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Showing posts with label India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

How Mantra and Chanting Can Heal Cancer in Minutes: Chinese Methods Similar to Indian Chanting and Kirtan of Mantras

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This video below shares something scientific that technological as well that we use in faith healing. The Mantra can do miracles when we chant it, sing in the Kirtan or in any other form. The Mantra in India that means what makes emotions, the creative intelligence (the Mann not Man though) swim in the world of waves and vibrations, the ocean of consciousness.

 

"Gregg Braden presents a video showing cancer being cured (transformed really) in less than 3 minutes using a specific language of emotion. This specific 'language of emotion' can be created within all of us and anyone can learn it, By properly FEELING this e-motion within us with the intention 'as if it has already happened', we are able to mirror the expectation to this intelligent field that is all around us. For more info on this language and how The LifeLine Technique taps into it, visit http://worldclasswellness.wordpress.com/lifeline/"

What is right here and right now is one of the most amazing as described in almost all ancient scriptures as when sound, the voice from light heard all prophets in the Old Testament responded to it and received what seems unbelievable to us and its also so in other religions, faiths and the ancient - modern schools of philosophies.

Well, I am not a preacher but talking about Quantum Physics that helps knowing the Secrets of Miracles as when we are in tune with the universe it works as if a miracle and Holy Bible and Other Holy Books, the Scriptures call it the Art of Living in the Present. We as the humans find it difficult to live in the present and thus miss what we know Prayers, the Very Art of Living in the Present, where the Spirit works beyond Space and Time.



I wrote it as Scientific Feelings and Creative Thinking naming both as Philselfology (Registered as started from 1986, and first book published in 1997) that can heal from within and this is Gregg Braden making these works expressing all in the a brilliant way.


 

Another wonderful video about this topic is: http://www.5min.com/Video/Kirtan-Mediation-Chanting-for-Health-185351582

Thanks for your time.

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Friday, September 23, 2011

The Man Who Influenced Me Most at My Sikh Philosophy at Youth: The Great Iron Man of Indian Civilization

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My mind was stormed as a young man when I finished my research work on Indian Civilization. The great man, who stormed me was Baba Kharak Singh. However, when I wanted to share about his greatness and patriotism for integrity of India as a nation and civilization I seemed as if a mad, but my concern was that this very man like Swami Vivekananda and other great Indians is a solution for making of India a devleoped country.  We share some of good and bad points, but let us read who Baba Kharak Singh was:



"He was a firm protagonist of national unity and opposed both the Muslim League's demand for Pakistan and the Akali proposal for an Azad Punjab. After 1947, he stayed in Delhi in virtual retirement, and died there on 6 October 1963 at the ripe age of 95." (With thanks from the source: http://www.sikhpoint.com/religion/sikhcommunity/babakharaksingh.htm). Who was he: "Baba Kharak Singh was a Sikh political leader and virtually the first president of the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee, was born on 6 June 1868 at Sialkot, now in Pakistan His father, Rai Bahadur Sardar Hari Singh, was a wealthy contractor and industrialist." (With thanks from the source: http://www.sikhpoint.com/religion/sikhcommunity/babakharaksingh.htm)

The point during the end of my research in 1996, I faced a serious problem when I shared my conclusions with some people including my neighborhood about the Tiranga, the Indian Tricolor Flag:

I share it as if a very bitter experience of a young person about a great Civilization like India. It was what I shared that it is what Tiranga, the Flag means when people like me say it all in the name of Baba Kharak Singh and thus taken as if mental and thus mentally depressed. As usual and normal in our country, I was badly treated as if having mental sickness as said by the lawyer and others who promote law as desired or... "Recognition of his Unity stand: He was one of those leaders who unhesitatingly took up the cause of the INA in 1945. He was a firm protagonist of national unity and opposed both the Muslim League's demand for Pakistan and the Akali proposal for an Azad Punjab. During the elections of 1946 he toured the whole of the Punjab and the N.W.F.P. and made a magnificent contribution to the success of the Congress.

According to Jawaharlal Nehru, during his whole life Babaji had never surrender to anything that he considered to be wrong or evil, whatever the consequences might have been. At another place Mr. Nehru said of Babaji:

"There are few hands which can uphold the honour and preserve the dignity of the national Flag better than those of Babaji". (With thanks from the source: http://www.sikhiwiki.org/index.php/Baba_Kharak_Singh#Recognition_of_his_Unity_stand) P.S.: I called myself mental because when I mentioned it to some of my neighbors they described it as sign of great depression I might be facing and they keep proving it by all possible means and feel ashamed of such people. They are kind of NGO's and high posted people who win International Recognitions just proving common people like me MENTAL! Alas with thanks!

