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Heritage

HI

n
PN.
Born

OAK
2.

at 9.54 a.m. On March Indore (Central India).

1917

in

P.N. Oak having made some far-reaching discoveries in history, is

The

author.

the founder president of the

Institute tor

Rewriting
finding
is

World

History.

His

latest

that in pre-Christian times Vedic


full

culture and Sanskrit language held

sway throughout the world. P.N Oak was born in a


Brahmin family
to
in

Maharaslurian

which

his father talked

him only

in Sanskrit,

mother only

in

and townEnglish, relations in Marathi


in Thai gave him fluenc) from childhood ,hose four languages from Agfl his B.A. degree Afterobttining M.A..U completing University and

folk in Hindi

courses of the

Bombay LUnvc,,.

worked

.b,.. yea, -a.

Tuu-nnn^
later

Pune and Fergusson College.

having

iotaM.1

ywaspoatedtcSmg.

"'

uionnl Arm .
I

'

"-',"
'
'

N,, lM

tan

WORLD VEDIC HERITAGE


A HISTORY OF HISTORIES
(

Volume

II

Presenting

A Unique Unified Field Theory Of History

That From The Beginning Of Time The World Practised Vedic Culture And
Spoke Sanskrit

P.

N.

OAK

Founder President
Institute

For Rewriting World History

HINDI SAHTTYA SADAN


PH-23553624, Fax -91-11-25412417
E-mail
:

iDdiabooks@rcdiffrnail.com

WORLD VEDIC HERITAGE

O Purushottam Nagesh Oak

Dedication

All

mundane

activity is a co-operative eflbn. so is this


,
,

work which

is

hereby dedicated to my family members relations friends and the printers who helped in various ways in ihe completion of this project.

4
Volume P^s400/Volume II -4&J00/-

The

object in writing this

work

is

to acquaint and

awaken the world

public to its primordial Vtdic Heritage of the

umes when human beings

were not divided and packed into mutually hating, hissing and hitting national and religious compartments
Vedic culture regards the whole globe as a

commom home and all beings

"VV
Hindi Sahilya Sadan
,

(including animal and plant

life)

as one family.

23553624 ,23617134 2 B.D. Chambers 10/54 D.B. Gupta Road KarolBagh,N.Delhi-5 Fax -91-11-25412417
,

Ph

Hinduism is a modem residual, territorial synonym of primeval, ancient worldwide Vedic culture implying people residing in the Sindhu (pronounced Hindu) region, whose goal is to lead a virtuous life oT renunciation and social service sans drugs, hot drinks and womanizing without being pinned down to any prophet or the prophets book
Readers believing in such an ideal may help set up World vedic Herito tage Academics throughout the world. This work is also dedicated t>Tanny. that goal of freeing humanity from all forms of tenor, torture,
treachery, trickery, taxation

E-Mail

indiabooks@rediffinail.com

Third Edition -2003

and temptation of

so called religions

and

weld

all

people into a

common

harmonious, homogeneous, peaceful

cheerful, helpful fraternity

P.N Oak
Plot

No

10.

Goodwill Society,
-

Aundh. Punc
Tel

411007. India

-(0212) 338449

I'nntedal

Sanjeev Offiwl Printers. Delhi-110051

. .

Contents
Volume
]

2. Introduction
3.

World Vedic Heritage University - Appeal To Second Edition

4. Novel Facts
5. 6. 7. 8. 9.

And Indictment And Format The Unified Field Theory Of History


Indignation

A New Framework For World History


De-briefing

And

Disinfection

We

are grateful to the

Author for granting

us permission to publish this edition.

Two

articles have been added to this edition which have been attached at the end as

The World Know 7 The Current Hodge - Podge Of History 10. What Led Me To This Discovery 1 1 The Five - Thousand - Year - Barrier
History Does
12. 13. 14.

How Much

Appendix

& II.
Publishers

Basic Definition Theories About The Creation

The Vedas

15. Validity 16. 17.

Of Basic Concepts Concerning The Vedas The Universally Accepted Vedic Theology
Vedic Theology

18. Religious Scriptures 19. Reclining

Vishnu Statues

20.

21

The Lingual Theorem Sanskrit The Mother Of All Human Speech And Thought

22. Vedic Science 23. Ancient Nuclear Establishments 24. Vedic Scientific And Technological Texts 25. Dravids 26.

The

Original

27. India

The Leaders Of Vedic Society Home Of Vedic Culture As It Was Known

28.

29. Swearing

The Vedic Socio Economic System By The Fire

30. Vedic Culture 31. 32.

And

Militarism

The Vedic

Military Organization

Worldwide Vedic Culture

39.
14

Manumrhl

311

33.

The Ancient Santkrit Attu The World Keeps Vfadlc Time 36 Ayurved The Ancient Universal Medical System

313
321

37 \fcdic Architecture 38. The Universal Vedic Marriage System

The \Wlc Origin Of World Music 40 The \Wic Origin Of Prosody 41. Sanskrit Nomenclature Of World Coinage 42. Sanskrit Nomenclature Of Weights And Measures 43. The Sanskrit Nomenclature In Modern Sciences 44. The Sanskril Nomenclature Of Modern Educational Texts 4V The Universal Vedic Educational System 4*. Sanskrit Expressions In European Usage 47. The Ramayanic War 48 The Rameyan In Ancient Asia 49. The Ramayan In Ancient Europe
39.

332 349 365 375 386 390 393 395 398

Contents of Volume
The Vedic 63. The Vedic 64. The Vedic
62.
Past

II

Section

continued.
723 739 757 769 773
784

400 406 410

Of Europe Past Of Russia Post Of Germany 65. The Vedic Past Of The Austrian Region 66. The Vedic Past Of The Scandinavian Region 67. The Vedic Past Of Greece 68. The Vedic Past Of Italy 69. The Vedic Past Of France, Spain & Portugal 70. The Vedic Past Of Tunisia 71. The Vedic Past Of The British Isles 72. The Vedic Past Of Ireland
73. English Is

795 836
861

165

913 925
951 963

The Universal Deity 5 Hindu Origin Of The Jews 52 Vodic Culture In The East
30. Krishna

437 446 476 493


501

A Dialect Of Sanskrit
Past

74.

The Vedic

Of Africa

75. Historical Misconceptions

The Vodic Pw Of Japan The Vodic Past Of America 35. The Vedlc Pail Of China 56. The Vodic Past Of Korea And Manchuria 57 The Vodic Put Of West Asia 58 The \fedic Put Of Egypt 59. The Vsdic Pul Of Syria And Assyria 60. The Vedic Roots Of Arabia 61 The Vedic Roots Of Islam
53.

515
523

54

The Vedic Far East 77. The Vatican Papacy Is A Vedic Institution 78. The Vedic Roots Of Christianity 79. Christ A Pseudonym For Chnsna
76. 80.

976
1002

1016 1030 1038 1048

557 596

No

Jesus Ever Lived

81. Vsdic Traditions


82.

602 620 634 637 680

83.

The Worldwide Vedic Nomenclature The Astounding Predictive Compendiums

106*
1071

84. India 85. 86. 87.

Common Heritage Vedic Deities And Festivals Around The World


-

Europe

1077 1083

The World Keeps Hindu Tune


Summation
II

1088
1093

SECTION
88. Study 89. 90.

And

Research Methodology

1109
1118

The Importance Of History The National Flag

1144 1152 1160

Christian Chronicles Misleading Muslim 92. Unpardonable Lapses Of Indian Historians Cconspiraey 93. The Anglo Muslim Archaeological

91

&

1179

"
723

Of History W. Records 95. Paucity Of Hindu


Lessons
96.

I20|

Blundersome Historical Cliches

1238

97. Practical Application

Of History
Hindudom
National Suicide

1243 1250
1263 1268 1293

98. Alien
99. Alien

Tampering With Indian History


Designs Against

100. Ignorance

Of History Leads To

101. Solar Physics In 102. Vedic Sociology 103.

Surya Siddhanta

1307
1313

The Genesis Of Humanity


Exercise Par Excellence
Conclusion

104. Vedic Physical Fitness


105.

1320
1327

THE VEDIC PAST OF EUROPE


needs to be specifically noted that several countries and regions world end with the letters 'ia' as Russia. Prussia, Siberia.
Iberia,

Picture Index

1340
It

Bibliography
Index

Of Personal Names
I

in the

Appendix Appendix

II

1376
1391

Rumania. Bulgaria.

Ethiopia, Somalia, Tanzania, Austria,

Australia, Scandinavia,

Armenia and Albania.

That (h)

is

a Sanskrit termination signifying

"a

country of"

a certain people or of

some

special features. Society


in particular Strabo. the

The Four Classes of Ancient European

About Europe in general and Albania

ancient geographer has noted in pages 230 to 234 of the second

volume of his Geography " Tne greater part of Iberia is well

inhabited.

Some

part of this country

(Armenia, Colchis, Albania etc.)

b
is

encompassed by the Caucasian mountains. The inhabitants of


country are also divided Into four classes. The
that
first

this

and chief

from which kings are appointed. The second

consists of priests.

The

third is composed of soldiers and husbandsmen. Tht fourth comprehends the common people... Tne gods they worship are tht Sun, Jupiter and the Moon. Moon has a temple near Iberia. The
priest is a person

who

next to the king, received the highest honours.


to old age, which (besides

The Albanians pay the greatest respect

to parents) is extended to (all) persons in general.

Prom the above description it appears that during Strabo'e t'mea the term Iberia * (alia* STberia) applied* to tba whole of
'

Europe though currently 'Iberia'

aigniflaa tht region

camp

*
7
Carmelite born at Ho.
ia

m
Spain and Portugal alone, while Sberia is at the other end.

that in pre-Christian

The second point to be noted from Strata's observation times European society was divided Into

the

that fn India

Whose name before he became a monk w u utm pv, - when a woman Is deuvered
her

the Austrian dominion

fcl

17* A n
,

*\

four Vedic classes vix. Brahmans. Kshatriyas. Vaishyaa

and Shudras.

the magistrate or overseer that


to th*
turn,
list

Though Strabo does not mention those specific terms, yet his description leaves one in no doubt that they constituted the four
Vedic divisions

of person,

who

bound to transmit to the Una an the number and amities of the


is

^ZZ^XZ^*? ,J^^'
*,
. Brahmin,

**mX^!^
usu^ok^

huahL

The

deities.
all

people are

Sun. Jupiter and Moon and the respect to elderly characteristic of Vedic culture.

On

page 348 of Vol-11 Strabo mentions a temple of Adresteia.


district

of the Indian princes was periods and occurs in Strabo. The Brahman, are to mark with equal care, in their temples, the birhday child. In each of these there is always
paid

political

establishment

P-nalirC^T^

^^ *
district,

A whole

bore the

name

of that deity.

And the

city

named

Adresteia after the deity,

was
is

situated

between Priapus and Parium.

buainew expressly I to keep a register of the births, marriage, and death, and ate of every interesting event that concerns the
such an accural* and minute account of the family connodons. and condition of every person in the neighbouring
truly astonishing

by the overseer of the temple

iTnot^T

who*

That term Adresteia

a Sanskrit term signifying the terrible

unknown (unseen) future or Nemesis. And another Greek author, Antimachus does indeed specifically sUte that Adresteia was Nemesis.
Ancient Postal Service
It is

class to which they belong. These Variar, or calculators, are therefore enabled to grv.
life

is

" .u

generally believed that the postal service

is

a modern amenity

The above

is

a very important observation by a mediaeval

introduced by the Europeans.


records that
it

But

mediaeval European author


states

is

Indian.

A relevant footnote

"The

post

had been introduced into India, and distinguished by the


...

name Angela
word

kind of post was established formerly in Persia. The old

India. What be noticed was that under the Vedic administration the priestly class In every temple kept an accurate record of every birth, death and marriage and other Important events concerning alt persons. All this f. statistic.. That

European visitor Ua

Persian word Angaras seems to have an affinity to the Indian


Angela; and
it is

too is a Sanskrit
figures..

term

fftfn"^ <wfn"

i.

e. sizing

up with

facts

and

not improbable that the Persians borrowed their

establishment of the post from the Indians. "' Angela in Sanskrit


implies both

The very term 'Census' too


counting, enumeration
alias

is

Sanskrit

'Sankhyaf'

I,

a,

palms cupped together (to deliver letters).

'sum.'

Camas

ii

Sankhyas

The Census loo is easily assumed to be a modern practice. But on page 257 of his travel account Bartolomeo (a barefooted
11) Footnot* on P

That indicates the numerous functions assigned to Brahman, under the Vedic system.
(IA) Translated from German by William Forster; printar. J. Dam. Chancery Lane, London; (Observation* made fay th* author duruw Wa 13-year reaidence (n India from 1778 to 1788 A. D.). Ta. original of this work appeared at Rome In 1798 A. D, A German edIUo.

147 of

A Voyage To The East Indies, by Fra Paolino

Da Tan Bartolomeo, member

of (he Academy of Valitri and formerly profeuor of Oriental languages in the Propaganda at Rome; with nolo* and llluit/auoni by John Reinhold Forstar;

was published

fn 1788 at Berlin

by Dr. John IWnnold Fontac.

736
Diocese
In

U De*ahh
term Diocese sfgnJflei the Sanskrit term 'DEVASHIS' I, .
its

727

the Christian id mlnist ration the


Is

Bishop's district. That


'

blessed

by God

'

Under the ancient, universal Vedic administration


Devashis had

hand the elementa of the alphabet, and than smooth when they wish to trace out it with the lelt hand other character! pupDs have made tolerable progress In when the
of the right

writing thty art

each Diocese

alias

headquarters

in a

temple. 1>tere

the priestly class used to maintain accurate birth charts

and other

information about every person, serving as a detailed census record.

admitted to (higher) schools where they begin to write on oabn leaves... when the Guru enters the school he Is always received with the utmost reverence. His pupils must throw themselves down with the utmost reverence and respect, place their right hand on the mouth and not venture to speak a single word unta he grvea them express permission ... The chief branches taught by the Gurus
are- (1) theprinciplesofwritingandaccounU. (2) Sanskrit grammar

Whenever

a person

were arrangements
purpose of their
tne local priests.

at the places

or families or other groups went on tour there they visited to have the date and
recorded in visitor-registers maintained by perfect than that Vedic system

visit

What could be more

or keeping a benign, parental eye on the well-being and

movements

(including) the art of speaking with elegance, (3) Amarkoah

of every person! "Thus Hindus wrote detailed histories.

a Sanskrit dictionary that contains everything that relates to the

Vedic System or Education

gods, the sciences, colours and sounds, the earthly aeas and riven.

men and
The Vedic system of education which Barlolomeo noticed
India
In

animals, as well as the arts and

all

kinds of employment

in India.

To render the

construction of the Sanskrit language and

was practised

all

over the world for millions of years until

the

mode

of its expression

more

familiar to their pupils, the

Guru

the Mahabharat war.

It

was the shattering


in

effect of the Mahabharat


like

employs various short sentences clothed

in Sanskrit verse called

war which wrecked that system


i tree hacked of all its foliage.

other parts of the world

Shlok. These verses serve not only as examples of the manner


in

But since that Vedic system had


alias

Us roots
in India

in India.

Vedic culture

Hinduism continues

to live

at the

which the words must be combined with each other but contain same lime, most excellent moral maxims, which are thus
if

though

in a shrivelled,

withered form.

Imprinted In the minds of the young people as

in play, so thai

ii

Though Bartolomeo describes the educational system in India muat be understood that, that same educational system was in
all

while learning the language, they are taught rules proper for formfng
their character,

and directing their future conduct

in

life.

(Here

vogue

over the world upio the Mahabharat war. as is apparent


still

are

from the Vedic educational terminology

in

vogue

in

Europe.

some specimens) Why do we dwell in cities and not in forest* ? each other, end Because (1 ) we may enjoy friendship, do good to

Hereunder we quote the routine which Bartolomeo noticed In


the

>

Gumkulams surviving in the 16th century In India. By that time Christianity and Islam had totally destroyed the Vedic Gurukul
system
In

stranger. (2) Wounds receive in our homestead the wayfarer and the those inflicted caused by slander Bre more difficult to heal than but particularly sword. (3) Modesty becomes every man by fire and

the learned and the rich.

(4)

The path of
is

a married couple

Europe. Africa. West Asia and other regions of the world.

never deviate Trom the path of duty

as difficult as that

who ofa

Bartolomeo a noting.
<

how Gurukul used to function it had from He observes The education of youth in India much simpler and not near so expensive as in Europe. The children
' '

glimpse of

penance... In the garden or sacred recluse undergoing the severest Ungam or rriapus is children are taught, the

enclosure

In

which

generally found.

(Some) pay

form divine honour to fire under the

aaaembW half-naked under the coconut

tree; place

themaelvea

In
-

of

God

rows on th ground, and trace out on the sand with the fore-finger

Ganesh

goddess of eloquence and

Idols of Canaan and Shiv, Besides this there are and learned men, Suaswau th, the protector of aclence. and branch*. history... the other acience.

*"

m
youth are-poetry, fencing, botany, medicine, navigation: the use of the spear on foot; the art of playing law. self-training (i. e. swadhyay). at ball: chew, logic, astrology,
of laamlnj taught lo ihe Indian

729 Western scholars presume that If and when a aimOarily la noticed either the West must have borrowed from ihe East or vice versa.

5*udent are obliged to observe the strictest silence for five years.

We

would ask

altogether

The Indians do not follow that general and superficial method of tdurxtkw by which children are treated as if they were all intended
fo- the same condition and for discharging the same duties; but thoM of each caste are from their infancy formed for what they

all scholars lo rid their minds of that dichotomy They must hereafter cultivate a new concept to thoroughly

grasp ancient history.


the

What they must


existed

realize

is

that throughout Sanskrit,

ancient

world

there

one

uniform

Vedic

civilization.

Consequently during those ancient times they are bound


the

are to be during their whole lives....


that the arts

and sciences

in india

It however cannot be denied, have greatly declined since foreign

same practices everywhere To say that one borrowed from the other is absolutely unrealistic when the entire ancient world adhered lo a single language and
to

come across

same

teachings and

conquerors expelled the native king; by which se\reral provinces

uniform culture.
Sanskrit- A

ha*v been laid entirely waste;


each other.

and the castes confounded with

Before that period the different

kingdoms were

in

World Language
footnote

fhurshing condition; the laws were respected and justice and


order pervafled ...

civil

The

translator's

on

page

318

of

Bartolomeoa

/ saw with

my own

eyes that the children of


in the

travel -account points out that


in

"Sanskrit words occur not only

the king of Travancore, Rama Varma were educated '* manner as the Shudrv

same

Ptolemy but

also In Arrian

and Slrabo." This,

therefore, la
his

an evident refutation of the conjecture of George Forster (in us that


passed
language was not
it

The above extract


India

Is

very important because

notes to the Indian play, Shakuntalam, pp. 533-334) that the Sanskrit

it

tells

was

a prosperous

and disciplined country before

known

to the Greeks,

and has ea'ated

in India

under alien rule, and gives one an idea of

system was very simple

in

execution;

how how

only from the birth of Christ.

the Vedic educational


it

ensured the most


studied

John Reinhold Forster who wrote the


to

earlier footnote

seems

comprehensive scholarship and

how

all

pupils

together
all

have had

a better idea of the antiquity and spread of Sanskrit

irrespective of the social standing of their parents.

Educators

than a large body of other Western scholars such as George Forster.

over the world could learn a


above,
in

lot

from the Vedic pattern described


the

People often wonder

why

a long line of

German

scholars should

reforming

and

recasting

present

educational

system.
In

evince interest in Sanskrit. Such a sense of wonder arises from


public ignorance of ancient history. Sanskrit ought to be
in

book theaboveconwxt concludes that "Pythagoras must have borrowed


from the Indian philosophers, for his scholars
* u t>#ct*d to silence during the
'i

footnote added by the translator of Barlolomeo 's

the

his philosophy in part

>

blood of the Germans because that was their mother-tongue in

the pre-Christian era. The real wonder


kind viz.

is,

therefore, of the contrary

same number of yews.

how

alienated

the Germans have become from their

Scholar*
It

Blunder
the Sanskrit

primordial Vedic culture and Sanskrit language as a result of ISOO

years of cruel Christian brainwashing

Urm
<

should be noted at the outset that Pythagoras

is

Pwth-GuniB

1.

e. a

preceptor attached to a seat of learning.

Sanskrit In

German;
in

Pp.

10 387.

A Vo

Ww

The study of Sanskrit


th,

Germany and other Western

countries

TM M*.

Ibid.

was pioneered by Christian missionaries who looked upon Indians

7
7a
li to that maliciously motivated approach and conditioned the study of Sanskrit all along which among Europeans and Americans when they should have approached

as potential

convens

has vitiated

canto

Mnndal ) of the Rigved

is

devoted entirely to the

Soma extract

and

Its

uses described in ornamental language.


start of

and nTHiBIM as the mother language of all humanity and the vocal goddess of the Vedas.
It

in all humility

With the

Muslim Invasions spread over a thousand

years Hindu polity broke

poet. J. G. Harder (1744-1803) took an interast in ancient Sanskrit literature and introduced Kalidasa *s famous play

A German

destruction the technique of

down and during that Soma distillation was

period of great

loR.

Russia has. however, been known to administer to iu Olympic

Abhijnan Shakuntalam to fellow-poet. Goethe (1749-1832). That play was translated into German by George Forster (1764-94).
Kalidasa s Sanskrit play brothers of
in

sportsmen an extract of a plant known as Eleuthero-coeus SenticMus (of the Somatensic genus ) to improve their performance. The extract
is

won the admiration

not at

all

regarded as a drug but

is

classed as a healthy energizer

of the three Schlege)

whom

two were founders of modern Indological studies

Rigved describes the

Germany.
In

was

fetched

by Syen

of the

Soma as a very "ancient plant which Dua region from the 8wa territory
' '

lying beyond the Rajik country.

It

grows

in

mountainous region."
the Sharyanawai

1818

W. Von
Bonn

Schlegel

was appointed the

first

professor of
edition

Soma growing
variety.

in the valley

of the

Suahoma river in

Sanskrit in

University. Schlegel published a

German
in

tract of the ArjiWan region is considered to be of the efficacious

of the Bhagawadgeeu in 1823 and of the

Ramayan

1829.

Franz Bopp

's

published view in 1816 that Sanskrit

was

closely

Rajik country

is

north of Kashmir beyond the Himalayas.

related to Greek. Latin. Persian

and Germanic languages caused

surprise in European academic circles.

The Soma
soft fibres

leaves are described as yellowish green covered with


like the

and are shaped

peacock feather.

Thereafter Hegel.

Ruckert. Heine and Schopenhaur devoted

themselves to the study of Indian philosophy and religion.


scholars devoted themselves to a study of
Incidentally

Some

Buddhism.
arises

The leaves used to be washed in flowing water and pounded with stone. The pulp used to be mixed with water and the |uk
strained through woollen doth.

the

German surname

Schlegel

from the

Sanskrit word Schlaga meaning good reputation,alios praise.

That extract used to be mixed with

cows

milk, yoghurt or

honey

lo yield elixirs of different tastes

and properties. Modern

Vedie

Soma

Plast

scientists

must

strive to rediscover the original Vedic

Soma

plant

People often talk of the Vedic period. That

or try to evolve and breed the required variety from the Russian
Is

an error based

on the presumption that the Vedas are human compositions. They are not. Vedas are the word of God handed down through a few mdroduals to humanity
of the creation.
(like

Somatensic plant.

The

real

Sanskrit nomendature ought to bt


'

Somavanstc and not Somatensic. Somavansic means


family.' Since the very

of the

Soma

name

Russia atgnifiee that


it

it

has been a

a technologica) guide) at the time

land of Vedic sages Tor millions of years

would be proper to
alias

search for the real Vedic wonder plant. Somalau


in that region.

Somavalb

>

mention the juice of the Soma plant as an important offering to the Gods and extol its qualities as an elixir of life. Obtaining tt was considered a matter of great importance. The ninth

vde

rituals

The importance
In

of the

Soma

plant in
hotly

anoeni Vedic
and mistletoe

Europe survives
in

modern times

in the

use of
is

Christmas celebration. In fact mistletoe

the garbled spading

m
of the
frtik-

w"
tn

738
1

Somnlaia-

Vedic
(iiliw
'

The Cade'

Thf term

'

Otitic

pronounced as Kella) were an undent people. refer* strictly -speaking lo the group of language*
In the

spelling of

The Coromondale (coast of east India) laaboacrude European <** *hFi hrw) Chols Mandal Alaya the Sanskrit term
' ' ' '

signifying

Chola regal enclave. The existing traces of that name


I,

which survive today only

north and west of the British


the Alps, northern
Italy,

lilea

from Kuala Lumpur


Cholas'

e.

'

Cholanimpunun *

alias

'a

city of

the

ml

(n

Britain,

Franc*-.

Spain,

porta of

efMwm

|jr*0,

the capita! of Malaysia in the

Yuirotlavie

and even

In Central TAirkey....

they shared a

common

the Coromondale of India In


Scotland in the Far West,
is

Far East, to the middle, and Cholomondeley of


territorial

cultural heritage

These people were

rigidly stratified.

At the top

emphatic proof of a large


times, of the

of Ihe aoclhl |iynunid was the king... but he look advice from
Ills

chunk decipherable

in

our

own

more

ancient united

chieftains

on

political

and military questions, and from the priests


..

Vedic Sanskrit world.

on the liming and rellgioua implications of what he planned..

"

The
universal

details

mentioned above indicate how

relics
all

of the ancient

Our
vli

solution provides easy

answers to

ult

such knotty problems,

unitary Vedic system He scattered


fall

over the world.

(hut until (he

Mahnbhural wnr (oround 5501 B. C.) the entire


Thereafter with the breakup of the universal.

They

all

into place to

form

a composite Vedic world system.

world spoke Sanskrit

Some
tire

practices such as the postal service, census and maintenance

Vedic system the insj over which Sanskrit was spoken and Vedic
iiiiuiv

of statistics which are mistaken to be inventions of modern Europeans


a

mere

revival of Vedic links lost during the dark ages, as their traces found even In mediaeval India.

was

practised,

gradually dwindled,

At one such stage a


is

clear

from

big sector of the globe

(from Scotland to Turkey) spoke

common
The Forehead Mark
That Christianity
Vedic tree
is
is

langunge termed above as Keltic, which

was obviously a watered -down

form of Sanskrit.
Tlir Ancient

only an hijacked, fossilized branch of the

Cholu Heufm

apparent from the ash mark on Christian foreheads.


their foreheads

like a broken sentence with missing words, scattered bits of

Orthodox Hindus apply holy ash to

and on

their

evidence Indicate that a Sanskrit-speaking Chola dynasty ruled the

torso daily after bath. That practice persists

among Christians
still

even

world (or a very large part of


In

It)

In the

post-Mahabharat

era.

today

proving that they were once Hindus and that they


label.

continue

Dm But fin Malaysia) we have Kuala Lumpur which derives Ha name from the Cholas (as exploined earlier). In the British
lain is Cholomondeley, also

Hindu practices under a Christian


begins on Ash Wednesday. ash

The Christian
toiler,

festival lent,

On

that

day the

priest anoints holy

Sno* *Ch'

Is

commemorating the away of the Choles. pronounced as "K" and also bj 'Kh' It should
I,

on Ihe householder's forehead warning the


art dust

"Remember

man! thou

and unto dust thou

shall

return."

br apiMirrnl that the Kelt s and Kholdeans alias Chaldeans also signify

Cyprus wus Kubcr klund

Choldltm and CholUc people

e.

those of the Chola kingdom.

The Chola. a Sanskrit -speaking Indian dynasty of known ancient Chola history seems lo bo a luler sprout or remnant of on earlier
dynasty which
h-ld

The name Cyprus of an


of the legendary Sanskrit

island in the Mediterranean is a corruption


alias

name Kuberus
ruler of

Kuber.

worldwide sway
1

Kuber used
Man,

to

be the

Lanka kingdom. He was deposed

and ousted by his younger brother Ravon.


<3>

Reader . Digest History 1074 publish*] b> the Haider's Digest AMorinUon. London,
46 The

Uat Two

Million Years.

of

734

73o
In

or

Id.

European pronuncitUon 'C* is sometimes pronounced as tl and 'p" is often pronunced as 'B* or vice versa. Keeping

i.

e. scenic region.

thai in

mind one may

visualize

how the Sanskrit name Kuberuj

Deulwhland
the Sanskrit

(I, e.

Germany)

Is

the land of the ancient primordial


is

cam*- to be spelled as Cyprus.

Vedic Daityo-slhan. The ending 'land'


in

a mispronunciation of

Coinciden tally

Ramayanic versions which were

vogue

in

this
Is

term Sthaan meaning place', region or location. Lest may sound far-fetched consider the Sanskrit term 'hast' which hund
in English.

mediaeval Europe (quoted elsewhere in this volume) use the term Emperor of Cyprus instead of spelling out his name as Ravan.
' '

spelled as

'sf has

led to 'nd' in English,

That indicates how the Sanskrit sound and may be In European languid
is

Mauritius

in general. Therefore it must be noted that the suffix land Western malpronunciation of the Sanskrit suffix 'sthan.'

the

the epic

The island of Mauritius also has a Ramayanic origin. Ab per Ramayan a missile trigerred by Lord Rama blew off the
it in

Consequently names such as England, Basutolond. Thailand.

Doniv general Marichus's body and dumped


across the South Western sea. That island
fell

Nagoland Somaliland scattered


.

ail

an island faraway

over the world are relics of Vedic.

Sanskrit times.

where the body of Marichus


(alias

has

since

been

commemoration of
Dinar

that thrilling historic

known as Marichus war

Mauritius)

In
I.

Belgium

is

the Sanskrit

compound Belum ajeyam (*a srim)

episode.

e. (people of) invinciblo strength.

Similarly Bulgaria
o high calibre.

is

'Bul-giriya'

(ra-nfnj)

j.

strength of

The currency of numerous Muslim countries such as Bahrein. Iraq. Kuwait. Tunisia. Jordan and Yemen is Dinar. The legal lender
of the ancient Gupta emperors of India was also known as Dinar. That is a &nskril term signifying a gold coin and also a gold ornament.
In

Dutch
(as noted

is a

malpronunciation of the primoridiol Vedic clan DaMja


in

by us

the term Deutschland)


to the term Denmark. In Vedic lore '3iunda'
individuala

We now come
and

Greece too the

(like

legal tender was Dinarius. Yemen has the Riyal Saudi Arabia) as its currency, which derives from Raya meaning

Mark" are two

who being

priests of the Daitya

clan are invariably mentioned together as

Shundomark (gnw*j

King

in Sanskrit, like

the word

'

royal

'

Sanskrit Nomenclature in the

West
derives from the god -given language

Since
Sanskrit,

all
it

human speech

is known as Denmark Is obviously therefore a land deriving name from those priests of the Daitya clan. Danav 15FR> has also come down to us as a synonym of the term Daitya. Consequently ih nylon known as Denmark derives its name from the two closely
its

What

all topographical names throughout the world juch as those of oceans, rivers, regions, continents,

is

but natural that

associated priests

Shunda Mark

of the

Danav

alias Daitya

dan. The

name Diana

is

Sanskrit Donovi

i.

e. lady

of the Danav clan. Pwple

cities

and

villages should all


cite

be Sanskrit.
illustrative instances.
is

Here we only
land of Rishis
i.

of Denmark ore known as Danes which is a modern malpronunciation of the origino! Vedic trm Danav. Luxemburg i LakahmJ-durg 1.

few

Russia
i.

is

the

e. the Castle

of goddess Lakshmi. Netherlond

is

imwfc) Anursthan

e. sages.

Armenia

Arya-monova
is

e. of people

who
1-

being below the sea-level.

profess Aryon alios Vedic culture. Siberia

the region of Shlbfrs


Sverge (Sweden): and Norge (Norway) are Sanskrit terms Swargi

e.

temporary hutments.
Austria
ii

(Heaven) and Naraka (Hell)


the land of Astraas
i.

e. missiles

Rumania is Ramaneeya

'

736

737

Europe

fa

Surope
that
all

We Uiui we
Sanskrit

European countries

still

retain their Vedic,

temples used to bo baaed on the Bhigawid Geeta (not tba Bible since no Bible was in existence then) in front of idols of Lord
Krishna. Later as and
Christianity tbe

names and

of the Sanskrit

implying that

associations. Even Europe is a truncated form word 'Sirupe' (continent) meaning ' good-looking its residents are the most good-looking of all.

when European
replaced

people got converted to


leeue

GeeU was

by the so-called Bible and

Chrisn was misrepresented

u jesus Christ.

Remove the Christian Crust


In

must tear away tbe

view of the evidence presented above scholars of the world artificial Christian crust of a thousand years

standing which hides and smothers the Vedic past and Sanskrit
roots of Europe.

The academic world must hereafter search

for

the lost Vedic recitation tradition in the various countries of Europe

and for traces of the Upanishads, Puranas. Ramayon, Mahabharat,

ShreemBd Bhagavatam. Ayurved. classical Vedic music and dance and such other facets of Vedic, Sanskrit culture which have been
buried deep by Christian zealots. For instance. Georges B. Dumozil
a nonegenarian

highly respected French writer


titled

who

died around

1990 has authored a three-volume work

Mythes et Epope'
lore.

<(r>hs and Epics) which


Hut collection proves that
if

is

a collection of Vedic cultural

European (Christian) scholars honestly


will

and dispassionately probe their past they


Christianity
is

find

that their

a mere make-believe imposition without any roots

of

its

own.

Divine Lord Krishna Worhsipped

"n* Sanskrit term iesus Chrisn was deftly changed to jesus Christ by neo-Christian zealots. In pre-Christian European homes
and temples idols of Lord Krishna known as Baalkrishno alias Baakhrim used to be widely worshipped. He was the universal
|od. the latest incarnation

whose discourse, the Bhagavad- Geeta used to be deeply revered, avidly studied and fervently discussed
in
all

homes while discourses baaed on the Geeta were


temples. Since auch discourses are
in

delivered

Utile child

kn all

Dbarma-Churcha
place
.
for

Sanskrit, the

known as Churcha alias church has come to signify

One
!

of

Rome**

mo*
It

celebrated object!

was

stolen

from tin Are

Cotli

Church recently, Thli 16th century woodn >utuo


carved In otlvt wood.

of th Infant Cbritn

religious congregations

prior to ihe 4th century A. D. the

and discourses. In these daya t< discourwe In all European

wu stolen once before In 1798 by French eafcuen.

7W

789

THE VEDIC PAST OF RUSSIA


Heathenism

It [a (I.

not generally realiwd that Vedlc culture

alias

the Hinduism) was as ruthlessly destroyed In Europe by the Roman armies from the 4th century onwards as was done by Arab armies In West Asia.
.

From such a Europe, Russia had become further cut off culturally
since the October 1917 revolution

when

It

went Communist.

Even so the whole of Europe.


Coum.tu.Htadtx's Dlgrst

Including Russia, bears Indelible

both Europe and Russia traces of Its ancient Vedic culture. But primordial Vedic pest. steeped In ignorance about their

k cunomuy

la

Vedlc tradition to depict lh

Sun

tiding

chariot

crowing tht kin. and worship

Him

u divinity
Is

locarnat*

on Kalha Saptaml
all

doy, towards the end or January. The


the world In pte-Cbristian

same custom was observed


evident from the above

over

remain about It. Likewise the rest Therefore, the Russians need to be told informed of the pre-Christian of the European world also needs to be However. In this chapter wt Vedic culture of Europe as a whole.
shall deal
Is

times as

relic (circa

part of Europe which with the Vedic past of only that

I6CO B, C.) found In

bog (In 1902 A. D.) at Trundholm In Denmark.

currently

known as Russia.

In Hindu. Vedic tradition the

Sun

'a

choriot la

representing tht colours seen through a prism.

drown by seven horses The term 'horse-power'


these seven

Ancient Observatories
Vedic culture, indent Since astronomy forms an integral part of astronomy to. The astronomical

used in modern power-generation technology has lt origin in the obove


Vtdie solar energy representation. In Vedlc terminology
It

Russia

was

proficient

in

Is

hlch ore termed Soptn-Suidhu


solar)

I.

e.

seven oceans or etreama of (divine


gold disc ei the bock of the choriot

energy.

The drculor shining

antibuted to an Ulugh observatories In ancient Russia, wrongly Christianity nor Islam Beg. were of hoary pre-lalamic origin. Neither
has played any role
In

repreeenia the 8un


publication
-

(photo reproduced from page 67.

Reader

'

Dltert

about preserving or expanding knowledge

HUior- of

Man The
:

La*i

Two

Million
-

Yean; 1974).
of

Actually
:

the

UUe

of that

volume should have been


(Insleod of

The History

Man

The

Lea*

Two BMIm yean

Two

Million) because that Is the Vedic

simple reason that both the allied science of astrology for the believe In serology doctrinally frown on astrology. They don 'I doctrine believe neither In the Karma theory nor In the

because they
of rebirth.

computation.

a-

** *

-*

Vfe

:'oo^

>

HkiayKnatci^^maoox^f
jmtm
act

v*

a tef

'"*'

md mmtsW a spefied s pvpCK Imn am rinni|ii'.i *M vtbs


fc"

a* a dm tfoaov Bet & -as* wmtml ar*mat*x a an


:

ltarao

ami

^ juuuajd

mm

wm a* aay na&at -jm. f acrd ttxct pffj saimi ar-none


rf tar

ao
act
|

raa

car eaaT fat

apgx-ai

F-=
:

-.aa

t aoocc

va: at
_"

ail

r:

MRBi

'"

"-*"

!-"^,^t.

a*r axancc ia
i**
"^

rf

afl

fejben

*-a*

'-adi?

'

tana* VaSe = =*=x *

wife tJ*r aBrpira *;. frar =rai in

aaapn tf A YaSe caeca arc aac* COS AT^TT'T H.CT3BC

kw
B

! ftonak

rf

aa= rvi-ax

aw =*?**
vac
-jk

aoc-T-^

-*-^

a kct; ajrajr* of '-at Vaac rna k. B i3nscc race =*

=*! riBH ^tmt Iw.m of = E =


ii

*mwmm.*amma*T

ifltt

li*
a
*Ji at

we T^aaB) waaaal
i

Tde
1

"!!
1

Mato)*
wm'^nrnx Tafc~
it
I

aaaa*

ar****

iaaa; m\

mm

ar* saaar

* v= *"

I
l

+ vlotane. to With and great


Malhan wrs

njui to laming.

7U
the

"**"

St,vit*

^MlogfiU stumbled on
inside the
in

separate complexes. Each of theea conaliUd of a number of oava

mmVM
woe

* Buddhist
In

owmonutwy
Termei

Kara-Tepe

construction! and other building*


etc... aoinotlmoa arranged In

I,

*. tsmplea, shrine*. oelL. yards

wn during excavation -work

Southern Usbokielan, fresh


cultu rsl relationship

two row*.

In

aoma yards

thera were

W* ftwtH Ontral Asia and


ImiMd
in

onw again thrown on tho possfbUHy of "


tndto. of wiitiriK for

elupes while

In othera there

were columned porticos

called

afwan."

The cave-temple and ornnmonUl and genre

the

alwana were often embslllehsd with

palntlngn of varloui daRlea and donors...

puch "fresh light" to be


after chance dinging*
all

"thrown"

patch* by flu and

Mill

m ntray locotlona,
tho darkness that

and

alao with scenes

from legends.

cholera would do well to

thruw uul once for

"Of

particular Interest

among

the Kara-Tope flnda are the

ihrniidi their rationality, to realise that

though mankind
it*

may

nuvnr
all

Inscriptions In different longuagoa-ln the so-called Kuiihan script


the (baaed on the Greek alphabet), the Brahml, the Khsrwhlrt. origin Mlddlo Persian on well ai yoi unidentified writing of Aramaic
' '

! to dig up lh# whole earth lo know


once
it

pant hlHLory

at

nne glance, yet

It

can certainly be sagacious enounh lo

cuniprebend that the wholi world having been pervaded

by a

common
by

mtlure and
in the

common language from


link* are

tho beginning of time,

everywhere

Indian mentors
like

R*jerchors found ancient frescoes-many of which were dona - and statues of tho Buddha which looked very
bouht those in India. Tho oxpoditton alio found and population aoveraV Sanskrit manuscripts, nflk and

world whether abovt* the ground or under.

pro-Muslim and

much

prrChnSUen

bound lo be nothing but Vodlc.

from the

local

Malhan further wrtlea "the Imvrller Huol Tat


A

(who

piipcr pieces... and other ancient


In

Items."

728
OthtT What is true of Russia must be taken to apply to every Vodlc civilisation papered region in the world. The ancient primordial the whole world with Vodlc manuscripts.

viil<d the vldnlty

Huo To
belaid

U
In

(l.

of Term**) wrote about the atnte of Hutul) where the king, nobility and tho people

iha Buddha.

He

also

mmtlonH

the presence of

many

iddhlM monasteries (here.

An

ancient manuscript

^ration
of the

mention, the
In

of

UN

Buddhl.t ...mplns

Samarkand

.Uicmuiij."

tho middle

(1868-lflM)

and legends of
lo arise

Oldenburg Malhan writes about a Russian researcher 8. culture who wrote a scholarly essay on the history, deemed Oldenburg's Inspiration should be
India.

from

than his old Vodlc ancestry rather

from any chance.

%???*?***"*" ^ ****
"
""""
,yflnl

-1 hi

*******

"K** HuMhtal tamp*. By

this

slruy.

enrller still

by

iuch. This is proved third-party fascination for India as principle enunciated by Oldenburg'i exact understanding of the

me

above that "Buddhist art


Is

in India

proceeds from the genera)

trends of Indian art which

much

of older and the devetopmool


*

Buddhists Indian art did not slop with the

exodus from India.

T^ritJn I mausoleum.

This is what VeBJc and All that art 1. .ho world ought lo understand. The term Buddhist. Jain ind so on. to classify ll

architecture throughout scholars of ancient art and


ll I.

wrong

ton-vm

* Thl. prove,

mmo*ly u-d * that 'a.wan' M.ar.allrt.rVedlc.cse-ml w rdDtallandmal.o.cslledMutUm.lw

^i^i-Sat"

^1

v*
ttot

T.

w
.*_.-

atoaaBB Ainu

i>

Caw

*a ctotof by

*a T **
to

* *W Ta M-tol 7a*
a

a
.

mvfaat*

taM *
"

-nanou

tot

apactoaaar aartaal > l aa

ajtt
la
I

>

.-i

r;..i

Tto aaa aa* aafitop

^ **

" to "*

r:

Vaaae

>*-.>

B 6c- >c attrfbatoa

wand

vkk

Ma

fcea* 'X

fcuf

i ry

d Mm> Unrtto aawfiara n In W gufc*


i i

^ Mf*r^aa4*tor|toaa a

* bwurj

by ta* Ifaafcaa

bm

-J*

*a of JUrpn-ufcr

U*

To
VatdtHb

iiHam a*b MtTaBn


a**"^" **-*

>sjmr*9xm

W^*4*'a%K=ataa.fianafc-it
i

iMKbi
vaa

Mftpf

j*

aatfiiar

* it* &-**

n tmmxni

w&xm*
a

m fit*
^**

Aerawrj

>/ an

von
baa* xisaniarVy*

Awton

a^*apfaaa*rlairTbH8iiTBjrtto^ha t^ant*:

m h*A* ***** - a*^**l


i

ato-w

tfiMi ?W aa**

M "W

r7vUMaa>
i

tf

Sai da)
'

"

i?agaiM flmi TV atcya

ukiU u/yxiierm Wee nubn

Tni
a

-y >

Hbtti.
rl i
f

ae*r l*>r

x B-'Ml Vflc m j VCw T ztotamm


i

i y
F tt

saw
toa

atan

mm
at

fam

a/ artaat

'

(toMa ** J tTtfcnrtr
*

'-*

YaaV

fctftot)

aw.
at

toCfacaajBx Ktoto

M.ail-frttiarfSrW(n V
'/ant
aatf tott>

Vaatys (ru/

BfKtti

aw

<

OHaytoaajaaaaua

eaeavtaK.

Sor

ttriptf to

a* "c- ua> iraam Vac*


*>*

>* * v*ac warrtor Chtnajfx

fc* aawa M-a*at

Ciw

f aa fWc*<

>
'-at

i mi mcaimaa
Tfartai atoaajtaar

'-kt,

14 Car

^r

TVaaawrn

portteDOfl

taflafltol

Umr y*n

erto*;

m*

^aaacnt raa>ao. tt

8*r

tor

'

Sfcir

* ** a*< ft-e a3 **** tei rf m 'J"""ril > * * qf*30 ai'/Aravtt'/Uafei ^L* "!*. ^
:amyt. tow
at:
to
1

toftoan*

aafer
I

?Ut
*S*>

fiatoi cfaarv

Ml 4eMy Lao*

cat
,

(fa*

Maataas dwawtfw. tod ^ft


a

tha

urn

Sfcarta

ia atf

at

VaaV. Mill it J.

to

awian

aartoaet toay

**

>
4a aaaoa (can.
ItaafcR
afl

to? toa

J wS

amiip

o>

w m *Ur**m
aase aonnKy

-SbMr'

ai

Tte Baatoato tbatoaaH tto ohatoal Bin In* atjUa.


al.

tea

Tb. Vadte prKtk. af fa-tow^


BJ

<

">*

,-.-4

Tea-

747
i Sanskrit term

la also

Nava ShJNr which

signifies a

new townshlpa
Chrisn and Chrisnlan.
City of Krishna In Siberia, about 2000 mites to the east of Moscow is Krasnoyarsk.

of improvised hutments

nm
The term
'Soviet'
is

Sanskrit

'Svet'

I.

e.

the

white
a
1

(mow-mantled) region (of Rishees). Likewise

dty named

after Lord Krishna.

Around the world there must

Stalin 's daughter !

name Svetlana is a local corruption of the Sanskrit name Sveunana meaning 'the fair-faced'.
Bal-Sevfk

be many dtles named

after Lord Krishna, one

way or the

other.

(ifcimi)

Research needs to be undertaken on this point.

1SKCON

TV

By a curious
term Bolshevik
(i. is

divine magic

and coincidence the International

the Sanskrit term Bal-Sevfk (*3?ft*)

Society for Krishna Consciousness

(ISKCON) movement
places.

penetrated

signifying Russees

e.

sages)

who (through penance)


power
(i.

sought

city named Russia and obtained a foothold In Krasnoyarsk, the very

the attainment

of (spiritual or temporal)

e.aajaliaa

after Lord Krishna Himself, of

all

strength.

Vcdic Recitation
Samooha-.Nishtha
According to a report
published In the Russian newspaper
national daily read

Communist
I.

is

the Sanskrit term

'

Samooha Nishtha

(wpj

pnj)

SOTSIAIJSTICHESKAYA INDUSTRTYA. a
industrial

by

e.

one whose considerations and conclusions are group-oriented,


i,

mass-oriented
*c"
is

e.

community

oriented.

There when the

letter

made

to retain its alphabetical pronunciation as


' '

'si* the

syllable
f.

commu will be seen to be the Sanskrit word (community) group. Even the word community "Samoohan-ity (wrjrlift.) i- e. a group outlook.
e.

Samooha'
Sanskrit

is

managers, the saffron-robed followers of ISKCON who fellow -members are a familiar sight in the USA have now some has been in Soviet Russia too. This Is Just as well because Russia parts of Russia a Vedic country from time Immemorial. In remote where Christianity has not yet been able to make heavy inroads,
a tradition is
still

being maintained In several churches, of mumbling


os a substitute for long rorgotten

Graam Names of townships ending with the suffix. ' grad ' are of Sanskrit
origin,
e.

some un-understood abracadabra

worship. Vedic chants, at the start of the new-fangled Christian

Vedic Fire Temple

such as Stalingrad and Leningrad which are 'graam' (I, townships) of the days of Vedic culture. To conform to their

original Sanskrit spelling

and meaning they should be spelled as Sulingraam, Leningraam, The ancient name of Kuibyshev township was Samar which is a Sanskrit word.

On the Caspian Sea is the busy port. Baku. In thai dty b (Jwalamai) an ancient Vedic temple or the Goddess of Effulgence which has Inscriptions buried under heaps of nshes left there by
ancient

Vedic

fire-worshippers.

The

relics

there

need

close

archaeological study.

KrishM
At least
till

World War

II

an occasional Vedic (Hindu) tadhu

>

The name Krishna used to be very common in pre-Christian Europe but its prevalence goes usually unnoticed. The very terms
'Christ'

keepin* (monk) used to station himself In those austere surroundings


alive a slender link with the

and 'Christian' are corruptions of the Sanskrit words

Vedic past of that spot. Loci) Hindu for the (Indian) merchants used to raise voluntary contributions

740

upkeep of that temple and It* solitary occupant-cum -tender. How many more such lamplee throughout Russia must now masquerading as Christian churches
vanished
I

or

been
faith
'

neo Christian

How many more must havt stamped out of existence by a rampaging one may well Imagine.

be

gatlkril

Russia

'

the fact that

be gauged from Vedic. Sanskrit Inheritance may also language bears many a time Russian phraseology and
.

Vedic Chariot Carving

The Evening News (Bombay)


Vedic chariot etc.
Koihviip
in

Times of India publication of


n

30th August 1982 reported the discovery of carvings depicting


the Tajikistan region of Russia.

For instance, the Sanskrit word for close identity with Sanskrit. Snusha. The Russian term Is -Snokna This . daughter-in-law, is Is common the Sanskrit letter sha ' aa kha lrait of pronouncing the Sanskrit word Stsnye U, wide region. In India itself Among in the Punjab region of India. disciple) la pronounced as Skh
' '
'

word the Arabs that same Sanskrit


as Sheikh.

'

Sahys came
'

to

be pronounced

Knshynp the progenitor of Vedic Rushees. That long, hoary Vedic tradition was to someextent revived in modem Communist Russia when at the Book Fair In Moscow
is

The Caspian Sea

named

after

Russians uee the word


Is

'

Agone' for a

fire. It*

Sanskrit origin

"Agni'.
for long has a language Lithuania which was a part of Russia

in

1979 the publication branch of the

ISKCON movement, namely

close to Sanskrit.

the Bhaktivedanla Book Trust was allowed to display its publications.

Samkrlt Names
Sanskrit. all European names) are Russian name* (and in tact Lord signifies the great Indre. Vedic The Russian name Andropov Lebedev la the Sanskrit nam* Lava-dav of the Gods. The name
I.

That

fair

was

visited

by thousands of Russians, predominantly


a liking for

young snd the belter educated. Some of them with


yoga or other Vedic concepts spent a
stall to

lot of

time at the ISKCON

work as
fall

interpreters or render other help.

e.

