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Tel: 91-11- 23684445; Fax: 91-11-23517722 1 August 2012
1.
FESTIVALS: Purushottam Maas: A solar year
consists of 365.25 days while a lunar year consists of 354.36 days. To bring
parity, an extra month is added after about 32 months in the lunar calendar.
This extra month finds mention in Aithreya Brahmana, Taitreya Samhita Rigveda,
Atharvaveda etc. According to a legend,
this extra month went to Bhagwan Vishnu and requested him to provide a Lord to
him also since every month, nakshatra and day are devoted to one or the other
Lord, it did not have any. Lord Vishnu granted the wish and said: “You will be
known by my name, Purushottam”. Since then this month is known as Purushottam
maas and Lord Vishnu is the Lord of it. It is also known as Adhik Mass, Mal
Maas, Adhimaas, Malimaluch, Sansarpa or Ahansapati Maas. Charity, donation,
homas are performed during this month. Auspicious works such as marriage,
mundan etc are prohibited during this month. There is an extra Bhadra in
Vikrami 2069, corresponding to August 18 to September 17.
2.
Ekal to Olympics: Ekal student, Pinki
Karmakar, ran for Bharat with London Olympic Torch in Nottingham Square on June
28. Seventeen year old Pinki Karmakar is a student of class X in Barbaruah Tea
State High School of Dibrugarh district, Assam. Pinki started her journey from
Ekal Vidyalaya in Barbaruah Tea village of Dibrugarh. “It was the only running
school in my village then,” she said.
Pinki’s father, Rajan Karmakar, is a painter in a
factory and mother Leela Rajvar plucks tea leaves. Among five sisters and one
brother, Pinki is the brightest. Pinki practises sports under the project
“Sports for Development” of UNICEF. She was selected on her merit to run with
Olympic Torch. Pinki is proud of her country. The whole village is proud of
her. Pinki told the media, “I am elated. It is due to the Ekal Vidyalaya I have
reached here.
3.
VISHWA SANGH
SHIKSHA VARG: (Dwitiya Varsh) VSSV
- 2012 started on July 15th at Chinmay Ashram, Kouva, Trinidad. This 21-day
varg is the first such varga outside Bharat. A total of 58 swayamsevaks from 6
countries are participating in the varg. The countries represented are USA, UK,
Kenya and Caribbean countries of Suriname, Guyana and Trinidad. The Varg was
inaugurated by Swami Prakashanandji of Chinmay Ashram in presence of Swami
Aksharanandji – Guyana who is Sarvadhikari for the varg and Arun Kankani – Vice
President – Sewa International USA. Swami Prakashanandji detailed the
importance of service to humanity and appealed to the participants to remain
‘sachet’ (alert) during the varg. Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh Trinidad &
Tobago Sanghchalak Shri Deoroop Timal and other office bearers were also
present.
This is the 6th VSSV
which takes place every 3 or 4 years for volunteers of HSS who finish their 3
Sangh Shiksha Vargas of 7 days in their respective countries. The varg schedule
includes shareerik training like Ashtang Yoga, Samata, Dand, Niyuddha and
bauddhik programs of important topics on Hindu culture, challenges to youth,
modern tools of communication etc. Programs from local cultural groups showing
the efforts taken by ‘Jahaji’ Bharatiyas to preserve their culture are also
planned. RSS functionaries Sarkaryavaha Ma.
Bhaiyya ji Joshi, Ma. Kannan ji, Ma. Bhagaiah ji, Saumitra ji Gokhale,
Ravikumar ji, Dr. Ram Vaidya ji and
Anil Vartak ji will also guide the participants.
4.
Vishwa Samiti Varg-2012: With a motto “Vayam
Vishwa-Shanthai Chiram Yatna Sheelah”, 15-day Vishwa Samiti Varg-2012 was
inaugurated at Hubli by Dr Ramachandra Bhat Kotemane, Director, Veda Vijnana
Gurukulam, Bangalore
on July 24 in august presence of Rashtra Sevika Samiti Akhil Bharatiya Pramukh
Kaaryavaahika Shanthakka, Varg Sarvaadhikaaari
Alakaataai Inaamdaar and Kshetriya Pracharak Mangesh Bhende. Organised by
Rashtra Sevika Samiti, the Vishwa Samiti Varg is held once in 4 years, and this
is the 5th such.
