Tag: Tamil

  • He Blesses Even Those Who Curse Him Subrahmanya

    The Embodiment of Beauty, Murugan in Tamil,  the Best among Brahmins, is a God who Blesses you even when you Curse Him…In Tamizh.

     

    Murugan,Subrahmanya.Image.jpg.
    Murugan,Subrahmanya.

     

    He is described as the God of Tamil , His Father, Shiva, gave the langauge Tamil and Murugan was the chief among the poets Sammelan in the Tamil Sangam Era.

     

    So close was Lord Murugan considered by the Tamils, so attached to Him were/are  they to Him, He is praised as a Toddler.

     

    He is described as so accessible to those to the Tamil Language that He Blesses even those who Curse Him in Tamil, says Saint Arunagirinathar.

     

     


    மொய் தார் அணிகுழல் வள்ளியை வேட்டவன், முத்தமிழால்
    வைதாரையும் ஆங்கு வாழ வைப்போன், வெய்ய வாரணம் போல்,
    கை தான் இருபது உடையான் தலைப் பத்தும் கத்தரிக்க
    எய்தான் மருகன், உமையாள் பயந்த இலஞ்சியமே!

     

    முத்தமிழால் வைதாரையும் ஆங்கு வாழ வைப்போன்-He Blesses even Those who curse Him in Tamil.

    moii-thaar aNi-kuzhal vaLLiyai vEttavan muth-thamizhaal

    vai-thaarai-yum anggu vaazha vaip-pOn veyya vaaraNam pOl

    kai-thaan irupadhu udai-yaan thalai paththum kaththarikka

    ei-thaan marugan umaiyaaL baya-ndha ilang-chiyamEy

     

    The God who married Valli who wears flowers,

    In her pretty hair around which bees fly,

    The god who is the nephew of Lord Rama,

    Who cut off  the ten heads of Ravana,

    Who resembled an exuberant elephant,

    And the God who is the stream of Goddess Parvathi,

    Would be present  and bless the one with happiness,

    Even if ill is told of him in the three Tamils*.

     

    (Translation by P.R.Ramachander)

     

    Citation.

    http://stotraratna.sathyasaibababrotherhood.org/m15.htm

     

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  • Tamil Culture Part Of Sanatana Dharma

    I had a comment for my post on Skanda, not Muruga, ‘Is not Tamil  Culture a part of Sanatana Dharma?’

     

    A tricky question indeed.

     

    My reply was it is both a part and not a part of Sanatana Dharama.

     

    Map of Tamils area during Vedic period.Image.Jpg.
    Map of Tamils area during Vedic period.

     

    People who were living North of Vindhyas  were not seemingly unaware of the existence of the Great Culture that was thriving in the Dravida, meaning South, part of India , The South of Vindhya ranges.

     

    Viswamitra, banished his 52 sons to Dravida for having disobeyed and questioned him to the Dravidian  Region.

     

    They found a superior culture, if not on par with the Vedic culture to be thriving there.

     

    They found that , of all the civilizations known then , The Tamils were the only Culture, who were so evolved that they ascribed  five landmasses in their territory, ascribed Gods, birds.Animals, Palnts, Lifestyle to each of these Divisions, this was explained in Agathiyam , Thokappiyam , the ancient Grammatical works of the Tamil language, dated some five thousands years!

     

    Curious fact is that these Tamil texts quote Vedas and they , in turn, quote, the Tamils!

     

    Please read my post, Million year Old Tamil quotes Vedas and They quote Tamil.’

     

    The great Tamil Chera King Nedunchearalaathan was the man who fed both the armies of the Mahabharata War, Kauravas and Pandavas.

     

    He had been addressed as P’erunchotru Udiyan’ one who fed many number of Stomachs-Nedunchotru Uthiyan Neduncheralaathan was how he was called.

     

    He donated 100 veli( one veli= 100 acres) of land to Brahmins on the condition that he should see the Homa Smoke in the morning from this area every morning!

     

    ( source.History of Tamils By PT.Srinivasa Iengar)

     

    There are references to Arjuna marrying a Princess from Madurai on his pilgrimage.

     

    Now coming back to Viswamitra’s sons.

     

    The sons of Viswamitra mingled with the Tamils and followed the Tamil Customs.

