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Chidambaram has left behind a sick economy -- S. Gurumurthy

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Is that Really the Case Mr Chidambaram?

Published: 03rd April 2014 06:00 AM
Last Updated: 03rd April 2014 07:47 AM
BJP leader Yashwant Sinha had last week criticised Union Finance Minister P Chidambaram for “running to the ground” a well-run economy and being “a spoiler”. Chidambaram passionately responded. If his response were to be reworded in appropriate places it would read thus: ‘When I was the Finance Minister from 2004 till October 2008, the economy was roaring with 8.5 per cent growth, touching a historic high of 9.3 per cent.
‘One, of every parameter, 2007-8 was the most outstanding year in India’s history-- forex reserves crossed $309 billion, fiscal deficit limited at 2.9 per cent, savings was the highest at 36.8 per cent and GDP growth was the highest at 9.3 per cent. Then Pranab Mukherjee took over. The global downturn occurred in 2008-9 and 2009-10 when he gave tax concessions. The concessions should have been pulled back in 2011 itself but not done, which was Pranab’s mistake. I became the Finance Minister again in 2012 and I began doing it. Had it been done earlier by Pranab the results would have been visible last year, instead of now. The economy is now stable, the fundamentals have strengthened-- the fiscal deficit is 4.6 per cent, forex reserves $300 billion, with an expected addition of another $25 billion and current account deficit originally estimated at $60 billion would be lower, $35 billion.’
Far from defending the UPA, Chidambaram merely explained how well he had done as Finance Minister and how badly Pranab had fared. Chidambaram has been Finance Minister for three-fourths of the 10-year UPA rule and Pranab, for only a quarter of the UPA regime.
But Pranab, occupying the Rashtrapathi Bhavan, is disabled from defending himself. But then is Chidambaram matchless in economic performance and faultless in crisis management, as he claims? First take the external sector, which dented the economy with current account deficit, knocked down the rupee value and caused the crisis.
Chidambaram gloats over the forex reserves touching $300 billion and projected to rise to $325 billion before the UPA term ends. But he would not utter a word about almost the four-fold rise in foreign debt from $112.6 billion in 2004 to $426 billion by December 2013. Nor utter a word about the rise in the short-term debt by 26 times from $5 billion to $106 billion - from 4 per cent to a quarter of the debt. Or about the rise in external commercial borrowings by six times from $22 billion in 2004 to $121 billion by 2013 or trade credit by 22 times from $4 billion to $87 billion. Or about the foreign debt to GDP ratio from 18 per cent in 2004 to 21 per cent in December 2013.
Despite all this, the secret behind the reduction in the current account deficit that Chidambaram gloats over is not the rise in exports or in foreign investment, but additional deposits of $23 billion [read borrowings] from Non Resident Indians, at high interest. But this is just half the external sector story. The other half brings out how the UPA decade was not just a lost decade but a decade of destruction.
During the UPA tenure, the current account deficit topped $360 billion-- approximately half of which occurred when Chidambaram was the Finance Minister and the other half when Pranab headed the Ministry of Finance(MoF). But Chidambaram’s entry as Finance Minister signalled the start of the current account deficit from 2004-5.
The earlier two years under the NDA yielded current account surplus of $22 billion after almost 25 years of continuous current account deficits. Chidambaram had praised the NDA for leaving a robust external balance. But the UPA inflicted a current account deficit of $360 billion in 10 years. Sinha is right.
Chidambaram started the UPA work of spoiling the external sector. When he left as Finance Minister in October 2008, the country had incurred a current account deficit of over $60 billion.
When he came back he added another $125 billion. It is the current account deficit, which knocked off the rupee value by almost half. The rupee was 45 to a dollar and it fell to almost Rs 68 to a dollar by August 2013. Just eight months earlier The Economist magazine [2.1.2013] had said that the real value of the rupee was 19.75 to the dollar! The fall of the rupee coincided with the return of Chidambaram as Finance Minister in 2012.
Every additional rupee paid for a dollar means higher oil price of `10,000 crore annually. The fall of 23 rupees to the dollar would have cost the country `2.3 lakh crore extra oil bill.
Chidambaram launched a broadside against oil and gold imports as the culprit for the high current account deficit. But net oil imports for the UPA’s nine years ended 2014 was $515 billion and net gold imports was $161 billion. It was capital goods import which vaulted to $587 billion-- out of which over $400 billion imports occurred when Chidambaram was the Finance Minister and the balance $181 billion under Pranab.
Instead of making the economy rise, capital goods import knocked down the domestic capital goods sector by 10 per cent and brought down manufacturing growth from 11.5 per cent to 2.9 per cent in 2012-13. The current account deficit of $360 billion also meant that much reductionin the nominal GDP growth as that much prosperity moved out of the country.
To make it worse, more than half this deficit became China’s trade surplus from India-- equal to three years of China’s defence spending. Now come to employment. The Planning Commission Data Book dated March 10, 2014 shows [p110] that the NDA rule between 1999-2004 had generated 60.7 million jobs in five years. But the UPA, in the six years from 2004 to 2010 generated-- believe it-- just 2.7 million jobs. A mere 37,500 jobs per month! The NDA had added 21.25 million jobs in agriculture in five years. In six years, the UPA reduced 15.7 million jobs in agriculture. In manufacturing, the NDA had added 11.7 million jobs in five years. In six years, the UPA brought down the manufacturing jobs by 7.23 million. Most of the destruction of jobs occurred in Chidambaram’s period.
The UPA added 14 million jobs in the next two years, 2010-11 and 2011-12. But that was not under Chidambaram. But under Pranab! Under the UPA rule the rupee lost 35-50 per cent of its value. Foreign debt rose by four times. Forex reserves which were two and half times foreign debt is now just three-fourths of the debt. Imports of capital goods rose and destroyed the manufacturing base of India. And yet Chidambaram claims that he has left behind a healthy economy. Is that so Mr Chidambaram?

http://www.newindianexpress.com/opinion/Is-that-Really-the-Case-Mr-Chidambaram/2014/04/03/article2145889.ece



Sonia's wealth assessed by business magazine versus assets declared for Rae Bareli LS election 2014.

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Sonia Gandhi has declared a paltry 9 crores as assets in her LS election affidavit for Rae Bareli constituency.  

Has she declared the assets owned in a private company which includes her family members and a few others and which acquired National Herald shares?

Now the question is: who is right Sonia or Business Insider which claims that her assets are $2-19 billion, that is, equal to Rs. 120772946859.90 - Rs. 1147342995169.08? 

[In words for the low end estimate of $2 billion: 12077 crores, 729 lakhs, 46 thousand 859]. This estimate makes SoniaG's wealth more than that of Nilekani.

I happened to read from a Mumbai Fin. daily that I.T department has sent strong letters to widows, Sr.citizens, ordinary house-wives etc - regarding their non-payment of income tax and connected matters.  I wonder whether I.T department has sent any notice to politicians who are declaring assets in crores.  If declared assets run into crores, what must be the real worth?  It is mind boggling. Will the present FM Chidambaram clarify?


This is certainly a matter for inquiry by the next government.


Will the next government make efforts to bring back wealth by Indians held abroad into the nation's financial system? By any reckoning, there is a lot of money so held abroad in tax havens and thus, not benefiting the nation's financial system with such wealth.
Why shouldn't Indians hold their money in Indian financial system, instead of benefiting foreign countries?

Swiss laws have a provision for restitution of illicit wealth if a national Government demands it.

Kalyanaraman

Meet The 4th Richest Politician In The World -- Sonia Gandhi

#4 Sonia Gandhi

Net Worth: $2-19 billion
Residence: India
Position: President, Indian National Congress (political party)
Gandhi is originally from Italy. She is the widow of Rajiv Gandhi, the assassinated former prime minister. As leader of the Congress party, Gandhi played a key role in reviving the party's fortune and power.
There's some dispute about her actual net worth, while Forbes doesn't list it. And India's National Election Watch has it listed at about $200,000. 
Source: World's Luxury Guide (based on OpenSecrets.org, Forbes.com, Bloomberg.com, Wikipedia.org, Guardian.co.uk)
Excerpt from:

Meet The 23 Richest Politicians In The World

No one goes into politics to get rich, but politicians happen to be some of the wealthiest figures around the globe.
German newspaper Die Welt's World's Luxury Guide section recently released a list of the world's richest politicians, and from local officials and members of Congress to foreign ministers and royal heirs, the list includes newcomers and regulars alike.
Though many of those who made the list come from the Middle East and Southeast Asia, the third richest lawmaker on the list is New York City's own Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg.
Leaders without any real involvement in matters of state, like Bhumibol Adulyad, King of Thailand were excluded from the list.

In Sonia Gandhi's asset declaration, a loan to Rahul

In Sonia Gandhi's asset declaration, a loan to Rahul
Rahul Gandhi chauffeurs mother Sonia in Raebareli (AP Photo)
http://www.ndtv.com/elections/article/election-2014/in-sonia-gandhi-s-asset-declaration-a-loan-to-rahul-503529

Sonia declares assets worth over Rs 9 crore, she gave son Rahul Rs 9 lakh as loan


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/lok-sabha-elections-2014/news/Sonia-declares-assets-worth-over-Rs-9-crore-she-gave-son-Rahul-Rs-9-lakh-as-loan/articleshow/33135582.cms

Rajmohan Gandhi (AAP Candidate): Working for CIA to Promote Secessionist Movements in India? -- Madhu Purnima Kishwar

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Watan Ka Dushman: Rajmohan Gandhi Charged with Working for CIA to Promote Secessionist Movements in India?





























Sai Lal alleges Rajmohan used him & his sisters for beggary in Europe

Author(s) : Madhu Purnima Kishwar

The allegation of Rajmohan Gandhi being a CIA agent working for decades to promote secessionist and terrorist groups in India at the behest of CIA is based on a video recorded interview with Sai Lal Jediya, son of a Gandhian freedom fighter, Late Hira Lal who lived in Panchgani where Rajmohan's MRA headquarter is also located. MRA has long been suspected of being a CIA outfit.

Sai Lal came and met me at my house last week sought help in bringing the truth about Rajmohan Gandhi to public notice. Since Sai Lal has documentary evidence to back up his charges, some of which are made avaialable in this videorecorded interview, I thought it best to put them out in the public domain so that Rajmohan can be called to account. We will gladly publish Rajmohan's version and hope he will choose to respond to these serious charges. (Click for video interview)

Sai Lal has known Rajmohan Gandhi from age 10 when Rajmohan took Sai Lal and his two sisters to Mumbai on the false promise to Hira Lal that that he would provide his three children value basededucation of the kind Mahatma Gandhi had propagated. Instead, Sai Lal and his sisters were made "theater actors" and put in the roles of destitute Indian children to accompany Rajmohan Gandhi on hisfund raising tours in Europe ostensibly to set up a college for poor students in Panchgani.

Sai Lal provides solid evidence in this video recorded interview of how Rajmohan used them for "beggary" in Europe and forced 10 year old Sai Lal to convert to Christianity while in Europe.
This betrayal has left Sai Lal traumatised. But worse was to come. Sai Lal says, on returning to India Rajmohan tried to get Sai Lal's father Hira Lal involved in instigating separatist movements in Nagaland and other border areas of then North East.

This caused a permanent rift between the two and Hira Lal wrote a small book in Hindi entitled : "Watan Ka Dushman: Rajmohan Gandhi" to expose the sinister politics of Rajmohan who he had initially trusted blindly on account of his pedigree.

This charge of involvement with secessionist movements seems to be in line with Rajmohan Gandhi's known closeness to US based ISI agent Gulam Nabi Fai-- who is currently in an American jail on charges of ISI inspired conspiratorial activities. Fai had for years run campaigns in support of secessionist movement in Kashmir in collaboration with well known "human rights" activists in India --who have all been likewise funded by US foundations and donor agencies.

Rajmohan Gandhi has been a lead player in this game. This was exposed when Fai was arrested, tried and sent to jail in the US on charges of indulging in illegal activities on behalf of ISI and Rajmohan was one of the prominent signatories to the petition in defence of Fai and demanding his release.

Sai Lal alleges that Rajmohan and the MRA headquarters built by Rajmohan in Panchgani, Maharashtra are centres of CIA backed anti national activities in India, including holding training camps for terrorist groups.

Sai Lal's father refused to fall into Rajmohan's trap. Instead, he published a small book called "Watan ka Dushman--Rajmohan Gandhi" in Hindi and incessantly campaigned against Rajmohan Gandhi to expose his CIA links, his unethical ways of raising funds and his role in fomenting separatist movements in India. 

Sai Lal alleges that Rajmohan--though based in the US-- lands in India before every key election, be that of JP led Janata Party in 1977, VP Singh's Janata Dal in 1989 or  2014 election in which AAP has been propped up by Congress to trip Modi's rise to PM's post. It is not a coincidence that AAP's core team members like Prashant Bhushan and Yogendra Yadav and Kejriwal are known supporters of secessionist forces in Kashmir and North East and Maoists in Central India. 

It is well known that Rajmohan has also been a close associate of Teesta Setalvad, Shabnam Hashmi, Gautam Navlakha, Colin Gonsalves, Father Cedric Prakash and a host of US supported NGOs thathave made a full time career out of BJP bashing, demonizing Modi and building a hysterical campaign against India by projecting it as a country that is hostage to “fascist” forces who are allegedly crushing Muslims and Christians in India.

Sai Lal also alleges and shows evidence how MRA was given an American air force plane for its activities, indicating that Rajmohan's links with the US establishment are rather dubious.

MRA has long been suspected of being a CIA outfit. Rajmohan has been the prime mover of MRA in India. He needs to respond to all the charges being leveled against him by Sai Lal. (Click for video interview)



Revelations on Rajmohan Gandhi by Sai Lal Jediya

Published on Apr 3, 2014


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Manushi's explosive revelations on Rajmohan Gandhi.
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Shame on you Madhu Kishwar sinking to this new low!
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What bollocks ? Madhuji how did you fall for such a conman ? May be in your hate for AAP you have been totally blinded and your aqal has gone to graze grass. May be what he is saying is true ! But till you produce some solid evidence other than heresay, its all rhetorical propaganda bullshit, am sure you understand that.
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u r also CIA-Congress(AAP) supporter. Kejriwal is american Nehru.
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moral re armament (mra) .........raj mohan gandhi 
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Don't know if what the man says is true, but its mind boggling!
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Look carefully guys this how a liar looks like. This guy wrote a book against Rajmohan Gandhi when he stood against Rajeev in 1989 in amethi. iska baap nehru ka dalal tha.  Now he joined VHP
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u sound like CIA-Congress(Kejriwal) supporter
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Make these books available online . so that he is thoroughly exposed!!
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Watch these Breaking India Brigade!! 
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Chidu leaves economy in complete mess -- Subramanian Swamy

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Subramanian Swamy accuses Chidu of leaving economy in ‘complete mess’

by Mar 30, 2014
Bangalore: The BJP leader Subramanian Swamy today accused Union Finance Minister P Chidambaram of having left the country's economy in a "complete mess" and said the next government led by Narendra Modi would have to undertake major reforms to undo the damage caused by the UPA government.

"We are in a very, very delicate situation and the new government will have to undertake major economic reforms to rectify what damage the UPA has done to Indian economy," Swamy told reporters here.
]Subramaniam Swamy. ReutersSubramanian Swamy. Reuters
Hitting out at UPA government for economic growth rate of 4.8 percent when compared to NDA's 8.4 per cent, he said
fiscal deficit was at all time high and could lead to a major
crisis.

"....government has now reached the stage that for every Rupee that they borrow from public sector bank, 96 paisa they have to repay as interest on principal for the previous loan."

He said, "we are in a complete mess and the most alarming part of today's situation is that the budget has been put in such a difficult and bad state by Chidambaram ..."

Stating that the next government would be led by Modi, Swamy said, "it is going to face a situation of bankruptcy of Indian economy, which it will have to rectify within six months."

BJP's manifesto will speak about some of the economic reforms planned by the party, he added.

Contesting UPA's claim that large part of economic crisis is due to external crisis, he said "....we were affected by the instrument created by Chidambaram that was called participatory note....participatory note is a method of laundering money that goes out of India to bring it back and invest it in our stock market."

"...the crisis was entirely due to UPA in creating an instrument, derivative called participatory note... it is the most dangerous money laundering weapon created in any country; ...tomorrow we abolish participatory note all this crisis will disappear.

Calling Unique Identification Authority of India as "one more scam in making" he said "...this scheme is the most useless scheme as judged by study done by the IIM-Ahmedabad and the standing committee of Parliament on Finance."

"In my opinion Nilekani should be prosecuted under Section 13 (1) (d) part 3 of the Prevention of Corruption Act for squandering national resources to US-based companies involved."


PTI
http://www.firstpost.com/politics/subramanian-swamy-accuses-chidu-of-leaving-economy-in-complete-mess-1457655.html

Call for papers: Conference on Building Competencies for a Deeper Hindu-Christian Dialogue, April 26, 27, 2014

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Hinduism-Christianity Comparative Religion Series

Call for Papers

Seminar
“Building Competencies for a Deeper Hindu-Christian Dialogue”


CONTENTS
Executive Summary
Background
Issues
Determinants – Schools of Thought
Purpose
Goal
Objectives
Suggested Areas
Submission Guidelines
Debate Proposal
Conference Information

Executive Summary

The intellectual basis for the current Hindu-Christian interlocution, or the so-called Inter-faith dialogues, seems to be the ideological formulations that were formed in a colonial milieu of 19th century India. Ideally, the pre-independence ideological imperatives should have been updated in view of the freedom that was attained in 1947. However, post-independence, there have been very few efforts to rethink the ideological parameters, with the notable exceptions of Late Shri Sita Ram Goel and Shri Ram Swarup. What is worse is that colonial parameters have been further extended to build a post-independence narrative that is acutely compromised in its core and one that has yielded in indeterminate results.

