Sabtu, 06 Maret 2010

Kashmir Exiles’ Dream of Returning Comes Closer

Source: www.independent.co.uk

KASHMIR, INDIA, February 22, 2010: The 400,000 Hindus driven out by Muslim extremists 20 years ago hope talks beginning this week will bring them a step closer to going home.

There are positive signs, for in recent months several long-closed Hindu temples have been restored and reopened, with the help of the Muslim community, and a key Hindu festival was celebrated in Srinagar for the first time 20 years. A Pandit organization in the city hopes to reopen 60 more temples in the valley this year. Muslim leaders admit more needs to be done, both in providing homes and jobs and in building sufficient trust to persuade Hindus to return. Occasions at which the community comes together include the religious festivals it has traditionally marked. On a recent afternoon in the Lajpat Nagar neighborhood of Delhi, scores of Kashmiri Hindus gathered to celebrate perhaps the most important, Shivaratri, or the “Night of Shiva”.

In January 19, 1990, the Hindus of Kashmir, better known as the Kashmiri Pandits, were forced to flee the valley between the Great Himalayas and the Pir Panjal mountains in which their families had lived for centuries. In just three months, more than 400,000 Hindus were scattered across India and beyond. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, were killed. Two decades later, fewer than 3,000 Hindus remain and the government of India says it is determined to help those who want to return to the homes they were forced to leave. But the Pandits say the government does little but talk. Even now, many are still enduring lives of quiet misery in inadequate refugee camps.

Jumat, 05 Maret 2010

Gubernur Bali Resmikan Pembangunan Markandeya Yoga City

(Bali Post) - GUBERNUR Bali Made Mangku Pastika membuka secara resmi even International Bali India Yoga Festival (IBIYF II) II yang diselenggarakan di Banjar Gunung Sari, Desa Tegal Linggah, Kecamatan Sukasada, Kabupaten Buleleng, Kamis (4/3) kemarin. Pada saat bersamaan Gubernur juga meresmikan dimulainya pembangunan pusat yoga internasional Markandeya Yoga City yang diprakarsai Yayasan Bali India (Bali India Foundation). Pembukaan IBIYF II ditandai dengan pemukulan gong sebanyak lima kali, sementara peresmian pembangunan Markandeya Yoga City ditandai dengan peletakan batu pertama serta mendem pedagingan.

Markandeya Yoga City merupakan salah satu pusat pendidikan spiritual, khususnya yoga, yang diharapkan mampu menjadi tempat belajar yoga terbesar di dunia. Dr. Somvir (Ketua Yayasan Bali India) dan Prof. Nyoman Sirta (Ketua Panitia IBIYF II) mengemukakan, dipilihnya Banjar Gunung Sari Desa Tegal Linggah, Kecamatan Sukasada sebagai lokasi pembangunan Markandeya Yoga City karena memiliki sejarah sangat erat dengan perjalanan spiritual Rsi Markandeya, tokoh spiritual Hindu asal India yang mendirikan Pura Besakih.

Menurut kedua tokoh ini, Rsi Markandeya beryoga di lokasi ini sebelum melakukan persembahyangan di Tirta Kuning dekat Danau Tamblingan hingga akhirnya menanam panca datu di Pura Basukian, Besakih.

Itulah sebabnya, kata keduanya, Yayasan Bali India memilih lokasi ini dan sekaligus mengabadikan nama Rsi Markandeya. ''Kami ingin membawa citra Bali ke seluruh dunia, dan ini merupakan tempat pendidikan yoga yang terluas di dunia,'' ujar Dr. Somvir seraya menambahkan perlu waktu lama untuk mewujudkan daerah ini sesuai harapan.

Pembangunan pusat pendidikan yoga ini mendapat dukungan penuh dari penduduk setempat dimana luas keseluruhannya diperkirakan mencapai 11 hektar.

Gubernur Bali Made Mangku Pastika dan Wakil Bupati Buleleng Made Arga Pynatih dalam sambutannya mengemukakan, momentum peresmian pembangunan pusat yoga dan pembukaan IBIYF II ini merupakan momentum yang sangat bersejarah.

Menurut kedua pemimpin ini, peletakan batu pertama Markandeya Yoga City ini merupakan pertanda dimulainya suatu pembangunan dan pengembangan agama, adat dan budaya yang sejak berabad-abad lamanya telah dijadikan pedoman oleh masyarakat Bali.

