Wednesday, March 10, 2010

The four pillars of devotion

I am starting this article to explain about the four pillars of
devotion in hinduism view.

To be started ...

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Why be a Vegetarian - 4

Thirukural in tamil

தன்னூன் பெருக்கற்குத் தான்பிறிது ஊனுண்பான்
எங்ஙனம் ஆளும் அருள்? 251


தன் உடலை வளர்பதற்காக வேறொரு உயிரின் உடலை உணவாக்கி கொள்பவர் எப்படி
கருணை உள்ளம் கொண்டவராக இருக்க முடியும்


பொருளாட்சி போற்றாதார்க்கு இல்லை அருளாட்சி
ஆங்கில்லை ஊன்தின் பவர்க்கு. 252


பொருளை பேணி காதிடதவர்க்கு பொருள் உடையவர் எனும் சிறப்பு இல்லை ;
புலால் உண்பவற்கு அருள் உடையவர் என்னும் சிறப்பு இல்லை

படைகொண்டார் நெஞ்சம்போல் நன்னூக்காது ஒன்றன்
உடல்சுவை உண்டார் மனம். 253


படை கருவியை பயன் படுத்துவோர் நெஞ்சமும், ஒரு உயிரின் உடலை
சுவைத்து உண்பவர் நெஞ்சமும் அருளுடமையை போற்ற கூடியவை அல்ல.


அருளல்ல யாதெனின் கொல்லாமை கோறல்
பொருளல்லது அவ்வூன் தினல். 254


கொல்லாமை அருளுடைமை ஆகும் ; கொல்லுதல் அருளற்ற செயலாகும் .
எனவே ஊன் அருந்துதல் அறம் ஆகாது

உண்ணாமை உள்ளது உயிர்நிலை ஊனுண்ண
அண்ணாத்தல் செய்யாது அளறு. 255


உயிர்களை உணவாக்கி கொள்ள சகதிக்குழியும் வாய் திறவாது; புலால் உண்ணாதவர்கள்
இருப்பதால் பல உயிர்கள் கொல்லபடாமல் வாழ்கின்றன


தினற்பொருட்டால் கொல்லாது உலகெனின் யாரும்
விலைப்பொருட்டால் ஊன்றருவா ரில். 256


புலால் உண்பதற்காக உலகினர் உயிர்களை கொல்லதிருபின், புலால் விற்பனை செய்யும்
தொழிலை எவரும் மேற்கொள்ள மாட்டார்கள்.


உண்ணாமை வேண்டும் புலாஅல் பிறிதொன்றன்
புண்ணது உணர்வார்ப் பெறின். 257


புலால் என்பது வேறொரு உயிரின் உடற்புன் என்பதை உணர்ந்தோர்
அதனை உண்ணாமல் இருக்கவேண்டும்

செயிரின் தலைப்பிரிந்த காட்சியார் உண்ணார்
உயிரின் தலைப்பிரிந்த ஊன். 258


மாசற்ற மதி உடையோர் , ஒரு உயிரை பிரித்து அதன் ஊனை உன்ன மாட்டார்கள்

அவிசொரிந் தாயிரம் வேட்டலின் ஒன்றன்
உயிர்செகுத் துண்ணாமை நன்று. 259


நெய் போன்ற பொருட்களை தீயில்இட்டு ஆயிரம் வேள்விகள் நடத்துவதைவிட
உண்பதற்காக ஓர் உயிரை போக்காமல் இருப்பது நல்லது


கொல்லான் புலாலை மறுத்தானைக் கைகூப்பி
எல்லா உயிருந் தொழும். 260


புலால் உன்னதவர்களையும் அதற்காக உயிர்களை கொல்லதவர்களையும்
எல்லா உயிரினங்களும் வணங்கி வாழ்த்தும்

To be continued..


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Friday, March 5, 2010

Why be a Vegetarian - 3

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The Mahabharata and Bhagavad Gita View of Vegetarianism
The very name of the cows is aghnya, indicating that they should never be slaughtered. Who, then could slay them? Surely, one who kills a cow or a bull commits the most heinous crime.
Mahabharata, Shantiparva 262.47. FS,pg. 94

The purchaser of flesh performs himsa (violence) by his wealth; he who eats flesh does so by enjoying its taste; the killer does himsa by actually tying and killing the animal. Thus, there are three forms of killing: he who brings flesh or sends for it, he who cuts off the limbs of an animal, and he who purchases, sells or cooks flesh and eats it -all of these are to be considered meat-eaters.
Mahabharata, Anu. 115.40. FS, pg 90

He who desires to augment his own flesh by eating the flesh of other creatures lives in misery in whatever species he may take his birth.
Mahabharata, Anu. 115.47. FS, pg. 90

One should never do that to another which one regards as injurious to one's own self. This, in brief, is the rule of dharma. Yielding to desire and acting differently, one becomes guilty of adharma.
Mahabharata 18.113.8.

Those high-souled persons who desire beauty, faultlessness of limbs, long life, understanding, mental and physical strength and memory should abstain from acts of injury.
Mahabharata 18.115.8.

Ahimsa is the highest dharma. Ahimsa is the best tapas. Ahimsa is the greatest gift. Ahimsa is the highest self-control. Ahimsa is the highest sacrifice. Ahimsa is the highest power. Ahimsa is the highest friend. Ahimsa is the highest truth. Ahimsa is the highest teaching.
Mahabharata 18.116.37-41.

