Here is an interesting report on fraudulent pagan religious practices and "rationalists" in India, from Times Online of London.
.
.
Rationalizing India has never been easy. Given the country’s vast  population,  its pervasive poverty and its dizzying array of ethnic groups, languages  and  religions, many deem it impossible. Nevertheless, Mr Sanal Edamaruku (pictured) has dedicated his life to exposing the charlatans — from levitating village fakirs to televangelist yoga masters — who he says are obstructing an Indian Enlightenment. He has had a busy month, with one guru arrested over prostitution, another caught in a sex-tape scandal, a third kidnapping a female follower and a fourth allegedly causing a stampede that killed 63 people.
This week India’s most popular yoga master, Baba Ramdev, announced plans  to  launch a political party, promising to cleanse India of corruption and  introduce the death penalty for slaughtering cows. Then, on Wednesday,  police arrested a couple in Maharashtra state on suspicion of killing  five  boys on the advice of a tantric master who said their sacrifice would  help  the childless couple to conceive. “The immediate goal I have is to stop these fraudulent babas and gurus,”  says  Mr Edamaruku, 55, a part-time journalist and publisher from the southern   state of Kerala. “I want people to make their own decisions. They should  not  be guided by ignorance, but by knowledge. “I’d like to see a post-religious society — that would be an ideal  dream, but  I don’t know how long it would take.” His organisation traces its origins to the 1930s when the “Thinker’s  Library”  series of books, published by Britain’s Rationalist Press Association,  were  first imported to India. They included works by Aldous Huxley, Charles  Darwin (pictured standing) and H.G. Wells; among the early subscribers was Jawaharlal Nehru,   India’s first Prime Minister. The Indian Rationalist Association was founded officially in Madras in  1949  with the encouragement of the British philosopher Bertrand Russell, who  sent  a long letter of congratulations. For the next three decades it had no  more  than 300 members and focused on publishing pamphlets and debating within  the  country’s intellectual elite. But since Mr Edamaruku took over in 1985, it has grown into a  grass-roots organization of more than 100,000 members — mainly young professionals,  teachers and students — covering most of India. Members now spend much of their time investigating and reverse-engineering “miracles” performed by self-styled holy men who often claim millions of followers and amass huge wealth from donations. One common trick they expose is levitation, usually done using an accomplice who lies on the ground under a blanket and then raises his upper body while holding out two hockey sticks under the blanket to make it look like his feet are also rising. “It’s quite easy really,” said Mr Edamaruku, who teaches members to perform the tricks in villages and then explains how they are done, or demonstrates them at press conferences.
Other simple tricks include walking on hot coals (the skin does not burn  if  you walk fast enough) and lying on a bed of nails (your weight is spread   evenly across the bed). The “weeping statue” trick is usually done by  melting a thin layer of wax covering a small deposit of water. Some tricks require closer scrutiny. One guru in the state of Andhra  Pradesh  used to boil a pot of tea using a small fire on his head. The secret was  to  place a non-conductive pad made of compacted wheat flour between his  head  and the fire. “I was so excited when I exposed him. I should have been  more  reasonable but sometimes you get so angry,” he said. “I cried: ‘Look,  even I  can do this and I’m not a baba — I’m a rationalist!’.” Another swami — who conducted funeral rites for Indira Gandhi, the Prime   Minister who was assassinated in 1984 — used to appear to create fire by   pouring ghee, clarified butter, on to ash and then staring at the  mixture  until it burst into flames. The “ghee” was glycerine and the “ash” was  potassium permanganate, two chemicals that spontaneously combust within  about two minutes of being mixed together. Exposing such tricks can be risky. A guru called Balti (Bucket) Baba once smashed a burning hot clay pot in Mr Edamaruku’s face after he revealed that the holy man was using a heat resistant pad to pick it up. The chief rationalist was almost arrested by the government of Kerala for revealing that it was behind an annual apparition of flames in the night sky — in fact, several state officials lighting bonfires on a nearby hill — which attracted millions of pilgrims.
