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The battle for Sanskrit

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“Sanskrit language, as has been universally recognized by those competent to form a judgment, is one of the most magnificent, the most perfect, the most prominent and wonderfully sufficient literary instrument developed by the human mind.”- Sri Aurobindo

“The language of Sanskrit is of a wonderful structure, more perfect than Greek, more copious than Latin and more exquisitely refined than either. Human life would not be sufficient to make oneself acquainted with any considerable part of Hindu literature.”- Sir William जोनेस


Shri Rajiv Malhotra, a great Bharatiya scholar and expert in Bharatiya civilization, writes in his book “The Battle for Sanskrit” about the importance of Sanskrit revival in developing ourselves socioeconomically, scientifically, and technologically advanced in every field while preserving the great heritage. After reading this article, you will understand why you should read this book.

There are those among Western and Western-based Indologists who are leading an aggressive and well-organized movement to position Sanskrit study as a political battleground. They claim it is laced with toxic elements that support Vedic, Brahminic, and royal hegemony, as well as oppressive views of shudras, women, Muslims, and all those who can be construed as ‘others.’ They regard Sanskrit as a repository of Vedic knowledge (shastra) or politically motivated literature (kayva), all of which should be studied as curious relics of a bygone era. They consider oral tradition to be marginal. Attempts to resurrect Sanskrit as a living language are seen as associated with Hindu violence and hostile to oppressed masses.

Sanskrit study centres that had previously been relocated from India to Europe have now relocated to the United States. The majority of academic Sanskrit research is now conducted and driven from the United States. This research is being conducted through the lens of Western perspectives and theories, which Rajiv ji refer to as ‘American Orientalism.’ Young social scientists are being trained for this new mission, which aims to create new prescriptions (like smritis) that are ostensibly “detoxified.” If current trends continue, India will be an importer of knowledge about its own civilization rather than a leader in the discourse about itself.

Simultaneously, westerners from a wide range of disciplines and walks of life are exploring ancient Sanskrit for its philosophical sophistication, spiritual guidance, and potential for expanding systematic knowledge in fields ranging from physics to mind sciences. Westerners have a vested interest in Sanskrit studies in order to extract the civilization’s underlying cultural wealth accumulated over millennia.

In other words, the study of Sanskrit and sanskriti in the West is being taken over by two distinct vested interests: (a) social scientists and humanities scholars seeking to reinterpret India’s past and re-engineer its future by exhuming the toxicity they perceive in Hindu Dharma; and (b) scientists, environmentalists, spiritual seekers, self-help experts, and ‘new thought gurus’ seeking to mine its treasury of knowledge.

Non-translatable Sanskrit terms must enter the mainstream
Sanskriti must be revitalised on multiple levels and in various ways. Even those who do not become fluent in Sanskrit can learn important non-translatable words and concepts. It is critical to explain and argue why common translations (for example, ‘atman’ translated as’soul’) are false, misleading, and confusing when used in a Western context.

The goal should be to infuse these Sanskrit terms into the English idiom so that the words and ideas they represent become part of the English mainstream discourse. We can Sanskritize English to some extent by incorporating Sanskrit words and concepts into everyday language. When our ideas are translated in the West today, they are almost always taken out of context, disconnected from the source, and reintroduced as part of Western thought. The preservation of Sanskrit terms, as well as the correct history and metaphysical framework, should aid in preventing such hijacking.

Shastras must be seen as a platform for innovation
The shastras of the past are encyclopaedias and databases that contain the intellectual work done to date and are written in Sanskrit. Many specialised fields of knowledge are covered within the shastras, including architecture, astronomy, ceramics, chemistry, ethnics, jyotisha (broader than astrology), mantra, medicine, metallurgy, philosophy, and psychology. All await study by experts.

This knowledge must be placed in a modern context, scientifically tested where possible, updated, and used as the foundation for future extensions and developments. The goal is not to recite old verses out of chauvinistic pride, but to solve contemporary problems by combining Sanskrit with new knowledge. The shastras were never permanently frozen or sealed. They were constantly challenged by rivals and kept alive as dynamic bodies of knowledge that evolved with new evidence.

Unfortunately, traditional experts are becoming increasingly scarce, and those who remain spend the majority of their time reproducing old texts rather than developing new ones. As a result, the majority of research into the knowledge embedded in shastras is done by westerners, with little regard for preserving the culture from which it arose. The Sanskrit tradition has lost social and economic capital as a result of this.

Vedanta is the main domain of shastras that is alive and well today. This is referred to as moksha-shastra. The pursuit of moksha must be infused into various vyavaharika practises and not seen as something separate. The paramarthika and vyavaharika realms are inseparable. The various shastras are a unified body of knowledge that must be approached in a holistic manner. As a result, the shastras pertaining to various vyavaharika realms must also be prioritised. Pollock, Western Indologist, interestingly, attacks shastra precisely because it is integrally and holistically unified with Vedic cosmology. We must resurrect and keep them united for the same reason he despises them. bear in mind, each shastra is based on a distinct intellectual tradition.

Repositioning Sanskrit as the foundation of an Indian Renaissance is intended to revitalise the art of writing smritis.
For example, we need new itihasas to describe two long-lived traumatic events that occurred over the last 1,000 years: the Islamic invasions, which peaked with Aurangzeb’s rule across most of India, and British colonialism from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries. It is necessary to research the method by which such itihasas are written. Today, we can apply this genre in practical ways.

The Mahabharata, for example, speaks not only of politics but also of the lessons to be learned from trauma at various levels: individual, group, community, social, and so on. All of this must be placed within a much larger framework, the Veda itself. This would effectively decolonize Indians and allow for a better understanding of India’s past.

As part of the Indian Grand Narrative project, we must also present the Indian history of science and technology. All knowledge we have of our past, dating back to the Indus-Sarasvati Civilization, must be written down, both analytically and as itihasa, and widely disseminated.

The Sanskrit ecosystem must be revitalised holistically. First and foremost, we must develop a model for studying Sanskrit as part of a living system that is still practised today. We need to understand the importance of Sanskrit and sanskriti as a Bharatiya, and this book will undoubtedly help us to understand.

The Way Forward

Some people and organisations are working hard to resurrect Sanskrit. Sanskrit Bharati is one such organisation, with approximately 5000 centres in India and branches in approximately 15 other countries. Around 10000 volunteers work tirelessly to popularise Sanskrit. It has also released over 500 books and in digital format as well.

Teacher as leader

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If your actions inspire others to dream more,
learn more, do more, and become more, then you are a true leader.

Being a teacher! Isn’t it a beautiful act, a wonderful reality and a vocation of pride?
Teaching is not just any other profession! It’s a profession which gives you the ability to transform a raw human being into a creative, sensible citizen. If one understands this responsibility of freedom offered by this extremely noble profession, we can become real leaders in the form of teachers and can lead thousands of path seekers in this journey of life.

It is said that teaching is such a profession that it creates all other professions by imparting simple lessons during crucial phases of one’s life. Is it possible in any other profession? Children rely on teachers for showing them the correct path to live and reach the horizons of their dreams. The teacher is responsible for instilling the correct amount of confidence, vision and ambition in a student. So before entering this profession one has to introspect about ones actual capabilities.
Ways to become a great ‘leader- teacher’:

  1. Know your stuff
  2. Create something new
  3. Structure your role
  4. Keep the energy going

What teachers generally do in the classroom? :-

  1. Explain the topic
  2. Give home work/project work
  3. Check home work/project work
  4. Prepare worksheets, question papers
  5. Conduct exams
  6. Give results
  7. Take children to field trips or excursions

Don’t you think this is a little stereotypical aspect to follow? Being a teacher, how many of us really think if we can go beyond the prescribed textbook or prescribed pattern of education?

Let’s look at a case study: There was a student called Mohan. He was good in English language. Being a topper in class, year by year he became extremely good in that particular subject. Here we are considering his marks and rank in that subject in particular. He topped in the board exams. One day, he was invited as a guest of honour at some function for his successful achievement in the exam to share his success story with other students. The surprising fact is that he could not speak a single word in front of the audience and the incident was so frustrating that he lost all confidence in life. He became an introvert.

The conclusion is that, if Mohan’s English teacher had given him opportunities of public speaking beyond the exams he could have been successful in living his life to its true potential. We can study the cases of different subjects as well. If you teach Science, Maths, Social Studies or any other subject, show the students the world beyond the text books and the exams. Make them confident and respectful youngsters.

Do not forget that students spend a long span of their life with their teachers. Almost every human being has an average sixty years of active life and one fourth of the very important period of student’s life is spent with school teachers. These are the formative years of one’s life. Every school teacher is responsible for the child’s most important period of life. If you want to become an ideal teacher ask some of these questions to yourself

  1. Do you have thorough knowledge of your subject?
  2. Do you read any literature/books/blogs about your own subject?
  3. Do you make any effort to improve your subject knowledge?
  4. Do you have a practical approach towards your subject considering life situations of your students?
  5. Do you write articles/ blogs/ extracts about your subject?
  6. Do you prepare teaching aids and use them for every topic you teach?

