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Antarctica ice is growing, Himalayan ice is growing. NaMo, announce National Water Grid assure 24x7 water to every farm, every home.

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Himalayan glaciers too are gaining more glaciers exceeding the glacial melts because the dynamic Himalayas are rising 1 cm. per year due to the Indian plate moving up north at the rate of 6 cm per year lifting up the Eurasian plate. For the foreseeable future, this dynamism will continue and the Himalayan rivers will continue to flow for the next tens of thousands of years. 
Himalayan range spread from Hanoi, Vietnam to Teheran, Iran. 1 cm.rise means accumulation of more ice and snow than glacial melts.

It is time for NaMo government to get serious and implement SC directive on Interlinking of Rivers issued in 2012, an extraordinary judgement of a three-judge bench headed by CJI Kapadia providing a roadmap for speedy implementation of the vital project. The task should be to reach 24x7 water to every farm and every home by moving Brahmaputra floodwaters into Subarnarekha, Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri and a contour canal along the Konkan Railway in Sahyadri ranges to make the rivers flowing south of Vidnyas also perennial rivers. The addition of 9 crore acres of wet land with assured irrigation will be a revolution of unprecedented magnitude; just imaging the social fabric of the nation if these 9 crore acres are distributed to 9 crore landless families at the rate of 1 acre per family. India with her alluvial lands and assured command area of irrigation can become the granary of and feed the world. Waterways can be created to complement the Railroads; floods will be mitigated in northeast and droughts will become narratives of the past in the rest of the country freeing the famers from dependednce on erratic monsoons.

NaMo, announce National Water Grid Authority and create the Water Grid within the next 3 years reaching out 24x7 water to every farm and every home in 6.2 lakh villages of the nation, to complement the Swachch Bharat mission.

Kalyanaraman

Journal of Glaciology logoMass gains of the Antarctic ice sheet exceed losses


Publisher: International Glaciological 

Abstract:

Mass changes of the Antarctic ice sheet impact sea-level rise as climate changes, but recent rates have been uncertain. Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat) data (2003–08) show mass gains from snow accumulation exceeded discharge losses by 82 ± 25 Gt a–1, reducing global sea-level rise by 0.23 mm a–1. European Remote-sensing Satellite (ERS) data (1992–2001) give a similar gain of 112 ± 61 Gt a–1. Gains of 136 Gt a–1 in East Antarctica (EA) and 72 Gt a–1 in four drainage systems (WA2) in West Antarctic (WA) exceed losses of 97 Gt a–1 from three coastal drainage systems (WA1) and 29 Gt a–1 from the Antarctic Peninsula (AP). EA dynamic thickening of 147 Gt a–1 is a continuing response to increased accumulation (>50%) since the early Holocene. Recent accumulation loss of 11 Gt a–1 in EA indicates thickening is not from contemporaneous snowfall increases. Similarly, the WA2 gain is mainly (60 Gt a–1) dynamic thickening. In WA1 and the AP, increased losses of 66 ± 16 Gt a–1 from increased dynamic thinning from accelerating glaciers are 50% offset by greater WA snowfall. The decadal increase in dynamic thinning in WA1 and the AP is approximately one-third of the long-term dynamic thickening in EA and WA2, which should buffer additional dynamic thinning for decades.

Full text: http://docserver.ingentaconnect.com/deliver/fasttrack/igsoc/00221430/j15j071_1446132589095.pdf?expires=1446516858&id=guest&checksum=84753B526428BBFF0330DF49EED86EE2
Societyhttp://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/igsoc/jog/pre-prints/content-ings_jog_15j071

Antarctica is gaining more ice than it’s losing, NASA study finds
No, global warming hasn't been cancelled.
SIGNE DEAN
2 NOV 2015
A new study from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Centre has revealed that the Antarctic ice sheet is thickening enough to currently outweigh the losses of ice occurring due to global warming.
The continuous melting of ice at the poles of the Earth has been a powerful indication of the effects of global warming on our planet for quite some time now – and it's important to note these new results don't contradict the fact that glaciers are melting at an increased rate. But it does mean that, for the next few years at least, new ice gain is outweighing that loss.
"We’re essentially in agreement with other studies that show an increase in ice discharge in the Antarctic Peninsula and the Thwaites and Pine Island region of West Antarctica," said glaciologist Jay Zwally, lead author of the study. "Our main disagreement is for East Antarctica and the interior of West Antarctica – there, we see an ice gain that exceeds the losses in the other areas."
To reach this conclusion, the scientists pored over satellite data on Antarctic ice between 2003 and 2008, and discovered that there had been a net gain of 82 billion tonnes of ice per year over this time period.
Notably, this is less than in the years between 1992 and 2001, when the net gain was a whopping 112 billion tons per year.
The team calculated ice volume based on changes in surface height of the ice sheet, as measured by satellite altimeters. Antarctic ice is formed by snowfall that accumulates and slowly compacts into solid ice at a rate of less than 2 centimetres, or roughly 0.7 inches a year.
The researchers explain that this current rate of ice accumulation in East Antarctica has been occurring for the past 10,000 years, and is still outweighing the losses from collapsed ice shelves that see glaciers running off into the warming ocean waters, particularly on the coast of West Antarctica and the Antarctic Peninsula.
However, these findings contradict a 2013 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which indicated a net loss of 147 billion tonnes of Antarctic sheet ice per year between 2002 and 2011.
So what's going on here? 
According to University of Washington glaciologist Ben Smith, who wasn't involved in this study, these new results show how difficult it can be to determine small changes in ice height with satellite data alone. 
"Doing altimetry accurately for very large areas is extraordinarily difficult, and there are measurements of snow accumulation that need to be done independently to understand what’s happening in these places," said Smith.
And as Slate columnist and meteorologist Eric Holthaus recently put it, Antarctica is notoriously difficult for us to comprehend: "The quantities of ice, and therefore, the potential impact on the global climate system is beyond human comprehension – but often, so are the timescales."
On top of that, there are still scientific challenges involved in getting the data right when it comes to figuring out what is really happening on the icy continent, and this new study appears to be an example of just that.
"The good news is that Antarctica is not currently contributing to sea level rise, but is taking 0.23 millimetres per year away," Zwally said in a press statement. "But this is also bad news. If the 0.27 millimetres per year of sea level rise attributed to Antarctica in the IPCC report is not really coming from Antarctica, there must be some other contribution to sea level rise that is not accounted for."
In more bad news, the researchers also predict that this long-term ice gain will only outweigh losses for another couple of decades, before catching up and finally creating an overall loss.
If the conclusion of this study proves correct, accounting for that 0.27 millimetres of sea level rise is going to be the next piece of the puzzle. And NASA researchers are already working on getting even better satellite data, with the highly accurate ICESat-2 scheduled to launch in 2018.
The study was published in Journal of Glaciology on 30 October.



http://www.sciencealert.com/antarctica-is-gaining-more-ice-than-it-s-losing-nasa-study-finds

A letter asking the Governor to clarify his stance in specific terms-- Ashok Chowgule writes to Raghuram Rajan. What is your take on kaalaadhan, Governor ji?

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It appears to be fashionable to talk 'tolerance' to gain MSM attention. What an attempt by the RBI Governor? He should stop playing to the gallery and be spending more time implementing 1. Know Your Client financial propriety norms in banking systems and 2. Tarapore Committee recommendations and scrap PNotes -- the hawala route for kaalaadhan manipulations instead of keeping the monies in India's banking and financial system.

Kalyanaraman

We have read your full speech at the IIT Delhi convocation recently, which is published at: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Tolerance-and-respect-for-economic-progress-Fulltext-of-Raghuram-Rajans-speech-at-IIT-Delhi/articleshow/49610362.cms We presume that your speech has been reproduced correctly. You might have read the English media commenting that, in addition to the students and others at the convocation, you are also addressing the present National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government. And the message that has been received by this media is that you think that an atmosphere of intolerance has become pervasive since 16 May 2014, when the election results for the Lok Sabha gave the NDA more than 300 seats in that chamber of parliament. We know that nowhere in your speech you have referred to any political party or an alliance or any non-political organisation or any specific persons. However, the message, as set out above, is what has been received by those who call themselves as liberals. We realise that you cannot be held responsible for any misinterpretation of your speech, if the liberals did not check with you personally about what you really meant. We would also like to mention that there are some in the Right Wing who say that your comments actually apply to the situation that existed before 16 May. You would have also read the comments of Shri Naryan Murthy, ex of Infosys, that he is convinced that the religious minorities and the Dalits in India feel very unsafe after 16 May. We recognise that these comments were not made based on your convocation address, but based on whatever information he has. As far as VHP is concerned, we agree with the statements of the present government that much of the supposed social disharmony is exactly that – supposed. And that most of the English media and the liberals have taken it upon themselves to manufacture a problem where none exists. Hence, what you actually meant in your speech becomes very important. Only when there is clarity on issues will it be possible to have an informed discussion on the theme of your convocation address.
We think that it would be appropriate if you could come out with a specific statement about whether you think that there is an atmosphere of intolerance in India at the present moment of time. Additionally, we think it appropriate if the situation has come to pass primarily since 16 May. We fully accept that any intolerance that is not controlled, the economic and social growth of our country is seriously at risk. Hence our request to you. If you wish, you may contact the undersigned at the email address above. Looking forward to hear from you soonest. Please acknowledge receipt of this message. Namaste

Greek civilization. This ain't no spoof :)-- Indian and Greek drama were both theatres of incarnation

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Indian & Greek drama were both theatres of incarnation
Theatre theorist Professor Bharat Gupt tells Pawanpreet Kaur how Aristotle’s Poetics and Bharat Muni’s Natyashastra share more commonalities than are acknowledged by Western scholars.
PAWANPREET KAUR  6th Oct 2012
Noopur Performing Arts’ Krishna-Leela
Q. Few scholars have explored Indo-European or Eurasian theatre. What triggered your interest in this area of study?
A. While studying classical theatre traditions, I discovered that there are primarily two dramatic theories practised the world over — Aristotelian and Indian. I wanted to compare the similarities and differences between these and to explore the possibilities of the Indian and European theatre traditions having a common origin. But I found it difficult to understand Greek drama by studying literary criticisms of British and American scholars, who were deficient in their understanding of Greek theatre. So I decided to study Poeticsand Natyashastra on my own. This is how my book Dramatic Concepts — Greek and Indian was born.
Q. What is the central argument of this book?
A. I firmly believe that Natyashastra and Poetics should not be seen as Eastern and Western productions alone. We need to understand them within the framework of Indo-European culture and the art of sacred drama or hieropraxis. During my research, I felt that ancient Greek drama and culture were given an unduly empirical colour by Western scholars. In order to understand the true essence of these seminal works, especially Natyashastra, one needs have a first-hand working knowledge of all performing art forms .
Q. What are the most striking similarities between classical Greek and Indian theatre?
A. Both classical Greek and Indian theatre traditions strove for sacred action (hieropraxis) — they both promulgated worship, philosophical understanding and theatrical representation at the same time. They pleased both gods and men and used semiotised gestures, music, dance and dialogue to create a highly ornate theatrical reality. Both promoted certain values among people. In Greek theatre, they achieved this by acquainting people with the Olympian gods and in Indian theatre, they promoted Vedic values with the idea of making life better. So, in a sense, both were theatres ofavatar or incarnation (avataran). Also, neither had puritanical views on art — all arts were instruments for higher ecstatic experiences.
Q. How is that different from the Western theatre tradition?
A. We need to understand that Western theatre is very different from Greek theatre. Greek theatre came to an end roughly in the 2nd Century A.D., when with the advent of Christianity, worship of the Olympian gods was abandoned. Post-Renaissance European drama, which is what Western theatre essentially is, was secular in content and realistic in presentation. The primary goal of this European drama was social reformation, culminating in the works of writers with a clearly Leftist leaning, such as Dryden, Ibsen and Shaw.
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Neither had puritanical views on art — all arts were instruments for higher ecstatic experiences.
Q. Did classical Indian theatre witness similar changes?
A. Around the 11th Century A.D., with the coming of Islam, classical Indian drama ceased to be urban theatre. It was banished to the countryside, where the worship of deities was not permitted, and remained there until the arrival of the British, who brought back theatre to the cities. But their tradition was Victorian in spirit and in technique. This, coupled with the national struggle for independence, gave birth to a socio-political theatre tradition, very little concern for the metaphysical. Rural theatre meanwhile was still following the ancient traditions of performance — music, dance, costume, poetry, myths, incarnation, devotion and was about the deep questions of life.
Q. How does classical Indian theatre differ from Greek drama?
A. Unlike Greek drama, classical Indian theatre used performance as a close encounter with the audience. Indian theatre was secular, whereas Greeks were entirely subsumed by metaphysical and contemporary political concerns. Greek theatre was an entirely ritual affair, done two or three times a year on special occasions, Indian theatre pervaded everyday life. Another very interesting distinction was language — while Indian theatre was multi-lingual, using Sanskrit and non-Sanskrit dialects, Greek theatre was only in literary Greek and was not known to use prose at all.
Q. Western scholars have often asked why Indians did not write any tragedies. Is that a fair question?
A. Neither did the Greeks! There is a misplaced notion among Western scholars that tragedy is a play with an unhappy ending. Greek plays were typically written as trilogies and only the first of these plays ended unhappily, in death or decline. The second and the third parts often progressed towards reconciliation. However, European dramatists like Marlowe, Shakespeare and Dryden modelled their plays only after the first part of the trilogy and that is how the tradition of tragedy grew in Europe. But this was not how ancient Greek theatre was practiced.
Q. In your book you have argued that rasa is comparable to catharsis. Are they not two completely distinct constructs?
A. I have said rasa and catharsis are not contradictory. There have been different expositions by classical commentators, who have tried to show us that a certain kind of purification is necessary forrasa to emerge. The idea of catharsis is also purification. Aristotle did not think of catharsis as the primary aim of drama. This is another big mistake of Western literary criticism. Aristotle talks about a special pleasure that tragedy is capable of giving us. The aim of tragedy then is to give pleasure.
http://www.sunday-guardian.com/artbeat/indian-a-greek-drama-were-both-theatres-of-incarnation

Greek civilization. How do historians explain Alexander receiving gift of Indian sword?

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Mirror: http://tinyurl.com/q2res9f

How do historians explain Alexander receiving gift of Indian sword from Purushottama after getting defeated, after the Macedonian troops revolted and refused to go beyond Jhelum?

Here is a picture which adorns rhe Steel Institute premises in Ranchi.
Was Alexander defeated in the war fought on Jhelum river bank?

Who was spinning myths as history?


Kalyanaraman
Sarasvati Research Center

It is good to learn from Sri Kalyanaraman about fraud perpetrated on the world, about Greek  origins of Western Civilization.  Truly it is said , no body changed the course of history more than a historian. So it is, especially so with history of India since it came to written by enemies of India.

Plutarch was contemporary of Alexander. Like Al Beruni who accompanied Mohd Gazni and left his impressions about him and India, Plutarch noted the fraud Alexander foisted on future generations. He used to leave over sized armor here and there so that people will think he was a giant of a person.

East India Company hired historians who were followed later by Macaulay, Marx disciples all hailed Alexander's victory over Purushottam or Porus. The reason for this fraud , since India was then subjugated by  British, is to show that Asians were no match for West, their place is to be a colony for superior Europeans.Karl Marx also felt the same way . Despite all pretensions of  being anti-imperial , Communists of India and Marxist historians of India remained most loyal subjects of her or his majesty faithfully indoctrinating the  views of British and Marx on unsuspecting students of India.

However Marshall Zhukov  who led Russian troops to victory in II war, who also studied military history had different opinion and please see the article that follows, Sri Kalyanaraman's E Mail. Alexander lost the war in India, and retreated but never reached his Macedonia alive. He succumbed to wounds he received in a Gana Rajya or a democratic republic of Malavs of Multan, Punjab. 

This is yet another instance, why India needs a thorough review of history in light of many recent findings and critic against baseless prejudices such as Aryan invasion theory or giant contributions of Islam to India etc, incorporated as history in our texts taught to students of India. 
GV Chelvapila
3 Nov. 2015

Marshal Zhukov on Alexander’s failed India invasion

Alexander’s invasion of India is regarded as a huge Western victory against the disorganised East. But according to Marshal Gregory Zhukov, the largely Macedonian army suffered a fate worse than Napoleon in Russia.

Handing victory in India to Alexander is like describing Hitler as the conqueror of Russia because the Germans advanced up to Stalingrad. Source: wikipedia.org
Handing victory in India to Alexander is like describing Hitler as the conqueror of Russia because the Germans advanced up to Stalingrad. Source: wikipedia.org

In 326 BCE a formidable European army invaded India. Led by Alexander of Macedon it comprised battle hardened Macedonian soldiers, Greek cavalry, Balkan fighters and Persians allies. The total number of fighting men numbered more than 41,000.
Their most memorable clash was at the Battle of Hydaspes (Jhelum) against the army of Porus, the ruler of the Paurava kingdom of western Punjab. For more than 25 centuries it was believed that Alexander’s forces defeated the Indians. Greek and Roman accounts say the Indians were bested by the superior courage and stature of the Macedonians.
Two millennia later, British historians latched on to the Alexander legend and described the campaign as the triumph of the organised West against the chaotic East. Although Alexander defeated only a few minor kingdoms in India’s northwest, in the view of many gleeful colonial writers the conquest of India was complete.
In reality much of the country was not even known to the Greeks. So handing victory to Alexander is like describing Hitler as the conqueror of Russia because the Germans advanced up to Stalingrad.
Zhukov’s view of Alexander
The Snow Maiden
Statue of Alexander in Istanbul Archaeology Museum. Source: wikipedia.org
In 1957, while addressing the cadets of the Indian Military Academy, Dehra Dun, Zhukov said Alexander’s actions after the Battle of Hydaspes suggest he had suffered an outright defeat. In Zhukov’s view, Alexander had suffered a greater setback in India than Napoleon in Russia. Napoleon had invaded Russia with 600,000 troops; of these only 30,000 survived, and of that number fewer than 1,000 were ever able to return to duty.
So if Zhukov was comparing Alexander’s campaign in India to Napoleon’s disaster, the Macedonians and Greeks must have retreated in an equally ignominious fashion. Zhukov would know a fleeing force if he saw one; he had chased the German Army over 2000 km from Stalingrad to Berlin.
No easy victories
Alexander’s troubles began as soon as he crossed the Indian border. He first faced resistance in the Kunar, Swat, Buner and Peshawar valleys where the Aspasioi and Assakenoi, known in Hindu texts as Ashvayana and Ashvakayana, stopped his advance. Although small by Indian standards they did not submit before Alexander’s killing machine.
The Assakenoi offered stubborn resistance from their mountain strongholds of Massaga, Bazira and Ora. The bloody fighting at Massaga was a prelude to what awaited Alexander in India. On the first day after bitter fighting the Macedonians and Greeks were forced to retreat with heavy losses. Alexander himself was seriously wounded in the ankle. On the fourth day the king of Massaga was killed but the city refused to surrender. The command of the army went to his old mother, which brought the entire women of the area into the fighting.
Realising that his plans to storm India were going down at its very gates, Alexander called for a truce. The Assakenoi agreed; the old queen was too trusting. That night when the citizens of Massaga had gone off to sleep after their celebrations, Alexander’s troops entered the city and massacred the entire citizenry. A similar slaughter then followed at Ora.
However, the fierce resistance put up by the Indian defenders had reduced the strength – and perhaps the confidence – of the until then all-conquering Macedonian army.
Faceoff at the river
In his entire conquering career Alexander’s hardest encounter was the Battle of Hydaspes, in which he faced king Porus of Paurava, a small but prosperous Indian kingdom on the river Jhelum. Porus is described in Greek accounts as standing seven feet tall.
In May 326 BCE, the European and Paurava armies faced each other across the banks of the Jhelum. By all accounts it was an awe-inspiring spectacle. The 34,000 Macedonian infantry and 7000 Greek cavalry were bolstered by the Indian king Ambhi, who was Porus’s rival. Ambhi was the ruler of the neighbouring kingdom of Taxila and had offered to help Alexander on condition he would be given Porus’s kingdom.
Alexander meets Porus. Source: wikipedia.org
Facing this tumultuous force led by the genius of Alexander was the Paurava army of 20,000 infantry, 2000 cavalry and 200 war elephants. Being a comparatively small kingdom by Indian standards, Paurava couldn’t have maintained such a large standing army, so it’s likely many of its defenders were hastily armed civilians. Also, the Greeks habitually exaggerated enemy strength.
According to Greek sources, for several days the armies eyeballed each other across the river. The Greek-Macedonian force after having lost several thousand soldiers fighting the Indian mountain cities, were terrified at the prospect of fighting the fierce Paurava army. They had heard about the havoc Indian war elephants created among enemy ranks. The modern equivalent of battle tanks, the elephants also scared the wits out of the horses in the Greek cavalry.
Another terrible weapon in the Indians' armoury was the two-meter bow. As tall as a man it could launch massive arrows able to transfix more than one enemy soldier.
Indians strike
The battle was savagely fought. As the volleys of heavy arrows from the long Indian bows scythed into the enemy’s formations, the first wave of war elephants waded into the Macedonian phalanx that was bristling with 17-feet long sarissas. Some of the animals got impaled in the process. Then a second wave of these mighty beasts rushed into the gap created by the first, either trampling the Macedonian soldiers or grabbing them by their trunks and presenting them up for the mounted Indian soldiers to cut or spear them. It was a nightmarish scenario for the invaders. As the terrified Macedonians pushed back, the Indian infantry charged into the gap.
In the first charge, by the Indians, Porus’s brother Amar killed Alexander’s favourite horse Bucephalus, forcing Alexander to dismount. This was a big deal. In battles outside India the elite Macedonian bodyguards had not allowed a single enemy soldier to deliver so much as a scratch on their king's body, let alone slay his mount. Yet in this battle Indian troops not only broke into Alexander’s inner cordon, they also killed Nicaea, one of his leading commanders.
According to the Roman historian Marcus Justinus, Porus challenged Alexander, who charged him on horseback. In the ensuing duel, Alexander fell off his horse and was at the mercy of the Indian king’s spear. But Porus dithered for a second and Alexander’s bodyguards rushed in to save their king.
Plutarch, the Greek historian and biographer, says there seems to have been nothing wrong with Indian morale. Despite initial setbacks, when their vaunted chariots got stuck in the mud, Porus’s army “rallied and kept resisting the Macedonians with unsurpassable bravery”.
Macedonians: Shaken, not stirred
Although the Greeks claim victory, the fanatical resistance put up by the Indian soldiers and ordinary people everywhere had shaken the nerves of Alexander's army to the core. They refused to move further east. Nothing Alexander could say or do would spur his men to continue eastward. The army was close to mutiny.
The Greek historian says after the battle with the Pauravas, the badly bruised and rattled Macedonians panicked when they received information further from Punjab lay places “where the inhabitants were skilled in agriculture, where there were elephants in yet greater abundance and men were superior in stature and courage”.Says Plutarch: “The combat with Porus took the edge off the Macedonians’ courage, and stayed their further progress into India. For having found it hard enough to defeat an enemy who brought but 20,000 foot and 2000 horse into the field, they thought they had reason to oppose Alexander's design of leading them on to pass the Ganges, on the further side of which was covered with multitudes of enemies.”
Indeed, on the other side of the Ganges was the mighty kingdom of Magadh, ruled by the wily Nandas, who commanded one of the most powerful and largest standing armies in the world. According to Plutarch, the courage of the Macedonians evaporated when they came to know the Nandas “were awaiting them with 200,000 infantry, 80,000 cavalry, 8000 war chariots and 6000 fighting elephants”. Undoubtedly, Alexander’s army would have walked into a slaughterhouse.
Hundreds of kilometres from the Indian heartland, Alexander ordered a retreat to great jubilation among his soldiers.
Partisans counterattack
The celebrations were premature. On its way south towards the sea, Alexander's army was constantly harried by Indian partisans, republics and kingdoms.
In a campaign at Sangala in Punjab, the Indian attack was so ferocious it completely destroyed the Greek cavalry, forcing Alexander to attack on foot. In the next battle, against the Malavs of Multan, he was felled by an Indian warrior whose arrow pierced the Macedonian’s breastplate and ribs.
Says Military History magazine: “Although there was more fighting, Alexander’s wound put an end to any more personal exploits. Lung tissue never fully recovers, and the thick scarring in its place made every breath cut like a knife.”
Alexander never recovered and died in Babylon (modern Iraq) at the age of 33.

Past as hostile and present as intolerant -- BS Harishankar. Award wapsi is a recognition by the eminences that their work did NOT merit awards.

