Tag: Rig Veda

  • Meru Arctic, Kashmir, Tanzania ,Celestial?

    Mount Meru is mentioned in all the Puranas, especially while talking of the Evolution of The Universe.

    Jambudvipa lies in the middle of all Mortal Realms and in its center is the lofty Mt. Meru, bright as gold. Its height is 84,000 yojanas, and it extends 16,000 yojanas below the earth; its width at the top is 32,000 and at the base is 16,000 yojanas.

    -Kurma Purana.

    Name Width Height/Depth
    Sumeru (Sineru) mountain 80,000 yojanas 80,000 yojanas
    Sea 80,000 yojanas 80,000 yojanas
    Yugandhara mountains 40,000 yojanas 40,000 yojanas
    Sea 40,000 yojanas 40,000 yojanas
    Iṣadhara (Isadhara) mountains 20,000 yojanas 20,000 yojanas
    Sea 20,000 yojanas 20,000 yojanas
    Khadiraka (Karavīka) mountains 10,000 yojanas 10,000 yojanas
    Sea 10,000 yojanas 10,000 yojanas
    Sudarśana (Sudassana) mountains 5,000 yojanas 5,000 yojanas
    Sea 5,000 yojanas 5,000 yojanas
    Aśvakarṇa (Assakaṇṇa) mountains 2,500 yojanas 2,500 yojanas
    Sea 2,500 yojanas 2,500 yojanas
    Vinadhara (Vinataka) mountains 1,250 yojanas 1,250 yojanas
    Sea 1,250 yojanas 1,250 yojanas
    Nimindhara (Nemindhara) mountains 625 yojanas 625 yojanas
    Outer Sea 32,000 yojanas relatively shallow
    Cakravāḍa (Cakkavāḷa) mountains(circular edge of the world) 312.5 yojanas 312.5 yojanas

     

    Mount Meru is also considered Divne and is ver Holy for the Sakthi Upasakas.

    Lalitatha Sahsranama  referrs  ‘Meru Mandla Madhyastha’

    This house is described in detail in the Brahmaanda Purana,”In that house of Chintamani all is Chintamani.”This house having an extent of a thousand yojanas is above the world system.

     

    The Rudrayaamala says,”In that Chintamani house of a thousand yojanas in extent.

     

    “The house which is on Meru is smaller in size. ‘

    https://ramanisblog.in/2014/04/17/lalitha-devis-abode-chinatmani-gruham-details/

     

    There are views that this Mountain is terrestrial.

    Some Hindu traditions place it in The Arctic.

    1.There is evidence that the Rig Veda was composed in the Arctic.

    I have  a post on this.

    Bal Gangadhar Tilak subscribes to this view.

    The Arctic region today, comprises of kilometers thick sheets of Ice spread for miles together, with hardly any land or vegetation on it.. But, what if the North Pole, at some time in its history, did support land as well as vegetation???
    My research, turned up evidence that North Pole INDEED boasted of a continent right until the Miocene Period which however, got submerged during the subsequent Ice-Ages (!!). According to latest geological evidence, the last Glacial period closed about 10,000 years ago and the geographical distribution of land then, was radically DIFFERENT from what it is at present..”
    Mount Meru as the Center of the Earth.jpg
    Mount Meru as the Center of the Earth.
    2. Mount Meru in Tanzania.
    We have a Mountain by the name Meru in Tanzania.
    Meru in Central Asia, Korean Legend.jpg
    A Korean world map centered on the legendary Mount Meru in Central Asia.”A Korean world map centered on the legendary Mount Meru in Central Asia.” by Unknown – http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/200504/the.leek-green.sea.htm. Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons – http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:A_Korean_world_map_centered_on_the_legendary_Mount_Meru_in_Central_Asia..jpg#mediaviewer/File:A_Korean_world_map_centered_on_the_legendary_Mount_Meru_in_Central_Asia..jpg

    Mount Meru is an active stratovolcano located 70 kilometres (43 mi) west of Mount Kilimanjaro in the nation of Tanzania.

    And there is a Town Meru in the neighboring Kenya!

    3.Meru is also identified Mount Meru or Sumeru with the Pamirs, north-west of Kashmir.

    4.The Meru is Celestial.

    Hindu Tantra shastras maintain that Meru is a spiritual Plane of Existence.

    Buddhism and Jainism say the same.