Teachers are the parents, friends and guides for students. They are instructors, counsellors, caretakers and mentors. While performing these roles they lead to develop a habit of ‘switch over’. The teacher leaders turn mirrors into windows meaning they change a student’s focus from being self-centred to world-centred. A teacher is a:

  1. Resource facilitator
  2. Creative analyst
  3. Curriculum Designer
  4. 4. Classroom king
  5. 5. Learning Moderator
  6. Trainer
  7. School leader
  8. Tutor
  9. Change Maker
  10. Role Model
  1. Resource Facilitator- A teacher has open access to creative and practical learning resources. A language teacher can show the students a good educational movie or a maths teacher can actually take them to the local market to teach them money transactions.
  2. Creative Analyst- Analysis of the students’ work has to be done flawlessly because it boosts their confidence. If the teacher analyses students’ reports creatively rather than critically, students too, develop the habit of analysing project reports, practical experiment results creatively and not critically. It enhances positivity.
  3. Curriculum Designer- Most of the teachers think curriculum designing is not our job. We get it readily and our job is only to deliver the lessons as it is, but most of the times don’t we feel why this particular chapter is given in the syllabus? This is out of date! There is no point in teaching such lessons to the new generation. So, we need to approach the curriculum designing committee. We need to take initiative and follow up. It is the teacher who can lead the role of curriculum designing effectively.
  4. Classroom king and kingmaker- Yes! Why not consider yourself as a king? When a teacher is in the classroom, students hope to get special attention. Teacher is the Director of the Classroom drama. Teacher is the decision maker. Every child awaits the teacher’s words and if those words are inspiring and full of positivity then you are the king maker.
  5. 5. Learning Moderator- moderator is someone who moderates a meeting or discussion. Learning is a continuous process of various stimulating incidents and here the stimulator is a teacher. The moderator allows audience or students to ask questions and participate.
  6. Trainer- When we call teachers trainers, it expands their work profile. Then the teacher cannot just go into the classroom and read the text and explain the topic but will need to demonstrate the facts of the content he or she teaches.
  7. School Leader- How do the extremely successful schools work – not only on the examination board guidelines but also by the guide lines of the school leaders. Every school requires the best leaders. How can a school leader be created? The basic need is the instinct of the person; second the urge and effort for self-development; third tremendous hard work. A school leader is a versatile personality having thorough knowledge of contemporary modern education.
  8. Tutor- Sometimes we have more than forty students in one class, but every student should feel that this teacher is giving me personal attention like a tutor. How can we capture the students’ attention in class. Some students like touch therapy, some require good words or special mention of their names, etc. Teachers should identify such needs of their students and fulfil them in class.
  9. Change maker- Mahatma Gandhi had once said that if you want to see change, be the change first! Essentially, teachers and school leaders are the agents of change. Most complex problems need not have complex solutions. Teachers are potential change makers. Teachers should be energised, equipped, connected and mobilised to become change makers. A very young Malala could bring change in a critical situation in her country by her sacrifice and courage. Then why can’t we be the pioneers to the change we want to see in our education system by implementing simple actions?
  10. Role Model- A Teacher has to be a role model! A teacher is a major influencing factor in a student’s life. A role model is a person who inspires and encourages the students to strive for greatness, live to their fullest potential and see the best in themselves. A role model is someone we admire and someone we aspire to be like. We learn through them, through their commitment to excellence and through their ability to make us realise our own personal worth. Therefore, teachers should be very alert and conscious of their work.

Teachers who teach only academics may be forgotten but the teachers who teach life lessons are always remembered! Be the teacher-leader.
Be the Change!

Dr Rajeev Ranjan Singh

Principal

Mount Columbus International School

Himmatpur Road, Simbhaoli

When it comes to Bollywood, Hindus should not emulate Prithviraj Chauhan’s action

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We all have heard of the story of Prithviraj Chauhan defeating Mohammed Ghori and then sparing his life again and again, only to be attacked by Ghori repeatedly each time. Ultimately, Ghori ended up defeating Prithviraj Chauhan and killing him.

I am not going to go into the details of history now, but the moral that can be drawn from this story is to not spare your enemy after defeating him. In Bhagavad Gita Arjuna was asked to be merciless against the Kauravas and not spare a single life of his enemy on the battlefield. Bhagwan Krishna’s words were not taken seriously by Prithviraj Chauhan and it was disastrous not just for himself, but for the entire Hindu civilization.

Now coming to the present times there are protests being done against the anti-Hindu propaganda done by Bollywood in the past and present. Whether it is Akshay Kumar asking Hindus to avoid going to Vaishno Devi in a sly manner, or movies like Lajja(2001) where most scenes were crafted to lampoon Hindus and Hindu society.

All this was done without any protest since the inception of Bollywood in the 1920s. The Urdu Film industry relentlessly targeted Hindus and Hinduism unflinchingly. It became a multi-billion dollar industry of Anti-Hindu propaganda. It was supported by the Indian National Congress for decades and many Bollywood stars, directors, producers, etc, were quite close to the Nehru-Gandhi family. They were treated like demi-gods by the Public.

Apart from the Anti-Hindu nature, Bollywood promoted adultery, sleaze, eve teasing, etc. It gave a very bad message to young men that the whole purpose of a man’s life is to pursue women, which strongly went against the ethos of Hindu society where most of the marriages were arranged.

Bollywood had a corrosive effect on the psyche of Hindu society and had a significant contribution in deracinating the Hindus over several decades. It looked like challenging the anti-Hindu nature of Bollywood would be an impossible task. Because the influence of Bollywood on people’s life only increased at the turn of 21st century. While people just watched movies till the 1990s, the personal life of actors were not seen as an ideal to be copied.

However, at the turn of 21st century almost all mainstream media started having a section of glamour where several aspect of an actor’s life were showcased. They were promoted as youth icons and roles models for the youth to emulate. The mainstream media promoted the life and opinions of the actors as an ideal worth imitating. They started endorsing brands, events and even political parties. The ‘star kids’ were promoted by the mainstream media, which only increased the nepotism that existed in Bollywood for decades.

Then the year 2020 happened. Sushant Singh Rajput’s death opened a can of worms which exposed the dirty side of Bollywood. Around this time the twitter handle Gems of Bollywood was launched. It opened the eyes of Hindus to the ugly nature of Bollywood. The repercussions are now being felt by Bollywood in 2022 where most of the films are becoming a flop.

While the Urdu Film industry is pretending to ignore the effect of boycott campaign, the result is on the wall for everyone to see. Bollywood is not going to take this lying down. They will do PR work to make themselves look strong and likeable to soften the minds of Hindus and win their sympathy. However, I will stand strong and merciless towards my enemies.

If I had a dharmic upbringing my resolve would have been very clear and strong. Like Arjuna was asked to be towards his enemies. However, because of my liberal education I have to remind myself to not become soft and let Bollywood people make me sympathetic towards them because of their PR work.

Do you remember that Saif Ali Khan named his son Taimur even after knowing very well that Taimur massacred lakhs of Hindus? Maybe he takes pride in those massacres and arrogantly justified his decision when questioned. It didn’t stop there. The mainstream liberal media, which openly hates hates Hindus started showcasing every aspect of Saif Ali Khan’s son’s life. They were regularly writing reports of his dress, smile, silly acts, etc. They wanted to insult Hindus more and more. I haven’t forgotten that. Nor have I forgotten that Bollywood was insulting Hindus for decades which has been excellently highlighted by the twitter handle Gems of Bollywood.

WHAT SHOULD HINDUS DO?

Personally, I am going to completely ignore every single movie, article, news, serial, or any piece of entertainment till 2040 and introspect on the reasons behind killing of Kanhaiya Lal, Chandan Gupta, Nikita Tomar, Kamlesh Tiwari, Ramalingam and countless other Hindu deaths at the hands of extremism.

Remember that even if you see any movie on television the producers churn money through satellite rights. More articles will be written where actresses ‘cross all limits of boldness’ and vulgarity. Actors will be seen in temples and doing ‘humanitarian’ work. All the creativity will be used to do some or the other publicity stunt. I am going to IGNORE them all. Total boycott till 2040 from my end.

I will try to create awareness about the other side of entertainment industry among my family, friends and on social media. And I don’t care about Bollywood’s soft power. I am more interested in Hindu hard power.

मोबाइल की लत के हानिकारक प्रभाव क्या हैं?