52 delegates from 8 countries are participating in the
Varg. An exhibition showcasing ancient Hindu traditions, Bharat’s achievements
in science and technology, seva activities by RSS, has been arranged in the
Varg.
5.
ANNA STARTS NEW FAST: Anti-graft activist Anna
Hazare, who galvanised the country last year with his hunger strikes against
corruption, began a new fast on July 29 to press demands for a crackdown on
official graft. Hazare and his supporters want parliament to strengthen a
pending anti-corruption bill and the creation of a special team to probe graft allegations
against 15 ministers, including Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. The 75-year-old
former army truck driver threatened to fast until death if the demands are not
met. “I am confident that... the people of my country will not let me die. I
draw my strength and confidence from you,” Hazare told several thousand
supporters gathered at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi.
6.
HANG ME IF I AM GUILTY, MODI: "Hang me if I am guilty (Main gunehgaar hoon to
mujhe phaansi par latkaa do)", said Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi
to the Urdu weekly Nai Duniya, edited by former Rajya Sabha SP member Shahid
Siddiqui. He refused to offer an apology for the 2002 communal violence. He
said he wasted no time in calling in the Army to deal with the violence, citing
a press communique issued by the state government to buttress his contention.
"On February 27, I told my officers to contact the Army. The Army said all their personnel were deployed at the border because of the Parliament attack...I said those working in certain sectors would definitely not have gone to the border. At least get them here," Modi told Siddiqui adding that he had given "shoot-at-sight" instructions to police to tackle the rioters. To a question that he had ordered inaction for 48 hours, Modi said, "Whoever said that should have faith in the SC. You need to repose faith in someone. SC appointed committee has come out with a report. For the first time a riot was investigated. Faith should be reposed in that." The interview is on the cover of the weekly, and runs into six pages covering post-Godhra riots, the state of Muslims in Gujarat and other sensitive issues.
"On February 27, I told my officers to contact the Army. The Army said all their personnel were deployed at the border because of the Parliament attack...I said those working in certain sectors would definitely not have gone to the border. At least get them here," Modi told Siddiqui adding that he had given "shoot-at-sight" instructions to police to tackle the rioters. To a question that he had ordered inaction for 48 hours, Modi said, "Whoever said that should have faith in the SC. You need to repose faith in someone. SC appointed committee has come out with a report. For the first time a riot was investigated. Faith should be reposed in that." The interview is on the cover of the weekly, and runs into six pages covering post-Godhra riots, the state of Muslims in Gujarat and other sensitive issues.
7.
RELIGION FOR
RATINGS: It’s been apparent for a while now that the
country’s electronic media will go to extreme lengths to spice things up. But
religion is now fair game too. In yet another example of how the industry’s
commercial goals trump ethics, open-mindedness and common sense, on July 24 a
television show broadcast an imam leading a Hindu boy through a live conversion
to Islam carried out in the studio as part of the show, complete with the
audience joining in to suggest Muslim names for the new convert. There is no
reason to think the boy was not converting of his own free will, but the whole
event had the distinct air of being carried out to give viewers something new
and different to watch, even if that meant dragging an intensely personal and
spiritual experience into public view. More disturbingly, what the channel
obviously didn’t stop to consider is the message this broadcast would send to
the country’s minorities. The joy with which the conversion was greeted, and
the congratulations that followed, sent a clear signal that other religions
don’t enjoy the same status in Pakistan as Islam does. In a country where
minorities are already treated as second-class citizens in many ways, this
served to marginalise them even further. After the uproar over her pursuit in a
park of innocent couples — who she later claimed were actors, making that
episode even more questionable — one would think the host and her management
would have been more careful with her programming. But then that is the problem
with Pakistani media: it is missing a responsibility chip, hurtling ahead with
what seems like exciting content without stopping to consider the ethical implications
or appropriateness of its programming, or the message it will send to all
Pakistanis, not just those it considers the mainstream. – Editorial, The Dawn, Pakistan,
July 27, 2012.