     

    Tibetan Buddhism regards Meru as the Center of the Universe and believes it to be beyond the physical plane, in a realm of perfection and transcendence. Symbolic representations of Meru are frequently found in Tibetan and Bhutanese mandalas designed to aid in meditation.’.

    5.Surya Siddhanta View.

    Surya Siddhanta is a highly accurate astronomical treatise br the Hindus.

    It says, of Meru thus,

     

    Suryasiddhanta once says square root of 10 is value of ‘pi’, but root of 10 is merely a crude value of ‘pi’ for teaching students and should never be used for any serious purpose. Any siddhanta must never abuse the basic laws of mathematics. The value of ‘pi’ is 3.14159265……., and not root of 10. In Vedic mathematics, there were formulae for computing ‘pi’ with 12 or 32 digit accuracy. Fot 12 digits, ‘pi’ = SQRT {2* (18000^2) / (65656565 – OCTAL 666)} ; Octal 666 is number for Satan in Biblical mathematics and is therefore subtracted.

    Earth’s equatorial circumference is 1600 * ‘pi’ = 5026.5482457… yojanas, whereas Manda-paridhi of sun is 5040 yojanas (5039.990052). One degree (amsha0 of manda paridhi is sun’s paridhyamsha (= paridhi + amsha) = 5040 / 360 = 14 yojanas (13.9999723667) per degree. The diameter of manda-paridhi is 5040/pi = 1604.278659816 yojanas or 34.112669 kms, which is the distance of the centre of Manda-paridhi from Earth’s equatorial surface. it is equal to the height of Mt Meru (Mt Kenya = 5.199 Kms) and a mysterious term equal to 28.913669002241621530835902160508 Kms. It is equal to sum of four components :

    d1 = R * sin(180 degrees / 42000) = 28.6231184335656015… Kms
    d2 = R * sin(180 degrees / 4200000) = 0.2862311846025405641566… Kms
    d3 = R * sin(180 degrees / [4200000 * 71]) = 0.004031425135247426…. Kms
    d4 = R * sin(180 degrees / [4200000 * 71 * 14 ]) = 0.000287958938 Kms

    The actual centre of all universes is 28.913669002241621530835902160508 Kms higher than the tip of terrestrial Mt Meru (Mt Kenya) and is Divine Mt Meru.’

    I have written an article that

     

    1.Lord Vishnu’s Nabhi as the center of our Milky way Galaxy verified.

    “The Galactic Center cannot be observed at visible, ultraviolet, or x-ray wavelengths because interstellar dust obscures the line of sight. All scientific information about it comes from observations of gamma ray, hard X-ray, infrared, and radio wavelengths. The precise astronomical location of the Galactic Center at approximately 3 degrees Sagittarius (sidereal) was first verified in 1918 by Harlow Shapley. However its energetic connection to the earth was not realized until 1932 when Karl G. Jansky, an engineer working for Bell Telephone, was investigating the source of the static interference with overseas telephone lines. He discovered that the interference was due to radio waves being emitted from the center of the galaxy. The source of the radio waves appears to be located almost exactly at the Galactic Center, and may coincide with a super massive black hole. This black hole has the equivalent mass of 4 million suns and is the source of most of the gravitational energy in our galaxy. Thus the Galactic Center is the Sun around which our Sun rotates.’

    Considering all these facts I tend to surmise that the Physical Meru is in the Arctic ( I have a post that the inside of the Earth is not hollow) ans also a spiritual plane.

    After all what is In the Microcosm is in the Macrocosm.

    Citation.

    http://decodehindumythology.blogspot.in/2011/12/heaven-at-north-pole.html ( Image and a portion of the Text quoted)

     

  • Arkaim, Russia Rig Vedic Mandala Swasthika City Of Hindu Gods

    The archeological finds at Arkaim, in the Southern Urals steppe, 8.2 kilometres (5.1 mi) north-to-northwest of Amurskiy, and 2.3 km (1.4 mi) south-to-southeast of Alexandronvskiy, two villages in the Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia, just to the north from the Kazakhstani border, is treasure trove of archeologists.

    Swastika at Arkaim, Russia.jpg
    Decorative Swastkikas found at Arkaim.

    It is , based on the findings so far, indicates strong Sumerian and Vedic influences.

    Temple built by Yama is found there.