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आज की दुनिया में, लगभग 95% लोग फोन की लत से पीड़ित हैं। इस लत का सकारात्मक प्रभाव से अधिक नकारात्मक प्रभाव पड़ता है। यह लत स्वास्थ्य के साथ-साथ शारीरिक रूप से भी दोनों के लिए खतरनाक है। यह अनपेक्षित मनोवैज्ञानिक प्रभावों की संख्या को भी दर्शाता है, जैसे: –

1. नींद की कमी: कार्यस्थलों, मित्रों, रिश्तेदारों, परिवार के सदस्यों आदि के लगातार संदेशों और कॉल के कारण, हम हमेशा सोचते हैं कि कोई व्यक्ति हमें संदेश या कॉल करने जा रहा है, इसलिए मुझे उसके संदेश या कॉल का जवाब देना चाहिए और इसकी वजह से इस लत को हम अपना अधिकांश समय चिट-चैटिंग में बिताते हैं।

2. एकाग्रता शक्ति का नुकसान: हम अपने काम पर ध्यान केंद्रित नहीं कर पाते हैं और अक्सर गलती करते हैं और दिए गए समय में अपना काम पूरा नहीं कर पाते हैं। इसके अलावा, जब हम कुछ काम करना शुरू करते हैं, तो हम हमेशा इसे जल्द से जल्द खत्म करने की कोशिश करते हैं लेकिन इससे अक्सर कुछ गलतियाँ और कुछ समस्याएं हो जाती हैं।

3. फैंटम पॉकेट वाइब्रेशन लक्षण: इस सिंड्रोम में किसी को लगता है कि फोन वाइब्रेट कर रहा है लेकिन फोन बिल्कुल भी वाइब्रेट नहीं कर रहा है। फोन की रिंगिंग के दौरान भी यही बात होती है, कोई सोचता है कि फोन बज रहा है लेकिन फोन बिल्कुल नहीं बज रहा है।

4. चिंता विकार: अनुसंधान ने साबित किया है कि कॉलेज जाने वाले छात्र जो सेल फोन का उपयोग कर रहे हैं, उनके खाली समय के दौरान उत्सुकता से भरने की अधिक संभावना है।

5. अवसाद: फोन का अधिक उपयोग करने के कारण जब हमारा फोन हमारे पास नहीं होता है तो हम अस्थिर और उदास महसूस करते हैं।

6. रिश्तों में गड़बड़ी: जब हम अपने परिवार के सदस्यों, दोस्तों या किसी समूह के साथ होते हैं तो अपने मोबाइल फोन में लगातार सिर रखते हैं और उनसे संवाद नहीं करने से गलतफहमी पैदा होती है। और रिश्तों का बंधन शिथिल हो जाता है।

कुछ खतरनाक शारीरिक प्रभाव इस प्रकार हैं: –

1. डिजिटल आई स्ट्रेन: इस आई स्ट्रेन में कोई व्यक्ति 2-3 घंटे से ज्यादा स्क्रीन पर अपनी दृष्टि नहीं रख पाता है। आँखें खुजलाने लगीं। आंख की लाली भी हो सकती है। यह अधिकांश समय धुंधली दृष्टि की ओर जाता है जो चीजों को ठीक से देखने में असमर्थ बनाता है। फोन के अधिक उपयोग के कारण यह सिरदर्द की ओर भी ले जाता है।

2. गर्दन की समस्या: यह एक ऐसी समस्या है जिसमें से एक गर्दन की बीमारी और गर्दन में दर्द से पीड़ित है। यह समस्या गलत स्थिति में बैठने और टेक्सटिंग संदेशों के लिए गर्दन को लंबे समय तक झुकाने के कारण होती है।

3. पीठ की समस्याएं: गेम खेलने के लिए या काम के उद्देश्य के लिए लगातार कंप्यूटर के सामने बैठे रहने से पीठ की जबरदस्त समस्याएं हो सकती हैं जो आजीवन भी हो सकती हैं।

4. कार दुर्घटनाएं: आजकल लोग ऑडियो सुनने या कार चलाने के दौरान आईपीएल मैच देखने के लिए कार चलाने के दौरान भी मल्टी टास्किंग करने में विश्वास करते हैं, जिसके कारण कार दुर्घटनाएं काफी बढ़ गई हैं

मोबाइल की लत्त कैसे छोड़ी जा सकती है। पुराने टाइम की एक कहावत है, जो इंसान की जरुरत को दर्शाती है उस के अनुसार रोटी कपडा और मकान ये आदमी की पहली जरुरत होती है, लेकिन आज इन के साथ हमारा मोबाइल भी जुड़ चूका है। वैसे तो मोबाइल का यूज़ आज के टाइम पर बहुत जरुरी हो गया है।

अब बात ये है की आप मोबाइल का इस्तेमाल किस लिए करते है। आप सब से ज्यादा टाइम मोबाइल मैं कहाँ ख़राब कर रहे हो। सोशल मीडया जैसे व्हाट्सअप, फेसबुक, इंस्टाग्राम, मेस्सेंजर, या फिर किसी और साइट या सोफ्टवेयर पर उसे नोट करे। हम जब भी आपने मोबाइल को किसी काम के लिए उठाते है, तो जैसे ही डिस्प्लै ऑन करते है तो सब से पहले क्या दिखाई देता है? नोटिफिकेशन अब वो नोटिफिकेशन फेसबुक या व्हाट्सअप किसी का भी हो सकता है। अब हम क्या करते है आपने काम छोड़ कर उस पर लग जाते है और काम को भूल जाते है। ऐसा हमारे साथ दिन मैं पता नहीं कितनी बार होता है।

आप सब से पहले आपने सभी अप्प के नोटिफिकेशन बंद कर दे। और हो सके तो उसे डिलीट कर दे। अगर ये आपके लिए पॉसिबल नहीं है तो थोड़ा एकांत मैं बैठ जाये और सोचे इसे यूज़ करने से हमारा क्या फायदा हो रहा है। और फायदा हो रहा है तो वो कहा तक हमारे और हमारी फैमिली के लिए अच्छा साबित हो रहा है। वैसे 95 % चांस मैं ऐसा नहीं होता हम बस आपने टाइम पास और एन्जॉय करने के लिए मोबाइल को यूज़ करते है। करना कुछ और चाहते है हो कुछ हो रहा है। पता नहीं मोबाइल हमारे कण्ट्रोल मैं है या हम मोबाइल के।

अब आप को करना क्या है। मैं अपनी बताता हूँ। मुझे जब भी कोई आदत छोड़नी होती है तो मैं क्या करता हूँ। मैं भी मोबाइल से तंग था और ये ऊपर जो बाते मैंने बताई है मैं एक्सपीरयंस कर चूका हूँ। मैंने भी अपनी लत्त को छोड़ा है, मैं क्या करता हूँ मुझे जब भी अपनी कोई आदत छोड़नी होती है। मैं एक टारगेट बनाता हूँ। मैंने शुरुवात मैं मोबाइल को बहुत छोड़ना चाहा। मेरी हालत इतनी ख़राब थी कि घर वाले बोलते रहते बेटा ये काम कर ले ये कर ले पर मैं आपने मोबाइल से चिपका रहता मैं उस दौर मैं काफी चिड़चिड़ा हो चुक्का था। सब से गुस्से से बात करता कोई भी मुझे बोलता तो एक दम से गरम अब ये क्या काम बताएगा। एक मिनट के लिए मोबाइल छोड़ने को तैयार नहीं। पर मेरे दिमाग मैं एक बात रहती कि अब मैं ज्यादा ही गुस्स चुक्का हूँ इस मैं। मैं तंग था मोबाइल से पर छोड़ नहीं पा रहा था। मैंने जैसे तैसे कर के खुद को कण्ट्रोल करना चाहा पर नहीं हुआ।

फिर मैंने अपना टारगेट बनाया। पहला टारगेट:- मैं दो घंटे के लिए मोबाइल यूज़ नहीं करूँगा। अगर किया तो अपनी एक अप्प को डिलीट कर दूंगा। अब टारगेट तो बना लिया पर पूरा कर पाना बहुत मुश्किल 10 मिनट निकले 20 निकले, फिर कब मैं आपने टारगेट को भूल मोबाइल मैं लगा पता नहीं चला। और जब टारगेट याद आया मैं मनं ही मनं खुद को बुरी भली कहने लगा रियल मैं खुद से बहुत ज्यादा शर्मिंदा हुआ। मैं एक छोटा सा टारगेट पूरा कर न सका मेरे सपने तो बहुत बड़े है वो कैसे पुरे होंगे। अब बात पनिसमेंट कि, मैं टारगेट भूल गया कोई बात नहीं पर मैंने खुद को पनिसमेंट किया और मैंने अपने दिल पर पत्थर रख कर व्हाट्सअप को डिलीट कर दिया। मैं बार बार प्लेस्टोरे जा कर व्हाट्यसाप डावनलोड करने कि सोचता पर दिल कहता भाई बदलना है के नहीं। मैंने जैसे तैसे कर के खुद को कंट्रोल किया।

मैंने दूसरा टारगेट तीन दिन बाद किया उस दिन भी दो घंटे के लिए मोबाइल न यूज़ करने कि कसम खाई। और उस दिन भी वही हुआ एक घंटा बीस मिनट बाद मोबाइल फिर हाथ मैं। टारगेट फिर छुट्टा पर पनिसमेंट मैंने उस दिन भी खुद को किया। मैंने फेसबुक को डिलीट कर दिया। अब वैसे भी चलाने के लिए मेरे पास कुछ नहीं बचा था मोबाइल मैं। अब मैंने सोचा के पहले टारगेट और दूसरे टारगेट के बिच क्या डिफरेंट रहा। पहले दिन बीस मिनट बाद मोबाइल यूज़ किया और आज एक घंटा बीस मिनट यानि एक घंटे का डिफरेंट। मेरे समज मैं आ गया मेरे अंदर सब्र तो आया पर कुछ खो कर। उस दिन बाद मैंने बहुत सरे टारगेट बनाये और पूरा किया आप भी ऐसे कर सकते हो।

किसी ने कहाँ है (RIp इर्र्फान खान फिल्म स्टार ) दिमाग को आपने ऊपर हावी मत होने दो दिमाग के ऊपर खुद हावी हो जाओ। दिमाग आपने ऊपर हावी रहेगा तो ऐसी दिक्कते आती रहेगी। और दिमाग पर आप हावी हो जाओगे तो कुछ भी इम्पॉसिबल नहीं है।

आप भी अपनी आदत छोड़ सकते हो। बस खुद को पुनिसमेंट देना सीखो। मैंने अपनी ज़िंदगी को ऐसे ही बदला है। टारगेट बनाओ

मैं आज सब अप्प यूज़ करता हूँ। पर मैं व्हाट्सअप फेसबुक को यूज़ करता हूँ, वो मुझे नहीं। सोशल मीडिया हमारी एनर्जी को चूस जाते है।

आपने उत्पर काम करो सब कुछ पॉसिबल है।

Dr Rajeev Ranjan Singh

Elizabeth II: The unifier of traditionalism

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With democracy replacing the world order, Kings and Queens were no more divine but mere accountable subjects of a constitution, yet endured the delicate continuation that bridges the bygone and contemporary. To this day, oaths are sworn, anthems sung, flags hoisted, and virtue awarded. With the passing of the Queen, one is reminded of not only her compassion towards her kingdom but the extended world.