     

    Their descendant , Apasthamaba, combined the best of Tamil practices and the Sanatana Dharma ad compiled the Apashamba Sutra, which is practiced by the Brahmins even to-day(Apasthamba Sutra)

     

    One notable custom is the inclusion of Mangaya Dharana, Thali in a Marriage, which is not found in Vedic Marriages.

     

    In Santana Dharma, marriage is complete with the performance of Panigrahana and Sapthapati.

     

    And the wearing of ‘Metti’, wring worn around the toe of the leg of Man was practiced  among the Tamils, to indicate that he was married.(women were decribed as not looking at Men in the Face!)

     

    This custom was changed to Women by Apasthamba.

     

    Read the following information to complicate the issue.

     

    Evidence indicates that Apsthamba compiled  the practices of the Tamils  and the Sanatana Dharma was unaware of the Tamils Culture.

     

    Yet Archaeological and other Puranic references indicate that there was  interaction between the two great cultures.

     

    It seems that there were two different cultures existing side by side at the same time.

     

    Or is it that both were One and that History is lost in India , as usual with us.

     

    I tend to agree with the last view.

     

    The archaeologist K.�V. Raman also notes�:

    Some form of Mother-Goddess worship was prevalent in the Megalithic period … as suggested by the discovery of a small copper image of a Goddess in the urn-burials of Adichchanallur. More recently, in Megalithic burials the headstone, shaped like the seated Mother, has been located at two places in Tamil Nadu.[17]

    Megalithic culture attached great importance to the cult of the dead and ancestors, which parallels that in Vedic culture. It is also likely that certain gods later absorbed into the Hindu pantheon, such as Aiyanar (or Sastha), Murugan (the later Kartik), Korravai (Durga), Naga deities, etc., were originally tribal gods of that period. Though probably of later date, certain megalithic sites in the Nilgiris were actually dolmen shrines, some of them holding Ganesh-like images, others lingams.[ 18] Megalithic practices evocative of later Hinduism are thus summarized by the British archaeologists Bridget and Raymond Allchin�:

    The orientation of port-holes and entrances on the cist graves is frequently towards the south. … This demands comparison with later Indian tradition where south is the quarter of Yama. Among the grave goods, iron is almost universal, and the occasional iron spears and tridents (trisulas) suggest an association with the god Siva. The discovery in one grave of a trident with a wrought-iron buffalo fixed to the shaft is likewise suggestive, for the buffalo is also associated with Yama, and the buffalo demon was slain by the goddess Durga, consort of Siva, with a trident. … The picture which we obtain from this evidence, slight as it is, is suggestive of some form of worship of Siva.[ 19]

    About the third century BC, cities and towns appear owing to yet little understood factors�; exchanges with the Mauryan and Roman empires seem to have played an important catalytic role, as also the advent of iron. From the very beginning, Buddhist, Jain and Hindu[*] streaks are all clear.

    Among the earliest evidences, a stratigraphic dig by I.�K. Sarma within the garbagriha of the Parasuramesvara temple at Gudimallam,[*] brought to light the foundation of a remarkable Shivalingam of the Mauryan period (possibly third century BC)�: it was fixed within two circular pithas at the centre of a square vastu-mandala. �The deity on the frontal face of the tall linga reveals himself as a proto-puranic Agni-Rudra�[20] standing on a kneeling devayana. If this early date, which Sarma established on stratigraphic grounds and from pottery sherds, is correct, this fearsome image could well be the earliest such representation in the South.

    Then we find �terracotta figures like Mother Goddess, Naga-linga etc., from Tirukkampuliyur�; a seated Ganesa from Alagarai�; Vriskshadevata and Mother Goddess from Kaveripakkam and Kanchipuram, in almost certainly a pre-Pallava sequence.�[21] Cult of a Mother goddess is also noticed in the early levels at Uraiyur,[22] and at Kaveripattinam, Kanchipuram and Arikamedu.[ 23] Excavations at Kaveripattinam have brought to light many Buddhist artefacts, but also, though of later date, a few figurines of Yakshas, of Garuda and Ganesh.[24] Evidence of the Yaksha cult also comes from pottery inscriptions at Arikamedu.[25]

