joint us in this quest. They have the answers in their books. They are perhaps frozen in time. They will continue to mark time. They will live a repetitive life. They cannot march with us without causing immense damage to their religious beliefs. Our ways are, thus, different. But we can live together. How? Let us learn that too. That Hindus are living “in darkness”, that Hinduism is a “false religion”—these are still the kind of things being said about us by our critics. Why? Because we Hindus are a gentle people, our State is a soft State and we are ignorant of our past. Let us work on a New India—an India for the “Global Indian.”

Thursday, April 10, 2008

CONCEPT OF TIME IN ANCIENT BHARAT

The Indian word for Geography is Bhugol, which means that the earth is round. Hindu temples are built as per the agamas set forth in the Vedas. The temples usually have a Navagraha that have all the planets of the Solar system. Here we can see that the Sun is in the middle of the solar family. Ancient scientists like Aryabhatta, Varahamihira, Bhaskaracharya, Brahma Gupta in the 5th and 7th centuries, made many calculations about the size and circumference of the earth, distance between the heavenly bodies and the periods of their movements around the sun. Their findings reckon closely with modern calculations. In Europe, Nicholas Copernicus in 1543 and Galileo in 1616 proposed that the earth is round, that it moves and that it revolves round the sun. But their theories were not only rejected but also declared as heresy. Giardano Bruno was burnt at the stakes on 17 February 1600 for his scientific views. Thus we see that the science in Bharat was at least 1,000 years ahead of that in Europe.

Lord Sun was worshipped in Ramayana and he was depicted in the Vedas as a shining personality riding a chariot driven by seven horses. These seven horses denote the seven days in a week. A question arises as to why did they show seven horses? The answer is again scientific. Sun ray passing through a prism or a raindrop breaks into seven colors (VIBGYOR). Also the Navagrahas contain nine heavenly bodies of the solar system. (Of these Rahu and Ketu are merely nodes in the orbit of the sun or earth)


DIVISION OF TIME IN THE HINDU CALENDAR

A. SMALLER UNITS OF TIME

The smallest unit of time as per the Hindu calculations in Truti which is 33,750th of a second
100 Trutis make a Tatpara,
30 Tatparas make a Nimesha and 45 Nimeshas make a Prana and A Prana is 4 seconds, the average time taken for breathing in and out by a normal healthy person..

1 Tithi or Divas is 1 day, the period of time from Sun-Rise to Sun-Rise on the following day. 1 Tithi or day is divided into 2 halves – Ahar the day time and Ratra the night time.
The day is further divided into 30 Muhurtas or 60 Ghatikas. Each Muhurta therefore is 48 minutes and each Ghatika is 24 minutes.
Each Ghatika is divided into 60 Palas and each Pala is further divided into 60 Vipalas. Thus a Vipala is 0.4 seconds.

7 days make a week called Saptah.
1 month called Maas is divided into 2 halves – Shukla Pakshha from Amavasya to Purnima (New moon to Full Moon) and the Krishna Paksha from Purnima to Amavasya. The month starts from the day after Amavasya.

1 year called Varsha is divided into 2 halves of 6 months each called Uttarayana and Dakshinayana. It is also divided into 3 parts of 4 months each called the Chaturmaas, 6 seasons of 2 months duration each called Vasant Ritu, Grishma Ritu, Varsha Ritu, Sharad Ritu, Hemant Ritu and Shishir Ritu.
There are 12 months in a year and the names of the months are Chaitra, Vaishakha, Jyaishtha, Ahadh, Shravan, Bhadrapad, Ashwin, Kartik, Margashirsha, Pausha, Magh and Phalgun.


B. BIGGER UNITS OF TIME

Higher values of years are called Yugas (Eras or Eons). There are four yugas. Kaliyuga has 432,000 years, Dwapar Yuga has 864,000 years, Treta Yuga has 1,296,000 years and Satya Yuga or Kruta Yuga has 1,728,000 years. A cycle of these four yugas, called a Mahayuga is therefore, 4,320,000 years.

1,000 Mahayugas make the day time (Kalpa) of Brahma, the Creator and another 1,000 Mahayugas make his night time.
360 Brahma Days make one Brahma Year and 100 such Brahma years make his working Period called Brahma-Ayu or Maha-Kalpa. Mahakalpa is the largest unit of time which is 311,040,000,000,000 solar years.