8.
SC forms panel to end
Amarnath yatris' woes: Eighty eight deaths so far in this year’s ongoing
pilgrimage to the Holy Cave of Amarnath shrine, situated at a height of 13,500
feet in south Kashmir Himalayas, led the Supreme Court on July 20 to constitute
a high powered committee (HPC) to undertake remedial steps.
The HPC, chaired by the Jammu and Kashmir Governor,
who is also Chairman of the Amarnath Shrine Board (ASB), would submit a report
to the court by August 13 on the steps to be taken for widening of existing
roads leading to the Holy Cave, segregation of motorised and non-motorised
traffic, medical facilities at regular distance along the entire stretch of the
yatra, and the impact caused to the environment. The bench of Justices BS
Chauhan and Swatanter Kumar issued a slew of directions to the Centre, State
Government and ASB in view of the large number of casualties en route the
shrine.
9.
VHP writes to Rashtrapati: Dr Pravin Togadia,
Antar-rashtriya Karyakari Adhyaksha, Vishwa Hindu Parishad has written a letter
to the Rashtrapati on ethnic cleansing of original tribes, other Hindus &
non-Muslims in Assam & current violence there. For the last two decades,
Karbi Anglong, Khasi, Dimasa, Bodo, Jaintia & many other local tribes who
have made Bharat’s north east eco-friendly with their environmentally simple
life styles, who have made Bharat rich with their great art & culture are
being brutally attacked, their jungle habitats burnt, their women raped, their
men fired at in close range & ultimately they are forced to either die at
the hands of Bangla Deshi invaders or leave their age-old traditional
habitats.Unfortunately, the Assam’s systematic ethnic cleansing of local
tribes, other Hindus & other non-Muslims is being ignored by the
authorities knowing fully well that the happenings in Assam are the systematic
efforts of Bangla Desh helped by Jehadi elements to create Greater Bangla Desh
& socio-politically occupy Assam & many parts of north eastern Bharat. Terror
outfits supported by HUJI in Bangla Desh & ISI, Al Qaeda in Pakistan are
fully deep-rooted by now in Assam namely like MULTA (Muslim Liberation United
Tigers of Assam) & others. VHP has demanded that a Tribunal should
immediately be formed to deport all Bangla Deshi Muslim infiltrators from Assam
& also from other states in Bharat to prevent further Ethnic Cleansing of
Bharat’s own citizens. The tribunal should have members from the Army, those
retired & served most part in Assam so that they are well aware
of the situation there, the socio-cultural experts to understand the importance
of original tribes in Bharat & the legal experts to give justice to all the
tribes who have been facing attacks by Bangla Deshis.
10.
HINDU HELP LINE
for Assam violence: More than three
lakh people have been affected by the sustained and systematic eight days’
violence against original tribes and other Hindus in Assam perpetrated by
Bangla Deshi infiltrators settled there.
For
the past many years Bangla Deshi infiltrators invaded Bharat from north eastern
borders, encroached upon these tribes’ lives, lands & livelihood pushing
them more & more away.
Karbi Anglong, Khasi, Bodo, Dimasa, Jaintiya & many such tribes are worse affected.
Karbi Anglong, Khasi, Bodo, Dimasa, Jaintiya & many such tribes are worse affected.
Hindu
Help Line has already a few conveners & volunteers in Assam. They have been
trying to reach food, clothes, medicines, water, milk powder, warm clothes etc.
Hindu
help Line appeals to all in Bharat & abroad to come ahead in helping
Assam’s Original Tribes & other Hindus in this times of crisis. Those who
wish to stand by with Hindus there & send aid, can contact contacthhl@gmail.com or
special mobile Number 09825323406 only for Assam Relief Aid.
