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Friday, July 26, 2013

Hindu Religion prevailed in Africa 6000 years ago:



Johannesburg: Where does Lord Shiv not exist? It is said that Shiv is in every particle and every stone. There is Shiv in Kailash, Shiv in Kashi, and Africa. The discovery of a Shiv idol in South Africa is proof that 6000 years ago, Africans used to follow Hinduism. Archaeologists have found a 6000-year-old shivling idol in a cave named Sudara in South Africa, made of hard granite stone. The archaeologists are amazed at how the shivling survived there for so long? Recently the world's longest shivshakti effigy was unveiled in South Africa. In that effigy Lord Shiv and his shakti (power) better half Parvati is also present. This effigy was established in the township of Actonville in Benoni city. 10 artists took 10 months to complete this effigy.

From a broad statistical standpoint, Hinduism’s roughly 0.2% presence in Africa is seen as so inconsequential that most data organizations don’t even bother mentioning it in their census reports. Instead, they opt to clump the religion, along with a medley of the continent’s other minority faiths, into a 1% usually categorized as “others” and simply leave it at that.

However, broad statistics can sometimes be deceiving, especially when it comes to figures so prominent that even minuscule percentages are significant in terms of actual numbers. Such is the case regarding Africa’s Hindu adherents, whose 0.2%, in the context of the continent’s 1.2 billion population, is an estimated 2.5 million.

As such, Hinduism, though sparsely practised throughout the continent compared to religions like Islam and Christianity, can be found in notable pockets, pockets in which the culture, despite seeming out of place, is expressed just as beautifully as anywhere else.

While the scattered nature of these pockets can make understanding Africa’s Hindu story a somewhat complex, a handful of the most noteworthy can still give an overarching view of what this story entails. With the hope of providing said view, here are four countries where Hinduism’s presence is particularly noteworthy and why.

1) South Africa

Before the Union of South Africa (the historic predecessor to the present-day Republic of South Africa) was founded in 1910, the area comprised four separate British colonies: Cape, Transvaal, Orange River, and Natal.

In this last colony, Natal, now part of the KwaZulu-Natal province, Hinduism began taking root in the African mainland. The government, needing a cheap replacement for the labour plantation owners lost after slavery was abolished throughout the British Empire, decided to do what several other colonies had already begun: import Indian nationals under a system of indentured servitude.

Presented with the opportunity of new beginnings — specifically five-year contracts, after which they could sign for another five years, followed by the opportunity to settle permanently with crown land and full citizenship rights — 6,445 impoverished yet hopeful Indians journeyed to Natal between 1860 and 1866.

Sadly, these early immigrants were treated more like slaves than hired workers, brought on overcrowded ships, housed in military-style barracks, and forced to work under terrible conditions. So bad was the ill-treatment of labourers, in fact, that immigration was paused after 1866.

In 1874, however, it resumed in full throttle, as thousands of new immigrants poured into Natal, not just indentured labourers but also a community of traders, artisans, and teachers who made the trip at their own expense. Over time, many labourers who completed 10 years of service, equipped with the skills they acquired during their indentureship, joined this community, which quickly began expanding.

Concerned that Natal could become majority Indian if this growth remained steady in 1891, the government decided to revoke its promise regarding gifting land and citizenship. 

Regardless of this move, Indians made up almost half of Natal’s population by 1893; by 1904, they outnumbered the whites. By 1911, after all of the colonies joined to become the Union of South Africa, thereby ending Natal’s indentureship program, the colony had received more than 150,000 Indian immigrants.

As South Africa became more industrialized, the following decades saw the rapid urbanization of Hindus who began moving into the cities, most notably Durban, the Indian population of which increased from 17,015 in 1911 to 123,165 in 1949.

Though, during this period, this population faced a myriad of challenges, including high levels of unemployment, wide-scale poverty, and various efforts by the government to have them repatriated, they persevered, building temples and schools so their youth could become better educated in Hindu culture, as well as have access to better jobs.

Therefore, establishing themselves firmly in the city's cultural fabric, Durban is now home to most of South Africa’s 1.3 million Indians, making it, according to some sources, the largest Indian city outside of India and thus a most potent hub of Hindu practice.

2) Mauritius

While Natal was the first British colony in the mainland to become part of the Indian-indentured-servant program, it was actually Mauritius, the island located roughly 1,200 miles off the southeastern coast, that was the first British colony in Africa (in all of the empire, in fact) to start importing Indian workers in the new post-slavery system.

Having once been the recipient of Indian workers under French colonial rule, 6,000 of Mauritius’ 80,000 population was already Indian when Britain began its indentured program, thus making it a more appealing work destination for recruits — some of whom had relatives there — even after other colonies began competing for their services.

Because of this, Mauritius’ Indian population swiftly grew, despite Parliament having to pause the program for two years due to the ill-treatment of workers like it later had to in South Africa, as 700,000 labourers migrated to the island between 1834 and 1920.

Today, 50% of Mauritius’ 1.3 million population is Hindu, making it the only African country where Hinduism has the highest number of followers.

As a result, the island is sometimes called “little India,” where almost all its presidents and prime ministers have been Hindus and where most Hindu celebrations are public holidays.

3) Uganda

Generally speaking, the story of Hinduism in Uganda begins in similar fashion to that of South Africa and Mauritius, or any other British colony.

Requiring cheap labour, this time for the construction of the Uganda Railway that would connect Kampala in Uganda to Mombasa in Kenya, the British imported around 40,000 Indian workers in the 1890s.

After completing the project in 1902, a majority of the laborers returned to India, while a small percentage opted to stay and continue work in railway and other British operations, like retail and administration.

Comprising just a sliver of Uganda’s overall population, this small percentage was soon joined by a wave of new immigrants — mostly traders — who began establishing their own businesses. As these businesses prospered, spurring even more immigrants to come and work, the Indian population became instrumental in developing the country’s economy through and beyond the end of colonialism.

Unfortunately, after colonialism, discrimination against Indians rose to exceptionally high levels as part of the policies of various East African governments who felt that indigenous Africans should be at the forefront of the economy.

Such xenophobic policies reached their culmination in 1972 when military dictator General Idi Amin announced that all of the Indian-origin people living in Uganda — numbering, by that time, almost 80,000 — had to leave the country. If, after 90 days, any of them were still there, they would, as he put it, be made to feel as if they were “sitting on fire!”

Hence leaving their businesses and homes to be seized by the government, all of the region’s Indians mass migrated to a medley of other countries, including around 28,000 to the United Kingdom, around 15,000 to India, and around 8,000 to Canada.

Thereafter faced with a shortage of skilled professionals, the expulsion of Indians actually caused Uganda to fall into a financial crisis, resulting in long-term economic devastation.

20 years after the exodus, Uganda reversed its laws banning Indians, offering to give back their seized properties with hopes they would return and reinvigorate the economy by recreating employment. Having already rebuilt their lives in other parts of the world, however, most who left Uganda in ‘72 decided to simply sell their reclaimed property and not move back.

There was, on the other hand, a minority who indeed returned, with some even repossessing the businesses they originally owned. Now numbering 30,000, Ugandan Indians again hold controlling stakes in various sectors of the economy, employing more than 1 million indigenous people and contributing to more than 65% of the country’s domestic revenue.

4) Ghana

Ghana’s Hindu community, from a broad perspective, is made up of two distinct groups: Indians and indigenous Africans, both of whom get along very well, regularly sharing spaces of worship and occasionally banning together to host visiting teachers or dignitaries.

During the first half of the 20th century, the Indian community was very small, consisting mostly of Gujaratis who settled in the country in the colonial era — not as indentured servants, but as merchants seeking economic opportunities. After 1947, however, this group was joined by an influx of Sindhis who migrated to Africa, spurred on by the partition of India, thus adding to Ghana’s overall Indian population.

Because, for the most part, this population engaged in their cultural practices privately due to the general assumption Hinduism was an Indian faith that might be unappreciated by foreigners, the migrants made no real attempts to introduce their traditions to the native Ghanaians during this period. The religion, as a result, remained only among the Indians for a long time.

The Ghanaians, nevertheless, still managed to have encounters with Hinduism throughout this period. Soldiers who had served alongside the British in Sri Lanka and India during World War II, according to reports, came back to Ghana with remarkable tales of Hindu gods and mysticism, arousing in the Africans a curiosity for India and its spiritual culture.

Fueled not only by the popular rise of Hindi movies, which were characterized by supernatural displays of spiritualism, but also by the appearance of various astrologers and healers who claimed connections to Hinduism, this curiosity rose throughout the decades.

When, in the 1970s, a new wave of Hindu groups thus began arriving in the country — ones whose goals were to actively share their traditions with the indigenous — many of Ghana’s people were primed to reciprocate, despite the hostile public reaction instigated by Christians.

As such, Hinduism began taking hold among Ghana’s native, so much so that the indigenous Hindu community now actually outnumbers the Indian community, and Hinduism as a whole is the country’s fastest growing religion.

Thanks https://www.hinduamerican.org/blog/hinduism-beyond-india-africa

Khmer Empire


Khmer Empire’s capital of Angkor in the Siem Reap district in Cambodia, but not many have heard of Koh Ker, the once grand capital of the Khmer empire for a brief period between 928 to 944 AD.

Thursday, July 25, 2013

பிரான்ஸ் நாட்டு ரயில்களில் திருக்குறள்!


 திருவள்ளுவர் அழகு தமிழில் எழுதிய திருக்குறள் பிரெஞ்சு மொழியில் பிரான்ஸ் நாட்டு ரயில்களில் எழுதப்பட்டுள்ளத ு. அய்யன் திருவள்ளுவர் அழகு தமிழில் எழுதிய 1330 குரல்கள் ஆங்கிலம் உள்ளிட்ட பல்வேறு மொழிகளில் மொழிபெயர்க்கப்ப ட்டுள்ளது.
திருக்குறளை தமிழர்கள் மட்டுமின்றி உலக மக்களும் படித்து வருகின்றனர். சென்னையில் உள்ள வள்ளுவர் கோட்டத்தில் இருக்கும் குரல் மண்டபத்தில் 1330 குரள்களும் பொறிக்கப்பட்டுள ்ளது. மேலும் உலக மக்கள் கொண்டாடும் வள்ளுவருக்கு குமரி கடலில் 133 அடி உயர சிலை நிறுவப்பட்டுள்ள து.வள்ளுவரின் குரல்கள் தமிழக அரசுப் பேருந்துகளில் எழுதப்பட்டுள்ளத ு. இது நம் அனைவருக்கும் தெரியும். ஆனால் பிரான்ஸ் நாட்டு ரயில்களிலும் திருக்குறள் எழுத்தப்பட்டுள் ளது என்று உங்களுக்கு தெரியுமா? பிரான்ஸ் நாட்டு ரயில்களில் பிரெஞ்சு மொழியில் திருக்குறள் எழுதப்பட்டுள்ளத ு. அதன் அருகில் திருவள்ளுவரின் பெயர் எழுதப்பட்டுள்ளத ு.
புகைப்படத்தில் உள்ள குறள் இது தான்.
மாதர் முகம்போல் ஒளிவிட வல்லையேல்
காதலை வாழி மதி

விளக்கம்: திங்களே! இம் மாதரின் முகத்தைப்போல் ஔி வீச உன்னால் முடியுமானால், நீயும் இவள்போல் என் காதலுக்கு உரிமை பெறுவாய்!

