Showing posts with label News and Comments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News and Comments. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 November 2011

Leftovers of Brahmanism

Here is report on a disgusting annual ritual practised at Kukke Subrahmanya, a prominent temple in Karnataka. This temple, located in one of the most forward districts in Karnataka and patronized by such luminaries from the Indian sports and the cine world as Sunil Gavaskar, Sachin Tendulkar, Aishwarya Rai, and Shilpa Shetty, attracts lakhs of devotees every year. This temple is popular among the devotees for Sarpa Samskara, a special puja conducted to get rid of serpants' curse inflicted in one's present or previous births!)



'Made Snana' performed at Kukke Subrahmanya Temple

Anisha Sheth

Several men, women and children performed ‘made snana', a ritual in which people roll on plantain leaves containing leftovers of lunch served to Brahmins at the Kukke Subrahmanya temple, on Monday.

Assistant Commissioner of Puttur subdivision Sundar Bhat, who is the administrator of the temple, was reported to have said on Sunday that the ritual would not be allowed to be performed this year. It is said that the Dakshina Kannada administration allowed the ritual on Monday bowing to pressure from local people.

Controversy

There was a controversy over the ritual last year following opposition by certain groups. The groups had urged the Government to ban the ritual in a temple that comes under the Muzrai Department. ‘Made snana' has been performed on the temple premises for three days during the annual Champa Shasthi festival for many years.
‘Made Snana' is a ‘harake' (an offering made for fulfilment of a wish). In this case the offering is to roll on leftovers of food consumed by Brahmins. Another reason this ritual is the belief that it cures skin diseases. Those who perform the ritual include Brahmins.

Speaking to presspersons at the temple office on Monday, Mr. Bhat said that on Sunday he had “appealed to the people to cooperate with his request” by not performing the ‘harake' as it was not among the listed sevas at the temple.

Referring to his statement on Sunday, Mr. Bhat said he had not issued an order, but had only made a request. A copy of the ‘harake' listed at the temple is available with The Hindu . It does not mention ‘made snana'.

Mr. Bhat said Deputy Commissioner N.S. Channappa Gowda had given him an “oral” order to permit the ‘harake'.

Around 10.30 a.m. a few people at the temple began to express disagreement with Mr. Bhat's decision. A banner stating that the ritual would be performed on all three days was put up on one of chariots of the temple outside the entrance. A.V. Nagesh, a man from the Malekudiya community, said that the temple's “ancient tradition” must be continued. He threatened that no one from the Malekudiya community would prepare the temple ratha for the ‘shasthi' festival if ‘made snana' was banned.

Legend has it that the Malekudiyas, a tribal community, were the ones who originally installed the temple deity. Preparation of the temple chariot is ritually done by members of the community. 

A number of Malekudiya people living in and around Subrahmanya gathered outside the temple office. For around half an hour, a group of people were closeted with Mr. Bhat in his chamber before the go-ahead was given.

Vidya Prasanna Tirtha of Subrahmanya Math said that a devotee should have the right to “rectify” his ‘dosha' .

Leader of the Social Transformation Movement in Belthangady P. Dikaiah told The Hindu that such a ritual being performed in a government temple would amount to the government indirectly supporting casteism.

The Deputy Commissioner told The Hindu that district administration “had not given permission”, but had merely allowed the people to perform the ritual.
He did not give a clear answer when asked why the district administration thought of banning the ritual on Sunday.


Friday, 18 November 2011

Hazards of a Spiritual Pilgrimage

Apollo Hospitals opens critical care unit with ICU facility at Sabarimala 

(The Hindu, Madurai,  

The Apollo Hospitals has set up a full-fledged critical care unit with ICU facility at Sabarimala for the healthcare needs of devotees going to Lord Iyappa temple. The seven-bedded centre at Pamba was established based on the request made by Akhila Bharatha Iyappa Seva Sangam. 

“Already there is an Apollo Clinic cum information centre functioning at Pamba for Iyappa devotees. Since there was a request for starting full-fledged unit, the Apollo Hospitals Group chairman Pratap C. Reddy gave his consent for setting up a state-of-the art critical care unit there so that a devotee in emergency would get timely medical attention,” a press release from the hospital said. 

Rohini Sridhar, Chief Operating Officer and Director of Medical Services, Apollo Speciality Hospitals, Madurai, has said that the seven-bedded critical care centre at Pamba in Sabarimala is a 2,500 square feet facility which will be fully operational from November 16. 

Apollo clinic which was started in the year 2000 at Pamba had now grown to a 24-hour unit with ICU facility and it had provided timely care to nearly two lakh patients during the past 10 years. This unit will be connected with other major centres through telemedicine facility in order to get expert opinion for emergency cases. 