11.
SEVA BHARATI
ASSAM has set up 3 base camps for
medical relief exercise, 2 in Kokrajhar and 1 in Gossaigaon. They have pressed
2 ambulances and two teams of doctors and helpers at these camps. Medicines are
being given for contagious and water borne diseases. Relief materials which are
of immediate importance are being provided in these camps. Mosquito coils,
bread, biscuits, bed sheets have been distributed.
12.
Lakshmi Sehgal passes away: Lakshmi Sehgal, freedom fighter and close
associate of Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose, passed away on July 23 in Kanpur. The
97-year-old who was the first captain of Rani of Jhansi Regiment, the women's
wing of Azad Hind Fauj or Indian National Army, had been ailing for some time
and was undergoing treatment at the Kanpur Medical Centre. Sehgal was the Left
Front candidate in the 2002 presidential election, but she lost to APJ Abdul
Kalam. Lakshmi Sahgal was a revolutionist of the Bharatiya independence
movement, an officer of the Indian National Army, and the Minister of Women's
Affairs in the Azad Hind government. Born in a Tamil Brahmin family in 1914, Lakshmi
Swaminathan Sehgal obtained a medical degree and set up a clinic for the poor
in Singapore in 1940. She fought the Allied forces in World War-II, commanding Jhansi
Rani Laxmi Bai Regiment of INA.
13.
Bal Apte No More: Senior Sangh ideologue, veteran BJP leader and former Rajya
Sabha MP Balwant Parushuram Apte, 73 who was popularly known as Bal Apte,
passed away in Mumbai on July 18 following a chronic lung disease. He is
survived by his wife and daughter. A lawyer by profession, Bal Apte played a
key role in the expansion of Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad and BJP work in
many parts of the country. He was also associated with Overseas Freiends of BJP
(OFBJP) activity for couple of year.
In his condolence message, RSS Sarsanghchalak Shri Mohan
Bhagwat said, “The first and foremost quality that comes to one’s mind about Apteji
is his candid, at times stern but always friendly advice which had played often
a stabilising role in many a minds and matters. We have lost that support
forever. The pain of that loss we have to bear along with members of his
family. While offering my condolences and respects in his revered memory, we
also pray for the necessary courage to us all and peace and enlightenment on
the path of the departed soul.”
14.
US award for 4 young
bharatiya-origin scientists: US President
Barack Obama has named four Bharatiya-American scientists among 96 researchers
as recipients of the prestigious Presidential Early Career Awards for
Scientists and Engineers. The awards bestowed on Sridevi Vedula Sarma, Pawan
Sinha, Parag A Pathak and Biju Parekkadan is the highest honour given by the US
government to science and engineering professionals in early stages of their
independent research careers.
"Discoveries in science and technology not only
strengthen our economy, they inspire us as a people," Obama said.
"The impressive accomplishments of today's awardees so early in their
careers promise even greater advances in the years ahead." An associate
professor of computational and visual neuroscience in the Department of Brain
and Cognitive Sciences at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Sinha
received his undergraduate degree in computer science from the IIT-New Delhi
and his Masters and doctoral degrees from MIT. Sarma is assistant professor,
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Institute for Computational Medicine at
the John Hopkins University. Parekkadan is associated with Massachusetts
General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, whereas Parag A Pathak is from the
MIT.
15.
14-year-old rescues 3: 14-year-old Sagar had gone to the Yamuna bank to deliver lunch
to his father, who operates a motorboat, and was returning home when he saw
Pankaj (15), Gaurav (15), Badal (14) and Deepak (16) in the Agra Canal in
Southeast Delhi’s Jaitpur area, screaming for help. “I dived into the canal. I
pulled Pankaj, Badal and Gaurav out of the water one by one. But it was too
late for Deepak. He was gone. I looked for him for around 30 minutes and then
went home,” said the Class VII student of a government school in Jaitpur. A
police officer said the four boys, who were cousins, were bathing on the stairs
of the 12-feet-deep canal, and slipped into it. Just then Sagar was passing by
and he heard their screams.
