Friday, November 22, 2013

News from Hindu Press International-67


















News from Hindu Press International 






Posted on 2013/11/6 18:20:57 ( 386 reads )
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DEHRADUN, INDIA, November 5, 2013 (Zee News): Amid chants of Vedic hymns and light snowfall, the portals of Kedarnath and Yamunotri, the two major chardham pilgrimage centres in Garhwal Himalayas, were closed to visitors on Tuesday for winter during which they become snowbound and inaccessible.

While the portals of Kedarnath, which bore the brunt of the June calamity in Uttarakhand, were closed after an elaborate six hour ritual at 8 AM, those of Yamunotri located at a height of 10,804 feet were shut at 1:15 PM in the presence of temple committee and senior administrative officials.

Chief priest of Kedarnath Temple Bagesh Ling performed the special prayers in the presence of nearly 150 persons including devotees and officials who braved icy winds and a light snowfall to witness the closure ceremony, Kedarnath-Badrinath Temple committee CEO B. B. Singh said.

About one quintal (100 kg) of ashes brought from Nashik by Mahamandaleshwar swami Samvidanand were applied to the Shiv Linga in the sanctum sanctorum of the temple during the elaborate Samadhi Puja, the ritual which preceded its closure for peak winter months when the area becomes snowbound and inaccessible, Singh said.

Later, a replica of the statue of Lord Shiva was carried in a palanquin known as Utsav Doli to nearby Ukhimath town for its winter sojourn.

The portals of Gangotri were closed yesterday while those of Badrinath shrine are scheduled to be closed on November 18 bringing down the curtains on the annual Chardham pilgrimage marred this year by the June 16-17 flashfloods in Uttarakhand which led to its prolonged suspension for over three months.

The four shrines of Badrinath, Kedarnath, Gangotri and Yamunotri, collectively known as Chardham are closed in October-November every year due to snowbound conditions in the area at the peak of winter.
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Posted on 2013/11/6 18:20:43 ( 316 reads )
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Find the One everywhere and in everything and there will be an end to all pain and suffering.
-- Sri Anandamayi Ma (1896-1982), Bengali mystic and saint
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Posted on 2013/11/6 18:20:00 ( 493 reads )
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LONDON, ENGLAND, November 5, 2013 (ASian Image): The values of the UK's Indian community should be "ever more involved" in shaping British life, David Cameron said today, as he visited one of the biggest Hindu temples outside India.

The Prime Minister said he wanted "many more British Indians" in Parliament after arriving at Shri Swaminarayan Mandir in Neasden, north-west London, with wife Samantha to celebrate the Hindu festival Diwali.

The couple removed their shoes before entering as a customary mark of respect, while Mr Cameron was also decorated with a tilak -- the red dot on the forehead adopted by Hindu worshippers on religious festivals.

Speaking to thousands of worshippers gathered in the temple's main hall, Mr. Cameron said: "I think of the values that you are celebrating today -- family, community. Those are the values that we in this country need more of.

"It is great that more British Indians are contributing to British politics.

"We want many more British Indians in our parliament, Commons and Lords, and yes, in the government of our country too."

The Prime Minister apologized for failing to wear traditional Indian clothes during the visit after describing Mrs. Cameron's sari dress as "magnificent."

He told worshippers he will soon make his third official visit to India as Prime Minister and said the British Indian community could help build relations with the Asian country.

"This is a vitally important friendship for the United Kingdom," he said.

"Yes we have a shared language, we have cultural ties, we have a shared past, but what really matters is how we can work together now and in the future.

"We want to be the partner of choice for India."

See video report here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-24810905
And photo gallery here (largely devoted to Mrs. Cameron's spectacular sari): http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/art ... i-visit-Hindu-temple.html
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Posted on 2013/11/5 18:41:05 ( 368 reads )
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PABNA, BANGLADESH, November 2, 2013 (The Daily Star): An angry mob vandalized at least 26 houses and a temple of the Hindu community in Pabna's Ataikula upazila today following a rumor that a Hindu boy posted something on Facebook demeaning Prophet Mohammad.

It took around six hours for the law enforcers to bring the situation under control after the vandalism ensued around 11:00am, our Pabna correspondent reported from Ataikula.

According to locals, some people showed a print out of the image of the Facebook group that demeans Islam and Prophet Mohammad at a local bazaar. They claimed that Rajib Saha, a class X student of Miapur High School, wrote something on the page.

Infuriated at this, scores of locals rushed to Bangram village and vandalized their house. They later set fire to it. Despite repeated requests by the law enforcers, the angry locals did not leave the place and locked in clash with them.They vandalized a temple and 25 other Hindu houses in course of the clash.

Talking to The Daily Star at Ataikula Police Station, Babul Saha, Rajib's father, claimed that his son was innocent and could not write any content derogatory about Prophet Mohammad. He blamed activists BNP and Jamaat-e-Islami for torching his house.

Rajib was busy with his academic activities around 12:00am when Babul met him for the last time, the father said. "I did not see him since the clash erupted," he added.

A similar incident of torch and vandalism took place on the night of September 29 last year when Islamist fanatics ransacked, looted and burnt 12 Buddhist temples in Ramu in Cox's Bazar. They also looted 50 houses and torched 15 of them in Buddhist villages. The attacks were apparently triggered by a fake Facebook posting of an anti-Islam photograph tagged to a fake account of a Buddhist youth on the social networking site.
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Posted on 2013/11/5 18:40:59 ( 444 reads )
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BANGLADESH, November 5, 2013 (Dhaka Tribune): Members of Hindu community in Lalmonirhat on Monday came under targeted attack again, for the third time in a week of escalating sectarian tension and violence in the region.

At least 15 Hindus - including nine male and six female - were injured, 40 houses raided, four of them damaged, and valuables worth an as-yet unknown amount were looted during the attack. Many frightened families fled to neighboring villages after the attack.

The incident occurred around 12:30pm at the Satpatki Majhipara village of Mohendranagar union in Lalmonirhat Sadar Upazila. The injured were admitted to the Lalmonirhat general hospital, but despite deployment of additional security personnel, the atmosphere in the village remains electric with the villagers anticipating a repeat attack.

