Tag: Uttar Pradesh

  • Hinduism Present Gods Not In Vedas Why?

    I have received a perceptive comment on the Gods worshiped in the Vedas.

    This is it.Vedic Gods Abstract ,Hinduism.jpg Vedic Gods Abstract ,Hinduism.

    After completing the Shruti texts, I moved onto the Smritis – the Itihaas and the Purans when my daughter, while reading the draft, commented : No portion of the Veds (including the Upanishads) really talk of Brahma, Vishnu, Mahesh, Ganesh, Devi etc. How did the transition take place.?

    The Agams do provide a clue but to my mind there are several missing links – especially in the practices as seen from Uttar Pradesh where I come from. Can you throw any light on this?’

    I kept the comment pending lest I forget it.

    The Vedas  as rightly said do not mention the Trinity Brahma , Vishnu And Shiva as much as the other deities as Indra, Varuna , Agni.

    Shiva is not mentioned at all, excepting in Sri Rudram as Sivaaya Ca, Sivadharaya ca.

    No mention of Brahma either.

    But we have references to Vishnu and Narayana.

    Example.Narayna Suktham ,Vishnu Suktham.

    Devis Lakshmi and Durga are mentioned , Sri Suktham and Durga Suktham.

    Vishnu is mentioned six times, in the Rig Veda

    Ganapati Upanishad is found in the Atharva Veda.

    As to how the Trinity and other deities we worship today came into play is the human necessity of having a fixed an object for realization with specific attributes that are identical with human attributes.

    Vedas speak of Para Brahmanas Nirguna, with out Attributes.

    Saguna, Gods with attributes were limited to what we now consider as minor deities, like Indra, Varuna and the others.

    More of karma kanda was followed and Bhakthi Bhavam the Path of Devotion does not find a place in the Vedas as much as in the post Vedic period.

    Vedic karmas were performed as per the Vedic procedure, were more mantra oriented( the deities are bound by the Mantras) and the Deities like Agni were used as conduits in carrying the oblations and these deities were considered to be the benefactor of human needs.

    Howver as the number of these deities were numerous, there was a necessity of establishing  much more powerful deities, who are are in control of these deities.

    Thus were the Gods Brahma and others.

    As for as Shiva is concerned there are references to Siva in the South. Pre Sanatana Dharma period where He is described as Adhi Shiva and a First Siddha.

    I have published a couple of articles on this and more to follow.

    So many of the Gods we worship today were not mentioned in the Vedas.

    That does not necessarily mean they are Illusions or lies.

    As I have mentioned in my earlier Post that Hinduism does not believe in personal God but understands the Human Mind;s necessity og having one.

    So it allows the worship of these deities.

    As Krishna says,in The Bhagavad Gita

    “I shall grant the boons to one who prays  in the Form he worships and in the same manner that Deity would’

    Thereby implies the Nirguna Upasna can be supplemented by Saguna worship.

    Deities mentioned in the Rig Veda.Numbers indicate the number of times the Gods were mentioned.

    • Indra 289
    • Agni 218
    • Soma 123 (most of them in the Soma Mandala)
    • The Asvins 56
    • Varuna 46 [1]
    • the Maruts 38
    • Mitra 28[1]
    • Ushas 21
    • Vayu (Wind) 12
    • Savitr 11
    • the Rbhus 11
    • Pushan 10
    • the Apris 9
    • Brhaspati 8
    • Surya (Sun) 8
    • Dyaus and Prithivi (Heaven and Earth) 6, plus 5.84 dedicated to Earth alone
    • Apas (Waters) 6
    • Adityas 6
    • Vishnu 6
    • Brahmanaspati 6
    • Rudra 5
    • Dadhikras 4
    • the Sarasvati River / Sarasvati 3
    • Yama
    • Parjanya (Rain) 3
    • Vāc (Speech) 2 (mentioned 130 times, deified e.g. in 10.125)
    • Vastospati 2
    • Vishvakarman 2
    • Manyu 2
    • Kapinjala (the Heathcock, a form of Indra) 2

    Minor deities (one single or no dedicated hymn)

    • Manas (Thought), prominent concept, deified in 10.58
    • Dakshina (Reward for priests and poets), prominent concept, deified in 10.107
    • Jnanam (Knowledge), prominent concept, deified in 10.71
    • Purusha (“Cosmic Man” of the Purusha sukta 10.90)
    • Aditi
    • Bhaga
    • Vasukra
    • Atri
    • Apam Napat
    • Ksetrapati
    • Ghrta
    • Nirrti
    • Asamati
    • Urvasi
    • Pururavas
    • Vena
    • Aranyani
    • Mayabheda
    • Tarksya
    • Tvastar

    I have taken as a frame of reference as it is the oldest and regarded as most authentic.