16.
bharat inducts 3rd indigenous
stealth frigate: Defence Minister AK Anatomy on July 21 commissioned
the 6,200 tonne warship INS Sahyadri, which is the third and last of the
Shivalik-class stealth frigates under Project 17 built indigenously at the
Mazagon Docks Limited (MDL), Mumbai. The first two ships in the class are INS
Shivalik and INS Satpura that are now on active duty. The three have cost some
Rs 10,200 crore and have been commissioned in the past two years.
The INS Sahyadri is an indicator of the generational
shift in Bharat’s warship-building capability. The 143m long ship can
tactically fire weapons even before the enemy detects it. The warship has
long-range surface-to-surface Klub missiles, area defence missiles Shtil and
Barak, anti-submarine torpedoes, 100 mm mounted gun and six-barrelled 30 mm
gun.
17.
Gandhinagar bharat's tree
capital: The latest figures of a census conducted by Gujarat government show
that 53.9% of 5,700-hectare area of its capital town Gandhinagar is covered
with trees. Effectively, there are 416 trees for every 100 people in the city,
which are more than any other city in the country. The census was conducted by
the social forestry department along with various municipal corporations and
urban development authorities. According to Forest Survey of India, Bangalore,
Chandigarh and Delhi have a green cover of 18.9%, 14.9% and 11.9%,
respectively. H S Singh, additional principal chief conservator of forests,
social forestry, said, "Gandhinagar's tree cover is comparable with the
best in the world. Atlanta in the US, for instance, is considered among the
greenest cities globally and has exactly the same percentage of land under tree
cover as Gandhinagar's."
18.
Set in Stone: In celebration of its
150th year, the Archeological Survey of India (ASI) has scheduled a number of
activities and events, one of which is an exhibition, titled “Archaeological
Survey of India Outside India”, on display at the National Gallery of Modern
Art, Mumbai. “We need to make people more aware of Bharat’s expertise in
archaeology and of the culture in and outside the country,” says AK Sinha,
Director (CEP, NCF, Publication), ASI. He adds that even fewer people know of
the work conducted outside the country by the ASI.
Among the sites represented in this exhibition are the
famous Angkor Wat Temple in Siem Reap, Cambodia, Vat Phou Temple in Lao PDR,
Laos, and Ananda Temple in Bagan, Myanmar. In 1960, an ASI team travelled to
Egypt to begin excavations in the areas around Afyeh and Tumus after the
Government of Egypt proposed a dam around the area. The area explored included
a cemetery, which when excavated, revealed that a number of graves had been
plundered and the team studied the method of disposal.
19.
interlocutors report opposed:
"The
language of the Interlocutors’ Report is the language of the separatists. It
questions the laws which make J&K an integral part of Bharat. It speaks
about human rights violation of terrorists but has failed to include the voices
of those who have been the real sufferers like those who have migrated from
Pakistan,” said Leader of Opposition Smt Sushma Swaraj while addressing a
dharna at Jantar Mantar on July 16. The dharna was organised by Jammu-Kashmir
People’s Forum to protest against the Interlocutors’ Report. About 3,000 people
participated in the dharna.
RSS Akhil Bharatiya Sah Sampark Pramukh Ram Madhav
said, “The report is against the spirit of non-negotiable integration of Jammu
& Kashmir with India in 1947. Mirpur, Muzaffrabad and Gilgit are ours. This
report has included only sentiments of leaders of Kashmir Valley. A report
should have the sentiments in it, but it should not be against the Constitution,”
he said. He alleged the interlocutors’ report is an attempt to include the
voices of those who do not have respect for the Constitution. They have failed
to put versions of the refugees, the Kashmiri Pandits, who have been forcefully
evicted from their land.
