STERLING DEVOTEE



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Topic: Religions > Atheism
User: "Dr. Jai Maharaj"
Date: 22 Apr 2005 12:36:32 PM
Object: STERLING DEVOTEE
Sterling devotee
The Hindu
A devotee of the Lord who had the good fortune to be
praised by Him during His advent in the world was
Hanuman. He becomes the central figure in the unfolding
of the story in the search for Sita when Raam and
Lakshman came to meet Shugreev to befriend him and seek
his help. On beholding the brothers Sugriva afraid that
they were Vali's men sent Hanuman to find out who they
were. Hanuman went in the guise of a mendicant and while
introducing himself tried to ascertain their identity.
After listening to him Raam told Lakshman, "To speak in
the way he has done is not possible for one who has not
studied Rg Ved with an eye to its meaning, not memorised
Yajur Ved and has no knowledge of Saam Ved either. Surely
the entire range of grammar has been studied by him in
many ways, as is clear from the fact that nothing has
been wrongly worded by him even though speaking a good
deal."
In his discourse, Shri Ananth Padmanabhachariar said just
as the Lord had sized him up instantly, Hanuman also with
his astute mind came to the conclusion that they were not
ordinary men. The Kambh Ramayanam describes that Hanuman
recognised Raam as the Lord incarnate. His father Vayu
had foretold that he should serve the Lord during His
manifestation and had also instructed him as to how to
recognise Him. And when he came into the presence of Raam
he felt an inexpressible bliss, which reassured him that
his surmise was right. Kambhan says he saw the qualities
of the Almighty, a king and a sage together in Raam.
The Uttar Kand of the Valmiki Ramayan describes Hanuman's
extraordinary birth and attainments at length in the
words of Sage Agastya. Raam's question to the sage gives
insight into His assessment of Hanuman, "Incomparable
indeed was the might of Vali and Ravana. The might of the
aforesaid two warriors was, however, not equal to the
strength of Hanuman; such indeed is My opinion. Heroism,
cleverness, strength, firmness, sagacity, prudence,
prowess and power have taken their abode in Hanuman. If
Hanuman, the friend of Shugreev, were not with Me, who
else would have been able to get the news about Sita?"
High praise indeed! Did Raam not hug him in gratitude
when he came with the good news of locating Sita?
More at:
http://www.hindu.com
TRIBUTES TO HINDUISM
1. Mahatma Gandhi:
"Hinduism has made marvelous discoveries in things of
religion, of the spirit, of the soul. We have no eye for
these great and fine discoveries. We are dazzled by the
material progress that western science has made. Ancient
India has survived because Hinduism was not developed
along material but spiritual lines.
"India is to me the dearest country in the world, because
I have discovered goodness in it. It has been subject to
foreign rule, it is true. But the status of a slave is
preferable to that of a slave holder."
2. Henry David Thoreau:
"In the morning I bathe my intellect in the stupendous
and cosmogonal philosophy of the Bhagavad Gita in
comparison with which our modern world and its literature
seems puny.
"What extracts from the Vedas I have read fall on me like
the light of a higher and purer luminary, which describes
a loftier course through purer stratum. It rises on me
like the full moon after the stars have come out, wading
through some far stratum in the sky."
3. Arthur Schopenhauer:
"In the whole world there is no study so beneficial and
so elevating as that of the Upanishads. It has been the
solace of my life -- it will be the solace of my death."
4. Ralph Waldo Emerson said this about the Gita:
"I owed a magnificent day to the Bhagavad Gita. It was as
if an empire spoke to us, nothing small or unworthy, but
large, serene, consistent, the voice of an old
intelligence which in another age and climate had
pondered and thus disposed of the same questions which
exercise us."
The famous poem "Brahm" is an example of his Vedanta
ecstasy.
5. Wilhelm von Humboldt pronounced the Gita as:
"The most beautiful, perhaps the only true philosophical
song existing in any known tongue ... perhaps the deepest
and loftiest thing the world has to show."
6. Lord Warren Hastings, the Governor General, was very
much impressed with Hindu philosophy:
"The writers of the Indian philosophies will survive,
when the British dominion in India shall long have ceased
to exist, and when the sources which it yielded of wealth
and power are lost to remembrances."
7. Mark Twain:
"So far as I am able to judge, nothing has been left
undone, either by man or nature, to make India the most
extraordinary country that the sun visits on his rounds.
Nothing seems to have been forgotten, nothing overlooked.
"Land of religions, cradle of human race, birthplace of
human speech, grandmother of legend, great grandmother of
