Tag: Ganesha

  • Shri Ganeshaye Namah Inscription Baku Ateshgah Azerbaijan

    Hinduism was in existence in the Caucasus Region, Iran and Urals.

    The Ancient Kingdom was known as UttaraKuru.

    Before Zoroastrianism came to hold its sway in Persia Hinduism was practiced.

    I shall be posting on Zend-Avesta, the Scripture of Zoroastrians and The Vedas.

    The Temple at Baku Ateshgah Azerbaijan contains inscription stating with Shri Ganeshaya Namah, the traditional Hindu way of praying.

    An inscription from the Baku Atashgah. The first line begins: I salute Lord Ganesha (श्री गणेसाय नम), the second venerates the holy fire (जवालाजी, Jwala Ji).Image.jpg
    An inscription from the Baku Atashgah. The first line begins: I salute Lord Ganesha (श्री गणेसाय नम), the second venerates the holy fire (जवालाजी, Jwala Ji) and dates the inscription to Samvat 1802 (संवत १८०२, or 1745-46 CE). The Persian quatrain below is the sole Persian inscription on the temple[7] and, though ungrammatical,[7] also refers to the fire (آتش) and dates it to 1158 (١١٥٨) Hijri, which is also 1745 CE. “Atashgah-inscription-jackson1911” by A. V. Williams Jackson (1862 – 1937) – From A. V. Williams Jackson’s book “From Constantinople to the Home of Omar Khayyam”. Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons – http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Atashgah-inscription-jackson1911.jpg#mediaviewer/File:Atashgah-inscription-jackson1911.jpg

     

    Sanskrit (above) and Persian (below) inscriptions from the Ateshgah (fire temple) of Baku, Azerbaijan. The Sanskrit inscription is a religious Hindu invocation in old Devanagari script while the Persian inscription is a couplet. The Sanskrit invocation begins with: I salute Lord Ganesh (श्री गणेशाय नमः), a standard beginning of most Hindu prayers. The second line venerates the holy fire Jwala Ji (जवालाजी). The inscription is dated to Vikram Samvat 1802 (संवत १८०२, i.e. 1745 CE). Unlike the several Sanskrit (written in Devanagari) and Punjabi (written in Gurmukhi) inscriptions in the temple, the Persian quatrain below is the sole Persian one and, though ungrammatical, also refers to the fire (آتش) and dates it to Hijri 1158 (١١٥٨, i.e. again 1745 CE). (From the source, “a quatrain in not very good Persian, the mistakes of which might have been made by a Hindu imperfectly acquainted with the language …”.)

    The Baku Ateshgah (from Persian: آتشگاه Atashgāh, Azerbaijani: Atəşgah or “Fire Temple” is an ancient Hindu castle-like religious temple dedicated to Jwala Ji in Surakhani,[2] a suburb of greater Baku, Azerbaijan, which was initially recognized as a Zoroastrian fire worship place. “Atash” (آتش) is the Persian word for fire. The pentagonal complex, which has a courtyard surrounded by cells for monks and a tetrapillar-altar in the middle, was built during the 17th and 18th centuries. It was abandoned after 1883[citation needed] when oil and gas plants were established in the vicinity, ending the flow of natural gas to the temple and extinguishing the holy fire.

    The Baku Ateshgah was a pilgrimage and philosophical centers of fire worshipers from Multan (now in Pakistan), who were involved in trade with the Caspian area via the famous “Grand Trunk Road”. The four holy elements of their belief were: ateshi (fire), badi (air), abi (water), and heki (earth). The temple ceased to be worshiped after 1883 with the installation of petroleum plants (industry) at Surakhany. The complex was turned into a museum in 1975. The annual number of visitors to the museum is 15,000.

    The Temple of Fire “Ateshgah” was nominated for List of World Heritage Sites, UNESCO in 1998 by Gulnara Mehmandarova — president of Azerbaijan Committee of ICOMOS—International Council on Monuments and Sites . It was also featured on an episode of Globe Trekker.’

     

    Azar’, meaning ‘fire’ in Old Persian, is derived from Avestan ‘atar’ which means ‘fire’.

    Avestan is  closely linked to Sanskrit. In Sanskrit, ‘agira’ (अगिर), ‘ashira’ (अशिर ), ‘agni’ ( अग्नि ), and ‘ushij’ (उशिज् ) all mean fire.

    The Avestan ‘atar’ derives from Sanskrit ‘agira’, just as the Latin ‘igneus’ derives from Sanskrit ‘agni’.

    The Avestan ‘Payegan’ which means ‘Protector’ derives from Sanskrit ‘palaka’ (पालक) which also means ‘protector’.