Thus Hindus have
Truti the smallest Unit of time which is 33,750th of a second

Maha Kalpa the largest unit of time which is 311,040,000,000,000 solar years



HINDU CALENDAR & THE WESTERN SIMILARITIES

The names of the weekdays are the same, of course different words in different languages, and in the same order. What we call as Bhanuwar or Raviwar in India is called Sunday. Bhanu or Ravi means the sun. The next day we call Somawar. Soma means the moon and the day in Europe was called Moonday which became Monday. Similarly Saturday or Shaniwar s named after the planet Saturn equivalent to the planet Shani. The other days of the week in the European calendar are named after the Greek Gods and in the Hindu calendar are named after the other solar planets. The week days in Bharat are named in a particular order depending on their distance from the earth - moon is the nearest heavenly body affecting the lives on earth followed by Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus and Saturn is the farthest one here, Sun is the centre of the solar system. Thus we have Raviwar, followed by Somawar, Mangal, Budh, Guru, Shukra and Shani corresponding to these planets.
Another fact is the division of the year into twelve months current in the entire world. The original Western Roman calendar prior to 525 AD had only 10 months - January, February, March, April, May and June followed by September (Sapta - 7th), October (Ashta - 8th), November (Nava - 9th) and December (Dasha - 10th). But when they came into contact with our science of astronomy, they found that they were wrong and added two months after their great emperors i.e. July after Julius Caesar and August after Augustus and this was taken over in the present Gregorian calendar.

Since Yugadi, the Hindu Lunar New Year fell in March, Europe also accepted March as their New Year. March, April, May, June, July, August was followed by September (Sapta-7th) and so on till December (Dasha - 10th). January was their eleventh month and February was their last month or 12th month. That is why all months had 30 or 31 days and the last month February had the balance of 28 or 29 days to complete a year of 365 or 366 days.

Measurement of day and night

The earth rotates round its axis at the rate of 1600 kms per hour and as such approx. 24 hours (23 hrs 56 min) are taken from one sun-rise to another. Due to this rotation a civil day of 24 hours including night is formed. The lighted part of the earth is known as day (ahah) and the dark part as night (ratri). Thus both day and night are called ahoratra. Later developed hora system was the degenerated form of a-hora-tra only. The English term ‘hour’ also evolved from Sanskrit term ‘hora’.


Sankalpa is observed before the commencement of any religious activity.
In the Sankalpa we mention, Kalpa, Manvantara, Yugadi, Samvat, Ayana, Ritu, Maas, Paksha, Tithi, Vaar, gruha, Nakshatra and the geographical location of the place where the religious activity is conducted. Thus our forefathers, the Vedic Rishis had a complete knowledge of Astronomy and geography (Khagol and Bhugol Shastra).


1 Manvantar is the time taken by Solar System for 1 revolution, which is 322,580,000 years (32 crore, 25 lakhs, 80 thousand years)
There are 14 Manvantaras. We are now in the seventh Manvantara called Vaivasvatha Manvantara

1 Mahayug is the time taken to complete a cycle of Kali yug, Dwapar yug, Treta yug and Satya yug. This is 4.32 million years.We have completed 27 such mahayugas are now in the 28th Mahayuga.

1 Kaliyuga is 432,000 years.Twice of kaliyug is Dwapar yug 864,000 years.Thrice of Kaliyug is Treta Yug 1,296,000 years and four times is Satyayug 1,728,000 years.
We have completed several Kaliyugas Mahayugas and Manvantaras.

In this present Kaliyuga, we have completed 51 centuries and today we are entering the Chiatra Shudha Pratipada in the second year of 52nd century in Kaliyug.
(Yugabda 5110, AD 2008)


Interesting Anecdote

Two friends Ram and Shyam went on a camping trip.
After a good meal and mouthful of pedas, they lay down for the night, and went to sleep.
Some hours later, Ram awoke and nudged his faithful friend. “Shyam, look up at the sky and tell me what you see." Shyam replied. "I see millions and millions of stars."
”What does that tell you?" Shyam pondered for a minute.

"Astronomically, it tells me that there are millions of galaxies and potentially billions of planets.
Astrologically, I observe that Saturn is in Leo.
Horologically, I deduce that the time is approximately a quarter past three.
Theologically, I can see that God is all-powerful and that we are small and insignificant.
Meteorologically, I suspect that we will have a beautiful day tomorrow.

“What does it tell you?"
Ram was silent for a minute, then spoke.
"Shyam, you idiot, someone has stolen our tent."


Maya in Physics

The Sanskrit word for Uiverse is ‘Viswa’ meaning ‘all’. Thus the universe may be defined as that which includes everything. ‘Jagat’ is another word in Sanskrit, used in the sense of the universe. It is derived from the Sanskrit verb root ‘gam’ (gam+kvip), which means ‘to go’. Everything in Jagat is in motion, everything is changeable, mutable. Anything which is at rest, which is motionless and immutable is not concerned with jagat. There is another word ‘samsara’ (sam+sr+ghan) in Sanskrit. It is also used for universe. According to this concept, everything in the universe moves with others in harmony. It is akin to the word ‘cosmos’ involving order instead of disorder or chaos.