tradition. The land that all men desire to see and having
seen once even by a glimpse, would not give that glimpse
for the shows of the rest of the globe combined."
8. Rudyard Kipling to Fundamental Christian Missionaries:
"Now it is not good for the Christian's health to hustle
the Hindu brown for the Christian riles and the Hindu
smiles and weareth the Christian down; and the end of the
fight is a tombstone while with the name of the late
deceased and the epitaph drear, "A fool lies here who
tried to hustle the east".
9. Jules Michelet, a French historian, said:
"At its starting point in India, the birthplace of races
and religions, the womb of the world." This is what he
said of the Raamyana in 1864: "Whoever has done or willed
too much let him drink from this deep cup a long draught
of life and youth .. . Everything is narrow in the West -
- Greece is small and I stifle; Judea is dry and I pant.
Let me look toward lofty Asia, and the profound East for
a little while. There lies my great poem, as vast as the
Indian ocean, blessed, gilded with the sun, the book of
divine harmony wherein is no dissonance. A serene peace
reigns there, and in the midst of conflict an infinite
sweetness, a boundless fraternity, which spreads over all
living things, an ocean (without bottom or bound) of
love, of pity, of clemency."
10. Shri Aurobindo:
"Hinduism.....gave itself no name, because it set itself
no sectarian limits; it claimed no universal adhesion,
asserted no sole infallible dogma, set up no single
narrow path or gate of salvation; it was less a creed or
cult than a continuously enlarging tradition of the
Godward endeavor of the human spirit. An immense many-
sided and many staged provision for a spiritual self-
building and self-finding, it had some right to speak of
itself by the only name it knew, the eternal religion,
sanaatan dharm...."
11. Will Durant would like the West to learn from India,
tolerance and gentleness and love for all living things:
"Perhaps in return for conquest, arrogance and
spoliation, India will teach us the tolerance and
gentleness of the mature mind, the quiet content of the
unacquisitive soul, the calm of the understanding spirit,
and a unifying, a pacifying love for all living things."
12. Joseph Campbell:
"It is ironic that our great western civilization, which
has opened to the minds of all mankind the infinite
wonders of a universe of untold billions of galaxies
should be saddled with the tightest little cosmological
image known to mankind? The Hindus with their grandiose
Kalpas and their ideas of the divine power which is
beyond all human category (male or female). Not so alien
to the imagery of modern science that it could not have
been put to acceptable use.
"There is an important difference between the Hindu and
the Western ideas. In the Biblical tradition, God creates
man, but man cannot say that he is divine in the same
sense that the Creator is, where as in Hinduism, all
things are incarnations of that power. We are the sparks
from a single fire. And we are all fire. Hinduism
believes in the omnipresence of the Supreme God in every
individual. There is no 'fall'. Man is not cut off from
the divine. He requires only to bring the spontaneous
activity of his mind stuff to a state of stillness and he
will experience that divine principle with him."
13. Sir Monier-Williams:
The Hindus, according to him, were Spinozists more than
2,000 years before the advent of Spinoza, and Darwinians
many centuries before Darwin and Evolutionists many
centuries before the doctrine of Evolution was accepted
by scientists of the present age.
14. Carl Sagan, (the late scientist), asserts that the
dance of Nataraj signifies the cycle of evolution and
destruction of the cosmic universe (Big Bang Theory). "It
is the clearest image of the activity of God which any
art or religion can boast of."
15. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, a professor of Eastern
Religions at Oxford and later President of India:
"Hinduism is not just a faith. It is the union of reason
and intuition that cannot be defined but is only to be
experienced. Evil and error are not ultimate. There is no
Hell, for that means there is a place where God is not,
and there are sins which exceed his love."
Jai Maharaj
http://www.mantra.com/jai
Om Shanti
Hindu Holocaust Museum
http://www.mantra.com/holocaust
Hindu life, principles, spirituality and philosophy
http://www.hindu.org
http://www.hindunet.org
The truth about Islam and Muslims
http://www.flex.com/~jai/satyamevajayate
The terrorist mission of Jesus stated in the Christian bible:
"Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not so send
peace, but a sword.
"For I am come to set a man at variance against his father, and the
daughter against her mother, and the daughter in law against her mother in
law.
"And a man's foes shall be they of his own household.
- Matthew 10:34-36.
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.