Now, I would like to add some great points about Baba Kharak Singh Ji:

Baba Kharak Singh: The Uncrowned king

By Roopinder Singh

"Many people talk about Master Tara Singh when he was vice-president of SGPC, and Baba Kharak Singh as the President. Baba Kharak Singh opposed formation of any new separate country by dividing India. He instead made it sure that Sikhs remain part of India while demanding inclusion of Sikh Color of saffron (Orange shade) at the top of the National Flag: "However, there was a difference of opinion between Master Tara Singh and Baba Kharak Singh of the SGPC over the question of participation in the Civil Disobedience Movement. Baba Kharak Singh complained that despite Gandhi’s assurance of including the saffron colour of the Sikhs in the national flag, it had not been done so far. Therefore, he refused to participate in the Movement till the “Sikh Safforon colour” was included in the flag.20 In this connection resolution had been passed on August 30th 1930, in which it was pleaded that the Sikh safforon colour in the National Flag should be included." (With thanks from the page 5 of http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/2086/9/09_chapter-ii.pdf). This is also an answer to the question raised in the next question:

‎"... does the saffron color on the indian flag represent Hindus or Sikhs. I have heard that there was going to be a main protest against the British where they would form jathas and walk in protest while being shot at. All three religious groups were involved, and there was indecision over who would lead (because the leading groups would be the ones shot at) eventually it came down to it that only the Sikhs were willing to lead, but baba Kharak Singh ji made an agreement that since the Sikhs will lead, they're color will go at the top of the Indian flag. But after looking at some websites, they say that the saffron color is traditionally that of hindus, green muslims and white representing peaceful coexistence... so is the story just a myth or what?" (With thanks from the source: http://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?%2Ftopic%2F2216-indian-flag%2F)

Its for the first time that I have come to know how much great Indian leaders appreciated a Sikh so much that I salute to all who shared such a high honor for Baba Kharak Singh. I could have shared it all in 1996 when I was searching for him in the books and other research papers, but it took more than 15 years to know this truth about the True Iron Man among Sikhs who loved all selflessly as the True Indian. I thank to the Internet and Google that I could search it while sharing it as the major points about Baba Ji that include:

Baba Kharak Singh Marg is situated in the heart of New Delhi. People from all over the world go there hunting for handicrafts at emporiums of different states, including Punjab, Haryana and Himachal Pradesh. But who is this Baba after whom this important road in the nation’s Capital has been named?


What was his role in India’s freedom movement? Why did free India’s rulers decide to rename the famous Irwin Road as Baba Kharak Singh Marg? Lord Irwin was a Viceroy of British India (of the Gandhi-Irwin Pact fame).

Diving from Connaught Place towards Rashtrapati Bhavan recently, I saw a Nihang Sikh crossing Baba Kharak Singh Marg. I asked him if he knew anything about the Baba. He replied: “Beta, Baba ji Sikhan de betaj Badshah san.” (Son, Babaji was the uncrowned king of the Sikhs). A politician who spurned positions, perks and privileges Baba Kharak Singh (1867-1963) was often addressed by this title.


To quote Khushwant Singh: “In the history of every nation. Some figures stand out as landmarks by whose presence we recognise the events of time– Baba Kharak Singh is such a landmark–not only in the history of the history of the Sikhs, but that of India itself.”

“Baba Kharak Singh’s name is associated with the birth of political consciousness in Punjab, its maturing into a movement and the first triumph of the experiment of passive resistance to be carried out in India. He is the most important Sikh character of the Indo-British history.”

An aristocratic lineage and his family’s good relations with the British (Baba Kharak Singh’s father and his elder brother held the titles of Rai Bahadur), did not prevent this well-educated man (the Baba was among the first graduates from Panjab University, Lahore, in 1899) from joining the freedom struggle.

What made him give up a comfortable and privileged lifestyle and opt long terms in prisons? In a word –patriotism.

Baba Kharak Singh’s long public life began innocuously enough — when he was elected Chairman of the Reception Committee of the fifth session of the All-India Sikh Conference held in his home town, Sialkot, in 1912.

The Jallianwala Bagh massacre in 1919 and the subsequent events in Punjab under Martial Law galvanised him into political activity. He addressed the annual session of the Indian National Congress which was held as Amritsar in December 1919, under the presidentship of Motilal Nehru.

Baba Kharak Singh was elected the first President of the Shiromani Gurdwara Prabhandak Committee (SGPC) in 1921. In November that year, the Punjab Government passed as order where by the keys of the toshakhana (treasury) of the Golden Temple at Amritsar were to remain in the custody of the Deputy Commissioner of the district.

The SGPC protested and an agitation was launched. Baba Kharak Singh was arrested. The agitation continued.

As Rana Jang Bahadur Singh, a former Editor of The Tribune wrote: “Ultimately the proud ruling power had to bend before the iron will of the puissant Baba. The key was delivered to him at a public function by a representative of British imperialism. And, metaphorically speaking with that key he eventually opened the gates of the temple of freedom. He became a general of the army of liberators in the Punjab and his life became a saga of sustained, valiant struggle.”

On January 17, 1922, the keys of the Golden Temple were handed back to Baba Kharak Singh, who had been released along with thousands of other political prisoners, at Akal Takht. On this day Mahatma Gandhi, who was then ‘Dictator’ of the Indian National Congress, sent the following telegram to Baba Kharak Singh: “First decisive battle for India’s freedom won. Congratulations.”

In February, 1922, Lala Lajpat Rai, who was then President of the Punjab Provincial Congress was imprisoned. Baba Kharak Singh was elected the new President. Commenting on this move, Mahatma Gandhi wrote in Young India: “I congratulate the Punjab Provincial Congress Committee on its decision to elect Sardar Sahib. It is indeed an excellent choice.”

“In the days of our struggle for freedom, he was a pillar of strength and no threat of coercion could bend his iron will. By his example, he inspired innumerable persons,” Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru said on the occasion of the 86th birthday of Baba Kharak Singh.

The Morcha for Gandhi cap is a good illustration of this statement. While Baba Kharak Singh, along with Khan Abdul Gaffar Khan, was among the 40 prisoners held in Dera Baba Ghazi Khan Jail, the British jail authorities issued an order under which political prisoners were not allowed to wear anything which formed a part of their national dress.