For billions, she was the one constant in a world of bewildering change. But most of all, she is going to be remembered as the Queen who had tea with Paddington Bear & pulled a marmalade sandwich from her purse. At this hour, as the world unites in mourning, her institutionalized supremacy is dismantled and a bond is unravelled between her life and countless many who look upon the grave of a virtuous civilization.

Everything she exemplified – restraint, duty, grace, reticence, persistence – is disappearing from the world. Ideals of conservatism, tradition, and spirituality must be safeguarded in an age of uncertainty, anxiety, hatred and no transcendent vision to guide us. ⁣For many of us who are descendants of colonized ancestors, it’s difficult to mourn a person who represents a legacy of oppression.

⁣So how do we hold space for such a time as this? ⁣Nelson Mandela said, “It is so easy to break down and destroy. The heroes are those who make peace and build.” The colonizing, imperialism & scandals were easy. Too easy. The peacemaking, healing, rebuilding and reimagining are impossibly hard & heroic feats of perseverance. ⁣ There’s a story about a visit Mandela made to see the Queen. He was given a protocol full of procedures on how to address her. But upon seeing the Queen approaching, Mandela broke protocol & called out, “Elizabeth! You’ve lost weight.” She replied, “Thank you, Nelson, you don’t look bad yourself!”⁣.

It is impossible to respect cheap, easy, shallow mockery of those who love their country, their monarch and their society at a moment like this. Actively celebrating the death of an elderly woman makes you a very unsavoury person. I’d advise all anti-traditionalists that if they can’t say anything decent right now then they should maintain a respectful silence. All human beings deserve empathy and fellow feeling.

Some may find the outpouring odd, but millions felt affection and respect for the woman who uncomplainingly filled her constitutional role for seventy years. She did her duty to the country right up until her dying hours and became an enduring, positive symbol bearing testimony to the fact that even in the modern age, civilization is still guided by its past. The monarch’s death reminds us to stay kind, loving and above all, moralistic and to mourn the degenerated cowardly souls filling the void between. I will extend mercy and weep, despite all that’s terrible within me. ⁣

⁣⁣

The story of girls in India

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‘Mom, what is menstrual hygiene? Is it something that only I stand unaware of?’ 

‘No, my child; this is something which even I know nothing of. We are not allowed to talk about such things.’

Just about two decades later, the change is evident in the questions asked by the girls in our country. 

‘Mom, I can’t believe women still stand unaware of menstrual sanitation and proper hygiene measures. The workshop that we conducted in the rural vicinities was an eye-opener.’

‘It is our responsibility to enlighten the ones that stand unaccustomed to the prerequisites of a decent female life’. 

Girls in our country have had a journey from being called a ‘rebel’ for demanding equal number of schools in the neighbourhood for females to being called ‘torchbearer of women empowerment’ for demanding equal pay for equal work. It has been a journey from inviting opprobrium for leaving homes to work to try to stay ahead of everyone in the competitions of a subtle daily life running from the same starting line.

Still, even today when a daughter with her parents, passes through a billboard with a journalist on it screaming of ‘voicing the truth by uncovering the reality of events’, she wonders to herself, ‘would she be able to do the same one day ?’. Well, the answer today is, by and large yes, if given the opportunity. 

The paper would focus upon the stark changes that we witness today in terms of girls’ education as we did two decades ago in our country. What has changed? Some would argue that nothing in the peripheries but a lot in the metropolitan world. It has some element of truth in it but the fact also stands undeniable that education is a matter of discussion in the country today. There is still a long way to go but statistics have proven the essential achievements secured in the arena. 

Language is the most powerful mode of representation. Cora Kaplan is able to express the essence of this statement in her words where she says;

Our individual speech does not…. free us in any simple way from the ideological constraints of our culture since it is through forms that articulate those constraints that we speak in the first place [Kaplan 56] 

Education starts from the way females speak about education. The fearless attitude today is surely a big reason to celebrate, for, speech is a plan turned to action. The more people engage in a discussion, the more it is likely to influence the majority thought process and hence, it turns to reality as action follows ideologies. 

Before turning to the thesis about the change in education for girls today, it is of utmost importance to steer through the social conditions that denied girls’ right to their liberation through education previously and why the situation seems challenged today. 

‘Woman’ – without her ‘they’ say there can be no ‘man’. 

In much of the written literature, we find much evidence of oppression of women and dominance of men. In European, Middle Eastern and African cultures, women did not have equal political and social rights as men and were often under the control of their fathers and husbands in almost all societies. In Greece too women did not have basic rights which is often held up as the originator of democracy. Political theorists like Aristotle and Socrates considered women to be incapable of practical thought and not true citizens. Even in India, women have been witnessing the history of subjugation. During the ancient period, although women were seen as contributing equally as men were hunted and women gathered, gradually this notion faded. 

Women were often ousted from social life by denying them property rights, social and political rights and also education rights. Women although were considered goddesses, their situation remained unimproved. Instruments of suppression were the practice of Sati and child marriage which prevailed for a very long time. In Mahabharata which is considered to be the great epic and is held proudly, subjugation of women is evident. Patriarchy prevailed at that time too and women were oppressed which is evident by the example of Draupadi who was shared as a wife by five men and was also lost as a bet by one of her husbands. Women at that point could not claim share of her father’s property and could not succeed as a royal heir. Even in the Vedic times, women were not considered as equal and were not even allowed to hear or study the Vedas by the dominant class of men in the society. This was continued even in the Mughal period where women were oppressed by men of the household. Although women slowly started acquiring important status and gaining rights all over the world, true freedom from oppression was never attained. Even today in some parts of the country, women’s reproductive functions and sexual capabilities are seen as disgusting to the extent that menstruating women were till recently not allowed to even visit some temples which adorned female goddesses.

Some religions and cultures also preach subjugation of women where women are taught to dress, speak and behave in a certain way which is expected to be appropriate. Some countries support patriarchy through certain rules like in some countries the punishment of rape is that the rapist’s wife is given over to the rape victim’s husband or father to rape if he wishes, as a revenge. In some extreme cases, rape victim is married off to the rapist. There have been many writings on these things by feminists which are ignored. Marxists believe that oppression of women began with the rise of a class society, about 6000 years ago and oppression of women is a creation of culture. Male dominance throughout ages has resulted in erosion of female identity and status as individuals. 

Another form of patriarchy called Neo patriarchy coined by Hisham Sharabi in 1988 evolved to suppress women at the household level. It involves control and exercise of power guided by the elder women in the family but supervised by men. In this system, women are responsible for perpetuation of patriarchy by subjugating younger women in the family, especially the brides. ‘The second sex’ by Simone Beauvoir [1949] is an historical account of women’s disadvantaged position in a society. ‘One is not born, but rather becomes a woman’. It is one of the earliest feminist works and is used by many contemporary feminists to draw on to women’s oppressed position. ‘…her wings are cut and then she is blamed for not knowing how to fly’ ‘Still I rise’ by Maya Angelou [1978] also draws upon how women had been victims of patriarchy.

‘ You may write me down in history With your bitter, twisted lies,

You may trod me in the very dirt But still, like dust, I’ll rise. 

You may shoot me with your words, You may cut me with your eyes, You may kill me with your hatefulness, But still, like air, I’ll rise.’

As women had no right to material property, the only way to attain a respectful status in society was through entering into a matrimonial alliance with a man of higher status. Social status was assigned to women based on the reputation of their fathers and husbands. 

But, today, Gone are the days when literature was restricted to men and inspiration must be drawn from the women in Shobha De’s novels who revive their lost fortunes, look glamorous, act different, break the norms, are sexually liberated and free thinkers. As Simone De Beauvoir says ‘All oppression creates a state of war. And this is no exception’[ Beauvoir 156 ]. 

History provides evidence of how women have always been victims of male dominance and have faced gross repercussions by stepping out of the boundaries set for them. 

In the examples of Draupadi being stripped of her dignity, Sita’s character being questioned after being kidnapped, Padmavati’s decision to burn herself, women in India have always been struggling and surviving in a dark world.