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THE PAST AS HOSTILE AND THE PRESENT AS INTOLERANT


The extreme hostility towards Bharat’s past has  also currently  manifested  as  intolerance towards  the present  political system which does not succumb to  the ideas of both Eurocolonialism and Euromarxism.
Nov.1, 2015
Eminent South Asian archaeologist, Professor Dilip K Chakrabarti gave a talk in Delhi in November 2014. It was sponsored by the Centre for Policy Studies and the Diwan Chand Institute of National Affairs. Professor Chakrabarti highlighted certain important issues on the current status of ancient Bharateeya historical studies. He pointed out that among our universities and research institutes, only a few offer courses on ancient Bharat. Even among this handful of institutions, the places where the subject is taught with some kind of competence and expertise are very few. Professor Chakrabarti emphasised that Bharateeya are not seriously interested in their ancient past and there is no prestige in its study and at the end there are no job opportunities. There is also an emerging trend of hostility from a particular group of modern historians towards ancient Bharateeya studies.
Much before Professor Dilip Chakrabarti outlined this anti national trend emerging in ancient Bharateeya studies, Professor Govind Sadashiv Ghurye, veteran sociologist highlighted it. Ghurye opposed foreign funded projects since he articulated that they lacked transparency and Bharateeya scholars were not provided space and independence by foreign research agencies. Professor Ghurye’s   bitter opponent was Verrier Elwin, Anglican Missionary and Deputy Director, Anthropological Survey of India. Verrier Elwin was virulently resistant towards the integration of hunting–gathering communities with mainstream agricultural societies in Bharat. He argued that the effect of contact upon those who are integrated with the larger Hindu society has been disastrous, resulting in moral degradation and psychological depression which he termed as “the loss of nerve”. G S Ghurye regarded the creation of Excluded and Partially Excluded Tribal Areas as the colonial strategy of divide and rule. In his work  Aborigines, Ghurye charged Verrier Elwin for following a policy towards tribes which he termed ‘isolationist’ and maintaining them as “museum for the study of anthropologists”. Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru appointed Verrier Elvin as an adviser on tribal affairs for north-eastern states of Bharat, and later he was appointed Anthropological Adviser to the Government of NEFA (North East Frontier Agency). NEFA was one of the political divisions in British India and later the Republic of Bharat till 1972, when it became Arunachal Pradesh.
Two ideological groups, Eurocolonialism and Euromarxism are opposed to Bharat’s cultural and political integration. These western political ideologies were born, nurtured and sustained on intolerance, deprivation and violence. Although externally hostile in the name of political ideas, they have unanimity in the context of   resisting Bharat’s cultural integration. Both are ideologically united in Bharat baiting. They join hands in the propagation of the Aryan invasion theory. Both have consistency in targeting the scientific heritage of Bharat. They have uniformity in the mortification of Bharateeya traditions. They express solidarity to fulminate against the idea of Bharat’s cultural unity.  The history and legacy of relationships between Church missions and colonial state was a major theme of discussion at the International Conference held in April 2015 at the University of Copenhagen. The very theme of the conference was ‘Colonial Christian Missions and their Legacies’. In the Marxian and Capitalist context, the neglect of colonial societies by European Polity has been recently highlighted. Post-colonial scholars such as María do Mar Castro Varela and Nikita Dhawan contend that Marx defended a “Eurocentric model of political emancipation that consistently ignores the experiences of colonised subjects in non-Western societies” and “failed to develop his studies of Bharat and Africa into a fully elaborated analysis of imperialism.” Edward Said of Colombia University highlighted in his writings how Marx postulated that even in destroying Asia, Britain was launching a real social revolution. Although there are counter arguments that Marx also took a keen interest in pre-Capitalist societies, it cannot be denied that his perceptions were moulded by western convictions.
 From the early seventies the left activists started controlling academic and research institutions in Bharat. A senior economist, requesting anonymity   made an interesting revelation to The Telegraph dated July 26, 2013. He said in the 1970s, it was a given rule that if one had economic beliefs that weren’t aligned with Marxism, Bharat wasn’t the place to be an academic. This trend spread in major Bharateeya Universities. In May 2013, Delhi University's Academic Council asked the sociology department to revise their syllabus due to “more than necessary number of papers on Marx” and inclusion of Bharateeya thinkers like Ambedkar. There were objections on the over emphasis of Marxism in history. This was the case in almost all universities in Bharat. In West Bengal, Tripura and Kerala Gandhian studies were virtually cornered by papers on Marxism. Historians of West Bengal and Kerala universities have shown profound contempt for early Bharat. Earlier in June 2003, former Chairman of ICHR, Professor MGS Narayanan critically observed that the ICHR worked like a monopoly. Even applications for projects were never available and proposals never got a response. 80 per cent of the research funding was cornered by three universities, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Calcutta University, and Aligarh University where the left dominated the academics. Professor Narayanan also observed that only those in the good books of the Left had a place in ICHR. In an article written in The Telegraph dated July 26, 2014, Historian Ramachandra Guha scrutinised that Marxist historians in Bharat dominated social science by providing support in 1969 to the Congress party which was reduced to a minority in the Lok Sabha after a split. Guha reollects his first academic job, at the Centre for Studies in Social Sciences in Kolkata where the unwritten rule was that that any new entrant to the Centre must be a Marxist as well. With change in government by 2014, the heydays of left also passed away. We should understand that the Left parties which dominated Bharateeya academics scuttling every voice of dissent are currently lamenting on ‘saffronisation’ due to loss of their dominion.
In January 2010, the Department of Sociology of Delhi University formally inaugurated a new European Study Centre at its premises funded by the European Union. It included the ‘re-design of the existing sociology syllabi of the Post Graduate and M. Phil programme at department’ in consultation with European scholars. Likewise, near Kochi in Kerala, the Marxist historians excavated the site at Pattanam keeping aside Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) and Bharateeya Universities. The project was undertaken by the Marxist controlled Kerala Council for Historical Research. For last ten years Euro-American scholars such as Istvan Perczel, Roberta Tomber, De Romanis Fernando, Robert Isanman and Derek Kennet who are also Biblical scholars, have been in the forefront of the excavations at Pattanam. Following heavy criticism from archaeologists and historians, a month back, the ASI cancelled the license for excavations at Pattanam under Marxist historians.
Syed Hussain Alatas, Malaysian academician, evaluating the ‘captive mind’ condemned third world intellectuals with their persisting obsession with imported and inherited theories of knowledge unfamiliar to their culture and society and their intellectual traditions. At the Universiti Sains Malaysia in Penang, an International Conference on ‘Decolonising Our Universities’ was held in June 2011. The participants highlighted the alleged harm done to universities outside the West by “the tutelage and tyranny of Western institutions.” They complained that in non-Western nations “indigenous intellectual traditions” have been denigrated and marginalised. The group that included participants from Australia, China, Bharat, Indonesia, Iran, Japan, Malaysia, Nigeria, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Tanzania, Thailand, Turkey, and Uganda, issued a call to action: “We are firmly convinced that every trace of Eurocentrism in our universities – reflected in various insidious forms of western controls over publications, theories, and models of research must be subordinated to our scintillating cultural and intellectual traditions.”
At the Penang International Conference, Claude Alvares criticised the Bharateeya academic society for blindly submitting to western Intellectual tradition. Alvares argued that in Bharat, western science including western social science is unquestionably accepted by its academic monarchs indicating the unconditional intellectual rout of its so-called thinking or academic community. The country's (so-called) 'finest' minds - those who qualify for the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) - are harvested in a handful of imported institutions that serve as unabashed recruiting grounds for production systems and economies abroad. UNESCO –World Social Science Report, 2010 concludes that for all practical purposes, social science research outside the non-European world is insignificant in quality, and it is rarely cited.
The extreme hostility towards Bharat’s past has  also currently been  manifested  as  intolerance towards  the present  political system which does not succumb to  the ideas of both Eurocolonialism and Euromarxism. The writers who accuse  about intolerance in Bharat have clear Left-Maoist ideology. Ashok Vajpayi, K Sachidanandan and numerous writers who have recently returned   their awards back to Sahitya Academi in the name of growing intolerance in Bharat are intimately associated with SAHMAT which is controlled by CPI (M). The others in Sahitya Academi returned awards accusing growing intolerance in the country include Kedar Nath Singh, Rajesh Joshi, Manglesh Dabral, Kashi Nath Singh, Krishna Sobli and DN Srinath are leftists. It is a false propaganda that the writers who returned the awards are liberals without any ideological inclination.  K Sachidanandan and his left colleagues protested against the arrest of top Maoist leader Kannampally Murali by the Maharashtra anti terror squad in May 2015 at Pune. There are other occasions in which Sachidanandan has defended Maoists in the name of human rights. Sarah Joseph, another writer who returned the award to Sahitya Academi was AAP candidate from Thrishur Lok Sabha constituency of Kerala in 2014. Self styled tribal activist Ganesh Devy has been a recipient of Ford Foundation grant. Ganesh Devy’s NGO Bhasha received over Rs 12 crore in eight years. The Bhasha Research and Publication Center headed by Ganesh Devy received around 56 lakh rupees from Ford Foundation. Ganesh Devy was unwilling to return Sahitya Academi and Padmasree awards when tribals underwent violence and eviction in Assam, Western Ghat regions and Central parts of Bharat.  Devy has returned Sahitya Academi award due to “first time growing intolerance in Bharat since Independence”. Evidences are coming to light that Ganesh Devy’s NGO received funds from Christian Religious organisations such as Catholic Relief Service in the US and the Holy Cross Provincialate at Switzerland. In 2015, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) put the $12.5 billion Ford Foundation on a watch list over funding it to activist Teesta Setalvad in 2009. At that time she was pursuing legal cases on post Godhra violence in Gujarat.
Ghulam Nabi Khayal and Nayantara Sehgal who returned the awards to Sahitya Academi did not find any intolerance in anti sikh riots of 1984, Raghunath temple and Quasim Nagar massacres of Jammu and Kashmir in 2002, or the Mumbai riots in 1993, and 2008. Ashok Vajpayi did not trace an iota of violence when the CPI (M) launched the Nandigram massacre in West Bengal butchering nearly two dozen villagers. There were no protests from these left wing writers when Bhagalpur, in Bihar and Deganga in West Bengal in the east, Doda in Jammu & Kashmir and Muzaffarnagar UP in the north, Mumbai in the west and Marad in south turned red and innumerable lives were perished. These writers did not    observe any intolerance in any of these massacres. For them these massacres represented Bharat’s pluralism. Waryam Sandhu who returned his award was a Naxal activist. He did not identify any intolerance when Maoists bombed a bus in 2010 and killed 76 civilians at Dantewada in Chhatisgarh.
Eurocolonialism and Euromarxism have jointly launched a cultural bomb on Bharat. As Kenyan novelist and post colonial theorist Ngugi wa Thiongo argues, the effect of cultural bomb is to annihilate people’s belief in their names, in their languages, in their environment, in their heritage of struggle, in their unity, in their capacities and ultimately in themselves. The intellectuals and writers who virtually represent left political strategies have been inherently hostile towards Bharat’s past which is evident in their writings. They have remained truculent towards any individual or movement which critically defends Bharat. They have remained rancorous towards any political system that shields Bharat’s unity. This venomous hostility towards cultural Bharat manifests in multiple ways. Certainly any violence has to be condemned. Dadri is condemnable. But we have to remember that during last ten years, there have been numerous instances of inhuman violence towards dalits, women and children in Bharat. There were riots and rampage. They have been conveniently kept aside by the left writers who maintained an unscrupulous silence as part of a well knit political strategy. This strategy has a global network. Let there be a nationwide public debate on the depth and width of intolerance in Bharat. Circumventing such debates, the current argument about rising intolerance in Bharat is a political agenda which is an outcome of extreme hostility towards nationalism.
Dr B S Hari Shankar (The writer is a Researcher at India Policy Foundation, New Delhi)
http://organiser.org//Encyc/2015/11/2/Opinion---The-Past-as-Hostile-and-the-Present-as-INTOLERANT.aspx

Rss: The Bhagwat way -- Advaita Kala

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Advaita Kala is a novelist and scriptwriter based in Delhi

RSS: The Bhagwat Way

Mythicised or misunderstood, RSS is an organisation whose influence is a permanent topic of contention. Its doors seldom open to outsiders, its leaders hardly speak to the public, and, at 90, it is still steeped in secrecy and moulded by a culture of austerity and discipline. Is the Sangh changing faster under the leadership of Mohan Bhagwat, the possible reforms including its attitude towards Muslims and women? Advaita Kala gains access to the cloistered world of RSS
Mohan Bhagwat addresses a rally in Kolkata, 2014 (Photo: RUPAK DE CHOWDHURI/REUTERS)
Mohan Bhagwat addresses a rally in Kolkata, 2014 (Photo: RUPAK DE CHOWDHURI/REUTERS)
A long corridor opens into a series of small rooms, one after the other. Inside the room is a bed with a thin mattress and two plastic chairs, their armrests touching. A matka sits in the corner on a high stool and overhead a noisy ceiling fan exerts itself, to little effect. This is the room of apracharak. Room after room is like this one. It is a prototype, marked by frugality and basic necessities that indicate human use. There is nothing to show of a personal life, not even family photographs. No television—usually a stack of books signal entertainment, but their worn and well-circulated condition suggests that a certain rigour is attached to the reading habit. At 3.30 p.m. the gong sounds—the clang of a hammer hitting a brass plate, it echoes through the empty passageways and in the distance one starts to hear voices trickling into the corridors. This is the high tide of presence and then like a wave it recedes and settles at the end of the hall in the common dining room, where the chatter continues unabated. And I am told that one can set one’s watch to the routine at the RSS complex in Keshav Kunj, Delhi.
The main hall is empty nowadays and in it are yet again more plastic chairs and whirring fans. Next door there is a consumer court, with the usual hangers-on waiting outside for a hearing, or their lawyer, or just passing time. At Keshav Kunj there are no people hanging around, seeking proximity or favour or appointments. The inner courtyard is empty, the guards at the gate don’t check your purse, although they notice your presence and maybe your gender. Inside, a man who must be the oldest pracharak(possibly an octogenarian) rises to welcome you and asks how he can be of help.
This somnolence is misleading, things are stirring, not just in Keshav Kunj where buildings stand in various stages of dismantlement but also within. It is what Mohan Bhagwat, the present sarsanghchalak, would refer to as an “unfolding”—a term that would excite unease in RSS baiters and elicit curiosity in the neutral observer. The sixth sarsanghchalak is the first to acknowledge that what is or was to become of the RSS in its ninetieth year of existence, is something that even its founder, Dr Hedgewar declined to extrapolate on, hence the unfolding. Every sarsanghchalak, he says, responds to his times and this response is left for posterity to judge. It is difficult to tell if the burden of history or a legacy to bequeath weighs heavily on the walrus-moustached and easy-to-laughter present sarsanghchalak, but he is signalling changing times, through moves small and more significant. Like the approval of applause at an event, a deviation from the usual code of conduct, since the Sangh eschews individual aggrandisation. Sometimes, Bhagwat will clap along and add that good work must be appreciated, prompting the coming together of more hands in self conscious acknowledgment. Or be it a more accommodating approach to a traditionalbête noire—westernisation. It is an interesting time for the largest volunteer-based social movement in the world (outsider definitions aside) through its nine decades of existence the RSS has insisted that this remains its core identity. This 65-year-old bachelor with Z-plus ‘VVIP’ security, who till two years ago travelled only by train with a secretary for company, leading the RSS through the jagged terrain of modern and aspirational India.
“Character is like a tree and shadow like a reputation. The shadow is what we think of it; the tree is the real thing,” said Abraham Lincoln, in a timeless quote that may apply to the RSS as well. That its shadow precedes it is inarguable. That its tree branches out into shakhas, 51,330 in India at last count, is the real thing. Even granting a slim attendance of maybe ten people to the individual shakha, means that something like 513,300 RSSswayamsevaks gather to participate in physical exercise and reaffirm their faith in its ideology, every morning, every day. So how does an organisation, one that has been banned on three occasions, continue to grow? Are these morning sessions, spent discussing newspaper headlines of the day broken by a game of kabaddi and other sport (including the western rugby in student shakhas), a tactic in subversion? A ploy to distract and dull critical faculties of analysis and independent thought? Once again its shadow will inform you that the shakhas function as spaces for group lobotomies, its participants fed on a diet of unadulterated hate for minority communities and a general suspicion of the world, not to mention victimhood. Its all-male environs prepping its brainwashed battalions for a fight of historical proportions with a persistent enemy—compromised Hindu masculinity. It might be premature to draw a conclusion, but it would not be remiss to suggest that this common place demonisation of the RSS has contributed to its growth. The RSS is more than the routine criticism thrown its way, the latter having been reduced to a cliché that younger Indians find easier to dismiss, moved as they are as a generation to particularise their own experience.
My first interaction with the RSS was on a television debate in 2009, their representative sat at the other end of the panel and denounced the concept of Valentine’s Day as a western one. My own love for Valentine’s Day is at best ambiguous, underwhelmed as I am by its crass commercialisation, but the holiday found a defender in me that day because of the pugnacious attack on it. As with all television debates, no side won that one, audience applause to comments were the only barometer, but little did I know then that the RSS system does not quite gauge its impact by public applause (as previously mentioned). The RSS today speaks of not westernisation but ‘westophication’, which is the adoption of western habits for the purpose of appearing sophisticated. A not entirely unreasonable position, for amongst these are sociological impulses that even the West is making conscious attempts to move away from. Moreover this ‘new’ approach is an inevitability in our shrinking world that the Sangh has accepted with a pragmatism that belies the criticism of being stuck in the past. Neither on closer observation is it far-fetched to see how it finds a place in their conversation with the larger world, when one hears Bhagwat speak of the fluidity of Hinduism, “Hinduism is gatisheel not stithisheel, there is a lot in the Vedas that we do not practice anymore. It is the constant search for truth. Forms keep changing, what our ancestors practiced that was positive we must embrace and take along with us, what was wrong we should leave behind and move ahead.” This moving ahead is the underlying refrain in his conversation, whichever issue he discusses, even himself, “Today I may feel like I am changing things and making improvements, but future generations may turn around and say I made mistakes, then what will happen to me? The future... progeny has the independence to judge.”
The judgement sways both ways, from the clash of values between generations at home to incidents that get escalated when moral policing takes over. In the case of the latter, the invisible hand of the Sangh is almost always seen in the present narrative. What is the Sangh’s stand on the wilfulness of the young to do things their way and the right to individual choice? “When children say that till now you have done things your way, now let me do things my way, then let them do so. What is wrong with that? They are your own children, one should believe that they may do as they like and may face obstacles but will not lose their way. They should feel secure that should they return after facing obstacles and defeat, someone is there for them. This is important, for they will not become cynics then.” This attitude prevails in the Sangh as well. During the days of Dr Hedgewar, it is said that no restrictions were placed on karyakartas and they were given complete independence and the freedom to use it. “This continues,” says Bhagwat, “Have we not made mistakes ourselves while carrying out the work of the Sangh? But we did so under the watch of our elders, they did caution us but never stopped us and brought us this far. The same applies at home.”
The Sangh often thought of as being judgmental, is ironically judged constantly, from the ballooning khakhi shorts that elicit much mirth and ridicule, to the moniker ‘sanghi’ used derisively online but now embraced by Modi supporters. The Sangh despite its online army of ‘sanghis’ many of whom have never visited a shakha or are members, remains an enigma, often to its own disadvantage. But its deep suspicion of being misrepresented over the years and being banned has made it retreat, choosing to work on the streets as opposed to having its version out in the broadsheets. As Bhagwat points out, “You may notice that we are finally speaking out loud in public about issues. It is because for the first time we have the space to do so.” Amongst his many conversation points is ‘third wave feminism’! The Sangh which has been summarily dismissed by critics for not having enough writers or intellectuals in its corner (it does but not enough of those have peer review credibility in a system dominated by another ideology), ‘compensates’ by being readers, voracious ones at that.
Neither does it bother to have a PR plan for engagement with the press. One early interaction of mine was on a writing assignment about the RSS marching band which was performing in Connaught Place for the first time. I was keen to record the response of the Delhiite to these men in khakhi shorts, it was to be a first. The only hospitality that was offered to me by a 72- year-old karyakarta was a cup of tea from the communal tea tap, which I was informed was being given at the expense of someone else, since the tea was always portioned in advance. Naturally I declined, despite the bitter Delhi cold, but it was an interesting insight into their guileless albeit reserved approach to the media. Or perhaps a woman?
The Sangh has for long been accused of being anti-women, a charge that is facilitated by the absence of women amongst its ranks. A long time observer of the Sangh commented that this Vijay Dashami celebration was intriguing for the presence of a woman on stage. This ‘presence’ of women or rather the lack thereof has been an observation that began as an enquiry in 1925 and has since become an indictment of the Sangh. How can a volunteer- based organisation not have any women in its midst, especially when its stated aim is to work amongst members of society? It was a question posed to Dr Hedgewar a decade after the Sangh was founded and has now made its way to Mohan Bhagwat, even if cushioned in polite speak—why is the influence of women so limited in the Sangh?
Part of the answer lies in the pages of time. When the Sangh was formed social conditions did not permit the free interaction of men and women at work. Dr Hedgewar felt that good intentions would be compromised by unnecessary chatter and conjecture, so the RSS began as an all-male organisation. The Rashtra Sevika Samiti was formed in 1936 as a parallel organisation that carried forward the work of the Sangh amongst women. It maintains to this day its organisational independence but shares an ideology. But isn’t this self-segregation along gender lines out of step with the times?
“Let me improve on your question,” says Mohan Bhagwat, “There is not little visible influence of women in the Sangh, there is none. The pracharak has no home, so with him no woman enters the Sangh. But when someone becomes a swayamsevak, he does not do so independently, slowly his family joins and helps keep his work going with the Sangh. When the Rashtra Sevika Samiti was formed it was decided that the work will be carried out amongst men by the Sangh and amongst women by the Samiti. They will help each other but not merge and that continues. If it comes from the two organisations that they would like to unite and work together, then when that happens, it is another matter. But it has not happened so far.” So is a merger a matter of time? The present sarsanghchalak, who in February 2015 said women are not baby-making factories as a response to the suggestion that Hindu women should have at least four children, seems to leave the door cracked open for the entry of women in the Sangh at some point. Or maybe that door was never really closed and padlocked in the first place, as has been assumed? That is the problem with being the Sangh, a lot of what it says in its most vociferous avatar is attributed to ‘strategy’, when often it’s just something that never got enough airtime in the past.
And if this is indeed ‘strategy’ it also serves to show that the Sangh is opening up to other ‘constituencies’—its alleged ‘Project to Otherise’—an accusation consistently furthered by critics is being consciously combated and dismantled like never before with all the means at its disposal.
No one experiences the fallout of this ascribed project more than the Indian Muslim. A reality addressed by the Sangh in 2002 with the formation of the Muslim Rashtriya Match, an organisation still looked at with scepticism. The Sangh’s attempt at denoting Hindu as a civilisational term as opposed to a religious one, finds little support. In the current environment, where terror attacks are attributed to a faith and Islamophobia is on the rise, the Sangh’s approach to the matter is critical for how it (the Sangh) is perceived not only by outsiders but even those within. Critics would assume that the Sangh may look at this as an opportunity, as a way of consolidating its appeal within the majority Hindu community. Mohan Bhagwat’s response on the looming ISIS threat that has mentioned India in its plans deflates that expectation, “ISIS is a problem— it exists, one should worry about it. But even before getting to us they are in trouble. And in whose name it claims to fight (Muslims), those very people have stood up against it.” An acknowledgment of moderate Muslims who make up the majority of the faith and are a counter to the barbarity of ISIS isn’t what one would anticipate from Bhagwat. Neither would it appeal to the radical right or life-long RSS critic. But here it is. And Bhagwat continues, “If we stay strong, calm—our people, our armed forces if they remain like this—what will happen is that those the ISIS hopes to attract will be drawn to us and we will all get stronger. We should acknowledge that ISIS is a problem but focus on how it must not spoil anything for us. Intellectuals discuss the problem of ISIS and then get into the why. That western powers created it etc. But there is no need for all that, their barbarity is inhumane. That is it. The reasons are a thing for another time.”
Bhagwat is careful to remove religion from the equation, a liberal position encouraged the world over. Furthermore there is an emphasis on the disconnect between ascribed or claimed cause and action, an argument used by those who support and denounce terror activities in an attempt to claim a higher moral ground. He draws equivalence with other violent movements. “Take Naxalism also, how is that in sync with the Constitution, law and order as well as humanity? People get into the reasons, it’s because of lack of education, opportunity, development etc. But the point is—does it justify their violence? That is the point. We must think of everyone as our own. We need to be mentally strong and have the ability to stop the forces that create and spread divisiveness.”
But this is Bhagwat speaking, the messaging attributed to the RSS remains one that is often in opposition to what the Sangh’s stated position is. With its swelling ranks, online sympathisers and various fringe groups offering unsolicited allegiance, the communication problem for the RSS is only compounding. From not being heard enough and being misrepresented, to being heard in every utterance and yet again being misrepresented. Their tryst with misrepresentation continues. As one social media active swayamsevak tells me, “The well-meaning support from online ‘sanghis’ can be problematic. Because online these people are recognised as the RSS voice, but they in most cases have no understanding of the RSS’s stand on various issues.”
However, the RSS despite its insistence on taking an independent stand cannot distance itself from this Government. The most contentious example in recent times being Bhagwat’s comment on reservations that whipped up a political storm. It is a classic example of how the Sangh continues to see itself as an outsider to politics but the other side insists on anointing it as the ultimate insider and the real power. This new mandate means the RSS will now have to calibrate its public speak in view of political repercussions. For an organisation considered political by many, the Sangh’s reference to politicians as ‘the other’ may ring hollow but the general attitude one encounters even towards the BJP in the Sangh is that of polite distance. However where the deviation takes place is in their acknowledgment of the ‘compulsions’ of the BJP and their good intentions. For all the chatter of it being a battle of wills between the RSS and the BJP—the approach of the former is that of a consultant, it offers to explain, and admits it takes longer, since politicians have too many factors to consider. Is there exasperation? If there is, it remains good-natured.
The interest in the RSS today isn’t only about external perception but also internal discourse. For the first time in the Sangh’s history, a formerpracharak has been elevated to poster boy status, one who headlines ‘meet and greet’ events at international rock show arenas. A lot of the Sangh’s goodwill in urban India at least is owed to the elevation of Narendra Modi and his development message, a man who elicits unstinted loyalty as well as extreme criticism. This idea of the individual overwhelming the collective must not sit easy with the Sangh. Even supporters of the current dispensation sometimes view the RSS’s stated positions as a conscious undermining of the Government. Suggesting as do critics that the ire comes from the diluting of the Sangh’s pursuit for homogeneity, which has been flouted by the ascension of one man. But it is a convoluted understanding of the dynamics within the Sangh, for the reality is implicit: there would be no Modi without the Sangh. And the next Modi could also be a pracharak.
At one point Bhagwat quotes a verse from the Bhagvad Gita: “Sv-alpam apy asya dharmasya trayate mahato bhayat. Jitna dharam sambhav hai utna karo,” (A little advancement on this path can protect one from the most dangerous type of fear. Follow as much on the path of dharma as is possible). The path of Mohan Bhagwat would lead to a Sangh reimagined.


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    Good article. I was with RSS when in school. No doubt the thinking was old fashioned. But Now it is changing and top people are able to think independently. Even if they are old fashioned, they also represent a lot of people, who think in old fashioned way, we like it or not. 
    If you see Mr. Bhagwats leadership, he has handled organisation in absoultely matured manner. Even his arbitration with BJP whenever necessary has been quite matured. He arranged modi to have complete freedom, instead of a compromise of having an Advani or Murli Manohar Joshi in his cabinet. This is great management, with onus of performance now on Modi, both for the nation as well as BJP.
    People will basically talk RSS as fascist, whatever RSS says. But do you think indian people are such idiots that RSS keeps having pracharaks, inspite of having no material benefits?
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        Fresh wave of unbiased journalism in this age of media mafia.
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            Good article.Some points made by Bhagwat are a bit vague and wavering,
            nevertheless commitment of RSS is unflinching.
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                This is not a creative criticism. Author is biased against RSS. No clear disagreements. As for women not being part of RSS, let RSS decide. We do not object to Vatican, the country of the men only, a member of the UN.
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                    The writer tries to remain aloof, unsympathetic, without being judgemental, and succeeds.
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                        a must read article...to be understood with open and unprejudiced mind.
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                            Interesting insight into RSS, how low is the security, no checks on people entering the office, wonder if that is enuf indications to a secular terror outfit to bomb? 😆
                            To me, RSS is behind Vajpayee's win and now Modi's but both times, BJP deceive them and become more sicular than before. Perhaps RSS wishes secularism but BJP ends up as Muslim appeaser and lose 2nd term. In search of Hindu party, Hindus keep waiting. ;)
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                                Great insight.. rare reporter who didn't come running with words that can be twisted and put on all leading English daily to lynch RSS for days to come.
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                                    Hi, Advaita kala, being a novelist you might have read George Orwell's
                                    1984. There he wrote about 'Thought police'. Yes, you went to the office
                                    of 'thought police.' The only new thing I learned from your article is 'pracharaks' are misogynists. They want hindu women to become the
                                    factory of producing children.

                                    Captivating photos from the Indigenous World Games in Brazil

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                                    Captivating photos from the Indigenous World Games in Brazil

                                    Last updated on: November 03, 2015 09:15 IST

                                    The first World Indigenous Games were held in Palmas, Brazil, from October 23 to November 1.
                                    Indigenous peoples from around the world compete in traditional and Western sporting events in Brazil.
                                    Also billed as the Indigenous Olympics, the games include 2,000 athletes from a number of Brazilian tribes, as well as indigenous groups from countries like—the United States, Russia, New Zealand and Ethiopia.
                                    The Games are the biggest thing ever to roll into the sleepy town of Palmas in the state of Tocantins.
                                    Sporting events include some Western-style competitions like soccer, and many indigenous traditional games; some played competitively, and some played as demonstration events.
                                    Throughout the nine days of competitions, however, there have also been protests about Brazil's treatment of its indigenous people.
                                    Here are some of the most captivating moments from the first World Indigenous Games in Brazil…
                                    Indigenous women
                                     
                                    Indigenous women from the Kamayura tribe take part in a demonstration of the Huka Huka fight at the first World Games for Indigenous Peoples in Palmas, Brazil. Photograph: Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters
                                    An indigenous woman
                                     
                                    An indigenous woman carries a painted log during the opening ceremony. Photograph: Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters
                                     
                                    An indigenous woman
                                     
                                    Indigenous men from Terena tribe compete in a canoeing competition during the first World Games for Indigenous Peoples in Palmas, Brazil. Photograph: Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters
                                     
                                    An indigenous man
                                     
                                    An indigenous man takes photos of fireworks. Photograph: Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters
                                     
                                    Maori men
                                     
                                    Maori men from New Zealand compete during a tug-of-war competition. http://im.rediff.com/sports/2015/nov/03indi5.jpg
                                     
                                    An indigenous woman
                                     
                                    An indigenous woman participates in a parade called ‘International Indigenous Beauty’. Photograph: Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters
                                     
                                    Indigenous people from the Kayapo
                                     
                                    Indigenous people from the Kayapo tribe watch a soccer match. Photograph: Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters

                                    In India, the left does no wrong -- Kumar Chellappan. Read 'An outline of intellectual rubbish' by Bertrand Russell (1943) which fits the leftists of India.

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                                    IN INDIA, THE LEFT DOES NO WRONG

                                    Tuesday, 03 November 2015 | Kumar Chellappan | in Oped

                                    Intellectuals blaming the Modi Government for ‘growing intolerance’ in the country should take note of the actions of communist, Marxist and other Left-wing leaders, who tolerate no dissent among their ranks
                                    So-called eminent historians, film personalities and scientists have now joined the bandwagon of Sahitya Akademi award winners who have been returning their awards, to protest growing social intolerance in the country. All these intellectuals have been critical of the Modi Government.
                                    The reasons for their protest are well-known: The Dadri lynching incident in Uttar Pradesh, the murder of three rationalists in Maharashtra and Karnataka, and Delhi Police’s ‘beef raid’ on Kerala House.
                                    In the last case, Delhi Police had received a complaint that beef was being served at the Kerala House canteen. It is not known whether Kerala House in New Delhi has some sort of ‘diplomatic immunity’ but friends in Kerala tell this writer that it is a den for all kind of nefarious activities by politicians, bureaucrats and ‘dealers’.
                                    The most anti-Modi newspaper published from Chennai, which is also considered to be the unofficial mouthpiece of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), has reported that two policemen went to Kerala House and asked the manager if cow meat was being served at the restaurant. When they were told that the restaurant does not serve cow meat, the officers left without making a fuss.
                                    But by the next day, hell broke loose and television channels were beaming with pictures of Marxist MPs, staging a protest in front of the Kerala House. Mr Anirudhan Sampath, a self-styled intellectual among the Marxist MPs, was heard accusing the Modi Government of violating the federal structure of the Constitution! Ironically, Mr Sampath represents a political party which does not tolerate any dissent. Remember the gruesome murder of TP Chandrasekharan, the Marxist rebel? Marxists speaking of freedom of expression is, indeed, odd.
                                    While the Hindutva forces are demanding a total ban on cow slaughter, the Marxists in Kerala organised a beef festival all over the State. Mr VS Achuthanandan, former Chief Minister of Kerala, reportedly said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had consumed beef during his official visit to the United States. Poor people tend to believe his words and are under the impression that the cow slaughter issue is about the Government seeking to monitor the people’s dietary preferences.
                                    The ‘eminent historian’, Mr KN Panikkar, had no qualms in accepting the post of Vice-Chancellor of the Sree Sankaracharya University of Sanskrit at Kalady near Kochi in Kerala, though he does not know Sanskrit. The first thing he did after assuming office was to have the pictures of Adi Sankara removed. This is the same Mr Panikkar who signed a statement which said, “Differences of opinion are being sought to be settled by using physical violence. Arguments are met with not counter-arguments but with bullets.” Mr Panikkar and his communist colleagues should clarify exactly who uses violence against those with whom they have a difference of opinion.
                                    Also, the demand that the Prime Minister should react to each and every murder happening across the nation is childish. State Governments have full authority to maintain law and order, and it is for these Governments to investigate the chaos in their States.
                                    The communists and a section of the Opposition feel threatened because they stand exposed. They had just been misusing academic and democratic institutions to further their ideologies. All of this is now out in the open, with the change in Government at the Centre. The agitation by the students of the Film and Television Institute of India, over the appointment of a pro-BJP actor as chief, is proof that there’s no scope for lies and double standards.
                                    Moreover, we have to get over this obsession with the term ‘eminent’ while we describe the greatness of our scientists. “Pushpa Mittra Bhargava is the founder-director of the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad. And that’s it,” reacted a molecular biologist who has many research papers on genetic studies to his credit, when asked about the former’s decision to return the Padma award. Shouldn’t the law be equally applicable to all? Or is it that the communists and the Congress are more equal than others?

