SAMVAD

Pausha Krishna 4, Vik. Samvat 2073.Yugabda 5118: 16 January, 2016


1. FESTIVALS: Vijaya Ekadashi 2. PRAVASI BHARATIYA DIVAS 2017
3. SCHOLARS CONVERGE AT BENGALURU TO CHANGE DISCOURSE ON JAMMU & KASHMIR 4. HINDUS AND JEWS GAIN GROUND IN NEW US CONGRESS
5. PAKISTAN'S MISSING 6. SERVE THE SOCIETY WITHOUT EXPECTING ANYTHING IN EXCHANGE:
7. SWAYAMSEVAKS ARE SOCIAL MESSENGERS: MOHAN BHAGWAT 8. 8TH VIBRANT GUJARAT SUMMIT: BHARAT EMERGING AS GLOBAL R&D HUB: MODI
9. A STRONG AND VIRTUOUS BHARAT IS THE NEED OF THE UNIVERSE - SURESH SONI 10. SARKAR GIVES 'PAISA', KALYAN ASHRAM GIVES 'DISHA'
11. IIT KHARAGPUR ALUMNUS WINS TECHNICAL ACHIEVEMENT OSCAR 12. CHANDRASEKARAN, A MARATHON MAN, BECOMES TATA GROUP CHAIRMAN
13. WORLD’S FIRST "BRAILLE ATLAS" FOR THE BLIND MADE IN BHARAT 14. PM INAUGURATES COUNTRY'S FIRST INTERNATIONAL BOURSE
15. KNIGHTHOOD FOR BHARATIYA-ORIGIN DNA EXPERT 16. PIO APPOINTED TO TOP MILITARY POST IN KYRGYZSTAN
17. BHARAT'S PER CAPITA INCOME TO CROSS RS 1 LAKH IN FY17 18. NRIS, BHARATIYAS TRAVELLING GET A BREATHER
19. SHRI VISHWA NIKETAN FOOD FOR THOUGHT

Article:

SWAMI VIVEKANANDA'S VISION OF UNIVERSAL RELIGION AND THE WEST


1. FESTIVALS: Vijaya Ekadashi is the eleventh day of Phalgun Krishna Paksh corresponding to February 22 this year. Vijay means victory. Bhagwan Ram was advised by sage Vakadalbhya to cross ocean on this day. Bhagwan Ram heeded to his advice and attained victory over Ravana.

The day has special significance for Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. It was on this day in Vikram Samvat 1962, 19th February 1906 that Guruji, Madhav Sadashivrao Golwalkar was born. Madhav got Diksha from Swami Akhandananda, the disciple of Swami Ramakrishna Paramahansa but he did not become a Sanyasi. He guided lakhs of Swayamsevaks by inculcating values of right living in them. -goTop

 

2. PRAVASI BHARATIYA DIVAS 2017: The annual global convention for the Bharatiya diaspora, Pravasi Bharatiya Divas 2017 was held in Bengaluru from January 7 to 9 with a record participation since its inception. Fourteen States, including Karnataka, Kerala, Assam, Haryana and Madhya Pradesh had put up stalls at the exhibition. Foreign dignitaries including Surinamese Vice-President Michael Ashwin Adhin, Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Costa and chief ministers from seven states participated in the event.

Pradhan Mantri Narendra Modi, in his speech, emphasised on FDI being both foreign direct investment (FDI) and 'first development of India'. He appealed to the non-resident Bharatiya community, 'Put your money where your mouth is.' While foreign direct investment has grown significantly over the last two years or so, there is still much that the well-off non-resident Bharatiyas can do in investing in their country of origin. By reminding them that they are Bharat's brand ambassadors abroad, Pradhan Mantri invested in them enormous trust, which the non-resident Bharatiyas cannot but work to uphold.

The Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Awards were conferred by Rashtrapati Pranab Mukherjee at the Convention on 9th January in the valedictory session. Out of the total 30 awardees selected by an 11 member committee headed by Uparashtrapatiji, Six were from USA, two each from United Arab Emirates and UK and one each from Australia, Bahrain, Belgium, Brunei, Canada, Djibouti, Fiji, France, Israel, Japan, Libya, Malayasia, Mauritius, Portugal, Qatar, Singapore, Thailand and Trinidad and Tobago. Three prominent office bearers of Vishwa Hindu Parishad namely Dr Maheshbhai Mehta and Ramesh Shah from USA and Sushil Saraf from Thailand were among the awardees. -goTop

 

3. SCHOLARS CONVERGE AT BENGALURU TO CHANGE DISCOURSE ON JAMMU & KASHMIR: A strategic gathering of academic and legal experts, senior Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) functionaries and political leadership discussed in Bengaluru on January 6-7, the road map to correct the discourse on Jammu and Kashmir, which has been distorted by forces inimical to Bharat's interests.The national confluence of scholars was organised to mark the conclusion of millennium year celebrations of Kashmir's great philosopher Acharya Abhinavagupta. Art of Living Foundation hosted the 40-session scholars meet. Sri Sri Ravishankar has presided over the year-long celebrations of Acharya Abhinavagupta.

Addressing the gathering of over 300 scholars, strategists and legal luminaries, Union HRD Minister Prakash Javadekar said Acharya Abhinavagupta was the embodiment of Bharatiya thought, which has always questioned established norms and created positive change.

RSS Sarkaryawah Suresh alias Bhaiyyaji Joshi said, "Acharya Abhinavagupta propagated the basic principles of Bharatiya thought through Shaiva philosophy - from Kashmir in the north to the southernmost areas of Bharat." In his address, Sri Sri Ravishankar said true intellectuals are celebrated beyond centuries and Acharya Abhinavagupta was such an amazing thinker and philosopher.

Others who addressed the conference were Arun Kumar, member of Akhil Bharatiya Karyakari Parishad of RSS, Dr Nirmal Singh, the deputy Chief Minister Jammu and Kashmir, RSS Akhil Bharatiya Sah-Prachar Pramukh J. Nandakumar etc. The Confluence included eight simultaneous dialogue sessions on different aspects of Abhinavagupta's works as also current issues - issues having far-reaching implications vis-a-vis Jammu Kashmir state. -goTop

 

4. HINDUS AND JEWS GAIN GROUND IN NEW US CONGRESS: This is for the first time in American history that the Congress has three Hindu members - Tulsi Gabbard, Raja Krishnamoorthi and Ro Khanna. After Jews, who have 30 members in the new US Congress, Hindus and Buddhism, each having three members jointly share the third spot in terms of religious ranking of US Congress members, according to Pew Research Center analysis.

