Tuesday, September 24, 2013

News from Hindu Press International-14















News from Hindu Press International 





Posted on 2010/7/27 7:04:01 ( 353 reads )
Source: sify.com
INDIA, July 17, 2010: A controversy has broken out in Kerala's famed Sabarimala temple over a court suggestion to consider widening of the temple's 18 holy steps as well as the door to the sanctum sanctorum to allow pilgrims easier access. The head priest of the temple and a vastu expert, among others, have opposed any attempt to tinker with the temple's original structure.

The Kerala High Court's observations were made while considering a report submitted by the Special Commissioner of Sabarimala stating that many devotees were injured during the last festival season. The court also suggested erecting a conveyor belt to make darshan easy for the devotees.

Pilgrims have to wait for several hours before they get a chance to climb the hallowed 18 steps which lead to the sanctum sanctorum and get darshan of Lord Ayyappa.

Veteran temple vastu expert Cheruvalli Narayanan Nampoothiri said that under no circumstances would it be possible to make any changes in the basic structure of any temple according to the norms of temple vastu. "Changes just cannot take place in the basic structure. And since the Lord is installed inside no part of the sanctum sanctorum can be altered or reshaped," said Nampoothiri.

General secretary of Akhila Bharatha Ayyappa Seva Sangham, N. Sreenivasan, criticised the court's suggestions saying they would hurt the sentiments of millions of believers. "Each of the 18 holy steps represent the hill Gods of Lord Ayyappa and it is impossible to widen the doors of the sanctorum of the temple for convenience of the pilgrims," said Sreenivasan.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/27 7:03:01 ( 407 reads )
SRI LANKA, July 2010: Western attire has been outlawed for this year's Nallur Festival in the Jaffna Peninsula and pilgrims have been told that only the traditional sari or long skirt and full blouse for women and the verti for men will be allowed. Even the popular churidar (Salvars) worn by women have been banned.

Jaffna Mayor and festival's Organizing Committee chairperson Yogeswari Patkunarajah told the Sunday Times the decision was taken since a large number of expatriate Tamils were visiting the peninsula in Western attire that was not in keeping with the Tamil culture of the area.

The festival which is likely to attract hundreds of thousands of people from all parts of the country and overseas begins on August 15 and will go on for 25 days.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/27 7:02:01 ( 396 reads )
GERMANY, June 14, 2010: The inaugural celebration for the renovation of the Hindu temple at the Robert-Koch-Strasse is in full swing. Anyone who accepted followed the friendly invitation removed their shoes and entered the long, single-story building to have a look at another world.

A new statue of the Goddess Durga, the wife of Shiva, was set up in a colorful, ritually painted shrine. The shrine has been painted by an expert effort. The statue is now in place under a canopy. Priests were brought in from out of the area to conduct the ceremony.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/27 7:01:01 ( 375 reads )
Source: www.bbc.co.uk
The amount of phytoplankton - tiny marine plants - in the top layers of the oceans has declined markedly over the last century, research suggests. Writing in the journal Nature, scientists say the decline appears to be linked to rising water temperatures. The final tally included 445,237 data points spanning the period 1899-2008.

"This study took three years, and we spent lots of time going through the data checking that there wasn't any 'garbage' in there," said research leader Daniel Boyce from Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

The higher quality data available since 1950 has allowed the team to calculate that since that time, the world has seen a phytoplankton decline of about 40%.

If the trend is real, it could also act to accelerate warming, the team noted. Photosynthesis by phytoplankton removes carbon dioxide from the air and produces oxygen.

In several parts of the world, notably the Southern Ocean, scientists have already noted that the waters appear to be absorbing less CO2 - although this is principally thought to be because of changes to wind patterns - and leaving more CO2 in the air should logically lead to greater warming.

"Phytoplankton... produce half of the oxygen we breathe, draw down surface CO2, and ultimately support all of our fisheries," said Boris Worm, another member of the Dalhousie team. "An ocean with less phytoplankton will function differently." The question is: how differently?
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/27 7:00:01 ( 428 reads )
There is one thing God cannot do. He cannot separate Himself from the soul.
   Yogaswami of Jaffna (1872-1964)
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/26 7:05:01 ( 384 reads )
CHENNAI, INDIA, July 21, 2010: It was the collapse of the temple tower at Srikalahasti in Andhra Pradesh that spurred experts to inspect the rajagopurams characteristic of Chennai's temples. What they discovered were not cracks or fissures but rare sculptures including one of the Maratha king Shivaji, which embellish the intricate carvings on these structures. "While climbing up the tiers of different temple towers across the city, we stumbled upon rare murtis whose existence was unknown," said an expert.

We noticed a sculpture of Tamil poet Tiruvalluvar sitting cross-legged, with some palm leaves in his hand, at the Kalikambal temple in Broadway. Another sculpture depicting the marriage of Shiva and Parvathi was found at the Karneeswarar temple in Saidapet," said an official. "The Kalikambal temple also has a rare painting and a sculpture showing Goddess Kali blessing Chhatrapati Shivaji." It is said that Shivaji visited the temple in the year 1677 and offered prayers to the deity.

Historical records indicate that Shivaji's army came down south up to Kancheepuram, then under the sway of the Nawab of Arcot, who owed allegiance to the British. Legend has it that he visited the temple one night after he heard that the presiding deity was Kali, his favorite goddess. A long line of Maratha kings, who were descendants of Shivaji, later controlled the Thanjavur region for nearly two centuries.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/26 7:04:01 ( 447 reads )
UNITED STATES, July 21, 2010: It has emerged that professionals from India took a third of the available US work visas under the H-1B category last year. Among foreigners living in the US on a temporary basis, India made up the largest group, second only to Mexicans. Last year there were 364,757 non-immigrant Indians residing in the US and 403,793 Mexicans. Among H-1B holders, the largest group by far were from India, with 123,002 people from the sub-continent taking H-1B US work visas last year. Overall, the leading source countries for non-immigrant residents of the US in 2009 were India, taking 36 per cent of the US visas; Canada with 6.5 per cent; the UK with 4.3 per cent and Mexico, taking 4.2 per cent.

In terms of the US student visas issued, students from five countries accounted for more than half the total number. These countries were China, taking 14 per cent; South Korea, with 13 per cent; India, taking 9 per cent and Mexico and Japan, who took 8.2 per cent and 5.6 per cent respectively. California and New York headed up the list of preferred destinations for holders of temporary US visas.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/26 7:03:01 ( 414 reads )
UNITED STATES, July 22, 2010: If you missed the winning essays of the Hindu American Foundation's second annual NextGen Essay Contest, here is your chance to read what the next generation of Hindus is thinking. The question asked was, "How do you live your Hindu identity differently than your parents live theirs?" Contestants, in two categories based upon their age - 17 - 22 years and 23 - 27 years, were judged on their creativity, focus and style by a four person panel composed of HAF staff and Executive Council members. From the many worldwide entries, four outstanding essays, two in each age category, were selected as the winning entries.

At the "source" link above," you will find intelligent pieces such as the one written by Hamsika Chandrasekar, 19, one of the winners. "Having learned both Bharatnaatyam and Carnatic vocal music for over ten years, I connect with much of Hindu lore through the medium of song and dance. Draupadi's pain, Arjuna's struggle, Ravana's anger, and Krishna's wisdom are all concepts I understand through hand gestures, footwork, facial expressions, and lyrics." Chandrasekar is a rising sophomore at MIT, pursuing a major in Brain and Cognitive Sciences with hopes of going to medical school or working in the field of Global Health. She is trained in both classical Indian dance and Carnatic music.

Another winner is Pramal Lad, 25, born and raised in the UK. Lad left his career as a Tax Consultant at PricewaterhouseCoopers to join the NGO sector in Karnataka, India to train rural graduate students with the aim of securing well-paid employment. He is currently a Fellow with Indicorps, a grassroots partnership organization that places young Indians who have a willingness to give themselves fully for one year in the development of local communities in India. "Whilst my parents continue to spend many hours every day in devotional worship or Bhakti Yoga, I invest all of my time supporting the neglected rural communities of Karnataka, adding value to their lives, both present and future," Lad wrote in his winning essay. "My parents spend many hours offering food, clothing and attention to the divine representation, whilst I work with living, breathing manifestations of the divine spirit - a subset of the hundreds of millions of Indians who are in desperate need of the same clothing, food and attention. I worship by serving the underserved..."

Shweta Thakur, a graduate of UCLA, wrote: "While my parents can feel grounded by doing pujas and considering actions of today affecting the far future, I find it more comfortable to live my Hindu identity using more tangible concepts like writing and thinking about the near future," Thakur wrote. "The beauty of our religion is its ability to embrace all kinds of practices."

Click on the link above for a treasure-trove of young Hindu American thinking.