    The suffix ‘gana’ (गण) in Sanskrit means ‘a group’ or ‘troop’. ‘Palak-gaan’ in Sanskrit would therefore mean ‘protectors’ or ‘guardians’.

    In Rigveda ‘groups of gods’ were referred to as ‘devagana’ ( देवगण)

    The first syllable of ‘Zarath-ustra’ may well be a distortion of ‘harit’ meaning ‘golden’. In Persian ‘zarat’ also  means ‘golden’ and is derived from Sanskrit ‘harit’ via Avestan.

    The Sanskrit ‘ash’ (अष्) means ‘to shine’. ‘Zarathustra’ then means ‘one who shines like gold’.

     

    Citation.

    Baku Atashgah

  • Brahma Vishnu Ayodhya Brahmin Priests In Thailand

    Of all the lands of the world,South east Asia was most influenced by Hindusim.Sri Vijayama,Kataram,were some of the Empires which were ruled by the Tamil Kings.

    Thailnad Postage Stamps.jpg
    Thailnad Postage Stamps ,Hindu Gods.

    Names of the people in the region are more Sanskritic than even Indians.

     

    Brahma in Thailand.jpg
    Brahma Temple In Thailand. Image.”Thai 4 Buddies”. Licensed under CC BY-SA 2.5 via Wikimedia Commons – http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thai_4_Buddies.jpg#mediaviewer/File:Thai_4_Buddies.jpg

     

    ‘The epic, Ramakien, is based on the Ramayana. The city, Ayutthaya, is named after Ayodhya, the birthplace of Rama. Numerous rituals derived from Brahminism are preserved in rituals, such as use of holy strings and pouring of water from conch shells. Furthermore, Hindu deities are worshipped by many Thais alongside Buddhism, such as the famous Erawan Shrine, and statues of Ganesh, Indra, and Shiva, as well as numerous symbols relating to Hindu deities are found, e.g., Garuda, a symbol of the monarchy. The famous Hindu rituals of the Giant Swing and the Triyampavai-Tripavai ceremony depict a legend about how the god created the world.

    The élite, and the royal household, often employ Brahmans to mark funerals and state ceremonies such as the Royal Ploughing Ceremony to ensure a good harvest. The importance of Hinduism cannot be denied, even though much of the rituals has been combined with Buddhism.’

    Rajaguru

    Sri Siridhornkul arranged an interview with Phara Rajaguru Vamadevamuni, the Royal Priest of the Royal Household of Thailand, for Saturday evening. We met at Rajaguru’s temple, called Devasthana Bosth Brahmana, located in the Sao Ching Cha area of Bangkok. Rajaguru’s lineage of brahmins had been in Thailand so long, and intermarried with the Thai community, that he is completely Thai in appearance. When I first met him, I could just not take my eyes off his charming and royal face. His pony tail hair added to his divine looks. Rajaguru, a graceful, divine and soft-spoken person, discoursed at length in a down-to-earth manner about the challenges faced by the Hindu community in Thailand. [See sidebar opposite for the interview.]

    One person I spoke with later shared an incident which illustrated the Rajaguru’s influence. Two years back, I was told, a company started using Lord Hanuman in an advertisement for an anti-itching medicine. This person complained to the company, and to other Hindu organizations, but to no avail. He then brought the matter to the Rajaguru, who in turn spoke to the police. The police requested the company to discontinue the advertisement, which they did.

    Hurditya observed, “The role of Rajaguru today is to conduct pujas for the Royal Family. I do not think that what he does has much impact on the youth. And then only one person cannot revive the five million population of Bangkok. I see that he wants to revive Hinduism, but it is a hard job. If it continues the way it is [with the youth not being interested], Hinduism is going to disappear from this country in the future, for both Thais and Indians.”

    Citation,

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erawan_Shrine

    Thailand Hinduism

  • Sex Education Hindu Pyramid Temple Sukuh Java

    That Hinduism spread far is one fact, another fact is that Hinduism considers Sex as neither a Sin nor something to be abhorred.

    It advises Moderation, more specifically controlled enjoyment of pleasures.

    An ancient Temple , intended for ancestor worship primarily has Sex education as it theme in the Reliefs in the Temple,.

    This Temple is in Sukuh,Java,Indonesia.