    The whole city seems to have been built by the Mandala concept of the Rig Veda.

    Arkaim,Rusia.jpg
    Arkaim, built with Rig Veda Mandala Principle.


    The site is generally dated to the 17th century BC. Earlier dates, up to the 20th century BC, have been proposed. It was a settlement of the Sintashta-Petrovka culture. Newly found artifacts make the site itself much older; scientists agree on it being at least as old as Troy and the Egyptian pyramids; it dates back to the 4th millennium BC. It is said to be older then Stonehenge (3300 BC)…

    During the excavations of Arkaim no jewellery was found, no masterpieces of ancient art, no unknown writings, nor other such treasures – only fragments of broken ceramic ware, bones of domestic and wild animals, an occasional stone tool and even more rare, bronze tools. But even those common things are not well presented at Arkaim. The collection of artifacts is so poor and unimpressive, that it is not possible to make a museum exhibit appropriate to the site. Therefore, from the point of view of archeologists, the main value of the ruins was, and probably will be, the design of the structures itself and their lay-out.

    Arkaim Settlemen.jpg
    Arkaim Settlement, Russia.

    The structures were tall; they had solid walls, gallery ceilings, wood-paved roadways, second floors and high wooden towers. Nowadays, archeologists have a more complete picture of how the settlement in the Arkaim Valley looked at the time of its peak, and it is quite impressive. First of all it is important to emphasize the point that this large settlement was not a collection of separate structures, but an all-inclusive design and construction. The total area extends to about twenty thousand square meters (twenty-four thousand square yards), and the settlement ground-plan is comprised of two circles, one inside the other, made of massive defensive walls.

    The external wall is about 160 meters (500 feet) in diameter. It was surrounded by a ditch 2 meters (6.5 feet) wide, filled with water. The external wall is very massive, 5.5 meters (16 feet) high and five meters wide. It was constructed of timbered cages filled with soil and added lime, and an outer facing of cob blocks. Four entries were designated in the wall: the largest-one southwesterly and three smaller ones located on opposite sides.

    Inside the city entrance is the only ring-shaped street, about 5 meters (18 feet) wide, that separates dwellings adjoining the external wall from the internal ring-shaped wall. As mentioned above, the street had timbered flooring under which, along its full length, the 2 meter-wide (6 feet) ditch was dug which connected to the external ditch. Thus, the city had their storm water drain, the overflow of water filtered through the timbered roadway into the ditch which then went into the external ditch.

    The circles of the dwellings were divided into sectors by radial walls, spaced in between every two premises. In the plan they look similar to wheel spokes. There were thirty-five dwellings at the external wall and twenty-five dwellings at the internal one.

    One end of every dwelling adjoined either the external or the internal wall, and faced either the main ring-shaped street or the central square. In an improvised hall there was a special water drain which went into the ditch under the main street. Yes, as we saw earlier, ancient Aryans had a water drain! Furthermore, each dwelling enjoyed a well, a furnace and a small dome-shaped storage place.

    From the well, above the water level, two earthen pipes branched off. One of them went to the furnace, another one to the dome-shaped storage place. What for? The most ingenious things are often simple. We all know that if one looks into a well one feels a flow of cool air. And so in the Aryan furnace, this cool air, passing through the earthen pipe, created a draught of such power, that they could mould bronze without use of bellows. It appears that each dwelling had such a furnace and ancient metal smiths only needed to perfect their skills to compete in this art. Another earthen pipe provided air to the storage place, of a lower temperature than the ambient air: some type of a refrigerator?

    The central square that crowns Arkaim is approximately 25 by 27 meters (82 by 88 feet). Judging by the remnants of the fire places which were situated in specific locations, this was the square to fulfill certain sacraments.

    The complicated and well planned internal lay-out of dwellings and ring-shaped streets made a sophisticated trap for uninvited visitors, in the divide between the external defensive wall and other fortifications as well as an efficient storm water drainage system. Even the colors of the “facing materials” used by ancient Arkaim inhabitants were functionally and aesthetically significant.

    Further on, we see the ring of the internal wall with a puzzling purpose. It is even more massive than the external wall, being 3 meters wide (9 feet) by 7 meters high (22 feet). This wall, according to excavation data, has no entry, except for a small doorway in the southeast which isolates the twenty-five internal premises from all the rest. To approach the small entry in the internal ring, one had to go along the whole length of the ring-shaped street.