Thousands of women have been strangled to death by endless restrictions being imposed on them. From being enchained to the constraints of domestic life to the practises like Sati, Child marriage, the entire journey of a female from a girl to a woman have been predetermined. 

It’s high time that women seriously take up the task of bringing about a change by educating their friends, husbands, sons about how women ought to be treated. 

It’s time to celebrate ‘Womanness’ and permanently bury terms like ‘Mansplaining’ with the conventional picture of a woman. Women of the 21st century are capable enough to question but those questions need to be answered so that new questions arise questioning every unfair phenomenon. Efforts like providing permanent commission to women in the Short Service Commission by the Supreme Court instil a spirit into each woman of India to cross the barriers and emerge out of complexities with flying colours. The dream captured in the statement made by the UN Women Executive Director Michelle Bachelet – ‘21st Century will be the century of girls and women’, must be realised by taking small steps which would eventually lead to the celebration of the utopian India dreamt by each woman. 

The simple fact that a lot of changes have been introduced in the girls’ education, is that I am writing this paper freely about what we have been facing through the ages. I am educated enough to critically analyse the facts and then make a statement. 

Education has largely been believed in the last decades as the source of ‘trouble’ at homes wherein the ‘obedient’ females start questioning the norms that put them at a place not desirable. Even if allowed, it was believed to make the women more ‘acceptable’ to be married to educated men. In the decades after independence, education has been all about rebellion to have people accept it as a right for women. There are numerous reasons why the realm of education has undergone massive changes through the times. There have been plenty of challenges to the same that seem to find solutions or at least interest of change-makers of the society. This has been a booster for female education. 

The main hindrance has been the dominant ideology of the Indians whose society has always had a son preference. Daughters have always been viewed as an ‘outsider who lives at the biological parents’ house until she attains a certain age as desirable to the parents to marry her off at her rightful destined house’. The thought has witnessed a change primarily because of technology.  With people making use of the internet largely, it has been possible to connect to women throughout the world and to stay in tune to the developments of the female world outside the state boundaries.

Free and independent media has been a force to be reckoned with as more females join the industry to take up their own issues. With a boom in literature, in the absence of censorship or restrictions, feminist authors have increasingly been the votary of girls’ education.  With liberalisation and globalisation setting its foot in India, female Education increasingly came to be included within Sustainable development goals for equitable and inclusive development as a necessity to attain agendas set internationally. Plan International in a report stated that every dollar spent on girls’ education has the potential to generate a general return of $2.80 which could also boost the economies of developing nations by 10% in the next ten years. The investment on girls’ in India is thought to be a futile exercise.

Patriarchy’s deep seated impact on the Indian society has been exemplified with the preference of child marriage over education as education has been believed as a domain reserved for men. Even if the government has launched programmes like Beti Bachao Beti Padhao Scheme and Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana, education for girls is still wrought with many challenges. The main issue concerning the inability of girls to reach schools is the distance of schools from homes. A lot of rural areas and tribal areas face paucity of schools within ranges of their homes.

The schools lack proper hygienic measures to encourage girls with no toilet facilities or proper measures to help girls during menstruation. Girls often are forced to withdraw their admission from schools due to their parents’ decisions of getting them married before completion of their studies. 

There is a dire need of encouraging girls’ education as when one girl is sent to study, a family tree gets educated. It helps to break the cycle of poverty and unorthodoxy in an Indian family. Educated girls take sane decisions when it comes to family planning and the future of families and national growth increases dramatically. Girls’ education must be encouraged through awareness programs to change the mindset of parents unwilling to help their daughters with education. Scholarships and proper infrastructure in schools must be focussed upon to augment girls’ education. Girls’ education strengthens economies and reduces inequality. It contributes to more stable, resilient societies that give all individuals the opportunity to fulfil their potential.

“For full development of our human resources, the improvement of homes 

and  for  moulding  the  character  of  children  during  the  most  impressionable  years  of  their 

infancy, the education of girls is of greater importance than that of boys”.

The agenda of girls’ education has been in attention now in full swing given the active role of civil society who has been very vocal about issues of female foeticide, child marriage, early pregnancies and women empowerment. The situation of girls’ education has improved impressively which is quite evident given the statistics related to girl education. With an increase in standards of school infrastructure in the ‘New India’ which caters to girls’ needs, female students constitute 48.6% of the total enrolment in the last decade in higher educational institutes as per AISHE. 

‘We educate women because it is smart. We educate women because it changes the world.’- 

Drew Fuast

Communist China’s territorial hunger and democratic India’s security

Since the occupation of Tiananmen Square (Gate of Heavenly Peace) by Communist Party of China(CPC), post-Chinese Civil War, in 1949, the single political party ruled country has adopted territorial expansionism -based on vaporous historical evidences- as major components of her foreign policy. CPC during early phase of its rule had been successful in expanding her territory northward, westward and south-westward with brutal capture of Manchuria, Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang and Tibet. In so far as China’s Tibet occupation is concerned, it will be incomplete without mention of then Indian ruler’s visionless foreign policy which in fact facilitated belligerent Dragon reaching the country’s porous border.

During middle phase of CPC’s first Paramount Leader and the founder of People’s Republic of China(PRC) Mao Zedong’s rule, People’s Liberation Army(PLA) pounced on the country’s Panchsheel ally India in south of her occupied Tibet in 1962 based on Mao’s manufactured “Palm and Five Fingers” territorial claim and encroached some territories on the sparsely populated Himalayan height. Apart PLA made a daring attempt in 1969 to further expand Chinese territory towards further north to capture collaborator-turn-foe Union of Soviet Socialist Republic(USSR)’s resource rich but thinly populated eastern territories far away from the capital of centrally administered country. But, the war was so furious within a short time of start that PRC top leadership was forced to hide in country’s remote mountain range fearing nuclear strike on Beijing from its manufactured enemy.

In 1979, PRC leadership under Deng Xiaoping, post-first Paramount leader Mao Zedong era of 37 years rule, made an attempt to expand southward saying “The child is getting naughty, it is time he got spanked”. The war PRC fought with fellow communist ruled Vietnam was so shocking that PLA had a humiliating withdrawal.

Post-Vietnam misadventure, China has changed her expansionist strategy from direct confrontation to incremental/salami slice strategy. To support this new strategy, PRC first concentrated in country’s economic development by opening up its markets to outside world abandoning the founder’s dogmatic closed economy with backing of capitalist developed countries under the leadership of America, which were opposed to their dreaded Cold War rival Warsaw Pact group under the leadership of USSR. During early three decades of open market economy, PRC had strictly adhere to Deng Xiaoping famous dictum “Hide your strength, bide your time”.

During the period, the country’s GDP witnessed year-on-year double digit growth on an average, the fastest in the world, and country’s foreign exchange reserve reached $3trillion, the highest among all the countries in the world. By the time, the present belligerent President Xi Jinping, who has adorned himself the Paramount Leader status second to Mao Zedong, took over the country’s leadership, PRC had achieved the second largest economy status in the world with GDP of above $10trillion and almost had reached the status of world super power in manufacturing, so far occupied by the US.     

With solid economic backing, PRC added with its existing incremental/salami slice expansion strategy the Debt Diplomacy through China centric Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) following the ancient Silk Road concept. The infrastructure based initiative had early setback when India, then the third largest economy in the PRC’s immediate neighborhoods and having potential to compete with the initiative’s initiator for economic and military supremacy in the region, refused to join the initiative alleging it breaches country’s sovereign territory.

But, Xi Jinping has not been disoriented. In the meanwhile, PRC has almost occupied South China Sea building naval infrastructures in the marginal sea’s coral reefs, building artificial islands and sabre-rattling small littoral countries as and when they venture into the sea for economic activities as per United Nations Convention on the Laws of the Seas(UNCLOS).

Here, it is to remind that Communist or Totalitarian regimes anywhere in the world have not been comfortable with thriving democratic countries in their neighborhoods. Former fears influence of later on their population’s aspiration with 1989 Tiananmen Square uprising for democracy fresh in the mind.

PRC leadership knows very well that Democratic India, located on the strategic place of the 21st Century world’s most happening region, has the all-round potential to challenge Chinese ambition to achieve world Super Power status when the existing Super Power the US is declining. In view of this, PRC leadership has got India specific strategy of ‘String of Pearls’ embedded with Debt Diplomacy with clear objective to strangulate India through BRI.

Now, China has either already got or has been constructing military-cum-commercial bases in countries around India and her sphere-of-influence in Indian Ocean Region(IOR) investing her high cost and hugely surplus capitals though many of these projects are not financially viable and economically beneficial to host countries.

Here, it looks incomplete without mention of allegations that the host countries’ political leadership, bureaucrats, militaries and civil societies including media houses have been handsomely benefited in allowing BRI projects into their countries. Many allege the same strategy has been applied in India, but the same has limited success here in view of some patriotic forces in politics and civil society.

Now, many of these BRI host countries in the immediate neighborhood of India as elsewhere in the world are in complete debt trap of China. As per latest Bloomberg report quoting IMF, Pakistan’s Chinese debt is $30billions, which is 30% of country’s total debts, and ratio to GDP is 10%. As per Christian Science Monitor, Sri Lanka’s total public and publicly guaranteed debt was $35.8 billion at the end of 2021. Of that amount, lending by China accounted for $7.1 billion, or 20%, compared with less than 1% in 2001. 