Study of the Vedic literature of ancient India reveals that a few astrophysical concepts prevalent at that time have close resemblance with those of modern sciences.
· The cosmic egg, the excessive heat produced in the cosmic egg and the bursting of the egg have been mentioned in unambiguous language. (Tandva Brahmana vii.10.1; Jaimini Brahmana I.145; III.12; Shatapat Brahmana VI.1.2.3.)
· After the explosion of the primordial egg, the universe expanded. (Mundaka Upanishad I.1.8)
· The stars were formed out of clouds of gases and dust. (RV, V.47.3; X121.5; YV, XIII.30; Tbra 1.5.2.5; S.Bra VII.5.1.8; X.6.5.2; J.Bra II.45 and 62; A.Bra IV.20).
· The earth had its origin from the sun. All the planets of our solar system and the moons of the planets originated primarily from the sun. (TS, III.4.3; VII.3.10; S.Bra, I.4.1.22; J.Bra I.87; Vap, 50.99.53;
· The earth is spherical in shape. (S.Bra VII.1.1.37)
· The sun, the earth, the moon and the other planets and the space are all spherical in shape. (J.Bra, I.2.57; II.62; S.Bra VII.1.1.37)
· The interior of the earth is full of hot molten mass. (YV, XI.57; S.Bra, XIV.9.4.21; T.S. V5.2)
· The earth and the other planets of the solar system rotate round their respective axis and revolve round the sun. (YV, III.6; A.Bra III.4.6)



Early Western Concept

“God has created man and created everything else for the pleasure of man. The centre of the universe is man. Earth is the place where man lives. Hence the anthropocentric universe is bound to be geocentric. Earth is the centre of the universe. It is stationary and everything else is moving around it. The sky is a dome-shaped blue canopy hanging over the earth. The sun and the moon are small objects wandering in the sky. The stars are insignificant specs of light glued to the sky for decorative purpose only.” This was the anthropocentric and geocentric concept of the Western man.
‘The world’, ‘the universe’, ‘the cosmos’ and ‘the Earth’ were synonymous terms in the geocentric concept. Such an idea has now been discarded. It has been realized that the earth occupies an insignificant dot in the illimitable universe.

For Aristotle (384-322 BC), the Greek philosopher, it was the law of Nature for the heavens to be perfect and changeless. Hipparchus (190-120 BC) was a Greek astronomer. Claudius Ptolemies (AD 100-170), who was another Greek astronomer, summarized Hipparchian system and his own in the form of a book. Both these astronomers could visualize the epicycloid motion of planets. Ptolemy gave the idea of a geocentric universe. In the Ptolemaic system, the Earth is pictured as the centre of the universe, with all other astronomical bodies circling around it. The Bible supported the idea of the geocentric universe.

Pliny (AD 23-79) a Roman scholar was astonished to observe a new star in Scorpio. But how could it be possible? If it violated the concept of a ‘perfect and changeless heavens’ could it be correct? Is it not sacrilegious to report a change in the heavens? The medieval astronomers in Europe and Middle East might have observed changing stars in the heavens; but they might not have reported their findings on religious grounds, and might have explained them away as their observational errors. The astronomers of that age, whether Christian or Muslim, saw in the perfection of the heavens a symbol of the perfection of God. He could not dare to find a flaw in the perfection of the created objects of God. For the astronomer, the earth too would have been perfect, had not Adam and Eve committed the first sin. They ate the forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden. That was the reason of the earth being imperfect. But nothing like that happened for the heavens. And so the heavens were perfect and changeless.

In the sixteenth century, there was a conceptual change in the Western world, and hence the old idea of the changelessness of the heavens was discarded. In 1543 Nicholas Copernicus, a Polish astronomer proved that the sun was the centre of the universe and that all the planets including the earth revolved round the sun. Giordano Bruno (1548-1600) an Italian philosopher supported the Copernican heliocentric theory and also popularized his own theory that each star is a sun attended by a retinue of planets. This was originally the doctrine of Nicholas of Cusa (1401-1464), a German cleric. At that time no one believed the fact that there were stars too dim to see. People questioned, “Why should such invisible stars exist? Why did God create them? Is it not sacrilegious to suggest that God’s creation is purposeless? Bruno was declared to be a heretic and burned at the stake.
The heliocentric concept that the sun was the centre of the universe, was in vogue until Harlow Shapely (1885-1972), an American astronomer gave a big blow to it. He showed that the sun was not the centre of our galaxy and that it was far on the outskirts of the galaxy. According to him, our position in our galaxy (Milky Way) and the then supposed universe was eccentric.
Our galaxy, the Milky Way was then considered the universe. Now it is well known that there are innumerable galaxies and all of them are in motion; all of them move; In our present concept, the universe has no centre. We live in an acentric universe.


The Gregorian calendar

The present calendar used worldwide which says this year as 2008 AD is called the Gregorian calendar introduced by Pope Gregory XIII in 1582 by a Papal Bull. This superceded the previous Julian calendar that was introduced in 4 AD and later amended in 525 AD by a Roman abbot Dionysus Exiguous.