God Lava.

By the.

of

1980 the

Krasnoyarak, 2000 miles to

movement had spread the east of Moscow.


functioning at the

as far as

Ajurved
lb. ancient Vedic A Sanskrit tart of Ashtang Ayurved (I, brons. Idol of Russia along with medical science) dJacovered in Academy display at tn* International the Vedic deity of longevity Is on New Delhi 110016. of Indian Culture. 22 - Haul Khaa,

A branch

of

ISKCON

started

Community

Centre's House or Culture in Krasnoyarak, as a Health Club.

sweets at the
at the

A young Russian, Yevgeny Tretyakov, who had helped prepare ISKCON stall in the Moscow Book Fair, appeared
still

The same
able to

first ISKCON meeting in Krasnoyarak in saffron garb, reclUd mantra* and explained to his audience how the ISKCON routine

make heavy
lie

Christianity haa not been Institute report* that since that region inroads into Inhospitable Siberia

retain*

Vedic linka'ta

was conducive

rest of Russia. For instance.

peopU

much larger measure than the waier. In Sort* idore Gang*


preparations such a. Tripbal.

to health.

Rucin Communist
even is
in

ancient

down on the ISKCON centre times Hiranyakashyap had frowned on his own son
authorities cracked

and are familiar with popular Ayurvedic and Hlngashtak powdere.

Pralbad for singing the glories of Lord Viihnu In that urns Caspian
region. This
Is

Though currently Russia and India are formed part of the IndivWbk. nations yet in ancient Urn*, they

politically

two

different

a euriout Instance of history repeating itself-

747
746

is

abo

Sanskrit term

Nava Shlbfr which

signifies

new townships

Chrisn and Chrisnian.


City of Krishna
In Siberia
,

hutments. of improvised
Soviet

TV
name

term

'Soviet'

is

Sanskrit

'Svet'

i,

e.

the

whit*

city

named

about 2000 miles to the east of Moscow (a Kraanoyarmk. after Lord Krishna. Around the world there must

Likewise Stalin 's daughter's (snow-mantled) region (of Rishees). (tfawn) SveUana is a local corruption of the Sanskrit name
'

Krishna, one way or the other. be many cities named after Lord Research needs to bo undertaken on this point.

Svetanans meaning
Bal-Sevik

the fair-faced

'.

ISKCON
Society for Krishna Consciousness
International By a curious divine magic and coincidence the (ISKCON) movement penetrated
In

The term Bolshevik


signifying Russees
(i.

is

the Sanskrit term Bal-Sevik (dKj

e.

sages)

who (through penance)


(i.

sought

Russia and obtained a foothold


after

Krasnoyarak. the very city named


places.

the attainment of strength.

(spiritual

or temporal) power

e.B).alias

Lord Krishna Himself, of

all

Vedic Recitation
According to a
Sanskrit term
'

Samooha -Nishlha
Communist
i.

report

published in the Russian newspaper

is the

Samooha Nishtha

'

(?"

flnj)

SOTSIAUSnCHESKAYA TNDUSTRIYA.
industrial

a national

daily

read by

e.

one whose considerations and conclusions are group- oriented,


i,

mass-oriented
'c'
is

e.

community
its

oriented. There

when
'

the letter
'si'

are a

managers, the saffron-robed followers of ISKCON who -members familiar sight in the USA have now some fellow

made
'

to retain
'

alphabetical pronunciation as

the

syllable
I.

e.

commu will be seen to be the Sanskrit word (community) group. Even the word community
i.

Samooha'
Sanskrit

is

"Samoohan-ily (wn^tft.)

e.

a group outlook.

Russia too. This is Just as well because Russia has been parts of Russia a Vedic country from time immemorial. In remote where Christianity has not yet been able to make heavy inroads, of mumbling a tradition is still being maintained in several churches,
In Soviet

Graam
Names of townships ending with the suffix, grad ' are of Sanskrit such as Stalingrad and Leningrad which are 'graam' (I,
'

as a substitute for long forgotten worship. Vedic chants, at the start of the new-fangled Christian

somo un-understood abracadabra

Vedic Kir* Temple

origin,
e-

townships) of the days of Vedic culture.

To conform

to their

original

Sanskrit spelling and meaning they should be

spelled as

Stalingraam, Leningraam. The ancient

name

of Kuibyshev township

On the Caspian Sea is the busy port. Baku. In that city is (Jwalamai) an ancient Vedic temple of the Goddess of Effulgence which has inscriptions buried under heaps of ashes left there by
ancient

Vedic

fire -worshippers.

The

relics

there

need

a close

was Samar which


Krishna

is

a Sanskrit

word.

archaeological study.

At least

till

World War

II

The name Krishna used to be very common in pre-Christian Europe but its prevalence goes usually unnoticed. The very terms 'Christ' and 'Christian' are corruptions of the Sanakril words

Cmonk ) used to station himself In


alive a slender link with the

an occasional Vedic (Hindu) sadhu those austere surroundings keeping

Vedic past of that spot. Local Hindu (Indian) merchants used to raise voluntaiy contributiona for the

748
solitary occupant-cum -lender. How upkeep of that temple and Ita throughout Russia must now be many more such templee

749

Sanskrit

masquerading as Christian churches vanished or been stamped out of


!

How many more must


existence

have

Russia

'

Vedic, Sanskrit inheritance

may

also

be gauged from

by

rampaging

neo-Christian faith

'

one may well imagine.

Vedic Chariot Carring

time Russian phraseology and language bears Sanskrit word for close Identity with Sanskrit. For Inrtance, the Russian term Is '&iokha'. Thia a daughter-in-law, la Snuaha. The
the fact that

many

trail of

pronouncing the Sanskrit


itself

letter

'

aha

'

a.

'

kha '

la

common
(I. t.

The Evening News (Bombay) a Times of Indlu publication of


30th August 1982 reported the discovery of carvings depicting a
Vedic chariot etc. In the Tajikistan region of Russia.

to a wide region. In India


disciple) is

the Sanskrit word

Sbhya

pronounced as 9ikh in the Punjab region of India. Among the Arabs that same Sanskrit word 3shya came to be pronounced
' '

Kashyap
The Caspian Sea
is

as Sheikh.

named

after

Kashyap the progenitor of Vedic


at

Russians uae the word


Is
'

'

Agone

'

for a fire. Ita Sanskrit origin

Rushees. That Jong, hoary Vedic tradition


in in

modern Communist Russia when


1979 the publication branch of the

was to some extent revived the Book Fair in Moscow


to display its publications.

Agni

Lithuania which was a part of Russia for long has a language


close to Sanskrit.

ISKCON movement, namely

the Rhaktivedanta

Book Trust was allowed


visited

Sanskrit

Names
all

That

fair

was

by thousands of Russians, predominantly

young

wd

Russian names (and in fact

European names) are Sanskrit.

the better educated.

Some

of

them with a

liking for

yoga or other Vedic concepts spent a


stall

to

lot of lime at the ISKCON work as interpreters or render other help.

The Russian name Andropov signifies the great Indra, Vedic Lord of the Gods. The name Lebedev is the Sanskrit name Lava-dev
i.

e.

God Lava.

By

the.

fall

of 1980 the

movement had spread

as

far

as

Ayurved

Krasnoyarsk. 2000 miles to the east of Moscow.

A branch of ISKCON started functioning at the Community Centre'. House of Culture in Krasnoyarak. as a Health Club. A young
Russian, Yevgeny Tretyakov.

A Sanskrit

text of Ashtang Ayurved

(i.

e.

the ancient Vedic

medical science) discovered in Russia along with a bronie Idol of


the Vedic deity of longevity
is

on display at the International Academy


Delhi 110016.

who had
in

helped prepare

of Indian Culture, 22

Haul Khas, New

7tV"
man^

"the fim ISKCON meeting


nd explained u>
conducive to health.

ISKC N SUU

in
to

** Moscow *"* Wr.

appeared

The same
able to
still

Institute reports that since Christianity has not been

Krasnoyarak

saffron garb, recited

make heavy
its

Inroads into mhoapltable Siberia that region

bis

audien Ce hew the ISKCON routine

retains

Vedic links'ln

much
in

larger

measure than the

>
Prrfha"

rest of Russia.

For instance, people

Smerta adore Gangs water.

and are

familiar with popular Ayurvedic preparations such at Trlpbela

* 1* b curiou, in^,, of

Vt^T

"ny' k" hy' P h' d <" on


u

hi.

own son

and Hingashtak powders.

Though
nations yet

currently Russia and India are politically two different


In

ancient times they formed part of the indivisible

'

760
global Vedic crvflJsatlon.
alias

761

Dravids

md

were deputed

Those trained there were known as DraM '


to supervise sodo-rellgious afrit

of the gtobiJ Vedic society. As such there


for people all

curbs.

over the world. There were The learned and spiritually id vanced Vedic sages -cum

perfect mobility no crippling


political

wu

sciences
is

and technology has bean Irretrivmbly

lost 7

The enswar

and

rust that even the highest knowledge and expertise tends u> be forgotten, time to time. For Instance doctors, englnaers,

-scholars

were

in

demand and command everywhere.

The Ancient Adighai Vedic Community


Consequently, a Russian Orientalist,

If asked to lawyers, physicists snd other highly qualified parsons appear once again for the matriculation exmlnstfon would shudder was lost out of it the prospect. Similarly all Vedic expertise upheavals. discontinuance and disuse through historical upsets snd

aome

artefacts of the Adighai,

Russia from ancient times, such as bronze axes, and idols of Lord Vishnu are on display in Russian museums. The decorative patterns and pictures carved on those axes have tbeir counterparts in India Among those decorative figures are elephants though elephants were never native to the cold Russian region.

Asimov points out that Vedic community surviving [q

The Ruulan FesUvali


The Russian carnival of the
the autumn
burial of Kupalo, la celebrated in
la

when

a
Is

straw figure

actually buried, a bonfire

is

lighted and a Kolo

danced by young

men

and women. Rubnikoff

hos collected tbeee ballads and published them . In French

has analyzed and described them. The name Rambaud signifying the holy feet of Lord Rama.

la

Rambeud Rampaud

Vedic connection Ancient cop.es of the Koran found in West Asian countries which re currently Muslim also have elephant figures drawn in the margin
that they belong to the sunny Indon .ub-continent. That community also perpetuates Vedic music
Adighai folk-songs also proclaim

Theelephaiitdecorat.onisasuresignofmdian,

God

the The Russian Kupalo Is obviously what Is known as Cupid, <.) * Coap-da of Love in English That Is the Sanskrit name tfn
.

hLTZ:. ?***
jfaoa

fa todia
-

all

angered Lord Shiv by disturbing the latter 's meditation. Cupid was burnt by Lord Shiva with the fire that emanated from festival. In Lord Shiva's third eye. That Is an Important Vedic because

He

-"*

India
in

it is

known

as HoH. It

ia

that

which

Is

observed as Kupalo

Russia and under other namea

all

over the world to impress

Veda,

are the repositories of

on humans the need to sternly burn their passions.

*2T2Z22.
J retam some
g
links
el

" d "*

the

"*
Vedic
-

knowledge including h8v

* **
in

Samaveda
Samaveda la one of the four Vedaa. Individuals of tha Ural -Altaic language in Siberia are known as Samayeda while their
Samayedic. This
intensive, Is a strong Indication that if undertaken, traces of Sunavedic radiation

of ancient

131 T ?**** nZ^Z^ " ^t! ""ku? **


'

-ad trithraeUc
ta

IMUrium

to

Bombay

"

**" ~ * S
Mr
'

atudiee

geography

community
is called

at

the Nehru

Intelligent research is

in

November, 1981.

can
of tboae

still

be detected

among

those people.

PrWrV6d 0Vtr

M **Pt

Dionysus SuUue

Ussssee!

KkwIc^

Ruiu
in Vedic

A l,400.year-old statue 6f the Greek god. Dionysus valued at 170.000 dollars has been stolen from I^ningrad'sbemltasjsmiiswim.
a news agency said recently.

R"*

W* mIght wood " to how the ancisnt expertise

m
njw^.flDdtanKv-*!*- '."">
Our comment AMkift term Drvanam bus

75J

^^
n,
refr u>

Mjiot of iht

myihfc-

irod

of fmility standing by hit Artdan.


|, e-

mining on August *> ** HuMtan Information agency

land of Mlaafle*.

Dionysus
i.

b
e

a Ifarbted pronunciation of the

lord of lb. Goo*.

found to Astrakhan. Hindi manuscript of Padma Puran Jwalamukhi waa In the 7th century a temple dedicated to Goddee* attaching raised to the city of Baku. The name Badl Jwalamukhi etbted elsewhere. 10 it Indicates that a smallBr Jwalamukhi temple

wi

wum
oA*
Woman

Christian, scholars instead of

mentioning Lord Shiva

Km as tbt phaMc deity of fertility.


it

Buddhbm b known
of Siberia.

to

have nourished

in

tbe Buriat region of

Budflhbm

only a latter day

name

Hinduism

alias

praying to that deity for fertility It not because

Vedic culture.
signifies

Tbe term Buddha used

to so-called

Buddhist countriea

but beaut* i sped*! bastower of progeny divinity it hii the power to grant all dealrea.

e manifestation of

god (not a mortal Buddha).

Rlgvedic Carvings

7b* name of Hii consort Aridane b in fact the Sanskrit term Andaman alias Arighne e. destroyer of enemies. Shiva's consort Durga is also known by numerous other names such as Chandi. and Bhflwani She is known to wield several weapons and kill demons
I.
.

Drawings
been found
to

illustrating the contents of

many

Rigvedlc

hymns have

KazhakJatan

eastern the northern Tian Shan mountains, to south reported Tas* from Moscow. A composition. Ralpa

Tarn

'

and other mtocraent*.

and tbe
Pojorny)

sun carved on a rock, depicts a human-Uke figure with the bull moon over It* bead. There are several carvings of s

Podromy

(pronounced

a Slav Russian

surname

which symbolized the universe and sun for


-

many ancient civilizations

meaning on* residing at the foot of a mountain derives from Sanskrit


Pod-Paad; lor-gfri. ni-niwaa.

(Indian Express 3rd Feb. 1990)

A
all

Letter to the editor publbhed in the dairy

STATESMAN

of

Savfe language* are splinters of Sanskrit like

other languages.

New

Delhi

on Jury

12,

with 1976 alluded to the discovery of Jars

The Rusabn word Brat meaning 'brother' meaning 'husband's brother. Is the same

is

Sanskrit Bhrsta. Devar

In Sanskrit

Sanskrit inscriptions in Soviet Uzbekistan. Sanskrit inscriptions


to

and Russian.
Kharosti and Brahmi scripts have been
in the Soviet found in the Kara-tepe HQ1 to Southern Uzbekistan Soviet Embassy release (Sep. 17,1976)

Grin i.e.

'

throat

'

or
In

'

neck

Is also Is

s Sanskrit

word used in Russian,

MaU
U

Tor

mother'

Sanskrit

'Mat* in Russian. Supeti in Russian

Sanskrit SwipiU for 'sleeping/


like the

Union said a

New

Delhi

MM

German language ancient Russian too followed


< i

tyitam of seven

and three numbers (singular. duaJ

of India published by the dally Patriot (Sept. 17) and the Time* ancient trade (Sept. 18). The Karatepe Hill to located near the

and plural)

town of Termez on the

right

bonk of the Amu-darya. A Buddhist


In the hflJ.

monastery has also been discovered

Th.Sm.krit word 'Bhagawan- for Cod

>

^^kriT^
6 A

*** " *'

shortened in Russian

The monastery ruins are

believed to belong to the

2nd or 4th

from BNfwtnI or

scholars tend to century A.D. They could be older since Western


the Buddha underestimate the antiquity of ancient events. Even What is characterized lived in the 19th century B.C. and not in the 6th.

Vnb. fI!L

.?'

?"*

***

eolony rf ,ndf " merchant* on the

as Buddhism

must be understood

to be

a phase or

cult of

Hinduism

7M
4li)

756
Vpdie culture.

Amdau

Stud to

21,

A Teas dispatch published by the Times of India. November 1976 reported the discovery of a studio - several metres
site of ancient Penjikent in Tajikistan. The rooms were covered with mutli-colour paintings showing

underground at the
inner

goddesses surrounded by stars, and beasts, garlands and fruila.

The

paintings are believed to

be of the sixth to eighth centuries.

The Evening News (a Times of India, Bombay publication)


of 30th August 1962 reported the discovery of carvings depicting
a Vedic chariol etc. in the Tajikistan region of Russia.

The
(Rusiia)

picture depicts the entrance to a palatial building in

Samarkand

The grave

inside

buMlng,

is said

to be that of Tamertain.

building waa raised if that be so it must never be fanded that the over the grave. Historic buildings throughout the world are littered with Muslim graves true or fake. That hw misled hlatorlana, architects and

Even

edifies irchaeotogisui all over the world to wrongly connect the origin of the to the date of tba death. Likewise that also wrongly leads them to regard

the architecture of the building to be Islamic

and sepulchral.

In such

mature one must

alwsya ask to be ahown eormspondtng palaces.

a conqueror such aa Taraerlaln had such a itupendoua palace bulli (?) over his corpee hy others, where are the palaces that he himself or others

7
rtlMri for
fifty

him while be wae

alive 7

767
being, kicking

monarch win hv

pelecea

Wore

hii

corpse
*t

cm

have one!

Sura Tameriaui hu no

(spectacular) palace be couldn

have bed a majeetic mausoleum.


the palace of Sanaa^t-apeaking VedJe Muallm IconoduU would never akttcb

The buOdtog eean alongside

wu
.

rutan of the indent Rusafan region


living betogi

on

their bufldmga.

Mirk tbe drawings In the two corntra of tot arch, beiow the 7Be* depict riatog eun shining on tiger chasing a deer. Ruasian
guides describe that oarlctture

linte)

women

-Soor-Sadul

'

but plead Ignorance about


I,

Ha meaning.

"Diet

la

the Sanskrit term 'Soorya-Shardul'


la

e.

'The

3^
who

THE VEDIC PAST OF GERMANY

and tbe Tiger.' 'Obviously that


bald

the

emblem of tbe Vedic

rulers

away

to that region. This underline, tbe neceeafiy of searching the

world for such ancient Vedie royal

emblema which have remained unnoticed.


adorning tbe

Modem Germans have very often evinced keen interest in Sanskrit


studies. In the present state of public Ignorance of past, the interest that

The symmetry
la alao

to

identical aketches

ehouMen of

tbe arch

Europe's Vedic
la

a Vedic
ia.

trait.

Germans have in
is

Sanskrit research

generally

Tamerlain's tomb and lalamic srebftacture, h Infect an ancient Hindu palace or temple in Vedic architecture.

What

therefore,

detcribed

as

considered a freak trait. But that


in Sanskrit studies

a mistake. Germans are interested


is

because Sankrit

in their blood. In pre-Christian

AH

historic edifice., gardens,

township, throughout tbe world ascribed

to Muafimi art tbua captured Hindu property.

Germany was a land steeped in Sanskrit language and Vedic culture. The Christian Invasion of Germany, like that of other parts of Europe, did Indeed pull the Germans eway from their primordial
times Vedic culture.
Prussia (the kernel of
(H **ti)
I.

'Pre-Russia'

I.

modern Germany) is the e. en extension of tht

Sanskrit term
Rishi country

e. of Russia. Its other

name "Deutschland"

is

a corruption

of the Sanskrit term "Daitya-Sthan." It was the greet accomplished

Vedic Daitya community which controlled the European region of the world Vedic administration. The term Titan ' is the European
'

pronunciation of the Sanskrit


Is known

word

Daitytn. Therefore

Germany

as Deutechland

The term Deutach is an European corruption


Daitya.

of the earlier Sanskrit


also share the

name

The Dutch people of Holland

same name

Daitya. This wul be apparent from tbe

close similarity between the

terms Deutach and Dutch.

Maxmueller, a German scholar of Sanskrit settled in England,

who

edited a

modern

edition of the Rigved describee himself in


(<nrr Jitf* fcr

Sanskrit on

Its

front page as

anta

n>rfrj (I.

frnftwi rfannej
e.

mt)

I,

e.

(edited)

by

me bom

In

8harman

a acholar)

'

766
country. resident of Oxford,

named Moksha Moolar.


called

Vaitland

la

obviously

the

name

Veda-land.

Consequently
as
(a

In the above endorsement Maxmueller has hit upon three important clues. Firstly, knowingly or unknowingly ho has discovered

Germany had priestly families reciting the Vedaa hereditarily in India. From the mention of the temple and the statues It
a temple

he term German is a corruption of the Sanskrit term Sherman applicable to Sanskrit scholars in Vedk terminology. Secondly,
that
' i

apparent that the spot had an ancient Vedic establishment with

of Vishnu or

similar Vedic deity, and the statue* art

MaxmueDer has

rightly implied that the

term Oxford

is

literal

those of ancient sages

who manned

the Vedic establishment there.

translation of the Sanskrit

term Go-toertb. Thirdly. Maxmueller


Is

The Swastlk Symbol


Early In the 20th century the Nazi party In Germany adopted

has implied that his

name
is

the Sanskrit term

Mox-mooler
is

I,

e.

one whose personality

rooted (n salvation. This

very plausible.

Mot

(i,

e.

Salvation)

was Indeed the


Moksh.

goal of the ancient sages

the Swastik as

its

symbol. In doing so the Nazis didn't choose


rightist

inhibiting the Russian

and Prussian regions, as evidenced by the


i.

a freak outlandish symbol. The Nazis werea fiercely patriotic,


organization firmly rooted in the the Swastik
it Is

term Moscow

alias

Mocsow

soil.

When
Is

such a party chose

e.

obvious that the Swastik

an ancient Vedic symbol

Tacitus, an ancient

Greek writer has

testified

to the ancient
first habit

which

is

regarded as a native emblem because Germany has been


all

Hindu. Vedic culture of the German?.


of the

He notes "The

a Vedic country
It

along In pre-Christian times.


all

Germans on

rising

was ablution, which must have been of

may

also

be noted that the Swastik was widely used


In In

over

Eastern origin and not of the cold climate of


iht loose flowing robes, the long
a<

Germany, as
'

also

Europe as an important Vedic symbol


Large Swastika hive been found Inlaid
royal

the pre-Christian era.

and braided hair tied in a knot the top of the head so emblematic of the Brahmins. ''

mosaici

in

Britain.

Veda-Laud

Roman, golden dinner-set on display in the London also has the Swastik carved on it. Thus
country of Europe has had

British

museum,

practically every

relics bearing the Swastik.

The Dravida alia- Druids who exercised supervisory control over worldwide Vedic culture were in Germany loo. We Bre infonned
that in a certain

The very term Swastik


well-being. It
in
Is

is

Sanskrit meaning an

emblem

of

monastery, upon theconfincs of Vaitland in Germany,

symbolic of the Sun and the earth and the coamoo


It
it

were found

six old statues.

They were the figures of andnet Druids.


and their heads covered

a constant mystic, dynamic whirl.

represents the spheres

They were seven

feet in height, bare-footed,

but instead of being merely spherical,

has

clefts

to keep

it

in

with a Greetash hood,

with a acrip by their side, and a board

constant dynamic motion with wind-power. Ills, therefore, a symbol


of karma or constant action In consonance with the whirling cosmos

two divisions, to their book and a Diogenes siaff. five feet n lgih; their countenances were severe and morow, end their direct* to the eartb-tbey were placed at the "^ galea of the temple.
middle; in their hands

descending from their nostrils. plaJtod out in

was

The Swastik also represents the divine energy which pervades the
universe and the eight directions which are of primary and permanent

importance

in

Vedic tradition.
left

The
different

notion that the Nazi Swastik being forked to the

was

From

the above passage

we

from the

real,

Vedic, Indian variety,

not true. India

conclude that a pert of

Germany
Tod.

too has large

left- forking

Swastika

Inlaid In

stone, displayed high

on the entrance of the majestic, seven-storied ancient Hindu palace

iw r"I t

m. A Comply Malory M A CoLi""?

'nd

AnU *" t!"


of

u*

* r*^

")

Col.

Jam*

In

Sikandra (six miles north of Agra) where the Mogul monarch

no
Akbar
to

761
said 10

have been buried

lai*r.

Vedic Tantric designs inc] udt

Smiito of

either variety 1>T

Ganesh idols with their elephantine


'

Hahnemann

Is

the Sanikrit suffix

'

Manav meaning
'

'

man

'

trunk curving

w the right or the left sccording to one

s preference.

Rama
Personal and place names deriving from the Vedic Incarnation

and Daityas (alios Danavas) lnt In the andent rift between Devas Svastik forking to the right was chosen by the Gods as their symbol whOt the one forking to the left was preferred by the Daityaa a*
ii

Rama abound
Is

In in

apparent

from

the

left -forked

Swastik

rooted

in

German

Ramstein

Germany.

Europe. Corresponding to Ramsgate of the British It is to be understood not merely as

(Deutschland) tradition since hoary antiquity.

a stone but as

the

first
is

' sthan 'i.e. spot. In West Germany the site where American Pershing-U missile was located in November.

The Laod-Grant Deeds


The land-grant deeds of ancient
those of India. Both contain the

1963

named Ramstein.
Is

Germany are

identical with

Hahnemann

Haouman

an invocation addressed to divinity,

names of witnesses, a description of the gifted land, names of the donor and donee, reason for the grant and a promise that
the grant wffl be enjoyed

by the donee

fn

perpetuity and that the

wee of the medical system known as homoeopathy Hahnemann. That Is the Ramayanlc name Hanuman. The prevalence Ramayan used of that name in Germany is clear proof that the pre-Christian Germany to be revered, recited and enacted in ancient. The founder
as

donee

' right

to unhindered

enjoyment of the property wfll be guarded

much

as

it

is in

India- Researchers would, therefore,

do well

and guaranteed. Such Identity of wording, sequence and form of the contents is emphatic proof that both Germany and India were

put

of

i universal Vedic administration in the ancient past.

an andent version of the Lowen-bertt legend in German destroyed literature since the original Sanskrit Ramayan has been survive back by Christian vandals in Europe. But still traces do
lo look for

long

Bam
In

several surviving as discussed in a special chapter in this volume on

European versions

of the

Ramayan.

Germany one comes across names

like

Hindenburg and

Heidefburg. with that suffix 'burg' signifying a fort. Therefore,

the term Hindenburg (ffeff)


while
;iiedelb ui
>

means

(fe^.

the fort of the Hindus.


-

reserves of victim like invaders poisoning the water and food with base substitute nations or adulterators mixing quality products

w-*-?

i.

the Sanskrit

compound

andent Christian invaders of Europe have deliberately confounded the


legend of the Lion-hearted

'Haya-dal-durg-

fort garrisoned

Rama

with that of the Lion-hearted

acuonanea expUm the word


only party right. -

by a contingent of horse. If German burg iq mean a mountain they are

Richard of the Crusades.


Naturally, therefore

when every
its

nation of Europe has a legend

Dwkt

of Richard the Lion-hearted In


Is not

andent

literature that legend

mall *?

<qUiVaIOU
'

,Tiian)a

'

is

***** Th*

Is

of

Rama of the British Richard but of the Vedic incarnation Ramayanlc fame. Hit also waa a crusade against Raven. Why
I

rST
Mm

^^^^^^'^y-'whichiscommonly

would other nations of Europe go rapturous over the British king Crusades Richard when their rulers too had partidpated In the

But the
to
a

fact thai

all

nations of Europe pay reverential


the

homage
he

legendary

Richard

Lion-heart

prove*

that

German .affix 'mann'

name*

like

-Hermann- and

Ramachandra, the Lion-heart.

Htetf,.

CMrftaM

* ABcknt O""""*
chieftains In

?3

that renowned I. appears ceremonial burial either from lack of firewood used to be *vn a cold country or out of extra respect for their for cremation in a Two such burials are died hereunder.

andent Hindu

Gwmtny

to

have. In Sanskrit a chariot


if

is

known
la

'

rath

' .

It

may be obeerwd
drawn by bonta word was

that
Is

the first syllable 'Cha*

eliminated the remainder 'riot'

obviously the Sanskrit word 'rath'.

chariot

was

known
two
'

as

'aswa-rath'

jttwa

in
in

Sanskrit.

That

malpronounced as 'aacha-rath'
1978) reported the discovery London Times (of October 12. 'hung* grave of the 6tb century B. C. of a Celtic chieftain.
a
first

Europe. In count of time

letters

dropped out and the spelling changed to chariot.

of a

The use of the chariot as weD

the continuation of

its

Sanskrit

containing

wealth

of

treasures
chariot,

Including

the a

chieftain's
beautifully
in in

name

rath aliaa riot

'

la

important evidence of the prevalence of

four-wheeled

ceremonial

gold

jewellery,

Vedic culture throughout the ancient world.

decorated coach,

bronze plates, weapons and fabrics,


in

field

outside Vaihingen near Ludwisberg

West Germany,

a round

Another Kshatriya Chieftain

barrow of 60 yards diameter. The grave was specially constructed


out of layers of
the

The March 1980 issue of the National Geographic magazine (USA


carried

wood planks

alternating with layers of stone. In

an

elaborate,

illustrated

article

on

the

archaeological
in

wooden inner chamber of the grave, some

5x5

yds. was

excavation of a

mound

in

Hochdorf village near Stuttgart

Wan

found the skeleton of the chieftain lying on a wheeled coach supported

Germany.

by human figures.

He wore

a gold

neck-band, gold-rings, two on

Under the mound was


all

a well-preserved square chamber, secured

snake-shaped gold brooches and a kind of a gold stomacher. His


leather shoes and quiver containing gold and iron -tipped arrows were also decorated with gold. By the coach lay a leather riding- whip,

sides with timber and stones.

Inside the

chamber on

a royal,

bronze gilded coach lay the


'

a gold goblet and a bronze- vessel decorated with the figures of


lions.

body of an ancient

chieftain of

2600 years
is

antiquity.
in India

RemnAnts of

plain - patterned

woven material indicated

that

he was shown wearing was exactly as

shown

The attire when enacting

bung with fabrics. The most striking object wood and iron chariot complete with chains. harness and yoke. In it was a kind of dinner service of 14 bronze plates. One Kleismann professor of pre-history at Bonn University said the grave and many of the objects were very similar to those
was the
chieftain 's

the grave bad been

plays concerning the Mahabharat era.

Near the
lion figures

feet of the

body was

round vessel ornamented with

(symbolic of Vedic royalty). In that vessel lay remnants


e.

of

mead

i.

a drink of honey.
the Sanskrit

of the Etruscans.

Mead

is

Msdhu
Is

word

for honey. In Vedic tradition

a drink of

honey

given to near and dear ones In a loving holy


It

As observed by us elsewhere were followers of Vedic culture in

in

this

volume, the Etruscans

welcome or send-off.
at the burial

was

that Vedic tradition which

was observed

Italy.

~bhng relics found in the German md there ]*> prgfefiet Vedic


j

eHery

and other objects are such as are associated with ancient Vadic royally of India.

^^ ^

Consequently the closely grave prove that the chieftain


]fan

of the andent Sanskrit-speaking Vedic administrator

of the Stuttgart region of ancient Germany.

^^ ^
elit*

Saxony

Andent German areas had


Saxony was 'Shak-seni'
i.

all

Sanskrit namse.

The

origin of

Tba chariot was

e a camping ground of the ermy of


'

veto,,

which the ancient Vedic

used

the Kshatriya clan of Sbakas. In India

Saxena

'

Is a

common surname

766 Shak tena. of people employed by


Rflna
I.

e.

armies on accounting job..

evidence cttad also leads U> the same of Sanskrit. Tba historical

Even

sfter the

Mshsbharat wit

number of Kaurav

princes

Tboee apadaSataf In German lanejuag*. Vasography end FowkaV grammar could take a cue from this vohime (and the book
conclusion.

wen

urnamaa

Consequently German administrators throughout the world. those ancient Kuru admin istratora. like Ruhr derive from

Howlers) and tract

In detail the Sanakrlt origin of

German.

distorted form of Sanskrit. The Cermin language Itself is a to be Sanskrit in origin. For Its words will also be found Sanskrit ' ayasam.' iniunce. the word 'eisen signifying iron is

the KngHah Here we propose only to flhistrett tba approach. Taka StoaTeD-anar' Onwwi word surrender. That U the Sanakrit term term t*aw) English word 'leader' la tba Sanskrit
likewise the

Moit of

Lok-dhar*
therefore.
'

I.

a.

"person who
la spelt In
'

controls, leads (or) twaye the

'

masses. That same word

aa

leitar

'

In

German. Obviously,
'Lok-dhar'

The German honorific


of the 'Mr.' in English.
instance, in India devout

'

Herr as in
'

'

Herr Hitler

'

is

an equivalent
respect. For

WUr

Is

the form

whkh the Sanskrit word

Herr

Is

Vedk term of
' '

survives in the

German language.
'

Hindus while taking a bath in any river


will

or well or even in their own homes

keep chanting

Herr Gangay. .
purify them

administrator. That

eignifiee a district Consider the German word gauleiter which gau In Sanskrit signifies the 'cow'. Is because
'

Herr Gangay." wishing thereby that the bath


like the sacred

may

water of the Ganga river.

e. a cow-farm allaa The term 'gawaleya' stood for a ranch 1, around revolved economy Vedic Since the dairy-farm.

likewise Hindus always attach the term Herr to the names


of their Gods. In Vedic practice
'

cow -establishments
(ITTSWT i)

'gauleiter *

Is

the Sanskrit term

-gau^-dbar"

Herre

Ram

'

and

'

Herre Krishna,
God.

ire
1,

common

chants.

And

since

Mahadev

signifies the Great

e. deity

of superior rank, the honorific


of

"Herr"

is

used twice

end German The almost complete identity In the Smskrii 8anakriUc of nouns Is yet another emphatic pointer to the declension
origin

and the

name

Mahadev

is

invariably Invoked as

"Herr Herr

of the German language.

Mahadev."
Shh- Worship

The worship of Lord Shiva, the father god and his consort Mother Goddess used to be prevalent all over ancient Europe including Germany. Yet Christian Europe has been so estranged from iu Vadic past that if they find
the a Shivling the

Europeans dub

U
a

object looking like a hat. Weat Germany has issued M-pennies postal stamp depicting a Shivling covered with gold

as a cult

beet

found during excavation


it

in

the city of Schifferstadt. but

ascribed

on the stamp as a

cult object

shaped

like

a gold bat-

German Language

*"* iJ^^T*? 0bwn" tkmlhM ^n^throughout * riders


nould
'

^b

^^
Uiia

volume

7
787 200 single pieces together
with
to

make

s nssriy 30 cm.

uD. upright

figure

human

as well as animal features.

The

sdentiflc dstlng of the layer

of the find with the Carbon 14 method dated this statue to sboul 32.000

years of age. making


In the

It

the oldest existing find of s figurative sculpture

world
-

Our Comment
The

man-Uon

figure

shown

above

Is

obviously

the

Nsrs-Sunhs

Incarnation of divinity In Vedic culture. Obviously the deity hod s msee


in

hand. This

Is

one

additional proof of

Germany and

In fact the

whole

of Europe having been part of the Vedic world.

The above

picture

was

published in the English dally of Calcutta dated &inday. March 26. 1996.

We however deplore the

PaleoUthf c Age and Glacial Period terminological

classification fancifully devised

and dictated by
Is

European archaeologists.

Just say 32,000 years ancient. That

enough.

Since

Germans constitute
Prahlad

the Vedic Daitya


e.

community

it li

but

proper that the Narasimha


there.

I.

Man-Uon
the

Idol

should be found

Because

was

Hiranyokashyap. The

latter forbada

son of the Daitya ruler son Prahlad from engaging In


life

divine contemplation. Sensing danger toPrahlad's


in the

Cod Incarnated
Tyrant Daitya

form of a Man-Lion (Narasimha) and


That
Is

killed the

king.

the Vedic legend.

Oldest

Man
in

Lion

A MuKum

In the

town

or

Ulm

southern Germany recently txhibiwd

the spectacular 32,000 year-old find of a man-lion carved out or a

mammoth

tusk belonging to the Paleolithic Age in an exhibition on

"Animal and

Man

in the

Aru

of the Glacial Period

"
tusk which were excavated Cave in the valley of river Lone In

For 30 years,

fragment

of a

mammoth
awoy

from the deep

Interior of the Stadel

southern Germany were lying tucked


archives of this

In

boxes In the archaeological

museum.

1WS, an archwologLsi discovered some marks

While making inventories of the finds of the Stodet Cave In October sculpting. Ha fitted the
of

UJSCHE BUNPESPQ5T

THE VEDIC PAST OF TOE AUSTRIAN REGION

Hungary
a scenic,

is

a corruption
'
'

of the Sanskrit term Shringery implying


' '

huly region.

S and H

have been interchangeable.

In

Osoma De Core's

preface to the Tibetan Dictionary that

own nation Hungarian scholar observes about Sanskrit "To hia study of Sanskrit wiD be feels a pride in announcing that the he Europe The Hungarians satisfactory than to any other people of
more
will
.

find a fund of information from

its

study, respecting their

origin,

structure of manners, customs, and language, since the

>COLDENER HUT*
COlDKfCU DER

VON

SCHIFFIRSTADT KUITISCHER
BRON7F.Zf.IT

dialects) is most analogous to Sanskrit Cos also of other Indian language of occidental while it greatly differs from the the Hungarian, analogy, in the Hungarian, Europe. As an example of the close postpositions are invariably used. language, instead of prepositions Again from a verbal root, without excepL with the personal pronouns.

In

A postal sump depicting on ancient Craany. Instead of concluding from

gold-plated Shivling discovered


It

that In pre-Christian times

Germans foUowed v ij c culture Md worshipped the ShlvUng modern scholars dub it as a quaint, bat-like cult-object venerated by some non-descript

simple syllabic addition, the aid of any auxiliary verb, and by a causal, verbs distinguished as active, passive, the several kinds of etc. are formed In the desiderative. frequentative, reciprocal '" Hungarian, In the same manner as in Sanskrit.
advisable hereafter it would be and study of Hungary's history for all those interested in the world\ of the ancient Vedic traditions to look upon It as a part and concerning Hungarian culture Then alone will all the enigmas

In view of the above observation

Chriitianity and Isiom hove thua so thoroughly estranged whole communities and nations from thar post moorings aa to make them look upon their own ancestor,

ss

some unknown savagee and

strangers.

customs be

clear.

Mythok*,. XVTfl, India in Cr* or Truth In (1) P. 304. Appendix NoA. D. Glaago*. by F.. Porocke. John J. Griffith 4 Co..

'

'

770 77J

The Austrian
Hungary's
Buddhaprashtha
capital.
i.e.

capital la these

daya spelled a* Vienna. But a


la

Budapest

is

the

Sanskrit

t*rm

few centuries

earlier it used to

be spelled as Vlndoban which

the city of Buddha.


in the in

Buddha

lived In the 19th


is

century B. 0. (and not

6th century B. C. as

being currently
titled

a corruption of the andent Sanskrit term Vrindavan, the new! and famous township associated with Lord Krishna, in India.

assumed) as discussed

a special chapter in

my

book

'Some

Blunders of Indian Historical Research.


Realization of that 1300-year under- estimation

The name Vrindavan mentioned


justification

above

has

also

another

namely that

tales of

the divine flautist (Lord Krishna)


nations.

of Buddha 's

form part of the legends


in

of

most European

For instance.
'

antiquity

assumes considerable importance assumed


to

in history.

Because

if

Greece the

flautist is

Buddha
history

fs

have

lived in

the 6th century B. C. the


is

the divine soul) and in

known as Pan (from Sanskrit pran ' i. Germany as the Pied Piper of Hamdin.

t-

from

that period to

any gigantic authoritative push from India which enabled the spread of Buddha *s teachings from China and Japan to Europe and the Arab lands. That spread of Buddhism at lent over half the world was achieved
of

those 2.500 years

our own we are not aware

fairly

known. And during

Poland
In p town

known

as Czestoehowa in Poland

is

an andent tempW
i.

the vedie Mother Goddess

known

as the Black Virgin


is

e. Kali.

during those

The
is

**'a

Gora monastery

In

which that holy icon


i,

consecrated

1300 years of Buddhism which remain completely wiped out from because of modern scholars 1 underestimation of the antiquity of human civilization.
history

the meaningful Sanskrit term Isan-Gauri

e.

Lord Sbiv and

his consort, Gauri.

Austria

in

the term

The country known as Austria

as a
is the
-

The terms Czechs. Czechoslovakia and Czestochowa originate shak (IT*) an andent dan of Vedic Kshatriyu who branch of the Daitya clan administered parts of Europe. The
' '

Slt^ SS2SS en^


L*.
!

Sf,

AStr33

^
'

Sanskrit t*rm

'

Astriya*

missnes

Snce

" UVfag '" the e PnJMia) r

wer*

""* * 0. Russia) ^n European continent


of the
ta

I,

e. RishJs of

Britain Saxenas of India. Saxons of Europe and the Anglo-Saxons of Czechoslovakia are part of the same stock. Consequently the term
Is

Slavak the Sanskrit term Shakaslavakiya (5TWW*rq>.

is

another

ancient sub-clan.

^li vJJ^T-! ^"^ m " W taown

mventing. experimenting on and perfecting various

WWch

TSL^ 7r^e Wnt


-0-

the* manufactured

,1eS

to Astriya. It Astriy.- which attaches t* the region we

*"**

be Sanskrit. For Most Slav names could be easily detected the Slav region instance, news reports of poutical developments in name as Yasuai AkaaM early in 19M A. D. mentioned a leader's (meaning wit?" the Successful. Heaven-Bom) and Mahabharal. could be Dusshasan. a character in the epic
Duahane which

*" ^ya.andDev.3^^e4rfUl whil * h **cient Europe miK"es mounMd d *** m* each other TJ? W Ulntt
in

E*u,m Europe L^? J


been

70ye*v

f^^^T "^
ta

language. The Poles also Sanskrit la the mother of the Polish expression in their regard India as their cultural mother. This find* meming. "He who saying ''Kto poxnal mdia, poinal coly Swial'"

Ru89ian *"<* mounted " miWne3depl0yedlnWMt* Europe

sees India has seen the whole world.

"

*<"

deadly atare. for over

For

detected. The Sanskrit roots In the above words can be easUy paahyati is the Sanskrit word instance, the word poxnal
' ' '

'

772/ 773
(woft) while 'coly await'
ft

'tkhfltm jagat*

(i,

e.

the whole

world).
Bulgaria

At on Indian

film

festival held

in

Bulgaria recently,

it

wu

discovered that Bulgarian audiences could easily understand Sanskrit words in the dialogue but couldn t follow Urdu.

For instance, when the film

'SPARSH' (meaning 'touch')


lustily

wu

shown the whole audience cheered and


title

repeated the

knowledgeable

SPARSH
in

with a gasp of wonder because Bulgarians


the
is

too use the word Sparsh

same sense.
replete with Sanskrit words.
this

THE VEDIC PAST OF THE SCANDINAVIAN REGION

The Bulgarian dictionary


the Bulgarian

When
Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Iceland though separate countries
today, are

Government was Informed of

by the Indian
in

Embassy. Bulgaria promptly introduced courses

Sanskrit in

lumped together

in

ancient Vedic

terminology as

numerous schools,
Sanskrit studies.

Sofia University has a special

department for

Scandinavia.

Scandinavia (W^rfta)

is

a Sanskrit term meaning; a naval


of Scand. the son of Lord Shiva

Bulgaria itself is a Sanskrit

compound Bui -garia (*h *ifa) meaning

settlement founded in the

name
'

'strength of a high calibre.*

and Commander-in-Chief of the divine armies. The Vikings inherited word Smha that tradition. The last syllable Wng is the Sanskrit
' '

Belgium
Likewise Belgium
'Invincible Strength'
is

signifying a lion.

It

could be that 'r' Is missing from the original


'

the Sanskrit

compound (**

arinny

name Virking meaning Virsimha <*t#*> meaning


i.

brave Ukeation."

e.

The whole of Europe was administered

in

ancient times by a
alias

Laxmi-durg i. e. the fortress of the goddess of wealth CLaxmi) indicating that in pre-Christian times the principle deity of those people was the Vedic
is

Luxemburg

Sanskrit-speaking Vedic clan known as Deityas

Danavaa.

Shunda and Merk were two


of the Daityaa, It is those two
In the

joint priests of the ancient clan

Goddess Uxmi.

names which

are

commemorated
name.
appears

term Denmark, with a


is,

slight distortion of the first


In

Count Blomatierna

therefore, right

observing " II

Scandinavia before the Mahabbaral that the Hindu settlers migrated to

war."
The ancient names Sverige for Sweden and The term (-*3> are Sanskrit terms Swarga (W"f> snd Narka l**). Dunu clan. Snc* Sweden in Sanskrit signifies a region of the good tradition, it signifies 'Hell* In Sanskrit. Vedic
Narka
alias

Norge for Norway

Norge

774
It

wry

significant

and pertinent thai


Is

in

Norway one town

is actually

775

very important proof of the Vedic past of Norway. Narakasur does indeed figure in Vedic legends as the Daitya long of the Hell region i. e. Narka currently spelled in

named Hdl. This

Names and Surnames


Scandinavian names such as

Europe

Amundsen and Sorenscn are dearly


Is

as Norge alias Norway.

of the Vedic tradition. In India the term Sen used as a surname, but basically
It
'

these days generally

is

personal
'

names such aa

Upsali near Stockholm in

Sweden

is

a Sanskrit term stgnifyng


It

Ugrasen and Bhadrasen which have

sen

endings.

an auxiliary or subordinate educational campus.


be that
in

could, therefore

the pre-Christian days Upsala originated as a second

satellite campus

of the main educational establishment in Stockholm.

nomes

The term Veda also forma part of Scandinavian namea like Vedrom ond Vedpraknsh in India.
Idols

TheVedas
Scandinavia
's

Buddha
antientmost scripture
is

known as Edda

because

it is a corruption of the name Veda. After the discontinuance of Sanskrit tuition in Europe and as a result of the spread of Christianity,

Some Buddha idols found In sunken ships In the frown sees around Scandinavian countries, indicate that because Scandinavfa
practised Vedic culture
his

the contents of the Vedas were forgotten and the word itself came
lo

when the Buddha rose to fame in Indis. too as name, fame and images were carried to Scandinavia

to other parts of the world.

be mispronounced as Edda. Its kernel viz.


all

its

Sanskrit chanta
Shiva Worship

have

been substituted by

some imaginary

stories.

Vedic Designs Dorothea Chaplin observes in her book


it
*
'

Many
During recent years

relics

as in rest of Europe.

Scandinavia of Shiva worship are often found In But Christian invaders of Scandinavia have

has

come

lo

be recognized

how

deeply the impress of ancient

Indian

designs and folklore have influenced the pre-Columbus avunation of America. But the designs and beliefs centred around

the elephanta are just aa emphatically revealed in the antiquities of Scotland and Scandinavia. "*
In Vedic tradition elephanta

rituals and prayer books done-their worst in twisting Shiva worship woven around sexual revelries to appear as though they were aD Even In India, enemies or primitive adulation of the genital organs. manufactured such defamatory Sanskrit of Vedic culture have revelling in masquerade as genuine classics of those

literature lo

sex worship.

are considered holy. God Ganesh

has an rfephanl

's head. Every temple and palace Is many a Ume decorated with elephant atetues because an elephant ia considered tymbol of sober wisdom, sacred strength

have observes Count Biornstierna. himself a Scandinavian, myths of the Scanduiavuns Scandinavia) another proof that the (in are derived from those of the Hindus. '
-

"We

The existence of the elephant


uve elephant is

and regal grandeur.

Though
Scandinavia

under the present

political

dispensation

the

term

in Scandinavian

symbolism though

may apply

to Norway, Sweden,

Denmark and

Iceland

not native to the region, ia a sure indication of the orevdence of Vedic culture in pre-Cbriettan ScandinavU.

tuts northern European regions In yet let us also study the other

context.

Even

today, the study of Sanskrit

is

a treasured objective

WWJ",,

^ F8

-* 8,tRider4Co .. Paternoster Row .London.

Hindus, by Couni Bornsitonuu (2) P. ira. The Theogony of the

>

'

776

these people can be mostly identified with Vedlc deities.

among the Finns and the Lithuanians and the legendary godj "a

777
#

The suffix
which
All

'

GOTH

'

quoted above

Is

the Sanskrit term

'

Got

OcclKMlovakti
In the Czechoslovak language too Veda means knowledge. This an indication that the Vedas have been a part of ancient European tradition. Science faculties in Czechoslovakia academies are
is

signifies

a bond of nurture under a

common Guru

alias i*jr.
If

Hindu

intelligentsia continue to retain

and mention.

asked,

their 'Gotra' alias 'Goth' with holy nostalgic reverence. India's

Foreign Secretary
tradition.

in

the 1980s was

'

Rasagotra

'

of that

same

known

as 'Veda'.

Sharkara. Even the English word sugar is a regional variation of that Sanskrit term. The Czech word 'Sicker' is nearer stfll in pronunciation to the Sanskrit term
is

TV

Sanskrit word for sugar

The extract quoted above gives one an

indication that the people

who

inhabit the vatious regions of Europe are Teutons alias Daityas;


all

and that they

had a

common

ancient literature.

It

contained

Sharkara.

poetry and laws and that the ideas therein agreed with ideas in
Sanskrit scriptures. That clearly indicates that the Edda was a

Finland

latter-day, native European edition of the Vedas like the Zend Aveala
is

The 'Sauna' hot bath of Finland, word Snonam meaning bath.


' ' '

obviously the Sanskrit

of Persia.

-Edda

(alias

Veda)

is

the sacred book of the Scandinavian

Teutonic family... it includes the Goths of different names, the Moeso-Goths near the Danube; the Visigoths in Spainthe Ostro-Goths who culminated under Theodoric in italy; the Franks whose name fa free men and the Lombards who founded a second

branches of the

The above conclusion gets further clarified and confirmed by some more details which Laura gives, namely, the Norsemen were converted to Christianity SO much later than any other European nation that their cosmogony and mythology have been preserved
to us in a perfectly unaltered condition... Their literature
is

both

kingdom
the

Of the Teutons we hear nothing until Tacitus them settled in Germany. Teuton is a European mal pronunciation of the Sanskrit term Daityan. Tolcdand we must go to learn what they believed and felt before they were brought into contact
in Italy.

grand and poetic. Their sacred books are the two Eddas, one poetic. the other prose, written in that old Norse tongue which was once

Roman

historian found

spoken by the four families throughout the Scandinavian Peninsula.

The four

families possibly

mean the

four social functionaries of

with Christianity. In the year 874

Vedic society the Brahmins, the Kshatriyas. the Vaishyas and the the Shudras. The word Edda means great grandmother because

D. body of people

left

to the tyranny of Harold Harfager. or Fair Hair


'

Norway because they would not submit


and
settled in

poems were handed down from grandmothers by

repetition.