Among the 293 Republicans elected to serve in the 115th Congress, all but two identify as Christians; there are two Jewish Republicans - Lee Zeldin of New York and David Kustoff of Tennessee - who both serve in the House.The 242 Democrats in Congress include 28 Jews, three Buddhists, three Hindus, two Muslims and one Unitarian Universalist - as well as the only member of Congress to describe herself as religiously unaffiliated, Kyrsten Sinema from Arizona. -goTop

 

5. PAKISTAN'S MISSING: Pakistan appears to be lurching towards totalitarianism, with at least five bloggers and independent civil society activists having mysteriously 'disappeared' over the last fortnight. The evidence points towards state involvement in their disappearances. All of them questioned state policies; their families have reported men in plain clothes taking them away in unmarked cars in similar fashion; they have been targeted through orchestrated online smear campaigns; and the assumption within Pakistan is that they have been kidnapped by the government to silence independent voices.
This used to be a common fate of Balochi activists before, but now such practices have reached deep into the Pakistani mainstream with the current abductions being reported from Islamabad and Punjab. Major cities have witnessed protests demanding their immediate release; nevertheless bloggers and activists are even more vulnerable than journalists in Pakistan. Human Rights Watch, the UN and US state department have all expressed concern at the fate of the disappeared. India should not remain a silent spectator.
As one of South Asia's most stable democracies, India should speak out in defence of human rights in the region. New Delhi recently made human rights in Balochistan an area of concern following Pakistan's all-out intervention in Indian Kashmir. This concern should extend, logically, to the persecuted in other parts of Pakistan - keeping in mind that the democratic constituency intersects largely with the peace constituency as well. Given the shrinking space for freedom in Pakistan New Delhi should not only call for the activists' release but also offer asylum to persecuted dissidents, who may want a safe space to pursue their activism within Pakistan. That's how the West trumped the Soviet Union during the Cold War; today's instantaneous means of communication make it even easier to amplify voices across borders.- Editorial, Times of India, January 16, 2016.

 
-goTop

 

6. SERVE THE SOCIETY WITHOUT EXPECTING ANYTHING IN EXCHANGE: RSS Sarsanghachalak Shri Mohan Bhagwat while speaking at the Virat Hindu Sammelan organised on the concluding ceremony of Bharat Sewashram Sangh centenary celebration on December 31 in Vasanda, Gujarat said, "We have to strengthen the society without expecting anything from Sarkar. We have to serve the society without expecting anything in exchange. This will not only strengthen the Hindu society but will also send a good message to the entire world." International general secretary of Bharat Sevashram Sangh Swami Vishwatmanand Maharaj, joint secretary Swami Ambarishananda Maharaj, Swami Santprasad Maharaj of Swaminarayan Mandir (Halol-Kalol) and Prince of Vasanda Jaivirendra Singh also addressed the gathering. More than 50,000 Vanvasis were present on the occasion. -goTop  

 

7. SWAYAMSEVAKS ARE SOCIAL MESSENGERS: MOHAN BHAGWAT: Sarasanghachalakji on January 1 said that swayamsevaks are like social messengers who instill good values among citizens. Bhagwat was speaking at the 60th year celebration of RSS magazine 'Sadhna' in Ahmedabad. Speaking as the chief guest of the event, Bhagwat added that the society has always felt the need of media which can speak with decency, with facts and which can reach out to the masses to help form ideas for betterment of society."Now, people get information through internet and though types of media have changed, the society still needs media which will disseminate hope, positive ideas and good values," he said.Swayamsevaks have been doing this kind of information dissemination all along, Shri Bhagwat added. -goTop

 

8. 8TH VIBRANT GUJARAT SUMMIT: BHARAT EMERGING AS GLOBAL R&D HUB: MODI: "Bharat is emerging as the global Research and Development hub with the country producing the second largest number of scientists and engineers, said Pradhan Mantri Narendra Modi at the summit. Foreign Direct Investment in the last two fiscals was 60 per cent higher than in previous two years." he added. Outlining Bharat’s strength of 3 Ds - Demography, Democracy and Demand - Modi also spoke about his ambitious 'Make in Bharat' initiative. He pointed out that his Government was on course to achieve the ambitious target of providing a roof over every poor's head by 2022.

The theme of the four-day 8th edition of the Summit is 'Sustainable Economic and Social Development'. The Presidents of Kenya and Rwanda, Prime Ministers of Portugal and Serbia, Deputy PM of Russia, besides Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, Railways Minister Suresh Prabhu and the Chief Ministers of Gujarat, Maharashtra and Arunachal Pradesh Vijay Rupani, Devendra Fadnavis and Pema Khandu respectively too attended the Summit. -goTop

 

9. A STRONG AND VIRTUOUS BHARAT IS THE NEED OF THE UNIVERSE - SURESH SONI: "Bharat is an eternal nation; it is the soul of the humanity. And to make a strong and virtuous Bharat is the need of the universe. This can be achieved only through making the people understand the basic tenets of Hindu dharma and only Sanskrit can be vehicle for this change", said Suresh Soni, RSS Sahsarkaryavah while delivering the keynote address in the special program attended by about 2000 delegates  during the All Bharat Convention of the Sanskrit Bharati at Udupi, Karnataka on January 10. Shri Shri Vishweshteerth Swamy, the pontiff of the Paryaya Shree Pejawar Adhokshaja Mutt, Udupi, Shri Shri Nirmalanandnath Mahaswami of the Adi Chunchungiri Mahasansthan Mutt, Shri Dharmapalnath Swami of the Shakha Mutt, Bhaktvatsal Sharma, the newly elected national president of the Sanskrita Bharati were present on the Dias. -goTop

 

10. SARKAR GIVES 'PAISA', KALYAN ASHRAM GIVES 'DISHA', said Smt Draupadi Murmu, Jharkhand Rajyapal at the foundation day of Vanvasi Kalyan Ashram and its founder Bala Saheb Deshpande’s birth anniversary celebration in Bhubaneswar on December 26. "19,200 sewa projects are being run by the Kaylan Ashram in Vanvasi villages for their development. Protection of Vanvasi culture is really a basic service. Writing books on Vanvasi heroes, literature on festivals and rituals is a great service to the rural people," the Rajyapal added.

Kalyan Ashram vice president Kripa Prasad Singh, as the chief speaker said that 1,33,431 students are getting education in Kalyan Ashram schools, hostels and informal education centres. This year the health workers treated 11,42,667 patients in remote area. Beneficiaries of village development, skill development, SHG and other economic development projects are more than a lakh. He said about 2,000 full time workers, part timeworkers and Vistaraks are working in the Vanvasi areas.  Others who graced the occasion included JP Mishra, Haricharan Bandra, Dr Sanjit Kumar Panda and RSS National Executive Member Sunil Pada Goswami. -goTop

 

11. IIT KHARAGPUR ALUMNUS WINS TECHNICAL ACHIEVEMENT OSCAR: Bharatiya-American Parag Havaldar, a computer engineer from IIT Kharagpur, is part of the Academy Awards' list of winners for Techinical achievement. The list of 18 achievements was recently announced by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for its 2017 Scientific and Technical awards and Havaldar is honoured for the development of expression-based facial performance-capture technology at Sony Pictures Imageworks. "This pioneering system enabled large-scale use of animation rig-based facial performance-capture for motion pictures, combining solutions for tracking, stabilisation, solving and animator-controllable curve editing," a release from the Academy said. The awards will be handed out on February 11 in Beverly Hills, ahead of the main Oscar ceremony to be held on February 26.
The technology developed by him and his group has been used to create stylised and realistic character animations in a variety of movies including "Alice in Wonderland", "Monster House", "Hancock" and "Spiderman".  -goTop

