[Advaita-l] Chanting Gayatri overseas
Venkatesh Murthy
vmurthy36 at gmail.com
Wed Oct 11 00:59:44 EDT 2017
Namaste
On Tue, Oct 10, 2017 at 4:27 AM, Ravi Mayavaram via Advaita-l <
advaita-l at lists.advaita-vedanta.org> wrote:
>
> On the aside, for all those living abroad, real threat is what Ravi
> Chandrasekhara pointed out. A large percentage of the children of these
> immigrants will marry people from other religions and/or other castes.
> There is a high probability that the family line of dharma these
> immigrants may come to a grinding halt with them.
>
This is the Crux of the Problem. A Brahmin X goes abroad. X's children will
marry outside of Brahminism with High Probability. By very good luck they
may still marry Brahmins. What about grandchildren of X? Great
grandchildren of X? They will have less and less restrictions than X and
will not listen to some old traditions of a Third World country. The
Probability of grandchildren and great grandchildren of X NOT marrying even
Indians is SO HIGH. X's line of descendants is doomed to become Mlecchas at
some stage. My friends THIS is the Bitter Reality the Brahmins permanently
staying abroad will not accept. They are Responsible for making a Brahmin
Line into Mleccha if not today but definitely in the future. Can they
accept this Reality and still live abroad?
>
> I am convinced that only way to help them is by teaching paatanjala
> yoga-darshana (and rigorously when they are in high school). May be via
> yoga darshana, they may get back to other things later in their lives. Even
> on the bhakti side, we should mean what we say. For example, never dismiss
> phala shruti as mere arthavaadaa. That is enough to undermine it. If phala
> shruti of Sri Vishnu Sahasranaama, says some things, then that is it. It
> is true. If we have that conviction and help other Hindus in need, nobody
> will convert to other religions.
>
> --
> Ravi
>
>
>
> On Sunday, October 8, 2017, 12:03:58 PM CDT, Sujal Upadhyay via
> Advaita-l <advaita-l at lists.advaita-vedanta.org> wrote:
>
> Namaste Sri Kalyan ji,
>
> I talked to my friend who has visited Sringeri Matha several times. He
> daily practises nitya karma and anusthana, that he is supposed to do as a
> Brahmin. He did not have all the answers, but honestly gave some answers.
> I will share the same.
>
>
> 1. In Sringeri Matha, there is a belief that crossing ocean is not
> permitted.
> 2. Sringeri Jagadguru himself never initiated any setting up of any
> matha or branches in any foreign land.
> 3. It is the locals who wanted to practice sanAtana dharma and so kept
> requesting Sringeri Jagadguru many times.
> 4. Who actually initiated this establishment is not known to him, but
> according to him matha is just for administrative purpose.
> 5. Sringeri Jagaguru may be aware of all these happenings. He has been
> getting invitations for foreign travel but has declined everytime and he
> does not intend to travel to foreign land.
> 6. Foreign travel should not be more than 3 days
> 7. Those Brahmins who trael abroad and settle there or stay for long
> time may return. However they are not allowed to participate in any of
> the
> yajna-s i.e. havan and vedika yagja-s organised by matha and denfinitely
> not in the Sringeri matha itself. Only Bra
> h
> mins from Bharat are allowed to perform Yajna
> 8. Sringeri Jagadguru may bless anyone who approaches him but this does
> not mean that he endorses their actions. Many come with a hope to solve
> personal or material problems from Jagadguru. He may bless them but this
> does not mean he will actually take away all their sorrows or say
> tathastu
> and fulfill their wishes.
> 9. He indicated that at times, Acharya remains detached and neutral to
> many activities and may bless the work as a formality
> . Actually it's not blessings nor it's appreciation, but just a
> formality.
>
>
> As per my understanding, Sringeri Acharya does not give upadehsas to all,
> but to a select few. He does not give diksha to all. He will not share his
> opinion with anyone, but may give casual instruction just to satisfy the
> questioner. Only to sincere seeker will he give upadesha which if followed
> will change his life and one will surely progress on spiritual path. Like
> Ramana Maharshi, he too at times remains aloof from matha activities, like
> Sri Chandrashekara Bharathi Swami ji, the guru of Sri Abhinav Vidyatirhta
> Swami ji.
>
> Regarding degradation of Brahmins, my friend too is worried and he is also
> sad that western Hindus actively defend attacks on dharma but not much is
> done by traditionalists.
>
>
> As far as I am concerned, I am not on any side, neverthless foreign travel
> is happening. We are doing business with them. We import and export goods.
> So their money comes to us. So with it comes their samskAra-s, the
> vibrations. We are in a particular situation as described by other members.
> So just curious about future and what steps traditional Brahmins are taking
> to arrest this trend.
>
>
> There are dharma and punishments that changes with time. For some sin,
> these days it is not possible to donate 9 cows and one bullock as
> repentance or punishment. However there are some things that should not be
> changed. If certain rules are pivotal for spiritual progress to realise
> Atman, they should not be compromised. Maybe ban on foreign travel is one
> of them or may be not. I can't judge.
>
>
> If I have stretched too much. Maybe I should give myself a break.
>
>
> Hari OM
>
> Sujal
>
>
>
> On Sun, Oct 8, 2017 at 9:31 PM, D.V.N.Sarma డి.వి.ఎన్.శర్మ via Advaita-l <
> advaita-l at lists.advaita-vedanta.org> wrote:
>
> > Does somebody 's approval disapproval
> > of marrying outside hindu fold
> > make a difference?
> > Suppose one disapproves what can he do?
> >
> > Puranas have already predicted
> > that
> > in Kaliyuga
> >
> > all the
> > earlier
> > norms will be broken. They ha
> > ve
> > said that this is *Yuga Dharma*.
> > That means that *for this age this is the dharma*. Why do we hanker
> for
> > Kritayuga dharma in Kali. Is it not wrong to do so.
> > Is there not a motive behind such a desire? This I think is due to
> > mechanisms of vested interests
> >
> > Every age has a dharma. That dharma evolves slowly in order to keep the
> > society at that time in order.
> > The modern human society is also slowly evolving its own dharma. The
> modern
> > Hindu society also will do the
> > same. I do not think that any of us can stop it.
> >
> > Vidura has described the highest dharma as
> > "Do not do to others those things, when done by others pain your mind"
> > He said that this is the supreme dharma. Can there be any higher
> authority
> > for dharma.
> > than the incarnation of Yamadharmaraja himself.
> >
> >
> > regards,
> > Sarma.
> >
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--
Regards
-Venkatesh
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