Posted on 2010/8/3 7:00:01 ( 422 reads )
The modern young (as well as the old) Hindu struggles in vain to understand the religion of his forefathers, and gives up the quest altogether.
   Swami Vivekananda (1863-1902) summarizing the impact of Lord T. B.Macaulay's education policy in India and the destructive success of the government schools for Hindus
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/31 7:05:01 ( 360 reads )
FIJI, August 02, 2010: About 40 priests of the Shree Sanatan Dharm Pratinidhi Sabha of Fiji were given certificates indicating their ordination yesterday.

Sabha General Secretary, Vijendra Prakash, priests are be well trained before they went out into communities to perform prayers. All the priests fcome under the Shree Sanatan Dharm Brahman Purohit Sabha of Fiji, the governing body of all Hindu priests in the country. Mr Prakash said the idea was to get all priests under one roof. "Our next step will be getting these priests registered as Hindu marriage officers and Justice of Peace," he said.

The ceremony started with a march from Gyan Mandir to Shiv Mandir in Samabula. The priests were also given identification cards. The youngest in the lot is 18-years-old and the oldest is 55-years-old.

Mr Prakash said the right people with the right training are needed as they would be leading and teaching people in communities.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/31 7:04:01 ( 351 reads )
VARANASI, INDIA, July 10, 2010: Plastic bags inside the premises of the famous Kashi Vishwanath Temple will soon be a thing of the past as the local Trust has proposed a total ban on the use of plastic material inside the premises.

While the proposal is being viewed as an environment-friendly measure to restore the sanctity of the prominent temple in the city, it also marks the extension of the recent decision to prohibit use of plastic material inside the famous Sankat Mochan temple.

According to Pt Harihar Kripalu Tripathi, chairman of KVT Trust, the proposal was a long-felt need, especially from devotees, as such articles are not only difficult to dispose of, but are also responsible for causing the choking of drains and litter on temple premises. "We are also trying to discourage shopkeepers near the temple premises from selling 'prasad' and other articles in plastic bags while efforts for the use of paper bags, jute sacks or even cartons are being promoted in the area," he added.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/31 7:03:01 ( 384 reads )
INDIA, July 28, 2010: India's largest state has become the latest to announce a complete state-wide ban on the use of plastic bags this week. From the beginning of August the manufacture, storage, import, sale and transport of plastic carry-bags will be illegal in Rajasthan. No shopkeeper, retailer, trader, hawker or vendor will be allowed to supply goods to consumers in bags.

In Mumbai in 2005 India experienced massive monsoon flooding partially as a result of drains blocked by plastic bags, resulting in over 1000 deaths. Similar flooding happened in 1988 and 1998 in Bangladesh, which led to the banning of plastic bags in 2002.

Cows - sacred in India - frequently asphyxiate after trying to eat the bags.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/31 7:02:01 ( 359 reads )
NEW DELHI, INDIA, July 21, 2010: The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is focused on building soft power -- the attractiveness of a country's civilization, culture, values and political system -- as well as ensuring that China is respected and admired for its achievements since reforms began in 1978. In contrast, India puts little emphasis on promoting the country's historical, economic, political and cultural credentials to the world. Its appreciation for the value of cultural diplomacy is poor.

Although loathe to admit it, New Delhi would do well to learn lessons from Beijing about the importance of selling its strengths and achievements to the world. One lesson is the sheer amount of economic and manpower resources Beijing devotes to shaping its messages and selling its story. For example, China has funded more than 270 Confucius Institutes in 75 countries teaching Mandarin and the CCP's version of history to more than 100 million foreigners. Beijing aims to have 1,000 institutes up and running by 2020. In contrast, India has only 24 cultural centers in 21 countries functioning under its missions abroad.

India is a rising and ambitious power. But its re-emergence has failed to excite and capture the collective imagination. This doesn't change the fact that democratic India's soft power potential is enormous compared to China's.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/31 7:01:01 ( 360 reads )

Mauritius is one of the most beautiful places in the world. If you visited it 30 years ago, you would be equally charmed by its natural allure and hartbroken by the state of Hinduism on the African Island. The ancestral religion of most Mauritians was forlorn, seemingly destined to disappear. Until a miracle happened.

Vel Mahalingum tells the story of how the Hindus of Mauritius started studying their faith, and today this nation's majority Hindu community is perhaps the best model of how to face the 21st century and keep your religion in the bargain.

Discover how the Hindus of Mauritius uplifted themselves, transformed their nation and became models for the world.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/31 7:01:01 ( 1133 reads )

Mauritius is one of the most beautiful places in the world. If you visited it 30 years ago, you would be equally charmed by its natural allure and hartbroken by the state of Hinduism on the African Island. The ancestral religion of most Mauritians was forlon, seemingly destined to disappear. Until a miracle happened.

Vel Mahalingum tells the story of how the Hindus of Mauritius started studying their faith, and today this nation's majority Hindu community is perhaps the best model of how to face the 21st century and keep your religion in the bargain.

Discover how the Hindus of Mauritius uplifted themselves, transformed their nation and became models for the world.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/31 7:00:01 ( 455 reads )
One who is established in a comfortable posture while concentrating on the inner Self naturally becomes immersed in the Heart's ocean of bliss.
   Siva Sutras III, 16
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/30 7:06:01 ( 332 reads )
MUMBAI, INDIA, July 30, 2010: An Indian court ruled that Hindu Gods cannot deal in stocks and shares, after an application for trading accounts to be set up in their names.

Two judges at the Bombay High Court on Friday rejected a petition from a private religious trust to open accounts in the names of five Deities, including the revered elephant-headed God, Ganesha.

"Trading in shares on the stock market requires certain skills and expertise and to expect this from deities would not be proper," judges P.B. Majumdar and Rajendra Sawant said, according to Indian newspapers.

The trust, owned by the former royal family of Sangli, in western Maharashtra state, brought the case after successfully securing income tax cards and savings accounts for the Deities. But National Securities Depository Limited (NDSL) rejected the trust's application for permission to open trading accounts, arguing that it would be difficult to take action against the Gods in the event of irregularities. "Gods and Goddesses are meant to be worshipped in temples, not dragged into commercial activities like share trading," the judges said.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/30 7:05:01 ( 368 reads )
MUMBAI, INDIA, July 14, 2010: Pyramids have been credited with supernatural or paranormal properties since the days of ancient Egypt. Now their power is to be harnessed to cut road accidents. Traffic officers in Nagpur have agreed to allow small pyramids to be placed at 10 accident-prone sites in the city to see if their claimed positive energy can reduce crashes.

Deputy Commissioner of Police (Traffic) Sahebrao Patil said the road safety initiative came about after a meeting with an expert in Vastu, an ancient Hindu system of construction and energy flow. "He told me that he had placed a number of pyramids on roads outside the city and the results were excellent. The number of accidents reduced," Patil said.

[HPI note: For Satguru Bodhinatha Veylanswami's publisher's desk on Vastu's powers and limitations click
here ]
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/30 7:04:01 ( 515 reads )
MUMBAI, INDIA, July 11, 2010: A day after the Supreme Court decision to lift the ban on the sale of American author James Laine's controversial book on King Shivaji, protests took place in several parts of the state, especially in western Maharashtra -- former stronghold of Shivaji's Maratha empire.

Amid protests at his hometown in Nanded, Chief Minister Ashok Chavan said his government was exploring legal options to ban the book. After activists of Maratha Seva Sangh, he told the media, "We will study the apex court judgement and take advice from legal experts on what can be done to ensure the ban on the sale of the book. We will also see if there can be any amendments to the existing law to ensure this."
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/30 7:03:01 ( 451 reads )
Source: sify.com
UNITED KINGDOM, July 28, 2010: A novel initiative called Global Leicester has been launched here to teach British children about Asian cultures that abound the city's diverse ethnic population.

The promoter, Leicestershire Education Business Company (LEBC), says the new venture will promote multi-culturalism from an early age by understanding local cultural differences and dismantling boundaries communities construct around themselves by intention or otherwise. Since 1992, LEBC has set up and managed links between schools, colleges and companies, so that young people, aged 5-19 learn more about business and working life.

As part of the introductory programme, a team of school children were taken on a trip to Leicester's Golden Mile, the stretch of Belgrave Road populated by Asian community, particularly Indian. The primary schools children from across the city went around the various Indian banks, restaurants, sari shops, Asian supermarkets and sweet-marts and even the Shree Ram Mandir.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/30 7:02:01 ( 521 reads )
USA, JUly 30, 2010 (By Rabbi Robert dos Santos Teixeira, LCSW): Striking similarities exist between YHWH, the God of Judaism (whom Christians often refer to as Yahweh), and Shiva. Both, for instance, appear as a "pillar of fire;" both are associated with a bull, YHWH with a golden calf and Shiva with Nandi; and both have a blue complexion. Biblical, talmudic, midrashic, and mystical texts reveal that the ancient anthropomorphic form of YHWH is indeed blue!

Not surprisingly, the Hebrew terms tarshish, sapir, and tekhelet that convey the blueness of YHWH's body, accoutrements, and abode come from Sanskrit, which invites even further exploration and comparison.