    As is normal it was vandalised by Islam in the fourteenth century.

    http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AKeris_Relief_at_Sukuh_Temple.jpg
    English: The scene in bas relief of Sukuh Temple in Central Java dated from 15th century Majapahit era shows the workshop of a Javanese keris blacksmith. The scene depicted Bhima as the blacksmith in the left forging the metal, Ganesha in the center, and Arjuna in the right operating the tube blower to pump air into the furnace. The wall behind the blacksmith displays various items manufactured in the forge, including keris. These representations of the keris in Candi Sukuh established the fact that by the year 1437 the keris had already gained an important place within Javanese culture.http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8f/Keris_Relief_at_Sukuh_Temple.jpg.By Gunawan Kartapranata (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0) or GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html)], via Wikimedia Commons

    Sukuh (Indonesian: Candi Sukuh Indonesian pronunciation: [ˈtʃandi ˈsukʊh]) is a 15th-century Javanese-Hindu temple (candi) that is located on the western slope of Mount Lawu (elevation 910 metres (2,990 ft)) on the border between Central and East Java provinces.

    Sukuh temple has a distinctive thematic reliefs from other candi where life before birth and sexual education are its main theme. Its main monument is a simple pyramid structure with reliefs and statues in front of it, including three tortoises with flattened shells and a male figure grasping his penis. A giant 1.82 m (6 ft) high of lingga (phallus) with four balls, representingpenile incisions, was one of the statues that has been relocated to the National Museum of Indonesia.

    Candi Sukuh in eastern Central Java.jpg
    Sukuh Temple.Candi Sukuh in eastern Central Java.By Merbabu (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0) or GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html)], via Wikimedia Commons

    Sukuh is one of several temples built on the northwest slopes of Mount Lawu in the 15th century. By this time, Javanese religion and art had diverged from Indian precepts that had been so influential on temples styles during the 8th–10th centuries. This was the last significant area of temple building in Java before the island’s courts were converted to Islam in the 16th century. It is difficult for historians to interpret the significance of these antiquities due to the temple’s distinctiveness and the lack of records of Javanese ceremonies and beliefs of the era.

     

    The founder of Candi Sukuh thought that the slope of Mount Lawu was a sacred place for worshiping the ancestors and nature spirits and for observance of the fertility cults.[3]The monument was built around 1437, as written as a chronogram date on the western gate, meaning that the area was under the rule of the Majapahit Kingdom during its end (1293–1500). Some archaeologists believe the founder had cast the fall of Majapahit, based on the reliefs that displaying the feud between two aristocratic houses, symbolizing two internal conflicts in the kingdom.

    In 1815, Sir Thomas Raffles, the ruler of Java during 1811–1816, visited the temple and found it in bad condition.In his account, many statues had been thrown down on the ground and most of the figures had been decapitated. Raffles also found the giant lingga statue broken into two pieces, which was then glued together. This vandalism of traditional culture (especially where sexuality is not suppressed, as in the statues) is likely to be an effect of the Islamic invasion of Java during the 16th century, based upon the identical patterns found in all other Islamic and monotheistic invasions generally.

    The central pyramid of the complex sits at the rear of the highest of three terraces. Originally, worshippers would have accessed the complex through a gateway at the western or lowest terrace. To the left of the gate is a carving of a monster eating a man, birds in a tree, and a dog, which is thought to be a chronogram representing 1437 CE, the likely date of the temple’s consecration. There is an obvious depiction of sexual intercourse in a relief on the floor at the entrance where it shows a paired lingam which is represented physiologically by the (phallus) and yoni, which is represented bodily by the (vagina). Genitalia are portrayed on several statues from the site, which is unique among Javanese classical monuments.

    The wall of the main monument has a relief portraying two men forging a weapon in a smithy with a dancing figure of Ganesha, the most important Tantric deity, having a human body and the head of an elephant. In Hindu-Java mythology, the smith is thought to possess not only the skill to alter metals, but also the key to spiritual transcendence.Smiths drew their powers to forge a kris from the god of fire; and a smithy is considered as a shrine. Hindu-Javanese kingship was sometimes legitimated and empowered by the possession of a kris

    The elephant head figure with a crown in the smithy relief depicts Ganesha, the god who removes obstacles in Hinduism. The Ganesha figure, however, differs in some small respects with other usual depictions. Instead of sitting, the Ganesha figure in Candi Sukuh’s relief is shown dancing and it has distinctive features including the exposed genitalia, the demonic physiognomy, the strangely awkward dancing posture, the rosary bones on its neck and holding a small animal, probably a dog. The Ganesha relief in Candi Sukuh has a similarity with the Tantric ritual found in the history of Buddhism in Tibet written by Taranatha.[5] The Tantric ritual is associated with several figures, one of whom is described as the “King of Dogs” (Sanskrit: Kukuraja), who taught his disciples by day, and by night performed Ganacakra in a burial ground or charnel ground.