Gubernur Bali Made Mangku Pastika berharap, dengan dibangunnya Markandeya Yoga City Bali yang sudah dikenal dengan berbagai predikat akan semakin dikenal sebagai provinsi damai dan demokrasi. ''Hari ini dilakukan upaya menapak kembali jejak spiritual Rsi Markandeya untuk meletakkan dasar-dasar agama Hindu di Indonesia. Kita berharap, mulai hari ini Bali akan memancarkan aura spiritual yoga kepada dunia bahwa Bali senantiasa mengumandangkan kedamaian sebagaimana doa yang setiap hari disampaikan orang Bali, Shantih, Shantih, Shantih,'' kata Gubernur.

Sebagai pribadi dan pimpinan pemerintahan di Bali, Gubernur menyampaikan terima kasih dan penghargaan yang tinggi kepada Yayasan Bali India dan masyarakat Gunung Sari pada khususnya, dan masyarakat Buleleng pada umumnya. Berkaitan pembangunan pusat yoga ini, sebelumnya Gubernur berkesempatan mapunia 100 truk batu kapur (limestone) untuk pengerasan badan jalan sepanjang 3 km menuju lokasi. (r)

Berebut Sumbangan, 63 Orang Tewas di Kuil

Liputan6.com, Lucknow: Ternyata tidak hanya di Indonesia saja, pembagian sembako gratis berujung maut. Di India pembagian sumbangan juga dapat mematikan. Menurut pejabat senior pemerintah India jumlah korban tewas akibat berebut sumbangan di sebuah kuil mencapai 63 orang dan puluhan lainnya terluka akibat terinjak. Demikian dirilis Associated Press, Kamis (4/3).

Pejabat setempat, Ashok Kumar, mengatakan kerumunan ribuan orang yang berdesakan juga menyebabkan gerbang di kompleks candi di Kunda, roboh. Sementara, Brij Lal, pejabat kepolisian setempat kedatangan ribuan warga miskin di kuil untuk menerima paket sedekah yang berisi pakaian dan beberapa peralatan, dalam upacara peringatan kematian istri pemimpin spritual Hindu, Kripalu Maharaj.

Sumber Associated menyebutkan pembagian sedekah berujung maut di kuil di India, merupakan hal lumrah. Di daerah terpencil dan tidak memiliki fasilitas untuk mengontrol pertemuan besar, ratusan hingga ribuan orang yang berkumpul berdesakan dapat menyebabkan kematian. Sumber kantor berita Perancis AFP menyebutkan, setidaknya 220 orang tewas terinjak di kuil Hindu, Mehrangarh Fort, di kaki gunung Himalaya, 2008 lalu.(AYB)

Kamis, 04 Maret 2010

Mutiara Bhagavad-Gita


Tak menyakiti, kedamaian dalam segala situasi, rasa puas dengan apa yang ada, tekad ke arah spiritual, keinginan untuk memberi, kemasyhuran dan kehinaan -- semua hal yang berbeda dari makhluk-makhluk ini terpancar dari-Ku semata.


Yang Maha Esa bukan saja merupakan asal-usul alam semesta ini, Yang Tak Terlihat dan Tak Terbayangkan oleh kita, tetapi juga merupakan Kekuatan Maha Dahsyat Yang Tak Terbatas di alam semesta ini. Dia Bukan saja merupakan asal-usul yang baik saja tetapi la juga pencipta yang tidak baik dan negatif sifatnya yang berada di dalam pikiran dan ulah para makhluk ciptaan-Nya. Apakah itu pikiran atau situasi yang menyenangkan atau menyusahkan. Apakah itu bersifat positif maupun sebaliknya, semua itu berasal dari-Nya. Dia adalah sumber dari segala-galanya tanpa diskriminasi. Bukan berarti bahwa Yang Maha Esa ini buruk atau negatif sifatnya, tidak! Semua itu adalah ciptaan-ciptaan-Nya yang diperankan atau ditugaskan pada Sang Maya, Ilusi Yang Maha Esa. Dia sendiri bersemayam di atas semua ilusi ini, jauh di atas Sang Maya dan tak terpengaruh sedikitpun dengan pekerjaan Sang Maya ini. Dengan semua "permainan-Nya", maka Yang Maha Esa ini menunjang dan menjalankan dunia ini, memang Maha Misterius Dan Maha Gaib keberadaan Yang Maha Kuasa ini dengan segala Kekuatan dan Kasihnya Yang Tak Terbatas itu. Om Tat Sat. Om Shanti Shanti Shanti Om.