    The same site also yielded one square copper coin of the early Cholas, depicting on the obverse an elephant, a ritual umbrella, the Srivatsa symbol, and the front portion of a horse.[ 26] This is in fact an important theme which recurs on many coins of the Sangam age[27] recovered mostly from river beds near Karur, Madurai etc. Besides the Srivatsa (also found among artefacts at Kanchipuram[28]), many coins depict a swastika, a trishul, a conch, a shadarachakra, a damaru, a crescent moon, and a sun with four, eight or twelve rays. Quite a few coins clearly show a yagnakunda. That is mostly the case with the Pandyas� coins, some of which also portray ayubastambha to which a horse is tied as part of the ashvamedha sacrifice. As the numismatist R.�Krishnamurthy puts it, �The importance of Pandya coins of Vedic sacrifice series lies in the fact that these coins corroborate what we know from Sangam literature about the performance of Vedic sacrifices by a Pandya king of this age.�[29]

    Finally, it is remarkable how a single coin often depicts symbols normally associated with Lord Vishnu (the conch, the srivatsa, the chakra) together with symbols normally associated with Lord Shiva (the trishul, the crescent moon, the damaru).[30] Clearly, the two �sects��a very clumsy word�got along well enough. Interestingly, other symbols depicted on these coins, such as the three- or six-arched hill, the tree-in-railing, and the ritual stand in front of a horse, are frequently found in Mauryan iconography.[31]

    All in all, the material evidence, though still meagre, makes it clear that Hindu concepts and cults were already integrated in the society of the early historic period of Tamil Nadu side by side with Buddhist and Jain elements. More excavations, for which there is great scope, are certain to confirm this, especially if they concentrate on ancient places of worship, as at Gudimallam. Let us now see the picture we get from Sangam literature.

    Vedic & Puranic Culture�Literary Evidence
    It is unfortunate that the most ancient Sangam compositions are probably lost for ever�; we only know of them through brief quotations in later works. An early text, the Tamil grammar Tolkappiyam, dated by most scholars to the first or second century AD,[*] is �said to have been modelled on the Sanskrit grammar of the Aindra school.�[32] Its content, says N. Raghunathan, shows that �the great literature of Sanskrit and the work of its grammarians and rhetoricians were well known and provided stimulus to creative writers in Tamil…. The Tolkappiyam adopts the entire Rasa theory as worked out in the Natya Sastra of Bharata.�[33] It also refers to rituals and customs coming from the �Aryans,� a word which in Sangam literature simply means North Indians of Vedic culture�; for instance, the Tolkappiyam �states definitely that marriage as a sacrament attended with ritual was established in the Tamil country by the Aryas,�[ 34] and it uses the same eight forms of marriage found in the Dharmashastras. Moreover, it mentions the caste system or �fourfold jathis� in the form of �Brahmins, Kings, Vaishyas and Vellalas,�[35] and calls Vedic mantras �the exalted expression of great sages.�[36]

    The Tolkappiyam also formulates the captivating division of the Tamil land into five regions (tinai�), each associated with one particular aspect of love, one poetical expression, and also one deity�: thus the hills (kuri�ji�) with union and with Cheyon (Murugan)�; the desert (palai�) with separation and Korravai (Durga)�; the forests (mullai�) with awaiting and Mayon (Vishnu-Krishna)�; the seashore (neytal�) with wailing and Varuna�; and the cultivated lands (marutam) with quarrel and Ventan (Indra). Thus from the beginning we have a fusion of non-Vedic deities (Murugan or Korravai), Vedic gods (Indra, Varuna) and later Puranic deities such as Vishnu (Mal or Tirumal). Such a synthesis is quite typical of the Hindu temperament and cannot be the result of an overnight or superficial influence�; it is also as remote as possible from the separateness we are told is at the root of so-called �Dravidian culture.�

    Expectedly, this fusion grows by leaps and bounds in classical Sangam poetry whose composers were Brahmins, princes, merchants, farmers, including a number of women. The �Eight Anthologies� of poetry (orettuttokai�) abound in references to many gods�: Shiva, Uma, Murugan, Vishnu, Lakshmi (named Tiru, which corresponds to Sri) and several other Saktis.[37] The Paripadal, one of those anthologies, consists almost entirely of devotional poetry to Vishnu. One poem[38] begins with a homage to him and Lakshmi, and goes on to praise Garuda, Shiva on his �majestic bull,� the four-faced Brahma, the twelve Adityas, the Ashwins, the Rudras, the Saptarishis, Indra with his �dreaded thunderbolt,� the devas and asuras, etc., and makes glowing references to the Vedas and Vedic scholars.[39] So does the Purananuru,[40] another of the eight anthologies, which in addition sees Lord Shiva as the source of the four Vedas (166) and describes Lord Vishnu as �blue-hued� (174) and �Garuda-bannered� (56).[41] Similarly, a poem (360) of a third anthology, the Akananuru, declares that Shiva and Vishnu are the greatest of gods[42]