User: "Iain"

Title: Re: STERLING DEVOTEE 23 Apr 2005 05:21:22 AM
Dr. Jai Maharaj wrote:

Sterling devotee

Sounds like William Hague.
~Iain
.

User: "Didi"

Title: Re: STERLING DEVOTEE 22 Apr 2005 03:03:26 PM
Please stop using this group as a promotional tool for your belief
system.
Thank you
Didi
.
User: "Dr. Jai Maharaj"

Title: Re: STERLING DEVOTEE 22 Apr 2005 03:26:40 PM
In article <1114200206.243719.284870@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com>,
"Didi" <skullbabe@hotmail.com> posted:

Please stop using this group as a promotional tool for your belief
system. Thank you Didi

Is that what you believe? I see. You are using the newsgroup
as a promotional tool, yet telling others not to do so. Why?
Jai Maharaj
http://www.mantra.com/jai
Om Shanti

.


User: "Kate "

Title: Re: STERLING DEVOTEE 22 Apr 2005 08:54:01 PM
QUOTE:
This is the Jai FAQ for rec.food.veg. I used to say it has few
sources, but the response has been so great that I have lots of
sources. Still some inaccuracies, but unlike Jai, we're trying to
propagate the truth.
1. Isn't Jai just a well-meaning, enthusiastic vegetarian with a poor
understanding of netiquette?
A: No, and it is extremely important to understand this. Jai is a
malicious troll intent on introducing as much noise into various
newsgroups as possible, specifically noise about himself. It is
pointless to try to reason with him, pointless to instruct him in
proper netiquette, and not worth your while to debunk his arguments
because he will simply repost them. Jai was voted "Kook of the Month"
for May/June 1995:
.

User: "Radical asantaist"

Title: Re: STERLING DEVOTEE 24 Apr 2005 03:23:29 AM
The gates of alt.atheism slowly swung open, and there stood
usenet@mantra.com (Dr. Jai Maharaj),who intoned thus:

Sterling devotee

Here is a list of Sterling devotees:
James Goldsmith (dec'd)
Michael Howard.
Robert Kilroy-Silk.
Rupert Murdoch
George W Bush.
George Soros.
David Silverman F.L.A.H.N. aa #2208
Due to be prayed for by Gastrich 11.3.2011
.
User: "Dr. Jai Maharaj"

Title: Re: STERLING DEVOTEE 24 Apr 2005 03:39:55 PM
In article <6elm6115siu9b9jl6d0vm2hoqvgju1u6ss@4ax.com>,
Radical asantaist <aardvarkantiques@answersinthephonebook.org> posted:


Here is a list of Sterling devotees:

James Goldsmith (dec'd)
Michael Howard.
Robert Kilroy-Silk.
Rupert Murdoch
George W Bush.
George Soros.

David Silverman F.L.A.H.N. aa #2208
Due to be prayed for by Gastrich 11.3.2011

Speaking of President Bush, two items below:
An attempt on President Bush's life may come from
New York resident Alan Brooks -- please read:
1 Alan Brooks says he will murder President Bush
2 Alan Brooks calls for 'a quick execution' of President Bush
1
Alan Brooks says he will murder President Bush:
http://tinyurl.com/4cjom
Forwarded post
by "Alan Brooks" <chips@panix.com> <alan2@sirius-software.com> <mwsm@panix.com>
[ From: "Alan Brooks" <chips@panix.com>
[ Subject: Re: Standard Advice again
[ Newsgroups: misc.writing.screenplays
[ Message-ID: <cq5elb$rr3$1@reader2.panix.com>
[ Date: Sun, 19 Dec 2004 21:50:18 -0500
[ Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC
[ Path: . . . newsfeed-00.mathworks.com!panix!not-for-mail
[ NNTP-Posting-Host: 24-161-97-113.hvc.rr.com
[
[ Ron <ronaldinho_m@hotmail.com> wrote:
[
[ > Alan is Joseph Stalin, remember?
[
[ You're not keeping up, Ron. I'm going to make Joseph Stalin look like
[ Little Lulu. This is after I murder Bush and finish my MWS powergrab.
[ You'll have to ask Jay Stevens for details, as he seems to be keeping my
[ calendar these days.
[
[ Alan Brooks
[ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
[ A Schmuck with an Underwood
The above post is archived at:
http://tinyurl.com/4cjom
Or,
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/misc.writing.screenplays/msg/9c445402f9f520c8?dmode=source
2
Alan Brooks calls for 'a quick execution' of President Bush:
http://tinyurl.com/5rn5z
Forwarded post
by "Alan Brooks" <chips@panix.com> <alan2@sirius-software.com> <mwsm@panix.com>
[ From: "Alan Brooks" <alan2@sirius-software.com>
[ Newsgroups: misc.writing.screenplays
[ Subject: Re: (Somewhat ON Topic) Trouble for Bush?
[ Date: Tue, 6 Jul 2004 09:15:33 -0400
[ Organization: PANIX Public Access Internet and UNIX, NYC
[ Message-ID: <ccgssj$itm$1@reader2.panix.com>
[ NNTP-Posting-Host: 24-161-97-113.hvc.rr.com
[ X-Trace: reader2.panix.com 1089205971 19382 24.161.97.113
[ (7 Jul 2004 13:12:51 GMT)
[ X-Complaints-To:

[ NNTP-Posting-Date: Wed, 7 Jul 2004 13:12:51 +0000 (UTC)
[ X-Newsreader: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2800.1409
[ X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2800.1409
[
[ RonB <RonB@bliz.org> writes:
[
[ > It's time for Kerry to step up to the plate and say -- "Bush
[ > screwed up. He's botched this thing so badly that our only choice
[ > is to get the hell out of there. Besides, this was *not* an
[ > internationally legal war. We had no right to go into Iraq in the
[ > first place."
[
[ And when the international crimes tribunal declares Bush, Cheney,
[ Rumsfeld, Rove and Ashcroft International Criminals, Kerry will
[ have to round 'em up and turn 'em over.
[
[ This could really clear up the nation's Bush problem.
[
[ Alan Brooks
[ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
[ A Schmuck with an Underwood
[
[ -- A fair trial and a quick execution.
The above post is archived at:
http://tinyurl.com/5rn5z
Or,
http://www.google.com/groups?selm=ccgssj%24itm%241%40reader2.panix.com&output=gplain
End of forwarded post
by "Alan Brooks" <chips@panix.com> <alan2@sirius-software.com> <mwsm@panix.com>
Contact information published by Alan Brooks:
Alan Brooks
chips@panix.com
Chips & Ink, Ltd.
1140 Wittenberg Road
Mount Tremper, NY 12457 USA
Telephone - 845-679-8959
sirius-software.com
Gary Gregory
gary@sirius-software.com
Sirius Software
875 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139
USA
Telephone - 617-876-6677
End of forwarded messages by
"Alan Brooks" <chips@panix.com> <alan2@sirius-software.com> <mwsm@panix.com>
===============================================================================
.


User: "harmony"

Title: Re: STERLING DEVOTEE 27 Apr 2005 02:54:09 PM
someday steven speilberg will make a movie on hindus.
"Dr. Jai Maharaj" <usenet@mantra.com> wrote in message
news:seiFu1272OVVYe@GhoOh...

Sterling devotee

The Hindu

A devotee of the Lord who had the good fortune to be
praised by Him during His advent in the world was
Hanuman. He becomes the central figure in the unfolding
of the story in the search for Sita when Raam and
Lakshman came to meet Shugreev to befriend him and seek
his help. On beholding the brothers Sugriva afraid that
they were Vali's men sent Hanuman to find out who they
were. Hanuman went in the guise of a mendicant and while
introducing himself tried to ascertain their identity.

After listening to him Raam told Lakshman, "To speak in
the way he has done is not possible for one who has not
studied Rg Ved with an eye to its meaning, not memorised
Yajur Ved and has no knowledge of Saam Ved either. Surely
the entire range of grammar has been studied by him in
many ways, as is clear from the fact that nothing has
been wrongly worded by him even though speaking a good
deal."

In his discourse, Shri Ananth Padmanabhachariar said just
as the Lord had sized him up instantly, Hanuman also with
his astute mind came to the conclusion that they were not
ordinary men. The Kambh Ramayanam describes that Hanuman
recognised Raam as the Lord incarnate. His father Vayu
had foretold that he should serve the Lord during His
manifestation and had also instructed him as to how to
recognise Him. And when he came into the presence of Raam
he felt an inexpressible bliss, which reassured him that
his surmise was right. Kambhan says he saw the qualities
of the Almighty, a king and a sage together in Raam.