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Scientific Reason behind Indian Punishment

 

Remember the ‘good’ old Indian school punishments? Holding the earlobes with arms crossed over your chests, bending the knees and then sit and then stand and so on till the time Masterji is saying?

Ever thought why the traditional Indian school teachers would give this particular punishment? I believe even majority of the teachers who grant this punishment to their students do not know the reason behind it. This form of punishment has been in practice in our country since the Gurukul time and was given to the students who were weak in studies. That is a different question if now a days teachers grant this punishment for any mistake and not only for studies but originally it was meant for weak students only.
Talking about the logic behind this punishment, it is very interesting to know that this particular posture increases the blood flow in the memory cells in brain and synchronizes the right and left side of the brain to improve function and promote calmness, stimulates neural pathways via acupressure points in the earlobe, sharpens intelligence and also helps those with autism, asperger’s syndrome, learning difficulties and behavioral problems.

Probably we have forgotten this ancient method of increasing memory power but the West is now using is very diligently and they are recommending this posture or exercise to treat many a diseases.

Like Useful info <


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Scientific Reason behind Indian Punishment :

Remember the ‘good’ old Indian school punishments? Holding the earlobes with arms crossed over your chests, bending the knees and then sit and then stand and so on till the time Masterji is saying?

Ever thought why the traditional Indian school teachers would give this particular punishment? I believe even majority of the teachers who grant this punishment to their students do not know the reason behind it. This form of punishment has been in practice in our country since the Gurukul time and was given to the students who were weak in studies. That is a different question if now a days teachers grant this punishment for any mistake and not only for studies but originally it was meant for weak students only.
Talking about the logic behind this punishment, it is very interesting to know that this particular posture increases the blood flow in the memory cells in brain and synchronizes the right and left side of the brain to improve function and promote calmness, stimulates neural pathways via acupressure points in the earlobe, sharpens intelligence and also helps those with autism, asperger’s syndrome, learning difficulties and behavioral problems.

Probably we have forgotten this ancient method of increasing memory power but the West is now using is very diligently and they are recommending this posture or exercise to treat many a diseases.

Like @[312842482135099:274:Useful info] <

Dhanvantari




Dhanvantari is an Avatar of Vishnu from the Hindu tradition. He appears in the Vedas and Puranas as the physician of the gods (devas), and the god of Ayurvedic medicine. It is common practice in Hinduism for worshipers to pray to Dhanvantari seeking his blessings for sound health for themselves and/or others.

Commonly worshipped as the Hindu God of Medicine, the Master of Universal Knowledge, Physician of Gods and the Guardian Deity of Hospitals, DHANVANTARI is regarded as the original exponent of Indian medical tradition called AYURVEDA, the ‘eternal science of life.’ This tradition is now accepted as the oldest, most original and unbroken medical system of the world.

In ancient Indian tradition there are several schools like those of ATHARVAN, ATREYA, CHARAKA, SUSHRUTA, BEHLA, AGNIVESA, PARASARA, HARITA, VAGBHATA and MADHAVA. Of these, the ‘Great Three’ or BRIHAT-TRAM are the works of CHARAKA, SUSHRUTA and VAGBHATA. Further there was the school of physicians headed by ATREYA and of the Rasa Siddha-s, by KASHYAPA.

DHANVANTARI has many myths and legends woven around him. Normally shown as clad in bright yellow silk, He is depicted with four hands- the upper pair of hands carrying sankha and chakra, and the lower pair, a (golden) leech (jalookaa-medical term Hirudo Medicinalis) and kamandalu (pitcher) (sometimes shown as a blood letting bowl). Sometimes he is shown with the text of the upaveda, AYURVEDA and medicinal herbs. Sometime he is shown with a tulasi-seed garland around his neck and a plant-wreath halo. His complexion is blue, making Him another incarnation of VISHNU. Interestingly, the leech was part of the doctor’s kit in olden days since it was used to suck out impure blood from the patient‘s body. Even now, extract from its saliva is used to prevent clotting.

What does the word Dhanvantari mean?

The word DHANVANTARI affords different interpretations:

(a) The word dhanus is only indicative (upalakshna). It denotes the science of surgery. The one who has seen the end (anta) of it is DHANVANTARI.

(b) The word dhanvan means a desert. (Compare RIGVEDA [V.36.1] dhanvachara meaning, he who moves in a desert). There is a mantra in the Veda: dhanvan iva prapaaasi (0 Lord! You are like the place where water is distributed to travellers in a desert.) Thus, DHANVANTARI the incarnation of Lord VISHNU with a pot of nectar in His hand is like prapaa (water spot) in the desert of worldly existence.

The RAMAYANA (Balakanda, Sarga 45) describes him as a divine being who emerged from the milky ocean after a churning of 1000 years. He carried a kamandalu (water pitcher) in one hand and a danda (staff) in the other.

The first Dhanvantari

Gods, repeatedly defeated and killed by their more powerful cousins, the demons, approached Lord VISHNU, seeking the boon of rejuvenation and the gift of immortality.

He then directed them to churn the primeval ocean in which were hidden the secrets of life and death.

The Gods sought the help of the demons, to whom they promised part of the spoil. With VASUKI as the rope and Mount MANDARA as the churning rod, they churned the ocean till it yielded several valuable things such as desire-yielding trees, a cow, the flying horse, the white elephant and nymphs, Moon and LAKSHMI. Finally came DHANVANTARI the divine physician, holding the pitcher of AMRITA the elixir of life that could bestow immortality.

The HARIVAMSA (ch. 29) describes him as prosperous-looking, and says that after emerging from the milky ocean, he stood worshipping Lord VISHNU. VISHNU named him ABJA. He then bowed down to VISHNU and said: “0 Lord, I am Your son. Allor a share of the sacrifices to me.” VISHNU replied: “Portions of sacrifices have already been allotted. Since you were born after the celestials, you cannot be considered as one of them. You will be born in the world of humans and then you will become a celebrity. In your second life, which will be in the DVAPARA YUGA, even from the time of your conception, you will have various occult powers. You will be born as god-incarnate. You will compose works on AYURVEDA which will be well known in all parts of the world.”

"Dhanvantari is worshipped as the Hindu God of Medicine. He epitomlzes medical knowledgeAe is also regarded as the origlnal exponent of the Indian Medical Tradition, Ayurveda".

In the DVAPARA YUGA, there was a king called DHANVA in the family of the rulers of KASI. He did not have children for a long time. He performed penance and propitiated ABJA (another name for DHANVANTARI). Pleased by his austerities, ABJA was born as his son. DHANVA named him DHANVANTARI. DHANVANTARI taught AYURVEDA in parts, to eight disciples. To him were born KETUMAN, BHIMARATHA and DIVODASA.

There is a story in some purana-s connecting DHANVANTARI with PARIKSHIT, the grandson of the PANDAVA-S. When TAKSHAKA wanted to bite PARIKSHIT and kill him, a specialist in treating poisonous bites rushed to save the king. But TAKSHAKA bribed and sent him back. It is said that the doctor thus sent back was DHANVANTARI. But other references identify him with KASHYAPA.

The BRAHMA VAIVARTA PURANA (Krishnajanma Khanda) has an interesting story connecting DHANVANTARI with MAANASAA DEVI, a serpent Goddess. Once DHANVANTARI was going to KAILASA along with his disciples. On the way, TAKSHAKA hissed and spat venom. Irritated, one of the disciples of DHANVANTARI boldly plucked the diamond on the head of TAKSHAKA and threw it on the ground.

Hearing about this, VASUKI, the King of Serpents, threatened DHANVANTARI with thousands of serpents under the leadership of DRONA, PUNDARIKA and DHANANJAYA. The poisonous breath of these snakes made the disciples of DWANTARI swoon. However, DHA”TARI made all of them recover with a powerful medicine and in turn sent all the serpents to a swoon.

When VASUKI came to know about this, he next sent the serpent-maid MAANASAA DEVI, a disciple of Lord SIVA, to face DHA”TARI. MAANASAA DEVI also made all the disciples of DHANVANTARI swoon. But DHANVANTARI proved more than a match for her. He brought back his disciples to normal with his powerful medicines. When MAANASAA DEW realized that she could not harm DHANVANTARI or his disciples with her poison, she took the trisula (trident) given by Lord SIVA and aimed it at DHANVANTARI. At this point, SIVA and BRAHMA appeared before them, pacified and sent them away.

According to some other works, DHANVANTARI was born as DIVODASA, King of KASI. He became famous as KASIRAJA and composed many texts on AYURVEDA. Glorification of these works is to be found in the AGNI PURANA (chs. 279-288), and the works of KASIRAJA’S disciple, SUSHRUTA.

The BHAGAVATA PURANA refers to DHANVANTARI as “smritamaatra aartinaasanah” (One who destroys all sufferings even when remembered). DHANVANTARI, DIVODASA and KASIRAJA are names of the same person who is “the first God and who freed the other Gods from old age, disease and death”, and who in his Himalayan retreat taught surgery to SUSHRUTA and other sages.

The VISHNUDHARMOTTAKA PURANA (I. 73.41) which is a major text on iconography, suggests that, DHANVANTARI should be presented as surupa (handsome) and priya-darshana (pleasant in appearance), with two hands, carrying a pitcher of ambrosia in each hand. According to some dhyanasloka-s given in the PRAPANCHA-SARA-SANGRAHA DANVANTARI may be meditated upon as bathing Himself with nectar flowing from the two pots He holds over His head. This form is to be visualised as seated on the devotee’s head, or upon the lunar orb in the full-moon night. Yet another verse describes him as handsome (manoharaanga), with a tranquil face (prasanna-mukha) and residing in the solar orb (ravi-bimbastba.)

