Tag: Religion

  • ‘Lost’ Mind Space.

    This is in continuation of my Post on Hinduism,JK.

    As I was saying about the film ‘Gravity’ dealing with the psychological aspect of being stranded in Space,I started thinking on the meaning of being ‘Lost’

    In general terms  by losing we convey the sense that we have not been able to have what we had,or we do not know where what we had been using was gone.

    In the case of Objects, we try to recollect,in many cases one visits the places mentally, some even physically(which I do, if it is my Home, to recall what had happened.

    In most of the cases we do find what we thought we lost.

    Excepting in cases where others have wantonly taken or hid them .

    Then we repossess them.

    Before we think of this, let us see what this ‘Lost’ means  in other contexts.

    Many say or feel they are lost in Thoughts or lost in confusion.

    in these cases what happens is that people are concentrating on a particular thought or indecision and fear of taking decision to the exclusion of everything else.

    So in effect their losing in things is illusory but a diversion in something else.

    So effectively they do not lose anything, or do they?

    The examples quoted above relate to mental images and they exist/existed only in the Mind.

    And as such they have as much Reality of being or having been with us before or their continued association with us.

    Therefore the term Lost does not really mean losing but a change of mental state.

    If the mental states are the criteria, which they really are, then, all the things we we experience fall under the same category and need not los(?!) sleep over it.

    As put by Hinduism aptly we are but temporarily Trustees of all things here, nothing more.

    It may not be out-of-place to mention an interesting fact.

    Tamil, a Language in India is as ancient as Sanskrit.

    Tamil has a word for parents ,’Petror’, ,’பெற்றோர் ‘   ‘meaning those who beget.

    It implies that even children , whom we pride ourselves of our own blood are not our own to call them as such.

    We beget them, that’s all.

    So all we have here is on a Trusteeship basis, nothing is owned by us to lose.

    Now to the question of being lost in Space.

    You lose yourself only when you have some fixed point.

    You can fix West if you know where you are,, whether you re in the East, South or the North .

    If you can not or do not have a reference as to where you are , how do you say you are lost for both the statements have no reference.

    At best we can say we disoriented and remain scared.

    How about being disoriented or lost to one self.

    In the next Post.

  • Six Sinners Who Can Be Killed Without Mercy

    Though there are many sins listed in Hinduism, Six sins are rated as the worst sins and one does not beget sin by killing those who commit them.

    These sins are listed in the Vasishta Smriti and Manu Smriti.

    Hell, Hinduism.
    Hindu Concept of Hell.

    They are,

    1.Arsonist,

    2.One who poisons,

    3.One who attempts to kill, with arms, one without arms,

    4.One who grabs another’s wealth.

    5.Who grabs another’s Land and

    6.One who kidnaps, rapes another’s wife.

    They are called the ‘aadhadhayees’

    These six are worthy of being killed without a second thought.

    ‘Aaadhadhayye Namayaandham Hanyaaathe vaavicharayan,

    Naadhadhayevadhe dhosho handhurbhavati Kaschana. Manu Smriti (8/350/351)

    No sin accrues by killing one who comes with the intention of killing.

    Agnitho Karadhaschiva sastrapanirthanabhah,

    kshetrathaarobaharta ca shdadhe hyadhatathatyinah’   Vasitha Smriti (3 /19)

    The meaning of this has been listed at the top,

    However, there is another interesting view on Killing.

    Sa Eva Papishtodhamo yah kurayath Kula Naasanam’

    He is the greatest Sinner who destroys his Family/ Kin. –Smriti

    No wonder why Arjuna was confused in Arjuna Vishada Yoga(Chapter 1 The Bhagavad Gita)

    Lord Krishna explains elsewhere in the Gita.

    Subtle are the ways of the Dharama, even the most Learned would find it difficult to understand that.

  • Manu Smriti ,Who A Brahmin Is How To Learn Veda

    I have devoted some posts on this subject.

    I have been asked by email the Manu Smriti‘s stand on Brahmins and the discipline needed to learn the Vedas.

    Laws of Manu
    Manu Smriti.

    I am reproducing  aversion of Manu Smriti on this and you may read the Full Text in the Link.

    You would find details on this and also on Naming of Children and a host of information.

    Manu Smriti, Chapter II.

    1. Learn that sacred law which is followed by men learned (in the Veda) and assented to in their hearts by the virtuous, who are ever exempt from hatred and inordinate affection.