In the meantime, China has taken over the 99 years lease of its built strategic Hambantota port, located on the world’s one of the trade routes south of India. As per UK think tank Chatham House ‘the partial Chinese ownership of Hambantota port has so far been symbolic. Still, such ownership structures could be used to China’s advantage in the future’. Over Hambantota Port issue too, India’s leadership in 2008 exhibited poor strategic vision by refusing Sri Lankan offer to built-operate-transfer scheme based strategic port.

Now, Sri Lanka is in severe financial crisis. During this period, Chinese, despite being the largest lender, did not come forward to rescue the country, and even has been found reluctant to cooperate the indebted country to get easy loan from IMF to get ride up the present crisis. And to make the situation worst for island nation, PLA Navy sent a naval ship engaged in intelligence collection to Hambantota Port intentionally to create rift between India and Sri Lanka when the former is trying to rescue the later with survival financial doses.

The strategically located tiny archipelago in the south of India on the major trade route of world i.e. Maldives’ former President and present Parliament Speaker Mohamed Nasheed said in December 2019 that his country owed China $3.5 billion in loans. Note: Maldives’s GDP is $5 billion. Nasheed said that the Chinese debt trap was an economic and human-rights issue, and an issue of sovereignty and freedom of the island nation. Nasheed has also said that project costs were inflated, and the debt on paper is far greater than the $1.1 billion actually received.

On 10 August 2022, Bangladesh’s finance minister Mustafa Kamal warned that developing nations must ‘think twice’ about taking more loans through China’s Belt and Road Initiative. He said ‘Beijing’s poor lending decisions’ are pushing already indebted nations into economic distress. Highlighting Sri Lanka’s crisis, Minister Kamal said that China must follow a more robust process for evaluating its loans.

On the same day, The Print reported, “China has been consistently endeavoring to expand its influence in Nepal, analysts said amid fears that China aims to trap the Himalayan nation in a spiral of irrevocable debt without helping Nepal and to use its land. That is why China encourages Nepal to ‘live luxuriously’ with it ‘on loan’.”

Here, it is quite difficult to ignore the fact that the vulnerability of Indian Ocean Region rim countries from east Africa to west ASEAN to Chinese manipulation the type seen in recent past in Sri Lanka, which Chatham House has explicitly recognized, and has been in practice in Pakistan since start of execution of China-Pakistan Economic Corridor(CPEC) has strategic implication on India’s maritime security, energy security, trade security ……. and last but not the least to her territorial security as PRC’s territorial hunger has been since the days of its founder is well-known. Already CPEC project under BRI infringes India’s territorial sovereignty in the northern state of J&K, partly due to earlier government’s visionless foreign policy.

In the given situation, Indian government, opposition leaders, media and civil society need to be very visionary, the kind seen during preparation for 1971 Indo-Pak war. The present government with absolute majority is duly elected one like the government was there in early 1970s. And like that government was trusted by then opposition leaders, media and civil society despite the then Prime Minister’s bold refusal to divulge the details of war preparation in the Parliament floor, the present government deserves the same trust.

At least the party, which is squarely responsible for bringing PLA to the northern (from Ladakh to Arunachal) and southern (Hambantota) door steps of India, should not go for 2008 kind secret MoU with China, should not indulge in secret talk with Chinese Embassy staffs during Doklam standoff and should not abuse country’s arm force leadership using derogatory words because all these acts send wrong signals to enemies and have demoralizing effect on forces guarding the country in the inhospitable terrain.

To successfully face the Dragon belligence, the country needs “whole of nation approach” as expressed by General Manoj Pande soon after taking oath of office.

Bengaluru: Silicon valley of India under water

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Bengaluru city, has always been known for its chequered history, gentle people, refined culture, and salubrious climate. Bengaluru brags 67,000 registered IT businesses, making it India’s largest IT cluster and provides employment to nearly 2 million people. The city is trending in social media because of the heavy rainfall this year. This season, Bengaluru Urban has recorded 141 per cent (717.8 mm) excess rainfall and Rural 114 per cent (616.1 mm).

Citizens of Bengaluru shown their anger on social media by saying that the main problem of the flood is unplanned construction and dying lakes. Some of them even said that the migrant workers and city’s population has damaged the city. The affected areas are largely the IT corridor and lake bed areas that have seen unbridled encroachment & construction over years. Almost 47 lakes have been converted to residential apartments in the last few years.

The encroachment of the valley that originates at Hebbal and the disturbance of the massive Bellandur catchment, is cause of the worst pain in Bengaluru today.

Bengaluru sits above 2900ft sea level, one has to be master in bad planning to flood a high altitude, rich metro city. Other cities like Mumbai & Chennai with their flat terrain, costal tides, heavy rainfall are geographically flood vulnerable. They cannot be compared to Bengaluru.

The finest housing societies in Bengaluru where the rich and famous stay are submerged in water this rainy season. Bengaluru has evolved over the years to become a modern version of itself. If the city wants to continue the moniker of ‘IT capital of the world’ the district administration has to improve the infrastructure of the city.

Today 90% lakes and wetlands were already gone or about to be destroyed. Land are being offered at extravagant costs to new residents to the city who are ignorant that they would only experience Bengaluru’s wonderful weather’s drawbacks. Today most of the residential societies are relying on Trucks to get water.

Everyday several water tanks will be used by the society which increases the maintenance cost to the apartment owner. Residents also rely on bottled water for their daily drinking needs.  Bengaluru is disintegrating right in front of our eyes. If 5 hours of rain can do this, the future looks bleak for the city. We haven’t reached the bottom of this yet. Also, all these buildings whose basements are getting flooded, it’s eating away into their structural life.

If you look at Bengaluru as the old city from its inception, the old areas and suburbs that were added till say the early 1990s. They are all almost perched up in the plateau that the city is and as growth pushed outward, it started following the flow of water from this plateau and around the city.

In the old days while residents of small Bengaluru enjoyed its forever sweater weather, the lands around it well nourished by precipitation and flowing water, supplied its residents with fresh vegetables, fruits, what not. One of Karnataka’s Chief Minister uses to take dip in a holy river in Bengaluru before going to office, today that river is converted to a sewage water line. You cannot dare to go near it. There is still a department called Lake Development Authority which beautifies 5 lakes meanwhile 50 lakes are lost.

Today Bengaluru is a megapolis, with the single factor that has attracted the lakhs of its new inhabitants – great weather. There are unfortunately no shortcuts or quick fixes to fix this now. With climate change and heavier intensity precipitation becoming a norm in Bengaluru now, it is only going to get worse. You have built right in valleys and floodplains and accelerated run off with concrete.

The losses will mount. Many people have lost or paid heavy amount to repair cars submerged in underground garages for 3-4 consecutive years now. The losses to business and Bengaluru’s economy are incalculable. The Chief Minister of Karnataka finally seems to be acknowledging this.

But what about the city’s reputation? It’s shot for good. Good weather is now a curse for the majority of its population.

A short history of Big Pharma colonialism in India (Part IV)

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This is the final installment of a four-part article. In Part I, Part II and Part III we have followed pharma scandals across the decades. This part concludes the series.

Sterility vaccines

Critics have credibly argued that vaccines have been used as a stealth vehicle for surreptitiously rendering women infertile.

Fertility-regulating vaccines have been tested in India. These vaccines have the potential to make women permanently infertile. The main carriers being used in the prototype vaccines were the diphtheria toxoid DT and the tetanus toxoid TT, which are the very vaccinations that are being implemented throughout developing countries today.

The prestigious journal Nature Medicine reported that the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) has done clinical trials in India of a tetanus toxoid vaccine (TT) laced with the anti-fertility hormone hCG (human chorionic gonadotropin). The 2022 documentary “Infertility: A Diabolical Agenda” is about controversial WHO-sponsored tetanus vaccine programs. Critics have argued that these campaigns were a front for population growth reduction in “unstable less developed countries”. Researchers have credibly argued that the vaccines were secretly and intentionally “laced with the hCG hormone that causes miscarriages and infertility.”

We have already (in Part II) discovered that throughout history, Big Pharma has been closely intertwined with the business of eugenics and population control. Also during the Covid-19 pandemic, former Pfizer chief scientist Dr. Mike Yeadon has warned that gene based injections could (in the future) be used as depopulation agents and gene therapy technology could be used in a (future) depopulation event: “That is why the technology was introduced to make “vaccines” in the first place… Designing delayed toxicity into these technologies is rather simple. In December 2020, Whitney Webb reported that COVID-19 Vaccine Developers Oxford-AstraZeneca (Covishield) have links to the British Eugenics Movement. Many researchers have also argued that Covid-19 is a result of gain-of-function experiments in bioweapon labs in China or the U.S. The funders of these bioweapon labs also have strong ties to Big Pharma. And the bioweapons industry has its own sinister history with eugenics. Furthermore, a 2022 study has shown that gene therapy vaccines could, in theory, transcribe into DNA, which could theoretically lead to infertility (and other) problems for the children and grand-children of the vaccinated. Autoimmune responses to placenta, accumulation in ovarian tissue, ovarian cancer, malformations, spontaneous abortions, menstrual and period problems, sperm damage, babies born with cardiac (and other) problems and stillbirths are just some of the many problems that could, at least in theory, affect the fertility of those vaccinated with gene therapy vaccines.