By the Papal order, Pope Gregory omitted 10 days in the calendar to make corrections for the difference between the sidereal year and the solar year. Thus, Thursday 4 October 1582 was followed by Friday 15th October 1582. Further corrections were made by omitting 1 day each in the years 1700, 1800 and 1900 AD.


Science in the West in 16th Century

The western world did not know in those days that earth was round in shape that the earth was moving around its own axis and that earth revolved round the sun. Scientist Nicolas Copernicus published the books "The Revolutions of the Heavenly Bodies" in 1543 and dedicated it to the Pope of his times. But this book was rejected and banned and was called the devils work. In 1616 Galileo who observed the sunspots said that the earth is moving (E pur si mouve). He faced the solemn condemnations of the western authorities that proclaimed his theory as heresy. Galileo approaching 70 years was imprisoned, blinded and helpless in the jail, he died after 9 years. In 1600 another scientist Giordano Bruno paid the price of his faith in science at the stakes.

In the absence of the knowledge about the sun, the moon, the earth and their shapes, distances, their orbits etc no calendar can be designed properly. Hence the western calendar was based on the scientific discoveries made in other countries especially India with which it had an active contact even prior to the times of Pythagoras, Megasthanese and Alexander.

Monday, March 24, 2008

THE ESSENCE OF EDUCATION

Osho, Rajneesh

“The education that has prevailed in the past is very insufficient, incomplete, superficial. It only creates people who can earn their livelihood but it does not give any insight into living itself. It is not only incomplete, it is harmful too -- because it is based on competition.
Any type of competition is violent deep down, and creates people who are unloving. Their whole effort is to be the achievers -- of name, of fame, of all kinds of ambitions. Obviously they have to struggle and be in conflict for them. That destroys their joys and that destroys their friendliness. It seems everybody is fighting against the whole world.


Education up to now has been goal-oriented: what you are learning is not important; what is important is the examination that will come a year or two years later. It makes the future important -- more important than the present. It sacrifices the present for the future. And that becomes your very style of life; you are always sacrificing the moment for something which is not present. It creates a tremendous emptiness in life.
The commune of my vision will have a five-dimensional education. Before I enter into those five dimensions, a few things have to be noted. One: there should not be any kind of examination as part of education, but every day, every hour observation by the teachers; their remarks throughout the year will decide whether you move further or you remain a little longer in the same class. Nobody fails, nobody passes -- it is just that a few people are speedy and a few people are a little bit lazy -- because the idea of failure creates a deep wound of inferiority, and the idea of being successful also creates a different kind of disease, that of superiority. Nobody is inferior, and nobody is superior. One is just oneself, incomparable.

So, examinations will not have any place. That will change the whole perspective from the future to the present. What you are doing right this moment will be decisive, not five questions at the end of two years. Of thousands of things you will pass through during these two years, each will be decisive; so the education will not be goal-oriented.
The teacher has been of immense importance in the past, because he knew he had passed all the examinations, he had accumulated knowledge. But the situation has changed -- and this is one of the problems, that situations change but our responses remain the old ones. Now the knowledge explosion is so vast, so tremendous, so speedy, that you cannot write a big book on any scientific subject because by the time your book is complete, it will be out of date; new facts, new discoveries will have made it irrelevant. So now science has to depend on articles, on periodicals, not on books.
The teacher was educated thirty years earlier. In thirty years everything has changed, and he goes on repeating what he was taught. He is out of date, and he is making his students out of date. So in my vision the teacher has no place. Instead of teachers there will be guides, and the difference has to be understood: the guide will tell you where, in the library, to find the latest information on the subject.

And teaching should not be done in the old-fashioned way, because television can do it in a far better way, can bring the latest information without any problems. The teacher has to appeal to your ears; television appeals directly to your eyes; and the impact is far greater, because the eyes absorb eighty percent of your life situations -- they are the most alive part. If you can see something there is no need to memorize it; but if you listen to something you have to memorize it. Almost ninety-eight percent of education can be delivered through television, and the questions that students will ask can be answered by computers. The teacher should be only a guide to show you the right channel, to show you how to use the computer, how to find the latest book. His function will be totally different. He is not imparting knowledge to you, he is making you aware of the contemporary knowledge, of the latest knowledge. He is only a guide.


With these considerations, I divide education into five dimensions. The first is informative, like history, geography, and many other subjects which can be dealt with by television and computer together. The second part should be sciences. They can be imparted by television and computer too, but they are more complicated, and the human guide will be more necessary.In the first dimension also come languages. Every person in the world should know at least two languages; one is his mother tongue, and the other is English as an international vehicle for communication. They can also be taught more accurately by television -- the accent, the grammar, everything can be taught more correctly than by human beings.