    2. To act solely from a desire for rewards is not laudable, yet an exemption from that desire is not (to be found) in this (world): for on (that) desire is grounded the study of the Veda and the performance of the actions, prescribed by the Veda.

    3. The desire (for rewards), indeed, has its root in the conception that an act can yield them, and in consequence of (that) conception sacrifices are performed; vows and the laws prescribing restraints are all stated to be kept through the idea that they will bear fruit.

    4. Not a single act here (below) appears ever to be done by a man free from desire; for whatever (man) does, it is (the result of) the impulse of desire.

    5. He who persists in discharging these (prescribed duties) in the right manner, reaches the deathless state and even in this (life) obtains (the fulfilment of) all the desires that he may have conceived.

    6. The whole Veda is the (first) source of the sacred law, next the tradition and the virtuous conduct of those who know the (Veda further), also the customs of holy men, and (finally) self-satisfaction.

    7. Whatever law has been ordained for any (person) by Manu, that has been fully declared in the Veda: for that (sage was) omniscient.

    8. But a learned man after fully scrutinising all this with the eye of knowledge, should, in accordance with the authority of the revealed texts, be intent on (the performance of) his duties.

    9. For that man who obeys the law prescribed in the revealed texts and in the sacred tradition, gains fame in this (world) and after death unsurpassable bliss.

    10. But by Sruti (revelation) is meant the Veda, and by Smriti (tradition) the Institutes of the sacred law: those two must not be called into question in any matter, since from those two the sacred law shone forth.

    11. Every twice-born man, who, relying on the Institutes of dialectics, treats with contempt those two sources (of the law), must be cast out by the virtuous, as an atheist and a scorner of the Veda.

    12. The Veda, the sacred tradition, the customs of virtuous men, and one’s own pleasure, they declare to be visibly the fourfold means of defining the sacred law.

    13. The knowledge of the sacred law is prescribed for those who are not given to the acquisition of wealth and to the gratification of their desires; to those who seek the knowledge of the sacred law the supreme authority is the revelation (Sruti).

    14. But when two sacred texts (Sruti) are conflicting, both are held to be law; for both are pronounced by the wise (to be) valid law.

    15. (Thus) the (Agnihotra) sacrifice may be (optionally) performed, at any time after the sun has risen, before he has risen, or when neither sun nor stars are visible; that (is declared) by Vedic texts.

    16. Know that he for whom (the performance of) the ceremonies beginning with the rite of impregnation (Garbhadhana) and ending with the funeral rite (Antyeshti) is prescribed, while sacred formulas are being recited, is entitled (to study) these Institutes, but no other man whatsoever.

    17. That land, created by the gods, which lies between the two divine rivers Sarasvati and Drishadvati, the (sages) call Brahmavarta.

    18. The custom handed down in regular succession (since time immemorial) among the (four chief) castes (varna) and the mixed (races) of that country, is called the conduct of virtuous men.

    19. The plain of the Kurus, the (country of the) Matsyas, Pankalas, and Surasenakas, these (form), indeed, the country of the Brahmarshis (Brahmanical sages, which ranks) immediately after Brahmavarta.

    20. From a Brahmana, born in that country, let all men on earth learn their several usages.

    21. That (country) which (lies) between the Himavat and the Vindhya (mountains) to the east of Prayaga and to the west of Vinasana (the place where the river Sarasvati disappears) is called Madhyadesa (the central region).

    22. But (the tract) between those two mountains (just mentioned), which (extends) as far as the eastern and the western oceans, the wise call Aryavarta (the country of the Aryans).

    23. That land where the black antelope naturally roams, one must know to be fit for the performance of sacrifices; (the tract) different from that (is) the country of the Mlekkhas (barbarians).

    24. Let twice-born men seek to dwell in those (above-mentioned countries); but a Sudra, distressed for subsistence, may reside anywhere.

    25. Thus has the origin of the sacred law been succinctly described to you and the origin of this universe; learn (now) the duties of the castes (varna).

    26. With holy rites, prescribed by the Veda, must the ceremony on conception and other sacraments be performed for twice-born men, which sanctify the body and purify (from sin) in this (life) and after death.

    27. By burnt oblations during (the mother’s) pregnancy, by the Gatakarman (the ceremony after birth), the Kauda (tonsure), and the Maungibandhana (the tying of the sacred girdle of Munga grass) is the taint, derived from both parents, removed from twice-born men.