    They realized that its lay-out, the ground-plan of Arkaim, is related to the Mandala principle, a square inside a circle – one of the basic sacred symbols of Buddhist philosophy.

    The word Mandala is translated as a circle or disk. In the ancient Rig-Veda writings, where it has been first described, the word has a set of values: a wheel, a ring, the country, space, society, gathering.

    The symbolic meaning of a Mandala is understood all over the world as a model of the Universe, even of the entire cosmos, where the two most important principles present in our Universe are represented in the form of a circle and a square. Arkaim, with its dwellings, having adjoining rooms, might possibly represent the “wheel of time”, where every aspect is defined by the previous one and in turn, defines the next one.

    Did these ancient sages, perfectly familiar with the structure of the Universe, see how harmoniously and naturally it is arranged and therefore, constructed their city as a mini-Universe? And the engineering genius of these ancient builders, which we already explored, is equally admirable.

    And now, further into these explorations, come more far-reaching conclusions which can be taken as a key to the most important riddle of Arkaim: In the ‘Land of Cities’, its most amazing distinction is not any richness of artifacts, but it’s surprisingly high level of spiritual culture. It represents a special world that in many aspects is permeated with spirituality, from settlement and funeral architectural forms to sculptured images chiseled into stone.

    Citation.

    Rig Vedic Mandala City

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  • World’s First War Immigration 5000 BC Dasarajnya Harappa

    Unlike the other religious literature, Hinduism report events as they were, it does not whitewash history,be it the killing of Vaali by Lord Rama,the tactics adopted by Krishna in  Mahabharata battle,matricide even by sages.

    These texts portray people and society as it were, with real people with normal human foibles.

    They explain that there were people, when spirituality was in the ascendency, there were people, kings ,driven by greed went to war with each other.

    If Indian history and Puranas were to have been concocted all the characters could have been shown as pure as fresh snow.

    Not so.

    In the earliest literature of humanity,rig veda there is a reference to a Battle of Ten Kings, around 5000 BC-this could have been earlier.

    This was fought on the banks of river Ravi.

    This place is now known as Harappa, which, along with is one of the earliest sites which reveals the high levels of culture in the Vedic period.

    The Dasarajnya War.

    India north west kingdoms, rige vedic period.bmp.
    India North west kingdoms, rige vedic period.

    The Battle of the Ten Kings (dāśarājñá) is a battle alluded to in the Rigveda (Book 7, hymns 18, 33 and 83.4-8), the ancient Indian sacred collection of Vedic Sanskrit hymns. It was a battle between tribal kingdoms of Vedic Aryans: an “internecine war”, as the 1911 Britannica puts it, as opposed to the more frequent accounts of Aryans fighting Dasyus. K. F. Geldner in his 1951 translation of the Rigveda considers the hymns as “obviously based on an historical event”, even though all details save for what is preserved in the hymns have been lost. Further details have been provided in an incisive discussion of this hymn by H.P. Schmidt.[2]

    Battle of the Ten Kings
    Date c. 14th century BCE[1]
    Location Near Parusni River (modern Ravi),Punjab
    Result Decisive Trtsu-Bharata victory
    Territorial
    changes
    Rigvedic tribes conquered by Sudas

    • Bharatas settle in Kurukshetra
    • Emergence of Kuru Kingdom
    Belligerents
    Trtsu-Bharata (Indo-Aryans) Alinas
    Anu
    Bhrigus (Indo-Aryans)
    Bhalanas
    Dasa (Dahae?)
    Druhyus (Gandharis)
    Matsya (Indo-Aryans)
    Parsu (Persians?)
    Purus (Indo-Aryans)
    Panis (Parni?)
    Commanders and leaders
    King Sudas
    Vashishta
    The Ten Kings
    Vishvamitra
    Strength
    Unknown but less More than 6,666
    Casualties and losses
    Unknown but less 6,666 (Mandala 7)

    The battle took place during the middle or main Rigvedic period,[3] near the Ravi River in Punjab. Some of the powerful Purutribes like the Bharatas, allied with other tribes of the north west India and guided by the royal sage Vishvamitra, were defeated by the Trtsu (Puru) king Sudas in battle, celebrated in a hymn by Sudas’ poet and priest Vasistha (RV 7.18). There are diffferent account as to when this battle actually took place due to different hypothesis from different scholars. Some date it back to near 3000-4000 BC whie other consider it to be dated around the 14th century BC…

