Some of the intellectual
celebraties in the world of the
West and the East had the following things
to say about Hinduism:
"The key Hindu concept of dharma - the right way, the sanctioned way, which all men must follow, according to their natures - is an elastic concept. At its noblest it combines self-fulfillment and truth to the self with the ideas of action as duty, action as its own spiritual reward, man as a holy vessel."
(source: The Treasury of Hinduism - By Harischandra Lal Singh p. 199).
Recently, he was in India to attend the Pravasi Bharatiya Divas and discussed some of his controversial ideas about rewriting Indian history. He has starkly reminded us time and again that India was ravaged and intellectually destroyed by invasions that began in about 1000 AD.
"How do you ignore history? But the nationalist movement, independence movement ignored it. You read the Glimpses of World History by Jawaharlal Nehru, it talks about the mythical past and then it jumps the difficult period of the invasions and conquests. So you have Chinese pilgrims coming to Bihar, Nalanda and places like that. Then somehow they don't tell you what happens, why these places are in ruin.
They never tell you why Elephanta
island is in ruins or why Bhubaneswar
was desecrated.
You see, I am less
interested in the Taj Mahal which is a vulgar, crude building, a display of
power built on blood and bones. Everything exaggerated, everything
overdone, which suggests a complete slave population. I would like to find out what was there before the Taj Mahal.
I'm actually more at ease with the epics,
the Ramayan and the Mahabharat, and the stories from the Panchantantra. But I would like to see this past recovered and not dodged. That
foolish man Nirad Chaudhuri, who wrote one good book, then went into kind of
absurd fantasy, he built a whole book around somebody who came with the
invaders, Al-Beruni, who said, “the Hindus are very violent and aggressive
people”. Their land is being taken away from them, they are being destroyed and
enslaved and he says this. This foolish man Chaudhuri builds a book around this
statement; that is the kind of absurdity we have to avoid."
(source: How do you ignore history? - interview - economictimes.indiatimes.com - January
13 ' '03).
He sees India as a vast
and ancient civilization that successfully met its own challenges centuries ago. It was first disconcerted, then subjugated, and finally released
by the West in a damaged condition. Islam, he claimed, had both enslaved and
attempted to wipe out other cultures. He has touched upon the consequences of a
series of Muslim invasions of India beginning in the 10th century--and remarked
on how these invasions had "shattered" Indian (at that time almost
exclusively Hindu) civilization. "There probably has been no imperialism
like that of Islam and the Arabs," He has supported the Ram Janmabhoomi movement and the idea to build a temple at Ayodhya and expressed his sympathy for Hindu Revivalism.
"India was trampled over, fought over. You had the invasions and you had the absence of a response to them. There was an absence even of the idea of a people, of a nation defending itself. Only now are people beginning to understand that there has been a great vandalizing of India. The movement is now from below. It has to be dealt with. It is not enough to abuse these youths or use that fashionable word from Europe, 'fascism', There is a big, historical development going on in India."
(source: carribeanhindu.com).
He has pointed that India was one of the cultural basins of the world till about 1400 AD or so, but it had declined since then.
(source: Pravasi Bharatiya Divas - rediff.com).
“India has been a wounded civilization because of Islamic violence: Pakistanis know this; indeed they revel in it. It is only Indian Nehruvians like Romila Thapar who pretend that Islamic rule was benevolent. We should face facts: Islamic rule in India was at least as catastrophic as the later Christian rule. The Christians created massive poverty in what was a most prosperous country; the Muslims created a terrorized civilization out of what was the most creative culture that ever existed.”
(source: OutlookIndia.com, 15 November 1999 and http://www.indpride.com/vsnaipaul.html)
Naipaul described the mosque's destruction as being part of a "mighty creative process" unleashed by Hindus. The people who say that there was no temple there are missing the point. Babar, you must understand, had contempt for the country he had conquered. And his building of that mosque was an act of contempt for the country. Today, it seems to me that Indians are becoming alive to their history. Romila Thapar's book on Indian history is a Marxist attitude to history which in substance says: there is a higher truth behind the invasions, feudalism and all that. The correct truth is the way the invaders looked at their actions. They were conquering, they were subjugating. And they were in a country where people never understood this.
"What is happening in India is a new historical awakening....Indian intellectuals, who want to be secure in their liberal beliefs, may not understand what is going on. But every other Indian knows precisely what is happening: deep down he knows that a larger response is emerging even if at times this response appears in his eyes to be threatening."
(source: An Area of Awakening - Interview with V.S. Naipaul – By Dileep Padgaonkar Times of India July 18, 1993).
He says Hindu militancy is a 'creative force'. "Dangerous or not, it's a necessary corrective to history and will continue to remain so." He feels that India was renewing herself, yet again, from her own inexhaustible stream of history and civilization, her native genius.
"Indian intellectuals have a responsibility to the state and
should start a debate on the Muslim psyche," To speak of Hindu fundamentalism, is a contradiction in terms, it
does not exist. Hinduism is not this kind of religion. You know, there are no
laws in Hinduism. And there are many forces in Hinduism.... My interest in these
popular movements is due to the pride they restore to their adherents in a
country ravaged by five or six centuries of brutal government by Muslim invaders. These populations, in particular
the peasantry, have been so crushed, that any movement provides a certain sense
of pride. The leftists who claim that these wretched folk are fascists are
wrong. It's absurd. I think that they are only reclaiming a little of their own
identity. We can't discuss it using a Western vocabulary."
‘‘I think every liberal person should extend a hand to that kind
of movement from the bottom. One takes the longer view rather than the
political view. There’s a great upheaval in India and if you’re interested in
India, you must welcome it’’ "What is happening in India is a new, historical awakening. Gandhi used religion in a way as to marshal people for the independence cause. People who entered the independence movement did it because they felt they would earn individual merit. Only now are the people beginning to understand that there has been a great vandalising of India. Because of the nature of the conquest and the nature of Hindu society such understanding had eluded Indians before."
(source: indolink.com)
"I think when you see so many Hindu temples of the tenth century or earlier time disfigured, defaced, you know that they were not just defaced for fun: that something terrible happened. I feel that the civilization of that closed world was mortally wounded by those invasions. And I would like people, as it were, to be more reverential towards the past, to try to understand it; to preserve it; instead of living in its ruins. The Old World is destroyed. That has to be understood. The ancient Hindu India was destroyed."
(source: Interview by Sadanand Menon - The Hindu, 5 July 1998).
"The older I get, the more Hindu I become."
(source: Hinduism Today August 1999). For more on Naipaul, refer to chapter Islamic Onslaught).
252. Glen Peter Kezwer a physicist from Canada. He lives in Himachal Pradesh and is author of the book Meditation, Oneness and Physics writes:
" Spirituality is an intrinsic part of Indian culture and life. For the worshipper, this aspect of Indian culture serves as a constant reminder that behind the material forms which constitute our daily world, there is an unchanging consciousness which permeates everything.
From times immemorial India's message has been promulgated by her saints, sages, gurus and rishis and transmitted by them to those who were desirous of knowing the truth. The essence of this message is simple: Behind the eyes of every living being on earth there shines a light. This light is one and the same in all beings. This light is immortal, blissful, eternal and indestructible. This is the light of consciousness which makes each and every one of us alive and alert and gives us the power to breathe.
It is written in Chapter II, verse 30 of the Srimad Bhagavad Gita that Dayhee nityamavadhyoayam / Dayhay Sarvasya Bhaarat: The spirit which dwells within the body is eternal and indestructible. It dwells in the bodies of all, and is therefore the selfsame spirit in every living human being or creature. This spirit, which can also be called Aatmaa or Self, is the true nature of all. It is indivisible, being one and one alone, and is the unchanging reality behind the changing world which we experience every day through our senses. To know or realize this Self is the quest of every spiritual seeker throughout history, and the means to achieve this loftiest of goals can be found in the spiritual heritage of India."
(source: India’s Spiritual Heritage - By Glen P Kezwer)
253. Swami Chinmayananda (1916-1993) founder of Chinmaya Mission. He was not satisfied with degrees in literature and law or with other worldly aspirations pursued the spiritual path in the Himalayas under the guidance of his Gurus Swami Tapovanam and Swami Sivananda.