Thus Sikhs could not wear black turban (the Sikh symbol of protest since the Nankana Sahib tragedy) and Hindus as well as Muslim could not wear Gandhi caps.

Led by the Baba, the prisoners decided to violate the ban. When a month or so later, in January, 1923, the inspector General of Prisoners came on an inspection, the political prisoners wore their black turbans or Gandhi caps.

The enraged British authorities forcibly removed the turban from Baba Kharak Singh’s head. At this, the prisoners refused to wear their clothes. The Sikhs vowed to wear only their kacheras and the Hindus their dhotis till the ban was lifted.

Baba Kharak Singh was to remain in jail for five and a half years till the Punjab Legislative Council unanimously passed a resolution to release him in 1927.

While in jail, he was offered various inducements to change his stance and start wearing clothes. The British even tried the famous –divide and rule– tactics by allowing the wearing of the turbans, not Gandhi caps.

The Baba remained unfazed and unmoved. His sentence was increased several times for defying the ban. He was even incarcerated in the ‘condemned cell’ where those who have been awarded the death sentence are kept, but he refused to bend or compromise.

An iron will and firm convictions marked out Baba Kharak Singh from the rest. While the Congress party accepted Dominion status as a first step towards the achievement of independence in1929, this man refused to compromise.

When Pandit Madan Mohan Malviya went to Baba Kharak Singh to request Baba Kharak Singh to give his support for the ‘Nehru Report’ which accepted Dominion status, the Baba said: “Panditji, I respect you but how can I accept semi-slavery?” Baba Kharak Singh did not bend and eventually the Congress revised its decision.

President Rajendra Prasad, writing about Baba Kharak Singh later said: “In the midst of fluid alignments and changing politics which swept many a patriot off his feet, Baba Kharak Singh ever remained steadfast to his convictions of sturdy and secular nationalism.”

After Partition, Baba Kharak Singh settled down in Delhi. He refused offers for any position and became an elder statesman of the nation and the Sikhs.

As Gurdit Singh Jolly, a 93 years old veteran freedom fighter who was a close associate of Baba Kharak Singh, recalled in a firm voice which belied his years:

“We could not celebrate the 84th birthday of Baba ji’s because of this ill-health. Pandit Nehru came to Baba Kharak Singh’s house near the Old Secretariat in Delhi, at 9:30 a.m. to greet Baba ji.

“We received the PM and ushered him to the drawing room where Baba ji was sitting. After the exchange of greetings, Nehru said: ‘To whom has this house been allotted?’

“Sant Singh Layalpuri said that the house had been allotted Baba ji’s grandson to compensate the loss suffered by the family in Pakistan (Baba ji’s son died in 1947 in a car accident in the Kuku valley)

“Nehru said: ‘Baba ji aap ke – before he could complete the sentence, Baba Kharak Singh snapped back:’Jawahar, mere ko kharidne aye ho?’ Jawaharlal Nehru was left speechless,” recalled Mr. Jolly, who witnessed the exchange, when I met him in New Delhi recently.

Two years earlier, on June 6, 1949, Nehru presented Baba Kharak Singh with a silver replica of the National Flag at a public function held to commemorate his birthday.

He had then said: “There are few hands which can uphold the honour and preserve the dignity of the National Flag better than those of Baba ji’s. Baba Kharak Singh’s record of honesty and integrity could not be easily equalled.”

Baba Kharak Singh died on October 6, 1963. Even in his death, he caused a stir.

“Pandit Nehru was in Parliament when he heard that Baba Kharak Singh had passed away. He rushed from Parliament to be by his bedside.

“When he arrived there he saw that Baba ji was still struggling. Nehru was angry at having to rush out on the midst of a Parliament session and he asked the doctors for an explanation. ‘Well technically he is dead. But this is some kind of a struggle going on within him,’ said the doctors. There he was, struggling till the very last”, recalls Mr. Jolly.

It is interesting to see how perceptive Baba Kharak Singh was. On July 10,1949. In an appeal to the nation he said:

“It is a matter of genuine pride that India has become free from foreign domination and I pray the Providence to bless my motherland with lasting prosperity and biding peace.

“But I regret to say that the lot of the common man in India has not much improved as it should have under the national government. Our Prime Minister (Nehru) is truly a great man worthy of the position that he hold, but I regret to observe that most of the things that he intends to do for the country’s good and many a declaration of policy he makes are nor fully implemented by those who are doing the day-to-day administration.

“Black marketing, corruption, jobbery (fraudulent official transactions) and several other vices are rampant both in the administration as well as outside. I am afraid that if drastic steps are not taken immediately and of nothing substantial is done effectively to stem this vicious tide, our hard-won freedom will be of little use.”

Baba Kharak Singh was describing the Indian scene of four decades ago. His advice still holds good, but just as it did not have much affect on those who were eulogising him then, it will have little impact on those who are in the power now." (With thanks from the source: http://www.sikhiwiki.org/index.php/Baba_Kharak_Singh#Recognition_of_his_Unity_stand)

Thanks for your time to read it.

Copyright by Dr. Harmander Singh-Protected and archived by World_Wide_OCR_dot_com Seal (TM) File, Canada
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Monday, September 12, 2011

How and Why Vedic Means Sanatana or Eternal Laws and Principles of Nature, Universe and Spirit: My TV Serial on India as Civilization - 1

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While writing my research report as concept, script, story, screenplay, and all about Ancient India in Modern Context mentioning great enlightened souls, I found a myth. Yes, one of the most common myth about the Vedas is of historical, mythological and religious aspects that seem to be ancient. We appear to take Indian Mythology as Vedic and thus something of the very past time, space and whatever we can include in the past.