According to several victims, pro-hartal activists of BNP, led by local Jatiyatabadi Chhatra Dal cadre Shawn Islam, launched the attack in retaliation for refusal of some Hindu fish traders to pay tolls earlier this week.

However, Abdul Mazid Mandol, general secretary of BNP-Mohendranagar unit, denied involvement of BNP activists in the attack and said he had cautioned party activists against doing any such thing.
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Posted on 2013/11/5 18:40:53 ( 501 reads )
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FLUSHING, NEW YORK, October 21, 2013 (EcoWatch): A public school in Flushing, NY that was the first in the nation to offer a 100 percent vegetarian lunch menu reported recently that students have improved attendance, test scores and energy in the wake of the change.

Students are still allowed to brown-bag, but the overwhelming majority--about 90 percent--of students are choosing the veggie-based cafeteria food, which includes organic roasted tofu, braised black beans and falafel. After one semester, the number of students at the school who were classified as overweight and obese dropped 2 percent, Principal Bob Groff said. He believes that number is down even more this year.

The school, which has more than 400 students in grades pre-K through 3, changed its lunch menu in January. The school went vegetarian because the plant-based choices were superior to the meat-based ones offered by the city, Groff said.

The school, P.S. 244, created the vegetarian menu with the help of the New York Coalition for Healthy School Food. About 70 percent of the students at P.S. 244 have families with Asian or Indian roots; this veggie-friendly cultural background may have played a role in the smoothness of the transition and the popularity of the program with the school's parents and students.

"The food in their cafeteria is the envy of many," New York Coalition for Healthy School Food Executive Director Amie Hamlin said. "The children are getting the nutrients their bodies and brains need to function at their optimal levels." Hamlin said she has been fielding calls from other schools interested in creating healthier meal plans.

P.S. 244 was recognized last week by the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group that promotes plant-based diets, for becoming the country's first public school to serve vegetarian-only meals in its cafeteria.
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Posted on 2013/11/5 18:40:46 ( 336 reads )
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Just as a big banyan tree sprouts from a tiny seed, so the wide universe with names and forms sprouts forth from the heart.
-- Sri Ramana Maharshi (1879-1950), South Indian mystic
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Posted on 2013/11/4 18:36:59 ( 442 reads )
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NAIROBI, KENYA, October 29, 2013 (Quartz): Terrorism fears here, a little more than a month after the Westgate mall attacks, have prompted a ban on fireworks during the Indian holiday, often celebrated with the eating of sweets, the exchange of gifts, the lighting of candles, and lots of fireworks.

Government officials say they fear that criminals and terrorists could use the cover of fireworks and festivities to infiltrate crowds and cause mayhem. This will be the third year the government is imposing a ban.

It's putting a damper on some celebrations. Ansuya Patel, 55, says that usually Diwali means gathering at someone's house, or at one of the gymkhanas, or community clubs. This year however, she says, the meals, parties, and even jewelry will be simple, mainly comprised of close family members gathering. She will be going to the temple that day. (Diwali falls on Nov. 3.)

Although the government has permitted the use of "noiseless" fireworks, several members of the Hindu community here say they won't even bother and would prefer to keep revelry low key. Patel says: "This time there won't even be the noiseless fireworks. We do not plan to visit this year, and we are not expecting visitors. We will celebrate simply."

Celebrations have been muted since Kenya's military intervention in Somalia in 2011. Now, fears of attacks by Al-Shabaab, the terrorist group behind the Westgate mall attack (along with a recent spike in violent crime) has snuffed out the remaining sparks.

It's the prevailing mood in the country, says Swaran Verma, chairman of Kenya's Hindu Council. The Indian community lost more than 20 of its own, Hindus, Sikhs, and Muslims, in the Sept. 21 attacks. Verma said that the focus this year during Diwali would be on prayer and not entertainment. He added that the estimated Hindu community of 70,000 had received approval to use noiseless fireworks, which light up but make no sound.
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Posted on 2013/11/4 18:36:53 ( 499 reads )
Religion News Service

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, November 1, 2013 (RNS): Parents who say yoga is inherently religious have appealed a judge's ruling that allowed yoga in a public school system near San Diego, saying it violates the constitutional separation of church and state.

"Our children are not religious guinea pigs and should never be subjected to such misguided religious experimentation," said Dean Broyles, president of the National Center for Law and Policy, a nonprofit based in Escondido, Calif., dedicated to defending religious freedom, traditional marriage and the sanctity of life.

Broyles filed a notice of appeal Wednesday (Oct. 30) in San Diego Superior Court on behalf of parents who oppose the yoga curriculum in the Encinitas Union School District. Broyles first filed a lawsuit regarding the district's yoga program last February on behalf of Stephen and Jennifer Sedlock, whose child attended El Camino Creek Elementary School in Carlsbad.

In July, San Diego Superior Court Judge John Meyer ruled against the Sedlocks, saying that the teaching of yoga in public schools does not establish a government interest in religion. Meyer explained that although yoga is rooted in religion, it has a legitimate secular purpose as part of the district's physical education program.

Since then, according to El Camino Creek principal Carrie Brown, the Sedlocks pulled their daughter from the school and placed her in a different school in the same district. According to Brown, the controversy over the yoga practiced in the school district of approximately 5,000 elementary school students has died down. It is "a completely different climate," she said.

Each student in the Encinitas School District is now taking 30-minute yoga sessions twice a week, though there is still the option for some students to opt out.

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Posted on 2013/11/4 18:36:46 ( 326 reads )
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The atman in you is that which indwells all things." "Tell me, Yajnavalkya, about this atman that indwells all things." "It is that which transcends hunger and thirst, sorrow and delusion, old age and death."
-- Brihadaranyaka Upanishad III, 5A
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Posted on 2013/11/1 17:40:00 ( 1122 reads )
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MOSCOW, RUSSIA, January 4, 2007 (Times Of India--Please note this article is six years old): An ancient Vishnu statue has been found during excavation in an old village in Russia's Volga region, raising questions about the prevalent view on the origin of ancient Russia.