12. CHANDRASEKARAN, A MARATHON MAN, BECOMES TATA GROUP CHAIRMAN: Natarajan Chandrasekaran, the 53-year old MD and CEO of Bharat’s largest technology company TCS, has been elevated as the first non-Parsi and first professional executive to head the country's largest, $100 billion conglomerate. He will take over as executive chairman from February 21, becoming the seventh in the 149-year history of the salt-to-software conglomerate and only the third 'non-Tata' after Mistry and Nowroji Saklatwala. Chandra joined what was then Tata Consultancy Services in 1987 as a computer programmer and became its MD and CEO in 2009. Besides being an insider, Chandra has also consistently delivered over the seven years that he has led TCS, the crown jewel of the Tata - revenues have grown 262% since 2009-10, net profit 247%, and it is the most valuable company in Bharat with a market capitalization of Rs 4.62 lakh crores. It contributes 10% of the Tata Group's tatal reveues 40% of its profit and 70% of its market value.
N Chandrasekaran is also a world traveler when it comes to running long-distance races. From Berlin to Amsterdam, from Boston to Tokyo and from Mumbai to New York, Chandra has run more than a dozen marathons in these cities since he took to running about seven years ago.  -goTop
 

13. WORLD'S FIRST "BRAILLE ATLAS" FOR THE BLIND MADE IN BHARAT: We have seen the map read and learnt the map but for the blind who has never known it, this comes as a 'box of surprise'. As blind people have strong sense of touch the newly made map will be made accessible for blind people.

The National Atlas and Thematic Mapping Organization of Kolkata have stepped forward to make such unique atlas. In this version of Atlas, the map outlines are raised and embossed on paper using silk screen printing in order to feel them. This is called as "Braille Atlas." This initiative taken by NATMO will help to bridge the gap between Bharatiya science and the social need.Prithvish Nag, Surveyor General of Bharat, said "This is the first full atlas for the blind in the world. Most other efforts in the world have been to make individual-tactile maps but to make a full atlas which can be mass produced, this Bharatiya effort that." -goTop

 

14. PM INAUGURATES COUNTRY'S FIRST INTERNATIONAL BOURSE: Pradhan Mantri Narendra Modi on January 9 put Bharat on the global capital markets' map as he inaugurated the country's first international stock exchange named India International Exchange at the Gujarat International Finance Tec-city (GIFT) in Gandhinagar. "Bharat is in excellent time zone and this will enable trading at IndiaInx 22 hours a day, starting when the Japanese markets start and closing when the US markets close," Modi said after inaugurating the exchange. Terming the event "momentous", Modi pointed out that the world class facilities at Gift City-touted as Bharat's first smart city with next-in-class infrastructure-will be for world class talent in finance and technology at IndiaInx.

IndiaInx under the Bombay Stock Exchange will be one of the fastest exchanges in the world trading in currencies, equities, commodities, derivatives, and even masala bonds in near future.  -goTop

 

15. KNIGHTHOOD FOR BHARATIYA-ORIGIN DNA EXPERT: Shankar Balasubramanian, a Bharatiya-origin British professor of chemistry and DNA expert at Cambridge University, has received a Knighthood along with Olympic stars Andy Murray and Mo Farah among others by Queen Elizabeth II for their contributions.

Balasubramanian, 50, Herchel Smith Professor of Medicinal Chemistry at Cambridge University, has been recognised for his work as a co-inventor of Next Generation DNA sequencing, described as the most transformational advance in biology and medicine for decades. -goTop

 

16. PIO APPOINTED TO TOP MILITARY POST IN KYRGYZSTAN: Bharatiya-origin Saudi-based entrepreneur has been appointed Major General of Kyrgyzstan, a rare military position occupied by a Bharatiya in the central Asian country. Shaikh Rafik Mohammed, who hails from Kerala, was appointed Major General of Kyrgyzstan by defence minister Ali Mirza. It is a rare military position occupied by an overseas Keralite, said Omar Abu Baker, media adviser of Rafik. Rafik was invited by the Kyrgyzstan government to take up the prestigious military position in view of his earlier contribution to the country. -goTop

 

17. BHARAT'S PER CAPITA INCOME TO CROSS RS 1 LAKH IN FY17: As per the 'First Advance Estimates of National Income, 2016-17’ released by the Central Statistics Office (CSO), the per capita net national income during 2016-17 is "estimated to be Rs 1,03,007" at current prices.This is higher by 10.4 per cent compared to Rs 93,293 during 2015-16."The per capita income in real terms (at 2011-12 prices) during 2016-17 is likely to attain a level of Rs 81,805 as compared to Rs 77,435 for the year 2015-16," the estimates said. -goTop

 

18. NRIS, BHARATIYAS TRAVELLING GET A BREATHER: Non-Resident Bharatiyas and citizens who happened to be overseas at the time of demonetisation will be given an opportunity to deposit scrapped notes of Rs 500 and Rs 1000 denomination. Bharatiya citizens will have time until March 31, 2017, to exchange their notes while foreigners can do so until June 30, 2017. NRIs will have to provide customs certificate about import of the scrapped notes. The deposits will have to be made personally by the owners of the funds and no third party deposits will be allowed. "While there is no monetary limit for exchange for the eligible Resident Indians, the limit for NRIs will be as per the relevant FEMA Regulations," said RBI. -goTop

 

19. SHRI VISHWA NIKETAN: Pravas: RSS sarkaryavaha Bhayya ji Joshi would return to Bharat after his tour to South Africa. Saumitra Gokhale samyojak Vishwa Vibhag will return to USA and Dr Ram Vaidya sahsamyojak will rerun to UK. Visitors: Khanderao Kand, Chander Malik -USA, Sanjiv Bhakri - Australia, Ranbir Singh Rathi & others - Hong Kong

FOOD FOR THOUGHT: The emancipation of Bharat needs the razor-like intelligence of a Shri Shankaracharya and the limitless compassion of a Bhagwan Buddha. -- Swami Vivekanand. -goTop

JAI SHREE RAM

--

SWAMI VIVEKANANDA'S VISION OF UNIVERSAL RELIGION AND THE WEST

Ram Madhav

 The very name of Swami Vivekananda sends through us a stirring current of strength. "I am one of the proudest men ever born" he proclaimed while speaking about his Hindu roots, "but let me tell you frankly, it is not for myself, but on account of my ancestry."

Only the sinners live long, goes an adage. It shouldn't be taken to mean that all those who live long are sinners. But the reverse of it is also equally true. Lives of many great men are shorter. Adi Shankara, for instance, lived for only three decades. Shivaji died at the age of 51. Similarly, Vivekananda's life was short. Born in 1863, he died at a very young age of 39, in 1902. But the amount of good work that he did in such a short period can be gauged from the fact that even after over a century since his demise, he is still considered as the most powerful youth icon and an inspiration to the country.

Among his contemporaries was Mahatma Gandhi, though they never met. On a visit to the Ramakrishna Mutt at Belur, which was founded by Vivekananda, Gandhi claimed that his patriotism grew a thousand-fold after reading Vivekananda.

I have gone through his works very thoroughly, and after having gone through them, the love that I had for my country became a thousand-fold.

Mahatma Gandhi

Romain Rolland, renowned French philosopher and Nobel prize winner, had authored a biography of Vivekananda. He had boundless admiration for Swamiji.

I cannot touch these sayings of his . . .without receiving a thrill through my body like an electric shock . . .what transports must have been produced when in burning words they issued from the lips of the hero.

Romain Rolland

Rolland also once said that his greatest regret in life was not to have met Vivekananda and learnt at his feet.