The Uttar Kand of the Valmiki Ramayan describes Hanuman's
extraordinary birth and attainments at length in the
words of Sage Agastya. Raam's question to the sage gives
insight into His assessment of Hanuman, "Incomparable
indeed was the might of Vali and Ravana. The might of the
aforesaid two warriors was, however, not equal to the
strength of Hanuman; such indeed is My opinion. Heroism,
cleverness, strength, firmness, sagacity, prudence,
prowess and power have taken their abode in Hanuman. If
Hanuman, the friend of Shugreev, were not with Me, who
else would have been able to get the news about Sita?"
High praise indeed! Did Raam not hug him in gratitude
when he came with the good news of locating Sita?

More at:
http://www.hindu.com

TRIBUTES TO HINDUISM

1. Mahatma Gandhi:

"Hinduism has made marvelous discoveries in things of
religion, of the spirit, of the soul. We have no eye for
these great and fine discoveries. We are dazzled by the
material progress that western science has made. Ancient
India has survived because Hinduism was not developed
along material but spiritual lines.

"India is to me the dearest country in the world, because
I have discovered goodness in it. It has been subject to
foreign rule, it is true. But the status of a slave is
preferable to that of a slave holder."


2. Henry David Thoreau:

"In the morning I bathe my intellect in the stupendous
and cosmogonal philosophy of the Bhagavad Gita in
comparison with which our modern world and its literature
seems puny.

"What extracts from the Vedas I have read fall on me like
the light of a higher and purer luminary, which describes
a loftier course through purer stratum. It rises on me
like the full moon after the stars have come out, wading
through some far stratum in the sky."


3. Arthur Schopenhauer:

"In the whole world there is no study so beneficial and
so elevating as that of the Upanishads. It has been the
solace of my life -- it will be the solace of my death."


4. Ralph Waldo Emerson said this about the Gita:

"I owed a magnificent day to the Bhagavad Gita. It was as
if an empire spoke to us, nothing small or unworthy, but
large, serene, consistent, the voice of an old
intelligence which in another age and climate had
pondered and thus disposed of the same questions which
exercise us."

The famous poem "Brahm" is an example of his Vedanta
ecstasy.


5. Wilhelm von Humboldt pronounced the Gita as:

"The most beautiful, perhaps the only true philosophical
song existing in any known tongue ... perhaps the deepest
and loftiest thing the world has to show."


6. Lord Warren Hastings, the Governor General, was very
much impressed with Hindu philosophy:

"The writers of the Indian philosophies will survive,
when the British dominion in India shall long have ceased
to exist, and when the sources which it yielded of wealth
and power are lost to remembrances."


7. Mark Twain:

"So far as I am able to judge, nothing has been left
undone, either by man or nature, to make India the most
extraordinary country that the sun visits on his rounds.
Nothing seems to have been forgotten, nothing overlooked.

"Land of religions, cradle of human race, birthplace of
human speech, grandmother of legend, great grandmother of
tradition. The land that all men desire to see and having
seen once even by a glimpse, would not give that glimpse
for the shows of the rest of the globe combined."


8. Rudyard Kipling to Fundamental Christian Missionaries:

"Now it is not good for the Christian's health to hustle
the Hindu brown for the Christian riles and the Hindu
smiles and weareth the Christian down; and the end of the
fight is a tombstone while with the name of the late
deceased and the epitaph drear, "A fool lies here who
tried to hustle the east".


9. Jules Michelet, a French historian, said:

"At its starting point in India, the birthplace of races
and religions, the womb of the world." This is what he
said of the Raamyana in 1864: "Whoever has done or willed
too much let him drink from this deep cup a long draught
of life and youth .. . Everything is narrow in the West -
- Greece is small and I stifle; Judea is dry and I pant.
Let me look toward lofty Asia, and the profound East for
a little while. There lies my great poem, as vast as the
Indian ocean, blessed, gilded with the sun, the book of
divine harmony wherein is no dissonance. A serene peace
reigns there, and in the midst of conflict an infinite
sweetness, a boundless fraternity, which spreads over all
living things, an ocean (without bottom or bound) of
love, of pity, of clemency."