    Not only deities or scriptures, landmarks sacred in the North, such as the Himalayas or Ganga, also become objects of great veneration in Tamil poetry. North Indian cities are referred to, such as Ujjain, or Mathura after which Madurai was named. Court poets proudly claim that the Chera kings conquered North Indian kingdoms and carved their emblem onto the Himalayas. They clearly saw the subcontinent as one entity�; thus the Purananuru says they ruled over �the whole land / With regions of hills, mountains, / Forests and inhabited lands / Having the Southern Kumari / And the great Northern Mount / And the Eastern and Western seas / As their borders….�[43]

    The Kural (second to seventh century AD), authored by the celebrated Tiruvalluvar, is often described as an �atheistic� text, a hasty misconception. True, Valluvar�s 1,330 pithy aphorisms mostly deal with ethics (aram), polity (porul) and love (inbam), following the traditional Sanskritic pattern of the four objects of human life�: dharma, artha, kama, and moksha�the last implied rather than explicit. Still, the very first decade is an invocation to Bhagavan�: �The ocean of births can be crossed by those who clasp God�s feet, and none else�[44] (10)�; the same idea recurs later, for instance in this profound thought�: �Cling to the One who clings to nothing�; and so clinging, cease to cling� (350). The Kural also refers to Indra (25), to Vishnu�s avatar of Vamana (610), and to Lakshmi (e.g. 167), asserting that she will shower her grace only on those who follow the path of dharma (179, 920). There is nothing very atheistic in all this, and in reality the values of the Kural are perfectly in tune with those found in several shastras or in the Gita.[45]

    Let us briefly turn to the famous Tamil epic Shilappadikaram (second to sixth century ad), which relates the beautiful and tragic story of Kannagi and Kovalan�; it opens with invocations to Chandra, Surya, and Indra, all of them Vedic Gods, and frequently praises Agni, Varuna, Shiva, Subrahmanya, Vishnu-Krishna, Uma, Kali, Yama and so forth. There are mentions of the four Vedas and of �Vedic sacrifices being faultlessly performed.� �In more than one place,� writes V. Ramachandra Dikshitar, the first translator of the epic into English, �there are references to Vedic Brahmans, their fire rites, and their chanting of the Vedic hymns. The Brahman received much respect from the king and was often given gifts of wealth and cattle.�[46] When Kovalan and Kannagi are married, they �walk around the holy fire,� a typically Vedic rite still at the centre of the Hindu wedding. Welcomed by a tribe of fierce hunters on their way to Madurai, they witness a striking apparition of Durga, who is addressed equally as Lakshmi and Sarasvati�the three Shaktis of the Hindu trinity. There are numerous references to legends from the Mahabharata, the Ramayana, and the Puranas. After worshipping at two temples, one of Vishnu and the other of Shiva, the Chera king Shenguttuvan goes to the Himalayas in search of a stone for Kannagi�s idol, and bathes it in the Ganges�in fact, the waters of Ganga and those of Cauvery were said to be equally sacred. Similar examples could be given from the Manimekhalai�: even though it is a predominantly Buddhist work, it also mentions many Vedic and Puranic gods, and attributes the submergence of Puhar to the neglect of a festival to Indra.

    Vedic Dharma

     

     

     

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  • Genocide Vs Fishermen Lanka Blackmail Cowering India

    No China Card, No Security issues.

     

    A Simple blackmail will do even if you commit genocide.

     

    Lanka releases Indian Fishermen
    Lanka releases Fishermen

     

    Pure and Simple.

     

    Size of the County  or the strength of Economy or Military Might has no relevance.

     

    Now the Congress is asking for votes for a Stronger Government in New Delhi.

     

    Strong for more Scams?

     

    This is what Sri Lanka has done pre and post Resolution on Genocide, the killing of the Tamils  in Lanka.

     

    Valueless ,Inhuman ,Spineless and cowardly act

    “Sri Lanka’s president ordered the release on Friday of 98 Indian fishermen detained for poaching as a “goodwill gesture” after New Delhi abstained in a vote on a U.N. resolution that approved an international inquiry into alleged war crimes on the island.