    The Trtsu are the tribe led by king Sudas. Sudas himself is included in the “ten kings”, as the Trtsus are said to be surrounded by ten kings in 7.33.5. But it is not made explicit how this number is supposed to be broken down: if of the tribes mentioned in 7.18, the Turvasas, Yaksuss (pun for Yadu),[2] Matsyas, Bhrgus, Druhyus, Pakthas, Bhalanas, Alinas, Shivas and Visanins are counted, the full number is reached, leaving the Anavas (7.18.14), the Ajas and Sigrus (7.18.19) and the “21 men of both Vaikarna tribes” (7.18.11) without a king, and implying that Bheda (7.18.19, also mentioned 7.33.3 and 7.83.4, the main leader slain by Sudas), Shimyu (7.18.5), and Kavasa (7.18.12) are the names of individual kings. The Bharatas are named among the enemies in 7.33 but not in 7.18.

    • Alinas: One of the tribes defeated by Sudas at the Dasarajna,[4] and it was suggested that they lived to the north-east of Nuristan, because the land was mentioned by the Chinese pilgrim Hiouen Thsang.[5]
    • Anu: Some place them in the Paruṣṇī (Ravi) area.[6]
    • Bhrigus: Probably the priestly family descended from the ancient Kavi Bhrigu. Later, they are related to the composition of parts of the Atharva Veda (Bhṛgv-Āṅgirasa) .
    • Bhalanas: Fought against Sudas in the Dasarajna battle. Some scholars have argued that the Bhalanas lived in the Bolan Pass area. [7]
    • Druhyus: Some align them with the Gandhari (RV I 1.126.7).
    • Matsya are only mentioned in the RV (7.18.6), but later in connection with the Śālva.[8]
    • Parsu: The Parśu have been connected by some with the ancient Persians.[9]
    • Purus: one of the major tribal confederations in the Rigveda.
    • Panis: also the name of a class of demons; later associated with the Scythians.

    The battle itself took place on the banks of the Parusni (Ravi). The warriors of Sudas are described as white-robed (shvityanca), wearing hair-knots on the right side of their heads (daksinataskaparda), having flying banners (krtádhvaj) (RV 7.83.2), while the ten kings do not sacrifice (áyajyavaḥ). It appears (7.18.5) that Sudas managed to cross the Parusni safely, while his foes, trying to pursue, were scattered by a flood and either drowned or were slaughtered by Sudas’ men:

    7.18.9 As to their goal they sped to their destruction: they sought Parusni; e’en the swift returned not.
    Indra abandoned, to Sudas the manly, the swiftly flying foes, unmanly babblers.
    7.18.9 They went like kine unherded from the pasture, each clinging to a friend as chance directed.
    They who drive spotted steeds, sent down by Prsni, gave ear, the Warriors and the harnessed horses. (trans. Griffith)

    Kavaṣa and the Druhyu were “overwhelmed by Indra” while still in the water (7.18.10). The slain warriors of the Anu and Druhyus are numbered 6,666 (7.18.14).

    In the aftermath of the battle, the Bharatas under Sudas (7.33.6), received tribute from the Ajas, the Sigrus and the Yaksus (= Yadu, 7.18.20), and Indra destroyed the seven fortifications of the enemies, and gave the treasures of Anu to Sudas (7.18.13). 7.18.17 stresses that this was a victory against all odds, compared to a lamb defeating a lion.

    Citation.

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

  • Rig Veda Composed In Russia?

    I have come across information that the Rig Veda was composed in Russia!

     

    Dr. Weer Rajendra Rishi (1917 – 2002) was a well-known Indian linguist.

     

    Vishnu Idol in Russia.jpg
    Vishnu Idol. The idol found in Staraya (old) Maina village dates back to 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. Image credit.http://bharatuntoldstory.tumblr.com/post/76958321892/evidence-of-ancient-worldwide-vedic-civilization.

     

    He was fluent in Russian and worked in the Indian Embassy in Moscow between 1950—1952.