We can create in the world an atmosphere of brotherhood: language connects people and language disconnects too. There is right now no international language. This is due to our prejudices. English is perfectly capable, because it is known by more people around the world on a wider scale -- although it is not the first language. The first is Spanish, as far as population is concerned. But its population is concentrated, it is not spread all over the world. The second is Chinese; that is even more concentrated, only in China. As far as numbers go, these languages are spoken by more people, but the question is not of numbers, the question is of spread.
English is the most widespread language, and people should drop their prejudices -- they should look at the reality. There have been many efforts to create languages to avoid the prejudices -- the Spanish people can say their language should be the international language because it is spoken by more people than almost any other language.... To avoid these prejudices, languages like Esperanto have been created. But no created language has been able to function. There are a few things which grow, which cannot be created; a language is a growth of thousands of years. Esperanto looks so artificial that all those efforts have failed.
But it is absolutely necessary to create two languages -- first, the mother tongue, because there are feelings and nuances which you can say only in the mother tongue. One of my professors, S. K. Saxena, a world traveler who has been a professor of philosophy in many countries, used to say that in a foreign language you can do everything, but when it comes to a fight or to love, you feel that you are not being true and sincere to your feelings. So for your feelings and for your sincerity, your mother tongue... which you imbibe with the milk of the mother, which becomes part of your blood and bones and marrow. But that is not enough -- that creates small groups of people and makes others strangers. One international language is absolutely necessary as a basis for one world, for one humanity. So two languages should be absolutely necessary for everybody. That will come in the first dimension.


The second is the enquiry of scientific subjects, which is tremendously important because it is half of reality, the outside reality.

And the third will be what is missing in present-day education, the art of living. People have taken it for granted that they know what love is. They don't know... and by the time they know, it is too late. Every child should be helped to transform his anger, hatred, jealousy, into love.

An important part of the third dimension should also be a sense of humor. Our so-called education makes people sad and serious. And if one third of your life is wasted in a university in being sad and serious, it becomes ingrained; you forget the language of laughter -- and the man who forgets the language of laughter has forgotten much of life.So love, laughter, and an acquaintance with life and its wonders, its mysteries... these birds singing in the trees should not go unheard. The trees and the flowers and the stars should have a connection with your heart. The sunrise and the sunset will not be just outside things -- they should be something inner, too. A reverence for life should be the foundation of the third dimension.
People are so irreverent to life. They still go on killing animals to eat -- they call it game; and if the animal eats them -- then they call it calamity. Strange... in a game both parties should be given equal opportunity. The animals are without weapons and you have machine guns or arrows.... You may not have thought about why arrows and machine guns were invented: so that you can kill the animal from a faraway distance; to come close is dangerous. What kind of game is this? And the poor animal, defenseless against your bullets....It is not a question of killing the animals; it is a question of being irreverent to life, because all that you need can be provided either by synthetic foods, or by other scientific methods. All your needs can be fulfilled; no animal has to be killed. And a person who kills animals, deep down can kill human beings without any difficulty -- because what is the difference? And there are cannibals....
Just a few days ago in Palestine, the people demanded that the government allow them to eat human flesh, because there was not enough food -- so why waste a dead body? Whether it has died naturally or has been destroyed by the terrorists or has been in an accident, it is good food! And the surprising thing is that the government of Palestine has agreed -- they had to. Food is short, and people cannot be left hungry. Today they will be eating the naturally dead or the accidentally dead, or those killed by terrorists; but this is not going on forever. Soon they will start finding ways to kill people -- to steal children, because their flesh is thought to be the most delicious.

A great reverence for life should be taught, because life is God and there is no other God than life itself, and joy, laughter, a sense of humor -- in short a dancing spirit.
The fourth dimension should be of art and creativity: painting, music, craftsmanship, pottery, masonry -- anything that is creative. All areas of creativity should be allowed; the students can choose. There should be only a few things compulsory -- for example an international language should be compulsory; a certain capacity to earn your livelihood should be compulsory; a certain creative art should be compulsory. You can choose through the whole rainbow of creative arts, because unless a man learns how to create, he never becomes a part of existence, which is constantly creative. By being creative one becomes divine; creativity is the only prayer.

And the fifth dimension should be the art of dying. In this fifth dimension will be all the meditations, so that you can know there is no death, so that you can become aware of an eternal life inside you. This should be absolutely essential, because everybody has to die; nobody can avoid it. And under the big umbrella of meditation, you can be introduced to Zen, to Tao, to Yoga, to Hassidism, to all kinds and all possibilities that have existed, but which education has not taken any care of. In this fifth dimension, you should also be made aware of the martial arts like aikido, jujitsu, judo -- the art of self-defense without weapons -- and not only self-defense, but simultaneously a meditation too.