    India, Sri Lanka’s largest trade partner, backed two prior resolutions, but on Thursday unexpectedly took a neutral stand on the demand for a probe into actions by both Sri Lankan state forces and Tamil rebels during the 26-year conflict that ended in 2009.

    “The president ordered the release of all Indian fishermen as a goodwill gesture,” Mohan Samaranayaka, a spokesman for President Mahinda Rajapaksa, told Reuters.

    A total of 23 states voted in favour of the U.S.-led resolution, 12 against and 12 abstained. Among those who voted against were China and Pakistan, while India withheld its vote over concerns that the investigation would be “intrusive”.”

     

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  • Vedas On Women Social Status

    One of the charges leveled against Hinduism is that it treats women shabbily deny them respect and enslaves them.

    Nothing can be farther from The Truth.

    Hinduism is the oly Religion where the God is worshiped as a Unit in One,Ardhanareeswara.

    God as Man and woman
    Man Woman God.Ardhanareswara,Image source : http://halibedragons.wordpress.com/2011/12/08/ardhanarishvara/

    Kalidasa exclaims that Lord Shiva and Parvati are like the ‘Word and its Meaning”

    Abirami Bhattar in Tamil says,

    ‘Solloum Porulum ena Nadamaadum’

    ‘One as the word and its meaning’ Abirami Andhadai

    Women are regarded as Mother and The Taittriya says first respect is for Mother,

    Matru Devo Bhava.Great Rishis like Kathyayani,Gargi were women.

    “”What differentiates the Hindu brilliance in logic and rational thought from its Hellenistic parallel is that Hindus were very aware of the intellect’s limitations. They understood that only the feminine intuitive mind was capable of grasping the deepest spiritual truths in powerful flashes on intuition.”

    Some of them are.

    • Gargi Vachaknavi – A female Rishi who challenged Yajnavalkya on questions relating to the human soul.
    • Maitreyi.
    • Lopamudra – Wife of Sage Agastya
    • Andal – A 8th century Tamil saint-poet and one of the twelve Alvars.
    • Karaikkal Ammeiyar – A 6th century Tamil saint-poet, one of the sixty three Nayanmars
    • Mangayarkkarasiyar – A Pandya Queen, wife of King Nedumaranan, one of the sixty three Nayanmars
    • Isaignaniyaar – A Tamil saint-poet, one of sixty three Nayanmars
    • Avvaiyar – A Sangam period Tamil saint-poet, ethicist, social reformer.
    • Akka Mahadevi – A prominent figure and Kannada poet of the 12th century Veerashaiva Bhakti movement.
    • Mirabai – Hindu mystical poet and a devotee of Krishna whose bhajans are sung all over India.
    • Lalleshwari – Hindu saint-poetess, and a mystic of the Kashmiri Shaivites.

    “”A girl also should be brought up and educated with great effort and care.” (Mahanirvana Tantra); and “All forms of knowledge are aspects of Thee; and all women throughout the world are Thy forms.” (Devi Mahatmya)

     

    Women, who so desired, could undergo the sacred thread ceremony or ‘Upanayana‘ (a sacrament to pursue Vedic studies), which is only meant for males even to this day. The mention of female scholars and sages of the Vedic age like Vac, Ambhrni, Romasa, Gargi, Khona in the Vedic lore corroborates this view. These highly intelligent and greatly learned women, who chose the path of Vedic studies, were called ‘brahmavadinis’, and women who opted out of education for married life were called ‘sadyovadhus’. Co-education seems to have existed in this period and both the sexes got equal attention from the teacher. Moreover, ladies from the Kshatriya caste received martial arts courses and arms training”

    Wifehood in the Vedic Era

    As in present, after marriage, the girl became a ‘grihini’ (wife) and was considered ‘ardhangini’ or one half of her husband’s being. Both of them constituted the ‘griha’ or home, and she was considered its ‘samrajni’ (queen or mistress) and had an equal share in the performance of religious rites.

    Divorce, Remarriage & Widowhood

    Divorce and remarriage of women were allowed under very special conditions. If a woman lost her husband, she was not forced to undergo the merciless practices that cropped up in later years. She was not compelled to tonsure her head, nor was she forced to wear red sari and commit ‘sahagamana’ or dying on the funeral pyre of the dead husband. If they chose to, they could live a life of a ‘sanyasin’ or hermit, after the husband passed away.