     

    Dr. Rishi was the author of (1) Russian-Hindi Dictionary (foreword by the late Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru), (2) Russian Grammar in Hindi, (3) Russian Folklore in Hindi (4) Hindi translation of Pushkin’s poem ‘Gypsy‘, (5) Marriages of the Orient, (6) Roma—The Punjabi Emigrants in Europe, the USSR, the Americas etc. (7) Romani-Punjabi-English Conversation Book, (8)Romani-Punjabi-English Dictionary and (9) Multi-Lingual Romani Dictionary (Romani Hindi English French Russian.

     

    One of his last works was a book India & Russia – Linguistic & Cultural Affinity.

     

    He took voluntary retirement from the Indian Foreign Service in 1973.

     

    He was awarded the  Padmasri , High Honour by the President of India in 1973.

     

    He states that the Folklore of Russia resembles Sanskrit when sung.

     

    He observes..

     

     

     

    Professor Smirnov (1892—
    1967), the reputed Sanskritologist of the Soviet Union has trans­
    lated Mahäbhärata into Russian in this type of verse. Professor
    Smirnow had with him a recording of an extract from the
    Mahäbhärata read in Sanskrit original by Professor Nirmal
    Chandra Maitra of India to the accompaniment of Indian
    instruments. When after playing the recording of the Sanskrit
    version, Professor Smirnov read his Russian translation, the
    enchanting melody of the rhythm was found to be very much
    like that of the Sanskrit original as read by Professor Nirmal
    Chandra Maitra and sounded in unison”

     

    He further analyses the Grammar, Phonetics and style of Sanskrit and Russian and points very close affinity.

     

    I have provided a Link towards end of this post.

     

    I am also providing a list of Russian words that bear a striking resemblance to Sanskrit.

     

    In the meanwhile I read a Book where the author, a Scholar in Sanskrit, Tatyana Elizarenkova in her Book ‘Language and Style of the Vedic Rsis’ states that the Rig Veda was written in Russia!

    This is based on the language construction, Grammar and the affinity between Sanskrit and Russian.

    Based on a Study of Indo-European Languages and cross checking with other scholars of the West who knew Sanskrit she seemed to have arrived at the conclusion.

     

    My knowledge of Sanskrit , Vedas and Puranas is limited to the extent that the area which is called Russia was a part of Vedic India and the names of Rivers

     

    Mountains ,places have a striking resemblance to Sanskrit, from Kabul onwards.

     

    However I have been able to unearth information on a single locale in Russia where there is evidence of Vedic influence.

     

    Beyond it I have not been able to get any further information.

     

    Readers may contribute.

     

    Now to the affinity between Sanskrit and Russian.

     

    This interesting information I reposted from borissof blog.

    The list of cognate verbs:

    Meaning Rus.                  Russian             Sanskrit                Meaning Skr.