                                    • PPurushothaman  from India
                                      In some professional colleges democracy does not exist, dictatorship of the left-leaning students organisation decides!
                                      about 4 hours ago
                                       (0) ·  (0)
                                       
                                      • KKrishan  from United States
                                        Well said. Our howling eminent intellectuals will do well to read Bertrand Russell's " An Outline of Intellectual Rubbish" and see where they fit. Hot headed are not intellectuals.
                                      http://www.dailypioneer.com/columnists/oped/in-india-the-left-does-no-wrong.html

                                      An Outline of Intellectual Rubbish

                                      by Bertrand Russell

                                       A Hilarious Catalogue of Organised and Individual Stupidity", which Russell wrote in 1943.

                                      Man is a rational animal-so at least I have been told. Throughout a long life, I have looked diligently for evidence in favor of this statement, but so far I have not had the good fortune to come across it, though I have searched in many countries spread over three continents. On the contrary, I have seen the world plunging continually further into madness. I have seen great nations, formerly leaders of civilization, led astray by preachers of bombastic nonsense. I have seen cruelty, persecution, and superstition increasing by leaps and bounds, until we have almost reached the point where praise of rationality is held to mark a man as an old fogey regrettably surviving from a bygone age. All this is depressing, but gloom is a useless emotion. In order to escape from it, I have been driven to study the past with more attention than I had formerly given to it, and have found, as Erasmus found, that folly is perennial and yet the human race has survived. The follies of our own times are easier to bear when they are seen against the background of past follies. In what follows I shall mix the sillinesses of our day with those of former centuries. Perhaps the result may help in seeing our own times in perspective, and as not much worse than other ages that our ancestors lived through without ultimate disaster.
                                      Aristotle, so far as I know, was the first man to proclaim explicitly that man is a rational animal. His reason for this view was one which does not now seem very impressive; it was, that some people can do sums. He thought that there are three kinds of soul: the vegetable soul, possessed by all living things, both plants and animals, and concerned only with nourishment and growth; the animal soul, concerned with locomotion, and shared by man with the lower animals; and finally the rational soul, or intellect, which is the Divine mind, but in which men participate to a greater or less degree in proportion to their wisdom. It is in virtue of the intellect that man is a rational animal. The intellect is shown in various ways, but most emphatically by mastery of arithmetic. The Greek system of numerals was very bad, so that the multiplication table was quite difficult, and complicated calculations could only be made by very clever people. Now-a-days, however, calculating machines do sums better than even the cleverest people, yet no one contends that these useful instruments are immortal, or work by divine inspiration. As arithmetic has grown easier, it has come to be less respected. The consequence is that, though many philosophers continue to tell us what fine fellows we are, it is no longer on account of our arithmetical skill that they praise us.
                                      Since the fashion of the age no longer allows us to point to calculating boys as evidence that man is rational and the soul, at least in part, immortal, let us look elsewhere. Where shall we look first? Shall we look among eminent statesmen, who have so triumphantly guided the world into its present condition? Or shall we choose the men of letters? Or the philosophers? All these have their claims, but 1 think we should begin with those whom all right thinking people acknowledge to be the wisest as well as the best of men, namely the clergy. If they fail to be rational, what hope is there for us lesser mortals? And alas-though I say it with all due respect-there have been times when their wisdom has not been very obvious, and, strange to say, these were especially the times when the power of the clergy was greatest.
                                      The Ages of Faith, which are praised by our neo-scholastics, were the time when the clergy had things all their own way. Daily life was full of miracles wrought by saints and wizardry perpetrated by devils and necromancers. Many thousands of witches were burnt at the stake. Men's sins were punished by pestilence and famine, by earthquake, flood, and fire. And yet, strange to say, they were even more sinful than they are now-a-days. Very little was known scientifically about the world. A few learned men remembered Greek proofs that the earth is round, but most people made fun of the notion that there are antipodes. To suppose that there are human beings at the antipodes was heresy. It was generally held (though modem Catholics take a milder view) that the immense majority of mankind are damned. Dangers were held to lurk at every turn. Devils would settle on the food that monks were about to eat, and would take possession of the bodies of incautious feeders who omitted to make the sign of the Cross before each mouthful. Old-fashioned people still say "bless you" when one sneezes, but they have forgotten the reason for the custom. The reason was that people were thought to sneeze out their souls, and before their souls could get back lurking demons were apt to enter the unsouled body; but if any one said "God bless you," the demons were frightened off.
                                      Throughout the last 400 years, during which the growth of science had gradually shown men how to acquire knowledge of the ways of nature and mastery over natural forces, the clergy have fought a losing battle against science, in astronomy and geology, in anatomy and physiology, in biology and psychology and sociology. Ousted from one position, they have taken up another. After being worsted in astronomy, they did their best to prevent the rise of geology; they fought against Darwin in biology, and at the present time they fight against scientific theories of psychology and education. At each stage, they try to make the public forget their earlier obscurantism, in order that their present obscurantism may not be recognized for what it is. Let us note a few instances of irrationality among the clergy since the rise of science, and then inquire whether the rest of mankind are any better.
                                      When Benjamin Franklin invented the lightning rod, the clergy, both in England and America, with the enthusiastic support of George III, condemned it as an impious attempt to defeat the will of God. For, as all right-thinking people were aware, lightning is sent by God to punish impiety or some other grave sin-the virtuous are never struck by lightning. Therefore if God wants to strike any one, Benjamin Franklin ought not to defeat His design; indeed, to do so is helping criminals to escape. But God was equal to the occasion, if we are to believe the eminent Dr. Price, one of the leading divines of Boston. Lightning having been rendered ineffectual by the "iron points invented by the sagacious Dr. Franklin," Massachusetts was shaken by earthquakes, which Dr. Price perceived to be due to God's wrath at the "iron points." In a sermon on the subject he said, "In Boston are more erected than elsewhere in New England, and Boston seems to be more dreadfully shaken. Oh! there is no getting out of the mighty hand of God." Apparently, however, Providence gave up all hope of curing Boston of its wickedness, for, though lightning rods became more and more common, earthquakes in Massachusetts have remained rare. Nevertheless, Dr. Price's point of view, or something very like it, is still held by one of the most influential of living men. When, at one time, there were several bad earthquakes in India, Mahatma Gandhi solemnly warned his compatriots that these disasters had been sent as a punishment for their sins.
                                      Even in my own native island this point of view still exists. During the last war, the British Government did much to stimulate the production of food at home. In 1916, when things were not going well, a Scottish clergyman wrote to the newspapers to say that military failure was due to the fact that, with government sanction, potatoes had been planted on the Sabbath. However, disaster was averted, owing to the fact that the Germans disobeyed all the Ten Commandments, and not only one of them.
                                      Sometimes, if pious men are to be believed, God's mercies are curiously selective. Toplady, the author of "Rock of Ages," moved from one vicarage to another; a week after the move, the vicarage he had formerly occupied burnt down, with great loss to the new vicar. Thereupon Toplady thanked God; but what the new vicar did is not known. Borrow, in his "Bible in Spain," records how without mishap he crossed a mountain pass infested by bandits. The next party to cross, however, were set upon, robbed, and some of them murdered; when Borrow heard of this, he, like Toplady, thanked God.
                                      Although we are taught the Copernican astronomy in our textbooks, it has not yet penetrated to our religion or our morals, and has not even succeeded in destroying belief in astrology. People still think that the Divine Plan has special reference to human beings, and that a special Providence not only looks after the good, but also punishes the wicked. I am sometimes shocked by the blasphemies of those who think themselves pious-for instance, the nuns who never take a bath without wearing a bathrobe all the time. When asked why, since no man can see them, they reply: "Oh, but you forget the good God." Apparently they conceive of the Deity as a Peeping Tom, whose omnipotence enables Him to see through bathroom walls, but who is foiled by bathrobes. This view strikes me as curious.
                                      The whole conception of "Sin" is one which I find very puzzling, doubtless owing to my sinful nature. If "Sin" consisted in causing needless suffering, I could understand; but on the contrary, sin often consists in avoiding needless suffering. Some years ago, in the English House of Lords, a bill was introduced to legalize euthanasia in cases of painful and incurable disease. The patient's consent was to be necessary, as well as several medical certificates. To me, in my simplicity, it would seem natural to require the patient's consent, but the late Archbishop of Canterbury, the English official expert on Sin, explained the erroneousness of such a view. The patient's consent turns euthanasia into suicide, and suicide is sin. Their Lordships listened to the voice of authority, and rejected the bill. Consequently, to please the Archbishop-and his God, if he reports truly-victims of cancer still have to endure months of wholly useless agony, unless their doctors or nurses are sufficiently humane to risk a charge of murder. I find difficulty in the conception of a God who gets pleasure from contemplating such tortures; and if there were a God capable of such wanton cruelty, I should certainly not think Him worthy of worship. But that only proves how sunk I am in moral depravity.
                                      I am equally puzzled by the things that are sin and by the things that are not. When the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals asked the pope for his support, he refused it, on the ground that human beings owe no duty to the lower animals, and that ill-treating animals is not sinful. This is because animals have no souls. On the other hand, it is wicked to marry your deceased wife's sister-so at least the Church teaches-however much you and she may wish to marry. This is not because of any unhappiness that might result, but because of certain texts in the Bible.
                                      The resurrection of the body, which is an article of the Apostles' Creed, is a dogma which has various curious consequences. There was an author not very many years ago, who had an ingenious method of calculating the date of the end of the world. He argued that there must be enough of the necessary ingredients of a human body to provide everybody with the requisites at the Last Day. By carefully calculating the available raw material, he decided that it would all have been used up by a certain date. When that date comes, the world must end, since otherwise the resurrection of the body would become impossible. Unfortunately I have forgotten what the date was, but I believe it is not very distant.
                                      St. Thomas Aquinas, the official philosopher of the Catholic Church, discussed lengthily and seriously a very grave problem, which, I fear, modern theologians unduly neglect. He imagines a cannibal who has never eaten anything but human flesh, and whose father and mother before him had like propensities. Every particle of his body belongs rightfully to someone else. We cannot suppose that those who have been eaten by cannibals are to go short through all eternity. But, if not, what is left for the cannibal? How is he to be properly roasted in hell, if all his body is restored to its original owners? This is a puzzling question, as the Saint rightly perceives.
                                      In this connection the orthodox have a curious objection to cremation, which seems to show an insufficient realization of God's omnipotence. It is thought that a body which has been burnt will be more difficult for Him to collect together again than one which has been put underground and transformed into worms. No doubt collecting the particles from the air and undoing the chemical work of combustion would be somewhat laborious, but it is surely blasphemous to suppose such a work impossible for the Deity. I conclude that the objection to cremation implies grave heresy. But I doubt whether my opinion will carry much weight with the orthodox.
                                      It was only very slowly and reluctantly that the Church sanctioned the dissection of corpses in connection with the study of medicine. The pioneer in dissection was Vesalius, who was Court physician to the Emperor Charles V. His medical skill led the emperor to protect him, but after the emperor was dead he got into trouble. A corpse which he was dissecting was said to have shown signs of life under the knife, and he was accused of murder. The Inquisition was induced by King Phillip II to take a lenient view, and only sentenced him to a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. On the way home he was shipwrecked and died of exhaustion. For centuries after this time, medical students at the Papal University in Rome were only allowed to operate on lay figures, from which the sexual parts were omitted.
                                      The sacredness of corpses is a widespread belief. It was carried furthest by the Egyptians, among whom it led to the practice of mummification. It still exists in full force in China. A French surgeon, who was employed by the Chinese to teach Western medicine, relates that his demand for corpses to dissect was received with horror, but he was assured that he could have instead an unlimited supply of live criminals. His objection to this alternative was totally unintelligible to his Chinese employers.
                                      Although there are many kinds of sin, seven of which are deadly, the most fruitful field for Satan's wiles is sex. The orthodox Catholic doctrine on this subject is to be found in St. Paul, St. Augustine, and St. Thomas Aquinas. It is best to be celibate, but those who have not the gift of continence may marry. Intercourse in marriage is not sin, provided it is motivated by desire for offspring. All intercourse outside marriage is sin, and so is intercourse within marriage if any measures are adopted to prevent conception. Interruption of pregnancy is sin, even if, in medical opinion, it is the only way of saving the mother's life; for medical opinion is fallible, and God can always save a life by miracle if He sees fit. (This view is embodied in the law of Connecticut.) Venereal disease is God's punishment for sin. It is true that, through a guilty husband, this punishment may fall on an innocent woman and her children, but this is a mysterious dispensation of Providence, which it would be impious to question. We must also not inquire why venereal disease was not divinely instituted until the time of Columbus. Since it is the appointed penalty for sin, all measures for its avoidance are also sin-except, of course, a virtuous life. Marriage is nominally indissoluble, but many people who seem to be married are not. In the case of influential Catholics, some ground for nullity can often be found, but for the poor there is no such outlet, except perhaps in cases of impotence. Persons who divorce and remarry are guilty of adultery in the sight of God.
                                      The phrase "in the sight of God" puzzles me. One would suppose that God sees everything, but apparently this is a mistake. He does not see Reno, for you cannot be divorced in the sight of God. Registry offices are a doubtful point. I notice that respectable people, who would not call on anybody who lives in open sin, are quite willing to call on people who have had only a civil marriage; so apparently God does see registry offices.
                                      Some eminent men think even the doctrine of the Catholic Church deplorably lax where sex is concerned. Tolstoy and Mahatma Gandhi, in their old age, laid it down that all sexual intercourse is wicked, even in marriage and with a view to offspring. The Manicheans thought likewise, relying upon men's native sinfulness to supply them with a continually fresh crop of disciples. This doctrine, however, is heretical, though it is equally heretical to maintain that marriage is as praiseworthy as celibacy. Tolstoy thinks tobacco almost as bad as sex; in one of his novels, a man who is contemplating murder smokes a cigarette first in order to generate the necessary homicidal fury. Tobacco, however, is not prohibited in the Scriptures, though, as Samuel Butler points at, St. Paul would no doubt have denounced it if he had known of it.
                                      It is odd that neither the Church nor modern public opinion condemns petting, provided it stops short at a certain point. At what point sin begins is a matter as to which casuists differ. One eminently orthodox Catholic divine laid it down that a confessor may fondle a nun's breasts, provided he does it without evil intent. But I doubt whether modern authorities would agree with him on this point.
                                      Modern morals are a mixture of two elements: on the one hand, rational precepta as to how to live together peaceably in a society, and on the other hand traditional taboos derived originally from some ancient superstition, but proximately from sacred books, Christian, Mohammedan, Hindu, or Buddhist. To some extent the two agree; the prohibition of murder and theft, for instance, is supported both by human reason and by Divine command. But the prohibition of pork or beef has only scriptural authority, and that only in certain religions. It is odd that modern men, who are aware of what science has done in the way of bringing new knowledge and altering the conditions of social life, should still be willing to accept the authority of texts embodying the outlook of very ancient and very ignorant pastoral or agricultural tribes. It is discouraging that many of the precepts whose sacred character is thus uncritically acknowledged should be such as to inflict much wholly unnecessary misery. If men's kindly impulses were stronger, they would find some way of explaining that these precepts are not to be taken literally, any more than the command to "sell all that thou hast and give to the poor."
                                      There are logical difficulties in the notion of sin. We are told that sin consists in disobedience to God's commands, but we are also told that God is omnipotent. If He is, nothing contrary to His will can occur; therefore when the sinner disobeys His commands, He must have intended this to happen. St. Augustine boldly accepts this view, and asserts that men are led to sin by a blindness with which God afflicts them. But most theologians, in modern times, have felt that, if God causes men to sin, it is not fair to send them to hell for what they cannot help. We are told that sin consists in acting contrary to God's will. This, however, does not get rid of the difficulty. Those who, like Spinoza, take God's omnipotence seriously, deduce that there can be no such thing as sin. This leads to frightful results. What! said Spinoza's contemporaries, was it not wicked of Nero to murder his mother? Was it not wicked of Adam to eat the apple? Is one action just as good as another? Spinoza wriggles, but does not find any satisfactory answer. If everything happens in accordance with God's will, God must have wanted Nero to murder his mother; therefore, since God is good, the murder must have been a good thing. From this argument there is no escape.
                                      On the other hand, those who are in earnest in thinking that sin is disobedience to God are compelled to say that God is not omnipotent. This gets out of all the logical puzzles, and is the view adopted by a certain school of liberal theologians. It has, however, its own difficulties. How are we to know what really is God's will? If the forces of evil have a certain share of power, they may deceive us into accepting as Scripture what is really their work. This was the view of the Gnostics, who thought that the Old Testament was the work of an evil spirit.
                                      As soon as we abandon our own reason, and are content to rely upon authority, there is no end to our troubles. Whose authority? The Old Testament? The New Testament? The Koran? In practice, people choose the book considered sacred by the community in which they are born, and out of that book they choose the parts they like, ignoring the others. At one time, the most influential text in the Bible was: "Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live." Now-a-days, people pass over this text, in silence if possible; if not, with an apology. And so, even when we have a sacred book, we still choose as truth whatever suits our own prejudices. No Catholic, for instance, takes seriously the text which says that a bishop should be the husband of one wife.
                                      People's beliefs have various causes. One is that there is some evidence for the belief in question. We apply this to matters of fact, such as "what is so-and-so's telephone number?" or "who won the World Series?" But as soon as it comes to anything more debatable, the causes of belief become less defensible. We believe, first and foremost, what makes us feel that we are fine fellows. Mr. Homo, if he has a good digestion and a sound income, thinks to himself how much more sensible he is than his neighbor so-and-so, who married a flighty wife and is always losing money. He thinks how superior his city is to the one 50 miles away: it has a bigger Chamber of Commerce and a more enterprising Rotary Club, and its mayor has never been in prison. He thinks how immeasurably his country surpasses all others. If he is an Englishman, he thinks of Shakespeare and Milton, or of Newton and Darwin, or of Nelson and Wellington, according to his temperament. If he is a Frenchman, he congratulates himself on the fact that for centuries France has led the world in culture, fashions, and cookery. If he is a Russian, he reflects that he belongs to the only nation which is truly international. If he is a Yugoslav, he boasts of his nation's pigs; if a native of the Principality of Monaco, he boasts of leading the world in the matter of gambling.
                                      But these are not the only matters on which he has to congratulate himself. For is he not an individual of the species homo sapiens? Alone among animals he has an immortal soul, and is rational; he knows the difference between good and evil, and has learnt the multiplication table. Did not God make him in His own image? And was not everything created for man's convenience? The sun was made to light the day, and the moon to light the night--though the moon, by some oversight, only shines during half the nocturnal hours. The raw fruits of the earth were made for human sustenance. Even the white tails of rabbits, according to some theologians, have a purpose, namely to make it easier for sportsmen to shoot them. There are, it is true, some inconveniences: lions and tigers are too fierce, the summer is too hot, and the winter too cold. But these things only began after Adam ate the apple; before that, all animals were vegetarians, and the season was always spring. If only Adam had been content with peaches and nectarines, grapes and pears and pineapples, these blessings would still be ours.
                                      Self-importance, individual or generic, is the source of most of our religious beliefs. Even sin is a conception derived from self-importance. Borrow relates how he met a Welsh preacher who was always melancholy. By sympathetic questioning he was brought to confess the source of his sorrow: that at the age of seven he had committed the sin against the Holy Ghost. "My dear fellow," said Borrow, "don't let that trouble you; I know dozens of people in like case. Do not imagine yourself cut off from the rest of mankind by this occurrence; if you inquire, you will find multitudes who suffer from the same misfortune." From that moment, the man was cured. He had enjoyed feeling singular, but there was no pleasure in being one of a herd of sinners. Most sinners are rather less egotistical; but theologians undoubtedly enjoy the feeling that Man is the special object of God's wrath, as well as of His love. After the Fall-so Milton assures us-
                                        The Sun Had first his precept so to move, so shine, As might affect the Earth with cold and heat Scarce tolerable, and from the North to call Decrepit Winter, from the South to bring Solstitial summer's heat.
                                      However disagreeable the results may have been, Adam could hardly help feeling flattered that such vast astronomical phenomena should be brought about to teach him a lesson. The whole of theology, in regard to hell no less than to heaven, takes it for granted that Man is what is of most importance in the Universe of created beings. Since all theologians are men, this postulate has met with little opposition.
                                      Since evolution became fashionable, the glorification of Man has taken a new form. We are told that evolution has been guided by one great Purpose: through the millions of years when there were only slime, or trilobites, throughout the ages of dinosaurs and giant ferns, of bees and wild flowers, God was preparing the Great Climax. At last, in the fullness of time, He produced Man, including such specimens as Nero and Caligula, Hitler and Mussolini, whose transcendent glory justified the long painful process. For my part, I find even eternal damnation less incredible, and certainly less ridiculous, than this lame and impotent conclusion which we are asked to admire as the supreme effort of Omnipotence. And if God is indeed omnipotent, why could He not have produced the glorious result without such a long and tedious prologue?
                                      Apart from the question whether Man is really so glorious as the theologians of evolution say he is, there is the further difficulty that life on this planet is almost certainly temporary. The earth will grow cold, or the atmosphere will gradually fly off, or there will be an insufficiency of water, or, as Sir James Jeans genially prophesies, the sun will burst and all the planets will be turned into gas. Which of those will happen first, no one knows; but in any case the human race will ultimately die out. Of course, such an event is of little importance from the point of view of orthodox theology, since men are immortal, and will continue to exist in heaven and hell when none are left on earth. But in that case why bother about terrestrial developments? Those who lay stress on the gradual progress from the primitive slime to Man attach an importance to this mundane sphere which should make them shrink from the conclusion that all life on earth is only a brief interlude between the nebula and the eternal frost, or perhaps between one nebula and another. The importance of Man, which is the one indispensable dogma of the theologians, receives no support from a scientific view of the future of the solar system.
                                      There are many other sources of false belief besides self-importance. One of these is love of the marvelous. I knew at one time a scientifically-minded conjuror, who used to perform his tricks before a small audience, and then get them, each separately, to write down what they had seen happen. Almost always they wrote down something much more astonishing than the reality, and usually something which no conjuror could have achieved; yet they all thought they were reporting truly what they had seen with their own eyes. This sort of falsification is still more true of rumors. A tells B that last night he saw Mr.-, the eminent prohibitionist, slightly the worse for liquor; B tells C that A saw the good man reeling drunk, C tells D that he was picked up unconscious in the ditch, D tells E that he is well known to pass out every evening. Here, it is true, another motive comes in, namely malice. We like to think ill of our neighbors, and are prepared to believe the worst on very little evidence. But even where there is no such motive, what is marvelous is readily believed unless it goes against some strong prejudice. All history until the eighteenth century is full of prodigies and wonders which modern historians ignore, not because they are less well attested than facts which the historians accept, but because modem taste among the learned prefers what science regards as probable. Shakespeare relates how on the night before Caesar was killed, A common slave-you know him well by sight- Held up his left hand, which did flame and bum Like twenty torches join'd; and yet his hand, Not sensible of fire, remain'd unscorch'd. Besides-I have not since put up my sword- Against the Capitol I met a lion, Who glar'd upon me, and went surly by, Without annoying me; and there were drawn Upon a heap a hundred ghastly women, Transformed with their fear, who swore they saw Men all in fire walk up and down the streets.

                                      Shakespeare did not invent these marvels; he found them in reputable historians, who are among those upon whom we depend for our knowledge concerning Julius Caesar. This sort of thing always used to happen at the death of a great man or the beginning of an important war. Even so recently as 1914 the "angels of Mons" encouraged the British troops. The evidence for such events is very seldom first-hand, and modern historians refuse to accept it-except, of course, where the event is one that has religious importance.
                                      Every powerful emotion has its own myth-making tendency. When the emotion is peculiar to an individual, he is considered more or less mad if he gives credence to such myths as he has invented. But when an emotion is collective, as in war, there is no one to correct the myths that naturally arise. Consequently in all times of great collective excitement unfounded rumors obtain wide credence. In September, 1914, almost everybody in England believed that Russian troops had passed through England on the way to the Western Front. Everybody knew someone who had seen them, though no one had seen them himself.
                                      This myth-making faculty is often allied with cruelty. Ever since the middle ages, the Jews have been accused of practising ritual murder. There is not an iota of evidence for this accusation, and no sane person who has examined it believes it. Nevertheless it persists. I have met white Russians who were convinced of its truth, and among many Nazis it is accepted without question. Such myths give an excuse for the infliction of torture, and the unfounded belief in them is evidence of the unconscious desire to find some victim to persecute.
                                      There was, until the end of the eighteenth century, a theory that insanity is due to possession by devils. It was inferred that any pain suffered by the patient is also suffered by the devils, so that the best cure is to make the patient suffer so much that the devils will decide to abandon him. The insane, in accordance with this theory, were savagely beaten. This treatment was tried on King George III when he was mad, but without success. It is a curious and painful fact that almost all the completely futile treatments that have been believed in during the long history of medical folly have been such as caused acute suffering to the patient. When anaesthetics were discovered, pious people considered them an attempt to evade the will of God. It was pointed out, however, that when God extracted Adam's rib He put him into a deep sleep. This proved that anaesthetics are all right for men; women, however, ought to suffer, because of the curse of Eve. In the West votes for women proved this doctrine mistaken, but in Japan, to this day, women in childbirth are not allowed any alleviation through anaesthetics. As the Japanese do not believe inGenesis, this piece of sadism must have some other justification.
                                      The fallacies about "race" and "blood," which have always been popular, and which the Nazis have embodied in their official creed, have no objective Justification; they are believed solely because they minister to self-esteem and to the impulse toward cruelty. In one form or another, these beliefs are as old as civilization; their forms change, but their essence remains. Herodotus tells how Cyrus was brought up by peasants, in complete ignorance of his royal blood; at the age of twelve his kingly bearing toward other peasant boys revealed the truth. This is a variant of an old story which is found in all Indo-European countries. Even quite modem people say that "blood will tell." It is no use for scientific physiologists to assure the world that there is no difference between the blood of a Negro and the blood of a white man. The American Red Cross, in obedience to popular prejudice, at first, when America became involved in the present war, decreed that no Negro blood should be used for blood transfusion. As a result of an agitation, it was conceded that Negro blood might be used, but only for Negro patients. Similarly, in Germany, the Aryan soldier who needs blood transfusion is carefully protected from the contamination of Jewish blood.
                                      In the matter of race, there are different beliefs in different societies. Where monarchy is firmly established, kings are of a higher race than their subjects. Until very recently, it was universally believed that men are congenitally more intelligent than women; even so enlightened a man as Spinoza decides against votes for women on this ground. Among white men, it is held that white men are by nature superior to men of other colors, and especially to black men; in Japan, on the contrary, it is thought that yellow is the best color. In Haiti, when they make statues of Christ and Satan, they make Christ black and Satan white. Aristotle and Plato considered Greeks so innately superior to barbarians that slavery is justified so long as the master is Greek and the slave barbarian. The Nazis and the American legislators who made the immigration laws consider the Nordics superior to Slavs or Latins or any other white men. But the Nazis, under the stress of war, have been led to the conclusion that there are hardly any true Nordics outside Germany; the Norwegians, except Quisling and his few followers, have been corrupted by intermixture with Finns and Laps and such. Thus politics are a clue to descent. The biologically pure Nordic loves Hitler, and if you do not love Hitler, that is proof of tainted blood.
                                      All this is, of course, pure nonsense, known to be such by every-one who has studied the subject. In schools in America, children of the most diverse origins are subjected to the same educational system, and those whose business it is to measure intelligence quotients and otherwise estimate the native ability of students are unable to make any such racial distinctions as are postulated by the theorists of race. In every national or racial group there are clever children and stupid children. It is not likely that, in the United States, colored children will develop as successfully as white children, because of the stigma of social inferiority; but in so far as congenital ability can be detached from environmental influence, there is no clear distinction among different groups. The whole conception of superior races is merely a myth generated by the overweening self-esteem of the holders of power. It may be that, some day, better evidence will be forthcoming; perhaps, in time, educators will be able to prove (say) that Jews are on the average more intelligent than gentiles. But as yet no such evidence exists, and all talk of superior races must be dismissed as nonsense.
                                      There is a special absurdity in applying racial theories to the various populations of Europe. There is not in Europe any such thing as a pure race. Russians have an admixture of Tartar blood, Germans are largely Slavonic, France is a mixture of Celts, Germans, and people of Mediterranean race, Italy the same with the addition of the descendants of slaves imported by the Romans. The English are perhaps the most mixed of all. There is no evidence that there is any advantage in belonging to a pure race. The purest races now in existence are the Pygmies, the Hottentots, and the Australian aborigines; the Tasmanians, who were probably even purer, are extinct. They were not the bearers of a brilliant culture. The ancient Greeks, on the other hand, emerged from an amalgamation of northern barbarians and an indigenous population; the Athenians and Ionians, who were the most civilized, were also the most mixed. The supposed merits of racial purity are, it would seem, wholly imaginary.
                                      Superstitions about blood have many forms that have nothing to do with race. The objection to homicide seems to have been, originally, based on the ritual pollution caused by the blood of the victim. God said to Cain: "The voice of thy brother's blood crieth unto me from the ground." According to some anthropologists, the mark of Cain was a disguise to prevent Abel's blood from finding him; this appears also to be the original reason for wearing mourning. In many ancient communities no difference was made between murder and accidental homicide; in either case equally ritual ablution was necessary. The feeling that blood defiles still lingers, for example in the Churching of Women and in taboos connected with menstruation. The idea that a child is of his father's "blood" has the same superstitious origin. So far as actual blood is concerned, the mother's enters into the child, but not the father's. If blood were as important as is supposed, matriarchy would be the only proper way of tracing descent.
                                      In Russia, where, under the influence of Karl Marx, people since the revolution have been classified by their economic origin, difficulties have arisen not unlike those of German race theorists over the Scandinavian Nordies. There were two theories that had to be reconciled: on the one hand, proletarians were good and other people were bad; on the other hand, communists were good and other people were bad. The only way of effecting a reconciliation was to alter the meaning of words. A "proletarian" came to mean a supporter of the government; Lenin, though born a Prince, was reckoned a member of the proletariat. On the other hand, the word "kulak," which was supposed to mean a rich peasant, came to mean any peasant who opposed collectivization. This sort of absurdity always arises when one group of human beings is supposed to be inherently better than another. In America, the highest praise that can be bestowed on an eminent colored man after he is safely dead is to say "he was a white man." A courageous woman is called "masculine": Macbeth, praising his wife's courage, says:
                                        Bring forth men children only, For thy undaunted mettle should compose Nothing but males.