    Polyandry
    One can only grudgingly admit that there are few references of polyandry in the Vedas. In the
    marriage hymn of Rigveda
    xxxi
    , Surya is married to Aswins. The marriage of Rudasi with Maruts
    is also find place in it.
    xxxii
    There are some passages in which the wife is mentioned in connection
    with husband in plural.
    xxxiii
    It is interesting to note that later Vedic literature do not approve
    polyandry though legalize the polygamy.
    xxxiv
    Widow Marriage
    As in the case of a widower, the widows are allowed to marry again. It may sound strange, but
    the funeral hymn in Vedas exhorts widow to marry the one who holds her hand is willing to
    marry.
    xxxv
    It also shows that the brother of the deceased took charge of the widow. Atharveda
    too mentions of women marrying second time.
    xxxvi
    The passages do not suggest that the women
    should marry only her brother-in-law.
    xxxvii
    Sati
    Atharvaveda
    xxxviii
    , however, shows a strange funeral ritual of the Vedic age, which has preserved
    some formalities similar to the custom of Sati. It depicts a widow lying by the side of her
    husband’s corpse on the funeral pyre and being asked to come down. A prayer was offered that
    she should lead a prosperous life, enjoying the bliss of children and wealth. The passage is open
    for interpretation either way.
    Niyog
    /Levirate
    Women’s right to have children was granted by the practice of
    Niyoga
    /Levirate.
    xxxix
    As there are
    few instances of remarriage of widows, and in the absence of clear injunction of widow-
    marriages, one can safely assume that this practice was more popular than remarriages.
    Religious and Social life of Women
    The Vedic society was quite free and did not pose much restriction upon the free movement of
    their women. They were educated along with boys of their own age, free to move with them,

    5
    approach them for marriages and took part in sports and extra curricular activities, of course
    within the accepted norms and customs of the society. We do not come across the system of
    purdah in the Vedic society. Even the life after marriage does not change much in their social
    interaction. The marriage hymn itself requires th
    e bride to be shown to all the assembled guests
    at the end of the marriage rituals.
    xl
    The practice still continues in Hindu marriages. It is also
    hoped that the bride will be able to speak with
    composure in public assemblies down to her old
    age.
    xli
    The presence of ladies in social and public gathering therefore, was a normal feature in
    Vedic time.
    xlii
    They were quite free to associate them
    selves with others on the occasion of
    festivals and rejoicing.
    xliii
    The Vedic Aryans were
    mostly occupied in military activities
    as they were engaged in the task of
    carving a homeland for themselves. They had, therefore, to rely upon a greater degree of
    cooperation from their women folk. Women are depicted in Vedic literature as taking part in
    agriculture and in manufacture of bows, arrows and other war materials. They were also engaged
    in weaving cloth, dying, embroidery and basket-making. They were also engaged in teaching,
    independent of their man-counterpart. The cultivation of fine arts like music, dancing and
    painting was the domain of the women only. Musical reciting of the Sama-hymns was the special
    function of ladies.
    xliv
    The Vedas regard women as untouchable during her monthly period. This temporary impurity is
    assigned to their taking over from India one third of the sin of Brahmana murder, which he
    incurred when he killed Vritra.
    xlv
    Child bearing is regarded as the special function of women,
    and evil spirits are believed to be very of anxious to visit them during their periods to prevent
    conception. They may also harm her husband. One stanza in Vedic hymn prays that the bride
    should have no evil eye and hopes that she would not be the cause of the sudden death of her
    husband.
    xlvi
    During the time of confinement, the women are regarded as impure as the
    phenomenon of menstruation is considered to be repeated at the child birth.

    Source.

    http://hinduism.about.com/od/history/a/vedic_women.htm

    http://www.ravitiwari.in/rtpaper1.pdf

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  • EVR Fake Political Anti Brahminism

    Anti Brahimn Poster
    Anti Brahminism

    ‘If you find a Snake and a Brahmin, kill the Brahmin First”-EVR

     

    “Recalling his earlier Erode days my media friend said EVR used to address public meetings at Erode’s Karaivaikkal maidan. Power connection for loudspeakers came from an electricity line drawn from an Iyer lawyer’s place close to the maidan. At one such meeting the Dravidian Kazhagam supremo, in an anti-Brahmin rant, called on his followers to go for Brahmins with scissors and have their sacred-thread snapped. As lawyer Dhandapani Iyer heard EVR holding forth on cutting off Brahmins’ sacred thread he cut off power to the public maidan, leaving the mike system dead .