You can read more at the source, linked above.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/30 7:01:01 ( 0 reads )
Source: HPI
KAPAA, HI, USA, July 30, 2010: The HPI staff has detected some technical issues that affected the delivery of HPI emails in the last two weeks. We apologize for the inconvenience and expect the service to be normalized soon.
No comment

Posted on 2010/7/30 7:00:01 ( 421 reads )


Posted on 2010/8/6 7:00:01 ( 461 reads )
Source: www.bbc.co.uk
LONDON, UK, August 7, 2010: A giant sheet of ice four tumes the area of Manhattan, measuring 260 sq km (100 sq miles), has broken off a glacier in Greenland according to researchers at a US university.

It is the largest Arctic iceberg to calve since 1962, said Prof Andreas Muenchow of the University of Delaware. There was enough fresh water locked up in the ice island to "keep all US public tap water flowing for 120 days," said Prof Muenchow.

The first six months of 2010 have been the hottest on record globally, scientists have said.

No comment

Posted on 2010/8/5 7:05:01 ( 428 reads )
PALANI, INDIA, July 15, 2010: The steps leading to the sanctum sanctorum of the Dandayuthapani Swamy temple in Palani are to be paved with 11 lbs. of gold plating, chairman of the Board of Directors of the temple Balasubramanian has said.

A meeting of the board was held on Tuesday presided over by the chairman. After the meeting, Balasubramanian said that the estimate for the second rope car system to the temple had been sent to the Department of Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowment for sanction. As soon as permission is granted, work will start on the project.

The renovation of the Mariamman temple in Palani is under way in preparation for the kumbabishekam on October 22. It has been decided to charge a small fee for special dharshan at the Thiru Avinankudi temple, Balasubramanian said.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/5 7:04:01 ( 335 reads )
USA, December 23, 2008 (By Roger Ebert, film critic): I received a DVD with a whimsically named movie, "Sita Sings the Blues," and almost did not watch it. And then I finally did. My reaction? I am enchanted. I am swept away. I am smiling from one end of the film to the other. It is astonishingly original.

Nina Paley, the animated movie's author, begins with the story of Ramayana, which is known to every school child in India but not to me. Paley depicts the story with exuberant drawings in bright colors.

Of course there is a lot more to it than that, involving a monkey army, a lustful king who occasionally grows 10 heads, synchronized birds, a chorus line of gurus, and a tap-dancing moon. It coils around and around, as Indian epic tales are known to do. Even the Indians can't always figure them out. In addition to her characters talking, Paley adds another level of dialogue: Three voice-over modern Indians, ad-libbing as they try to get the story straight. Was Sita wearing jewelry or not? How long was she a prisoner in exile? How did the rescue monkey come into the picture? These voices are as funny as an SNL skit, and the Indian accent gives them charm.

Beginning in Chicago, I will enlist a cadre of starving art teachers, vengeful wives and resourceful Indian-Americans. They will break into the houses of film lovers, throw mails bag over their heads, chain them to seats in a movie theater, and allow them to watch "Sita Sings the Blues." If they don't love it, let 'em sue me.

[You can watch "Sita Sings the Blues" for free at
www.sitasingstheblues.com ]
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/5 7:03:01 ( 340 reads )
Source: www.unp.co.in
INDIA, August 2010: The United States topped the list of Foreign Tourist Arrivals in India for 2009. The 803,000 visitors from the U.S. represented a 15.7% share of foreign tourists. This was followed closely by the United Kingdom with 748,765 visitors and a 14.7% share and Bangladesh with 458,063 visitors and a 9% share.

Canada, Sri Lanka, France, Germany, Australia,
Malaysia, and Japan rounded out the top 10 countries for 2009.

For the first time in six years, the number of tourists coming to India has decreased - mostly due to the global meltdown.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/5 7:02:01 ( 358 reads )
NEW DELHI, INDIA, April 15, 2010: Dr. Asko Parpola, an Indologist from Finland, is Professor Emeritus of Indology, Institute of World Cultures, University of Helsinki, and one of the leading authorities on the Indus Civilization and its script. He has concluded that the script -- which is yet to be deciphered -- encodes a Dravidian language. As a Sanskritist, his fields of specialization include the Sama Veda and Vedic rituals. Here are some of his thoughts:

"There is some criticism that the Indus script is not a writing system. I do not agree [with that]. All those features of the Indus script which have been mentioned as proof for its not being a writing system, characterize also the Egyptian hieroglyphic script during its first 600 years of existence. For detailed counterarguments, see my papers at the website
www.harappa.com ."

"What I mean by the Dravidian solution of the Indus enigma is obtaining certainty that the language underlying the Indus script in South Asia belongs to the Dravidian language family. For this, it is not necessary to decipher the entire script (which in any case is impossible with the present materials) but we need a sufficient number of tightly cross-checked sign interpretations."

"It is 16 years since I published 'Deciphering the Indus Script.' Since then some progress has been made, and I shall talk about it at the Classical Tamil Conference in June. Progress is very difficult, however, also because our knowledge of Proto-Dravidian vocabulary and especially phraseology is so incomplete. This knowledge is critical for reliable readings, and here Old Tamil offers precious but unfortunately limited material."
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/5 7:01:01 ( 605 reads )
Source: HPI
KAPAA, HI, USA, August 5, 2010: The HPI article "New Series of Programs on Hinduism," published yesterday, did not have the correct url. For the Hindu Academy's YouTube channel, go to http://www.youtube.com/hinduacademy where Jay Lakhani of the Hindu Academy, based in London, is creating an impressive collection of positive Hindu material. The questions are sometimes as good as the answers, providing insight on what Hindus want to know.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/5 7:00:01 ( 454 reads )
As the bee takes the essence of a flower and flies away without destroying its beauty and perfume, so let the sage wander in this life.
   Dhammapada 50
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/4 7:00:01 ( 441 reads )
KAUAI, HI, USA, August 5, 2010: Hinduism Today, Sanatana Dharma's flagship magazine, now has a presence on Facebook.

In these times of "Web 2.0" -- when interaction is the key -- millions of people use Facebook as their home base on the internet.

Facebook has recently reached the impressive mark of 500,000,000 users. The website's tools allow users to choose which new and updates they will see, effectively filtering the information overload the plagues most of the web.

Once more, Hinduism Today embraces technology, bringing you timeless wisdom in the most modern ways.

Join Facebook, if you have not done so, and connect with Hinduism Today
here .
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/3 7:07:01 ( 339 reads )
Source: Press Release
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO, August 2010: Over 100 scholars from India and around the globe are gathered for the World Association of Vedic Studies (WAVES) at the University of the West Indies, August 4 to 7. Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar will to address the atendees.

This is the first time that such a conference is being held in the Caribbean. It is being co-organized by WAVES, the Indian High Commission and the Mahatma Gandhi Cultural Centre. "The universal insights of the Vedas have much to guide and inform us in this challenging global climate, hence we have chosen the conference theme: Vedic Knowledge for Civilizational Harmony," says Prof. Bal Ram Singh, conference chair.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/3 7:06:01 ( 511 reads )
BUENOS AIRES, August 2010: The Hastinapur Foundation of Buenos Aires has published a Spanish version of Mahabharata. This is the first time that the full version of Mahabharata, the Indian epic, has been translated into Spanish.

The translation in 639 pages was done by Mr. Hugo Labate over a period of seven years. The book is available in bookstores in Buenos Aires.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/3 7:05:01 ( 357 reads )
JALANDHAR, INDIA, July 12, 2010: Facing alleged social discrimination and economic hardship, a number of Hindus and Sikhs from Pakistan want to embrace Indian citizenship. Many Pakistanis belonging to Hindu and Sikh faiths have been living with their relatives in various parts of India for years and many of them want to be here permanently. About 200 such families have been residing in this city for over 10 years. While some of them have acquired citizenship of this country, many who are still waiting accuse the Indian government of being "apathetic" to their condition.

Sammakh Ram, who migrated here with his family from Peshawar in 1998, claims that the condition of Hindus in the neighboring country is "miserable". "You can't imagine how Hindus are treated there. We neither have any rights nor facilities," he said. "Now, this is our country and we will not go back to Pakistan at any cost," he said.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/3 7:04:01 ( 397 reads )
Source: Press Release
The Hindu Mandir Executives Conference announces the second annual Sanatan Dharma and Science Essay Competition for the 2010 Sanatan Dharma Scholarship. The competition is open to college students as well as the high school students. The essay topic for college students is "Creation of the Universe," while for the high school students it is "Vasudhaiv Kutumbkum." The purpose of the essay is to explore the scientific basis behind Sanatan Dharma concepts and Vedic philosophy.

The essays must be written in English and should be 500-1000 words in length. The completed essays in MS Word format must be mailed to
omcenter@gmail.com by the September 15, 2010 deadline.

Two scholarships will be awarded for each category of contestants: 1st Prize: $1000 and 2nd Prize: $500. These awards are expected to increase with additional contributions. The award winning essays will be published online as well as submitted to national and regional media.