Despite his efforts, he admits  that  people still go to the festival and continue to revere self-styled holy  men. One reason is that Indian politicians nurture and shelter gurus to give  them  spiritual credibility, use their followers as vote banks, or to mask  sexual  or criminal activity. That explains why India’s Parliament has never  tightened the 1954 Drugs and Magic Remedies Act, under which the maximum   punishment is two months in prison and a 2,000 rupee (£29) fine. 
Link (here) to read the full article. 
This is an excerpt from Fr. Francis Xavier Clooney, S.J. a professor of Eastern Religions at Harvard University his post entitled, Tamil Love VI: How Hindu poet prepares us for Holy Week at America.
This is an excerpt from Fr. Francis Xavier Clooney, S.J. a professor of Eastern Religions at Harvard University his post entitled, Tamil Love VI: How Hindu poet prepares us for Holy Week at America.
     Perhaps not the model of child care for today, but hardly a violent act or moment of great suffering. But in his meditation on what Narayana is like — transcendent, sovereign, condescending, and now entirely vulnerable, accessible — Nammalvar is struck by the sudden transition — the great Narayana now in the state of a little boy roped by his mother to a stone. Those who hold back must wait, faced with puzzles and conundrums, not knowing what God is, or where. Hope lies in the fact that that the “lady in the lotus” — the Goddess Sri Laksmi — is ever with Narayana, the two inseparable. She is the mother, and elsewhere in Tiruvaymoli Nammalvar indicates that she is a mediator, who makes it easy to reach Narayana. The cryptic reference to the churning of the butter evokes a well known incident in the mythology of Krsna: as a small child, he was prone to tricks and naughty behavior, even if through each prank some portion of the divine plan is achieved. Here, Krsna has put his hand into the butter churn and taken a gob of butter to eat; his mother, frustrated with the behavior of this two-year-old, ties him to the large mortar stone (something like putting him in a playpen, or in a halter). 
Link (here) to the full post. 
Jesuit Scholastic Aaron Pidel has posted a piece exploring the evangelization tactics of one the greatest Jesuits St. Francis Xavier, S.J.. Here is an excerpt of his much larger post , this pull quote from the famous Jesuit missionary.
The [native boys] are full of love and desire for the faith, keen to learn the prayers and to teach them to others … When I hear from them some idolatrous ceremonies in the villages … I collect all the boys I can, and off we go together to those places, where the devil gets from them more despiteful treatment than their worshiping parents had given them honour. The little fellows seize the small clay idols, smash them, grind them to dust, spit on them and trample them underfoot.
Jesuit Scholastic Aaron Pidel has posted a piece exploring the evangelization tactics of one the greatest Jesuits St. Francis Xavier, S.J.. Here is an excerpt of his much larger post , this pull quote from the famous Jesuit missionary.The [native boys] are full of love and desire for the faith, keen to learn the prayers and to teach them to others … When I hear from them some idolatrous ceremonies in the villages … I collect all the boys I can, and off we go together to those places, where the devil gets from them more despiteful treatment than their worshiping parents had given them honour. The little fellows seize the small clay idols, smash them, grind them to dust, spit on them and trample them underfoot.
Link (here) to the full piece. 

Yeah some one believing in a comic bible full of nonsence stories about talking snake,big fish ,flate earth and blah blah dosent suit to comment on this. There is only two religion as evil as satanism itself infact even worse.its Christianity and Islam. Atleast these Hindus and Asian Religionists never killed anyone in the name of their god. Look at urselves christians. U cant even look at urselves in a mirror.
ReplyDeleteDon't you follow international news? Thousands of peaceful, inoffensive Christians have already been killed in Orissa and other parts of India by Hindu mobs....the competing metaphysical claims of both religions will have to be decided on some basis other than that of "Well, I don't like Christians."
ReplyDelete