A seminar was organised by India Foundation at India
International Centre New Delhi 21.07.2012
on interlocutors report on Jammu
and Kashmir. The seminar was well attended by
intellectuals from across the country and many retired military officers. Senior
BJP leader Arun Jaitley was very critical of Justice Sageer Ahmed report which
was prepared when Sageer Ahmed was ailing. The report was submitted to State
Government after his death without placing it before the members of the Working
Group including him (Jaitley). He said that the cross border terrorism is an
important factor supporting militancy in J&K and it suits the separatist
leaders like Syed Ali Shah Geelani for whom their politics survives only if
Kashmir remains tense. He said the concessions can be made to the common people
and not to the separatists of Kashmir.
20.
Army Chief on lifting afspa: The Army is against
thinning of troops in Jammu and Kashmir and has reiterated its position that
the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act should not be withdrawn from certain
parts of J&K as has been proposed by the state government. Army Chief
General Bikram Singh, who visited the Northern Command last month, is believed
to have recommended to the Ministry of Defence that thinning of troops is not
feasible at present given the delicate security situation in the state and the
presence of terror camps and launching pads across the Line of Control (LoC). The
Army’s position on the security situation in J&K has factored a spurt in
infiltration from across the LoC. The numbers of attempts in the past few weeks
have been substantially more than those that took place in same period last
year. In the first fortnight of July, at least 25 militants are believed to
have sneaked in. Over 600 militants are said to be present at launching pads
across the border.
21.
Maharaja Ranjit Singh's
haveli in Pakistan: Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal on July 24
sought the personal intervention of Prime Minister for conservation of Maharaja
Ranjit Singh's dilapidated ancestral haveli at Gujaranwala and
"baradri" of Maharaja Sher Singh at Lahore in Pakistan. In a letter
to the prime minister, Badal noted that "Sher-e-Punjab" Maharaja
Ranjit Singh was the founder of the Sikh empire which extended from the Khyber
Pass in the west, to Kashmir in the north, Sindh in the south, and Tibet in the
east. He said that historical religious sentiments of people of Punjab were
linked to these monuments.
22.
BMS launches new website: Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh
(BMS), the largest trade union organisation in Bharat launched its new website www.bms.org.in on the occasion of its
foundation day on 23rd July in a function at Ernakulam. The BMS has over 8.3
million members and currently around 5860 unions are affiliated to it. The
website was formally inaugurated by Shijin, an Auto driver also Joint Secretary
of Auto Union. More than 400 people belonging to 12 unions attended the
programme.
23.
SHRI VISHWA
NIKETAN: Visitors: Shri Sandeep Lad, Shri Paven Sharma, Shri Sunil Pala,
Susri Sita Morar, Susri Anisha Bhogaita, Susri Seema Saujani from UK.
24.
FOOD FOR
THOUGHT: When the orders (for withdrawal) came, members of Rani of Jhansi
Regiment sent a petition to Netaji signed in their blood requesting him not to
send them back. They had come prepared to shed their blood and wanted to be
given the opportunity to do so. – Dr.
Lakshmi Sahgal, Indian National Army (INA).
JAI SHREE RAM
Stars,
not sun, predict monsoons accurately
Sandhya Jain
The Met office in Bharat, as elsewhere in the world,
forecasts monsoons based on the Gregorian calendar. But that system has
repeatedly proved unreliable. We must look to the nakshatras for solution.
According to the Hindu panchang, the month of sawan
which along with bhadon comprises Bharat’s monsoon season, began on July 4;
rains drenched this parched city on July 5. Was the monsoon on time, or
‘'delayed’ as the Met office kept lamenting? The Union Ministry of Agriculture
was clueless how to reassure farmers who sowed the kharif crop too early. CK Raju,
who played a key role in building Bharat’s first supercomputer, Param, and
received the Telesio-Galilei Academy of Science’s gold medal for 2010 for
discovering and correcting a mistake made by Albert Einstein, says the monsoon
was similarly ‘delayed’ in 2003, 2004, 2006, 2009, and 2010. Each time, the
rains eventually belied the Met office’s predictions of drought.
This is because the Gregorian calendar on which the
scientific community relies is not suitable for such calculations. Bharat must
first decide if the monsoon synchronises with the tropical or sidereal year.