Besides free consultation and ICU care, the Sabarimala devotees are also given medicines free of cost as a part of the Apollo Group's corporate social responsibility, she said. 

Explaining about the critical care unit at Pamba in a simple function held here, the hospital's Senior General Manager T.N. Sekar had informed that lakhs of people travel to Sabarimala during the pilgrim season every year and some of them face health problems due to unaccustomed exertion. Blisters on the feet and diarrhoea due to unsafe food are the common minor complaints while some devotees get serious ailments. 

The total number of outpatients was above 37,000 last year. P. Boopathi, General Manager (operations), Apollo Speciality Hospitals, Madurai, spoke on the latest devotee-oriented initiative of the hospital.

Thursday, 10 November 2011

Communalism Muddies Anti-Nuclear Agitation

Carvaka


Hindu Outfits Seek Speedy Commissioning Of Project
 

TIRUNELVELI: Even as the participation of Bishops and priests in the ongoing anti-Kudankulam Nuclear Power Project agitation is growing gradually, Hindu outfits have started their campaign in support of the project.

Bishops and priests of Roman Catholic and Church of South India have expressed their solidarity with the agitating population, mostly Christians.

RC Bishop of Tuticorin Diocese Rt. Rev. Yvon Ambroise recently visited Idinthakarai, where 127 persons were on an indefinite fast. RC Bishop of Palayamkottai Diocese Rt. Rev. A. Jude Paulraj inaugurated the demonstration held at Palayamkottai recently against the project.

The CSI Bishop of Tuticorin – Nazareth Diocese, Most Rev. A.D. Jebachandran, and CSI Bishop of Tirunelveli Diocese J.J. Christdoss, along with several priests, visited the protest venue at Idinthakarai.

Against this backdrop, the Hindu outfits have started their campaign in support of the project through demonstrations and by submitting petitions to the Tirunelveli Collector.

While the Hindu Desiya Congress handed over a memorandum to Dr. Selvaraj on Tuesday, the Hindu Munnani organised a demonstration on Jawahar Grounds, Palayamkottai, on Wednesday.

Speakers at the protest venue demanded immediate commissioning of the project, “in the best interest of the country”. They alleged that the protest was being orchestrated with the funding from foreign countries, “which never wanted a strong and developed India.”

“The ongoing agitation is nothing but a subversive activity and treason and hence the State and the Central governments should take stringent action against those who are orchestrating the protests directly and indirectly,” said V.P. Jayakumar, State vice-president, Hindu Munnani.

 Members of the Thennaadu Munnetra Kazhagam, another Hindu outfit, have also expressed their support. The Shatriya Nadar Iyakkam and some more organisations have decided to start relay fast at Chettikulam in support of the project.

Sunday, 6 November 2011

Pushpa Yagam to Save the Mother Earth from Earth Quake!



Carvaka


Mountain of flowers for the Lord


The annual ‘Pushpa Yagam' festival was held on Thursday at the famous hill temple of Lord Venkateswara amid religious fervour.

Over seven tonnes of a wide variety of bright and aromatic flowers were used in the festival. Earlier in the morning ‘Snapana Thirumanjanam' was performed to the ‘utsava' deities of Lord Malayappa and his two divine consorts inside the main temple complex. 

Immense importance is attached to the festival, which according to scriptures is observed to pray to the Lord to save the earth from natural calamities such as earthquakes, cyclones and epidemics.


The floral festival, Pushpa Yagam, at Tirumala Tirupati is an annual affair and the temple has been conducting it every year without any interruption for decades or centuries. Tonnes of flowers worth lakhs of rupees are used to conduct this puja, which according to the news report quoted above is observed “to pray to the Lord to save the earth from natural calamities such as earth quakes, cyclones and epidemics”

Earth quakes, cyclones and other natural calamities however continue to wreak havoc with human life in various parts of the world. According to Wikipedia not less than 40 major earth quakes involving hundreds or thousands of fatalities are reported in the current century.

In India, more than 20000 people died in the earth quake that visited Gujarat in 2001.In the 2004 Indian Ocean Earth Quake, over 2 lakh people were perished,  out of which more than 18000 were in India alone. In the recent earth quake that rocked Sikkim on September 11, 2011, 111 people were killed.  No amount of pushpa yagams came to the rescue of the people or the land. If we have succeeded in controlling epidemics, it was not because of any expensive pujas offered to any deities. 