While the Christian interlocutors are straightforward in their approach and have crystal clarity of Christianity, it is the Hindus who seem to be lost in the maze of outdated theories, compromised perceptions, lack of intellectual capital, and sheer capitulation to a “default” and further regress into intellectual stasis.

Before a meaningful and deeper Hindu-Christian dialogue can occur, it is imperative to build Hindu ideological competencies, and incrementally build clarity on the nature of Hinduism in relation to Abrahamic “religions” in general, and with Christianity in particular.

This seminar invites papers on the comparative analysis and positioning of Hinduism vis-à-vis Christianity, and Hindu views of Christianity from a Dharmic standpoint.

Background

There have been several attempts at having a Hindu-Christian dialogue but most have not gone beyond expressing diplomatic niceties. From a Hindu point of view, there is no perceptible impact where it matters the most.  It is quite clear that those who are engaged in the so-called Hindu-Christian dialogue are either intellectually disempowered, or have been coopted by the Abrahamic-Western Establishment.

Most of the current Hindu position in the myriad Hindu-Christian dialogues seems to be based on the apparent “practice” of Sri Ramakrishna of Christianity (and Islam). It is not very clear whether it was how this episode was recorded in “Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna” (English translation of the original Bengali text), or whether the Saint could actually really practice Christianity for a small period of time in the true sense of the word. Nevertheless, this has been extrapolated to inconsequential ends in the Academia, based on which the Hindu-Christian dialogue at the community level seem to be stalled in the tracks. At the end of the day, Hindus have not gained an inch in the process.

What is the use of a dialogue if it does not result in any tangible benefit to any of the principals? Therefore, it is incumbent upon the Hindu intellectual community to go into the basics of both Christianity and Hinduism at the fundamental level, and explore why the parameters of current dialogue are not suitable or inadequate, and what kind of competencies need to be built, in order to engage in a meaningful and a much deeper Hindu-Christian dialogue that what it is today.

Issues

There are several public issues that are a consequence of Hinduism’s interface with Christianity. A selected few are listed below.

Hindus have had to engage the Christian missionaries for the past many centuries. In each country this has been a unique experience for the Hindus. The case in the U.S. is special because of the presence of huge majority of Christian population who despite being liberals and accommodating of diversity in several dimensions, have not been sensitized enough on differences between Abrahamic organized religions vs. Hindu schools of spirituality. As a result, a large majority of Christian Americans accept the proselytization of Hindus by evangelists as a legitimate and “moral” activity. Quite often the American Hindu community puts up a weak defense against Christian proselytization in the U.S., because they are told that it is practical to avoid confrontation in a Christian majority country. This self-imposed inhibition enables the missionaries to target the 2nd generation immigrants with “love of Jesus.”  

Conversions go unabated, and there are no let up on the likes of Project Joshua. In India, cultural debasement continues by unprecedented levels of proselytization. The world over, same sets of issues are faced by the Hindu communities – be it Fiji, the Caribbean, Europe or North America. Outside of India, prejudice against Hinduism reflects in cases of discrimination, bullying, mocking Hindu symbols and sometimes violence.

The definition of religious freedom is understood in different terms in the U.S. and in India. For example, the position and actions of U.S. Commission on Religious Freedom vis-à-vis India translates into protection for missionaries to proselyte in India. Bodies like USCRF largely ignore ban on conversions in Israel or blasphemy laws enacted in Christian societies such as Ireland. It is clear that “religious freedom” in the US means “freedom to proselytize” and nothing else.

Social service in the Christian parlance has an entirely different purpose than the Hindu concept of Seva. The objective of Christian social services is not to help humanity, but to gain converts to Christ. This has been popularized by the media, and made socially acceptable. On the other hand, Hindu social service is always rendered to help humanity, but in an act of humility the word Hindu is not ascribed to it. This ends up in a stereotype that Hindus do not engage in social service, hence a justification for conversion. This is a paradox that needs to be resolved.

First Hinduism is attacked for its caste system, and based on this alibi conversions to Christianity are justified. But once the scheduled castes become Christians, reservations are asked for them, because of the caste system.

If a Hindu sports a tilak, he is attacked as a communalist. On the other hand there is an institutionalized interference of Church into politics, which is encouraged and fed upon in elections.

Determinants - Categorization of Schools of Thought
Building the Zero-Base Template

The current state of intellectual stasis in the Hindu-Christian dialogue is an outcome of a plethora of factors that need to be considered for research, re-interpretation and further investigation. A selected few of such factors are listed below (by no means comprehensive), along with a suggested nomenclature of the respective schools of thought:

a.       The Synthesis School and Sri Ramakrishna’s Practice of Christianity for a Short Duration – to reiterate what is mentioned elsewhere in this document, that most academic discourses on the subject, use Sri Ramakrishna’s so-called practice of Christianity for a short duration as a basis, and then extrapolate this to inconsequential lengths, by ascribing avatarahood to Jesus. The same academicians also cite purported Buddhist influences on early Christianity. What is often missed from this discourse is the basic structure of Christian theology that is based on dogma, and not on individualistic spiritual experience which is quintessentially Hindu-Buddhist in its conception. The mystical experiences of Christian monks cannot escape the basic dogma of Christian belief-system. In all, it seems it does not make any sense of an accomplished advaitin like Ramakrishna to get into and out of Christianity for a short duration. Somebody forgot apostasy in this narrative. In all, a School of Synthesis has emerged both in academia and in popular space, which goes out of its way in finding technical commonality in Christianity and Hinduism, despite the differing totality of Christian doctrine and resulting ideological position vis-à-vis Hindus and Hinduism. It is noteworthy that many leading lights of the Indian freedom movement, including Swami Vivekanand and Mahatma Gandhi, belonged to the Synthesis school of thought. The Synthesists have extended their narrative to include modern-day Vedantists who have proposed absorption of Christianity into modern Vedanta.
b.      The Inculturist School and the  “Jesus in India” theory – hundreds of books have been churned out all over the world to prove that Jesus may have lived in India. This position was originally proposed by Rev. Raimundo Pannikkar, which later grew into an entire industry. It seems that the purpose is a wink to Hindus to adopt Jesus as one of their own. But this position is untenable because had Jesus been born even on the ghats of Benares, it would not have make an iota of difference to the structure of Christian theology. Jesus in India has also led to equally untenable Jesus as a Yogitheory.  The Jesus in India and Jesus as a Yogi theories, though founded by Indian Christian scholars, have been internalized by Hindus sufficiently enough to be considered an ideological factor that must be addressed from the Hindu side.  Such Hindus are more likely to be coopted by Christian conservative establishments, such as the Republic Party in the US. They would form a conjugate pair with their Progressive counterparts, mentioned elsewhere in this document. Most likely this segment will negotiate a nominal existence for Hindus as religious vassals within the ambit of the conservative establishment (for example - Hindus will be asked to sign-off on anti-abortion, anti-gay, pro-public prayer agenda).
c.       The Progressive School and the “separation of Jesus from the Nicene creedtheory - within Christianity, especially in the West, there exists an ideological position of “separation of Jesus from the Nicene creed”, which could be seen as a logical outcome of enlightened discourse in the post-Renaissance period. But many Hindus, especially those who have been brought up in an overwhelming majority Christian milieu, have adopted this position as their own, based on which so-called inter-faith dialogue is conducted. This position may make perfect sense within the Christian community, but where do Hindus and Hinduism figure in this position? It seems like, it is due to intellectual disenfranchisement and a thought vacuum, this position is inaccurately appropriated by the Westernized Hindus, thinking that with this they may find a “seat at the table (in the West).” This is a quite a comical position to take for a Hindu, simply because Hindu spiritual and cultural experience is vastly different from Christians in the West, and the so-called “separation between Jesus and the Nicene creed” might be irrelevant from a Hindu point-of-view. The Hindus who take this position, in effect, serve no better than colonial sepoys of western/Christian neo-colonialism, by making Hindus a part of a process that is outcome of a dogmatic intransigence of the conservatives pitted against the rebellion of the liberals within Christianity, and whose ultimate aim remains no different from the colonial conquests of an earlier era – instead of conquests by sword and plunder, this time, it is worldwide domination of western “values” and “culture” -- which is just the other side of the Christian coin, often packaged as “progressive” and “liberal”. The secularized and westernized Hindus who adhere to this position are the Hindu Progressives, are more likely to be coopted by George Soros type left progressive-liberal politics , who serve as modern-day equivalent of mansabdaars of the erstwhile Mughal Empire. The Hindu progressives will be more likely to be (and are being) coopted by the Democratic Party in the U.S. They will negotiate personal positions of power, and in return will be asked by the Left Establishment to attack Hinduism and Hindutva.
d.      “Karma Chameleons” – there are a plethora of Indian-origin public personalities who have taken Indic ideas, and disfigured them to plug into a certain thought vacuum that exists in the New Age milieu of the West, which gives them instant name and fame, and a rich yield of public attention (and monetary benefits).  One of the prominent examples is Dr. Deepak Chopra who has gone to the length of proposing a “Third Jesus” who is supposedly more of a spiritual guru to all humanity than a prophet. This position seems to be an aggregate of Synthesis, Inculturist and Progressive positions, and then some.  There are many others who have proposed similar theories. The intention here is somehow to make themselves fit into the Western societies and “be counted.” Hence the epithet “chameleon.”
e.      The default position – most Hindus take a certain default position of “anything goes” variety. There is no ideological qualifier in such a position, but deserves a separate category because of the sheer number of Hindus who fall in this category. Most do not care what Christianity is all about, and hence act as sitting ducks when their time comes as a target of proselytization – be it evangelical or that by progressives. The Hindus adhering to the default position can be called the survivors, due to the adaptability to just survive in any milieu.
f.        The Hindu Classical position – there is scope for the development of a Hindu position on Christianity that is based on parameters extracted from the Classical Hindu civilization. This school of thought is yet to be formed. A selected few thinkers have expounded positions that could be classified as close to a Hindu Classical one, but a monumental intellectual effort is further needed to solidify a whole school of thought. Works of Sita Ram Goel and Ram Swarup can become the basis of future work that may constitute the Hindu classical position. The Classicist scholars and thinkers will have to experience adhyatma in addition to conventional academics, in order to develop deeper insights into their own traditions before they can look at others. Thus, the classical position remains a work to be done.

Purpose

Given the various schools of thought, as outlined elsewhere in this document, it is imperative to research and theorize upon each school of thought, perform a SWOT analysis from a Hindu perspective of each school, to determine what will be more suitable in a Hindu-Christian dialogue, develop the necessary skills set, and only then perhaps come face to face with the principal interlocutors from the Christian side (who have always been more  honest and straightforward in their approach towards Hinduism).

The purpose of the research, theorization and debate is to attain clarity of thought that would result in a much more honest Hindu engagement with Christian interlocutors, than what it is today.


Goal

The goal of the Hinduism-Christianity Comparative seminar series is to formulate aHindu Classical School of Thought vis-à-vis Christianity, one that is devoid of colonialist 19th-century and derivative theoretical formulations, and incrementally build an ideological position that is closer to classical Hindu civilization.

The thinkers and philosophers belonging to this school will be called Hindu Classicists, in contrast to Synthesists, Inculturists, and Progressives.

Objectives

The objectives of the seminar are:
-          To obtain an assessment of each Hindu school of thought on Christianity
-          To seek clear demarcation of lines between various Hindu viewpoints on Christianity
-          To seek a SWOT analysis of each Hindu school of thought vis-à-vis Christianity (whether how effective a particular school of thought is in dealing with Christianity and its representatives
-          To list and explain set of issues that affect Hindus worldwide that are driven by Christianity,  missionaries and derivative political, economic and social issues
-          To develop a set of parameters that can be utilized to formulate a Classical Hindu position of Christianity
-          To offer a valid critique of each Hindu school of thought from a classical Hindu position
-          To suggest a list of core competencies required by the Hindu interlocutors in engaging Christianity and its representatives
-          To explain who should be the Hindu interlocutors in engagement with the representatives of Christianity, and why?
-          To build a set of guidelines for the Hindu interlocutors who can engage in a Hindu-Christian dialogue

Suggested Areas of Work

Thinkers and scholars are invited present their viewpoint based on the aforementioned background, categorization, goal and objectives. Suggested areas of work include, but are not limited to:

(a)    A paper of how to describe Hinduism to a non-Hindu. What should be the differentiating parameters.
(b)   A historical insight into Sri Ramakrishna’s practice of Christianity for a few days – what it means from both from a Christian and Dharmic standpoints.
(c)    Jesus as a Yogi” and “Jesus in India” theories – how these have been used to construct a narrative of indigenization of Christianity (in India), and positioning of Jesus Christ amongst the Hindus? What are the socio-political expressions of the same, their validity from a Christian perspective, and how it impacts the Hindu-Christian dialogue?
(d)   A Hindu perspective of Jesus – could Jesus be considered as a spiritual being from a Yogic standpoint? How should Hindus look at Jesus, and on what basis?
(e)   Why “Separation of Jesus from Nicene Creed” theory is irrelevant and detrimental to the Hindus? This theory is adopted by Hindus in the West in order to fit into the mainstream, without realizing that they could be coopted into Christendom leading eventually into conversion.
(f)     Rationale for Indian Christians to "convert out" of Christianity (NOT necessarily convert into Hinduism). The paper could do a comparative analysis of Indian classical culture with what a convert to Christianity loses when he converts.
(g)    "A Hindu Perspective on Inter-faith Dialogues - Guidelines for the Hindus" - this should be a critique the current way this so-called inter-faith dialogue goes on and build a set of parameters and guidelines, in order to affect a possible course correction.
(h)   An analysis of Missionary Service industry camouflaged as "humanitarian" work. The paper will juxtapose the material benefits offered by the missionaries in return for conversion as an unethical and immoral position from a basic humanity's point of view. The paper will use examples such as iconification of Mother Theresa and show how the media portrays to build a narrative of legitimizing an immoral activity such as conversion. The paper writer will do a qualitative comparative analysis between how Buddhism was spread in East Asia vs. how Christian missionaries do it.
(i)      Church's intervention in politics and public affairs - this paper should expose international evangelical groups' support for terrorism in India, esp. in the Northeast. Also, in Kerala, the Church actively intervenes in all kinds of public issues. The writer will analyze this from an ethical point of view, and why it is improper in public life.


Submission Guidelines

Contributors will be asked to submit the following:
-          Title (one line)
-          Abstract (1-2 paras)
-          Bio sketch (not to exceed 2-3 paras, please do not send whole CV)
-          Photo (passport style front facing)

If bio-sketch and photo are available on the web, then no need to submit.

Once the proposal is admitted, the contributor will be asked to upload the whole paper to a designated website, in addition to send a MS-WORD and a pdf copy of the paper. Also, needed is a list of three (3) peers, who can review your work in the online system. One of the reviewers could be you.
The contributor must not release his paper prematurely in the public domain. After the conference, the paper will be published on the conference associated website, which then can be quoted and reproduced elsewhere without alteration.

The papers must be followed up by a summary presentation (in a ppt) on the salient points in the paper.
Debate – the contributor can be challenged for a debate, and must agree to one, if a proposal for a challenge is proposed.

Deadlines

For title, abstract, bio sketch, and photo: April 15th, 2014
For papers and ppt: April 24th, 2014

Debate Proposal

In order to clarify the positions from various schools of thought a debate is being invited. Please note that the sole purpose of the debate is theoretical positioning, in order to yield practical value. A hardened position in theory is meant for bouncing a perception.

How to Engage Christianity: Confrontation or Conciliation?

Hinduism has a rich tradition of studying and evaluating rival religious ideologies. However, barring a few honorable exceptions, Hindus have not evaluated Christianity. We live in an age when Christianity seeks global domination and Christian beliefs shape social attitudes to varying degrees. Hindu society is not impervious to Christianity. Therefore, the need to actively engage Christianity cannot be overstated. This necessitates that the Hindus apply their rich tradition of evaluating rival religious ideologies to Christianity. A Hindu should begin with seeking the answers to many questions: 
1.       Is the Christian influence beneficial or harmful?
2.       Are Hinduism and Christianity compatible?
3.       Can the two religions coexist?  

One must adopt the strategy to engage Christianity based on the answers to these questions. One could engage Christianity in many possible formats, e.g., inter-faith dialogs, debates, social media, textbook portrayal, and critique. What should be the method of engagement regardless of the format? Which one is likely to be effective?

Debater A: Confrontation

The two religions cannot coexist. A Hindu should be clear that for dharma to survive, Christianity must be deconstructed. This can only happen through a direct confrontation in the intellectual space to recover the next generation of those who are born as Christians from Christianity.

Debater B: Conciliation 

The effective approach is to contrast the principles of Hinduism with those of Christianity. This would allow an open-minded observer to see the merits of Hinduism and the limitations of Christianity. This would allow co-opting the neutral observer into the larger framework of dharma.


Format of the debate:

Round 1: Each debater makes his/her case for 30 minutes (Total duration: 60 minutes)
Round 2: Each debater rebuts the other for 10 minutes (Total duration: 20 minutes)
Round 3: Each debater gets 5 minutes to question the other (Total duration: 10 minutes)
Round 4: Each debater delivers a concluding speech for 5 minutes (Total duration: 10 minutes)
Round 5: Q&A by the audience (Total duration: 30 minutes)
Total: 130 minutes

Further Information

Rajiv Varma

Conference

Global Hindu Conference
April 26th-27th, 2014
San Jose, CA, USA

Details of the conference are given at < http://globalhinduconference.org >.