The statue found in Staraya (old) Maina village dates back to the VII-X century AD. Staraya Maina village in Ulyanovsk region was a highly populated city 1700 years ago, much older than Kiev, so far believed to be the mother of all Russian cities.

"We may consider it incredible, but we have grounds to assert that the Middle-Volga region was the original land of Ancient Rus. This is a hypothesis, but a hypothesis, which requires thorough research," Reader of Ulyanovsk State University's archaeology department Dr. Alexander Kozhevin told state-run television Vesti .

Dr. Kozhevin, who has been conducting excavation in Staraya Maina for the last seven years, said that every single square meter of the surroundings of the ancient town situated on the banks of Samara, a tributary of Volga, is studded with antiques.

He believes that today's Staraya Maina, a town of eight thousand, was ten times more populated in the ancient times. It is from here that people started moving to the Don and Dneiper rivers around the time ancient Russy built the city of Kiev, now the capital of Ukraine.
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Posted on 2013/11/1 17:38:36 ( 553 reads )
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DENPASAR, BALI, October 31, 2013: (hindujagruti): Hindu leaders on the Indonesian holiday island of Bali Tuesday lashed out at a government plan to attract more tourists to their most sacred temple as "degrading" to Hinduism. The Indonesian Hindu Association's concerns centered on a government decision to include the Besakih temple and the volcano upon which it sits on an official list of sites to be developed for tourism.

The row highlighted concerns that Bali's booming tourism industry is a double-edged sword, as it threatens to erode the Hindu culture which is part of the attraction for the millions who visit the tropical island.

"These sites are the center of the universe for us Balinese Hindus, and we are worried that by making it an official tourist destination, our spiritual lives will be disrupted," association head Ngurah Sudyana said. "We are concerned that our spirituality will be degraded and exploited if these sites are just seen as commercial."

The temple and volcano, in eastern Bali, were included in the list of 88 places across Indonesia to be developed for tourism over a 15-year period. Besakih, known as the "mother temple" by Balinese Hindus, is a huge, stone complex which sits 3,280 feet up the side of Mount Agung, a volcano that has great spiritual significance for Bali's Hindus.

The tourism ministry plans to improve tourism links and accommodation at the selected destinations to boost an industry that is often criticized as underdeveloped compared with neighbors like Thailand and Malaysia.

The tourism ministry defended the plan and said it planned to hold consultations with Bali's religious leaders to address their concerns. "We are trying to conserve strategic tourism destinations, not cause any disruption to them. It will certainly bring benefits to the communities,"ministry spokesman Noviendi Makalam said. "There will be no major developments there without consultations with the community first."
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Posted on 2013/11/1 17:38:22 ( 531 reads )
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Death is not extinguishing the light; it is putting out the lamp because the dawn has come.
-- Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941), Bengali poet and Brahmo Samaj philosopher
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Posted on 2013/10/31 16:05:29 ( 658 reads )
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WASHINGTON DC, October 2013 (The Hindu): The first -ever Diwali festival was celebrated at the U.S. Congress on Tuesday amidst chanting of Vedic mantras by a Hindu priest. Over two dozen influential lawmakers along with eminent Indian-Americans gathered at the Capitol Hill to lit the traditional "diyas."

The event--the first of its kind event at the Capitol Hill--was organised by the two Co-Chairs of the Congressional Caucus on India and Indian Americans, Congressmen Joe Crowley and Peter Roskam in recognition of increasing presence of the Indian-American community.

"I have come here to say Happy Diwali," said Nancy Pelosi, Leader of the Democratic Party in the House of Representatives. "United States owes a great debt of gratitude to India. Our civil rights movement was built on the nonviolent movement in India. Martin Luther King studied there, spoke there. We are blessed not only by that legacy, but also by the presence of so many Indo-Americans in our country," Pelosi said.

Roskam said Indian Americans are an example of an enormous diaspora that is incredibly influential. "You have the ability to bring together people from both sides of the isle in ways that are powerful and significant," he said.

"When we look at the relationship between the United States and India moving forward it is a wonderful relationship that has a great thing in store," said Roskam, who along with other lawmakers were welcomed at the historic event with red tilak, jasmine garland. A Hindu priest presented them a traditional shawl amidst chanting of Vedic mantras.

Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, the first Hindu American lawmaker, said, "Diwali is celebration of righteousness."

Ami Bera, who is the only Indian American in the current Congress, said this was an incredible Diwali celebration. "It is great to be one Indian American in the Congress, but at our second, fifth Diwali celebration, we want to see more members of the Diaspora elected to the House of Representatives. We want to see deepening of this relationship as we move forward," Bera said.
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Posted on 2013/11/13 16:58:55 ( 128 reads )
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CHENNAI, INDIA, November 8, 2013 (The Hindu): Watchtowers and a police outpost are being planned at the world heritage site in Mamallapuram by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI). The security measures will come up early next year, as part of ASI's drive to secure world heritage sites from attacks and damages following the attacks at Bodh Gaya in Bihar in July this year.

Tamil Nadu has four world heritage sites. The group of 35 monuments at Mamallapuram and Brihadeeshwara Temple (Big Temple), Tanjore, will get the security cover in the first drive. Brihadeeshwara Temple in Gangaikondacholapuram and Sri Airavateswara temple in Darasuram near Kumbakonam will be up for security cover next.

ASI will coordinate with the Kancheepuram district police to set up a police booth near the Shore temple and at least 100 security guards will be deployed at various strategic and crucial points within Mamallapuram. Further, watchtowers will be set up near the monuments along the seashore at Mamallapuram.