The tropical (solar) year is the length of time the sun takes to return to the
same position in the cycle of seasons as seen from earth, such as from one
vernal equinox to the next.
It is not wholly synchronous with the earth’s orbit
around the sun (sidereal, actual year) due to the precession of the equinoxes,
and is around 20 minutes shorter (the difference can accumulate over long
periods). Bharatiya astronomy rests on the sidereal year; a better method of
timekeeping as the sun’s transit against fixed stars (nakshatras, for example,
Dhruv-tara) is easy to observe and traditionally determined sowing and
harvesting activities.
Europe was aware that it lacked the knowledge to
precisely calculate the length of either the tropical or sidereal year, which
Bharat knew from at least the third century. Hence the Gregorian calendar
reform committee headed by Christoph Clavius tried to consult Bharatiya
calendrical sources; just prior to the calendar reform of 1582, his student
Matteo Ricci was in Bharat, scouting calendrical manuals in Cochin! The
Gregorian calendar reform was needed because the Julian calendar fixed the
length of the year very crudely as the Romans were weak with fractions; so the
calendar slipped roughly one day every 128 years. By 1582 CE, it had slipped
about 10 days out of phase in the 1250-odd years since the Council of Nicaea
fixed the date of Easter by fixing the date of the vernal equinox on XII
calends (March 21). By the end of the 16th century, the vernal equinox fell
around March 11 on the Julian calendar.
The Gregorian reform corrected this anomaly by
advancing the calendar by 10 days, and by making every centennial year not a
leap year unless divisible by 400 (for example, 2000). It thus came closer to a
more accurate figure for the fractional part of the length of the tropical
year. The correction was vital for the practical purpose of fixing latitude
from observation of solar altitude at noon, necessary for navigation which was
then extremely important for Europe which lagged behind the Bharatiyas and
Arabs.
Shockingly, after independence, the Bharatiya calendar
reform committee adopted the Gregorian calendar and said the seasons depend on
the tropical year! Superficially, the tropical year seems supported by
astronomical treatises like Surya Siddhanta and PancaSiddhantika, but the
passages have been misunderstood. Anyway, even prior to Varahamihira and the
PancaSiddhantika, Aryabhata explicitly advocated the sidereal year; Marxist
historians concur that Bharatiya agriculture was linked to the nakshatras.
Modern Bharat has not seriously studied the monsoons,
though even today good monsoons drive the economy. The late Meghnad Saha
believed heat balance alone mattered in configuring the monsoons; CK Raju
thinks wind regime is the key, but says major research is necessary to
establish a paradigm. The ancients coped by creating over 5000 panchangs, each
‘corrected’ to account for latitude (hence the Kerala monsoon arrives much
before rains in Delhi) and longitude. There is a powerful cultural context here
—the Bharatiya calendar revolves around the rainy season (varsha) as the year
(varsh) relates to rain. It is eternally relevant for agriculture as poor
calculations can wreak havoc through mistimed agricultural operations.
The Nehruvian quest for “scientific temper” led to
slavish adoption of the Gregorian calendar for calculating the seasons and
monsoon rhythm, though objective analysis shows that every year the monsoon
arrives in harmony with the panchang, though ‘scientists’ keep bleating about
‘delays’. Refusing to learn from experience or history, they have ruined
farmers and harvests.
The keynote of the Hindu calendar is the monsoons on
which agriculture rests, and not summer or winter which may be relevant in
Europe. Monsoons depend upon the wind regime. The global circulation of wind is
not decided solely by the position of the sun. Hot air rises at the equator,
but does not descend at the poles. Due to the Coriolis force, the earth’s
rotation causes air to be deflected and to descend before the Horse-Latitudes
(sub-tropical latitudes between 30 and 35 degrees north and south). Thus, the
monsoons also depend upon the Coriolis force, which is an inertial force. Since
the only possible inertial framework is one fixed relative to the distant
stars, the Coriolis force relates to the sidereal motion of the earth, and
monsoons relate to the sidereal year. Had monsoons related to the tropical
year, the cumulative difference between the tropical and sidereal year would
have put the Indian calendar out of phase. This never happened.