My approved TV serial with pilot episode gave the clarifications we discuss here to Indian Mythology. My focus has been on the enlightened souls mentioned in Shri Guru Granth Sahib Ji, the Holy Book of Sikhs as the Living Guru. It includes almost all enlightened souls of India during and from 10-11th Century to 16-17th Century.

The Gurbani (Teachings of Shri Guru Granth Sahib Ji) as the Poetical teachings from all Indian sates and languages embraces past and present as Eternal. It starts by approving Bhakta Dhruva and Prahlada as the Icons of Spiritualism in the Divine World in which we live and call it the Natural World. They attained the Divine Wisdom.

 Now, why this concept seems a myth. Please read the following:

"...mode of worship is largely unchanged today within Hinduism; however, only a small fraction of conservative Shrautins continue the tradition of oral recitation of hymns learned solely through the oral tradition..." (With thanks from the source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_Vedic_religion)

We may lose the term Eternal laws and principles of natural world that never change in the universe. We may lack our insufficiency in finding the ancient knowledge and wisdom as Classical Music, Dance, Literature, Math, Science and lot more from India. All of it has one single term ETERNAL that is popular as Sanatana.

When we consider things in context to Space, Time and Relevancy, we may call anything ancient but wisdom has nothing to do with Time, Space and Relevancy in this context as Math, Music and Grammar is an example.

If we as Indians or who think Classical Indian Works as of great worth keep saying things of the past, we may never get the universal knowledge and wisdom.

So, the Vedic simply means what does not change with time and so we practice all of it in the Classical Arts, other works that are listed as Classical, and surely including the Six Schools of Philosophy:

"Hinduism is the predominant religious tradition[3] of the Indian Subcontinent. Hinduism is known to its followers[4] as Sanātana Dharma (a Sanskrit phrase meaning "the eternal law", "the eternal law that sustains/upholds/surely preserves"[5][6]), amongst many other expressions..." (With thanks from the source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanatana_dharma)

The other major point that seem to have made India as if merely a Hindu state seems as if something that hinders past as part and parcel for our present and thus future:

"...Originally, Hindu was a secular term which was used to describe all inhabitants and cultures of the Indian subcontinent (or Hindustan) irrespective of their religious affiliations. It also occurs sporadically in Sanskrit texts such as the later Rajataranginis of Kashmir (Hinduka, c. 1450), some 16th-18th century Bengali Gaudiya Vaishnava texts, including Chaitanya Charitamrita and Chaitanya Bhagavata, usually to contrast Hindus with Yavanas or Mlecchas.[20] It was only towards the end of the 18th century that the European merchants and colonists referred collectively to the followers of Indian religions as Hindus. Eventually, it came to define a precisely religious identity that includes any person of Indian origin who neither practiced Abrahamic religions nor non-Vedic Indian religions, such as Jainism, Buddhism, Sikhism, or tribal (Adivasi) religions, thereby encompassing a wide range of religious beliefs and practices related to "Sanātana Dharma".[21][22]..." (With thanks from the source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanatana_dharma)

The term Hinduism was introduced into the English language in the 19th century to denote the religious, philosophical, and cultural traditions native to India. Thus, in a way, Hinduism literally translates to "Indianism". [23]

Indian Women also played a great role in the Vedic Period and in modern context Vedic means of and from knowledge and wisdom. Who practices the original knowledge and wisdom is Vedic without ever referring to Time, Space, Age, Gender, Creed, Caste and all that gives us new identity and thus Vedic means whatever is Eternal..." (With thanks from the source:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vedic_science)

Thanks for your time to read it as How and Why Vedic Means Sanatana or Eternal Laws and Principles of Nature, Universe and Spirit: My TV Serial on India as Civilization.

The next part of this article is here: Lord Rama and Ravana: How and Why Vedic Means Sanatana or Eternal Laws and Principles of Nature, Universe and Spirit: My TV Serial on India as Civilization - 2

Philosophically every human is a metaphysical. Thanks again!

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Saturday, September 10, 2011

East and West: Brahman, Spirit, Nature, OM, and Universe as Adam and Eve: Words Need Attention

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There two words that confuse most of the people in the west. Many who assume to be very modern people in east also find these words as confusing the Hinduism and the Brahman. The associated words include Brahman and Nature. These has nothing to do with religion as such. The reason for it is that these are discussed in the Six Schools of Indian Philosophy not in the religions as they are.

These Six Schools differ a lot but are part of the Grand Indian Civilization. All students who follow it are known by various names. In general, Brahman as Philosopher or the Thinker, the Knowing person about the Spirit, Nature and Universe in these schools received great respect knowing Philosophy of the Six School. And, thus it seems a Brahmnical religion. Its not the case, many schools developed with various names like Buddhism, Sikhism, Jainism and many others that follow the Schools without claiming to be Hindus by religion.

Even the word OM is sound energy that is understanding the Quantum Physics and the Creation of the Universe. The Philosopher or Thinker of Indian Schools as the Brahman knows and understands it.

All religions follow philosophy, the spiritual or metaphysical part that we know as Philosophy of Religion.

This religious part is known as Samparda, say as if the name of the Religious University in which one is known more by religion than school of philosophy.