The business of eugenics and population control always had powerful proponents in the West. Henry Kissinger‘s NSSM-200 published in 1974 is one of the key documents on how to use USAID help to reduce the global population and it calls for the reduction of the population in India and in 12 other “less developed countries”. The “Kissinger Report” was created in collaboration with the WHO, and it became official US policy under President Gerald Ford in 1975. The document contains chilling passages like this one: “There is an alternative view which holds that a growing number of experts believe that the population situation is already more serious and less amenable to solution through voluntary measures than is generally accepted. It holds that … even stronger measures are required and some fundamental, very difficult moral issues need to be addressed.”

Kennedy argues that such high-level US government commitment explains the WHO’s monumental commitment to sterility vaccines. Kissinger’s unwavering support for Pakistan during the 1971 Bangladesh genocide, which took the lives of three million Bengalis, can be seen as another example of this commitment.

Hepatitis B vaccine, Hib vaccine and the pentavalent (combination) vaccine

Hepatitis B is an infectious disease caused by the hepatitis B virus (HBV) that affects the liver. The virus is transmitted by exposure to infectious blood or body fluids. It is usually a very mild viral infection. Chronic hepatitis can lead to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC; liver cancer). Since HCC is very rare in India, the WHO initially did not recommend the vaccine for this country.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr described how the conspiracy by GAVI, WHO, and UNICEF to force India to mandate hepatitis B vaccines is yet another illustration of how, under Bill Gates’s hegemony, vaccine industry profits trump public health:

Notwithstanding such concerns about the high costs and meager benefits of the vaccine, Gates, through his surrogates at GAVI, PATH, and WHO successfully arm-twisted the Indian government in 2007–8 into introducing the hepatitis B vaccines. GAVI pushed WHO to change the official policy to a universal recommendation, meaning that even countries with low disease burdens would be required to vaccinate. GAVI hoped this would reopen the Indian markets. WHO obligingly changed its recommendation to include universal immunization with hepatitis B vaccine for all countries, even those where HCC was not a problem. The Indian government obediently adopted WHO’s recommendation.

Robert F. Kennedy : The Real Anthony Fauci: Bill Gates, Big Pharma, and the Global War on Democracy and Public Health (2021)

Many Indian academics and public health officials condemned the government’s hepatitis B mandates, citing India’s extremely low burden from HCC. Independent scientists and Indian physicians argued against immunizing 25 million babies each year to theoretically prevent 5,000 cases of HCC. It is known that anticancer vaccines are poor performers, and there is not even meager proof that the vaccine can prevent any cancers. A study by Jacob Puliyel found that the vaccine did not reduce hepatitis B and that it may actually increase the incidence of HCC in India because it reduces natural immunity. As Jacob Puliyel writes: “Admittedly, it is embarrassing to have a paper trail showing that these facts were obvious before India launched this expensive programme. The vaccination programme however continues unhindered by these facts.” Hepatitis B vaccination is still part of India’s “Universal Immunisation Programme”.

Another controversial vaccine is the Hib vaccine. Hib disease is very rare in India and initially the WHO recommended Hib vaccines only in nations suffering a grave disease burden. Robert F. Kennedy shows how Big Pharma captured and corrupted India’s medical institutions to get around such restrictions:

To overcome such meddling from India’s prying medical community, in 2005 Gates funded, through GAVI, a four-year, $37 million study of mass vaccination with Hib jabs in Bangladesh intending to showcase the vaccine’s benefits. GAVI’s Bangladesh study backfired, showing no advantage from Hib vaccination. In response, a formidable coterie of superstar international health experts—all of them, coincidentally, from Gates-funded organizations WHO, GAVI, UNICEF, USAID, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and CDC—issued a deceitful proclamation that fraudulently claimed that the Bangladesh study proved a Hib jab protects children from “significant burden of life-threatening pneumonia and meningitis.” … Based on Gates’s orchestrated guile, WHO in 2006 took the official position that the “Hib vaccine should be included in all routine immunization programmes.” Once again, the Indian government caved in to Gates and mandated Hib vaccines in India, where Hib invasive disease was nearly nonexistent. In self-congratulatory articles, GAVI boasted triumphantly of its role in rescuing the Hib vaccine project in India after the Bangladesh study proved the vaccine a worthless waste of money. GAVI’s article notes that, since there was little burden from Hib disease in India, it had been a great challenge to gin up support for WHO’s recommendation. GAVI bragged—in technocratic argot—that it twisted WHO’s arm to revise WHO’s Hib vaccine policy from a weak permissive statement to a firm recommendation calling for universal vaccine introduction in all countries. WHO’s volte-face dragooned reticent Indian health officials to recommend the useless vaccine.

Robert F. Kennedy : The Real Anthony Fauci: Bill Gates, Big Pharma, and the Global War on Democracy and Public Health (2021)

One prominent critic of this Big Pharma intervention was Dr. Puliyel. He complained that this incident “highlights the influence GAVI and other vaccine manufacturer-funded organizations like the ‘Hib Initiative’ have on the WHO and how it impacts vaccine uptake internationally.” Puliyel protested that the “Gates Foundation has privatized and monetized international public health policy, transforming WHO recommendations into effective mandates and compelling poor countries to pay annual tribute to foreign Pharma overlords”.

According to him India and other Asian nations are now effectively compelled to administer the vaccine and to increase Hib uptake targets, “irrespective of an individual country’s disease burden, notwithstanding of natural immunity attained within the country against the disease, and not taking into account the rights of sovereign States to decide how they use their limited resources.” He added that “the mandate and wisdom of issuing such a directive, for a disease that has little potential of becoming a pandemic, needs to be questioned.”

Dr. Puliyel denounced Gates and GAVI for pushing the Hib vaccine in India and for falsifying the characterization of the research data: “The directive has come after a number of failed attempts to convince the scientific community of the need for this vaccine in Asia.” He described the HiB saga as “a case study on the visible and invisible pressures brought to bear on governments to deploy expensive new vaccines.”

Despite Gates’s victory in winning recommendations for Hib and hepatitis B in India, actual uptake rates disappointed the Big Pharma mikados. Defying the WHO and Indian Health Ministry recommendations, Indian doctors were reluctant to administer these vaccines.

So Big Pharma used another ruse. Big Pharma introduced a diabolically cunning strategy to euthanize three birds with one stone. They withdrew their flagging Hib and hepatitis B vaccines and reissued a new concoction that combined those immunizations with the DTP vaccine. The popular DPT vaccine had become another sandbag on Pharma’s profit ambitions because Pfizer’s DPT patent was long epxired. The Pharma cabal solved these profiteering problems by brewing up a new vaccine by mixing the DTP, Hib, and hepatitis B formulas in a single syringe.

That new combination became a “new vaccine” – the “pentavalent vaccine”. GAVI and WHO recommended its use in India to replace the DTP vaccine. “Compliant Indian health ministries then phased out the DTP, which had been popular with doctors. Now, if any physician or individual wanted DTP, their only choice would be the Pentavalent vaccine”. But the underlying reason for this caper was to increase the uptake of the hepatitis B and Hib vaccines in these countries by piggybacking on the well-accepted DTP vaccine.

The combination vaccine, marketed as “safe and effective”, was deadly. Kennedy writes that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not licensed the combination vaccine for either safety or efficacy, and developed countries do not use it. And the pentavalent vaccine is life-threatening to infants.

The pentavalent vaccine was also introduced in Bhutan, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, and Vietnam. In each of these countries, children died after they were vaccinated. When Bhutan suspended the vaccination program, “WHO persuaded health officials to resume the program, insisting that viral meningoencephalitis caused the deaths. Bhutan obeyed” and more deaths followed… “Sri Lanka unleashed the pentavalent vaccine in January 2008 and then suspended the program four months later after five babies died. Under pressure from WHO, Sri Lanka reintroduced the vaccine in 2010.” More infant deaths occurred as a consequence.

India introduced the pentavalent vaccine in December 2011. Since then, Indian health officials reported many serious Adverse Events Following Immunization (AEFI). Kennedy concludes that “Gates and WHO simply trivialize the deaths as sad coincidences or collateral damage. The vaccine has effectively reduced the incidence of Hib disease in India. However, there has been a proportionate increase in non-Hib strains of H. influenzae, including non-serotypable strains, causing invasive disease in the post-Hib vaccine era. As usual, there was no accounting.” Also the NTAGI sub-committee has not been allowed to evaluate the deaths. The Hepatitis B and Hib vaccines are still part of India’s “Universal Immunisation Programme”.

Conclusion

The published science examining the question of vaccine safety and efficacy indicates that virtually all of Gates’s blockbuster African and Asian vaccines—polio, DTP, hepatitis B, malaria, meningitis, HPV, and Hib—cause far more injuries and deaths than they avert. One should also remember that Big Pharma Dons like Dr. Fauci control funding of medical science in the US, which means that there is a dearth of honest studies about the safety of Big Pharma products. Fauci’s one man control through NIH, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and the Wellcome Trust gives him control over 57 percent of worldwide biomedical research. Such control guarantees that Big Pharma can craft, dictate and perpetuate global medical narratives.