The

y ^"l
;

ih

ZZ * "
to

J~Z
J*

wiih them the religion, the poetry, and the ra* and " this desoIat* vo,canic is,and tnev unchfln 8ed for hundreds of years... in 1639 these

seems current interpretation that Edda-signifies the grandmother of the two. to be mistaken. The poetic Edda which is the older them are religious, and give Is a collection of 37 sagas. Some of men: an account of the creation of the world, of the gods and

toidaw agree

discovered... this literature of


f U,

some

of

them

historical telling of the heroes of the nation;

one

all

wonderfully with the Sanskrit ideas.


;

the Teutonic families;


. .

of them gives a aeries of moral maxims.

wlfcttt

The ancient naUon " wno >nhablt the Scandinavian peninsula

' '

'

fWUl0U
'

Uterinum, Studies In (4) Pp. 267-269, Sanskrit and lu Kindred Comparative Mythology, by Laura Elisabeth Poor. C. Kegan 1881. Paul It Co.. Paternoster Square. London.

Voluinr

>'

AryauuwiW. Aib Publishing House, Bombay, I8

778

*Th*

ballads

** written before the 6th century but they

779

in 1096 A. D. by a Christian priest vert coOected together, name given to Soemund. Scholar* think Soemund waa a

named him in

Who,

like the air.

support*

all vital

action.

reference to this, for

it

means the mouth which scatters seeds.


head

He moves not: he ia far yet near. He la within thla universe, and ytt
Outside this universe; whoe'r beholds
all living

Soemund

signifies Shiva's

7W

Ve4

and Upanlshads
prose Edda was collected about 1200 A. D. It explains

creatures as In him, and Urn,


all. ***

The
and the history of the poetic Edda which, indeed,
it. It

universal spirit aa in

"TV

Henceforth regards no creature with contempt.

the mythology

could hardly be understood without


a system of belief,

would be difficult to gather

The two EddBS, one


respectively.

in

verse and the other in prose are obviously

carry-overs of the original Sanskrit Vedas and the Upanisheda

even a connected story, from utterances so


disjointed as

The wonderful charm and breadth

of thought and the

vague,

incoherent and

those of

especially the mythological part ; the heroic

portion
is a

Soemund 's Edda, is more connected


wonderful charm

story of the creation in the Edda are unmistakable characteristics

oftheVedaa. Smilar pre-Christian Anglo-Saxon Ballads arepreaerved


in a

and comprehensible. But nevertheless there

manuscript in Exeter Cathedral

in

England.

about tbcEdda-a vague breadth in the thought, a delicious simplicity


in the expression.

Of course there

is first

the

cosmogony or

creation

Since the Mahabharat war (around 5561 B. C), the tradition


of Vedic recitation in Europe broke

of the world (as under) :

down and

the

memory

of the

VedBs gradually faded away. Later because of the Christian invasion


There was
in

times of old

Nor Sand not Sea


Not
gelid

even the remaining traces of the Vedic tradition were wiped out from Europe. In spite of such a big lime-gap the irresistible divine

waves

Earth existed not.

Nor heaven above


It

magic of the Vedas impelled even a Christian priest such as Soemund could to scrape and cull together whatever conceptual remnants he was long extinct Vedic tradition in Europe. The effort
find of the

was

a chaotic

chasm

worth

its

while because from that collection, described above, one

And grass nowhere


Then the Supreme ineffable spirit willed And a formless chaotic matter was created."
The above
the Sanskrit
b>

spelled as Edda can certainly conclude that what is currently being vix. The was indeed basically the Veda or its kindred literature

Upanishads and the Puranas.


Upsala was a Temple

clearly a rendering

of the opening statement of

Brahmand Puran.

We
,

have already explained


a

earlier

that Upsala is a Sanskrit

Thta

will

immediacy
is

m&at y^ wonderfu hymn of the Rigved


wind

word connoting

subordinate educational establishment.

Laura

"There

Unmoved

Who

only one being who exists yet moving swifter than the

"ThelempleofNoraemen Poor"a noting says as much. Sheobaerves. it waa sacred." was at Upsala in Sweden; the grove that surrounded
It

waa obviously
Pp.

a hermitage

and Vedic school.

far

ouutripa the senses, though as gods

(M
Tnmsoanda the nee**
(light

U3-U4

and pp. 270.372.

[bid.

of other beings

(8) P. 283, Ibid.

780

With

the

Christian

Invasion of Europe

Olaf

was the

firet

Scandinavian king to be inviegled into turning a Christian. As soon he was baptized he let loose his armies in 1030 A.D. to convert

such aa Sudhakant, Asha, Meenakshi and Ramkali. They remember nnd respect India aa their Baro Than' f. e. big land.
,

Scandinavians to Christianity. Thereafter the Gods of old were stigmatized and misrepresented as demons and devils.
all

Ancestor Worship

Scandinavians settled
centuries earlier

in

England were turned Christians four


in their

than the people

home

countries.

The ancestor-worship practised by the Slava in ancient Umee and the powers of nature adored by tbom are proof of their
pre-Christian Vedic heritage.

The Ramavan
All

The Slavs
lie

also offered sacrifices under


la

Oak

trees.

ancient Sanskrit scriptures


in

battered, scattered, tattered,

Their chief deity Bog

a relic of the Sanskrit

word Bhagawan.

trampled and forgotten


and the Upanishads
Likewise the

Europe.

Some remnants

of the Vedas

Swarog
is

is

another name of that supreme deity. That name Swarga

we have

already discussed above.

the Sanskrit word for heaven.


English words 'Bogy' and 'Puck' are also corruptions of the

Ramayan

loo has been reduced to small bits. like

fragments of a torn text, single episodes from the


in

Ramayan
is

survive

Sanskrit word 'Bhagawan.'

Europe as loose, independent stories. One such

the Hildcbrand

The Sun
wind god.

Is

called

Dauzh-Bog by the
i,

Slavs

That

is

the Sanskrit
Is

Lied, the oldest in

Norse mythology because

it is

an episode from

term Diwas- Bhagawan

e.

the God of daylight. Stri-Bog

the

the mDJion-year ancient


i bigger

Ramayan,

It

is

a part of what was once

German

epic.

Ogon is
The Mahabharal Legends

their pronunciation of the Sanskrit 'agni'

meaning

'fire.'

Slav peasants refer to grain always as 'sacred corn' In tbe

Another Norse ballad


covered with a coat of
of the

is

about Sigfried. a hero


this is the

who was
European
born

born
relic

Vedic Hindu way.

hom. Obviously

Mahabharat character.

Kama who was

The Vedic
with

deity

Varun

Is

pronounced by the Slavs as Parun.

an Tree Worship
Corresponding to the
tall

armour-plated torso.

The Vedic

hisi of the Slavs

banyan and peepul

trees In India tbe

Oak
Modern
slates such as Czechoslovakia

tree

was

held so sacred by tbe

Sava

that even after conversion

ihe region inhabited

and Yugoslavia constitute by the Slav community.

tolerate to Christianity and giving up their Idols the Slavs would not

their sacred

Oak

trees to

be cut down.

Slave language like other languages is a dialect of Sanskrit too. Their fire u agni at in Sanskrit, Malka (Mallika) mplher. sestra
is
is

The

Sail

Custom

aiiler;

brat

is is

brother;

syn

is

son. nos

is

nose, dom (dham)

alias dwar. The aim Hindua from India. They worship Rama. Krishna, Kail and numerous other Vcdic deities. In Scople a city in Yugoslavia

house, dvar

door

gypsies living with the Slavs

!/ a thousand years ago Slav widows loo used Immolate themselves on the funeral pyrea of their deceased husbands

Upto about

arr

aa In India.

The Slavs looked upon the rainbow and the milky way aa the

over JjO.mo

Rames

alia>

Hindu*

live.

Their

names too are Hindu

782

783 Sankranll
I'cstiviil

the abode of the dead.

pathways to heaven, which was the abode of the Sun and ther , a *ron

Yet as

up a Vcdi Sloven.
Mr. Verkoviez a Slav resident of Serres. near Salonica, published In IS74 a remarkable collection of Slavonic poetry and

India the people celebrate the end of winter by building bonfire. Peasants dance and sing songs to Loda, the goddess
In

of spring and festivity and for a week the children shoot with bows and arrows. The Christian priests have now baptised that festival
as Butter

Week. Tnis

Is

yet another indication of

how

named

Chrlstisns
festivals to

Veda Slovene
still

That

is

an indication of the

li

memory

and Muslims put their

own

shrouds on age-old Vedic

surviving

among

of the Vedat

till retain for the

the Slavs and also of the great respect thev Vedas. This couldn't have been possible if

make them

look deceptively Christian or Muslim.

Vedas had not formed part of their lost heritage. Those songs used Mohamedan Bulgarians but Mr. Verkaviex claims to have found them in an ancient monastery on Ml. Rhodope in Tnrace. Some Slavonic savants hail them as genuine, sacred ancient hymns while others denounce them as concoctions.
to be recited even by

In India there are two festivals, both connected with winter,

where bonfires are


of a water festival.

lighted.

One

falls

on January 13/14 and the

other about two and half months later

The

latter is also a kind

The one

falling

on January 13/14

is

known

in the

Punjab reaion
is

of north India as Lodi and also as Sankranti. This

almost the

Tne Norsemen and Slavs were forced to abandon their Vedic culture and become Christian in the 9lh century.

same
Slavs

as the 'Loda* of the Slavs. Since Indian festivals have an


It

unbroken Vedic link


Is

Is

obvious that the Loda

festival

of the

For a long time


Vladimir,
the

Christianity

was

also of Vedic origin.

suffered

to

exist.

However

in 980 A. D.) proclaimed Christianity as the state religion by himself toppling a statue of the Vedic deity, Varun alias Parun. Thereafter, all Vedic temples and schools in the region were turned into Christian churches and monasteries. At his baptism the name Vladimir was changed to Wassily. The Russo-Greek church has since hailed him as St. Basil This is yet another instance of the Christian Muslim
.

Charlemagne of Russia (who ascended the throne

and

practice of raising lo sainthood

persons

who

wielded the sword

and resorted to terror end torture to eradicate worldwide Vedic culture and force people to become Christians or Muslims.

TV heroic ballads that are sung about Wasaily and about Charlemagne are fuD of pre-Christian Ideas and sentimenta grafted on to these Christian converts.
A few ritual songs preserved by the peasantry described the fricultural changes of the seasons. Bui constant priestly disapproval of those pre-Christian songs have resulted in changing the origin*) Vedic content and meanings of those songs.

1M
786

Under the ancient Vedic administration Greece was used


as a penal settlement. It as the (*JHR)
(or)
*

was

therefore, designated In Sanskrit

Yavaoa

region. In that

word the

first syllable

'YA' signifies 'departure' while the other syllable <*T) Vana signifies a forest. Therefore, the term ' Yavana ' signified a land of exile or segregation. The European term Ionia is a corruption of the Sanskrit term Yavana. Social dropouts who
'

could not conform to the strict standards of Vedic discipline

THE VEDIC PAST OF GREECE

either left voluntarily for Greece or


left in

were deported. Rebels who

a huff also went to Greece.

Some others

left for

Greece

Europeans tend
their culture.
itself

to

But

it is

regard Greece and Rome as the source of seldom realized that Greeco-Roman culture

from a spirit of pure adventure. Others followed them as caterers and traders while officials of the Vedic administration were
posted there

on duty. Thus the Vedic Greecian settlement was


islands

was

entirely Veojc.

similar to the origin of the British settlement in Australia and

of the

Andaman -Nicobar
Vedic
tradition

under the British regime


that

in

Mrs. Colonel Ehvood observes

"The

striking analogy between

India.

also

enjoins
life in

every

adult

after

some

of the Hindoo fables with those of the Greeks, would induce us Ut believe that the Greeks and Hindoos must, at an early age. have had much intercourse and possibly Pythagoras, with the doctrine of the Metempsychosis,
of the Indian

retirement spend a part of his

the forest. That period

was known as Vanaprastha.

i.e.

departing to distant Greece.

may have imported some of the adventures Gods, and ascribed them to the Greek deities.

The Ptnal Setilemem


Being mainly rebels, outcastes, dropouts, adventurers and non-conformists those elements in Greece (I. e. the Vedic Yavana) gradually built up a parallel mythology out of spite
for or ignorance of the
in India

"Indra whirling
Jupiter

his thunderbolt, appears to be the same with Chrisn and his nine Gopis, are evidently Apollo and the
is

Muses. The beautiful Camadeva

more

interesting being even

*an

or Europe. A

parallel

mother culture they had left behind may be found in Punjab and

Cupid, while the lovely Maya, the Goddess of bwiiy. the Venus, sprang from the bosom of the ocean. Surya *nd Arjune. resemble Phoebus and Aurora, and the twin sons Awinau. Aiwuucum-arau. ortheDaul, Castor and Pollux; Lachshcml

the Greecian

Bangladesh regions of India now mainly inhabited by Hindus, their utmost forcibly converted to lslam.Consequently.tbey do dress and behave in a spirit of proselytized vengeance, to look,
striving their differently; yet in spite of their best antagonistic

~) "Wpine.
u

with ears of

com appears

to be Ceres; Kali, Hecate or

Hindu origin
'

still

Sr

Hanuman and

William Jones identifies Ganesha with Janus, whilst

for Instance, several

shows through their names and customs, Muslims still call themselves "Kanwar'.
'

hi,

monkey

attendants, resemble Pan and his Sylvan

Ra|a

.
'

'

Rao,

'

'

BhatU

etc.

which are

all

Hindu appellations.

Cultural Rift
e

Jtol Ll2:
I8 a.*D

Na

rM

rf

?i E,Wood

Uve

of
-

vnM. Henry

Joun,ey 0verinnd from ***** Colburn London.

long

Thus whenever there Is a cleavage either due to anger or residence away from home, differences in customs,

788

manners, languid and


_r deliberately forged

deities

do develop by themselves or
the
rift.

787
Sanskrit educational system broke down,
local

lo accentuate

This must be

mannerisms

led to

remembered when studying ancient Greece.


parts of Europe. Scholars should
historical investigation

Rome

and other

remember

this principle of

Lwists and turns of pronunciation hardening Into what as the Greek language. The same rule holds good for

we term
all

other

languages. They are


Sanskrit.

all

post -Mahabharat variations of

universal

Krishna Worship

The same
Greece having been a prominent penal settlement under
the post - Mahabharat Vedic administration. Krishna (also spelled

rule also appb'es to

all

deiUea. Mythology and personal

names loo are


Vedic traditions.

latter-day regional variations of earlier universal

as Chrisn)

was one of the main

deities

of the region. Barbara

Wlngfield-Stralford observes
is

"In many ways Krishna worship


is a

Names And

Deities
is

strange similarity upU) a point In the story of the early years of the Christ child and Lord Krishna. Driven from His birthplace by oppression and
persecution the earthly parents of Srikrishna also

very

like Christianity,

and there

Thus Demetrius
Gods); Socrates
is

(Wwi)
is

Deva-Mitras

(i,

e.

a friend of the
is

(g$*nt> Sukrutas (one

whose conduct

helpful

and meritorious); Alexander


calamities); Parthia

{wwfc) Alaksyendra (the


the land of Piartha
(i. e.

invisible

found a
little city

divinity; Aristotle is (wfteiH) Arishta-taal

(God as the warder of


(I,

Nazareth to shelter them for a time,


of refuge...
It is

"3

in

Gokul, the

(iT#y

is

e.

Arjun);

Theodorus
is 's

is

(&STG0 Devadwaras

the Doorway lo Divinity).


of the chier deities

not only the story of Jesus which

patterned on
(of the Jews)

Lord Krishna, the mentor of Arjun, was one


worshipped in Greece. Tnat
into accepting Christianity
is

thit of Krishna but even the story of

Moses

birth is identical with that of Krishna. This indicates

how

the

why when Greece was terroriied Greeks and Romans quietly baptized iesus
It is the equivalent

Jews and Christians coined their own stories of their own separate divine heroes. But in so doing they had no
so-called
alternative but lo slick both to the original

Chrisn as Jesus Christ. The Greek greeting 'Hari Tutay* (May


Hari bless you) refers to Lord Krishna as Hari.
of the Hindu (Indian) greeting

as well as the incidents of his


thai

life.

name of the hero Because it may be noticed


'S' and 'H' are

"Rama Rama ".The name Hercules


I.

loo

is (Sft

the term jesus Christ

$* &U

Heri-cul-eesh

e. Lord of the lineage of Hari.

Is

only a malpronunciation of the

(J, e.

Vishnu), and

signifies Krishna.

The twelve legendary

labours

Sanskrit

name

iesus Chrisn. Likewise, since

interchangeable (as 'Sindhi' becomes

Hindi'), the Sanskrit

t*rm Mohesh (the Great Lord) as Moses.

is

being spelled by the Jews

sfter the of Hercules counterfeited by the Greeks are patterned slaying of the twelve outstanding feats of Lord Krishna, such as word demon king Kamsa and lifting the Goverdhan mountain- Thus

Greek h . Variation or Sanskrit

dvfliiaUon. word, god for god and name for name Greek Vedic origin. traditions, culture end language are of Hindu.

for

The language of ancient Greece,


the Vedic world,

like that of

the rest of

All

pro-Christian era eminent Greeks we hear of during the

was

Sanskrit. Later, after the great carnage

were

or

the

Mahabharat

war

when

the

meticulous,

universal

Hindus i, e. followers of Vedic was a form of Sanskrit.


all

culture and their language

Sirubo the Hindu Geographer


(2) Pp. MM12,lndlaan<JtheEngliBb. by Barbara Wingfteki -Stratford. JonaUion Upr. London. 1U22 A. D.

Among them was

Strata,

an

ambient

g*ph- who*

?m
three-volume geography
ancient
is

source of great informaUon on (i


in

789
multitude at the shrinea also enabled the priest and other templt
staff to cater to the needy,
1,

wrid. Strabo
D.

is

surmised to have been born

66

He

died in 24 A.

B r C
'

e. the destitutes

and to iraveQeri.

He belonged to the Stoic


1

sect.

That

is

the Sanskrit word <*aft*

Alexander

A Vedk Monarch
alias

Suvik

'

meaning
earlier

'

meditative

That Alexander was a devout Hindu

Vedlst

is

proved

firstly

An

systematic

Greek

writer

on

geography

Eratosthenes

who

*,.

by

hli Sanskrit

name Alaksbyendra (meaning

the invisible Lord)

died at the age of 80


is

around B. C. 196.
f.

and secondly by his meticulous adherence to the tradition of Vedic


rulers to erect temples along the borders of his realm
e.
.

Eratosthenes

the Sanskrit

name Rati-Sthan-eesh

to twelve

tGod) of the
superfluous.

Lord

city

of the Goddess or Love.


this conclusion

Vedic

deities.

We arrive at
(meaning

0W;

The initial 'If u because the Sanskrit word


spelled

Vishnu and Shiva

"ratie'

'amorous')

is

as

'erotic'

European languages.

in

true Vedist sees no rivalry between Shiva and

Vbbnu. The

Shaivite va Vaishnavite controversy

Hindu Expertise

in

Navigation

one sometimes hears of is a latter-day development raised by narrow-minded people. To a true


Vedist divinity is one but
it

has three functions namely of creation,


alias functions.

The expertise of Indians in navigation during those ancient days Is apparent from Strabo "s noting on page 149 of the third volume of Ws Geography that a certain shipwrecked
Indian when brought Egyptian king offered to guide their ships to India if he wai promised safe passage to India.
to the

nurture and annihDoUon representing three facets

Vishnu and Shiva represent two of those facets. Therefore, it was Kshatriyas, in the custom for rulers and administrators i. e. the

On page 257 of his third volume Strabo informs us that Alexander too erected altars as boundaries of his Indian campaign m those parts of the Indies he arrived at ... in Imitation of Hercules fld Bacchus A footnote on the same , page adds, "these were 12 altara of 60 cubits each erected to the 12 Gods. "
UUHiy of Border Temples
1

u Vedic tradition, to ensure proper administration of their realm field of representatives or Vishnu, and to fight relentlessly in the Shiva. battle against the aggressor, in the name or Lord
The Greek name Bacchus
is

the truncated Suiskrit

name (ws**)

Tryambachesh

European the three-eyed Lord) ofLord Shiva. In ' while the remainder usage the first syllable Tryam ' got dropped off
(i. e.

curiously enough Just as continued to be spelled as Bacchus. And intoxicants wayward persons in India smoke and consume

some

u* to

J * mark

h<My Vedi USU,m erecl ** " .1 the outer limit, of districts, cities, regions

^hnu

temples

Greeks too regarded (such as Bhaang) in the name of Lord Shiva, the This again shows Shiva as the deity presiding over drinking orgies. how the Greeks were wayward Hindus.

and countries-

ZU!T7 *** food,

."""*

.belter, rest

Zl!
th/T7 UW

TT
,

W r8hip Uke V0W8 Md **""* weddings. Such PWP ** enBUred ceflaeIws * on the border without
'

,!

Wear* traveller * usua"y and peace at such temples. Moreover. b0rdB1 CT8ured 8 * constant stream of
-

U8eful purposra

Mount Olympus

of the Greeks

is

abode of their Gods. Eliminating the


notice that the first syllable

supposed to be the heavenly last syllable 'pus' one may


the Sanskrit

'^y
The

'olym

'

is

word Alayam
'

incurring any expenditure.

Granthalayam (abode of books i. e. Horary) temple. The Creek Mount and Devalayam (abode of Gods) i. e. a wcJcb substitute for the Vedic tradition

meaning abode as
' '

in

'

Olympus

is

a regional

offerings of the constant

791
,

Mount

iv >!:

as Lhe abode
791

Pythagoras be, that

must bave borrowed

his

days. Later that Chrisnan-lty Vedic cult deftly camouflaged

Itself

as Christianity with a baptismal shroud when threatened with


annihilation

by emperor Constanttne's mfllUry


In

force.

, f

^ J

period of silence was The five-year

Intended to give student*

Krishna

Mosak
city

Corinth
In

the

education so that tbey grounding in traditional questions, or if they did for asking any

may
feel

not

The

of Corinth

Greece had been

in

ancient times a

ed

bke

a ,ian K

would be sensible. any question* those


Pythagoras
it

About

pre-Christian era

and other European scholars of the would be more proper to say that whatever
they
all

prominent centre of Vedic culture with several of its temples dedicated playing to Lord Krishna. A large mosaic of a young lad Krishna grazing cows the flute, standing cross-legged under a tree while

hangs
a
local

In the

museum

In Corinth. It

was obviously

salvaged from

region tbey belonged to.

were brought up

in the Vedic

church by Krishna temple ravaged and converted into a

times. So, system of education thBt pervaded the world in ancient


instead of saying that

Christian Invaders.

-Pylhugoros

must have borrowed


it

his

philosophy In pari

from Indian philosophers "

would be more
product of the

appropriate to say thai Pythagoras himself

was

About the Hindu, Vedic Sanskrit culture of Greece E- Pococke to the topic. It Is tilled has puplished a special volume devoted India In Greece or Truth In Mythology.
:

worldwide

Vedk

educational system. This should

be apparent not

Pococke

tells

ua

"Among

the strongest peculiarities of the

only from the five-year period of silence


but even

he enjoined on his pupils

from his very name. The term Peeth Guru (spelled by

perfection of the arts so-called heroic period of Greece, appear the vessels; their abundance of gold; the profusion of gold

and the

the Greeks as Pythagoras) itself signifies a

'guru

'

working

at a

pwh*
of

i.

e.

educational establishment. All scholars

change their

mode

of thinking in this respect.


in

must hereafter They must not talk

some vague Indian influence


in

some sphere or country such

nw

Japan. China. Arabia or Italy for instance. All must realize lhe Vedic way of life (which now largely survives only in

beauty of embroidered shawls;varied yet elegant workmanship; the the loom, thenumerous ornaments the tasteful and ample produce of working of that material: the gift of of ivory; the staining and sometimes too from the gods; necklaces as a valuable present, the social refinement and brazen tripods and the cauldrons; the and Menelaus; finally the magnificent palaces of Aldnous comfort; the war chanoi... contest of Troy, the constant use of the great

The whole of
Kristm, Colin in Greece
it

this state of society, civil


Asiatic;

and military, must

strike

anyone as eminently
undoubtedly
is...

much

of

It

specifically Indian.

Such

Knvhn.

wu
B

the

ia^B 2?
c

God of Greece (and of by A8alhac,ose


'

Rome)

is

proved
<*
lt

of an Indian
language...

attendant tokens these evidences were but the rehgion and colonization with its corresponding

^^*W\^T

'
in

<**

*
th

n diSPlBy

several

muMum!''
*

the ere of the supposed the whole of Greece, from down to the close of Um Trobm godshlps of Poseidon and Zeus, and religion, and in me war(was) Indian in language, sentiment

'^ to^*wZtc**- d Rome Cr


KriShn
Upt0 in

"'

WM

-"

arts of peace

and war" (pages 9

to 12)

in pre-Christian

Greeks Spoke Sanskrit and Hellanfc Greece. -Sanskrit was the language of Pelasgic

G
7S2

*
793
great

and poets, from the most undent date, rwi Both togograpbera manifest a profound ignorance. excepting Homer and Heaiod. 0r primitive state of their native land... profound contempt for the

imnwrfW) Implying

region

of

manaiona.

In

European

We

shall

therefore be cautious for taking

our guide,

in matter,

eliminated. languages the letter *ha* (8) of Sanskrit words geu is spelled only aa co (I. - *8o" For instance, the word Saba

m>

f pelaagic.

or mythologic or heroic history, either

Homer or

Heaiod,

instoad

logographer or poet, save


Sanskrit sources.

when

their

accounts ore conformable to

"(Page 16)
of very

Thus

number

renowned scholars from the ancient

and also pronounced as "Ko" in the word 'absolver from JfaT 'cooperate'. The term Papa-he (W-Bj I, a. (m<ffa> alias Pope. The name Maharahipal is spelled merely as Papa great sage). into Marco-Polo (one nurtured by a
of sha)

turns

Pococke warn readers about the unreliability of Greek sources. That is what explains the European expression,
Strabo to the

modem

Sun Worship

to

Greece
world Sun-worship was a else in the Vedic the Sanskrit Greece loo. The term HeUopoUs is
of the sun.
is

As everywhere prominent
ritual in
1.

"Cheat meets a Greek" meaning a *iper Cheat " This Greek undependabiUty is
"Creek
undependability. Scholars
of these cautions.
all

encounters
like

Muslim

word Hellpuras

e. the city

over the world seem to be unaware

The term metropolis too


<7m gmj Metro is Sanskrit Mahatlar.
i.

e. bigger

(large-siie)

the Sanskrit term MahatUr-puras term city. Accordingly the

Pococke accuses Greek authors of so metamorphosing original

names of men,
posterity.

cities and religious rites as to confuse and mislead He. therefore, suggests a special course in discovering

Shukuntalam'

in

Greek City?
city

the original. Arabs and Persians play the

same

trick.

They

tar
in

their pre-lslnmic history also to look Islamic in its entirety.

Origin of ihc World

century

founded around the 3rd Afghanistan. In the Greek kingdom, trinkets and most importantly B. G. a number of coins,
'

excavated Al-Khanoum. a Greek French archaeologists have

Professor

Boumouf

In

his

Discourse

on

Sanskrit

one of the scenes in en intricate mosaic depicting (News the Greeks and the Indians. reveal the age-old inks between and
l.s

^
,

U.tr.iure. delivered at the College of France, observed. -We" will In*, with its philosophy and it8 myln9( fu UteralurC( Jts

in Indian

Express. Feb.

1.

19M)

My

tan and

it,

u*^
n

Nfly

of the enju, of the world that

h mQre we will attempt


fe9SOr

to decipher.
,s

"

vo.un^\r^
HmTrom

lhBt C *" " *** ^^ThavTw'r " *<** ' hUma < ** very beginning.

a***.

^2 ^

Pr *""" " ?***' T* ""* It ", * mind8 Ved M ta * Boumouf

^
the

re-sons to .believe ao uttuuae Al-Khanoum. maintained that they had of art found at characteristics of the nieces of the typical Indian even dep.ct a of the Indo-Greek coins the excavation site. Some lard Krishna. plethora of Indian deities including

Dr

Olivier Guillaume.

who

participated In the excavation of

'

The moat
stained

intriguing piece of evidence

however

Is

a sheUjmd

been glas. motif that has

archaeologists. Dr. Guillaume claims

put together by the probably thai the scent could

JR

'"Or*,.-

8-^kX.Deli''8

tl^S)

P **pl *

ek lflngUfl8
'

' ia a

d rivaUon from

Indiu

must have dwelt

was -Shakuntal-m-. Dr. CuteiM. be from the legendary Resource.. New Delhi. head of the French Centre for Human

Al-Khanoum may have been the

capital of the

kingdom founded

'""^^.theSan.krittennMaha -Sadaneay.

794

796

glorious

DJodotua. 'Hut kingdom extended southward, by p Greek called mountains into Gandhara. The Sakaa fc^ the Hindukusb beyond kingdom. Tnecity, which had control overtheGrk rined destroyed in 145 B.C.. the archaeologiM heights was finally

re,^
'

scid, the

name Diodotus

is

Vedic, Sanskrit

Devadutus meaning

divine envoy'

Uke

all

Greek

cities.

tatter lower and it* upper towns, the

Al-Khanoum too was divided into the was known as acropolis,


huge gymnasium,
a theatre

THE VEDIC PAST OF ITALY


luly are synonymous Rome. Roman empire and
history.

Apart from the palace the city had a

and temples.

A number

of gargoyles

and theatre-masks found

the site resemble those used in Greece.

From
is

to the the 7th century B. C.


Italy

tod

"^^C.
Wore.
ancient

.went

o very large part of


Etruria history of
Italy,

was

also

yet another synonym-

known as Etruna. So when we d,scuss the


those terms
in

one may keep

all

view.

Italian

worth the Probably, every scholar history as Christian or pagan.

name

these days treats of

Dotation
terms with the common ore dl Inter-relaled the term of the 'E' continent. lyin B at the bottom

The term Europe.

Iberia,

(ata Eberi.)

"*

" te ***
(or sound)

initial letter

E.in^it

(t*>U* (Buly) -*" " "">

Th. nam. Rome

riM from Lord Ram. th. Vedic Inchon.


monarch In Rome as elKhre

Rome

Europe the Pivot of Vcdic

,
,

of ancient Egypt the n Ptoton and the Pharaoh,

ZZL

Rama has been regarded as an ideal lIU from modem

^ ^~t. **"*""

"
798 797
l

th* which

celestial origin of he-venly.


1

and shines with

eternal
tern,
is

oomkr
Devs

l^hl- That

' w*V ^man mo" "" *"


name

often "** Ibe

Vedk

Fuoerati
funeral rites of the
if

alias

Devas added to their

as in India.

Deva

tht

also the reason Vedic t*rm for God. That is

why Roman monarcha

The
found

Romans were
of a

identical with tboae of


relative
la

representative of Lord Vishnu on earth. wtrv regarded as divine or entire cosmos, while on His behalf monarchs Lord Vishnu governs the
tradition started when, u on earth rule over the humans. This the start of the creation the first set of Kshatriya administrators
trained

the Hindua. Even

the

body

dead friend or

not

are performed with due and Romans so that the deceased s solemnity amongst both Hindua torment. abode and not wander about In soul may reach its divine
religioua rites

for the deceased

by

divinity,

took charge of their duties on earth.

It is that

tradition

(the Divine Right of Kings)

which French and

British

monirchs too reiterated and tried to hold on to


tried to

when the

public

wrest power from them.

Origin of

Rome
Remus and Romulus founded Rome
is a

between Hindu and Roman funeral Describing the Vedic similarity nearest relation closed the eyes Fanny Parks observes "The rites wss then laid on 1^ ground. mouth of the deceased- the corpse and the The body, dressed annointed with perfumes. osthed and the deceased had worn whe* which the couch was with the feet onwards; . couch in the vestibule,
.

ire

That
it

mere myth.

Yet

may

be noticed that even there the

two names are mere, variations

eariy and (towers... the Romans sometimes decked with leaves from Ccrnandi vel the custom of burning gradually dropped upon the Greeks - but was afterwards the.

^ f
m

eo*^

of the
in

name Rama. Those same


Ramulu
is

variations of the
in

name Rama,

are

vogue even in India, for instance,


the

the Andhra Pradesh part

of India

form which the name Rama assumes.

Tht Baulct

When

fighting valiantly in upholding righteousness a Kshatriya

and destroying
his
in

the wicked,

must not

flinch.

Tn

That

is

tradition.

bene

times of Kshatriya wore a saffron, crimson dress. That was or two reason,. One was that the saffron colour in Vedic tradition. .sthe colour of renunciation

alone will ensure salvation for

*my

him. Therefore,

Ir 1,1

^ Z^ ^^ZT^^J^ "* ^^^,7Z^ ?


We

and community service. That

monltt weflr oran *

'*
'

<W
*

is

why

mourning.

his

sons wiin

Hags null*

their hesds bsre. snd

'"'^ 'd,^
"**

u*

mUmes
it

lore

V<*'
,

C,0lhed

"d *^ated.
RajpuU n hl
-

rostra by hi. son. of th. deceased from the

* **

<K*nns

ofw.JL!

n1or' 8

spirit.

out

* U
P

Rim. u,,)!^

"*

"f^ *>**" ihey were


ojvlnt

Kshatriyas
'

* -"

in India

PriCUW ^^-^W(or.n im^VrZ' sun * Vedic

C U 'dn 1 h,Vf " for global humanity.

798
7SP

,hf

dlv

Homirwm mortuum

in

urbe ne aepetito,

n .v,

antiquity.

. .

There had bean held at Abydoe* and elsewhere a aacrtd


In
.

!l

a^rdin*

to the

SSiS

*Hers...

customs of other nations, the jew,. when the pfle was burnt down... the
with

nearest relauons, ther*d by the


friends

loose robes and

th|

performance similar to th* myaterfea of our Middle Age*.


'

which

eventa of Osiria a pasalon and reaumacUon were reproduced Issuing

!!l^barefooied... The

when they returned home,


with water,

from the templea the god fell under Set 'a btowa; around hit body funeral lamentations were simulated, and be was buried according
to the riles...

was also purified, and swept with ovr a (Ire... 1* certain ceremonies for the of broom. There were i certain land Oblations or sacrifices to the sacrifice was performed...
bouse
itself

Z . further purification,

ifter being sprinkled

st^

" The same myth was


in

represented In almost the same manner

Rome,

at the beginning of each

November. While the

priests

funeral, a

dead were afrerwards


oi

made
1

at various times,

both occasionally and

and the believers moaned and lamented. Isis in great distress sought the divine body of Osiria whose limbs had been scattered by Typhon
...

stated periods..."

There was an esoteric meaning attached to

it

that none but

the pious elect understood... In Egypt the clergy communicated


i

Worshipped

Rama
'

certain rites
'

and interpretations onlv upon a promise not

to reveal

Fanny Parks notes

in

her book.

The Romans worshipped

their

them." 3
The above passage Is very significant. It stales that the observance Is of immemorial antiquity, that
that
it

founder Romulus as a god.

under the
It

name

of Quirinus... they

were invoked with prayers. "^


that

has already been observed above

lamenting the burning of Osiris


it

Lord

Rama

is

often referred to ss

Ramulu

in

some pans
is

of a

was observed throughout the ancient world and

had an

India

too and

so

was He in Rome.

The name Quirinus

esoteric meaning.

name Krishna. In Vedic Rama and Krishna are both incarnations of Lord Vishnu.
Greeco-Roman corruption of the
Burning of
In

tradition

Even the names mentioned are Sanskrit.


fs

Isis

is

Iseus. Osiris

Eswaras and Typhon

is

a malpronunclation of the name Tryambak

Kama De*a

meaning Lord Shiv.

Vedic lore in India

Kama Deva,

the

God

of Love

is

said

Rati 's disconsolate


alive

lament for her spouse


fiery

Kama Deva

(burnt

to have incurred the wrath of

Lord Shiva for which the latter burnt

by Lord Shiva's
is

him down. This legend survives

in an annual ritual all over the world in the form of lighting Ballentine alias Ballentyne fires. That term BeHemine is a corruption of the Sanskrit word (afon*) Balidan.

eye)

wrath pouring out of Shiva's third (known as Rati VUap) the subject of a very touching poem
and

relented by the renowned Sanskrit poet Kalidas. Lord Shiv This Is a highly restored Kama Deva's spirit without the body. That it should be commemorated through esoteric legendary episode.

ZZZ^
*>

>

Franz Cumont observes an the celebration, connected with the worship of late, the *** m0Sl liv* w *s the commemoration of the ** Osui, (inventio) Its antecedents date back to remote

**&*** wch a ritual of ancient Rome

"W*

emphatic proof of out the ancient world as an annual ritual (s world. Cupid the prevalence of Vedic culture throughout the ancient who annoyed' (Lord ia a Sanskrit term -Kop-da' Implying 'one
Shiv).

FinS

Park?'

^1^** of

' Pilrim ln

Ui <ii

P, . raa432lbi.

University Pre,,,

3rch of the PlctunaQ^ndon. 197B.

Roman. Pusniim By Frans 3) Pages 97- 9. The Oriental Relijloni In (2o) Abyodos Is Ayodhya.
,

Cumont

HO
801

Onci* of Rota* The popular legend that

Rome

wu

founded by twin
is

brotw
it u,

Another

Italian

dty

Is

Milan

alias

Milano, which

Ii

a Sanskrit

Remus ind Romulus, suckled by a she-wolf, too buams to be believed.


Writing about the origin of the

a bluff,

iW

Niebuhr "That

Rome was

self-evident... hT<e the

name Rome. Pococke quot*. name was assumed to k. mysterious name of the Tiber... when
not a Latin
it

tarm signifying 'meeting.' In the Ramayanlc tradition tba Rama-Bbarat Milan aliu meeting marks a very important episode. This indicates that In India it (s commemorated as (Bbarat) MQap. the Italian city Milano gets its name from the Rama-Bharat Mflan
(i.e.

meeting) celebration taking place there from very ancient times.


in Italy
is

read of the Mexican festivals of the

of a
the

new

secular period,

vi Fire at the beginnlrw is impossible not to be reminded

Likewise the dty of Verona


deity

named

after the Vedic

New

Varun. These instances should induce researchers to InveaUgaW


'

of

Roman. or properly speaking the Etruscan secular

festivals; mor*

Italian shrines and the the Vedic, Sanskrit origin of Italian rities. term Catacomb la the Sanskrit Italian language. Far instance, the
'

especially at

Rome

new

fire

was kindled

in

the
1,

Temple of VIMj
page 281)."*

term (snnjx)

'

Sata

Kumbh

' .

signifying

'

hundred pitchers '

alias

on every 1st of March (Neibuhr's

Rome, Vol.

'hundred chambers.'

That

Rome

Is

named
homes.
'

after the Vedic incarnation

Rama

is

further

Hindu Rulers of Rome and Egypt


' '

proved by the existence of scores of paintings of Hamayanic episodes


in

Rome

like

Egypt "

aays Pococke was colonized by a conflux

ancient Italian

The

spelling

Vista

'

mentioned above

is significant

because

hence the pomp of her pontifical of the solar as well as lunar races: Another singular analogy has always partaken of the ritual of each.
ii

indicates that

the deity

occurring especially In

was Vishnu. The other spelling 'Vesta* the term Vestal Virgins seems to be a
'

is

mistake.

ought to be Vista! Virgins. That Vista is none other than Vishnu Is apparent from the fact that even in several regions
It

they presented by the Virgins of tht Sun. the elect a* service if Thse were young maidens dedicated to the and who at a tender age were taken from their homes, under the care convent* where ibey were placed
into elderly

are called.

the deity:
introduced
of certain

of India Vishnu

is

pronounced as Vistu and even as Bistu. The

who had matrons 'Mama Conas' (read as Mama-Cenyas)


their walls...

Bistupur locality in Jamshedpur


Yet another proof of the
city, situated

commemorates

Krown grey, within


a resemblance

One

is

astonished

^ find

<*

that

name.

Indian, between the institutions of Lhe Aim-riom

Rama origin of Rome is that another on the Adriatic coast, diagonally opposite Rome. -Rimed Ravenna, sffcr Ravan. the great adversary of Rama. About ~cock* bserves *'**" the
"ban

the ancient

Roman and
"*'

tho

modern Catholic" (Prescott'a Fvru,

Vol. 1, Page 105)

The system of dedicating

virgins to

"* *

memory

of....

Ravan

still

in the city of

great rival

Rama or Roma. ""


na P-P f

Ravenna, and see on the western cowl.

European scholars as the Davadwi system i-> India. at the worldw.de Pococke and Fran* Cumont look bewildered
problems of history are prevalence of the Devadast system. Such Vedic culture pervaded the it is realiwd that resolved only i a> limes. Even the phraseology used

a Umple deity is known such as Prescou,

vident of the Vedic wiaence past of

^'v^r
US'""

dU "

9h0u,d

P M "nc

'

u,!v0

whm

Italy.

whole world
all

in

anciwl

Sanskrit. For instance, the term

'

Mama Canya

mentioned -hove
'

J:

S:

*
(6) Pp. 160- INI,
ibid.

tea

lte

_M
,
,

Kiny"

r ^LnthriJ'Wy>the
'

urm MiM

**
larm

' the e,derly vir* n) 0r


'

M,
by
their

lfthel

tbeChri5tifln

*""

'Moilr

b an ** I!!!li .bow Even

translation of

"* Sanskrit terms (Maha Kany.) 'convent' b the Sanskrit t^


convent
'

impetuous advance, breathless md panting, they urrandtred

to the raptures of a sacred enthusiasm.

"

(page 48 of Cumont

'

book). This description

tallying with

Hindu practice indicates the

rm

KtnwM n" to

meaning Blissful \ A Mcred ind nuns dedicBtwl to

is

so

named because

existence of Hinduism in lands converted to Christianity and Islam.

SOCia, Se^vire,

On page fiO
voluntarily

of his

book Cumont further observes

' '

In the midst

Goddess Ma The Horn-"


Cumont obsenw.
fni awjdess
.

of their orgies, and after wild dances, some of the worshippers

wounded themselves and. becoming

intoxicated with the

"Roman

soldiers learned to revere

MA.

the

the rites of her cult

wpne even more sanguinary...

view of the blood, with which they sprinkled their altars, they believed they were uniting themselves with their divinity. Or else.
arriving at a

Wack rotes, her (devotees) would turn round and round of drums and trumpets, with their long loose hair Id tV sound flmming. and when vertigo seized them and a state cf anesthesia d*j
in

paroxysm of freniy. they

sacrificed their virility to

the gods as certain Russian dissenters


excessive.
. .

still

do today...

All

these

demonstrations.

. .

must

not cause us to alight the power


ecstasy, the voluntary

wis

attained, they

would strike their arms and bodies great blows

of the feeling that inspired

it.

The sacred

with iwords and axes.

The view of the running blood excited them,


goddess and her votaries

mutilations and the eagerly sought sufferings manifested an Brdent

mi
wiUi

ihey ihen sprinkled the statue of their


it

longing for deliverance from subjection to carnal instincts, and a fervent desire to free the soul from the bonds of matter.

..

Fina3\ a prophetic delirium wouid

they foretold the future.

"7
clearly implies that

overcome them and

Hindu God of Love "Madan"

TV above description
Vouse Ma h

Romans were Hindus

the Sanskrit nam* of the Mother Goddess. Every Ifodn chiM calls his mother 'MA', Mother Mary is a variation

A mournful ceremony in pre-Christian Rome, observed on March commemorated the death of Attii. Obviously Altis was thehusbend of Rati and he was burnt down by a conflagration emerging from
21
lord Shiva's third eye. because at the advent of spring.

same name. And


all

nmwy
inr

KiB observed

tv

saw tmiwd

the sanguinary rites of the Mother Goddess over India even today either realistically or sjfc Mu8lims whfl nnt ue

Madan.

^ ^.^ Mr$
lhe foresU

(the

God

of Love) attempted to distract Shiva engrossed in dee;

penance. The day


irinrmj
Christ '3

known

ca dies Sanguinis, Diwas Sanjiwanus (few

ritual as

Muharrum.

G*dde*i Worship

a Sanskrit term meaning the day of resurrection. fancied resurrection is nothing but a subtle proselytized
of

concoction

the

pre-Christian

Vedic

remembrance

of

the

" **r^cTr

? *****
'

* Berecyntua

resurrection of the

God of love.

Hindu Dei lies


through

in

the West

^-^ *
" no**

w^d.

r*"owd of
,i,1K

worshippers followed

w!^T' **
".
1

lheir sftouls uilh lbe

**** nf

Umbouriiwa.

with

wat Fran* Cumont observes on page 110 of his book :- "It the seas easy for the divinities or the Phoenician Coast lo cross Byblos t hem were Adonis whom the women of
(into

Rome) Among
,

a with uproar of '.V


I 8<-r. ft

mourned;
instruments excited
,

rkilmiircode*

" The Lord


j

of the Dance*

*'.

who came from

Beirut;
i .

pB

Km(

Mama the master of rain, worshipped at Cara; and Maiuma celebrated e. Ma uma (*KW In Sanskrit whose nautical holiday waa

r. WJ cumoBl.

"

**
vary spring*
All

Ostia as well as in the Orient. the coast near

i:eity

unless

ft

is realized that Persia

was a

part of the Vedic world


La

those divinities

The term v* are Vedic.


traEs

Vedk

is

to be understood

The Western
Sun
Is

notion that Mlihri worship was a primitive cult

wnwmtbe ruhune that

from the Vedas to the Bhagavadgeeu.

wrong. Vedic thought conceives divinty as all-pervading and the


naturally a prominent, visual, dazzling symbol of divinity
ia

:- the course of millenluma, %u. mil pnmrna over the *vuir<u> Moreover hundred* of namea. several deities, their functiona nd the world the long distances arou and misjoined. In the passage quoted "got distorted

connected with the Earth. In Vedic tradition Fire


representation of the Sun.

an earthly

Soften

Astrology

In

Rome
Roman
empire.

But be has hundreds of other names too. ,Uas "nr> Nataraj. ia {**$$*{) above passage, the name BaJmarcodes Bui in the Krishna. In. Hindu mythology Balmukundas. a Sanskrit name of Lord speaking but he is an incarnation not the Lord of Dances, strictly
he is

Dances .bove the Lord of

is

generally

known

in

India as Shiva

Astrology exercised absolute authority under the Astrology

was considered a most

valuable art and the queen of

sciences. At

Rome and

in

the provinces architects erected sumptuous


in Sanskrit) in the likeness

Sepllzonla

(i. e.

*Wjw Sapta-hhuvan

known for

his expertise in dancing.

Ma- lima

is

obviously Mother

of the seven spheres.

Shiva. It was in spring that Goddess Uma. th* consort of Lord tried to interfere with for her sake Mada... the God of love, had

exact length of a

life

The custom arose of stating In epitaphs the to the very hour. The astrologer was consulted

for the auspicious time for founding a city or crowning a ruler,

Lord Shiva

"s

penance. Consequently, her celebration coinciding with

marriage, journey, change of domicile and even for taking a bath, visiting the barber, changing clothes or manicuring the fingernails.

spring has mythological relevance.

The nautical holiday was because


's

Questions were Baked auch as

will

a son

who

is

about to be born

mariners participated

in

Ma

TJma

worship. The term

Mama

(the

have a big nose ? Will


adventures? Certain
cut during a waxing
astrology, like

a girl just

coming into

this

world have gallant

master of rain

is

a corrouptior of the

name Varuna

beliefs also prevailed,

such as getting a hair

Vedk

Traditions of

Grceco-Roman Courts
' '

moon

forebode baldness.

Some

adepts at

Emperor

Tiberius neglected the practice of religion

Franz
is

Cum on

observes on page 137 of his book that

There

on the ground that fate governed aD things. This indicates prevalence


of Vedic culture. Tiberius is the Sanskrit

a striking simDarily not only

between the observances of the

name Tripuresh

i.

e.

Caesars and the practice of the oriental


the beliefs that they held.
tradition

monarchs but

also between

Lord of three townships.

cannot

be doubted

The continuity of the religious and political (Read L'Eternite dea Emperaura

Roman
An

Deities

Romans- 1898, p. 442) .... the habit of welcoming friends with a Idas was a ceremony in the oriental formulary before It became a familiar custom in Europe.

worshipped in idea of several pre-Christian deities

Rome,

The City be had from St. Augustine's sarcastic book titled seized and turned of God. All ancient temples in Rome had been

may

The MUhra Problem

into Christian churches. In the

book

titled

the Studio

PwHka

(p.

who assume Mithra to be a Persian deity wonder how it came to be worshipped in Greece and Rome wo. The answer i. that Milra In Vedic tradition connotes the Sun. &K*
scholars

Westem

368) the author describes a grotto located near Trapezus and formerly church. dedicated to Mithra but now transformed into a
Christian Writings Distort Europe's Vedk: Post

Vedic culture existed


In all

Cumonl observe* on pages 14-16

of his book.

"The

writings

all

over the world the sun was worshipped


U,

counine*.

it

|.

wrong to dub Mithra

be a mere Pars!*"

'

**. are ,oday

^ SS
"
their

prejudiced, are very tthSk authors, although rth, -cK^totol them one must guard again* mformiUon. but in pursuing By a peculiar Irony of fate those error.

807

wnd

of

to

many

in

divinities of the Orient their attacks against the nevertheless directed

Z mnuy
was

they

attempt

to destroy...

The term Senate

is

an abbreviation of the Sanskrit term Sena-Stban

our

aid in revivin

Some

, of these polemic!*

m?

Lord Shiva
1 '

been pagans themselves during their youth. converts or they had Mnternus who has written a bad the case with Firmicus
This
treatise

Utin

derived their votaries. Either they

information from

Toe temple of Concord was

built

upon a part of

lhii arts

and

it

waa hence

called

Area Concordae. Romulus

It said

to have

dedicated a brazen

groupof statuary representing a four-horse chariot

on astrology and

finally

fought the Error of the Profane

there and to have planted a lotua tree...

The moat

celebrated temple

always arises as to how much ReDgfem However, the question esoteric doctrines and the ritual they can have known of the
their power to disclose these ceremonies... They boast so loudly of believe all the ebominations... In addition they were too ready to

of Janus, for there were several others in Rome, stood in front of the Curia."" That the temple of Janus
alias

Ganesh was in

the front,

is

significant since that


is

is

a Vedic practice.
in the
if

Since "C*
alphabet, the
as

pronounced both as '8' and 'K*

Roman
is

calumnies that were circulated against the pagan mysteries... In


short the literary tradition
is

initial

*C

In the

term 'Concordae'

pronounced
the

not very rich and frequently

little

'S'

will

immediately reveal that the name Concordae


I,

worthy of belief
-i
in'in!