DHANVANTARI’S appearance is celebrated each year on the 13th day (trayodasi) of the waxing moon a few days before the DIPAVALI.

The second Dhanvantari

There is an account of a second DHANVANTARI as AMRITACHARYA. He appears to be an eminent medical scientist born in the ambashtha caste. According to a work called the AMBASHTHACHARA CHANDRIKA, sage GALAVA once went to the forest to collect darbba grass and firewood. He walked for long and felt thirsty and hungry. He then saw a girl coming that way with water. She was a vaisya girl VIRABHADRAA by name. He quenched his thirst with the water given by her. Pleased with her, the sage blessed that she would get a noble son. The girl said she was still unmarried. GALAVA then made a figure of a male with dharbha grass and asked her to get a child from that figure. She got a beautiful baby boy. Since he was born to a vaisya mother and brahmin father (darbha-purusha created by the Brahmin GALAVA) he belonged to the ambashta caste. The boy was named AMRITACHARYA.

Dhanvantari and Kumbha Mela

There are episodes connecting DHANVANTARI with the KUMBHA MELA river festival, which takes place once in twelve years at four different places- HARIDVAR, ALLAHABAD, NASIK and UJJAIN. As DHANVANTARI emerged with the pot containing nectar in His palms, a great fight took place between the Gods and demons to wrest the pitcher from His hands. During the fierce battle that took place in the sky, a few drops of nectar fell in the four places referred to. Hence these places became sacred. KUMBHAMELA-S are held at these places to commemorate the divine event. Devotees throng to these places in tens of thousands to purify and rejuvenate themselves with the waters, which are supposed to have within them, the power of AMRITA.

The Nighantu

DHANVANTARI appears to have been an actual historical person, although his precise identity is hard to be ascertained. He taught surgery and other divisions of AYURVEDA (Indian system of medicine) at the instance of SUSHRUTA, to a group of sages among whom SUSHPUTA was the foremost. DHANVANTARI is regarded as the patron-god of all branches of medicine. While DHANVANTARI is not credited with any medical treatise of his own, in the early accounts, there is a voluminous glossary and materia medica known as DHANVANTARI NIGHANTU. Even as there is the HIPPOCRATES’ oath for allopathic doctors, so is there the DHANVANTARI oath for AYURVEDIC practitioners.

This work is considered the most ancient of all medical glossaries available. The original work is said to have been in three recensions and the present version may have been based on one of them. This text in six se.ctions deals with 373 medicinal substances, their names and synonyms and a brief description of their properties. Described as the ‘third eye’ for practising physicians, it is extensively relied upon, despite several more comprehensive glossaries that have been compiled subsequently.

Dhanvantari in the context of Allopathy

Modern scholars with a scientific bent of mind assume that Western Science in its modern phase is the paradigm for all forms of scientific knowledge. The native systems of medicine, in their opinion, are crude and unscientific. But if Science can be defined as the body of knowledge based on observation of phenomena under a theoretical framework, which itself is tested in observation, the system of AYURVEDA also has a claim to be called Science. In course of time it has been, and is being realized that there is a vast field for research and discovery in this ancient system of medicine. Texts on AYURVEDA lay great importance on empirid observation – collection of data on drugs, on pathological symptoms, and even on anatomy through dissection of corpses.

These texts mention drugs of vegetable, animal and mineral origin. The number of drug plants mentioned in the three SAMHITA-S (CHARAKA, SUSHRUTA and the text ASHTANGAHRIDAYA of VAGBHATA) is somewhere between 600 and 700 and the number of Sanskrit names (excluding their derivatives) of vegetable drugs is about 1900. These works do not discuss plants as such. They discuss, instead, the effects on our bodies of the different parts and products of the plants.

Says the CHARAKA SAMHITA (Sutra Stbana, Ch. I, verses 72-73): “Roots, bark, pith, exudation, stalk, juice, sprouts, alkalis, milk, fruit, flower, ash, oils, thorns, leaves, buds, bulbs and off-shoots are the plant products now in medicine.” In ancient days they were doing trephining (making holes in the head), nose corrections and operative deliveries. In so far as the drugs of animal origin are concerned, the CHARAKASAMHITA done discusses 165 varieties of animals. It says (Sutra Sthana Ch, I, w. 68-69): “Honey, milk, bile, fat, marrow, blood, flesh, excrement, urine, skin, semen, bones, sinews, horns, nails, hooves, hair, gorocana – these are the substances used in medicine from the animal world.” Again, it mentions 64 main minerals used for drugs. This gives an idea Of the enormity of the pharmacopoeia On which AYURVEDIC medicine was based. About the respect for empirical observation of the AYURVEDIC physicians, CHARAKA (Virnaana Sthana, ch. 118, verse 14) says: “The entire world is the teacher for an intelligent physician, as it is the foe for a fool”. Both CHARAKA and SUSHRUTA declare that there is no substance in the world, which is not relevant for medicine.

AYURVEDA has cure for several diseases for which there may not be a permanent cure in allopathy. It must be admitted that there is no dramatic and overnight cure in AYURVEDA. It works over a period of time; but it works.There are very effective thaila-s (oils), aasava-s (drugs), churna-s (powders) and vatika-s (pills/tablets) for different ailments. For instance, KSHEERABALAADI TAILAM is effective for paralysis, VASANTA KUSUMAKARAM for diabetes, ARJUNA (bark) for heart ailments, DRAKSHARISHTA and DASAMULARISHTA for colds and flues, NARAYANA TAILAM and MAHAMASHA TAILAM for rheumatism; RASNA (a herb) and MAHAYOGARAJA GUGGULU for joint pains, BHOOMYAMALAKI (juice extract) for jaundice (Hepatitis B); LASUNA – garlic (crude or caps) good for heart conditions and the control of cholesterol. Every part of the MARGOSA plant leaves/nuts/oil/shoots, is very effective in curing many an ailment. TULASI (basil) is a very powerful plant with rich medicinal properties. ALOE VERA (called KUMARIe)x tract is ideal for curing
uterus problems, bleeding complaints, skin diseases and so on. There are several greens like kattali,pasala keerai, kuppameni keerai, agattikeerai, etc. which act very effectively against a number of diseases like herpis, allergy, kidney stones, cataract, toxins in the body, hair loss, etc.

Conclusion

For certain diseases, AYURVEDA preparations seem to be better. This is what many doctors practising allopathy also have realized. Of course there is also one section of allopaths, which does not recognize the soundness of other systems like AYURVEDA, UNANI and HOMEOPATHY. A good number of them, ofcourse, are recommending the use of AYURVEDIC medicines to their patients. They themselves are using AYURVEDIC medicines. It may be observed in conclusion that the various systems of medicine should work in collaboration to cure or relieve. There should be an open mind and a healthy respect to all systems. After all, many of our “grandmother‘s superstitions” are being found to have a scientific basis cloaked in mumbo-jumbo. We should never forget that divine help plus medicine are required for curing every disease. According to DAVID FRAWLEY (AYURVEDIC HEALING: 1989. Morson Publishing), “Within all of us is the archetype of the Divine Healer. This Divine Healer is the true healer in all beings, not any particular individual or special personality. To heal others or ourselves we must set it in motion within ourselves. DHANVANTARI represents this truth in the tradition of AYURVEDA. His status is found at most AYURVEDIC schools and clinics. It is a reminder that however much we know or skilful we become, everything still depends on the grace of spiritual nature.
Photo: Dhanvantari

Dhanvantari is an Avatar of Vishnu from the Hindu tradition. He appears in the Vedas and Puranas as the physician of the gods (devas), and the god of Ayurvedic medicine. It is common practice in Hinduism for worshipers to pray to Dhanvantari seeking his blessings for sound health for themselves and/or others.

Commonly worshipped as the Hindu God of Medicine, the Master of Universal Knowledge, Physician of Gods and the Guardian Deity of Hospitals, DHANVANTARI is regarded as the original exponent of Indian medical tradition called AYURVEDA, the ‘eternal science of life.’ This tradition is now accepted as the oldest, most original and unbroken medical system of the world.

In ancient Indian tradition there are several schools like those of ATHARVAN, ATREYA, CHARAKA, SUSHRUTA, BEHLA, AGNIVESA, PARASARA, HARITA, VAGBHATA and MADHAVA. Of these, the ‘Great Three’ or BRIHAT-TRAM are the works of CHARAKA, SUSHRUTA and VAGBHATA. Further there was the school of physicians headed by ATREYA and of the Rasa Siddha-s, by KASHYAPA.

DHANVANTARI has many myths and legends woven around him. Normally shown as clad in bright yellow silk, He is depicted with four hands- the upper pair of hands carrying sankha and chakra, and the lower pair, a (golden) leech (jalookaa-medical term Hirudo Medicinalis) and kamandalu (pitcher) (sometimes shown as a blood letting bowl). Sometimes he is shown with the text of the upaveda, AYURVEDA and medicinal herbs. Sometime he is shown with a tulasi-seed garland around his neck and a plant-wreath halo. His complexion is blue, making Him another incarnation of VISHNU. Interestingly, the leech was part of the doctor’s kit in olden days since it was used to suck out impure blood from the patient‘s body. Even now, extract from its saliva is used to prevent clotting.

What does the word Dhanvantari mean?

The word DHANVANTARI affords different interpretations:

(a) The word dhanus is only indicative (upalakshna). It denotes the science of surgery. The one who has seen the end (anta) of it is DHANVANTARI.

(b) The word dhanvan means a desert. (Compare RIGVEDA [V.36.1] dhanvachara meaning, he who moves in a desert). There is a mantra in the Veda: dhanvan iva prapaaasi (0 Lord! You are like the place where water is distributed to travellers in a desert.) Thus, DHANVANTARI the incarnation of Lord VISHNU with a pot of nectar in His hand is like prapaa (water spot) in the desert of worldly existence.

The RAMAYANA (Balakanda, Sarga 45) describes him as a divine being who emerged from the milky ocean after a churning of 1000 years. He carried a kamandalu (water pitcher) in one hand and a danda (staff) in the other.

The first Dhanvantari

Gods, repeatedly defeated and killed by their more powerful cousins, the demons, approached Lord VISHNU, seeking the boon of rejuvenation and the gift of immortality.

He then directed them to churn the primeval ocean in which were hidden the secrets of life and death.