                                      All these ways of speaking come of unwillingness to abandon foolish generalizations.
                                      In the economic sphere there are many widespread superstitions. Why do people value gold and precious stones? Not simply because of their rarity: there are a number of elements called "rare earths" which are much rarer than gold, but no one will give a penny for them except a few men of science. There is a theory, for which there is much to be said, that gold and gems were valued originally on account of their supposed magical properties. The mistakes of governments in modem times seem to show that this belief still exists among the sort of men who are called "practical." At the end of the last war, it was agreed that Germany should pay vast sums to England and France, and they in turn should pay vast sums to the United States. Every one wanted to be paid in money rather than goods; the "practical" men failed to notice that there is not that amount of money in the world. They also failed to notice that money is no use unless it is used to buy goods. As they would not use it in this way, it did no good to anyone. There was supposed to be some mystic virtue about gold that made it worth while to dig it up in the Transvaal and put it underground again in bank vaults in America. In the end, of course, the debtor countries had no more money, and, since they were not allowed to pay in goods, they went bankrupt. The Great Depression was the direct result of the surviving belief in the magical properties of gold. It is to be feared that some similar superstition will cause equally bad results after the end of the present war.
                                      Politics is largely governed by sententious platitudes which are devoid of truth.
                                      One of the most widespread popular maxims is, "human nature cannot be changed." No one can say whether this is true or not without first defining "human nature." But as used it is certainly false. When Mr. A utters the maxim, with an air of portentous and conclusive wisdom, what he means is that all men everywhere will always continue to behave as they do in his own home town. A little anthropology will dispel this belief. Among the Tibetans, one wife has many husbands, because men are too poor to support a whole wife; yet family life, according to travellers, is no more unhappy than elsewhere. The practice of lending one's wife to a guest is very common among uncivilized tribes. The Australian aborigines, at puberty, undergo a very painful operation which, throughout the rest of their lives, greatly diminishes sexual potency. Infanticide, which might seem contrary to human nature, was almost universal before the rise of Christianity, and is recommended by Plato to prevent over-population. Private property is not recognized among some savage tribes. Even among highly civilized people, economic considerations will override what is called "human nature." In Moscow, where there is an acute housing shortage, when an unmarried woman is pregnant, it often happens that a number of men contend for the legal right to be considered the father of the prospective child, because whoever is judged to be the father acquires the right to share the woman's room, and half a room is better than no room.
                                      In fact, adult "human nature" is extremely variable, according to the circumstances of education. Food and sex are very general requirements, but the hermits of the Thebaid eschewed sex altogether and reduced food to the lowest point compatible with survival. By diet and training, people can be made ferocious or meek, masterful or slavish, as may suit the educator. There is no nonsense so arrant that it cannot be made the creed of the vast majority by adequate governmental action. Plato intended his Republic to be founded on a myth which he admitted to be absurd, but he was rightly confident that the populace could be induced to believe it. Hobbes, who thought it important that people should reverence the government however unworthy it might be, meets the argument that it might be difficult to obtain general assent to anything so irrational by pointing out that people have been brought to believe in the Christian religion, and, in particular, in the dogma of transubstantiation. If he had been alive now, he would have found ample confirmation in the devotion of German youth to the Nazis.
                                      The power of governments over men's beliefs has been very great ever since the rise of large States. The great majority of Romans became Christian after the Roman emperors had been converted. In the parts of the Roman Empire that were conquered by the Arabs, most people abandoned Christianity for Islam. The division of Western Europe into Protestant and Catholic regions was determined by the attitude of governments in the sixteenth century. But the power of governments over belief in the present day is vastly greater than at any earlier time. A belief, however untrue, is important when it dominates the actions of large masses of men. In this sense, the beliefs inculcated by the Japanese, Russian, and German governments are important. Since they are completely divergent, they cannot all be true, though they may well all be false. Unfortunately they are such as to inspire men with an ardent desire to kill one another, even to the point of almost completely inhibiting the impulse of self-preservation. No one can deny, in face of the evidence, that it is easy, given military power, to produce a population of fanatical lunatics. It would be equally easy to produce a population of sane and reasonable people, but many governments do not wish to do so, since such people would fail to admire the politicians who are at the head of these governments.
                                      There is one peculiarly pernicious application of the doctrine that human nature cannot be changed. This is the dogmatic assertion that there will always be wars, because we are so constituted that we feel a need of them. What is true is that a man who has had the kind of diet and education that most men have will wish to fight when provoked. But he will not actually fight unless he has a chance of victory. It is very annoying to be stopped by a speed cop, but we do not fight him because we know that he has the overwhelming forces of the State at his back. People who have no occasion for war do not make any impression of being psychologically thwarted. Sweden has had no war since 1814, but the Swedes were, a few years ago, one of the happiest and most contented nations in the world. I doubt whether they are so still, but that is because, though neutral, they are unable to escape many of the evils of war. If political organization were such as to make war obviously unprofitable, there is nothing in human nature that would compel its occurrence, or make average people unhappy because of its not occurring. Exactly the same arguments that are now used about the impossibility of preventing war were formerly used in defense of duelling, yet few of us feel thwarted because we are not allowed to fight duels.
                                      I am persuaded that there is absolutely no limit to the absurdities that can, by government action, come to be generally believed. Give me an adequate army, with power to provide it with more pay and better food than falls to the lot of the average man, and I will undertake, within thirty years, to make the majority of the population believe that two and two are three, that water freezes when it gets hot and boils when it gets cold, or any other nonsense that might seem to serve the interest of the State. Of course, even when these beliefs had been generated, people would not put the kettle in the ice-box when they wanted it to boil. That cold makes water boil would be a Sunday truth, sacred and mystical, to be professed in awed tones, but not to be acted on in daily life. What would happen would be that any verbal denial of the mystic doctrine would be made illegal, and obstinate heretics would be "frozen" at the stake. No person who did not enthusiastically accept the official doctrine would be allowed to teach or to have any position of power. Only the very highest officials, in their cups, would whisper to each other what rubbish it all is; then they would laugh and drink again. This is hardly a caricature of what happens under some modern governments.
                                      The discovery that man can be scientifically manipulated, and that governments can turn large masses this way or that as they choose, is one of the causes of our misfortunes. There is as much difference between a collection of mentally free citizens and a community molded by modern methods of propaganda as there is between a heap of raw materials and a battleship. Education, which was at first made universal in order that all might be able to read and write, has been found capable of serving quite other purposes. By instilling nonsense it unifies populations and generates collective enthusiasm. If all governments taught the same nonsense, the harm would not be so great. Unfortunately each has its own brand, and the diversity serves to produce hostility between the devotees of different creeds. If there is ever to be peace in the world, governments will have to agree either to inculcate no dogmas, or all to inculcate the same. The former, I fear, is a Utopian ideal, but perhaps they could agree to teach collectively that all public men, everywhere, are completely virtuous and perfectly wise. Perhaps, when the war is over, the surviving politicians may find it prudent to combine on some such programme.
                                      But if conformity has its dangers, so has nonconformity.
                                      Some "advanced thinkers" are of the opinion that any one who differs from the conventional opinion must be in the right. This is a delusion; if it were not, truth would be easier to come by than it is. There are infinite possibilities of error, and more cranks take up unfashionable errors than unfashionable truths. I met once an electrical engineer whose first words to me were: "How do you do? There are two methods of faith-healing, the one practised by Christ and the one practised by most Christian Scientists. I practice the method practiced by Christ." Shortly afterwards, he was sent to prison for making out fraudulent balance-sheets. The law does not look kindly on the intrusion of faith into this region. I knew also an eminent lunacy doctor who took to philosophy, and taught a new logic which, as he frankly confessed, he had learnt from his lunatics. When he died he left a will founding a professorship for the teaching of his new scientific methods, but unfortunately he left no assets. Arithmetic proved recalcitrant to lunatic logic. On one occasion a man came to ask me to recommend some of my books, as he was interested in philosophy. I did so, but he returned next day saying that he had been reading one of them, and had found only one statement he could understand, and that one seemed to him false. I asked him what it was, and he said it was the statement that Julius Caesar is dead. When I asked him why he did not agree, he drew himself up and said: "Because I am Julius Caesar." These examples may suffice to show that you cannot make sure of being right by being eccentric.
                                      Science, which has always had to fight its way against popular beliefs, now has one of its most difficult battles in the sphere of psychology.
                                      People who think they know all about human nature are always hopelessly at sea when they have to do with any abnormality. Some boys never learn to be what, in animals, is called "house trained." The sort of person who won't stand any nonsense deals with such cases by punishment; the boy is beaten, and when he repeats the offense he is beaten worse. All medical men who have studied the matter know that punishment only aggravates the trouble. Sometimes the cause is physical, but usually it is psychological, and only curable by removing some deep-seated and probably unconscious grievance. But most people enjoy punishing anyone who irritates them, and so the medical view is rejected as fancy nonsense. The same sort of thing applies to men who are exhibitionists; they are sent to prison over and over again, but as soon as they come out they repeat the offense. A medical man who specialized in such ailments assured me that the exhibitionist can be cured by the simple device of having trousers that button up the back instead of the front. But this method is not tried because it does not satisfy people's vindictive impulses.
                                      Broadly speaking, punishment is likely to prevent crimes that are sane in origin, but not those that spring from some psychological abnormality. This is now partially recognized; we distinguish between plain theft, which springs from what may be called rational self-interest, and kleptomania, which is a mark of something queer. And homicidal maniacs are not treated like ordinary murderers. But sexual aberrations rouse so much disgust that it is still impossible to have them treated medically rather than punitively. Indignation, though on the whole a useful social force, becomes harmful when it is directed against the victims of maladies that only medical skill can cure.
                                      The same sort of thing happens as regards whole nations. During the last war, very naturally, people's vindictive feelings were aroused against the Germans, who were severely punished after their defeat. Now many people are arguing that the Versailles Treaty was ridiculously mild, since it failed to teach a lesson; this time, we are told, there must be real severity. To my mind, we shall be more likely to prevent a repetition of German aggression if we regard the rank and file of the Nazis as we regard lunatics than if we think of them as merely and simply criminals. Lunatics, of course, have to be restrained; we do not allow them to carry firearms. Similarly the German nation will have to be disarmed. But lunatics are restrained from prudence, not as a punishment, and so far as prudence permits we try to make them happy. Everybody recognizes that a homicidal maniac will only become more homicidal if he is made miserable. In Germany at the present day, there are, of course, many men among the Nazis who are plain criminals, but there must also be many who are more or less mad. Leaving the leaders out of account (I do not urge leniency toward them), the bulk of the German nation is much more likely to learn cooperation with the rest of the world if it is subjected to a kind but firm curative treatment than if it is regarded as an outcast among the nations. Those who are being punished seldom learn to feel kindly toward the men who punish them. And so long as the Germans hate the rest of mankind peace will be precarious.
                                      When one reads of the beliefs of savages, or of the ancient Babylonians and Egyptians, they seem surprising by their capricious absurdity. But beliefs that are just as absurd are still entertained by the uneducated even in the most modem and civilized societies. I have been gravely assured, in America, that people born in March are unlucky and people born in May are peculiarly liable to corns. I do not know the history of these superstitions, but probably they are derived from Babylonian or Egyptian priestly love. Beliefs begin in the higher social strata, and then, like mud in a river, sink gradually downward in the educational scale; they may take 3,000 or 4,000 years to sink all the way. You may find your colored help making some remark that comes straight out of Plato-not the parts of Plato that scholars quote, but the parts where he utters obvious nonsense, such as that men who do not pursue wisdom in this life will be born again as women. Commentators on great philosophers always politely ignore their silly remarks.
                                       Aristotle, in spite of his reputation, is full of absurdities. He says that children should be conceived in the Winter, when the wind is in the North, and that if people marry too young the children will be female. He tells us that the blood of females is blacker then that of males; that the pig is the only animal liable to measles; that an elephant suffering from insomnia should have its shoulders rubbed with salt, olive-oil, and warm water; that women have fewer teeth than men, and so on. Nevertheless, he is considered by the great majority of philosophers a paragon of wisdom.
                                      Superstitions about lucky and unlucky days are almost universal. In ancient times they governed the actions of generals. Among ourselves the prejudice against Friday and the number thirteen is very active; sailors do not like to sail on Friday, and many hotels have no thirteenth floor. The superstitions about Friday and thirteen were once believed by those reputed wise; now such men regard them as harmless follies. But probably 2,000 years hence many beliefs of the wise of our day will have come to seem equally foolish. Man is a credulous animal, and must believesomething; in the absence of good grounds for belief, he will be satisfied with bad ones.
                                      Belief in "nature" and what is "natural" is a source of many errors. It used to be, and to some extent still is, powerfully operative in medicine. The human body, left to itself, has a certain power of curing itself., small cuts usually heal, colds pass off, and even serious diseases sometimes disappear without medical treatment. But aids to nature are very desirable, even in these cases. Cuts may turn septic if not disinfected, colds may turn to pneumonia, and serious diseases are only left without treatment by explorers and travellers in remote regions, who have no option. Many practices which have come to seem "natural" were originally "unnatural," for instance clothing and washing. Before men adopted clothing they must have found it impossible to live in cold climates. Where there is not a modicum of cleanliness, populations suffer from various diseases, such as typhus, from which Western nations have become exempt. Vaccination was (and by some still is) objected to as "unnatural." But there is no consistency in such objections, for no one supposes that a broken bone can be mended by "natural" behavior. Eating cooked food is "unnatural"; so is heating our houses. The Chinese philosopher Lao-tse, whose traditional date is about 600 B.C., objected to roads and bridges and boats as "unnatural," and in his disgust at such mechanistic devices left China and went to live among the Western barbarians. Every advance in civilization has been denounced as unnatural while it was recent.
                                      The commonest objection to birth control is that it is against "nature." (For some reason we are not allowed to say that celibacy is against nature; the only reason I can think of is that it is not new.) Malthus saw only three ways of keeping down the population; moral restraint, vice, and misery. Moral restraint, he admitted, was not likely to be practised on a large scale. "Vice," i.e., birth control, he, as a clergyman, viewed with abhorrence. There remained misery. In his comfortable parsonage, he contemplated the misery of the great majority of mankind with equanimity, and pointed out the fallacies of reformers who hoped to alleviate it. Modern theological opponents of birth control are less honest. They pretend to think that God will provide, however many mouths there may be to feed. They ignore the fact that He has never done so hitherto, but has left mankind exposed to periodical famines in which millions died of hunger. They must be deemed to hold-if they are saying what they believe-that from this moment onward God will work a continual miracle of loaves and fishes which He has hitherto thought unnecessary. Or perhaps they will say that suffering here below is of no importance; what matters is the hereafter. By their own theology, most of the children whom their opposition to birth control will cause to exist will go to hell. We must suppose, therefore, that they oppose the amelioration of life on earth because they think it a good thing that many millions should suffer eternal torment. By comparison with them, Malthus appears merciful.
                                      Women, as the object of our strongest love and aversion, rouse complex emotions which are embodied in proverbial "wisdom."
                                      Almost everybody allows himself or herself some entirely unjustifiable generalization on the subject of woman. Married men, when they generalize on that subject, judge by their wives; women judge by themselves. It would be amusing to write a history of men's views on women. In antiquity, when male supremacy was unquestioned and Christian ethics were still unknown, women were harmless but rather silly, and a man who took them seriously was somewhat despised. Plato thinks it a grave objection to the drama that the playwright has to imitate women in creating his female roles. With the coming of Christianity woman teak on a new part, that of the temptress; but at the same time she was also found capable of being a saint. In Victorian days the saint was much more emphasized than the temptress; Victorian men could not admit themselves susceptible to temptation. The superior virtue of women was made a reason for keeping them out of politics, where, it was held, a lofty virtue is impossible. But the early feminists turned the argument round, and contended that the participation of women would ennoble politics. Since this has turned out to be an illusion, there has been less talk of women's superior virtue, but there are still a number of men who adhere to the monkish view of woman as the temptress. Women themselves, for the most part, think of themselves as the sensible sex, whose business it is to undo the harm that comes of men's impetuous follies. For my part I distrust all generalizations about women, favorable and unfavorable, masculine and feminine, ancient and modern; all alike, I should say, result from paucity of experience.
                                      The deeply irrational attitude of each sex toward women may be seen in novels, particularly in bad novels. In bad novels by men, there is the woman with whom the author is in love, who usually possesses every charm, but is somewhat helpless, and requires male protection; sometimes, however, like Shakespeare's Cleopatra, she is an object of exasperated hatred, and is thought to be deeply and desperately wicked. In portraying the heroine, the male author does not write from observation, but merely objectives his own emotions. In regard to his other female characters, he is more objective, and may even depend upon his notebook; but when he is in love, his passion makes a mist between him and the object of his devotion. Women novelists, also, have two kinds of women in their books. One is themselves, glamorous and kind, and object of lust to the wicked and of love to the good, sensitive, high-souled, and constantly misjudged. The other kind is represented by all other women, and is usually portrayed as petty, spiteful, cruel, and deceitful. It would seem that to judge women without bias is not easy either for men or for women.
                                      Generalizations about national characteristics are just as common and just as unwarranted as generalizations about women. Until 1870, the Germans were thought of as a nation of spectacled professors, evolving everything out of their inner consciousness, and scarcely aware of the outer world, but since 1870 this conception has had to be very sharply revised. Frenchmen seem to be thought of by most Americans as perpetually engaged in amorous intrigue; Walt Whitman, in one of his catalogues, speaks of "the adulterous French couple on the sly settee." Americans who go to live in France are astonished, and perhaps disappointed, by the intensity of family life. Before the Russian Revolution, the Russians were credited with a mystical Slav soul, which, while it incapacitated them for ordinary sensible behavior, gave them a kind of deep wisdom to which more practical nations could not hope to attain. Suddenly everything was changed: mysticism was taboo, and only the most earthly ideals were tolerated. The truth is that what appears to one nation as the national character of another depends upon a few prominent individuals, or upon the class that happens to have power. For this reason, all generalizations on this subject are liable to be completely upset by any important political change.
                                      To avoid the various foolish opinions to which mankind are prone, no superhuman genius is required. A few simple rules will keep you, not from all error, but from silly error.
                                      If the matter is one that can be settled by observation, make the observation yourself. Aristotle could have avoided the mistake of thinking that women have fewer teeth than men, by the simple device of asking Mrs. Aristotle to keep her mouth open while he counted. He did not do so because he thought he knew. Thinking that you know when in fact you don't is a fatal mistake, to which we are all prone. I believe myself that hedgehogs eat black beetles, because I have been told that they do; but if I were writing a book on the habits of hedgehogs, I should not commit myself until I had seen one enjoying this unappetizing diet. Aristotle, however, was less cautious. Ancient and medieval authors knew all about unicorns and salamanders; not one of them thought it necessary to avoid dogmatic statements about them because he had never seen one of them.
                                      Many matters, however, are less easily brought to the test of experience. If, like most of mankind, you have passionate convictions on many such matters, there are ways in which you can make yourself aware of your own bias. If an opinion contrary to your own makes you angry, that is a sign that you are subconsciously aware of having no good reason for thinking as you do. If some one maintains that two and two are five, or that Iceland is on the equator, you feel pity rather than anger, unless you know so little of arithmetic or geography that his opinion shakes your own contrary conviction. The most savage controversies are those about matters as to which there is no good evidence either way. Persecution is used in theology, not in arithmetic, because in arithmetic there is knowledge, but in theology there is only opinion. So whenever you find yourself getting angry about a difference of opinion, be on your guard; you will probably find, on examination, that your belief is going beyond what the evidence warrants.
                                      A good way of ridding yourself of certain kinds of dogmatism is to become aware of opinions held in social circles different from your own. When I was young, I lived much outside my own country in France, Germany, Italy, and the United States. I found this very profitable in diminishing the intensity of insular prejudice. If you cannot travel, seek out people with whom you disagree, and read a newspaper belonging to a party that is not yours. If the people and the newspaper seem mad, perverse, and wicked, remind yourself that you seem so to them. In this opinion both parties may be right, but they cannot both be wrong. This reflection should generate a certain caution.
                                      Becoming aware of foreign customs, however, does not always have a beneficial effect. In the seventeenth century, when the Manchus conquered China, it was the custom among the Chinese for the women to have small feet, and among the Manchus for the men to wear-pigtails. Instead of each dropping their own foolish custom, they each adopted the foolish custom of the other, and the Chinese continued to wear pigtails until they shook off the dominion of the Manchus in the revolution of 1911.
                                      For those who have enough psychological imagination, it is a good plan to imagine an argument with a person having a different bias. This has one advantage, and only one, as compared with actual conversation with opponents; this one advantage is that the method is not subject to the same limitations of time or space. Mahatma Gandhi deplores railways and steamboats and machinery; he would like to undo the whole of the industrial revolution. You may never have an opportunity of actually meeting any one who holds this opinion, because in Western countries most people take the advantage of modern technique for granted. But if you want to make sure that you are right in agreeing with the prevailing opinion, you will find it a good plan to test the arguments that occur to you by considering what Gandhi might say in refutation of them. I have sometimes been led actually to change my mind as a result of this kind of imaginary dialogue, and, short of this, I have frequently found myself growing less dogmatic and cocksure through realizing the possible reasonableness of a hypothetical opponent.
                                      Be very wary of opinions that flatter your self-esteem. Both men and women, nine times out of ten, are firmly convinced of the superior excellence of their own sex. There is abundant evidence on both sides. If you are a man, you can point out that most poets and men of science are male; if you are a woman, you can retort that so are most criminals. The question is inherently insoluble, but self esteem conceals this from most people. We are all, whatever part of the world we come from, persuaded that our own nation is superior to all others. Seeing that each nation has its characteristic merits and demerits, we adjust our standard of values so as to make out that the merits possessed by our nation are the really important ones, while its demerits are comparatively trivial. Here, again, the rational man will admit that the question is one to which there is no demonstrably right answer. It is more difficult to deal with the self esteem of man as man, because we cannot argue out the matter with some non-human mind. The only way I know of dealing with this general human conceit is to remind ourselves that man is a brief episode in the life of a small planet in a little corner of the universe, and that, for aught we know, other parts of the cosmos may contain beings as superior to ourselves as we are to jellyfish.
                                      Other passions besides self-esteem are common sources of error; of these perhaps the most important is fear. Fear sometimes operates directly, by inventing rumors of disaster in war-time, or by imagining objects of terror, such as ghosts; sometimes it operates indirectly, by creating belief in something comforting, such as the elixir of life, or heaven for ourselves and hell for our enemies. Fear has many forms-fear of death, fear of the dark, fear of the unknown, fear of the herd, and that vague generalized fear that comes to those who conceal from themselves their more specific terrors. Until you have admitted your own fears to yourself, and have guarded yourself by a difficult effort of will against their mythmaking power, you cannot hope to think truly about many matters of great importance, especially those with which religious beliefs are concerned. Fear is the main source of superstition and one of the main sources of cruelty. To conquer fear is the beginning of wisdom, in the pursuit of truth as in the endeavor after a worthy manner of life.
                                      There are two ways of avoiding fear: one is by persuading ourselves that we are immune from disaster, and the other is by the practice of sheer courage. The latter is difficult, and to everybody becomes impossible at a certain point. The former has therefore always been more popular. Primitive magic has the purpose of securing safety, either by injuring enemies, or by protecting oneself by talismans, spells, or incantations. Without any essential change, belief in such ways of avoiding danger survived throughout the many centuries of Babylonian civilization, spread from Babylon throughout the empire of Alexander, and was acquired by the Romans in the course of their absorption of Hellenistic culture. From the Romans it descended to medieval Christendom and Islam. Science has now lessened the belief in magic, but many people place more faith in mascots than they are willing to avow, and sorcery, while condemned by the Church, is still officially a possible sin.
                                      Magic, however, was a crude way of avoiding terrors, and, moreover, not a very effective way, for wicked magicians might always prove stronger than good ones. In the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries, dread of witches and sorcerers led to the burning of hundreds of thousands convicted of these crimes. But newer beliefs, particularly as to the future life, sought more effective ways of combating fear. Socrates on the day of his death (if Plato is to be believed) expressed the conviction that in the next world he would live in the company of the gods and heroes, and surrounded by just spirits who would never object to his endless argumentation. Plato, in his "Republic," laid it down that cheerful views of the next world must be enforced by the State, not because they were true, but to make soldiers more willing to die in battle. He would have none of the traditional myths about Hades, because they represented the spirits of the dead as unhappy.
                                      Orthodox Christianity, in the Ages of Faith, laid down very definite rules for salvation. First, you must be baptized; then, you must avoid all theological error; last, you must, before dying, repent of your sins and receive absolution. All this would not save you from purgatory, but it would insure your ultimate arrival in heaven. It was not necessary to know theology. An eminent cardinal stated authoritatively that the requirements of orthodoxy would be satisfied if you murmured on your death-bed: "I believe all that the Church believes; the Church believes all that I believe." These very definite directions ought to have made Catholics sure of finding the way to heaven. Nevertheless, the dread of hell persisted, and has caused, in recent times, a great softening of the dogmas as to who will be damned. The doctrine, professed by many modern Christians, that everybody will go to heaven, ought to do away with the fear of death, but in fact this fear is too instinctive to be easily vanquished. F. W. H. Myers, whom spiritualism had converted to belief in a future life, questioned a woman who had lately lost her daughter as to what she supposed had become of her soul. The mother replied: "Oh, well, I suppose she is enjoying eternal bliss, but I wish you wouldn't talk about such unpleasant subjects." In spite of all that theology can do, heaven remains, to most people, an "unpleasant subject."
                                      The most refined religions, such as those of Marcus Aurelius and Spinoza, are still concerned with the conquest of fear. The Stoic doctrine was simple: it maintained that the only true good is virtue, of which no enemy can deprive me; consequently, there is no need to fear enemies. The difficulty was that no one could really believe virtue to be the only good, not even Marcus Aurelius, who, as emperor, sought not only to make his subjects virtuous, but to protect them against barbarians, pestilences, and famines. Spinoza taught a somewhat similar doctrine. According to him, our true good consists in indifference to our mundane fortunes. Both these men sought to escape from fear by pretending that such things as physical suffering are not really evil. This is a noble way of escaping from fear, but is still based upon false belief. And if genuinely accepted, it would have the bad effect of making men indifferent, not only to their own sufferings, but also to those of others.
                                      Under the influence of great fear, almost everybody becomes superstitious. The sailors who threw Jonah overboard imagined his presence to be the cause of the storm which threatened to wreck their ship. In a similar spirit the Japanese, at the time of the Tokyo earthquake took to massacring Koreans and Liberals. When the Romans won victories in the Punic wars, the Carthaginians became persuaded that their misfortunes were due to a certain laxity which had crept into the worship of Moloch. Moloch liked having children sacrificed to him, and preferred them aristocratic; but the noble families of Carthage had adopted the practice of surreptitiously substituting plebeian children for their own offspring. This, it was thought, had displeased the god, and at the worst moments even the most aristocratic children were duly consumed in the fire. Strange to say, the Romans were victorious in spite of this democratic reform on the part of their enemies.
                                      Collective fear stimulates herd instinct, and tends to produce ferocity toward those who are not regarded as members of the herd. So it was in the French Revolution, when dread of foreign armies produced the reign of terror. And it is to be feared that the Nazis, as defeat draws nearer, will increase the intensity of their campaign for exterminating Jews. Fear generates impulses of cruelty, and therefore promotes such superstitious beliefs as seem to justify cruelty. Neither a man nor a crowd nor a nation can be trusted to act humanely or to think sanely under the influence of a great fear. And for this reason poltroons are more prone to cruelty than brave men, and are also more prone to superstition. When I say this, I am thinking of men who are brave in all respects, not only in facing death. Many a man will have the courage to die gallantly, but will not have the courage to say, or even to think, that the cause for which he is asked to die is an unworthy one. Obloquy is, to most men, more painful than death; that is one reason why, in times of collective excitement, so few men venture to dissent from the prevailing opinion. No Carthaginian denied Moloch, because to do so would have required more courage than was required- to face death in battle.
                                      But we have been getting too solemn. Superstitions are not al-ways dark and cruel; often they add to the gaiety of life. I received once a communication from the god Osiris, giving me his telephone number; he lived, at that time, in a suburb of Boston. Although I did not enroll myself among his worshipers, his letter gave me pleasure. I have frequently received letters from men announcing themselves as the Messiah, and urging me not to omit to mention this important fact in my lectures. During prohibition, there was a sect which maintained that the communion service ought to be celebrated in whiskey, not in wine; this tenet gave them a legal right to a supply of hard liquor, and the sect grew rapidly. There is in England a sect which maintains that the English are the lost ten tribes; there is a stricter sect, which maintains that they are only the tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh. Whenever I encounter a member of either of these sects, I profess myself an adherent of the other, and much pleasant argumentation results. I like also the men who study the Great Pyramid, with a view to deciphering its mystical lore. Many great books have been written on this subject, some of which have been presented to me by their authors. It is a singular fact that the Great Pyramid always predicts the history of the world accurately up to the date of publication of the book in question, but after that date it becomes less reliable. Generally the author expects, very soon, wars in Egypt, followed by Armageddon and the coming of Antichrist, but by this time so many people have been recognized as Antichrist that the reader is reluctantly driven to skepticism.
                                      I admire especially a certain prophetess who lived beside a lake in Northern New York State about the year 1820. She announced to her numerous followers that she possessed the power of walking on water, and that she proposed to do so at 11 o'clock on a certain morning. At the stated time, the faithful assembled in their thousands beside the lake. She spoke to them, saying: "Are you all entirely persuaded that I can walk on water?" With one voice they replied: "We are.""In that case," she announced, "there is not need for me to do so." And they all went home much edified.
                                      Perhaps the world would lose some of its interest and variety if such beliefs were wholly replaced by cold science. Perhaps we may allow ourselves to be glad of the Abecedarians, who were so-called because, having rejected all profane learning, they thought it wicked to learn the ABC. And we may enjoy the perplexity of the South American Jesuit who wondered how the sloth could have traveled, since the Flood, all the way from Mount Ararat to Peru-a journey which its extreme tardiness of locomotion rendered almost incredible. A wise man will enjoy the goods of which there is a plentiful supply, and of intellectual rubbish he will find an abundant diet, in our own age as in every other.
                                      http://www.personal.kent.edu/~rmuhamma/Philosophy/RBwritings/outIntellectRubbish.htm

                                      Greek civilization. Alexander in Multan, karay saan (will do) -- Salman Rashid. Alexander did not die. He made it back by the skin of his teeth. Sept. 326 BCE.

