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Christian Pastor Arrested for Forcing ‘Shelter Home’ Children to Beg in Hyderabad

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Christian Pastor

A Christian pastor, M James, was arrested yesterday for duping minor children and forcing them into begging at traffic signals in the IT Corridor in Hyderabad, on the pretext of providing education to them at his orphanage ‘Bhrama Puthra Social Service Society’, police said.

Another Hindu Activist, an OBC, Hacked to Death in Congress-ruled Karnataka

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Hindu Activist Praveen Poojary

An RSS Swayamsevak and autorickshaw driver Praveen Poojari, aged 32, was hacked to death on Sunday night in Kushalnagar town, Kodagu (Coorg) district of Karnataka.

As per this report in StarOfMysore.com :

Poojari was returning home after participating in a torchlight rally organised as part of ‘Akhand Bharath Sankalpa Yatra’ when three unidentified persons hired his auto. After travelling for some distance, they attacked an unsuspecting Poojari at a curved stretch of the road, with a knife, inflicting injuries on his neck and abdomen, it is learnt.

Even as Poojari bled to death, the attackers fled the spot.

As the news of Poojari’s death spread, hundreds of workers of BJP and Hindu organisations gathered in front of Kushalnagar Government Hospital mortuary. They were joined by members of Auto Driver Associations, who staged a flash protest in front of the mortuary, demanding that the District in-charge Minister M.R. Seetharam visit the spot. Virajpet MLA K.G. Bopaiah, who visited the spot, succeeded in convincing the protestors to disperse.

As tension gripped the town following Poojari’s murder, the Police clamped prohibitory orders in the town as a precautionary measure till tomorrow.

Strongly condemning Praveen Poojari’s murder, Bopaiah said that Hindu activists were being targeted in the district. Urging the Police to take appropriate measures for preventing such incidents, Bopaiah asked the Police to trace and apprehend the culprits at the earliest.

BJP MLA Arvind Limbavali has also tweeted his concern with the abject law & order situation in Karnataka under Congress rule –

A few days back, we had another report of Karnataka Congress leaders taking the law into their own hands –

With upright police officials such as DSP Anupama Shenoy being targeted by Government ministers and Congress functionaries, and senior police/admin officers dying in mysterious circumstances such as DSP MS Ganapathi , DSP Kalappa Handibag, IAS DK Ravi – it beggars belief why there is zero debate in national media on the grave crisis facing Karnataka – a state which is home to Bengaluru, the hub of our country’s iconic IT industry.  It is almost as if Karnataka has fallen off the map for our Lutyen’s media cabal – NDTV, TimesNow, CNN IBN, Headlines Today etc. – that was full of negative stories around corruption, church attacks, piling garbage etc. during the previous BJP Government under BS Yedyurappa. While BSY & BJP were hounded 24×7 by our ‘nuetral’ media commentators, Siddaramaiah and his Godmother Sonia have been given a free pass!

If these double standards do not expose the agenda of our English language media, nothing ever will. 

The recent event organized by Amnesty International at a Theological college (Christian seminary) in Bengaluru, ostensibly to empathize with victims of the conflict in Kashmir, that predictably led to anti-Bharat, pro-Pakistan and anti-Army sloganeering shows how deep the nexus between #BreakingIndia forces is today : Congress/’Secular’ parties–>Missionaries–>Jihadis–>Communists–>Maoists–>Foreign-funded NGOs–>Marxist Academics–>Lutyen’s Media 

Danger Zone For Hindu Activists in South Karnataka

The hacking of Praveen Poojari comes on the back of 3 other recent murders of Hindu activists in Karnataka, all in a belt comprising of 3 adjacent Karnataka districts – Dakshina Kannada, Kodagu (Coorg), Mysore:

  • Kyathemaranahalli Raju (37), a BJP leader, was brutally hacked to death in Mysuru near a tea stall at Udayagiri extension in March this year by a gang of four to five who attacked him with lethal weapons. Raju had stopped the illegal construction of a masjid in Kyatamaranahalli and was the main driving force behind building a Ganesh temple. Only one person has been arrested thus far, and even his name was not revealed in media reports.
  • Prashant Poojary, a Bajrang Dal activist, was hacked to death in Moodbidri (Dakshina Kannada) in Oct 2015 for opposing cow slaughter. 9 people have been arrested thus far for this muder – Mohammad Sharif, Mohammad Mustafa, Kabir, Mustafa Kavoor, Mohammud Haneef (36), Mohammud Ilyas (27), Ibrahmin Liyaqat (26), Abdul Rasheed (39), Mohammad Imtiaz Gantalkatte (40 – he was arrested at Mumbai airport while trying to fly out to Dubai) – all of them are members of the Popular Front of India (PFI), a radical Islamic Organisation; Mohammad Sharif is the president of local unit of PFI in Bajpe in Dakshina Kannada district. A Congress minister Abhyachandra Jain is known to be close to PFI, and had stitched together an alliance between Congress and PFI’s political wing, Social Democratic Party of India (SDPI), for panchayat elections.
  • DS Kutappa, a retired State Government employee and VHP’s Organising Secretary for Kodagu district, was killed in Nov 2015 during stone-throwing by Islamists who attacked a peaceful protest against Congress Government sponsored ‘Tipu Jayanti’ celebrations.  CM Siddaramaiah was quick to issue a statement that Kutappa died after falling from a roof to escape the police lathi charge, but later his own police arrested 2 people – Khalid from Arekadu village and Abdul Gafoor from Hudikeri near Siddapur – for the violence which led to Kutappa’s death.

It is probably no coincidence that this danger zone for Hindu activists in Karnataka is bordering North Kerala, another hotspot of Islamic fundamentalism that is flourishing in districts of Kasargod, Kannur, Malappuram. Recently, 21 Muslim youth (including recent converts) had gone missing from Kasargod, suspected to have joined terror group IS (Islamic State). The Islamist organization PFI is based out of Kerala, although it has now acquired a multi-state dimension across South Bharat by merging with other Islamist outfits like Karnataka Forum for Dignity etc. PFI cadre have been involved in several cases of murder, kidnapping, intimidation, Love Jihad and rioting such as the assault on professor T. J. Joseph. In 2012, the Government of Kerala informed the High Court that the activities of Popular Front are inimical to the safety of the country and it is “nothing but a resurrection of the banned outfit Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) in another form.” Intel agencies have also found PFI to be involved in terror attacks carried out by IM (Indian Mujahideen), while Taliban & Al-Qaeda propaganda material was seized during raids in 2010.

While our national media and intelligentsia is preoccupied with the alleged threat of ‘cow terror‘, who will raise the issue of Islamist threat to ordinary Hindus like Praveen Poojari? Going by his surname and this Government classification, it appears that Praveen Poojary is an OBC (Other Backward Class) – at least from that angle, shouldn’t he get a mention on front pages and during 9 PM TV debates? Or does his Hindu identity override his caste/class status in the eyes of our secular-liberal media?

CPM Attacks Schoolboy for Participating in Raksha Bandhan Program

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CPM Attacks Schoolboy

Continuing their assault on practicing Hindus in Kerala, CPM party workers have sunk to new depths and are not sparing even children now. In a recent event organized by ABVP (Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad) to celebrate the Hindu festival of ‘Raksha Bandhan’, CPM (Communist Party of India – Marxist) workers attacked a schoolboy and broke his hand.

Advaita & Monotheism- Analysed by Late Shri Sita Ram Goel

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Advaita & Monotheism

Late Shri Sita Ram Goel was one of the greatest Hindu thinkers, a writer and political activist who wrote extensively on the damage to Hindu culture and heritage brought by expansionist Islam and missionary activities of Christianity. In his seminal book “India’s Secularism-New Name For National Subversion”, he has listed seven important contrasting attributes that differentiate between Advaita & Monotheism in terms of ways of worship. These seven attributes and historical facts clearly show that Monotheism is basically religion with imperialist connotations. Due to this reason, Monotheism is different from Dharma that lacks imperialist connotations. As my tribute to Shri Sita Ram Goel, great son of Bharatvarsha, I have summarized his observations below :

ADVAITA

1st Proposition of Advaita: Polytheism is central to Advaita, where multiple gods and goddesses are symbols of one infinite, ineffable and indescribable supreme power. Mr. Goel here refers to a couplet of Goswami Tulsidas- “Hari Anant Hari Katha Ananta-God is infinite and so is his narratives and stories”. So even a minuscule part of cosmos can be considered divine as it is reflection of that infinite itself.

2nd Proposition of Advaita: In Advaita, gods and goddesses can assume any animate or inanimate form, namely human male or human female, plant, animal, stone, mountains and rivers etc. This indicates that all animate and inanimate world is pervaded by one Supreme Being and devotee can worship that in form of her choice.

3rd Proposition of Advaita: In Advaita, not only there are different forms to worship, a devotee can choose different ways of worship or develop her own system to worship divine. The object of worship and mode of worship cannot be at fault, but fault can only lie in quality of devotion. Mr. Goel refers to a couplet of Goswami Tulsidas to illustrate this. “Jaki rahi Bhavna Jaisi, prabhu murat dekhi tin taisi – Level of devotion of a person determines level of connect to god”.