Courtesy: http://peopleforanimalsindia.org
It is not that the wealthy devotees whose well or ill earned contributions fill the coffers of the temple are completely unaware of the real cause of earth quakes, cyclones and epidemics. They are aware. The temple however continue to perform them as as ritual handed down to them from the hoary past.  And the devotees do not question them as they hesitate to challenge a tradition. It could also be because the devotees still harbor a fatalistic attitude towards unpleasant things in our life - such as natural calamities.

But that does not mean that they should continue to do it. A number of practices which were earlier considered divine and hence unalterable have been done away with because of progressive movements among the devotees themselves or as a result of legislative measures. The revolting animal sacrifices performed in many a temple has thus been banned in a number of states (though the practice continues in certain places clandestinely) as a result of both the people' agitation as well as the subsequent government orders banning them.

La Tomatina
But, how can we compare floral offering with animal sacrifice? You may protest. It surely is a legitimate question. A pushpa yagam is definitely not as revolting a ritual as animal sacrifice. However, apart from the fact that both  tend to instill  and perpetuate fatalism among the people, it is also massive waste of resources. This can be compared to the recent attempt (in September 2011) by some people in Bangalore and Mysore to enact a 'tomato fight' mimicking the Spanish festival La Tomatina. It was legitimately criticized and the State Government banned the event saying that tomatoes should not be wasted. Similar argument can be advanced against pushpa yagam too. An alternate and more ethical event could be a Flower Show open to the public.

While one tries to understand the psychological need of the people visiting religious places seeking mental solace, the massive amount of money spent on worthless offerings to deities is unacceptable. Despite the Tirupati town being the richest pilgrimage city of any religious faith in the world (Uma Sudhir -13 September 2007 – “Tirupati Oust Vatican, Reigns at Top, www.NDTV.com Retrieved 6 November 2011), in terms of Human Development, the state of Andhra Pradesh where the Tirupati temple is situated ranks (with a score of 0.416) at a low 10th in comparison with all other Indian States (Human Development Report 2007).

Why cant the temple authorities spend the money to improve the living standard of the people of the state, instead of wasting it on worthless pujas?

Tuesday, 18 October 2011

U.S. Evangelist Held for Violating Visa Norms


William Lee, the U.S.-based evangelist, who went into hiding after police spotted him violating visa norms by addressing a gospel convention in the city on Wednesday, was arrested and produced before the Judicial First Class Magistrate Court-I here on Saturday. He was remanded in judicial custody till October 18.
Mr. Lee arrived on a multiple-entry tourist visa, which was valid till March 20, 2012. 

Following information that he would be addressing the convention named ‘Musical Splash 2011,' organised by the Thiruvalla-based Faith Leaders Church of God at the Jawaharlal Nehru International Stadium in Kaloor here, police officials landed at the venue and asked him not to do so.

Friday, 14 October 2011

Sufi Islamic Sect Warns Against Hardline Wahabi Extremism

The All-India Ulama & Mashaikh Board (AIUMB), a Sufi Islamic branch claiming to represent 80 per cent of Indian Sunni Muslims, has come out strongly against hardline Wahabism, holding the ideology responsible for radicalisation of young Indian Muslims. The AIUMB counts itself among the significant Sufi Khanquahs in India, among them Ajmer Shareef and Dargah Hazrat Nizamuddin Auliya.

“Wahabi-influenced terrorism has taken a section of Indian Muslim youth in its grip,” said Maulana Syed Mohd Ashraf Kachochavi, AIUMB general secretary at a press conference here. He said the AIUMB would hold a Muslim Maha Panchayat at Moradabad (on October 16) from where a call would be given to the masses to rescue Islam and Muslims from the clutches of Wahabi extremism which was sustained largely by (Saudi) petro-dollars. “Peace-loving Sufi Muslims are in a huge majority in this country but regrettably the major Islamic institutions, including the Waqf Boards and the Madrasas, are under the control of cash-rich organisations practising hardline ideologies. We want to reclaim Islam from these elements and turn our youth away from the path of extremism and towards harmony and co-existence,” the Maulana said. “The Wahabi hardliners are spending billions of dollars to hurt the democratic and secular fabric of this country built over centuries through peaceful activities of the Sufi saints.” 


xxx

Churn in Muslim community over Wahabi charge

Vidya Subrahmaniam [The Hindu,October 20, 2011]
 
Maulana Syed Mohammad Ashraf Kachochavi is the General Secretary of the All-India Ulama & Mashaikh Board (AIUMB), a Sufi sect that came from nowhere to take Moradabad — and the Muslim world — by storm last week. Soft-spoken and gentle, with long robes and a flowing beard, he fits the part of the Sufi cleric to perfection. 