    I belong to Krishna Yajur.

    Citations.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rigvedic_deities

  • Vishnu Resides In Ganga Magha Purnima

     

    Magha Purnima, the Full Moon day in January-February, is a religious festival, when Pious activities are engaged in with specific emphasis on taking bath in the River Ganges.


    Embed from Getty Images

     

    Maghi, is the month during which the famous Kumbh Mela and the annual Magh Mela takes place at Sangam in Prayag or Allahabad.

    Vishwamitra performed the ritual bath during the Kumbh Mela on a Magh Purnima in 2382 BCE. Magh Purnima is an important bathing date during the Kumbh Mela and the Magh Mela.

    Thepposava, Madurai during Magha Purnima.gif
    Float Festival, Madurai.

    Magha Purnima 2015- 3 ,February, Tuesday.

    Timings.

    Purnima Tithi Begins = 02:31 on 3/Feb/2015
    Purnima Tithi Ends = 04:38 on 4/Feb/2015


    Excception,

    When Ganga is not accessible, because of any reason, one may bathe in any other holy stream, river, tank or pond, Moreover, Gangajal is kept almost in all the Hindu homes. Some of it may be poured into ordinary well water, and then used for bathing.

    On this day a fast is observed and charities are done.

    Early in the morning, after ablutions, the dead ancestors are offered libations, and the poor are given dakshina , one which can afford.

    Magh Purnima is an auspicious day for performing Sathyanarayna Puja.

    Lord Vishnu resides in river Ganga during Magh month and even a touch of this water takes a person to Heaven.

    ( Brahma vaivartha Purana)

    According to other Puranas, Lord Vishnu is impressed by charities  on this day

    It is believed that Lord Vishnu resides in Kshir Sagar during this month and river Ganga is a form of Kshir Sagar.

    A dip in the sea at Kanyakumari and Rameshwaram also has high religious value.

    Similarly, a bath in the Pushkar Lake in Rajasthan is also regarded as equally auspicious. In Madras at Kumbakonam, there are shrines of Nageshwara and Sarangpani near which there is a large tank in which devotees can take a dip on this holy day.

    It is believed that the water of the sacred Ganga flows into this tank on this auspicious day.

    On Magh Purnima, the ‘float’ festival is celebrated at Madurai in Tamil Nadu. On this day, the ornately decorated idols and images of Lord Sundeshwara and Meenakshi are mounted on the floats and are taken to Mariamman Teppakulam Sarovar which is a large sacred tank in Madurai. The procession is accompanied by music and chanting devotional songs.

    Magh Purnima is the birthday of King Tirumala Nayak who constructed the Mariamman Teppakulam which is a few kilometres to the East of Madurai. –

    There is a special significance of this day in Buddhism as well. It is believed that Gautam Buddha announced his impending death on this day. There are religious ceremonies held at Viharas, prayers are dedicated to the Buddha. Religious flags are hoisted on all the monasteries at dawn and sacred verses are chanted from the Tripitaka. –

     

    According to astrology, Magh Purnima occurs when Moon is in Cancer and Sun is in Capricorn sign.

    Taking bath in the Ganges on Magh Purnima relieves a person from all problems related to the Sun and the Moon.

  • Festival Of God Sisters Karwah Chauth

    It is the unique feature of Hindu Fesivals to have a spiritual meaning,as in Pongal,Baisakhi which celebrates the Compassion of the Sun for providing good yield from the earth.


    Embed from Getty Images

     

    It also serves a social purpose , that of uniting the family members in all the functions.

     

    In one festival celebrated in Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, western Bihar, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, Haryana, Punjab, Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand and Gujarat States of India meets the psychological needs a  newly married bride.

     

    In the early days distance was an issue, girls married to a far off place would feel lonelyand feel depressed.

     

    She develops a  close friendship with a woman, of nearly the same age, of the bride and both the girls share their joys and sorrows.

     

    There is another legend.

     

    Karva is another word for ‘pot’ (a small earthen pot of water) and chauth means ‘fourth’ in Hindi (a reference to the fact that the festival falls on the fourth day of the dark-fortnight, or krishna paksh, of the month of Kartik).[8] It is uncertain how the festival originated and how it came to be celebrated only in the northwestern part of the Indian subcontinent. One hypothesis is that military campaigns and long-distance travel usually resumed around the time of the festival, as the area dried and numerous rivers of the region (see Sapta Sindhu) subsided from the effects of the monsoon. Women observed the fast to pray for the safety of their husbands at this time as they ventured away from home. The festival coincides with the wheat-sowing time (i.e., the beginning of the Rabi crop cycle). Big earthen pots in which wheat is stored are sometimes called Karvas, so the fast may have begun as a prayer for a good harvest in this predominantly wheat-eating region.

