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Archive for April 17th, 2008

UK Army’s First Hindu Chaplain Explains How The Mahabharata Can Comfort Soldiers

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

www.timesonline.co.uk


UNITED KINGDOM, April 8, 2008: When Attri was interviewed at the Ministry of Defense for the job of Britain’s first Hindu chaplain, he was asked what he would say if a soldier did not want to go to war. Hindu teachings, he responded, offer good guidance: “Duty is our priority. It’s our karma, and we have to face it.” Hindu teachings have armed most of the soldiers he counsels with resolve. “They know they’ve undertaken a contract to look after the boundary walls of the country.”

As Hindu chaplain to the British Army since 2005, one of Acharya Krishan Kant Attri’s most crucial tools is the Bhagavad Gita. “I use it all the time,” says the 45-year-old pandit, or Hindu priest. Attri performs army weddings, supports soldiers and their families, and acts as a liaison between Hindu troops and their commanding officers, explaining small but symbolically charged issues: why Hindu soldiers want to wear rakhi, or symbolic red strings, around their wrists, or why strict vegetarians do not want to use spoons that have touched meat at meals. He has also gone to Nepal to select chaplains for the Gurkhas, and this spring will visit troops in Afghanistan. “I want to see what the soldiers go through, to help me advise them and support the families left behind.”

Last year, Sir Ian Blair conceded to “a feeling in the Hindu community that we have not given them as much attention as other groups”. A 2006 Runnymede Trust report on Britain’s Hindus opened thus: “British Hindus form the third-largest faith-based community in Britain yet we know remarkably little about them, their needs or experiences.”



Fervor Marks Ram Navmi Celebrations Across India

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

www.hindu.com


NEW DELHI, INDIA, April 15, 2008:: The faithful thronged temples to offer prayers as Ram Navmi, the birthday of Lord Rama, was celebrated with religious fervour and gaiety across the country on Monday. Thousands of people made a beeline to temples in places such as Ayodhya Ujjain and Rameswaram.

In the Kashmir valley, Hurriyat leaders visited a temple and felicitated their Hindu brethren on the occasion. Kashmiri Pandits in droves also flocked temples and offered prayers. The celestial wedding of Lord Rama and Sita in temples marked Ram Navmi festivities across Andhra Pradesh. More than a hundred thousand of people attended the divine wedding at the famous Bhadrachalam temple on the banks of the Godavari in Khammam district.



A New York Opera About a Giant’s Life: Mohandas K. Gandhi

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

www.nytimes.com


NEW YORK, USA, April 11, 2008: An imaginative restaging of “Satyagraha,” a Philip Glass opera about the early life of Gandhi, has premiered at the New York Metropolitan Opera on April 11.

“Satyagraha” is the middle work in Mr. Glass’s trilogy of operatic portraits, between “Einstein on the Beach” and “Akhnaten.” Written in 1979, the libretto is drawn from the Bhagavad-Gita, and bears little direct relation to the action, which plays out in a series of tableaus that crisscross time. The action focuses on Gandhi’s early years and inner awakening as a leader of the oppressed.

The tenor Richard Croft, who shaved his head and lost ten pounds for the role, plays Gandhi. But the most impressive figures on scene might be giant puppets made for the opera; twenty feet tall, they emphasize the gigantic forces Gandhi opposed on his quest.



Daily Inspiration

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

www.hinduismtoday.com




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