Yet on stage at the Sufi Maha Panchyat, he roared like a lion, hurling charges against institutions that Muslim intellectuals hold in awe. At the centre of his accusations was the venerated Islamic seminary of Deoband which he held guilty of spreading hard-line Wahabism: “Hamey Wahabiyon ka na Immamat kabool hai, na kayadat Kabul (We reject the religious and political leadership of Wahabis”). Maulana Kachochavi went on to ask the gathering to rebuff overtures from Wahabi preachers, saying, “If anyone knocks on your door with the message of extremism, hand him over to the nearest police station.” 

The cleric had done the unthinkable and unsurprisingly there was a rush of reactions. Retaliation came swift and strong from the adherents of the Deoband school. The Mohtamim (vice-chancellor) of Darul Uloom Deoband summoned a hurried press conference where he countered the charge and questioned the credentials of the AIUMB. And yet, alongside the loud protests — and blogs that sprang up overnight denouncing the Sufis and calling them non-Muslim — there were also gentler voices urging Muslims dispassionately to examine the message from Moradabad. Interestingly, the Sufi strains were picked up in neighbouring Pakistan with some energetic tweeting of the Moradabad Panchayat news by liberals who saw the Indian challenge to extremism from their own perspective — a perspective of fighting a long and losing battle against intolerance and bigotry. 

The AIUMB, which claims to represent, among others, the Sufi Khanquahs of Ajmer Shareef, Dargah Hazrat Nizamuddin Auliya and Barelilly Shareef, made three broad points at the Maha Panchayat. First, Indian Islam's roots are in peaceful, inclusive Sufi traditions which have historically been followed by the largest numbers (80 per cent according to the AIUMB) in the community. Second, over the years, the Sufis have lost their voice and prominence to hard-line Deobandis who have taken control of key institutions like the Wakq Board and the Madrasas, besides acquiring enormous political clout. Third, influenced by Saudi petro-dollars, the Deoband ideology has slowly morphed into a form of extremist Wahabism which has taken sections of the young into its vice-like fold. The AIUMB did not directly link the spread of Wahabism to terrorism but said terrorism drew sustenance from ideologies like Wahabism and Salafism, etc. At his press briefing, Darul Uloom rector Maulana Qasim Nomani, was unsparing of both the AIUMB and the English press that covered the meet. He said no one claiming to be Sufi could use the defamatory language that the AIUMB had used against fellow Muslims. “Why did the English media front-page this news?” he asked. 

‘Funds are fully audited'
 
Later, Maulana Nomani told The Hindu that the Sufis were malcontents out to spread disaffection among Muslims. There was no Saudi influence as Deoband's funds were fully audited and the institution did not accepts grants from any government, domestic or abroad. The Maulana also rebutted the extremism charge, saying Deoband had held a huge anti-terrorism rally on the campus two years ago. 

The Urdu press, which all but boycotted the Maha Panachyat and blanked out the speeches made there, however, gave full play to the reactions of Maulana Nomani. There were also individual statements of outrage. Masoom Moradabadi of Jadeed Khabar saw a foreign hand behind the Sufi sect. He also accused the Sufis of presiding over huge sums of money collected at the dargahs for which there were no accounts. 

Social activist Tanweer Alam argued that the Sufi sect was welcome to seek political power but it had no business to tarnish Deoband which had played a stellar role in India's freedom struggle. Mr. Alam was furious that the AIUMB saw no difference between Deobandi and Wahabi ideologies which were themselves in conflict in some areas.” 

Islamic scholar Sultan Shahin however fully backed the Sufi conclave saying it marked a milestone in Muslim politics: “It is for the first time that mainstream Ulema have come out so strongly against Wahabism which is slowly but determinedly spreading in this country.” Mr. Shahin cited the example of Pakistan where extremism not only took liberal lives but toasted and celebrated the killers. “Islam on the subcontinent has always had a syncretic, local flavour. Islam spread in India through the Sufi saints. But all that changed with the infusion of Saudi petro dollars. For me the most worrying example is Pakistan. Everything that happened there a decade ago is happening here today.” 

Mr. Shahin admitted that the space for extremism had been created by the Indian State which far from showing sensitivity towards Muslims, prematurely accused them of terrorism whenever there was a bomb blast:” When from the very first minute you talk of Muslim suspects when there have also been instances of Hindutva terrorism, that would distress any Muslim.” Mr. Shahin, was however emphatic that the answer to injustice was not extremism: “You cannot deny that injustice has been done. But if you turn to extremism, you destroy yourself.” 