"
.

Sanskrit, Vedic term Sonkordae (SWfffc)

e God Shankar

alias Shiv.
all

A four-horse
Mjharshh
'

chariot and a lotus plant mentioned above are

peculiarities of Vedic culture.

In Vedic tradition

Rishi
'
.

'

denotes a

'

Sage

'

while

'

MaharsW

denotes a

'

great sage

In ancient Italy

both those terms were


easily

common. Being improperly

spelled,

however. they are not

The modern words 'concord' and concordium indicating 'agreement' obviously originate in the Sanskrit name Sankar-deo and Sankar devam i. e. God Sankar alias Shiva In whose temple
the warring parties signed a peace-pact, because Lord Shiv
is

rtwgnizable. The founder of the Catholic mission in China in


"t

15M

the

D. was an Kalian. Malteo Rirci. That


is

is

u Vedic Sanskrit name

God of warriors.
Since Ganesh
la

Mlfca4eVi Rmhi. Mahadeva

name
in

of I.orU Shiva. Research along


civilization

ihe Hues
and

the son of Lord Shiv and Ganesh

is

traditionally

will indicate that Italy

had a full-fledged Vedic


ancient times.

worshipped

first at

every ritual His temples also abounded in Rome.

thai Indians

spoke Sanskrit

Army Mouw
Soiaculum was the designation or a place at which the Senate in the early time or Rome. ""
'

Lord Vishnu

"The

MB

in imitation of the spherical

temple of Vesta was a round building and was built shape of the earth, which Vista was

supposed to personify.

" 10
to the above elucidation by Robert Burn.

The Senate

in

*wnrti Consequently

those ancient tunes consisted entirely of army


their
Is

alight

amendment

*ni "if*iIhW,

meeting place had the Sanskrit name a Sanskrit term implying the Army high command.

necessary

() Pp.

(10) P. 603,

S5-M Ibid. Rome md

th

Umpagns. by Robtrt

fern.

"
808

'

. ,

and presider of the entire lard Vlihnu Iff the sustainer spheres and not of 'the auth which consists of bintoni of
Bui

cos^

no
word
ia

^q^
k

those myriad even the entire cosmos containing sphere* curved sphere in itself. It is that total cosmic sphere

apelled as 'Seraph'. Obvioualy after Iconoclaatk asuulta

destroyed the statue of the reclining Vlahnu the cobra coiling

(r^.
.

underneath remained unmolested for some years. Consequently what

Rrahmanda over which Vishnu alias Vista presides and not notth, tht earth alone. Therefore his temple was circular or rather elliptic V11
ihe

was

earlier

the temple of Vistae

alias

Vishnu, came to be known

generations later aa the temple of the cobra. With further iconoclastic


assaults and modernistic zeal even that lonely
,

The image of Vishnu reclining on the eternal cobra is also on, elliptical longish,rolund temple to enclose it. Such ( a temple formed (he sacred centre of ancient Rome.
which needs an
Fir*

damaged cobra was

assaulted and dismantled. Therefore, the current confusion about

the identity of the location of the Serapis. The temple of Serspia

Worship by the Newly-Wed

and Vistae were one and the same. It is for this reason that one well-versed In Vedic lore must be associated with all archaeological
titled

On page 170
is

of the

volume

Rome and

ihe Campagng

diggings and study of pre-Christian sites throughout the world.


Christian scholarship proves unequal to the task.

a photo of the ruins of the temple of Venus in Roma... "and an altar upon which every newly married pair in Rome wei-e expected
to offer sacrifice...

Devalaya

In
sit

India under the Vedic


fire for

wedding the married couple has

to

because
i.

by the sacred

hours to offer oblations to the chanting


in

The church of St. Bartholomoo has long since been destroyed it was originally a temple of Brihet Mahadeo (yR n?3*l e. a large-size Lord Shiva. This indicates how names fancied
be Christian are
in fact Sanskrit,

of ihe Vcdai. This

was exactly the custom

pre-Christian Rome

to

Vedic.

because the people there followed Vedic culture.

On
worship

its

pages 205 and 206

Burn's volume also refers to


in

Robert Burn records on page 288 of his book that "near the great drain was a spot called Doliola. in which, at the time of
tht A

of

Goddess

Juno Regina

the Gallic invasion of 387 A. D. the sacred aymbola from the temple
of Vesta were buried for safely in small casks.
Doliola
is

pre-Christian

Rome.

" The Utin term


a temple.

pnyessionsl

honour of Juno Regina wns. .. performed by seven and twenty virgins... two white heifers were led at the hd
in

hymn

the Sanskrit

word 'Devalaya' (%WI! meaning

of the temple, before the procession...

"

The symbols were obviously buried by neo-convert Christians under the false pretext of safety. Those ought to be dug out now.

The
ia

tradition of including a sacred heirer in religious ritual*

>

Vedic custom. likewise the expression 'Seven and Twenty* (instead of twenty seven) is Sanskrit phraseology (?wfarPU In Vedic ntuals ihose 27 goddesses are symbolically represented by as many bald nuts and reverentially worshipped They are known as Matrukas-

On page 291 the author reproduces a photo of the "Round " Because temple of Hercules, usually called the temple of Vista. Hari is the name of Vishnu, and Rama and Krishna are His incarnations. Heri-cul-eesh was Vishnu himself or any of his
incarnations.

On page
Serapii (,
is

251, of his
in

volume Burn observes

"The

temple of

On

page 298 of his book Robert

Bum
i,

mentions temples of
Vedic tradition)

named

the Curiosum Urbis...


'

but nothing further

planetary deities (known as Navo-grahas


In the centra)

e. ^rorsin

known about

its aft*,

In

The term Strapi* ia the Sanskrit Bnuin (is panted out elsewhere

temple complex of ancient Rome. According to Vedic tradition cosmic affairs follow the planetary lime-clock. Therefore
the planets are worshipped as vital pistons of the divine mechanism

te.-m

'

Serve*

"

i.

'

**'

in ifti*

volume)

the *an*

810

^ T*Z * * tZ K- tL
,

HwuIw

djg, Vesta

alias

Vishnu was the presiding


tion that
is tl

*"

deiiVtfTOur
his

w Hercules and the To^dly by the Latin poets.


for

epithet Hercules

"

constantly

^
w*

nt
Capitolina which

deity

was tbe

national symbol of the

Roman

regime.

Strabo states that Tibur

The triade consisting of goddesses Minerva and June and god


Jupiter
Is

two things,

its

Herein,

and

its

wate^.

a 24-inch

tall

sLatue which was worshipped in the temple

of Jupiter In Rome. The deities are three-seated figures of Minerva,


Jupiter and June with their respective sacred bird mounts the owl.
eagle and peacock.

lo the

With the temple of the greater number of inscriptions relating mosl likely stood where have been found...." (Page 397 of his cult of Hercules The
Ifbtary

Hercules was united a

library,.,

(the temple)

book).

obviously stocked Sanskrit

VecV

scriptures,

The Bombay

triade figured In a daily)

news item
in

In

the Times of India (a


its

on February 7A, 1994

connection with

attempted

translations and commentaries.

theft for

shipment abroad.
to identify

Rome has thus a number of inscriptions, also actual drawings other hidden documents and paintings of Ramayanic episodes and evidence still available real . earnest, in the Vatican With such colossal
.

The animal-mounts help one


'

Minerva as goddess

LakshmE, Jupiter as Vishnu and June as Saraswati. The name Jupiter Deva-Pitar I. e. father of the gods. Itself Is Sanskrit
Conversion of

non-denominational scholarship will certainly be able to. write an


entirely

new history

of pre-Christian

Rome. But

all

these historic
to lack

Romans

to Christianity tore

them away from


Identification of

assets arc going

waste because a Christian

Rome seems
recall,

their primordial Vedic roots

and muddled-up the

the aptitude, enthusiasm recognize Its

and knowledge to

sort out and

various deities.

own

pre-Christian days.

What was probably

the tenth international


17.

Ramayan conference

Apart from important centres in India, Britain, Arabia and Italy


are

was held from April 13 to


Prominent among

1992 at

Villa

Guliano in Turin, Italy.


hosted the conference

some more countries where gigantic statues of the

reclining

Italian scholars

who had

Vishnu were erected. Idols or lard Vishnu have also been found

and a number or other countries in the East and the West, testifying lo the world sway of Vedic culture.
In Russia

was Prof. Oscat Botto, head of the department of Oriental Studies, were University of Turin. Other two participating local scholars
Dr. Victor AgosUnf. Executive in

CESMO

and Dr. Irma Piovano.

the pivot of Vedic Europe. Current accounts of Roman language, culture and history present us with a tangled conglomerate of Greecian. Phrygian, Egyptian, other Pagan.
Clirislian

Rome was

Director
It is

CESMEO.
a pity that

none

of the

more than 100


all

participating Sanskrit

and many

and Indological scholars from


inkling that the

over the world had the slightest

influences.

Roman

history ge

Ramayan was a world epic and Sanskrit was a world language and not of India or the Hindus alone.
Italy the Likewise though the conference was held in tradition scholars themselves showed no awareness of the Ramayanic two cities of their own country. For instance, the names of their
Italian

remarkably clarified

If

It

Is

realized that

Rome

has from time immemorial been the Sanskrit culture in Europe.

hub and pivot of

Vedic.

DMm Vedic Triade or Andcnl Rome


1

Rome

and Ravenna derive from

Rama

and Ravan respectively.

- CfeBt

i U of ,I "t\ ?, Vedic

R0man" Were Ramans followers alias devotees incarnation Ram. is further proved by the Triad*

The name Oscat Botto is the Sanskrit term Akshnl Bhatt which Agortlnl b from latter Is the same as Aboil. Similarly the surname

*12
1

indent Vedic sage. AfMiin, the famous


'!
I V-

813
-

wrote
I

~ W J" W w professor Botlo of Italy "s own rich Ramayanic herlw

the Ramayanic conferen,^* est coi year 1993 In the context of " received no reply. Could it ibe^ which he had participated. letter or as a Catholic Christian he be did not receive my in the conference presuming the Ramayin only a superficial interest
In the
'

Jones writes "The titles and attributes of this old Italian deHy versea of SulpKlus and a are fully comprised in two chorlambick superfluous. further account of him from Ovid would here be
'

Jane pater. Jane Turns, dive biceps, biformli, principium deorum. cat* rcrum sator.

to

be only a fictional Hindu tale from India and not

historical

occurence of universal dimensions ?

The above
lyric poet

lines ere

now

attributed to Septimiua Serenus. a

who wrote

in the

age of Hadrian, says a footnote in

the book.
'* Father Ganesh (Janus) all-beholding The couplet above says. with two forms.Ohl Ganesh. Thou divinity with two heads, and deities." sagacious planter of all things, and leader of
,

Ganesh was written as Janus


is

in ancient

known

as a two-faced deity because the


in

Greece and Rome. He Ganesh icon that used

to

be placed

the entrance used the top middle portion above

Ofe inside and the have one face looking- in blissful grace on city or realm. outside the home, other keeping a watch on life

'

It

who when

of the Vedic pantheon not only Ganesh but all deities years ago worshipped all over the world just about 2500 were
is

there

was no Buddhism,

Christianity or Islam-

Jones who had a staggering European scholars such as Sir William before them were so thoroughly pile of auch evidence benumbed brains failed U> draw by the Christian ego that their

P**

the right conclusions,

Andenl UnWcnal Ganesh Worship


in arohaeotogical Luristen region of Western Iran the engraven figure undertaken in 1970 a strip bearing excavations to was discovered. It was estimated of the elephant God Ganesh display in museum B. C. The strip Is now on be of about 1200 In

the

l.

^!??" * Urt CM "


'

''

from

**

Cree* and Rome.

nl imd
hh,.

'

* " * ***& by eminent British scholars. f"


rrom

in Paris.

"^"n 1

Europe

it

an

illustration in that

alias

(I.e.

and have named it Sbaotan The Japanese revere Lord Ganesh San.krit term Shiva-Tanay KanJiUn The term Shootan Is the Japan have Lord Lord Shiva). Over 2Vi tempi- in
son of

814

816

GaneahconsecrWdinlhem.
Myth* or Pre-Columbian America by A book Ganesh worship in the n elaborate description of
titled

principle in

Geometry. Aristotle

Is

famous as one who

laid

ih

Melo*^
America

foundation

on which almost the


.

entire Western concept of ethics

contains

philosophy has been built Plato snd Socrataa are remembered for their

continents In ancient times.

and wisdom respectively.


But what was the actual source of their knowledge which made subsequently them so femou a primarily in the Western countries und

History also contains Hewitt s Primitive Traditional similar


informelion.

The East and West Magazine (of Italy). Vol. rv (1958)


338. and Vol.

over the world 7 This through the spread of Western education all that must be studied very carefully. is. a question
pig,

18 UA6B) also provides

some

details.

Hindu

Hnivi.ni

Empire

show that The painstaking researches of Gerbe and Urwkk Vedic and Upanishadic thought was profoundly influenced by the Hindu Brahmins wisdom. It was found that in those hoary limes.

Greek

Rome

is

named

after the incarnation

Lord Rama. This

were present

in Persia

fount of Indian these regions and could drink ul the


possible only because

and Asia Minor and Greeks used to visit wisdom becoming


Brahmins. Max Muller and WintemiU

Romans were Hindus and the Roman empire

disciples of those learned

was an Hindu empire.


Venice, u rily in Italy
is

Further Max Muller himself, on the also accept this as authentic. Eusoblus, says that Rrahmins basis of authentic information given by
the Sanskrit

name Vonesh

i.

e.

Lord
to

Socrates. used to visit Athens about the time of


PlBto. the father of
in fact visited

of Forests indicating that its

main shrine, a temple dedicated

much

of Western thought and learning,

Lord Shiva was located in a verdant forest


in

when Venice was

founded

some

visited parts of Asia on a cultural tour and

hoary antiquity.

large part of that ancient

Hindu city has been swallowed

by the sea. as happened with Dwarka. the capital of Lord Krishna.


12, 1980 the finds of more dikes and ruins of buildings and monument* of the Roman anjjre submerged on the north-eastern edge of the lagoon city of Venice alia, Vaneah. near the island of Torcetior.

The press reported on January

than

Indian Ideas from Pythagoras, India also, out of fascination for the Voltaire, indebted. In this connection. to whom also he is deeply banks earliest. Greeks went to the the French thinker, saya that the Plato knowledge. Hopkins states that of the Ganges In search of first to point while William Jones was the hi fuU of Sankhya ideas

Pythagorean and Sankhya thought. out the similarity between


Dr.

Berlshlener says.

"To

the Vedic
'

Aryans
Rita
'

the

central

philosophic conceptions
natural and

ozonized naturewas

which include*

Several Italian cities

kwu

and mythological figures.


fr

may be seen to be named after Hindu Rome is named after Rama, Ravenni
'

human order."
' ' '

k^^LT"
VUclnucncr on

RaVfln

Veron8 from VflrunB Bnd VenlM

Dharma i. - of A closely related concept was Dham of Dham ' and Romans Greeks emphasize the creative energy made central conception of "Ratum through the Greeks derived their
' . '

Tot

,h t

Creeks a d

R0ma0i
four

Ratio, naluralis Ratio. Rita-

tJT^Tn*?* "'
oriu

"*
1.

^ M ** *
fof

nn

The Greeks and Romans, perhaps

following the Vedic Pllru

While Pyvhagoras

p^

mg||UoBi j

'

816

817

rMMlSl "1*
jKoDiot

EE "i Sl.
Mi.

o~.drfha

cull of ancestor believed in the

worship

a,

Similarly the

worship of the

fir, know,,

Western acholara on

whom

the world has so far

depended

for

the Agnihotra of the

Hindus.
is

historical and archaeological finds seem a proper Interpretation of unaware that they stand In need of a proper to be blissfully

Olympus of the^Greeks

but

reorientation. Since they

have a long Christian

tradition behind

them

Sen

Hindu Olympus. The legend of Jason and th. reproduction of the an echo and enfeebled version of is nothing but
Fleece"

the Ramayan.

The preponderance of
in Italy

the Vedic way

of

life

and of Sanskrit

Pompeii waa swallowed they tend to forget that In 79 A. D. when Vedic culture up by a volcanic eruption Italy followed a kind of a Hercules (battered and shattered by the Mahabharat war 6661 B C .). malpronuncJaUon of the Sanskrit name of Lord krishna Is therefore a spelling would be Heri-cul-eeab. Herculanium waa the
, .

fact that even after professing can be clearly seen from the Italians still practise Vedic ritual, for almost 1600 years Christianity language. label and speak a Sanskrilized

Ua

proper temple-complex of Krishna. Therefore

it

contained great treasure.

under a Christian

The most

interesting detail about ancient Italians

was that they

heUum) signifies The name Heb (yielding tbe name of tbe gaa the medallion is a Vedie the Sun God in Sanskrit. His Image on The snake-coil gold armlet is also a typical Vedic omsmant.
concept.
discoveries of Western archaeological and historical and reinterpreted. so far need thus to be revised, reviewed

worshipped the Shiva Unga and performed not only recited the Vedas, Ramayana in their households worship but also sang the story of
fire

The whole range

their walls, plaques and vases and paint*1 Raniayanic episodes on

Stupe In

Rome
capital of Italy, is

as Illustrated elsewhere in this volume.

Rome, tbe
it

known

as the eternal

dty because
relics of

Buried Vcdlc treasures or

Pomp*: sudden
buried

is

named

after the Incarnation

Rama. To preserve the


Is

holy

men

inside

huge masonry mounds

a hoary Vedic custom.


there
a
is

Pompeii, a prosperous dty in Italy was all of a the erupting A. D. 79 by the molten lava and ash spewed out by volcano named Vesuvius. Pompeii is the Sanskrit name Pampa
in

Such a

mound

Is

known

as a stoop. In

Rome

an ancient
.

site called
it is

Catacomb where there is what they caQ

Pyramid Actually

Vesuvius

is

Vishwesh.
the

M
ruins
being
is

noted on

Shiva) (I.e. worshippers of Lord a stoop of the Essenese of ChrUuanlty by Joseph page 160 of the book

ABC

Among
Herculanium

buried
is

building complex known

as

Bernard.
Mussolini was the head of the Italian Early in the 1940's Benito Edda which waa eldest daughter

which

explored

through

archaeological

excavation begun in 1986 on the coast close to Naples. Skeletons of 80 persons found clinging to one another to tbe panic that gripped the people in

Government. The name of his

wu

among the ruins lastly Herculanium when the ominous

torn Veda. That Illustrates the European pronunciation of tbe daughters all over the world were (like Veda-Kumaris in India)

how

rumble and gurgle of the volcanic eruption started.

named

Some of the excavated chambers contained fabulous treasuresOne ornament had in it a medallion depicting the image of Hell. ear the Sun God. The other ornament* found Included gold rings,
pendants, armlets shaped like coiled snakes, silver vessels. bron

that also indicates women were after the Vedas. InddentaBy their profeasional methodic permitted to read the Vedas though was a lifelong, wholetime recitation waa another matter, which
dedication, not expected

from women.

and iDvar coins and a glass bottle for perfume,.

A
In

Vedu- Kshatriya administrator of about


burial

600
In

B. C.

lying In ttoU
village

hn

chamber, discovered under a


In

mound

Hochdorf

nr
Hundreds
discovered
all

Stuugsrt dty

Wt

Germany.

belongs to a time

controlled Europe.

'German*

when the Sanskrit-speaking Vedic Doitya din li a malpronundaUon of the Sanskrit term

of such

Ramayanic episode* painted


In

Inilde

indent home*,

over

Italy are displayed

books and reports concerning

'Siarnuur by which these people were called by others.

archaeological finds.

However

unaware of Christian scholars are blissfully


Is

The European

name Sherman

therefore Indicates

an ondent Brahmin pundit.

puixlea what the pictures depict. Resolving such worldwide important functions of the present volume.

one of the

Tte apparel and the ornaments on the body are identical with those which Mahabharat-tlme personalities wear on the Indian stage.
f f

dn^m

5JL

T My

'

mKal a,uWron mttl with

Uon-flgure.

Vedic In the above picture the women In Hindu. ssing the sharing of wives of DBahsrtlh. father of Rama. They are discu fir. ritual. potion obtained from the putrs-kameahti

apparel are the three

the fertility

<^m,

and bona

away. Kaikeyl (at the right) feeling offended looks

tndlcale(,

^^p,^

being

The greet relevance of named after the Vedlc


all

Italy's capital

Rome (pronounced Roma')


paintings caricaturing

Incarnation,

Rama, and

his life-story, found

scholars even within

to m*lem over Italy, hss been completely lost not only the pathetic Italy Itself- This underlines

Ineptitude of
&>

modern

that allegiance scholarship but also the blighting effect


a

**

administrator during *>d roc* to mik , u

I*

fonground mav I- .^n

hu^T WeUmc
<

to Christianity has

on the research acumen of

whole people

"' ^ chamber Tht

cho

of the chariot used by


li

lined with

Umber

be mounted both within and A vigorous effort needs, therefore, to its lost pre-Christian Vedw outalde Italy, to make that country aware of

MD

:!. **
^ZTwb MoU are
by
Kill

of Riiimywfe hv retorting copl

used ;o be a VedJc hermlUge. Coplea transformation the Papacy


Veaas, the Upanishads, translations secreted Kfipturei and their local durini that terrible

r u. nd shroud adopted eariy Z^r fonitantine's Roman


B

**.. My, *

found revered. remembered and persuading the Vatican to cast off iu


in

sn
of

P^nUnM

for arranging

the*

c d* u

r jr

h **

Chri^

m^
,

the 4th century at the

dlcu*.

legion..

PHor to

that harrowing overnight


f

^
ago

Ramayan. Mohnbharat and numeroua other Sanakrit

away over 1500 years

wk.

should

now

be looked for and brought out into

honest, non-sectarian the open. Thii however calls for an


drive to search for ibe great hidden

and uninhibited

Vedic truth.

Rom, (riI
This

of

iuly)

i-

mmed

.iter

*e

Vedic

got detail of ancient history

Europe. Paintings, auch a. the ln*de ancient 0tt** h0 ve been found painted far bain* bad Italy. Tho* pantingexcavations in

oblired from the memory of a one abova depicting Ramayonlc

**"*? Qm

**
<

^2m J**"*^

>M, taM

W,

^nM

RaL, au
l|B

and

Uuuhman

womm

or

|tland

described in the

Ramayan)

in aingW <* are aeen here walking hand the lore*. SiU came. In her
in

the

Tulaai

Manjwi

sacred BaaQ ptanO (seed- bearing twig of the

Bur*
he
i.

il* brcaher of

Rama.

Mns hi. horse in .he forest

in search

cf Item.'. luerriU.

mp.

1*

md.c.u Out row of spear, at ti* right

followed by hi. troops.

TMi

l>

one of

U hundreds

of

Ramaywic

episodes found pointed In

ancient Italian

ana studied

spoke Sanskrit homes belonging to the era when Italians Vedic brotherhood. Sanskrit scripture, is rcemebrs of the worid

Thi.
In.

I.

amon, hundrrf.

4 P*< -"
Bom. duly)-

~ - *

I.

Elrunn MuMum
It

In the Vttloui In

dn-lcu . tfcnwnlc

o. Ik.

tayAW VU

.bducun. Run,..

the wife of his brother

&JgrW-

m
,

rfktiuou.Bnu.ndRom U tu..

,CT1^^
***" m
Uw
East.
.

MM

in their

hundreds, found
'

all

over

Italy,

j*^

" **

ne*rna,,0n
'

Fam8
'

^ "* "*"

ITJS
11
to

^Z^i*T** **
ana

Li Tlir

"^
collect

and raarrame

~ch picture* from Im, Randan uaed to b. t enacted aa mucb in the


the

dviliution The ao-calW Etruscan

of ancient Italy

muat

hereafter be

udl*d a. i part of the


enigma.

"dent

Vedic world instead of being regard*!

u an isolated

German manuscript of 1174 A. D. An omite. profusely Illustrated August Research Ubrary in Wolfnbuettel by monk Harimann. at toe Herzog Brunswick in Germany, also needs dose examination for
ju south of
traces of lbs
i Sanskrit

on Hart,

Ramiysn and Mahabharat of indent Europe. Harimann la name signifying a person whose mann i. e. mind is concentrated the Vadk deity.

found One of the hundreds of Ramayanic episodes

painted on vases

and bouse-wafla

in ancient Italy.

monkey-chief Rama's bruincr Lakahman (left) grappUruj *** the at Rama', dlapoeal for Sugreev for duly-daUybf In placing bia troop, Not- the tail of tbecowenng the campaign agalnat Rav.n. (kin. of Lanka).

monkey -chief

(right

bottom corner).

827 Since pre-ChriatUn Italy '.

Etmacam
ire

followed Vedlc culture they

named

Rome

aft*r

Rama and

devoutly caricatured Ramayanlc event, on the walk

of their home*. Such


in Italy.

drawing

now

on dlaplay in varfoui

mueeumi

Not* the Hindu-style apparel

of

Ravan and Slu.

H*mayuilc
.

-.. VlbhUhw. read,


raekee

fl

PW11
.

* ,n
fe

nwni Mian home.

** *w*l

to . flen*m

( bottom right).

"^
to

^"M

-' * Jdn I ord SfU (aeen equalling


'

K^

83H

A Ramnyanic episode found painted


ltd Kuan

in

undent

Italian

homes. Lava

(MM

of

Ramo)
it

capturing a aacrindol horse released by their

rather, and driving

away to Shge ValmiW 'a hermitage.


Ramiyanic
paintings

Hundreds

of

such

discovered

by

Italian

^^^ ^^ctotars
I"
1

archaeologista ire languishing unnoticed


ftii

and unrecogniied because modern

to

i^ujy

luch Mrfctfiwi
"

Ramnyanic.

-rh e

itory of R mU |

Romului foundln *"" two twin o,

obviously a distortion of the legend of

Pompey, the Consul on


Thia picture

of

Rome, wearing the sacred Vedlc sandalmark

mm

UM

Rlm||

Uvi

his froehead, indicates that


la

Kuth who wwfl numirt(

andent Italy waa a part of the Vedle worid. Rome, by reproduced from page 337 of the Hfaory sf
titled

Smith, and the book

Lel

MWa U**

by lyangar.

^
831 830

Idols of

Lord Ganesh from India (at the

left)

and from

Italy-

Mark

the close similarity.

Anarat luly'i Etruscans (2nd

century B.

C.

and

beyond)

w
tbt

Swikm-vaWng
of

Vedists as

apparent from the above portrait of on*

ttwr emperwi aarinf a dhoti and holy sandal- paste **d and nesk. (Tha above

marks on

At nun,eroua ptoN 1" Italy Hah Cigotic been Hi. fUber, Lord Shh. bev. up in pubUc aquare. .re even now unwittingly

and emblem,

1
<

M.

w1 Ur*Shr h
luly. to spit,

or

Urt

Go->l

photo appears earlier on page 186 of UoJ

UBfa
sornhT
'

* Iymg*

.ueh Ire^ent,

prolan,

evidenee

lnd "

P**e 300,

"*

H,rtory of Bon,ei

**

Invent,
I,
It

the Vie pM o. M. do,, rthh.* dtio and Muslim secuHan 1i.tf.ne. andupon .uch erfdene.

iher,

i.

M
<"

>"

" "***

"**"*J
with

the mind, ol aenolar.

make them

look

on Impervious,

dull,

deadened dale and

ba7

the body cloth with rest of

""

rivtr

Tiber too

Lord Shiva etandins; over


Italy.

Node* the trident

In

public fountain al a road square in BolOP. Shiva's hand. But the booda of two intf"

round Shiv fl ', neck have * been aubstituwd with birde beau" Uuer-day Qiriitian aculptor'e ignorance of Italy's Vedic past.
colllnj

in archaeological

"Hirougnout iuiyi (doU of n( f0 C|TC8bi 3hivi oihflr VedJc de)UM dlggin* bave never been puhticised by the CbrittJu r*i<*

for

^TJr"^

''

""

UJ1Wlltin

P"^

remembrance and rev***

*"**>

continue to

.und up and be counted at public pUcas.

SM
babies The she-woH suckling the two human
Is

therefore an sBefory for

and bartaned Sits nn anary. deserted


forest
i

who

nurtured her iwin sons In the

That such

Italy statue should be displayed sa a national symbol in

conversion to more proof of Italy's Ramsyanlc heritage. And yet (l one onwards has so deadened the eenafbilitfea of Christianity from 312 A. D. Conference wsi ocademlcs thai when on International Ramaysnic
Italian
Italian scholars appeared totally in 1903 A. D. participating held in Turin effect pre-Christian Vedic past. Such is the blighting oblivious of their to mind, of even the intelligent., Christianity and Worn on the of pre-Mohomed human existence in pre-Christian and

draw a
times.

total

Wank on

Vrukodara (jrttf:)
in

is in

i very

common

Vedic expression.

It

ia

used

:n*

Bhagawad Gcu

describing the

mighty

Bhm

aa o Vrukodara
a

aignifying

tough, brave person nurtured

and suckled by

<ehe) watf-

The lutuf depicting Remus and Romuiua * suckling ot the breost a she -wolf la a cherished Roman symbol proudly depicted In Italian museumi-

Rome alias Roma la named alter Lord incarnation. HI. wife Slta gave binh to a set of twina Kueba and Lava while in exile. The twine nurtured and reared by Slta in a for-*
in.

The

capital of Italy,

R*mi.

Vsdk

btrraiUf. which was her retreat, grew up to become valiant fight**'

837

(0i

fri

y^^O

I-

lhe abode a11

"

"hrine of tbt Great God

(Vishnu).

On a WQH alongside a road leading to the Eiffel tower la a inscribed with the 1st chapter of the Sanskrit scripture stone tablet Bhagavatem. Even if that tablet may have been put up
Srimad

by

the

modern
it

ISRCON

(International

Society

(or

Krishna

Consciousness)

represents a miraculous re-sprouting of the ancient

THE VEDIC PAST OF FRANCE. SPAIN

AND PORTUGAL
about
1

primordial Vedic culture of France.

France hiving

bwi

converted to Christianity only

500

jwi
Thai

ago, for million j of


i

years earlier

it

was

a Vedic country.

why

it

has

great

number of

relics of

those times.

To the wrat of

Psrii is

a railway junction known as Sab!?'

whidbimil-prwiunciaUoncrftbeSanalcritteiTnaivalsyaindicatirig

inn

11

wise township

raised

around a

&iv temple. That ancienlmost a


visitor

brine ha.
f

ben kept mysteriously


-

locked anduninvMligaied.

" taw Dr v v P^dse of Pune. who founded the T! *=* fcyan Prabodhlni insUlution). delected all the signs of P*d auvDn, when be peeped through the barred
,nflu

windows.

-.** inner urge (to start an


* *~*
: of

establishment)

"-picMabbW

* ^bibg^Usri r: K.uravathe ** * Ubbshmwl the


8,,n,,y -

coun. in

Th

1st

*cripwr* chapter af the Sa^Wrll

Q W<

J(ntj tttuS)P |lUn '"

vr-Jih-aJ 8yaa

on . ro-Usidc public edifice

*f OK

EUW

^^^

'

'

^ri rumi X>^ *^ *

A, north--*

France in region of
after Lord

Alsace there
Kfost

I,

Ram..

other

found

w * of

tov^
from the
in

ori8in

suffix 'gal'

in .that last

name. 3nc ($*: 'Puratah*


like 'port'
It

terior of n Christian

modem

France needs to be scratch*,

Sanskrit signifies

frontal'.

Terms

and

'

portal

^^bbedtor^I^Vedic.ouIandbody.
nime Gaul stems from the Vedic sage GsuIbv Pnmc*-, ancient school used to be on the bank (mm) whose Vedic hermitage
Prsvar in Sanskrit signifies a sage. Its current of the river Seine. The plural of Pravar is Pravarance Western pronunciation is Friar.
i.

indicate that Portugal gel a its

name

because

provided an entrance

and
is

exit to the Gaul alias Ouluv region

and people. The term Gaelic

also of the

same

origin.

The term Spain


connoting pulsation

originates in the Sanskrit


'

word 'Spnnd' (Wt)


'

alias

throbbing

' .

European terms such as spin


root. Consequently

spun, spindle' derive from the same Sanskrit


Spain gels
its

e.

group of sages.

It

is

that

word which has led to the

modem
Vedic.
three
a

name from

Its

ancient
Africa.

'

pulsation... throbbing' Vedic

civilization lerm France. Us ancient Keltic alias Celtic

was

activity linking

Europe with
in

Though France. Spain and Portugal have


different countries in

emerged as

Cadiz,

a port

Spain had numerous Krishna temples

modem
in

times, yet they together

formed

mentioned by Herodotus and other ancient Greek authors. Even


'holy' because of the entire promontary there used to be called were there. the numerous temples dedicated to Vedic deities that

compart Vedic region

the pre-Christian days.


alias

The terms 'Franc'


etc. are fa

'France' and
'

'French, Franchise'
'

derivatives of the Sanskrit root

pra

pronounced as

'

fra

modem-day European pronunciation. The Sanskrit root 'pro*


tending towards' (spirituality alias altruistic service).
is

pillars in its front

towering Krishna temple with a row of tall, massive, rotund verandah used to be a familiar landmark with
identify the coast of

which mariners on approaching ships could


Spain.
It Is

aignifies

Vedic

monk

known

in Sanskrit

as Pravarh

tote

(mi The suffix

'

var'

. 'superior' calibre.
'"

^^ Lfn \1. ^^ M '*" Correspondingly, ** *?T uwmaelves C2 modestly merely as ^ Fra Asi8n ^untnes too
' '

The 'Pravar' of Vedic terminology

commonly

their studies. This open to reason and are dedicated to

scholars are believed that European Christian is only

call

'

^CXT^ *
1

scholar, are because my experience is that Christian not existence of Christ end are generally averse to question the pre-Christian cMtalkft In prepared to admit of any organized
partially true

" -"nm,

freedom

Europe.

Reding France
I

had the same experience.


ail

talked to,

we*

not at

Keen even to study

\*T. W*
-

TheaddJUonof
"

of Vedic FrUra
,TO

" F Ht. the Sanskri I7t J"* ""Willy m0dern 'F^


geLs
ll$

n' u

"

*"*"*

that prior to Christianity France

the plural
'

hd ofWanamei^o^,^
in

-'

-*

alias

p-.,,

^>

na

me8ning lhe Mearned from the concenlraUon


Si

lhat

"*"

potest
0811

"

of ftinc*. Center DDIon professor of the civitotlon And out *' University. USA to Studies Harvard

civfllzation.

When

wrote lo Mr.

'^'

t^VlTCZ S**""
' *
noMp ^

"
'*%

Cu,flV

pre-Christian Franc,
brief,

antiquity the impress the term Caul signified

'"^^r^on^mpn.in"^ '^^ rwiw


-

brusque reply dated

Spain and Portugal is apparent

b. of for your letter. Unfortunately. heriug. of 1 know nothing .bout h. pre-Chrl.tian


1

^^^^C^ ^
WWOT

^
ft

*.

'

H WW. T^X

^ *'^W armies
-Chnttian

n*^ \L t ibtof v^ *** *. ^ *"


*jwbWf,
4 of
(,

M Mm

We3tem sch0,ars nev er pre-Christian France because In their *orth *vilizaUon-wise,


ihii <*P,V
lhflt

Ml
known as Drulda. That Sanskrit word, compowd of two iyllab!w. Dra-Vida signifies ' a aeer and acholar.
Franz Cumont observes
' '

wy

ta

^^
^
this 18

to say.

its

existence as a country,

due

^ Chrigl

In Gaul. Druldism with oral tnsdlUona

chnstianity.

embodied

in

long poems, perished and disappeared.

"1

Ttat means

a horrific satate of affairs. It show,

thnl France has not only smothered its

own

Vedlc civilization but

to

modem

creeds and religions

permanently damage,
off aJl pre-Christian

has wiped out


zeal, exactly

all

evidence of

It

in its latter-day fanatic Christian

of scholars.

persuades

them to cut

as Muslims did with their own Vedic past.

J^ofihe
*rv manner in

irrelevant world ai unwarranted,


which Muslims obliterate
all

or useless in the
history.

Casting a glance at the histories of countries


Spain
it

pre-Mohammed

like France and appears that these countries have often been seized by

remarks such as the one quoted Tnt Implied notion behind scholars, that Europeans were bove. in the minds of present-day
virtual

public frenzies during

which they made a complele breakaway from


it

the past, trying not only to disown

but even to obliterate

it.

caw-men

until

Jesus pulled
its

them out of their caves with


the identical miracle

In the case of France this occurred at least twice in recent

his Christian magic,


attributed to

had

parallel later in

memory; once about 1500 years ago when

it

was

seized with

Mohamed by people forced to turn Muslim.

Both these instances indicate


fanatical creeds are.

how dangerous individual-centred


all

neo-Christian fever and again in the later part of the 18th century during its convulsive anli-monarchial upheaval. In both cases large in terror seeking sections of Frenchmen themselves had to flee

They invert

divine values

and force

their

asylum

in

neighbouring regions.
's

foQowwi 10 misrepresent slavery as freedom

Mm.

and ignorance

as

Cumont
modernism and progress,
Jesus
is

mention of oral

traditions in

andentGaul

is

important

Equating Christianity with

doubly

expected to repeal because only in the Vedic tradition students are heart and all texts of all sciences and arts
all

their lessons

by

toll?"

t^^f Z^^LT
Krtk TaliiM

*" "**

WM my
-

fecau* "*
did

included are entirely in verse. Ancient Gaul

what wt

call

France.

Europeans (flnd

West Asians too)

Spain. Portugal and Swizerland.

dVi,iMUon

U *>

only thereafter thaL

Nomah ShWcsh (TO


Cumont

ftfal)
In

^
* r F

have yet Christian scholars Sanskrit salutation to Lord Shiva, and it were some glossed over it and ignored it as though

cites a curious inscription

France which

is

obviously

tole of the Euro


'

h* vJT' * , , usaci9C eminari run by renowned


'

of the wortd.

K nlinmt
'

"long with the other


sages.

po nter as a very important naturd this but worship in France- And to the existence of Shiv l uuid of Shiv a

'^*

undecipherable

titbit.

But

we

regard

it

~~ * " V, ^ * "" *"


*** "" *'.
,

when neighbouring lUuy was worship that isnotto be understood that when we mention Sh,v but must be regw* be mistaken to be some isolated cult
(1) Pp. 20-21. Oriental ReUgions In

**+*

the ancient

name

of

con,

-,

Roman

PMUm

by Ffe CWmora

M
- h^rlans

""^ .Cl^ *"*


|

B,-

u> the to

wd****
that

of

"** V*"c
Italy

cj.

^uce
.

when

and

O
V*
to

ancient locations in

France and other European regions or* of Vedic.


analysis of

Sanskrit origin.

The

few names given hereunder thoukJ

,* kno

Hi

*"V ta ** ** or

* ^

culture. Switzerland couy -ptised Vedic


chin

pretence, therefor,,

Finland bed

nothing to do with

J
H
^

be helpful to
1

all

those interested in conducting furtner research

of pre-Christian

France and other parts of Europe.

Cannes

^
-r

^
-" 1

inscription topic L^fe ui the


dedications like

we quoU Cumont

The

real, ancient, original spelling and pronunciation of

Cannas

N-me

Scbcsfo in the Urnvr*.

written without dissertations U> be of i nurn^r

anyty

European languages "C was a (Kannes) should be Sannea. In lalar 'C was pronounced aa 'X\ Bubsiituto for 'S\ though apeUed as Sannes It will be if the city name Cannes ia
Therefore
the Sanskrit term Sanis i. a. Saturn. immediately detected to be temple in France was founded around a Obviously the city. Cannes worship. was a famous centre of pilgrimage for Saturn r Saturn and it* centremost cathedral in Cannes is obviou-ly

espWmng' 1

iw

that despite curious f-ct

8 number of dissertations

bafo,

^Tpon* could explain

the

meaning of those two simple San**

1 50*10
y-ho

of Sanskrit for the poverty

and

historical scholar^,,

The biggest and


site

Vedic Saturn temple. of the ancient

wrestled with the topic.

The

inscrplion

is

Sand*
Marseilles

Shiva the Lord. Sebesio is the compowrf meaning "Salutations to Lord.' 'In popular parlance everywbw word Svi-eesh i. e. Shiv the

vii

very often pronounced as

'

b and the term Shiv-eesh oecoru


'

geographer records (on paw 268, VolJ) Sirabo. the ancient wtt it a protecuve that MarseiUea had around
in his

G^ffrapby y

Sebeski. Shiv is in fact different

from Mithra the Sun. Yet

after

ns,d

rW7th

temple of the Delphian

**..

TW M*

the decline of Vedic culture in

Europe the names. appeartnoM.


all

tUribuiM and sexes of different Vedic deities


That
Is

got mixed ap
I

why one could

find a salutation

to Shiva engraved on

current name Marseille* Maricnalayas (rfr^maj the Sanskrit term. corruption of that ancient
8

statue of Mithra. It could also


is

be said that the Statue of

ah

Vendues
rnose studying French
ancient deity to
antlauilies

being mistaken for that of

Mithra.

Bui In another sense the said inscription is not the least

whom

Verseillea

-ea

UKongruoui because according to the Vedic concept divinity


entity People represent
it in different nalysli. any deity whatever ii, name of the Supreme Being.

is

o*

ways. Yet
or form,

in

the ultima*

tunes go back to the or Shiva. Ml such names Bai (now Rot there was known aa

-^ I^^X ^
may
find out
.

Vd*

sovereign
a> Rajnl

is

represent***

(now 'Rene')
..__-i

That

ft common
divinity

U why

in

Vedic chants several nan*

u>

numerous

u a whole.

deities.

Each one of them reP r*

L Mans
progenitor an andenl lawgiver,

after the great

Mw**

*^ ***
ma

race.
|,

Manu

(ll

lh .t the

names of

all

import**
|

2J Pp. 16-17.

^
.

m
***'
00
fl

MB
^^fVol.lo^ObooVStrabonot^thatinTo,!^,
vercn in greet temple held bVi US,y

Roman

times Paris was spelled as Parisorium. That

In

turn was

" ,,

"^Zl
ii

*>y

the

inh^
thBl

of the ancient Vedic. Sanskrit a corruption

nam* Paramwwartum
signifies the

^T
{

** " - *^MoThor-Godde M JZT** *


,

<*

"Sw

J"*-*-"

because in India loo there

^
is

*** h

Instance the family deity of rn For Bhavflni Her ltmple townBhl


-

J
p *i Tuli^

ar,p

the (n Vedic terminology

term Parameswar

Supreme

God white bis consort, the ftjpreme Goddess ia known as Parimwwirl. Consequently, on the banks of the river Seine there used to be famous, temple of the Mother Goddess. It was known as
8

r^^rJon
I Z>t
blouse
,,

fifteen

Sholapur miles from .so an


places

known

as

imr^t

temple city
Tul,apur

Wore
in

ke Tata). n

,n India.

^
*

Paramsewarium. Therefore the township which developed around Parameswarium. After the carnage also came to be known as
it

of the
in

Mohabbaral war when Sanskrit

tuition broke

down and
to

lajdty

pronunciation set

in the ancient Sanskrit

name came

be biped
itaeif

kins. be.ng dedicated to and rev**, France are Vedic

libra

TuIaja.The astrological sign "Tula same Mother Goddess (representing divine jutf*) by a goddess holding symtolfced

After as Parisorium.

Roman

rule ended the

term Parisoriuro

was abbreviated to Paris- But in have further abbreviated it to ' Pari


of the

actul pronunciation
' -

Frenchmen

Thia

is

but a symbolic indication


farther

B pair of scales, also

commemorates that same goddess. Chat*


the Sanskrit

way

Christianity has pulled


their Vedic moorings.

Frenchmen further and

(pronounced Snito)

is

word

'

kot

'

as in Amarkot.

away from
Sorbonoe

Joan of Arc gets her

name from the township of Sun-won^


the Sun, as

because 'Arc' l**> in Sanskrit signifies

may

be

Ha

The well-known
Sur-Bhanu
' *

university Sorbonne derives IU


in

name from
'

from the famous Konark temple in India.

which means
I,

Sanskrit
'

Sun

of the

Cods

and

hen

Such sample instances analysed In this chapter should

gnu
of

signifies

divine lustre

th.

HO*

of divine knowledge-

new impetus to the search for the Vedic. Sanskrit derivation


all

Notre

Dume a

Vedfc Goddess
translated as is usually

indent place names in France. All this evidence lead9

to l(a

The term 'Notre Dame'


But that
is

conclusion that pre-Christian

France was steeped in Vedic culwrr

wrong.

Its

al

original

meanmg

is

Our Mother

aha.

Muni
This give. us ,

Goddess.'
important research clue that as else**
cities

the world several

European

are

named

after

Vedic deil* fedic deiuat

shrin

^mona^es.

d that their historic churches are all pre-Christian

Vedic tempH* The term monk, monastic and monastery derM


deacendant <* a convert V

T1 fan,, No D. M orEur peJs.hatori^ Jhnn,o(^Vrt=M^ ntu ry U* H was on* in h. 1 A church. Unul present form as . Christian

Cheer,

%*E.
J
Vldle

Hn Hindu
Parta
'"**

* **

Lpl. mp,e

Even of .he Mother Godde...


of the

Mother

h.^

ana made

to fonr*

child, the people of


v > cap**] o( p-, B
, , ' '

* ZZ2Z uw *"* f ". <* Gri*^* jt*ZC *"" "


out that

Fran who

Punwl up0

ChrhUiy. troop, and forced to accept

Mother Cxklrt,

TV Una*nd

Pflria

*etB

iLs

nam e from

lh~

Vs*
a. that

thi.

one has to

recall that

mlr.cu.ouw In. .hrtne of a ChrhtlM Godde

Ml
Roman

HI
times Paria was spelled aa Pariaorium. Tnat in turn was
the ancient Vedic. Sanskrit corrupt' " of
t

"^WlofVoMofhisbookSlnibonotesfhfltinTouiouH,

**"

J"J^d * "
country

^
known

,n

Obviously the deity in

"~ ^^ * ^
tar*

name Parameswarium
signifies tht

inhablUnt* that tempi,

Vedk

terminology the term Parameawar

Supreme

* ..

S
the

For Lnstanc* the

deity of Sluvtf the

Goddess ia known as Paiamerwari. Rod while his consort, the Supreme frequently, on the banks of the river Seine there uatd to be was known as famous, temple of the Mother Goddess. It

as

SnoA

.bout fifteen

townsh.p on . TuUn. Bhivani. Her temple known as Tulajapur. miles from Sholapur is
an important temple city ib

Saureshtra region also In thr

known

pBramBewarium. Therefore the township which developed around known as Parametrium. After the carnage also came to be II Mahabharat war when Sanskrit tuition broke down and Uuoiy
of the

Tuljapur in India, and Therefore places li* Talaja and being dedicated to and revering Toulouie in France are Vedic kins, Mother Goddess "HilBja-The astrological sign Tula ' alia*

u ftlaja.
same
Libra

pronunciation set in the ancient Sanskrit

name came

to

be Uspad
Itattf

parisorium. After

Roman
'

rule

ended the term Parisorium

'

symbolbw] by a goddess holding (representing divine justice) a pair of scales, also commemorates that same goddess, Chateau
(pronounced Shalo)
is

actul pronunciation Frenchman abbreviated to Paris. But in This is but a symbolic indication abbreviated it to Pari bave further has pulled Frenchmen further and farther the way Christianity of
ttos
' .

the Sanskrit

word

'

kot

'

as in

Amarkot.

moorings. .way from their Vedic


Sor bonne
university Sorbonne the well-known Sanskrit Sun Sur-Bbenu which means in
' ' '

Joan of Arc pels her name from the township of Sun-worship


because 'Arc' (s*> In Sanskrit signifies the Sun. as

may

derives Hs
of the

nam.
'

fro..

be seen

from the famous Konark temple in India. Such sample instances analysed in this chapter should give a new impetus to the search for the Vedic. Sanskrit derivation of
all

Gods

and hence

signifies

divine lustre

i.

e. tht

'

light of divine

knowled-e-

Notre

Dame

a Vedic Goddess
usually

ancient place

names

in

France.

All this

evidence leads to the


in

conclusion that pre-Christian France

was steeped

Vedic culture.

is The term 'Notre Dams' original meaning But that is wrong. Its real

Muni
Goddess.'
us n important research clue that aa elsewhere the world aeveral European citl are named after Vedic deities and that their historic churches are all pre-Christian Vedic temples
This

pv

T*
U

Cbrfra. famous No. tan.


the

^J^ ^E
is

Our Mother

on,y

fa,

1*. n.ury

present form
,S

m
mad.

Chrirtian church. Um.1

temple of .he Mother Godde*.

timmi
Par*

llW de,Wnd,inl

Vedist

temple of tht Mother

Gide

taytbrt and

u.

Ibr*

her

children, the people of

France

VeAc who

"^* ^w*. **"V """"" &W l***^ ,,. ^ P" *? 7 V*""

*
but
1

^^1J*ZL T " u "*""


P
thi.

,u * from th *"* * ne ha, to recall that during

nm

Iroope and forwd lo acrcpl ChrlsUBilU'-

Bu.even thouh.het.mpl.of
that of

axrm .IwVadkf^-*"^
mlru

. Chrillan

Coddm Ih. ihrui.

ui

MS
that in English as well as French the Sanskrit U s a clue article tu ' has aaaumed the softer pronunciations the and dc* Also * changes to ' garcon * which * Indkatea that k replaces balocannm
* ' ' '
.

VedkYaMnM
A)l

'

over th* cathedral

one
.

may *

various geometrical pattem,

net)

squares, hexagon

octagons and circles with 12 or 24

b' while *d'


the Sanskrit

la

substituted by an *r*; *un pro"


'

in

French

la

word <W*)

alp

'

meaning

'

littla

'

est

(pronounced

Goddess-worship terminology such esoteric designs spokes, to Vdk "Wch represent the various creative circulti it* known ai Ventres use of by divinity in shaping the cosmos,

'a') is the Sanskrit word 'eatl' (fW) meaning 'ie'. French language scholara ought to study this aspect.
Zodiacal Signs

ma*

ttwch

DWect of Samkrii
scholars,
litterateurs,

French

journalists,

teachers

and

astrology.