Vivekananda was a revolutionary monk, revolutionary in the sense that he possessed great courage and conviction to defend Hinduism abroad on the one hand, and severely jolt Hindus out of their slumber through his harsh admonition, on the other. He was relentless in his efforts to carry the message of Vedanta to every nook and corner of the world, but he was also ruthless in exposing the fallacies and superstitions that were eating into the vitals of Hinduism domestically.

His visit to the United States to take part in the World's Parliament of Religions (WPR) at Chicago in August 1893 was a turning point in the history of Hinduism. That was not an easy time. India was under British rule, as a slave country. Hinduism was a much-denounced religion in the West, thanks to the overzealous missionaries who wanted to make some extra money by portraying India in a negative light. Moreover, this young man of just 30 was a completely unknown entity both in India as well as abroad.

But once Vivekananda set foot on American soil, he was unstoppable. He faced great difficulty, especially with the lack of money and lack of acquaintances in a faraway foreign land. But fearlessness was his character, and knowledge and oratory his weapons. He displayed exceptional knowledge and oozed self-confidence. That is why when he wanted an introduction from Professor John Henry Right of Boston University for participation in the WPR, the learned professor responded by saying, "To ask you, Swami, for your credentials is like asking the sun to state its right to shine."

We must also recall that Vivekananda was the first Indian to be invited to chair the Department of Oriental Philosophy at Harvard University, though he politely declined.

The WPR was a first-of-its-kind interfaith event in those times. The host committee was chaired by a clergyman, John Barrows. Around 190 papers were presented at the event, majority of them by Christian scholars. Vivekananda spoke thrice in that 10-day conference. It is well-known that he became the centre of attraction because of his unique thoughts and unparalleled oratory. His very first words, "Dear Brothers and Sisters of America", attracted a thunderous applause for a good couple of minutes. He left an indelible impression on the audience through his authentic portrayal of Hinduism and Vedanta.

It is important to consider the background of the Chicago event. Promoted by a predominantly Christian group, the event received both curiosity and condemnation before it actually kicked off. The Archbishop of Canterbury had sent a letter of disapproval from London saying, "the Christian religion is the one religion. I do not understand how that religion can be regarded as a member of a Parliament of Religions without assuming the equality of the other intended members and the parity of their position and claims."

Vivekananda propagated the idea of a 'universal religion' and equated it with Vedanta. The organisers, including Barrows, were undoubtedly impressed by his vision and oration, but at the same time they saw in his philosophy a threat to Christianity. His inclusivism was acceptable to them to the extent that it didn't challenge the primacy of Christianity. Barrows' report said.

    The Parliament has shown that Christianity is still the great quickener of humanity, that it is now educating those who do not accept its doctrines, that there is no teacher to be compared with Christ, and no Saviour excepting Christ . . . The non-Christian world may give us valuable criticism and confirm scriptural truths and make excellent suggestion as to Christian improvement, but it has nothing to add to the Christian creed.

In his "Review and Summary" of the Parliament, Barrows seemed to attack Vivekananda directly by saying:

    The idea of evolving a cosmic or universal faith out of the Parliament was not present in the minds of its chief promoters. They believe that the elements of such a religion are already contained in the Christian ideal and the Christian Scripture. They had no thought of attempting to formulate a universal creed.

However, the WPR had provided an excellent opportunity for a new star to rise on the spiritual horizon of the world. Many prominent papers of the time had carried articles eulogising the ideas and ideals presented by Vivekananda in the form of Vedanta or universal religion. "We are carrying coal to Newcastle", wrote a paper suggesting that it was an insult to send Christian missionaries to a land from where Vivekananda came.

During his four-year sojourn in the West, Vivekananda had propagated the glorious Indian idea of universality of spiritual thought. He believed that like all other things, spirituality and religion too had to pass the test of scientific exploration. Mere belief, according to him, was not enough. Religions had to stand the test of scrutiny and investigation of science. "If a religion is destroyed by such investigations, it was then all the time useless, unworthy superstition; and the sooner it goes, the better". When someone asked him about Vedanta, he responded in the affirmative about the scientific basis of his religion.

In the ninth chapter of Bhagavad Gita, Krishna tells Arjuna that he was imparting him 'Jnanam Vignana Sahitam', meaning spiritual knowledge that is in consonance with scientific knowledge.

Universal religion or Vedanta is not a negation of the existence of multiple religions. It is based on the statement by Gitacharya in the fourth chapter of the Gita, ye yatha mam prapadyante, tams tathaiva bhajamy aham, meaning whoever worships me in whatever form, I am That. Vivekananda used to quote this verse from the Gita to state that Vedanta is not an exclusivist or superior religion but one that every human being should attain in the evolutionary process of spiritual thought.

Through Vedanta, Vivekananda tried to dispel the notion in the West about Hinduism being a religion of many gods. Since the Semitic world believed in the monotheistic conception of God, Hinduism to them was polytheism. Vivekananda would contest this understanding to explain that the Vedantic philosophy in Hinduism proposed omnipresence of God and, hence, if one were to explain Hinduism in those terms, it ought to be categorised as omnitheism, not polytheism.

Despite his eager support and propagation of Vedanta and universal religion in the West, Vivekananda had some harsh words for his countrymen. A modernist at the core, he was aghast at the depravity, poverty and superstition at the time in his motherland. He had openly revolted against these aspects and condemned the practitioners of those false faiths in the harshest of terms.

On his way to America, Vivekananda had the opportunity to visit Japan. He spent considerable time visiting several cities like Tokyo and Osaka. His letters to his fellow countrymen from Japan are instructive of his modernist outlook on the one hand, and his abhorrence for backward-looking ideas of the Hindu religion on the other.

"Come, see these people, and then go and hide your faces in shame", wrote Vivekananda in a letter to India on 10 July 1893, from Japan.

    A race of dotards, you lose your caste if you come out! Sitting down these hundreds of years with an ever-increasing load of crystallized superstition on your heads, for hundreds of years spending all your energy upon discussing the touchableness or untouchableness of this food or that, with all humanity crushed out of you by the continuous social tyranny of ages - what are you? And what are you doing now? . . . promenading the sea-shores with books in your hands - repeating undigested stray bits of European brainwork, and the whole soul bent upon getting thirty-rupee clerkship, or at best becoming a lawyer - the height of young India's ambition - and every student with a whole brood of hungry children cackling at his heels and asking for bread! Is there not water enough in the sea to drown your books, gowns, university diplomas and all?

These words might sound harsh, but behind them laid a naked truth - of a great nation with universal hoary ideas being reduced to a despondent mass of hungry, uneducated and superstitious people.

In Rolland's words, Vivekananda, through his life and teachings, had wanted to awaken this mass of people, who were the inheritors of the world's greatest philosophical truths and wisdom. His obituary for Vivekananda read:

    He was less than forty years of age when the athlete lay stretched upon the pyre. But the flame of that pyre is still alight today. From his ashes, like those of the Phoenix of old, has sprung anew the conscience of India. Oh Mother! Awake.

In Rabindranath Tagore's words, "If you want to know India, study Vivekananda. In him everything is positive and nothing negative". Let's each one of us study Vivekananda. Only then can we understand the real India.