ASI's Chennai Circle team led by G. Maheswari, superintending archaeologist, has been holding a series of meetings with district collectors and superintendents of police where heritage sites are located. "Providing security cover to the monuments is also part of the conservation work," she said. The four world heritage sites are a part of 248 centrally-protected monuments under the jurisdiction of Chennai Circle that comprises Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Puducherry.
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Posted on 2013/11/13 16:58:48 ( 178 reads )
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UNITED STATES, November, 2013 (Press Release): The Hindu American Foundation invites applications from academics in the humanities who are studying or conducting research related to Hinduism. Applicants can be graduate students, post-doctoral students, or junior faculty. The program aims to fund rigorous scholarly research on Hindu Americans, Hinduism as it is practiced in America, or the intersection of Hindu Americans and public policy. Where feasible, comparisons to the practice of Hinduism in other parts of the diaspora or India are encouraged. The primary focus should be on Hinduism in America broadly construed.

The following are examples of eligible areas of research (the list is not exclusive and other ideas will be considered):
Association between generation and religious practice in the American Hindu Diaspora
Dharmic theory and practice in the American Hindu Diaspora
American Hindus of Non-Indian Extraction: Who are they?
Charitable giving among Hindus in the US: How much, which causes?
Hinduism and the Media: Methodological approaches to understanding portrayal
Visibility of Hindu Americans in elected office or public policy roles
Demographic studies of the Hindu American community
The status of recent Hindu refugee communities in America and in the world
Analysis of Hindu American advocacy compared to other faith communities in America

This is a one year grant for $2,500, with the possibility of renewal if work remains outstanding and the grant officers believe that extra time and money will contribute significantly to the final product and to the literature. Funding may be used for research personnel, supplies, travel to a conference to present findings, and other justifiable expenses. Funding may not be used for direct salary support. The application deadline is January 31, 2014.

Apply at "source" above.

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Posted on 2013/11/13 16:58:34 ( 129 reads )
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To enter into the spiritual life is a rare blessedness, it is a great good: to take it seriously and engage in active spiritual Sadhana is a second blessedness and a still greater good: but to persevere in the spiritual life, to be ever progressive and ceaseless in one's spiritual life, is the greatest good, the crowning blessedness.
-- Swami Chidananda (1916-2008), President of Divine Life Society
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Posted on 2013/11/12 16:30:00 ( 271 reads )
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KABUL, AFGHANISTAN, November 6, 2013 (New York Times): Community leaders of this country's two religious minorities--Hindus and Sikhs--estimate that 35 years ago around 100,000 of them lived in Afghanistan. After three decades of fleeing from conflict to countries like India, Canada and Germany, only 3,000 are left. The majority of the 300 families remaining are Sikhs.

Most of the Hindus and Sikhs who remain in Afghanistan are weary of religious discrimination and absence of economic opportunities, and they are hoping to leave their country as anxieties grow about their prospects after American troops withdraw from Afghanistan at the end of 2014. In September, for instance, President Hamid Karzai had to issue a legislative decree to reserve a single seat for Sikh and Hindu Afghan nationals in the lower house of Parliament after lawmakers refused to do so.

Among those trying to get out of Afghanistan is Ram Prakash, who owns the oldest photography shop in Kabul established in 1955. With most of his family already in India, the elderly Mr. Prakash is only waiting for a good offer to sell his business, but none has come so far. "There is no point being emotional about it. Our shop is a famous institution and that also makes us targets," he said.

Under the Taliban regime from 1996 to 2001, Hindus had to identify themselves by yellow markings on their forehead or wearing a red cloth. On a late afternoon in August, a few people lazing around the Asamai temple grounds in Kabul shared different memories of the time.

One man recalled that Hindus with a yellow dot could get away without a beard but that terrible retribution was unleashed on a Muslim who shaved. Another said that he was forced to convert to Islam by the Taliban and marry a Muslim woman because he was seen speaking to her in a shop.

In recent years, some Afghan Hindus and Sikhs have made their way back home, at least temporarily because of financial pressures. Most of those who returned to find work left their families behind.

But a few like Balram Dhameja, the caretaker of a Hindu temple in Kabul, came back with their daughters and wives. Mr. Dhameja returned to Afghanistan with his family after 14 years because he couldn't make a living in India.

Mr. Dhameja said that he served in the Afghan police force when the country was led by the Moscow-backed President Mohammad Najibullah, who was toppled in 1992 by the America-backed mujahedeen, and hanged from a lamp post by the Taliban four years later.

The former police officer recalled fleeing to India in 1992 along with at least 15,000 other Hindu families. "It was easy to get refugee status then because the Indian government responded to it like an emergency," he said. "The hard part was finding jobs to stay on and make a good life."

Refugees say that India is slow to grant them citizenship, and without it, they have a difficult time finding work. According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, as of January 2013, there were 10,046 Afghan refugees and 958 Afghan asylum seekers living in India.

For the rest of this informative report, click "Source" above.
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Posted on 2013/11/12 16:21:21 ( 207 reads )
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WASHINGTON, DC, September 27, 2013 (Press Release): Hindu American Seva Communities (HASC) cohosted, with the White House Office of Public Engagement the fourth annual conference, "Dharmic Seva: Transforming Our Self, Our Communities, Our Country", in the nation's capital on September 27th to promote seva and civic engagement to address social justice issues and celebrate an inside-out approach to development through seva and tradition. Seva is an important part of our Dharma and sadhana (spiritual practice). The inspired conference, focused on self-transformation leadership, youth, women, environment, strengthening of our community, places of worship and country through global Diaspora engagement. Various policy papers and ideas were presented at the White House to the policy makers, senior administrators and the community. Some of these are available on our website, "source" above.

The conference theme is inspired by Swami Vivekananda (1863-1902) on his 150th birth anniversary; the first Hindu monk who came to America in 1893. It honored the first Parliament of World Religions conference which ended on 9/27/1893.