‘Lack of tolerance'
 
Faizur Rahman, Secretary-General of the Forum for the Promotion of Moderate Thought Among Muslims, attributed the “unnecessary” Sufi controversy to “the lack of tolerance among Muslim organisations for dissent.” He said it was within the Sufi group's Islamic and democratic rights to “censure the so-called Wahabi school of thought” adding that there was enough evidence in Wahabi writings and homilies to justify the AIUMB's charges. “There are books of fatwas written by Saudi clerics which contain such abhorrent ruling as those that declare a Muslim who does not pray five times to be a ‘kafir' and say that he must be killed and ‘buried outside the graveyards of the Muslims' if he does not repent.” 

But Mr. Rahman was unhappy with the sweeping nature of accusations flowing from Moradabad. He found the charge that Wahabi hardliners turned up at homes to propagate extremism particularly over-the-top. “There is no evidence for this.” 

There is no doubt that the Sufis set the cat among the pigeons last week; they have pitted ideologues against ideologues. But whatever the Sufi group's larger interests, they have done a service by setting the stage for a debate on extremism.

Friday, 7 October 2011

Casteism in God’s Own Country

Carvaka

Devaswom Membership Open To All Castes: Court


The Thrissur Principal Munsiff Court on Tuesday issued an order stating that members of all castes of the Hindu community are eligible to be members of the managing committee and general body of the Thiruvambady Devaswom.

Till now, membership to these bodies of the Thiruvambady Devaswom was restricted to ‘Savarna Hindus,' that is, to Namboodiris, Nairs, and Ambalavasis.

On a petition filed by Visala Hindu Samatva Vedi representative and SNDP Thrissur union president K.V. Sadanandan and Kollara Ravindran, Judge N.V. Raju issued the order stating that all Hindus, belonging to the Chirakkal, Angady, and Punkunnam thattakam, should be made members of the Devaswom.

The court declared as invalid a bylaw in the Devaswom's constitution that stipulated only ‘Savarna Hindus' could be members.

Advocate K. Gopinathan, who appeared for the plaintiffs, argued that discrimination based on caste or casteism was out of place in a democratic State. “The Kandanathu Mana, the owners of the temple, had dedicated it to the public with a vision that all Hindus would have equal role in the temple affairs,” he said.


The court ordered that the name of Kollara Ravindran be included in the membership register of the Devaswom without insisting that he must be a ‘Savarna Hindu.'

The Thiruvambady Devaswom filed a petition that operation of the decree should be stayed till an appeal is filed against the verdict.

The petition will be taken up for hearing on October 10.

Later, Thiruvambady Devaswom president M. Madhavan Kutty told reporters that the Devaswom would seek expert legal opinion whether the constitution of a religious body could be changed by a court or whether it needed the involvement of the legislature.

“No caste discrimination is being practised in the temple or institutions run by the Devaswom. The shrine is open to members of all castes in the Hindu community. Workers in the temple belong to different castes, including Dalits. In a school run by the Devaswom, there are even members from other communities,” he said.

Thursday, 6 October 2011

Petition against Puja in Government Offices


Carvaka

Notice on Petition against Puja in Government Offices

The Madras High Court on Tuesday ordered notice to the State government on a writ petition seeking a direction to authorities not to permit Ayudha Puja celebrations in government offices. 

In the petition, filed through counsel S. Doraisamy and V. Elangovan, petitioner T.S. Mani, president of the Periyar Dravidar Kazhagam, Tiruvanmiyur here, stated that the State government had issued an order in December 1993 prohibiting religious worship or prayer within its office premises. 

In August 1994, the Chief Secretary had written to all Secretaries citing a letter from the Centre to ensure that no religious worship or prayer took place on office campuses. 

The petitioner said that during Ayudha Puja, government offices became temples. No official activities were carried out. 

Last year, members of the PDK tried to prevent the conduct of puja in police stations. Cases were foisted against them. 

He wrote to the authorities on September 21 this year to issue instructions for preventing puja in government offices. There was no response. Hence the petition. 

The petitioner said that during Ayudha Puja, government offices become temples. 



Today, October6, 2011, is Vijayadasami. It is a public holiday. In Port Blair (Andaman & Nicobar Islands), where a significant section of the population consists of Bengali speaking Hindus, this day is celebrated as Durga Puja.  There are dozens of durga puja pandals set up by various organizations across Port Blair, each one of them attracting people in hundreds and thousands, with women forming the most visible section of the devotees - they come attired in colorful saris and churidars embroidered with sequins and beads (you simply can’t miss their glittering outfits). The megaphones set up outside these pandals blare out crudely composed devotional songs as well as the latest bollywood item numbers. As I write this, 3.30 pm,  Munni Badnam Hui Darling Tere Liye…is the one coming out of the pandal outside my flat.

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