For more info please visit:
www.omtemple.com or write to omcenter@gmail.com
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/3 7:03:01 ( 534 reads )
Source: Press Release
KALAMAZOO, MI, August 3, 2010: The Sambodh Center for Human Excellence will celebrate the annual Maha Rudrabhishekam and Chandi Homam on August 7 and 8, 2010. These two powerful rituals together bestow the abundant blessings of God Shiva and his consort Shakti, in this life and final liberation from beyond.

The religious rituals will be conducted by Sree Aswath, a renowned Vedic scholar and Hindu priest, of Columbus, Ohio, and Pradip Sagdeo, president and officiating Hindu priest of the Sambodh Center. They will be assisted by nine additional Hindu priests in a divine event of authentic rituals and colorful celebration. All are invited to witness and participate in this special event.

The Saturday program will begin at 10:00 a.m. For details, please visit
www.sambodh.us
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/3 7:02:01 ( 325 reads )
Source: Religion News Service
USA, August 4, 2010: [HPI note: The relevance of this debate in American society is relevant to U.S. Hindus because it scrutinizes the separation between church and state, and might alter its boundaries. While such separation was, in principle, part of the early pillars of U.S. law, its interpretation shifts as society becomes more diverse. Religious plurality brings to light the bias particular to one religion and not shared by others.]

In a decision with enormous legal, political, and religious implications, a federal judge struck down California's voter-approved ban on same-sex marriage. Chief U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker's watershed decision marks the first time a federal judge has declared a state gay marriage ban unconstitutional. In a 138-page decision, Walker ruled that "moral and religious views" are not a "rational basis" for the state to deny same-sex couples equal marriage rights.

Walker concluded that Proposition 8, California's voter referendum that outlawed gay marriage in 2008, violates the constitutional rights of gay and lesbian couples.

Religious groups -- including the Roman Catholic Church and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints -- used their political influence and deep pockets to push for Prop 8. Mormons donated an estimated $22 million to the cause, and church headquarters were fined $5,000 by California officials for failing to declare non-monetary contributions.

A recent poll sponsored by advocates for gay equality suggests public opinion in California has shifted in favor of allowing same-sex couples to wed.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/3 7:01:01 ( 407 reads )
Source: www.youtube
USA/CANADA, July 2010: Aastha TV on SKY 807 (Direct TV in USA and Rogers Cable in Canada) are broadcasting a new series of programs on Hinduism.

The daily broadcasts include an early morning program from 7 to 7:30 a.m. with interactive sessions with Hindu & Non-Hindu youth. An afternoon program from 4 to 4:30 p.m with talks aimed at parents and youngsters at home. And an evening program from 10 to 10:30 p.m. with philosophically oriented talks.

You can watch some of the clips on the source url above.


Posted on 2010/8/7 7:05:01 ( 366 reads )
USA, August 8, 2010: Julia Roberts declared on Elle magazine that she and her entire family are practicing Hindus, making her the most prominent convert to one of America's increasingly prominent religions. "I'm definitely a practicing Hindu," says Roberts, who grew up with a Catholic mother and Baptist father.

Roberts, 42, tells the fashion magazine that she and husband Danny Moder and their three children, 5-year-old twins Phinnaeus and Hazel and 3-year-old Henry, all go to a Hindu temple to "chant and pray and celebrate."

According to reports, Roberts has been interested in yoga for quite some time. She was in Haryana (India) in September last to shoot "Eat, Pray, Love" in an ashram. In January 2009, she sported a "bindi" (vermillion mark on forehead) during her trip to India. She has a production company called "Red Om Films."

Even Julia Roberts is hoping for some improvement in her next life -- though many of us would wonder how that could be possible. "Golly, I've been so spoiled with my friends and family in this life," she tells Elle. "Next time I want to be just something quiet and supporting."
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/7 7:04:01 ( 350 reads )
Source: www.nytimes.com

JHABUA, MADHYA PRADESH, INDIA, August 8, 2010: Ratan Bhuria's children are curled together in the malnutrition ward, hovering at the edge of starvation. His daughter, Nani, is 4 and weighs 20 pounds. His son, Jogdiya, is 2 and weighs only eight.

Landless and illiterate, drowned by debt, Mr. Bhuria and his ailing children have staggered into the hospital ward after falling through India's social safety net. They should receive subsidized government food and cooking fuel. They do not. The older children should be enrolled in school and receiving a free daily lunch. They are not. And they are hardly alone: India's eight poorest states have more people in poverty -- an estimated 421 million -- than Africa's 26 poorest nations. Roughly 42 percent of all Indian children under the age of 5 are underweight and death from malnutrition is common.

India's ability, or inability, in coming decades to improve the lives of the poor will very likely determine if it becomes a global economic power, and a regional rival to China, or if it continues to be compared with Africa in poverty surveys.

This persistent inability of the food distribution system has sparked an ideological debate. Should the country begin to unshackle the poor from the inefficient, decades-old government food distribution system and try something radical, like simply giving out food coupons, or cash?

The food system has existed for more than half a century and has become riddled with corruption and inefficiency. Studies show that 70 percent of a roughly $12 billion budget is wasted, stolen or absorbed by bureaucratic and transportation costs.

"The question is whether there is a role for the market in the delivery of social programs," said Bharat Ramaswami, a rural economist at the Indian Statistical Institute. "This is a big issue: Can you harness the market?"
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/7 7:04:01 ( 1261 reads )
JHABUA, MADHYA PRADESH, INDIA, August 8, 2010: Ratan Bhuria's children are curled together in the malnutrition ward, hovering at the edge of starvation. His daughter, Nani, is 4 and weighs 20 pounds. His son, Jogdiya, is 2 and weighs only eight.

Landless and illiterate, drowned by debt, Mr. Bhuria and his ailing children have staggered into the hospital ward after falling through India's social safety net. They should receive subsidized government food and cooking fuel. They do not. The older children should be enrolled in school and receiving a free daily lunch. They are not. And they are hardly alone: India's eight poorest states have more people in poverty
Ѡan estimated 421 million Ѡthan Africa's 26 poorest nations. Roughly 42 percent of all Indian children under the age of 5 are underweight and death from malnutrition is common.br /br /India's ability, or inability, in coming decades to improve the lives of the poor will very likely determine if it becomes a global economic power, and a regional rival to China, or if it continues to be compared with Africa in poverty surveys.br /br /This persistent inability of the food distribution system has sparked an ideological debate. Should the country begin to unshackle the poor from the inefficient, decades-old government food distribution system and try something radical, like simply giving out food coupons, or cash?br /br /The food system has existed for more than half a century and has become riddled with corruption and inefficiency. Studies show that 70 percent of a roughly $12 billion budget is wasted, stolen or absorbed by bureaucratic and transportation costs.br /br /"The question is whether there is a role for the market in the delivery of social programs," said Bharat Ramaswami, a rural economist at the Indian Statistical Institute. "This is a big issue: Can you harness the market?"
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/7 7:03:01 ( 403 reads )
Source: timesofindia.indiatimes.com

NEW DELHI, July 12, 2010: The Indian Supreme Court dismissed Bombay High Court's decision to quash the ban and confiscation of the controversial book -- "Shivaji - The Hindu King in Muslim India," as a "drastic" exercise in governamental power, a power that should be exercised cautiously to uphold the Constitution.

But less than a week after Supreme Court slammed the Maharashtra government for banning American author James Laine's book on Shivaji, the state is contemplating a legislation to stop defamation of national, historical or community icons.

Maharashtra home minister R R Patil announced in the assembly on Monday that the state would introduce a bill in the winter session to ban such books. Patil said, "We will not allow defamation of Chhatrapati Shivaji and Jeejamata. This is a matter of Maharashtra's asmita (pride)."

Lawyers, however, say a "general law seeking to ban books" will not stand the constitional validity test.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/7 7:03:01 ( 1126 reads )
NEW DELHI, July 12, 2010: The Indian Supreme Court dismissed Bombay High Court's decision to quash the ban and confiscation of the controversial book Ѡ"Shivaji - The Hindu King in Muslim India," as a "drastic" exercise in governamental power, a power that should be exercised cautiously to uphold the Constitution. br /br /But less than a week after Supreme Court slammed the Maharashtra government for banning American author James Laine's book on Shivaji, the state is contemplating a legislation to stop defamation of national, historical or community icons. br /br /Maharashtra home minister R R Patil announced in the assembly on Monday that the state would introduce a bill in the winter session to ban such books. Patil said, "We will not allow defamation of Chhatrapati Shivaji and Jeejamata. This is a matter of Maharashtra's asmita (pride)." br /br /Lawyers, however, say a "general law seeking to ban books" will not stand the constitional validity test.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/7 7:02:01 ( 378 reads )
Source: www.forumforhinduawakening.org

SUNNYVALE, CA, August 8, 2010: The Forum for Hindu Awakening and with the Sunnyvale Hindu Temple are organizing a Hinduism Summit at the Sunnyvale Hindu temple on 28 August 2010. Several distinguished speakers have already confirmed their presence.