For conference information, please contact:


Conference group e-mail: ghc@ghfinc.net

Swamy questions Rahul's M.Phil, threatens action

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SWAMY QUESTIONS RAHUL’S M.PHIL, THREATENS ACTION

Saturday, 05 April 2014 | PNS | GANDHINAGAR
Challenging All India Congress Committee(AICC) vice-president Rahul Gandhi’s claim of having acquired Master of Philosophy (M.Phil) degree from the famous Cambridge University, former Minister of Law & Justice Subramanian Swami said that Rahul didn’t get M.Phil degree from the British University and despite the fact, if he would mention about the degree while filing nomination for the Lok Sabha elections, he would file a case against him.
“During an interview to a TV channel, Rahul said on camera that he would show me M.Phil degree. Subsequently, I wrote him later to do that, but till today there has been no answer from his side,” said the BJP leader on Friday during a Press conference in Ahmedabad.
A staunch opponent of Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, Swami also distributed a certificate he availed from University of Cambridge to mediapersons. The certificate showing the name of ‘Mr Raul Vinci’ suggested that he failed subject — National Economic Planning & Policy. Swami claimed that Rahul did take admission as Raul Vinci for security purpose.
“Rahul took further legacy of failure. His father Rajiv, grandmother Indira and even great grandfather Jawaharlal Nehru were also failed in overseas universities. In fact, Nehru was given ‘Gentleman Pass’ remark, which was sophisticated term for the failed student,” he said.
The BJP leader also raised issue of Sonia’s background. He said that Sonia’s father was with Hitler’s Army and was caught by Russian troops and was sent to jail. Generally, Hilter’s soldiers were not released for 20 years, but Sonia’s father was released in just four years, said Swami adding that it became possible because he opted to work for Russian spy agency KGB.

http://www.dailypioneer.com/nation/swamy-questions-rahuls-mphil-threatens-action.html

Munda speaking people and vedic tradition of worship of ancestors -- Jayasree Saranathan

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Mundas: A product of Parashurama’s fury – I
by Jayasree Saranathanon 05 Apr 2014


Munda speaking people are perhaps a much discussed but less understood people of India. Though there were different opinions on their origins, recent genetics studies have shown that they were indeed autochthonous to India and not of South East Asian origin {1}. Their genetic markers are shared by many others in India thereby showing a shared origin within India many thousands of years ago. This makes them part of ancient Indian history which we will discuss in this article.

The Munda group of people are identified by their language and cultural similarities. They are known to have lived in seclusion for thousands of years in inaccessible regions of hills and forests of Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, West Bengal, Bangladesh, Odisha and Andhra Pradesh. Seclusion and endogamy might have made their speech and habits unique to themselves, but a look at their cultural and religious beliefs show them as sub-tracts of Indian history who were forgotten for long due to the exigencies of circumstances that forced them to retreat to seclusion. 

Their belief system consists of worship of ancestors, spirits of ancestors, entities in Nature including rocks, mountains and trees and a God called Singbonga. Together these beliefs are called as “Sarna Dharma” in which Sarna is the sacred grove. The tenets of Sarna Dharma are similar to Hindu practices which have made researchers think that Hinduism had influenced these people. This has given rise to an opinion that Hinduism with its Vedic roots was a later formation or a later entrant to India and that Hindus and Mundari people were different from one another. With genetic studies showing that Mundas are of the same genetic stock as other Indians, the focus shifts to their cultural practices to ascertain whether there were cultural-inflows or they were a sub-set of larger Hindu customs.

To take the most popular belief of the Mundari people, their worship of Singbonga gives rise to interesting inter-connections. Singbonga is the Creator God or Sun God. In their language, it literally means Sun-spirit. By this we infer that they are Saura worshippers, but they are not. Though they orient their houses towards east and greet the rising Sun, “not one of them will ever aver that the Sun is his God or even that he dwells in it. The sun is for him the symbol of Singbonga’s power, majesty, splendour. It is not a divinity in any respect whatsoever” {2}. This means the Mundari conception of Singbonga did not exactly arise from Sun worship. This made researchers think that Mundas were perhaps influenced by their Hindu neighbours to worship the Sun. This implies that the so-called sun worship by the Munda people does not come with the expected tenets of sun worship. The reason for this is not to be traced to “Hindu influence” from outside but to the very creation story that they have about themselves.

Singbonga

According to Munda tribes, Singbonga was the one who created them. It was he who gave them the laws of life but did not project himself as the centre of their worship. This idea coupled with idea of the special rituals done to the Karam tree and the sacred grove rituals of Sarna gives a different story that fits with certain passages from the Mahabharata, past records of some places and the recordings done during the British period. According to the Mundas, the Karam trees saved their ancestors who were fleeing from an enemy. This means their ancestors hid themselves behind the trees or in the trees to escape detection from enemies. This happened at night time as they do the worship and rituals to the Karam tree at night with the Moon and the stars as witnesses. The excessive importance given to ancestors and spirits of ancestors reveals a story of a difficult time when their ancestors, the first generation of Mundas, were fleeing from death in the hands of an enemy. At that time Singbonga safeguarded them and paved the way for them to start a new life.

The name Singbonga sounds similar to the name of a popular place in Jharkhand / Chota Nagpur region where Mundas had been living for long. This is “Singhbhum” whose meaning is obvious as Simha bhumi – land of lions. Today there are no lions though the place has a thick forest cover to facilitate the presence of lions. There is no known association with lions to this place. The only association exists with Singbonga, worshiped by Munda people.

The name Singbonga is separated as Singa – bonga. Singa is a corrupt form of simha, the lion in many languages, including Tamil and Bengali.  Bongo is “Vanga” (Vanga desa) in Bengali, the language spoken in the vicinity of the Mundas. So the name is Singa-vanga, a native of Vanga desa who was valiant like a lion, who led them in their escape from an enemy, saved them from death and helped them to start a new life in the place(s) where they had fled – which were remote ones such as mountains or deep forests or inaccessible areas.

Indian history as found in the Mahabharata shows that Vangas were indeed a group of people who ran for shelter to escape from the fury of Parashurama! To avenge the death of his father, Parashurama went around and killed Kshatriyas 21 times. The Mahabharata lists many groups of people who escaped from him and started living incognito by shedding kshatriya-hood. “Vangas” find mention in the list of such escapees. An important group of Mundari tribes namely Savaras also find a mention in the Mahabharata as people who escaped from Parashurama.

Mahabharata 7-68 mentions the Vangas and others being vanquished by Parashurama:
“The Kashmiras, the Daradas, the Kuntis, the Kshudrakas, the Malavas, the Angas, the Vangas, the Kalingas, the Videhas, the Tamraliptakas, the Rakshovahas, the Vitahotras, the Trigartas, the Martikavatas were all vanquished by Bhargava Rama.”

Mahabharata 14-29 mentions the Savaras having fled the fury of Parashurama:
“Then, some of the Kshatriyas, afflicted with the terror of Jamadagni’s son, entered mountain-fastnesses, like deer afflicted by the lion. Of them that were unable, through fear of Rama, to discharge the duties ordained for their order, the progeny became Vrishalas owing to their inability to find Brahmanas. In this way Dravidas and Abhiras and Pundras, together with the Savaras, became Vrishalas through those men who had Kshatriya duties assigned to them in consequence of their birth, falling away from those duties. Then the Kshatriyas that were begotten by the Brahmanas upon Kshatriya women that had lost their heroic children, were repeatedly destroyed by Jamadagni’s son. The slaughter proceeded one and twenty times.”

The above verse specifically states that the fleeing people took shelter in the mountains. It also says that they fled as though they were trying to escape from a lion! This description found in the context of Savaras’ escape to the mountains, obviously in the region around Singhbhum, gives another meaning to the name Singhbhum. Did Savaras call this place Simha Bhumi due to the kind of fear it caused to them from lion-like Parashurama? This is a probable explanation as this fits with the place and circumstance. The escape of ancestors of Mundari speaking people fits with the narration in Parashurama’s episode.

The Mundari story on Singbonga shows that one Singa of Vanga desa had led them in their escape. Many of their tribes were killed but others managed to escape by hiding themselves behind rocks and trees and inside groves and caves and that is why all these structures are considered worthy of worship. The biggest festival called Karam festival is related to this early story of the Munda people.

Karam festival

This festival is dedicated to Karam God who resides in the Karam tree. During this festival, the Karam sapling is procured from the forest and planted ritualistically. According to the Munda people, the Karam trees saved their forefathers who were fleeing from their enemies. They hid themselves behind the Karam trees and escaped notice from their enemies. The Karam tree is supposed to possess a spirit that had helped in their escape. The Karam puja is done with this belief to this day by all Munda groups. In the case of Mundas, this is done on the 11th day in the month of Bhadrapada once in three years. The striking correlation is that this date in Bhadrapada in a normal year (when lunar and solar years start close to each other), almost coincides with the first day of the Solar entry into Virgo (Kanya rashi) which is exactly the first day of the year in a time scale called “Parashurama Era”!

The book “Useful tables forming an appendix to the Journal of The Asiatic Society” published in 1834 makes a brief note on Parashurama Era under the caption “Years numbered by cycles” (Yuga or Era) . At the time of the recording done by the contributors to the Journal of the Asiatic society, this time scale of Parashurama was still in vogue in peninsular India starting from Mangalore through Malayalam speaking regions of “Malabar, Cotiote and Travancore, to cape Comorin”. It is stated that this era was in cycles of 1000 years. It was a solar cum sidereal year which started when the sun entered the sign Kanya (Virgo). The running era at that time of recording in the Journal was the 3rd cycle. The date of 977th year in the 3rd cycle is also given in this book as 14th September, AD 1800.  On checking it is found that it coincides with the solar entry date into Virgo. As per that record, Parashurama Yuga (era) had started in the 12th century BCE in this stretch along the West coast of India! The knowledge of solar sankramana (entry into a sign) and division of the zodiac into 12 signs and months had been there even at that time in this part of the country. Is it merely a coincidence that the start of the Parashurama year and time of Karam festival are the same?

The similarity is not only about the date. It is also found with reference to the tree. The Karam tree is known as Kadamba tree! But the Karam tree found in Munda regions in Chota Nagpur is the Sal tree which is indigenous to that place. Kadamba forests were in abundance in the west coast in Tulu speaking regions. The Kadamba dynasty existed in that region. Even before that, Nannan lineage had ruled the stretch including Konkan regions. There are references in Tamil Sangam texts to a king Nannan whose royal flower was the golden hued Kadamba flower. The very name Konkan was derived from a popular Tamil phrase in vogue at that time referring to this ruler as “Pon padu kon-kaana Nannan” (NaRRiNai 361) and “Ponnam kaNNI polam thEr Nannan” (PathiRRup patthu 40) in Sangam Tamil texts.  Pon padu “Kon-kaanam” literally meaning “forest having” gold referring to the golden coloured Kadamba flowers became the name of the place. Thus the Kadamba tree is an identity of the west coast of Konkan and Tuluva.

The Tuluva people were known to have celebrated the Kadamba festival of the same kind as Karam festival of the Mundas in the same month of Bhadrapada (to be precise, on the 11th lunar day of Bhadrapada, the date of Karam festival of Mundas of Chota Nagpur). {3} It was celebrated by them as an agricultural festival. The kadamba twigs were brought and worshiped in the courtyard in all houses in the Tulu speaking regions. This seems to be an old practice, perhaps coming from the time of the start of the Parashurama Yuga. Similar practice of use of twigs is seen in the New Year day of Vishu in Kerala. Use of twigs of importance to a place is a common feature on the New Year day.

Before jumping to a conclusion that this practice could have influenced the Mundas, in other words before concluding that this Hindu practice entered the culture of Mundas who were not originally Hindus, let us see some other variations of this festival.

The same festival is celebrated in the coastal region of Udupi as a harvest festival - “Koral Parba” or “Pudvar”. This is celebrated on the day after the sun’s entry into Virgo – that is, on the day after the New Year in Parashurama Era. The choice of the plant depends on the main product produced in the region, so corn is the product that is brought home with religious fervour on this day of Pudvar.

In the Kadamba festival, Kadamba twigs were brought and worshiped. Today Kadamba festival is officially celebrated in Karnataka in January as Kadambotsava in honour of the Kadamba dynasty which ruled Kannara and Konkan regions, i.e., the date had been changed from September / Bhadrapada to January to a date that occurs soon after Makara sankramana. It is believed that this date was the time the Kadamba kings celebrated as Spring festival. Going through all these developments in Kadamba festival, one can see that the Karam festival of the Mundas was different and not an agricultural festival. The semblance of an agricultural festival or a sacred grove festival must have come after Kurukhs started mingling with them. 

Kurukh, also called Oraon, are one of the Mundari speaking people found in Chota Nagpur. According to The Indian anthropological Society, the Kurukhs were of Konkan origin. {4} The Kurukhs had migrated to Chota Nagpur regions and started to co-exist with the already existing Munda groups. They too follow Sarna Dharma. There is scope to believe that the kadamba festival at the start of Parashurama year was perhaps brought by Kurukhs to Mundari people. The date and methods of the festival perhaps signify a cultural inflow in to Mundari life – not from “Aryans” or Brahmins but from a similar kind of people of Hindu stock.

But this line of thought rebels with the idea that Mundas were chased by Parashurama. Doubts may arise that it does not sound logical for a people who managed to escape from Parashurama to celebrate the Karam festival on the start of Parashurama year. But the fact of the matter is that the Mundas have a memory of an enemy encountered by their first generation ancestors, but not the identity of that enemy. The Kurukhs carried a cultural festival which was originally a harvest festival. But the Munda’s Karam festival is not a harvest festival. It is a festival to remember and thank the Karam God enshrined in the karam tree for having saved their ancestors. {5}. This difference is crucial in ascertaining the origin of the festival which however has become more like a harvest festival of the Konkan region thanks to the influence by Kurukhs.

When we analyse the Karam festival of Mundas further, we can see relics of Vedic practices. The Mundas celebrate it on the 11th lunar day in the waxing period of Bhadrapada, one of the Pitru-tarpan days in Vedic society, the Shukla paksha Ekadashi or Tamasa-Manvadhi day when offerings (tarpan) are made to ancestors. The month of Bhadrapada is dedicated to worship of ancestors. The waning phase of Bhadrapada is known as Pitru paksha dedicated to the worship of ancestors. Similarly the corresponding solar month of Kanya is dedicated to Pitru-worship. The very first day of Sun in Virgo / Kanya when the Parashurama Year started was actually a special time called Shadasheethi punya kala when pitru-tarpan is done in the Vedic society. The Munda’s Karam puja meant for ancestral worship coming on the day of pitru tarpan in Vedic society cannot be dismissed as coincidence. It is because the Mundas do not observe Karam puja every year, but only once in three years.

Only once in three years the 11th lunar day of Bhadra pada (waxing phase) either coincides with Solar entry into Virgo or occurs after the sun had entered Virgo. In the intervening two years, the 11th lunar day and Sun’s position do not occur in Virgo or in Kanya month, but will be in Leo, as can be seen from a random look at the position of Sun for a few years starting from 2012 AD.

11th lunar day in Bhadrapada
 Sun’s position.

Sep 25, 2012
9th day in Virgo
Karam Puja
Sep 15, 2013
29th day in Leo

Sep 5, 2014
19th day in Leo

Sep 24, 2015
7th day in Virgo
Karam Puja
Sep 12, 2016
26th day in Leo

Sep 1, 2017
15th day in Leo

Sep 20, 2018
4th day in Virgo
Karam Puja
Sep 9, 2019
23rd day in Leo

Sep 28, 2020
12th  day in Leo

Sep 16, 2021
1st day in Virgo
Karam Puja

{Today, however, Karam festival is celebrated every year as a worship of the sacred grove and as a harvest festival; other tribes of the Mundari group of languages celebrate on slightly different dates.}

It is obvious that the Karam Puja of the Mundas was timed to coincide with the solar month of Virgo that is special for ancestral worship. Either they had knowingly followed a pre-existing custom of pitru tarpan on the 11th day in Bhadrapada falling in Virgo, or that was the actual date when their ancestors had taken shelter behind the Karam tress.

It is preposterous to think that the memory of the day of escape stayed on with them for thousands of years. But the importance given to the Moon and the stars in the Karam puja as witnesses at the time of the escape of their ancestors gives credence to the belief that they indeed remembered the lunar thithi of the day of escape. This date must have occurred in the solar month of Virgo, prompting them to stick to luni-solar basis for this festival.

Another probability is that after settling down to a new life, apparently under the guidance of Singbonga, they started doing annual pitru-worship in the solar month of Virgo. The start of the Parashurama New Year comes with such a connection. Why the solar sankramana day in Virgo was chosen for Parashurama New Year is something of a surprise, given that Parashurama Jayanti is observed in the month of Margashira. The month of Virgo does not seem to have any connection with Parashurama. It was in fact the time of Tamasa Manu’s beginnings.

Tamasa Manu was the period of 4th Manvanthra which was followed by Raivata Manu whose sons were headed by Arjuna, Bali and Vindhya. The people living in the region of Vindhyas were perhaps denoted by this. This gives credence to a thought that the people living in the Vindhyas perhaps remembered the previous Manvadhi of Tamasa Manu and offered oblations for Tamasa Manvadhi day. This is to say that the inhabitants of Vindhya, Narmada and the surrounding regions where Parashurama lived, could have held this day (Tamasa Manvadhi / Virgo sankramana) as special for pitru tarpan. Otherwise why was this date chosen for Parashurama year? There is another explanation too. Parashurama was known to have made a terrible offering of blood of the people slain by him in Samanta Panchaka, to his ancestors. In keeping with that, the Year by his name was started on a day that is special for making offerings to ancestors.

It must be noted that even the Tamil New Year day that starts on the sun’s entry into Aries was originally ‘celebrated’ by doing sacrifices and making offerings to the departed pitrus {6}. Any sankramana day is reserved for pitru tarpan. In the case of Chandramana, the New Year or new month is started on the day after pitru tarpan (done on every New Moon day).

In the light of these rules, the Karam puja falling on the day of Kadamba festival in the regions that followed Parashurama Era is truly for the purpose of remembering ancestors and not for celebrating harvest. The similarity in date with Kadamba festival coinciding with Parashurama New Year must be to do with a much older practice coming from pre- Parashurama days, of remembrance of ancestors on the first day of the solar month of Virgo. That day being Tamasa Manvadhi day of importance to people of the Vindhya range supports the origin of Mundas from that region.

The Mundas’ Karam puja coming on a date known for pitru-worship seems to be a conscious choice of date by the early Mundas as a continuing practice from their previous tradition. Even if this idea is rejected, it is still seen that the choice of the date once in three years in the month known for ancestor worship shows that they were previously following Vedic tradition that accord importance to worship of ancestors.