The Brahman is word for what Universe Produces as the Brahma, the Spirit in the Universe. The general term for Brahman is the one, who understands natural laws and principles of nature, spirit and universe. Now, nature is dealing with it similarly as Eve is from the Adam. The Adam means the Seed that sprouts as if after separating from the Spirit, the Brahma or Brahman in general. Both are used as synonymous many times. The Seed of the Universe creates the Nature.

So, the nature is usually addressed as Womb, the Eve. This respect for Eve makes people call Mother Nature. There is no other great significance as the main thing is the Seed. Female carries sperm in her blood which is from the father. Its not thus just matter of Ribs of Adam. She cannot give sperm other than present in her blood and that is of her father.

However, the Male while also having father's sperm in the blood gives the sperms of his own. This very simple biological term is referred as Eve from Adam due to Sperm that we also know as the Purusha in India.

Few words about how woman can produce child without man:

"In the second method, the need of a male is not absolutely essential. A human being can be created by only a female. That is why it is sometimes called asexual method. Every cell has a nucleus that contains the genes. The composition of genes decides the look of a person, the colour of hair, height and so on.

In this method, the egg cell is taken out of the womb and placed in a dish; its nucleus is removed and discarded. The nucleus of a normal cell taken from anywhere else in the body, say leg or arm, either of the same person or anyone else is placed in the egg cell. This egg cell is then placed in the womb of either the same female or any other female and develops into a baby. It will look exactly like the person whose nucleus is implanted into the empty egg cell. It will have nothing in common with the so-called mother.

It is possible to use egg cell from any female animal, say a cow, to clone a man by placing the nucleus of a human’s cell inside the emptied egg and then implant it into the womb of any woman. The resultant clone will look like the donor of the nucleus." (With thanks from the source: http://www.oocities.org/jkrworld/Cl.htm)


Thus, this Purusha has name Brahman or synonymous Brahma, the main Seed Giver and thus Lord Krishna calls himself as Seed.

The Seed has tree in it, so the Indian Philosophy projects human as an inverted tree having roots in the head or sky, and branches, the body as trunk with arms and legs.

We may not argue on things that have biological evidences.

Thanks for your time to read it as East and West: Brahman, Spirit, Nature, OM, and Universe as Adam and Eve: Words Need Attention

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Monday, August 22, 2011

God, Holy Spirit as the Shakti, Life, Nature: Concept of Philosophy, Religion, Name, Naam, Sound in Indian Civilization

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The Tenth Guru Nanak, Shri Guru Gobind Singh writes first God created the double edged sword (Negative and Positive), then the Universe. He created the play of Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva(Humans). On His command Durga kill's all negative powers. In this context Durga is the power of the Angels to defeat the demons. The Guru is not interested in the medium of the Hindu Goddess, he is interested in the Shakti given to her by God, which is God's own power." (With thanks from the source: http://www.sikhiwiki.org/index.php/Chandi_Di_Var)


In the Japuji Sahib, Shri Guru Nanak Dev Ji says: Kita Pasao Eko Kavao... means from one sound (the word) God created the world, the creation. It needs a little attention that the space always exists. It is matter of creation of life in the space or the creation of universe in which life exists. The Quantum Physics agrees that universe was created from sound, and thus the first of energy. This creation of life is creation of Shakti that further makes Creation gifted with all that we as humans understand. The word Shakti simply means Energy in both the living and the nonliving forms. The living ones have life, the Shakti in the invisible form though...

The nonliving things also have forms of energy that we know as Five Basic Elements, the Solid, Air, Fire, Water and above all Space. These cannot covert itself from one form to another without using the Shakti, the Energy. Thus, this form of energy that we call Shakti is living form. This is irony to say that God in Visible and Invisible forms are two. If we pinch our body and say that our invisible form feels pain in the invisible; it seems funny. Why? It seems that we need to consider what makes us known both the visible and the invisible, and all that occurs in it. Yes, its one...

This ONE has Trinity and that is not the point of one particular religion or faith. Its simply Science and follows the Dharma in its original form that we usually call Religion means understanding nature by being one with it. What does it mean to be ONE with nature and even GOD...

When one is ONE with ALL, it simply means realizing the self, the self-realization. Its very easy and yet very difficult when one considers Trinity as THREE different forms...

The Shakti, the living form of Energy is usually addressed as Holy Spirit in many religions as Holy Books, the Scriptures are having word Holy as the Prefix. The reason for it seems that most of the religions have feelings of great reverence and even worship the Spirit as the Shakti...


The Shkati obeys the command from God and thus it has nothing to do with any religion as such as in the Japuji Sahib Shri Guru Nanak Dev Ji says it thus: Eka Mayi Jugti Viayi Tin Chele Parvan... means One Spirit Produces the Three Powers that are, the Power of Creation (Brahma), Power to Sustain (Vishnu) and Power to Give New Forms to Any Change Shakti Causes (Shiva). We in India know it well that Shiv means Shav, the Dead and Shiva as its Energy Gives Life to it, means to the Dead and that is why known as Shakti of the Shiv (the Shiva)...


These Powers and Energy are One and has nothing to do with how one understands it. The way to self-realization does not get affected by it. However, if one keeps these three not as ONE in mind one cannot focus or meditate and realize the self... up to these levels all is just science and philosophy... further there are six schools of philosophy that lead one to understand the ONE...