For the India Abroad report on the conference, click here:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0Bwlxj ... WcFV2X3M/edit?usp=sharing

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Posted on 2013/11/12 16:21:15 ( 200 reads )
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Let me tell you the truth: there is nothing wrong in your being in the world. But you must direct your mind towards God; otherwise you will not succeed. Do your duty with one hand and with the other hold to God. After the duty is over, you will hold to God with both hands.
-- Sri Ramakrishna Paramahansa (1836-1886)
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Posted on 2013/11/11 17:57:26 ( 443 reads )
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UNITED KINGDOM, November 8, 2013: Tattoo parlors across the world are offering free swastika tattoos next week as part of an event to "reclaim" the symbol from the Nazis. Parlors have signed up to the worldwide scheme entitled "Learn to Love the Swastika" which aims to "spread knowledge and appreciation of the gentle swastika" before it was used by the Nazi Regime in World War 2.

For thousands of years, the swastika was seen as a symbol of peace and luck and remains one of the most prominent spiritual symbols in Hinduism, and Buddhism. The connotations of the symbol - at least in the western world - has since changed to one of hatred and anti-Semitism, after Adolf Hitler adopted the Swastika for the Nazi regime.

The campaign to "take back" the swastika began as a tribute to Canadian artist ManWoman, who campaigned for most of his life to reclaim the Swastika from the Nazis before his death last year. ManWoman, real name Patrick Charles Kemball, wrote a book called Gentle Swastika, Reclaiming the Innocence and covered his body in more than 200 swastikas as part of his campaign.

Now tattoo parlors from all over the world have agreed to offer free swastika tattoos on 13 November in order to educate people about the origins and true meaning of the Swastika. More than 170 artists across 40 countries have agreed to take part in the event, including parlors in the UK, US and even Germany.

One man wrote on the event's official Facebook page: "I am so happy to be booked in to get my swastika done I am really looking forward to it, It's been too long that the neo-nazi's have hijacked what is a symbol for love and peace. I will wear mine with pride."

Audrie Cabena, from Yankee tattoo parlor in Dundee, Scotland, told the Evening Telegraph: "I met ManWoman once and he was covered in swastikas. I think it is important to recover that symbol and educate people. It's been a peace symbol for thousands of years, but it's now seen as a symbol of hatred because of a relatively short amount of time. I'll talk to the people who come in and make sure they are doing it for the right reasons. I'm not saying it's safe to walk around with a swastika on you. You might get people making comments. But if I receive any backlash over this, I'll have to deal with it when it happens."

A spokesperson for Show Racism The Red Card in Scotland said she is against the free tattooing event. "Much as the swastika may have started as meaning one thing, fascism is what it represents now," she said.
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Posted on 2013/11/11 17:57:20 ( 293 reads )
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NEW DELHI, INDIA, November 8, 2013: Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall were pictured on day three of their India tour in front of a magnificent Hindu Temple complex of Akshardham. This will be the Royal couple's third official visit to India together and their most extensive yet. The temple was constructed with the help of thousands of volunteers over five years and is now a huge pilgrimage and tourist attraction.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/artic ... amilla.html#ixzz2kChcexOl
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Posted on 2013/11/11 17:57:14 ( 221 reads )
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There is something beyond our mind which abides in silence within our mind. It is the supreme mystery beyond thought. Let one's mind and one's subtle body rest upon that and not rest on anything else.
-- Maitri Upanishad
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Posted on 2013/11/8 18:32:18 ( 391 reads )
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WASHINGTON, DC, November 5, 2013 (White House Press Release): Today, First Lady Michelle Obama welcomed guests to the White House for a Diwali celebration. The celebration started with the First Lady surprising local students at a Bollywood dance clinic and trying out some moves herself.

Then the First Lady spoke during a reception in the East Room: "We've celebrated this holiday here at the White House every year since Barack took office. And there's a reason why we've done that. When we say that we want to make the White House the 'people's house,' we mean all people. We mean that we want to honor and embrace all of the many cultures and faith traditions that make us who we are as Americans. And Diwali is very much one of those traditions.

Diwali is celebrated by members of some of the world's oldest religions not just here in America but across the globe. "It's a time to come together with friends and family, often with dancing and good food," the First Lady said. "But Diwali is also a time for contemplation and reflection. It's a time for us to think about our obligations to our fellow human beings, particularly those who are less fortunate than we are. And as we light the diya -- the lamp -- we recommit ourselves to the triumph of light over darkness, of good over evil.I am so proud and so honored to be celebrating this beautiful holiday at the White House with all of you. And I wish you all and all your loved ones a Happy Diwali and Saal Mubarak."
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Posted on 2013/10/25 16:20:55 ( 597 reads )
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I was an atheist until I found out I was God.
-- Spotted on a T-shirt in Auroville

Posted on 2013/11/8 18:32:10 ( 383 reads )
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BALI, INDONESIA, November 7, 2013 (The Jakarta Post): Bali Governor Made Mangku Pastika has proposed that temples be excluded as tourist destinations on the island to limit, or even prevent, tourists visiting the places of worship.

"Further discussion with the island's tourist industry will be necessary to consider the proposal. It is high time for us to limit access to our temples. Please use the temples to worship the Creator," he said.

Pastika was talking during a seminar held on Tuesday on tourism and the Besakih mother temple, which has recently become a hot issue among Balinese religious and community leaders since the news of the planned inclusion of the largest and the most sacred temple in Bali in one of the national strategic tourist destinations.

"Temples must function as worship places," the governor said.

Currently, traders sell various goods, from food to fashion items, outside temples. "During piodalan, temple anniversaries, the traders pack the temples' yards," the governor said.

What was more important, Pastika said, was that nobody could guarantee that all visitors were eligible to enter these sacred sites. Behavior while inside the temple must also be decent and visitors should wear appropriate clothing.

I Gusti Ngurah Sudiana, chairman of the Indonesian Parisadha Hindu High Council (PHDI), warmly welcomed the proposal.

"There are some restrictions applied to non-Hindu visitors visiting temples," Sudiana said.

A Hindu temple is architecturally and philosophically divided into three zones -- the jeroan (the inner part and most sacred site of the temple), jaba tengah (the middle section) and jaba luar (the temple yard). "Visitors may enter the temple yards but must not enter the jaba tengah and jeroan," Sudiana recommended.

Spokesperson of the Indonesian Tour Guides Association (HPI) Bali chapter, Amos Lilo, said he appreciated the governor's proposal.