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                                      I am grateful to Shri G. Parthasarathy who has given me the link with the following insight:

                                           You message made most interesting reading. http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2015/11/greek-civilization-how-do-historians.html

                                            Some of the best works about Alexander's travails along the Indus Valley have been written by a Pakistani historian Salman Rashid. Salman is one of those  rare classical historians  in Pakistan, who does not echo the rubbish authored by the country's "official historians," who pretend that history commenced in the Indus Valley only after the first Arab invasion of Sind by Mohammed bin Qasim.

                                           There is little doubt that the resistance they faced along the Banks of Jhelum shook Alexander's army. But, the Greeks received their final and decisive setback when Alexander's soldiers virtually rebelled during the siege of Multan, then defended by a Seraiki/Rajput garrison.

                                            You may like to download the link given below to an article written by Salman Rashid in the Express Tribune Newspaper of Pakistan on the  siege of Multan.

                                            With warm regards,

                                                                                                   G Parthasarathy

                                      http://tribune.com.pk/story/215087/alexander-in-multan/

                                      The Express Tribune

                                      The writer is author of Jhelum: City of the Vitasta (Sang-e-Meel, 2005) salman.rashid@tribune.com.pk
                                      Back in 2001, when I was making the PTV documentary Sindhia mein Sikander (on Alexander’s Indian campaign), I discovered a large body of local myth. One was the ridiculous pride that everyone took in the fact that Alexander of Macedonia tarried in their village for ‘six months’ — always six, never more, nor less. The other, a Multan-centric one, was about how the people of that city killed the conqueror.
                                      Having sailed down the Jhelum from the vicinity of Mandi Bahauddin, to its junction with the Chenab near Jhang, Alexander made forced marches across what was then sand desert, through modern Toba Tek Singh to Kamalia, Tulumba and eventually Multan — “the principal town of the Mallian people”, as the historian Arrian tells us.
                                      The city of Multan lay around the lofty battlements of a strongly fortified citadel with two perimeter walls that stood in the area taken by the tomb of Rukne Alam today. Alexander led the attack with one division supported by another, under his general Perdiccas. Alexander’s troops managed to take down a gate, massive as it must have been, penetrating into the first corridor.
                                      As the foreigners milled about in the corridor between the two defensive walls, they saw above them the battlements virtually crawling with the defenders. As Alexander ordered sapping operations, he also called for scaling ladders to be put up against the walls. Impetuous as he was, Alexander did not like the slow progress. Snatching a ladder from the man carrying it, Alexander personally placed it against the wall and, crouching under his shield, clambered up to the crenulations.
                                      Immediately behind him was Peucestas, carrying the sacred shield that Alexander always used in battle. Following Peucestas was Leonnatus, the king’s personal bodyguard.
                                      Having reduced the defenders on the battlements, Alexander stood on the crenulations in full view of both the defenders and his own troops. While his troops were hurrying to join him on the fort walls, Alexander jumped inside the fort where he met the best of the Rajput troops from Multan and as far away as Rajasthan. In the thick of this battle, as he raised his sword arm to strike an adversary, an arrow from a Multani archer found its target.
                                      The arrow, having pierced his corselet, lodged in his breast on the right side. Alexander fell. We are told that he bled from the mouth, the blood being mixed with air bubbles, meaning that his lung was punctured. There is then a very moving heroic scene preserved in the histories: Perdiccas standing astride the still body, protecting it with the shield of Achilles, and Leonnatus desperately holding off the attackers.
                                      Meanwhile, Alexander’s panicked soldiers had gained the wall by escalade. Soon the gates were thrown open and the fort taken. Though he gave his army a fright, Alexander did not die. He made it back by the skin of his teeth. This was September 326 BCE.
                                      Four years later, in June 322, Alexander died apparently of a fever in Babylon. In between the injury in Multan and his final exit from near Gwadar, Alexander fought several battles, notably those of Rahim Yar Khan, Sehwan and Hyderabad. And he survived the horrendous march across the parched wastes of Makran. Yet so many in Multan believe he died of their arrow.
                                      It is said, in jest of course, that the Multani phrase ‘karay saan,’ (will do) means something may (or may not) get done in the next several years after the utterance. I joke with my Multani friends that if they want to believe it was their arrow that killed the Macedonian, then we must also take the karay saan joke at face value. Surely only such an arrow could have taken four years to kill a man.
                                      Published in The Express Tribune, July 23rd, 2011.

                                      Reader Comments (17)

                                      • Nadeem
                                        Jul 23, 2011 - 12:24AM
                                        Good article. I would really like to see more articles from you focusing on the ancient history of lands that are now part of Pakistan.
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                                      • Tanoli of karachi.
                                        Jul 23, 2011 - 12:45AM
                                        hahahahahhaha funny last words well written man but its true one tine one yoonani guy told
                                        me alex made a mistake instead of going west he went to india got killed poor baby.
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                                      • khan
                                        Jul 23, 2011 - 2:15AM
                                        Thank you for such an informative article.
                                        Please carry on writing in the same vein…..
                                        4
                                      • QB
                                        Jul 23, 2011 - 4:15AM
                                        Great article. We need more like this to explore our history.
                                        I believe if it was USA than they would have made a monument at the site where Alexander was shot and would have earned millions of dollars by now in tourism — One of these days when our country will be safer, we should be able to do so much to explore our rich history and show it to the world.
                                        6
                                      • Irshad Khan
                                        Jul 23, 2011 - 10:46AM
                                        History is extremely interesting subject for those who want to know about past of the region, of the city and of the world where they live. It also helps to plan for the future. It gives pride of being part of that and also teaches many lessons. It promotes the wish of travelling and learn many things which you can`t, while sitting at a place. Thanks, Mr. Rasheed, for writing this small and very interesting historical piece. I request for continuing. It is very essential, because History has become most neglected and most forgotten subject in Pakistan. People are unaware about their backgrounds and historical importance of this land. I believe majority people of the country do not know anything about history of Indus civlisation, Moenjodaro, Peshawar(Qissakhani Bazaar), Lahore and many other famous and small places but had and are great historical importance. People now avoid to talk on history and other academic subjects but only on lifestyles, eatings, shopping malls, restaurants which have become symbol of status. Our strong media has also completely neglected History of the country; Even the recent history of the country is being twisted in favour of tribes and Powerful families. Kindly try to make things straight and continue to write about recent history too. write, I take the opportunity to also request the media to record interviews of those people who saw movement of Indepence and creation of Pakistan. A very little number is still alive and available, who can narrate the correct history. This is also important, rather very important otherwise we will be left as rudderless ship.
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                                      • SharifL
                                        Jul 23, 2011 - 11:56AM
                                        Good article. I think Tribune should encourage more articles on history and other social areas and not only current day politics.
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                                      • Malay
                                        Jul 23, 2011 - 2:13PM
                                        As always very informative.
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                                      • M Ali Khan
                                        Jul 23, 2011 - 4:07PM
                                        And yet according to most Pakistanis, our history only starts when Muhammad bin Qasim invaded Sind on the orders of his tyrant commander/uncle Hajjaj bin Yusaf.
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                                      • SaudiRules
                                        Jul 23, 2011 - 6:32PM
                                        I thought our history began after Ghouri invaded the infidels in sindh! We should not be impressed by the infidel history of the hindus/sindhus of the Multan who fought gallantly against sikander as we are taught that the hindu soldiers are coward and our great golf-playing, businessmen jawans are better than 10 hindus-just doing their job as soldiers!
                                        Mr. Salman Rashid please stop spoiling the young pakistani mind with the infidel history! What is next, you are going to tell us that Lahore was founded by the son of hindu god-king Rama Luv?
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                                      • Frank
                                        Jul 23, 2011 - 6:44PM
                                        Alexander jumped inside the fort where
                                        he met the best of the Rajput troops
                                        from Multan and as far away as
                                        Rajasthan.
                                        Alexander lived in the 4th century BC. The Rajput caste came into existence during the 8th and 9th centuries AD as a caste of landowners in North West India paying tributes to various Hindu kings, most prominently the Gurjara-Pratiharas. The Rajputs only came into prominence in the 11th century AD after Sultan Mahmud’s raids helped to free them by weakening their Gurjara-Prathihara overlords.
                                        With a gap of more than a millenium between Alexander and the Rajputs I wonder how they managed to meet on the battlefield.
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                                      • Gandeto
                                        Jul 23, 2011 - 7:35PM
                                        Well aware of the event in question and yet very refreshing to hear it again from you. Good read as always. I am glad you did not cross the line and portray Alexander as Greek. Looking forward to your next piece of historical perspective. Greetings from a Macedonian colleague.
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                                      • Tanoli of karachi.
                                        Jul 23, 2011 - 7:43PM
                                        @ Frank no man next pakistani missile name gonna be Alex the macedonian.
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                                      • Neville Batliboi
                                        Jul 24, 2011 - 12:22AM
                                        I would like to submit;http://maps.google.com/maps? of Alexander's exit down the Indus,
                                        as detailed by Salman Saab in his informative article above.
                                        Recommend
                                      • pardesi
                                        Jul 24, 2011 - 11:23AM
                                        @ Frank
                                        you assume it was the heroic islamic warriors who fought with alexander then?
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                                      • Observer
                                        Jul 24, 2011 - 9:33PM
                                        @SaudiRules:
                                        Liked your post !! From your name it appeared you were hardcore Islamic.
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                                      • Bharatvarsha
                                        Jul 25, 2011 - 1:03AM
                                        Dear Sir, I’m a big fan of your writings, please continue the great work of elucidating your readers. Btw great article as always.
                                      • JS
                                        Jul 26, 2011 - 1:10PM
                                        Love ya salman saab!!

                                      Arun Shourie ji,go out and fight, nimitta matram bhava savya saachin. I fully empathise with Sandeep's anguish.

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                                      Is This The Winter Of His Discontent?
                                      Sandeep Balakrishna
                                      The writer is the Director and Chief Editor, India Facts Research Centre, the author of Tipu Sultan: the Tyrant of Mysore, and has translated S.L.Bhyrappa's Aavarana from Kannada to English.
                                      Arun Shourie’s bitterness was evident throughout his interview with Karan Thapar. However, as a writer, thinker, intellectual, activist and public figure who courageously fought in the face of adversity, the nation owes Arun Shourie.
                                      If he Whom mutual league,
                                      United thoughts and counsels, equal hope
                                      And hazard in the Glorious Enterprize,
                                      Joynd with me once, now misery hath joynd
                                      In equal ruin: into what Pit thou seest
                                      From what highth fall’n!
                                      The last surviving Intellectual Godzilla—that fought the good fight—of the so-called Indian Right Wing has fallen.
                                      Or has he?
                                      Did ambition or frustration or both guide Arun Shourie’s latest acid-dipped interview to Karan Thapar? Or is he only clamouring for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s attention?
                                      Without second guessing him, we can get three points out of the way at the outset.
                                      First, Arun Shourie’s bitterness was evident throughout. That Shourie who had skewered this same Thapar on several occasions in the past with detailed dossiers was reduced to—and I say this with great responsibility—what appeared a scripted show which required him to only agree with Thapar.    
                                      Second, it was clear that he reserved most of his anger for only a certain section of the BJP. Nothing else explains his vociferous agreement with every phony canard that Thapar fished out of his rabbit-hat. If one looks at Shourie’s record, he was the one who for much of his life wrote longforms and books precisely rebutting these sorts of canards.
                                      Third, as a consequence of the second, Arun Shourie has suddenly become the darling of the very folks whose bluff he called, whose shenanigans he exposed, whose insults he suffered—but didn’t cower—relentlessly, mercilessly almost throughout his life.
                                      ******
                                      Whether one may or not believe it, Narendra Modi is in many ways destiny’s child. Nothing else can explain how he managed to tide over the worst of the unrelenting, vicious onslaughts sustained over a decade; and then there were so many things that could go horribly wrong at any stage throughout his high-voltage campaign. That he pulled off such a blockbuster victory can in the final tally of things be largely attributed to destiny or a higher power or whatever you want to call it. “Superstition” and “blind belief” will also do.  
                                      Yet, this victory or destiny favouring him didn’t come overnight. Indeed, a lot of things came together to make Narendra Modi the Prime Minister. Among others, Arun Shourie’s lifelong, painstaking contribution to the so-called “Right Wing” intellectual discourse stands right on top of that.
                                      Hailing from what I call the Sita Ram Goel School, he awakened about two generations of Indians to a discourse rooted in integrity and a simple but unflinching commitment for truth and the nation, by leading by example. But for his predecessors and likeminded contemporaries, these would have been yet another in the long line of lost generations, misled and marred by Nehruvian Islamism that is at the root of most of this country’s problems.  
                                      Arun Shourie, together with Ram Swarup, Sita Ram Goel, K.S. Lal and others, constructed the inspirational foundations of the so-called “Right Wing” discourse in India in extremely adverse circumstances, often at great personal and professional risk. It is thus both ironical and tragic when today, he agrees with Karan Thapar about “rising intolerance” in the Modi regime—Arun Shourie had the first-hand taste of experiencing the tenderness of Indira Gandhi’s Emergency.
                                      To truly appreciate how Shourie changed and influenced public discourse, one must recall the sheer sweep and depth of the body of his work, apartfrom his investigative journalism, newspaper columns and activism.
                                      From politics, religion, history, communism, law and judiciary, bureaucracy and administration, democracy and parliament, internal and external security, there’s perhaps no subject he’s not delved into in-depth. His research was backed by unfalsifiable and mountainous facts—one reason for the bulk of most of his books—and was truly insightful and path-breaking. It is a testimony to solidity that the corpus of his work has beenbesmirched but has never been rebutted.       
                                      But for his Eminent Historians, how many would have known the scale and extent of the national betrayal in the ICHR? Or for that matter, the kind of political vandalism that went on during “Mr. Clean” Rajiv Gandhi’s regime (These Lethal, Inexorable Laws: Rajiv, His Men and His Regime)? At the height of the Ram Janmabhoomi movement, when the entire secular press had ganged up to choke the discourse emanating from the pro-Janmabhoomi side, Arun Shourie gave space to Sita Ram Goel in the Indian Express without which most wouldn’t have heard of the masterly two-volume Hindu Temples: What Happened to Them. Shourie was fired from his job for this impudence.
                                      Most of all, Arun Shourie showed how one could stand up to Communist—morphed into secular-liberal after the fall of the USSR—bullying, scare tactics, and slander-as-public-discourse. Indeed, this has remained unchanged even as I type this: count the number of instances of manufactured outrage and calumny ever since Modi became PM—the latest being the Award Returns national drama. As the respected Dr. Shankar Sharan sums it up, Communist “discourse” is Gaali Shastra(Treatise of Scatology).
                                      Without exaggeration, if the online space—including social media—is today dominated by the so-called “Hindu Right,” its underpinnings can reasonably be found in Arun Shourie’s body of work among others of his kind.
                                      Equally, his record of intellectual and personal integrity has remained intact. Considering the fact that he handled two heavyweight ministries in a single term and did exceptionally well in both with no allegations of corruption or wrongdoing. Given the record of Indian politicians for most of the period after Independence, this is no minor achievement.
                                      The current outrage against Shourie by (what I assume by now are) his former supporters is rooted in how he has apparently set fire to this long and gallant record. To put it more bluntly, his fall from grace. Yet, at a level, the outrage has some merit although it has exploded disproportionately—labelling him a Congress mole, anti-national, “worst turncoat,” traitor, and so on.
                                      ******
                                      If we travel back in time, one of the reasons why P V Narasimha Rao, the PM who unshackled India’s economy could do that was because he successfully ensured that Sonia Gandhi came nowhere close to wrecking the said unshackling.
                                      If we travel further down to Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s prime-ministership, India had become vastly different. There was optimism and hope: recall Arun Shourie’s own three part Indian Express article-cum-warning. The titles of two parts were especially clairvoyant: Before the Whining Drowns it, Listen to the New India and This is India’s Moment, but only a Moment, Can We Grasp it?  
                                      Unfortunately, we went for the Congress-secular-media manufactured whining and didn’t grasp the moment, and the nation was submerged in a ten-year long nightmare.
                                      Here are some lengthy excerpts from those August 2003 pieces:
                                      Infosys had not even been born 25 years ago. Wipro was a company selling vegetable oil. Indeed, other than the Tata” in Tata Consultancy Services, there is scarcely a name in the IT industry that was known then.
                                      […]
                                      And these 26-year-olds are changing Indias perception also of itself: that India can; that, therefore, we should face the world with confidence.
                                      […]
                                      On the one hand, we have unbounded opportunities and incomparable advantages to seize them. On the other, there is the fate that will surely befall us if we falter. Unemployment will reach such proportions that social unrest will become unmanageable. Similarly, if the rates of growth of India and China continue to differ by the margins of the past 15 years, within the next 15 years the Chinese economy will be six times that of India. And the consequences will be worse than we can imagine.
                                      […]
                                      We have become what an American author calls “Negaholics” addicted to the negative as an alcoholic is to drink. Ever so many of us are unaware of even the elementary examples that have been listed above.
                                      […]
                                      I have had occasion to travel abroad several times in the past two-three years. Each time I have been struck by the contrast between the way India is looked upon abroad, and the way we look upon it here.

                                      There is an equally telling symptom here at home there is much greater confidence in the Indian industrial class than there is in the rhetoric of politicians who ostensibly are shouting on behalf of and to save that industry!
                                      […]
                                      But the main solutions lie, as usual, not in the economic realm. They lie in political arrangements, in discourse. We must reduce the frequency of elections: schedule elections, as the vice-president and the deputy prime minister have proposed, to state assemblies and to the Lok Sabha simultaneously; fixed terms for legislatures…
                                      […]
                                      Even before such changes are put into effect, and even after they have been instituted, we have to make everyone see that change cannot be blocked.
                                      […]
                                      Not the details of economic policythat is not where the impediments lie. The way we look at things, our discourse, the drag of interests that are vested in the way things are;these are what we need to change. [Emphasis added]
                                      Without sounding presumptuous, it’ll be worth our time to reflect deeply on this, and know for ourselves how far down the abyss India plummeted in the next decade. A Chief Worthy of the selfsame Infosys is today issuing statements echoing the phony drumbeat of said “rising intolerance” while another had opted to become a Minister in the regime that oversaw the Decade of Decay.  
                                      Like in Vajpayee’s time, today’s India too is characterized by hope and optimism, and the same whining that is now backed by more numerous and louder voices.  
                                      However, there’s a key difference: Vajpayee could manage to push reforms because Sonia Gandhi hadn’t yet tasted power directly. And as recent history shows, the 2004-2014 decade witnessed how almost all key institutions and offices of the Government were massively subverted once she tasted power and wielded it absolutely. Murmurs about an essentially Congress-loyal bureaucracy running-riot-by-stalling have only increased in recent times.
                                      And so, one of the greatest challenges that Modi faces is to thoroughly clean up this dangerous mess that the Congress has left behind. Given the strong roots of the 60 plus years of the Nehruvian ecosystem in almost all spheres, and given how even a petty robbery is seen as an opportunity to pull down Modi, this won’t prove easy.
                                      *****
                                      It was certainly unfortunate to exclude Arun Shourie from the Government. Yet, it is equally true that he could’ve expressed his disappointment in a far more measured fashion than taking potshots at Modi and the BJP—potshots of the same colour that he had fought against throughout his life. Thanks to this, he is now seen as having joined the ranks of Karan Thapar who had brazenly called for the “sudden removal of Modi.” Needless, Thapar is obviously gleeful.
                                      Whatever the political or other outcome of this episode, it is a great illustration of the need to have Hamsaksheera Viveka: where the swan sips only the milk content in milk and leaves the water content behind.
                                      As a writer, thinker, intellectual, activist and public figure who courageously fought in the face of adversity, retained his integrity, and shaped the thoughts of nearly two generations, the nation owes Arun Shourie. And he, like any human being is endowed with ambition, disappointment and the rest. And so, it’s best to maintain dignified silence on the issue instead of prolonging it.
                                      In the end, perchance had Shourie heeded this Shakespearean titbit, Karan Thapar wouldn’t have had the opportunity to conduct the interview:
                                      I have no spur
                                      To prick the sides of my intent, but only
                                      Vaulting ambition, which o’erleaps itself,
                                      And falls on th’other.
                                      For me, Arun Shourie will always remain one among the Four Rishis of contemporary Bharata who have deeply, positively shaped my studies, thoughts, and outlook.  
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                                        I read through your poignant piece veery carefully, Sandeep ji. Your Guru has fallen. You adore your Guru and he didn't have to take recourse to wise-cracks of Shakespeare. If only he had folowed the guidance of Gitacharya, he wouldn't have made an ass of himself before the whatever Thapar. He has exhibited loss of विवेचना discrimination in appreciating the merits (demerits) of others, Surely, as an ex-IE editor, he should have know about the whatever Thapar. I am no psychiatrist to unravel behavioral aberrations or mere anecdotes or sound bytes which would have made whatever Thapar enthralled beyond compare. May be senility, may be true outrage, who knows? I don't think NaMo would have denied him an opportunity if he had asked to meet NaMo to express his outrage. This failure is inexplicable. Maybe, he could have talked to his friends and sought a 'second opinion' on his state of outrage.
                                        I feel sorry for that aatman who, as you rightly note, has done so much in the pursuit of satyam. May paramaatman give him sadbuddhi and s'anthi, peace of mind. No big deal, Arun Shourie ji, don't despair on petty things, bharat mahaan hai. All of us are merely nimitta maatram; that is what Gitacharya has told you and has told all of us. Please remember this guidance of the Gitacharya.
                                        तस्मात् त्वं उत्तिष्ठ यशः लभस्व जित्वा शत्रून भुङ्क्ष्व राज्यं सम् ऋद्धं I
                                        मया एव एते निहन्ताः पूर्वं एव निमित्त मात्रं भव सव्य साचिन् II श्लोक 33 Chapter 11 - Viswarupa Darsana Yoga - Sloka 33
                                        The rashtram is destined for her due share of the global GDP. NaMo will make this happen; what has achieved in May 2014 is true Swarajyam. Let us celebrate the moment, Arun Shourie ji.
                                        With Devi Sarasvati's anugraham, everything is possible. So, go out and fight, nimitta matram bhava savya saachin.
                                        Namaskaram. Kalyan
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                                            Arun Shourie's sulking started long back, which is visible in his "Can He Understand a Mother's Heart". One can argue it has nothing to do with his career discontentment but a personal one. But the tinge of negativity is visible ever since, in different colors.
                                            But Sandeep isn't quite accurate in attributing to Shourie the Hindu Right: Arun Shourie was never Hindu right. His main contributions are on the post colonial institutions, their inherent corruption (judiciary, academics, legislature, defense, polity etc). What makes people feel he was ever right wing is his criticism of missionaries and fatwas (which he promptly balances out with his comments, on intolerance and H extremism etc though not so elaborately). Overall Arun Shourie made little if any, contribution on Hindu right thinking. This does not undermine his phenomenal contributions but one needs to place him properly in the spectrum. He has always been the non-Hindu post colonial modern kind with little regard to cultural systems, but demonstrated far more honesty than is typical of that kind.
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                                                More damage is being done by redundant and incremental Jaitley driven FM then any outburst or protest by sickulars.. Strong action on ground can answer everything , if there is right person in the all important Finance ministry...
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                                                  I will not cut any slack to Shourie as he has 'repudiated every word' he has ever written (comment from Kanchan Gupta). It appears as if it was a dfferent Shourie who wrote the books & was courageous throughout! Now emerges the sad bitter emaciated man talking shit & appearing like Sonia's poodle. I am yet to recover from the shock of Shourie's betrayal.
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                                                      Sir if you get chance see his pathetic behavior once Modi won the Lok Sabha election. He was among those who ran to Modi for getting ministerial berth. The way he ran to meet Modi as if he worked hard for Modi's victory and now he is running to get appreciated for his hard work. But I guess he forgot that Modi is a Gujju. And getting something for free from Gujju is the last thing you should expect.
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                                                          Yes Shourie is great! Let's put him on a pedestal, but what motivated this about turn? Still searching for a credible theory.
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                                                              Your last paragraph really describes the feeling of thousands who are fans of Mr. Arun Shourie works.
                                                              Last time I briefly met him when he was with Mr. Sudheendra Kulkarni of course before 2014 election. Can we speculate?
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                                                                  You may personally have been very influenced by Arun Shourie but perhaps you are overstating the case here. The right has arisen not because of some people but because of the people and it will continue to rise no matter what the short term political events of the next few years.
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                                                                      If all this results in Congressi like Jaitley being thrownout of cabinet then this is a very good move. Shourie and Swamy are men with original ideas, they must be there in the cabinet to make meaningful impact in 3-4 years....
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                                                                          What exactly is the problem with Mr Jaitley ? I've heard an undercurrent of dislike and disparagement directed at him by some otherwise BJP & Modi-supporters, but never heard clear reasons given.
                                                                          And do you propose that Shourie should be given a place in the Cabinet, now that he has embraced the "mainstream" media assault on the Modi government ?
                                                                          Besides, Jaitley is an old and staunch political supporter of Modi. It is he who strongly proposed Modi as PM when his own name was being proposed as a possible candidate.
                                                                          I am interested in your views.
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                                                                              I agree with you and I have same questions. Only answer I know is, his closeness with some folks from the media; but that doesn't explain the extant of disparagement of BJP supporters with Jailtely
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                                                                                  You just pointed the reason. Many believe Jaitley has too much in common with PC and has deep ties with media which has not once cornered him or questioned him whether it was on Economic front or the I&B ministerial decisions but circumvented him and blamed it on Modi. They believe and IMO not entirely unfounded Jaitleys blunders are attributed to Modi and absolves himself of anything.
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                                                                                      well.. one reason can be.. Jaitley seems to be the weakest link in chain. he lost election still became top most minister. they tried it with sushma swaraj whose work is more visible but jaitley being in finance ministry work will be visible only after 3 years
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                                                                                        I would also like to know this.
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                                                                                        Appoint Shaurie Dean of JNU. all go happy. as shaurie is alreaady darling of media of seculars.
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                                                                                            You either die a hero or live long enough to see yourself becoming the villain. Sad that Arun Shourie ended up becoming the villain.