By forcing farmers to abandon the ancient
nakshatra-governed seasons in favour of the tropical year, Nehruvian secularism
and scientific temper have compromised our food security. An eerie coincidence
that has facilitated the eclipse of agriculture from public consciousness is
the virtual disappearance of rural symbols once associated with major political
parties —cow and calf (Congress); plough and farmer (Janata, Lok Dal), while
the sickle of the communist parties has degenerated into an offensive weapon.
This is a telling comment on the growing urban bias in our polity and our
distorted understanding of the economy, the adverse effects of which have already
come to haunt us.
Two decades of liberalisation-globalisation and
thousands of crores of ‘incentives’ later, the service and the manufacturing
sectors have failed to promote growth or made a dent in unemployment
nationwide. The economy is gasping for a good monsoon to lift it out of the
present morass. Can we at least now trash the liberalisation-era myth that
there is no link between agriculture and growth? -- The Pioneer, 17 July, 2012.
Christian
Affront on Diwali
Viju Sidhwani, M.D.
Ever since we were young we attended the annual Diwali
mela at South Street Seaport. Each year our family drove in to downtown
Manhattan from the surrounding suburbs. Breathing in the panoramic views of the
Big Apple, with the backdrop of a glorious sunset, we knew an evening of live
dance performances, puppet shows and a display of exquisite fireworks bursting
on a blanket of stars was soon to follow. This was our idea of Diwali.
Nearly every year I have enjoyed the crowds, delicious
food and divine music that is characteristic of the street fair. However, this
year for the first time I came across a group who prominently identified
themselves as Bharatiya Christian missionaries. They came not for the purpose
of enjoying the mela or for observing the sacredness of the occasion, but with
the intention of converting Hindus and Sikhs to Christianity.
Among the other street vendors, this group set up a
table to distribute Christian literature and free water to passersby. One
person among them brought color-coordinated T-shirts proclaiming that Jesus is
the only one. As the day progressed, the growing number of motivated
evangelists infiltrated the crowds in the streets.
For much of the afternoon I saw them mobbing innocent
visitors, foisting upon them bottled water and literature. I was handed a
pamphlet by two men, one of them asking if I was interested in attaining peace.
I accepted the literature and briefly perused it before asking them why they
were preaching Christianity at a Diwali mela. One of the men rudely responded that
America is a free country and that he had the right to freedom of speech. His
counterpart cited the technicality that Diwali was over three weeks away and
arrogantly added that his presence was not disturbing anyone because this was a
community event open to everyone. I eventually told one of them that I was very
happy being Hindu, to which he replied, “I’m here to offer you something
better.” Turned off and insulted, I ended the conversation, indicating to them
that their presence was unwarranted and their aggressive propagation of
Christianity on such a noble occasion was impolite and indecent.
The competitive antagonism brought by the missionaries
detracted from our festive celebration of the festival of lights as they made
efforts to persuade members of our community to attend church and eventually
convert to Christianity. Coerced conversion of faith is fundamentally offensive
to the benevolent and peaceful dharmic traditions. While we as a unified
community are pluralistic in our beliefs and encourage diversity amongst
ourselves, we cannot welcome people who alienate us from our native ancestry
and intend to annihilate a tradition that is thousands of years old.
Hindu and Sikh American youth need the opportunity to
explore our culture and beliefs and to enjoy our festivals without facing
intimidation by those who wish to lure them toward a belief system that does
not accept our tradition’s antiquity, greatness and accepting nature.
On the auspicious occasion of Diwali, let us propagate
the true spirit of love and embrace our brothers and sisters, be they of
different faiths, on the condition that we are venerated to a degree that is
commensurate with our benevolent outlook of love and acceptance for all.
Viju
Sidhwani, 32, is a physiatrist and interventional pain specialist in New York
City. -- The Hinduism Today Magazine
Web Edition, July/August/September 2012
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