The Hindu Summit, also called Hindu Dharma Sabha, welcomes anyone interested in understanding and living Hinduism. It invites discussion on current issues facing the Hindu community, the spiritual reasons behind them, and working together to overcome the issues to preserve Hinduism which holds out concrete solutions for the problems widespread in society today.

For more information and registration details, please visit the " source" link above or call 877 303 3342.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/7 7:02:01 ( 911 reads )
SUNNYVALE, CA, August 8, 2010: The Forum for Hindu Awakening and with the Sunnyvale Hindu Temple are organizing a Hinduism Summit at the Sunnyvale Hindu temple on 28 August 2010. Several distinguished speakers have already confirmed their presence.

The Hindu Summit, also called Hindu Dharma Sabha, welcomes anyone interested in understanding and living Hinduism. It invites discussion on current issues facing the Hindu community, the spiritual reasons behind them, and working together to overcome the issues to preserve Hinduism which holds out concrete solutions for the problems widespread in society today.

For more information and registration details, please visit the " source" link above or call 877 303 3342.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/7 7:01:01 ( 435 reads )
Source: Press Release


UNITED STATES, August 2010: In the spirit of President Obama's "Active Lifestyle Challenge", the dharmic community, with help from Hindu American Seva Charities (HASC) will combine faith and health through a Yogathon focused on youth, accompanied by adults, in a nationally coordinated open house event on Sunday, August 29. The open house will include an introduction of the temples to the community; explanation of yoga and its connection with philosophy and tradition, with a workshop on yoga asanas for youth and adults.

This Yogathon will be a part of the United We Serve - Let's Read, Let's Move campaign and will be featured on the serve.gov site. It will offer free introductory yoga workshops with help from temples across America and many other partners.

All temples across the country are invited to participate and register through
http://www.hinduamericanseva.org/yogathon
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/7 7:01:01 ( 872 reads )
Source: Press Release
UNITED STATES, August 8, 2010: In the spirit of President Obama's "Active Lifestyle Challenge", the dharmic community, with help from Hindu American Seva Charities (HASC) will combine faith and health through a Yogathon focused on youth, accompanied by adults, in a nationally coordinated open house event on Sunday, August 29. The open house will include an introduction of the temples to the community; explanation of yoga and its connection with philosophy and tradition, with a workshop on yoga asanas for youth and adults.

This Yogathon will be a part of the United We Serve РLet's Read, Let's Move campaign and will be featured on the serve.gov site. It will offer free introductory yoga workshops with help from temples across America and many other partners.br /br /All temples across the country are invited to participate and register through a href="http://www.hinduamericanseva.org/yogathon "www.hinduamericanseva.org/yogathon /a
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/7 7:00:01 ( 424 reads )
Hinduism gave itself no name, because it set itself no sectarian limits; it claimed no universal adhesion, asserted no sole infallible dogma, set up no single narrow path or gate of salvation; it was less a creed or cult than a continuously enlarging tradition of the Godward endeavor of the human spirit.
   Sri Aurobindo (1872-1950)
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/6 7:05:01 ( 387 reads )
MALAYSIA, August 3, 2010: The Sri Maha Mariamman temple in Sungai Salak in Lukut, Negri Sembilan, has become the first solar-powered religious edifice in Malaysia. The 100-year-old temple, located 2.5 miles from the main road, could not carry out its prayer sessions effectively due to electricity supply problems.

The temple committee sought the help of Yayasan MyNadi, a non-governmental organisation that advises Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak on Indian affairs, to rectify the problem.

In India, several ashrams and temples are moving toward renewable energy to set an example of sustainable living.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/6 7:04:01 ( 446 reads )
NEW DELHI, INDIA, July 21, 2010: The Commonwealth Games in the city may prove a dampener for Ramlila and Durga Puja celebrations during the festive period in October. After asking schools and markets to shut down during the Oct 3-14 Games, Delhi Police now have Ramlila celebrations and Durga Puja on the radar.

"We are asking that the fairs associated with the Ramlilas be rescheduled. The fairs have no religious relevance and could be organized three or four days later," Delhi Police Commissioner Y.S. Dadwal told reporters at the Police Headquarters. The Commonwealth Games in Delhi would coincide with the annual Ramlila fairs throughout the capital from October 7.

Organizers of the religious-cum-community events are fuming. Subhash Goyal, who organises Chandni Chowk's popular Luv-Kush Ramlila, argued that the fairs transform the religious nature of the event to that of a community festival: "How can the commissioner say the fairs associated with these events are irrelevant? The fairs are what draw the people to them," he asked.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/6 7:03:01 ( 385 reads )
TORONTO, CANADA, July 25, 2010: Perched atop an ornate custom-built chariot, the Hindu God Ganesh slowly circled his way around the Sri Varasiththi Vinaayagar Temple in Scarborough Saturday morning. Thousands watched reverently as a statue representing the deity was pulled along outside the temple on two ropes by devoted followers during the annual Hindu Chariot Festival.

Temple officials say the chariot festival, now in its 11th year, is the most important of all annual festivities at Sri Varasiththi Vinaayagar and a significant event for members of the Sri Lankan Tamil Hindu community within Canada.

This year, as many as 20,000 people were estimated to have participated in the elaborate ceremony, which hosted a number of community leaders, prominent and distinguished citizens, and cultural groups in the Toronto area.

Beautiful photos can be seen
here
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/6 7:02:01 ( 475 reads )
NEW DELHI, INDIA, July 12, 2010: For the first time, women will be given the same rights as men to guardianship and adoption of children, even if they are single. A new law to make this effective appears set to become a reality this year. According to the existing law, in case a couple wants to adopt a child, the father is the natural guardian. The proposed amendment to the 120 year-old Guardians and Wards Act, 1890, includes the mother along with the father to be appointed as a guardian, making the process gender neutral.

Noted constitutional expert Rajeev Dhavan said once this law comes into existence, mothers would have equal rights as that of the father. "She would be responsible even as a trustee of the property, in case the minor child inherits his or her share of the property," he said. The second amendment, proposed in the Hindu Adoption Maintenance Act 1956, aims to remove hurdles in the way of a married woman to adopt and give a child for adoption, based only on her marital status. Presently, unmarried and divorced women, as also widows are allowed to adopt, but women separated from their husbands and engaged in divorce battles, cannot adopt a child. The new amendment would allow married single women to adopt with the consent of her husband till the divorce proceedings are completed.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/6 7:01:01 ( 457 reads )
UNITED STATES, July 30, 2010 (Press release): The International Karma Yoga Day is an initiative designed to bring together all yoga schools and practitioners around the world for one day of service a year. Every year, on the second Sunday of September, we will link as many different people as we can across the world in kindness, love and outreach. The next international Karma Yoga Day is set for September 12, 2010!

Make a pledge to do SOMETHING that resonates with you. Run a yoga class for free or by donation, volunteer with an organization, bring your community together for a cause, give a little money, or just give a hug.

We encourage and assist individuals, communities, and entire schools in making a positive impact. Feel free to develop your own projects for time and funding donations or you can contribute to our sponsored project for children, which includes poverty alleviation, intercultural exchange, environmental awareness, peace studies and leadership training. Learn more at the source above.



Posted on 2010/8/13 7:03:01 ( 447 reads )
CALCUTTA, INDIA, August 14, 2010: Before 1947, when the British left India, Anglo-Indians -- also known at the time as half-castes, blacky-whites and eight annas (there were 16 annas in a rupee, the official currency of India) -- formed a distinct community of 300,000 to 500,000 people. Most were employed in the railroads and other government services, and many lived in railroad towns built for them by the British, where their distinctive culture, neither Indian nor British, flourished.

But today that culture is fading fast, with its last torchbearers aged and often lonely.

No one is certain how many Anglo-Indians live in India today; they were last counted in a census in 1941. Intermarriage and successive waves of emigration after Indian independence are thought to have reduced their number to 150,000 at most, said Robyn Andrews, a social anthropologist at Massey University in New Zealand.

The children and grandchildren of those who stayed have become increasingly assimilated, marrying Indians without European ancestors and adopting local languages.

The president of India appoints two Anglo-Indian members of Parliament each session to ensure that the tiny community has political representation. Barry O'Brien, an Anglo-Indian lawmaker in West Bengal's State Assembly, said most Anglo-Indians were Christians, but he acknowledged that there were no longer enough of them to fill their own churches. "It's going to be gone, completely, within a few years, and with it, a unique memory of the British in India," Mr. O'Brien said.

The culture dates to the late 18th century, when British employees of the East India Company began to marry Indian women in substantial numbers and have children. By the late 19th century, as more British women migrated to India, cross-cultural marriages dwindled. But by then, Anglo-Indians had achieved a privileged, if curious, place in Indian life. They considered themselves superior to Indians but rarely mixed with Britons as equals, who generally looked down on them.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/13 7:02:01 ( 347 reads )
TOKYO, JAPAN, August 14, 2010: Japan has long boasted of having many of the world's oldest people -- testament, many here say, to a society with a superior diet and a commitment to its elderly that is unrivaled in the West. That was before the police found the body of a man thought to be one of Japan's oldest, at 111 years, mummified in his bed, dead for more than three decades. His daughter, now 81, hid his death to continue collecting his monthly pension payments, the police said.