     

    This Festival falls on the Chaturthi, Fourth day of the Waning Moon,Krishna paksha  Nine days before Diwali. It falls on the fourth day of the Kartik month.
    The pooja preparations start a day in advance. Married women buy the shringar or the traditional adornments and the other pooja items like the karwa, matthi, heena etc.

    Early in the morning they prepare food and have it before sunrise. The morning passes by in other festive activities like decorating hand and feet with heena, decorating the pooja thali and meeting friends and relatives.

    In the late afternoon women gather at a common place like temple or a garden or someones’ place who has arranged the pooja. An elderly lady or the pujarin narrates the legend of Karwa Chouth.

    The essentials of this gathering and listening of the Karwa chauth story , a special mud pot, that is considered a symbol of lord Ganesha, a metal urn filled with water, flowers, idols of Ambika Gaur Mata, Goddess Parwati and some fruits, mathi and food grains. A part of this is offered to the deities and the storyteller.

    Earlier an idol of Gaur Mata was made using earth and cowdung. Now just an idol of Goddess Parwati is kept. Every one lights an earthen lamp in their thalis while listening to the Karwa story. Sindoor, incense sticks and rice are also kept in the thali.

    At this time the women wear heavy saris or chunries in red , pink or other bridal colors, and adorn themselves with all other symbols of a married women like, nose pin, tika, bindi, chonp, bangles, earrings etc.

    Once the moon rises, the women see its reflection in a thali of water, or through a dupatta or a sieve. They offer water to the moon and seek blessings. They pray for the safety, prosperity and long life of their husbands. This marks the end of the day long fast.

     

    Other Legends.

     

    A beautiful queen called Veervati was the only sister of seven loving brothers. She spent her first Karva Chauth as a married woman at her parents’ house. She began a strict fast after sunrise but, by evening, was desperately waiting for the moonrise as she suffered severe thirst and hunger. Her seven brothers couldn’t bear to see their sister in such distress and created a mirror in a pipal tree that made it look as though the moon had risen. The sister mistook it for the moon and broke her fast. The moment she ate, word arrived that her husband, the king, was dead. Heartbroken, she wept through the night until her shakti compelled a Goddess to appear and ask why she cried. When the queen explained her distress, the Goddess revealed how she had been tricked by her brothers and instructed her to repeat the Karva Chauth fast with complete devotion. When Veervati repeated the fast, Yama was forced to restore her husband to life.

    In a variant of this story, the brothers build a massive fire behind a mountain instead and trick their sister by convincing her that the glow is the moon. She breaks her fast and word arrives that her beloved husband has died. She immediately begins running to her husband’s house, which is somewhat distant, and is intercepted by Shiv[disambiguation needed]-Parvati. Parvati reveals the trickery to her, cuts her own little finger to give the wife a few drops of her holy blood, and instructs her to be careful in keeping the complete fast in the future. The wife sprinkles Parvati’s blood on her dead husband and, coming back to life, they are reunited.

    The Legend of Mahabharata

    The belief in this fast and its associated rituals goes back to the pre-Mahabharata times. Draupadi, too, is said to have observed this fast. Once Arjun went to the Nilgiris for penance and the rest of the Pandavas faced many problems in his absence. Draupadi, out of desperation, remembered Lord Krishna and asked for help. Lord Krishna reminded her that on an earlier occasion, when Goddess Parvati had sought Lord Shiva’s guidance under similar circumstances, she had been advised to observe the fast of Karva Chauth. In some tellings of this legend, Shiva tells Parvati the story of Veervati to describe the Karva Chauth fast. Draupadi followed the instructions and observed the fast with all its rituals. Consequently, the Pandavas were able to overcome their problems.[37]

    The Legend of Karva

    A woman named Karva was deeply devoted to her husband. Her intense love and dedication towards him gave her shakti (spiritual power). While bathing at a river, her husband was caught by a crocodile. Karva bound the crocodile with a cotton yarn and asked Yama (the god of death) to send the crocodile to hell. Yama refused. Karva threatened to curse Yama and destroy him. Yama, afraid of being cursed by Pati-vrat (devoted) wife, sent the crocodile to hell and blessed Karva’s husband with long life. Karva and her husband enjoyed many years of wedded bliss. To this day, Karva Chauth is celebrated with great faith and belief.