    to argue, to slander vad – vadit vad – vadati वद्-वदति to confer or dispute about; to contend, quarrel
    to ask pros – prosit prach – prachhati प्रछ् – पृच्छति to ask, to question, interrogate
    to ask various questions, make various inquiries vɨspra – vɨsprašivaet viprach – viprcchati विप्रछ – विपृच्छति to ask various questions, make various inquiries
    to bake, cook peč – pečyot pас – pacati पच् – पचति to cook, bake, roast, boil
    to bark lay – laet rai – rayati रै – रैयति to bark
    to be, exist bɨ – budet bhū – bhavati भू – भ्वति to become, be
    to beat, hit tuz – tuzit tuj – tojayati तुज् – तोजयति to hurt
    to burn, to shine gor – gorit ghṛ – ghаrati घृ  – घरति to shine, burn
    to caress, fondle, comfort las – laskaet las – lasāti लस् – लसति to play, sport, frolic; to embrace
    to cart, transport, carry, draw voz – vozit vah – vahati वह –  वहति to carry, transport, convey
    to catch lov – lovit labh – labhate लभ् – लभते to take, seize, catch
    to coddle, pumper; to cherish, foster lel – lelyeet lal – lālayati लल् – लालयति to  caress, fondle, foster, cherish
    to continue to do smth.., to linger on; to delay; to entertain bav – bаvit bhū – bhavayati भू – भावयति exist, be found, live, stay, abide, happen, occur; to cause to be or become; to cherish, foster
    to cough kasl – kaslyaet kās – kāsate कास्कासते to cough
    to dawn svet – svetaet śvit –śvetate श्वित् – श्वेतते to be bright or white
    to die , decease mer – mryot mṛ – marati मृ – मरति to die, decease
    to drink pi – p’yot pī – piyate पी – पीयते to drink
    to dry, desiccate suš – sušit śuṣ – śuṣyati शुष् – शुषति to dry, become dry or withered
    to exterminate, to make to die mor – morit mṛ – mārayati मृ –  मारयति to cause to die, kill, slay
    to fall pad – padyot pad – padyate पद् – पद्यते to fall
    to fart perd – perdit pard – pardati पर्द् –  पर्दति to break wind downwards
    to fear, be afraid boya – boitsya bhyas – bhyasate भ्यस् – भ्य्सते to fear, be afraid, tremble
    to give away otda – otdayot uddā – uddadāti उद्दा – उद्ददाति to give away
    to give out, to distribute vɨd – vɨdayot vidā – vidadāti विदा – विददाति to give out, distribute, grant
    to give to drink po – poit pa – pāyayati पा – पाययति to cause to drink, give to drink, water (horses or cattle)
    to go, walk i – idyot iṭ – eṭati इट् – एटति to go
    to happen, to be present, to frequent bɨv – bɨvaet bhū – bhavati भू – भ्वति to happen, occur
    to knead mes – mesit miśr – miśrayati मिश्र् – मिश्रयति to mix, mingle, blend, combine
    to know zna – znaet jña – jānāti ज्ञ – जानति to know, have knowledge
    to lick liz – ližet lih – lihati लिह् – लिहति to lick
    to lick out vɨliz – vɨlivaet vilih – vilelihat विलिह् – विलेलिहत् to lick continually or repeatedly
    to live, dwell živ – živaet jīv – jīvati जीव् – जीवाति to live, be or remain alive
    to lock; to hide (dial.) ver – veraet vṛ – varati वृ – वरति to cove, screen, veil, conceal, hide, surround, obstruct, to close (a door)
    to love, like lyub – lyubit lubh – lubhati लुभ् – लुभति to desire greatly or eagerly, long for, be interested in
    to make come back, turn around vorot – vorotit vṛt – vartayati वृत् – वर्तयति to cause to turn or revolve
    to make warm, to melt top – topit tap – tapati तप् –  तपति to make hot or warm
    to measure mer – merit mi – miroti मि –  मिरोति to measure, meter, out, mark
    to milk do – doit dhe –  dhayati धे – धयति to suck, drink
    to overturn, pull down, to drag down val – valit val – valiti वल् – वलति to turn, turn round
    to peel, to shell vɨlup – vɨlupit vilup – vilumpati विलुप् – विलुम्पति to tear or break off or to pieces, wound, lacerate pull out or up; to tear away
    to praise slav – slavit śram – śramyati श्रम् – श्राम्यति sound, shout, loud praise
    to pull, stretch tyan – tyanet tan – tanoti तन् –  तनोति to stretch (a cord), extend
    to push away, to cast (an arrow etc.); to flow or run quickly (usually down), to fall down ri – rinet rī – riṇāti री – रीणाति to release, set free, let go
    to revolve, rotate vert – vertit vṛt – vartate वृत् – वर्तते to turn, turn round, revolve, roll
    to roar, bellow, howl rev – revyot ru – ravīti रु – रवीति to roar, bellow, howl, yelp, cry aloud
    to roll, turn around val – valyaet val – valate वल् – वलते to turn, turn round
    to see; to know how to do smth.. vid – vidit vid – vidati विद् – विदति to notice,  observe; to know, understand, perceive, learn, become or be acquainted with, be conscious of
    to seek, search; to wish isk – iščet iṣ –  icchati; eṣati इष् – इच्छति; एषति to seek, search; to desire, wish, long for, request
    to sell proda – prodast pradā – pradatte प्रदा – प्रदत्ते to give away, give, offer, sell
    to separate (off), to detach oddel – oddelyaet uddal – uddalati उद्दल् –  उद्दलति to split away, break away
    to shake tryas – tryasyot tras –  trasyati त्रस् – त्रस्यति to tremble
    to shine, glitter bles – bleščet bhlāś – bhlāśate भ्लाश् – भ्लाशते to shine, beam, glitter
    to sit sid – sidit sad – sīdati सद् – सीदति to sit upon or in or at smth.
    to sleep spa – spit svap – svapiti स्वप् – स्वपिति to sleep,  fall asleep
    to sob rɨd – rɨdaet rud – rodati रुद् – रोदिति to weep, cry, howl, roar, lament, wail
    to squeeze, pinch klešč – kleščit kliś – kliśnati क्लिश् – क्लिश्नाति to torment, cause pain
    to stay awake bde – bdit budh – budhyati बुध् – बुधय्ति to be awake
    to stick (to), to  adhere (to) lip – lipnet lip – limpyati लिप् – लिम्पयति to be smeared; to be attached to, to stick, to adhere
    to stick, to mould, model lep – lepit lip – lepayati लिप् – लेपयति the act of smearing, daubing, anointing, plastering
    to stretch out, extend, to draw out, extract vɨtyan – vɨtyanet vitan – vitanute वितन् – वितनुते to spread out, to stretch, extend,  to unfold, display, exhibit, manifest
    to survive vɨživ – vɨživaet vijīv – vijīvati विजीव् – विजीवति to revive, return to life
    to sweeten slad – sladit svad – svadati स्वद् –  स्वदते to make sweet or pleasant or agreeable
    to swim, float plavat’; plav – plavaet plu – plavate प्लु – प्लवते to float, swim
    to take bra – beryot bhṛ – bharati भृ – भरति to hold, possess, have, keep
    to think, imagine mni – mnit mna – manate म्ना – मनति to think, believe, imagine
    to torture pɨt – pɨtaet piṭh – peṭhati पिठ् – पेठति to inflict or feel pain
    to touch kas – kasaet kaṣ – kaṣati कष् – कषति to  test, try; to rub
    to turn away vɨver – vɨvernet vivṛti – vivartate विवृत् – विवर्तते to turn back or away
    to turn back, to come back vert – vertaet vṛt – vartate वृत् – वर्तते to turn, turn round
    to twirl, to turn round and round vert – vertit vrt – vartayati वृत् – वर्तयति to cause to turn or revolve
    to wake up bud – budit budh – budhyate बुध् – बुध्यते to wake up
    to have sexual intercourse yeb – yebyot yabh – yabhati यभ्- यभति to have sexual intercourse
    to wish, want vol – volit vṛ – vṛṇoti; varayati वृ – वरति; वरयति to choose, select, choose for one’s self, choose as; to like, love well