In the present context we can see a Vedic connection in another myth of Karam festival – the myth of two brothers called Karma and Dharma. Dharma had a dream in which Karam God appeared and told him to celebrate and arrange for a puja in his honour in return for which he will have many crops, livestock and riches. When Dharma told this dream to Karma, Karma ignored it. A few years later, Dharma became rich and Karma became poor. Karma understood his folly and started celebrating Karam God along with Dharma. They became rich and this formed the basis for the celebration of Karam festival.

This story is a symbolism of the need to do one’s work in rightful ways. Such work pays well. The work in the context of the Mundas is to raise food (crops and livestock) in the forested and hilly tracts. This requires hard work but if they do that, it will pay. The name Karam and Dharma and the idea of doing karma and getting fruits of it when done in dharmic ways are all ideas of Vedic culture. The Karam puja is an indigenous one and no one brought it to them. Even the Kadamba/Karam details show that Mundas had an independent and original reason to celebrate it as seen from the time and cause of the festival. A pre-existing idea among them was preserved as a myth and they stuck to it as it induced them to do hard work in unfriendly terrains.

To be continued...

References:-
{2} Ponette P. Foot note in “Social water management among Munda people in the Sundarban” Part  3, Page 32
{5} “Social water management among Munda people in the Sundarban” Part 3, Page 35
{6} “Madras Journal of Literature and Science” Vol 1, page 42.

The author is an independent scholar; she blogs at Non-Random Thoughts
User CommentsPost a Comment
Yet another example of how the "Hindu" identity is totally altering the very perception of our history..

Most of hindu intellectuals are unable to accept the fact that so many tribal groups lived their life without getting disturbed by other cultures.. they wanted to bracket every people group and culture of this land as part of some large religio-cultural entity.. why this obsession for homogenity?

Tomorrow, the author will start claiming that andaman tribals were also lost tribe of vedic society..

Please come out of this Hindu and vedic Obsession..

See our history from ethnic point of view and NOT from religious point of view..
senthil
44 Minutes ago
Report Abuse
Parasurama destroyed 21 generations of kshatriyas.. he does not persecute any tribals or forest dwellers..

Mundas are tribal groups who are different from the varna society.. Manu Smriti has ensured that tribals were never disturbed when varna society establishes nagara and grama..

so the mundas have been able to retain their culture for thousand of years.. Only the recent Hindutva people are hell bent on destroying their culture by imposing vedic culture on them..
and the government by driving them away from their forests in the name of education and development..
senthil
30 Minutes ago
http://www.vijayvaani.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?aid=3158

A game-changing reform strategy; empower states for land acquisition, rural employment, food security laws -- Arvind Panagariya

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BJP's chargsheet against Congress led UPA -- Full text

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http://www.bjp.org/images/pdf_2014/upa_chargesheet.pdf BJP's chargesheet against Congress led UPA (Full text) (Embedded)

http://www.scribd.com/doc/216545793/BJP-s-Chargesheet-against-Congress-led-uPA 


BJP ‘chargesheets’ UPA, terms its rule a disaster
Ravi S. Singh
Tribune News Service
New Delhi, April 4

Taking a broad sweep at the alleged acts of omission and commissions of the UPA government, the BJP on Friday presented a chargesheet on its 10-year rule which it described as an “endless saga of scam and corruption”.

The party picked holes in the government's economic policies and alleged the UPA destroyed all engines of growth. Though the UPA inherited robust growth rate of 8.5 per cent from the NDA, growth has nosedived to 4.5 per cent because of UPA mismanagement, corruption and bad governance, said the document. Releasing the 58-page document, BJP leader Ravi Shankar Prasad said the intention behind the document was to remind the public that it should have no expectation from the Congress-led UPA government in the future.
The chargesheet, which is in the form of a booklet, criticised Prime MinisterManmohan Singh for “devaluing” his high office. “Dr Manmohan Singh worked more like the CEO of a company where the board was headed by Sonia Gandhi with Rahul Gandhi as her deputy. Dr Singh made compromises to remain in office and one does not come across a single case where he made any decisive intervention to contain the loot of public money in a series of scams that became the defining feature of this the most-corrupt government since Independence.”
Slamming the UPA government for failure to control prices and low infrastructural growth, including national highway projects, the chargesheet said the entire infrastructure suffered because of corruption, indecision and policy paralysis.
It termed rising unemployment as the UPA’s biggest failure. Citing the National Sample Survey data, it said 6.07 crore jobs were created in NDA’s six years (between 1999-2000 and 2005-05) while only 1.54 crore jobs were generated in eight years of UPA rule (between 2004-05 and 2011-12). “A good number of jobswere created during the NDA regime in the manufacturing and services sector while the same has slumped into the negative in the UPA regime. The NDA generated 1.21 crore jobs every year, which came down to 22 lakh per year during UPA rule,” it added. Highlighting that the government failed to address problems of poverty, it listed major scams that occurred during UPA rule. These include 2G spectrum, coal, IGI Airport land grant, Air India, rotten food, Hasan Ali money laundering, ISRO-Devas, defence land and LIC housing loan scams.
On security, it highlighted the over-500 reported incidents of border violations by the Chinese. “The government failed to assess the military implications and take steps to shore up India’s defences,” it said.
PM, Sonia, Rahul in firing line

  • The 58-page document highlights the "failures" of the UPA on various fronts, including unkept promises made in 2009
  • It accuses the Congress leadership of a "deliberate, conscious devaluation" of the Prime Minister’s office by Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi where Manmohan Singh acted more like a CEO of a board they controlled
  • Slamming UPA's economic policy, the BJP said the government destroyed the economy where inflation is uncontrolled, growth rate is declining and unemployment is going up
http://www.tribuneindia.com/2014/20140405/main1.htm

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yatiAI9ggek

BJP releases Charge Sheet against UPA Government 04.04.2014

Ishrat Jahan Conspiracy, the full untold story. Disseminate widely in the interest of India's national security.

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This is the docudrama by Saraswati Films which tells the story of the true facts leading up to the Ishrat Jahan encounter killing.

The best answer to conspiratorial allegations and accusations is to review the facts in a 41 min. film documentation, dramatically unraveled. 

Kudos to the team which has brought this film into the public domain.

It contains a reconstruction of the events, with actors and interviews with Shri Ajit Doval, renowned former Director of the IB, RSN Singh, the outstanding army intelligence officer (also RAW), senior journalist, Tavleen Singh and Gautam Sen,who was Professor of international political economy at the London School of Economics.
The attempt to implicate Modi and Gujarat government ministers and the disgraceful persecution of some of India's most loyal public servants, including, Rajinder Kumar of the IB, are fully exposed. 

It also highlights the attempts to assassinate Shri Narendra Modi. 

Readers can judge which official Indian entities and politicians were 'in the know' or indeed worse.

Kalyanaraman





The Ishrat Jahan Conspiracy from Saraswati Films on Vimeo.

Google street virtual tour of Angkor Wat, Siem Reap, Cambodia

The 11th hour -- Mediacrooks

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The 11th Hour                                                            
Monday, April 7, 2014                        


Mom walks into son’s room at 4 in the morning at night. She tells him “Sweetie, power is poison”. The son feels the apple falling on his head and declares to the world “power is poison” and the parrots in our MSM applaud. They herald the arrival of the new great white hope. Just over a year later the desperate Sonia Gandhi who “hates power” is running all over desperately seeking that poison. She runs to Imam Bukhari and begs for Muslim votes. That’s the only policy the Congress has ever had –divide the country on religious and communal lines. Since she came to India SoniaG has mostly lived in the corridors of power. In the last 10 years she has been even more powerful as an unquestionable queen. Power is poison, she says! She says the Opposition is hungry for power not she. Power is poison, she says. Yet, she is rattled to the core at the prospect of losing it. Rattled enough to go and beg Bukhari for Muslim votes. Our media did some meows and rushed past this sick deed. Her fences(like SP, BSP, RJD, JDU, Arvind Kejriwal) all seem to be facing the heat. “At the stroke of midnight, when the world slept, India awoke to a great fraud being played on its parliamentary democracy. It was fleedom at midnight” said Arun Jaitley. The fraud he is referring to is the sudden ending to the parliamentary session discussing the Lokpal bill in December 2011. In that session Ram Jethmalani modified an old saying:

RamJ has been remarkably accurate. The prospect of losing power is driving the Congress and SoniaG to desperate measures. To protect this divine being who has been sent by Italy to save Indians and India a whole lot of fences operate. At the 11th hour they even got GobarPost to rake up some old Babri nonsense. Flopped! They are as desperate to keep her in power as much as she loves that poison. Their target clearly being the BJP and particularly Narendra Modi. Even during the NDA days the senior BJP leaders mollycoddled the Gandhis allowing them a free run. This guy Modi seems to be in no such mood. So they have abused him with all kinds of fake cases, name-calling and the works. In my previous post (Hunting season is over) when I mentioned a vast Christian lobby desperately working against Modi, many people scoffed at it. As if working as a “fence” for Congress and SoniaG a motley group of US Congress members again got together to scream “threat to minorities” on the eve of Indian elections.

It is not just those US Congressmen indulging in skulduggery; a familiar Christian from India, John Dayal, who has been an anti-Modi campaigner (and also a campaigner against anything pro-Hindu), was specially imported as a witness. No Hindu person of any denomination was allowed participation. Need any more proof of how the religious bigots of US want to control India? Anyone ignoring this criminal motive of US politicians to muddy Indian elections and covertly destroying Hindu culture needs an awakening. A couple of days ago Amit Shah, the BJP’s manager for UP, seems to have made a speech which asked voters to seek “revenge” and the media-parrots went into an instant outrage. Needless to say, half the morons didn’t even bother to hear or read what he said.


Timesnow was among the first to outrage as usual. The bimbos on the channel started screaming “divisive polarising” all over again at BJP and Amit Shah. Circus clown Arnab Goswamieven had Timesnow screaming it was a BJP strategy that Modi would be all politically correct in his speeches but his state managers will do all the communal talk. Such is the BS these people peddle. Here is whatCNN-IBN offered as a loose translation of what Shah said in Hindi to the Jats who had suffered from communal violence at Muzaffarnagar and apathy at the hands of the SP govt:


Even if one were to consider the above a crude way of sending out a political message there is absolutely nothing wrong in what was said. Amit Shah asking voters to seek revenge through the ballot is a perfect way that every citizen should seek in voting out a non-performing, communal or corrupt govt. However, the father and mother of media-filth who pose as Editor and Deputy Editor of CNN-IBN did not bother to even read the report of their own channel. Both, the Monk and the Category5Moron, were quick to scream “scary” with Rajdeep calling Shah a communal “leopard” whose spots won’t change. What would you call this pair whoallegedly run a news channel but prefer to quote another news outlet to vent their hatred and scare-mongering? That’s right; both of them conveniently quoted a headline from the Indian Express while their own channel carried a translation on their website. The two are so frustrated with Modi that they clutch at anything at the 11th hour that can in some way paint Modi as a communal devil who will destroy India. But evidence suggests that it’s not Modi but Rajdeep and his Hammamis who have that agenda. This fact doesn’t escape people anymore. Of course, the hate-filled ones who share the filthy cake of CNN-IBN have to be SoniaG’s parrots at NDTV. Take a look:

You see, the crass communal nonsense of SoniaG is a grand “score” by her party, like a brilliant heist or like the winning shot according to NDTV. On the right of the above pic is the “box of parrots” jumping in delight over an opportunity to nail Amit Shah or Modi. As the tweeter observes, it is the very news outlets and their cronies who are actually being more communal than Amit Shah in scare-mongering and hate-mongering. They too know it’s their last chance at the 11th hour. Much of this “manufactured outrage” is probably to cover up the “Boti Boti” case of Congi Imran Masood and the seriously communal action of SoniaG in seeking votes by religion. Another guy, Nitish Kumar, came up with a silver bullet. He says many in BJP also eat “non-veg” food. Maybe we will have a new vote-bank by food. Frustration all over! NDTV couldn’t help LYING some more when they twisted Modi’s quote on corruption as under:

After my tweet NDTV issued an apology and deleted their tweet above. But I have no doubts, and you shouldn’t too, that this is deliberate mischief and not a “genuine error” as they claimed. It has been happening all too frequently to be an error. Other than that, this mischief from NDTV happens only with Modi or BJP, never with any other politician or party. The folks at the channel know it as does the world. A typo or a wrong attribute can be an error but totally twisting a quote to mean the opposite is no accident. It is clear mischief. A recent misadventure by the C5M to a village in UP showed that the Dalits there were fully behind Modi to her utter dismay. Naturally, the so-called angel divine of Dalits, Mayawati, too calls for a rescue by Muslims of UP like SoniaG does. Here you go:

Poor Muslims, for all that they have gotten so far from parties like SP, BSP and Congress a lot is being asked of them. Political parties are unable to combat Modi anymore and now rely on hate-mongering with a community to do them a favour.Who knows, maybe in a few days there will be an appeal to Pakistan, Bangladesh and Saudi Arabia to campaign in India to combat Modi. Seems far-fetched? Why, aren’t they already doing that with crony NGOs and US Congress representatives? As much as they hunted him, he is now haunting them. There is this man from the Southern newspaper; a man with no morals, no values and no principles who does the same thing for no rhyme or reason. He passes by the name of N. Ram, owner of The Hindu with P Malini as its editor who frequently unleashes “organised” hate letters against Modi. Here’s what appeared on April 6:

The silly Ram frequently publishes letters from “prominent citizens” against Modi. I challenge you to recall more than a name or two that you’ve ever heard in your life from the list in the spurious article. The wording of the note by these “prominent” citizens is as much BS as any that has passed in the millions of articles written against Modi. One can make a directory of scumbags if they were compiled into one. This is not the first time either. Ram published a similar letter from prominent citizens onFebruary 20, 2014. All the media scumbags are left with nothing more to hurl at Modi. They’ve run out of ammunition as I said in my previous post. These scumbags of society indulge in fear-mongering and then they accuse Modi of nurturing fear. They are such idiots that they are oblivious to their own comedy.

Rajdeep Sardesai too is a comic moron who is oblivious to the enduring filth he promotes on TV and print over Modi and Gujarat. In every article that he trashes Modi for negligence since 2002 Rajdeep has had only one spot in the whole state of Gujarat that represents poor development or poor growth. His permanent victim has been one called “Citizen Nagar” in Ahmedabad. Look up any article or video of his where he complains of shabby facilities and you will find Citizen Nagar. Why? Because it is a Muslim locality. There is no denying that there is no state in India that still doesn’t have localities which need help. Gujarat may have its own spots (Hindu ones too). But why the obsession with only one Citizen Nagar? It was one of those days when this corrupt Rajdeep woke up at the 11th hour and decided to step out his lair of comfort that he found a Meena Bagh slum right under his nose. For the 666 years that Rajdeep has been a Sonia-Bhakt in Delhi, have you ever heard him talk of Meena Bagh or any other slum? There is no cure for willful blindness. From his 52-Crore bungalow Rajdeep can see Citizen Nagar in Ahmedabad all year but could see Meena Bagh for the first time in his life. Bravo!

From SoniaG begging Imam Bukhari to GobarPost to US bigots at their Capitol Hill to The Hindu to Mayawati appealing to Muslims to Imran Masood threatening “Boti Boti” to screaming murder over Amit Shah and the usual rants by opponents in politics and media at Modi, everyone is making a last ditch attempt to reverse their miserable fortunes. They are like those students who start reading up at the 11th hour outside the exam hall or prepare “cheat-sheets” to hide in their sleeves or in their pants. In all of this, there are still some who recognise the inevitable truth that it is only Modi who is talking governance and development and jobs. The rest are just singing the old worn-out song of secularism, communal and still resorting to appeasement and religious divisions. We are into election days from today and it doesn’t appear this 11th hour cramming will help.

http://www.mediacrooks.com/2014/04/the-11th-hour.html#.U0KgU_ldVy7

Election Manifesto 2014 of BJP -- Full text

Eternal vigilance is the price of democracy. A memorial to Jayaprakash Narayan -- MG Devasahayam

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The most fitting memorial to what Devasahaym calls the Festival of Democracy is rendered by recollecting memories of a great patriot of India, Jayaprakash Narayan who enshrined democracy in India and restored faith in the people as arbiters of their abhyudayam..

As the 16th Festival of Democracy commenced today, Devasahayam remembers the dark days of Emergency and reminisces about how the then Congress Government in 1975 converted India's vibrant democracy into a dynastic dictatorship. 

Devasahayam has dug out his article published in THE TRIBUNE on the 25th Anniversary of the proclamation of Emergency. 

This captures the struggle between democracy and dictatorship in a fair measure.
"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it". Let us not be so condemned.

Kalyanaraman

Sunday, June 18, 2000, Chandigarh, India

Emergency Revisited

A bright light during dark hours
“Prisoner” JP in Chandigarh
by M. G. Devasahayam

“Freedom became one of the beacon lights of my life and it has remained so ever since. Freedom with the passing of years transcended the mere freedom of my country and embraced freedom of man everywhere and from every sort of trammel. Above all it meant freedom of the human personality, freedom of the mind, freedom of the spirit. This freedom has become a passion of my life and I shall not see it compromised for bread, for security, for prosperity, for the glory of the state or for anything else”.

Loknayak Jayaprakash Narayan

IN the dying moments of the 2nd millennium, standing on the ramparts of the Lincoln Memorial at Washington DC, President of the United States of America, William Jefferson Clinton declared: “The story of 20th century is the triumph of freedom. We must never forget the meaning of the 20th century or the gifts of those who worked and marched, who fought and died for the triumph of Freedom”.

That self-effacing Noble Laureate and philosopher-economist Amartya Sen, in a BBC interview that preceded President Clinton’s homily, echoed this in equally emphatic terms. According to Prof. Sen, “Freedom is more critical for the developing world because it gives voice to the poor and the needy”.
It is this voice, when heard loud and clear, that facilitates access to necessities, so essential for alleviating poverty. For him freedom was the best thing to have happened to India, giving its poor a voice and say in the policies of governments. True indeed.