On the cathedral are drawn the 12 zodiacal signs of Vedic Hod Notre Dame originated as a Christian cathedral it
becomes relevant only
in the

kncopiphers would do
origin of

well, hereafter, to look into

the Sanskrit

shouldn't have displayed Zodiacal signs because astrology has no


place in Christian theology. Astrology

French and consequently look upon Panini as their chief


in this

ipimmanin. To help them

task a few leads are being given


all

Vedic context where the


future births and
circle.

human

soul has a history of past and

hereunder 10 serve as a head -start for

Europeani.

Karma

indicated and also induced by the zodiacal


also indicate that in the Vedic tradition

Frenchmen usually pronounce 'S' as an over the Wert. For instance, ths Sanskrit

'Z\
term

The zodiacal signs

This trail
'

is

seen

idols representing the nine planets too used to

be consecrated and

Ishwar

'

meaning
the

TJT'^n overthe^dent world. The terms ^ruler, an

(M

"** ***" wm

U5fti to

"Wy

worshipped in the Notre


times.

Dame Vedic Goddess temple In pre-Christian

Caesar. Kaiser.

Vedic Texts

Among

Noire the designs on the facade of

Dame are also ahown


Bole

are not the two book*, one open and the other shut. They concerning e. sacred chants but the Vedea and the Devi Mahatmyam I,

Those books depicted on the the greatness of the Mother Goddess. in the manner continuation of pre-Christian symbols cathedral are a Bibte ( explain them away as tta of the Zodiacal signs. To
*

tt.fr.ieh

"*yj

proselytiiaUon. Had U afterthought improvised by Christian closed too* been two. The been the Bible there shouldn't have ibe the open book la represents the Veda SamhJU while

"

hni.aU

Tr._

****** i.Tl.

Mahatmyam

i.

Goddess. e. the chant of the

Yokshas And Sages

^"w lea r~_

Th. entire
.

UH
.

spire of the

fisure, of S oIn

-*.'fir.s=

nun,, bird,. be* U

Pin*

with SU cn crowding

.1 the towering

Gopunm,.

f.pire.) of

"^""S M k VUc W^^T "" """*


" X"

* ^J*?J1 ml **

848 849
for . parallel.

They

udd,?d

*** "Kes- U erB

"ons. den*,,

ARlncourt

yakshasetc

The
persons held In high reverence Ceremonial washing of the feet of
it

battle of Agincourt la recorded In French history.


la

The term

Agincourt
for

the Sanskrit AgnTkot signifying a walled township known

I"

A*

wortMP-

important

religious

ceremonies
still

in

Notre

Dame

Is

hoary

Caoesh

pre-Christian practice which is


out in

faithfully
all

and meticulously earn*}


Christian congregation,
is

inodenvday France even though

"Ganesh..

is

depleted

on

a carving at

Rhelma

In

France wilh

vev
feel

suiu and socks and shoes, and washing of the feet

never

his head. 8 rat above

"a

a Christian practice as such. Therefore, the ritual of


at
religious

washing U*
of lay

ceremonies In Notre
ceremonies.

Dame

is

a carryover

pre-Christian

Vedk

Yet Christian scholars and

general has recorded that the Geubj Julius Caesar, the Roman descended from Dli Pater namely the Father of the claim to be That is a Sanskrit. Vedic term (%OTl foaij signifying Lord

CodsIndra

persons pay

no heed 10 such

details.

Even the Pope washes

the

tut of children and other sacred souls as a ritual in certain ceremonies


(throughout the year). Yet even he doesn
of washing the feet
Vedic past of his
't

realize that the tradition

u a prelude to a welcome proves the pre-Chrl


office.

Vedic pest of France is proved by Use alias Vishnu. The Caesar about ancient Frenchmen's belief in testimony of Julius Lord Vishnu unlike modern French inteUigtnisie their descent from Darwin. monkeys to be their ancestors as per
asserting

own august and sacred

The

old

Warily
w*.

J-m*
*

-^tKtT: *ia "*""


elur. ib,

untying the lace, of one's shoes. pulUng off on ,., .queuing on the floor with the trousers on, pulling up (he having on, , fee, j for nothlng a)|

:.

Sanskrit word corruption of the

priest) ia a French word 'prestre' (signifying a -purohif. Tne English word

barrister

'

is

also of the

same

origin

The
i.

Frer.cn
e. the

word

"

detente

TOhB

f0r

"^

9 the Sanskrit

word

(M)
ToT

'dwaitanf

end of

difference

".

6*f

opinion.

such

Th. French word


h"" t

meaning 'lung-

is

MM

^
Loun

cltaT. ,

'ienls

neer

ray.

which

Is

tradition, of French royalty. indicaUve of the Vedic

^ **"*

""^"""^yc^lnsldo the shoes and

-oueen') The French word Rene (meaning The tenn .' for 'street' Is .

word 'ratthy.' (Wl>.

"

ta

r^^^lSLn
^ By
afiae

S" ""^

ll

*-

.highwayistheSanskrittermCf^)-^^
of

'-" & '"^"^'^ ^^ .^^ ^K


1
1

^"'^^c^,' """"""I
u

Vedic ri.ua, ln

on.u* enough for . herd and therefore implying, e read wide in the b*i has It. e^valent. or . hullock-cart to pass. TO. amTOxfora. language In term, like 'Uksuridge'
(3) r. 37.

^^

Mr. Myth

and Spirit or

***

Chaplin. Rider
1835.

&

Co.

PttemoM' M UM '

^"^.J, few. ""

U-4".

MO
Kl
Rher
Seta*
nvr Europt

Puns, the capital of France is situated on the banks TV name was originally ^m.-IU,. Thoi noma waq nriuinnllu Sindhu j.. B"ven by proceeding from India who colonized France in remote
_ o.:~~ river Seine.
i

Thot was because the language or language* apoken

all

were variations of Sanskrit.

*W
i!

ami.

Since the French eliminate the last


that Sanskrit

consonant the

that they had Gauls. Caesar saya.


little

Speaking of tht Godfrey Hlgglns observes In this context all the aama language, with some
'

last

term got dropped. What remained was Seine current name which the French use for their river.
Krishna
In

jaw*,

over to Britain to to pass

it was usual with them variation In their dialecta. But he says Improve themselves, in the discipline

France

Dorothea Chaplin mentions that


thought to be a Keltic fertility

"at Autun
is

in

France **

which almost provea that the two countries had Qf the Uruids. And Tacitus says expressly, that the language ne ,a me language. * Thai U why French Britain was not very different... If Gaul and penod of the British Isles for a long
,

language continued to be the

God

overcoming

a serpent "*

even

in

modern times.

Christian scholars not bothering to distinguish

Vedic deities
fertility

between the vanou have conveniently lumped and damned them all
in

The Linguul Cleavage


England but the whole not only France and This indicates that L-ngusg* spoke the common and the entire world once a Europe

gods to create a subtle prejudice

the readers
.

'

mini,

The episode of overcoming the multihooded cobra Kaliya is prominm


in the UTe of

of 0(

Lord Krishna. Therefore. Autun obviously had indent Krishna temple at the spot occupied by its main cathednL

SS
Manu

S^^*
H.

countries

^ ^ mpm ^^ nd^g
drifted^,

A book
or the

titled Myihcs ci Epopee' by L. Dumozil Vedic legends or France and Europe.

is

a compiW

lan"ges.
Smrlll

Champjpnc

favourite drink

charnp^

producl of mod(rn

That

ord

Qabt]m ?rma h
.

W(Jrd

5nampoo

thousand years bafo*

Un* a*

and
Rafter

""* " "


{

though,

md

'

t.

doctlon for external


Qf

^ drfaWng

^^

^versn^Ue ,M nu.th.^ ancient Vedic wo


l

Tte ancient laws


life

in

verse referral Mi

^ ^^
known ..

!0cia!

throughout the

additional proof of

governing , j u. altas Vedic culture Hinduism lhi

The Language

AlK, tm

Drill< jn

Spain (and ,he aocial order in

w-

that the
It

promonury
In

toeuse

abounded

umptaol^JJ

~^ ^m*
C"*>

^ ^^ *

g*f V*

_____^^

spoke the some language as the French.


(6

)P.n.11>.WtlcDid..by0odtr.HIrf-.
(8) P. 12.

Md-

b **+.

Eorop-n

In Christian sources as

studying
ff

Mu.Um
TH1et.

Students of history and genuine researcher* must Christian altar, be very vigflant In studying European sources. They must
bereaft**'

*^I

be

ry
of

cw^""

boul

ndenUou8
is

^TT^Ld
hM cooW
people vli

^eJy^MMfcript
by

rnark th.t '"It by rutins* Csesar 'a (Memoirs)

very proUbk,
ejdsting has

on the lookout for motivated forgeries of the kmd be constantly Interpolations are both In the ten and pictorial mentioned above. Such
pre-Christian manuacripta had to manually IHusirationa. Since time to time during the Christian era. the copying copied out from opportunity for liberal forgery with a view to Christians used the and condemn earlier culture as pagan, heathen glorify Christianity demoniac. This aspect of European history does not teem to

now

Christian priestlet of the above remark

h U*%K

examme

the

Mowing

been noik, supposed to have

msde by Caesar about the French


extremely addicted
scruple to sacrifice

"The "hole

ration of the Gauls is

U ip-r*Jton: wherein... Uwy make no


At the time of Caesar,

man.

"

and be adequately
Calais

known or

sufficiently stressed.

namely

in (he 1st

century B. C. Italy

and

Fnnce being both European countries


been different. Tberefore.it does not

fairly close to

one another,
't

and both non-Christian, their standards of superstitfousness couldn

haw

seem plausible for Caesar

pronounced 'Kalay*) Is the The French city, Calais (though that It originated as an ancient Vedic Sanskrit word Salay Indicating for similar names in other countries school. Researchers should look
too.

u axidemn
kcntmoF
of Caesar
ii '1

contemporary France as superstitious. Obviously thai

an interpolation by some latter-day Christian copyist commentiriui

Ecole. the French


sala
'

word

for
'

'

school

'

is

also the Sanskrit

word

burdened with an

initial

'

Whst iht Commenlarius records susnidom statement,


i>

in

continuation of the previous

twins. Cannes The terms Casino and Cannes are

Is

Sanis

I.

e-

quite plausible. It says that


((.

the coke" deity with

them

with the Cauls)

"Mercury Of him they

Saturn while Casino


interchangeable)
it

if

can be

and C are written as Sacino (because S manager seen to be the name Sakuni. the

baw nuny
*-" (vide

images, (they) account

"^andbe

him the inventor of all arts, and conductor of their Journeys, and the patron of
and gain.Next u>

and Minerva.

him are Apollo and Mara and Jufpter

epic the Kaurava court of the of the gambling establishment of at Cannes is the MMharat Mahabharal. It could be that the Casino Yudh-sOur challenged the eldest Pandav. site where king Duryodhan lost latter staked aD and crafty game of dice at which the to

lh

"BM " * Vedic

all.

astrology.

Hamayan and Mahabh.nl events took


To asenhe them
life
all

place

.11

over the wortd.

"**** I^MraUbni rf

Commentarius have also added

<

**%

the

^J^er
'

mZ^ta^" ?
Vedic culture and

alone. ,s to locations in India Buddha attributing event, tn aa villagers in Buddhist countries

"**

h0n Ur f lhC

to sites in their

own

regions.

nock to the

Hanikoi
In ihe

B .. H.I

volume UUcd lb. Hoi,


the Priory of
(I-

D
Lincoln

M*
Rich.*
e.
I.

'-'

Join.

mi.

wihn-Mkh* Hint.
Son

U*h

"

***
'

H-r,

.he

Ui. Rennee-le-Chateeu

H"**)

""*"""<

ft"""** *,,, "" QUM


""

"

m
^t'^ JL
*f

866
the

u^h.0 In

Frenre. Thu> French Pyrennew regn of Vedic frnrtnl *.


are of

Ian

Athara outside of Cerdoba as well aa building* and in* palace city of SevHo ""d elsewhere will turn out to be non-Moslem. In abort,
In

Aoricni Vrdtc BultdlnB* '"

SP" 1"

there

is

need to rewrite Spanish history as well aa Indian history.

TV law * lnouh t* comiMy wiP*


.chteToit when

Vwiic p851 of Spain


il ' h0U,(l

seems at present
1

*o

In

n couldn 't be different. T.ot3 of evidence ihepw-Chrisliffii period. Spain past of Spain must be lu rking in numerous of that lost, forgotten Vedic is that a Vedic Spain was overrun plans What has really happened first by Christianity. later in 711 A. D. came the
|

the rest of

Europe

"P**"**" *followed

'" thou 8hUul

November

a connected paper that professor Mills read in Chicago on 4 1983 at the 17th Annual Meeting of Middle East Studies
of

Vedic culture

Association

North

America,

based

on

bis

preliminary

research-endeavours Involving on archaeometric analysis of the Muslim buildings in ancient Spain. Mr. MQla observed
so-called
'

Two

specific potentially fertile

monuments

for the application of

mo

smothered

Muslim onslaught over Spain


Spain
lata"5

eclipsing its Christian past.

Thereby
yeart
and

Vedk

pest receded into greater oblivion.

About 600
these

Mosque of archaeometry are the Taj Mahal and the (so-called) (so-called) mosque that is part Cordoba. Neither face Mecca. The whereas Mecca from Agra is Taj complex faces due west
of the

the

brave Spanish

people drove

away the Muslims


all

H degrees

55 minutes south of west.

It is

oriented to the cardinal

eonutitedly retrieved their Christian soul. But in


convulsions the Spanish people
Christian retrieval
is

historical
the/r

of a Hindu temple in India." directions as would be typical

seem

blissfully

unaware that

only

half-way house.

What they ought

to

therear

aw

back

is

their original basic

Vedic sou).
titled

how a wood sample he took from Prof. Mills then describes river-leveldoorwayoftheTojandhaditlestedforcarbon-14 College Williams. Director of the Brooklyn dating by Dr. Evan door proved that even that laboratory,

Around 1956 A. D. in my book r.ia I first threw a hint about

1 nc

Tuj

Muhul

RadicLion

is

a Hindu

this, alerting

scholars of Latin

hntory that the antecedents of massive ancient edifices in Spain.


tail)

Sikn also taken from Fatebpur pre-Shahjahan. Similar samples 3rd-generaUon usually attributed to the proved that that township,

attributed

^Wed
-iuncl

to the

Muslim

Mogul emperor. Akbar,

is

also

much more
methods

ancient.
to determine the origin

Moors,

need

to

be

seriously

in view of the Muslim penchant authorship of captured buildings.

Tor claiming false

of the

tST

WU We"- found 1
,

for later

Mr. Marvin H.

Mb.
study

Applying the same scientific * examining wood and n buildings in Spain by (so-ca 1) mosqu m pressor Mills obser.es about the samples th cadence as to iu ongm we have so little concrete Cordoba Moslem provenance

Lent

* * ** ZH1

^'0rk
,

m*h
,5

point as to its a definitive assertion at this

fl

Penary
*
-

should be viewed with

some doubt.

"

^^me .inhi,^^? ^ "* *** *J?*T^? Nr mber

* Umbio UniveRily

"

m*

**

^MwWmbuJiainntw n
**"* *

'

"

thal lhe

McZTl,r r ^^V^^^^om
l

m05t ""P01

'

n0lMos,emalnl1 They probably


711 A. D.

the He .hen add, he. Mecca.... and The (so-called) Mosque In Cordoba,
I.

"DcuU.

doe, no.

*
IM

In .he be orien.ed .owarda .he heaven.

^^jTS JP ^e
.he Kaba
d,

b*

"^
tan
fo,

Much

like in India

reason bo.
l.

I.

t^^'^^^l^T^^- >*>"**" " *"*"" ?** * ** r^k? ^^^*W< * *^ * -""* new WM


-mgttBU -'
<*.ueof Cordoba
.

a superior

arienutlon

*. doe* no. follow of the Kaba. on n Moslem veneration


..hf.here.re

.-* * ""
severa.oU>er,oe.^

choose
3 Professor MDIspoinU oU

ones. Thus

the Alhambra.

"

con-rn*

U*

*7

^
"n

857

te 9U

Chn^atbedra.

~ "^ *

thflt
ft

the original

Roman

.^
"ot
te

Mohohbarat, was Madri belonging to the Madra in the Obviously that Madra la modem Spain. The name of its

rvgion.
capital.

fS** p.
'.

- T1-i,.^ngcoo S Jni 3tyliS C cont.nu.ty ui the*** by the Moslem invaders ov iJiTu Hid to haw been built e,ongBted shape f sUge
ti i

Madrid is a Sanskrit term (fflft-1) meaning 'giving away Madri. (in marriage to Pandu). It derives its name from the great event

w hen Pandu was welcomed there.


and other arrangements made

A'huge wedding panda! was erected


for the large concourse attending

VtwW
did

of

bastions which

facades have battlements mosque layouts. The appearance and function. suggest . fortress-like

**

thr

lime all those fixtures induced the royal wedding. In course of regular township there, which is today 'a Madrid. the growth of a
In

October -November 19B3 and a few years


sister flew
spiritual
all

earlier too the Spanish


to

Why

to rebuild the original minaret Abdur Rahman 1U have

built earlier apposed to have been

by al-Hikam

1.

with curioui

Queen Sophia and her homage to and seek


Peetham

the

way from Spain


from
the Hindu

pay

solace

Vedic

and lily leaves decorations at the top Log* i-old and silver fruit practice? are so many h)cb are inconsistent with Muslim Visegolhic and Roman of tht interior columns and capitals in the

"Why

of KamakoU soint-preceptor-priest sannyesln, the Shankaracharyi causation this contact may in South India. In mundane

styles?

How

were the Moslems of Spain able to decorate tbe


in

(waited) mosque
according to
lbn

such intricate and beautiful mosaics when,


only one mosaicist

Idhari.

was brought from


returned

from a chance persuasion by a common be explained away as arising two parties. But that is loo tenuous Indian acquaintance of the royalty of fashion-steeped Europe to an explanation for Christian speaking In different priestly recluse of India, both

be drawn
tongues.

lo

fl

Comumiinoplp who taught

two

'slaves'

and

homo.

Accaniing to Terrasse, being an infidel he


allowed jn the (so-called)

was probably not even

mosque.
'

is

quit- probable

from professor Mills

observation above

of history must also take cognizance Actually in such matters several at times trailing over operation of unseen spiritual links, the -as nearer and also more past births. The Pope's Vatican

that those ancient spectacular

buDdings in Spain are neither Christian nor Muslim but are earlier Vedic temples, forts and palaces. It*

*m

thai the mosaicist

is

was an Infidel indicates that the mosaic non-Muslim and therefore pre-Muslim. Moreover how

<* from considerations of taw**. * havesoughtspn^ Spanishprincesses could compatftHity. Tne two may therefor^ ordinary course. The reader solace from him in the h
accessible
well

^ "K

Z TZ'*J*
5jl
**

Wym *

to novice

slaves

'

in mosaic

^rX^ ^
m oTMurf
m *"* **Um ** mo* h, Lvu-

V ^^^

,7 ^

to 'slave,- arl8 slaves arises


lrft" in

trnm tho wicked from the


as
slaves.

m*

imagine the strength of the Shankarechary. of Ind o*& drew the two princesses lo the em and Ve*c cd tureJM bluse of their ancestn.1 links with India InHb.Uon and s n cast away their

invisible,

*M *"

"

wn-MuBHms

scholar, should, therefore, continent, lying hidden the European l. rediscover the Vedic past of recent Christian crust. under a comparatively

Ma*
T>*j,

J^'*T ^ ? ^^i^

Ve

** * ond

thai hereafter

^..thebuDdrngthatis^ingcurrentlyj^the^ment
secretariat In

d C,8,ni in hist<>rical chronicles and to the strictest

Pan)lm (Goa) ha, been

" d

scrutiny.

record, a, the Adilshahi palace.

Modern Kholar,

*J^^""

'"^"-^Mf.^ thePundavHs) menllonsd

Western ,ty,e of research assume dubbing as the last word


governmental

*fZ
In auilumuc.

Th, '
<J

101
ffl

b*rtrt

w P1*

b0Wnd the WeSlGm br-n *ng.


will reveal

to

^^^
,wiwhi> Hindu
scholar,

^hiMlaperi examination

that the builds

ruthlessly Implemented.

* *
l

MUSUm

Ad,1ShflhS them3e,Ve9

rulers.

Christians had Invented. Initiated and implemented that deadly


practice

much

earlier.

That

is

bow

In

Western countriaa not a atna>

G^,
..

Snarly

when

dealing with the

Ued27

mo^
'

non-Christian was suffered or allowed to live. Such cent perctnt conversions were the magic of the blood -dripping swords of Islam

p^^ av

that only

captured, ravaged temples. The Puri anUlx Obviously they were Shahpuii is an Islamic distortion important indication that Sofa
'

^win, somewhat
an

6ofa Snehpuri one of them viz. the Masjia have all been destroyed, identifiable. Others

and Christianity.
Exposing Conversion History
It

should be the duty especially of Muslim and Christian scholars

it

of the

Hindu divine

name Shambhu Shivpuri.


' '

their respective pre-conversion pest and writ* en honest lo delve Into gecount of the quick ferocity with which cent percent conversions

The usual assertion that the so-called mosque was built by must be understood to mean that he captured built within that lemple in that year. &ch edifices can never be
rbrahim Adllshah
' '

were effected in no time. later all accounta of the coercion and til neo- convert generations cruelty were systematically buried and Christian have been forced to believe that they all en maste turned

one year.

Its

30 x 30 metres masonry tank is also a

Hindu

feature.

enamoured of Christian and Islamic preaching. or Muslim being

The so-called Dargah of Ghazi Abdulla Khan Shahid


slain while

(i, e.

one

A Muslim
history
historian
,

capturing a Hindu shrine) inside the old fort in Ponda;


in

must not delude

or Christian who doesn't probe Into that conversion himself to be an honest academician.

the

Namazgsh

Bicholeim

wrongly ascribed lo Akbar

(son of

thinker or citizen.
/

Aurangzeb); the so-called Karon


rulers or

mosque

in

Diu ascribed to Muslim

Tragedy of Indonesians

Malaysians

Camboy, the so-called Bahadurshah

mosque
edifices.

in

Diu, and

Fori Narva

must all be studied

as ancient

Hindu

The canards
in. the

of their

Muslim authorship must no longer be believed

convened to Islam retain Indonesians and Malaysians though gentleness and Vedic Sanskrit much of their Vedic charm, culture, few. precisely because they succumbed to

Christianity,

imposed on Europe and several other pails of

names and customs sporadic ferocious Arab-Muslim

raids but did not sufTer

from

long

world through force, coercion

D that classical history.


Mam Too A
of

and deceit has unfortunately

buried

Merc

Burial

Mound
shown above to be a mere graveyard
alias

T"
=

hrisUanily *** been f culture marked with

a cross. Islam
cu,u,re
-

Mohumedanism

ferocity of even those passing Arab Muslim domination. Yet the and Malaya-ana that almost all Indonesians raids was so severe and subnut to an Islanuc were forced to proclaim themselves Muslim Instance, their VedJc core. For veneer while unknowingly retaining president Sukarno (as p* the name of the late Indonesian th*ep.c the heroes of
.

M*

* ZZZT^ n w lowd m!
y

spelling)

ic

Islflm

has a

much

5hortcr

Sukarno-putrl also bear, Mahabharat. His daughter Meghawati name. classical Vedic Sanskrit
totally delightful

is

the

name

of

Kama, one

of

Unc,enL
'

Uke

Christianity Islam too


l
'

'vrann^^^'^r'
** by Islam not .JIT
*

008 to

" ton '

^^^

Algeria

* Ma,aysia and IndonWft


w

thing..

They mut flr lnve.tig. <"*

"rl"

.ccount of
of

Amb

cruelty which In

. Urn

*' ,n " ' ^4 iw* * *T^


'

^ *
r

taM

'

*as the ultimatum which

Southern A.tan

nrtnU

Into

ptln,

Hut

<rt

* "">

^agsggr~**>
THE VEDIC PAST OF
TUNISIA

en

The

'ia'

ending as

in

Russia,

Siberia.

Bulgaria.

Austria

is

Sanskrit, signifying a region with a particular speciality. Thus Austria


signifies a

land of Astras
it

i.

e. missiles.

When
God

has a prefix

'IS"

alias 'eesh'
it

(or eeshui) signifying

(1-ord

Almighty)

in

Sanskrit
in

connotes a divine region.

Therefore the 'ISIA' ending


initial

Tunisia denotes n divine land. The

syllable 'Tun' pertains to

one of the many attributes of

divinity

in

Vedic Sanskrit lore.

Tunisia
It

is

continent. is one of the tin countries of the African sandwiched between Algeria and Libya in north Africa

F-vi the
'c' is
will

noun Africa

if

spelled

and pronounced as Afriaa (since


"civil',

also

pronounced as

V as

in 'centre',

citation etc.)

reveal itself to

have the Vedic ending

signifying a divine land. Africa

Ptnb
topUy

ihttld of

kin*

Qmria V
(

of Spain,

made

of steel, gold nnd

Stm

Consequently

regional

names sucb aa
e.

and

America

if

it tat Royni

iw Bead ^d

Annor> Madrid. The

deity In the centre with snakes co&l


oil

around

Uw

nfck

is

Lord Shiva the Vedic deiiy of

warriors-

immortal divinity) they Sanskrit names. could be immediately identified as ancient Vedic.

pronounced as Afrisa and Amarisa (L

a^ , "J-?" iWnailiVe to*"** d intransigence mt*ed rf mS'zI : "?"* *- * "-"IS

^"t

*~

up

are Though Tunisia's residents are all Arabs, who polygamy, (banned they are free Tram three Islamic drawbacks vii. shows the abiding effect since 1956), 'purdah' and Illiteracy which

mostly Muslim

of their pro-Islamic Vedic memories.

satjjjn

"

Mausoleum

at

Mana*lir,

TunMa
of a captured Vedie

mausoleum The photo said to bo a


temple in Tunisia.

Is actually lhat

individuals
g.

of capturing and converting Christian leolota first started the spree and mausoleums (e. and turning Vedic temples into churches

the

Westminister Abbey and St. Paul*!

in

London.)

years later a section or the Envious of their success, three hundred conquering, subduing Arabs loo used the same gimmick of plundering, new. deceptive theology called and convening people in the name or o
Ruin or Tr* Bbov, phow or
a

Roman Huh

at

Za K houun
Tunisia called a

islam.

m>

^ -^ir T"
zst*
a
i ,C
'

hisoric scenic spot In


'

*nrtj,o,o,tj

,n

(oci

Mered

,UrrDUndin
1

* * ^Xr::'" -, J*Ii * ,onm- wT WMe


1

P>- * * Uke any other


'uni ,n ,n <"<

Roman
(oU3 '
typted
the

The above building

la

one such captured Vedic

edifice dedicated

to

Kund

Muslim captor.

We

arrive at the above conclusion from the

Mowing

wai

u*

Wniwrn,WJ

- <
"w
<'"

KU-Ude evidence vlx.


a dead

waa (1) If the above polatial building which Uw deceased Muslim where are the corresponding palaces when
alive 7

built over

arched wail bordering the

occupied

(2)

If

deceased railed such the successor of the


is to*

bil,

h0lb Eun,PBan
f0rCftl l

Chniuun nnd Mu5Um


n^i8ti',,,

n palatial edifice to

house the body of the deceased where


? If

weeeesor

>"** ***1 IoDowm

VmiTT
'

,Ubml1 l0

magnificent palace

"^'"wnntawitah, 1,r

**"* (**,

^"^.mUy th* pouen, of their * w* ^r their conversion to Christianity.

successor had neither the deceased nor his means y palace or mansion of tbeir own would they have the financial ** the will to build a grand edifice to house a mere corpse 1 (3) Kc >* dose look at the building itself. It tl totally symmetrica], which
*

a Vedic
I,

"Wch

It ! trait. (4) Look at the base of the domes. edifice connote Vedic speciality The three domes on a symmetrical

octagonal.

Mi
.

& VI* "*' *** *** "^


-f>

IiUmk P** , sMsm In **** ' ** mhft For whom

**nc

Itf**.

Wrj

^.mt,

"***"

"L

g^

o.d**ta|

technique to

explore

^J*"
!**

"*

^ *" w *

U.BHC snnlteeture. The Vonae* word monulery "**,

THE VEDhC PAST OF THE

BRITISH ISLES

Currail histories of the British

isles suffer

from the

mum

fiuh

which other histories suffer, namely, thai beyond two thousand yeara they draw a complete blank. Tt\it la but natural whan we
consider that even an average individual doe* not
of his

know any
that
is

history

own

family

beyond two generations though

his nearest

and dearest topic.


9uch Ignorance of regional and national
years has been the
Firstly,
It

histories

beyond 2000

bane of world public

life in at least

two reaped*.

leads to

more

dissensions, ftifu get wider aa time paeaea


,

and people forget their primordial Vedic bonds as children of common parents who lived amicably as one family while parents ware aa"v,
get estranged,

separate and become inimical towards one another

es time passes. If
is

reminded of

their nostalgic child hood

-unky there

some hope of their coming together once again or at least cultivating

mutual cordial rotations.

The second
i

fault arising

from en Ignorance of remote


In trying to

history

thai several

problems defy solution. And then.

wresOa

with them scholsrs acquire great reputations even by suggesting orne absurd, haphazard, make-do solutions. 9nos those solutions

**

unreal they lead to more problems which further tissue, with the result that human knowlaoge becomes a cheered, ""etisfaclory patchwork.

complicate

TWe

ia

history of ths currently the ailualion concerning the

'

887

fttthtl*

Accouni- of

Romw. Norman
ftbrie

or

Anglo-Sexonttr^
.ssue.

satisfactory into

covenng every

The
Schol^

current terminal

'

land

'

stems from 8anikrtt

'

Khan
li

'

as

I,

shall presently explain.

The Sanskrit word "granUs"

tpslied

SHVW
STto

StTSS n^
every

'gland' in English. likewise the Sanskrit word lamp-'ithtn'

faced insoluble of study have

probl^

significance haa escaped them all of task from time immemorial part of the world, other

^
,

lamp-atand in English. That proves that the Sanskrit lermlntUons antb' and 'than* change to 'and' In EngHsh. Tharefore. /mgulistban came to be spelled in English as AnguUand t. e. England.
In Sanskrit the suffix iah signifies something in the style retains its original Sanskrit In English too the suffix 'iah'
' ' ' '

rkrwuue of the British isles ^aiy of this finding becomes

was Sanskrit and


apparent

Its

culture. Vedj c

when every

problem

history will of any branch of


of that doctrine.

be seen to resolve itself on the

ba*

of*.

Saukrtt Origin
Let

meaning- Take the Sanskrit word 'baal' signifying a child. The to the Sanskrit word baal ' the derivative suffix iah ' when added means exactly what childiah ' means in English. By this
' .

haalish

'

'

us

start with the

very

name England. That

is

of Hindu,

ja-Angul-ish

the Angul people (or land) came to be known rule the language of e. Therefore, Anglai and Angullsb i. e. English.

Sanskrit origin.

have an older
British.

To understand this let us turn to the French who and more continuous civilization than that of the

*
*

words deriving from English) are Sanskrit


Angul Country
Dictionary The Oxford English
(Vol.

Anguli.

Moreover we nave observed in the earlier chapter

how

the

eariier

knguage of the

British Isles

was French, because the French

I.

p. 327) explains the

is a

doser and nearer rebc and descendant of Sanskrit. The French


is * Anglais '. The terminal name though pronounced as Anglay
'

word for English and the English people


1

Tconlion,
in the Sanskrit

term explained earlier, that the

s
it i.

'

being silenced in French the

Is

a Sanskrit word originating in the Sanskrit t*rm Anguli' a Anger.

country

a Hnger-sju. term Anguli-Sthen i. .. anguli agnlfie. because the Sanskrit word

&*- flnge^
a
finger.

e.

The word
>

Sanskrit origin. Britain too la of


i.

**

Ancient Hindu explorers and administrtfore who fanned over viigm Europe looked across the English channel and called tht

.as Brihat-Sthen

e.

the
in

was corrupt** to Britain

We.

-Anguli'

Cstben' or 'desta')

i.

e.

2*25
To

a flnger-si.
a

hnd
'

If

* ""**
Gn* 1
finger.

^.7^
"""V Uhe extended)

Europe to be

palm-sixe.
1

laaneererremnantoftheSansknt tself signified 'the Greaf


but the memory of greatness
Britain'
is

^ <~^l w

"*

^^^J,.
V^
1

BriUln

PP^
"

to be the 'Anguli

^^^ *JX^Z'<* **
Brit-n of

un-

an

exact

translation

of tbe

een*

g^t
.

term

****** ^hl"^ " ^ UMrinB.wd m mmmt^^wu J^ ^ * *** ^ P^. *m *^*^**'lT!* bw,chMenu *%* An^ ^ n ^"^ WW^^^J

Brihat-Sthan.

ste

^~
ta

Vedic
for

mWSUrf

'

lndin| -

different

Consequently the length


standard-"*

(w*pit*)

Hindu Royalty words The conclusion that the


Ireland,
English.Jteg
origin of Sanskrit

UcindMedito
h,t

oceans

Britain

incidentally highlight*

^^ ^^ ^

BHutai
|ht

and Scotland are

m
net
thai the British

Was were
against

KihlU^rTi^whoipokeSan3kr.t.
of Briiiln

who fought
(I- e.

ruttf o^. The last known Hindu *>v*^ Roman invaders was queen

first

explored and

Bod^.

Rayelseema'. In the Indian Telugu language i king Is known KirtR Krishna Deva Ral of the Vijiyanagar empire wee Hayulu
' .

thai Buddhi-laha

of superior or Godly intellect) of the

hh^

known

as

'

Krishnadeva-rayulu
is

' .

From

this it It

apparent that the

Lord Shiva. tribe L e. tbe tribe of

word 'royal'
'

the mis-spelled Sanskrit word 'rayal*. Snifter


,

Though the names of other kings will have to be traced hereafter yw there is a plethora of evidence to prove that the royal tradition, of Great Britain and Ireland are entirely of Hindu, Sanskrit VedJc
origin

'compassionate' are 'dayalu' (WJ> I. e. Sanskrit derivatives and ' krupalu * (favourably disposed) from Rrupa daya
'

from

'

The word 'Majesty'


Meharoj - asti
' i . .

is

the corrupt form of the Sanskrit


'

e High Sovereignty. The English title

Sir

'

is Sanskrit

even to this day. Tbe English


e. the
is

word monarch

is

SmtMrH
Sri
tradition

Manawirka I
the

Sun among humans, since in Vedic

monarch

always regarded aa tbe


is

sun of glory and power


Vedic tradition the
auffli
(e.

Mr

Roy Henderson Is, therefore, Sanakrit Sri Rai Indrasen. the Sanskrit term Maha-Ster (**-**) a short form of Mister is
'

Sir

'

'

fuiuuner of the realm. That


Aditya
'

why

of a high order, like Mahodaya. signifying a person

in

wu

many-a-Ume attached

to the sovereign "s

name

The Flag
Hindu tradition speaks of God and the king extends that the sway of
believe the ten directions. Hindus

g. Viltramiditya and Pratapaditya) . In the

same

tradition the Iranian


himself

sovereign too continued the


as

ageoM Vedic practice of styling


Aryan
(i.

to

all

the ten direct.ons.

Arya Mfhir

i.

e.

the sun of the

e.

Vedic)

culture,

even after conversion to Islam.

two of those above and the nether world are Tta high heavens

"e
in

renting

ei^^

R^emh^gthat-g'is^pronouncedas 'j'asin 'genetics" and gwmntology w* mty that the W0R,8 regfflt regwcy " V-' "8 ar raBn (raJ6n >. regime' all derive from the
'

supernatural, Sanskrit. Eight

been etouti guard, have ri

directions. assigned to those

'

'

"

'

Consequently ancient Hindu


used royalty and divinity

^^Z 1^^TZ*
also the

* -ther exdu.vely or as p^ of . worW


^word
'regime'

empiret

^The w0rd

royaT

^ ^^

Sanskrit 'raiysn!'.

^ ^^ ^ ^ ^
n
Vedic colour of salnU

I,

drawn

In

ochre which

is

Hindu

rd *>

^u^exp.an.tioninBritishhe^li^^^
* <**.

flag

those has three crosses namely


Is

rj of <_. *PW flag,

1 th* cl

Andrews

untenable because

In

and of the batUe-drees of Ksbatriy.

******m

the oU*r one like the plus sign and two ftvto cross overlaps one of those

-^ ^
lherW

^
X
.

a third

hmWlc:

convention,

ynMBlM ,

The
in

triple-cross

expl"" " "

'^' ^bZ^'' - - * ~"


'
**>'.

haphazard after- thought. the word. and

'RaJpur'

'

m
.

Writ

king of the forest by virtu, glorifies a lion as the A teataft verse names of Hindu kings also prowess. Therefore, the of to own suffix 'simha' i.e. -lion' as may be seen usual* ended with the
in

^r^n ^Z J^i
,

Jil^n,

word fori throne is rendu imliUonlhe " - Vc^c soverrign


.
'

Smhasan'
is

jbe Sanskrit word 'cote' signifies the protective wall around township. Therefore the coat which a person wean u protective
pptrel

Uon

Seal

^*

around the body,

is

also a Sanskrit word.

invariabry

to be brave like

figure^ because a Vedic throne flanked by lion h subject,. a Uon in

v*ng

by King

likewise Agincourt in France, famous for the battle won there Henry 111 of England, is the ancient Hindu centre of fire

the Sanskrit name Agnicote. Under Vedic rule, fire worship with widely practised on the European continent and the worship was
British isles.
fires

The

tradition

still

survives In Baletyne

alias Balentine

names

like 'Jagst

Smha' and 'Man Smha.

'

Therefore, the

occasionally lighted

all

over Europe.

and 'Napoleon' and Leonid are in lerm Richard the-b'on -hearted'


the Sanskrit tradition.

Schoenbaum's book
carries on His Life before Sir for poaching,
' '

titled

"Shakespeare- A Documentary

of

illustration of

young Shakespeare hauled up


is

coronation chair In that tradition the British


in

i,

e.

the throne

Thomas
'

Lucy- In the background

the

Westminster Abbey has four gilded lion figures at the ends of

walled castle or

township

Charicote.

it* legs.

The 'Shire' Ending


topographical In Britain all
fs a shelf

The Sacred Hindu Stone


Under the aest of that coronation chair
an almond coloured stone
slab.

names are
' .

Sanskrit in origin. The

which holds

'

ending

shire

'

is

Sanskrit

'

eshwar

Indian townships are known


etc.

ThaL slab

la

a sacred relic associated

as Lankeshwar.

Tryambakeshwar. Mahabaleshwar
are

Smilary

with the coronations of British sovereigns

from time immemorial,

EngUsh

locations

known

as
'

Lancashire.

Warwickshire.
shire

because

it

The atone b

of the

memento carriDd by ancient Hindu kings from India. same genre and Vedic ochre colour as the
Those forta were
built

Hertfordshire etc.

survmng as The Sanskrit ending eshwar

atone of the Red Forts in Delhi and Agra.

by Hindu tangs when Delhi used to be known as Indraprastha and Agni ta Agranagar.

Hindu lo-mhip'.
In India, wriled

signifies a township around a in modern English usage, proof of Shiva worship Therefore, the suffix shire ' is Suva continent. Some^specmen prevalent in England and on the .een m the times may suit be Lingaa and icons of Shiva of those Europe. Rome and elsewhere m Etruscan museum in the Vatican in

^""V*

^*

townships and forts are


'"
-

known as Cote' which

The Bury Termination


' '

T SS^SS ST * ItL^r ZZ:t


AkSwoT^ *?',?

8ddUW ***'
""
Amark0t
-

-***.

tot.^^'

,n

a*"*

lht

SlMk * nam "'

State*.
called

Se ending 'bury' as in Bloomsbury fc the Canterbury, Ainabury, Shrewsbury.

T*

'Cot*" as

may

-^bn^eaUkeCharicote.Nonhcote.HeathcoteandKingscote

"

c*y of

(i. e. a locality) aa in Jagannathpury. Sanskrit 'P* eh

pury

horC

*"* "* "* SP of that ? *"* Ministration as *** from *** Aswacote e.
i.

" ^"^

English

-boat.'

Distant

Tnafland

townsh.^ indlaputable Sanskrit names has also manner as Cholbury. Rajbury and Fechbury. the English bury ' ending is Sanskrit pury
' ' -

^^""JT* ^ m
"
*

= . ^"^^^^
-

"

^hjp.

with

e-w

^ u ojnjkrit

^^

873
The,

surname

Churchill

ia

from

Sanskrit

(f

*n

.Churcha-Chalak* i. e. one who conduct, religious diacourae.. That Winaton ChurchQl 'a forefathers had been Indicates that Sr

.--*

'ton

'

asin Ringston,

is

Sansktrit

'

sthan

priest..

The room
lenown as
'

in

churches where holy


'

clerical apparel is
'

kept

Vestry ' from Sanskrit

Vastra

meaning apparel.

EEL.
swb-npw
Rhcn

< *"h*n",ton "" "* Norttampton ^un-7-nlnj . -u.wn.hip-.


I.

is

^' UttarpatUn

temunau<,,,

.nd

Mohinprtun. Hampton

is

Hsmpi-patlan.

An Wol of the Vedic ftin god Mithraa of pre-Christian Vedlc Umes was found in the debris around the Houses of ParHament London during reconstrution work after the World War H bombing
In

damage.
"Thames' pronounced as 'Tames'
(i,

TV
and
i*

river

is

the Sanskrit
in

The word

'underling'

in

English

is

Sanskrit

'antsrling'

ord "TimaM*

e. dark) since
is

it

is

mostly enveloped

Shivling. signifying a smaller, interior

Hindu Shiva temples have

fog ihe
big

muddy. The river Timasa

mentioned in the Ramayana.

customary double Shivalings. The one on the ground floor is and prominent while the other in a pit in the nether storey
inner knowledge) and antaratma (inner being

The river Amber


(meaning
'

in Britain gets its

name from Sanskrit Ambha

is

smaller and not very prominent. Smilar other words in Sanskrit


(i,

waier

'

says the Oxford Dictionary of Place

Names

and

are antar-Jnan

e.

Proper Names. English rivers could not bear Sanskrit


the British isles

names

unless
in

or soul

were administered by Sanskrit -speaking rulers

Taotra

indent Lima.

Ram
'

The word {<m)


tantrum
'

tantrum ' in English is the Sanskrit word which indicates that Hindu mantra-tantra (religious and
'

Ramigate
an

is

i well

known township which


'

is

reminiscent of
to have

esoteric practices)

were prevalent

in

ancient Britain. Minister

is

dem Ram.
1

temple. In India loo


"

"J?

T' [

*"" sG

^ Man ^Portant.

it is

not

uncommon

from Man in.

sacred topographical
'

The English surname 'Branm*


Brahmin
Vedic
'

is

Sanskrit

Brahma' as

in

The name Abraham

of Brahma too is a malpronunciation

tlie

name

for the Creator.

B **

MualSJggC

"^PWi-nciation of Brahmandham.

the lexicographers are in English etymologists, philologists and

lin ^"a*nt "JO?'. "*? .


''

Queens Gate, Margate


9Wai

"^^-nbmkmmui
laNgtM
Tin VQTO rhut I'V.
'

or

riverside

kbit of tracing English words to Utin and Gn* Thenrfor^ than to Sanskrit direct. Greeks never ruled EngUnd^
l

J"
a
,

Engli 8 h

ch
i

language. Enguar cannot be derived from the Greek fc*T prakrit diverts a dialect of Sanskrit as Indian

'-"*- toroum

'"^^n!Wr church, "m^ng

Marathi. GujaraU and Bengali. Since

UUn and Crt*

W.

^eetaofSamkrititcouJdbethatsonwEng^

'

w
"*"

a**riiP*> a*n*i-"P-"'
!

b,

instances; 'upper tbe following tpparent from "ani".


i

^L ^ ^
,

uU n

nd

Greek.

ui

because

mltrs ruled

**" B*

tand f0r

thousan<fc

w
./JJ
oopef
.

876

ofy^'
The event of the sea-coaal vegeuticm contamination havoc Mausal Parva 1. e. the Missile Chapter towards described in the
Mohabharat. It says that some mischievous teenager! the end of the dressed a male colleague to look like a pregnant the Yedu tribe

derived ___ ^fc^rth, derived directly

from Senskri.
Is

.^um'

"
(oEngtoh-'

Saint " 'madhyam (| ; 'nuui'is 'manav-. doori, dwir ",d^M der-. rules of Sanskrit grammar also

preacher*

Qf

woman
the

i(te several
.

apply

and approached a sage with the request to predict whether would be a boy or a girl. The irate sage, seeing through the offspring game cursed that the 'birth would be a misafle which would
'

Sanskrit wort. top cooksiilbeJagannathwmpleinPuri are known as Soupka*. Hmee derived from Sanskrit because Sanskrit Modern bdian languages are India. Vice-versa when modem ancieni spoken language of
course of English the opening

meals

is a

annihilate

all

the Yedus. In course of lime (so goes the story)


'

'delivered the youth actually

a missile. Thereafter, fearful of the

predicted grim

mass

annihilation the young

men pounded
that

the missile
in the sea

mm

and threw

its bits into

the sea.

The reeds

grew

the

European languages are seen

W be dialecU of Sanskrit

it is

apparent
too. That

Out Staskrit was the spoken language of


could be possible only ruled
if

indent Europe

Europe practised Vedic culture and wis

Dwarka coast) bore nuclear contamination. Uter there later (on the frolicking on the beach pulled out the reed and the Yedu tribe drunken brawl beat one another to death with it, thus fulfilling
in a
annihilation. Obviously the the prophecy about total remnant of the Mahabharel war, was broken missile, an unexploded But the contaminated vegetation pieces and dumped into the sea

concerned

by Vedic kings.

CohuI Nadear Cooumhuik>a


The Environment Ministry of Greet Britain issued a warning
to the public

into
it
1

on November 30. 1983 to "avoid unnecessary use

most people in the produced results in the annihilation of account which may appear S the sum and substance of the

region.
slightly

or the beach near the VVmdacalenuclear processing

garbled with

some incongruous

details.

plant in north-west
to

England because the vegetation


fldio ' iCtive

on the beach has been found

Aryans and Dravids


themselves Aryani. I*"1 Aryans were mistakenly led to the belief that the

" **

contamination discovered

was 1000

timei

bigher than the level considered Thj,


little detail i.

Englishmen

call

"

hu

how"'
w^of

normal.

race.

of great significance

*^c^ *"* ^ M^TT'Tv"


*
"*
'

because

it

provides two

Tta.

word
is

* Rifles

Hinduism .Has the Vedi,

n the hu

of those tin*
-

V.. This

easily illustrated

by the Ary.

K*- COaSl V<**lion


" by80ne
ta

Prcvingflntly

ta ,.^' that believes in Vedic revivalism. they though currently in fact admit that

&

m ^ 1Ung ^'

^
:

""^ pR*.

Aryans Englishmen

***

- Mill* U ?/
w*
u

Uhabbarex

*of numerous

*"** * *r oTi
,1,lu-*mu>Un
ltt-l.

^1^^ ,wu T ** *
that
exfaflU8tiveiy

find thfll

nUdMr

practised Vedic culture. Christianity their forefathers

age " to '**

with the devastating


in

TO. b

^k

lhe v

which nuclear

community amongst

. further supported by the as in India. the British too

of the

D*vid (LMd)

part ta tali, the Dravids are

the Hindu
of old)
read P- H.

way of life. Smllarly in Engb.h form put of the lanjer A*n

* ^S^i *^.^*T
P-n*' '
socbty-

^ E^h Mri
art
'ft*'

*'

^ves

from the Indian. Hindu

D^
the

877

TVC^lriMuKrtm
in

U*
not are
i

their

niy only

sre slauncher Hindus and more mdii Drsvids today north imaged by Islam. Sur,^ ccunterp*** to the the Dravids alias all over Europe too ui i*ii in Britain but

n^

the West, accepting Christianity on it* fin* announcement at once introduced tha rites and observances which had already been In India. for centuries

Buddhists

of

closely knit,

staunch religious group


(the

who

still

chant the *w*


as orthodo*

Dean Inge, commenting on the teaching of Christian missionaries such as Plotinua, Caimant, Gregory, Augustine and the like says they are the ancient religion of Brahmins "masquerading in the
clothes

Gayalri

mantram

hymn

to the

Sin)

in English

borrowed

from the Jewish.

Gnostic,

Manichaean

and

Hindus do

in India in

Sanskrit.

Keo-Platonic allegories."

At the break of
at the

dawn on equinoxes and solstices they

g^
facui|
nil)

HumboH

says that Hindu customs and manners prevailed


first

In

Stonebenge and at public heaths and

commons and
our

America when the Europeans

founded colonies there. WDJiam

the east they invoke the rising This


ii

Sun

to 'energize

intelligent*'

an exact translation of the Sanskrit


'

chant 'Dhiyo yo

Jones points out that the biggest temple of Mexico houses an image museums throughout South American countries of Shiva, and the have several figurines of Shiva and Ganesh. his Elephant- beaded Bamayana and son, while the poetry of Peru bears the imprint of

prachodayat

(Pi*

*;

H^mqJ

Gayatri Mantra ia Local Dialect

Mahabharata. Miles Poindexter says that the hymns of the Inca


rulers of

Peru remind us

of the simple chanting* very similar to

Mackeniie says thai


ChrifUanily
Britain

the

religion

of

Great

Britain

before

was Buddhism and the Druids (DravidJans) in ancient were Buddhists and constituted a social order which reserved

that of Aryan Brahmins.


'

Syrian author Zenob says

'

the worship of the Hindu God Krishna


before

*o**elf the mysteries of religion. This evidently

shows

that the

""ton

i-

of the British in the earlier ages, that is prior nothing other than Vedic religion and culture.

to Buddhism,

third centuries was present in America in the, second and containing large images existed Christ. Temples dedicated to Krishna

century A. D. there were in near the lake 'Van'. In the fourth Bhagawsta religion whose America about five thousand folbwcrs of
deity

was Krishna.

tats

n .1*1,
'

n>

WM

excav*l-

The indent Sn
are
spracd

Bretuu, I.-. of According to Sir Henry Mine. the old

W*

of

Z* aV *"
taud

Aryan. The A^wmedh.

culture .tcriflc. of Vedic

ur.it* ID

Europe prior to the

the 12th century A.D. in Ireland.


of Urge In the pre-Christian er. . word meung tb. Start.. . corrupted form of the Suukrit

pi

ca,
lr

^^Viu ^^I^^
Into th* local

rahip,
ftnd

0bserVince

of

"Man*

rite"

* -"'"""

redlaUon of 'Gayatri Mmtri'

T *

did
|

etasriy

.ho*,

" *

.*^ were

^)mmmtt

flfaakm Qf

******
,Unf

of the Vedic

Mgt

Atri.'