"But we have to remember that many foreign tourists come to Bali to learn more about the religion and culture of the Balinese people. Worship places like Besakih Temple are among the most attractive tourist destinations in Bali," Lilo said.

Lilo suggested that the government and religious bodies provide clear information on which areas in temples tourists were allowed to enter.

"Clear regulations and information are needed to avoid misunderstanding. Tourists mostly respect the religious code of ethics applied here in Bali," Lilo said.

Tanah Lot Temple is a success story. "People come to Tanah Lot to see the view of the temple but they do not disturb any ongoing religious activities," Lilo said.

Mengwi Temple in Badung regency is another success story, with the temple management clearly providing information on the temple's zoning.
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Posted on 2013/11/8 18:32:03 ( 334 reads )
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THANJAVURE, INDIA, October 24, 2013 (Epoch Times): A classical form of Indian paintings, embedded with sparkling gold and precious stones, is still popular in the southern region of the country; the traditional art originated about six centuries ago. The "Tanjore paintings" are a heritage value art-form that got its name from a place located in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu.

A national award winning middle aged painter, V. Panneer Selvam, whose ancestors were Tanjore art painters, started to paint when he was a teenager. "I learned from my uncle and he learned from his father, his guru (the master)," Selvam said.

Traditionally the paintings were done on a wooden plank layered with a cloth. The subjects of the paintings were usually gods, saints, and mythological stories, which were drawn with vegetable colors. Their ornaments and surroundings, all contoured with designs created from lime, were finally covered with gold foil.

"The gold designs are embedded with Kundan and Jarkan stones (Indian gemstones). We use 22 carat gold foil," he said. "The only change is that we have started to paint with poster colors," he added.

Till date no records are available to track how the painting style has originated 600 years ago. However, the art form enjoyed great patronage from the rulers of that region, who also patronized many other classical art forms like dance and architecture.

Making Tanjore paintings is a hectic and long process; Selvam takes on average seven days to finish a small 8 by 10 inches painting.

Nowadays the characters in the paintings have changed to include the demands and likes of the people who buy them. Pointing to huge a painting of the Buddhist Goddess Tara, done in the Thai style, Selvam said that someone from America had ordered it.

"We do have clients who value the tradition and buy," he said.

Selvam highlighted a fact that earlier there were not many Tanjore painters, but now due to increased demand many people have taken it up. "There are at least 50 people making Tanjore paintings in Tanjavur city itself," he explained.

Recently, he displayed his paintings for sale in a public exhibition in Bangalore. He said that on festival days, companies tend to buy paintings for their employees. Selvam has also traveled to Malaysia, Singapore, and Canada to exhibit his paintings.
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Posted on 2013/11/8 18:31:57 ( 308 reads )
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Look at the man who walks on a tight rope. He is performing various tricks, but his mind is only on the rope. So also, we may be doing various things, but our minds must be on God." Sri Sri Sri Sivaratnapuri Tiruchi Mahaswamigal ("Trichyswami") founder of Kailasa Ashram, Bangalore
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Posted on 2013/11/7 16:24:37 ( 536 reads )
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DHAKA, BANGLADESH, November 7, 2013 (Dhaka Tribune): Expressing grave concern over the recent attack on Hindus in Pabna and Lalmonirhat districts, the US embassy has urged the government to protect the rights of the minority communities. The call came through a statement issued on Wednesday by the embassy in Dhaka.

The statement read: "We call on all those involved in these incidents to desist from abusing the rights of minorities, and ask all parties to ensure they are stopped immediately and the perpetrators are held accountable."

It asked the government to act authoritatively against those who incited and committed this violence. The statement also expressed concern over the deaths, injuries, and ongoing violence associated with hartals.

"While engaging in peaceful protest is a fundamental democratic right, we firmly believe violence is never the answer." We look to the government of Bangladesh to ensure the safety of all its citizens and encourage all Bangladeshis to peacefully express their views," it added.

It also urged all political parties to stage peaceful demonstration programmes to avert violence.
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Posted on 2013/11/7 16:24:31 ( 504 reads )
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UNITED KINGDOM, November 6, 2013 (Daily Mail): Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall tonight took part in a solemn ceremony of thanks with Hindus on the banks of the River Ganges. In the holy Hindu city of Rishikesh, the prince led his wife by the hand to the banks of the sacred river where they joined Hindu worshippers conducting the aarti ceremony.

The couple were welcomed by the Hindu guru Swami Chidanand and his leading disciple Sadhvi Bhagawati Saraswati, both dressed in orange robes, who draped a garland of marigold blooms around their necks and strings of beads.

With the foothills of the Himalayans looming in the distance, Charles told gathered trainee priests and their leaders: "It's a particular joy to join you here on the banks of the Ganges this evening because it is, above all else, my first visit to the Ganges and so from that point of view it is a very special occasion for both myself and my wife. But we also wanted just to stress how deeply we felt for all those people who suffered so dreadfully as a result of the awful floods in June -- our thoughts and prayers were so much with those families who have had to suffer the appalling catastrophe."

Swami Chidanand has been involved in a project to help eradicate pollution in the Ganges, gathering together scientists, engineers and activists to help clean the waters and riverbanks. Charles went on to praise the Swami for his "deep understanding of working in harmony with nature."

The heir to the throne added: "It seems to me the key to our future is to rediscover our connections with nature, for too long we seem to have ignored the services that nature provides us."

The prince told how the birth of his grandson Prince George, in July, had given him a reason to redouble his efforts on working to help preserve the planet. "And now that I've just recently become a grandfather, I think it means even more when you have a grandchild to think of their future and all the futures of other grandchildren around the world, we owe them I think something a great deal better for their futures as well."

The royal couple were given small aarti lamps and joined other participants in circling them clockwise in a ritual performed by devotees each sunset designed to worship the Ganga River.

Much more of the Royal Couple's nine-day tour of India including photos and video at 'source' above.