4th Proposition of Advaita: In Advaita, TRUTH is impersonal and eternal. Anyone can seek and experience the TRUTH directly without mediation of any other person. TRUTH remains “same” for him as well as for those who could seek it in past and who would seek it in future. No one can claim the monopoly of having experienced REVELATIONS which is the only valid TRUTH overriding all claims of past and future.

5th Proposition of Advaita: Man should hold those beliefs which are consistent with reason and can be verified ultimately at some level of human consciousness. So teachings of some higher spiritual persons should be verifiable by others reaching same spiritual level.

6th Proposition of Advaita: The whole world is one family – Vasudhaiv Kutumbakam. Each member of this one family should reciprocate “considerate conduct” from others. Do not do unto others what you find unpalatable to yourself.

7th Proposition of Advaita: Advaita considers superiority of humans over other parts of nature, only for spiritual seeking. As Universe manifests different animate and inanimate limbs of one Infinite power, these limbs are not meant for unbridled consumption and humans need to cultivate a relation of friendliness, while seeking sustenance and livelihood from them.

MONOTHEISM

1st Proposition of Monotheism: Central to Monotheism is that creator and controller of Cosmos is the One God who is unique, who remains outside cosmos and does not manifest himself in different forms, and hence worship of any other god or goddess inside cosmos is not permitted. Considering any part inside cosmos as divine, is a serious crime against the One God.

2nd Proposition of Monotheism: In Monotheism, one God created the Cosmos without aid of any substance out of sheer void or nothing. He remains out of this Cosmos as omnipotent. So destruction of animate or inanimate parts of cosmos for unbridled consumption is not against his wish. Since he resides outside Cosmos, worship of any part of it is not to his liking.

3rd Proposition of Monotheism: Human male is highest creation of One God, as he was created from One God’s own breath blown in to a clay figure. That breath became soul of this human male. In Monotheism, it is not very clear if human female also has soul, as human female is made from one piece of rib of human male. All other parts/limbs of cosmos (animate and inanimate) are made for enjoyment of human male.

4th Proposition of Monotheism: Man has only one life which needs to be devoted for exclusive worship of One God as per the commandments of One God. Since direct contact with One God is not possible as Man remains inside and One God remains outside cosmos, so to help the Man in dark, One God sends his Messengers to Cosmos from time to time, to reveal those Commandments to the Man. Here, the last Messenger pronounces the final commandments that supersede all commandments spelled out by previous Messengers. One God also sanctions in these Commandments, that those who do not follow these commandments, their lives and properties be confiscated.

5th Proposition of Monotheism: After advent of last Messenger two events take place. Here history of mankind is divided into two parts, namely of Darkness before revelations by last Messenger and of Enlightenment after that. Firstly, whatever modes of worship and culture prevailed earlier need to be erased as symbol of darkness. Secondly, existing mankind is again divided into two groups, one who believe in last Messenger’s message and obeys it and another who has doubt or challenges Last Messenger’s revelations. The believer group is loved by One God, and second group invites his wrath.

6th Proposition of Monotheism: As per this proposition, the Sovereignty of whole world is bestowed to last Messenger and through him to group professing complete faith in him. As One God has also confiscated life and properties of those who do not follow last Messenger’s commandments, it becomes sacred duty of the first group to wage ceaseless Jihad against the second group, and either make that group submit to last Messenger’s commandments or annihilate it altogether. Those who are annihilated, their properties and wealth should be confiscated and their families be made slaves.

7th Preposition of Monotheism: As per this proposition, on last day of Judgement, all those born from beginning to end of creation will rise from their grave and present themselves before one God. The last Messenger will reappear and sit beside One God giving account of good deeds and bad deeds to the One God for each human. Those who had professed full faith in One God will be sent to Heaven containing all the objects of Enjoyment. Those who rebelled would be sent to hell. It is important that ONLY FAITH and NOT CONDUCT will define who goes where.

Readers can very well appreciate why Late Sita Ram Goel says – Monotheistic religions are not same as Dharma as per Advaita philosophy of worship of supreme power.

-By Pankaj Prasad (Working professional, student of Dharma)

(Disclaimer: This article represents the opinions of the Author, and the Author is responsible for ensuring the factual veracity of the content. HinduPost will not be responsible for the accuracy, completeness, suitability, or validity of any information, contained herein.)

An Open Letter to Gurcharan Das

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Gurcharan Das

Dear Gurcharanji,

Sadar Pranam.