(Ram Madhav is National General Secretary of the BJP and director of India Foundation.) -goTop


SHRI VISHWA NIKETAN vishwav@bol.net.in www.shrivishwaniketan@blogspot.com

Pausha Shukla 3, Vik. Samvat 2073.Yugabda 5118: January 1, 2017



SAMVAD

Pausha Shukla 3, Vik. Samvat 2073.Yugabda 5118: January 1, 2017


1. FESTIVALS: Saraswati Puja -Vasant Panchami

2. Hanukkah at Gateway of India

3.  bharat on cusp of a change : RASHTRAPATIJI

4. PM Modi Inaugurates Shiv Smarak

5.  RSS not a remote control, wants strong Bharat with Hindutva at its core: Bhagwat

6. Dharma Sanskriti Mahakumbh

7. Soldiers protect nation's borders, saints secure moral borders: dr Bhagwat

8. Vedic hymns are scientific equations: Veda Ravishankar

9. 'CENTRE FOLLOWING PATH OF DEEN DAYAL UPADHYAYA'

10.  BHARAT test-fires nuclear-capable Agni 5 ballistic missile

11. Cambodian Scholar Becomes Country's First 'Sanskritist'

12.  OVER 3 LAKH VISIT HSSF-2016 IN BENGALURU

13. 'We Did Great With The Hindus', Says Trump

14. First time, Church says: Dalit Christians face untouchability

15. HSS VISHWA SANGH SHIKSHA VARG-2016 CONCLUDES AT NAIROBI

16.  Dr. B. B. Lal Honored by Indian Council of Historical Research

17. Collectors can give citizenship to Pakistan Hindu migrants

18. MADRAS HC DECLARES SHARIA COURTS ILLEGAL

19. BHARAT TOP SOURCE OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRANTS

20. PIO Elected as mayor of key Californian City

21. WINTER TOURISM WITNESSES 34% GROWTH

22. 100 GLORIOUS YEARS OF BANARAS HINDU UNIVERSITY

23. BHARAT'S ECONOMY SURPASSES THAT OF UNITED KINGDOM

24. SHRI VISHWA NIKETAN: Pravas -Visitors & FOOD FOR THOUGHT.

Articles:

I BARKING UP THE WRONG TREE

II. Pivot to the east


1. FESTIVALS: O, Wind! If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind? - Percy Bysshe Shelley. All over the world, spring denotes end of winter season. According to Bharatiya Panchang, Vasant Panchami falls on the fifth day of Magha Shukla Paksha, corresponding to February 1 this year. Yellow fields of Sarson visible upto far off have made the yellow colour synonymous with Vasant. People wear yellow clothes and colour their food yellow. Saraswati is worshipped in a yellow dress, and sweet saffron rice and yellow sweets are consumed within the families. In Nepal, Bihar and eastern Bharat, the festival is known as Saraswati Puja. Saraswati is the Goddess of knowledge, music, arts, science and technology. Maharaja Ranjit Singh introduced the tradition of kite flying on this day over two hundred years ago. The festival is celebrated by the Bharatiya diaspora in all parts of the world. -GoTop

 

2. Hanukkah at Gateway of India: Hanukkah is the Festival of Lights for the Jews, with an aim to spread light and love. This year's public celebration of lighting of the Menorah (candle stand) took place at the Gateway of India in Mumbai lead by Rabbi Israel Kozlovsky, the rabbi of Chabad in Mumbai. Speaking on the occasion, Kozlovsky said, "The festival of Hanukkah goes on for eight days with we adding a light everyday to the Menorah. We are here to spread a clear message of love and goodness as the world needs it the most today. Every candle we light is meaningful and powerful. We all need to spread the light and pray for world peace." The first light on the Menorah was lit by Gilad hassidwho lives and works in Surat in the diamond technology trade. The following lights were lit by Ilan Divon, commercial attaché at the consulate of Israel in Mumbai. -GoTop

 

3.  bharat on cusp of a change - RASHTRAPATIJI: While many global economies are yet to recover fully from the blow dealt by the 2008 financial crisis, Bharat seems to have weathered the storm effectively and is marching ahead with strong economic indicators, Rashtrapati Pranab Mukherjee said in Hyderabad on December 23 while addressing an industry gathering. "It is fortunate that even after almost a decade, when many other economies are still limping ..the Bharatiya economy is still moving ahead. Bharat has emerged as the largest economy among the fastest growing nations," he said, adding that Bharat is at the cusp of a change and can claim its rightful place provided it addresses human development issues. -GoTop

 

4. PM Modi Inaugurates Shiv Smarak: Pradhan Mantri Narendra Modi along with Rajyapal C Vidyasagar Rao, Mukhya Mantri Devendra Fadnavis and other dignitaries, the descendants of the great Maratha warrior, Udayan Raje Bhosale and Sambhaji Raje Bhosale vroomed off from Girgaum Chowpatty in a large Indian Coast Guard hovercraft in the afternoon of December 24 to perform a symbolic 'jalpujan' for the proposed Rs 3,600 crore memorial of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj. At the designated spot in the Arabian Sea finalised for the project, where a makeshift floating mini-replica of the proposed memorial was created for the event, Modi poured water from a bronze vessel and threw some earth at the site to perform the 'jalpujan'. On return, he performed another brief 'bhoomipooja' at Girgaum Chowpatty for the memorial amidst sounding of bugles and 'tutaris'.

The Shiv Smarak will be a memorial, in the form of a giant mid-sea statue, for the Maratha warrior king Chhatrapati Shivaji. It is set to come up on a rocky islet one km off the shores of South Mumbai on the Arabian Sea overlooking Marine Drive, with the Malabar Hill on one end and Nariman Point at the other. Slated to be 309ft tall, the statue along with a pedestal and foundation would be taller than New York's Statue of Liberty. The memorial complex on the islet will house a library on the warrior king, an amphitheatre, an aquarium, an IMAX cinema hall to screen films on the Chhatrapati, guest rooms and a helipad. There will also be replicas of the entrance arch of the historic Raigad Fort, of the Tulja Bhavani temple, forecourts designed after his palaces and wadas of the Maratha era. It will be accessible by boats to arrive and depart from jetties, which will come up at Radio Club in Colaba, Nariman Point and at Sagar Sangam in Navi Mumbai. -GoTop

 

5.  RSS not a remote control, wants strong Bharat with Hindutva at its core: Bhagwat: "The Sangh's aim is to build a strong Bharatvarsha with the right leader and with Hindutva at its core," said Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) Sarasanghachalak Dr Mohan Bhagwat addressing the concluding function of a four-day-long meeting of RSS pracharaks from Gujarat, Maharashtra and Goa in Vadodara on December 21. "There is a need to bring the right kind of change in the society based on the ideology of Hindutva," he said. "RSS is not a remote control," he added in an apparent reference to the allegation of opposition parties that it dictates terms to the BJP-led NDA government.  "It is wrong to look at Hindutva as an ideology of a particular religion or community. Sangh does not ask anybody his caste or creed when he joins us after believing in our ideology," he said. -GoTop

 

6. Dharma Sanskriti Mahakumbh held at Nagpur from December 24 to 26 witnessed the participation of 1,118 saints from all over the country. The inspirational speeches delivered by the saints and Shankaracharyas and leaders impressed upon the gathering to think "Bharat is my home, sanskriti is my identity, adhyatma is my power, social service is my devotion, freedom is my expression, equality is my goal, universal brotherhood is my condition, government is our policy, santvachan is tradition and good conduct is action." The speakers reverberated with these thoughts and appealed the audience to follow these principles to achieve the aims and objectives of the Mahakumbh to make Bharat "Vishwa Guru" and "Guide of Humanity".