Swami Chinmayananda was appalled by the fact that majority of Indians had no appreciation of their religious heritage, and that spiritual learning was given to only the privileged classes. From then on his only mission in life was to take religion from classes to the masses, and to "convert Hindus to Hinduism". He told his guru, "I feel the immense urge to go down to the plains and share the wealth of the holy scriptures with my fellow countrymen. I want to run down like a Ganga which nourishes and inspires with its refreshing waves. "If he thought the task was going to be an easy one, he was wrong for he faced stiff opposition from the orthodoxy. But he was not the man to be baffled by such obstacles, and he carried on with his goal of the democratization of religion
Has written several books including Self-Unfoldment (The Self-Discovery Series).
"Hinduism is not bound by any rigid text book or commandments, orders, declarations and revelations; but it is a storehouse of scientific facts and has in it healthy impulses of a growing tradition. The Hindu religion or Sanatana Dharma, is the way of life of perfect living and of gaining mastery over oneself. This religion reveals the secret process which brings forth an effective personality out of a shattered man of despair and disappointment."
(source: Hinduism: The Eternal Religion - By M. D. Chaturvedi p. 3-5). Swami Chinmayananda - Tribuneindia.com).
"Hinduism is the religion for our times," Unlike the other scriptures, the methodology followed by the Gita appears to be more conducive to the modern, scientific mind and the educated classes. For they don't believe in anything. They want everything to be rationally proved, intellectually defensible. And the approach of the Gita is very rational because Krishna had to address a dynamic, young, educated, intelligent man who was a born skeptic. Arjuna did not believe or understand that Krishna was an intellectual giant. It is only in the eleventh chapter that he got a glimpse - and, thereafter, his attitude changed. But till the eleventh chapter he was absolutely rational. He did not believe a word of what Krishna said. Krishna had to make him believe it by the strength of logic."
(source: Chinmaya mission UK).
In his book, Vedanta: The Science of Life, he states:
"The Gita is very intimately connected with the life of everyone of us, whether it be in the market place, at home or in the political field, Bhagavad Gita not only indicates theories of the Hindu way of life, but also reveals certain definite scheme by which every individual can work out his own self-improvement."
(source: Hinduism: The Eternal Religion - By M. D. Chaturvedi p. 52)
254. Robert R. C. Zaehner (1913-1974) British historian of religion who investigated the evolution of ethical systems and forms of mysticism, particularly in Eastern religions. The son of Swiss parents who had immigrated to England, Zaehner studied Oriental languages at the University of Oxford. Author of several books including Hindu Scriptures, and Hinduism.
Zaehner said “Hindus do
not think of religious truths in dogmatic terms.” and Hindus say, “dogmas can’t be eternal,
only the transitory distorting images of truth that transcends not only them
but all verbal definitions.”
And then Zaehner goes on to say, “for the passion for dogmatic certainty that has racked the religions
of Semitic origins, from Judaism itself through Christianity and Islam to
Marxism they feel nothing but shocked incomprehension.”(source: How certain should we be, the problem of religious pluralism – By Mark Tully).
It was the sublime ancient tolerance of Hinduism that he often stressed, that was the true proof of the wisdom and mature dignity of the Hindu tradition.
"In the family of religions, Hinduism is the wise old
all-knowing mother. Its sacred books, the Vedas, claim, 'Truth is one, but
sages call it by different names.' If only Islam, and all the rest of the
monotheistic 'book' religions, had learned that lesson, all the horror of
history's religious wars could have been avoided. Which other religion has its God say, as Krishna does in the Bhagavad
Gita, 'All paths lead to me.'
"If only the Church had the sense to allow so many different
and seemingly contradictory approaches to God, how much saner its history would
have been!"
He also observed that all traditional poems and meditations and
philosophical texts of Hinduism are "different-shaped peaks in one vast,
grand, interconnected mountain chain, like the Himalayas."
(source: Teachings of Hindu Mystics - By Andrew Harvey p. xv -
xviii).
255. Vecente Avelino ( ? ) who was the Consul General
for Brazil in India in 1930 belonged to the inner circle called Tattva Shri Chaitanya. He was a devout
Vaishanava and an ardent admirer of Shri Ramakrishna. In an address at
Panihati, near Calcutta, on the occasion of a religious festival organized by
the Shri Gauranga Grantha Mandir to commemorate Shri Chaitanya's visit to that
place, he said: "India is the only country which has known God and if anyone wants to know God he must know India."
(source: The Vision of India - By Sisirkumar Mitra p.207-208)
256. Claude Arpi ( ? ) French dentist-turned- Tibetologist, author of Fate of Tibet: When Big Insects Eat Small Insects has written:
"Though I am still a French man, I adopted this country as my own long ago However, today, I am sad. When I left France for India, I came with a dream: I was going to the land of the Vedas, of the Buddha, a continent with an eternal religion. I thought everyone in this country was turned "inwards", seeking a higher light; I believed India would soon be able to guide the world towards a more meaningful tomorrow. Why I am sad now? I can't help feeling a terrible divide between this dream and today's reality (at least the one depicted in the English media).
I still believe in "India of the ages", but I cannot grasp why Indians themselves still refuse to acknowledge the greatness of their culture.
Is it not disheartening that historians base their judgment on press reports and not on their own scholarship? Then why do they spend three days discussing text-books when there are so many more important subjects related to history to be discussed?
What about the neglected discoveries of Poompuhar or the new sites in the Gulf of Cambay?
It is estimated that 12 million Americans are today practicing yoga and that 450 yoga centers are blossoming in the US. The same tidal wave is submerging Europe. In France alone, more than one million people are practicing Buddhist meditation.
What is sad and shocking is that these historians, like many intellectuals in India, are not at all concerned by what has always made India great, they prefer to denigrate India. "
(source: India of old-new dreams - by Claude Arpi - dailypioneer.com).
257. Jean Michel Varenne ( ? ) the distinguished French Orientalist wrote in 1976:
“The only remaining testimony to the prestigious civilization of
ancient Egypt lies buried in archaeological remains; which meant that the
inhabitants of the Nile valley, converted to Islam thirteen centuries ago, had
to wait for Champollion to decipher the hieroglyphics before they could know
anything of the beliefs of their distant ancestors. Yet during all this time Hindu families continued, and still continue
today, to venerate the selfsame Vishnu who is celebrated in the archaic hymns
of the Rig Veda…”
“It would be impossible to overemphasize this exceptional
durability of a civilization that is extremely difficult to conceive of as
mortal. And certainly the Hindus themselves would be the last to subscribe to
the notion that all cultures have a limited life-span. That is the product of
Western minds trained at an early age to write essays on “The Causes of the
fall of the Roman Empire,” of a Christian or a Moslem faith proud of the fact
that its first believers once repudiated pagan polytheism, and therefore prone
to assume that all civilizations are perishable the same way as human beings
themselves. To the traditional minded Hindu, on the other hand, such
revolutions are inconceivable, for him, the religion he professes has no
beginning and no end; it had no founder, and it lies in no one’s power to
attack or breach it. It is the eternal
norm (in Sanskrit, sanatana dharma), the universal law, the supreme religion.
Being absolute, it cannot be modified in any way and remains identical to
itself down through the ages.”
Traditional India knows that nothing in the universe is chance,
that everything is necessity. In the infinite multiplicity of the real it reads
a reference to unity, and perceives the rule of a sovereign order even where
complexity seems in danger of lapsing chaos and incoherence. The All, in itself
and in each of its parts, is governed by an immutable, unbreakable law that
supports the world while at the same time transcending it absolutely."
(source: Yoga And the Hindu Tradition - By Jean Varenne p.
1-15). 258. Count Louis Hamon aka Cheiro (1866-1936) author of several book, Language of the Hand and World Predictions published in 1926. Born in Ireland as William John Warner, Cheiro also went by the name Count Louis Hamon.
He had a wide following of famous European and American clients like Mark Twain, Sarah Bernhardt, Mata Hari, Oscar Wilde, Grover Cleveland, Thomas Edison, the Prince of Wales, General Kitchener, William Gladstone, Bernard Shaw and Joseph Chamberlain.