    28. By the study of the Veda, by vows, by burnt oblations, by (the recitation of) sacred texts, by the (acquisition of the) threefold sacred science, by offering (to the gods, Rishis, and manes), by (the procreation of) sons, by the great sacrifices, and by (Srauta) rites this (human) body is made fit for (union with) Brahman.

    29. Before the navel-string is cut, the Gatakarman (birth-rite) must be performed for a male (child); and while sacred formulas are being recited, he must be fed with gold, honey, and butter.

    30. But let (the father perform or) cause to be performed the Namadheya (the rite of naming the child), on the tenth or twelfth (day after birth), or on a lucky lunar day, in a lucky muhurta, under an auspicious constellation.

    31. Let (the first part of) a Brahmana’s name (denote something) auspicious, a Kshatriya‘s be connected with power, and a Vaisya‘s with wealth, but a Sudra’s (express something) contemptible.

    32. (The second part of) a Brahmana’s (name) shall be (a word) implying happiness, of a Kshatriya’s (a word) implying protection, of a Vaisya’s (a term) expressive of thriving, and of a Sudra’s (an expression) denoting service.

    33. The names of women should be easy to pronounce, not imply anything dreadful, possess a plain meaning, be pleasing and auspicious, end in long vowels, and contain a word of benediction.

    34. In the fourth month the Nishkramana (the first leaving of the house) of the child should be performed, in the sixth month the Annaprasana (first feeding with rice), and optionally (any other) auspicious ceremony required by (the custom of) the family.

    35. According to the teaching of the revealed texts, the Kudakarman (tonsure) must be performed, for the sake of spiritual merit, by all twice-born men in the first or third year.

    36. In the eighth year after conception, one should perform the initiation (upanayana) of a Brahmana, in the eleventh after conception (that) of a Kshatriya, but in the twelfth that of a Vaisya.

    37. (The initiation) of a Brahmana who desires proficiency in sacred learning should take place in the fifth (year after conception), (that) of a Kshatriya who wishes to become powerful in the sixth, (and that) of a Vaisya who longs for (success in his) business in the eighth.

    38. The (time for the) Savitri (initiation) of a Brahmana does not pass until the completion of the sixteenth year (after conception), of a Kshatriya until the completion of the twenty-second, and of a Vaisya until the completion of the twenty-fourth.

    39. After those (periods men of) these three (castes) who have not received the sacrament at the proper time, become Vratyas (outcasts), excluded from the Savitri (initiation) and despised by the Aryans.

    40. With such men, if they have not been purified according to the rule, let no Brahmana ever, even in times of distress, form a connexion either through the Veda or by marriage.

    41. Let students, according to the order (of their castes), wear (as upper dresses) the skins of black antelopes, spotted deer, and he-goats, and (lower garments) made of hemp, flax or wool.

    42. The girdle of a Brahmana shall consist of a of a triple cord of Munga grass, smooth and soft; (that) of a Kshatriya, of a bowstring, made of Murva fibres; (that) of a Vaisya, of hempen threads.

    43. If Munga grass (and so forth) be not procurable, (the girdles) may be made of Kusa, Asmantaka, and Balbaga (fibres), with a single threefold knot, or with three or five (knots according to the custom of the family).

    44. The sacrificial string of a Brahmana shall be made of cotton, (shall be) twisted to the right, (and consist) of three threads, that of a Kshatriya of hempen threads, (and) that of a Vaisya of woollen threads.

    45. A Brahmana shall (carry), according to the sacred law, a staff of Bilva or Palasa; a Kshatriya, of Vata or Khadira; (and) a Vaisya, of Pilu or Udumbara.

    46. The staff of a Brahmana shall be made of such length as to reach the end of his hair; that of a Kshatriya, to reach his forehead;

    (and) that of a Vaisya, to reach (the tip of his) nose.

    47. Let all the staves be straight, without a blemish, handsome to look at, not likely to terrify men, with their bark perfect, unhurt by fire.

    48. Having taken a staff according to his choice, having worshipped the sun and walked round the fire, turning his right hand towards it, (the student) should beg alms according to the prescribed rule.

    49. An initiated Brahmana should beg, beginning (his request with the word) lady (bhavati); a Kshatriya, placing (the word) lady in the middle, but a Vaisya, placing it at the end (of the formula).