Posted on 2013/11/20 18:00:00 ( 140 reads )
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USA, November 19, 2013 (Wall Street Journal): Since the mid-1990s, the share of people 65 years old and over living with their children or other relatives in the United States has risen from around 6.6% to 7.3% in 2013, according to an analysis of data from the Census Bureau's Current Population Survey by Jed Kolko, chief economist at Trulia, a real-estate listings site.

According to the American Community Survey -- a bigger Census study with a sample size large enough to analyze specific demographic groups -- 9% of seniors lived in a household headed by their children, children-in-law or other relatives besides their spouses in 2012. Another 2% lived with people they weren't related to, while 3% lived in places like nursing homes. The rest, about 85%, lived in their own homes.

The recession and weak recovery forced a growing number of young Americans to shack up with their parents, creating more "intergenerational" households. Seniors, meanwhile, are playing a critical role by offering financial lifelines and other types of support to adult children who are struggling to get by--or who are having difficulty achieving milestones like buying a house.

But what's driving the trend of more seniors living with their children isn't low income-growth or high joblessness -- it's mainly the fact that the share of seniors born in another country is rising -- indeed, it's already gone from 8% in 1994 to 13% in 2013.

That is important because foreign-born seniors are four times more likely to live with their children. Around 25% of foreign-born seniors in the U.S. live with relatives, compared with just 6% for U.S.-born seniors.

Whether or not Grandma and Grandpa are going to live with you varies hugely by which country they were born in.

Nearly half of all U.S. seniors born in India (47%) were living with relatives. Vietnam (44%), the Philippines (38%), Mexico (35%) and China (34%) also posted high shares. By contrast, only 5% of Canadian-born seniors live with their kids, below even the 6% share of U.S.-born seniors. German-born seniors in the U.S. were at 6%; England-born, at 7%.

It's not all about whether seniors are born in the West or not -- factors like age and race are important, too.

Seniors are more likely to live with relatives if they're older. The share of seniors who are 80 or older has grown from 22% in 1994 to 25% in 2013. Just 6% of the youngest seniors (65 to 69) live with relatives, versus 15% for those 85 and older. African-American, Asian-American and Hispanic seniors born in the U.S. are all twice as likely as whites to live with relatives. Other factors that make seniors more likely to live with children include not being married, being female (women live longer) and living in a metro area with fewer seniors.
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Posted on 2013/11/20 17:54:06 ( 121 reads )
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AUSTRALIA, November 2013 (press release): Bushfires raging in the Blue Mountains around Sydney as early as October is being seen by Hindu community leaders as a call to action. This call is the subject of the Hindu Climate Change Action Kit, jointly published by the Australian Religious Response to Climate Change (ARRCC) and the Hindu Council of Australia, and was launched on Saturday, 26th October by Rev. Swami Sunishthananda of the Sydney Vedanta Centre. The launch took place as part of the Deepavali Festival at Sydney Olympic Park.

ARRCC's President Thea Ormerod, who was present at the launch said, "After a week of uncharacteristically hot weather for October and terrible bushfires, it is imperative that we all step up and take responsibility for addressing climate change. We need to start making Earth-friendly choices both as individuals and communities. Like our Christian Kit, the Hindu Climate Change Action Kit provides loads of well-grounded, easy-to-use, creative ideas to assist Hindus to play their part. From Hindu spirituality to the science basics and improving energy efficiency, from ideas for nurturing a sense of connection with Mother Nature to advocacy, this kit will support Australian Hindus in making their contribution."

Sri Venkateswara Temple, Helensburgh, is one example of a temple that has taken the sorts of actions that the kit recommends. These include insulating the temple to conserve energy and reducing the size of the pits used for the Omum (Havan) fire ceremony, to reduce firewood consumption.

"Mahatma Gandhi said: 'The rich must live more simply so the poor may simply live'," quoted Professor Agar. "The simple message is to control our desires and reduce the demand on precious natural resources. Spirituality is at the heart of sustainability. The Hindu Climate Change Action Kit encourages us all to conserve energy, live a simple, contented and fulfilled life with mental peace and tranquillity, green our worship and festivals at the temple and at home, and live healthy active lives including a balanced diet with plenty of fruits and vegetables. This is a message for our wider communities, businesses and for our political representatives as well. I highly commend the kit to all Hindus."

The Hindu Climate Change Action Kit is downloadable from 'source.'
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Posted on 2013/11/20 17:53:53 ( 109 reads )
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The sages, being filled with universal love for all beings, did not want to keep their enlightenment to themselves. They declared to all: "O mortals, striving and struggling upon this Earth plane, weeping, wailing, buffeted by the vicissitudes of life: we have come upon a great discovery. There is something beyond these appearances, these vanishing names and forms that go to make up this universe. There is something beyond, which is the very source and support of all these objects of the phenomenal world. Why do you search in vain for happiness outside? Come, come, happiness resides within."
-- Swami Chidananda (1916-2008), president of Divine Life Society
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Posted on 2013/11/19 17:19:13 ( 393 reads )
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FIJI, November 19, 2013 (Fiji Sun): The Vishwa Hindu Parishad Fiji says comments by Cook Islands bishop, Tutai Pere, condemning Diwali celebrations held in the island nation are saddening.

VHP Fiji national president Jay Dayal said the bishop was forgetting the values of Christianity. "At the same time, we in Fiji are fortunate and so ever thankful to our government that Fiji is a secular nation that allows freedom of religious practices and personal beliefs bringing everyone together during their respective festivals," Mr. Dayal said.

"As a Christian, the bishop should learn to love his neighbors rather than enforce his imprudent personal beliefs on others that divide a society in a tiny island nation like the Cooks, said Dayal.

Bishop Pere was on Radio Australia labeling Hindus as idol worshipers (listen to the full recording at http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/inte ... tion-as-blasphemy/1220374). Mr. Dayal said: "Diwali is a festival of light not idolatry or blasphemy against Christians as alleged by the Bishop Tutai Pere. "He needs understanding with the significance of Diwali. Diwali celebrates the triumph of good over evil, light over darkness, falsehood to truth and death to immortality.