He spoke of the Hindu race and the
remarkable sciences for foretelling future, (The Bhavishya Purana) which the
Hindus, have, as prophetic sciences:
“To consider the origin of this science, we must take our thoughts
back to the earliest days of the world’s history, and further more to the
consideration of a people the oldest of all, yet one that has survived, and who
are today as characteristic and as full of individuality as they were when
thousands of years ago the first records of history were written.
I allude to those children of the East, the Hindus, a people whose philosophy and wisdom
are every day being more and more revived.”
“Looking back to the earliest days of the history of the known
world, we find that the first linguistic records belong to the people under
consideration, and date back to that far distant cycle of time known as the Aryan
civilization. Beyond history we cannot go; but the monuments and cave temples
of India, according to the testimony of archaeologists, all point to a time so
far beyond the scant history at our disposal, that in the examination of such
matters our greatest knowledge is dwarfed into infantile nothingness – our age
and era are but the swaddling clothes of the child; our manhood that of the
infant in the arms of the eternity of time.”
“Long before Rome or Greece or Israel
was even heard of, the mountains of India point back to an age, of learning
beyond, and still beyond. From the astronomical calculations
that the figures in their temples represent, it has been estimated that the
Hindu understood the Precession of the Equinoxes centuries before the Christian
Era."
(source: Hinduism in The Space Age - By E. Vedavyas p. 233-235)
In a book called You and Your Hand by the late Count Louis Hamon, known
better as Cheiro, this statement is found:
"people who in their ignorance disdain the wisdom of
ancient races forget that the great past of India contained secrets of life and
philosophy that following civilizations could not controvert, but were
forced to accept. For
instance, it has been demonstrated that the ancient Hindus
understood the precession of the equinoxes and made the calculation that
it [a complete cycle] took place once in every 25,870 years. The
observation and mathematical precision necessary to establish
such a theory has been the wonder and admiration of modern astronomers.
They, with their modern knowledge and up-to-date instruments, are
still quarrelling among themselves as to whether the precession, the most
important feature in astronomy, takes place every 25,870 years
or every 24,500 years. The majority believe that the Hindus made no
mistakes, but how they arrived at such a calculation is as great a mystery as
the origin of life itself."
(source: Antiquity of Indian Astrology).
259. Richard Lannoy (1928 - ) author of The Speaking Tree: A Study of Indian Culture and Society has
written: “The Kailash temple at Ellora, a complete sunken Brahmanical temple carved out in the late seventh and eighth centuries A. D is over 100 feet high, the largest structure in India to survive from ancient times, larger than the Parthenon. This representation of Shiva’s mountain home, Mount Kailash in the Himalaya, took more than a century to carve, and three million cubic feet of stone were removed before it was completed. An inscription records the exclamation of the last architect on looking at his work: “Wonderful! O How could I ever have done it?”.
In Europe’s middle ages, the great cathedrals, including the one
of Chartres, rose from the ground upwards to the sky, supported not so much by
stone as by the powerful religious symbolism that drove the Christian church.
In India, the craftsmen did not build, but removed the earth and stone to
discover space in the service of a different religious symbolism, not one
identified with any religious monolith, but instead, one to which different
religious groups owed allegiance. Here Lannoy is more precise:
“A hollowed-out space in living rock is a totally different
environment from a building constructed of quarried stone. The human organism
responds in each case with a different kind of empathy. Buildings are fashioned
in sequence by a series of uniformly repeatable elements, segment by segment,
from a foundation upwards to the conjuction of walls and roof; the occupant
empathizes with a visible tension between gravity and soaring tensile strength.
Entering a great building is to experience an almost imperceptible tensing in
the skeletal muscles in response to constructional tension. Caves, on the other
hand, are scooped out by a downward plunge of the chisel from ceiling to floor
in the direction of gravity; the occupant empathizes with an invisible but
sensed resistance, an unrelenting presence in the rock enveloping him; sculpted
images and glowing pigments on the skin of the rock well forth from the deeps.
To enter an Indian cave sanctuary is to experience a relaxation of physical
tension in response to the implacable weight and density of solid rock.”
(source: Decolonizing History: Technology and Culture in India, China and the West
1492 to the Present Day - By Claude Alvares p.72-73).
260. Michel Danino (1956 - ) Born in 1956 at Honfleur (France) into a Jewish family recently
emigrated from Morocco, from the age of fifteen Michel Danino was drawn to
India, some of her great yogis, and soon to Sri Aurobindo and Mother and their
view of evolution which gives a new meaning to our existence on this earth. He
has been settled in Tamil Nadu for 25 years and has given many lectures in
India and is author of The Invasion That Never Was, The Indian Mind Then and Now, L’Inde et
L’invasion de nulle part and Kali
Yuga or The Age of Confusion. He
is also the convener of the International
Forum for India's Heritage.
He talks about Indian culture:
"The so-called “New Age”
trend of the 1960s owed as much to India as to America; a number of Western
universities offer excellent courses on various aspects of Indian civilization,
and if you want to attend some major symposium on Indian culture or India’s
ancient history, you may have to go to the U.S.A; some physicists are not shy
of showing parallels between quantum mechanics and yogic science; ecologists
call for a recognition of our deeper connection with Nature such as we find in
the Indian view of the world; a few psychologists want to learn from Indian
insights into human nature; hatha yoga has become quite popular."He has shown the reverence with which nature is held in Hinduism.
"In fact, since the start of the Judeo-Christian tradition, the West broke away from Nature and began regarding her as so much inanimate matter to be exploited (a polite word for plunder). The contrast with the ancient Indian attitude is as stark as could be. Indian tradition regards the earth as a goddess, Bhudevi ; her consort, Vishnu, the supreme divinity, incarnates from age to age to relieve her of the burden of demonic forces—sometimes of humanity itself. This he does out of love for the earth, his companion. Sita means “furrow,” and she returned to the earth whence she came. Shiva too is bound to the earth through Parvati, daughter of Himavat, i.e. the Himalayas. Earth and Heaven are therefore inseparable: “Heaven is my father; my mother is this vast earth, my close kin,” says the Rig-Veda (I.164.33)."
(source: bharatvani.org and Nature and Indian Tradition - By Michel Danino).
Refer to Arise Awake to the New Indian Age - By Michel Danino and The Lost River: On the trail of the Sarasvati - By Michel Danino - penguin
"Western civilization, not even three centuries after the Industrial Revolution, is now running out of breath. It has no direction, no healthy foundations, no value left except selfishness and greed, nothing to fill one's heart with. India alone has preserved something of the deeper values that can make a man human, and the world will surely be turning to them in search of a remedy to its advanced malady."
Once India's ancientness is recognized, we can understand the strength that enabled her civilization to survive through all those ages. Whether she will survive her present phase of degradation and lead the world to a new phase is the question."
(source: Sri Aurobindo and Indian Civilization - By Michel Danino). For more on Michel Danino, refer to chapter on Aryan Invasion Theory).
He has asked this agonizing question:
"A German or French or English child will be taught something of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, because they are regarded as the root of European culture and somehow present in European consciousness today. ... But Indian Epics a hundred times richer and vaster in human experience, a thousand time more present in Indian consciousness will not taught to an Indian child. Not to speak of other important texts such as the beautiful Tamil epics, Shilapathikkaram and Manimekalai."
(source: The riddle of India's Ancient Past - indicdharma.blogspot.com). For more refer to http://micheldanino.voiceofdharma.com/).
“If [Indian] teachers were not so ignorant, as a rule, of their own culture, they would have no difficulty in showing their students that the much vaunted 'scientific temper' is nothing new to India.”
(source: Effects of Colonization on Indian Thought - By Michel Danino - indiacause.com).
261. Jack Sarfatti ( ? ) Physicist of the Physics/Consciousness Research Group writes:
"I suspect that general relativity and quantum theory are two complimentary aspects of a deeper theory that will involve a kind of cosmic consciousness. The cosmic consciousness or the Mahat of India's Samkhya Philosophy is the basis of entire creation".
(source: Science and Vedanta - By H M Ganesh Rao)
262. B B (Braj Basi) Lal (1921- ) On joining the Archaeological Survey
in January 1946, he held charge of the Excavations Branch and participated with
Sir Mortimer Wheeler in the excavations at Harappa, now in Pakistan. In 1951 he
was deputed for advanced studies at the Institute of Archaeology, London. In
1961, under a UNESCO project, he conducted excavations in Nubia, Egypt, and
brought to light valuable evidence relating to prehistoric and protohistoric
periods of that country.