The Gods sought the help of the demons, to whom they promised part of the spoil. With VASUKI as the rope and Mount MANDARA as the churning rod, they churned the ocean till it yielded several valuable things such as desire-yielding trees, a cow, the flying horse, the white elephant and nymphs, Moon and LAKSHMI. Finally came DHANVANTARI the divine physician, holding the pitcher of AMRITA the elixir of life that could bestow immortality.

The HARIVAMSA (ch. 29) describes him as prosperous-looking, and says that after emerging from the milky ocean, he stood worshipping Lord VISHNU. VISHNU named him ABJA. He then bowed down to VISHNU and said: “0 Lord, I am Your son. Allor a share of the sacrifices to me.” VISHNU replied: “Portions of sacrifices have already been allotted. Since you were born after the celestials, you cannot be considered as one of them. You will be born in the world of humans and then you will become a celebrity. In your second life, which will be in the DVAPARA YUGA, even from the time of your conception, you will have various occult powers. You will be born as god-incarnate. You will compose works on AYURVEDA which will be well known in all parts of the world.”

"Dhanvantari is worshipped as the Hindu God of Medicine. He epitomlzes medical knowledgeAe is also regarded as the origlnal exponent of the Indian Medical Tradition, Ayurveda".

In the DVAPARA YUGA, there was a king called DHANVA in the family of the rulers of KASI. He did not have children for a long time. He performed penance and propitiated ABJA (another name for DHANVANTARI). Pleased by his austerities, ABJA was born as his son. DHANVA named him DHANVANTARI. DHANVANTARI taught AYURVEDA in parts, to eight disciples. To him were born KETUMAN, BHIMARATHA and DIVODASA.

There is a story in some purana-s connecting DHANVANTARI with PARIKSHIT, the grandson of the PANDAVA-S. When TAKSHAKA wanted to bite PARIKSHIT and kill him, a specialist in treating poisonous bites rushed to save the king. But TAKSHAKA bribed and sent him back. It is said that the doctor thus sent back was DHANVANTARI. But other references identify him with KASHYAPA.

The BRAHMA VAIVARTA PURANA (Krishnajanma Khanda) has an interesting story connecting DHANVANTARI with MAANASAA DEVI, a serpent Goddess. Once DHANVANTARI was going to KAILASA along with his disciples. On the way, TAKSHAKA hissed and spat venom. Irritated, one of the disciples of DHANVANTARI boldly plucked the diamond on the head of TAKSHAKA and threw it on the ground.

Hearing about this, VASUKI, the King of Serpents, threatened DHANVANTARI with thousands of serpents under the leadership of DRONA, PUNDARIKA and DHANANJAYA. The poisonous breath of these snakes made the disciples of DWANTARI swoon. However, DHA”TARI made all of them recover with a powerful medicine and in turn sent all the serpents to a swoon.

When VASUKI came to know about this, he next sent the serpent-maid MAANASAA DEVI, a disciple of Lord SIVA, to face DHA”TARI. MAANASAA DEVI also made all the disciples of DHANVANTARI swoon. But DHANVANTARI proved more than a match for her. He brought back his disciples to normal with his powerful medicines. When MAANASAA DEW realized that she could not harm DHANVANTARI or his disciples with her poison, she took the trisula (trident) given by Lord SIVA and aimed it at DHANVANTARI. At this point, SIVA and BRAHMA appeared before them, pacified and sent them away.

According to some other works, DHANVANTARI was born as DIVODASA, King of KASI. He became famous as KASIRAJA and composed many texts on AYURVEDA. Glorification of these works is to be found in the AGNI PURANA (chs. 279-288), and the works of KASIRAJA’S disciple, SUSHRUTA.

The BHAGAVATA PURANA refers to DHANVANTARI as “smritamaatra aartinaasanah” (One who destroys all sufferings even when remembered). DHANVANTARI, DIVODASA and KASIRAJA are names of the same person who is “the first God and who freed the other Gods from old age, disease and death”, and who in his Himalayan retreat taught surgery to SUSHRUTA and other sages.

The VISHNUDHARMOTTAKA PURANA (I. 73.41) which is a major text on iconography, suggests that, DHANVANTARI should be presented as surupa (handsome) and priya-darshana (pleasant in appearance), with two hands, carrying a pitcher of ambrosia in each hand. According to some dhyanasloka-s given in the PRAPANCHA-SARA-SANGRAHA DANVANTARI may be meditated upon as bathing Himself with nectar flowing from the two pots He holds over His head. This form is to be visualised as seated on the devotee’s head, or upon the lunar orb in the full-moon night. Yet another verse describes him as handsome (manoharaanga), with a tranquil face (prasanna-mukha) and residing in the solar orb (ravi-bimbastba.)

DHANVANTARI’S appearance is celebrated each year on the 13th day (trayodasi) of the waxing moon a few days before the DIPAVALI.

The second Dhanvantari

There is an account of a second DHANVANTARI as AMRITACHARYA. He appears to be an eminent medical scientist born in the ambashtha caste. According to a work called the AMBASHTHACHARA CHANDRIKA, sage GALAVA once went to the forest to collect darbba grass and firewood. He walked for long and felt thirsty and hungry. He then saw a girl coming that way with water. She was a vaisya girl VIRABHADRAA by name. He quenched his thirst with the water given by her. Pleased with her, the sage blessed that she would get a noble son. The girl said she was still unmarried. GALAVA then made a figure of a male with dharbha grass and asked her to get a child from that figure. She got a beautiful baby boy. Since he was born to a vaisya mother and brahmin father (darbha-purusha created by the Brahmin GALAVA) he belonged to the ambashta caste. The boy was named AMRITACHARYA.

Dhanvantari and Kumbha Mela

There are episodes connecting DHANVANTARI with the KUMBHA MELA river festival, which takes place once in twelve years at four different places- HARIDVAR, ALLAHABAD, NASIK and UJJAIN. As DHANVANTARI emerged with the pot containing nectar in His palms, a great fight took place between the Gods and demons to wrest the pitcher from His hands. During the fierce battle that took place in the sky, a few drops of nectar fell in the four places referred to. Hence these places became sacred. KUMBHAMELA-S are held at these places to commemorate the divine event. Devotees throng to these places in tens of thousands to purify and rejuvenate themselves with the waters, which are supposed to have within them, the power of AMRITA.

The Nighantu

DHANVANTARI appears to have been an actual historical person, although his precise identity is hard to be ascertained. He taught surgery and other divisions of AYURVEDA (Indian system of medicine) at the instance of SUSHRUTA, to a group of sages among whom SUSHPUTA was the foremost. DHANVANTARI is regarded as the patron-god of all branches of medicine. While DHANVANTARI is not credited with any medical treatise of his own, in the early accounts, there is a voluminous glossary and materia medica known as DHANVANTARI NIGHANTU. Even as there is the HIPPOCRATES’ oath for allopathic doctors, so is there the DHANVANTARI oath for AYURVEDIC practitioners.

This work is considered the most ancient of all medical glossaries available. The original work is said to have been in three recensions and the present version may have been based on one of them. This text in six se.ctions deals with 373 medicinal substances, their names and synonyms and a brief description of their properties. Described as the ‘third eye’ for practising physicians, it is extensively relied upon, despite several more comprehensive glossaries that have been compiled subsequently.

Dhanvantari in the context of Allopathy

Modern scholars with a scientific bent of mind assume that Western Science in its modern phase is the paradigm for all forms of scientific knowledge. The native systems of medicine, in their opinion, are crude and unscientific. But if Science can be defined as the body of knowledge based on observation of phenomena under a theoretical framework, which itself is tested in observation, the system of AYURVEDA also has a claim to be called Science. In course of time it has been, and is being realized that there is a vast field for research and discovery in this ancient system of medicine. Texts on AYURVEDA lay great importance on empirid observation – collection of data on drugs, on pathological symptoms, and even on anatomy through dissection of corpses.

These texts mention drugs of vegetable, animal and mineral origin. The number of drug plants mentioned in the three SAMHITA-S (CHARAKA, SUSHRUTA and the text ASHTANGAHRIDAYA of VAGBHATA) is somewhere between 600 and 700 and the number of Sanskrit names (excluding their derivatives) of vegetable drugs is about 1900. These works do not discuss plants as such. They discuss, instead, the effects on our bodies of the different parts and products of the plants.

Says the CHARAKA SAMHITA (Sutra Stbana, Ch. I, verses 72-73): “Roots, bark, pith, exudation, stalk, juice, sprouts, alkalis, milk, fruit, flower, ash, oils, thorns, leaves, buds, bulbs and off-shoots are the plant products now in medicine.” In ancient days they were doing trephining (making holes in the head), nose corrections and operative deliveries. In so far as the drugs of animal origin are concerned, the CHARAKASAMHITA done discusses 165 varieties of animals. It says (Sutra Sthana Ch, I, w. 68-69): “Honey, milk, bile, fat, marrow, blood, flesh, excrement, urine, skin, semen, bones, sinews, horns, nails, hooves, hair, gorocana – these are the substances used in medicine from the animal world.” Again, it mentions 64 main minerals used for drugs. This gives an idea Of the enormity of the pharmacopoeia On which AYURVEDIC medicine was based. About the respect for empirical observation of the AYURVEDIC physicians, CHARAKA (Virnaana Sthana, ch. 118, verse 14) says: “The entire world is the teacher for an intelligent physician, as it is the foe for a fool”. Both CHARAKA and SUSHRUTA declare that there is no substance in the world, which is not relevant for medicine.

AYURVEDA has cure for several diseases for which there may not be a permanent cure in allopathy. It must be admitted that there is no dramatic and overnight cure in AYURVEDA. It works over a period of time; but it  works.There are very effective thaila-s (oils), aasava-s (drugs), churna-s (powders) and vatika-s (pills/tablets) for different ailments. For instance, KSHEERABALAADI TAILAM is effective for paralysis, VASANTA KUSUMAKARAM for diabetes, ARJUNA (bark) for heart ailments, DRAKSHARISHTA and DASAMULARISHTA for colds and flues, NARAYANA TAILAM and MAHAMASHA TAILAM for rheumatism; RASNA (a herb) and MAHAYOGARAJA GUGGULU for joint pains, BHOOMYAMALAKI (juice extract) for jaundice (Hepatitis B); LASUNA – garlic (crude or caps) good for heart conditions and the control of cholesterol. Every part of the MARGOSA plant leaves/nuts/oil/shoots, is very effective in curing many an ailment. TULASI (basil) is a very powerful plant with rich medicinal properties. ALOE VERA (called KUMARIe)x tract is ideal for curing
uterus problems, bleeding complaints, skin diseases and so on. There are several greens like kattali,pasala keerai, kuppameni keerai, agattikeerai, etc. which act very effectively against a number of diseases like herpis, allergy, kidney stones, cataract, toxins in the body, hair loss, etc.