    50. Let him first beg food of his mother, or of his sister, or of his own maternal aunt, or of (some other) female who will not disgrace him (by a refusal).

    Source:

    http://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/manu/manu02.htm

  • Navaratri 2013 E Book Free Download.

    I have posted a blog on the essence of Navaratri,Golu.

    Couple of Posts on the Slokas Poojas details  have been posted in the site.

    Mahalakshmi.gif
    Mahalakshmi

    Navaratri 2016.

    Navratri Day 1 – October 1, 2016 – Ghatsthapana – Navratri Begins
    Navratri Day 1 – October 2, 2016 – Chandra Darshan (Tithi is repeated)

    Navratri Day 2 – October 3, 2016 – Sindoor Tritiya

    Navratri Day 3 – October 4, 2016  – Varad Vinayak Chaturthi

    Navratri Day 4 – October 5, 2016 – Upang Lalita Vrat – Lalitha Panchami

    Navratri Day 5 – October 6, 2016 – Saraswati Awahan

    Navratri Day 6 – October 7, 2016 – Saraswathi Puja (western parts of India)

    Navratri Day 7 – October 8, 2016 – Saraswathi Balidan – Maha Lakshmi Puja (western parts of India)

    Navratri Day 8 – October 9, 2016 – Mahashtami – Annapoorna Parikrama – Saraswati Visarjan – Mahanavami fasting

    Navratri Day 9 – October 10, 2016 – Mahanavami  

    The tenth day is celebrated as Dasara or Vijaya Dashami.


    Note – Navratri day 9 and 10 are marked on same date in many calendars.
    South India
    In South India, Goddess Durga is worshipped during the first three days.
    Goddess Lakshmi is worshipped during the next three days
    Goddess Saraswathi is worshipped during the last three days.

    The Navratri commences on the first day (pratipada) of the bright fortnight of the lunar month of Ashwin.

    The festival is celebrated for nine nights once every year during the beginning of October, although as the dates of the festival are determined according to the lunar calendar, the festival may be held for a day more or a day less.

    The Navratri commences on the first day (pratipada) of the bright fortnight of the lunar month of Ashwin.

    The festival is celebrated for nine nights once every year during the last week of September/ beginning of October, although as the dates of the festival are determined according to the lunar calendar, the festival may be held for a day more or a day less.

    The term more or less  is not indicative of ambiguity.

    It is because the date varies depending on the fact whether you follow the Solar or the Lunar Calendar, Surya or Soura Manasa, or Chandra Manasa

    Now the Kanchi Periyava Forum, dedicated to the Maha Periyavr has provided a Link for an E Book on Navaratri, which is quite informative.

    You may download it for reference.

    In the Sankalpa make suitable alterations.

    Sources:

    http://www.when-is.com/navaratri-2013.asp

    For book in Google Drive, click the following Link.

    https://docs.google.com/file/d/0BwuDCferB6sJZHVKTW9qZEhOYmM/edit?usp=drive_web

    Navarathri is celebrated five times a year. They are Vasanta Navaratri, Ashadha Navaratri, the Sharada Navaratri, and the Paush/Magha Navaratri. Of these, the Sharada Navaratri of the month of Puratashi and the Vasanta Navaratri of the Vasanta kala are very important.

     

    1. Vasanta Navaratri: Basanta Navaratri, also known as Vasant Navaratri, is the festival of nine days dedicated to the nine forms of Shakti (Mother Goddess) in the spring season (March–April). It is also known as Chaitra Navaratri. The nine days of festival is also known as Raama Navratri.

     

    2. Gupta Navaratri: Gupta Navaratri, also referred as Ashadha or Gayatri or ShakambhariNavaratri, is nine days dedicated to the nine forms of Shakti (Mother Goddess) in the month of Ashadha (June–July). Gupta Navaratri is observed during the Ashadha Shukla Paksha(waxing phase of moon).

     

    3. Sharada Navaratri: This is the most important of the Navaratris. It is simply called Maha Navaratri (the Great Navratri) and is celebrated in the month of Ashvina. Also known as Sharad Navaratri, as it is celebrated during Sharad (beginning of winter, September–October).

    http://ramanisblog.in/2012/10/14/navarathri-golu-essential-details/

    http://ramanisblog.in/2012/10/15/navratri-puja-slokas-2-day-i-3-slokas-audio-text/