Nyaya, the school of logic,

Vaisheshika, the atomist school,

Samkhya, the enumeration school,

Yoga, the school of Patanjali (which provisionally asserts the metaphysics of Samkhya),

Purva Mimamsa (or simply Mimamsa), the tradition of Vedic exegesis, with emphasis on Vedic ritual, and

Vedanta (also called Uttara Mimamsa), the Upanishadic tradition, with emphasis on Vedic philosophy.

(With thanks from the source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_philosophy)...

Please note again that these are schools of philosophy and one enters into any of these school and gains the knowledge for self-realization that become the religion and or faith. However, all of these remain the Wisdom Tree...

Accordingly one gets the name as Sikh, Hindu, and all that one knows in sects and other forms. The doctrines do not disregard any philosophy as Fifth Nanak Shri Guru Arjan says (in Shri Sukhmani Sahib): Sagal Matant Kewal Harinam... means that At the End (the Conclusion) of All Religions, Faiths and Philosophies is the Name, Naam. This is the Eternal Sound to which word name is refereed as the source and thus the unstruck sound, the First Eternal Form of Energy that remains even when there is no universe (in the Void). This to what all salute...



In the Holy Gita, Lord Krishna asks Arjuna to leave all religious bonds that do not allow to perform the duty assigned to him...


The most of the diversification that we observe in the Indian Civilization is due to the Six Schools of Philosophy, and it has nothing to do how people perform the rituals and religious activities, the Karma Kanda. 

The people who abuse philosophy harm the bridge that Indians inherit as scientific and religious knowledge from all possible which are also practiced in the world as Classical Arts, Dances, Yoga, Astronomy, and several other forms of action for the pure and applied form of Philosophy. For example, the aborigines in India know when the Tsunami comes. It is the knowledge and wisdom based on the observations that many people whom many call illiterate learn all of it orally... we need their knowledge and wisdom and this very thing also carries the term Veda... means Practical Wisdom...

The differences present among the Six Schools of Philosophy does not constitute any ground to claim that religions and faith in India differ, however in the case of selection with choice of any school does not mean that one can claim that others seem wrong. At the end, all Six Schools have one thing common and that is what we know as the Divine Wisdom, the Brahmgyana, the Wisdom of the Divine. Its highly intuitive and have high discerning power without being dual in nature. 

Thus, the Hinduism is more close to Philosophy than as it seems blend of many religions, faiths and sects with ism. Accordingly, the divisions that we have as diversification as Sikh, Hindu or Buddhist does not reflect the Philosophical differences but the School of Philosophy.

The major question that has become so is what Indian Philosophy with its Six Schools and otherwise say about Name, Word, Sound. We usually read word Namah like Om Namah Shivaye or Om Shri Ganeshaye Namah. The word Namah means salute to the Visbile Form. Grammatically it salues to OM using word Ganesha or Shiva. However, the direct salute is Naman. This Naman is from within not physical in nature.

The word Sri or Shri is for the Shakti that Creates the visible and one salutes to it. However, when one salutes directly to the Invisible God, the Shakti or Living form of Energy gets hidden into her first form the Sound. The sound is form of Energy in the Space that we know as Word. We call this Word Akhar in Punjabi or Akshra in Hindi and the Sanskrit, which means that never perishes. So, the word and sound does not perish.

Now, the Namah and Shri emerge into One Sound and that is OM. It includes both Shri in it as it has Form of Energy as Word, and thus OM by itself has both forms, the word and the sound. However, the word Rama when recited does not have Shri or Namah in it. We have many names to salute to the Invisible form in the nonphysical or metaphysical way and that is known as Nama, Naam, Name, etc.

We usually address someone with polite words Sri Hari Ji. Now, the Shri is for the visible, a salute. The word ending with Ji is respect, the Namah, but what makes one react is the name Hari. If we call Hari, one immediately reacts or responds to it. God or OM in general remains hidden in the words like Rama, Krishna, Waheguru and others as these need just feelings of reverence. It is from our heart that we salute to them and thus usually avoid Shri and Namah.

If one does not understand why so. Its because we do call our self as Respected Mr. Hari Ji. The very thing is that Hari is our own SELF and that is why Self-realization. 


Now, some people who think that man cannot be God seem to assume that no man can assume to be God, and in this context its true that no man can be God, but we are talking or discussing about the oneness present among God, His Shakti, the Power of Creation that creates life within the universe. 

Even the universe is just a body in which we live due to presence of life at our planet Earth in the Solar system. The self is the real and body is just flesh that no longer remains as one dies (saying it that all perishes simply mean that everything that has birth meets death).

The Indian Philosophy does not have its name as derived from the Greek word Philosophy (With thanks from the source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy). Indian thinkers whom we also know as Sages, the Rishi's and Muni's called it the Darshna (With thanks from the source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_philosophy). 

In it, the Darshna means the Seer, the Observer of knowledge and wisdom not just lover of it. This state is called being Drishta, the Seer and further the one, who can experience the real self, the Drishta and thus the Darshna. The word Seer seems further illustration so I have just added a video for it. The seer in the Indian Philosphy as the Darshan by no way seems to have anything to what it says in the words used the Divination.


Well, we can understand it from this video: http://metaphysicsinlife.blogspot.com/2011/08/how-indian-darshna-means-seer-observer.html



Thanks for your time reading it.!