The history of Big Pharma colonialism is a truly shocking one, and this article merely scratches the surface of a litany of wide-scale harms, many of which are carried out in the name of public health. Robert F. Kennedy’s excellent book The Real Anthony Fauci is highly recommended for further reading on the crimes of the Big Pharma cartel across the world. It is imperative that we all become educated on the racist, colonialist and cut throat capitalist operations underpinning the vaccine industry and its current profit locus, the ‘war on Covid.’ One could also conclude that Big Pharma has used India as a test bed for their products and their strategies, before applying them globally. That explains how the decade of vaccines morphed into the decade of plandemics.

This is the final installment and Part IV of the article. Word Virus is a writer on politics and the pharmaceutical industry. This article was originally published on substack.

Islamist sectarian violence in the United States of America

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Dr Binoy Shanker Prasad

[Abstract: The inter-sectarian violence among the Muslims is found everywhere they have presence in the world. The Sunni-Shiite cleavage is causing death and destruction in Syria, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan and all over the Middle East. Now, it seems to have touched the shores of the USA as well. In addition to the ethnic, geo-strategic and ‘power’ factors, the root cause of such violence lies in the preachings and practice of Islam itself.] 

In the Albuquerque area of New Mexico, USA, four Muslims  — Aftab Hussein, 41; Muhammad Afzaal Hussain, 27; Mohammad Zahir Ahmadi, 62; and Naeem Hussain, 25 – were killed between November, 2021 and August, 2022.[1]

The police were not pointing at a clear motive; the terrified community was full of speculation. A section of the media and the public were giving this tragedy the familiar racial twist of a “serial killing” by a whiteman targeting immigrants of color. 

Americans – especially the American Muslims – were horrified when they came to know that two Sunni Muslims, Muhammad Syed and his son Shaheen Syed were arrested in connection with the murders.

The serial killing turned out to be a hate-filled sectarian targeting of Shiite Muslims by a disgruntled Sunni Muslim aided by his son. 

Following a report in the New York Times, I wrote the following comment on the incident: [2]

“The mixed ethnicity of Albuquerque [appears to be] is very welcoming, compassionate and supporting to the Muslim immigrants. The anti-Muslim spin to the story will certainly not work here. Our plain-thinking innocent American friends need to understand that a small number of Muslims (refugees, students, escapees from war or conflict-torn areas), steeped in their fundamentalist sectarian Islamism, commit crimes against the non-Muslims at large and oftentimes among themselves. This seems to be the core point of the story the NYT reporters try to bring home. 

The Shia-Sunni conflict is a reality around the world. There are inter-sectarian conflicts in all faiths. But regular bombings of an entire horde of worshippers at Friday mosque mass prayers are sadly found in many Islamic and Muslim-majority countries.

Besides Shia-Sunni, there are many other sects of Islam the orthodox Sunnis are against. Their violent skirmishes are sometimes witnessed in the Western countries as well.

The welcoming Americans, while working for the integration of their immigrant communities into the mainstream, will be well advised to be aware of these considerations.

Members of the Muslim community must also ensure that the sectarian feelings must not flourish in “the rainbow culture” of the West they have embraced.

Thanks to the NYT and its reporters for publishing this report and allowing a discussion apparently on this dangerous mix of ethnicity, crime and Faith. Many pockets of humanity have come under its spell.”

The Islamists’ Denial

After this series of incidents, a representative for the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), a heavily-funded Islamist lobbying group that was known to have involvement in sponsoring the anti-India, “Dismantling Golbal Hindutva” conference in the US in Sept 2021, tried to sugar-coat the murderous sectarian division within the Muslims. 

He said, “Like Protestants and Catholics, the Sunni and Shiite communities in this country live near each other, work with each other and marry each other in peace,” and added that “there is no significant history of violence at all in the U.S. between Shias and Sunnis.”[3]

The CAIR’s representative didn’t mention that the Shiites, as a minority among Muslims, have been subjected to suspicion and violence by the Sunnis the world over. This hostility originated from the teachings of the hard-line Sunni faith leaders and scholars in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. Iran and Iraq are the Shia-led Islamic countries trying to be counterweight to the Sunnis. Poor countries like Yemen are the battlegrounds between the Sunnis (Saudi Arabia) and the Shias (Iran).  

Elsewhere, the Shias are the soft targets of the Sunni Islamists’ violence. Hate speech and violence against the Shia community in Pakistan have caused thousands of deaths. According to one estimate, approximately 4,847 members of the Shia community were killed in religious hate attacks between 2001 and 2018.[4]

In the Islamic month of Muharram, the Shiite mosques and communities around the world are often targets of Sunni Muslim extremists who denigrate Shiites with such slurs as “disbeliever” and “apostate.”[5] 

 Tarek Fatah, a Canadian author and journalist of Pakistani origin, has admitted in several interviews that many of his Shia friends in Canada have either dropped or hidden their last names for fear of being identified as Shia by the Sunni Islamists.[6]  

The Islamic faith and community leaders in north America and Europe have begun to brood over the possibility of rising trend in horrific intra-Muslim sectarian attacks or anti-Muslim hate from fellow Muslims.

At the murder of the Shia Afghan Muslims in Albuqerque, a fellow Afghan Shia Muslim settler, I. Hussain, referred to the discrimination they suffered at the hands of Sunnis in Afghanistan and mourned, “We came all the way from that side of the world because of this whole situation, and now they are doing the same thing they were doing there.”[7]

There were those, however, who would prefer that Muslim sectarianism not be widely discussed. “Some Muslims are saying, ‘Don’t air our dirty laundry,’ because it will impact Islamophobia,” 

When sectarian religious hatred hit the Muslims home, they were now raising their voice understandably against their own people. 

A New York Imam, in a statement, appealed: “Help each of us to be the best of their supporters at this time and to do our part to obliterate hatred in all of its forms, including anti-Shia hatred, even if that means speaking out against those who are close to us.”

Wajahat Ali, in a New York Times opinion piece, wrote that he had expected “grim news from Pakistan, Afghanistan and other Muslim-majority countries about attacks on Shiites, who account for about 15 percent of Muslims worldwide,” but not in America.[8]

However, the Muslim Imams or the learned liberal Muslim intellectuals would never acknowledge that the origin of this kind of a fanatic behavior was Islam and its dangerous cult teachings.

For instance, in one of the Hadees, the founder of Islam, Muhammad, is said to have predicted that his Ummah would be divided into 73 sects, “but only one would be saved”. All Muslim sects happily claimed that their sect was the ‘saved one’ – the naji – and the ‘others’ were destined to hell. This Hadees “divided the Muslim Ummah into two sections: the saved ones and the hell-bound ones.”[9] 

To take another example, the Islamic Hadees scriptures, the preachers’ messages and the centuries old cultural practices based on them brainwash the young Muslim minds to accord subservient status to women whose value and mental faculties were worth half a man’s. 

It was because of the influence of this mindset that Syed, the accused of the Albuquerque serial killing, was so upset about his wife learning how to drive, his daughter dating and marrying a Shia. He sent his son to her daughter’s university classrooms to chaperone her.

There’s no denying that a variant of mental disorder could also be an aggravating factor in such cases, but the Islamist cult is found to be responsible for incubating that disorder. 

Dr Wafa Sultan, a US based doctor of Syrian origin who escaped Islamism years ago and dedicated herself to educating Muslim women to liberate themselves from this faith, asserted that a person was insane or mentally deranged if, after reading the Islamic scriptures including the Quran, didn’t leave Islam.[10] [11]    

It’s this mental disorder that is playing out at the International level. Islamists’ violence, obscurantism and discrimination are a menace everywhere. 

The world is right now saturated with persecution at the hands of the Islamists. Just ask the Copts, Zoroastrians, Jews, Ahmadis, Maronites, Shiias, Assyrians, Hindus and Christians in the Islamic or Muslim-majority countries – many of the groups were either eliminated or are in the process of being driven out. 

The Islamists have now infiltrated the USA and the country will have to be prepared for the repetition of tragic disasters like the 9/11.

References:

[1] 

[2] 

[3] https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/16/opinion/albuquerque-shia-sunni.html ]

[4]

https://www.satp.org/satporgtp/countries/pakistan/database/Shias_killed_Pakistan.htm
https://www.satp.org/satporgtp/countries/pakistan/database/Shias_killed_Pakistan.htm

[5] https://reliefweb.int/report/afghanistan/bracing-attacks-ashura-extra-security-measures-shia-mourners

[6] 

See many of Tarek Fatah’s interviews including, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aiw4MJ22M2k

[7]

[8]

[9] 

https://www.dawn.com/news/1035023
https://www.dawn.com/news/1035023

[10] https://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/11/world/middleeast/for-muslim-who-says-violence-destroys-islam-violent.html

[11] 

About the Writer:

Originally from Darbhanga, Bihar (India), Dr Binoy Shanker Prasad lives in Dundas, Ontario (Canada). He is a former UGC teacher fellow at JNU in India and a Fulbright Scholar in the USA. Author of scholarly works including a book, Violence Against Minorities, Gandhi in the Age of Globalization (a monograph) and a collection of poems, Dr Prasad has taught at Ryerson University, Centennial College and McMaster University. He has also been the president of Hamilton based India-Canada Society (2006-08 and 2018-20).