On September 27, 2015, you wrote an article with the title “Smriti Irani, have a good cry. Then give 240m kids a chance”

URL: http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/men-and-ideas/smriti-irani-have-a-good-cry-then-give-240m-kids-a-chance/

In the article you quoted from a test result of 2011 which showed the abysmally poor results of Bharatiya students in an international test.  If my memory is correct, Smritiji became the education minister in 2014, and I wondered how could she be responsible for the mess.  So, in response, I wrote on October 26, 2015, an article titled “Abuse and Social Realities”.  It is available at:

URL:   http://hvk.org/specialarticles/abuse/abuse.html

In my article, I pointed out that you were falsely blaming Smritiji for the mess in the government schools due to the provisions of the Right to Education Act,  which, as you yourself noted, was promulgated in 2009.  In your article, you wrote: “Instead of improving the quality of government schools, RTE has unleashed a corrupt inspector raj upon private schools, leading to the closure of many on dubious grounds.

The Power of a United Hindu Community

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Now it is time to increase our efforts to work together and make Hindus a concerted force that is recognized by everyone. Of course, we know this is not easy and is going to take time, but the sooner we all get started, the sooner we can accomplish it. But there are those of us, such as those I am sharing the stage with, who have already been working on this for years. We only ask that you all make a stand to join together, to make a powerful and strong Hindu community.

Vedic culture has been changing the world throughout the ages. For example, many have offered their respects to the Vedic culture, such as Henry David Thoreau who said: “In the morning I bathe my intellect in the stupendous and cosmogonal philosophy of the Bhagavat Geeta, since whose composition years of the gods have elapsed, and in comparison with which our modern world and its literature seem puny and trivial.”

Or Arthur Schopenhauer: “There is no religion or philosophy so sublime and elevating as Vedanta.”

And, of course, Ralph Waldo Emerson who mentioned, “I owed a magnificent day to the Bhagavad-Gita. It was as if an empire spoke to us, nothing small or unworthy, but large, serene, consistent, the voice of an old intelligence which in another age and climate had pondered and thus disposed of the same questions which exercise us.”

Many other quotes could be included but you get the picture. Vedic culture will continue to change the lives of many people, but we can accelerate this positive change the more we unite and the more we work together. Let us all move forward in this direction and become the great force we were meant to be, and that this world needs.

This means that we must be good Hindus, good Dharmists, followers of Vedic Dharma. And that means that we must follow our principles, uphold the yamas and niyamas, and observe our traditions. Is that so difficult? I dont think so. But that means we also need to be educated in them. Let us not relinquish or let go of our standards because of too much Western influence. We must know what they mean and their real purposes. Let us interact with Western society, as we already do, but let us not forget who we are. Bharat is our real identity. The fact is that more Westerners than ever before are adopting the ways and philosophy of Vedic culture, whether it is through yoga and meditation, or adapting the philosophy of karma and reincarnation. Many are those who want to follow this path. I am an example of that, and there are many more out there, and many more who want to but dont know it yet. We need to be willing to share it with them. That itself is a great contribution to the world from the Vedic path. The more we uphold our principles and let others know why they are important, the more they will also adopt our ways.

For example, I have one Bharatiya friend who is a strong vegetarian and would always hide his meal when he took it to work so no one would see it. But then someone started asking questions about it, so he had to explain why he was a vegetarian, and included information about the Ayurvedic reasons and benefits about the spices we use, like turmeric, cumin, and others. In a short while, most of his work crew, which consisted of 80 other workers, became wild about Bharatiya vegetarian cooking. Then he also did the same thing with explaining the benefits of doing the Surya Namaskar, after which nearly half of his co-workers started practicing it. So what is the difficulty? All you have to do is share what you already know, and people will become interested.

This is also why Hindus need to be educated in their culture to realize how profound, deep and special it is, and what knowledge it contains. Then they will be proud of their culture and follow it. After all, we have nothing to be ashamed of, nothing to be afraid of. We are representations of and participants in the most profound and oldest of all spiritual traditions and cultures, and it has the deepest of all spiritual knowledge. The only thing is that many people dont know that. I dare say that many Hindus also do not fully know how deep and profound it is because of lacking the education of their own path. This needs to change. And this lack of knowledge is the prime reason why Hindus in Bharat may convert to some other religion.

To help make this change, we also need to understand that it is a fact that without proper measures of defense and promotion of our culture, you cannot give proper protection to it. It is a tough world and things have changed. Most wars in this world are now 80% intellectual. We now have to use our intelligence to show what our culture is in order to really protect and preserve it from those who are always trying to demean and criticize it. We must understand that apathy is an enemy. Apathy, the tendency to do nothing, is our greatest enemy. We must conquer our own apathy where we find it. This, in fact, is the teaching of Lord Krishna to Arjuna in the Bhagavad-gita, as previously stated. Are you are follower of the Bhagavad-gita? Are you a follower of Sanatana-Dharma? Then we must conquer our apathy and take a stand for doing something to maintain Vedic Dharma.