He was the Director General of the Archaeological Survey of India
from 1968 to 1972. He writes:
"The great civilization of the Indian subcontinent, has had
its roots deep in antiquity, some seven to eight thousand years ago, and its
flowering in the third millennium B.C. still lives on. In contrast, when we
look round the world we are surprised by the fact that the Egyptian and
Mesopotamia civilizations that flourished alongside this Indic Civilization
have all disappeared, leaving hardly any trace behind. Why? The Indian psyche
has indeed been pondering over this great cultural phenomenon of 'livingness',
and this quest.."
" What is that ‘something’, some inherent strength? Doubtless
it lies in the liberal character of the Indian civilization, which allows for
cross-fertilization with other cultures, without losing its own identity. Even
time (kala), the great devourer,
has stood testimony to the fact that the deep foundations of Indian culture
could not be shaken either by internal upheavals, however great may have
been their magnitude...." "
the soul of India lives on!"
Speaking about the River
Saraswati, he writes:
"Western linguists and historians and their, more vociferous,
Indian counterparts claim that the Rigvedic Sarasvati was the Helmand of
Afghanistan. The Rigvedic Saraswati,
according to what is stated in the Rig Veda (RV. 10. 75. 5) itself lay between
the Yamuna on the one hand and the Sutlej on the other. These two rivers do not
exist in Afghanistan.
(source: The Saraswati Flows on: The Continuity of Indian Culture - By
B. B. Lal. p. Chapter V p. 136).
Lal is critical of
‘‘Western scholars and their Indian followers’’ for not accepting the
unity between the Indus Valley and Vedic Civilizations.
‘‘Most likely, the authors of the Indus valley civilization were the Sanskrit-speaking Vedic Aryans,’’ Lal asserted. Lal invoked the Rig Veda to prove his thesis. “To say the Vedic people were nomads is either ignorance or due to a willful twisting of facts,” he alleged.
(source: Times of India 12/26/02).
He has dubbed the hypothesis of “Aryan invasion of India” a myth.
He alleged that it was still accepted for reasons other than historical. ‘‘Most likely, the authors of the Indus valley civilization were the Sanskrit-speaking Vedic Aryans,’’ Lal asserted. Lal invoked the Rig Veda to prove his thesis. “To say the Vedic people were nomads is either ignorance or due to a willful twisting of facts,” he alleged.
(source: Times of India 12/26/02).
“The theory that there was an Aryan invasion of India is completely wrong,” Lal stressed in a seminar in New Delhi and alleged that political reasons were behind its being in the textbooks. “Do the proponents of this theory expect us to believe that urban Harappans, on being sent away to south India, shed overnight their urban characteristics and took to a stone age way of living?" asks Lal.
(source: Aryan invasion a
myth, argues former DG of ASI - indianexpress.com). For more
refer to chapter on Aryan Invasion
Theory)
263. Sir John Woodroffe aka
Arthur Avalon (1865 -1936) the well known scholar, Advocate-General of Bengal and
sometime Legal Member of the Government of India. He served with competence for
eighteen years and in 1915 officiated as Chief Justice.
Alongside his judicial duties he studied Sanskrit and Hindu
philosophy and was especially interested in the esoteric Hindu Tantric Shakti
system. He translated some twenty original Sanskrit texts, and under his
pseudonym Arthur Avalon he published and lectured prolifically and
authoritatively on Indian philosophy and a wide range of Yoga and Tantra
topics. His work helped to unleash in the West a deep and wide interest in
Hindu philosophy and Yogic practices.
He was instrumental in removing many of the cobwebs of ignorance
that had come to cluster round the Sakta philosophy and practice. His most
popular and influential book, a major contribution to the appreciation of
Indian philosophy and spirituality, is The Serpent Power – The secrets of tantric
and shaktic yoga, Sakti and Sakta, Introduction to Tantra Sastra and The World as Power
He has said:
"Ages before Lamarck and Darwin it was held in India that man
has passed through 84 lakhs (8,400,000) of birth as plants, animals, as an
"inferior species of man" and then as the ancestor of the developed
type existing to-day. The theory was
not, like modern doctrine of evolution, based wholly on observation and a
scientific enquiry into fact but was a rather (as some other matters) an act of
brilliant intuition in which observation may also have had some part."
"Indian thought with its usual profundity and avoidance of
arbitrary divisions, regards Philosophy as religious and Religion as
philosophical."
The Vedanta does not speak
ill of any religion, but assigns to each its place....I however was
concerned with the religion of the "Idolatrous"
"Heathen"...The point was this,...how could such a grade people have
principles so excellent that the Western Religions also laid claim to them? It
is clear that God has revealed Himself at all times and to all peoples
according to their capacity to receive knowledge of Him. "It is
Official Christianity which has been slow to recognize the merit of Indian
teaching and to give credit for anything to the "Heathen." Vedanta kindly tolerates even the most
ignorant of its detractors. "
"It is Official Christianity which
has been slow to recognize the merit of Indian teaching and to give credit for
anything to the "Heathen. The European man of a "religious" turn
of mind is too often over-beset with sectarian notions."
Attacks on Indian culture however have led and will lead to its
defense and appreciation. Kalidasa
says:
"Jvalati chalitendhanah agnir viprakritah
pannagah phanam kurute
Prayah svam mahinmanam kshobhat pratipadyate hi janah."
"Jvalati chalitendhanah agnir viprakritah
pannagah phanam kurute
Prayah svam mahinmanam kshobhat pratipadyate hi janah."
"When the faggots are stirred the flame leaps. When the Snake
is stirred it rears its hood. Through being stirred to action people mostly
attain their proper greatness."
In writing then of Indian Culture I have in mind not any soiled or
hybrid developments of the time, but the
principles of the civilization
of old India, with its Dharma, Devata and Gomata - a civilization in its depths
profound, on its surface a pageant of antique beauty - the civilization of
India of the Hindus." In India there has been intellectual
and spiritual freedom - the most valuable of all. The history of Europe on the
contrary is marked by intolerance and abominable persecutions."
"If, as is finely said in India, Satyannasti paro dharmah -
there is no religion higher than truth. As the Veda says, "Truth will
conquer." (Satyam jayate).
(source: Is India Civilized: Essays on Indian Culture - By Sir John
Woodroffe p. xiv - 22)
"An examination of the Vedic
thesis shows that it is in conformity with the most advanced philosophical and
scientific thoughts of the West and, where this is not so, it is the scientist
who will go to the Vedantist and not the Vedantist to the scientist."
(source: Hinduism: The Eternal Religion - By M. D. Chaturvedi
p.16-17).
A judge, an educator, a Hindu scholar and translator as well as an
author. During his multifaceted career, he practiced and taught law in India.
Aside from his successful career in law, which lead to his appointment as Chief
Justice of the high court in 1915, he had a a prolific output as a scholar of
Tantra. Had it not been for him, we might still share that general
prejudice regarding Tantra.
At the beginning of the twentieth century, Woodroffe boldly disregarded the hostile attitude towards Tantra.
Sir John Woodroffe's achievement in the exposition of Tantrik
thought cannot be over estimated. Himself a follower of Tantric cult, this
great Englishman edited in a masterly way a number of Tantric texts and most of
his views on them are regarded as authoritative. It is mainly through his
writings - a rare combination of insight and scholarship - that the ideas of
the Tantras began to enter the mind of the West in modern times.
(source: The Vision of India - By Sisirkumar Mitra p. 209).
In his views, Tantrism
represents the full flowering of the religious spirit of India.
(source: Religions of
Ancient India - By Louis Renou p. 84).