The new commune will have a full education, a whole education. All that is essential should be compulsory, and all that is nonessential should be optional. One can choose from the options, which will be many. And once the basics are fulfilled, then you have to learn something you enjoy; music, dance, painting -- you have to know something to go inwards, to know yourself. And all this can be done very easily without any difficulty.
I have been a professor myself and I resigned from the university with a note saying: This is not education, this is sheer stupidity; you are not teaching anything significant.
But this insignificant education prevails all over the world -- it makes no difference, in the Soviet Union or in America. Nobody has looked for a more whole, a total education. In this sense almost everybody is uneducated; even those who have great degrees are uneducated in the vaster areas of life. A few are more uneducated, a few are less -- but everybody is uneducated. But to find an educated man is impossible, because education as a whole does not exist anywhere.”



Friday, February 29, 2008

Purpose of education

Education is not mere a mean to meet two ends. Neither it is something to satisfy one's ego. With whole focus of modern education outwardly, only utilitarian aspect of things are taught. Educated person not necessarily in position to understand and practise the basic values of life which a so called uneducated man can follow with his age old wisdom. Even we accept that any knowledge is a double edged sword, by any aspect modern man is not becoming more wise with education. As the purpose itself is not propagating even secular values, we all become expert technicians of a subject without understanding a soul behind it.

Why education is failed to bring any fundamental change in one's nature or help him to evolve with his natural potential? We always talk that the root cause of all problems in developing countries like Bharat is lack of education to masses. It is also claimed that traditionally majority were deprived of basic rights of education by certain class in the name of castism and it is because of Britishers that people of modern Bharat could avail uniform education to everyone. When i see the problems of Bharat even after 60 years of independence following the western concept of education at all levels, I hardly can convince myself that the current format of education is and will solve the problems of our society. We are producing just literate masses without any roots merely trained to earn money by any means.

If we invest to educate coming generations, in the era of globalization and mass communication obviously people will be exposed to everything across the civilizations but without having firm roots on the ground. The result will be more and more cutting of future generations from the very idea of Bharat and producing mere western copy in desi body. By no means I want to devaluate western education system. It has its own strengths and west has built a civilized society on that basis in last few centuries. But the aspirations, goals, requirements of western society are totally different and why one should assume that the same is applicable to us and we cannot progress without following the footprints of the society whose philosophy of looking towards the life is diagonally opposite of the age old wisdom of eastern people? The world need two diagonally opposite ideas and both are necessary and true on its own. People should able to choose from them depending on one's inclination. Unfortunately we are allowing only one idea to develop and that too at the cost of other. We, the people of Bharat are at the diagonally opposite side of looking at the things not merely in past but in today's day to day life. Hence we see conflicts between what we see or practise and what we learn at every stage of the life. Obviously as we are not aware about and not taught about the meaning of what we see or practise, we tend to ridicule using the knowledge we acquire which is meant for totally different purpose.

To elaborate on this I would like to highlight the differences in two philosophies:

Who am i

This is as an old quest as human existence. Approaches may differ but everyone is interested to know the ultimate truth. As there is nothing beyond matter for western philosophy naturally Bharatiya mind will never get answer to this inner journey for him which starts beyond matter.

Matter and energy and consciousness

Western philosophy interprets everything in the language of matter as for them there is nothing beyond it. Bharatiya thinking is that everything is an interplay of energy in different forms. Matter is too a kind of energy. If we penetrate matter then we reach to electrons which is neither matter nor energy as per the latest understanding. This matter-energy is nothing but ever changing part of universe behind which is the primordial consciousness filled everywhere which is same in each living and nonliving thing.

Medicine

Allopathy is concerned only with physical body. Bharatiya philosophy considers the system as psychosomatic which is made up of body-mind-soul. Psychiatry too considers mind as just byproduct of bodily functions and not as independent entity.

Nature-human being relationship

Everything around is made for us and we are here just to exploit it for our benefit. This is what western philosophy believes and practice. Bharatiya darshan says that nature has enough for every-ones need and but not for every-ones greed. We are part of nature and have no special status over other living beings. We should extract only what is required without disturbing the natural balance.

Evolution of Genetic and Karmic code

Darwin's theory explains at physical level,how we are evolved from monkey. This was well known to our ancestors in the form of 'dashawatar tradition'. But this is not enough to explain the reason of ones birth in particular social,cultural and economic background. If everything in this world is governed by certain laws then birth of anyone whether human or amoeba cannot be without logical reason. Here comes the theory of reincarnation which can be easily explained with law of conservation of energy. Hence along with genetic code, karmic code also plays important role in evolution. Evolution is not necessarily always physical but it can be psychological, emotional and spiritual as well.

What one want to achieve in life

Human being is not just a bundle of desires. The ultimate happiness is never possible with materialistic possessions. Education should able to teach us how we can discriminate between 'Shreyas' and 'Preyas' meaning necessary and useful. Freedom is the ultimate thing everyone hankering for, it may be natural, economic, political, social, emotional or spiritual. We cannot feel bondage of next level until we get freed from lower bondage. At the moment we are only concerned about economical freedom and think that we will achieve everything then. But once economic freedom is achieved next bondage can be understood. Bharatiya darshan had experienced these levels long back and accepted that all levels are necessary but one should not stop at any step until the last one and that is to go beyond birth and death cycle.