We have to be fearless to protect and promote Vedic Dharma. I am honored and proud to be on the same stage as Dr. Subramanian Swamy and Kamal Kumar Swami, who are examples of the fearlessness of which I speak. I am honored and proud to be in front of all of you, and I am honored and proud to be called a Hindu, a Krishna bhakta, a follower of Sanatana-dharma. We should all be honored and proud in the same way and willing to work together. We dont have to proselytize, but we can all share the benefits of what our culture has given to us and to the world.

For example, in Secunderabad near Hyderabad, a few years ago there was a Krishna temple that the government wanted to move in order to widen the road, but all the local Hindus came together with a big demonstration to protest, and the state government backed down. This shows what can be done and what has been done when Hindus unite, and shows what we must continue to do. Then people will take us more seriously and reconsider before they simply get up to offend Hindus and think there will be no reaction. People will hesitate before taking Hindus lightly. But we have to have the determination to make a stand. And once we begin to work in this way, we cannot stop but must continue for the long-term, and never stop until the goal is reached.

Sometimes just by doing a little endeavor we don’t know and may even be surprised at what doors of opportunity will open for us. Sometimes all it takes is that we just start, step one foot in front of the other, and suddenly we step into a force, a current of energy that lifts us along like nothing we have experienced. Like a reciprocation from something that is far greater than we are that assists us to do things in ways that far exceeds our own expectations.

You have no idea how many times this has happened to me, and I’m sure many of you know exactly what I’m talking about. So can you imagine what would happen if all of us stepped forward in unity for the Dharma and open ourselves to that opportunity to make a difference? Plus, the more we all step forward to do something together, the easier it gets for everyone.

It is one thing to say we are united, and quite another to work and act united, engaged in concerted efforts as one community to protect, defend and properly promote our culture. It should not matter whether we are Vaishnavas, Shaivites, Brahmanandis, Shaktas, or Bengalis, Gujaratis, Tamils, Rajasthanis, or Americans, or any ethnicity, because when one aspect of the Vedic tradition is threatened, demeaned or unnecessarily criticized, then it is the whole culture that is under attack. We must see it that way. We must step forward and be strong Dharmists, and make a stand for our tradition and its future.

Sanatana-dharma is universal. It is actually beyond the universe, it is spiritual. We are essentially all Dharmists. It goes beyond all materialistic labels and definitions, and that is how we should act as united Hindus, followers of Santana-dharma.

Such materialistic labels and identities are part of the illusion, maya, and Sanatana-dharma is meant to lift us out of the illusion and into reality, the ultimate and supreme reality. Working in this way and helping each other as well is real unity.

So, let us also support each other in friendship, in Dharmic brotherhood and sisterhood. Let us not become divided by minor or superficial differences or labels, but let us gather and see our unity, our similarities as spiritual beings, all parts of the Supreme Spirit. That is the ultimate teaching of Bhagavad-gita and the Vedic shastra. That perception of reality is becoming increasingly rare these days in society, but it is an inherent principle and basic reality of Vedic Dharma and Dharmic civilization. That is why I call it the Last Bastion of deep spiritual truth. It goes beyond basic moralistic ethics and gives you the higher principles of self-realization. It gives you direct access to the Absolute, the Supreme, not only by descriptions but by offering the methods by which we can perceive and directly experience it by spiritualizing our consciousness. It gives us one of the last hopes for world peace. Let us not forget that and also help each other raise our consciousness and maintain that spiritual vision of who and what we really are. That will also pave the way for a truly united Hindu society.

There is no greater need for Hindu unity than right now, since there are forces that are also gathering that are trying to work against us. The problem is that it is in our nature to respect everyone, but not everyone wants to return the same respect back toward us. In fact, there are those who would like to see our complete extinction, the complete demise of Hindu Dharma or Vedic culture if they could, such as we have seen in Pakistan, Bangladesh, Kashmir, and so on. How long does it take before it becomes obvious that we must stand together even if only to preserve and protect what remains of our culture, and preserve and protect the homeland of our culture, Mother Bharat, Bharathvarsha.