P^alent

in ancient Englandcarryiflj

were Vedk Pundits

Vedk Temples
Hindu temple, .bounded
the
in

Vedic culture through sermon,

-.dent Briuin

M,

rriigion. Ancient

Hindu

m*m WO"""*

*"""

" lh* Grf*k

Church and Chrfsti^ity *?

throughout Great Britain and Ireland.

m
Tart*"'

679

2,
,

(in u

today'.

*"

""^H
u "*

*#* P**"**- m Mand Mia! j Un .If* an which SiirulrW*. Jrf


'

Zm W*
conquest. a corruption

be crovmed for centuries. wcn - Imown 9u>nehenge P****g the


to

T?>
Ro^

System cuuaes. this ri Shoodr.

two higher castes in Britain. Since the Hindu vara. atafioe of alone has two higher castas above the lowermost VMahya
I.

.dditlonel pn>of of

* **
m
ancient

British Islea, usually dismissed as beatheninn, wai including the


(n fact

Hinduism.

London was known as Londonium. Thii \, Under Roman rule ancient Sanskrit t*rm Nondonium signify^ of the much

Ayurved

a pleasing place.

system 'Ayurved' was The Hindu medical


ffnffland as

practised

SkKSunhUa
An ancient Sanskrit scripture. Shiva Samhita
in India to is

be concluded from English medical terms derived This is discussed elaborately in a separata chapter. from Sanskrit.

may

well known
title is found

Sanikril

Medium
in

devout Hindus and to scholars.

The same
in

Uned among the publications of the Druids


it

Britain. Currenuy
clearly suggest*
scripture.

Education

ancient Britain and in fact in the whole of Europe


is

only a tiny booklet in English


it

but

its

title

as used to be in Sanskrit
chapt*r.

also discussed at length in a separate

that

n a rickety namesake of the original robust Sanskrit New Year


I>a

Briub'i Hindu

Academic Degree*

Until 1762 A. D.

England's
is

New Year Day used


date

Academic degrees conferred


to be March

in the

Western

syiW education

25 (not January
tagin
then-

which

just about the exact

when

Hindus

cr^a!

year. Every year new Hindu panchangl "d-ri-cuni-epbemeria) are brought out around March 25. Tbil
proof of

new

SanskriUc. This and Its entire terminology Is the ^ant Vedk aducational special chapter disc^ss^ "lertfh

ta*^

ma

system.
Lexicographic Lapse

^ anaau m En*nd

Hindu roya, tradition having been rooted from pre-Mahabharat timea.

<*^ h'taL*
AurAlOTTihvnw
trooih.E

reWCh Wer
I
!*

UtIed 1>ie

ri*iD

rf

diction^ must
.hey

fi*.

T*

'

"^^ce
*Wss

in Scotland

(10-19

rt

mostly .

Gr*
if

the roo* of their

wortj*

*
n^uh.

two
fonomical
around OtfU

leases

fro* themselves .re descended

J"%ZZ n*
u old French w old

** "Bmufeeni ando^,'"' lheredev^oped a trend in Britain...R*^V0l )0 * ^"^'^n^origin'^TheEdhiburgh


.

Jf

received in Europo

sad to be of obscure origin

t*

^* *

Greek or other popular source, such

*". 1810

a. D.)

of English of

" BV h.v. by d Urge ignored lave nwth


becuse
the history they

* ** t

2%^

Hindu rule .t the

d*m

of

M*
.1

***

We.
in

centurieo

*r
th*

nstlond

Umgu^e

Isles of the BriU.h

jjb wdth.Er J.

3 V^S ^^
^^

*"*- record,

hi.

memoir.

This topic

hu

been dl.cu.wJ

n tot*

m
em
.,

*ndarP"*l

typtol fflurtn!Uon of

ho***

four '"

|n

Grt-i

Britain, on display In the British

Museum

in

London

V.
7

^^^Scrii-Vrfk
a<i|iiiiffiT

provide, the master-key to tradition

0'

the two

more lying undiapUyed In tu vault* Tkere might be many bearded figure holding a trident. hung up on walls was a
.

^Twith
Mtffl

portrayed riding a buffalo (like the God of death. begging bowl slung at B. we*.

Ve*

Ksh-rtn*.

of the

Uc^MlttothenritleUerintbewordXitriyi (Kshatriya)
As such the the warrior ruHng daae-

English alphibet represents the Sanskrit Tl letter -X'.in the importance in Hindu tradition That letter is of immense tour -kih.
*

In the British are also exhibited

Mother Goddess, the consort of Lord Museum.

Shiva, found

signify!,,
in

name Xavier

is

fact an

term Xatriya-vir namely Kshatrtyi sborvvtation of the Ssnskril retention of 'X' in the English alphabet is a very
warrior.

The

in the habit of dismissing such finds ss u/tern scholars are those icons belong to some suggesting thereby that objects cult hd nothing t ^ that iu _ ^ lu rf #K- ftn.,i -inn bad nothina the bulk of the population obscure sects but stray not much of a cWUiiaUon to talk , it or that there waa need to be thoroughly days. All those notion, tbo remote

JmZm
t

Hindu Kshatriya rule over Important piece of evidence of ancient


the British liiea.
fact A tbofl form of 'Kihatriya' is Thp Sanskrit term Rabatra has led to 'Scot* in

St

Kshatra. Scotland

is in

B *'
or

'Ksbatrs land'

mln * mWe cave-men wWle ro

2 Z t
,t

Isles hiving _,.\ notion of the British

renamed

desertsd

or . best having

be

inhsbHed only b, monkey.

nc.ri.Wn, VUfc countries like Indi. 1*1 . over d. *,,

EngSsb.

whld

CurrenUy

it

is

bebeved by historians that the people of Ireland


it

miaiiud and founded Scotland. On the face of


seams absurd.
is

this explanation
?

civilization

years. for millions of


the Btiusn . TuUua Caesar's Invasion

How

could Irish people

become Scota

But

if

Ireland

understood lo be the Sanskrit term 'Arya* land and if Scotland b understood to be another Sanskrit term Rabatra land then it

^".'^^^rity.Con^-.O,. UlesD^edthrough.penodofobHv.on^ ^
appears that
there

msy hsv, been

break '"

^^
,,)

'"^^..ndindMdu*.

bseomes quit* plausible that the Vedic people settled In Ireland moved to the northern lip of Britain and called that region Kshatraland

individual has Just is every

Us

up.

e. Scotland.

Ve4k Rdtci

of ride, the h*h under. when be i. down and


fEntand tb.

*^-*ZjZ*. - Mo-wver
. "J?"". d- oUivio

JZ ^^
i.

'

to honour of

nWr lhe WaD * Had


of Hieropoli.

.odd*

or hsv, their period, of glory,


inscription

has been found/"

European being cut off from the in the remou populstion or governance
evidence

^
p
i

,^u

.Nevertb*o(f don

^ ^^^.r,
-

present* in

this

**- m *E?;J?
to t*

wch

Bnttab

uu.

uluT , UfW Ua

' *" WW,Wp

^ Wn
by

WM wwiWw,d
very
,

ta

indlcte.

Out

the BriUsh Isle.

^^-^J., .nporiant. *. <* Qi^ioo.


V^c-S^sWrit
rfv

-*1

Comm n
gyv,,

bu.y component of the world

two

mmiC9 ^ Un

Undo- th. Vedlc dlfl-n^"" prei"" IndividuJ mood, ccordlng


to the

^^T

convsnl

^^^^

itatti

tram Cumont.

^^
. **

aBBBBBaaBt

to^t o*ta cu* Each *** ** controls and


vsc d**y
a whole,

^^

two boDa aa aupportera... Ttaa ae-otee.... ^^ooged to aom* S**"

raac. Uarctor*.

M
aa,

qj*

t^^,. j ** or any ^ * irtirt of VedK coAure m


* xto
G
A
aafct

^
^t
a

nng mentioned above baa a

9hrrfeg aoaaftad

L. Tat

of ttristianity there and .ftiarr of the pre-aaaoot saa* cck of that

Tveoc

the existence of a* worship and rn .a .aaiiJj btf proves oJWra in the ancient British Uaa. TapbJ^orlaaaar

I*dr

*.

the

in**

of the front cover of tbe aanaai nsatrch

jonat

of the faatitme for I960 A- D.

Bering bdaaa

rastory.

V*

fcaag

Shnfis*
11. 1830

Delhi.

, -,* May
GoB
raaf of

Oaaarwaooa oa a

Bfcaj

by U. Co). Jam* Tod. titled foond at Montrose in Scotland. "i

rv^ng
>,

an

an embleni of the Son is. bower. sBproper. Tiaa of Vefic caters * tha *nP f bo*, after the dad
it

theywereaBVe&dsatoamdsaaam Mftasto EtWtan.


Tha
wbki
a feeacBfle is

amend, was

sent to
:-

a*

;;.,

a? a

*** aaamatr of oc Society with the foGowing letter


2TJth

Upper Lodge. Buibey Park. March


1629.

Bat because the .ecu which * ** Vishnu and the Sonfafia the saaae. snaps aa*. their connertioo ith

-.

:: ,

Sanest

Wt*m B-*

Kt"^*

w wtz
od

;^ *
i

tost

*.

messed op. Therefore,

-^ *-* ***?! * l-* ~ *"""


ft

needs to

Tea

at

ooce apprcdau zat following curious dnrumataoce

oaaaaajd

wu u ring that ao^paraas this leoer.


Montrose, some yean

Vedic

ti***y

to identHy the

* *re4 "

West.

kwaadagspontbeFortHilDear

an. ob Oc at* of aa engagement ooaaaooed -* ft** *re* Mary . (.bo* 1565 A.D.)
Franca

by the landing

of

Vedic FU>ali ' Snnboli

minority and bar

recaartd bet a right


for it

knowledge of Hindu
__

Vartoo

at

oaca to

<4

^.^ro o^fa,

pebBcUein ihe-x^t British Aiqiiluin wtoncs tftled lodiM

tato

ported

Moat

truly yours.

G. Frudareoca

rt of Aprii. (-)quny observed


VI.

-m

or
in

todi.ffii-n Brit*-

W -*JS*S^
5

ea

-aljat*^
aairtqiW a**

Indan

Antiquities)
' 1

arcT^^*^
^
**"

-J^T'
H

.'

1ta

my,lic lmui

baa at ooca
the aymbol

Thar^ofMayC^eo^h;^in India

f*^

tapon

h rapra^nu

___^^^*T^..erpent*
t*
""*
-

and

in Britain.

" CPe 89.

-^ewristie
,

Z^ DVI *-* **+ * <- *


OBMBl.

The cirda
of tb.

wd

the crescent,

Roy*

Aaiatk

rymbol of Brahma,

oxwpicuou. ornarnenta of

the latter the sacerdotal

^j*^, that *"'7~4


or*

a**.)

mi&LWu-'

'

884

(Page

Z.

AnUquiUe>. Vol. VI. Indian

rcmn
UVini(

like tt are

bones of a carcass. The nam*


its

is

always of tot

^y

and not of

skeleton. Therefore, the term Swrwhrr^e

Hindu World

Dr John Wilson observes

in hi.

book

Am

(first published In

MM.

recently

3000 Yetn reprinted by the Indole**


titled India

^remaining random

any relation to the English word -Stone', from ot have stones left standing there.
therefore,
I.

*niu*d by every philologer of Book House. Varanasi) "ft * ourselves have sprung from the that the Aryas and day

amnl
nine

""^
8

Our discovery, Stavankun] irxx***)


ta

Is

that 'Slonehenge'

Is

the Sanskrit

e.

a medllational bower. " A few mats

*ay
p S

another location

titled

Woodhenge. Since the Sanskrit


alias

original stock.''

Vana' tof 'Wood Ms'

"Wana\
1.

the original Sanskrit


e.

TV

rightly inserts

Indian Antiquities (Pages XI-XTJ) prefect to Vol. VI of Hindoo religion probably spread over the whole

oTthe

location is

t^)

Vanakunje

forest 'bower.'

"The

nnP a new Insight

in detecting the Sanskrit origin of

earth; there are signs of


ii

it

in

every system of worship. In England


(I. e.

Engv

hTames

is

obvious Stonebenge

Is

one of the temples of the Booth,

;
-rv.

Zl

which is the Sanskrit ending in the suffix 'henge" Considered merely as an English bower. mling
' '

Buddha) and the arithmetic, astronomy, astrology, the holidays,


games, names of the stars, and figures of constellations, the language of the different nations bear the strongest marks of the same origin
. '

^Lble

the term 'henge'


is

is

meaningless.

Stonebenge The cunnehenge lom * Salisbury P

boulders standing on the a circle of huge

*^ ^ JsWp
To
Shiva.

^^ ^
the

of

CW v)

'Uk*

The same volume VI contains a Dissertation on the Indian Origin


or Druids" which concludes that the Druids of Europe were Brahmini

from

India.

llwarC^.^^gl.rd

Slonehcnuf

Sonehenge i renowned astronomers several rpnovmed According to lhe


is

Is

an

circte

The Stonthenge
sites of

one of the most important archaeological

pre-Christian England.

Almost

all

writers agree that


Is

It

was

a temple and an observaLory.

year,. and

g*

by navigational bcanngs

But no scholar

known

to have

"Plained the significance or the meaning of the term Slonehenge. They all easily that the term Slonehenge arises from some

awn

AvinsKy. . to h.m structure. According

clairn'^
fl

tt*i

standing there today

That

ia

yet another illustration


all

faulty

ZTtSZ"
""*.
*'
l

methodology of research followed these days >hB e,UC,da lW9

W*

over

imurovi-wiL.f.
wfc^

V*

^
"

ta

lhe context of the

form a pentagram or *e p varymg saes ot circles represent the per cen barely one with an error margin of
26-tonne stone, Currently on,y .6
circle,

^"enenge
ipp,iod to lh *
11

couldn't

have

been

^^f^^of * " ^

^ ^t^m^ " "^


lW
the

to sU

* - In-

-***

TAtlL?' ^'
**nKe
,?,,

while

He

flat.

herofboulders

* from very ancient


functioning

templein the

TnanKor,. the wrreni from tie, a**,

"" '

m083ivo - P>tered building.


riseS

*" ** a^ln"^**wly *"" **"*"* * *** " mlataken.

are also

m 30. and outer circle numbered stones stand two 6.8 metre high

^ ^^Uon.

Those stone

horses and 12 visible stones forming a

8!7

Most of the rocks

in

Stonehenge are arsons

I.

e.

sandjto^
As

clarified elsewhere

while others are bhie stones.

religion.

by ua Buddhism is not at V/hen the Buddha attained fame in India


.

all

separate

for hit (real

I** Aocknt Vedic


The
Bui
like

Pries*
still

British Isles

the Papacy

in

the Vatican in

have their ancient supreme Vedic sen Rome the ancient Vedic ponqfr

renunciation people flocked to hear his discourses In those discourses Buddha preached the same old Vedic -Upanlshadie philosophy
the

of the British Isles has also been forced to

embrace

Christianity

had been ingrained in him. Therefore, all Vedic teachings VedicesUbllshments all over the world In the post-Buddha preached in Buddha may have been preached In Buddha's as the sayings of
that

-ra

from 597 A. D.
That ancient sacred Vedic seat is the Archbisbopry of Canterbury.
Since the letter
'

name

in Britain too.

Distant nations cut off from India later mistakenly believed


that those teachings

'

in

English deputizes both for

were of the Buddha

himself.

The precise reason

si

'

.,

,|

'k"
the
*

it

is

advisable to try both those pronunciations to discover

not why Buddhism did

take root in India was that people here


Upanishadic teachings, were (uUy aware

original
*

Sanskrit
let

word.

Applying
it

that

rule

lo

the

term
for

Canterbury

us pronounce
let

as Santerbury.
'

Now
'

allowing
'

English mannerisms

us substitute

'

with

k
i
,

'

and

Taylor

h&ngin constant touch with own teachings were not different. In any case that Buddha 's spread of Buddha 's teachings to the British 's reference to the

'

with

to rewrite the

name Canterbury as Sankarpury

e.

the township

indicates Isles clearly


in

that in the post-Buddha era Vedic centres

of Lord Shiva. This will reveal that Canterbury had an ancient famous

Shiv temple which was the headquarters of the head priest namely the Archbishop. Lhe supreme Vedic pontiff of the British Isles.

the

the world, constantly invoked Great Britain too. as elsewhere in Vedic theology. Buddha "s name as the latest master of

Tne

Elephant and Peacock Motifs

biggest and

most ancient church

in

Canterbury should be

identified

as the site of that ancient Vedic Shiva temple. Research undertaken along these lines is bound to reveal the traces of that Vedic Shivi establishment. The current Archbishop is the successor in that sacred

One of
in Britain

peacocks are not native where elephants and in the art of regions
fauna.

too

spread of Vedic rivfliuUon the signs of the worldwide and the prevalence of the elephant
is

P~* "*

Vedic

Research must investigate the antecedents of the Archbisbopry of Canterbury alias Sankarpury. I had addressed a ltr to the Archbishop. Dr. Robert Runcie in 1983 suggesting thai his office had a pre-Christian origin of Vedic Shiv worship.
line.

Sr
beliefs
In

Cn^n

Efflot

South haa

cWed

that

centred arcund the dephanta

revved *.. mphtally

'%&

the antiquities of Scotland."*

The

reply received

"WiUoo

from the Archbishop's librarian was that the


are

MosaicsdepicUngpeacc*^^
on display
in

.robe into their antecedent* of

therefore for

was interesting but they don't have enough staff to such antiquity. The remedy lies

the British

Museum London^

the birds native to India. Moreover,


of several

some

university scholar to undertake the research.

Vedic

deities-

The Swastlk

Buddhism

Therefore, the portrayal of

Wood Mdow,
Prwchad
<3> Pin Britain

Tayjo,
it

^^
in

aa

was

Buddhjsm Greece/"

. ,

Is

indlcaUon

de-tiesp a pre worship of Vedic of the ancient

P"^

t Vedic is an *!"" Qmi Mttill "'j* " v.knt there-

^~*

IW ^

symbol,

W, HUtory

of IndU

t4> rTerDbyfflrGra ftonEUIotSn^.io^ Hindu Links. Myth and Spirit or KelUk and

MCha^ n

^ ^
"^^
,

of Aeatyi. whose language

wu Gaelic...

A boar

ti

.bo ,

fortress of Dunadd In Argyll... The carving of the ihe rock Inverness has n deMed name and a Rnock-na-Gael boar... near abow the animal is the carving of a aun-dlac. " The London
'

iiUlo.

1929 carried an article on It by Herbert of September 20, 1l(Bet " Fergus Mor. son of Ere, the first king of Scotland, la

Craw. .

LTtT- 7.t church ** invdcd by


u,

..

Prilh w5

obvio^y

Christy.

TTe grv

K rishn .
,

w ^ve

been crowned

in

the fort of Dunadd when he arrived


In

Wnl

from

Pfllrinda.

county Antrim, Ireland,

the early part of the

S^TuW
OjUW*
in

from Europe. or.dic VWIe culU-re

nuisUan era. Many that the It Is possible here, and


'

small pre-hisloric objects have been discovered


history of the fort began sometime

Mi.N Vcdtc Trinil?

stone

the figure of a boar is sometimes hewn out ln s event.... and placed over the grave of some hero. There is one
j

church of the the west door of the

Holy Trinity which

w
is

originally

D^acair

in

Kincardineshire Scotland, but which


the stone

no*

Banchory House
Ii itself

is

(which) besides having

the Firth of Forth, on the holy island of Incholm. In f these old Abbey are still in existence, the aurroundinga where the ruins of an an ancient foundation that the precincta are looked

showing such

fish on

It.

shaped

like o fish.

""

Every so-called church of the Christian Trinity

was a

quick
of

mi
v,

fubOe

substitute

for

the

holy

Vedic

trinity

Branma-Vtshnu-Maheab by invBdmg Christendom.


Unrefore,

The
is

said church

A symbolic boar of the East of Scotland upon as the 'lona" doorway of a shop. On the Mound in (was drawn) over the Cumberland stands St Andrew's church. Penrith, Edinburgh plaiud all the bra have the foundations of gnt antiquity... on form have been found of boars in mythological deified mane. Figures

Vedic temple.

The term Dinnacair

the Sanskrit

.tHounslowinMidaesex...Acuriousfigure^
sitting in a

term 'Dinkar' morning the Sun. Likewise the

term Kincardineshire

b Ua> Sanskrit term tMJfJWi Kincardineswor signifying Ix>rd Shiva. Thef/nti n a symbol and incarnation of Uird Vishnu. AH this indicates

was Lcovered

with a symbolic boar behmd H cross-legged attitude, and there may be n*ny at Meigle In Perthshire

others discovered

and undiscovered.

all

the plica mentioned

above formed a big Vedic temple


it

tabliihroem. Consequently,

the In the above passage

name

Ere

is

S^krit
is

meaning
the

is

*> ttronn indent Vedic tradition.

apporent that Scotland hod a

Sun. Antrim in

Sanskrit, means

interior

Perthshire

ftn**

*j

Lord Krishna. term Partheswar <n*W) signifying

"*

Sjmbol

Gaocsh

-.^JT?!* "
JTott!

^*

b0lr ,,may

h *****

*> *"

<W *

*'

**'" "**>
t re)ll{i0U9

South Wales,
of lhe Qndent

Vedic chants was used by sages for meditation and

Margate

Kent has a ve
that

*^jft ^^
**

represented

in

boar

3^^,

17) Pp. 30-31, Ibid.

(8,P

*.^Ch^

^PUn-i

book.
ibid.

ibid.

<) Pp. 31.

32

Ibid

n , book.

<

P. 37. ibid.

'

"

^
Sc*
rf

m
2wVttaCodr
''scandal
'

BBBaB

c^

Shiva in iht son of to

Vedic tort,

if

the

commander-ln^
S^ndlock"
it

The Sanskrit word


ip

'Jwala-(f, e. flam*)

ta

.p^ m .j^.

Gtefc language

n^

VVeiab and Cornlah.

J^nc
to

means bale.

From

this

should be obv^

Serpent Symbol

-The emblems
AUtonfieW
in

of aerpenta are found all over Britain At Suffordshire there are three fragment* of aculptured
Keltic plaitwork ends in a serpent head. (In) the badge of the Stafford family, the two ends

Wato

the earth

is

caDed 'pridd'. Apparently this

is

^
word

crosses- Here the


the Stafford
r

Knot,

of the Saruknt word

prithvi,

Toe Vedss tre known es both


Agar,

Nigam and Agam. The


Nigam"
signifies

knot occasionally terminate with the heads of aerpenu... The is a device of a snake on an old earth-house at Airlie. Angue, Scotland-.- Near Loch Nell in ArgyO, Is s serpentine mound 300

tW

connotta 'arrival', while

'departure.'

a.

long-""

Consequently both those terms apply to the


the arrival the

Vedas as dealing wim

Dogns
" At some time, during the 5th century A. D. Dogra was chief It seems not unlikely that his name the Druids in Britain "a in some way connected with the Dogras in Kashmir.

"Ogam

and departure of life, birth after birth. In ancient Britain script was an occult manner of writing, and is in The wheel of

cryptic form.

Ogam
in

is

often seen in Keltic designs;

of
is

and some
at

fine
in

specimens carved
south Wales.

stone find refuge in the church

Margim

" 10

Obviously the

name

of the

script

iadfcatei the prevalence of Vedic studies in

ancient Britain.

Another Indian Kshatriya clan, the Cholas have also an ancient township Cholomondeley in Scotland commemorating their ancient Sanskrit (a-hja-jrew sojourn in the British Isles. That term is
Chol-mandal-alaya
Lotus Motif
*

Toe golden ring which forms part of the Glasgow coal-of-smu

i,

e.

"an

enclave of the Cholas."

thought to be a solar symbol.

The C* ami Mother Goddess


in
f

Vedk

tradition the

cow

is

a very sacred animal. One may


in

"Although not indigenous

to the aofl. the graceful in

form of

the "cow-face looking out

Wqofcy

**

"n^kiwerf

from some of the carved rocks of and also in decoration of a later period par* of the country... At a very early period the Rishb

the lotus Is

much

in evidence

the early handiwork of the Pkfc

m the British Wea.

Scotland. In the bridal song of a

Webb

harpist there

is

an allusion

to

the lotus...

ancient Indi. established the

worship of the

great

innumerable figures of the

mother Goddess

have

Love sat on a lotus

leaf afloat

yvn^Z*
of the

fa

*" **** d Europe

And saw

old

during the last hundred


In

Time

in his loaded boat...

of a wind* A Keltic lotus leaf design also forms the framework


the Cathedral of lona.

** M Dam**. b Sanskrit Deva-Maatari. e. mother


pp tt-at.ttM

2) Pp.
(N) P m.QH.
(11)
(

73-74, lUd.

13>P.

81, ibid.

(1

P.O,IUd.

mediaeval In India in

Um
1

^
when the spring

with pomp "> P***" as they do in dwced round the Maypole

aerated
at

for

tbn*

festivity
'

nth8

some

^ p*

districts in

the present day.

""

^
old

mysterioua beautiful and subterranean grotto ... dleeovin* hundred yeara ago at Margate in the hit of Than*. tDout a It distinguished from other grottoa on the British Uylea on account I, excellent workmanship displayed in the interior, including the

lrUe mosaic.

The grotto comprise* an entrance,

a rotund. rectenguhr

SrrwinR

Gnu

oo floors

chamber and serpentine pessagee; and the walla. cetUnp and with symbolic pattema On the walla than irchways are ornamented
.

Kusa grass are lopped off and the gru, b chamber where the religion, Durj, strewn over the floor of the around October. Pu) ceremony is held in India
The roots of the

heart-outlines, each containing a smaller heart.... as Interpreted Hindus, a heart within a heart or a lotus within a lotus by the the cycle of creation A human heart with the aorta attached
are
Indicates
.

similar

custom

exists in Britain since


is

Vedic times. The

the riahis of old U> a developed lotus bud with wa9 compared by stem attached. There are also two small hearts on a panel... the

custom of Rush-bearing

observed annually on the 5th of Augmt or around that date, in the old church of St. Oswald at Graaroert Westmoreland. The Rush-bearing tradition
is

mosaic. which appears here and there glistens when the shell thrown upon it... In the rectangular chamber... are the
js

light
Sfcin.

in

also observed

moon and
in

stars...

Kent was a sun -worshipping county,


ita

apparently

Nottinghamshire on Ascension -Day.

53

it

has a white horse in

coal of arms, the grotto appears

There
a

is

i belief in the British Isles


floor

and also in India

Lag

to Vishnu, the Sun. in the form of Narayan or to be dedicated characteristic attitude Varun. He appears to be standing in his

U,

dog scratching the


of the

forebodes death.

Feuhul

God

of

Death
Scotland
is

contains an emblem of the Trinity supporting the earth, which each of the four family. Above again is the Sun. In

or human
associated with Saman, Cod

"

comers of the shrine


Toe Samain
featival in

is a

large conch.
grotto

of Death The festival starts at midnight on broomsticks


fly

on October 31

when

witcbe*

across the sky

and owls, bats and black csU

come out
PUri

in

the moonlight. Tnia coincides with the Vedic Sant


i.

Aau*u*a

offered to dead ancestor..

New Moon Day in October when libations in Saman ia a corruption of Yaman alia

Tame, the Vedic God of Death.

well be called the "The Margate grotto which might counterpart in the British hies. of the conch, appears to have no emblem central pillar on which is the This shrine with its beautiful Aryan fh. shows designs based on the Of the turtle certainly and in MO m.dday glory. JM The Sun ia portrayed rising, setting find a place on the from which rise eternal flames. *leo the whispering gallery, possesses the properties of a

w^

The grotto

entr^-wayTThought
a

U> have been


only.

o^T *?

KWl W BriUin 0ri


lub - diviai

'

Pnal9 " ^e Sanskrit term

kantW.
in

a passage-way

in single ffle

1* grotto resemb*
d
-

^^^S *
MnD ud Mi
%

wZlL^."*"*

weZSasaUtacZ. ^grotto
Toe Sanskrit word Sutha
origin of

of the district of

Midnapur

Khumb. C*

the term catacomb. Solha


1

_^**>dent cave used for Vedic chante and worship-

some form or other." times resounded with Vedic chante in ancient


water in

^'^oTte^ *> " J**' m ^ U/^ - ^ ^^


Th Marg*<

<****. Vedfc training

-Jmn Britato
'

^^

combe or comb.

*"

-wctaled with
'

numb*
'

fl* - U

fr* 1

^ -SwMnr ^^ttou-nd-yw-old
Own.
on

Zr ft^Ld

caDed

Combe have

t-n " Kumbha gily r or a


in

"* wa^
Us*j

*
in
I

and**
be,

Vedic practice of cremation being prevw* Evidence of the found tbe form "" containing 1 B"1*"1 ta

acred

preserved under elaborate atone shrtnea.


Bali's

Kant has recently rev,^

^
f

Ga*e
the

pottery", observes Dorothea Chaph,

Ball li

name

of a famous Abut king

fa

Vedlc lore.

He was

par S16 of her book.

adds that

Comb'
bills

i Scottish Lowland

word was
one side

to di-unfuish

such

a* are scooped out on

in the

banished to the nether world by God Viihnu. vanquished snd London, formerly known as Bdfa 's Gate is named BaUingsgate in Belfa. son of a British king and grandson of Cloton, king
fter

bosom of the hiD. or that portion which, form of crescent. The denominated 'coomb'. within toe hinated verge, is always

Cornwall.

On

Belin "s death his asbea were put fa a bronse urn


gat*. Belin
ia

on top of the arch of* which was put


form of the name
Tantrik Design
Bali.

a Sanskrit

ta

TaaSaateTowa
Avtbury U an ancient
site In

Britain

with serpentine stone


old

fcrmetkaw.9kmrnantlytnename(3^Ato>iry (of which Avebury


ii

wheel window with 16 segments The beautiful rose or


Bishop's palace at St. David's
fa

to the

i corruption) is in fact

a Sanskrit term connoting a snake town.


also

The

lite

of

Angebey

had a gigantic statue of Lord Vishnu


is

rtdmmg on
chapter.

the great time-serpent, which

described in a separate

South Wales and others of Snce (tJMl originated from Hindu tantrik designs. its kind have Sanskrit term signifying blessed or donated Devi-da (abas David) Is a church was obviously s Mother Goddess by the Goddess St. David *s
temple earlier.

lac Rag Tret

Sua
in

"Houston

Renfrewshire fa Scotland is

Hua

's

Town

in

which

re was a holy weD. Mothers used to bring their sick children to them in the pure and possibly medicated waters. They pal or garments on the branches of neighbouring trees, but
1

(<"**> The English name Martin Is Sanskrit of . Utin cross arms of the Martin family consist Sun. Tr* crescent moon to the one arm and the the m disc appended to
I.

Marland

e. the

other. In

*/w.iea)ou>

Christian

missionaries
filled

JhW^tradition Bid had the well

the people to with stones. " Hanging


forced
'

Vedic tradition the

perpetual Sun-Moon symbols signify

reign

^"i2r **

** ibriM- u ** mdmi Hindu cuswm

and fame for the ruling family.

Toe

circle representing

urn over Vishnu the Sun appears

while the trident la

raised over a

re found in several

Suva which European churches

^J^Tvsdic
are

temples.

hrtoMtffaa
When making
do
Pilgrimages

"

**J** J*

^ *^
Eda*^
nan* fr^

^da of Christian

zealots

appear as a Christian

name was a

and ware of cUenaha. a. Andrew, mad


temple dedicated to

Vadfc

deity. Indra.

The harbour there ia buDlofandent carved m

& eaftaegJ

today.

Two

Christian

monarche of England.

Canirte

canned

will -worship.
is

jwnes obtained from the debris of Vedic tern plea wrecked by ChriiUan Vedic Indra temple in Penh waa fanatics. The sndent pulled down to pieces. The county of Galloway was denuded and dragged of

Off the coast of Geheay


the
to

Ann

island deriving its

most

of

its

archaeological

remains,

and ancient temples were

'Aranya' signifying a Sanskrit won! <**>

forest. The

h]^

converted into churches.

pre-Christian antiquity. fuD of stor* relics of

John Kooa the Koocker


In Perth, after a

Moreakwar
Morayshire, figures In Scotland, specially in
in rocksii

sermon

delivered by John Knox,


in

all
'

indent

Toe

place

is

of bulls are can* an ancient Vedic temple site. Moraytfr,

artistic

Vedic shrines were destroyed

one night

St.

Paul

s cathedral

[n

a corruption of the Sanskrit

name
in

of the deity,

(*km) Moresby
of Lord Son.

at about the

London, which was an ancient Vishnu temple was also invaded same time and its valuable contents were either plundered

The place obviously abounded

Shiva temples which were destroy

or destroyed.
Saraswall
Staffordshire has

by

Christian lealots.

The

Bull.

Nandin

is

the

mount

Vcdk

Pilgrimages

many

relics of ancient Vedic shrines.


In

The

Pilgrimages were

made

to St. Nicholas'

Church on
festival.

White Lady which so often figures


the
tint

BriUsh legend

is

the Vedic

Monday and Tuesday of May to commemorate a


with accompanying ceremonies
solstice at Peebles in
It still

A processwo
festival
rf

goddess Seraswati.

takes place near the sumnv

Sacred Rivers

southern Scotland
fair

known

as the Bellana

was a pre-Christian holy

and feast. On the sumraiu

One of the many names of 'dwT in Welsh for water is


were feminine

the

Gangs

is

Dhur. end the word

overs derivative of Dhur. Keltic

Peebleabire hills are several forts of

which two most imports*

are Cademuir and Cardrona.

Peebles had been an important healing centre in pre-Chriitaa


times. It abounds in holy wells.

s is fenunme since Tamise in French ia obviously an innovation river that France too has s Tamasa is in Sanskrit. That shows

in the Sanskrit tradition.

The term

Father

Thames

Those wells dedicated

to varicw
sou**

Tamise

alias

Tamasa

of Ramayanic fame.
to

Vedic denies have their ancient Sanskrit


Christian

names

twisted to

The

spelled Ugtey, Keltic river in Essex,

pronounced

Hoog*

mcb

aa St.

Mungo and

St.

Ronan.

as In India.

**

W *
b

A holy spring here has a tank built around it 12 ft. h** around, h bn 36 pillars and holds 7000 gallons of water- To* two springa close by, one of fresh water and the other* honeahoe-type aperture. Britain has many such *=*
In Perth.

"It

not be very generdry

*"'?

CM.

n page .38 of her


pearl.
in

word meting,

^^^fcMcCn^-' TO. m-ning


'*' l

Greek hi*ori.n,

connection with

Alennd*

~^o( I*
.

Wi."

**

Vedic ahrinoa In Scotland suffered great ravage

TO, term ttrpriu

* - ""*' - ~ *"

'

'

' connotation* signifying


to the

woman devoted

to truth" or

-^

Edinboro-ghtheatyoftheVeda.
Dorothea Chaplin very rightly surmises that Edinburgh connotes Vedas. We arrive at the same conclusion but in dty of the

chosen pith.

Several areas in Britain are

named after Manu the first law-py


. '

w
u

different

and ruler-

One is the Isle of Man. The other


means the 'upland of Manu
in

Scotland, It

Cent^ and Checkmannan


(tbt

is

Slamannan

in

Scandinavia

way. Our explanation la that the Vedas had come to pronounced as Edda after the advent of Christianity in Europe, 's ancientmost scripture Edda i s an echo of the Sanskrit

smallest county

Scotland)

f.

e.

the 'Stone of

Manu

'

according

Vedas.

Tne Sanskrit form would be


In India there is

fam, **) Vedanampuram like

to professor

Watson.
dated 1731 in the Public Library of

Hastinampuram.

A map
that lslay

Edinburgh

states

called Hastinapur elephants). Likewise Edinburgh in Scotland la a a city of Sanskrit term Vedinpur alias Edinpur i, e. City corruption of the
(I. e.

an ancient city

among

the Western isles of Scotland is


it

an abbreviation

of the Vedas.

of the

'Isle

of 11a' and

is

said that

Helmsdale and Helmsdale


after
11a

river In &itherlandshire too

are

named

the daughter

of

Manu.

Pun ind Pun


The term 'Borough'
the Sanskrit term "Puni'
locaUty. Its feminine

Dorothy Chaplin 's explanation (on page 139 of her book) is with its famous beacon Is surrounded by 'The city of Edinburgh Scotland seems to be identical with of romance. Arthur in
o

halo

in the British Isles


i.

is

a corruption of
or

Fair one, Keltic god of fire. So conspicuous Aedh, or Aedhan. the King Arthur, whose Seat is figure in legend and romance as
a i
to

*.

an urban settlement, township

landmark

all

over Edinburgh and far beyond, would seem

also

2
,

<s*>o widely used

in

form 'Pury' indicating a smaller township. Britain as Bury. Therefore, these two terms

"1??

WWch

Vft7

COmmon

,n

ihe

B<^"

now known be identified with Edinburgh itself. This beacon, is Arthur, and one of the spots from as Arthur's seat, the Gadi of spread its illuminating which the mystic Aidh or Torch of the Vedas.
rays in
all

enlightenment directions for the material and spiritual

of humanity ?

***** day despite two thousand years


*
Whilb

of invasions by diverse

The word aidh in the Vedas is thought by * or ' indhan mean a torch. Edha (with a short a ') is a synonym names or the sacrificial fire... As so many
' '

Maxmueller

to

^ ^tLTn ^ Y ^ ***** ^ WlnaC r,^ ^^* *nl ** Ramsborol ?*"* ** '***. . X^? "^ *
rk8hire)
'
i3

in

fuel which builds up the British Isles are admittedly of Sanskrit origin,

it

seems within

the range

originated from of possibility that Burgh and Borough

end

Van,aPUr

the

of U)

pure..." 1 "

Farnr!

in

ruins of
site.

* WUtved

to

be the

oldest^ T^'
U ,Sh
, I 1

on a

ancient

I-

e.

plaf

ue

in that

churth

Manukul The Christian term Michael is a corruption of the term one descended from Manu.

Tne Town Council of Peebles owns

a silver

arrow d**""**
'

u^ ^ m^^^ *^^TT^ * ^ *
11

V^rX^C; ^
Chrbu*

W,Md

the Sanskrit term Krishna.

Th*

W
J

'

flattened stalk
is

and

In Edmbu preserved in the Hall of the Royal Archers

of

point. silver with a barbed

n
t

despiLe the

havoc wrought upon


lI8) P164. Ibid.

901

been culture has primordial heritage.

Britain (and In fid toil of the whole world's)

About

this

Dorothea Chaplin oberv

'

British

& ^ptaouslyfa^^^^^^ ^^ ^^^^


.

J^STwdWoo.

lights fa festival of n.-.wtf, the festival all In that

the gayest and longest

houses are

w^
tf

f^

mediaeval (niracle'pUiys of
Britons f the
(l. e.

Umea
alias

(belonged) to the ancient faith

Vedic

Aryan or Keltic). Morality plays

1TJI^i-m"One

membera of the househo,d


8

(wherein) abstract ideas take personal form. Allegorical are allegorical mythological figures are created by the dramatist for this purpose.
or
lhe Welher * written by John Haywood and performed The play r Malvern in 1732 was. described as a new and very merry interlude
. .

ndltfan.

the Hallow of the forma of

E'en

festivity

Scotland to

of thai of the Procession

Lamps, which are mad


face or that of the

at

out and given a turnips hollowed


that and Moon... The fact
10 think
In
li

human

it

lakes place in the

autumn

of

leads on,

manner of Wethers. It was printed in 1533. The central figure (l. e. Lord Indra) and can have been no other was the Sky God
all
.

may

be a reflection
is

of Dlvali.

The
' '

csta-maJdng at this time,

remarkable.

artistry diapUyM

and Kelts.

Heaven Father of both Hindus Dis Peter or Dyes Pilar, the The ploy envelops a philosophic truism presented with
less a fact for
all

humour, yet none the

time. The mythological

Dhcnu The
An

Cow

philosophy. covering veils the

"B

old Gaelic

Ms

the

Book of the Dun

Cow

indicates that

it*

Suiikril

word Dhenu for a cow was in use in ancient Britain. Evm


'

Om

In

Welsh Tradition
some to resemble language of the Welsh is thought by more Barrow maintains that Gaelic possesses George
pronounce*

word

cow '

to

i maJpronunciation

of the Sanskrit term

'

gow

"The
'

DrtSaai
a. David (David SsnL-i. e. devoted to Devi, the great goddw) psunn nint of Wales, practised
rigid austerities
legend

Sanskrit Sanskrit
as
it

is

spelled). In

Welsh is words than Cymric (Like Sanskrit ^al,*d Welsh tradition it is said that God
that

the

and to whom

His

name thus.Uland

thisistheword.thenrsteventtrad.t.onally
light

much

nucta. He was
Dewislmd

a Vedic

aanyasi

(recluse). South

three beams of preserved. These strokes are

the founds .on

tta. noubly

"

** tm Dewi5

in

Pembrokeshire has numerous Vedk


e.

knowledge. of the alphabet leading to

In

Hindu trad.tion

AW

(the

h Sanskrit Devi -sthan i,

the sanctuiry

represents combination of three sounds A U M) music* was the tera*rd The word uttered by the Almighty

the same Ito.

**A^'-^*

tem

*"****

is

a corrupt form of fe

the people of sound in the universe, according to the eyes of the Kelts,
ss

*'"
saneufied
lot.

music

in

big

of divine origin.

common with literature to tradition TWs is exactly Vedic

The above extract

is

jjjl that a.jetter a clear indication


in

* daS

^
*

* TW ^1 ^ * wlSi? "
lr

JUon *J

wasasmuchreveredintheBriUsh^
of public entertain**
1

and

speech,

as

it

is

revered

the

Vrtc

tradiuon in

Ind*

in

were
.

** *

tr8dlU0n
.

PMbS ""sue

entM ;_.-

wv *n around the doiW * W themeS xrJtC .... *f

(21) P. 18ft, Mil. (22) Pp. 192-liM. ibid.

'

902 Complicated Spelling


Several
locations
in

903
jrjTjng

thep

mahana

Khonobonoboworn

ratan

Rosin

the

British
titles

Isles

retain

their
ancjftit
hat!

long-winding Sanskrit names and

but their pronundaUon

Mahlnitarayudayaya Mahadilokpopnoparatana rajthanl buriromud ruplmarna mahasatamamo Vanuatitaakattlya ihlwas

mr8

obviously been distorted or shortcircuited.

Vijan'ikamprasit.

A
letters

city in

Wales has a tongue-twisting


:-

name made up

That long
magnificent

title

signifies
city

'

A city of angels,

greet city of Immortals.

namely

LUNT.MHPWIIWWGY11G0GERYOT
SIUOGOCOGOCH

of the God Indra, seat of the king of gleaming temples, city of the King's most excellent Avuthia. city of and dominions, home of Vishnu and all the gods.
jewelled
palace

We venture
The railway
ticket

to suggest that

if

some
title

Sanskrit expert and genius

of the place has

on

it

but the impossible

name

is

those letters printed pronounced in short as Clanfair


all

sties
also

^th

the long 58-letter


it

of the Welsh city he

may

be able to resolve
title

into meaningful words adding up to i

Piji.

That

name
is

of the town, in the west


1

o? Anglesey,

currently mistakenly believed to

Wales island country mean. 'St. Mary's


That

colourful long and


that of the
(or the

of that great city of vanished glory, like


' .

Siamese capital The word

Church has been substituted


'

church

in a dell

of white Hazel

trees,

near the Rapid Whirlpool,


is

word temple in the


would,
I

original title of that Welsh city.

The

by the Red Cave of the Church of

St. Tysflio,

obviously

58-letter title

suggest, resolve into something

like the

i Christian plaster shrouding the earlier Sanskrit

wording.

here offer the guidelines for any Sanskritist to try to unravel name which obviously refers to the temple of the reclining Lord Vishnu and Brahma and Shiva who constitute the holy Vcdie cosmic Trinity. We have already described in detail asewhere in this volume that the Isle of Angelsey had a gigantic
that Sanskrit

We

of the Supreme divinity Urd Vishnu following in chaste Sanskrit-Seat Creator, and sustainer of the world and the and the holy Trinity.
navel of the

cosmos

etc, etc.

Britain has

many names which make


is

absolutely no sense in

Sanskrit terms. For instance English but are very meaningful

Monmouthshire
of

l**0

Manmatheshwar

I.

e.

Shiva the L*rd

**my

representing the Vedic Trinity.


utle appropriate to it*
iS

As such It bore a long supreme importance. The 58-Ielter

theGodof Love.

Balliol is Ballal

(^)nameof the elephant -headed

god Ganesh.

the TJl "? P,M* ^j gnt uue s^


of that divine
S
j

rossiliMd ra,ic <*

**

grand Sanskrit

Numes

toc^liT ^ C
I

,UlherinB

mm * "^sents

Name, "Bagof and -Paget'


the distortion of a
corruption, of the Sanskrit

fanultaare of old Staffordshire

^ ^ZZ ^ ~^ ~ P^^^ ^ *
orthr^l, ^
e

PUnd 8entCTCe

S llin importance lh * ine titled ' lhe k" by the anaent Sanskrit poet and author. Bans

*e

word 'Bhakta- connoting . North We come across corresponding names 'Bhagaf in


and 'Bhngwot'
in

to owe

mm.

**

South

India.
is

TT* Engiish surname Roy


India since it is

found both

Boy

l"-|

a Sanskrit

name

** signifying king.

p,eor>'n irSaTOkr^titlesforfamous
The
int^

*<* avu^
142 htur.

"**

, yn,!^*"

** from Siam alias Thailand 01 *"1 C" P U1) md now Bangkok runs
'

Sheila I,
of character.

an English name ofSanskrit

worn. origin, signifying .

"
904

'

"

'

BOA The name Sarah


yoddea*

'

SanwwaU

as

survey

n European abbreviation of the Stnai^, is the short form of the


'

Sanity

word turveykihan (i*W). The term 'Syr'


in c!d

^ ownrnobOehomeaaitwera.
r

Welsh and 'Sir'

in

modern EngU^i
..-rhe legend of

Sanskrit honorific are malpronunciations of the


Rebirth

Sri.

the Holy Grail, so widely spread

In

Europe.

h full
or reincarnation appears in

Vjousiy

meaning. ... If the quest for of mystic the Grafl vanished. Only to those

TV Vedic doctrine of rebirth


in the

WaW

Holy( Holy Grail visible. _-*m*I fitted was the

"* TWs is as per Vedic

wisdom was not pursued whose condition of mind


tradition.

form of

Teliesin or Taliesin.

Chief Bard and one of the Three

Primary Inventors. Taliesin was a rebirth.

He
'.

is

sometimes

Ms
tradition As per Vedic
fict

equated

with Ossian or Oisin, son of Fingal in Scotland,

whose mother

Manu was
'

the
'

first

man on

earth. In
'

was a Hind. "


Royal

Sn

is

the Vedic ending 'Sen

the English
Is

word

'

man

itself

connotes

a descendant of Manu

Emblem
faces the

Manu
Is

to

known as Vaivasval l. e. son of Vivaswan. the Sun, That say Manu was the first being created by the Sun Himself.

"The King's Dragon sometimes


they support the royal arms, and in
of a gryffin.

Queen

's

Lion when
If

we

find that

Manu

is

regarded as the father of humanity

some cases he Lakes the form Both of these are Hindu emblems of Sva and Vishnu.
Andrews has a crescent
of the
in
its

in

other parts of the

world too where people are no longer Hindus

that

should be a sure

enough

indication that Vedic culture existed

"Tne
of

University of St.
is

coat

all

over the world.

arms which

a sign of

Sva

Hindu Trinity.

"
Such evidence
tiles in

is.

indeed, provided by Dorothea Chaplin, She

"One may
the

see a dragon
of. Westminster

among the designs on the


Abbey.

observes

Pyx Chapel

"Of

the

Isle

tantalizing

that of the

of Man Canon Kermode remarks' It is many names which occur in our Mania
identified with

The Dun Cow conspicuously carved in stone occupies an honoured Pwiuon on the lower of Durham
temple of the cowherd Krishna.
cathedral indicating that is was

inscriptions

none have with certainty been


(Zeitschrift
fiir

any historic

personage.

"

Celtische Pilalogic.

1897). Professor

W.

A. Craigie of St.
in

Andrew

S ?'lcrii word Hrid nlng 'heart' is written as Cridhe lnrTS?C 1YaX a wh* heardiologisu are known as Cardiologists.
'

Mon

Iceland, that it

mutation
KenJtive

may imply an

Man. called "s remarks of the Isle of that the has for the genitive Manor, and nominative, Manu, whence the
original

*?2 r * wZTT
*nd '

Manu

of Gaelic names.

Thus

the central point

in Iceland

Don* ngton

ta

Hertfordswre

ZlTo^J^ __J^^J*^^
Such
(23>
'

ParOTt3 broke U th P * van in which they

Ppears to be the mythic figure of the great Hindu law-giver^as


in

f ^ * on

m8ke
their

^^

WW "

minds

that they

Pp tte-aw.fcu.
102. It.d

of Man and some districts of the British kdand, currently sparsely populated had in the ancient limes the above "nourishing Vedic community. This is apparent from JjWwce .a well aa the preponderance of Sanskrit words (such

^e We

mainland.

*) P

.J^wMi,

e-

a relation)

in their language.

'

80S

807
Radna
.

la

M<w<lh*hlr*

cxplnincd earlier that has already been


Is

Monmouthshire

ManmaCheshwar)

the Sanskrit

name

of lard Shiva nnt| ai so

(^

of Shiva is Rudra. And surprisingly enough wwnsbip- The angry form ma" OT for ^n"" '^?) there is a should H nHy **
1

(or

ralW Rudjy nsIW Rudty


Hodry
Rodri.

p]^ v.* m Monmouiiuiuix-, u>i-mij the temple of Rudra. in Monmouthshire, obviously H Uje met Sanskrit form. An enraged Shiva is known as
'

"The important

ecclesiastical

centre of St

Itavid 'a in South


in
its

Wales, suggests association with


of

Hindu
(

atti-tfory

old
.

name
'

Muni ... the daughter of neksha and

he mother of Narad

'*

Cnrl
"Chwrjldrk the
old

name

for Elgin Cathedral,

fmm
pOJar

(is) possibly
is

Gauri.

the Goddess

of the hearth

and home. Ganri

wife of

9v. whose

the

vehicle,

Monea

in this district.