                                                                                          Where is Intolerance? India Will Never be Intolerant: Jaitley

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                                                                                          Where is Intolerance? India Will Never be Intolerant: Jaitley

                                                                                          Published: 03rd November 2015 02:21 PM

                                                                                          NEW DELHI: Asserting that India will never be intolerant, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley rejected Congress' pitch on the issue, saying opponents must fight political battles politically, and wondered "where is the intolerance".
                                                                                          Calling as "aberrations" some of the recent incidents including the beef row, Jaitley insisted that there is "no justification" in returning of awards and the national situation "is absolutely peaceful. India is fully committed as a liberal democracy to peaceful co-existence".
                                                                                          "There is an atmosphere of harmony. This country has never been intolerant and will never be intolerant," the BJP leader said. He was replying to questions including about the protest march of Congress to President Pranab Mukherjee on the issue today and Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Contemporary Sciences holding a seminar with 'Leftist' intellectuals on the issue.
                                                                                          Stressing that "political opponents must fight political battle politically", the Finance Minister said that it is "not fair" to create an issue due to political reasons and then link it to government even when incidents of crime are happening in states ruled by other parties.
                                                                                          "Where is the intolerance? We are the most vibrant democracy. The atmosphere will not change only by talking. If some incident happens like the one in Karnataka, which is Congress-ruled, you cannot link it to the central government to attack. That is not fair.
                                                                                          "This is a crime and action should be taken against whoever commits crime. That is why people in the mainstream in the country have opposed it," he said. The Minister was speaking after unveiling the plans for the 46th International Film Festival of India. The IFFI is being held in Goa between November 20 and November 30.
                                                                                          BJP and Congress have locked horns over the issue of "growing intolerance" in society, with Prime Minister Narendra  Modi yesterday saying the Congress president had no moral right to lecture the NDA on tolerance and it should "hang its head in shame" for the 1984 anti-Sikh riots where thousands were massacred.
                                                                                          Congress chief Sonia Gandhi yesterday met President Mukherjee ahead of the proposed march by party leaders to Rashtrapati Bhavan today to request him to invoke his constitutional powers to stem the "atmosphere of intolerance".
                                                                                          Jaitley also expressed confidence that the issue will have no impact on the IFFI. "I do not see any reason why anyone should try and disturb any event in India. It's not a good practice. It's not a good principle," he said.
                                                                                          http://www.newindianexpress.com/nation/Where-is-Intolerance-India-Will-Never-be-Intolerant-Jaitley/2015/11/03/article3111681.ece

                                                                                          Kudos to Ramamoorthi Jayaraj who won the Pride of Australia Award, 2015. Works with Tamil-speaking Torres Straits Islanders, ancient settlers

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                                                                                          Express News Service Published: 03rd November 2015

                                                                                          Tamil Researcher Now the Pride of Australia

                                                                                          CHENNAI: Born and bred in Sendamangalam town in Namakkal district, Ramamoorthi Jayaraj was a typical student. But 13 years after passing out of Madras Veterinary College in Vepery, Jayaraj, now a researcher with the Charles Darwin University, Australia, has bagged one of the most prestigious awards —The Pride of Australia medal.

                                                                                          The list of his contributions in the nomination files is extensive with cancer research and social work to educate the indigenous population of Australia’s Northern Territory. Jayaraj was one of 11 recipients of the medal this year, under the Inspiration category.
                                                                                          Jayaraj, while being recognised for his contributions to uplift the living conditions of the indigenous population, is primarily a biotechnologist. And it is in this field that he has made his most significant contributions.
                                                                                          Speaking to City Express from his desk in Charles Darwin University, the senior lecturer of clinical sciences spoke of his early experiences in India — both while schooling and in college.
                                                                                          “I was a typical student, but I was always good in academics. My father was a primary school teacher in the same town and after I finished my schooling in 1994, I began my undergraduate studies at Madras Veterinary College,” said Jayaraj.
                                                                                          Ramamoorthi Jayaraj | EXPRESS
                                                                                          Jayaraj’s journey toward the award began the minute he stepped into the MVC. He began filing research papers which got published even while he was an undergraduate. In fact, it was one of those research papers filed after his postgraduate stint at the same college which was picked up by a fellow researcher in Australia.
                                                                                          “He invited me to work at the CDU and I went. That was 13 years ago,” said Jayaraj. Once he began working at the Australian university, Jayaraj plunged fully into several clinical trials that were going on there. Most notably, in cancer research. Among the many in which his contributions have been recognised were those studying the effect of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in cancer patients and their family members.  Other trials explored how best to map cancerous and non-cancerous areas using molecular markers, the effects of radiotherapy on cancer treatment etc.
                                                                                          “But during that time, I also began taking an interest in the indigenous population of the state. They have several similarities with Indians, in both culture and physiology. But they have been an oppressed people and their condition is not as good as it can be even now. I began working with them on the side,” he admitted. 
                                                                                          He hopes the award will help promote the importance of health research and education in the Australian state.
                                                                                          Jayaraj currently works as a cancer researcher and educator for Australian Aboriginal and Tories Strait Islanders (an indigenous section of Australia’s population) in remote communities of Australia.

                                                                                          http://www.newindianexpress.com/cities/chennai/Tamil-Researcher-Now-the-Pride-of-Australia/2015/11/03/article3110218.ece

                                                                                          Pride of Australia Medal 2015 Northern Territory Award Ceremony finalists Andrew Warton,
                                                                                          Pride of Australia Medal 2015 Northern Territory Award Ceremony finalists Andrew Warton, Belinda Marshall, Abbey Holmes, Lee-Anne Stallan, Bob Shewring, Mandy Hall, Kourtney Rimmer (8), Marieanna Hammond, Romola Sebastianpillai, Dr Rama Jayaraj and Steve Martz.

                                                                                          INSPIRATION
                                                                                          Dr Rama Jayaraj
                                                                                          A senior lecturer in Clinical Sciences and a cancer researcher at Charles Darwin University, Dr Rama has inspired his students through an integrated, case-based approach in unique learning environments. He has initiated partnerships with many Territory organisations that provide support for his students’ projects, made significant contributions to indigenous education and provided high-quality student support.

                                                                                          Honour for inspirational cancer researcher

                                                                                          09-Oct-2015
                                                                                          Senior Lecturer in Clinical Sciences Dr Rama Jayaraj with his 2015 Pride of Australia “Inspiration Medal” for the NT. Photo courtesy of NT News
                                                                                          A Charles Darwin University lecturer and cancer researcher has been recognised for his significant contribution to education in the Northern Territory in receiving the 2015 Pride of Australia “Inspiration Medal” for the NT.
                                                                                          Senior Lecturer in Clinical Sciences Dr Rama Jayaraj has made significant contributions to Indigenous education and provided high-quality student support, while contributing to cancer research.
                                                                                          “I am really honoured to receive the award,” Dr Jayaraj said. “There are so many committed health professionals and educators working hard in the NT. I am very humbled.”
                                                                                          Dr Jayaraj is an applied biotechnologist and has helped to strengthen research ties between CDU and institutions in India, Indonesia and Thailand. More recently he has been working on community engagement and cultural activities focusing on Australian Indigenous alcohol-associated assaults and violence.
                                                                                          “The whole team at the university is excited about the award,” he said. “We hope it helps to promote the importance of health research and education in the NT, strengthens existing collaborations and creates new ones.”
                                                                                          As a lecturer in pharmacology, pathophysiology and micro biology, he has been integral in leading his students through an improved and integrated, case-based approach to address their unique learning environments.
                                                                                          “Many of our students are nurses, who are mothers and also work full-time,” Dr Jayaraj said. “We have developed and adapted the delivery of our courses using e-learning tools to be more flexible in assisting students to meet their work and study commitments.”
                                                                                          The Pride of Australia “Inspiration Medal” is awarded by the NT News and the Sunday Territorian in the NT. It recognises a member of teaching professions from early childhood to university education or a role model whose compassion and wisdom while teaching, coaching and mentoring youth has been truly inspiring.
                                                                                          Earlier this year Dr Jayaraj received the Ryan Family Award for exceptional performance and contribution to CDU for his commitment to excellence in teaching and involvement in research with a global reach.
                                                                                          SOK-5.pngShri Chandrasekhara Sarasvati, Mahaperiyava of Kanchi Matham discusses The Universal Religion
                                                                                          (HinduDharma: ) :
                                                                                          There is book containing photographs of the aborigines of Australia dancing in the nude (The Native Tribes of Central Australia, by Spencer Killan, pages 128 & 129). A close look at the pictures, captioned "Siva Dance", shows that the dancers have a third eyedrawn on the forehead.

                                                                                          இதழ் 46
                                                                                          அக்டோபர் 2012

                                                                                          அவுஸ்திரேலியப் பழங்குடிமக்களும் தமிழினமும் - 1

                                                                                          ஒரு நாட்டின் மூலமான மக்களை சுதேசிகள் (Indigenous people) என்கின்றோம். மூத்தகுடிகள், பூர்வீகக்குடிகள் என்றும் சொல்லலாம். அவுஸ்திரேலியாவைப் பொறுத்தவரை ஆதிவாசிகள் (Aboriginals), தீவுவாசிகள் (Torres Strait Islanders) என்ற இரண்டு வகையான மக்களை அப்படிச் சொல்கின்றார்கள். இவர்களுக்கிடையே ஏராளமான வித்தியாசமான பழக்கவழக்கங்கள், பண்பாடுகள், மொழியினைக் கொண்டவர்களாக இருக்கின்றார்கள்.

                                                                                          அவுஸ்திரேலியாவில் உள்ள மக்கள் தொகையில் இவர்கள் 2% ஆவார்கள். இது ஏறக்குறைய 400,000. இதில் ஆதிக்குடிகள் 357,000. ஐரோப்பியர்களின் வருகைக்கு (1788) முன்னர் ஏறத்தாழ 600 - 700 இனக்குழுவினர் (tribal groups) இருந்திருக்கின்றார்கள். அப்போது ஏறக்குறைய 250 விதமான மொழியைப் பேசியிருக்கின்றார்கள்.

                                                                                          இதில் ஆதிக்குடிகள் எத்தனையோ ஆயிரம் ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்னர் ஆசியாவில் இருந்தும், தீவுவாசிகள் Torres Strait (400ற்கும் மேற்பட்ட தீவுகள்) இலிருந்தும் வந்தவர்கள் ஆவார். 

                                                                                          ஆதிகாலத்தில் அவுஸ்திரேலியாவும் ஆசியாவும் ஒன்றாக இருந்ததாகவும் (ஆழமற்ற கடல் பரப்பு இவை இரண்டையும் இணைத்திருந்தது) பின்னர் இவையிரண்டும் பிரிந்ததாகவும் சொல்லப்படுகின்றது. இற்றைக்கு 50,000 - 130,000 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்னர் தென்கிழக்கு ஆசியாவிலுள்ள தீவுகளிலிருந்து, இந்த ஆழமற்ற கடல்பரப்பினூடாக முதன்முதலாக அவுஸ்திரேலியாவிற்கு ஆதிக்குடிகள் வந்து சேர்ந்தார்கள் என நம்பப்படுகிறது. இவர்கள் அவுஸ்திரேலியாவின் வடமேற்குப் பகுதியிலுள்ள கடற்கரையோரங்களில் முதலில் குடியேறினார்கள். 

                                                                                          விஞ்ஞானிகளின் ஆய்வின்படி, 56,000 - 78,000 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்னர் மனிதர்கள் வாழ்ந்ததற்கான சான்றுகள் பெறப்பட்டுள்ளன. 

                                                                                          சுதேசிகள் தாம் வாழ்ந்த இடங்களைக் கொண்டு பின்வருமாறு அடையாளப்படுத்தப்படுகின்றனர். 

                                                                                          Nyoogar (மேற்கு அவுஸ்திரேலியாவின் தென்மேற்குப் பகுதியில் உள்ளவர்கள்)Murri (நியூ சவுத்வேல்ஷின் வடக்குப்புறம் மற்றும் குவீன்ஸ்லாந்தின் தென்கிழக்கு)Yolngu (Nothern Territory இன் வடக்குப்புற நிலமான Arnhem)Palawa (ரஸ்மேனியா - Tasmania)Nungah (தெற்கு அவுஸ்திரேலியா)Koori (நீயூ சவுத் வேல்ஸ்)Koorie (விக்டோரியா)

                                                                                          1770 ஆம் ஆண்டு பிரித்தானியாவிலிருந்து கப்டன் ஜேம்ஸ் குக் என்பவர் தனது Endeavour என்ற கப்பலின் மூலம் Botany Bay என்ற இடத்தை வந்தடைந்தான். அதன்பிறகு 18 வருடங்கள் கழித்து குடியிருப்பதற்காக பிரிட்டனில் இருந்து வந்தார்கள். பழங்குடிகளின் நிலங்கள் பறிக்கப்பட்டன. சில பழங்குடிக்குழுக்கள் கொல்லப்பட்டனர். 1789 இல் பிரித்தானியமக்கள் கொண்டுவந்த சின்னம்மை மூலம் சிட்னியைச் சூழவிருந்த ஆதிக்குடிகள் கொல்லப்பட்டனர். ஒருபோதும் இந்த வருத்தத்தைச் சந்தித்திராத அவர்களுக்கு நோய் எதிர்ப்புச்சக்தி இருக்கவில்லை.

                                                                                          ஆதிக்குடிகளின் பிள்ளைகள் அவர்களிடமிருந்து பலவந்தமாகப் (STOLEN GENERATION) பிரித்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார்கள். இந்தப்பிரித்தெடுப்பு 1970 ஆம் ஆண்டுவரை நடந்தது. எத்தனை பிள்ளைகள் இப்படிப் பிரித்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார்கள் என்ற சரியான தரவுகள் கிடைக்கவில்லை. தரவுகள் அழிக்கப்பட்டன, தொலைந்துவிட்டன. ஏறத்தாழ 1910 இலிருந்து 1970 வரை 10% ஆன பிள்ளைகள் பிரித்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார்கள்.

                                                                                          ஆதிக்குடிகளுக்கென ஒரு கொடி Harold Thomas இனால் உருவாக்கப்பட்டு 1971 இல் அடிலயிட்டில் (Adelaide) பறக்கவிடப்பட்டது. கொடியின் மேற்பகுதியான கறுப்பு நிறம் ஆதிக்குடிகளையும், கீழ்ப்பகுதியான சிவப்புநிறம் ஆதிக்குடிகளுக்கும் நிலத்துக்குமான தொடர்பையும், நடுவே இருக்கும் மஞ்சள் நிறத்திலான வட்டம் சூரியனையும் குறிக்கிறது. உலகைப் படைத்தவர்கள் முன்னோர்கள் எனவும், அவர்களே நிலத்தைப் படைத்து அதிலே மலைகள் ஆறுகள் மரங்கள் என்பவற்றை உருவாக்கினார்கள் எனவும் ஆதிவாசிகள் நம்புகின்றார்கள்.

                                                                                          டிடிஜிறிடு (Didjeridu) என்ற வாத்தியக்கருவியும் பூமராங்கும் (Boomerang) ஆதிக்குடிகளின் சின்னங்களாகக் கருதப்படுகின்றன.

                                                                                          1960 ஆம் ஆண்டுவரையும் வாழ்வாதாரத்துக்கான (கல்வி மற்றும் சுகாதாரம் போன்றவை) உரிமைகள் மறுக்கபட்ட நிலையில் ஆதிக்குடிகள் இருந்துள்ளார்கள். 1965 ஆம் ஆண்டுமுதல் vote போடும் உரிமை பெற்றார்கள். 1967 முதல் குடித்தொகை மதிப்பீட்டில் சேர்த்துக் கொள்ளப்பட்டார்கள். 7 கோடி 618 இலட்சம் சதுர கிலோமீட்டரைக் கொண்ட அவுஸ்திரேலிய நிலப்பரப்பில் ஆதிவாசிகளுக்கென ஒதுக்கப்பட்ட நிலப்பரப்பு 9 இலட்சத்து 20 ஆயிரம் சதுரகிலோமீட்டர்கள் ஆகும்.

                                                                                          1972 ஆம் ஆண்டு அவுஸ்திரேலியா தினத்தன்று, ஆதிக்குடிகள் கன்பராவில் உள்ள பாராளுமன்றத்திற்கு முன்னால் உள்ள Ngunnawal என்ற நிலத்தில் ஒரு கூடாரம் அமைத்து தமது கொடியைப் பறக்கவிட்டார்கள். 'அவுஸ்திரேலியா அரசு தங்களை ஒரு வெளிநாட்டுப்பிரஜைகள் போல நடத்துவதால், வெளிநாட்டு மக்களுக்கு இருக்கும் Embassy போல தங்களுக்கும் ஒன்று தேவை'என அறிவித்து அந்தக்கூடாரத்தை ஆதிக்குடிகளின் Embassy என அறிவித்தார்கள். அவுஸ்திரேலியா அரசு அதை அகற்றுவதற்கு முயற்சித்த போதிலும், அது மீண்டும் கட்டப்பட்டு 1992 முதல் நிரந்தரமாக அங்கே உள்ளது.

                                                                                          ஐரோப்பியரின் வருகைக்கு முன்னர் ஏறக்குறைய 250 ஆதிக்குடிகளின் மொழிகள் (Alngith, Antakarinya, Bandjalang, Bayungu, Darling, Dirari, Iwaidja, Kamu, Kanju, Thawa, Yorta Yorta) இருந்தன. காலப்போக்கில் இவை அழிந்து கொண்டு வருகின்றன. ஆதிக்குடிகள் பேசிவந்த barramundi, billabong, boomerang, kangaroo, kookaburra, dingo, koala, wombat போன்ற பல சொற்கள் இன்று அவுஸ்திரேலியர்களின் ஆங்கிலச்சொற்களுடன் கலந்துவிட்டன.

                                                                                          2.

                                                                                          தமிழ்மொழியின் காலத்துக்கு சாட்சியாக தொல்காப்பியம், சிலப்பதிகாரம், திருக்குறள்(கிறிஸ்துவுக்கு முன் 31 ஆண்டு) போன்ற நூல்கள் உள்ளன.

                                                                                          |பஃறுளி யாற்றுடன் பன்மலை அடுக்கத்துக்குமரிக்கோடும் கொடுங்கடல் கொள்ள| - சிலப்பதிகாரம் (மதுரைக்காண்டம்)

                                                                                          இந்தப்பாடலின் மூலம் இன்றைய கன்னியாகுமரிக்குத் தெற்கே பறுளி ஆறும், பல மலைத்தொடர்களும், குமரிமலையும் கடலில் மூழ்கியது உறுதியாகின்றது. இங்கேதான் பாண்டியர் தலைநகரான மதுரை (இன்றிருக்கும் மதுரை வேறு) இருந்துள்ளது. இங்கேதான் முதற்சங்கம் இருந்தது. இந்த மதுரையும் கடற்கோளால் அழிந்தபின், கிழக்குக் கரையோரத்தில் இருந்த கபாடபுரம் பாண்டியரின் தலைநகராகியது. இங்கு இடைச்சங்கம் (இரண்டாம் தமிழ்ச்சங்கம்) உருவானது. இலக்கியங்கள் தோன்றின. பின்னர் இதுவும் அழிந்தபின்னர் கடலே இல்லாத வைகை நதிக்கரை மதுரை பாண்டியரின் தலைநகராகியது. கடைச்சங்கம் நிறுவப்பட்டது. 

                                                                                          இந்துமாகடலை ஆய்வு செய்த ரஷ்யவிஞ்ஞானிகள் (Prof Bezrucov) வெளியிட்ட அறிக்கையில் ஆதிமனிதனின் பிறப்பிடமாகக் குமரிக்கண்டம் (Lemuria) இருக்கலாம் என்கின்றனர்.

                                                                                          Ice Age காலத்தில் கடல்மட்டம் 500 - 600 அடி தாழ்ந்திருந்தன. அப்போது ஜாவா, சுமாத்ரா ஆகிய நிலப்பரப்புகளும் நியூகினித்தீவுகளும் அவுஸ்திரேலியாவின் வடபகுதி நிலப்பரப்புகளும் மெல்லிய அளவில் இணைந்திருந்தன.

                                                                                          உலகின் தொன்மையான தமிழினத்திற்கும், அவுஸ்திரேலிய அபரிஜினல் இனத்திற்குமிடையே பல ஒற்றுமைகள் இருக்கின்றன. அபரிஜினல் இனமக்களின் மொழி, கலாசாரம், பண்பாடு என்பவற்றுடன் உருவ அமைப்பும்கூட தமிழரோடு ஒப்புவமையாக உள்ளது. இந்தியாவின் குமரிக்கண்டம் கடலில் மூழ்கியபோது அங்கிருந்த தமிழினமக்கள் கிழக்கே அவுஸ்திரேலியாவிற்கும், மேற்கே ஆப்பிரிக்காவிற்கும் பரவினார்கள் என்பது செய்தி. 

                                                                                          அவுஸ்திரேலியாவில் இப்போதும் கூட களரி ஆட்டம் எனப்படும் நடனம் உள்ளது. பழங்குடிகள் பலவகையான நடனங்களை ஆடுகின்றார்கள். நெற்றியிலே ஒரு கண்ணை வரைந்து கொண்டு, இவர்கள் ஆடும் அந்த ஆட்டத்திற்கு 'சிவா நடனம்' (Shiva Dance) என்று பெயர். உடல் எங்கும் மூன்று கோடுகளாக வெள்ளை வர்ணத்தைப் பூசிக்கொள்கின்றார்கள். நெற்றியிலே மாத்திரம் கிடையாகப் பூசிக்கொள்கின்றனர். Spencer, Killan என்பவர்கள் எழுதியுள்ள The Native Tribes of Central Australia (Dover Publications, Inc., New York, 1968) என்ற புத்தகத்தில் இதற்கானபுகைப்படங்கள் ஆதாரமாக (படங்கள் 128, 129 / பக்கங்கள் 621, 622) உள்ளன.

                                                                                          பண்டைய தமிழர்கள் ஓடித் தப்பிப்பவர்களைப் பிடிப்பதற்கு 'வளரி'என்ற ஆயுதத்தைப் பாவித்தார்கள். சங்க கால இலக்கியமாகிய புறநானூற்றுப் பாடலில் (பாடல் எண் 233) வரும் 'திகிரி'என்னும் பதம் இந்த 'வளரி'யையே குறிக்கின்றது.

                                                                                          பாடல் எண். 233 - பொய்யாய்ப் போக!பாடியவர் : வெள்ளெருக்கிலையார்"பொய்யா கியரோ! பொய்யா கியரோ!பாவடி யானை பரிசிலர்க்கு அருகாச்சீர்கெழு நோன்றாள் அகுதைகண் தோன்றியபொன்புனை திகிரியின் பொய்யா கியரோ!.................................."என்று செல்கின்றது அந்தப்பாடல்.

                                                                                          'வளைதடி'என்று தமிழில் சொல்லப்படும் இந்த 'வளரி'என்ற ஆயுதம் இந்தியாவில் தமிழகத்தில் மட்டும்தான் பயன்படுத்தப்பட்டது. இந்த வளரியைப் போன்று அவுஸ்திரேலியா ஆதிவாசிகளால் உபயோகப்படுத்தப்பட்ட ஆயுதம் 'பூமராங்' (boomerang) ஆகும். எனவே இந்த ஆயுதம் தமிழருக்கும் அவுஸ்திரேலியா ஆதிவாசிகளுக்கும் பொதுவானதாகின்றது. இது ஒருமுனை கனமாகவும் மறுமுனை இலேசாகவும் கூராகவும் ஒரு பிறை வடிவில் மரத்தினால் அல்லது உலோகத்தினால் செய்யப்படுகிறது. இதை ஆதிவாசிகள் ஒரு இலக்கை நோக்கி எறிவார்கள். இலக்கு தவறும் பட்சத்தில் அந்த பூமராங் எறிந்தவரின் கைகளுக்குத் திரும்பி வந்து விடும். இதை ஆதிவாசிகள் வேட்டையாடுவதற்கு உபயோகித்தார்கள்.

                                                                                          மத்திய அவுஸ்திரேலியாவில் இருந்த பழங்குடிகளின் பரம்பலைக் கீழேயுள்ள படத்தில் காணலாம். இந்த இனத்தின் பெயர்களாக (Tribes Names) - வாகை (Waagai), சிங்காலி (Chingali), இளம்பிறை (Ilpirra), வால்பாறை (Walpari), அருந்தா (Aruntha) போன்ற பெயர்கள் இருப்பதைக் காணலாம். Alice Springs போன்ற இடங்களில், சிறுசிறு குழுக்களாக பரந்தளவில் 'அருந்தா'இனக்குழுவினர் உள்ளனர். மேலும் இவர்கள் விலங்குகள், மரங்களின் பெயர்களைக் கொண்டும் வகைப்படுத்தப்படுகின்றனர். ஏமு மனிதன் (Emu man), கங்காரு மனிதர்கள் (Kangaroo man), பிளம் மர மக்கள் ('Plum tree' people) போன்றவறை இதற்கு உதாரணமாகக் கொள்ளலாம். 

                                                                                          பழங்குடி மக்களின் பெரும்பாலான உரையாடல்களில் தமிழின் உச்சரிப்பைக் காணலாம். 'Ten Canoes'என்ற அவுஸ்திரேலியாவில் எடுக்கப்பட்ட அபரிஜினல் மக்களைப் பற்றிய படத்தைப் பார்க்கும்போது உங்களுக்கும் இந்த அனுபவம் ஏற்படலாம். அவர்கள் பாவிக்கும் சில சொற்களிற்கும் தமிழ்ச் சொற்களுக்கும் ஒற்றுமைகள் இருப்பதைக் காணலாம் (*பின்னிணைப்பு 1). 

                                                                                          சிட்னியில் 'விண்மலே', 'காக்காடு'என இரு இடங்கள் இருக்கின்றன. ஆகாயமும் (விண்) மலையும் ஒட்டி நிற்பதைப் போல இருக்கும் அந்த அற்புதமான இடத்திற்கு Winmalle (விண்மலை) என்று பெயர். 'கா'என்றால் சோலை, காடு என்றால் வனம். உண்மையிலே சோலைவனம் போல ஏராளமானவர்களைக் கவர்ந்திழுக்கும் அந்த இடத்திற்கு Kakadu என்று பெயர் வழங்குகின்றது. மேற்கு அவுஸ்திரேலியாவில் மதுர (Madura) என்று இன்னொரு இடம் இருக்கின்றது. இன்னொரு ஆதிவாசி இனம் அதிகம் பாவிக்கும் சொற்றொடர் 'பூனங்கா யிங்கவா'. அதன் அர்த்தம் 'பெண்ணே இங்கே வா'. 'பூ நங்கையே இங்கே வா'என்பதியே அவர்கள் இப்படிச் சொல்கின்றார்கள்.

                                                                                          ஆப்பிரிக்காவிலிருந்து புறப்பட்ட மனிதர்கள் தெற்குப்பக்க கடற்கரை வழியாக வந்து இந்தியாவினூடாக அவுஸ்திரேலியாவை அடைந்திருக்கக்கூடும் என்று ஒரு பொதுவான கருத்து நிலவுகின்றது. இந்தக்கருத்தை இந்தியாவிலுள்ள Dr Raghavendra Rao என்பவருடைய ஆய்வு உறுதி செய்கின்றது. இவரது குழுவின் மனிதவர்க்கசாஸ்திர ஆய்வின்படி (Anthropological Survey), திராவிடப்பழங்குடிமக்களிற்கும் தற்போதைய அபரிஜினல் இனத்தவருக்கும் பொதுவான DNA மரபணு மூலக்கூறுகளைக் கொண்டுள்ளதாகத் தெரியவருகிறது. இவர்களின் கருத்துப்படி 50,000 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்னர் அபோர்ஜினமக்கள் தென்னிந்தியா வழியாக அவுஸ்திரேலியாவிற்கு வந்து குடியேறியதாகவும், தற்போதைய அபரிஜினமக்களுக்கும் இந்தியக்குடிமக்களுக்கும் பொதுவான முன்னோர்கள் இருந்திருக்க வேண்டும் என்றும் கூறுகின்றார்கள்.