Writing under the pseudonym, Arthur Avalon seemed to be an ‘An
Indian Soul in a European Body? His books challenged the dominant Western understanding of Tantra as a
primitive and demonic cult. His emphasis was on the philosophical aspects of
Tantra and his conclusion that textual descriptions of rites should be read as
deeply spiritual symbolism. Author of several books including Bharata Shakti, The Serpent Power he has written:
"I believe that the East and
particularly India possesses that which is the highest value. I wish to see
this preserved for the mutual benefit of East and West. "
"...India has Panini, Patanjali's Mahbhashya, Supadma,
Kalapa, the Vakyapadiya, Bhopadeva, Sangkshiptasara, Siddantakaumudi,
Laghukaumudi, amongst the ancient, while the Vyakarna Kaumudi, Upakramanika of
Ishwara Chandra Vidyasagara, and the ashubodha of Taranatha Vachaspati head the
moderns. How is it that all these have been displaced? "
Indian tolerance is not merely a matter of temperament. It is
based on the doctrine of the relativity of ordinary human knowledge and, in
part, of morals and on the doctrine of Adhikara, that is the teaching that all
people are not fit for the same beliefs and practices, and that what is suited
to the capacity, intellectual, moral, and spiritual, of each person is that which
he may and should accept, follow, and practice.
Hinduism has no word for "pessimism," a European
conception, nor for optimism either. The universe according to it is a Dvandva
or duality of good and evil.
(source: Bharata Shakti: Collection of Addresses on Indian Culture - By Sir John Woodroffe p. xxi-xxvi. For more information, refer to chapter on Yoga and Hindu Philosophy).
(source: Bharata Shakti: Collection of Addresses on Indian Culture - By Sir John Woodroffe p. xxi-xxvi. For more information, refer to chapter on Yoga and Hindu Philosophy).
“In India there has been intellectual
and spiritual freedom – the most valuable of all. This is evidenced by the
great variety of religious and philosophical opinion in this country,
Rationalism Theism, Atheism and so forth, and the existence of a large number
of varying religious communities. The history of Europe on the contrary is
marked by intolerance and abominable persecution. The “liberty loving nations
of the West” have been in the past greatly, and still are to some extent,
behind India in the matter of intellectual and religious freedom.”
(source: Is India Civilized: Essays on Indian Culture - By Sir John
Woodroffe p. 21 - 22)
264. Prof Klaus Klostermaier (1933 - ) Distinguished Professor in
the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Manitoba in Canada. He
is author of several books including Hinduism: A Short Introduction. He has written:
"Hinduism has proven much more open than any other religion to new ideas, scientific thought, and social experimentation. Many concepts like reincarnation, meditation, yoga and others have found worldwide acceptance. It would not be surprising to find Hinduism the dominant religion of the twenty-first century. It would be a religion that doctrinally is less clear-cut than mainstream Christianity, politically less determined than Islam, ethically less heroic than Buddhism, but it would offer something to everybody.
It will appear idealistic to those who look for idealism, pragmatic to the pragmatists, spiritual to the seekers, sensual to the here-and-now generation. Hinduism, by virtue of its lack of an ideology and its reliance on intuition, will appear to be more plausible than those religions whose doctrinal positions petrified a thousand years ago..."
"Hinduism will spread not so much through the gurus and swamis, who attract a certain number of people looking for a new commitment and a quasi-monastic life-style, but it will spread mainly through the work of intellectuals and writers, who have found certain Hindu ideas convincing and who identify them with their personal beliefs. A fair number of leading physicists and biologists have found parallels between modern science and Hindu ideas. An increasing number of creative scientists will come from a Hindu background, will consciously, and unconsciously blend their scientific and their religious ideas. All of us may be already much more Hindu than we think."
(source: A Survey of Hinduism - by Klaus Klostermaier p 475-476)
265. Swami B V Tripurari ( ? ) American born has spent over 30 years as a Hindu monastic, Awarded the sannyasa order in 1975, Swami Tripurari has studied under several spiritual masters in the Gaudiya lineage, notably AC Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada. He is the founder of the Gaudiya Vaishava Society in 1985, author of several books, most recently Bhagavad-Gita: Its Feeling and Philosophy.
"For those now disenchanted with industrialization and scientific materialism as well as pseudo spirituality, India's ancient spiritual heritage provides a rich alternative. Eastern philosophy, and the devotional heart of India's Vedanta in particular, can fill the empty shopping bag of our Western accomplishments."
'Whoever reads the Bhagavad Gita for the first time will be struck by the beauty and depth of this work."
"Our present environmental crisis is in essence a spiritual crisis. We need only to look back to medieval Europe and the psychic revolution that vaulted Christianity to victory over paganism to find the spirit of the environmental crisis. Inhibitions to the exploitation of nature vanished as the Church took the "spirits" out of the trees, mountains, and seas. Christianity's ghost-busting theology made it possible for man to exploit nature in a mood of indifference to the feelings of natural objects. It made nature man's monopoly. This materialist paradigm has dominated the modern world for last few centuries. The current deplorable condition demands a spiritual response. A fundamental reorientation of human consciousness, accompanied by action that is born out of inner commitment, is very much needed. One of the measures that could help a great deal to fulfill this need is to regenerate and rejuvenate basic values of Hindu culture and propagate them."
(source: Ancient Wisdom for Modern Ignorance - By B V Tripurari p ix -xii and 13). For more on Swami Tripurari refer to chapter on Nature Worship).
266. Madeleine Biardeau ( ? ) was professor of Indian Religion at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes in Paris, author of several books, including Studies in Hinduism: Vedism and Hinduism and India.
She wrote about the interchange that is continually occurs in Indian philosophy and which can even be experienced by the more prosaic foreigner if he is willing to attune himself to the Indian atmosphere. She writes that, as well as being 'a personal loving God in the form of Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita, divinity is at the same time referred to in the Bhagavad Purana divinity and in many other texts as supremely impassive - none other than the cosmos itself.
"The God of Indian devotion - bhakti who responds to the same eternal needs of the human heart as exists anywhere else, never detaches himself wholly from the immanence of the world. He is personal and endowed with feelings only in the eyes of popular piety; to thought he reveals himself both far beyond and within at the same time; he reveals it as much as he hides it; and each man is in himself in some sort a manifestation of God."
(source: The Music of India - By Peggy Holroyde p. 36)
267. Navaratna S Rajaram (1943 - ) is a mathematician, computer scientist and linguist and historian of science. He has taught in several universities in the United States. Since 1984 he has been an advisor to the National Aeronautical and Space Administration (NASA).
He has written several books including Politics of History, Aryan Invasion Theory and the Subversion of Scholarship
He has written:
"Hindu God is not an external God who reveals himself only to a chosen prophet to be then imposed as the ultimate authority on others. God is something that anyone can know through one's own effort and seeking. Remember Krishna's words: "All creatures great and small - I am equal to all; I hate none, nor have I any favorites." The different yogas are pathways that can lead one to knowledge of God. This is similar to ancient Greek mysticism as practiced by sages like Pythagoras. There is no dogma that an external agent enforces upon everyone in the name of One God. Thus, the Hindu God like the Greek God is a personal God - as diverse as the individual. The multiplicity of Gods one sees in Hindu and Greek pantheons is a reflection of the multiplicity of pathways explored by sages. It is a natural consequence of the spiritual freedom that is the right of every Hindu. "
(source: A Hindu View of the World: Essays In the Intellectual Kshatriya Tradition - By N S Rajaram p. 8). For more refer to chapter on Aryan Invasion Theory
268. Swami Dayanand Saraswati (1824-1883) Rightly described as a human dynamo, Swami Dayananda shook the structure of established Hinduism to its foundations and infused into it new blood and fresh vigor. The founder of Arya Samaj, was a prophet with a difference. Dayanand is the father of both Renaissance (he brought to life world’s supreme knowledge, the Vedas, with his slogan ‘Back to Vedas) and Reformation. In 1849, the British annexation of Punjab, introduced the aggressive conversion of faith of Christianity. In time, Christianity threatened each of the coexisting religions. Christian missionaries brought with them new forms of organization and techniques of proselytism. He created a psychological revolution and gave tremendous self-confidence to Hindudom. Swamy Dayananda took the Christian and Muslim converts back into the Hindu fold by performing purification rites for them.
The British rulers sought to consolidate their rule by instilling inferiority complex among the then 90 per cent majority community. The British called Indians "most backward, barbaric, without the gift of scientific inventions and discoveries, the worst and most pitiable creatures, to whom we brought the light of learning, blessings of science and modernism"
Dayanand thundered: ‘Our Vedas are the earliest books, Hinduism is the most ancient of all the religions that have survived".