At the dawn of Independence, the founding fathers of our Republic chose the path of freedom and democracy despite extremely trying circumstances. Thanks to this, in the more than 50 years of our existence as a free nation, we have considerably surmounted the problem of poverty. What is more, despite all trials and tribulations and its many imperfections, India today is being lauded as the ‘largest democracy on earth’. But this very freedom stood trammelled and extinguished for 21 months commencing from this day 25 years ego.

Loknayak Jayaprakash Narayan, popularly known as JP was among India’s tallest leaders who had ‘worked and marched, fought and died for the triumph of freedom’ in a country wherein live one-sixth of the human race. And he did it not once, but twice — as a fiery fighter for freedom from alien rule under Gandhiji’s leadership and later winning it back from a native ‘durbar’, which brought in ‘emergency rule’ through the back door, under his own stewardship. But this ‘gift’ of his has been ignored and his name is being virtually erased from public memory.

This, in fact, is the trauma and tragedy of the Indian nation, keeping its resourceful but miserable millions, at the bottom of the pit. We worship the high and the mighty or those anointed or propelled by them. We adulate self-seeking, power hungry hypocrites hailing them ‘messiahs’ and ‘revolutionary leaders’. But we ignore and indeed humiliate sincere, honest and selfless people who have given everything for the country and its people, but did not seek anything in return.

JP is one such man who sacrificed all that he had — his youth, his family, his health and his life — so that this country attained Freedom and later sustained it. Tragically today, he stands near totally forgotten, slighted and ignored by the very people for whom he gave up everything.

A quarter century ego, in the dark hours of the night of June 25/26, 1975, when people slept, this ancient land of ours, wedded to freedom and democracy since Independence, stealthily slipped into slavery. In earlier instances when Indians lost their freedom, these were through external aggression and hegemony.

But this time around, the nation and its people were sought to be subjugated through internal repression and suppression of dissent wrought in by a native, democratically elected leadership, which was facing public wrath due to its various acts of commission and omission.

This sordid saga of National Emergency (from June 1975 to March 1977), which imposed dictatorship by suspending India’s Constitution and the Fundamental Rights of its citizens, is the most devious and dubious chapter in India’s 50 years existence as a Sovereign Republic. Painfully so, since this was done with consummate ease and through a seemingly democratic process.

For India and Indians, Year 2000 is more than an inaugural year of a new century and a new millennium. It is the completion of half-a- century of our Democratic Republic and 25 years of the ravaging of that democracy and its attempted replacement by a coterie-led dictatorship.

During the 18 months of active Emergency, people moved in hushed silence, stunned and traumatised by the draconian goings on. Across the nation, groveling academicians, advocates and accountants vied with each other to sing paeans of glory to the Emergency rulers, some signing pledges of loyalty and servitude in blood!

Whisky swilling and pipe smoking social climbers and sycophants chanted in unison, “Discipline is preferable to Democracy”, just because trains were running on time and they got parking space in Connaught Place! The bulk of the civil service crawled when asked to bend. Higher echelons of judiciary bowed to the dust and decreed that under the Emergency regime citizens did not even have the ‘right to life’.

Politicians of all hue and colour, barring honourable exceptions, lay supine and prostrate. There was gloom all around and it looked as if everything was over and the world’s largest democracy was slowly but surely drifting into dictatorship. But through this all, one single soul, one lonely spirit continued to stir in anguish and agony, for the first few months in captivity at Chandigarh and later attached to a dialysis machine at Bombay’s Jaslok Hospital and a spartan house at Patna. Yet, this defiant, indomitable spirit in the person of Jayaprakash Narayan dared the might of Indira’s dictatorship and defeated it thereby restoring freedom and democracy to India. This he did despite being in the frailest of health and living on borrowed time.
The happenings during the first few months of the Emergency (when JP was in captivity and lodged at the special ward of Chandigarh’s PGI, temporarily notified as Jail) were truly momentous in the sense that the true agenda of the ‘democrats-turned-dictators’ and the extreme vulnerability of Indian elite to state power and tyranny. was revealed But for the rise of JP and the people finding an ‘icon’ in him, India would have irreversibly passed into ‘dynastic autocracy’ with Sanjay Gandhi ‘inheriting’ the mantle of power from that self anointed “Queen-empress”, Indira Priyadarshini Nehru-Gandhi.

All nations, most of all India, need a symbol, human or not, to which they can cleave when times are bad, which can unite them across barriers of caste, creed, clan and language. Mid-seventies were bad days and through the draconian and repressive regime of National Emergency and the ‘era of discipline’ positioned against ‘anarchy and chaos’, Mrs. Gandhi was building herself up into that national symbol, that icon.
If she had succeeded, she would have got a clear mandate of the electorate in any ensuing election, since majority of voters would have voted for her instead of opting for a vacuum. When firmly in saddle, with autocracy and the Emergency endorsed by the electorate, the ‘iconship’ would have passed on to Sanjay Gandhi who was waiting in the wings. With age in his favour and his known dislike for the democratic process, India would have drifted from ‘direct democracy’ to ‘directed democracy’, a euphemism for dictatorship. An alternative icon was needed to prevent this tragedy from happening and JP with his towering personality and his aura as the hero of ‘Quit India’ movement eminently filled the bill.

JP’s emergence as an alternate icon to take the nation back to freedom and democracy was not an easy task. The Sarvodaya leader was out of circulation and public view for several years before he surfaced in 1974 to lead an uprising, which mostly involved the youth. Mainly students spearheaded this uprising, popularly known as “JP movement”.

Emphasising on the movement’s main thrust JP said, “We have always raised our voice against corruption. Prevention of corruption was the main aim of our movement”. These were indeed genuine and unassailable demands and should have received positive response from any Government run on democratic principles. Instead, a power drunk ruling coterie chose to respond brutally with harsh repressive measures resulting in the strengthening and spreading of the JP movement.
The Allahabad High Court judgement of June 12, 1975 unseating Mrs. Gandhi from Parliament for ‘corrupt practices’ gave a big fillip to the movement, which was poised to sweep the country. But before it could gain momentum Mrs. Gandhi struck and in one swift move declared the Emergency and incarcerated all worthwhile leaders who commanded public following.

On top of the list was ‘enemy number one of the state’ Jayaprakash Narayan. By this time JP had come to symbolise the conscience of the nation and uncompromising opposition to corruption and despotism which had become the hallmarks of Congress party and governments. By locking up an ailing JP in confinement, the ruling coterie thought they could break his body and spirit and thereby eliminate the only hurdle they had in enjoying uninterrupted and unfettered power.

What ‘man proposes God disposes’. In this case it was a woman proposing to be the icon of 70 crore (700 million) people and the unquestioned leader of the vast sub-continent of India for years to come and then pass it on to her chosen progeny. Using the Emergency as a whip to ‘discipline the nation’ and building herself up as “Indira is India”, she would have eminently succeeded with individuals and institutions collapsing one by one and falling by the wayside. And, barring sporadic murmurs of dissent, she had no opposition whatsoever and all roads were clear as far as eyes could see. But God has his own way of disposing.

During the initial days of the Emergency, within the confines of the yet to be commissioned intensive care ward of the PGI, JP was a old, haggard, incoherent, disjointed and defeated individual who felt that all hopes were gone and freedom in India stood extinguished. He had also mentally reconciled himself to die in confinement ‘as a prisoner of Indira Gandhi’. But the Almighty and the Ultimate Arbiter had other ideas. He wanted this man, who once symbolised all that was fiery in India’s Freedom struggle and all that was noble in pursuing a cause, to resurge, rise again and re-emerge as the nation’s hope and the alternate icon to lead the people back to freedom and democracy. For accomplishing this, He chose an insignificant instrument in me, then the Commissioner-cum-District Magistrate-cum-IG Prison of Chandigarh and therefore the custodian of ‘JP in Jail’.

When I received ‘prisoner JP’ at the tarmac of Chandigarh Air Force base on the night of July 1, 1975, the Emergency was only a few days old. JP had been taken into custody under the dreaded Maintenance of Internal Security Act by the District Magistrate, Delhi on 25/26 June night, moved around nearby areas of Haryana and Delhi’s All-India Institute of Medical Sciences, and was being brought to Chandigarh for safe custody and medical care. To me at that time JP was an enigma as well as a mystery. My memory of him as the ‘Hazaribagh hero’ of the forties was hazy and the perception of his recent campaign for ‘total revolution’ was rather confusing. The reception party of myself, Chandigarh’s Senior Superintendent of Police M. L. Bhanot and the Air Force Station Commander Air Commodore Bhasin was very courteous to JP and he was taken directly to the PGI Guest House, done up with all security trappings. My first impression of the old man was that he was totally perplexed and did not know what was happening.

The directive from ‘Delhi Durbar’ was that on ‘depositing’ JP in the PGI Guest House, I should report to Mr. Bansi Lal, the then Chief Minister of Haryana and a key member of the ruling Emergency coterie. When I called him up, his instructions were terse, “yeh salah apne aapko hero samajtha hai. Us ko wahin pade rehne do. Kisi se milne ya telephone karne nahin dena. Aap hi khatam ho jayaga”.(This damn fellow thinks he is a hero. Let him lie there. Don’t allow him to meet anybody or telephone any one. He will be finished this way). The same night Union Territory’s Home Secretary conveyed to me another ‘dicktat’ from Bansi Lal that JP should not be allowed to take a walk in the open between sunrise and sunset. Being unaware of the actual ‘Emergency agenda’ I did not give much importance to this. But later events were to reveal as to how ominous these remarks and these instructions turned out to be.

Something in my subconscious told me that this was not an ordinary man and his days in confinement would one day be part of history. As I drove back home from PGI Guest House around midnight, my mind went back to the days of India celebrating Independence when I was a tiny toddler. I vaguely remembered that in the far corner of the country where I belonged to (Kanyakumari, the Land’s End of India) it was JP’s name, which was in everyone’s lips. And his name was spoken in awe and admiration. Now also, within one year of his coming back to active public life, he has roused the people and their conscience which was lying dormant all the while.

In such a short period he had become the idol of the youth and the leader of a mass movement which shook Governments at their very foundation. During the 22 weeks JP was in Chandigarh, I did come to know him very intimately. And having understood the nobility of his struggle and the intensity of his commitment, partook in all matters concerning him and the State, shared his intimate thoughts and feelings, discussed political events and happenings, played ‘Devil’s Advocate’, participated in brainstorming and strategy sessions, took charge of his mental and psychological well-being, initiated the reconciliation process between him and the Prime Minister and succeeded in reviving his faith in himself and his people which he was on the verge of losing.

In short I became part and parcel of the transformation of the ‘dare-devil hero’ of the first freedom struggle from a ‘defeated idol’ in to an ‘inspiring icon’ who 15 months later led the second ‘liberation’ movement successfully and restored India back to freedom and democracy.

Needless to say that the short tenure of JP’s confinement was filled with high explosive events. One central thread however that stretched through the entire period of nearly five months of JP’s confinement was the confused and erratic attitude of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in dealing with ‘JP as Prisoner’ obviously under pressure from the ‘Delhi Durbar’. This predicament trickled down to all echelons of Government both in the Centre and the Union Territory of Chandigarh. Even on the day JP arrived at Chandigarh this confusion was evident. Though he was an ordinary MISA detainee whose health was not all that bad we were under strict instructions from Delhi to have him housed in the PGI under the care of a battery of doctors for no apparent reasons. So we had to hurriedly do up a guesthouse in the PGI campus with all security arrangements, declare it a temporary jail and lodge the VIP prisoner there.
“My world lies in shambles all around me. I am afraid I shall not see it put together again in my lifetime. May be my nephew and nieces will see that. May be”. These opening words of ‘JP’s Prison Diary-1975’s first entry dated 21 July — a full three weeks after his arrival in Chandigarh — amply describe a sense of defeatism and extremely fragile state of JP’s mind and spirit during the initial days of his confinement under MISA. While this was the state within PGI confines, outside some strange things were . Under instructions from the ‘Delhi Durbar’, Chandigarh Administration was preparing a contingency plan in the event of JP’s death in detention and a ‘death drill’ was being rehearsed. I was party to this bizarre event of discussing and rehearsing a living man’s funeral and it did leave a scar in my mind. The main point at issue was the Army’s role in such an eventuality and there was strong difference of opinion on this.

Blissfully unaware of these happenings and the rehearsal of his own funeral, JP was taking stock of things and doing some hard soul searching, introspection and evaluation of events leading to the imposition of the Emergency and its aftermath. This intense ‘solo-brainstorming’ led JP to believe that the ‘intellectuals’ who had egged him on saying ‘JP you are the only hope of the nation’ and whom he counted upon as bulwarks of democracy have buckled and have betrayed him. My sincere efforts to assure him otherwise did not carry conviction with JP.

This deep mental hurt was the main cause for some disturbing developments later including his conclusion that at least for the foreseeable future, democracy in the country was dead. And even when ‘it was put together after a long time’ he will not be there to see it. So, over a period of several days he drafted a ‘letter of farewell’ to Mrs. Indira Gandhi pouring out his heart in anguish, pleading with Mrs. Gandhi to mend her ways and “reconciling to die a prisoner under her regime”. This letter-indeed an epistle-sent on July 21, ’75 to the Prime Minister caused quite a ripple along the corridors of power.
Rules and instructions from ‘Delhi Durbar’ regarding interviews with detainees and sending/receiving letters as well as taking walks in open air were harsh and draconian. If these rules had been complied with, JP would have been in near total solitary confinement unable to meet anybody and allowed to send/receive only very few letters.

Any one with some conscience would not allow this to happen and I was no exception. So I stuck my neck out and got the harshest rules amended and others circumvented/defied to give some humane treatment to JP by allowing frequent interviews with his close friends and relatives. This came as some relief for the forlorn old man who had no family — wife, son or daughter — to call his own.

JP has been expecting some response to his impassionate letter of July 21 from Mrs. Gandhi whom he often referred to as “the child who used to play in my laps” When this did not materialise, he felt slighted and humiliated. Besides, he has been reading heavily censored newspapers containing news of intellectuals, academics and groups of people ‘hailing’ the Emergency and the ‘decisive’ leadership of Mrs. Gandhi as the best thing to have happened to the country. What particularly upset him was his mentor Vinobha Bhave describing the Emergency rule as ‘anusashan parava’ (era of discipline). Already smarting under a deep feeling of betrayal, these reports had tremendous psychological impact on JP and he became a ‘defeated idol’ giving up all hopes and ready to fold up.

At this time came the extremely disturbing news of the amendment of the ‘Representation of People’s Act’ granting immunity to the PM’s election and also reports that a constitutional amendment was being contemplated to make the election of President, Vice-President, Prime Minister and Lok Sabha Speaker non-justiciable. This was the proverbial ‘last straw on the camel’s back’ and something inside JP snapped and he lost all hopes ‘for the revival of democracy’ and decided to offer the ‘supreme sacrifice’ at the altar of the nation. On Sunday, August 10 I had permitted Mr. S. N. Prasad (brother-in-law of JP) an interview for one hour in the presence of Mr. Mohinder Singh, Executive Magistrate cum Jail Superintendent. Around noon Mohinder Singh delivered to me a letter from JP addressed to the Prime Minister conveying his decision ‘to go on fast until death’ unless the Emergency was revoked and all prisoners released within two weeks.

JP had authorised Mr. Prasad to announce this to the outside world. Considering the grave implications this could bring forth I took upon myself the task of dissuading JP from this disastrous move and succeeded after a two-hour highly surcharged nail splitting verbal duel with the hard-boiled revolutionary.

In the midst of all these, I was a mute witness to Delhi Durbar ‘Playing politics with people’s misery’. Extremely concerned and perturbed by the devastation and destruction caused by unprecedented floods in his home state of Bihar, JP drafted a SOS to the Prime Minister (reproduced below), that was delivered post haste to Delhi:

“Prime Minister, New Delhi

Feel deeply disturbed at reports of Patna and Bihar floods. Never in known history had Patna suffered thus. Pray for a month’s release on parole so that I may mobilise people’s help from within and without the state and organise popular relief in cooperation with the state and Central Governments. Even if floods recede there would remain colossal work to be done. At the time of the Great Bihar Earthquake of 1934 the British had released Rajen Babu from Hazaribagh for similar work. Request urgent attention and action.
JAYAPRAKASH (27 August, 1975)”

This was a frantic message in telegraphic style denoting extreme urgency. What followed was heartless and cruel politicking in Delhi with no concern for the misery of millions. Despite the floods getting worse and JP’s repeated pleadings for parole to organise relief, the response from Delhi Durbar was a stony, deafening silence.

Though the ‘Bihar episode’ was a bitter pill for JP to swallow, it did have a small streak of silver lining. Utilising this opportunity Prof. P.N. Dhar, Principal Secretary to Prime Minister had sent Mr. B.B. Vohra, an Additional Secretary in the Union Ministry of Agriculture for briefing JP on the Bihar flood situation.
Though nothing much came out of it, here was an opening for a possible breakthrough to initiate the process of political dialogue and reconciliation. So I got working on this, quietly putting the thought of reconciliation in the mind of JP, and increasingly getting positive response from him. My efforts culminated in a warm gesture by way of a letter to PM on September 17 expressing hope of an early end to the Emergency.

The first tangible result of my efforts towards reconciliation and restoration of normalcy in the country came in the form of a letter from JP to Sheikh Abdullah on September 22, ’75 in response to a statement issued by the Sheikh expressing himself in favour of ‘Conciliation at All-India level’ and offering his services towards this. The letter, written at my instance, inter alia said: “However, in spite of all that has happened and is happening, I am prepared to seek the path of conciliation. I shall, therefore, be much obliged if you kindly see me as soon as possible so that I could discuss this matter with you.