Alarmed, local governments began sending teams to check on other elderly residents. What they found so far has been anything but encouraging. Most elders are missing. Government records have proven to be old and inaccurate. Japanese society is in shock.

For the moment, there are no clear answers about what happened to most of the missing centenarians. Is the country witnessing the results of pension fraud on a large scale, or, as most officials maintain, was most of the problem a result of sloppy record keeping? Or is it a reflection of disintegrating family ties?

Some health experts say these cases reflect strains in a longeve society that expects children to care for their parents. Longer life spans mean that children are called upon to take care of their elderly parents at a time when the children are reaching their 70s and are possibly in need of care themselves.

Meanwhile, in a painful self-reflection, Japan is realizing it may have far fewer centenarians than previously thought.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/13 7:01:01 ( 340 reads )
KAUAI, HAWAII, August 14, 2010: Hinduism Today is working on its fifth lesson on Indian and Hindu history, covering 1947 to the present. As part of the lesson, we intend to include the major Hindu religious places of pilgrimage within each state (and the larger union territories) of India. We'd appreciate some help from our readers to list for us the top two or three pilgrimage destinations within each of the States. You can send us a list for one state, or two or three or for all of them. Your help is appreciated! Respond to Acharya Arumugaswami, managing editor, Hinduism Today, ar@hindu.org

  • States:
  • Andhra Pradesh
  • Arunachal Pradesh
  • Assam
  • Bihar
  • Chhattisgarh
  • Goa
  • Gujarat
  • Haryana
  • Himachal Pradesh
  • Jammu and Kashmir
  • Jharkhand
  • Karnataka
  • Kerala
  • Madhya Pradesh
  • Maharashtra
  • Manipur
  • Meghalaya
  • Mizoram
  • Nagaland
  • Orissa
  • Punjab
  • Rajasthan
  • Sikkim
  • Tamil Nadu
  • Tripura
  • Uttarakhand
  • Uttar Pradesh
  • West Bengal

  • Union Territories:
  • Andaman and Nicobar Islands
  • Chandigarh
  • The Government of NCT of Delhi
  • Dadra and Nagar Haveli
  • Daman and Diu
  • Lakshadweep
  • Puducherry
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/13 7:00:01 ( 402 reads )
On the whole, human beings want to be good, but not too good and not quite all the time.
   George Orwell
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/12 7:05:01 ( 379 reads )
Source: Press release
PORT-OF-SPAIN, TRINIDAD, August 11, 2010: The 2010 World Association of Vedic Studies -- WAVES -- conference held in Trinidad last week attracted over 100 scholars from all over the world. Participants shared their insights on the inner meanings in the Vedic literature and discussed the future of Vedic knowledge systems such as yoga and Ayurveda. Dr. Surujrattan Rambachan, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Trinidad & Tobago, who addressed the conference, observed that there could be no clash of civilizations in a global society when governed by Hindu wisdom.

Inaugurating the conference, the Indian High Commissioner to Trinidad and Tobago His Excellency Malay Mishra observed that "the Vedic message of 'service to people is service to the supreme' transcends time and place and that listening to the Vedic scholars had created a new enthusiasm to examine the current global issues in a harmonious light."

Leading scientists, artists, and philosophers deliberated on many deep issues at the beautiful St. Augustine Campus of University of West Indies in Trinidad. "The universal insights of the Vedas have much to guide and inform us in this challenging global climate, especially in building ethical, functioning democracies," said Prof. Bal Ram Singh, conference chair .

Among the attendees were Swami Jyotirmayananda, Yogini Sambhavi, Professor Ved Nanda, Dr. Ramkissoon, Dr. David Frawley, Professor Subhash Kak, Professor Adesh, Prof. Subhash Kak, Dr. Kalidas Shetty, Jeffery Armstrong, Kavita Pallod, Dr. Dyer Narinesingh, T.S. Rukmani, Douglas Allen, Sethuraman Rammohan, Oleg Perzashkevich, Sampadananda Misra, Aseem Shukla, S. Kalyanaraman and K. Ramasubramanian.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/12 7:04:01 ( 385 reads )
Source: Press Release
EASTON, PA, August 11, 2010: Sri Pujya Swami Dayananda Saraswati, a dynamic voice for dharma and Hinduism in the world, is being honored by his devotees on the occasion of his 80th birthday. From August 12 to August 15, a series of events at the Arshavidya Gurukulam in Pensilvannya will bring together his American followers.

For more informations, please visit
http://www.pujyaswamiji80.com/
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/12 7:03:01 ( 359 reads )
USA, August 11, 2010: [HPI note: The Washington Post's "On Faith" blog has started a discussion about Julia Roberts professing her Hindu faith. You can post a comment, and read other people's opinions, at the source above.]

Julia Roberts has long been called America's sweetheart. But is America ready for a Hindu sweetheart? Roberts' embrace of the faith that inspired the enlightenment of Eat, Pray, Love author Elizabeth Gilbert puts her far outside the American mainstream in terms of religious affiliation: 78 percent of Americans identify as Christian; only about 2 million people define themselves as Hindu. But Roberts' seek-and-ye-shall-find spirituality is actually quite reflective of American religious practice: 44 percent of Americans currently identify with a different religious tradition than the one in which they were raised.

[Here are some of the comments:]

"I think this is fantastic. Yet another reason for me to love her. However being non-Indian and practicing Hinduism is by no means a new thing" Posted By: Gsch216

"Dear Julia, You are an embodiment of Hindu philosophy and culture. Non-violent, non-oppressive without any demands of daily prayers and the like, Hinduism is a way of life that respects all forms of life. May your tribe grow." Posted By: Shovandas

"People are free to change their religion. That is what America is all about." Posted By: Ak1967

"Sorry if I find it hard to take her conversion seriously. Maybe if her announcing this did not coincide with a movie, I would find it more credible.It strikes me as an attempt to appear unique and get attention." Posted By: Michele79

"Hinduism is immensely rich religion. The Upanishads and Gita are the ultimate in human intellectualism. To those who try to belittle Hinduism by citing caste and sati fail to understand that these do not reflect the soul of Hinduism." Posted By: Centerglobal
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/12 7:02:01 ( 445 reads )
UNITED STATES, July 2010: Since 2006, Sewa USA has taken initiative in the resettlement of Bhutanese Refugees. By 2012 a total of 60,000 refugees will be calling America home.

Sewa's Bhutanese Refugee Empowerment (BRE) Project is assisting the refugees with education, housing assistance, farming, mobility, essential items, and employment. They are also providing help with heath care, women's empowerment and counseling on many topics. The organization has chapters in 30 cities across the US.

Atlanta, Georgia has become a haven for over 3,000 Bhutanese Refugees as of March 2010. This summer, SEWA USA is doing a summer internship program (Get Inspired, Atlanta!) for the needy Bhutanese in Georgia. It is a two and half month program involving 12 interns. If you are willing to contribute in anyway, please send an email to
atlanta@sewausa.org
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/12 7:01:01 ( 388 reads )
USA, August 6, 2010 (By Daniel Burke, Religion News Services): When U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker struck down California's Proposition 8, he said voters' motivation for outlawing gay marriage was clear.

"The evidence shows conclusively that moral and religious views form the only basis for a belief that same-sex couples are different from opposite-sex couples," Walker wrote in his sweeping, 136-page decision. "These interests do not provide a rational basis for supporting Proposition 8." Religion, in Walker's reasoning, amounts to a "private moral view," which should not infringe upon the constitutional rights of others.

While some legal scholars say Walker's decision lands on firm legal ground--a law must advance a secular purpose to pass constitutional muster--some religious leaders accuse the judge of trying to scrub faith from the public square.

R. Albert Mohler, president of a leading Southern Baptist seminary in Kentucky, wrote in an online column that "In essence, this establishes secularism as the only acceptable basis for moral judgment on the part of voters."

Jim Campbell, an attorney with the Alliance Defense Fund, a conservative Christian law firm in the defeated party of the litigation, said the religious freedom argument will play an important role as the case moves up the federal judicial ladder--including, potentially, the Supreme Court. "At bottom, our strategy here is, and has always been, that in this country we should respect the rights of the people when they do what they have always done: vote based on their religious and moral convictions," Campbell said.

As if to prove Walker's point, Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony released a statement on Wednesday that said, "Those of us who supported Prop 8 and worked for its passage did so for one reason: We truly believe that marriage was instituted by God for the specific purpose of carrying out God's plan for the world and human society. Period."

But Judge Walker did note, however, that no religion will be forced to perform same-sex weddings.