Conclusion

For certain diseases, AYURVEDA preparations seem to be better. This is what many doctors practising allopathy also have realized. Of course there is also one section of allopaths, which does not recognize the soundness of other systems like AYURVEDA, UNANI and HOMEOPATHY. A good number of them, ofcourse, are recommending the use of AYURVEDIC medicines to their patients. They themselves are using AYURVEDIC medicines. It may be observed in conclusion that the various systems of medicine should work in collaboration to cure or relieve. There should be an open mind and a healthy respect to all systems. After all, many of our “grandmother‘s superstitions” are being found to have a scientific basis cloaked in mumbo-jumbo. We should never forget that divine help plus medicine are required for curing every disease. According to DAVID FRAWLEY (AYURVEDIC HEALING: 1989. Morson Publishing), “Within all of us is the archetype of the Divine Healer. This Divine Healer is the true healer in all beings, not any particular individual or special personality. To heal others or ourselves we must set it in motion within ourselves. DHANVANTARI represents this truth in the tradition of AYURVEDA. His status is found at most AYURVEDIC schools and clinics. It is a reminder that however much we know or skilful we become, everything still depends on the grace of spiritual nature.

Scientists Finally Discover The Function of the Human Appendix




By Barbara Miller

It has long been regarded as a potentially troublesome, redundant organ, but American researchers say they have discovered the true function of the appendix.
The researchers say it acts as a safe house for good bacteria, which can be used to effectively reboot the gut following a bout of dysentery or cholera.
The conventional wisdom is that the small pouch protruding from the first part of the large intestine is redundant and many people have their appendix removed and appear none the worse for it.
Scientists from the Duke University Medical Centre in North Carolina say following a severe bout of cholera or dysentery, which can purge the gut of bacteria essential for digestion, the reserve good bacteria emerge from the appendix to take up the role.
But Professor Bill Parker says the finding does not mean we should cling onto our appendices at all costs.
“It’s very important for people to understand that if their appendix gets inflamed, just because it has a function it does not mean they should try to keep it in,” he said.
“So it’s sort of a fun thing that we’ve found, but we don’t want it to cause any harm, we don’t want people to say, “oh, my appendix has a function”, so I’m not going to go to the doctor, I’m going to try to hang onto it.”
3MRGSCIQIWUOS2204R8Y4WER1
Attractive theory
Nicholas Vardaxis, an associate professor in the Department of Medical Sciences at RMIT University, says the theory put forward by the Duke University scientists makes sense.
“As an idea it’s an attractive one, that perhaps it would be a nice place for these little bacteria to localise in, a little cul-de-sac away from everything else,” he said.
“The thing is that if we observe what’s been happening through evolution, the higher on the evolutionary scale we are and the more omnivorous animals become, then the smaller and less important the appendix becomes and humans are a good example of that.
“The actual normal flora bacteria within the appendix, as well within our gut, are the same, so we’ve lost all of those specialised bacteria.
“So it doesn’t have that safe house type of function anymore, I don’t think.
“It’s a vestige of something that was there in previous incarnations, if you like.”
Koala appendix
Unlike the human, the koala is famous for having a very long appendix.
It is thought to aid digestion on a diet made up exclusively of eucalyptus leaves.
Professor Vardaxis says that is not likely to change any time soon.
“Unless of course we have a massive blight and we get the eucalypt on which the koala thrives dying, then we may find some mutant koalas out there perhaps that will start eating other things, and as they start to eat other things, then over generations and hundreds of thousands of years of time, then surely, yes, the koala’s appendix will shrink as well,” he said.
Professor Vardaxis says it is possible that at that point, koalas might be afflicted by appendicitis and have to have it taken out at times.
thanks http://politicalblindspot.org/scientists-finally-discover-the-function-of-the-human-appendix/ 

தூங்கும் முறை பற்றி சித்தர்கள் கூறும் அரிய விளக்கம்..!!!



மனிதனின் அடிப்படைத் தேவைகளில் முக்கியமான ஒன்றுதான் உறக்கம் எனும் தூக்கமாகும். இது உடலின் ஆரோக்கியத்தைக் காப்பதில் முக்கிய பங்கு வகிக்கின்றது.

மனிதனின் வாழ்நாளில் மூன்றில் ஒரு பங்கு தூக்கத்தில் தான் கழிகின்றது. உடலிலுள்ள கோடிக்கணக்கான செல்களை தினமும் புதுப்பிக்கவும், உடலின் சோர்வு நீங்கி புத்துணர்வு பெறவும், உடல் வளர்ச்சி [குறிப்பிட்ட வயது வரை ]பெறவும், தூக்கம் இன்றியமையாததாக உள்ளது.

இரவில் தூங்கும் போதுதான் உடலின் வளர்ச்சி அதிகரிக்கின்றது என்று இன்றைய அறிவியலாளர்கள் கூறுகின்றனர்.

தூங்குவதைப் பற்றியும் அதில் உள்ள அறிவியல் உண்மைகளையும் சித்தர் பெருமக்கள் தங்கள் நூல்களில் வடித்துள்ளனர்.

தூங்குவதற்கு ஏற்ற காலம் இரவு மட்டும் தான் என்பது இயற்கையின் விதிகளில் ஒன்று. பூமியின் தட்ப வெட்ப நிலைகள் மாறி இரவில் குளிர்ச்சி பொருந்திய சூழ்நிலைதான் தூங்குவதற்கு ஏற்ற காலமாகும். ஆனால் இன்றைய நாகரீக உலகில் இணையதள நிறுவனங்களில் வேலை பார்க்கும் பலரும் இரவில் கண் விழித்து பகலில் தூங்குகின்றனர். இதனால் என்ன தீமைகள் விளையும் என்பது பற்றி சித்தர் பாடல் ஒன்று.

சித்த மயக்கஞ் செறியும் புலத்தயக்க மெத்தனுக்
கமைந்த மென்பவை களித்தமுற வண்டுஞ் சிலரை
நாயாய்ப் பன்னோய் கவ்வுமிராக் கண்டுஞ் சிலரை
நம்பிக் காண்

இதன் விளக்கம் :-

இரவில் நித்திரை செய்யாதவர்களிடத்தில் புத்தி மயக்கம், தெளிவின்மை, ஐம்புலன்களில் [உடலில்]சோர்வு, பயம், படபடப்பு, அக்னி மந்தம், செரியாமை, மலச்சிக்கல், போன்ற நோய்கள் எளிதில் பற்றும்.

வேட்டைக்குச் செல்லும் வேடருடைய நாய்கள் இரையைக் கவ்வுதல் போல் இரவில் நித்திரையில்லாதவரை பற்பல நோய்கள் கவிக் கொள்ளும்.

எந்த திசையில் தலை வைத்து படுக்க வேண்டும் என்பதை சித்தர்கள் அன்றே தெளிவாகக் கூறியுள்ளனர்.

உத்தமம் கிழக்கு, ஓங்குயிர் தெற்கு, மத்திமம் மேற்கு, மரணம் வடக்கு.

கிழக்கு திசையில் தலை வைத்து படுப்பது மிகவும் நல்லது. தெற்கு திசையில் தலை வைத்துப் படுத்தால் ஆயுள் வளரும். மேற்கு திசையில் தலை வைத்துப் படுத்தால் கனவு,அதிர்ச்சி உண்டாகும். வடக்கு திசையில் ஒரு போதும் தலை வைத்து தூங்கக் கூடாது.

இதனை விஞ்ஞான ரீதியாகவும் ஒப்புக்கொண்டுள்ளனர். வடக்கு திசையில் இருந்து வரும் காந்தசக்தி தலையில் மோதும் போது அங்குள்ள பிராண சக்தியை இழக்கும். இதனால் மூளை பாதிக்கப் படுவதுடன், இதயக் கோளாறுகள், நரம்புத்தளர்ச்சி உண்டாகும்.

மேலும் மல்லாந்து கால்களையும், கைகளையும் அகட்டி வைத்துக் கொண்டு தூங்கக் கூடாது. இதனால் இவர்களுக்குத் தேவையான ஆக்ஸிஜன் [பிராண வாயு] உடலுக்குக் கிடைக்காமல் குறட்டை உண்டாகும். குப்புறப் படுக்கக் கூடாது, தூங்கவும் கூடாது.

இடக்கை கீழாகவும், வலக்கை மேலாகவும் இருக்கும்படி கால்களை நீட்டி இடது பக்கமாக ஒருக்களித்து படுத்து தூங்கவேண்டும். இதனால் வலது மூக்கில் சுவாசம் சூரியகலையில் ஓடும். இதில் எட்டு அங்குலம் மட்டுமே சுவாசம் வெளியே செல்வதால் நீண்ட ஆயுள் வளரும். மேலும் இதனால் உடலுக்குத் தேவையான வெப்பக்காற்று அதிகரித்து பித்தநீரை அதிகரிக்கச்செய்து உண்ட உணவுகள் எளிதில் சீரணமாகும். இதயத்திற்கு சீரான பிராணவாயு கிடைத்து இதயம் பலப்படும்.

வலது பக்கம் ஒருக்களித்து படுப்பதால் இடது பக்க மூக்கின் வழியாக சந்திரகலை சுவாசம் ஓடும். இதனால் பனிரெண்டு அங்குல சுவாசம் வெளியே செல்லும். இதனால் உடலில் குளிர்ச்சி உண்டாகும். இரவில் உண்ட உணவு சீரணமாகாமல் புளித்துப் போய் விஷமாக நேரிடும்.