How all living creatures are related

All living beings has same consciousness. As we only look at the matter, we see each one as unique entity. Once we understood and feel the oneness then we will treat everyone same as we our-self expected to be treated by others. Education can play vital role to mould young minds in early years. But we have no such thing in present day education which has emphasis on right than duties.

All paths leads to same truth

Bharatiya darshan believes that same truth can be said in different ways. By accepting this we can expect the possibility of coexistence. With the notion of superiority or inferiority over other will not allow to accept other's ideas in right spirit. Every individual is at different step of evolution and not a single pill is useful for everyone. Religion is not the thing to be marketed but is for uplifting the individual to next level of freedom.

It may look like that this kind of education is not necessary for day to day living and one can get such learning in religious schools or at home by tradition. But the independent nation is for people and by people which should look after well being of an individual at every possible level. By defining growth in terms of consumerisation and then accordingly making people just a machine either to produce or to consume things is leading us to dead end. No doubt, we should not stretch and remain stuck to either end and try to follow middle path, but certainly the emphasis will differ if the goal is set. In the present day Bharat with diagonally opposite ideas about history and future about our nation it looks practically impossible to make such changes overnight.

But it only depends on attitude and our culture has inherent capacity to take everyone together. Once we start looking things from our own perspective and for our own needs, we will see things as they ought to be!

Saturday, January 26, 2008


Citizens must participate in own affairs
Tarun Vijay (http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Tarun_Vijay_Indians_must_step_forward/articleshow/2724824.cms)

Are we a republic? On the eve of Republic Day, it’s rather sacrilegious to ask this question, but on seeing the passive voter who has learnt to bash governance at each step and on seeing political parties being run as family fiefdoms, it’s more appropriate to say we are a nation trying to emerge as a republic.

What's the status of inner party democracy and how are parties commonly described? Congress under Sonia, BSP under Mayawati, DMK and ADMK under Karunanidhi and Jayalalithaa respectively, RJD under Lalu and Rabri, National Conference under the senior and junior Abdullahs and the Samajwadi Party under Mulayam Singh are some of the expressions used. Words like elections, democratic norms, republican sentiments and acceptance of differing viewpoints are replaced with nominations, authoritarian dictates, crowd-pulling capacities and 'follow or out' norms.

Still, we think at least we are doing better than Pakistan and Bangladesh and perhaps Myanmar too.

Democratic values are defined not only through personal, political and economic freedoms but also through peoples' actions and strength of the non-political leadership. Those who do not necessarily seek political and public office, yet are determined to correct socio-political wrongs. Those who volunteer to take the lead and be the first to face the bullets but do not don the mantle of rulers. If roads are dirty, temples littered rivers filthy and railway platforms stinking, it's not just the bad ruler and the incompetent bureaucrat to be blamed. The failure of inactive. self-centred people to rise and revolt is equally responsible for a failing state.

When political parties comprise climbers and seekers alone at the micro levels as well and peoples' organisations run after government grants and patronage, republics turn into banana republics.

In spite of a spectacular urban economic growth and mushrooming religious organisations with astonishing clout, India is witnessing an abysmally low level of non-political leadership that can change the spectrum for the general good of the masses. Temples in most of the holy towns and pilgrim centres remain dirty, priests do not utter mantras correctly and take money from devotees and then we expect the government to do something about it. The government takes over temples, resulting in further deterioration. Delhi is on the banks of the Yamuna, one of the greatest rivers of the land, yet it’s impossible to take a guest for a walk along the Yamuna or use a few drops for religious chores. Yet the government is petitioned, urged, requested to do something about it.

That's how the devotees of Krishna, whose life would remain incomplete without the Yamuna, continue with their daily routines. Delhi is ruled by Hindus, so are other states where we have holy shrines. Yet not only do the Hindu rulers belonging to any which party or ideology shy away from making pilgrim centres the best managed centres of faith in the world, but even Hindu billionaires and the socially effective glitterati find the civil dharma too mean to be engaged in.

The other day, ADMK leader Jayalalithaa issued a statement against Chief Minister K. Karunanidhi over the government’s attitude towards Rameshwaram temple where 15 cows had died due to negligence. I was there a couple of weeks ago and saw the world famous temple in a pathetic state. The main door, through which devotees enter the corridor leading to the sanctum sanctorum, had a huge billboard of Karunanidhi as if a darshan of the Chief Minister, an atheist, is compulsory before Lord Shiva's darshan. The corridor was littered with spilled prasadam, flowers and dirt. At the entrance itself, inside the temple precincts, an ugly cabin of Tamil Nadu Tourism had been erected and next to it was a cycle and scooter stand for government employees working there. On the right was a marble plaque announcing the opening of the Mandapam and unveiling of a statue of Raja Bhaskar Sethupathy on February 11, 1974. He was a protector of the Ram Sethu and belonged to a warrior clan created with the sole purpose of protecting the great bridge that Ram built.