I being the villain of the piece, the arch-conspirator, culprit number one, a return to true normalcy, not the false one established by repression and terror, can only be brought about with my co-operation. I am herewith offering you my full co-operation”. This letter was delivered at Delhi on 24 forenoon and the response from PM’s office, already working on the idea of ‘reconciliation’ was swift. A special emissary of the PMO (Sugatha Das Gupta, Director, Gandhi Institute of Studies, Varanasi, of which JP was the Chairman) arrived on 25 morning to initiate efforts for a political dialogue between PM and JP.

Though as per Delhi instructions I was not to be present at the meeting, on JP’s insistence, I participated and succeeded in breaking the ice and paved the way for the reconciliation process to begin. There were some more visits by Sugatha and the preliminary work on reconciliation was going apace.
Kamaraj’s death on October 2 came as a major setback for JP’s Grand Alliance plan to defeat Indira Congress as and when election came. JP had confided in me that Kamaraj was the most suitable person to head the united political party he was planning. According to him since Kamaraj made Indira Gandhi the PM, he should be the one instrumental in removing her since she has turned dictatorial. JP also wanted Mr. Kamaraj and Mr. M. Karunanadhi to come together so that Tamil Nadu could get into the national mainstream and a powerful regional opposition spearheaded by DMK could be put together against the Congress party.

JP said that Kamaraj had agreed to this in principle since according to him (Kamaraj), “allowing AIADMK to capture power in Tamil Nadu would be a unmitigated disaster since this ‘party’ is nothing more than an ‘unprincipled cinema-crazy crowd’.

The only contentious issue of Kamaraj and Karunanidhi joining the Grand Alliance was the inclusion of RSS-backed Bharatiya Jana Sangh with its communal image. JP was confident of resolving this in view of the solemn commitment given by the top leadership of both these outfits to eschew communalism in case the Alliance captured power at the Centre. That the commitments were not honoured is another matter.

As hope for the success of reconciliation efforts and restoration of democracy was rising, certain mysterious and intriguing things happened raising disturbing doubts in my mind. Though old in age and suffering from diabetes and mild heart problem, JP was by and large keeping fairly good health and was given good medical care at the PGI.

The first symptoms of some major ailment appeared on September 26, just a day after commencement of preliminary efforts towards reconciliation following JP’s letter to Sheikh Abdullah.

When asked about this the doctors said that they are looking into it. For about a month JP was OK but on October 24 the ailment (severe stomach pain and sweating) reappeared with more intensity and was noticed by me when I visited him in the morning.

The doctors had no explanation for this. This again inexplicably happened just two days after the delivery of a sealed letter from Lord Fenner Brockway (eminent British Labour MP, Member of Cripps Mission and a friend of India) to JP for which he was contemplating an appropriate and positive response.
The content of the letter was supposed to have been read only by the PM and came with instructions that even I should not open it. As per directions of the Union Home Ministry, I had personally delivered this letter to JP unopened. JP opened it, read it and with a smiling face gave it to me insisting that I should read it.

The content of the letter was a virtual apology on behalf of Indira Gandhi for imposing the Emergency and seeking JP’s co-operation in restoring normalcy in the country. Obviously Prime Minister was keen to end the Emergency at the earliest, but there were powerful forces working against it.

Looking back, I feel that the 10 days from November 7 to 16 ’75 greatly influenced India’s post-Independence history. On Nov 7, sharing the concern of JP’s brother Rajeshwar Prasad I had asked him to write a suitably worded letter to the Prime Minister apprising her of the seriousness of the matter. JP’s health was deteriorating fast and my suspicion was getting confirmed due to the doctors’s hedgy replies about JP’s health and the disappearance of Lord Fenner Brockway’s letter, which was key to the revival of the reconciliation process. Added to this was the intriguing phenomenon of Sugatha returning JP’s letter to Sheikh Abdullah undelivered.

Under the circumstances, I was convinced that it would be unsafe to keep JP in Chandigarh any longer and he should get to a place where his ailment could be diagnosed correctly and treated properly.

This conviction led me to initiate silent and swift steps to launch a multi pronged assault - through PM’s envoy Sugatha, JP’s brother Rajeshwar Prasad, Chandigarh Chief Commissioner/Union Home Secretary (official) and my personal channel on the PMO with the same message content — “If JP dies” — to create a crisis mind set and situation in Delhi.

This worked admirably resulting in a flurry of activities leading to JP’s release under dramatic circumstances on November 12, ’75 by an order served on him by the Chief Secretary and District Magistrate of Delhi who flew into Chandigarh by a special BSF aircraft.

They had brought with them two mutually confusing orders-one for parole and one for release- as a last ditch attempt by the ‘Delhi Durbar’ to sabotage the whole thing. I saw through the game and guided JP to take the appropriate decision resulting in his release on ‘unconditional parole’.

Following the release of JP, there was hectic activity and efforts by the ‘Delhi Durbar’ to delay his departure from Chandigarh as long as possible and they were putting pressure on the PGI doctors not to discharge him. This only strengthened my suspicion further and I gave this blunt poser to the PGI Medical Superintendent on November 14: “Though JP is no longer in my custody, I am the District Magistrate and am concerned with law and order since students in the Panjab University campus, just across the PGI were getting restive. I want an answer — are you curing him or discharging him? Take a decision”.

That very evening doctors discharged him and pronounced him fit to travel. On hearing of this there was panic in Delhi with its repercussions in Chandigarh and I was pulled up for speeding up JP’s discharge. I realised that there was no time to lose. Therefore, at great risk to my person and career I hastened JP’s departure by virtually commandeering the Indian Airlines Srinagar-Jammu-Chandigarh-Delhi Flight on November 16 to get him out of Chandigarh in the company of Messieurs Rajeshwar Prasad, M.R. Masani and R.K. Mishra who had come to take JP straight to Bombay’s Jaslok Hospital.

Though JP broke down while taking leave of me, my colleagues M.L. Bhanot, Mohinder Singh, R.D. Sharma (Deputy Jail Superintendent) and the PGI doctors, I could see a steely resolve in him. The departing words of JP only confirmed this. After he was seated in the aircraft and the doors were closed, they were opened again and the airhostess called for me saying that JP wanted to see me. When I went to him he shook me by the hand, thanked me profusely and said, “You are like a son I did not have. I will never forget your kindness to me”. Feeling terribly embarrassed I responded by requesting him to look after his health. JP’s reply to this still rings in my ears. “Mr. Devasahayam, my health is not important. The health of the nation is. I will defeat that woman and have it restored”. And then the aircraft departed.
As I drove back home, I thought about JP’s departing words. I knew that ‘woman’ was the harshest word JP would ever use for Indira Gandhi. What he said meant that the fire was back in him and I had been of some assistance in transforming the ‘Hazaribagh Hero’ from a “defeated idol to a defiant leader” paving the way for India’s second freedom some months later. With this satisfaction I went back to my chores. The rest is history.

[Postscript: As pledged, JP succeeded in ‘defeating that woman’ and removing the Congress Party from power at the Centre for the first time, replacing it with a ‘Janata’ Government. The democrat had defeated the autocrat and restored democracy in this country of teeming millions.] 

(Note: The author, a former IAS officer, was District Commissioner of Chandigarh when Jayaprakash Narayan was jailed there. This article was written on the 25thanniversary of the proclamation of Emergency)

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2000/20000618/edit.htm#1




Focus on good governance and development. BJP manifesto highlights -- Sandhya Jain

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http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2014/04/election-manifesto-2014-of-bjp-full-text.html Full text of BJP Manifesto.

Will do nothing with bad intent, Modi vows as BJP releases manifesto

New Delhi, Apr 7 (PTI): Narendra Modi on Monday vowed that he will not do anything with “bad intent” if he becomes Prime Minister as he outlined his vision.

”The party has bestowed me with certain responsibility. I want to make three promisespersonally -- I will never be found wanting on hard work, I will not do anything for myself and I will not do anything with bad intent,” the BJP's Prime Ministerial candidate said.

His thrust on doing nothing with “badh irada (bad intent)” assumes significance as certain sections, particularly the minorities, have apprehensions about his rule given the taint of 2002 riots.

Modi was speaking here at a function to release the party's manifesto where he underlined that his main focus would be on “good governance and development” with a strong government at the centre.

Seeking a mandate for 60 months, Modi said the country is in bad state and full of pessimism and the manifesto outlines the “direction, goal and commitment” to correct the situation.

He said the government has the main responsibility of catering to the needs of the poor and deprived and his administration would focus on this aspect, particularly in the areas of education and healthcare.

Invoking the “track record” of NDA rule under Atal Bihari Vajpayee and L K Advani, Modi said the manifesto outlined the agenda of development which would be “all inclusive” and “all loving”, covering the entire country.

”For us, this manifesto is not an election ritual or a document. This is our direction, our goal and our commitment,” he said in presence of Advani and other senior leaders Rajnath Singh, Murli Manohar Joshi and Sushma Swaraj. Arun Jaitley could not attend as he was filing his nomination papers in Amritsar.

”The 125 crore people of the country can feel the smell of their aspirations in thisbouquet of our manifesto,” Modi said.

Pledging to provide a strong government with “zero tolerance” with regard to internal and external security, he said, “There will be such a strong government at the centre that no country dares to threaten us but should feel like being friendly. We will also not threaten any other country but have cooperation. Such will be the capability of our government.”

He said his government would rise to the expectations and aspirations of the people with the slogans of “Ek Bharat, Shreshth Bharat” (One India, Outstanding India) and “Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas (Helping All, Development of All)

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1140407/jsp/frontpage/story_18164210.jsp#.U0LEAKiSySo

BJP manifesto a ray of hope in darkness of sunken economy

By Sandhya Jain on7 Apr 2014

BJP manifesto a ray of hope in darkness of sunken economy
True to its pledge to pick the economy out of its deep depression and stagnation, appropriately designated as the ‘Decade of Decay’ under the Congress-dominated UPA, the much delayed BJP manifesto, released on Monday, promises immediate priority to tackling the price rise and breaking the vicious cycle of high inflation and high interest rates, the principal issues that have contributed to the nationwide anger and disillusionment with the ruling dispensation. It pledges huge public expenditure in infrastructure development, which will kick start the economy and trigger huge employment potential in crucial sectors across the nation.
Addressing in detail all the burning issues of the day, the manifesto lays strong and equal emphasis on measures to revive agriculture and allied farm-based activities and measures to stimulate growth and developmentin urban areas by seizing opportunities offered by the global economy. It bears a strong imprint of the economic thoughts expressed by the party’s Prime Ministerial contender Narendra Modi during his hectic campaign tours across the country. The civilisational content reflects the traditional position of the BJP on issues ranging from the Ram temple to the common civil code.
The 52-page text deals comprehensively with contentious issues such as the need to frame a national land use policy and examine the acquisition of non-cultivable land to protect the interests of farmers and the food security needs of the country; the need to become a global manufacturinghub rather than remain a market for the global economy; encouraging the small and medium sector that has a major contribution in economic growth and employment generation; promoting the cooperative and handicrafts sectors; the tourism and hospitality industry that can earn foreign exchange while creating millions of jobs; building freight and industrial corridors for fast movement of people and goods; expediting national highways, particularly border and coastal highways and building all-weather roads in every village; modernizing airports, ports and railways and building next generation infrastructure; setting up gas grids to make gas available to households and industry; setting up a national optical-fibre network up to the village level and Wi-Fi zones in public areas; harnessing advanced satellite technology and expertise for development.
Lambasting the Congress-led UPA for insensitivity and indifference towards the plight of the people as runaway food inflation crippledhousehold budgets and triggered the overall inflationary trend while threatening the food and nutritional security of millions, the BJP manifesto notes that the regime failed to act upon the report of the committee of Chief Ministers, headed by Shri Narendra Modi, and submitted as early as 2011. It boasts that the BJP-led NDA Government held the prices.
As a corollary, the manifesto promises to rein in inflation by setting up a Price Stabilisation Fund and putting in place strict measures and special Courts to stop hoarding and black marketing. As repeatedly exhorted by Narendra Modi, the BJP-led regime would divide the functions of Food Corporation of India into procurement, storage and distribution for greater efficiency. It proposes to leverage technology to disseminate Real time data, especially to farmers – on production, prices, imports, stocks and overall availability. Steps will be taken to evolve a single ‘National Agriculture Market’, a long standing demand of farmers and traders, which will put an end to artificial embargoes on movement of agricultural produce across State boundaries, and bring better returns to farmers. It will also promote area specific crops and vegetables linked to the food habits of the people.
Promising an exponential leap in employment opportunities by huge public expenditure in upgrading infrastructure and housing, the manifesto also proposes to empower youth for self-employment by incubating entrepreneurship and facilitating credit. It stresses that the issue of employability would be tackled through a multi-skills development programme in mission mode. Thus, there will be simultaneous emphasis on job creation and entrepreneurship, in both rural and urban areas. Employment Exchanges will be transformed into Career Centres that will link youth with job opportunities in a transparent and effective manner through the use of technology, as well as by providing counselling and training.
Lamenting 10 years of jobless growth under the Congress-led UPA regime, the BJP manifesto lays emphasis on employment and entrepreneurship for broader economic revival. Accordingly, it proposes to strategically develop high impact domains such as labour-intensive manufacturing in areas like textiles, footwear, electronics assembly, and so on, and also Tourism. The BJP would work to strengthen the traditional employment bases of agriculture and allied industries, and develop retail through modernization and stronger credit and market linkages. Programmes like MGNREGA will be linked to asset creation.
Non-performing assets will be reduced in the banking sector and a regulatory framework created for non-banking financial companies. Taxes will be rationalized, simplified, and the tax regime made trusting, non-adversarial and conducive. All State governments will be brought on board regarding the GST, and Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) will be permitted in sectors required for job and asset creation, barring multi-brand retail. The Foreign Investment Promotion Boards will be made more efficient and investor-friendly. The all-pervasive corruption under the Congress-led UPA will be curbed by setting up a system which will eliminate the scope for corruption through public awareness; technology enabled e-Governance to minimize discretion in citizen-government interface; system-based, policy-driven transparent governance, and so on.
The menace of Black Money will be minimized by curbing the scope for corruption and generating black money. A Task Force will be set up to track down and bring back black money stashed in foreign banks and offshore accounts by amending existing laws or making new ones; the cooperation of foreign Governments will be sought for information sharing regarding black money.
Emphasising its commitment to a strong federal structure as envisioned in the Constitution of India, the BJP manifesto affirms that Team India will not be limited to the Prime Minister but will include the Chief Ministers as equal partners. This means the Chief Ministers of all States, regardless of party in power, as asserted by Narendra Modi in rallies in non-BJP-ruled States. The document promises fiscal autonomy of States, but stresses financial discipline. It proposes to establish ‘Regional Councils of States’ with common problems and concerns so as to find solutions applicable across a group of states. It encourages cooperation among states on security-related issues, inter-state disputes and for removing inter-regional economic disparities and promoting tourism.
Acknowledging the special needs and unique problems of hill and desert states, the manifesto proposes state-specific developmental priorities and models to meet the aspirations of the people. It proposes special attention to Union Territories (UTs); tribal welfare and infrastructure, particularly coastal area development. Island territories will be protected and developed, and moribund forums like the National Development Council and Inter-State Council will be revitalised. State Governments will be involved in promoting foreign trade and commerce, and States helped to mobilise resources through investments in industry, agriculture and infrastructure.
The Northeast, to which Narendra Modi has devoted special attention, has an enormous potential to generate wealth on account of its rich resources, but lags behind in development due to poor governance, systemic corruption and poor delivery of public services. The manifesto notes that the NDA government had initiated concrete measures to develop the Northeast by setting up a Ministry devoted to the region, and vows to empower this Ministry with a broader charter and non-lapsable funds. The BJP, it guarantees, will place special emphasis on enhancing connectivity within the region and to the rest of the country.
Pointing to the potential for heavy employment generation in the northeast, it promises massive infrastructure development, particularly along the Line of Actual Control in Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim. This is an urgent imperative from the point of national security. As an offshoot, there could be a boost in employment of local youth directly or indirectly by the armed forces and border security forces whose presence in the area will go up once infrastructure is improved.
The manifesto promises to address the issue of infiltration and illegal immigrants in the Northeast on priority basis. It proposes to complete all pending fencing work along the India-Bangladesh and India-Myanmar border, and enhance border security. Besides, it will tackle the issue of flood control in Assam and river water management; nurture more job-generating opportunities like tourism and IT industry; ensure safety of North-Eastern students studying across the country by setting up Hostels for them at various educational centres. Insurgent groups will be dealt with a firm hand.
Jammu & Kashmir, the manifesto avers, was, is and shall remain an integral part of the Union of India. Taking note of festering tensions between the different regions of the State, the BJP promises to pursue equal and rapid development in all three regions – Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh. The return of Kashmiri Pandits to their ancestral land with full dignity, security and assured livelihood will be prioritised, and the long pending problems of refugees from Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (POK) addressed. Reiterating the need to abrogate Article 370, the BJP proposes to discuss this with all stakeholders. The party promises to do full justice to Seemandhra, and address the issues of development and governance of Seemandhra and Telangana.
Reiterating its commitment to the diversity of India, to inclusion of all without exclusion, the BJP manifesto expresses opposition to the appeasement of one at the cost of the other, and of using institutions to protect the interest of a particular party or persons. It emphasises the concept of ‘India First’ as the philosophy behind ‘Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas’. At the same time, it stresses equal opportunities for minorities, especially Muslims, and ensuring that the young and the girl child in particular get education and jobs without discrimination. It envisages a National Madrasa modernization programme; empowering Waqf Boards in consultation with religious leaders and taking steps to remove encroachments from and unauthorized occupation of Waqf properties; market linkages and access to credit to traditional artisans in cottage and small-scale industry; preservation and promotion of the Urdu Neo-Middle class; educational scholarships and educational facilities; medical insurance and quality healthcare services; housing and public transport; urban amenities to rural areas and enhanced village level infrastructure by way of roads, potable water, education, health, electricity, broadband, etc.
The BJP proposes administrative reforms through an appropriate body under the PMO to bring about transparency in the decision-­making process. The party pledges to set-up an effective Lokpal institution and deal with corruption at any level firmly and swiftly. People-friendly measures will be installed for services like birth certificate, school admission, setting up business or paying taxes. All government records will be digitised on priority basis so that they are easily accessible. All government schemes and programmes will be reviewed and audited, and obsolete laws and regulations removed.
The manifesto posits IT as a great enabler for empowerment, equity and efficiency and points out that the NDA Government had made IT one of the major thrust areas, which resulted in India becoming the IT capital of the world. In future, the emphasis will be to ensure that the benefits of IT percolate to ordinary men and women. BJP will make e-Governance the backbone for good Governance. For this, every household and every individual will be digitally empowered.
Besides institutional reforms, rationalization and convergence among Ministries and opening up government to expertise from industry, academia and society, the heavy duty manifesto proposes doubling the number of courts and judges in the subordinate judiciary; a National Judicial Commission for the appointment of judges and separate fast track courts for specified commercial laws; reducing the number of cases in which the Government is a litigant and several measures to empower lawyers, increase the number of women at the Bar and on the Bench; and vast enhancement of specialized universities in Forensics, Arbitration, IPR, International Law, and so on. Police services will be vastly enhanced, and this too, could emerge as an area of immediate employment generation.
To bridge the gap between the rich and the poor, the manifesto proposes to bring the 100 most backward districts of the country at par with other districts and gainfully employ the rural poor in agriculture and allied activities, while developing the skills of the urban poor so that they take advantage of emerging opportunities. Food Security measures will include incorporating the best practices of successful PDS models to revise the existing PDS and addressing under-nutrition and malnutrition.
Special measures are proposed for the disadvantaged and weaker sections of society, with emphasis on education and entrepreneurship for SC, ST, OBCs and other weaker sections. Untouchability is to be eradicated at all levels; manual scavenging ended; and tribal development expedited with welfare schemes, electrification of tribal hamlets, development of all-weather roads, rural Haats (markets) and other measures.
The manifesto expresses special concern for senior citizens and persons with disabilities, including higher tax relief for families caring for a disabled member. There are a plethora of measures for the youth, sports, and women. Health has been emphasised with AIIMS like institutes in every state and public investment to promote Yoga and Ayurveda; universalisation of emergency medical services; sanitation, and so on.
Education will receive 6 per cent of the GDP, which will boost employment of educated graduates; universalisation of secondary school education has been made a national priority. The University Grants Commission will be restructured into a Higher Education Commission and measures taken for vocational of youth for employment. There will be massive Open Online Courses and skill development opportunities.
The highly comprehensive document touches almost every aspect of life. Among the notable promises is the pledge not to allow Genetically Modified (GM) foods without full scientific evaluation. It is impossible to do justice to the document in the course of a single article, but a quick perusal shows that the BJP was blasé about the delay in releasing the document because all the major promises have already been expounded at length before the people by Narendra Modi in his rallies while criss-crossing the nation.
Among electoral reforms, the BJP proposes to evolve a method of holding Assembly and Lok Sabha elections simultaneously and revising expenditure limits realistically.
As was only to be expected, the BJP concluded its manifesto by acknowledging the cultural heritage of India. It reiterated its commitment to explore all possibilities within the framework of the Constitution to facilitate construction of the Ram Temple in Ayodhya, and recognised the Ram Setu as part of India’s cultural heritage also of strategic importance due to its vast thorium deposits, which will be considered while taking a decision on the Sethu- Samudram Channel project.
The party has reiterated its commitment to cleanse the sacred Ganga, which is also the life sustaining source for the parts of the country through which it flows. All other rivers will also be cleaned with people’s participation. The cow and its progeny will be suitably protected in view of their contribution to agriculture and the socio-economic and cultural life of the country. All Indian Languages will be promoted as repositories of our rich literature, history, culture, art and scientific achievements. The document concludes with a commitment to draft a Uniform Civil Code to bring about gender equality and protect the rights of all women by drawing upon the best traditions and harmonizing them with the modern times.
http://www.niticentral.com/print-posts.php?p=208547 