    Other statues in Candi Sukuh include a life-sized male figure with his hand grasping his own penis and three flattened shells of tortoises. Two large tortoise statues guard the pyramid entrance and the third one lies at some distance in front of the monument. All of their heads point to the west and their flattened shells may provide altars for purification rituals and ancestor worship.In Hindu mythology, the tortoise symbolizes the base or support of the World and is an avatar of Vishnu, i.e. Kurma refer: Ocean of Milk.

    Citation.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sukuh

  • Ganesha Mouse A Flying Machine? Inca Painting

    Incas were the pre-Columbian people in Latin Amrica and their culture was a highly evolved one.

    They were Sun worshipers just as the Hindus worship the Sun.

    I will be posting detailed article on Incas and Sanatana Dharma.

    Lord Ganesha has the Mouse,’Mushika’and He is called as Maha Kaaya, one who has a Large Body.

    Though the legend has it that Mooshika was an Asura and after having been vanquished by Ganesha became His vehicle, there may be a different approach to this.

    The Fourteen Lokas mentioned in Hinduism denote mental and spiritual development , there are also indications that they may Planes at different levels of Existence.

    Quantum Physics has proved this and they have come upto 11 planes of Existence.

    Still three more to go.

    Please read my posts on this under Hinduism, Astrophysics.

    And Vishnu’s navel is the Milkyway Galaxy(Check my post on this).

    Proceeding on these lines, there are indications that the vechicles, Vahanas of Gods may have some thing to do with Space Travel.

    Erich Von Daniken is of this view.

    Ganesha with Mushika Vahana.jpg
    Ganesha with Mushika.Flying Machine?

    Ganesha’s Vehicle, A Flying Machine.

    Ganesha and Mouse Inca Panel.jpg
    On an ancient Incan panel you find a central figure,considerably larger than the other two figures, seated on a ‘mushaka’ or mouse. Is that Sri Ganesha? He was known as ‘Mahakaya’ (महाकाय) on account his being ‘large bodied’. And his vehicle was a ‘mouse.

     

    Inca Panel, Ancient Astrronaut,jpg
    https://ramanisblog.in/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/56f26-ancientastronautsarcophagus.jpg
    https://ramanisblog.in/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/a9a4e-ancientastranaut.jpg
    https://ramanisblog.in/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/a9a4e-ancientastranaut.jpg

     

    Seen here are ancient artifacts from South America. Was Sri Ganesha's 'trunk' really a 'breathing apparatus'.
    Seen here are ancient artifacts from South America. Was Sri Ganesha’s ‘trunk’ really a ‘breathing apparatus’.

    ‘Mouse’ originates from PIE ‘mus’.

    PIE is an engineered language.

    Most likely the source of ‘mouse’ is the Sanskrit ‘mushaka’ (मूषक) meaning ‘mouse’.

    Citation.

    http://vediccafe.blogspot.in/2014_03_01_archive.html

  • Shiva With Third Eye Dance By Australian Tribe

    Sanatana Dharma spread far and wide throughout the world.

    Middle east,Europe, Africa,Latin America, Americas,England, Sweden,Arctic,Russia,Iran, Burma,Indonesia, Japan,Vietnam,Laos, Cambodia,Fiji,Polynesian Islands, New Zealand and Australia.

    The dance of Lord Shiva.jpg
    Cosmic Dance of Shiva

    A group led by Shiva and Ganesha left from the South of India and traveled to Arctic through the middle east, Europe, Africa,Americas,before returning to Sarasvati valley through Russia and Iran.

    Earlier to this event , the Sanatna Dharma was in the Super Continent of Gondwana and spread easily to Australia.

    There is  also a reference that Australia might have been the repository for weapons, Astra Alaya.

    The wild native tribes of Australia, dance with a ‘Third Eye” painted on their forehead called the ‘Siva Dance’.  (Spencer and Gillen, “The Natives tribes of Central Australia, Figures 128-129, page 21.)

    About 5 km to the north of the township of Gympie in south-east Queensland is a structure (or series of structures) which has become known as the ‘Gympie Pyramid’.
    There have been many differing claims as to its origins and function. Some of these claims have been quite controversial and gained considerable media attention beginning in 1956 through to the present. In preparing this paper I investigated the various claims and the local folk-lore which surrounds the ‘pyramid’ and attempted to place these in a context which is supported by empirical or historical fact. Documentation was scarce which has meant that the results of my investigation tend to highlight what the structure is not rather than what it is. I hope to remedy this situation by completing a more detailed survey of the site in early 1990…”

    Astra in Sanskrit means weapons, arrows, Aalaya means home,

     

    Australia  might mean home of weapons.

     

    Atomic weapons were used in Mahabharata battle.

     

    Read my articles on this.

    Citation.

    http://rajavedapatasala.org/FAQ2.html

    https://ramanisblog.in/2015/01/16/australia-home-of-weapons-ramayana/