"

the Bull. j.

much

in evidence

on

*herdw1j

Above is the British coronation chair kept in Westminster Abbey. London:


E>y new British sovereign is
taw.
>

crowned on

it.

At

its

four legs are golden


Sovereign on

Two

front ones ore seen a: the bottom.

To crown o

lion-sett

(Smbosan

in

Sanskrit)

ia

inviolable

Vedic tradition. The

'wy. vexed Nona here ore a typical Indian pattern seen at numerous

-.. Urn,

k u,, bfM,hj

"^
'
in

vyuh,- find .

m cnlil

^wetlias
"
Indian
>

In India.

Even the word

(spelled in old English

"CSng*)

^~-St,^r',W """* *
<"

dayinHI "'lu

*->

HMrt
nm,,.

c glance.
Am

word Singh corrupted from Sanskrit 'Simha' (meaning a

baeaut* every sovereign

was called upon

to be aa brave and vitflani

"**

"**"

<" exist on the Malvern Chnpim. This I, doubly

Ul|l0B ln

Electing hi, subject*.


10

^ *""* ^L^-"^^,^
**!*. do.

*. K.h. lr, ata, , u. VCT> mda " VkUc mmu,y

^
l,

l"

Uona bul below lhe Chair -al

"Jnt almond-coloured, crude Stone of Scon.

may be seen a piece of rock. None knowi its history


that the
chair
is

ft*,

^*
^*JJ
'

l-i*^u

^^and
U %H!

century A. D. What is known, however. Is Mcred aociaUon with the British coronation
Inviolable.

*"*

'' 0bvl0Ufl,

rr

nonae aa IndU because regarding even

>nincated pronunciation ol the

name Stand,

aon of Lord

908

Shiva

md

commander-in-chief of the armies of the God,.

One

Pursoi

(i t *,

indent Vedic histories)

is

named

os

Saind Punas,

in times immemorial by Vrtt. The stone was carried from India, Kahamyai who administered ihf world. Tbey always retained the under their administrative seat so that even in distant lands they

*
may

new form

the Vedic Weals of providing a clean, simple, honest,

Mrin

tnd Impartial Vedic administration. It is that tradition

which

stiU r

wedded to :ht

British throne.

This statue of sage Agasi


is

from Java (Indonesia).


Agastya a
Vedic
his
scholar

known

for

exemplary

character, great erudition and

arresting personality hod mad*

such a splash in the ancient


world
that

everybody

from

emperors
Caesar)

(such as Augustus
to

Courwty,

British

Muaeum, London

ordinary

recluses

(such as St.

Augustine) Mi
In

proud to bear his name. Even


th* adjective
"august'

motif in

It was a popular Though the paecock belongs to tropical regions yet mosaic dug up Europe. Above is the photo of a andent Vedic

the British lales. exhibited in

London. the British Museum,

(personality)

>

derives

from
In

The peacock

is

number of ddUss considered holy and is the mount of a such

Vedic

sage-scholar

Agaetl'i

Vedic tradition,
This ts

Saraswati
of Grttt Britain-

spell -binding personality.

one of the vieual proofs of the Vedic past

Such atctues of Vedic sages and


deities

abounded

all

over Europe
by

* v*c
vrtlc

Note the entwining serpent design of the picture frame. p, s-aodstadJ invariably origin becau* multi-hooded cobra, we
daiuee.

W*|

**> but they

were cut down

neo- Christian zealots

vic

**

temple-gita, in

tUi we conclude that such moeaica were Europe and the British Wee.

laid

out at

*-

All

Counwy. BriUih Museum. London.

"^ Now^w-I^* fc "* W( * * e W8* Museum. London^-P**- > <Wound, centre, which %toZ
1

in

^taOwtv^c^L,^"^
14

befn found

"W

obviously occupied

*** btcn uneroav


inds

**'*"'

wtonans and archoeolotpsia wenl

*Bi&*fU*r

im"WIr
*

^ ** ^P

*'*"*' and

HwoloKical

tu

--- of fcw Otftofe Mary Que*

of Scots in

Weeta,^

Thou *h ^rtwim. ta "" Abbay are on <"ptoy y? pmi to prvtrfuJ submission to divinity In Uw Vedic N.*^ 1* an, proof lhat even aftr hu ~ dbw of death. TWa to srapbie M rtT w

- ***
ift.

'

'

of

,n

of

eanvtreion to Christianity ancient


all

Vedic tradition,

f^ I ow tbt worti visit the Abbey everyday and ye* none draws any history
our

ora day

ow

Europe, unknowingly. Thousands of visitor

pe^ ^

THE VEDIC PAST OF IRELAND

fonchuiom from such iraphJe details. This underlines the necessity f swakenlng in detecting crucial blstoritti irtatar and shtrper vigilance and
evtfeoc*
skip

Tola alto fltuatrates

bow current methods of

historical

pronunciation of the Sanskrit term Arya Sthan Ireland is a mal


I

restart)

am

a plethora of sues very valuable evidence even of a conenu

e.

fc. visual kind.

is that

(viz. Vedic) culture. An alternative explanation a land of Aryan it was known as Aranya Sthan 1. e. forest land. Ireland
life

end Irish

are therefore replete with

relics of their Vedic past

despite their

having been converted to Christianity over

i thousand

years ago.
'

The Encyclopaedia of Ireland records


kings
behalf

'

It

seems clear that

Irish

were sacral

in character,
1

performing

priestly function!

on

of the people."

Hindu tradition. The most illustrious is precisely the Vedic Udaipur also proclaims family of India namely theMaharanas of ruling

This

Itself

as playing a similar role.

or into 150 kingdoms (in ancient times) divided federated with its (ri Tuathel and Tuatha each ruled by a king

Ireland

was

CI* neighbours under an over-king (known as ruiri)... Ui N of Mlde (was) the chief dynasty of the Southern 908 (A. social unit was the large joint family.... in
anna, king of Taro defeated and
killed

^"T* -
.

Cuiwiwn. Cormac Mac "f

Wng

bishop of Cashel at the battle of Belach.


a

The word Tuatha signifying

kingdom

at'

) )

P- 82.

Encyclopedia of Ireland, Allen

Figgis.

M**

lW8

Pp. 82-83, Ibid.

"
916

914

t^.S^krii word 'Devasthan"

I.

e.

'Divine land
'

'.

The

t^
'

the Sanskrit aftnlfylnf the ruler is

term
"

Rai.

Ruin'

Unifying
ioint

'

king of kings
is

is

the Sanskrit term

Likewise the t*L

8*3]
^.

Tht Urge
the

family

also

an unmistakable Vedic
Sinna
is

This chanting was in the rhythmical aMUraUvt Myle* the po*Warchalc lanKUBge not to te rwd "y underauwd Ld in form of '" ordinary people.

^Uw

trait.

nun* of

the Jang (Flann)

obviously '$hn\i*'\

The

details

mentioned above indicate that

until the introducUon

Kshatriya Lion' the Vedic suffix of


is

names. The name CholmJ'


,

Christianity .

around the 6th century the tradition of Vedic recitation


in Ireland

obviously the

name of a famous

Indian Kshatriya clan

the Cholu"

ntinued

unbroken

and other European countries.

Tart ihf Ancient Hindu Capital


In the

AjU dh M-ran
is

county of Meath in Ireland

an open

term The Sanskrit


,

'

Ayudh Maran

'

signifies an instrument of

grass-covered

uneven spot

known

as

TARA.

It is

a highly hallowed location though


It

Higgins mentions* a King LughReobhdearg of Ireland, death. Godfrey Higgins quotes a tradiUon of a iudge of line of Elramon.
of the
line of (hat illustrious

there are almost

no

relics left there.

is

the legendary
the

site of

monarchs

"who had

the lodhtin

Moran (an)

the coronation of ancient Vedic kings.


of those

And since

main

veWcl*

days was the Ruth


in

(i. e.

chariot) the archaeological notices


call

breast; and if anyone gave false sentence, ornament worn on the Moran would close round his neck, till he had given
the

lodhan

marking various spots

that area

each spot

Rath \

Those
Vedic

the

proper verdict and

it

would do the same

if

put on the breast

obviously indicate the sites

where the chariots of the ancient

monarchs of Ireland, were parked.


Even the

name Tara

is

a Sanskrit

word

for a star. In India

a bfll-fortresj. Taragarh

was

evidence. Hence it became if he was delivering false of a witness, threaten a witness with the lodhan Moran... It was a proverb to turf bog in the county of Limerick on found 12 feet deep in a made of thin plated gold. the estate of Mr. Bury... it is

"

mw
i.

6ly
-

n*

also the capital

of a vedic monarchy
identical

***
Abb8y

TARA

in

Ireland has an

significance

Vedilt^"^ term h Mayo W.rn the Mayo


is

Counl>' '***
the Sanskrit

ancient

names mentioned above Lugh line name "Lakshman Rai-bhadra. The Reobhdearg is Manu the first human monarch Of Eiramon is obviously of Arya meaning the is Sansknt according to Vedic tradition. Ayudh Maran

Among

the Ancient royal Irish the Sanskrit

Pn^l^ *
-*r*
**"
L
*

k cr rr
n Lord Shiv*
state*
,

Cashel in

* ^PPerary

w-

are
iS

PPera0r

tHe SanSkrit

word Maya.
county has two
in

fatal

weapon

Tht Vedte Bardic Tradition

* ndu
"""

We have pointed out elsewhere that the English

*""' P*

v *c KwiuiioD

wd "bard- are Sanskrit words. Vedic monarchs courts bards attached to their courts. That Irish royal
Wdic
tradition is
Of the
' '

****"

**"
an

^
*

having on ep. an additional proof of Ireland

Encyclopaedi,

^ Hury..
Pta*e,! frorn

introduction of wriUn

-w w "^^re
K
11

existed long before


in the

*
AJ] Ceiti

""WlMiM,...

allof

^"n byu.^!?" to *Her by the Joint w "-om one em- to another,

*w

KnJT

8 whLT Beparfll lcarned ^d "*"*

Chri3lian missionaries

Scotch All the Irish. Vedic world. Higgins notes ounla agree in the substantial part of the hs">ry of the kings Institution. One of the most renowned

Prie8t, y

C,i5'

*" much
a>
J

celebrated for his establishment

<>r

regu

^^ ^ ^^

* facels of * oral tradition

memory

of

P.

U)

aw ibid
Druid., by Godfrey

by the chanting

^ W. The CelUc

W0*m. I***-

i#u lS*

ori,

?L

n*
kin*,

these people Was *hool or coitog* of

**

** ^^^

hBd one or

mor

^ih7h.*ocy
J-wW.
eountiy.

the time alluded to of his ctan- At

* STS
.h^

917

j^mlsharanya

#**<">

to

nother aimQar t*rm which


Is

figures in
is

literature. Daharan dent Sanskrit

in Iran. Bahrein

a similar

- ordered to collect the ancient recordj they ware future was entrusted the ge and lo these birds In
and continuing

p^Br^n, tbem

them

...

^
**
or

#'?
or

name

In Ion a In vi

*****
p^,

books time* i collection of


look plaoe in their colleges
of Ireland. .. the learned

was made. The Irish say the same Qfe or Drudical monasteries in several

Faber says (Origin of Pegu Uosb b. IV. The Rev. Mr. reUloon of lhe ^*,la " ** profflwd in Caul p- -*80 ' V same as that or the Hindoos and Egyptians. g palpably the

Britain

*L 1
J?

game

have regretted the dispersion and


of lona in the

consume
the

dHoman3

the Canaanites.lbe Phrygians, the Greeks also as that of Mr. Faber then goes on to show that the Phoenidani.
-

danrucuon of the

library

stormy period

Beformition. The unhappy stale of Irelana for the last 2000


ti

y*^

enough to account for the destruction of their institution milar to that of lona, and of most of their manuscripts. *'
quit*

the Palli, end the Egyptian shepherd An-kim. the Philistine, Cush i e. Cushites which the translators were all descendants of ttn0 which Septuagent always render by the word Ethiopians,
. ;

("the
.

Those who

misleadingly

accuse

the

Hindus

of

default

In

maintaining historical records and writing histories


the above noting of Higgins that the

may

leant from

bards alias poets were entrusted

the Greek language means nothing but black (but not observes (B. HI. Ch. ID), ft Negroes)-.- Mr. Faber have circumstance, that the ancient Irish should also i. a curious should have and that they and the Persians... had a Zaradusht name of Daghd. or Dughda. The dose his mother by the
rt
in

necessarily

with maintaining court records find writing histories. If they wrote


in

designated

verse that was because versification

was the vogue

SSb.
^Twas

in

rnry

branch of ancient learning. If certain bardic records which

haw

come down to us contain only the -ruler 'a praise and not much **ory that may be due to serveral reasons namely the other may have been dropped out being unimportant, unmteNgfoW

comple* .fetaty of U* observed by Borlase and the Druids, the Magi and Id superstitions of the Maunce estabushed by Valency. Wuford since oeen satisfactorily

Persia between the rel^on of

";<"*
*"*'

and Davies."

or trrrtevam to tat^ generation,, the ruler

may be

deserving

all

H above

the main theme extract corroborates

^J*

the eulogy

may be necessary

to inspire the younger

one. emrutad ^Vontll^?'' * recording w,th

eVWyb0dy

lhflt

lh*

**** "

**

the ancient world had all people of the was onlyan, Consequently Zaratushtra Hindus. of his times. Vedic tradiUon in the language

0*

Vedic cuHur, Pa.ee, are a part of the primordial


times communities 1ft. the

history in the Vedic ayaunv

BuddNs*.
is

CnnsU^
to
P

^
if

s^ cuHu* m

** 0.
our o.

<< V**

*
*
**
'

"*

-hole

"** iridnion ftrn< ' Anoy. vntoTjZX ' OB* tucb


^_

C^l^ ^ Z"

in

indent

Um

m Briuin M Bm
tt

Pares appear different that


the

because

*0rd *nya i*> and suggest"""** **** denM f0n*'

history they have been cut off


culture. Therefore,

torw** lr8cu

Ariny*

those differences

by tune and more we delve into panUnB narrowing down and

^ ^^^ ^
V|&
records

-^

rf

rtldon in InHrw-fcln.

Vedic culture.

Tar.
About the aignincance 0/ Tara.

o -ihM Chaplin Do""""

"T**

"

ai9

I
I

Xtt

rf Itai

r ihr^rt U w** a Budh HninIndi.isihou Kh tbyDr. aut OT pleof^W


"

(Mercury)

is

famni

may have been the husband of the TV found* of Katoan plate Inscnption in the Univ eniUy mentioned in a copper ^ mythological Tare is the goddess of war and oft* NUinda The to.iembJeaspeci.Hercolouris blue... Tara is called Neel Sara,^

rSd. P^r

built to have been

by Tan,

of Royal

l^'

^ rW
to

JS ^iture
hostile-

to collect wrfara tried

manuscripts end other evidence of the ancient

of Europe, those attempt* too war? tt nought Christian elements. Vallancey dtea speculc instances to

Xm

^,r out
Id

this conclusion.

On page XX

of the preface to his book Vallancey asserts

"The

the religion of
in

Britons was founded on that of the ancient


great part that of the Brahmins... by no other

II.

the Blue Saraswati).

Tara In Ireland,

presiding over

uj,
of

h which was,

haDi of justice, would


learning

be another aspect of Eithna, goddess

among

the Kelts."

TTrish
48 of her book)
' '

deities of the Brahmins have been recorded in could the manuscripts." That indicates that the pre-Christian

Dorothea adds (on page


accounts Eithna...

According

scripts in

some

was

fed

on milk brought from India by Angm

mdu,

Vedic,

England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland were all of Sanskrit scriptures and records of Hindu royalty.

Of and Mononnan.... The cows were certainly divine animals. "Tara


oldiera.
in

In

was called the great Hous* of the thousand Hindu mythology Tara is a war goddess (Page 62
Ireland
' '

of his

supported by Vallancey "b statement on page Tpia is further Sir William Jones allows the Irish language book that
' '

great affinity

with the Sanskrit."

of Dorothea Chaplin '$

book)

Empire Hindu World

Batiamlha
T>*
word
ciiy of Belfast in Ireland

has a Sanskrit origin


being

The
as

Sanskrit
Belfast.

Balaprasthi

(cm,

They were

is

mal pronounced end so

Hiipnuthi connotes a strongly fortified place Around It are a number of ancient fortresses.

is Belfast.

by the name of known to the early Greek historians rem seems to mdo-Schythae.The Scythian empire Persian Gulf and the Ind*n Ganges, and from the Egypt to the

On page

their

observe) In my last publication. of his book Vallancey the Punjab the Eire-Coti) history from (i- e. of
'

Im'**""

Sea to the Ganges.

"

VcdkCalturt of Ancient Ireland

'

^ '^ r r. ^.1L
arl
ri

Val,anwy notw in the

Pr

to his book

bhnrat after the Ma* world empire gradually disintegrated to by point of time referred Consequently, at the
,

mUan

.-

"*-*.

by the

Danes.

still chunk of that Broken world-Hindu-empire course beyond uplo tad mass from Egypt to Calcutta and of

War *"*-* wm

^^

Chm.

wi **

___J^^t^
Uy

by

C^u^rr

dWM fV^iCwUureWM9 sU mnlical,y y


'

and Japan.
Irish

whole of Europe. Later when

Reverence for Sindhu

wj

J^ ****'

* "*

9m

ali0,

Ko,Uc

andhu, the Sanskrit name of


Hindu lJnka by
Cen. Charle,
"i

tte^^^^S
to

ancient history. All people

seem

chensh tw w.

*^^h5^

F
l dth TO ,DtlIn,Wn4

* Instance,

Wy4tt P*W.10B by M. S*""*-

the Japanese Shintoism

is

Sindhuism dta

**** "Seghdu
0nt of the

delightful in Irish signifies the

e*u**on.

most

world, and delicious plains in the

930

paradises.

m
Irish.

Hindu Deliles of ihe

tmown
Irish,

as

Seomna

alias

Scorn

in Ireland

"the Saman

of the Pagan

the Judge of Hell,

who

rewarded or puniibed the departad


in

"The Pagan Irish had most of the deities of the Hindoo, Their Hilars still exist in Ireland under their names. By the
of argument used by Dupuia the Irish
In the preface to
is

rnetampaychosis according to their good or bad deeds His festival


is still

Out Ml

ny^

kept

in Ireland
,a

world...

on the eve

of the

may be

said u> he Hindoo,

called Oidhche Souls Day

9aman."

my

Prospecius of an Irish DIciionury,

a list of 18 deities, in
It is

common

pagc xXfo with the Pagon, Irish and

We

have already explained elsewhere

in this

volume thst the

tfc

Brahmins...
In

worthy of remark that the two greatest

riv*n

(Shannon) and the Suir, are the namti of the two greatest rivers of India, viz. the Ganges and the India
Ireland, the

Seanon

or Sndh... The Euphrates in Babylon

was named Sur.

'

,0

of paying homage to afl of one's ancestors on soma Vedic practice fortnight in September has been retained during the dark lunar day Christian Europe as the All Souls DDy which ia a translation fven In a Sanskrit term 'Sarv Pitri Amavasya' That the God of death, of the should be worshipped on the day previous to the day of
.

Yama

Vedic Fire Worship

is significant. the dead ancestors

"In an

island in

Lough Deargh,
all

In

the river Seanon, are

"From
seven
fir*,

ancient Irish manuscripts

it

appears... the Pagan Irish

churches and a round tower;

seven to contain a sacred

This conformity of seven churches

must have succeeded so miny

epithets of the &w In worshipped Budh... Budh and Daghdae are deities we have found in the ancient manuscripts .. All these
Irish

Pagan

altars, the

foundation of which

we may trace to the Brahminio!


seven thy tongues, seven
thy

centuries before our knowledge of them, of Ireland, written


the Indians..."
1

among

"

religion.

'Fire! seven are thy fuels,

holy facet, .even thy beloved abodes, seven

wonbp
;

ways do seven

sacrificed

Since the whole of Ireland got

its

name from
(i.

the Sanskrit terms


lis

thee, thy forces are

seven.' Fire is called in the Veda

Aranya
districts

(i.

e. forest)

and Aryasthan

e.

the Arys region)

.Cnjta

<*
Ifcarp

which seems to allude to seven consecrated hearths" Ceremonies of the Hindus, Af. Ref. Vol. 7).

are

known

as

Bun. In Sanskrit

the term

Vun on,
is

alia

Bun
bear

signifies

shady areas covered with


Lord Krishna while

foliage.

Thus

Irish districts

Uby. Mahon names such as Bun-Mahon and Bun

Mohan,

the epithet of

Uby

is

from Lava, the son or


forest.

^mJt!iTi^ "* *in pies t !?*


^"ly^J

and one river

*""**>

,r*Iand -

named

**
"*

Krishna Rama. Consequently Bun-Mahon implies a

ther lh

* h,ch

An old name for linen


as sacred

in Irish is

those churches

were temples.

ap parel during divine worship

holy linen u-4 India because by used to be supplied


,

establishments in India.

Goddess Kali's

name

exists

in Irish

death or black. In India too "casl'

msaninj as Cod or Cd the end or signifies


.

person and black colour.

At Adolr In the county of limerick art

U*

^"J*_____

St**-

923 former temples. abbeys which are

Madras

city in

ndii

Adyar i tuburb celled

^^
,!"

n*
)(

trfan

names

for

money

in general are

Ceara

(Ram)
well

rw

Ooa (Ke>. Capar (Kepar),

Piosa.

Mdmd Ana. Therimitar


known.

ih#

were written on tree The ancient Irish manuscripts endtm Vedfc tradition. That is why the Irish word
word
is

If*^

mdlan

nwnw

Kaperdik, Cowrie. Paisa and Ana are

'duivj

both the leaf of a tree and ft! many other language, J* the page the In English for Instance, for turning expression
Sanskrit

dul)

signifies

Vedic custom festival days In ancient Ireland were A, per with reference to the phases of the moon. determined
Royal Jewels

ptff of e book. This

may

be noticed in

hi

to

mm the leaf.

u^

The Gowlan Shi* Temple

The jewels that ancient Irish tonga wore, were simfler to those kings in India such as pearls in the ears. crown worn by Hindu around the neck and finger rings. Their names gold, gold chain
of oriental. loo re
Irish

"The Gowlan stands on an eminence... At the root


hit)

women's

hair-plaiting

and ornaments too

of ft,

consists of nine stones in in lh centre.' '"


is It

a temple.

a circle and Linmm Wl

were of the Indian

style.

When

anklets, bracelets and cups of gold were dug up from


-

Shb Church
Near Kmarney
in

several places

like

the Bog of CuUen

in

the Ttpperary region,

Irish origin and workmanship. experts doubted their

Some opined
after

the county of

Kerry

is

an Aghadoe Church.
-Jisfigured by

that they could

have been plundered from Srirangopatnam

ta

aaL"i

r l (WlBn
ft

inScn lion 'P

oWourfy
is

Everyone in Dublin who had been to India Tipu's defeat and death. they declared thai the questioned. But on close examination

was

r.T^rT^

UmP,e f
1

,reland
-

curremI *

<

P
v<

jewellery

was not of Indian workmanship. So


1*

close

is

the amuariiy

between ancient Indian and Irish jewellery.

uv who 4 ^or^rit.t'" ^

oMou5,y an anciem

Temple Jewellery
pre-Christian altars and Sun In Ireland there are caves with offered their wealth worship tradition near Athlone. Since people of national banks and at temples, the temples served the purpose

. refuge r from sin or an absolver from

^^cCotli^
c~ c^T
l**

^"

San ' krit


'

""w lerm

Killaarnavlrt

*"'

lhe 5ea

or c,ose l0 lhe

the priests officiated as bankers.

Crowns and

breastplates or gold

the Chriitan have also been found buried at temple-sites during


Invasion.

Wn^cy
ta<

bora

^^^WWtoJ^/ * f0rhdf * **
-*

^iT PrimeWrBhwl
"

In

Vedic culture ancient


f

Ailronomy

I* 'Cow --own Ci. e.


In

eight grout.
farthings)