Diwali was festively celebrated at the US Presidential White House by President Barack Obama with the First Lady. The British Prime Minister David Cameron, accompanied by his wife Samantha, visited the Swaminarayan Mandir, the largest traditional Hindu temple outside India, in north-west London and celebrated Diwali.

The Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper marked Diwali with members of Canada's South Asian community with crowds of hundreds in Mississauga, Toronto, Canada. The Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak and wife Datin Seri Rosmah Mansor embraced Malaysian Hindus at the Batu Caves and celebrated Diwali as well.

Mr. Dayal said: "As the leaders of some of the world's great nations joined hands with Hindus to openly celebrate Diwali on the same token the comments and dim-witted protest by Tutai Pere, Bishop of the Apostolic Church of the Cook Islands is sad but insignificant and VHP can only suggest to him to seek knowledge of the divine and rise above religious fanaticism." (You can listen to his complete response, also on Radio Australia, at http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/inte ... n-of-idol-worship/1221206)
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Posted on 2013/11/19 17:19:07 ( 312 reads )
Press Release

CANADA, October 2, 2013 (Canadian Public Opinion Poll): The last of three national surveys about values and religion in Canada shows English and French Canadians most favorable towards Christianity and least favorable towards Islam. Favorability of all religions is down since 2009.

The results from the last of three comprehensive national surveys about religion, religious freedom and values by Angus Reid Global show, as a whole, (54%) of Canadians view Islam unfavorably, while almost three quarters (73%) hold a favorable opinion of Christianity. Favorable opinions of other religions vary, with Buddhism (56%) and Judaism (51%) coming second and third to Christianity, followed by Hinduism (44%) and the Sikh faith (29%).

Demographics tell another story, with younger and university educated Canadian adults holding more favorable opinions of non-Judeo-Christian religions. The same trend emerges when Canadians were asked whether it would be acceptable or unacceptable if their children married people from non-Judeo-Christian religions. Canadian adults aged 18-34 and those with a university education were most accepting of this scenario. Scenarios where children were to marry a Christian partner were the only ones to garner widespread acceptance across regional, age and educational lines.

"The Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees our ability to practice the religions of our choice in Canada," says Kurl. "However, how much we choose to educate our neighbors about our faiths may be one factor in the deep disconnect between how we perceive different religions in this country."
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Posted on 2013/11/19 17:19:01 ( 202 reads )
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You must not let your life run in the ordinary way; do something that nobody else has done, something that will dazzle the world. Show that God's creative principle works in you.
-- Paramahansa Yogananda (1893-1952), founder of Self Realization Fellowship
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Posted on 2013/11/15 17:25:42 ( 452 reads )
Press Release

BELIZE, November 15, 2013 (Press Release): Following the sporadic series of conferences on the Indian Diaspora in the Caribbean since 1975 held mainly in Trinidad and Tobago, there is a plan to organize one conference every year in various parts of the region. Next year's conference will be held in Belize from August 5 to 11, 2014 on the theme "The Indian Diaspora in Belize and the Wider Caribbean." This is the first conference of its kind to be held in this English-speaking country, and in Central America.

Formally known as British Honduras, Belize is the only English-speaking country in Central America. Bordered by Mexico in the North and Guatemala in the West and South, it lies at the heart of the Caribbean Basin. Belize has giant Mayan Temples and the world's second largest barrier reef. It has a melange of over ten different cultures which are concentrated in specific areas in six districts.

Unlike any other Caribbean country, Belize experienced three waves of East Indian migration, commencing in 1858. The first wave of migrants consisted of 1000 deported ex-soldiers (and their families) who had rebelled against the British Government in India's First War of Independence/ Sepoy Rebellion. The second wave of Indians came to Belize in 1872 as ex-indentured workers from Jamaica. The third wave of Indian migrants to Belize left from Guatemala, from where they had gone to work in the coffee plantations in Cafe Mountains.

Unique to Indian history in the Caribbean is the fact that early immigrant laborers worked in Belize in the sugarcane, as well as lumber and banana plantations. As early as the 1860s, they worked under the employment of American ex-confederates. With the passage of time, the mainly-Hindu immigrants have all converted to Christianity, resulting in the absence of temples and lack of festivals in the country. The only remnants of Indian culture are the special preparation of food with turmeric [curry] and the observance of Hosay/ Muharram [Who-se-me-say]. Indians now comprise about four percent (7,000 persons) of the multi-ethnic population of Belize.

Corozal Organization of East Indian Cultural Heritage (COEICH) will be the main host and organiser of the conference. COEICH was formed in 2009 as a non-profit organization committed to preserve and promote East Indian culture in Corozal in particular, and Belize in general. It has embraced opportunities to establish connections with people of similar culture within and outside of Belize and, in so doing, has built a support network to help revive a lost heritage.

The tentative programme includes ceremonial speeches, cultural performances, exhibition displays and academic presentations in Corozal in north Belize and Punta Gorda (PG) in the south. There will be educational tours to the National Assembly, Herman's cave and Blue Hole in Belmopan, and visits to East Indian communities in Forest Home, Elridgeville, Jacintoville and Mafredi.

The conference aims to bring together academics, scholars, teachers and students at all levels with an interest in the Indian Diaspora in the Caribbean to discuss their research findings. Space will be provided for less formal presentations from activists and practitioners in the field in order to contribute to the limited store of public knowledge on Indians in Belize.

Possible paper themes can include, but are not limited to history, migration, inter-ethnic marriages, culture loss, alcoholism, business, remittances, agriculture, education and gender.

These themes can be approached from a variety of disciplines, and can be inter- as well as multi-disciplinary. At least two-thirds of each paper to be presented must deal with Indians in Belize. Submitted papers will be assigned to particular panels according to similarities in theme, topic and discipline.

For details contact:
Ms. Sylvia Perez Gilharry in Belize - sylviaperez1@yahoo.com,
Corozal Organization of East Indian Cultural Heritage (COEICH)

Dr. Kumar Mahabir in Trinidad - dmahabir@gmail.com,
University of Trinidad and Tobago (UTT)
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