RSS Sarsanghchalak Dr Mohanrao Bhagwat reiterated that Hindutva ensured welfare of all and appealed to the people to adhere to the standard parameters of Hindu culture and tradition based on the concept of "Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam" (World as one family), and "Vishwa Bandhutva" (Universal Brotherhood), and "Sanghatitshakti" (organised strength). Maharashtra Mukhyamantri Devendra Fadanvis, Assam Rajyapal Banwarilal Purohit, VHP International Working President Dr Pravin Togadia, Jagadguru Shankaracharya of Jyotishpeeth Swami Vasudevananda Saraswati, Jagadguru Shankaracharya of Kashi Sumeru Peeth Narendrananada Saraswati, Karveer Peeth Shankaracharya Vidya Nrisimha Bharati, Rashtra Sevika Samiti Pramukh Sanchalika Shantakka and Shrimant Mudhoji Raje Bhosale also addressed the concluding session. -GoTop

 

7. Soldiers protect nation's borders, saints secure moral borders: dr Bhagwat: The soldiers risk their own lives to protect us from foreign aggressions. We must remember them not only at the time of war but always as we remember the god from the bottom of our hearts in our daily life, appealed RSS Sarsanghchalak Dr Mohanrao Bhagwat. He was addressing the unique "Prerana Sangam" on Dec 24, organised as part of the ongoing "Dharma Sanskriti Maha Kumbh". The union of saints and soldiers sharing a common platform is a historic event. Jagatguru Shankaracharya of Jyotishpeeth Vasudevananda Saraswati presided over the function. -GoTop

 

8. Vedic hymns are scientific equations: Veda Ravishankar: Emphasising that the Vedic hymns are basically scientific equations and the rituals are their applications, Veda Ravishankar, Scientific Advisor from the Vedic and Scientific Research Foundation (VSRF) claimed on December 25 that sound health, pure environment and prosperity of the nation could be achieved by performing these applications in standard conditions. He was attending "Dharma Sanskriti Mahakumbh" in Nagpur and monitoring the effects of chanting of hymns like the "Shiv Mahimna Stotram" and "Hanuman Chalisa" on the environment. Ravishankar is the direct disciple of Swami Ramakrishnanda Saraswathy Swamigal, Atharva Veda Sankaracharya of Sri Vidya Peetham who had founded the VSRF to explore the scientific knowledge hidden in ancient Bharatiya Vedas. -GoTop

 

9. 'CENTRE FOLLOWING PATH OF DEEN DAYAL UPADHYAYA': BJP national president Amit Shah said that the Narendra Modi Government in the Centre was working on the principles of 'Untodaya' by implementing policies meant for the welfare of poor as path shown by Deen Dayal Upadhyaya. "Deen Dayal Upadhyaya was a staunch advocate of building a country based on holistic development which includes poor and rich. Modi's government is working on these principles and is trying to implement those in letter and in spirit," Shah said while addressing a function where a book on different facets of Deen Dayal's life was launched in Lucknow on December 29. -GoTop

 

10.  BHARAT test-fires nuclear-capable Agni 5 ballistic missile: Bharat successfully test-fired on December 26 its nuclear-capable, inter-continental ballistic missile Agni 5, which has a range of over 5,000 km covering whole of China, from Abdul Kalam island off Odisha coast. The three-stage, solid propellant surface-to-surface missile was test-fired from a mobile launcher of the Integrated Test Range (ITR) at about 1105 hours, DRDO sources said. About 17-metre long and weighing over 50 tonnes, the surface-to-surface missile majestically rose from the confines of its canister flawlessly and achieved all targets, sources in Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO) said. It is the fourth developmental and second canisterised trial of the missile. -GoTop

 

11. Cambodian Scholar Becomes Country's First 'Sanskritist': Chhom Kunthea became Cambodia's first "Sanskritist" on December 16 after receiving a doctorate for her research on the impact the ancient Bharatiya language - now used almost exclusively by Hindu priests during religious ceremonies - on the Khmer language. Sanskrit was used for written records during the Khmer Empire for more than 1,000 years, researchers believe. With her doctorate in the language, Ms. Kunthea could become one of the country's only native historians of ancient Cambodia, an area normally occupied by foreigners, said Chhem Rethy, the executive director of the Cambodia Development Research Institute. After obtaining a master's degree in Sanskrit from Magadha University in Bharat in 2008, Ms. Kunthea did her doctoral studies at the French research institute Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, where she wrote her dissertation on "the role of Sanskrit in the development of the Khmer language: an epigraphic study from the 6th to the 14th century." -GoTop

 

12.  OVER 3 LAKH VISIT HSSF-2016 IN BENGALURU:  Showcasing the service activities of various Karnataka based socio-religious organisations, the 5-day mega Hindu Spiritual and Service Fair-2016 concluded on December 18.

Basavamurthy Madara Chennayya Swamiji, Ma Ni Pra Basavananda Swamiji, RSS Akhil Bharatiya Sah Sewa Pramukh Gunwant Singh Kothari, eminent orator and columnist Chakravarti Sulibele addressed the concluding ceremony. The fair was visited by nearly three lakh visitors. Impressive Yoga performance was held by Isha Foundation. In Kutumba Vandana, about 1,000 people from undivided families gathered and the elder most member of the family was offered special respects. Sugunendra Swamiji of Puttige Math Udupi, former Additional Director, Department of Education, Government of Karnataka TN Prabhakar stressed on the value of family in one’s life. The fair was inaugurated on December 14 by former ISRO chief Dr Kasturirangan. -GoTop

 

13. 'We Did Great With The Hindus', Says Trump: US President-elect Donald Trump acknowledged on December 16 the contribution of Bharatiya-Americans in his electoral triumph. "We have a lot of people here tonight from the Indian community, Hindus. We did great with the Hindus," Trump said during a "Thank You'' rally in Florida, the key battleground state where he emerged victorious. "Where are they? We have a big group. There they are. I want to thank you. They were amazing and voted and they were fantastic," Trump said, pointing his fingers to the Bharatiya-American community at the rally. Trump pledged to work for betterment of the Bharat-US relationship and said that he would be the best friend of Bharat in the White House. He praised Pradhan Mantri Narendra Modi for his economic reforms and steps that he has taken to remove bureaucratic red tape. -GoTop

 

14. First time, Church says: Dalit Christians face untouchability: The Bharatiya Catholic Church has officially accepted that Dalit Christians face untouchability and discrimination, and that "their participation at the level of leadership is almost nil". These admissions are contained in a policy document prepared and released on December 19 by the Catholic Bishops' Conference of India (CBCI), the apex decision-making body of the community, which seeks to abolish all forms of exclusion of the socially backward sections and empower them. The 44-page document, titled 'Policy of Dalit Empowerment in the Catholic Church in India', asks the 171 dioceses to submit long and short-term plans within a year to end all kinds of discrimination against Dalit Christians. -GoTop

 

15. HSS VISHWA SANGH SHIKSHA VARG-2016 CONCLUDES AT NAIROBI: Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh (HSS) organised a 21-day cadre training camp Vishwa Sangh Shiksha Varg-2016 which concluded at Nairobi, Kenya. RSS Sarakaryavah Suresh Bhaiyyaji Joshi addressed the valedictory ceremony. He said that such camps are needed to produce men of character who would work for the cause of humanity and also expressed hope that Hindu society outside Bharat will act as a torch bearer for the universal peace and harmony based on age old Hindu values. Impressive physical demonstrations were presented to the 300 odd spectators from Nairobi which included Hon High Commissioner of Bharat Smt Suchitra and many prominent leaders from Hindu society.