(source: The prophet with a difference - tribuneindia.com).
Another very important contribution of Swami Dayananda is his work, 'Satyartha Prakash' (The Light of Truth). It contains fourteen chapters. It is a great book. It explains the true meaning of the Vedas and therefore is 'Satyartha Prakash'. And it is based solely on the Vedas.
(source: freeindia.org). For more on Dayananda Saraswati, refer to chapter Unknown Hindu Revivalists and refer to Arya Samaj.com.
269. Peggy Holroyde ( ? ) British author of several books on India including Indian Music: a vast ocean of promise and East comes West: a background to some Asian Faiths, writes:
"The sparkling energy of India lies in Hinduism. Without the framework of Hindu belief India would fall apart. Without Hinduism India is not herself.
"Because Indian society has, like the Chinese, been a unitary one where science and religion have never been in conflict, there has been no basic split as has happened with our own Christian background. Our own antagonism between the two disciplines of theology and science has created chaos in our thinking and a curious dichotomy during the past two centuries. In India I found a thankful release from our restricted vision of the creation of God."
"Hinduism has remained in constant, replenished usage throughout this tremendous stretch of time, impervious to outside influence, as onward flowing as the imperturbable Ganga itself. Not even Moghul invasion and Muslim supremacy for 700 years, nor the arrival of the British, Dutch, French and Portuguese with their own civilization and standards, penetrated into the imperious core of this steadfast faith. Hindu thought took and absorbed according to its own will, folding itself inwards at the sense of approaching danger like some gigantic sea-anemone drawing up all its tentacles, only to stretch outwards and flourish when the danger was past. One continues to hope that this will remain so, that modern Indians will realize that this is their enviable strength despite all their understandable yearnings for the material advantages of technology which they have seen give power and monopoly of advantage to the Western world. But their quality of synthesis, of intelligent absorption, may still save them from the sterility of urban life and the monotonous obsession with quantity and things, rather than with quality and life-perspective."
(source: The Music of India - By Peggy Holroyde p. 44-52)
270. Fritjof Capra (1939 - ) Austrian-born famous theoretical high-energy physicist and ecologist and the author of The Tao of Physics: An Exploration of the Parallels Between Modern Physics and Eastern Mysticism, He is co-director of the Center for Eco-Literacy in Berkeley. Capra who studied with Werner Heisenberg says:
"Hinduism cannot be called a philosophy, nor is it a well
defined religion. It is, rather, a large and complex socio-religious organism
consisting of innumerable sects, cults, and philosophical systems and involving
various rituals, ceremonies and spiritual disciplines, as well as the worship
of countless gods, and goddesses. The
many facets of this complex, and yet persistent and powerful spiritual
tradition mirror the geographical, racial, linguistic and cultural complexities
of India’s vast subcontinent. The manifestations of Hinduism range from
highly intellectual depth to the naïve ritual practices of the masses. If the
majority of the Hindus are simple villagers who keep the popular religion alive
in their daily worship, Hinduism has,
on the other hand, brought forth a large number of outstanding spiritual
teachers to transmit its profound insights. "
The Upanishads
contain the essence of Hinduism’s spiritual message. They have guided and
inspired India’s greatest minds for the last twenty-five centuries, in
accordance with the advice given by their verses:
Taking as a bow the great weapon of the Upanishad,
One should put upon it an arrow sharpened by
Meditation.
Stretching it with a though directed to the essence of That,
Penetrate that Imperishable as the mark, my friend.
One should put upon it an arrow sharpened by
Meditation.
Stretching it with a though directed to the essence of That,
Penetrate that Imperishable as the mark, my friend.
Modern physics has shown that the rhythm of creation and
destruction is not only manifest in the turn of the seasons and in the birth
and death of all living creatures, but is also the very essence of inorganic
matter. Modern physics has thus revealed that every subatomic particle not only
performs an energy dance, but also is
an energy dance; a pulsating process of creation and destruction.
"I saw cascades of energy coming down from outer space, in
which particles were destroyed and created in rhythmic pulses; I saw the atoms
of the elements and those of my body participating in this cosmic dance of
energy; I felt its rhythm and I heard its sound, and at that moment I knew that
this was the Dance of Shiv, the Lord of
Dancers."
"The metaphor of the cosmic dancer has found its most profound and beautiful expression in Hinduism in the image of the dancing Shiva."
"The metaphor of the cosmic dancer has found its most profound and beautiful expression in Hinduism in the image of the dancing Shiva."
"The dance of Shiva is the dancing
universe, the ceaseless flow of energy going
through an infinite variety of patterns that melt into one another’’.
For the modern physicists, then Shiva’s dance is the dance of subatomic matter. As in Hindu
mythology, it is a continual dance of creation and destruction involving the
whole cosmos; the basis of all existence and of all natural phenomenon.
Hundreds of years ago, Indian artists created visual images of dancing Shivas
in a beautiful series of bronzes. In our times, physicists have used the most
advanced technology to portray the patterns of the cosmic dance. The
bubble-chamber photographs of interacting particles, which bear testimony to
the continual rhythm of creation and destruction in the universe, are visual
images of the dance of Shiva equaling those of the Indian artists in beauty and
profound significance. The metaphor of the cosmic dance thus unifies ancient
mythology, religious art, and modern physics. It is indeed, as Coomaraswamy has
said, ‘poetry, but none the less science."
"The idea of a periodically expanding and contracting
universe, which involves a scale of tome and space of vast proportions; has
arisen not only in modern cosmology, but also in ancient Indian mythology.
Experiencing the universe as an organic and rhythmically moving cosmos, the
Hindus were able to develop evolutionary cosmologies which come very close to
our modern scientific models. The Hindu
sages were not afraid to identify this rhythmic divine play with the evolution
of the cosmos as a whole. They pictured the universe as periodically
expanding and contracting and gave the name kalpa to the unimaginable time span
between the beginning and the end of one creation. The scale of this ancient myth is indeed staggering; it has taken the
human mind more than two thousand years to come up again with a similar
concept."
"..the two foundations of of twentieth-century physics -
quantum theory and relativity theory - both force us to see the world very much
in the way a Hindu, Buddhist...sees it."
(source: The Tao of Physics: An Exploration of the Parallels Between Modern
Physics and Eastern Mysticism - By Fritjof Capra p. 85 - 245
and 17).
“One of my first excursions in Bombay was to the famous Elephanta
(Gharapuri) caves, a magnificent ancient temple dedicated to Shiva with huge
stone sculptures representing the god in his many manifestations. I stood in awe in front of those powerful
sculptures whose reproductions I had known and loved for many years: the triple
image of Shiva Mahesvara, the Great Lord, radiating serene tranquility and
peace; Shiva Ardhanari, the stunning unification of male and female forms in
the rhythmic, swaying movement of the deity’s androgynous body and in the
serene detachment of his/her face; and Shiva Nataraja the celebrated four-armed
Cosmic Dancer whose superbly balanced gestures express the dynamic unity of all
life.” “I had a more powerful experience of Shiva sculpture in the
Ellora caves. The beauty and power of these sacred caves are beyond words.
“
Capra had shown Heisenberg
numerous examples that the principal Sanskrit terms used in Hindu and Buddhist
philosophy – Brahman, rita, lila, karma,
samsara etc. had dynamic connotations.
(source: Uncommon Wisdom - By Fritjof Capra p. 49
and p 306 -309).
Refer to Shiva's Cosmic
Dance at CERN - the European Center for Research in Particle Physics
in Geneva.
271. Paul Brunton (1898 -1981) was a British philosopher, mystic,
traveler and author of A Hermit in the Himalayas, A Message from Arunachala and The Orient: Legacy to the West. A Search in Secret India is one of the great classics
of spiritual travel writing. With a keen eye for detail, Paul Brunton describes
taking a circular journey round India: living amongst yogis, mystics and gurus,
seeking the one who would give him the peace and tranquility that come with
self-knowledge. His vividly told search ends at Arunachala, with Sri Ramana
Maharshi. He has observed:
"We are witnessing in the West the appearance of an at
present thin but slowly deepening current of interest in those very thoughts
and ideas which the young men of India
are today doing their best to reject as inadequate to their needs and which
constitute the faith and religious traditions of their forefathers."