Howard Friedman, an emeritus law professor at Ohio's University of Toledo, said Walker is not attacking religion per se; he is just not giving religious expression any special consideration. "He's basically saying that a private moral view isn't a rational basis for legislation," said Friedman, who writes the popular "Religion Clause" blog. "Case law goes both ways on that. There are certainly some cases that say a merely moral view isn't enough to support legislation; on the other hand, there are some cases that talk about laws being a moral view on society."
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/12 7:00:01 ( 409 reads )
Give me a few men and women who are pure and selfless, and I shall shake the world. Swami Vivekananda    (1863-1902)
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/11 7:04:01 ( 345 reads )
Source: sify.com
INDIA, August 1, 2010: Every year the Ganesha festival is commemorated with deep fervor in Maharashtra. However, this year the surge in the petrol and diesel-price is likely to affect the ardent devotees.

The murthi makers lament that the price of commodities. Rising prices of petrol and diesel in the last five years, and increased transport charges have affected the price of plaster of paris and coloring, which are required to make a murthi. Higher labor charges have also contributed to the increase prices of Lord Ganesha murthis in the last five years.

The Ganesh Chaturthi festival, which falls on September 11 this year, is also quite popular in the southern states of Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Goa and Karnataka, as well as in Gujarat and Maharashtra in the west. Millions of ardent devotees worship the Lord Ganesha murthis and immerse them into water bodies on the final day.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/11 7:03:01 ( 412 reads )
UNITED STATES, July 2010: Across the country, major-league executives are meeting for prayer breakfasts and spiritual conferences.

If America's chief executives had tried any of this 10 years ago, they probably would have inspired ridicule and maybe even ostracism. But today, a spiritual revival is sweeping across Corporate America as executives of all stripes are mixing mysticism into their management, importing into office corridors the lessons usually doled out in churches, temples, and mosques. Gone is the old taboo against talking about God at work. In its place is a new spirituality, evident in the prayer groups at Deloitte & Touche and the Talmud studies at New York law firms such as Kaye, Scholer, Fierman, Hays & Haroller.

In Minneapolis, 150 business chiefs lunch monthly at a private, ivy-draped club to hear chief executives such as Medtronic Inc.'s William George and Carlson Co.'s Marilyn Carlson Nelson draw business solutions from the Bible. In Silicon Valley, a group of high-powered, high-tech Hindus--including Suhas Patil, founder of Cirrus Logic (CRUS), Desh Deshpande, founder of Cascade Communications, and Krishan Kalra, founder of BioGenex--are part of a movement to connect technology to spirituality. In Boston, heavy hitters such as retired Raytheon Chairman and CEO Thomas L. Phillips meet at an invitation-only prayer breakfast called First Tuesday, an ecumenical affair long shrouded in secrecy. More publicly, Aetna International (AET) Chairman Michael A. Stephen has extolled the benefits of meditation and talked with Aetna employees about using spirituality in their careers.

Spiritual events and seminares are happening at executive enclaves. For the past six years, 300 Xerox Corp. (XRX) employees--from senior managers to clerks--have participated in "vision quests" as part of the struggling copier company's $400 million project to revolutionize product development. Alone for 24 hours with nothing more than sleeping bags and water jugs in New Mexico's desert or New York's Catskill Mountains, the workers have communed with nature, seeking inspiration and guidance about building Xerox' first digital copier-fax-printer.

For Kris Kalra, chief executive of BioGenex, it's the Bhagavad Gita, the Hindu holy text, that offers the best lessons for steering a business out of trouble. He dropped out of corporate life for three months, studying the Bhagavad Gita for eight hours a day. After he returned to work, he started listening to other people's ideas and slowly let go of his micromanaging ways.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/11 7:02:01 ( 418 reads )
CHENNAI, INDIA, July 26, 2010: A number of temples and religious bodies in Tamilnadu are applying for the International Standard Organization's (ISO) certification. This step has been initiated by the state government's Hindu religious and charitable endowments (HR&CE) department.

Three popular temples -- the Kapaleeshwarar Temple in Mylapore, Parthasarathy Temple in Triplicane and Dhandayudhapani Temple in Vadapalani -- have sought and received the ISO 9001:2008 certification. The ISO officials checked for the fixed assets of the temples, their accounts and strict adherence to rituals.

Other temples will also join the queue of ISO's stamp of approval. Most likely among them are Meenakshi Amman temple in Madurai and Sri Ranganathaswamy temple in Srirangam.
No comment



Posted on 2010/8/11 7:01:01 ( 501 reads )
Source: www.uwf.edu
[HPI note: Dr. M. Lal Goel, Professor Emeritus of Political Science at The University of West Florida, wrote about the similarities between India's caste system and American society. You can read the full article at the source link, above. Here is a summary provided by the author.]

UNITED STATES, July 30, 2010: A recent article in Newsweek by Lisa Miller indicated that Americans "are slowly becoming more like Hindus and less like traditional Christians in the ways we think about God, our selves, each other, and eternity." The author cites the following poll data: 67 percent of Americans believe that many religions, not only Christianity can lead to eternal life, reflecting pluralistic Hindu ethos rather than monotheistic Christian view; 30 percent of Americans call themselves "spiritual, not religious;" 24 percent say they believe in reincarnation; and more than a third choose cremation rather than burial.

To this list may be added the growing caste-like pluralism and multiculturalism of the American populace. This essay describes features of India's caste system, its origin, the negative impact of Muslim and British imperial rule, and concludes with a description of the American social landscape.

No comment

Posted on 2010/8/11 7:00:01 ( 416 reads )
The greatest source of strength for any society is its faith in God. The day it renounces such faith will be the day that society begins to die.
   Swami Vivekananda (1863-1902)


Posted on 2010/8/17 7:06:01 ( 442 reads )
KATMANDU, NEPAL, August 9, 2010: A group of Bhutanese refugees expelled from their Himalayan homeland nearly two decades ago left Nepal for Britain on Monday to begin new lives after living in United Nations-run camps for years. Thirty-seven refugees left Monday and will be followed by many more, said Stephen Jaquemet, an official with the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees in Nepal.

Britain is the eighth nation to take in Bhutanese refugees. So far 32,000 have left for Western countries, most to the United States.

More than 100,000 ethnic Nepalese -- a Hindu minority in Bhutan for centuries -- were forced out of Bhutan in the early 1990s by authorities who wanted to impose the country's dominant Buddhist culture. They have lived as refugees in Nepal ever since.

[HPI note: to know more about the massive exodus of Hindu Bhutanese from their home country, read the
Hinduism Today feature article on the Bhutanese refugees.]
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/17 7:05:01 ( 398 reads )
MUMBAI, INDIA, August 14, 2010: Half the men who shape the Ganesha murtis in the city have been struck down by malaria. The clay and plaster of Paris strewn around and inevitable pools of stagnant water around the workshops, make them ideal breeding grounds for mosquitoes. This year, a number of murti makers are suffering its effects.

Ganapati murti maker Manohar Bagwe says he will have to work twice as hard this year to ensure the murtis are ready for devotees in time for Ganesha Chaturthi. Most of his workforce is down with malaria. A few blocks down the road, one of the busiest murti makers in the city has the same woes. "The BMC comes to fumigate our workshops, but it hasn't stopped the mosquitoes," said Ramesh Rawle, who says eight of his 20 workers have "escaped" to their villages due to malaria.

Taking note of the problem, the Ganeshotsav Samanvay Samiti has instructed all pandals in the city to spread awareness about malaria through their Ganesh themes.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/17 7:04:01 ( 406 reads )
Source: Religion News Service
UNITED STATES, July 21, 2010: A proposed bill aims to put a stop to teacher-administered spanking, making corporal punishment illegal in any school -- including private religious ones -- that receives even a trickle of federal funding. Religious school groups, usually quick to guard against government encroachment, have few worries about the bill because officials said many abandoned hitting as a punishment years ago. "Whether you believe it's right or wrong, it's just too big of a liability or legal issue," said Tom Cathey, a legislative analyst for the Association of Christian Schools International, an umbrella group for private Christian schools."We recommend that our schools not use corporal punishment."

Currently, 20 states allow corporal punishment in public schools, according to the Department of Education. Where it is allowed, corporal punishment is more likely to be disproportionately applied to minority students (36 percent) and disabled students (19 percent). "Corporal punishment does not work and in fact leads to increased negative behavior and dropout rates," said Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va., a co-sponsor of the bill. "Moreover, the fact that schools are applying school discipline policies in a discriminatory manner based on race, color, national origin, disability, or gender constitutes a civil rights violation."
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/17 7:03:01 ( 429 reads )
Source: www.laht.com
RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL, July 30, 2010: Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva will send a bill to Congress that would ban the corporal punishment that parents and teachers inflict on children, including slaps and spankings, a Cabinet member said Tuesday.

The bill will be an amendment to the Child and Adolescent Law, an ambitious piece of legislation for protecting children that went into effect exactly 20 years ago. The bill bans the practice of corporal punishment and the cruel and degrading treatment of children and adolescents. Human Rights Minister Paulo Vannuchi told state radio that the idea is not a novelty since at least 25 countries have laws that ban parents from hitting their kids, and that his intention is not to usurp parental authority but to prevent corporal punishment.