We must also recognize those people or groups who mean to do us harm, or even wish for our extinction, and then defend ourselves and our culture from their attacks, whatever they may be. But we need to be pro-active and develop plans, not merely wait for something to happen and then show some knee-jerk reaction. There are many who know this and already working in this way, but can you imagine if the whole Vedic community acted in this way together and supported such plans? It would have profound effects. We must look to see what we need to do and where we need to be in our measures to preserve and protect Vedic Dharma in 5 years, 10 years, or 20 years, and make pro-active plans to accomplish those goals. Major industrial companies do this, other religions do this, so there is no reason why we should not do this. Many of the more detailed action plans I have developed can be found in my book, “Crimes Against India: And the Need to Protect its Ancient Vedic Tradition.”

We still have a sizable population of nearly one billion Hindus around the world, but have you ever wondered why we are still not as formidable a force as we should be? In places like America, Bharatiyas, most of whom are Hindus, are one of the wealthiest ethnic groups in the country. We are certainly gathering influence here in many ways, and many are those who are entering politics and gaining influential positions, but we still have not become as formidable a force in the world as we could be. Why is that? It’s simple really. It’s because of a lack of organized effort, too much apathy, but primarily a lack of unity amongst us.

With a united force, we could more easily see to it that laws in government are passed that help defend Hindus rather than take our freedoms away. If we were a united and pro-active force, politicians would be scrambling to get our favor. We would get respect from politicians. We would create a greater recognition on the importance for them to acquire the Hindu vote, especially in Bharat. We could also have more control over the media that today thinks that being secular means to be anti-Hindu. We would get non-Hindus or critics of Hindu Dharma to feel that they cannot just say any damn thing against us because we won’t do anything about it. We need to be a force to be reckoned with, a force that is watching what others are doing for or against us, and listening to what they are saying about us, and be ready to stand up and do something about it when it is unjust.

We must unite around a common set of values, concepts and traditions that can be the universal uniting factors for all Hindus. This does not mean we give up our distinctions, lineages or paramparas, but that we focus on uniting on the basis of what we can all easily agree on, such as the basis of the Bhagavad-gita. Everyone knows the Bhagavad-gita, and should know it. There are all kinds of knowledge within it. But the thing that many people seem to forget is that the Bhagavad-gita is a call to defend Dharma. It is a call to action. That was one of the motivating factors for Arjuna from Lord Krishna. That Arjuna must not run away to the forest simply to meditate, which is what he wanted to do, but he must stand up and fight to defend Santana-dharma. And we must do the same because as we can plainly see all around us, that without it the whole world is falling into hell and confusion. As exhibited by the Mahabharata, sometimes when all else fails, you have to stand up and fight to protect Dharma and its spiritual principles.

We must also have the attitude that no Hindu is left behind, at least no sincere Hindu. A true Dharmic leader or Vedic Ambassador will feel this in the core of his heart. Everyone is a part of the whole, the complete. We merely have to awaken that completeness within ourselves. When everyone shares this vision amongst the whole community, then it becomes extremely powerful. When everyone is imbibed with spiritual unity, then the spiritual vibration is no longer something to seek or acquire, but it is something to witness, to experience, and we should bring together all like-minded people to work in that unity and to expand that spiritual vibration, that higher energy that exists within us all.

Everyone in the Vedic community must see all other Hindus as Dharmic brothers and sisters who are eligible to make the same spiritual progress as anyone else. Why? No Hindu left behind. That means everyone is eligible to enter the temples, everyone is eligible to practice its customs, everyone is eligible to participate in the core identity of being a Dharmist. Everyone should feel they have a place and are valued and have something to contribute. This is the basis of enthusiasm, which everyone should feel. This is the power a united Dharmic community. No Hindu is left behind. When this is established, it creates a most positive atmosphere in all who participate, it creates a very positive future, and it creates a winning team in which many others want to join. Everyone wants to be on a winning team, and then feel they can stand up and do their part. Then we all become very powerful in our ability to change this world, and bring in and manifest the spiritual vibration for one and all. Then we all become a part of that uplifting force, which is the ultimate destiny for all humanity, which is also described in the Vedic shastra, like Bhagavad-gita.

This is also, if I may say so, one of the main principles of what Kamal Kumar Swamiji is doing on his padayatras in Bharat. He goes everywhere, whether it is the villages, the streets, the dusty roads, even the houses of the Hindus, anywhere it takes to inspire everyone to remain a part of the Vedic family, and then work together to help preserve it. I have seen it. I have been with Kamal Kumar Swami in Tirupati for this very reason, and I applaud his work, and many others should be going out to reach the people in similar ways.

This is the ideal of no Hindu left behind, and the Dharmic leader and Vedic Ambassadors know how to instill this unity for everyone to take a stand, become involved and to defend and preserve the culture and all who participate in it. Any apathy amongst Hindus is what must be given up and left behind as we all gather momentum to make sure we all have our freedom and facilities to follow the principles, the customs, and the traditions of the Vedic path.