தகவல்கள்@
http://www.facebook.com/groups/siddhar.science/
தமிழ்ச்சித்தர்களின் அறிவியல் பற்றி விழிப்புணர்வு ஏற்படுத்தும் குழுமம்.
http://www.facebook.com/groups/siddhar.science/

ஸ்ரீ அருணகிரிநாத சுவாமிகள் அருளிச் செய்த திருப்புகழ்ப் பாடல்கள்



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 நாத விந்து கலாதி நமோ நம
வேத மந்திர ஸ்வரூபா நமோ ந
ஞான பண்டித ஸ்வாமி நமோ நம வெகுகோடி

நாம சம்பு குமாரா நமோ நம
போக அந்தரி பாலா நமோ நம
நாக பந்த மயூரா நமோ நம பரசூரர்

சேத தண்ட வினோதா நமோ நம
கீத கிண்கிணி பாதா நமோ நம
தீர சம்பிரம வீரா நமோ நம கிரிராஜ

தீப மங்கள ஜோதி நமோ நம
தூய அம்பல லீலா நமோ நம
தேவ குஞ்சரி பாகா நமோ நம அருள்தாராய்

ஈதலும் பல கோலால பூஜையும்
ஓதலும் குண ஆசார நீதியும்
ஈரமும் குரு சீர்பாத சேவையும் மறவாத

ஏழ்தலம் புகழ் காவேரியால் விளை
சோழ மண்டல மீதே மனோஹர
ராஜ கம்பீர நாடாளு நாயக வயலூர

ஆதரம் பயிலாரூரர் தோழமை
சேர்தல் கொண்டவரோடே முன்னாளினில்
ஆடல் வெம்பரி மீதேறி மாகயிலையிலேகி

ஆதி அந்தவுலாவாசு பாடிய
சேர்தல் கொங்குவை காவூர் நன்னாடதில்
ஆவினன்குடி வாழ்வான தேவர்கள் பெருமாளே


2

போத கந்தரு கோவே நமோநம
நீதி தங்கிய தேவா நமோநம
பூத லந்தனை யாள்வாய் நமோநம பணியாவும்

பூணுகின்றபி ரானே நமோநம
வேடர் தங்கொடி மாலா நமோநம
போத வன்புகழ் ஸ்வாமீ நமோநம அரிதான

வேத மந்திர ரூபா நமோநம
ஞான பண்டித நாதா நமோநம
வீர கண்டை கொள் தாளா நமோநம அழகான

மேனி தங்கிய வேளே நமோநம
வான பைங்கொடி வாழ்வே நமோநம
வீறு கொண்ட விசாகா நமோநம அருள்தாராய்

பாத கஞ்செறி சூராதி மாளவெ
கூர்மை கொண்டயி லாலே போராடியே
பார அண்டர்கள் வானொடு சேர்தர- அருள்வோனே

பாதி சந்திர னேசூடும் வேணியர்
சூல சங்கர னார்கீத நாயகர்
பார திண்புய மேசேரு சோதியர் கயிலாயர்

ஆதி சங்கர னார்பாக மாதுமை
கோல அம்பிகை மாதா மநோமணி
ஆயி சுந்தரி தாயான நாரணி அபிராமி

ஆவல் கொண்டுவி றாலே சீராடவே
கோம ளம்பல சூழ்கோயில் மீறிய மீறிய
ஆவினன்குடி வாழ்வான தேவர்கள் பெருமாளே

3

வாரணந்தனை நேரான மாமுலை
மீதணிந்திடு பூணார மாரொளி
வால சந்திர னேராக மாமுக மெழில்கூர

வாரணங்கிடு சேலான நீள்விழி
ஓலை தங்கிய வார்காது வாவிட
வான இன்சுதை மேலான வாயித ழமுதூறத்

தோரணஞ் செறி தார் வாழையேய் தொடை
மீதில் நின்றிடை நூல்போலு வாவியெ
தோகை யென்றிட வாகாக வூரன நடைமானார்

தோக கந்தனை மாமாயை யேவடி
வாக நின்றதெ னாஆய வோர்வது
தோணிடும்படி நாயேனுள் நீயருள் புரிவாயே

காரணந்தனை யோராநி சாசரர்
தாமடங்கலு மீறாக வானவர்
காவலிந்திர னாடாள வேயயில் விடும்வீரா

கார்விடந்தனை யூணாக வானவர்
வாழ்தரும்படி மேனாளி லேமிசை
காளகண்டம் காதேவ னார்தரு முருகோனே

ஆரணன்றனை வாதாடி யோருரை
ஓதுகின்றென வாராதெ னாவவ
ணாணவங்கெட வேகாவ லாமதி டும்வேலா

ஆதவன் கதி ரோவாது லாவிய
கோபுரங்கிளர் மாமாது மேவிய
ஆவினன்குடி யோனேசு ராதிபர் பெருமாளே.

4

மூல மந்திர மோதலிங்கிலை
யீவ திங்கிலை நேய மிங்கிலை
மோகன மிங்கிலை ஞான மிங்கிலை மடவார்கள்

மோக முண்டதி தாக முண்டப
சார முண்டப ராத முண்டிடு
மூக னென்றொரு பேருமுண்டருள் பயிலாத

கோல முங்குண வீனதுன்பர்கள்
வார்மை யும்பல வாகிவெந்தெழு
கோர கும்பியி லேவிழுந்திட நினைவாகிக்

கூடு கொண்டுழல் வேனை யன்பொடு
ஞான நெஞ்சினர் பாலிணங்கிடு
கூர்மை தந்தினி யாளவந்தருள் புரிவாயே

பீலி வெந்துய ராவி வெந்துவ
சோகு வெந்தமண் முகர் நெஞ்சிடை
பீதி கொண்டிட வாது கொண்டருள் எழுதேடு

பேணி யங்கெதி ராறு சென்றிட
மாற னும்பிணி தீரவஞ்சகர்
பீறு வெங்கழு வேற வென்றிடு முருகோனே

ஆலமுண்டவர் சோதி யங்கணர்
பாக மொன்றிய வாலை யந்தரி
ஆதி யந்தமு மான சங்கரி குமரேசா

ஆரணம்பயில் ஞான புங்கவ
சேவ லங்கொடி யான பைங்கர
ஆவினன்குடி வாழ்வு கொண்டருள் பெருமாளே.

5

வேயி சைந்தெழு தோள்கள் தங்கிய
மாதர் கொங்கையி லேமு யங்கிட
வீணிலுஞ் சில பாதகஞ் செய அவமேதான்

வீறு கொண்டுட னேவ ருந்தியு
மேயு லைந்தவ மேதிரிந்துள
மேக வன்றறி வேக லங்கிட வெகுதூரம்

போய லைந் தழலாகி நொந்து பின்
வாடிநைந் தென தாவி வெம்பியே
பூதலந் தனிலே மயங்கிய மதிபோகப்

போது கங்கையினீர் சொரிந் திரு
பாத பங்கயமே வணங்கியெ
பூசையுஞ் சிலவே புரிந்திட அருள்வாயே

தீயிசைந் தெழ வேயிலங்கையில்
ராவணன் சிரமேயரிந்தவர்
சேனையுஞ் செலமாள வென்றவன் மருகோனே

தேசமெங்கணு மேபுரந்திடு
சூர்மடிந்திட வேலின் வென்றவ
தேவர் தம்பதியாள அன்புசெய் திடுவோனே

ஆயி சுந்தரி நீலி பிங்கலை
போக அந்தரி சூலி குண்டலி
ஆதியம்பிகை வேத தந்திரி இடமாகும்

ஆலமுண்டரனாரி தைஞ்சவொர்
போத கந்தனை யேயு கந்தருள்
ஆவி னன்குடி மீதி லங்கிய பெருமாளே.

6

கோல குங்கும கற்புர மெட்டொன்
றான சந்தன வித்துரு மத்தின்
கோவை செண்பக தட்பம கிழ்ச்செங் கழுநீரின்

கோதை சங்கிலியுற்ற கழுத்தும்
பூஷணம் பல வொப்பனை மெச்சுங்
கூறு கொண்ட பணைத்தனம் விற்கும் பொதுமாதர்

பாலுடன் கனி சர்க்கரை சுத்தந்
தேனெனும் படி மெத்தருசிக்கும்
பாத கம்பகர் சொற் களிலிட்டம் பயிலாமே

பாதபங்கய முற்றிட வுட் கொண்
டோதுகின்ற திருப்புகழ் நித்தம்
பாடுமன் பது செய்ப்பதியிற்றந் தவனீயே

தால முன்பு படைத்த ப்ரபுச்சந்
தேகமின்றி மதிக்க வதிர்க்குஞ்
சாகரஞ் சுவறக்கிரி யெட்டுந் தலைசாயச்

சாடுகுன்றது பொட்டெழ மற்றுஞ்
சூரனும் பொடி பட்டிட யுத்தஞ்
சாத கஞ் செய்திருக் கைவிதிர்க்கும் தனிவேலா

ஆல முண்ட கழுத் தினிலக்குந்
தேவரென்பு நிரைத் தெரியிற் சென்
றாடுகின்ற தகப்பனுகக் குங் குருநாதா

ஆட கம்புனை பொற் குடம் வைக்குங்
கோபுரங்களினுச் சியுடுத்தங்
காவினன்குடி வெற்பினினிற்கும் பெருமாளே.

Bhavishya Puran :

The Prediction of Muhammad and Islam

As per Bhavishya Purana, Mahamada (Incarnation of Demon Tripurasura) = Dharmadushika (Polluter of Righteousness)

Religion founded by Mahamada = Paisachyadharma ( Demoniac Religion)

Original Sanskrit Version
Bhavishya Puran : Prati Sarg: Part III 3.3.5-27

Translationbhavishya puran muhammad tripurasur

Shri Suta Gosvami said: In the dynasty of King Shalivahana, there were ten kings who went to the heavenly planet after ruling for over 500 years. Then gradually the morality declined on the earth. At that time Bhojaraja was the tenth of the kings on the earth. When he saw that the moral law of conduct was declining he went to conquer all the directions of his country with ten-thousand soldiers commanded by Kalidasa. He crossed the river Sindhu and conquered over the gandharas, mlecchas, shakas, kasmiris, naravas and sathas. He punished them and collected a large ammount of wealth. Then the king went along with Mahamada (Muhammad), the preceptor of mleccha-dharma, and his followers to the great god, Lord Shiva, situated in the desert. He bathed Lord Shiva with Ganges water and worshipped him in his mind with pancagavya (milk, ghee, yoghurt, cow dung, and cow urine) and sandalwood paste, etc. After he offered some prayers and pleased him.