He added that the proposed legislation does not seek to imprison "any parent who hits" a child but rather to warn them, get them into a family-protection program and provide them with psychological guidance.

Even though the Child and Adolescent Law already includes sanctions for those responsible for mistreating minors, the amendment specifically defines corporal punishment as using physical force for "disciplinary or punitive" purposes that can cause "pain or injury to a child or adolescent."

If the measure becomes law, offenders will be warned by the authorities and obliged to attend family-protection institutions for psychological treatment and guidance. In more serious cases where the punishment causes injury, the Penal Code contemplates sentences of up to four years in prison for those who "abuse the means of correction and discipline."
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/17 7:02:01 ( 374 reads )
NEW YORK, July 19, 2010: John Friend is the founder of Anusara, one of the world's fastest-growing styles of yoga. For the past several months he has given his workshops in Tokyo, Taipei, Bali and Morrisville, N.C., and is on his way to teach more workshops in Copenhagen, Munich, Paris and Park City, Utah. These are stops on his "Melt Your Heart, Blow Your Mind Tour."

When Friend wasn't off leading workshops, he was helping plan the yoga-and-music Wanderlust festival to be held this week in Squaw Valley and the Anusara Grand Gathering in Estes Park, Colo., in September, the lead-in to Yoga Journal's annual weeklong conference featuring major American yoga teachers. "John brings in huge numbers," says Elana Maggal, conference director for Yoga Journal.

On the road and at home, Friend also keeps tabs on all the ancillary businesses he has created in the last 13 years, since Anusara was born: his global Anusara expansion (Studio Yoggy, one of the biggest yoga-school chains in Japan, will be offering Anusara yoga classes); his Anusara publishing ventures; and his Anusara yoga-wear business. He is also financing historical yoga research in Nepal and Kashmir.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/17 7:01:01 ( 406 reads )
Source: Religion News Services
(RNS) THE AMHERST, NY, USA: The atheist group Center for Inquiry has changed the name of its "International Blasphemy Day" to "International Blasphemy Rights Day" in a bid to show that organizers are not interested in "mocking religion" for its own sake.

Center for Inquiry representatives said the name change better describes the purpose of the event amidst criticism received after last year's inaugural events. International Blasphemy Rights Day is part of a larger, national campaign for freedom of expression. The name change is meant to "emphasize the important connection that we think there is between blasphemy and the right to free speech," said Ronald Lindsay, president and CEO of Center for Inquiry. Lindsay said some critics "interpreted blasphemy in its crudest form" but "blasphemy is a wider concept than that."

Although many people scoffed at last year's campaign, he said, the center believes religion is not, and should not be, immune from criticism. "Religious beliefs should be on the same level of political beliefs," Lindsay said. This year's events are scheduled for Sept. 30, the fifth anniversary of the publication of 12 cartoons of Islam's Prophet Muhammad in a Danish newspaper. Blasphemy is often, unfortunately, associated with crude criticism of believers. But our focus is on looking at the beliefs," he said.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/17 7:00:01 ( 469 reads )
People who take themselves too seriously are seldom known for any good sense of humor.
   Sita Ram Goel in "How I Became Hindu"
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/14 7:04:01 ( 371 reads )
MISSOULA, MONTANA, August 8, 2010: The 2000 U.S. census listed Patel at 172nd among the nation's 1,000 most common surnames, ahead of common surnames such as Gardner, Peters, Richards, Spencer and Andrews.

Sanjay Patel owns and operates a Days Inn in the heart of Missoula's small downtown. Patel moved to the United States 20 years ago and to Montana six years ago. His personal history mirrors that of many Indian business people named Patel in Roanoke. He, like they, are representatives of what is called the "Patel diaspora" -- referencing those who have, for many years, left India in search of business opportunities in other countries.

[HPI note: The next Hindu surname on the list is Sharma, ranked 2,247. The new 2010 census will probably bring more Hindus on the list, corroborating further the fact that Indian-Americans in the United States are now an integral part of America.]
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/14 7:03:01 ( 356 reads )
WASHINGTON, August 9, 2010: An organisation representing the interests of the Kashmiri Pandits in the US today asked the Indian government to protect the lives of the Hindu community in the Valley, which has witnessed violent protests.

"We are deeply concerned at this loss of lives and property and urge the state Government to make sure the remaining few hundred Kashmiri Hindu families are safe and secure," said Deepak Ganju, international coordinator for Kashmir Hindu Foundation (KHF). KHF noted that the Kashmir Valley had witnessed violent incidents resulting in loss of lives and property.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/14 7:02:01 ( 370 reads )
PAKISTAN, August 9, 2010: The body of a woman, who died in Lahore in June 2006, had to be kept in a mortuary for five days due to the absence of a cremation ground for Hindus in Pakistan. She was laid to rest in the Miani Sahib's graveyard for the Muslims as a last resort. The case generated a protest in Pakistan over the lack of cremation grounds, which would allow Hindus to conduct the last rites of their loved ones as per religion.

The Pakistani government has now approved a plan to set up a cremation ground for the Hindus near the Babu Sabu Chowk, close to the Ravi river. The land has been divided into two -- for Sikhs and Hindus.

Dr. Ram Chand said the availability of a cremation ground for Hindus was essential. "Though they are a minority community here, cremation rituals are part of their religious beliefs. Our leader Mohammad Ali Jinnah had assured every person who chose to live in Pakistan that they shall be free to practice their religion," he said.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/14 7:01:01 ( 396 reads )
Source: Press Release
AUSTRALIA, July 27, 2010: Frank Sartor, Minister for Climate Change and the Environment, announced Deepa Gupta as the youngest ever recipient of the Green Globe Individual Sustainability Champion Award at last night's 2010 ceremony at NSW Parliament House. "At only 26, Deepa is co-founder of the Indian Youth Climate Network," Mr Sartor said.

The Green Globe Awards have been running for 11 years. To win a Green Globe, you must demonstrate extraordinary environmental achievement.

Ms. Gupta's work to engage young people on climate change action is having wide- reaching impacts both here and overseas. Her work in the Indian Youth Climate Network has involved her training and speaking to more than 100,000 young people about climate change over the past year. She has worked on many projects including the Climate Solutions Road Tour, the Global South Youth to COP15 project and the Global Day of Fasting for Climate Justice.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/14 7:00:01 ( 482 reads )
Only one task to do here: find out who you are. How do you find out who you are? You need a Satguru! Anonymous.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/13 7:06:01 ( 419 reads )
JAMMU, INDIA, August 2, 2010: The naturally-formed ice lingam of Lord Shiva in Amarnath cave shrine in South Kashmir has totally melted, official sources revealed. "The holy ice lingam does not exist any more for this year," official sources said.

The pilgrimage to the Himalayan cave shrine, situated at a height of 13,500 feet, started July 1 and will end Aug 25. The number of pilgrims is expected to touch 600,000 - at least 100,000 more than last year's arrivals, which was the highest.

The Shiva Lingam, which at its best achieves a height of 12 feet, lasted just 32 days this year. The authorities had last year put a grill around the naturally formed Shiva Lingam, at the 3,880-meter high cave shrine, to slow down its melting, allegedly due to warmth produced from human activities in and around the cave.
No comment

Posted on 2010/8/13 7:05:01 ( 336 reads )
KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA, July 28, 2010: A Malaysian court on Tuesday fined 12 Muslims and sentenced one of them to a week in prison for illegally protesting the construction of a Hindu temple by parading a severed cow's head.

The 12 men were among scores of Muslims who marched with a bloodied cow's head from a mosque to the central Selangor state chief minister's office on Aug 28, 2009 to denounce the state government's plan to build a Hindu temple in their largely Muslim neighborhood. Some of the protesters also stomped and spat on the head and made fiery speeches that deeply offended Hindus.

All 12 pleaded guilty in a Selangor district court on Tuesday to a charge of illegal assembly and were fined 1,000 ringgit (US$310) each, said defense lawyer Afifuddin Hafifi. They faced up to a year in prison and a fine for the charge.

Two of them who brought and stepped on the cow's head also pleaded guilty to sedition. Both were fined an additional 3,000 ringgit (US$930), and one was sentenced to a week in prison, Mr Afifuddin said.

The protest was among the most high-profile in a string of interfaith disputes in recent years that threatened religious peace among Malaysians. Early this year, a string of firebomb attacks and vandalism hit mostly non-Muslim places of worship following a court verdict that allowed Christians to use "Allah" in Malay-language publications.
No comment

 




Om Tat Sat
                                                        
(Continued...) 

(My humble salutations to Sadguru Sri Sivaya Subramuniyaswami ji, Satguru Bodhianatha Velayanswami ji,   Hinduism Today  dot com  for the collection)


(The Blog  is reverently for all the seekers of truth, lovers of wisdom and   to share the Hindu Dharma with others on the spiritual path and also this is purely  a non-commercial blog)

No comments:

Post a Comment