Looted banking system -- V. Anantha Nageswaran

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Another dynastic legacy

The govt’s borrowing binge and the overall debt-fuelled economic growth of the UPA years have left the banking system broken
V. Anantha Nageswaran MON, APR 07 2014
Another dynastic legacy
Photo: Pradeep Gaur/Mint
Last week, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) granted in-principle approval to IDFC Ltd and Bandhan Financial Services Pvt. Ltd to set up banks. However, the Indian banking system is badly in need of capital and the problem will persist regardless of how many new bank permits are issued.
These days, the discussion on the legacy of the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) decade revolves around comparing economic growth in the UPA and the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) years, ignoring lags and leads. In fact, when it comes to economic growth, the NDA years should run from 1998 to 2008 and the UPA years should run from 2009 to 2019 because the ill-effects of the two UPA regimes will be with India for many years to come. The government’s borrowing binge and the overall debt-fuelled economic growth of the UPA years have left the banking system broken.
When the NDA took office, the gross non-performing assets ratio in public sector banks was 16%. When they left office, it was 7.8%. In September, this ratio had climbed to 12.3% (including restructured loans), with one crucial difference. The absolute sum at stake is too large now. Gross advances by public sector banks was Rs.2.85 trillion in March 1998. In March 2012, it was Rs.35.0 trillion. That the overall lending to the commercial sector(other than the government) by both public and private banks amounted toRs.46.7 trillion by March 2012 underscores the dominance of the nationalized banks in domestic credit creation (around 75%).
Why is India’s government-dominated banking system bankrupt? Why didbad debt rise rapidly in UPA years? An important reason is that the government destroyed the credit culture in the country with its farm loan waiver. In December 2007, the government announced a waiver of farm loans and included it in the budget for 2008-09 presented in February 2008, one year ahead of the elections.
report in Mint published in February 2012 says that on the aftermath of the loan waiver: “… effects of the massive Rs.76,000 crore farm debt waiver announced by the government during the 2008 budget are now being felt in the countryside…At a banking conclave hosted by Mint on Tuesday, State Bank of India chairman Pratip Chaudhuri did not pull any punches when he said that the moral hazard created by the 2008 loan write-off has become a reality now. ‘Agriculture is a bit of an issue. That is because of moral hazard that was created in 2008 when there was a write off of largeagriculture loans,’ he said, and also suggested that the credit culture in rural India was deteriorating.” Raghuram Rajan, then chairman of the committee on financial sector reforms, said in 2008 that, “after 15 years of getting away from the problem, the government had vitiated it again”.
photo
In a first formal study of its kind (The Economic Effects of a BorrowerBailout: Evidence from an Emerging Market, Xavier Gine and Martin Kanz, 21 October 2013), researchers from the World Bank set out to examine the implications of the farm loan waiver scheme.
Their study traces credit allocation and loan delinquencies in 491 districts and covers the period 2001 to 2012. Their findings are a severe indictment of the credit culture that the UPA is leaving behind in the country.
After the waiver, the default rate of borrowers increased. The higher default rates were not due to the changed behaviour on the part of banks. The banks did not become aggressive lenders anticipating that government bailouts for borrowers would wipe out non-performing loans from their books. Instead, the reason that defaults increased was because borrowers began to anticipate similar debt waiver programmes, especially around elections. More worryingly, the programme “gave rise to severe ex-post moral hazard problems, concentrated among borrowers that had previously been in good standing and who did not benefit from the bailout”. There was no evidence of improvement in farm productivity following the loan waiver.
As long as banks remain under dominant government ownership, politicians desperate for re-election will be tempted to go down this path, ignoring the long-term damage to the nation. As India looks set to end the dominance of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty in politics, it is time to end the legacy of government dominance of the banking sector bequeathed to the country by the former prime minister Indira Gandhi. Otherwise, the broken credit transmission mechanism in a country that is still very much dependent on bank credit will hold down the country’s growth rate for a long time to come.
To be sure, a financial sector dominated by private sector banks will have its own share of problems, as the West is realizing now. But the Indian financial sector is in the safe hands of RBI and its present leadership.
V. Anantha Nageswaran is co-founder of Aavishkaar Venture Fund and Takshashila Institution. Comments are welcome at baretalk@livemint.com.
http://www.livemint.com/Opinion/zOFPQ5848h2rSXQIuuketI/Another-dynastic-legacy.html

BJP vows to revise nuclear doctrine, set up National Maritime Authority. NaMo, declare thorium-based nuke doctrine and support to Indian Ocean Community.

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BJP vows to revise nuclear doctrine

TNN | Apr 8, 2014, 02.23 AM IST

NEW DELHI: A BJP government will "revise and update" India's nuclear doctrine, promising to maintain a credible minimum deterrent "in tune with changing geostrategic realities". While both main parties have promised to maintain a minimum deterrence, BJP has clarified in its manifesto that changing realities in the region would be reflected in its strategic policy. 

In foreign policy, BJP promised to "reboot and reorient foreign policy goals, content and process". Pitching for political stability and peace in South Asia, BJP said it would revive friendly relations within this region, though would not hesitate to take tough action if warranted. 

The party in its manifesto stuck to multilateral engagement steering clear of naming individual countries. But taking forward Narendra Modi's own views about the foreign ministry, the party promised to "expand and empower our pool of diplomats". Harking back to the Vajpayee era, the BJP plans to focus a lot of attention on NRIs and PIOs — many of whom have supported the party from overseas

In 1998, the BJP manifesto famously promised to conduct nuclear tests if it came to power, but no one took it seriously. This time everyone will, but the fact is, the UPA government has quietly modified the nuclear doctrine itself. With Pakistan developing the Nasr, a tactical nuclear missile, India has indicated that even a tactical strike would be met with a massive strategic second strike.

The BJP has also promised to fast-track defence purchases and open up foreign direct investmentin select defence industries. "BJP will strengthen the DRDO, encourage private sector participation and investment, including FDI," the manifesto said. 

This was a major hurdle in the UPA government, where defence minister A K Antony stood firm against FDI in defence. The present government has only opened up the defence sector to 26% FDI which was felt to be inadequate to attract defence investment into India, while an overt antipathy to the private sector made it difficult for Indian private sector to get into defence production. 

The party has promised to set up a national maritime authority to focus on coastal security. Promising to deal with cross-border terrorism "with a firm hand", the BJP has promised "punitive measures" to deal with illegal immigration. Modifying decades of accepted wisdom of keeping the armed forces out of all strategic decision making, the BJP has promised to "ensure greater participation of armed forces in the decision-making processes of the ministry of defence". 

While making short service commissions more "attractive", the party promised to set up four defence universities, a veteran's commission and ensure servicemen can exercise their franchise. 

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/BJP-vows-to-revise-nuclear-doctrine/articleshow/33410123.cms

Flaw discovered in internet's key security methods. Revert to Meluhha hieroglyphs.

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Experts Find a Door Ajar in an Internet Security Method Thought Safe



On Monday, several security researchers, including from Google, uncovered a major vulnerability called “Heartbleed” in the technology that powers encryption across the Internet.On Monday, several security researchers, including from Google, uncovered a major vulnerability called “Heartbleed” in the technology that powers encryption across the Internet.
Updated, 10:24 p.m. | A flaw has been discovered in one of the Internet’s key security methods, potentially forcing a wide swath of websites to make changes to protect the security of consumers.
The problem was first discovered by a team of Finnish security experts and researchers at Google last week and disclosed on Monday. By Tuesday afternoon, a number of large websites, including Yahoo, Facebook, Google and Amazon Web Services, said they were fixing the problem or had already fixed it.
Researchers were still looking at the impact on consumers but warned it could be significant. Users’ most sensitive information — passwords, stored files, bank details, even Social Security numbers — could be vulnerable because of the flaw.
The most immediate advice from security experts to consumers was to wait or at least be cautious before changing passwords. Changing a password on a site that hasn’t been fixed could simply hand the new password over to hackers. Experts recommended that, before making any changes, users check a site for an announcement that it has dealt with the issue. “This is a good reminder that there are many risks online and it’s important to keep a watchful eye around what you’re doing, just as you would in the physical world,” said Zulfikar Ramzan, the chief technology officer of Elastica, a security company.
The extent of the vulnerability was unclear. Up to two-thirds of websites rely on the affected technology, called OpenSSL. But some organizations appeared to have had advance notice of the issue and had already fixed the problem by Tuesday afternoon. Many others were still working on restoring security.
Because attackers can use the bug to steal information unnoticed, it is unclear how widely the bug has been exploited — although it has existed for about two years. On Github, a website where developers gather to share code, some were posting ways to use the bug to dump information from servers. The Finnish security researchers, working for Codenomicon, a security company in Saratoga, Calif., and security researchers at Google found the bug in a portion of the OpenSSL protocol — which encrypts sessions between consumer devices and websites — called the “heartbeat” because it pings messages back and forth. The researchers called the bug “Heartbleed.”
“It’s a serious bug in that it doesn’t leave any trace,” said David Chartier, chief executive at Codenomicon. “Bad guys can access the memory on a machine and take encryption keys, usernames, passwords, valuable intellectual property, and there’s no trace they’ve been there.”

Then companies began taking inventory of what they may have lost. But because the flaw would allow attackers to surreptitiously steal the keys that protect communication, user passwords and anything stored in the memory of a vulnerable web server, it was virtually impossible to assess whether damage had been done.
Organizations were advised to download immediately the newest version of the OpenSSL protocol, which includes a fix, and quickly swap out their encryption keys. It also meant organizations needed to change their corporate passwords, log out users and advise them to change their own passwords.
Security researchers say they found evidence that suggests attackers were aware of the bug. Researchers monitoring various “honey pots” — stashes of fake data on the web aimed at luring hackers so researchers can learn more about their tools and techniques — found evidence that attackers had used the Heartbleed bug to access the fake data.
Actual victims may be out of luck. “Unless an attacker blackmails you, or publishes your information online, or steals a trade secret and uses it, you won’t know if you’ve been compromised,” Mr. Chartier said. “That’s what makes it so vicious.”
Mr. Chartier advised users to consider their passwords compromised and urged companies to deal with the issue quickly. “Companies need to get new encryption keys and users need to get new passwords,” he said.
Security researchers say it is most important for people to change passwords to sensitive accounts like their online banking, email, file storage and e-commerce accounts, after first making sure that the website involved has addressed the security gap.
By Tuesday afternoon, many organizations were heeding the warning. Companies across the web, including Yahoo, Amazon and PayPal, began notifying users of the bug and what was being done to mitigate it. Tumblr, the social network owned by Yahoo, said it had issued fixes and warned users to immediately swap out their passwords.
“This still means that the little lock icon (HTTPS) we all trusted to keep our passwords, personal emails and credit cards safe was actually making all that private information accessible to anyone who knew about the exploit,” the security team at Tumblr, which is part of Yahoo, wrote on its site. “This might be a good day to call in sick and take some time to change your passwords everywhere — especially your high-security services like email, file storage and banking, which may have been compromised by this bug.”
Steve Lohr and Vindu Goel contributed reporting.

http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/04/08/flaw-found-in-key-method-for-protecting-data-on-the-internet/?hp


How to Devise Passwords That Drive Hackers Away



Minh Uong/The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/08/technology/personaltech/how-to-devise-passwords-that-drive-hackers-away.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

In a remarkable coincidence, the following book is in pubication process which describes a cipher which was discovered about 5500 years ago and used as Meluhha hieroglyphs and deployed on cuneiform and other tablets of clay. Maybe, the cipher offers a more reliable solution to the security of today's electronic tablets. 

Clearly, there are insecure tablets and there are secure tablets for business transactions of Bronze Age.

Await the publication announcement. (Note: The ancient cipher is so safe and reliable, that it has defied meaning for nearly 150 years since the discovery of the first tablet of Bronze Age!!).

Kalyanaraman
Sarasvati Research Center
April 9, 2014


Philosophy of symbolic forms in Meluhha cipher


The thesis reports re-discovery of lexical repertoire of Meluhha language. Meluhha language was in vogue during the Bronze Age from ca. 5th millennium BCE. Meluhha hieroglyphs of symbolic forms relate to Meluhha life-experiences as sphoā‘burst forth’ expressions in Meluhha language. The function of Meluhha writing system deploying Meluhha cipher as mudrā  is to catalog wheelwright-lapidary artifacts of stone, shell, metal traded by maritime seafaring merchants and artisan-merchant caravans along the famed, extensively documented  Tin Road. The cipher key here is artha translated as composite of entities and also ‘meaning’. In the Indian tradition, the word artha is a gloss which signifies both ‘meaning’ and also ‘wealth’ as seem in the compound Arthaśāstra used as a title for Kauilya’s treatise on wealth-creation and polity. This meaning is consistent with the word used for a polity Rāṣṭram (lit. ‘the firm, lighted path’) personified as divinity, vāk.
sphoāvāda elaborates on philosophical foundations of symbolic forms as media for ‘meanings’. In Indian rhetoric tradition mudra refers to ‘the natural expression of things by words , calling things by their right names’ (Kuvalayānanda). It is an energetic seal of authenticity. The gloss mudrā also signifies a seal, stamp, or impression made by a seal. Thus, by definition, the process of ‘sealing’ to create a ‘seal impression’ is an expression of words deploying symbolic forms. To call things by their right names, a rebus cipher with glosses of underlying glosses and related sounds of Meluhha language are used. The semantics get expanded to evolve mudra as a particular branch of education (e.g., reckoning by the fingers). In Tantra 108 mudrā are used; in Yoga, mudrā are used together with praanaayaama (breathing exercises) and  āsana-s ("seated postures"). Nāyaśāstra lists 24 asamyuta ("separated", meaning "one-hand and fingers") and 13 samyuta("joined", meaning "two-hand and fingers") mudrā-s. A commentary on Hevajra Tantra  refers to symbolic bone ornaments as seals or mudrā -s. (Sanskrit: aṣṭhiamudrā).
In the entire corpora of Meluhha hieroglyphs there are only two significant symbolic forms which may relate to ‘veneration’ or ‘worship’. Even these two symbolic forms are read rebus and are consistent with the archaeological context of working with ores, minerals, metals and alloys as life-activities. One form is of a person seated in a penance and is read rebus: kamaha‘penance’ Rebus: kammaa‘coiner, mint’. The second form is of a pair of persons flanking a person seated in persons; the pair of persons are shown using a mudrā‘with folded hands – as salutation’; this is called in Indian tradition añci- ‘to reverence’ read rebus: añjana’antimony’ (Chemical symbol: Sb).
This is a sequel to Meluhha – tree of life  which evaluated hieroglyphs as sacred carvings incised, to convey rebus substantive messages in Meluhha as we traverse, in a pilgrim’s progress, through mists of time into the Bronze Age. Language glosses tag to symbolic forms and get associated with divinities and tree of life are Meluhha sacred carvings; they connote -- rebus -- metal artifacts of a kole.l'smithy/forge' which is, kole.l'temple'.
Archaeological evidences from Ancient Near East point to the practice of worship in temples of divinities associated with these hieroglyphs. Kabbalah of the Ancient Near East tradition is a synonym of aagama of Indian tradition with the roots found in Meluhha as a visible language. Both traditions venerate altars as models of temples. Many metal artifacts are shown as aayudha ‘weapons’ in the hands of Pratimā in Indian iconographic tradition with an intimation of memories of smithy traditions of ancestors. In Indian tradition. Pratimā lakaa, bimba reflections in a tranquil pool of consciousness transform into stone or metal or wood hieroglyphs in a temple. Pratimā or mudrā -s are not mere abstractions but firmly premised on language sememes.