Suta Goswami said: After hearing the king’s prayers, Lord Shiva said: O king Bhojaraja, you should go to the place called Mahakakshvara, that land is called Vahika and now is being contaminated by the mlecchas. In that terrible country there no longer exists dharma. There was a mystic demon named Tripura(Tripurasura), whom I have already burnt to ashes, he has come again by the order of Bali. He has no origin but he achieved a benediction from me. His name is Mahamada(Muhammad) and his deeds are like that of a ghost. Therefore, O king, you should not go to this land of the evil ghost. By my mercy your intelligence will be purified.Hearing this the king came back to his country and Mahamada(Muhammad) came with them to the bank of the river Sindhu. He was expert in expanding illusion, so he said to the king very pleasingly: O great king, your god has become my servant. Just see, as he eats my remnants, so I will show you. The king became surprised when he saw this just before them. Then in anger Kalidasa rebuked Mahamada(Muhammad) “O rascal, you have created an illusion to bewilder the king, I will kill you, you are the lowest…”

That city is known as their site of pilgrimage, a place which was Madina or free from intoxication. Having a form of a ghost (Bhuta), the expert illusionist Mahamada(Muhammad) appeared at night in front of king Bhojaraja and said: O king, your religion is of course known as the best religion among all. Still I am going to establish a terrible and demoniac religion by the order of the Lord . The symptoms of my followers will be that they first of all will cut their genitals, have no shikha, but having beard, be wicked, make noise loudly and eat everything. They should eat animals without performing any rituals. This is my opinion. They will perform purification act with the musala or a pestle as you purify your things with kusha. Therefore, they will be known as musalman, the corrupters of religion. Thus the demoniac religion will be founded by me. After having heard all this the king came back to his palace and that ghost(Muhammad) went back to his place.

The intelligent king, Bhojaraj established the language of Sanskrit in three varnas – the brahmanas, kshatriyas and vaisyas – and for the shudras he established prakrita-bhasha, the ordinary language spoken by common men. After ruling his kingdom for 50 years, he went to the heavenly planet. The moral laws established by him were honored even by the demigods. The arya-varta, the pious land is situated between Vindhyacala and Himacala or the mountains known as Vindhya and Himalaya. The Aryans reside there, but varna-sankaras reside on the lower part of Vindhya. The musalman people were kept on the other side of the river Sindhu.

On the island of Barbara, Tusha and many others also the followers of Isamsiha were also situated as they were managed by a king or demigods.
Note This
Lord Shiva said: O king Bhojaraja, you should go to the place called Mahakakshvara, that land is called Vahika and now is being contaminated by the mlecchas. In that terrible country there no longer exists dharma. There was a mystic demon named Tripura(Tripurasur), whom I have already burnt to ashes, he has come again by the order of Bali. He has no origin but he achieved a benediction from me. His name is Mahamada(Muhammad) and his deeds are like that of a ghost.
According to Bhavishya Purana Muhammad was the rebirth of Tripurasura the Demon. Tripurasura was killed by Shiva in his(Tripurasura’s) past life.
Tripurasura’s Past life (Mythology[not from bhavishya purana])
Tripurasur was the son of Sage Gritsamad. One day the sage sneezed and from this was created a young boy who the Sage brought up as his own son. The sage taught the boy the Ganana Twam, Ganesh Mantra. Equipped with this mantra the boy meditated intensely on Lord Ganesh who ultimately blessed him. He was given three pura-s of gold silver and iron. Since he was the owner of these three pura-s he was given the name Tripur. Ganesh also bestowed on Tripur to be the most powerful, who none but Lord Shiva himself could destroy and after being destroyed by Lord Shiva he would attain mukti-salvation.
This boon made Tripur proud and he brought havoc in the entire world. He conquered the Nether world and then proceeded to takeover Heaven. He defeated Indra the king of heaven. His aggression made Lord Brahma hide in a lotus and Lord Vishnu in the Shirsagar. He soon also took over Lord Shiva’s Kailash Parvat and thus became the King of all the three worlds. The gods wondered on how to vanquish Tripurasur. Lord Narada told them that, since he had been granted a boon by Lord Ganesh himself it would be very difficult to vanquish him. He advised them to meditate on Lord Ganesh. Pleased Lord Ganesh decided to help the Gods.
Disguised as brahmin he visited Tripurasur and told him that he was a very enlightened Brahmin and could make for him three flying planes. Riding these he woud be able to go anywhere he wished within minutes. The planes could only be destroyed by Shiva.In return Lord Ganesh asked him to get him the statue of Chintamani which was at the Kailash Mountain. Lord Shiva refused to give the statue to Tripurasur’s messenger. The angry Tripurasur himself went to get the statue. A fierce battle started between him and Lord Shiva. He destroyed everything that belonged to the Lord Shiva who too retired to the Girikandar.
Lord Shiva too realized that he was unable to destroy Tripurasur because he had not paid his respects to Lord Ganesh. He recited the Shadaakshar Mantra to invoke Ganesh. On doing so from his mouth emerged Gajanan to grant Shiva a boon. Shiva continued his invocation of Ganesh who ultimately directed him on how Tripurasur could be killed. Lord Shiva was asked to recite the Sahastranam and then direct an arrow at the three pura-s of Tripurasur. Lord Shiva followed these instructions and finally vanquished Tripurasur.
The place where Lord Shiva invoked Lord Ganesh he also created a temple for him. The town surrounding this temple was called Manipur. The village Ranjangaon is considered to be the place where Lord Shiva himself sought the blessings of Ganesh and ultimately destroyed Tripurasur.
This prayer (chalisa) praises the Lord Shiva (Related to Tripurasura killing)
Tripurasur sang yuddha machayi,
sabahin kripa kari leen bachayi.
By fighting and killing the Demon Tripurasur,
You forgave everybody and saved the Gods.
Mlechha (meaning)
(from Sanskrit dictionary)

mlechha
??????? mleccha 1 A barbarian,a non Aryan ( One not speaking the Sanskrit Language or not conform in to Hindu or Aryan institutions),a foreigner in general
2 An Outcast, a very low man, Bodhayana thus defines the word:

gomAmsakhAdako yastu viruddhaM bahubhAshhate | sarvAchAravihInashcha mlechchha ityabhidhiiyate |

He who eats cow’s meat, and speaks a lot against shastras and he, who is also devoid of all forms of spiritual practice, is called a mlechha.

3 A sinner, A wicked person, A savage or barbarian race
etc…
Paisachya (meaning) (from Sanskrit dictionary)
Paisachya

Paisachya


Paisachya : Demonical, Infernal

Tripurasura : Asura meaning (from Sanskrit dictionary)

asura
Asura ????
1 An evil spirit,demon
2 A general name for the enemies of Gods,

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Kerala Home designs at its best!! Must watch !

புற்றுநோயை குணப்படுத்தும் நித்தியகல்யாணி . . .


மணல் பாங்கான இடத்திலும், தரிசு நிலங்களிலும், தானாக வளரும் தாவரம் நித்திய கல்யாணி. இது களர், மற்றும் சதுப்பில்லாத நிலத்திலும் வளரும். இது எல்லாப் பருவங்களிலும் பூக்கும் தன்மையுடையது. தமிழகமெங்கும் தானே வளர்கிறது. அழகுத் தாவரமாக தோட்டங்களில் வளர்க்கப்படுகிறது.பல காலமாக இதை வணிக ரீதியாகப் பயிரிடுகிறார்கள்.

நித்தியகல்யணியின் பிறப்பிடம் மடகாஸ்கர். மேலும் இந்தோனேசியா, இஸ்ரேல், தென் ஆப்பிரிக்கா மற்றும் அமெரிக்காவில் பரவியுள்ளன. இந்தியாவில் தமிழ்நாடு, கர்நாடகா, ஆந்திரா, அஸ்ஸாம், மத்தியப்பிரதேசம், மேற்கு வங்காளம் குஜராத் ஆகிய மாநிலங்களில் பயிரிடப்படுகிறது. தமிழ் நாட்டில் திருநெல்வேலி, தூத்துக்குடி, விருது நகர், இராமநாதபுரம் மற்றும் பெரம்பலூர் மாவட்டங்களில் தரிசு நிலங்களில் சாகுபடி செய்யப்படுகிறது.

ஐந்து இதழ் களையுடைய வெண்மை அல்லது இளஞ்சிவப்பு நிற மலர்களையும் மாற்றடுக்கில் அமைந்த இலைகளையும் உடைய குறுஞ்செடியாகும். இதன் இலை கசப்பாக இருப்பதால் ஆடுமாடுகள் இதனை உட்கொள்வதில்லை. இதனை சுடுகாட்டுப் பூ, கல்லறைப் பூ, பெரிவீன்க்கில் மதுக்கரை, முதலிய பல பெயர்களில் அழைக்கின்றனர். நித்திய கல்யாணியின் இலைகள், பூ, தண்டு மற்றும் வேர்கள் மருத்துவ பயன் கொண்டவை.

செயல்திறன்மிக்க வேதிப்பொருட்கள் . . .

ஆல்கலாய்டுகள், வின்க்ரிஸ்டின், வின்ப்ளாஸ்டின், அஜ்மாலின், ரவ்பேசின் (Raubasin) செர்பென்டைன் (Serpentine) ரிசெர்பைன் (Reserpine)

மனநோய்களை குணமாக்கும் . . .

இது இரத்த அழுத்தம், மனரீதியான நோய்களைக் குணப்படுத்தும். மாதவிடாயின் போது ஏற்படும் நோய்கள் குணமடையும். நித்தியக் கல்யாணி நாடி நடையைச் சமப்படுத்தவும், சிறுநீர்ச்சர்க்கரையைக் குறைக்கவும் மருந்தாகப் பயன்படுத்தலாம். மற்றும் அழகு சாதனப் பொருட்கள் தயாரிப்பில் பயன் படுத்தப்படுகிறது.

புற்றுநோய்க்கு மருந்து . . .

இதில் உள்ள 100 ஆல்கலாய்டுகளும் ஏறக்குறைய மருந்துகள்தான். அவற்றில் வின்க்ரிஸ்டின், வின்ப்ளாஸ்டின் ஆகியவை புற்றுநோய்க்கு மருந்தாகும். லுக்கேமியா மற்றும் லும்போமா புற்றுநோய்களை குணப்படுத்தும் மருந்துகளில் நித்தியகல்யாணியில் உள்ள ஆல்கலாய்டுகள் பயன்படுகின்றன. இதில் உள்ள அஜ்மாலின் கூட முக்கியமான வேதிப்பொருளாகும். ரவ்பேசின் (Raubasin) செர்பென்டைன் (Serpentine) ரிசெர்பைன் (Reserpine) இது தவிர மருந்து செடியான சர்ப்பகந்தியின் உற்பத்தி குறைவாக உள்ளதாலும் அதில் இருந்து கிடைக்கக்கூடிய முக்கிய மருந்து வேதிப் பொருள் நித்திய கல்யாணியிலிருந்து கிடைப்பதாலும் இத்தாவரம் மருத்துவத் துறையில் முக்கியத்துவம் பெற்றுள்ளது. குறைந்த ரத்த அழுத்தம், ரத்த அணுக்கள் குறைபாடு நோய்களையும் குணப்படுத்தும். பக்கவிளைவை ஏற்படுத்தாத மருந்துத் தாவரமாகும்.