10. Shri Aurobindo:

"Hinduism.....gave itself no name, because it set itself
no sectarian limits; it claimed no universal adhesion,
asserted no sole infallible dogma, set up no single
narrow path or gate of salvation; it was less a creed or
cult than a continuously enlarging tradition of the
Godward endeavor of the human spirit. An immense many-
sided and many staged provision for a spiritual self-
building and self-finding, it had some right to speak of
itself by the only name it knew, the eternal religion,
sanaatan dharm...."


11. Will Durant would like the West to learn from India,
tolerance and gentleness and love for all living things:

"Perhaps in return for conquest, arrogance and
spoliation, India will teach us the tolerance and
gentleness of the mature mind, the quiet content of the
unacquisitive soul, the calm of the understanding spirit,
and a unifying, a pacifying love for all living things."


12. Joseph Campbell:

"It is ironic that our great western civilization, which
has opened to the minds of all mankind the infinite
wonders of a universe of untold billions of galaxies
should be saddled with the tightest little cosmological
image known to mankind? The Hindus with their grandiose
Kalpas and their ideas of the divine power which is
beyond all human category (male or female). Not so alien
to the imagery of modern science that it could not have
been put to acceptable use.

"There is an important difference between the Hindu and
the Western ideas. In the Biblical tradition, God creates
man, but man cannot say that he is divine in the same
sense that the Creator is, where as in Hinduism, all
things are incarnations of that power. We are the sparks
from a single fire. And we are all fire. Hinduism
believes in the omnipresence of the Supreme God in every
individual. There is no 'fall'. Man is not cut off from
the divine. He requires only to bring the spontaneous
activity of his mind stuff to a state of stillness and he
will experience that divine principle with him."


13. Sir Monier-Williams:

The Hindus, according to him, were Spinozists more than
2,000 years before the advent of Spinoza, and Darwinians
many centuries before Darwin and Evolutionists many
centuries before the doctrine of Evolution was accepted
by scientists of the present age.


14. Carl Sagan, (the late scientist), asserts that the
dance of Nataraj signifies the cycle of evolution and
destruction of the cosmic universe (Big Bang Theory). "It
is the clearest image of the activity of God which any
art or religion can boast of."


15. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, a professor of Eastern
Religions at Oxford and later President of India:

"Hinduism is not just a faith. It is the union of reason
and intuition that cannot be defined but is only to be
experienced. Evil and error are not ultimate. There is no
Hell, for that means there is a place where God is not,
and there are sins which exceed his love."

Jai Maharaj
http://www.mantra.com/jai
Om Shanti

Hindu Holocaust Museum
http://www.mantra.com/holocaust

Hindu life, principles, spirituality and philosophy
http://www.hindu.org
http://www.hindunet.org

The truth about Islam and Muslims
http://www.flex.com/~jai/satyamevajayate

The terrorist mission of Jesus stated in the Christian bible:

"Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not so send
peace, but a sword.
"For I am come to set a man at variance against his father, and the
daughter against her mother, and the daughter in law against her mother in
law.
"And a man's foes shall be they of his own household.
- Matthew 10:34-36.

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User: "Dr. Jai Maharaj"

Title: Re: STERLING DEVOTEE 27 Apr 2005 04:07:23 PM
In article <4jSbe.9$332.8@okepread02>,
"harmony" <aka@hotmail.com> posted:

someday steven speilberg will make a movie on hindus.

He can be handed a screenplay that's so good
that he can't refuse. aap jub kahei(n), likhanaa
praarumbh kur doongaa |
Jai Maharaj
http://www.mantra.com/jai
Om Shanti

Dr. Jai Maharaj posted:

Sterling devotee

The Hindu

A devotee of the Lord who had the good fortune to be
praised by Him during His advent in the world was
Hanuman. He becomes the central figure in the unfolding
of the story in the search for Sita when Raam and
Lakshman came to meet Shugreev to befriend him and seek
his help. On beholding the brothers Sugriva afraid that
they were Vali's men sent Hanuman to find out who they
were. Hanuman went in the guise of a mendicant and while
introducing himself tried to ascertain their identity.

After listening to him Raam told Lakshman, "To speak in
the way he has done is not possible for one who has not
studied Rg Ved with an eye to its meaning, not memorised
Yajur Ved and has no knowledge of Saam Ved either. Surely
the entire range of grammar has been studied by him in
many ways, as is clear from the fact that nothing has
been wrongly worded by him even though speaking a good
deal."