                                                                                          1974 இல் Mungo Lake (NSW) பகுதியில் கண்டெடுக்கப்பட்ட எலும்புக்கூடு ஒன்றினை ஆராய்ந்தபோது அது இந்தியப்பழங்குடியினரின் சாயலை ஒத்திருந்ததாக விஞ்ஞானிகள் சொல்லியிருக்கின்றார்கள்.

                                                                                          *பின்னிணைப்பு 1
                                                                                          Macquarie (Aboriginal words) என்ற புத்தகத்தில் உள்ளபடி.

                                                                                          Father - papa (Tor/17.2), paapaa(Ngi/2.2) - அப்பா Pg 622Mother - Ama (Tor/17.2) - அம்மா Pg 660Fire - thum (Wik/16.6) Pg 624Hill - Muli (Bun/1.7) மலை Pg 640Jaw - thakal (Ngi/2.1) தாடை Pg 646Leg - kar (Wem/6.1) கால் Pg 650Moon - pira (Diy/11.8) பிறை Pg 659Nose - Muruh (Bun/1.1) மூக்கு Pg 665Old Woman - aka (Tor/17.3) அக்கா Pg 666Person - arelhe (Arr/13.3) ஆள் Pg 671Thirsty - yarka (Paa/3.2) தாக Pg 705Sky - alkere (Arr/13.8) ஆகாயம், karkanya (Paa/3.8) ககனம் Pg 690Stone - karnu (paa/3.7), karul (Ngi/2.7) கல் Pg 698Tree - madhan (Wir/5.14) மரம் Pg 709Tease - ngaiyandi (Kau/8.27) நையாண்டி Pg 703You - nhii, nhe (Dat/12.33) நீ Pg 723Before - muna (Kau/8.25) முன்பு Pg 588Come - wara (wem/6.17), wapa (Paa/3.17) வா Pg 605Wind - yartu (Paa/3.8) காற்று Pg 720Face - mulha (Diy/7.1) முகம் Pg 621

                                                                                          பின்னிணைப்பு 2

                                                                                          Arr - Arrernte - Aruntha (Central Australia) Bun - Bundjahing (NSW)Dat - Datiwuy (Northern Territory)Diy - Diyari (South Australia)Kau - Kaurna (South Australia)Ngi - Ngiyampaa (NSW)Paa - Paakantyi (NSW)Tor - Torres Strait Creole (Queensland)Wem - Wembawemba (Victoria)Wik - Wik - Mungkan (Queensland)Wir - Wiradjuri (NSW)

                                                                                          References:

                                                                                          1. Aboriginal Australia - Robyn Hodge

                                                                                          2. Macquarie (Aboriginal words) - A dictionary of words from Australian Aboriginals & Torres Strait Islander - Nick Thieberger & William Mcgregor

                                                                                          3. The Native Tribes of Central Australia - Baldwin Spencer and Francis James Gillen, Dover Publications, Inc., New York, 1968 (Originally published by Macmillan & Co. Ltd, London in 1899)

                                                                                          4. வியக்க வைக்கும் தமிழர் அறிவியல் - மாத்தளை சோமு

                                                                                          5. ABC article 'DNA confirms coastal trek to Australia' by Nicky Phillips - 24.07.2009

                                                                                          அவுஸ்திரேலியப் பழங்குடிமக்களும் தமிழினமும் - 2

                                                                                          படிக்காத இடுகை [Unread post]by வேட்டையன் » ஜூன் 6th, 2014, 1:09 pm

                                                                                          |ப·றுளி யாற்றுடன் பன்மலை அடுக்கத்துக் குமரிக்கோடும் கொடுங்கடல் கொள்ள| - சிலப்பதிகாரம் (மதுரைக்காண்டம்)

                                                                                          இந்தப்பாடலின் மூலம் இன்றைய கன்னியாகுமரிக்குத் தெற்கே ப·றுளி ஆறும், பல மலைத்தொடர்களும், குமரிமலையும் கடலில் மூழ்கியது உறுதியாகின்றது. இங்கேதான் பாண்டியர் தலைநகரான மதுரை (இன்றிருக்கும் மதுரை வேறு) இருந்துள்ளது. இங்கேதான் முதற்சங்கம் இருந்தது. இந்த மதுரையும் கடற்கோளால் அழிந்தபின், கிழக்குக் கரையோரத்தில் இருந்த கபாடபுரம் பாண்டியரின் தலைநகராகியது. இங்கு இடைச்சங்கம் (இரண்டாம் தமிழ்ச்சங்கம்) உருவானது. இலக்கியங்கள் தோன்றின. பின்னர் இதுவும் அழிந்தபின்னர் கடலே இல்லாத வைகை நதிக்கரை மதுரை பாண்டியரின் தலைநகராகியது. கடைச்சங்கம் நிறுவப்பட்டது.

                                                                                          இந்துமாகடலை ஆய்வு செய்த ரஷ்யவிஞ்ஞானிகள் (Prof Bezrucov) வெளியிட்ட அறிக்கையில் ஆதிமனிதனின் பிறப்பிடமாகக் குமரிக்கண்டம் (Lemuria) இருக்கலாம் என்கின்றனர்.

                                                                                          Ice Age காலத்தில் கடல்மட்டம் 500 - 600 அடி தாழ்ந்திருந்தன. அப்போது ஜாவா, சுமாத்ரா ஆகிய நிலப்பரப்புகளும் நியூகினித்தீவுகளும் அவுஸ்திரேலியாவின் வடபகுதி நிலப்பரப்புகளும் மெல்லிய அளவில் இணைந்திருந்தன.

                                                                                          உலகின் தொன்மையான தமிழினத்திற்கும், அவுஸ்திரேலிய அபரிஜினல் இனத்திற்குமிடையே பல ஒற்றுமைகள் இருக்கின்றன. அபரிஜினல் இனமக்களின் மொழி, கலாசாரம், பண்பாடு என்பவற்றுடன் உருவ அமைப்பும்கூட தமிழரோடு ஒப்புவமையாக உள்ளது. இந்தியாவின் குமரிக்கண்டம் கடலில் மூழ்கியபோது அங்கிருந்த தமிழினமக்கள் கிழக்கே அவுஸ்திரேலியாவிற்கும், மேற்கே ஆப்பிரிக்காவிற்கும் பரவினார்கள் என்பது செய்தி.

                                                                                          அவுஸ்திரேலியாவில் இப்போதும் கூட களரி ஆட்டம் எனப்படும் நடனம் உள்ளது. பழங்குடிகள் பலவகையான நடனங்களை ஆடுகின்றார்கள். நெற்றியிலே ஒரு கண்ணை வரைந்து கொண்டு, இவர்கள் ஆடும் அந்த ஆட்டத்திற்கு 'சிவா நடனம்' (Shiva Dance) என்று பெயர். உடல் எங்கும் மூன்று கோடுகளாக வெள்ளை வர்ணத்தைப் பூசிக்கொள்கின்றார்கள். நெற்றியிலே மாத்திரம் கிடையாகப் பூசிக்கொள்கின்றனர். Spencer, Killan என்பவர்கள் எழுதியுள்ள The Native Tribes of Central Australia (Dover Publications, Inc., New York, 1968) என்ற புத்தகத்தில் இதற்கானபுகைப்படங்கள் ஆதாரமாக (படங்கள் 128, 129 / பக்கங்கள் 621, 622) உள்ளன.

                                                                                          பண்டைய தமிழர்கள் ஓடித் தப்பிப்பவர்களைப் பிடிப்பதற்கு 'வளரி'என்ற ஆயுதத்தைப் பாவித்தார்கள். சங்க கால இலக்கியமாகிய புறநானூற்றுப் பாடலில் (பாடல் எண் 233) வரும் 'திகிரி'என்னும் பதம் இந்த 'வளரி'யையே குறிக்கின்றது.

                                                                                          பாடல் எண். 233 - பொய்யாய்ப் போக!பாடியவர் : வெள்ளெருக்கிலையார்

                                                                                          "பொய்யா கியரோ! பொய்யா கியரோ!பாவடி யானை பரிசிலர்க்கு அருகாச்சீர்கெழு நோன்றாள் அகுதைகண் தோன்றியபொன்புனை திகிரியின் பொய்யா கியரோ!"என்று செல்கின்றது அந்தப்பாடல்.

                                                                                          'வளைதடி'என்று தமிழில் சொல்லப்படும் இந்த 'வளரி'என்ற ஆயுதம் இந்தியாவில் தமிழகத்தில் மட்டும்தான் பயன்படுத்தப்பட்டது. இந்த வளரியைப் போன்று அவுஸ்திரேலியா ஆதிவாசிகளால் உபயோகப்படுத்தப்பட்ட ஆயுதம் 'பூமராங்' (boomerang) ஆகும். எனவே இந்த ஆயுதம் தமிழருக்கும் அவுஸ்திரேலியா ஆதிவாசிகளுக்கும் பொதுவானதாகின்றது. இது ஒருமுனை கனமாகவும் மறுமுனை இலேசாகவும் கூராகவும் ஒரு பிறை வடிவில் மரத்தினால் அல்லது உலோகத்தினால் செய்யப்படுகிறது. இதை ஆதிவாசிகள் ஒரு இலக்கை நோக்கி எறிவார்கள். இலக்கு தவறும் பட்சத்தில் அந்த பூமராங் எறிந்தவரின் கைகளுக்குத் திரும்பி வந்து விடும். இதை ஆதிவாசிகள் வேட்டையாடுவதற்கு உபயோகித்தார்கள்.

                                                                                          மத்திய அவுஸ்திரேலியாவில் இருந்த பழங்குடிகளின் பரம்பலைக் கீழேயுள்ள படத்தில் காணலாம். இந்த இனத்தின் பெயர்களாக (Tribes Names) - வாகை (Waagai), சிங்காலி (Chingali), இளம்பிறை (Ilpirra), வால்பாறை (Walpari), அருந்தா (Aruntha) போன்ற பெயர்கள் இருப்பதைக் காணலாம். Alice Springs போன்ற இடங்களில், சிறுசிறு குழுக்களாக பரந்தளவில் 'அருந்தா'இனக்குழுவினர் உள்ளனர். மேலும் இவர்கள் விலங்குகள், மரங்களின் பெயர்களைக் கொண்டும் வகைப்படுத்தப்படுகின்றனர். ஏமு மனிதன் (Emu man), கங்காரு மனிதர்கள் (Kangaroo men), பிளம் மர மக்கள் ('Plum tree' people) போன்றவறை இதற்கு உதாரணமாகக் கொள்ளலாம்.

                                                                                          பழங்குடி மக்களின் பெரும்பாலான உரையாடல்களில் தமிழின் உச்சரிப்பைக் காணலாம். 'Ten Canoes'என்ற அவுஸ்திரேலியாவில் எடுக்கப்பட்ட அபரிஜினல் மக்களைப் பற்றிய படத்தைப் பார்க்கும்போது உங்களுக்கும் இந்த அனுபவம் ஏற்படலாம். அவர்கள் பாவிக்கும் சில சொற்களிற்கும் தமிழ்ச் சொற்களுக்கும் ஒற்றுமைகள் இருப்பதைக் காணலாம் (* பின்னிணைப்பு 1 ).
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                                                                                          சிட்னியில் 'விண்மலே', 'காக்காடு'என இரு இடங்கள் இருக்கின்றன. ஆகாயமும் (விண்) மலையும் ஒட்டி நிற்பதைப் போல இருக்கும் அந்த அற்புதமான இடத்திற்கு winmalle (விண்மலை) என்று பெயர். 'கா'என்றால் சோலை, காடு என்றால் வனம். உண்மையிலே சோலைவனம் போல ஏராளமானவர்களைக் கவர்ந்திழுக்கும் அந்த இடத்திற்கு kakadu என்று பெயர் வழங்குகின்றது. மேற்கு அவுஸ்திரேலியாவில் மதுர (Madura) என்று இன்னொரு இடம் இருக்கின்றது. இன்னொரு ஆதிவாசி இனம் அதிகம் பாவிக்கும் சொற்றொடர் 'பூனங்கா யிங்கவா'. அதன் அர்த்தம் 'பெண்ணே இங்கே வா'. 'பூ நங்கையே இங்கே வா'என்பதியே அவர்கள் இப்படிச் சொல்கின்றார்கள்.

                                                                                          ஆபிரிக்காவிலிருந்து புறப்பட்ட மனிதர்கள் தெற்குப்பக்க கடற்கரை வழியாக வந்து இந்தியாவினூடாக அவுஸ்திரேலியாவை அடைந்திருக்கக்கூடும் என்று ஒரு பொதுவான கருத்து நிலவுகின்றது. இந்தக்கருத்தை இந்தியாவிலுள்ள Dr Raghavendra Rao என்பவருடைய ஆய்வு உறுதி செய்கின்றது. இவரது குழுவின் மனிதவர்க்கசாஸ்திர ஆய்வின்படி (Anthropological Survey), திராவிடப்பழங்குடிமக்களிற்கும் தற்போதைய அபரிஜினல் இனத்தவருக்கும் பொதுவான DNA மரபணு மூலக்கூறுகளைக் கொண்டுள்ளதாகத் தெரியவருகிறது. இவர்களின் கருத்துப்படி 50,000 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்னர் அபோர்ஜினமக்கள் தென்னிந்தியா வழியாக அவுஸ்திரேலியாவிற்கு வந்து குடியேறியதாகவும், தற்போதைய அபரிஜினமக்களுக்கும் இந்தியக்குடிமக்களுக்கும் பொதுவான முன்னோர்கள் இருந்திருக்க வேண்டும் என்றும் கூறுகின்றார்கள்.
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                                                                                          1974 இல் Mungo Lake (NSW) பகுதியில் கண்டெடுக்கப்பட்ட எலும்புக்கூடு ஒன்றினை ஆராய்ந்தபோது அது இந்தியப்பழங்குடியினரின் சாயலை ஒத்திருந்ததாக விஞ்ஞானிகள் சொல்லியிருக்கின்றார்கள்.

                                                                                          பின்னிணைப்பு 1Macquarie (Aboriginal words) என்ற புத்தகத்தில் உள்ளபடி,

                                                                                          Father - papa (Tor/17.2), paapaa(Ngi/2.2) - அப்பா Pg 622Mother - Ama (Tor/17.2) - அம்மா Pg 660Fire - thum (Wik/16.6) Pg 624Hill - Muli (Bun/1.7) மலை Pg 640Jaw - thakal (Ngi/2.1) தாடை Pg 646Leg - kar (Wem/6.1) கால் Pg 650Moon - pira (Diy/11.8) பிறை Pg 659Nose - Muruh (Bun/1.1) மூக்கு Pg 665Old Woman - aka (Tor/17.3) அக்கா Pg 666Person - arelhe (Arr/13.3) ஆள் Pg 671Thirsty - yarka (Paa/3.2) தாக Pg 705Sky - alkere (Arr/13.8) ஆகாயம், karkanya (Paa/3.8) ககனம் Pg 690Stone - karnu (paa/3.7), karul (Ngi/2.7) கல் Pg 698Tree - madhan (Wir/5.14) மரம் Pg 709Tease - ngaiyandi (Kau/8.27) நையாண்டி Pg 703You - nhii, nhe (Dat/12.33) நீ Pg 723Before - muna (Kau/8.25) முன்பு Pg 588Come - wara (wem/6.17), wapa (Paa/3.17) வா Pg 605Wind - yartu (Paa/3.8) காற்று Pg 720Face - mulha (Diy/7.1) முகம் Pg 621

                                                                                          பின்னிணைப்பு 2Arr - Arrernte - Aruntha (Central Australia)Bun - Bundjahing (NSW)Dat - Datiwuy (Northern Territory)Diy - Diyari (South Australia)Kau - Kaurna (South Australia)Ngi - Ngiyampaa (NSW)Paa - Paakantyi (NSW)Tor - Torres Strait Creole (Queensland)Wem - Wembawemba (Victoria)Wik - Wik - Mungkan (Queensland)Wir - Wiradjuri (NSW)

                                                                                          அவுஸ்திரேலியப் பழங்குடிமக்களும் தமிழினமும் - 1

                                                                                          படிக்காத இடுகை [Unread post]by வேட்டையன் » ஜூன் 6th, 2014, 12:35 pm
                                                                                          ஒரு நாட்டின் மூலமான மக்களை சுதேசிகள் (Indigenous people) என்கின்றோம். மூத்தகுடிகள், பூர்வீகக்குடிகள் என்றும் சொல்லலாம். அவுஸ்திரேலியாவைப் பொறுத்தவரை ஆதிவாசிகள் (Aboriginals), தீவுவாசிகள் (Torres Strait Islanders) என்ற இரண்டு வகையான மக்களை அப்படிச் சொல்கின்றார்கள். இவர்களுக்கிடையே ஏராளமான வித்தியாசமான பழக்கவழக்கங்கள், பண்பாடுகள், மொழியினைக் கொண்டவர்களாக இருக்கின்றார்கள்.

                                                                                          அவுஸ்திரேலியாவில் உள்ள மக்கள் தொகையில் இவர்கள் 2% ஆவார்கள். இது ஏறக்குறைய 400,000. இதில் ஆதிக்குடிகள் 357,000. ஐரோப்பியர்களின் வருகைக்கு (1788) முன்னர் ஏறத்தாழ 600 - 700 இனக்குழுவினர் (tribal groups) இருந்திருக்கின்றார்கள். அப்போது ஏறக்குறைய 250 விதமான மொழியைப் பேசியிருக்கின்றார்கள்.

                                                                                          இதில் ஆதிக்குடிகள் எத்தனையோ ஆயிரம் ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்னர் ஆசியாவில் இருந்தும், தீவுவாசிகள் Torres Strait (400ற்கும் மேற்பட்ட தீவுகள்) இலிருந்தும் வந்தவர்கள் ஆவார். ஆதிகாலத்தில் அவுஸ்திரேலியாவும் ஆசியாவும் ஒன்றாக இருந்ததாகவும் (ஆழமற்ற கடல் பரப்பு இவை இரண்டையும் இணைத்திருந்தது) பின்னர் இவையிரண்டும் பிரிந்ததாகவும் சொல்லப்படுகின்றது. இற்றைக்கு 50,000 - 130,000 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்னர் தென்கிழக்கு ஆசியாவிலுள்ள தீவுகளிலிருந்து, இந்த ஆழமற்ற கடல்பரப்பினூடாக முதன்முதலாக அவுஸ்திரேலியாவிற்கு ஆதிக்குடிகள் வந்து சேர்ந்தார்கள் என நம்பப்படுகிறது. இவர்கள் அவுஸ்திரேலியாவின் வடமேற்குப் பகுதியிலுள்ள கடற்கரையோரங்களில் முதலில் குடியேறினார்கள். விஞ்ஞானிகளின் ஆய்வின்படி, 56,000 - 78,000 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்னர் மனிதர்கள் வாழ்ந்ததற்கான சான்றுகள் பெறப்பட்டுள்ளன.

                                                                                          சுதேசிகள் தாம் வாழ்ந்த இடங்களைக் கொண்டு பின்வருமாறு அடையாளப்படுத்தப்படுகின்றனர்.

                                                                                          Nyoogar (மேற்கு அவுஸ்திரேலியாவின் தென்மேற்குப் பகுதியில் உள்ளவர்கள்)Murri (நியூ சவுத்வேல்ஷின் வடக்குப்புறம் மற்றும் குவீன்ஸ்லாந்தின் தென்கிழக்கு)Yolngu (Nothern Territory இன் வடக்குப்புற நிலமான Arnhem)Palawa (ரஸ்மேனியா - Tasmania)Nungah (தெற்கு அவுஸ்திரேலியா)Koori (நீயூ சவுத் வேல்ஸ்)Koorie (விக்டோரியா)

                                                                                          1770 ஆம் ஆண்டு பிரித்தானியாவிலிருந்து கப்டன் ஜேம்ஸ் குக் என்பவர் தனது Endeavour என்ற கப்பலின் மூலம் Botany Bay என்ற இடத்தை வந்தடைந்தான். அதன்பிறகு 18 வருடங்கள் கழித்து குடியிருப்பதற்காக பிரிட்டனில் இருந்து வந்தார்கள். பழங்குடிகளின் நிலங்கள் பறிக்கப்பட்டன. சில ப்ழங்குடிக்குழுக்கள் கொல்லப்பட்டனர். 1789 இல் பிரித்தானியமக்கள் கொண்டுவந்த சின்னம்மை மூலம் சிட்னியைச் சூழவிருந்த ஆதிக்குடிகள் கொல்லப்பட்டனர். ஒருபோதும் இந்த வருத்தத்தைச் சந்தித்திராத அவர்களுக்கு நோய் எதிர்ப்புச்சக்தி இருக்கவில்லை.

                                                                                          ஆதிக்குடிகளின் பிள்ளைகள் அவர்களிடமிருந்து பலவந்தமாகப் (STOLEN GENERATION) பிரித்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார்கள். இந்தப்பிரித்தெடுப்பு 1970 ஆம் ஆண்டுவரை நடந்தது. எத்தனை பிள்ளைகள் இப்படிப் பிரித்தெடுக்கபட்டார்கள் என்ற சரியான தரவுகள் கிடைக்கவில்லை. தரவுகள் அழிக்கப்பட்டன, தொலைந்துவிட்டன. ஏறத்தாழ 1910 இலிருந்து 1970 வரை 10% ஆன பிள்ளைகள் பிரித்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார்கள்.
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                                                                                          ஆதிக்குடிகளுக்கென ஒரு கொடி Harold Thomas இனால் உருவாக்கப்பட்டு 1971 இல் அடிலயிட்டில் (Adelaide) பறக்கவிடப்பட்டது. கொடியின் மேற்பகுதியான கறுப்பு நிறம் ஆதிக்குடிகளையும், கீழ்ப்பகுதியான சிவப்புநிறம் ஆதிக்குடிகளுக்கும் நிலத்துக்குமான தொடர்பையும், நடுவே இருக்கும் மஞ்சள் நிறத்திலான வட்டம் சூரியனையும் குறிக்கிறது. உலகைப் படைத்தவர்கள் முன்னோர்கள் எனவும், அவர்களே நிலத்தைப் படைத்து அதிலே மலைகள் ஆறுகள் மரங்கள் என்பவற்றை உருவாக்கினார்கள் எனவும் ஆதிவாசிகள் நம்புகின்றார்கள்.

                                                                                          டிடிஜிறிடு (Didjeridu) என்ற வாத்தியக்கருவியும் பூமராங்கும் (Boomerang) ஆதிக்குடிகளின் சின்னங்களாகக் கருதப்படுகின்றன.
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                                                                                          1960 ஆம் ஆண்டுவரையும் வாழ்வாதாரத்துக்கான (கல்வி மற்றும் சுகாதாரம் போன்றவை) உரிமைகள் மறுக்கபட்ட நிலையில் ஆதிக்குடிகள் இருந்துள்ளார்கள். 1965 ஆம் ஆண்டுமுதல் vote போடும் உரிமை பெற்றார்கள். 1967 முதல் குடித்தொகை மதிப்பீட்டில் சேர்த்துக் கொள்ளப்பட்டார்கள். 7 கோடி 618 இலட்சம் சதுர கிலோமீட்டரைக் கொண்ட அவுஸ்திரேலிய நிலப்பரப்பில் ஆதிவாசிகளுக்கென ஒதுக்கப்பட்ட நிலப்பரப்பு 9 இலட்சத்து 20 ஆயிரம் சதுரகிலோமீட்டர்கள் ஆகும்.

                                                                                          1972 ஆம் ஆண்டு அவுஸ்திரேலியா தினத்தன்று, ஆதிக்குடிகள் கன்பராவில் உள்ள பாராளுமன்றத்திற்கு முன்னால் உள்ள Ngunnawal என்ற நிலத்தில் ஒரு கூடாரம் அமைத்து தமது கொடியைப் பறக்கவிட்டார்கள். 'அவுஸ்திரேலியா அரசு தங்களை ஒரு வெளிநாட்டுப்பிரஜைகள் போல நடத்துவதால், வெளிநாட்டு மக்களுக்கு இருக்கும் Embassy போல தங்களுக்கும் ஒன்று தேவை'என அறிவித்து அந்தக்கூடாரத்தை ஆதிக்குடிகளின் Embassy என அறிவித்தார்கள். அவுஸ்திரேலியா அரசு அதை அகற்றுவதற்கு முயற்சித்த போதிலும், அது மீண்டும் கட்டப்பட்டு 1992 முதல் நிரந்தரமாக அங்கே உள்ளது.
                                                                                          ஐரோப்பியரின் வருகைக்கு முன்னர் ஏறக்குறைய 250 ஆதிக்குடிகளின் மொழிகள் (Alngith, Antakarinya, Bandjalang, Bayungu, Darling, Dirari, Iwaidja, Kamu, Kanju, Thawa, Yorta Yorta) இருந்தன. காலப்போக்கில் இவை அழிந்து கொண்டு வருகின்றன. ஆதிக்குடிகள் பேசிவந்த barramundi, billabong, boomerang, kangaroo, kookaburra, dingo, koala, wombat போன்ற பல சொற்கள் இன்று அவுஸ்திரேலியர்களின் ஆங்கிலச்சொற்களுடன் கலந்துவிட்டன.

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                                                                                          Fast forwarding to thorium -- Jaideep A. Prabhu. NaMo, protect thorium reserves and stop the Great Thorium Robbery

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                                                                                          • Published: November 3, 2015 01:13 IST | Updated: November 3, 2015 09:52 IST  

                                                                                            Fast forwarding to thorium



                                                                                            A new worldwide plutonium market brought under safeguards is a safe bet to help India advance its ambitious thorium reactor programme.