"For Indian culture is fruitful in
the domain of psychology, philosophy, and religion, so fruitful that there are
few doctrines which appeared out of original Western sources that have not
already been anticipated and developed...in India. "
The Bhagavad Gita
contains the mental quintessence and
successful synthesis of the various systems of religion and philosophy, it offers
a unique epitome of the high culture of prehistoric India. The following
sentences from the Bhagavad Gita unite in making the same declaration of an
unseen Reality and Unity which dwells behind nature.
“My self is the bearer of all existence.”
“All this world is pervaded by Me in My unmanifested form.”
“All this world is pervaded by Me in My unmanifested form.”
This doctrine is the keystone in the
entire arch of the earliest Indian philosophy.
This idea appealed to several “wise men” of our Western world -
philosophers and scientists, living so many centuries later, including Tennyson, Thomas Carlyle, and Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Alfred Lord Tennyson, (1809-1892) one time Poet Laureate of England sings:
“The sun, the moon, the stars, the hills and the plains,
Are not these, O Soul, the vision of Him who reigns?
The ear of man cannot hear, and the eye of man cannot see;
But if we could see and hear this vision – were it not He?”
Are not these, O Soul, the vision of Him who reigns?
The ear of man cannot hear, and the eye of man cannot see;
But if we could see and hear this vision – were it not He?”
"Ralph
Waldo Emerson (1803-1882), whose Transcendentalism
earned him the appellation of "the Boston Brahmin."
Reading through his writings and essays we find several passages which insists,
as the Hindu texts on the subordinate character of the visible material
creation."
The work of physicists like Currie, Rutherford, Fermi, Cockcroft,
Chadwick, Anderson and Millikan has brought us to the practical and proven
scientific principle that the inner structure of matter is reducible to a
single fundamental substance, an essential and immortal energy which is the
"life" of the myriad forms that make up the universe. Modern
development in the laboratory will vindicate the theory of a single element
underlying all the visible and different manifestations of material Nature, we
shall have to grant that the assertions
of the Hindu philosophers, made thousands of years ago....are but results of
the insight practiced by keenly perceptive and concentrated minds."
"The ancient Hindus took their philosophic statements in the
nature of a revelation from on high, as issuing forth from their seers as a
result of a personal self-experience in the spiritual domain. Our Western
scientists have no such experience, and if they are approaching similar
conclusions, it is because they are working their way from the profoundest
depths of this material world up to its farthest frontier where the ions elude
them and vanish into mystery……the wisest men of the ancient East and the modern
West…are beginning to arrive at precisely the same conclusions."
" This Indian doctrine declares human cognition of the entire
manifold universe to be illusionary in character. The vast multitude of
tangible objects and tangible creatures which we so plainly witness around us
were said to be the product of the constructive imagination of the One Hidden
Self. Man and his material environments were but finite dreams passing through
the mind of the Infinite Dreamer. Consequently
all that we know of the world is nothing more or less than a series of idea
held in our consciousness. Thus we arrive at a completely idealistic
metaphysics which, because of its very nature, must apparently remain for ever
purely speculative and beyond the scope of the finest instruments which can be
devised to prove or disprove. Nevertheless the strangeness and unfamiliarity of
the doctrine fascinated the Indian mind to an amazing extent. That this early foreshadowing of modern
idealistic philosophy was not merely a worthless superstition is evidenced by
the fact that some brilliant minds of the West have been equally fascinated and
perplexed. "
One of the greatest 19th century scientists was Thomas Henry Huxley (1825-1895), his
work, Collected Essays vol. VI, serve to show how much ancient Indian philosophy
anticipated modern Western thought.
(source: Indian Philosophy
and Modern Culture - By Paul Brunton p. 9 - 92 London Rider & Co.
Paternoster House, E. C). For more on Paul Brunton refer to chapter on Glimpses VI)
272. William Cooke Taylor (1800-1849) author of several books including
A popular history of British India,
commercial intercourse with China, and the insular possessions of England in
the eastern seas. He spoke glowingly of Sanskrit literature:
"It was an astounding discovery that Hindustan possessed, in
spite of the changes of realms and chances of time, a language of unrivalled
richness and variety; a language, the parent of all those dialects that Europe
has fondly called classical - the source alike of Greek flexibility and Roman
strength. A philosophy, compared with
which, in point of age, the lessons of Pythagoras are but of yesterday, and in
point of daring speculation Plato's boldest efforts are tame and commonplace. A
poetry more purely intellectual than any of those which we had before any
conception; and systems of science whose antiquity baffled all power of
astronomical calculation. This literature, with all its colossal
proportions, which can scarcely be described without the semblance of bombast
and exaggeration claimed of course a place for itself - it stood alone, and it
was able to stand alone."
"To acquire the mastery of this language is almost the labor
of life; its literature seems exhaustless. The utmost stretch of imagination
can scarcely comprehend its boundless mythology. Its philosophy has touched
upon every metaphysical difficulty; its legislation is as varied as the castes
for which it was designed."
(source: Journal of the
Royal Asiatic Society Vol. II (1834) - W. C. Taylor's paper on Sanskrit
Literature).
273. Gertrude Emerson Sen ( - 1982) historian and journalist and
Asia specialist. Author of several books including The Story of Early Indian Civilization.
She married a Bengali - Basiswar Sen and in her Voiceless India, she learned to love the deep-rooted
Indian view of life, Indian ways of thought and Indian ideals
She considered Hinduism a
priceless heritage of India. The vast archaic literature been handed
down, and which faithfully preserves the ideas and ideals of those far-off
times. It establishes the wonderful continuity and depth of Indian
civilization.
"As the Indian sages
pondered on the problem of good and evil, they were confronted with the
apparent injustices and cruelties of the world around them, and this state of
affairs was finally reconciled with their idea of Brahman by the conception of
a universal ethical law applying to all life. This law as proclaimed as the law of karma. In the words of the Upanishads, "As is a man's desire
so is his will, and as is his will so is his deed, and whatever deed he does
that he will reap."
"India held a strange and irresistible attraction for the
whole of Asia in the first millennium. People in the most primitive stage of
development as well as the Chinese with a civilization as ancient and
illustrious as India's own, acknowledged India as first in the supreme realm of
spiritual perception. Yet the civilization of India, transplanted abroad, did
not have a deadening effect of suppressing or stifling native genius, as the
imposition of a foreign culture often does. On the contrary, it called out the
best that others had to give. As a result of India's fertilizing influence, new
and distinctive types of culture everywhere arose, and each new colony was able
to create and contribute fresh treasure, to be added to the great Asiatic
heritage. How Indian religions and
Indian culture blossomed anew in foreign environments and endured for many
centuries is a fascinating and little appreciated chapter of Indian
history."
"The Indian colonies which began
to grow up all along the periphery of the motherland were essentially cultural
and religious, rather than political or racial. Yet
they were subject to strong Indian influences. These swept outward like tidal
waves. They passed south to Sri Lanka and beyond to the remote islands of the
Pacific. They inundated Burma, Malaya, Siam and Indo-China. They overwhelmed
Nepal and Tibet. From Afghanistan, they passed along to central Asia and China.
They lapped at the far shores of Korea
and Japan. Indian religious ideas and literature, Indian conventions of art and
architecture, Indian legal codes and social practices...all took root in these
outer territories." "For a long time Indians seem to have held
the monopoly of maritime commerce in both the southern and eastern seas of
Asia. They possessed large ocean-going vessels, in which they first ventured to
Sri Lanka, Burma, Malaya and gradually they extended their journeys to Java and
Sumatra and then to southern China.'
(source: The Pageant of India's History - By Gertrude Emerson Sen
p. 52 - 322).
274. J. Seymour Keay ( ? ) British M. P. Banker in India and
Indian Agent writing in 1883:
" It cannot be too well understood that our position in India
has never been in any degree that of civilians bringing civilization to savage
races. When we landed in India we found
there a hoary civilization, which, during the progress of thousands of years,
had fitted itself into the character and adjusted itself to the wants of highly
intellectual races. The civilization was not perfunctory, but universal
and all pervading - furnishing the country not only with political systems, but
with social and domestic institutions of the most ramified description. The beneficent nature of these institutions
as a whole may be judged from their effects on the character of the Hindu race.