    The Story of Satyavan and Savitri

    When Lord Yama came to procure Satyavan’s soul, Savitri begged him to grant him life. When he refused, she stopped eating and drinking and followed Yama who carried away her dead husband. Yama said that she could ask for any other boon except for the life of her husband. Savitri asked that she be blessed with children. Yama agreed. Being a “‘Pati-Vrat (devoted) wife, Savitri would never let any other man be the father of her children. Yama was left with no other choice but to restore Savitri’s husband to life

     

     

  • Why Less Muslims In Lok Sabha-Owaisi The Answer

     

    The representation of Muslims in this Lok Sabha will be the lowest since the first general election of 1952. The 16th Lok Sabha will have just 24 Muslim MPs, down from 30 in the 15th. That translates to 4.4% of the strength of the House. 



    Muslims constituted 4.3% of the first Lok Sabha in 1952, but their proportion has hovered between five and six per cent for the last quarter of a century after dropping from a high of 9.3% or 49 members in the LS elected in the 1980 elections. 



    The incoming House will have no Muslim MPs from Uttar Pradesh, a first. It will also not have any from Maharashtra, a large state with a substantial Muslim population. The only states to have elected MPs from the community are West Bengal (eight), Jammu & Kashmir (four), Bihar (four), Kerala (three), Assam (two) and Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu and Lakshadweep (one each). Of these, of course J&K as well as Lakshadweep have Muslim-majority populations.(Zee News)

     

    On the day the Indian Elections 2014 results were being announced,  Asauddin Owisi, wagging a Finger at Rajdeep Sardesai of CNN IBN, the English

     

    News Channel, said belligerently,

     

    Vladimir Putin To Muslims.image.jpg.
    Vladimir Putin To Muslims.

     

     

     

    ‘Now tell Me, why there are fewer MPS in Lok Sabha, why there is no Muslim has been elected in the BJP?

     

     

     

    You Media do Modi Namaskar daily,

     

     

    Tell Me why Muslims have also voted and made Hindus MP?”,

     

     

    Owaisi the answer is three simple numerical,

     

     

     

    9/11

     

    September 2001 Twin Tower Attack.

     

     

    And a host of Bombings.

     

     

    And Seven Letters of English

     

    Al Qaeda.

     

     

    You do not threaten people into electing specific people

     

     

    At this rate you might ask for Minority Reservations in election Results!

     

    Why Hindus  were elected as MPs by Muslims

     

    They are not Terrorists, notwithstanding Religion.

     

    Have you ever watched your speeches on TV?

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    How many Indian Presidents/Prime Ministers Pakistan has/had?

     

     

    How many Hindu/Non Muslim Cricket Players are there in Pakistan cricket team?

     

     

    How many Muslim Nations allow the Hindu law to embolden you to ask for Sharia law in India?

     

     

    How many temples have you looted?

     

     

    At least be grateful.

     

     

    If you do not want to be an Indian, you are free.

     

    Yo do nt get along with Christians, Jews, and even one sect of yours kills the members of the other sect .

     

    With whom shall be you be getting along?

     

    Let the decent Muslims live in India in peace.

     

     

     

    Best reply for your ilk is by Vladimir Putin, which I have posted in this post.

     

     

     

     

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  • Where Rama Quenched Hanuman’s Thirst Hanuman Dhara

    After Hanuman had set fire to the entire Kingdom of Lanka with his tail, his whole body was consumed in flames and he was burning in pain and was very thirsty.

     

    Hanuman
    Lord Hanuman

    Lord Ram pierced a Rock with an arrow in a mountain to  create a spring .

     

    Since, then the spring is known as Hanuman Dhara.

     

    A narrow stream of water emerges from the rock crevice and falls directly on the idol.

    Apart from that, there is a nearby well that never dries up, which is also considered sacred.

     

    Hanuman Dhara Temple Spring,Chitrakoot,M.P
    Hanuman Dhara,Spring that quenches Hanuman’s Thirst

     

    Hanuman Dhara Hanuman
    Hanuman at Hanuman Dhara,Chitrakoot,India.

     

     

     

     

     

    Nearest Airport. Satna airport,70Km

     

    Railway Station.Chitrakoot Raiway Junction,one Km.

    Temple Timings.

     

    All days of the week
    5:00 AM – 12:00 PM
    4:00 PM – 8:00 PM
    This is about 4 Km. to the east of Ramghat at the beginning of the Vindhyas.
    A stream of cool and clear water originating inside the mountain falls on the idol of Hanuman Ji and loses itself in a kund below.
    It is a popular belief that Hanuman Ji came here to cool down the heat after burning Lanka.”
    People visit for,
    Prosperity,
    Begetting a child-rare for a Hanuman emple.

     

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