The camp was attended by 33 shiksharthis from 10 countries and 22 sevikas from 4 countries. On December 25, 2016 a spectacular Path Sanchalan Route March was organised at HCK Ground, Nairobi. -GoTop

 

16.  Dr. B. B. Lal Honored by Indian Council of Historical Research: Professor Braj Basi Lal, the renowned archaeologist and author of the book "Rama, His Historicity, Mandir and Setu," has been awarded the first Gurukul Fellowship by the Indian Council of Historical Research (ICHR). The ICHR's two-year fellowship has been introduced with the aim of promoting the traditional "Guru-Sishya-parampara," or teacher-disciple tradition. Prof. Lal's 2008 book had created anuproar of sorts, where he had made the argument for the presence of a temple-like structure beneath the now-demolished Babri Masjid. In his book, he had written: "Attached to the piers of the Babri Masjid, there were twelve stone pillars, which carried not only typical Hindu motifs and mouldings, but also figures of Hindu deities. It was self-evident that these pillars were not an integral part of the Masjid, but were foreign to it." -GoTop

 

17. Collectors can give citizenship to Pakistan Hindu migrants: The Pak citizens eligible for citizenship in three districts, including Jaipur, Jodhpur and Jaisalmer, will now have their citizenship permission granted by the district magistrates. Besides this, the application fee for citizenship has also been decreased to Rs 100 per application, which will enable many those poor migrants, who had been finding it difficult to apply for the citizenship in absence of required money to be paid as fee. Hindu Singh Sodha, chairman of the Seemant Lok Sangthan, a voluntary organization fighting for the rights of these migrants, said that this decision has come as a huge relief to these people and would expedite the process of citizenship. -GoTop

 

18. MADRAS HC DECLARES SHARIA COURTS ILLEGAL: The Madras High Court on December 20 declared that all Sharia functioning from mosque premises are illegal and directed the Government of Tamil Nadu to get rid of such religious courts. The First Bench of the Madras Court consisting of Chief Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul and M Sundar said that religious places and other places of worship were only meant for religious purposes and it was the responsibility of the State Government to get rid of Sharia courts functioning from the premises of religious places. The Court order was in response to a public interest litigation filed by Abdul Rehman, a UK based professional who was aggrieved by the acts of such a Sharia Court functioning from the premises of a mosque in Chennai's Mount Road. Rehman had approached the Makka Masjid Sharia Court Council in the hope of reuniting with his estranged wife. But the Sharia Court forced him to sign a letter of divorce. -GoTop

 

19. BHARAT TOP SOURCE OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRANTS: Bharat is the top country of origin of international migrants with 15.6 million Bharatiyas living abroad, according to a Pew research which said international migrants make up 3.3% of the world’s population. Ahead of the International Migrants Day, Pew Research said as of 2015, nearly 3.5 million Bharatiyas lived in the UAE, the world’s second largest migration corridor. -GoTop

 

20. PIO Elected as mayor of key Californian City: Savita Vaidyanathan, an MBA Bharatiya American woman, has been sworn in as the mayor of the Californian city of Cupertino, globally known for tech giant Apple's headquarters. Savita is the first Bharatiya-American mayor of Cupertino, which according to Forbes in one of the most educated small towns in the country with local public schools ranking highly. -GoTop

 

21. WINTER TOURISM WITNESSES 34% GROWTH: "More coustomers are travelling this time during Christmas and New Year compared to last year", revealed a 'New Year and Christmas Travel Trends' report by comprehensive travel website MakeMyTrip. Winter tourism as a concept, has picked up in Bharat with 34 per cent more customers travelling this time during Christmas and New Year with four times higher growth for domestic travel than international one, compared to last year, MakeMyTrip Chief Business Officer-Holidays Ranjeet Oak said. For holidays within Bharat, Goa remains the most preferred destination, followed by Rajasthan and Manali as the other top places witnessing heightened interests. -GoTop

 

22. 100 GLORIOUS YEARS OF BANARAS HINDU UNIVERSITY: Inaugurating the International BHU Alumni Meet held at Vigyan Bhawan, New Delhi on December 25 and 26, Union Parliamentary Affairs, Chemicals and Fertilizers Minister Anant Kumar called upon the participants to propagate life and ideals of Mahamana Malaviyaji specially amongst youth by digital books. Justice Giridhar Malaviya, National President, Mahamana Madan Mohan Malaviya Mission delivered the inaugural address. S S Ahluwalia, State Minister Parliamentary Affairs proposed the Meet to find ways for opening of outside campuses of BHU. The valedictory session was presided by Uma Bharati, Union Jalsansadhan Mantri and was also addressed by Dr Mahendra Nath Pandey, State HRD Minister. Dr Krishnagopal, RSS Sahasarakaryavaha, speaking as Chief Guest in the valedictory session, said that with various qualities Mahamana was a rare combination on the planet.   Dr S V Tattwawadi, Patron, Manaman Madan Mohan Malviya Mission, called upon to strengthen the organisation so that minimum one branch of Mission is opened in each state.   
K Chandramauli,   a BHU Alumunas who has devoted himself for works on Ganga and author of several books was awarded Malaviya Memorial Award of Rs. 51,000 and a citation. Other lumaniries honoured for distinguished BHU ALUMNI Award with shawl andcitation included Justice Dr B S Chauhan (Chairman Law Commission), P C Dandiya, DN Bhargava, Mata Prasad, P L Jaiswal and K Vikram Rastogi. 400 alumni delegates attended the Meet. -GoTop

 

23. BHARAT'S ECONOMY SURPASSES THAT OF UNITED KINGDOM: Owing to Britain's recent Brexit-related problems and thanks to Bharat's rapid economic growth, Bharat has managed to overtake its erstwhile colonial master United Kingdom in terms of the size of the economy - the first time after nearly 150 years. This dramatic shift has been driven by Bharat's rapid economic growth over the past 25 years as well downslide in the value of the pound over the last 12 months, a report published in Forbes magazine said. Interestingly, economic think-tank Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR) had, in December 2011, forecasted that Bharat would become the "fifth largest by 2020" but Bharat has crossed this significant milestone much sooner. Union Minister of State for Home Affairs Kiren Rijiju while celebrating Bharat's landmark, said, "Bharat overtakes UK & becomes 5th largest GDP after USA, China, Japan & Germany." -GoTop

 

24. SHRI VISHWA NIKETAN: PRAVAS: RSS Sarkaryavah Bhaiyyaji Joshi will tour South Africa. Saumitra Gokhale samyojak Vishwa Vibhag will tour Mauritius, Botswana and South Africa. Ravi Kumar Vishwa Vibhag Sahsamyojak reached Bharat and Anil Oke AB Vyavastha Pramukh will reach Bharat after visiting Vishwa Sangh Shiksha Varg held in Kenya. VISITOR: Dr. Rajeev Bhatiya - USA. 