Inspiration


Prayer is not asking, it is yearning of the soul for communion with God.
Swami Sivananda (1887-1963)

Fifteen Fabulous Festivals

Source: www.hinduismtoday.com/festivals/

KAPAA, HI, USA, March 2, 2010: Hinduism Today is reaching out with accurate and uplifting information about Hinduism for Hindu communities and your local newspapers. And you can help.

Imprecise information, unflattering photos and an obsession for the bizarre are common when the media features our faith. For most Hindus, there seems little or nothing that can be done about this, except to practice detachment and soulful acceptance. That was the tone at a 2007 Hindu conference in Dallas, Texas, when suddenly the leaders collectively declared “Enough.” Determined to complain less and do more, they masterminded the Hindu Festival Media Initiative, a strategic project designed by Hinduism Today in collaboration with the Sanatana Dharma Foundation.

We selected fifteen major festivals as the core of the project and, in collaboration with Soumya Sitaraman of Bangalore, created a series of “pagers,” ready-to-print, newspaper-sized posters. They match standard US newspapers in journalistic style and size, making them easy to use, especially for small publishers with limited staff.

Newspapers (especially in these days of budgetary cutbacks) welcome input from faith communities if the material is of high editorial quality, with polished text and eye-catching photos, more so if it’s free. Motivated Hindus are encouraged to approach their local newspapers’ religion or lifestyle editors with the appropriate pager in the weeks before each festival. Editors may elect to use them as is, or draw from the graphics and words and adapt them to their own style. Television and public radio stations can also be approached; the pagers can provide a comprehensive and authentic summary for voice-overs. They are available on the web as teaching resources for families, schools, summer camps, temples, ashrams, bloggers, etc.

Talk to your local temple board, the local Hindu association and newspapers in your area. On this page you will find PDF’s of the pages. Download the PDF and take it to the editor of your local newspaper, or send them the URL to come to this page you are reading with the link http://www.hinduismtoday.com/festivals/

No matter where you live, these festival summaries will provide your local media with informative, factual information about your faith. By preemptively explaining how Hindus experience and understand Sanatana Dharma, we bridge the we-they cultural gap and participate proactively in bringing more tolerance, acceptance and understanding into the world.

Exploring Hinduism Today’s April/May/June Issue, Now Available


Source: www.hinduismtoday.com

KAPAA, HI, USA, March 2, 2010: The April-May-June edition of Hinduism’s flagship spiritual magazine, Hinduism Today is now available on bookstores and newsstands everywhere and also in digital format. This issue brings you a new installment of our acclaimed Hindu History for Children insight and a feature on the power and magic of Hindu festivals.

In this issue we explore 15 of the major Hindu holy days in the 32-page feature “Festivals!” It’s a marvelous romp through the year, stopping every month or so to tell about our celebrations. Festivals bind Hindu culture to the devotees, touching our lives, connecting families and neighbors, bringing together entire cities. Soumya Sitaraman, author of Random House’s “Following the Hindu Moon” helped the Hinduism Today editorial staff by contributing fascinating details, typical holiday recipes and her mother’s marvelous photography. The editors added “Fact & Fiction” sections to explore (and emend) some of the gnarly myths that people in the West hold about Sanatana Dharma. This is a great resource that can find its way into the schoolroom, the summer camp, anywhere students are learning about Hinduism past and present. As you would expect, it is elegantly designed by the HT team. See more about this interactive initiative to strengthen the Hindu world in the next HPI article, below.

A 16-page history lesson is the fourth in our series aimed at a sixth-grade audience. It covers the period from 1850 to 1947, when India was colonized by the British. As our readers know, Indian history in Western textbooks for children is appallingly inaccurate and skewed toward the strange. This segment continues our effort to rectify that, to give well-researched lessons that tell the true story of India’s place in the world down through the centuries. Here we present the facts about the British occupancy, their economic exploitation and sometimes ruthless repressions. Get ready to discover lots of new insights into those difficult days before Independence.

When our publisher, Satguru Bodhinatha Veylanswami, was in Melbourne in December, he gave a wonderful keynote talk on yoga and its place in the world, particularly its applicability to nonHindus. His current editorial gives us a glimpse of that talk, “Can Everyone Benefit from Yoga?”

And Bodhinatha’s Australian itinerary included the 2009 Parliament of the World’s Religions, touted as the world’s largest interfaith meeting–a reprise of the 1893 meeting that featured Swami Vivekananda. As part of the 2009 program, a rare gathering of Hindu leaders from around the world met to discuss key modern issues, trends and challenges. Our story brings you the opinions of the swamis who attended from all over the world. Their views of climate change, one of the key topics in Melbourne, will inform and perhaps surprise you.