In his discourse, Shri Ananth Padmanabhachariar said just
as the Lord had sized him up instantly, Hanuman also with
his astute mind came to the conclusion that they were not
ordinary men. The Kambh Ramayanam describes that Hanuman
recognised Raam as the Lord incarnate. His father Vayu
had foretold that he should serve the Lord during His
manifestation and had also instructed him as to how to
recognise Him. And when he came into the presence of Raam
he felt an inexpressible bliss, which reassured him that
his surmise was right. Kambhan says he saw the qualities
of the Almighty, a king and a sage together in Raam.

The Uttar Kand of the Valmiki Ramayan describes Hanuman's
extraordinary birth and attainments at length in the
words of Sage Agastya. Raam's question to the sage gives
insight into His assessment of Hanuman, "Incomparable
indeed was the might of Vali and Ravana. The might of the
aforesaid two warriors was, however, not equal to the
strength of Hanuman; such indeed is My opinion. Heroism,
cleverness, strength, firmness, sagacity, prudence,
prowess and power have taken their abode in Hanuman. If
Hanuman, the friend of Shugreev, were not with Me, who
else would have been able to get the news about Sita?"
High praise indeed! Did Raam not hug him in gratitude
when he came with the good news of locating Sita?

More at:
http://www.hindu.com

TRIBUTES TO HINDUISM

1. Mahatma Gandhi:

"Hinduism has made marvelous discoveries in things of
religion, of the spirit, of the soul. We have no eye for
these great and fine discoveries. We are dazzled by the
material progress that western science has made. Ancient
India has survived because Hinduism was not developed
along material but spiritual lines.

"India is to me the dearest country in the world, because
I have discovered goodness in it. It has been subject to
foreign rule, it is true. But the status of a slave is
preferable to that of a slave holder."


2. Henry David Thoreau:

"In the morning I bathe my intellect in the stupendous
and cosmogonal philosophy of the Bhagavad Gita in
comparison with which our modern world and its literature
seems puny.

"What extracts from the Vedas I have read fall on me like
the light of a higher and purer luminary, which describes
a loftier course through purer stratum. It rises on me
like the full moon after the stars have come out, wading
through some far stratum in the sky."


3. Arthur Schopenhauer:

"In the whole world there is no study so beneficial and
so elevating as that of the Upanishads. It has been the
solace of my life -- it will be the solace of my death."


4. Ralph Waldo Emerson said this about the Gita:

"I owed a magnificent day to the Bhagavad Gita. It was as
if an empire spoke to us, nothing small or unworthy, but
large, serene, consistent, the voice of an old
intelligence which in another age and climate had
pondered and thus disposed of the same questions which
exercise us."

The famous poem "Brahm" is an example of his Vedanta
ecstasy.


5. Wilhelm von Humboldt pronounced the Gita as:

"The most beautiful, perhaps the only true philosophical
song existing in any known tongue ... perhaps the deepest
and loftiest thing the world has to show."


6. Lord Warren Hastings, the Governor General, was very
much impressed with Hindu philosophy:

"The writers of the Indian philosophies will survive,
when the British dominion in India shall long have ceased
to exist, and when the sources which it yielded of wealth
and power are lost to remembrances."


7. Mark Twain:

"So far as I am able to judge, nothing has been left
undone, either by man or nature, to make India the most
extraordinary country that the sun visits on his rounds.
Nothing seems to have been forgotten, nothing overlooked.

"Land of religions, cradle of human race, birthplace of
human speech, grandmother of legend, great grandmother of
tradition. The land that all men desire to see and having
seen once even by a glimpse, would not give that glimpse
for the shows of the rest of the globe combined."


8. Rudyard Kipling to Fundamental Christian Missionaries:

"Now it is not good for the Christian's health to hustle
the Hindu brown for the Christian riles and the Hindu
smiles and weareth the Christian down; and the end of the
fight is a tombstone while with the name of the late
deceased and the epitaph drear, "A fool lies here who
tried to hustle the east".


9. Jules Michelet, a French historian, said:

"At its starting point in India, the birthplace of races
and religions, the womb of the world." This is what he
said of the Raamyana in 1864: "Whoever has done or willed
too much let him drink from this deep cup a long draught
of life and youth .. . Everything is narrow in the West -
- Greece is small and I stifle; Judea is dry and I pant.
Let me look toward lofty Asia, and the profound East for
a little while. There lies my great poem, as vast as the
Indian ocean, blessed, gilded with the sun, the book of
divine harmony wherein is no dissonance. A serene peace
reigns there, and in the midst of conflict an infinite
sweetness, a boundless fraternity, which spreads over all
living things, an ocean (without bottom or bound) of
love, of pity, of clemency."