He who sees that the Lord of all is ever the same in all that is-immortal in the field of mortality-he sees the truth. And when a man sees that the God in himself is the same God in all that is, he hurts not himself by hurting others. Then he goes, indeed, to the highest path.
Bhagavad Gita 13. 27-28. BgM, pg. 101

Nonviolence, truth, freedom from anger, renunciation, serenity, aversion to fault-finding, sympathy for all beings, peace from greedy cravings, gentleness, modesty, steadiness, energy, forgiveness, fortitude, purity, a good will, freedom from pride-these belong to a man who is born for heaven.
Bhagavad Gita 16.2-3. BGM, pg. 109

To be continued..
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Why be a Vegetarian - 2

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VEDA'S View about vegetarianism

LET YOUR AIMS BE COMMON, and your hearts be of one accord, and all of you be of one mind, so you may live well together.
Rig Veda Samhita 10.191

Protect both our species, two-legged and four-legged. Both food and water for their needs supply. May they with us increase in stature and strength. Save us from hurt all our days, O Powers!
Rig Veda Samhita 10.37.11. VE, 319

One who partakes of human flesh, the flesh of a horse or of another animal, and deprives others of milk by slaughtering cows, O King, if such a fiend does not desist by other means, then you should not hesitate to cut off his head.
Rig Veda Samhita, 10.87.16, FS 90

Peaceful be the earth, peaceful the ether, peaceful heaven, peaceful the waters, peaceful the herbs, peaceful the trees. May all Gods bring me peace. May there be peace through these invocations of peace. With these invocations of peace which appease everything, I render peaceful whatever here is terrible, whatever here is cruel, whatever here is sinful. Let it become auspicious, let everything be beneficial to us.
Atharva Veda Samhita 10. 191. 4

Those noble souls who practice meditation and other yogic ways, who are ever careful about all beings, who protect all animals, are the ones who are actually serious about spiritual practices.
Atharva Veda Samhita 19.48.5. FS, 90

If we have injured space, the earth or heaven, or if we have offended mother or father, from that may Agni, fire of the house, absolve us and guide us safely to the world of goodness.
Atharva Veda Samhita 6.120.1. VE, 636
You must not use your God-given body for killing God's creatures, whether they are human, animal or whatever.
Yajur Veda Samhita 12.32. FS, 90

May all beings look at me with a friendly eye. May I do likewise, and may we all look on each other with the eyes of a friend.
Yajur Veda 36.18.

Nonviolence is all the offerings. Renunciation is the priestly honorarium. The final purification is death. Thus all the Divinities are established in this body.
Krishna Yajur Veda, Prana Upanishad 46-8. VE, 413-14

To the heavens be peace, to the sky and the earth; to the waters be peace, to plants and all trees; to the Gods be peace, to Brahman be peace, to all men be peace, again and again-peace also to me! O earthen vessel, strengthen me. May all beings regard me with friendly eyes! May I look upon all creatures with friendly eyes! With a friend's eye may we regard each other!
Shukla Yajur Veda Samhita 36.17-18. VE, 306; 342

No pain should be caused to any created being or thing.
Devikalottara agama, JAV 69-79. RM, 116

To be continued...

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Why be a Vegetarian - 1

Today’s mechanical life makes us to only run, it does not allow us to stand and think. We are in a great nation blessed with lot of natural resources, Proper climate, etc and other essential things for leading a peaceful life. But the important thing is we INDIA had provided the greatest wisdom to the world. Our nation is rich in wisdom; every child born here will be able to achieve the highest level of wisdom, if there is even a minimal effort. Now let us discuss about one of the preaching’s of our nation to the world ‘The Vegetarianism’.
When we look into the Indian history, the 2000 year old Tamil literature ‘THIRUKURAL’ clearly emphasis on the vegetarianism. ‘THIRUKURAL’ is considered as holy book for all Tamil peoples. Thirukural is a 2 line poem that speaks about moral living. Saint Thiruvalluvar has composed that. There are 1330 poems totally in 130 Titles. Out of that 2 Titles are completely dedicated to Vegetarianism, so we have 20 poems in total.
We can see the from Thirukural View here.

The Tirukural, Preeminent Ethical Scripture

Perhaps nowhere is the principle of nonmeat-eating so fully and eloquently expressed as in the Tirukural, written in the Tamil language by a simple weaver saint in a village near Madras over 2,000 years ago. Considered the world's greatest ethical scripture, it is sworn on in South Indian courts of law.

It is the principle of the pure in heart never to injure others, even when they themselves have been hatefully injured. What is virtuous conduct? It is never destroying life, for killing leads to every other sin.
312; 321, Thiru Walluwar (TW)


Harming others, even enemies who harmed you unprovoked, assures incessant sorrow. The supreme principle is this: never knowingly harm any one at any time in any way.
313; 317, TW


What is the good way? It is the path that reflects on how it may avoid killing any living creature. Refrain from taking precious life from any living being, even to save your own life.
324; 327, TW


How can he practice true compassion Who eats the flesh of an animal to fatten his own flesh?
TK 251, TW


Riches cannot be found in the hands of the thriftless. Nor can compassion be found in the hearts of those who eat meat.
TK 252, TW


Goodness is never one with the minds of these two: one who wields a weapon and one who feasts on a creature's flesh.
TK 253, TW


If you ask, "What is kindness and what is unkind?" it is not killing and killing. Thus, eating flesh is never virtuous.
TK 254, TW


Life is perpetuated by not eating meat.The clenched jaws of hell hold those who do.
TK 255, TW


If the world did not purchase and consume meat, there would be none to slaughter and offer meat for sale.
TK 256, TW


When a man realizes that meat is the butchered flesh of another creature, he must abstain from eating it.
TK 257, TW


Perceptive souls who have abandoned passion will not feed on flesh abandoned by life.
TK 258, TW


Greater than a thousand ghee offerings consumed in sacrificial fires is to not sacrifice and consume any living creature.
TK 259, TW


All that lives will press palms together in prayerful adoration of those who refuse to slaughter and savor meat.
TK 260, TW

To be continued ....