So to wrap this up, we have covered a number of points, such as:

  • We all need to be Vedic ambassadors.
  • We must be educated in the profound nature of our culture.
  • Practicing the Vedic tradition is a right and a freedom which must be protected.
  • Apathy is an enemy.
  • Everyone can and must do something.
  • The Bhagavad-gita is a call to action.
  • No sincere Hindu left behind.
  • We must become united and work in concerted efforts, and become a formidable force for Vedic Dharma.

So how do we do this? We must become united under common principles, such as the teachings of Bhagavad-gita, united for stopping cow slaughter, united to stop the deceitful conversion practices that try to take people away from Vedic culture, united for such things as saving the sacred Yamuna River from all the pollution that is killing it. We should also be united to stop the corruption in Bharatiya politics, and united to keep Bharat the homeland of a dynamic and thriving Vedic tradition, united for preserving all aspects of the Vedic spiritual knowledge, and for passing it to the next generations. We should be united for the protection and promotion of the glorious character of Vedic culture that everyone can appreciate. Who among us cannot join and be united for these objectives? And the more people who participate and work together, the easier it is for all of us. The more we work in such concerted efforts, the more we establish a unified, global Vedic community.

It is said that the war of Kurukshetra, the war to uphold Dharma, lasted 18 days, which changed the world. If all Hindus, Dharmists, gurus, sadhus,bhaktas, etc., etc., all over the world ever really and truly united and worked together as a single force, we could change the world in 18 days. Isn’t that a goal worth working for? Isn’t that a goal worth fighting for? That, my friends, my brothers and sisters in Dharma, is one of the primary purposes of my life. This is all I’m living for. This is my vision, but we all have to share the vision. And I will work with anyone who shares that vision. In this way, we can stand united, and in this way we stay united.

So, if you help me and I help you, if you wish me well and I give you my best wishes, and we all work together like that, it creates an atmosphere of strength and positivity. It makes our future very bright and full of potential. And if everyone does a little something to help, fantastic things can happen. Many people will become attracted and want to be a part of it. So let us all work together, encouraging each other and become more united as Hindus, followers of Sanatana-dharma, and show the world the great contributions that the culture of Vedic Dharma has given and continues to give to all of humanity. If we take care of Dharma, Dharma will take care of us. But we have to take the first step. Together as united Hindus we can do this. That is the potency and power if we stay together, stand together and work together as a united, global Vedic community.

Thank you very much.

Dharma Rakshati Rakshita

Jai Sri Krishna

Is Kamlesh Tiwari Kept In Jail Deliberately?

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Kamlesh Tiwari

Kamlesh Tiwari was arrested in Dec 2015 for insulting a certain religion’s prophet and has been in jail since then because NSA (National Security Act) was slapped on him which has prevented his bail until now. The case is closely connected with the insulting comment by Azam Khan of Samajwadi Party in which he inferred that RSS is an organization of gay men. As per this interview of Kamlesh Tiwari’s wife and legal counsel,  Tiwari actually shot back in anger at Azam Khan in a private meeting or private text which was probably leaked in public.

Terrorists can’t be Sweethearts

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Terrorists as Sweethearts

The modern times are fundamentally weighed down by the load of deceit, greed, conspiracy and, more importantly, terror. The recent spat between Arnab Goswami of Times Now and Barkha Dutt of NDTV is a pointer to that. Yes, Bharatiya media stinks of dirt and filth that it gathered over the years. When one digs deeper one realizes that there is hardly any remnant of credibility and integrity in the mainstream media of Bharat now.

Book Review: Abhaya by Saiswaroopa Iyer

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Abhaya

“Our home isn’t just Anagha,” the wise and fearless Abhaya says in Saiswaroopa’s thrilling debut, “our home is everywhere that civilization stands by dharma.”

Abhaya has seen enough already to be wise, though she is but a young princess, slightly unsure of things as she is thrust into great inter-kingdom rivalries and intrigues, and slightly unsure too about the feelings in her heart for that kind, mysterious, and cool friend next door in the city of Dwaraka. Homes have been ravaged, kings betrayed and slain, wolves and raptors feast in the ruins of once happy towns, and yet, somehow, those who remain must fight for what is right, for civilization, and for dharma.