10. Shri Aurobindo:

"Hinduism.....gave itself no name, because it set itself
no sectarian limits; it claimed no universal adhesion,
asserted no sole infallible dogma, set up no single
narrow path or gate of salvation; it was less a creed or
cult than a continuously enlarging tradition of the
Godward endeavor of the human spirit. An immense many-
sided and many staged provision for a spiritual self-
building and self-finding, it had some right to speak of
itself by the only name it knew, the eternal religion,
sanaatan dharm...."


11. Will Durant would like the West to learn from India,
tolerance and gentleness and love for all living things:

"Perhaps in return for conquest, arrogance and
spoliation, India will teach us the tolerance and
gentleness of the mature mind, the quiet content of the
unacquisitive soul, the calm of the understanding spirit,
and a unifying, a pacifying love for all living things."


12. Joseph Campbell:

"It is ironic that our great western civilization, which
has opened to the minds of all mankind the infinite
wonders of a universe of untold billions of galaxies
should be saddled with the tightest little cosmological
image known to mankind? The Hindus with their grandiose
Kalpas and their ideas of the divine power which is
beyond all human category (male or female). Not so alien
to the imagery of modern science that it could not have
been put to acceptable use.

"There is an important difference between the Hindu and
the Western ideas. In the Biblical tradition, God creates
man, but man cannot say that he is divine in the same
sense that the Creator is, where as in Hinduism, all
things are incarnations of that power. We are the sparks
from a single fire. And we are all fire. Hinduism
believes in the omnipresence of the Supreme God in every
individual. There is no 'fall'. Man is not cut off from
the divine. He requires only to bring the spontaneous
activity of his mind stuff to a state of stillness and he
will experience that divine principle with him."


13. Sir Monier-Williams:

The Hindus, according to him, were Spinozists more than
2,000 years before the advent of Spinoza, and Darwinians
many centuries before Darwin and Evolutionists many
centuries before the doctrine of Evolution was accepted
by scientists of the present age.


14. Carl Sagan, (the late scientist), asserts that the
dance of Nataraj signifies the cycle of evolution and
destruction of the cosmic universe (Big Bang Theory). "It
is the clearest image of the activity of God which any
art or religion can boast of."


15. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, a professor of Eastern
Religions at Oxford and later President of India:

"Hinduism is not just a faith. It is the union of reason
and intuition that cannot be defined but is only to be
experienced. Evil and error are not ultimate. There is no
Hell, for that means there is a place where God is not,
and there are sins which exceed his love."

Jai Maharaj
http://www.mantra.com/jai
Om Shanti

Hindu Holocaust Museum
http://www.mantra.com/holocaust

Hindu life, principles, spirituality and philosophy
http://www.hindu.org
http://www.hindunet.org

The truth about Islam and Muslims
http://www.flex.com/~jai/satyamevajayate

The terrorist mission of Jesus stated in the Christian bible:

"Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not so send
peace, but a sword.
"For I am come to set a man at variance against his father, and the
daughter against her mother, and the daughter in law against her mother in
law.
"And a man's foes shall be they of his own household.
- Matthew 10:34-36.

o Not for commercial use. Solely to be fairly used for the

educational

purposes of research and open discussion. The contents of this post may

not

have been authored by, and do not necessarily represent the opinion of the
poster. The contents are protected by copyright law and the exemption for
fair use of copyrighted works.
o If you send private e-mail to me, it will likely not be read,
considered or answered if it does not contain your full legal name,

current

e-mail and postal addresses, and live-voice telephone number.
o Posted for information and discussion. Views expressed by others

are

not necessarily those of the poster who may or may not have read the

article.


FAIR USE NOTICE: This article may contain copyrighted material the use of
which may or may not have been specifically authorized by the copyright
owner. This material is being made available in efforts to advance the
understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic,
democratic, scientific, social, and cultural, etc., issues. It is believed
that this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as
provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with

Title

17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without
profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the

included

information for research, comment, discussion and educational purposes by
subscribing to USENET newsgroups or visiting web sites. For more

information

go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
If you wish to use copyrighted material from this article for purposes of
your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the
copyright owner.

Since newsgroup posts are being removed
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this post may be reposted several times.



.



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