Table of Contents

Re-discovery of Meluhha language
Indian linguistic area: pre-aryan, pre-Munda and pre-dravidian in India
Intimations of casting, soldering, riveting work, working with zinc (pewter), ivory
Evidence from Vālmīki Rāmāyaa
Evidence from Śatapatha Brāhmaa for mleccha Vācas
Evidence related to proto-Indian or proto-Indic or Indus language
Proto-Munda continuity and Language X
Reconstructing mleccha of 5th millennium BCE

Tin road caravan documentation

Historical background

Mleccha as bhāratam janam

Harappan control over the Oman Sea

Meluhha, Mleccha  areas: Sarasvati River Basin and Coastal Regions  of Gujarat, Baluchistan, Ancient Near East

Sphōavāda, theory of bursting forth
Three Samarra bowls: morakkhaka loha, pisācī loha
morakkhaka loha  'a kind of copper'
pisācī loha, ‘a kind of copper
Tin Road: Ashur-Kultepe and Meluhha hieroglyphs
Function served by the ‘standard device’ in Meluhha cultural, life-activities
Shahdad standard
Hieroglyphs on Warka vase read rebus as epigraphs
Tabernae montana as a hieroglyph
Seafaring metal merchants
One Meluhhan village in Akkad (3rd millennium BCE)
Forge: stone, minerals, gemstones
Meluhhans had travelled, traded and settled in Ancient Near East
Meluhha artisans had blazed the trail of lost-wax metallurgy
Dhokra as a Meluhha hieroglyph
Reduplication and homonyms with rebus readings as ‘areal universals’
Starting with verbs depicted as hieroglyphs
Structural characteristics of hieroglyphs
Indus script “fish-eyes” traded with Ur
‘Fish’ hieroglyph on Susa pot connotes alloy metal
Functions of tablets and seals: an archeological context

Appendix A: tagar symbolic forms
Appendix B: krəm‘neck’ symbolic forms
Appendix C:काणa‘one-eyed’, āra‘six’, ‘six rings of hair’ symbolic forms
Appendix D: kol ‘tiger’ symbolic forms
Appendix E: eaka'upraised arm'
Appendix F: dhokra kamar‘lost-wax metal caster’
Appendix G: Processions of stone-/metal-ware competence
Appendix H: Interpretation of Māyā's dream in Bauddham
Appendix I: Sphōavāda
Appendix J: Meluhha glosses related to symbolic form: helmsman, cargo kārī account
Appendix K: Metals trade catalog on a seal
Appendix L: Seal number 198 from Legrain 1921
Appendix M: Rebus as dream, as literacy
Appendix N: Bronze Age Linguistic Doctrine
Appendix O: Eagle and snake hieroglyphs
Appendix P: Meluhha hieroglyphs on a Proto-Cuneiform tablet
Appendix Q: Archaeological context is a cultural context for symbolic forms of ‘meanings’
Appendix R: ran:ga‘pewter or alloy of tin (ran:ku), lead (nāga) and antimony (añjana)’
Bibliography
Index
End Notes
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CPS response to leftist slur against Narendra Modi & the RSS

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Summary
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CPS response to Leftist slur against Narendra Modi & the RSS
Author
Description
Response by the CPS to the Leftist appeal urging people to vote against Narendra Modi. The appeal contains slurs against the RSS and Modi.
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CPS RESPONSE TO LEFTIST SLUR AGAINST NARENDRA MODI & THE RSS

Posted by IndiaFacts Staff  /   April 09, 2014  /   Posted 
Marxism logo
Note: About four days ago, over four hundred Leftists, self-appointed secular intellectuals, and artists issued an appeal that contains a direct call to the people of India not to vote for the BJP. The self-confessed aim of this group is to stop Narendra Modi from becoming the Prime Minister. However, the appeal also contains liberal slurs against both Narendra Modi and the RSS. The following is the full text of the appeal signed and endorsed by such prominent personalities as Achin Vainik, Irfan Habib, Suvira Jaiswal, Ashley Tellis, Harbans Mukhia, Shabnam Hashmi, and Zoya Hassan.
————–APPEAL BEGINS———————————————
Never before in post-independence India have political forces, which are a front for an organization committed to creating a Hindu Rashtra, made as strong a bid for power as in the coming elections. These forces are led by a person who presided over a pogrom against Muslims in Gujarat in 2002 and has never expressed any contrition over his role in that ghastly incident. And they enjoy the backing of the most powerful corporate houses in the country. The prospect of this alliance of corporate capital and communal forces coming to power constitutes a palpable threat to the future of our secular democracy. We urge all responsible individuals and political formations to ponder over the situation and urgently take whatever steps are necessary for defending our secular democracy. We appeal to the electorate to foil this corporate-communal alliance’s bid for power by voting against the BJP-led NDA.
———————APPEAL ENDS——————–
The brazenness of this appeal shocked the nation at large, and other academicians and thinkers specifically. The Centre for Policy Studies (CPS) has issued a strong condemnation of the Left’s appeal, which has been endorsed by eminent scholars, thinkers, and other prominent personalities including Dr. S L Bhyrappa, Dr. J.K. Bajaj, Dr. Anirban Ganguly, Dr. Rajput (former Director of NCERT), Madhu Kishwar, and Meenakshi Jain. The full text of the CPS condemnation is given below.

A Response to the Appeal by Left Academics: Rejoice that India is Coming into her Own

A number of academics have issued a statement warning the nation that the strong possibility of the NDA under the leadership of Shri Narendra Modi coming to power “constitutes a palpable threat to the future of our secular democracy”. They have gone on to issue a direct appeal to the electorate to vote against the BJP-led NDA. In addition they have appealed to various individuals and political formations to “urgently take whatever steps are necessary for defending our secular democracy”.
The academics who have signed this appeal include the usual left leaning activists; some of them are now active leaders of the Aam Aadami Party (AAP). Knowing the sympathies of many of them for violent extremism, one shudders to think what the urgent steps they have called for might mean.
The left-leaning academics of this kind have unfortunately dominated the intellectual discourse of the country since Independence. Through their control of the academic institutions and policy-making bodies, they have ensured that India remains struck in the corrosive self-negating worldview inculcated and nurtured during the colonial times. They have obstructed the path of India recovering pride in herself, her people and her civilisational heritage; and thus, they have kept India from seriously applying herself to the task of nation-building. But, though it may be possible to stop the progress of history for a while, history cannot be kept in abeyance for all times. The people of India have been kept waiting for nearly seven decades; the time has now come for India to break free and begin moving confidently towards her destiny.
We call upon the people of India to rejoice at the emergence of a leadership that is committed to restoring the glory of India as one of the most ancient, populous and important civilisations of the world. Let us rejoice that for the first time since Independence, there has appeared a definite possibility of India developing into a normal nation, comfortable with and proud of her culture and civilisation; and, seriously engaged in quickly uplifting all her people out of the long phase of deprivation and scarcity.
We appeal to the people of India to welcome the possibility of this new dawn of India and do everything necessary to make it happen.
  1. Dr. J. K. Bajaj, Director and former Resident Editor, Jansatta
  2.  
  3. Prof. M. D. Srinivas, Chairman and former Professor of Theoretical Physics, Madras University
  4.  Dr.
  5.  S. L. Bhyrappa, Eminent Thinker and Author, Karnataka
  6.  
  7. Sri Suryakant Bali, Sr. Journalist, former Editor, Navbharat Times
  8.  
  9. Sri Rambahadur Rai, Sr. Journalist, New Delhi
  10.  
  11. Sri Banwari, former Resident Editor, Jansatta, Delhi
  12.  
  13. Dr. Smt. Santishree D.Pandit, Professor of Politics and Public Administration, University of Pune
  14.  
  15. Prof. Purabi Roy, Historian and former Professor of International Relations, Jadavpur University, Kolkata
  16.  
  17. Ms. Madhu Purnima Kishwar, Editor Manushi
  18.  
  19. Prof. Kapil Kapoor, former Pro-VC, JNU
  20.  
  21. Prof. Bharat Gupt, Thinker and Author, formerly of DU
  22.  
  23. Prof. K. V. Varadarajan, former Professor of Economics, Chennai
  24.  
  25. Dr. Mahesh Sharma, former Chairman,  KVIC
  26.  
  27. Sri Adeesh Anand, Thinker and Author, New Delhi
  28.  
  29. Ambassador Prabhat P. Shukla, former Adviser to PM
  30.  
  31. Professor Ashwini Mahapatra, SIS, JNU
  32.  
  33. Shri Shakti Sinha, IAS (retd),  former Secretary, GOI
  34.  
  35. Shri Gaurinandan, formerly of DU
  36.  
  37. Shri Mayank Jain, Filmmaker and TV Journalist
  38.  
  39. Shri Vijay Kranti, Sr. Journalist
  40.  
  41. Dr. K. N. Singh, Gorakhpur University
  42.  
  43. Dr. Balwan Gautam, Professor, JNU
  44.  
  45. Prof. Pushraj Jain, Professor of Sanskrit,  DAV Evening College
  46.  
  47. Prof. Rajkumar Bhatia, formerly Professor of Economics, DU
  48.  
  49. Smt. Sandhya Jain, Senior Journalist, New Delhi
  50.  
  51. Prof. Brij Kishore Kuthiala, VC, Makhanlal Chaturvedi University, Bhopal
  52.  
  53. Mr. Farooq Khan, ex-IG, J & K
  54.  
  55. Shri D. C. Nath, IPS (retired)
  56.  
  57. Shri R. K. Ohri, IPS (retired)
  58.  
  59. Shri J. P. Sharma, IPS (retired)
  60.  
  61. Shri Avanijesh, DAV College, DU
  62.  
  63. Mr. Saurab Dubey, DU
  64.  
  65. Dr. Amit Awasti, DU
  66.  
  67. Dr. Shambhu Singh, DU
  68.  
  69. Dr. Manoj Rana, DU
  70.  
  71. Dr. Sanjay Kumar, DU
  72.  
  73. Dr. Abhay Jere, Scientist, Pune
  74.  
  75. Prof. B. B. Dutta, Shillong
  76.  
  77. Shri Sandeep Balakrishna, Columnist and Author, Bangalore
  78.  
  79. Prof. Meenakshi Jain, Historian and Author, DU
  80.  
  81. Prof. Saradindu Mukherjee, Historian and Author, DU
  82.  
  83. Colonel (retired) Hoabam Bhubon, former Chairman, Manipur Public Service Commission, Imphal
  84.  
  85. Prof. N. Joykumar, Manipur University, Imphal
http://www.indiafacts.co.in/cps-response-leftist-slur-narendra-modi-rss/#sthash.RIiee1rI.dpuf 

Sonia expects to buy protection from Muslims in name of secularism -- Arvind Lavakare

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Sonia expects to buy protection from Muslims in name of secularism

Arvind Lavakare8 Apr 2014



Thank you Soniaji. Thank you for stooping from your lofty position of President of the 129-year-old Congress and entreating Syed Ahmed Bukhari, a mere Shahi Imam to appeal to the Muslim community to vote for the Congress in Elections 2014. Her purpose in making the request was to ensure that “the secular vote is not divided.” And, less than 48 hours later, the Imam of Jama Masjid publicly performed in obeisance to Soniaji’s request (fatwa?)
Thank you, then Soniaji, for finally revealing the long-suspected suspected truth about yours and the Congress’s communalism which goes by a selfish interpretation of the words ‘secular’ and ‘secular vote’.
It is of course a different matter that Mufti Mokarram Ahmed, Shahi Imam of Fatehpur mosque was quick to publicly oppose Imam Bukhari’s endorsementfor the Congress by saying that the Muslim vote should vote for any secular party or even for an Independent vote. But even quicker had come the whiplashof Ahmed Bukhari’s younger brother, Syed Yahya Bukhari. The man had the guts to proclaim that the Congress was the most communal party in India and had done a lot of harm to Muslim interests. Rarely, if ever, had any Muslim of any importance come out with such an indictment. I therefore salute Syed Yahya and all Muslims like him.
Indeed, Sonia Gandhi’s interaction with the Shahi Imam event on All Fool’s Day shows that in respect of cajoling and chasing Muslim for their votes, Sonia Gandhi is no different from her husband Rajiv Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Jawaharlal  Gandhi, and from Rajiv Feroze Gandhi — all Congressi gods of the last century. Why, Soniaji has now finally shown herself to be no different from Mahatma Gandhi himself in begging favours from Muslims in return for promises of the future.
Several other issues also arise from this event.
The first fallout is that Sonia Gandhi reveals her belief that the Muslims don’t have a mind of their own and can be controlled by a Muslim cleric like robots made in some laboratory. Therein lies the implied assumption that Muslim votes can, like bundles of crisp currency notes, be carried in a van to a bank’s ATM centres. Whether voters from 138 million Muslims (2011 Census) in India vote in bulk, like grazing sheep, is something only psephologists and May 16 results can tell us. But the thought itself is an insult to the Muslim community.
Secondly, Sonia Gandhi seems to believe that Muslims voting for the Congress Party candidates is a manifestation of the ‘secular’ concept. The logic seems to be that voting for any other political party would be non-secular.
The tragic overriding fact is that our nation has been for too long obsessed with the adjective ‘secular’ and the noun ‘secularism’. One result of this obsession is that it has needlessly brought about a lot of hurt and hatred among our people. This has happened because neither the pretentious all-knowing media experts nor the politicians opposed to the BJP ever cared to analyse the adjective ‘secular’ and the noun ‘secularism’ in the Indian context. And the BJP, always such poor communicators, have never really told our nation how, in 1977, it did secure the Lok Sabha’s approval of a definition of the word ‘secular’ but failed to do so in the Rajya Sabha where the Congress continued to have a majority even during that period of the Janata Party rule under Morarji Desai.
Thus it is that very few know that in the Constituent Assembly debate on October 17, 1949Brajeshwar Prasad, member from Bihar, suggested the inclusion of the word ‘secular’ in the Preamble of our Constitution because he said that this word ‘secular’ was dear to India’s national leaders and its inclusion in the Preamble would tone up the morale of minorities as well as prevent disorderly activity. What happened? There was no discussion on the suggestion!
Two other points raised on this subject remained unansweredWas a state secular only when it stayed strictly away from religion, and could such a secular state survive only if society was slowly secularised as well? Or did a state that equally respected all religions best capture the meaning of secularism in the Indian context.
That last sentence above was seized by the Janata Dal Government to undo the introduction of the word ‘secular’ in our Constitution’s Preamble by Indira Gandhi in in the 42nd Constitution Act. Regrettably, as stated above the definition of ‘secular’ as meaning “equal respect for all religions” was not passed by the Congress majority in the Rajya Sabha.
By the way, the word “dharmnirpekshata does NOT mean equal respect for all religions as is believed by almost every politician. After all, dharm in Hindi means ‘fundamental duty’. It does not mean religion. For proof, the Hindi version of the Constitution of India has the word panthnirpekshata as translation of the word ‘secular’ in the English version. And it will interest readers to know that the word panth is the one that means ‘religion’. That word was coined by Lakshmi Mall Singhvi, (1931-2007), a literary figure and an altogether very versatile personality who was awarded the Padma Bhushan in 1998 and who was summoned by Indira Gandhi to translate the word ‘secular’.
Really, there would be almost no rancour among politicians if now the Congress accepts the meaning of ‘secular’ as being ‘equal respect to all religions’ as incorporated in the 44th Constitution Amendment Bill of the Janat Party 34 years ago.
Meanwhile, Sonia Gandhi would do well to ponder over the following two points:
1. “Dr Ambedkar made it clear in Parliament that he did not believe that our Constitution was secular because it allowed different treatment to various communities and the legislatures could frame separate laws for different communities.” (“Reforming The Constitution” UBS Publishers Distributors Ltd, 1992 edited by Subhash C Kashyap, an eminent Constitutional authority.). And  Kashyap’s own view is: “Where there is discrimination between man and man on the grounds of religions… where the administration of places of worship can be entrusted to Government Officers… where even fundamental rights are demanded and conceded on grounds of communities, it is a cruel joke to talk of secularism.
2.  Unknown to almost our entire political class, the Preamble of the separate Jammu & Kashmir State Constitution, November 1956, does not proclaim J&K as a ‘secular’ State. Thus the queer truth that an integral part of India is not ‘secular’ though the nation as a whole is advertised to be so.

http://www.niticentral.com/2014/04/08/secular-sonia-exposed-as-communal-and-ignorant-208780.html
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