I haven’t enjoyed a story as much as Abhaya in a very long time. From the breathless excitement of a chase and rescue in the first chapter involving a woman, her lover, and a violent mob intent on what the modern world calls “honor killings,” we are taken on a journey across the lives and minds of one of the most interesting cast of characters assembled for a tale about ancient Bharat. Abhaya, and a skillfully understated Krishna, are of course the heroes, who hold our hearts, and the future of sanity, in their hands; but there are brothers and sisters, mothers, tyrants, hypocrites, liars, and most of all the powerful figure of a woman revered as the Goddess herself, seeking to liberate the poor, mistreated women of the plains from their oppressors, but might not herself be aware of the dark fundamentalist conspiracy being hatched by a pseudo-religious zealot for domination and destruction.

Fundamentalism, patriarchy, governance, ethics, and of course, love, are all well-considered themes in Abhaya, even as a fast-paced adventure unfolds. Saiswaroopa follows in the path explored in the Shiva Trilogy by Amish in terms of weaving in several contemporary concerns and comparisons to modern Bharat into the tale, but also brings in her knowledge of classical Telugu literary traditions to play in stimulating ways.  As my own knowledge of this literature is limited, I found her introductory essays useful in appreciating the rich cultural world that has produced this work, while at a more experiential level, I could completely find myself transported into the sort of world of brave and intelligent women we grew up with in Chandamama and the great NTR epics of the 1950s.

Years from now, when academia opens up enough to take Bharatiya writing and popular culture seriously on their own terms, Abhaya will surely be studied as one of the finest examples in the civilizational rediscovery genre (and I hope we can start using something like this term instead of the dated and inadequate “mythological”). The enormous popularity of this genre, and more importantly, the enormous dedication of talented story tellers like Saiswaroopa to this creative quest, tell us that the struggle for decolonizing Bharat is very much underway, even if august academic bodies and institutions will take a while to catch up.

While I do not want to spoil the fun for the reader of discovering the wise parallels Saiswaroopa draws between her fictional world and present-day Bharat, one point does merit emphasis. Abhaya clearly has its hand on the moral pulse of today’s global, digital, and indeed liberal (in the true sense) Hindus who are fighting off a double-attack on them by a nasty and mendacious media-academic culture hell-bent on misrepresenting what is really churning to life after decades and centuries of colonization by ignorance. One line, for example: “The powers of Arya dharma are consolidating,” the antagonist is told, “the fault-lines that your network of Shaktas exploited all these days might not exist in a couple of years.”

In Abhaya, the reference is to the statesmanship of Krishna, as he advises his cousins the Pandavas to help gather the support of the fragmented and petty kingdoms and unite Bharata, not for some imperialist design, but simply for sustaining dharma, “that which values life over frenzied beliefs.” There are moments in the novel when the urgency of the present day Bharat becomes indistinguishable from the story. What is that urgency, and why do I view Saiswaroopa’s moral universe here as a truly liberal one? It is simply because Abhaya and her friends do not deny that the “fault-lines” exist. We can see that they do, in the novel, and in Bharat today. We are divided. Women are treated very badly (and increasingly men too), and much that is horrible is happening. But the important thing is that like Abhaya, we are witnessing an awakening that somehow knows how to fight those who exploit the fault-lines for their own predations and depravities, and yet nurtures its own conscience enough to also face and fight the fault-lines.

Abhaya will inspire you to be who you are, whoever you are. Read it, and get everyone you know to read it too.

The Kindle version of the book can be downloaded from here. The print book can be purchased from Amazon here.

By – Vamsee Juluri
Dr. Vamsee Krishna Juluri is a professor of media studies at the University of San Francisco and the author of Rearming Hinduism (www.rearminghinduism.com).
(Disclaimer: This book review first appeared on IndiaFacts.org, and is being republished on HinduPost with permission of IndiaFacts and the author. This article represents the opinions of the Author, and the Author is responsible for ensuring the factual veracity of the content. HinduPost will not be responsible for the accuracy, completeness, suitability, or validity of any information, contained herein.)

NaMo Bowls a No-Ball

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Brand NaMo Pradhan Mantri Acche Din Union Budget 2017 Narendra Modi નેતૃત્વ

The PM of Bharat, Narendra Modi, at the recent town-hall style meeting in the national capital, expressed his displeasure on the alleged corruption existing in the ‘Gau Raksha’ movement of the country. NaMo, while trying to bifurcate the devotion to cow inherently felt by vast majority of the Hindu masses into ‘Gau Bhakti’ and ‘Gau Seva’, commented that ‘Rajas’ while fighting ‘Baadshahs’ used to lose battles because the latter used to strategically place cows in front of their armies. The PM remarked that most of the gau rakshaks (cow protection volunteers) have made this activity a ‘business’ and if the states will make dossiers of these ‘swayamsevi’ (self serving) gau rakshaks, about 70 to 80% of gau rakshaks will be found involved in illegitimate/corrupt work.