|
|
 |
April 1992
India's Vice-President Inaugurates Vedic Conference
Murthy, C.S.H.N.
Tirupathi Devasthanam convened a
four-day National Vedic Conference January 28, 1992, on Tirumala Hill in
an effort to recover the ancient Vedic traditions. By spreading a message
of equality and love the conference hoped to contain the violence and
hatred growing day-by-day in India. This mammoth event was attended by
1,500 Vedic seers and scholars from all over the country - including
India's Vice-President. A festive feeling pervaded everywhere, aided by
the pleasant breeze on Tirumala Hill and the sky's serene heavenly clouds.
It was a journey into the Vedic past aboard the time machine of H.G.
Wells. Everyone here expressed a deep yearning for a return of the
beautiful Vedic Age.
Swami Shri Jayendra Saraswati of Kanchi and 18
other heads of various monasteries presided over the meeting. During the
weeklong deliberation, scores of research papers dealing with scientific
aspects of Vedas were read. The last such large-scale scientific analysis
of the Vedas occurred before India's independence.
In his inaugural
address, Dr. Shankar Dayal Sharma, the Vice-President of India and a great
Sanskrit scholar and a constitutional expert in his own right, suggested
the need for bringing out Vedic mathematics on a par with European
mathematics. Sharma pointed out that Professor Peter Beckman in his recent
book on History of Pi referred to His Holiness, Shri Bharathi Krishna
Thirtha's interesting book, Vedic Mathematics. Beckman cited the swami's
insightful analysis brought to light the structured mathematical thinking
of ancient Vedic scholars. Sharma said that the Vedas contain millions of
scientific solutions.
Professor Kuppa Siva Subramanyam explained
the scientific aspects involved in Vedic hymns which invoke gods for
timely rains. Other scholars brought out the botanical and agricultural
knowledge hidden in Vedas. Some gave a discourse on Vedic dialectics and
logic and showed how they are relevant today. Others described social
relations such as matrimonial sanctity, moral life and non-violence. They
said that peaceful, social co-existence and love was the universal
governing law found in the Vedas.
The Tirumala Tirupathi
Devasthanam pledged to publish the research papers read out here during
the conference. The Chief Minister of Andrah Pradesh, N. Janardhan Reddy,
promised to incorporate portions of the Vedas into the state's school
curricula right from upper primary level. A grand exhibit of Vedic texts
written by various scholars of eminence was the high point for many of the
conference visitors.
Each day's events were followed by a cultural
festival which included music and dance by eminent carnatic musicians and
bharata natyam dancers. The conference concluded February 3rd on a grand
note with a feeling that, among all the ancient traditions, the Vedic
tradition is the superior and in certain respects more scientific than
today's science.
Article copyright Himalayan
Academy.
Return to the Table of Contents
Return to Hinduism Today Home Page
|