     

    Citation.

    http://vedic.su/Vedic/tur/IndiaRussia_Rishi_OCR.pdf

    http://books.google.es/books?id=j-B0Y-IwTQAC&dq=Tatyana+Elizarenkova&printsec=frontcover&source=bl&ots=0PFOLcs-MI&sig=WBgXZxIMRdK2USOWuVs7N8aGzNQ&hl=en&ei=PfUQS4fQM4il4QbLl5CbBA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CA0Q6AEwAg#v=onepage&q&f=false

    http://1000petals.wordpress.com/2013/08/18/amazing-affinity-of-russian-and-sanskrit/

  • Sanskrit Not Hindu Language Nor Rig Veda

    Not content with dividing India on the basis of Aryan Invasion theory, there is an attempt by the West to denigrate and destroy The Hindu Identity by destroying its roots, Sanskrit and The Vedas.

    Sanskrit
    Sanskrit, the soul of India.

    Macaulay made his intentions clear in his address to the British Parliament, when he observed that it is the Hindu Culture, Religion and Sanskrit were the impediments to the advancement of Britain’s interests in India.

    So the Britishers floated the Theory of Aryan Invasion, encouraged linguistic tendencies and adopted a Policy  of Divide and Rule.

    They imposed English, simultaneously ensures that Indians lost respect for their Languages, Sanskrit and the local mother tongue.

    Contrary to what they expected the Hindus mastered English better, even better than the British and have advanced, thanks to the British.

    In the process Hindu cultural degradation started and is well on its way.

    Sanskrit losing its sheen in India, save by the Brahmin community, especially from Pune and the local Indian Languages giving way to way to English, rather more  to corrupted language like Hinglish,Gujliish,Tanglish.

    Now that the Aryan Invasion theory has been proved to be a Myth, the West has taken a new route.

    Attack from the Language front, Sanskrit.

    Prove that Sanskrit is not of Indian Origin.

    Trumpet that the Rig Veda is not a Hindu Scripture.

    This is how they go about.

    Watch the video.

    My rebuttal point by point follows.