    Realising his tactical mistake EVR swiftly made amends by raising his voice, loudly enough for him to be heard by the advocate Iyer, that his followers must ensure sure that nice Brahmins such as Dhandapani Iyer were spared. Power connection got restored and EVR carried on his speech, avoiding references that could hurt the man who powered his public address system.”

    This actually happened.

    An unruly crowd went around in Srirangam, cutting the tufts of Brahmins, Their Sacred Thread.

    They went around chanting,

    ‘Paapan Ozhiga”

    Down with Brahmins’ the term used to denote was derogatory, Paapan, in their opinion.

    These jokers did not even know Tamil.

    The term Paarpan was the term first used by Thirumoolar in his Thirumandiram, a Yoga Sastra Book in Tamil.

    The term means ‘one who Has Realized, who has seen the Real Self’

    EVR called Brahmins as interlopers into Tamil Nadu, conveniently forgetting the fact he is a Kanndiga.

    He administered a  Ganapati Temple, which was in his Family control.

    He justified it by saying that he was just doing his family duty!

    If you believe in some thing honestly, you should be at least honest about it.

    His ilk later justified this act as a sign of his magnanimity.

    I had attended some of his meetings.

    In one meeting in Chennai he said, to the crowd, when there was a commotion,

    ‘I do not want intelligent people here.

    I want only fools

    Sudras, you are the illegal children of Brahmins,

    Go and l…,

    If you have any self-respect go a Brahmin woman”

    These abuses continued unabated.

    Suddenly he changed tracks.

    ‘I am not against Brahmins but Brahminism

    What is this?

    Till date no one has explained what the difference is between Brahmins and Brahminism.

    This is just like ‘Annaism’ by MGR, which neither he nor others could understand.

    Periyar on 13/10/1919

    ‘We are apprehensive because we think aff All Brahmins”….

    “Not all Brahmins  are bad.

    There are honest, dedicated and patriotic Brahmins.

    We should remember they are influential’!

    Note he gives away why he changed track in the last sentence.

    ‘We should not oppose Brahmins’-Navasakthi 28/2/1925

    It is a mistake to imagine that only Brahimns are arrogant and are obsessed by Caste.

    It is with the other communities-Kudi Arasu 2/8/1925.

    The man who publicly spewed venom against the Brahmins had a news item published in his newspaper meant to attack Brahmins thus.

    “EVR performed the last rites  according to Vaishnava Rites,of  his elder brother E.V.Krishnaswamy’s  wife Nagammal  by non Brahmins’

    Kusi Arasu 10/2/1927.

    Brahmins were attacked because their cultural and religious roots,but you perform the same rites through the others.

    What a Joker!

    The quotes are from the Book by Sri.Suppu ‘Dravida Mayayai’ Dravdianism .an Illusion

    Links.

    Periyar’s self-respect movement was founded on a principle of intense anti-Brahmanist racism, while nominally claiming to be a movement espousing “rationalism” and “athieism”.Tamil Brahmins (Iyers and Iyengars) were frequently held responsible by followers of Periyar for direct or indirect oppression of lower-caste people on the canard of “Brahmin oppression” and resulted in innumerable hate attacks on Brahmins and which amoung other reasons started a wave of forced mass-migration of the Brahmin population. Periyar is alleged to have called for “Brahmin killing”s and burning down Brahmin homes. Later, in regards to a DK member’s attempt to assassinate Rajagopalachari, he “expressed his abhorrence of violence as a means of settling political differences”. The canard of “Brahmin oppression” rationalized conspiracy theories and pointed to Brahmins as enemies against whom the radical movements pitted themselves. The legacy of the anti-Brahmanism of the self-respect movement was taken over by the later Dravidan parties. Growing anti-Brahmanism in Chennai provided a rationale for polarization of the lower castes in the DMK movement. Eventually, the virulent anti-Brahmanism subsided somewhat with the replacement of the DMK party by the AIADMK. EVR’s followers have broken temple icons, cut sacred threads and tufts from Brahmin priests, and have often portrayed Brahmins in the most derogatory manner in their meetings and magazines.

    This mellowed down write up and find out how facts are doctored and presented as if EVR had no connection with virulent anti Brahminism

    http://www.thanthaiperiyar.org/social-activities/anti-brahmanism/

    http://mymysore3.blogspot.in/2006/12/periyars-brahmin-connection.html

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