Copyright by Dr. Harmander Singh-Protected and archived by World_Wide_OCR_dot_com Seal (TM) File, Canada
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Saturday, April 16, 2011

How History Creates Conflicts and Philosophy Resolves it - Why Religions and Faiths Seem to Fail

Detail of The School of Athens by Raffaello Sa...Image via Wikipedia
























What our youth lacks is Philosophy, particularly Metaphysics. The Philosophy is known as Darshan or Darshna in India which means to see the SELF or SOUL. Now, what history do we need to know the SELF and thus KNOW THYSELF is a universal and ETERNAL truth. History alone can never convince anyone no matter how great or true the facts and data is provided with most authentic way. So, the Indian Way of Wisdom Focuses on Darshna or Darshan of the God, Lord and or Self. We all pray for the Darshan and it is as if saying those who are PURE in HEART will SEE GOD. Now, to SEE GOD we need purity of heart. The self has no age and thus no history, which makes it ETERNAL. Why do we go for history has deep and intense need but after we understand its need.

If I know about Lord Rama and what to find him within I need a seeking for his Darshan which need history and philosophy. Otherwise, history is same as knowledge or big part of IT (Information Technology).

The Darhsna means Philosophy takes us away (beyond) space and time and thus we do need history after reading, the Swadhya, the Study for Self. When the desire to SEE is there history is also read. So, India is a country of philosophers and thinkers (they are known as Rishis's, Muni's, Sages and by so many other names.

What is benefit of chanting and singing name of Lord Rama, we feel his presence and thus start to love him and this Darshan with gives desire to know more about him and thus reading our Holy Ramaynan. It is relevant to most of the world religions and faiths; we start to learn about the greatness hidden in the parables and other riddles as it is in the Holy Bible. Then we get insight into the topic, we seem to want ready-made knowledge that we can feel, but metaphysically we need to understand the depth of wisdom without going for what the truth is historically or otherwise. How true are we depends up on what we have from our wisdom not from knowledge.

The knowledge is static but seems dynamic and thus can be used for any purpose. The manipulation of it can lead to controversies, conflicts and our taking no care of self. Why taking care of self, it is because self is hidden and what others see is our personality.

Wisdom is dynamic but may seem static and it is surely not static but dynamic. If we have focus on self-development, the knowledge about who and what we are in the mirror of wisdom, we can see our face of the self otherwise we may waste our life trying to please others by showing what either others want to see or we want to show.

Thus, history can be distorted and misused, the wisdom cannot be. Know Thyself cannot be made fool as we know history is collection of information and knowledge in the books and database, but wisdom is practical and one knows it without history or proofs. Why the metaphysics and all that has gone worldwide movement as New Age, New Era, Interfaith, and so on because the controversies that history can give are removed.

We at the same time seem to argue about the historical data that has conflicts. It has made all world religions and faiths as if one who believes in these is not a wise person. It seems that our focus on history has done it, and the New Age, New Era and other global movements supporting New World Order does not seem to have any conflict regarding anything.

Then why do we ignore Philosophy and Metaphysics in the Main World Religions seems a point of ignorance and when argument or conflicts seem there we tend to avoid or join some kind of movement that says things in a metaphysical way forgetting that all of it is already present in our own religious books and scriptures. Philosophy has no begining and end but history has and when we want historical facts and figures we may miss what we need KNOW THYSELF.

Thanks for your time to read it.
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Wednesday, March 16, 2011

What is India

What is India?                                                                                                   


About the Book What is India: Most important perhaps is the fact that there is no quarrel between ancient Indian philosophy and modern western science. In fact, as some western scientists quoted by Mr. Gewali have declared, Indian philosophy makes clearer the ideas of Physics. Thus we have the words of W. Heisenberg, “After the conversations about Indian philosophy, some of the ideas of Quantum Physics that had seemed so crazy suddenly made much more sense.” Of the ancient Indian texts, the Vedas, the Upanishads, and the Bhagavad Gita have been singled out by the western intellectuals quoted by Mr. Gewali. Thus in the words of Arthur. Schopenhauer, “In the whole world there is no study so beneficial and so elevating as that of the Upanishads. It has been the solace of my life; and it will be the solace of my death. They are the product of the highest wisdom.”


As to why these western intellectuals express so much awe, notwithstanding their own great accomplishments, can perhaps best be explained in terms of the uncalculated method used by the ancient Hindu sages – a method quite the opposite of that used by western thinkers. Unlike the latter, who use mainly speculative discursive argumentation, the Hindu sages first experienced the loftiest experiences. Only after this direct proof, did they write. There is therefore in their accounts of the divine, an indelible and scintillating stamp of the authentic – a stamp so alluring that foreign intellectuals easily detect in this Hindu wisdom, the highest knowledge of God.


The great love for India, which Mr. Gewali bears, is evident in the care with which he has compiled this work. He has taken care not only to collect quotations on India by source, but to provide us also with valuable biographical information and pictures of the intellectual giants he cites.

I wish to take this opportunity to congratulate Mr. Salil Gewali for this unique labor of love.

Thanks for your time reading it.

Please read more about the previews and foreword in the book here or at the Scribd as the above is from the Scribd with thanks. Thanks!
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India in the eyes of the western greats by Dr. Deepa Majumdar, Associate Professor, Philosophy, Purdue University North Central, USA

Three translations: Bhagavad Gita As It Is, a ...Image via Wikipedia









Every nation has its native essence, its unique historical destiny as carved by this essence, and its unique trajectory towards this destiny. At any point in its history, the citizens of a nation will be existentially apart from their nation, for they each have a birth and a death existentially separate from the birth and ongoing life of the nation. Therefore no citizen can, rationally speaking, claim in essence to belong wholly to any particular nationality. Much as we may love India, no Indian citizen can claim to be essentially Indian. We are each essentially human, and incidentally, by circumstance of birth, citizens of India.