                                                                                            What is the single greatest factor that prevents the large-scale deployment of thorium-fuelled reactors in India? Most people would assume that it is a limitation of technology, still just out of grasp. After all, the construction of the advanced heavy-water reactor (AHWR) — a 300 MWe, indigenously designed, thorium-fuelled, commercial technology demonstrator — has been put off several times since it was first announced in 2004. However, scientists at the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre have successfully tested all relevant thorium-related technologies in the laboratory, achieving even industrial scale capability in some of them. In fact, if pressed, India could probably begin full-scale deployment of thorium reactors in ten years. The single greatest hurdle, to answer the original question, is the critical shortage of fissile material.
                                                                                            A fissile material is one that can sustain a chain reaction upon bombardment by neutrons. Thorium is by itself fertile, meaning that it can transmute into a fissile radioisotope but cannot itself keep a chain reaction going. In a thorium reactor, a fissile material like uranium or plutonium is blanketed by thorium. The fissile material, also called a driver in this case, drives the chain reaction to produce energy while simultaneously transmuting the fertile material into fissile material. India has very modest deposits of uranium and some of the world’s largest sources of thorium. It was keeping this in mind that in 1954, Homi Bhabha envisioned India’s nuclear power programme in three stages to suit the country’s resource profile. In the first stage, heavy water reactors fuelled by natural uranium would produce plutonium; the second stage would initially be fuelled by a mix of the plutonium from the first stage and natural uranium. This uranium would transmute into more plutonium and once sufficient stocks have been built up, thorium would be introduced into the fuel cycle to convert it into uranium 233 for the third stage. In the final stage, a mix of thorium and uranium fuels the reactors. The thorium transmutes to U-233 as in the second stage, which powers the reactor. Fresh thorium can replace the depleted thorium in the reactor core, making it essentially a thorium-fuelled reactor even though it is the U-233 that is undergoing fission to produce electricity.
                                                                                            After decades of operating pressurised heavy-water reactors (PHWR), India is finally ready to start the second stage. A 500 MW Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) at Kalpakkam is set to achieve criticality any day now and four more fast breeder reactors have been sanctioned, two at the same site and two elsewhere. However, experts estimate that it would take India many more FBRs and at least another four decades before it has built up a sufficient fissile material inventory to launch the third stage. The earliest projections place major thorium reactor construction in the late 2040s, some past 2070. India cannot wait that long.
                                                                                            Procuring fissile material
                                                                                            The obvious solution to India’s shortage of fissile material is to procure it from the international market. As yet, there exists no commerce in plutonium though there is no law that expressly forbids it. In fact, most nuclear treaties such as the Convention on the Physical Protection of Nuclear Material address only U-235 and U-233, presumably because plutonium has so far not been considered a material suited for peaceful purposes. The Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) merely mandates that special fissionable material — which includes plutonium — if transferred, be done so under safeguards. Thus, the legal rubric for safeguarded sale of plutonium already exists. The physical and safety procedures for moving radioactive spent fuel and plutonium also already exists.
                                                                                            If India were to start purchasing plutonium and/or spent fuel, it would immediately alleviate the pressure on countries like Japan and the U.K. who are looking to reduce their stockpile of plutonium. India is unlikely to remain the only customer for too long either. Thorium reactors have come to be of great interest to many countries in the last few years, and Europe yet remains intrigued by FBRs as their work on ASTRID, ALFRED, and ELSY shows.
                                                                                            The unseemly emphasis on thorium technology has many reasons. One, thorium reactors produce far less waste than present-day reactors. Two, they have the ability to burn up most of the highly radioactive and long-lasting minor actinides that makes nuclear waste from Light Water Reactors a nuisance to deal with. Three, the minuscule waste that is generated is toxic for only three or four hundred years rather than thousands of years. Four, thorium reactors are cheaper because they have higher burnup. And five, thorium reactors are significantly more proliferation-resistant than present reactors. This is because the U-233 produced by transmuting thorium also contains U-232, a strong source of gamma radiation that makes it difficult to work with. Its daughter product, thallium-208, is equally difficult to handle and easy to detect.
                                                                                            The mainstreaming of thorium reactors worldwide thus offers an enormous advantage to proliferation-resistance as well as the environment. Admittedly, there still remains a proliferation risk, but these can be addressed by already existing safeguards. For India, it offers the added benefit that it can act as a guarantor for the lifetime supply of nuclear fuel for reactors if it chooses to enter the export market, something it is unable to do for uranium-fuelled reactors.
                                                                                            It is clear that India stands to profit greatly from plutonium trading but what compelling reason does the world have to accommodate India? The most significant carrot would be that all of India’s FBRs that are tasked for civilian purposes can come under international safeguards in a system similar to the Indo-U.S. nuclear deal. There is little doubt that India will one day have a fleet of FBRs and large quantities of fissile material that can easily be redirected towards its weapons programme. This will limit how quickly India can grow its nuclear arsenal to match that of, say, China. Delhi has shown no inclination to do so until now, but the world community would surely prefer that as much as possible of India’s plutonium was locked under safeguards.
                                                                                            The U.S. could perhaps emerge as the greatest obstacle to plutonium commerce. Washington has been resolutely opposed to reprocessing since the Carter administration, preferring instead the wasteful once-through, open fuel cycle. Although the U.S. cannot prevent countries from trading in plutonium, it has the power to make it uncomfortable for them via sanctions, reduced scientific cooperation, and other mechanisms. The strong non-proliferation lobby in the U.S. is also likely to be nettled that a non-signatory of the NPT would now move to open and regulate trade in plutonium. The challenge for Delhi is to convince Washington to sponsor rather than oppose such a venture. In this, a sizeable portion of the nuclear industry could be Delhi’s allies.
                                                                                            Scientists predict that the impact of climate change will be worse on India. Advancing the deployment of thorium reactors by four to six decades via a plutonium market might be the most effective step towards curtailing carbon emissions.
                                                                                            (Jaideep A. Prabhu is a researcher in foreign and nuclear policy. He can be reached at @orsoraggiante)
                                                                                          • Nishant  from India
                                                                                            It is not only the development of an individual that should matter to anyone but it is the wholesome development that is more important. The countries should work is collaboration of each other with an intension to provide the plutonium to those countries which are in a great need of that and in turn of that the exporters are going to be benefitted in terms of GDP of that country.
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                                                                                            • AAndy  from United States
                                                                                              Well written
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                                                                                              • Soothy Sayer  from India
                                                                                                Another hocus pocus tale to launder black money. U.S. tried thorium with REAL physicists for scientists instead of our rhut phut IIT two year study pass outs trying to pose as top nuclear scientists. Thorium has a BIG PROBLEM. It uses salts instead of water which become so corrosive that the metal pipes that transport them for cooling crack and break in no time. That's why Kakrapur is still non functioning despite crores of tax monies splurged on the reactors. Americans with the best scientists from around the world could not use thorium to make it economically viable or even feasible and you expect us to believe that our lameduck scientists who depend on Russian left overs can actually perform better. Stop fooling around with tax payers money. We have 49% of our kids malnourished and it's getting worse with simple boring dhal running at Rs 200 per kg. Please do something about installing Permaculture practices so our country can feed it's millions. We can't do without food t
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                                                                                                • AQAkram Qazi  from India
                                                                                                  This is a very good article, explaining the technical as well as political issues. But topic deserves a sequel that explains how India's membership in NSG, etc fit into all this.
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                                                                                                  • GVG VAIDYANATHAN  from India
                                                                                                    Jaideep has written a nice article on the approach one needs to take for forwarding utilisation of Thorium. Presently natural uranium shortage has forced us to go for external supply from Australia, Canada etc. The production of fissile Plutonium 239 from Heavy water reactors is not sufficient enough for an accelerated fast Breeder Programme. So Pu availability to get into the third stage of nuclear power programme is a factor to be reckoned alongwith the capability to effectively reprocess Uranium 233. It would be worthwhile if we can have Fast Reactors fuelled by Foreign Plutonium which do not breed and have Pu-U233 based Thermal Reactors.This way we can increase nuclear power contribution. I feel the present Government should think on these lines.
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                                                                                                    about 5 hours ago
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                                                                                                    • UUdhishtir  from India
                                                                                                      To import Pu bearing spent fuel is not a good idea for India- (a) there are bound to be unconscionable political and technical restrictions placed on India by the sellers. (b) We will be left with OTHER people's rad-excreta on OUR hands to dispose of and guard for years to come. Copious supply of neutrons (N) are required to get U233 from Th232. FBR is a good source of N. However, IF (big!) say < 5% of atoms in a 'fuel' rod of Th can be converted to U233 in a dedicated accelerator (non-reactor breeding), then it may be possible to get energy output, similar to that we now get from Nat U, from Th U233 in a N-economical PHWR-type reactor. Since fuel cost in Nuclear is low and in view of our large Th deposits, this slightly less than optimum use of Th can be adopted for a decade or so until our FBRs come of age. I feel disadvantage due to gamma from U232 is over-emphasised; after all in a PHWR 'hot-hot' fuel fresh from reactor core is regularly, safely handled by robotic machines!
                                                                                                      about 6 hours ago
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                                                                                                      • KSK SHESHU  from India
                                                                                                        With depleting natural resources like coal, India needs alternate sources of energy generation. Hence, exploration and reasearch in this fields needs financial and moral encouragement from the government as well as the reasearch institutions.
                                                                                                      • http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/fast-forwarding-to-thorium/article7834156.ece?homepage=true

                                                                                                      Fading dynasty, false protest drama to screen corruption. NaMo, restitute kaalaadhan. Start with Shah Commission, call Congi to account for subverting the Constitution.

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                                                                                                      BJP defends PM Modi, says Congress playing with fire by stoking up communal passion



                                                                                                      BJP defends PM Modi, says Congress playing with fire by stoking up communal passion
                                                                                                      Amid the debate over 'rising intolerance', the BJP has strongly defended Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
                                                                                                      NEW DELHI: Hitting back after Congress's march to Rashtrapati Bhavan, BJP on Tuesday alleged the opposition party was playing with fire by "stoking up communal passions" by projecting "falsehoods", asserting that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been the most powerful voice against bigotry and prejudice. 

                                                                                                      Describing Congress chief Sonia Gandhi-led march as a "desperate attempt by a fading dynasty" to retain marginal relevance when it stared at "disaster" in the Bihar polls, BJP claimed that it was indulging in the politics of despair having run out of ideas and lost all moorings to reality. 

                                                                                                      "A morally and politically bankrupt Congress leadership is playing with fire by stoking up sectarian passions for electoral gain through the projection of falsehoods.

                                                                                                      READ ALSO: Sinister campaign to create tension, Congress tells President; BJP counters charge 

                                                                                                      "It is a desperate attempt by a fading dynasty to retain marginal relevance at a time when it is facing utter disaster in Bihar elections. The empty spaces at Rahul Gandhi's meetings in Bihar provide a visual foretaste of the results to come," BJP spokesman MJ Akbar told a press conference. 

                                                                                                      On Sonia Gandhi's charge that Modi was endorsing incidents of hate, Akbar said the Prime Minister had spoken repeatedly, whether from the Red Fort, in his public meetings or 'Mann ki Baat', in support of harmony and against bigotry. 

                                                                                                      "His pain and anguish at certain tragedies has been not just apparently but publicly stressed," he said, recalling his statement that Hindus and Muslims should not fight each other but unite to fight poverty together. 

                                                                                                      Akbar also raked up the recent reports on the Congress chief's son-in-law Robert Vadra's land transaction involving shell companies and said the party leadership had been "rattled" by these revelations. 

                                                                                                      "False drama will not screen these facts from the people," he said. 

                                                                                                      BJP alleged that Congress started this "farce of a protest" in reaction to investigation "reaching the doorsteps" of the Gandhi family. 

                                                                                                      "This is not an ordinary march. This march is happening when you are going to get caught and investigation has come to your doorstep. Knowing very well that within a few days your story will be over and people of this country will know that you stand for corruption and corruption alone, you have started this farce of a march," BJP spokesperson Sambit Patra said. 

                                                                                                      Sonia Gandhi had led a march of top party leaders to Rashtrapati Bhavan to protest against the climate of growing intolerance in the country and accused Modi of "endorsing" incidents of hate.            
                                                                                                                                                                                                                 

                                                                                                      In memoriam: Sad news of Narain Kataria's demise. May his aatman find solace with paramaatman

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                                                                                                      A great fighter, yoddha, for dharma is no more with us. Narain Kataria ji has been an indefatigable activist among Hindu Americans for the cause of dharma. The best tribute to his legacy and his memory is to continue the service he has been rendering to protect dharma. 

                                                                                                      Heartfelt condolences to the members of his family and friends.

                                                                                                      Namaskaram. Kalyanaraman
                                                                                                      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bReo90cro_E Published on Mar 30, 2014
                                                                                                      Why to Vote for Narendra Modi ... Narain Kataria


                                                                                                      From left to right:  Shri Prakash Javadekar, Jagdish Sewhani, Narain Kataria and Arish Sahani                                                         Photo by:  Dr. Prakash Swamy 11/1/2011 http://hindtoday.com/Blogs/ViewBlogsV2.aspx?HTAdvtId=8545&HTAdvtPlaceCode=USA

                                                                                                      ---------- Forwarded message ----------
                                                                                                      From: Satya D <hitaya123@gmail.com>
                                                                                                      Date: Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 4:16 AM
                                                                                                      Subject: Kataria ji is no more
                                                                                                      To: Satya D <hitaya123@gmail.com>

                                                                                                      With deep sadness and heart break I would like to report Narain Kataria ji who fought for India, justice for Hindus is no more with us.    Current information is he passed away during his sleep last night.

                                                                                                      Even to the last minute Kataria ji was fighting for justice for Hindus.  He gave interview at ITV on the reports of intolerance in media is one sided with  no report when Hindus were killed the day before and went home at 9:30 PM.    

                                                                                                      I have known Kataria ji since 2007 when I first spoke at OFBJP meeting about how only Hindu temples are under Government control and how thousands of acres of land that belonged to temples in Andhra Pradesh are being grabbed under Hindu Endowment department.   Kataria ji quickly took me to his side and introduced me to other activists.   Since then Kataria ji and I worked on so many movements from Sonia Gandhi protest in 2007, faced together multi-million dollar lawsuits .    He was fearless and never once I have seen him hesitate to give his name and stand up.   For more than 25 years Kataria ji worked for India and Hindus.

                                                                                                      It is not what he did as much as how he did, treating everyone with respect,  with sensitivity and hurting no ones feelings and completely honest in his interactions.   

                                                                                                      He is one human being we all need to be proud of.   With deep sadness I say, I and my family will miss him. 

                                                                                                      The latest news I have is his cremation ceremony will in NYC on Saturday Oct 7th.

                                                                                                      Regards,
                                                                                                      Satya

                                                                                                      Narain Kataria ji passes away, Hindu world has lost a jnan yoddha, a karmayogi, a sthitaprajna -- दत्ता होसबाळे

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                                                                                                      Condolence message of Shri Datta Hosabale, Sah Karyavah, RSS:Nov, 4, 2015

                                                                                                      I'm saddened to read the very shocking news of the demise of Shri Narain Kataria ji this early morning. My deep condolences to his family. Narain Kataria ji's death is an irreparable loss to the entire Hindu world. 

                                                                                                      He was a relentless crusader for the cause of anything that was related to Hindu interest. A survivor of the holocost of the Partition of Bharat, he had made the democratic fight for Hindus his life mission. 


                                                                                                      Though old by age, he was young in his thoughts, spirits and action that would shame even youngsters. 

                                                                                                      He, along with his friends and associates, founded a few fora to carry on various public activities which have become dependable supporters and shelters in US for Hindus world over. He was a very kind, affable and lovable human being. He practiced the message if Bhagavad Geeta in life in every aspect. He was a jnan yoddha, a karmayogi and a stitapragna. It is nigh impossible to fill the void created by his passing away. The fate has tuned the coming Deepavali a dark one. 

                                                                                                      During my visits to USA I had met him on several occasions and also participated in programs organized by him. Recently I had a telephonic conversation with him. 
                                                                                                      I, on behalf of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, and millions of Swayamsevaks, with a heavy heart pay tributes- shraddhanjali- to this great son of Bharatmata and pray the almighty to bestow sadgati on the departed soul. 


                                                                                                      Om Shantih. 
                                                                                                      DATTA HOSABALE 
                                                                                                      Sah Sarkaryavah, RSS

                                                                                                      An award wapsi scam exposed Dibakar Banerjee returns an award which he never got? NaMo, restitute kaalaadhan.

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                                                                                                      A great scam has been exposed .. The so called secularist and anti-Modi campaigner Dibakar Banerjee has reportedly returned the National Film Award 2007.

                                                                                                      The film Khosla Ka Ghosla was selected as the best film by the National award Jury in 2007. The movie was produced by Savitha Raj Hiremath and the award was for the producer. 

                                                                                                      Dibakar Banerjee returned the award won by Hiremath and claimed that he was returning the "award" to protest the "intolerance" of the   Modi regime. The Best Film Award goes to the Producer of the Movie and not to the Director.

                                                                                                      Dibakar Banerjee had directed another movie "Oye  Lucky" which won the best movie award in 2009. But there is no declaration of his returning of this award as the producer is a Multi national corporation. 

                                                                                                      This was pointed out by film actor Anupam Kher in a TV chanel discussion on November 3, 2015. He also said that he was booed down by a crowd consisting of Shoba De, the lead campaigner against Modi, for speaking in support of Modi at the NCPA in Mumbai.

                                                                                                      How can someone return an award which he never got and only the producer got?

                                                                                                      Kalyanaraman

                                                                                                      Raghuram Rajan who pontificates is an IITian. How IITians have been subsidised by Govt. of India -- Jeswanth Padooru

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                                                                                                      Dear Smriti Irani, stop giving my money to IITians

                                                                                                      If IITians are so intelligent and can earn lakhs in their placements, why do they sponge off taxpayers' money?
                                                                                                       
                                                                                                      Photo Credit: IANS
                                                                                                      Dear Smt Smriti Iraniji,

                                                                                                      At the drop of a hat, every government, including yours, says that subsidies are bad for the economy and should be done away with.

                                                                                                      Many of the subsidies in your ministry are going to those who don't deserve it. IITians are the most guilty of this pilferage. To make things worse, they hardly do anything for the country. Best-selling fiction is not known to help farmers.

                                                                                                      1) To begin with, this is what they cost usWhile it takes over Rs 3.4 lakh to educate an IITian per year, the student pays only Rs 90,000 per year. The rest is borne by the government. That is close to Rs 2.5 lakh per student per year, which is being paid by the tax payer. If one extrapolates this to all the 39,540 students in the Indian Institute of Technologies, the cost borne by the tax payer on educating IITians extends to 988.5 crore annually.

                                                                                                      According to budget estimates, Rs 1703.85 crore is to be allocated to the IITs for 2015-'16.

                                                                                                      2) What do we get in return for the Rs 1,700 crore we spend on them?Inspite of producing 9,885 world-class engineers in computer science, electrical, electronic, chemical, mechanical, production fields every year...

                                                                                                      a) The Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle, though successful with the Russian Cryogenic Engine, has time and again failed with the indigenous cryogenic engine. We have succeeded only once with our indigenous cryogenic rocket.

                                                                                                      b) Indigenous submarines are still a distant dream because of the technological complexity in building them. Though many projects are coming up in our own shipyards, they are happening because we are merely manufacturing them in India with foreign technology.

                                                                                                      c) The indigenous Indian Small Arms System rifles for our army, developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation, have always been reported as problematic, and we import assault rifles from Israel.

                                                                                                      Why could our world-class engineers, who are educated with tax payers' money, not have built them?

                                                                                                      3) This is what our top IITians gave a missA Right to Information application that was filed recently has shown that less than 2% of engineers at the Indian Space Research Organisation are from IITs and the National Institutes of Technology. Our best space programme doesn't get our best engineers every year.

                                                                                                      The army doesn't get engineers and officers from the IITs. Between 1986 and 2006, not a single IITian has joined the Indian army.

                                                                                                      The DRDO has a shortage of more than 2,700 scientists, and it is stretched and overworked, but our world-class engineers don't find it challenging.

                                                                                                      4) If an IITian wants to run an online shop, then why do I, a taxpayer, have to pay for his chemical engineering degree?Going by 2013 figures, Flipkart, the online mega-store, recruited seven students from IIT Madras in 2013.

                                                                                                      One can understand the logic behind Flipkart hiring a computer science engineer. But six of the hires had studied aerospace, chemical, metallurgy, bio-technology and engineering physics.  What specialist knowledge will they bring to Flipkart?

                                                                                                      These students do not have any interest in what they learnt in their four-year undergraduate programme, and want to erase their history by moving to a different field.

                                                                                                      5) Why did I pay for Chetan Bhagat's mechanical engineering degree?I have nothing against Chetan Bhagat, but I do know that Indian taxpayers paid to make him a mechanical engineer. He has done everything but engineering.

                                                                                                      Another RTI filed with IIM Bangalore has revealed that out of the current batch of 406 students, 97 students are from IITs. Fifty-six of these are students with less than two years work experience.

                                                                                                      If all these engineers wanted to be was managers, why does the tax payer need to pay for their engineering education at the IITs?

                                                                                                      6) Get a loan, why seek a subsidy?All students from IITs can get collateral-free loans from nationalised banks for upto Rs 20 Lakh.

                                                                                                      And IITians are obviously so awesome that companies are eager to pay them crores of rupees.

                                                                                                      Then why should a world-class engineer who makes crores of rupees and adds no value to India be given a subsidised education at the IITs? Can't they get educated with a bank loan of their own and repay it after getting their huge salaries?

                                                                                                      7) Remittances help forex? Nope, not really.Whenever there is a debate on brain drain from the IITs, the remittances issue pops up. Many believe that IITians who go abroad send back remittances and contribute to foreign exchange reserves. However, it is a pittance for India.

                                                                                                      A report in the Economic Times shows that out of the total remittances of $70 billion to India, the remittances from IITians who go to developed countries is much lower than the remittances from the Middle East to the state of Kerala.

                                                                                                      Most of the Malayalis in the Gulf are blue-collar workers, not IIT engineers.

                                                                                                      So, why should the common man subsidise an IITian's college fees?



                                                                                                      Also see Dear IITians, how successful have you been in making India self-reliant in technology?

                                                                                                      And a response to this articleNo, Smriti Irani is not wasting your money on the IITians
                                                                                                      This article was originally published on Saddahaq.com.
                                                                                                      We welcome your comments at letters@scroll.in
                                                                                                      http://scroll.in/article/715918/dear-smriti-irani-stop-giving-my-money-to-iitians

                                                                                                      Pamphleteers of Communist parties and their hostility against Sardar Patel -- Anirban Ganguly

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                                                                                                      's failing mental capacities & how he is a pamphleteer of Communist parties: my column

                                                                                                      DEEP-ROOTED ANIMUS FOR SARDAR

                                                                                                      Wednesday, 04 November 2015 | Anirban Ganguly | in Oped
                                                                                                      Over the decades after independence, the Left-ideologues dominated the narrative in the educational sphere as well as reigned over various cultural and literary organisations. They deliberately downplayed Sardar Patel’s enormous contribution to nation-building
                                                                                                      On January 31, 1948,  P Sundarayya, the legendary ‘Comrade PS’, who, as Marxist ideologues and pamphleteers falsely claim participated in the Telangana rebellion against the Nizam’s oppression, in fact accused the one who had actually taken on the Nizam and ended his rule, for conspiring to kill the Mahatma. Addressing a meeting in Vijayawada, ‘Comrade PS’ had accused Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel of planning, in collusion with the RSS and the Hindu Mahasabha, to kill the Mahatma “with a view to perpetuating fascist rule in India”. A deeply hurt Sardar, enclosing the press cutting of ‘Comrade PS’s’ statement wrote to Jawaharlal Nehru reminding him that he had already forwarded his resignation. In March 1948, a hounded Sardar suffered his first major heart attack which nearly swept him off while the complete integration of princely states in India still remained to be achieved.
                                                                                                      This venom-spewing habit never really left the communists. In an issue of the New Age, a mouthpiece of one of the  communist dispensations, nearly 23 years after the Sardar’s death, an article, called him the “apostle of right reactionary and communal forces” and accused him of forcing people to “deviate from progressive policies”. That particular article in the New Age went on to argue that “one tragedy of post-independence era is that the first year of freedom found Sardar Patel’s dark shadow cast over the affairs of our newborn state”. In historical retrospect, it noted that “it would stand out that Nehru was a liberal far-sighted democrat with a profound dynamic outlook on world affairs, while Sardar Patel was a die-hard reactionary, given even to communalism and chauvinism. Indeed Patel was a drag on Nehru”.
                                                                                                      Even the self-abnegating Maniben Patel, the Sardar’s daughter, who for years not only indefatigably served her father but also maintained an impeccable and meticulous record of his letters and notes, enabling us to draw an idea of his multi-faceted persona, was not spared by another section. Secular Democracy, a mouthpiece of an organisation, Qaumi Ekta Trust, for example, launched a diatribe against her when she began working out to publish the Sardar’s correspondences and lesser known letters without official patronage or support. It accused her of violating the codes of classification!
                                                                                                      In reality, Maniben’s determination to disclose her father’s correspondences for the benefit of the people of India made the communists uncomfortable. One of the Sardar’s rare biographers, PN Chopra, was to note, “We can, however, very well appreciate the communists’ dilemma, as Patel’s papers reveal their role which is not very favourable and also explains the background of the continuing Naxalite trouble in Andhra Pradesh.” Through his determined leadership and uncompromising nationalism, Sardar Patel had succeeded in liquidating the Razakar-communist alliance that had then posed a near existential challenge to the fledgling republic of India by fomenting a state of insurrection of genocidal proportion at a time when problems of epic magnitude had besieged India. As the legendary KM Munshi, the Sardar’s right-hand man in the Hyderabad episode, noted, the communist party allied “itself with the Nizam’s Government on an anti-India front” while declaring that the Government of India was essentially capitalist.
                                                                                                      It is common knowledge, but needs reiteration, that in the past these very communist ideologues, leaders and visionaries had used some very revealing epithets against other national leaders such as Mahatma Gandhi, Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose and Jayaprakash Narayan, decorating them at various times and occasions with some of the following: “The hirelings of the Axis; the traitor Bose; the paid agents of the enemy; the advance guard of Tojo and Hitler; political pests; a diseased limb that must be amputated; and fifth columnists.” The epithet-distributing habit thus, of the communists and their pamphleteers who pass off as historians or peddlers of historical lies — namely the types of Irfan Habib, who, burdened with failing capacities, are unable to differentiate between the IS and the RSS — is an old one, and one need not be overtly perturbed by such diatribes, and must treat them instead as the manifestations of an increasing collective senility among the Marxists protectors of the ‘Idea of India’ and their less cerebral political benefactors who have sustained their spider-webs across our academic and social science institutions for years.
                                                                                                      Sardar Patel, in fact, had well anticipated the communist threat to the Indian republic and to its democratic aspirations, and had displayed the will to take them head-on, terming their action in Hyderabad as those of “murderers and dacoits” bent on creating “dislocation and disruption”. In fact, Munshi, in his memoir of Hyderabad, End of an Era, drew attention to a report submitted by a communist leader, Ravi Narayan Reddy, in 1950, to his own party, which noted that “between February 1948 and August 1950, the well-entrenched communists who had gone underground” in the region “were responsible for 223 murder, 24 kidnapping cases and burning 199 houses”. Sardar Patel was also prescient when he argued, “I do not think communism has much chance in India. The reason is they did not help the struggle for freedom but took advantage of it to consolidate themselves.” Such then has been the historical contributions of the communist parties to India’s post-independence evolution — a legacy that has always and unfailingly reflected violence, division and suppression inspired by a confused sense and understanding of history and of India.
                                                                                                      Interestingly, the Sardar was also the victim of awards and of celebratory politics. His centenary fell on October 31, 1975, four months after Indira Gandhi had clamped Emergency. It would have been politically unwise thus to celebrate the centenary of the apostle of unity and freedom. The then ‘liberal’ leadership of the Congress, after paying a perfunctory tribute to Sardar, pulled a silencing curtain over his contributions. It is also common knowledge how Sardar was overlooked for the award of the Bharat Ratna — receiving it only in 1991, four decades after his passing and by when most of the active Congress leaders had conferred on themselves and on one another that award. While pushing through the proposal of conferring Sardar with the Bharat Ratna, the late Madhu Limaye, in his characteristic style, articulated the raison dêtre of the attempt. Terming the Sardar’s omission as “absolutely malicious, an act of vendetta”, Limaye noted with stark candour, “It is this deep-rooted animus of the Nehruite sycophants that dominated governmental, media and academic thinking, that I wished to resist and overcome.”
                                                                                                      That ‘deep-rooted animus’ of which the Sardar was a victim, still holds sway, to counter it, to resist it and to eventually uproot and eradicate it shall be a true tribute to Sardar Patel, a true recognition of his everlasting contribution to India.
                                                                                                      http://www.dailypioneer.com/columnists/oped/deep-rooted-animus-for-sardar.html

                                                                                                      South China Sea? Or West Philippine Sea? Indian Ocean. Its time for NaMo to work for Indian Ocean Union of States

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                                                                                                       India not afraid to rile China as tension mounts in South China Sea

                                                                                                      Delhi purposefully riles Beijing as tension mounts in South China Sea
                                                                                                      Chinese dredging vessels in the waters around Mischief Reef in the disputed Spratly Islands. (File photo)

                                                                                                      NEW DELHI: As tension mounts in South China Sea (SCS), where the US just sent a guided-missile destroyer to challenge China's fanciful 9-dashed line claim, India is showing it is open to not only aggressively seeking freedom of navigation and overflight throughout the region but also ensuring disputes are resolved in keeping with international laws. 

                                                                                                      Top government officials here said it was "on purpose" that India mentioned SCS also as West Philippine Sea after foreign minister Sushma Swaraj's recent meeting with her counterpart from the Philippines, secretary of foreign affairs Albert F Del Rosario. It was the Philippines which insisted that SCS be referred to also as West Philippine Sea in the joint statement issued after the meeting. 

                                                                                                      The two leaders recently co-chaired the third India-Philippines Joint Commission on Bilateral Cooperation. The joint statement issued also referred to South China Sea as West Philippine Sea, the name which Manila has been using only for the past 4-5 years to challenge Beijing's claims over 90 per cent of SCS waters, including the Spratly island chain near the Philippines. 

                                                                                                      This was the first time that India referred to SCS also as West Philippine Sea in any official document. It is significant for India that 60 per cent of India's seaborne trade passes through Malacca Strait which opens into SCS. According to government sources here, India is also concerned about China's expanding naval presence in the Indian Ocean region and the fact that Beijing is looking to acquire a base for its navy in Djibouti, located strategically on the horn of Africa. 

                                                                                                      While PM Narendra Modi did not allude to this issue in his meeting last week with Djibouti President Ismail Guelleh, the government remains concerned about how a base in Djibouti could allow China to operate more freely in Indian Ocean, nullifying the advantage of geography to India in overseeing some of world's busiest shipping lanes. 

                                                                                                      In the meeting with Swaraj, while he thanked India for goodwill visits by Indian naval ships, Rosario also emphasized that it was high time India started to 'act east and go east' with more such visits by the Indian navy. 

                                                                                                      In fact, it was during PM Narendra Modi's summit meet with President Obama last year in September when the NDA government seemed to suggest a subtle shift in India's position over SCS by mentioning for the first time, in a joint India-US statement, the need for freedom of navigation and overflight in the region. Until then India had refrained from bringing up the issue publicly in any bilateral exchange with the US. 

                                                                                                      In the meeting with Rosario, India also called for settlement of all disputes by peaceful means and for refraining from the threat or use of force, in accordance with universal principles of international law, including the 1982 UNCLOS. While China has ignored proceedings at the international arbitration court in the Hague, which Manila approached, saying UNCLOS was not applicable in SCS, Beijing has used the same UNCLOS to stake claim over Senkaku/ Diaoyu islands in East China Sea. 

                                                                                                      India's decision to follow the ruling of international arbitration in its own maritime dispute with Bangladesh seems to have given it the moral right to pitch for similar arbitration in SCS disputes. In the joint statement, the Philippines recognized the steps taken by India to solve its maritime boundary with Bangladesh, through arbitration at the Permanent Court of Arbitration "and its acceptance of the ruling as an example of peaceful resolution of disputes in accordance with universally recognized principles of international law, including the 1982 UNCLOS by the International Court."

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