நீரிழிவுநோய் கட்டுப்படும் . . .

நித்யகல்யாணியின் ஐந்தாறு பூக்களை அரை லிட்டர் நீரில் போட்டுக் காய்ச்சி கால் லிட்டராக்கி 1 நாளைக்கு 4 வேளை கொடுக்க அதிக தாகம், அதிக சிறுநீர்போக்கு அதனால் ஏற்படும் உடல் பலவீனம் சரியாகும். அதிக பசி என்றாலும், பசியின்மையும் தீரும். சித்த மருத்துவத்தில் நீரிழிவு நோய்க்கு மருந்தாக பயன்படுகிறது. நீரிழிவு நோயாளிகள் இதன் வேர்ச்சூரணத்தை 1 சிட்டிகை எடுத்து வெந்நீரில் கலந்து 2, 3 முறை உட்கொண்டால் சிறுநீர்ச் சர்கரை குறைந்து நோய் கட்டுப்படும்.

வருமானம் தரும் நித்யகல்யாணி . . .

நித்தியகல்யாணியின் இலைகளும், வேரும் ஏற்றுமதி செய்யப்படுகிறது. செடி வளர்ந்து 6 வது,9 வது மற்றும் 12 வது மாதங்களில் இலைகளைப் பறித்து பதப்படுத்தி ஏற்றுமதி செய்கிறார்கள். பின் 12 வது மாதத்தில் தரைமட்டத்தில் செடியை அறுத்து விட்டு வேர்கள் உழுது எடுத்துப் பதப்படுத்தி வியாபாரத்திற்கு அனுப்புகிறார்கள். நித்ய கல்யாணியின் இலைகள் அமெரிக்கா ஹங்கேரிக்கு ஏற்றுமதியாகிறது. இதன் வேர்கள் மேற்கு ஜெர்மனி, இத்தாலி, நெதர்லாந்து மற்றும் பிரிட்டன் ஆகிய நாடுகளுக்கு எற்றுமதி செய்யப்படுகிறது.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Vedic Mathematics – Introduction


Vedic mathematics is the natural home of mathematics as we know it today. Mathematics as a subject is the one invented by humans, for our own convenience to represent things and to do calculations, unlike other sciences whose basic laws are found in nature. In Mathematics, it is the humans who have devised the computational methods.

And we all know that the roots of modern mathematics go back to ancient India. To quote Albert Einstein

We should be thankful to the Indians who taught us how to count, without which no worthwhile scientific discovery would have been possible.

Those who have studied the Roman Number System readily understand the difficulty in it. Every single number has its own unique symbol in Roman System and after a few numbers the system runs out of symbols! L gets introduced to represent 50, C gets introduced to represent 100, D at 500, M at 1000 and so on. And so, no reasonable mathematics beyond simplest of additions is possible in this system.

Ancient Indians took a completely scientific approach to mathematics. Mathematics was not about symbols, it was more about the actual numbers. So Indians decided about using a given set of symbols to represent any and every number, so that we don’t have to search for new symbols as we climb towards larger numbers.

The result was a place value based system, where a base was taken first, which simply meant the number of symbols used to represent numbers. And the same symbols would be used everywhere, and as we ran out of symbols, we simply push the symbols to left to represent the new number, and reintroduce other symbols on the right side.

I feel that the world’s best innovation was this place value based mathematical system which forced Indians to invent zero too. As a saying goes, the greatest contribution of Indians to world is Nothing! Nothing meaning Zero

Please note that zero was only a byproduct of this place value based system. The most important concept here is the place value system itself, not Zero.

Let me explain how.

First let us consider a base. Say 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. So these are our nine symbols for base 10.

Now ancient Indians devised a system where any number however big or small could be represented using only the nine symbols mentioned above.

The nine symbols used today are 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9

Why 9, why not 10 symbols? The actual idea was a base 10 system because humans have 10 fingers, so base 10 looks more natural. But one symbol was left out to make room for symbol promotion, a symbol increases its value 10 times when it shifts one place to the left! This amazing place value based system then can be used to represent any large number however big, without having to add any new symbols to the list!

So what next? well, just repeat the cycle by pushing the first number again one place left (called the ten’s place), and then create a new number by repeating the symbols in the original place (called the unit’s place).

Why was zero invented OR why should there be nothing? To understand this, consider 101. If 1 is in hundred’s place and 1 is in unit’s place, how do we represent it symbolically showing there is nothing between the two one’s in the tenth place?

This is when ancient Indians invented Zero. Zero is called Shunya in Sanskrit, meaning nothing. So zero as a place holder was used to represent an empty space, with no value stored there. Zero is not a number, in fact it was invented to say, there is no numeric value here. 100 means there is no value here(0) and here(0) at the end, but only here(1)

So we had 10 after 9, where the symbol 1 in 10 meant the value of 1 is ten times more than its value in 1, and this was visually indicated by having 0 in the unit place. An amazing system this was, where the value of a symbol is decided depending upon where it is placed! so 1 in 212 is different from 1 in 199! You never run out of symbols here, unlike the roman system!

Vedic Mathematics was again a continuation of this basic mathematical principles, where methods were devised by ancient Indians to make mathematics easy. So easy that, what we call to be difficult problems in modern mathematics, can be done mentally without using a pen and paper in the vedic mathematics! Why? Because vedic mathematics was the math devised by the very same people, the ancient Indians, who had created the basics of the mathematics. They clearly knew how to play with the numbers!

Why then did the vedic mathematics did not enter west along with place value and zero? Well, because most of the modern mathematics was popularized in the west by the arab merchants who borrowed the simple ancient Indian math, which was very helpful for their trade, and popularized this system in the west when they went there to trade the Indian spices, diamonds and other goods. Which is why the base 10 symbols (1 to 9) are called Hindu-Arabic numerals, invented by Hindus i.e ancient Indians and popularized in the west by Arab merchants.

Ancient India was the world’s largest exporter of goods! Entire europe panicked, when ottoman turks captured constantinople by blocking the land route to India in 1453, the turks demanded that the european/arab traders pay a heavy tax to pass to India through Constantinople which was the connecting land route from Europe to India!

Panicked by this european countries started a series of naval adventures to find a sea route to India. Note that it was not the Indians who were desperate to find a sea route to Europe, it was the other way round! Just imagine how dependent the rest of the world was on India then! What is America today was discovered and known to the rest of world because of this quest to search a sea route to India! Columbus who had set out to discover a sea route to India, thought he had reached India when he touched the west indies island and the american continent, which is why west indies is called so, and the native americans were called Red Indians by him!! America was discovered, thanks to India!

Which is what I keep stressing to the Indian youth that we need to bring back those golden days to make India a great power!

Coming back to the vedic mathematics, the ancient greeks learnt mathematics from the Indians. The famous historian Albert Burk, says that Pythagoras visited Arakonam, India, and learnt the so called Pythagorean theorem there! The very fact that Pythagoras never gave a proof to his theorem, proves that he did not discover it.

Baudhayana, a mathematician who lived in ancient India, centuries before Pythargos, has written a list of Pythagorean triplets discovered algebraically, has stated the so called Pythagorean theorem, and also has given a geometrical proof of the Pythagorean theorem for an isosceles right angled triangle!

Another great aspect of vedic mathematics is there is no single fixed way of solving a problem. Students can devise their own better ways also! And this gives scope for ample creativity and fun. Students will ENJOY this form of mathematics, because they UNDERSTAND it, unlike the methods taught in the schools and colleges today where for ex, many students who solve differential equations, really have absolutely no idea of what they are solving or what a limit means!

The beauty of vedic mathematics is the way in which the entire system is inter related, where when you know something is a reverse of an existing thing, all you have to do is to reverse the method to calculate that something! For ex, the multiplication method when reversed becomes the division method, because division is the opposite of multiplication!! The method of finding squares when reversed becomes the method of finding square roots!!

In vedic mathematics, maths becomes , not something that is difficult/cryptic to understand, but like reading a novel or like watching a movie, full of fun and entertainment

Dr David Gray says . .the role played by India in the development (of the scientific revolution in Europe) is no mere footnote, easily and inconsequentially swept under the rug of Eurocentric bias. To do so is to distort history, and to deny India one of its greatest contributions to world civilization .

He also says, The Yajurveda Samhitaa, one of the Vedic texts predating Euclid and the Greek mathematicians by at least a millennium, lists names for each of the units of ten up to 10 to the twelfth power (paraardha). Later Buddhist and Jain authors extended this list as high as the fifty-third power, far exceeding their Greek contemporaries, who lacking a system of enumeration were unable to develop abstract mathematical concepts.

The place value system of enumeration is in fact built into the Sanskrit language, where each power of ten is given a distinct name. Not only are the units ten, hundred and thousand (dasha, shatha, sahasra) named as in English, but also ten thousand, hundred thousand, ten million, hundred million (ayuta, laksha, koti, vyarbuda), and so forth up to the fifty-third power, providing distinct names where English makes use of auxillary bases such as thousand, million, etc.

George Ifrah, the professor of mathematics who traveled around the world in search of origin of numbers has said that By giving each power of ten an individual name, the Sanskrit system gave no special importance to any number. Thus the Sanskrit system is obviously superior to that of the Arabs (for whom the thousand was the limit), or the Greeks and Chinese (whose limit was ten thousand) and even to our own system (where the names thousand, million etc. continue to act as auxillary bases). Instead of naming the numbers in groups of three, four or eight orders of units, the Indians, from a very early date, expressed them taking the powers of ten and the names of the first nine units individually. In other words, to express a given number, one only had to place the name indicating the order of units between the name of the order of units immediately immediately below it and the one immediately above it. That is exactly what is required in order to gain a precise idea of the place-value system, the rule being presented in a natural way and thus appearing self-explanatory. To put it plainly, the Sanskrit numeral system contained the very key to the discovery of the place-value system.

Irfah concluded that place-value numeral system developed in India and this system is embedded in the Sanskrit language

Before we start the actual Vedic mathematic lessons, I strongly recommend that you read this article http://www.infinityfoundation.com/ECITmathframeset.html on the Origin of Mathematics by Dr David Gray.

The Aztec Calendar is known as the Aztec Chakra to Hindu Astronomers. (National Museum of Anthropology, Mexico.)

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A Gupta coin depicting Chandragupta

Photo: A Gupta coin depicting Chandragupta