Perhaps there are no other people in the world who show so much in their
character the advantageous effect of their own civilization. They are shrewd in
business, acute in reasoning, thrifty, religious, sober, charitable, obedient
to parents, reverential to old age, amiable, law-abiding, compassionate towards
the helpless and patient under suffering."
(source: Hindu Swaraj or Indian Home Rule - By M. K. Gandhi p.
106)
275. Swami Rama Tirtha (1873-1906) renounced his career as a
Mathematician in order to practice and preach Vedanta.
"Sanatana means Eternal. In its purest form, this religion is
Sanatana, because it is based on Truth. Truth is immortal and is never
annihilated. It remains the same yesterday, today and forever. Therefore our
true Sanatana Dharma, in its purest form, cam never be exterminated. It, however,
does not follow that we should relax into inaction, in the belief that our
religion is the best or that it can never be destroyed. No, no. This idle
thinking is the result of our indolent minds. It is, therefore, absolutely essential for the followers of Sanatana
Dharma to keep it safe from the evil and aggressive designs of the non-Hindus,
who are generally ever ready to malign us."
Truth is not only Eternal but also unlimited and infinite. It is
all-embracing. It is the religion for all, irrespective of their caste, creed
or nationality. In fact, it is great and glaring, and never sectarian. It is
liberal. Other religions have all been founded by individuals. But this Sanatana Dharma is not based on the
teachings of any one single person. Much before Rama, Krishna, Buddha,
Christ, Mohammed, Shankarcharya and others, the germs of the fundamental
principles of Sanatana Dharma were present.
Sanatana Dharma is very simple and natural because it is based on
the Laws of Nature. The man whose life is molded according to these Laws,
irrespective of their being physical, mental and spiritual, is in the real
sense, a Sanatani. Santana Dharma is a
grand and all-embracing religion. There should be no narrow mindedness
in a Sanatani. He should feel His
presene in the Chandala, in the thief, the lowest beings, the sinners, the
foreigners and in all. He should worship God in all, especially in the hungry,
the needy and the downtrodden with selfless service and liberality. This is in
real sense, the true worship of and devotion to God."
(source: Om Sanatana
Dharma - By Swami Rama Tirtha p. 20-29 and p. 73)
276. R S Nathan ( ? ) author
of Hinduism That is Sanatana Dharma,
observes:
"The result is the profound
Philosophy of Vedanta to which more and more men and women from all
parts of the world are flocking today for light, solace and fulfillment. So in
India, Philosophy is not a hobby or an
escape, but an intense search for Truth after having found from
experience that mundane achievements only complicate our lives and takes us
farther from our real goal. In fact Rishis of yore did not make a distinction
between Science on the one side, and Religion and Philosophy on the other. The
Science of the Upa-Vedas and the Vedanagas, and the Philosophies are the
Vedas-Vedangas, all culminating in the Vedanata – the end of the Vedas.
"Sanatana Dharma" the most ancient of all the living
religions of today, a non-prophetic religion popularly known as
"Hinduism" since the last few centuries, based on all-embracing
universal love, the eternal values of life and human endeavor, time-tested
knowledge and wisdom, and all-comprehensive in its vision, has a permanent
message enshrined in it, for the entire humanity irrespective of time, place
and circumstances."
(source: Hinduism That is
Sanatana Dharma - By R S Nathan preface and 36 - 46 published by Central
Chinmaya Mission Trust - Bombay 1989)
277. Satprem (1923 -2007) aka Bernard Enginger, a sailor and a Breton
born in Paris. A member of the French Resistance. Satprem was arrested by the Gestapo
when he was twenty and spent a year and half in concentration camps. Devastated
he journey first to Upper Egypt, then to India, where he served in the French
colonial government of Pondicherry. There he discovered Sri Aurobindo and
Mother. Their Message - "Man is a transitional being" - struck a deep
chord.
His first essay was dedicated to Sri Aurobindo or the Adventure of Consciousness a book
that has led so many to Sri Aurobindo and the Mother. His book, Evolution II translated from the
French by Michel Danino is dedicated to the Souls of India:
"the millions souls of India
unknown to themselves
unknowing of their own Treasure
with my love infinite
"the millions souls of India
unknown to themselves
unknowing of their own Treasure
with my love infinite
In his book, Evolution II, he wondered after Man, who? But the
question is: After Man, how?
(source: Evolution II - by Satprem - Translated by Michel Danino).
Satprem believed in the Hindu concept of reincarnation and asks:
"Which sadist God has decreed that
we would have only one life to realize ourselves and through which colossal
ignorance Islam and Christianity have decided that we shall go to Heaven or
Hell, according to the deeds, bad or good, which we have committed in a single
life?"
(source: Arise O'India - By Francois Gautier p.
10-11 ISBN 81-241-0518-9 Har-Anand Publications 2000)
278. Allama Iqbal (1873-1938) Indian thinker and poet.
The great civilization of the Indian subcontinent, has had its
roots deep in antiquity, some seven to eight thousand years ago, and its
flowering in the third millennium B.C. still lives on. In contrast, when we
look round the world we are surprised by the fact that the Egyptian and Mesopotamia
civilizations that flourished alongside this Indic Civilization have all
disappeared, leaving hardly any trace behind. Why? The Indian psyche has indeed
been pondering over this great cultural phenomenon of 'livingness', and this
quest has been very aptly echoed by him in the following words:
Yunan-o-Misra Ruma sab mit gaye jahan se
Ab tak magar hai baqi namo-nishan hamara
Kuchh bat hai ki hasti mitati nahin hamari
Sadiyon raha hai dushman daur-i-zaman hamara
Ab tak magar hai baqi namo-nishan hamara
Kuchh bat hai ki hasti mitati nahin hamari
Sadiyon raha hai dushman daur-i-zaman hamara
Ancient civilizations of Greece, Egypt
and Rome have all disappeared from this world, but the elements of our
civilization still continue. Although world-events have been inimical to us for
centuries, there is something in our civilization which has withstood these
onslaughts.
(source: The Saraswati Flows on: The Continuity of Indian Culture - By
B. B. Lal. p. Chapter V p. 136). For more on B B Lal refer to chapter Quotes251-270).
Iqbal, described Lord Ram
as the Imam of Hindustan.
(source: Saeed Naqvi column - indianexpress.com).
279. Ekkirala Krishnamacharya (1926-1984) author of Cradle of Indian History, physician,
educationist and Kulapati (rector) of the Theosophy-related World Teacher Trust
in Visakhapatnam. Fondly called by his disciples as `Master E.K'
"There was no religion in this land, nor was any religion
necessary for the Indians. The ancient Indians had a code of law for man to
follow. This was framed in accordance with various truths working in natrue.
The law of the existence of nature and its creation was observed in all its
detail and the law for man to follow as copied in accordance with it. This was
called Dharma. The term means
that which bears and protects. It is that which bears and protects when we
follow (it). Man is honored when he honors it. He receives protection when he
protects it. It was made into a constitution called Bharata Dharma. It was the path of life commonly accepted
throughout the land. Any attempt for religion is naturally limited and narrow
when compared with this."
So Dharma, is nothing but living in accordance with the laws of
nature. He used to say that the only qualification required to learn the `Gayatri Mantram' was the urge to
learn it, and today lakhs of people all over the world, irrespective of caste, creed
or religion have mastered it. He siad: "Secularism only means `not guided
by religion' but not discarding religion altogether. While some countries do
not feel ashamed to call themselves Christian or Islamic nations, it is only
India which is giving freedom to all people to practize their own
religion,"
In 1974, he toured Europe and America five times between 1972 and
1983 and propagated the message of
Sanatana Dharma, spiritual astrology, Pantanjali's Yoga, Bhagavadgita and
spiritual psychology.
(source: Who is a Hindu? - Koenraad Elst and An embodiment of service - The Hindu - Sept 09' 02)
Om Tat Sat
(Continued...)
(My humble salutations to , H H Swamyjis, Hindu Wisdom, great Universal Philosophers, Historians, Professors and Devotees for the discovering collection)
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