FOOD FOR THOUGHT: It is my duty to guard my homeland. An invader of these lands, whosoever he may be, has never succeeded. - Shivaji Maharaj in a letter to the Mughal officials. -GoTop

JAI SHREE RAM

 --

BARKING UP THE WRONG TREE:

Not Indians, but globalisation taking US jobs

The United States' recent concerns that Indians are chasing jobs of the country's middle class, are not entirely true. During the US presidential poll campaign, Republican candidate Donald Trump tried hard to assuage the country's working class population that he would bring back jobs to all of them. However, it has been generally observed that skilled Indians, those who are armed with top class engineering, management and medical degrees, either from home or from the US, normally stake claim to really high-profile jobs.

Thus, ordinary graduates passing out with science, technology, engineering and mathematics degrees from middle-and-working-class families in America, hardly come in competition with the highly skilled Indians, migrating to that country. It is a fact that the lower and the middle class Americans have been losing jobs in the last two decades as a result of massive waves of globalisation. This was mainly because of outsourcing of back-end jobs of major industries in the field of manufacturing, pharmaceuticals, automobiles and a host of financial services, to developing nations like India, China, Vietnam, Malaysia, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka etc. These and many less developing countries, offer the giant US multi-national corporations (MNCs) readily available cheap labour, low maintenance and operational costs; and opportunities to reach out to new markets. Therefore, the net margin of profit, earned by the MNCs, are certainly huge. To that extent, the cause of concern displayed by middle class Americans is valid.

The promise Trump made to his countrymen, assuring more jobs to the middle class, is absolutely fine. But the kind of perceptions that floated in some pockets of that country, about Indians driving deep into the job markets, must be judged cautiously. Over the years, the size of the American middle class has shrunk from 71 per cent in 1971 to 49 per cent today, as revealed by Pew Research Centre recently. But what is less commonly known is that more people are moving up the ladder than down in the US. Worryingly, those most likely to fall to the lower ladder in society, are with only a high school degree or dropouts from schools. Some economists in America say that manufacturing was once a field from which the middle class could aspire to climb the social ladder.

But, today it is not so. At the centre of the debate are not the Indians or any other migrant group,  that are stealing the jobs from the Americans. It is globalised trade that has made many locals lose their livelihood around the world. But the mounting rise of international trade has also contributed to the creation of millions of jobs which, in turn, has lifted many from poverty. What Bernie Sanders, a Democratic presidential contender, and Trump, agreed during the election campaign, was that trade was killing the 'American Dream'. Even the revolution in technological change, is another potential factor. Not the Indians. -- The Pioneer, Editorial, 16 December 2016. -GoTop

---

Pivot to the east

To be relevant in the 21st century, India must establish its presence in the Indian Ocean

Ram Madhav

"Nations have no permanent friends or allies; they have only permanent interests," said English statesman Lord Palmerston. What that implies is diplomacy is dynamic. Nations need to constantly evaluate and re-evaluate their preferences in the international arena and strategise. There is no place for romanticism in diplomacy. It has to be cold-blooded and utterly pragmatics.

Pragmatism demands that we talk about the Indian Ocean region more. India's foreign policy has long been tilted westward. Time we turned eastward.

21st century politics is going to be markedly different from the previous century. The global power axis has today shifted away from the Pacific-Atlantic region to the Indo-Pacific region. That brings tectonic shifts in world politics.

Many institutions will become irrelevant. 20th century power alliances like the NAM, Commonwealth, etc have become redundant. The European Union is imploding. Nato is more or less dead, waiting for the last rites to be performed jointly by Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin.

In their place new power alliances are emerging. The epicentre of these new alliances is going to be the Indo-Pacific region. Asia is today home to some of the world's leading and fast growing economies. 45% of the world's population lives here. Half of world's container traffic and one-third of bulk cargo traverses the Indian Ocean. Around 40% of the world’s offshore oil production comes from the Indian Ocean. Nearly half of the world's energy supplies pass through this region.

Half of the world's submarines will be roaming around in the Indo-Pacific region in the next two decades. This region will witness power play between three major powers. India and China are the two fast growing economies in the region. Both nurture big power ambitions. Both compete for the same resources. Hence competition is imminent between the two.

China, with its bigger financial and military muscle, is seemingly ahead today. It is in the driver's seat of many new transnational trade alliances like AIIB, Brics and RCEP. It is aggressively pursuing ambitious infrastructure projects like Belt and Road. Its efforts to emerge as the leading naval power in the region seem to be coming to fruition. In no time it has built a formidable navy with over 300 vessels of various sizes.

The future of America's role in the region is uncertain. President-elect Trump doesn’t share the vision of his predecessors in this matter. President Obama launched an ambitious alliance of nations of the Indo-Pacific region, the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). But Trump is not enthusiastic about it at all. At the Halifax security conference PASCOM chief Admiral Harris described TPP as "more or less dead". This signals diminishing US influence in the region.

India has great power ambitions. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has openly talked about India's "ambition to rise as an influential and responsible global power". In order to realise them India has to change gears and proactively engage in the region.

One of its first measures should be to bring the required nomenclature into vogue. Asia-Pacific is a phrase coined during the 1960s and 70s, when Asian powers like Japan and Singapore raised it and it suited America to bond with them. But today it is India and other Indian Ocean neighbourhoods that are emerging as powerhouses. Some Western scholars have started using the phrase 'Indo-Asia Pacific'. We need to call it 'Indo-Pacific', implying the centrality of the Indian Ocean to the region.

Modi has started many initiatives in the direction of asserting India's proactive role in the region. Greater bilateral engagement with countries in the region, enhanced interface with regional groupings like Asean, South Pacific Island Nations group, etc and keenness to play a role in regional disputes by shedding trademark reticence are some of the visible actions that Modi has taken.

De-hyphenation of bilateral relations is another major step taken by Modi in this direction. Our engagements with countries like America, Russia and China are based on standalone bilateral interest, without conflicting with our relations with any other country.

India has to strengthen its naval power if it really wants to play a bigger role in the region. Towards that end steps have been taken by the new government. A target of securing 200 vessels for our navy has been set for 2030. We have expanded Malabar Exercise to include Japan as the third member besides India and US.

But we have to go a long way. We live in an unstable neighbourhood, the challenge of which needs to be handled diligently. Technology - digital and cyber - is going to play a big role. India, with its vast tech manpower and demographic dividend, can take advantage of this.

India is going to face a new challenge in the form of changed US priorities. Certain actions undertaken by Trump could affect the regional balance in Asia. His future relationship or rivalry especially with countries like Russia, China, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan is going to change the power dynamic in the region drastically. We need to be alert to these challenges.

Hillary Clinton, during her visit to India in 2011, has called for India to assume a greater role in its region. "We encourage India not just to look east, but to engage east and act east as well," she said. "India's greater role on the world stage will enhance peace and security," she added in an essay in Foreign Policy magazine.

The stage is set for playing that role in the Indian Ocean region. (Excerpted from an address delivered at Symbiosis International University, Pune). -- The Times of India, December 23, 2016 -GoTop


SHRI VISHWA NIKETAN vishwav@bol.net.in www.shrivishwaniketan.blogspot.com