Inside the temple area, the grandeur of the Rameshwaram pillars is a mesmerising sight – 400 in all in a 4,000-feet long corridor. It's a world heritage site built in the 12th century by the Lankan King Parakram Bahu. Later kings of Ramanathpuram and Travancore kept on adding to the structure. Swami Vivekananda visited the temple on January 27, 1897 and a stone engraving cherishes that memory; his praise of the temple priests has been inscribed in his own handwriting. The Shiva lingam at the temple is believed to have been built by Sita with clay and is one of the 12 jyotilirlingas. Such an ancient temple and world heritage site is in utter neglect and is losing its pristine glory and charm. The well inside the room where prasadam is prepared and the kitchen are in shambles, darkness prevails with a feeble lamp adding confusion to the smoky and darkened room. Devotees are given stale and badly cooked bhog. Still, thousands of Hindus visit the place from across the world. They see, murmur some complaints, have a darshan and go away.

The temple management is in the hands of the Tamil Nadu government led by Karunanidhi who is infamous for issuing insulting and sarcastic statements about Ram and Sita. But what about the millions of devotees living around Rameshwaram?

We have seen nationwide agitations for and against reservations but people have never demonstrated to save rivers or cleanse temples. There is an organisation in Tamil Nadu with a Hindu tag that objected to a dress worn by an actress at a public function. They said it hurt Hindu sentiments. But these Hindus never get hurt when Sanskrit is abolished or the Hindu population declines or when poor Hindus are converted to other religions. Hypocritical Hindus worship Durga for Shakti, Saraswati for knowledge and Lakshmi for prosperity. But the same Hindu also commits female foeticide in large numbers. And this is true for other religious communities equally. True, there are organisations opposing it and spreading awareness and this has provided positive results. But foes of the girl child abound.

In Gaumukh, the source of Ganga, pilgrims leave bindis, plastic bags, incense sticks and other non-perishable items after the puja to 'absolve' themselves of all their sins. Should we blame the government alone if the glacier is shrinking and the heavenly place defining the solitude of divinity looks as if it has been defiled by the devotees themselves?

The republic is not just about casting votes, that too at less than 50 per cent roughly along caste lines. Republic is the active participation of people in their own affairs with righteousness as the benchmark of decisions and Gandhi's talisman as a touchstone. It calls for rising above immediate self-interest. That decides the levels of happiness in a society, not bank balances and a mention in Fortune 500 lists.

Abdul Rahim Khan-i-Khana was a great poet and benefactor of the poor and needy. Every evening, a large number of people would visit him seeking help. He would refuse none, but always looked down while giving alms. Once a gentleman asked why do you not even glance at the person who is receiving the money? He replied: “Denhaar koi aur hai, devat hai din rain, log bharam mo pe karein, tase neeche nain (“The real giver is someone else [God], but people perceive I am the one. Hence the eyes look down in embarrassment!). It's bliss to have such humility and it is this pure heart that sanctifies a republic and raises her people's happiness level.

The republic thrives on the spirit of giving. Everyone says everything should be done by government and everyone seems to be dissatisfied with everything - municipal corporators, parliamentarians, officers, doctors and drivers. The crowd in religious places is hardly seen to be carrying the responsibility of applying in the outside world what they obtained inside the congregation hall. No one says hate others, yet hate spreads astonishingly. Intolerance increases intolerance and accumulation of ill-gotten wealth further whets the appetite.

This is the time when the people of the republic should seriously come together to find way for eliminating religious intolerance and hate based on ideological apartheid. Recently a step was taken in this direction with religious leaders having a global presence and appeal sharing the dais for exactly this purpose – strengthening peace and plurality and resolving conflicts. Led by Swami Dayananda Saraswati, the day-long deliberations saw Sri Sri Ravishankar, the Dalai Lama, Swami Ramdev, Deoband's Mohammad Madani, Mumbai's Archbishop Oswald Gracious and of course former President Abdul Kalam. Such efforts need peoples' support if the republic has to live its ideals.

Once we saw JP movement. It failed. Gandhians have become merely sarkari jholawalas. The last hope lies in those who would unshackle themselves from burden of historical sins and write a fresh new republican order to throw off the fossilised system and its offshoots. The new rebellious generation, already showing signs of revolt and free from the colonial mindset and obsolete ritualism, shall create a new path like Adi Sankara , with just one religion in heart - the good of humanity and elimination of the unrepentant wicked. Trust your tricolour, its going to happen before we leave the world.