Nevertheless, citizens define their nations and contribute to its ever living history. To do this consciously is far more effective than to do this out of blind patriotism. Inasmuch as our colonial wound is yet to be fully healed, the temptation towards blind patriotism is great indeed – all the more, given the uniquely marvelous history of India. The solution lies not in avoiding patriotism, but in engaging in this love for nation in the most circumspect way possible, with our focus wholly on the heart of our ancient civilization.

More than ever before, it is now that we need patriotism to fight the biggest temptation India has ever faced in her chequered history -- namely the temptation of mammon through the unguarded onslaught of capitalism. Since we may not yet be self-conscious enough to comprehend our own exceptionalism, to be articulated realistically and without egotism, we have no choice but to depend on the accolades heaped upon India by the intellectual giants of the western world, some of them from nations that were former colonizers.

Today, the greatest danger faced by a poor “third world” country, when confronted with westernization (understood as capitalism, science, and technology), is the terrible loss in wisdom (and the concomitant anguish) that comes as the inevitable price to be paid for the “benefit” of rank materialism. Whether or not a nation falls into this trap of materialism depends again on its inborn acumen and native telos. In the case of India, this immortal telos was declared by revered Swami Vivekananda to be entirely spiritual and mystical.

We are, in essence, not militaristic. Nor are we, in essence, commercial. Our unique heritage, bequeathed by generations of sages, is that which mammon can never destroy, nor money ever purchase ... namely, divine wisdom with a total focus on attaining the mystical state of nirvanic enlightenment. Yes post-independent India has shown few signs of such spirituality. She has fallen far from the Gandhian ideals of non-violence and tolerance.

She has surged towards capitalism with a ruthless greed. But what we see so far is perhaps only the short run. Before she turns around to her own native telos, like any other nation, India has to make her own mistakes. This makes it all the more imperative that we Indians remain keenly circumspect about our unique history.

It is in the light of this background that I appreciate all the more, Mr. Salil Gewali’s unique anthology of original quotations on India, collected painstakingly from some of the greatest intellectual giants from the west. Titled, What is India: Know the answer from the world renowned intellectual giants, this illustrated work, published by Academic Publications, is, I suggest, all the more welcome and necessary at this phase of India’s history. If we are to overcome not only external dangers like post-colonialism and capitalism, but also internal dangers like caste prejudices and the oppression of women --- if we are to fight the greatest danger of our times – namely the danger of rank cynicism --- we must return to the mystical pinnacle of our civilization to understand our uniqueness.

For India stands alone among the nations of the world in having made the direct empirical experience of God realization the heart, hallmark, and principle acumen of her unique historical journey. Where others explored the arts and sciences, or wrote elaborate intellectual theologies, India charted the science of mysticism aimed at the direct, unequivocal realization of God. It is from this fountainhead of God inspired experience that Hindu wisdom draws its power.

In this work, Mr. Gewali includes quotations from credible intellectual giants like T. S. Eliot, A. Einstein, W. Heisenberg, J. R. Oppenheimer, F. M. Voltaire, Mark Twain, R.W. Emerson, and A. Schopenhauer, among others. All these quotations express awe for ancient Hindu wisdom, often seen as the cradle of European knowledge – that very knowledge that was foisted on India through colonialism. Some of these western intellectuals are humble enough to openly acknowledge the far greater maturity of Indian thought compared to European philosophy. Thus, if we have at one extreme, the poet T. S. Eliot saying, “Indian philosophers’ subtleties make most of the great European philosophers look like schoolboys,” then we have at the other extreme, the scientist A. Einstein saying, “We owe a lot to Indians who taught us how to count, without which no worthwhile scientific discovery could have been made.”

Most important perhaps is the fact that there is no quarrel between ancient Indian philosophy and modern western science. In fact, as some western scientists quoted by Mr. Gewali have declared, Indian philosophy makes clearer the ideas of Physics. Thus we have the words of W. Heisenberg, “After the conversations about Indian philosophy, some of the ideas of Quantum Physics that had seemed so crazy suddenly made much more sense.” Of the ancient Indian texts, the Vedas, the Upanishads, and the Bhagavad Gita have been singled out by the western intellectuals quoted by Mr. Gewali. Thus in the words of Arthur. Schopenhauer, “In the whole world there is no study so beneficial and so elevating as that of the Upanishads. It has been the solace of my life; and it will be the solace of my death. They are the product of the highest wisdom.”

As to why these western intellectuals express so much awe, notwithstanding their own great accomplishments, can perhaps best be explained in terms of the uncalculated method used by the ancient Hindu sages – a method quite the opposite of that used by western thinkers. Unlike the latter, who use mainly speculative discursive argumentation, the Hindu sages first experienced the loftiest experiences. Only after this direct proof, did they write. There is therefore in their accounts of the divine, an indelible and scintillating stamp of the authentic – a stamp so alluring that foreign intellectuals easily detect in this Hindu wisdom, the highest knowledge of God.

The great love for India, which Mr. Gewali bears, is evident in the care with which he has compiled this work. He has taken care not only to collect quotations on India by source, but to provide us also with valuable biographical information and pictures of the intellectual giants he cites.

I wish to take this opportunity to congratulate Mr. Salil Gewali for this unique labor of love.

The book may be visited at :

http://www.scribd.com/doc/36498555/What-is-India#fullscreen:on

Thanks for your time reading it.
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