two

"?* * "A plate of numerals from an Irish Ph book! comparePossesion" notes Vallancey Con page 315 of his Mi those of the Indians and Arabs..-, ore aim. guided by the Vedic Thia Indicates that the ancient world was
(lfl

~~~

AflftnitUH}

_J^ M

^J

lmInd wcre Indian .,-

P- 257, Ibid.

Ort**, Cm**
when the
rest of

*-<*
It

"

World Education.
on

Vauancev adds "ft

a remarkable circumstance

Europe through ignorance or

n*^

no

swwWgt

of

U*

true figure of the earth, in the

forgetfT^** '*
8th.

rotundity and true

to lbs

should have Hah ecboob" (Page 316 of Vallancey's book).


it

formation of

beJ^
**>

above statement the general In view of the notion tha yam ago Cafflao first discovered that the earth was round nmmnf. tarns oat to be unworthy of credence.
In
fact

ENGUSH

IS

A DIALECT OF SANSKRIT

another very
is

important
it

conclusion

we

reach

ViDantey'i disclosure

that

was Christianity which dnBrJrU

the ancient scientific Vedic

educaUonal system throughout the

*m
fa that

and aahered in an era of uninformed


instance, decided for itself that

Since this
jhal) deal

volume

is

written in English, in this chapter

we

dogmas.

Christianity
In

only with English, as a specimen to Qluatrate our finding

the world

was created

and on that basis mounted

40O4BC
tutor
the

every language on earth derives from Sanskrit because Sanskrit


first

its

make-believe axioms to

was the

divine language bestowed on humanity by divinity


in fact, compilers of
all

Muslim

dor

did the

same

Compilers of English dictionaries, and


in regions

of the world where

U
'

dictionaries

whether

in

Europe, Arabia or Persia would do

well to

-S

^11
20,liiC, '*

to

*
Sr

recast their lexicons

on the basis of Sanskrit etymology.


finding to the notice of lexicographers
1

abyss of sUrk

**

*im w
To bring
this invent*
It

new

bef^^l
"*
hvwriu.

"*

^
4

addressed a letter dated

September 18, 1972

to the Chairman of

Jones "was

W^rT
kj

";^

the nr9t

P^nitors

of that race.

An,bs or

W8e of his book) "that gn* * B^mins. " observflll'ons on the cycles of wHh'hiT r* * w ol, v. 2"nIon ^t the Hindoo religion spread

"""fr. Btir^

^^"^Jtx ^

Gwks.-

Astronomy

had

-^

,rish

" reo,bl "

Board of Editors. Webster's dictionaries, G and C Merruun was Company. Springfield. Massachusetts, USA. A similar letter Editui of Oxford also addressed to the Chairman of the Board of
the

Dictionaries in

England. The

letters ran as

under

DeerSr.
in your wiah to bring to your notice a serious Iscuni of your panel Q Perhaps it has escoped the notice aouiw "Perls that they must primarily look for the Sanskrit.c Tact has resulted f English of this important words. Non-realization
1

mrt

lexicography.

,t0nehen ^^^WrectoT urology,K W tr** T"y

ft

e 1

one of the temple*

of

*"*

'

to

arithmetic, holy days. gam

%?*^l^

to

wrong phDological and etymological explanations.


Per balance, take the word
' '

110 "

(ndwd because every hum*


*

widower. ' This


is

is

^na explained
'

^^aw!?' ^^^orid
'

u widows.
k*
'tat,
.
f

of Hindu origin. The

Let u. se- whether this

right. If

tobour

rom

India

by theGyP-'^

person "doing- labour 'widower* would

mean, per**

'

01
ho make*
meaning.
of
'

m
wrwi
'

widow. Carried lo

P- N. Otk.
Its logical

etymo^
.
,.

widower as explained by you would apply u> the munJe ' husband, who thereby renders her a widow. a woman
Tnls error has persisted because

president.

Institute for Rewriting Indian History.

of the fact that the


Sanskrit wordi
'

words

'

widow

'

your experts seem obllvtou, and widower ore mis-speD^


' '

^
tt

abandon

Oxford Dictionary office replied that they would not their 150-yeer tradition.
in their reply of

like

'Widhwa* and 'Widhur'; that

is

to say the won]


*

their position Webster's justified as 2S, 1972

September

widower

'

does not derive from the


'

word
'

'

widow.
'

under

likewise the words

truth
).

'

and

untruth

are Sanskrit
'

'

ruth

Oasr

Mr. Oak,

and

'

unruth

'

iw and
'

JTf
*

Just by knocking out

'

the Sanskritic

origin is revealed. Similarly

out to be Sanskrit

Ut

omit 'h' and the word 'that' tumi and they may be seen to be Sanskrit
' '

We

u be
In

able to

have received your letter of September 18. We are glad assure you that the editors responsible for etymologies
dictionaries have always been acquainted

the

Mariam-WebsWr
You

*ley'(*)

with Sanskrit.

will find

many such

derivations recognised in

The prefix 'para' as


is

in

'

para- psychology

'

and

'paramilitary,

our dictionaries,
Yogs, to

as for example at Avatar, Nirvono. Suttee. Swastika,

Swskril.

'para' meaaning 'different kind of."


'

'Rama'

as

in

'panorama'.

cinerama'
unjnan'.
as in

is

Sanskrit,

'known' and 'unknown'


prefixes
in
Is

historically that

name only a few. It is on the other hand quite Impossible that any large number of English words especially those
its

re

'jnan

and

Other

negative

like

in

have been In the English Innguage since

beginning in the

amorphus'. un
'disease') are

ill

unknown' and dis (as Sanskrit. TV word 'debt*


Is

'disengage' and

uriy centuries of
hive

Sanskrit 'dalU'

our era (such as widow, truih and know) could been taken from Sanskrit, a language whose very existence
to

meaning ihat (amouni) which

given.

*u unknown
ore
Sanskrit
until

the

Anglo-Saxons. The words

listed

above as

Noum
nwievoienl,

tike

'dentistry'

examples of true derivatives of Sanskrit did not

come

Into English

and

-trigonometry',
'

dani.jhMtn,- and 'tri-guna-matni.


malignant,
maJ.adroll)

the 18th

century (some of them even later), when the Sanskrit

The

prefix

'ma!'

(as

In

ItftfuBge

first

mal-procLice SMskrii, meaning bad. dirty, contaminated or

mal-administration.

and
nj foul.

became known

to a

few European scholars. There


lac. raj,

a few BtiH earlier English

words (such as

banyan)

*Mch wore introduced in the 16th centurey from India by

travellers.

Suffixe. *ic- and

'fy -Britannic, geodesic, solidify, are Sanskrit as in 'trthlc' mrutyupraya. praslarapry.'

directly from Sanskrit but from


The similarity in sound and

its

descendant modern Hindi.

n^a*
*

rWBiy'
"d-ity.

d>*nd"Wistom v. " * h * 0n U W0U,d * *>vlMM.. therefor*. for UWCiBU? ^'Wlisu with the compll-<i"" oMhTfuL 7, * m

(fon**r

pure Sanskrit compounds being 'Aggressor' is a Sanskrit word meaning

-re

^rit
2'

*idhwa which has misled you

and meaning of English widow fact that the is due lo the

t^^ r

*ords are indeed related, but not as daughter and mother. lnjl h l> that the name both are derived independently from

^oman whose husband has

died, in the

still

more anoent
both Ssnsknl

1m

iCEl

Sons** * y0Uf d ZL2riT^TefWnd ** m CU0n riM Only whenwords on " * -Main your
'

**JJI. Indo-European, which

was the ancestor of

'

modern w lj*' more " most of the languages ofthe Europe "* wort "o
justification for claiming that

English

aonm

toe English- linguifU


another.

saying the Sanskrit from the Swakrft than for come, call such words 'cognate* or "Udn'

You

wfll find

the cognate Sanskrit Vidhav.

* u^ ^

Jto
0,1

in

(if

the

griW

'"

n01 * f,te)
theory

Md

lnKribed
all

Koran

the

exterior. This.

Incidentally,

upsets of

words in other sister languages other airnfliriy related fa j? New International DietioiJ? etymology of widow in Webster s Third

died Indogrounding this

Saracenic
thesis
is

notions tboui the architecture. Our


is

book

titled

: '

The Taj Mahal

. Hindu

None of the English words you mention in your letter conceivably be derived from the Sanskrit word* you dte ta
sources. In several cases (is with know'
lo

and that) they are cogo^ the correaponding Sanskrit term, and this is stated in ih,
in

third up-dated edition of which li now ready for !.". the find It on the shelves of the library of Congress SSgtfOO. You will libraries of at least 20 unrvereiues which Washington and in the of Congress Book Procurement Program. members of the Library

"j*L finding is already being

quoted in books and examination*.

unabridged Dictionary, but

others there
a- d

is

no kind

of reUUomhip

httevrr (as between English debt

Sanskrit datta).
Sincerely your,

*r Indian

books, so far published, which have brought about Our other traditional historical concepts are: Some Blunders jcal change in Historical Research; and Agra Red Fort is a Hindu building.

F. Stuart Crawford.

To that

my

reply dated October 5. 1972,

was

of
:-

publication are; Some Missing Chapters two other books ready for Delhi 's Red Fort is Hindu Lalkot. World History; and

under way. Some other books are


Dear Mr. Crawford.

Thank you for your elucidative reply of September 26


letter of the 18th instant.

to

my

findings which affect world lexicography Aa regards our historical have research are as follows. Firstly, we different steps of our the

Apparently our views differ because wi

have been thinking on different historical wavelengths.


1

that reached the conclusion


old but Is

human

history

is
:

not just 5000 years

am

writing this not in a spirit of controversy but by wiy

written

much older. Secondly, a book titled of our Institute by a member (since dead)
modern
thousand years ancient and not

Tne Sphinx Spc-Wi


Dr. J. P.

of a Tree exchange or thoughts. right in pointing out that according to (u* accepted) historical concepts if European nations cam* into contact with India only four centuries ago how could SanrtnH nave been the basis of English

Snghal. proves. ciUng

scientific data that the

Vedis ire

You are absolutely

hundreds or
-

there of 1400 B. C. or

cumnUy

and European languages ?

But our research here question* those very historical concept


Permit

my book : Some Blunders race but out that Arya is no f Indian Historical Research points way of life and that Vedic the Indian (what we now call HINDU). was into India, n far from 'Aryans" from outside streaming India who went
abouts as held

by Maxmueller.

Tnirdly,

Aryans
ill

(i.

e.

me

to cite here a vivid instance

f the radical

eh**

over the world. Their language

Hindus) from ancient henc* u was Sanskrit and


1

*V**
t

torZ* 300 year, * P *

Z^UTT^mU ^ MahaI ^*
f

*"" br0UKhl ,boul


'
in

in historical

thinking. Til*

adages of Europe and Asia are derived from

^?
far

this

***-P* **mZ H. removed thecomplex


Idol,

^ ^lt Hthm

Atf- Th *d been assumed to be . mausoleum built by the 5th - generation


-

context that
all

pointed out in

my

letter of

lhat

words from

must as European languages

^
h

w .^
J8

ur

-"

th.t ojjr

he explained with reference to Sanskrit.

which
pit

Shahj.han

May

of S uggest that this latest piece

dug

h* and buried

to the notice

enable them of your panel of experts to

-^

wh(Owr

900
their traditional notions

981

need any amendment.

an^yyour,
The correspondence quoted above proves useful
in

Jjttod

heard for the fim Tba there was such a language as Sanskrit only about 400 lbt t therefore KuroPan couldn't have bean ago and Sux9kTii ** fon that period (i **> Nogkal. fro

that other point,

modern Europeans

^a**

knowing lh|

end

stand of English lexicographers.

What they

believe

Sanskrit and Hindi words started entry into English only about 400 years ago when Europeans began trading with India.

this

Other

-ould not . 1927. d


'.'.

8lrK ' "I* Kr*w tost wylng that there known as England at my age of 10 In 1927 England a country have had any Impact on my Ufa or that of my ancestors
is J

u9t Uke

"

' '

seemingly Sanskrit words are not those of Sanskrit but are from its ancestor the Indo-European language is what they believe.

consolidated

This can be proved factually absurd because England its imperial hold on my country (India) it least

hundred years before

my

birth, and therefore, whether

knew

There are several

illogicalities

involved in that traditional stand

of Webster 's Dictionaries.


Thirdly, the claim that East-West contact began only aboui

of the English Parllamwi' and the British sovereign fitornot. doings had affected not only my life but also that . of tnei r officials several of my forefathers.
f

400 years ago

is not right.

Wesn

't

there a simOar contact In


'a

the

The

fact that

Anglo-Saxons heard of Sanskrit as


is

a language

4th century B. C. during Alexander

invasion ?
at least claimed to have been

only about
is

400 years ago.

a statement of the above type, which

Were not

the Americas

known or

right In

discovered by several mariners from distant lands before Columbus


So, what

say that
?

modem

one sense but wrong in another. It would be right to Anglo-Saxons, like grown-up children, became
Sanskrit aware of Sanskrit about 400 years ago. But over the world for mOUons of years. Like

consciously

we

find

from history

is that

besides the big invasion)

has existed all along, all


children

or trade relations that have got recorded in recent history there always have been similar contacts earlier too. The world is round and moving, and like pebbles in a revolving drum people of different regions of the world have never stopped mixing with one another. Even when there were no aircrafls. automobiles, railway trains or steamships people did visit dj stant lands on foot, by bullock -or on horses, camels, donkeys, yaks of sheer

remembering

nothing

about

their

infant-days

the

Anglo-Saxons
Sanskrit in

remembered nothing about

their connections with

the earlier ages.


is

Moreover, there

another reason

their for their ignorance of

Vedic-Sanskrit heritage.
In fact

The ancestors of modem


all,

Anglo-Ssxoni (an
Africans or Asians)

the ancestors of

whether Europeans.

luat. or

"2"*^""*

and boats, out on pilgrimage or for military conquests. Kalidasa *

+?T!J*?' "* h
*.*X

^'aTL-ta!, m

* fim ** * Wch ** ^ hMboenQnrt n


U9
'

*****

chastising Invasion of Persia

by

the
idc*

"ere a part and parcel of the Vedic-Sanskrit world. cannot look had no outside view of it just as a person

Hence they
at his

own

lherefore

rid

of tbe

of the world
-

^ m0dW P^ofttwvuih!
i

**

tmuiA

Let it f trMlport ** "Native terms. In every f txan5Prt **v* coexisted and


Including walking.

l Process

mix with also be known

*** (without a mirror) all his life- Then followed a tong the Mahathir* hock and coma after the shattering effect of
"J*
Ja

era o.
.

world's person suffering a brain injury, the

""*

Vedlc past

was blanked

out.

Then came
from
its

and r. age the invasion,

Christianity

"n*PonauQO

u^

***** kept mov|n and mixing with whatever

*0r, a

dismamhenng and Islam further dividing and


It

"d completely alienating

Vedic past.
l<*<*
'

liable

other contention in the Webster"- Dictionariea

' '

Sanskrit langy^ words awmingly common lo from an earlier, common Indo-Europ^, been inherited by them, ^aginary, spurious and indefensible, language. < absolutely

and European

their
'

ht

w^

'"^h
-

'auW'

defence if lexicorgraphers dte words Ilka amoaJro. auto harp, autolysis, autonomy etc. to point out that BUUM ' fs * Cn*k rouw "waning self w. olio3
'

What was the p*,* thai language f in and all over India and Europe who spoke H ! Wu it spoken only (language) is absurd. 3muarlycouM The veo name Indo-Eurpoean Such questions expose Uj, there be an Indo- Asian language?

Ite

crip4 ?

Where

are

point out that that to the apedflc flew in their thinking. \A like to stop their aearch half-way at Greek or Latin or old

1Vy
l*

mustn *l
or
t

FrenC h

id

English or Arabic. In every case (as far as possible)

bollowness of thst claim. In

fad

this is precisely

the (law

in curreot
the

above f {h e
'

Sanskrit. In theyetymological explanation lrBCe the root U> words English dictionaries muat explain that 'alma'
self
'

preaumptioni. Instead of trying to search for the


source of
with
all

bottom and

(m

Ing
*

) is

the Sanskrit root which has either got abridged


*

concepts modern scholars have contented themsehti


half-baked,

been wrongly ^u\o or has

spelled as

'

automo.

some

haphazard,

ill

-digested.

make-bebevs
i

explanation* to persist in their dogmatic belief. Instead of insisting


that there existed
distant

instance of the above type Is the word Another cognate There loo the term mustn 't be divided as auto-maUc lomotic
' ' . '

some unknown common source-language In ttv past why not these scholars admit that that worldwide source

iS

automa-tic

'

unwfe*)

i .

e.

something that

'

tics

by

automo

language

wu

(alias

atma)
us

i.e. self.

Sanskrit itself

and none other! The origin,

extent

and

script of Sanskrit is fully

known while even the name


language
is

of that

Let

now consider the word


meanings

'patient'.

This

has two

other imaginary, ancestral

common

unknown.

contradictory

in current English.

As an

adjective the

word

Alter the above elucidation of the general issues involved wt

thaQ

now

ciut

some

specific instances of
in

how

collected. But person, who to calm, cooi and peiienf connotes a patient ifcmfta patient) the word doctor's a noun (I. e. a
'

lexicographers havr

commuted grave
task.

, person
therefore,

who

is

very uneasy from physical

"**"*"
two contra^

errors

their

philological

and

etymologkat
i9

restless

and uneasy.
'

How do

^h

or>

emanations of a kind

for

which even a school -boy

taken to

meanings attach to a single


do not

word paUent

In Englih ?

I*"" 1 *?

Consider the
wif.

word

'

aulo-mobfle

'

This

is

explained as auto
Sanskrit

and
'

mobile

move.

The corresponding

term b
jndiin

problems. Tney parade have thought over such cont^Ictory with it. Tnose some latin or French root and be done reach back to S*ns*m.

seem

to

meanings get explained only

when we

^ttmsbal

(sw-r, which
'

g^ ipeUwJ
'

jn

European or even

?ab mannerism as automo -bal The jAamo) signifies self while

first

Sanskrit syllable stma

the other syllable bal* <**


,

and -Mle IOTIR, -a-shaanU" connotes 'turmoil'

J"* ^tZJTl
-
hiMar
Iht workl ,

Zuil T* "

""^ r ilrtnBlh
auto plus mobile
-

When the

letter'

p'

Cona*quiUy to divide the term


to

prefixed get* (uselessly)


alias

"

wrong. The proper syltabks


to t

pmnundaUon 'p-shaanf
ingle spelling the

'pashaanl

Tor two

^^ m
_

sn

"

tvm B ***** ,earnJn school-boy ukl

J^Z^\ v^vh^iZ^ ^ *m *Tu * ****** wwartT ^


ri

word

'

U**e

'"^nrraphers. supposed "* Un8W8'* of il becauM "*

patient

meaningsbut with two contradictory meanings in tng contradictory


'

why

has two

HlUorlcal

R*vage

*Ch0l

*" not ""t" 1 them

thflt

San >ton
VVhy and

*** fr mflH0nt of Ve,rs from th* """

how does the

letter

'

'

to get attached

^nswer to that auch * * some letters. I.

interpolation of

' d additional Htufl

nf

historical ravage. tba result of

Jut

'

'

834
hostile assaults or r, and palace, get bettered through undergoes muUliUon ind rtp^ meat new needs a language loo to
.

InlUl "d upheavals the

*W
^

came

to be spelled as

'dooms '. Ut*. ou,

to

was

dislodged yielding the present word

^^

other language Sanskrit Therefore, In English and every origin interpolated letters or substitute could be delected by removing
missing letters.

home'-

'

'

The Sanskrit word hesty (*) signifies an elephant Substitute term hefty denotes with ' f to realise that the English an
' ' . ' ' '

numerous Sanskrit words in English which with an additional "a" attached at the beginning being spelled specimens are mentioned hereunder to guide readers to discover few
tjKewise. there ere
:

mny more

terminology the Sanskrit term elephantine personality. In Islamic


'

nasty

very appropriately denotes an Important personality. 'p* has contaminated and plagued In English the letter seven]
'

Able, apple, Initial Eliminating the


are-bal,

abbot,
'

Abraham,
*

assassin,

Bqua,

apothecary.

Sanskrit words. In

numerous cases the

letter

'

p
'

phal.

from the above words the Sanskrit terms bhat, Brahma, sahasin, qua and pathyakarl. The
a

remains

attached

as mere dead wood and as an unnecessary burden or a useless

<**. to. vz, meanings remain identical

m, FfflftR, *, TOnrft) meaning


the
first

reapectively-strength,
adventurer, water

fruit,

priest,

human

ancestor.

appendage with nobody ever pronouncing the


this kind are the

'

'

Instances

of

and chemist.
'

words

'

psychology, pfizer, pneumatic, pneumonia

and psychic.
In another category of

The term
European words the letter 'c' has
derived that 'the

'

serenade
'

is

explained by English dictionaries as


*

from
is

'

serano

meaning

fresh air' in old French. In fact

sometimes been added as s useless appendage to the original Sanskrit word. Take the word cottage, the Sanskrit word is ottage (alias
otaj). Snularty in the
i

word

the pure Sanskrit term


of

twm)

'swarnasd' meaning

sound

music'.

This

would indicate how etymological

name -Caesar' the

explanations In English dictionaries are

mere amateurish

kite-flying.

original Sanskrit
1

name
meaning,
snake.

aesar- abas 'eshwar' but


parasite. In

an initial 'c has stuck to it like auch cases the proper course for lexicographers would
appendage and reveal the main, original Sanskrit

Snake leads to the word why? Because in Sanskrit the term

to separate the

The Sanskrit word


'

w*nl But

m
'

'sneak'. Surreptitious has the same 'surp' signifies a


'pairs'
*

is

being spelled in
'

Etf*

Wr

lexicographers have so far failed in this

duty because

with an Initial

V as letter.
i.

'

The word

sinister

is

Sanskrit

{?m*>
used
there

faulty tuition in world history

during their school days.

'su-nlch-ster'

e.

'

stooping too low.

^trarHy

m'

ZL r
W

there .re word, in English which can

be

detected

The Sanskrit words ruth


In

ongtnlC
Utt
to
"*'

f **

**"

ml89in8-

the word

' Ul1
'

mWn J**"*'
Blgnifyin

and we get

the

<bumao>

* from th, S * * Saniknt J^l TOa


.

'

b^

"Vbya (WTO>
dhtme

hm^wr

8 an 'ape '.Drop the intruding


'

and
e
.

|,

it will be found the abode of the

as truth and untruth. the Sans n are many other words in English sprouting rrom and wnte 'ruth' (I, e. truth). The two words Tight' meaning ami *n identical pronunciation but differ in their I. 'ruth Yet tbey too derive from the Sanskrit word
English with an additional
t
'
.

W) and unruth (up) are being But

paw
^

Bauae anything that a person


tn*th since

gives in writing

is

(gen

^ wj^
^
.
,.

*"**>

<wnJXJS?

<mwing ,home,,
by *o\

,n

change^ retracted or it cannot be denied, * which is right is obviously the truth I. e. ruth,

lh

replaced

* t*rm 'errata"
true.

is

Sanskrit <*-*>
Is

''*
P**'"
"J"
1

therefore,

Pregnancy

Sanskrit

<P-*W

"

^^
,

937

93*

plW
English, with a little Insi^ retained as it is in detected to be to write the word 'year,' the letter off the tail of

seed;
iT;,.)'i

'cruel'
B camel:
(

la

the Sanskrit word


ia

cruer'

npj, tnd
Is

word The Sanskrit

'Vmh' <*>

signifying

-years'

may\

crt

inl

_^ ul
'aavr'

hrl lt?U

'heart': asylum
is

tswrm.)

lB

tumult:

curriculum

gurukulara Vpj*);
'

B5fByBin
beC*
I.

is

Rub

USe

vurs

'

that the to realite


'

word years
'

is

vears=varsh.
if

with B nerson
...

enter -pmit-nar' cow; entrepreneur ia an inner urge. Therefore 'enterprise' b that which has emerged from an Inner ijiaiifta) viz.
'

(jhSWi

The Sanskrit word


'k' and
last

kearn

(alias

karna)

clipped of

'"^Th^word
its Initial

'urge'
is

is the Sanskrit

word

'ooria' l^tf)

I.

#.

Unie

"n\

would be seen to yield the English word

'ear'

retaining the original Sanskrit

meaningcontinues to be misspelled in English

the Sanskrit word nw) 'sanshas' i. . ,enCrg properly. 'Wheat' may be noticed governs or counsels hi which g that whose vitality and vitamin ion of words like near . be a _

Conscience

'

'

'

w
P

The English word


as
will

'

mukh

'

S"1,k"

l
,

0,

^
is

frf

lire-giving'; canto
is

is

kaand;

mouth.'

If

the English

word

is

pronounced as 'mooth'

It

* lry

<wrafl), integrated onaia-ri

(awfe) antargai. vesture


'

be delected to be the Sanskrit word


' '

mukh.
'

is-l'm

<**U. anam;
is

'

that

is

(Hnj tol:

Wd
is

to

{m
.

lS

IShiBKI

wickat; cow
is

<* g0 w;

yesterday

(Rfffctl

The Sankrit won! sthan has been spelled as languages in the same way as the word hast
' '

land

'

in

European
as hand.

r Zadto-

is spelled

The Sanskrit word 'granlhi*


indicates that 'r' and
in English

is

spelled in English as gland. This their roles

^^'rt (wy)
"ana samana-il...
it

serpent

t**> serp; palace

is tsifflH

praasaad; astu*

vocabulari is a-stut. voc*

lw*)

Vacha-bal-ri; succinct

)ong

^
^

lumb;

T have frequently interchanged


'

and Sanskrit. Thus the word


e=***lft)

fertility

'

is

the Sanskrit

prayer

*U P
v

Uhanaa); Yoke

word

'falati-iti"

var

(IK)

waar; you

JW.'

Take almost any


word l#irj 'enter
is
.

word

and

it
'

shall

be
'

found to be
is

of

cm,

calaa-grath; rage

(?0 (W is
is

ra*'

Sanskrit -vintage. Consider the


'

word

interior.
'

This

the Sanskrit

The English word

enter

(i. e.
'

to go inside)
intercourse'

.ama-naam; supple is novo are (*> nava; sweat

<W chapah *
is

again the
i
'

same Sanskrit word. Similarly the term


Sanskrit "anter-kosh
(i.

{Wmi
or

kasthal; alcohol

W**> **
is

*^"V"!^
l*W>
a

^^ ^

is

(*, Y<*

new

8yd;

^
to
ft,

l*i
The word

e,

entering the inner cavity).


satisfying

rice in
is

aj)

ith

entertain

'

i
.

of the

same base because it implies


withdrawing a few

madeira

(Ufa) mad.ra; man


is

*^^*J?*~m. " Wl
nsas l^)i com. b
'.' d

"J^
IM
,%
'

deCOCli on

won

a person

innerself

Sanskrit

words and expressions thus continue


letters or

roam

is

t) rama; nose

to be used in English by adding or

imi) aagam with

by changing the pronunciation. Sanskrit words "mass" (**> and 'maasflT are masquerading in English as month and menses'
' ' '

V,

mind

is

pra-nhlt; coat is Uraj vraj;

m W)
i

its

initial

mana;

* " protest and pr^


is

^h
h

(#*>
(

koat; underling
is

****

^
#pni
^

mdieaiing ihe Interpolation of

^
In

pedestal
is

term

spectacles'

may be

Pwdiyam; cycle
divided into

two parts 'sped*'

l'KPa )

paadstnaJ.

P<^

m
^

chakr; chakl alias

mo
I
_

^_ ^^^
ft

^^ ^

"lorgue, is Sanskrit

1 deViW maWnB (the ' ' ** ihouM r*n Us hnuaTiT'* aiphsbetic* pronunciaUon
' ' '

**>

There

'<'

^)
"iKhl

{fV

duhltar;
|

radio is

medj um
Is

: i (im-7iiy adoreis(W^)asdar:pr
,

mrutyu; tree

is

vou rava dyu;


ner

as
'

'

si.

lU

(*snv naktam; upper

is

(W)

oopor;

^ ^^^ udaJia; ^harsk; ^ lW )W aari;

, I

"*""

the term

'

pleased

is

the Sanskrit word

'

boll Is

the Sanskrit word iv=u phal since


is

ft

is

round

like

the word foot


is

Sanskrit (TO) paad as explained elsewhere-

"nut,
'

^
.

.'

onJy the
'

last bit of the


'

Sanskrit word
'

'

pashya

'

with the i^

leased
P

English words 'plead' and 'pleader' .* oertv* Tbst word pleased is the Sanskrit word (nfe,
' '

f^ y^^

letters

pa

omitted; ign! (as in

ignition *) is the Sanskrit wo


is

plained
r

earlier, in Indian legends a person pracustag

pewn

egni' (Jtfa> meaning 'fire'; case


is

Sanskrit (Wnj kosh;

iP

cucom

(WWT) param-unt; su-oarim is supreme; court is kot (fc) I. e. a place enclosed by a (high] well: problem is the Sanskrit word (ifon?) viz. that which
<<f^) caushoon;

paramount

is

Sn

proaching his superior, fervently pleads 'bbo praseeda' meaning u> say 'Sr be pleased - to gnwt mv

'

tendi

towards an indecision; stadium


(wftaqj;
oil

suit 'in my favour.' Consequently repeated decree the pk* superior to be pleased yielded the words 'plead '. pleader ml de to pleadings, especially because the French pronounce the word
'

p^

(*

is

the Sanskrit

word

tf d

sthandflim
in>

is

'taiiV
tally

in is

Sanskrit;

progeny and progenitor


in

please* as 'play.'

Sanskrit words;

from 'tula'

Sanskrit which

sfgnifia

The English word

'

supreme '

is

'

suparam (fin) I. e.
'

'

highest.

weighing; comparing or matching. Watayan Hihhm) in Sanskrit b the origin of 'window' in English. This may sound far-fetched

The Sanskrit word 'janma' (meaning'blrth')hasledloEngUBh gynaecology and genesis. words such as

but a
(i. e.

u'ttle reflection

will

convince.

Window
'

signified

wind

ow

allow) an opening to admit the 'wind


syllable

exactly as

signified
Is

The Sanskrit word 'stha+bal'


stable

Is

the orign of English worts

by the

'wata' * ayan in the word watayan. That


'

why
lbs

and table.
little
'

their initio] letter


first byllable.

'

is

identical

and so

is

the meaning of

plastic

surgery

'

will reveal

the Sanskrit origin of any


equivalent of the English

English
is

word. For instance, the Sanskrit

'Miscellaneous'
'chain*
if

the Sanskrit word

'Misritam'. The word


is

manner word 'thief could be spelled in the rambling English


'Sthlen'
last letter
(fffc:).
'

rewritten as 'shain'

(because 'c'

pronounced

From
'

that drop the

initial

's' and substitute thi


English word
'

'si" in the English alphabet)

may be
is

realized to be the Sanskrit

n ' by

'

and one arrives at the


Beaten Track

thief'.

word
'

'shrinkhala.' Since
* '

'spoils'

the Sanskrit word

(Pi*!)

Dictionary Following the

spsrdhas

sportsman
'

'

is

also the Sanskrit


'

word
's

(PP-ftm or

wfcw)
')'

"

sperdhaman

alias

spardha manav.

Panini

cue and catch-word


s
Is

The Deccan CoDege Research Institute at Pune in India is

compiling

encompassing the entire range of vowels and consonants That explains the origin of the English

mulU-volume Sanskrit -English dictionaryadd this

My

suggestion to them
viz, of tracing

to

word

new dimension new

to the proposed lexicon,


origin,
fell

'all.'

English

TV word

words to their Sanskrit


vision
,

on deaf

ears.

'

lazy

'

is
'

'

alasi
lasi
'

'

in Sanskrit.

The

initial
'

'

'

dropped
'

Innovation calls for a


obviously the

courage, drive and

initiative

wr

out and the remainder

came

to be spelled as

lazy

instead

academic tnunmg compeers lack both because of their

Qfhaftato'tocy.'
Tnetarra Mice'
In

on European lines

(namely of regarding Sanskrit


'

as one of sever*

Sanskrit

is
'

H*
<T"*>

'luca' (pronounced
'

as Mules')

ndent languages) and the usual


themselves to a beaten track.

regulation

'

mentality of confining

'c
' '

is also
'

luka

TZ

in tfcnakrit.

T 8wt U

pronounced as k In English, the Sanskrit term came u> be spelled as Mice ' in English but pronounced 01 Uke '*' or Muka. ' Brow is M>hN

"

'

'

other Tne Oxford and Webster 's dictionary people on the

,we*J; .anguine

1,

Sanskrit SsnjiwsT.

(**

**-P consider themselves too high and mighty *"knees In their lingual stand. With a

**

**"

them of dictlonary-maWng experience behind

M * M
to

P**

JJ
*

^
' ' '

9*0
9*1

suggseUon for a basic alteration UJcdy to consider any frivolous to be attended to loo Itffl tn the day and too tertoj^

ologlgta

and lexicographers.
perfl.

Iftheypaynobaedibayao^

^eir

own

But It needs to be pointed out here that the founds, their dictionaries is faulty not ao much from a lack of
of the language
itself

Irony, perhaps. .to greatest


t

Is

that dicUcmary. makers

an

knoww*

as from a mistaken notion of the ^n? of linguistics. The history -teachers of dictionary-maker* fail^*? inform the tetter that Sanskrit was the first language that hum**.

f
'

the

Sanakritlc

origin

of the words 'diction*

ud

'dictionary
THctton

them selves which form the very basii of their proftaikxi.


la

the

Sanskrit word

'deekahtn'

iftwi) signifying

spoke universally for millions of years before Sanskrit broke./


into other languages.

Idance'
'

give" "* tbe P" 1^' Cons*lu nUy' theword 'dictionary'

U^h *

of the Sanskrit word tftrofi) truncated form

deekahamary
'

resolve difficult words forming part of tbe detkahan mi aid to


guidance.

Therefore, compilers of dictionaries

H.

W. Fowler (one
is

of their

must take a own fraternity) who warns

lesson fi^n
gilts

in the mil*]

pages of the Concise Oxford Dictionary that


unless he

"A

dictionary-make;.

This, wfll

be further clear when wa coturider tbe word


'

. '

dlsctptt

a monster of omniscience

must

deal with a great mtnj

w-

matters of which be has no first-hand knowledge. That he ha been guilty of errors and omissions in some of these he will lam

r^
Tin

soon after publication." Here

unaltered. Yet c continue. u> Mick to that .inundation remains usage. The only caution necessary it has a Sanskritic rf because in tbe spelling of the word the proper place of
' ' '

the English pronunciation is concerned, tbe letter so far as when written as dlsiple; tba unnecessary because even

detecting

we

have discussed not an ancillary or an ordinary

error

Xfete.

but a fundamental one namely the need for changing the very buii
of etymology and basing
all

Wm

Ungual derivations on Sanskrit. Thw

'ZIS*^ * in its
ts

mispl^ 'C Historic upheavals have the proper position and rewrite it as
wbo

VU

||jui

ta*nt
""

ft-J

word

de9 by

tuiUon

alone will be consistent with history and philology.

guidance given (by the

Guru).

The reader shouldn't imagine that the few words mentioned


in this chapter are the

Thus

we

number of can go on and on giving any

instances.

Sanskrit.

We
is

reiterate that the

only ones which could be connected whole of English (and every other

with

and^we' The Englsh pronouns 'you'


of Sanskrit

'yuyain- and 'weyam'.

a.

is

? S-* m
Cta)

language)
Sanskrit

entirely
first

derived

from Sanskrit because

historically

was the

language which devolved on

all

humanity
the
only

and

'it' la tat.

from

divinity at the start of the


all

cosmos, and remained

The English verb forms


Patterned

'to go.

language of

humanity for millions of years. Other

lantfuitf*

on

Sanskrit

art splintered freaks of Sanskrit. Therefore,

er no language was

khaditum-. (nft^u
doesn
claims
't

developed by any cave-men anywhere.

People are apt to argumen mislead their rivals in and cliches to


apply to English
1

's^t^r So,^^^^.^ repeats

equivalents

W^jS
-jeep u> eat. to

We
words

in English

simply cannot deal with the Sanskrit derivations of a" *1 here because that would mean a recoatru
1

of the entire English dictionary

Oura
.

is

just b

volume
to

dealing

world vllc history; consequently


chapter or ao to point out the

we
right

on& can at best devote


direction
pbflologw

terms men Besides, the Illustrative words and ^Pter. we hav* from time to time shown vftybnpA hw the seemingly English or European lerrrJnoK*? * human and only 9anakactivity
is

M ^^ ^

Sanskrit

9C
Gfimmif
Rules of Sanskrit
Sanskrit
the
'er'

Ml

^Ungud
grammar
and
,

Smithy
n

apply to English. For Intia* 'urn' endings respectively


la

Ought UP
***

tb0 bcBVy trifnc rf ^"fcrtcal forcea Sanskrit

H the mm W)
In

comparative and the superlative. -Hut rule


,

jy^
hS
'

known

of an humanity Ilea cruahed, prostrate nMnfl Mother-Language ** ^^rjng elm 091 the lnroei ** dettfe ^an in lu own homeland

ter

'tiun

bhava.

It

at

much

applies to English four


is

as the comparative degree in English too

'lighter', 'brighter*, lesser", while the superlative has the Sanskrit ' urn ending as in
'

by the 'or' endingasin

maximum.
The

^^ ^^ Amu*
'

J?

^ifa

^unlty
IniUtuUon.

of the entire Imematlona) to revive the study of Sanskrit in every academic


filial

therefore the

duty

un>-

regions of the world have pulled away her Umbe The different

be -inking them to

their

own

separate

modem

language. That

Sanskrit
is

'iatapraya'
'

purify.
'

as in 'mritapnw,corrupted to 'fy' in English as in 'solidify Since this is a vary vast topic requiring independent
'

termination

\^L
prays'

nunon
Jhose

around the world, pulsate with the those limbs, scattered life-breath of Sanskrit. Bereft of their lively Sanskrit link

but dead wood and bone. languages will be nothing

study

the above instances should suffice to guide researchers. e . mixing of neighbouring syllables also applies to numerous languages. For instance, in English word. 'In-legaT and in-limitoble" get pronounced as 'illegal' ind
' ,

such English is one


revitalizing interested in

dismembered limb of
or at least

Sanskrit. All those


filial

realizing its

linkage with
plastic

The tenskrit

rule of

Sandhi

(aft)

i,

Sanskrit,

may

set

up an

international

workshop

to

do some

reintegrating English with Sanskrit. surgery for gradually


fa

fflimiiable.'.he

There

it

may be

noticed that the last letter (n)

cder

to begin that process with English

let

ua

realize that

or

first

word

(in) acquires the

sound of the succeeding

English being
letter,

nothing but mangled and maimed Sanskrit every letter.


it

(1)

This rule is of Vedic Sanskrit . origin. For instance, in the term Jagatnath (i. . U>rd of the

syllable

and word of

that originates in Sanskrit. In detecting

Sanskrit

Cosmos)

is

Jagennath because the

pronounced

i.

Sanskrit link Sanskrit


spelling
syllable

one has to remember

thst sometimes the original

last letter

(t)

Pangea

of the first word (Jagat)

word continues

in English with

garbled or truncated
letter,

to

aince the initial letter of the succeeding word

basic or pronunciation. At times only the

sounl

TV Sanskrit origin of the ^dealing with Fran*.


.Ccorpee.
.

word. All such or letter of Sanskrit survives In the English of s group detection and reconstruction calls for the cooperation
tender oflmaglnaUve and gifted language-experts with a effort for Sanskrit. Such qualities and dogged determined
tha long link
the Insight

term champagne
'

is

explained

in lb.

****
group

m um original
G0d
,

The Urms dumb


'

muW
'

mwnmy
'.

in forging

in

the Suiekrit

mook and maun

with Sanskrit

will

alone give the striving

literary

tenJ^TU

^br h 1B

ettct tran>tion of the San-krit

and inspiration necessary for success.


an hereunder a few Instances to give and such lingual rethinking

We
*

cite

- V^T^T"" ******

are accepted

* W. * -n*) used diai^ of g^^.

in Hindi

^ *
**

the process of

Uak may be conveniently


sector

*w4y

M*"*" ** could be time-measurement. In ^*Jw v Here nomenclature.


different divided into

^
I

Initial

pushjo
l

'

explained

Its

Sanskrit

""fr* more terms

of that

same

the word sector- Take

Sacow

'

'

944
This
is

spelling

the Sanskrit word 'Scon* alias kshan (em, ana pronunciation have got mangled beyond
i (

.
'J**,
'*
'

ev^

*^

^ (or at least of English) to climb out of and stand on the Sanskrit


ivory- towers

their mistaken

pedestal to

Minute cou)d be the Sonskril word

'muhurtam'
seems
'

<M* t IttH thc

l0

rwtl "^

language. basis of their

signifying a small unit (of time). All that


It

in the English
tetter 'W'

word are the sounds of

to lurviv '

letterea

^,

spy

and

{m}
.

pronunciation Is a garbled meaning 'observe.'


' '

of the Sanskrit word

The

has been replaced by

n '.
Yh*

Take the word 'cauUon'. Substitute 'c' with 's' becam,!^ alphabetical pronunciation of' c ' is si The word caution mum
' ' . * '

^
RnB

term
8

'nS pr

Is
'

Sanskrit

(*m)

'angar*
'

I.

e.

burning coal.

pxpresslon

burning with anger

is

a repetition of the
I

then be rewritten as

'

Soution

'.

Let us

now

recollect that Sanik I

'd' sound has rAany-a-time been displaced 'dhanya'


Therefore

becomes
let

'thank'

and

'dent'
'

us further rewrite the word

in English by (n changes to 'tooth') Saution as Saudion.


' ' '

SSl ^
h
**' V " ,*

Mars Is of 'angar'. an86r ause ** COnn01*'


lactic'
>s

known

as Angarsk (Win*
'

in

'

^ nn
e.

the

Senakrit

compound

iB-'Mf-H*)

TL\c
mm\

meaning "that which Induces


is (I.

beneficial results.'

'speech' while a talented the Sanskrit word for

At

this stage

we can easily identify it as the Sanskrit word


unrecognizable in
its

Savndhan
its

iJtaown as vachaspaU
is

master of speech). Obviously word.


'

(HRviR) which like a prodigal wandering


Sanskrit

away from

buk

home becomes
' '

fJ2wi word speech


ftoi Aere
|

a garble of the Sanskrit

VKhaa

English habitat.
' '

Is

nothing

in

any language and any human speech which

will is

when similarly rewritten as surrent (PR) be easily known to be a Sanskrit word. The term 'serpentof the same genus because a serpent moves like an (electric!
is

The word cuvent

non-Sanskrit. non-Volte and


Sanskrit e. g. 'Damn of abuse in English are Even expressions 'crush iV or "suppress It. Sanskrit DAMAN meaning is the

current alias stream. That


as
"

why a stream

HI-

alias river Is

known

sarin* (Hfay)

in Sanskrit.
in
'

The

common

invective

'

You

silly

cow

1 '

madNrgM

&lh

The Sanskrit word


as
"

chilram
*

(fany has been garbled

in English
'

chequered

' .

Similarly the

word (wfowy

JXJZ*
the

used in the Mafcbhsrat ep-c parlance la an expression and wMe banish,ng Draupadi to the Kaurav court

charitryam

has been

Pandavas to the forest-

jumbled up aa

'

character.

The SootUsh prefix 'Mac' as in Macmillan and Macdonald MacdoneD Is Sanskrit imj 'MthiV
I.

Tne English exclamation


or
in

Ahoy I
*

'

Is

Sanskrit
'

Ahol'

e. 'big'
in

or 'great* as

Hullo

derives

from Sanskrit

Huttt

'

because a
'

i '

S i"-"

'

maximum '
utpet

I.

e.

'mahalUmam' <wrsu
'

Sanskrit.
'

U'o'
'

in

English

The term usurpation


' ' '

is

Sanskrit (3<TOiwi)

utpattsan

where
alia*

to pull
is

away

'

i. Champion

the Sanskrit word


be done in this

somebodya ivw*) 'asan' is Sampanna (WB),


Initial,

'chair'

Ka more could

*U
f

solitary

volume resurrecting

hjatorj

i and pointing out a few direction


ough
fcj

except solving . few sample examples aa practice

-finders. But these ahou* induce wbe. .incere and learned lexicographer, of

'

9m

9i?

The bronw
(that
Ii

Idol

the left

la

Sanskrit lumb- jeev-IM,

n in

that of the Vedic deity of LongMiy


ifrt.)

wu

found along with a Sanskrit palm-leaf manuscript


in Siberia.

of

Ayurved (the Vedic medical system)

That Aahtang- Ayurved text and the Icon are on display at


International

the

Academy of Indian Culture, 22 Haul Khas, New


idols at the right are

Delhi.

The two ceramic

among

the hundreds

of representations of the Vedic deities

on sale In bazars In Mongolia.

These idols and


to the

many others found throughout the world testify prevalence of Vedic- culture during pre-Christian times.
be Buddhist
the

Cfcrtaj, luhas pEiriVa, quarterly research Journal. Sept.

1063.

In countries which misbelieve themselves to

THANA

(India)
consecrated In

ndent
legends.

Vedic deities are fitted into

some mBke-belleve BuddbW


The abovtf representation of the Vedic deity.

Can""

^Pta
lrnini

of ancltnt
totally

proof thst China and Japan provides a dear

Buddhiat those two countries, alon* with

we

rest of

Wo*.

pracUaed Vedlc culture.

Japanese and Chinese

know

that deity

'

ShoUn

alia.
' '

hW

94*

L MMdual u
l:

hwn -

those

meant was Coned,; , worti deviated from the origin,, China* "" Japanese
vlsuaaxe that the deity

fip

T^
r

-,-

fifth

of

a^T?

only because

lttual lcon'

urm. (Shown

U n

dafcy

Ganesh.

tht Saaafcrii

* * slgnlfT )* *"' tln S^ 1*" wd Kangn*,, j| TJevau' <fcm since Chinese urm 'Deo' lh) Tec**alias

Kin|iwn>

**

* LonJ

Gan,f,h

*W

IU> u*.,

* ,dwUfv

arror Is to Imagine Buddhism to be some ,*, of , ffnudlam oUaa Vedlc culture. That 1, in wortawI(U was nothing more than a simple V*lc Tbf Buddha

^^

dew

^^ ^^^
Hld u
Ganh

who had renounced


earlier to the

444
'^rtvslry,

TV U*

n0

palatial princely life. That U why bia tdou too Hindu pantheon. There was never any conflict, bsllu Uon ind no "PPUntaUon.
'

U"

bo-Ian'

- Vsdlc philosophy.

Sanskrit sbbreriation and corruption of the


.

Consequetiy the t*rrn 'Sootn' h tarm I fin ffra) , of (Unj,

Ortf

7J10

tamplw

& Jop*"
exist

BtUi

hlVB

m "" ** Icons of Lord Ganeah


of

^
JJU

lwU1

mole-female standing embrace form, buch Images

SMv

Incidrnwlly this analysis should be useful to scholars to trace CbtntM

'hough not

known to
In India

anywhere

In India a' present,


all

must be round

and Japanese words to their Sanskrit source.

wont

cop' and the equivalent Japanese

'

For Instance, the Enitjik koppu both derive from u*


'

~*Lhere

because they couldn't have

migrated to China and

without leaving

some prototypes back


Is

in India.

Sanskrit

word 'kuppJ '**?

signifying a botUe. receptacle or a can.


,

-ft*

photo lmee shown In the


embrace.

so skilfully

mode

that once

It

appears

Japawsf scholar Hajlme Nokamura'a observation

standing back to bock while at another , pair


representing at

Uma

it

may

sppaar

curreni genera) academic view that 'Brahmlnlcal divinities' migrated tq i O-.ru snd) Japan In the Buddhist garb and as a port of Buddhist
suffers from several errors. Firstly, since

u bt

In a

frontal

pantheon

One

of the pair

modem scholars assign the Budflhi


"a

model for the

has an hoaddreaa which haa apparently been the Arab head -gear which indicates that along with Shiva Ganesh
in
a

only to the 6ih century B. C,


that prior to Buddhism China

Nakumura

observation

amounts

to asytni

to bo worshipped llK uaed


ecnsecrsud and worshipped

pre-lalamic-AraWa. Ganesh used to be


spedal tlttr In the royal palace In Japan
tradition

and Japan had no worthwhile

on

life, dviliiatlon,

euhure or history, which la wrong.


<o

Humanity has a history reaching

back

In

July/August on the Ganesh Chalurthl doy as per Vedk

mibons of years.

since

time Immemorial.

Even now Ganesh

(alias

Shown)

Is

Invoked and
seeking

The <aher error

tradition, worshipped by the Japanese in the Vedlc


is

when

nod

the use or the term

'

BrahmlnlcaJ divinities .' Brandim

culture as Brahmlnlcal

hide,

endeavours. Merchants of Kaniai fortune or success in professional

U
''

totally

wrong. There

is

no Brahmlnlcal
of Vedlc culture

^f'"
***

Br*hminil,m

worship

Shown

In Hoahanji

temple on Mount Ikomel

in Nara.

The

biottsi
Is

">

'* component

three other equally important

permanent priest Ganesh temple in Jopon is In Osoka city where o


on duty to conduct rituol In China

Vaishys. and Siu-irss

dassea nomcly Kshalriyas.

worship of the deity.


Itmplt In the rock-cut

" mMm* ' y ancient Vtfc^JT T ""* h " n ' ri vr,rMpP* "Quo. end C^atrV' f0m Ume 'nnwmortal * and are not post &*
CU)l" r flnd

bt

J^3

,rrJ'

* ri0U '

an Image of Ganeah may be seen


and another
In a

owis-uon,

^ T
"J*",n ,*,1
'

chrono,<i] blunder namely

It

oufM

it

TWhuang

Kung-hslen similar rockcut temple In


the Sun. deities too such sa

icons of

Around the

Ganesh are depleted other Vedic

'hfMoon, Cupid and the nine planetary divinities. fcKh rock-cut caves
all

locations mentioned over the world from the

"* "> *BudaC rh'-^u "^ "* * u " HuWhl >ni __ (ii _
'

>we.
,hUc deiUrt WPnl l *"*"

China, to the Margate grotto In the British Wea ** converted to oSurrbi *"", which were have since been
in

num^u

*as different

hum* .* Wft 10 ** con***


Buddnuuuf

JTL
,,

fmm

Vedlc il

once temple* but

"al

M1I,,,W,,)
,n

*W,W ml V,BHc '^"^ """^ coid r ulh .r lhan la carried


In the

mosques uaed to rwerberaU to Vedic chanta

in the

hoary

p**

<*" and Japan

name

of

?* "

^td at from the


It

purely mundane,

view atheistic point of

**<****
Ano
>

combin.tkn. grauaqu.. helerogvnous. Incongruous

<" mlulon, of ye r.

reverence ihnjojhout ha. evoked the high-t

the

m
toW. None know lu
origin,

how

it

began, where

y
and

manifestation of the divine mystery that ant more muit take cognisance of such therefore hiiiory
the southeastern coast of

^^ ^ shapT^
1

961
h

spirtum

fo^* *

China in Fujiyan province On temple. It has a nay be Ken the ruins of a Hindu Shlviin, me'-ne taO end numeroui Tamil Inscriptions. As late as ljo
Qrineat

q, **

An***
in^**
w,
of i

woman

used to invoke the blessings of the deity f0r

The carvings there depict on elephant reverentially placing


a

ShMIng. s cow secreting

its

mOk on

the Shivling in a kind

*w

THE VEDIC PAST OF

AFRICA

milky ahowerbath for the deity, the


entrant of the tyrannical ruler

mcynt* on an airborne garud alias eagle, Krishna playing the flute in Vrindi-ru s prankiah ehlkl Kriihna carrying away the apporel of bathing wqdm' the legendary subjugation of the multi-hooded cobra, Kaliya. Lord
bearing the force of the

Noroshimho IncornoUon teannto Hlranyakasyap. a flying Vlahnu

In

our

which for the


.

own times Africa is believed most part was opened for


for this,
it

to have been
colonization

a continent
the Arab*

by

Shhj

Banuman on

hit flight

Canga stream pouring down from the high bnve-t to Lanka and numerous such Vedlc legends.
deity,

ur0 peans. But

is

believed, that Africa

a dark,

unexplored landmnss,
vast stretches of

covered with wild, primordial forests and

sandy deserts.

The Grttco-Roman
facte

Janus

alios

Gonesh

is said

to have hid

two

when

Installed at

entrances to

homes and towns. One

face loduri
It

Inward while the other looked outward to ensure bilateral felldty.

owH

That is to soy Africa did lie The above notion is partly true. very long period of lime- But before neglected and abandoned for a
that
it

be that

Uw Greeco-Roman

idol

of

Ganeah was of the Chinese/

did

have the Vedlc

civilization like every other part of the

Japictw

variety illustrated earner.

earth.

&*h

**"

Wte ancient

graphic proofa far from being misinterpreted as connoting toast Hindu influence here and there must be regarded sa links of i

the

traced back at Vedlc connection with Africa can be Ramoyanic times i. e a million years ago.
Africa

least to

Vedlc culture

land because it
the Sanskrit

the conchshel) was then known as Shankh Dweep I. c. s The English word conch is shaped like that.

word 'snankh'
'

itself.

This

will

be realiad

if

'c

Is

'si'. In that illowed to retain its alphabetical pronunciation

conch could be written as


In the world

sonch 'i.e. shankh.

R-van. relations of

which war of the Treta Yoga, In J^/J^*!"J iney and Somali fled_ the letter, named Mall
i.

**re Kshetraps

e.

governors

of

parts

^equently, the two African


thMi

slates. Mali

of Shankh and Somali sun

DW

names.

Rhodesia

Th term Rhodesio

is

European *rtfn fancied to b. of

'

,h*

true. I. not

1*

Eoropetn

name Rhodes
ia

is

fatf

of .

b^-T^on'-

the As explained elsewhere

TV

name
is

Sir Cecil
itself

Rhodes (after

whom

ending 8 Rhodesia is
i

^ ^
^

ES

krfned

together

In

the like manner.

Il

appw,

*,

m,

that Pe*juan

Burmans
Is

obtained from India ibe writing,

963

Z,

named)

Sanskrit

"Sri Sosbeel

Rhldayesh' meaning n,

the Heart. The Onecharactered Lord of


,,

name

Susheel

<tl]

very

common

in India. the Sanskrit

reason to auppose that the Ethloplc alphabet Ethiopia by those Indian gymnoaophiiu who in JL brought to Apollonius, resided on a certain mountain not fir .V, t&ne of from knows but these Ethlopiana, Persians, Tibetlana Who

pZukrit. There

and have carried the Sanskrit language wilb them from peguans might their present countries... Father Pons once asserted
,w NOeIndia to

ftnganyke
leader

;,

term

'

Tung Nayak*

that

i. e.

'the

PW

SBOskrit
not only

language existed before the flood... Sanskrit words occur but also in Arrian and Slrabo. This, therefore. in Ptolemy,

the Sanskrit Zanzibar is an African corruption of

name Kancnijwr.

Dar-Es-Salmm
Tanganyka and Zanzibar have recently merged to form Their port-city Dar-es-Salaam is the Sanskrit term
pwar-eeshalayam
i.

refutation of the conjecture of Mr. George Forster. sn evident language was not known to the Greeks and had the Sanskrit tfut from the birth of Christ. See Forster 'a Notes pasted in India only "> 333-334.
is

Tanzania.
(STftnwty

w the Indian
Christian,

play

SHAKUNTALA, pp

e.

Gateway of the Temple of God.


local dialects including
Swahiti

Ethiopia's recent monarch, Haile Selassie though a convert bore the title- Lion of Judah ' because according to the
'

The African Swnhfli language and other


Arabic, are
all

corruptions of Sanskrit. For instance, the


for lion is the Sanskrit also

tradition every administrator had to have indent Vedic Kshatriya appellation Lion ' attached to his name to emphasize his duty
'

the

word 'simba'

term Simha.
of that
into in

to be

brave

in

protecting the people under his charge.


is

Ethiopia alias Abyssinia


great continent

is

one of the countries

The

name Abyssinia
i.

the corruption of two Sanskrit words


signifying a settlement

which had for a long time been plunged

Aip-Sndhu
of people

e.

waters of the Sindhu river

era of darkness, neglect, overgrown forests or


10 cataclysmic
still

upheavals. Yet even in

its

sandy oVserts due fragmented suie we may

who had come from the Indus


was
also

region.
in ancient

Africa

known
as

as

Kusha Dweep
that
its

Vedic lore

detect distinct traces of its Vedic past.

because of
ay
tall

two reasons.

One was

vast stretches were covered

About the lingual kinship between India and Ethiopia John


Reinhokt Forater observes in a footnote, "'Many of the oriental variation language! are distinguished by this peculiarity, that a small in a character causes a ne* syllabic variation with a differ*" Ethloplc pronunciation. This Is the cose, for example, with the alphabet, which has 2fi varied is characters and each of
1

grass

known

'Kusha'

after the in Sanskrit- Secondly,

Rams-Raven war the whole continent was administered by Rama s

Mn

Kusha.
African school text as Cushltas

* vowel marks. There for are also 20 different marks si* dipthonga so that ihe whole alphabet consists of 202 marks

mem

books also describe Africana wrong* *Vlng to the ancient administration of Cusha. Hla fatheris because Rama -as "wniionrt as Ham instead of Rama. That is

***

*
01

In

western regions as

"' dropped;

what was

left

Rham. In course was Ham.


'

InliW of time the

characters. All tnt component parts in the alphabet of the


in

Burn**
'

P*i and Av.

tn wnlamod,

but with

Ethloplc alpha** of

Gbm and

some

variation.

value Ambhar; have the same

^ *

*no*n.

M4-M8. A Voyage to the East

Indie.,

by ft.

** *"

J. Dtvi., Chancery Lant. London

U.

D. OCC-

66
96* te ih#

vr
that

1977 A. D.

^
And
In

^H* *** p^ mym


. lllon

sometime

earlier

Swam' Krishnanand narrate ^ when he called on the Ahy^**

Vd*

Te*is

Engraved

In

ihe Pyramids

. to Christian ruler would hardly hav,^ babevinitbat the ptewtntly surprised to hear the montr^', b.pd tf R. be was Africans are Cushitv' Tblalsnothingnewtous..

<

Jhe

Utter

,**

--

|s

a possibility that Vedic texts were engraved on

the

^
^
PI

'ids as

appea" from the following observation of PrmmCurnont books of the Greeco -Roman period are a faithful sicred
at the

Texts that were engraved upon the waQs of 'Eduction of the

We

\ramida

to look for African school text-book,, That impelled Krishnanand

JJrE passed.
J*
*

the African s designated as Cushit^ those books too he found

back to
the

dawn of history, notwithstanding the centuries Even under the Caesars the ancient ceremonies the first ages of Egypt, were scrupulously performed Word 8nd the
le>Sl

ms

BmBUest

^tore

lheh"

The Cobra Symbol


in Statues of Pharoah rulers displayed

"a

importance.

museums

around

the

figure of a cobra with a rabid world have on their foreheads the horizonatal 'eight'. This is of hood and the body coiled like an treat Vedic significance. In Vedic lore the monarch deputizes for

of Vedic Priests

Rome and

Egypt

Lord Vishnu. Lord Vishnu reclines under a cobra. Therefore,

the

monarch bore on

his forehead the


in

cobra as a symbol

associated

with Lord Vishnu. Even

India at the

Vithoba temple in Pendharpur cobra figure above


be-

Uw

idol

of Vishnu 'i wife bears a similar

processions. They were distingushed from other p|aies in linen tunic and by their habits. The by a tonsure, by e as Ganesh and Durga Idols in India were liable to destruction Jods after being worshipped for a few consigned to lakes or rivers
]e
.

"

hierarchy of ancient Greece, Rome and Egypt, was The priestly priest. They dressed the icons and carried sacred ded by a high

people

B re

head. Another significance is that

anyone on

whom a cobra opens-up


biting

days.

Ha hood,

like

a canopy, even for a few moments, without

ceremony always diwn the

the person,

augurs well for the person's future. Such a person Yet another significance
' .

immemorial antiquity. Theesseniial The Egyptian rituals had an was the opening (apertio) of the sanctuary. M uncovered to open for the statue of the divinity was

rises to a high position.

is

that yogic treausa


.

describe a divine

'

serpent power

known

as KundalinJ
spiralling

lying latent
waiil

but potent. coQed within the


to the cerebrum. This

human body
if

from the
is

power

successfully aroused

capable of

elevating a person to great spiritual heights

sacred fire and offered community's homege.The priest lit the Noel sacred Nile (i. e. Neel Gangs alias libations. Water from the uvre chanted to Saraswati) was used for the ceremony. Hymns and head of the Idols was the accompaniment of flutes. The body raiment covered with sumptuous
dressed everyday.

and immense temporal

achievement*. &ich waa the symbolic significance of the cobra on


the Pharoeh's forehead.

The idol was md ornamented with jewels and gems. An


Um
Jewels

inscription mention.

worn by an

lsis

(Spain). The sanctuary of ancient Cadiz


'

VedkRiuwIi
importance m M0r* priest *\!u7 L UU00r Wflry ^""ony the officiatingannointlnf. WmeUme
"E*yptian
ritual attributed

*m
considerable
to purity
had

(ods.

nap o the ceremoniously closed in the afternoon for HerodoUis describe. services were held. Twice-a-day elaborate WenUcal All this la Egyptians as the most religious of all people.
.

L^,?^
fal

*lth

toaotuinfromotrtainfoor' f00d
1
<'

u a Vedic This ^"l.


is

temple ritual in India.

fumigation or

* '* incontinence for a ceri-n


(3 > P.

trait

ibid.

<*> P-

W. Tb. Onw,ul

fcggion. tn

Romrn P

wlim

by frani

0"*'

987

..ft.

.torch

^tar-momhs * -wd w

Mf

navigation reopened 6lh when .r^ marched lo the *. gorgeous procession, protectress of sailors. his, the U

-^rsa

I.

e.

God.

Ms

is

alao

a Sanskrit wort

of the

MM

*
I*"*"

wM

[ptroduceo

The belief that each Egyptian dynasty Pronounced as lsus. is quite plausible under Vedic culture since iin Ld a new god
its

own
tion

special ancestral patron

deity.

The other
(In Egypt)

*> group of masked gowns


lm,
the

persons opened the


strewing

proce*^
ihe s loIUltl
btli*

composite religion founded by the Logidea


became
teries
-

women

In

white

flam,,

of the old creed of the PhBroahs and the

the dudophori u1 lh of the goddess and waving be girment hymnodes. whose songs mtagfc these came the k torches. After sound of the crossflutes and the ring*,, with the sharp #

i^

,s aiso is also

researcu wunura-. ougni io oe a research blunder. It ought to be realized

GrrtH
'hBl

mm

timbrels; the brass


the priests, with
while, bearing the

then the throngs of the initiates and fin^ shaven heads and clad in linen robes of daofog

and Egypt both followed Vedic culture. Hence dent Greece were common. A hymn to IsIb has been ond worships "a Ities f *" monument In Andras Island. That name Is the a marble found " .j d of lhe Cods). The city Alexandria also bean
Aiakshyen.lra. ^Sanskrit name
The Pyramids

images of animal-faced gods and strange symloli.

as for instance, a golden

urn containing the sacred water

of

ih,

m.icraplum of Ancient Egypt

U hw been
European Christian scholars have blundered in classifying
worship of Uis and Seropis as
tor

explained elsewhere in this volume that the pyramids

desert cities in the

named

after

Lord Rama and

display Jlia

-hearted to8*Hl lion

image.

a separate

religion.

The

belief ihal

tbar worship spread to the

Greeco-Roman world from the Serapiun

founded in Alexandria is only half the truth. Vedic culture which

was spread throughout the ancient world has o wide assortment


of gods and goddesses lo suit local

or individual

moods and

preference
still ibey

Evm

borne out by the fact that out or the numerous nis Is further are at as 'royal/ The three Urgent WTumids 80 are designated pynumd them the higgeat and mnl ancient Gi near Cairo. Among covers an Khufru. It is 230 metre* long and (i it Chepos alias Khafre ind Msnoure. known ant of 13 acres. The other two are
I

so they could

oil

*xibi together

or in isolation and

Tne Utter is the Sanskrit

term 'manohar'. meaning

'attractive.

11 represented, Godhead. The

individually

or collectively,

the supreme
Sanskrit Sarpas

Veiix
I,

word
cobra.

serpis alias Serapls is

erpent

alias

The cobra

deity is

supposed

to inhabit ni

rule the nether world.

Consequently under Vedic practice the coin

constitutes either a manifestation of divinity in its

S^S *
1

SenP'"m (flS fl of^Serpent4eiLy) U*,3krlt. To imagine that Egyptians influenced

' divfnily *

Even the

^
r

own

^^

right or

pyrnnfds. The others Mummies are buried in only a few of the the '.ong-held theory in empty. This detail should suffice lo disprove From this histonara Ihtt the pyramids were designed as mausoleums. structures are nev of the world must take the cue that gigantic
built

for Lhe

mausoleums of dead. Therefore the so-called


fakirs

Musum

"* RoB w

monerchs and
ownership

ere

all

captured

pre-isiamic buildings of

or vice versa

i.

warn-

They

all

followed

T:zztr *?** * *" *** *


other Egyptian
(4) p.

term Osiris

Is

^
the

Vl*

misused as Muslim cemeteries.

San*m

*z

Apart

from

the

mausoleum theory

various

**"*** ***

m M4

WtaW that the pyramids were 0f utronomlcal observatories or

J* v *esj
lt

water-reserv* designed as

as mathematical repositofof the future destiny of mankind or as

**V ^

and other ancient Sonskrit texts-

96S

Nik M

*^ fany tadUn
TV
rfver Nile

-nd yet

In

the history they have learned they hav, <V6diC) WOrid *mPire '

bean

a Sanskrit

name. To
Iu>
'

realize this

"*

nottobf
-

pronounced
"

*Nyle.'

full

name
'

used u,

r*eei-cniswiiu Nee) -SanunwU

signifies

tradition

' Tlw term Neet * In f -- alias Neel -Ganga. *n Krx associated with divinly the colour blue, always v river began to be referred to course of lime, the

...

Tb*^5*
.this *!

wer to sucb e
orld vll

from

bof fUng problems is precisely what w present lhal the Sanskrit. Vedlc dvfliaUon existed aQ the beginning of time. Consequently, what

**

In

briefly

** 'holars modf *
lbs

consider to be merely Hindu scriptural such


i

merely as "Nile'

I.

e. Noel.

That

made people

treat

it

as proptf

V"*

Upan
lfl

s hflds.

BamByan. Mahabharet.

Purtras and

'

noun and not as an


alios

So people forgot that the word Nil, because their connections Neel stood for the colour blue, wife
adjective-

WUfV|dlC
C

u_

humanity. Therefore they belong to the whole of


world theology and also history, world geography, covering every branch of the fine arts, sciences

mP
1

orld
'

Sanskrit were severed. Yet a special attribute


'

memory

persisted that the river

knowledge

h&

fl**
nl

blue

attached to

its

name. Therefore,

in

modmi
That
blue'

W*"

Th^
g0}ircl;

is

why

the Purens comprised information

of lhe Nile too. This should awaken the world

times, people started referring to the river as


is

'Blue Nile.'
'

i lingual absurdity because


as the Sanskrit

it is
'

a duplication of the epithet


alias
'

"T^nJiMHon
or

inasmuch

word

Nile

Neel

'

also

means blue.

1 riptures ** treasures IhBl tne ancient S6*" knowledge meant for all human beings. **pnsive world compnan mtautt y s i udied and Uught avidly

th(?refore

Modem
clues found

Egyptologists

who had been

frantically looking for the


it

^humanity

Universi* through a World Vedic Heritage

or

source of the Nile, ultimately discovered

only with the helpoi

regional bi-anches. Academy with

an ancient Sanskrit scriplUr*.


Itid

Pending
me
a

this Colwid

John opokc. who


in India, hts

served with the British Enat India Company

observed "Colonel Rl-jby gave

moot

interesting
ftf

u Gen. Charles Vallancey observe "Egypt itself of that i^ui Indian nation having received a colony
Pococke points out that
oftb. Solar race.
'

was

in

S6m

people-

paper with a
the

map

alti-ched to it about the Nile Li. Wilford

and Mountain

Menes (was) the

first

Epyptian king

Moon-

It

was written by
It i>

from the Purani

of the

- This

fully

andml

Hindus.

remarkable that the Hindus had christian*!


This,
I

U*

Vaivasvat

source of river Nib-

think,

shows clearly that the

ancient

SiiO was the fir*


Eihlcpian^

Menu (i. e. Manu human monarch.

name* accords with Vedic tradition alias the the son of Vivaswan

HinJw must have had some


o' Africa..
o*
.

All

kind of connection with different parts pnviQui information concerning the hydro-pap* )
1
.

arc Hindus
'

icww regions original cd with the ancient Hindus. rgypUut angi-oplytni


I

and ell tho&

Pococke mention*

Brahmin larcus^ Philostratus introduces the


.

who

rtissemiimttd the knowledge wtf

wwdw
Modem
r*

U-

swuee

***V hviihrticai humbugs


Kstoriani

o/ the Nile (the holy liver). *


'

m* w

originally the Ethiopians were by siajifh . wmpelled to leave India for the impurity contracted

Wing
I

an

in

to his auditor, that

oatiln

monarch, to
to

whom

allegiance. An Egyp they owed

b mrtt
,r,fl

from

all

aiwav, baffled by such reports comintf <*tr n* world. They notice an Indian influence

remark that he had heard from

"ns wen, the wisest of

men and

his father Ethiopians, a coio that the

tw

,B1

*. *

ft, I1SlflWfry o,

^ aMm ^
of

Np( by

09*-

and Campbell, 10 Back ) p 1'8, lrvdtn In rs k.. e Ov^l "8. India In Greece, by E. Pococke.

{*" by crnimerry

CoD^,. DC Rebus Hlbernlcus. by U. G. *. V** DubUn.


U.

w
of the Indian.

P~rved

the

wisdom and wage, of

u* r

acknowledged

U*

ancient ongin.

made

.
tb*

liter period

same by Jubui Afncsnus. from whom

We

find the

^
f|

Apr3

7*

been preserved

ihn

by Eusebius and Syncallus; thus Eusebiu, from the nver Indus sctUed Ethiopians minting Egypt."*
is

initio* Middle East including parts of Egypt as far hack f tbe roc*1 piled ^cording to the eminent archaeologist historian Dr.
t,

OQ2 * J"f ^ P$r

said "The to this day. q( Afifl


'

impact of Indian cMHration

is still

cvktam

The Ancient Vedk; Indian dymsllw

1"0

'

'

In

q,

WerP*"

vinnliy of

an important country in the African continent. Si*, Is 'si' the real pronunciation of ahou ihe original pronunciation realised that the original Vedlc It will then be

Morocco

Mitumi had typical Sanskrit names and In the 8 Maton*""" ihe great Indian hymn Rig-Veda were Uo|W incantations from archaeolog-si*. In tun the *"" sin* that region by U. S.
" i

Ke

'

Hindus

built

powerful empires

in

the north of

**
|

I ""

rthed in

be Morono.

man

8dB>
1

Indian

at the zenith of rhoki empire, u

^ .^^ ^

^^ ^

its

glory under

Rajendn

Nicobars. the Maldives

of that country

must be Moreshwar signifying the elephant

htadri

h **

and substantial parts of Indonesia and dive islands

god Ganesh.
Malaysia-"

The capiwl of that country is Marrakesh named after Lonl Shiva (father of Lord Ganesh) alias the god of death... therefor,
the ancicntmost church or

mosque of

thai

city will

be found,

on

dose archaeological study of the site to be that temple


Shiva In

of lonl

the Uiristan region of Western .lied deity Ganesh. In

.r*

at least

11

countries

which

still

worship the

whose name Marrakesh city was founded.


the victim

Sbice Africa hns been


invasions,

of Christian

and

Muifiai

most of its Vedic landmarks have been plundered, occupM

and obliterated by iconoclast Christian and

Muslim vandals.
in 12R0 B.

treaty signed between Hittities

and Mittanis

taah

invokes Vedic deities Mitra of the Near East by

and Varun (P. 3fS,

\ncient History

H. R. Hall)

"J" *"* IMMrt HlsW-y ta adduce, SUPPC^ Ma*ine (or My) Vo,. IV > tt.
an (1968) pe** 166-168 describes
Idol

worship Ihrt

was

vogue there^

ii

The Island of Madagascar (near the coast of South Africa) leplete wiih topographical names of Rnmayanic and other Vedic

^^
Vo
,

^^

""a"

modem Afghanistan.
A Natural

Origins

ShMIng

in

Mumha<a

(Africa)

Sahara

it

SaO U

is

malpronunriaUon of the Sanskrit term Sagar (meanW lurmJstd that the sandy waste of the Sahara df*

Nytle village in

"presents a dried up
ancient Vedic emperor.

j*.^

Sagar was also the

name

of

A natural Shivling-shap* ro<* exists Hindus.to Mombasa (South Alnca).


congregational fair is held there

*"^JZ
i

*<

nayon Shwaratn

lU*r (by Upinrfer Foiedar, 1925-3) E. Eastchester Ro d ; Brona. N. V USA) rf publi in NflUcna] Hefa)d (l)elhi)

>

having an altar with idols in their acred

customs sue" , H ndu ro The African Masai tribe observes several mv6ilx$ the homes, an

* "
Wnch

and worthy of worship. * Masai trfbals horn sling an animal


tht ears of children for ear-rings.

""
at their

^ *o

^^

95S
9f0

K
-.-

r^nva

is the

name **

<

Mm

Kflnya

Kumtr*

"i Indj,)

rivogrt repetUdly forwn and European Christians, and the native, both bv the Arab, repiedng the history of sold as slaves,

bn plundered d Afrio- h^inB


herded and

w
HISTORICAL MISCONCEPTIONS
descriptive and discourse subject, one history Is 8
there could think that
or
Is

bnn

^"J
ancfcni

adifflcuhtaak.
Indians aBai Hindus

who

operated global sea

routes In

times

we naturally reat

ship-buflders

and navigators.

After the Great Flood


the world.

Vaivaswat Manu's nine sons


laid

admini*^
down
for |Q
(3)

The ten principles of conduct they

be nothing

in

it

which could be abstruse

Individuals to adhere to

were (1) Truth (2) Non-Violence

complicated-

adherence to laws of nature as per one's an and waul status (4) Non-hankering (6) Physical hygiene (8)
Brahmacharya
I.

e.

ArthucoloRl^l

Eras

Resoluteness

(7) Peace (8) Righteousness

(9) Abstaining from

current history as But actually

an academic subject has numerous

theft (10) Self-control- Incidentally

the 10 Christian cornmandmenuj

if

echoes of these Vedic

commandments.

nursed and unquestionably followed conceptions being assiduously For instance, take the case of archaeology,

t,

hallowed disciplines.

These social standards of Vedic behaviou r were so compreheniht


as to rule out the necessity, for

out. has a well laid


study, as

any separat* temporal

laws.

(or

cut and dry succession of ages charted out divinity itself into though confidently whispered fav
s ear.

the first

archaeologist mid-Victorian European

As per that

In the History of East Africa written


It is

by March and Kingsworth


Ions

stated that Indians

had trade -connections with Africans

before the

Jews and Arabs.


In

al' modern followed unquestioning^ in trail, being blindly .fur for mEHons of yean Ice age. Tnat is to say It* was the covered with ice and therefore
its

acodemta.

creation

our mother earth was


it.

all

That
for thair

b why

the 16th century

European navigators

groping
Indian

bed no life

on

way from Africa to India had to be guided by "flon stationed in ATrica.

Now. what
ihnt

is

contradict the

assumption? In fact doesn't the proof for that broke offfWm theory ? If our globe
'

Big Bang

^^y

IJir-e-fclttm

^K

the

big

Sanskrit

term
-

'Dwar-ishalaytm-

to ih. (great)

Temple

It

pointa to iht e*sten

^
of

burning fire-ball and


and

still

has molten lava

ins.de its

1n,

why

did its

entire surface

fe? What

was the^dura. on

ttt world

thaw ? And what mode the surface logical over developed the habit of such ihc* "Weed of blindly accepting the bland assertions of
the freeze?

Had

*^"
> up

aw-V

**
*

S *

W in archaeological

accepted could have discovered that the currently Pleistocene. Ice.

iew

studies such as
is
all

W
**

MoimlKhic

and Neolithic

That sheer fantasy-

last

^
and
Iron

further

bronze, copper sub-divided into


historical

a*.

To*

modem

penod.
is

^
*

W
m

d0
tw

hi,
.

paW^

scrvice.

TV

above assumption

Tv^ous communis

not plausible because in our own Urn , living in ice-bound regions in Sft^

W
in

^ W
W

thB role

in the spirit of duly H , Therefore the natural course for a person b in which he or she has been placed by divinity
In the 18th century

Cod given function

Thus for instance by circumstances.


peshwo was
^

^ Ipo*

ine

originally only a civilian counsellor to the

but

aler gi ncc the

Mentha

ruler

became i mere

Lr

ZXntawherever

,e Mme Ume *- who can soar and Americans


But
Bl

C mmUniU

into space.

^'^hLd W rt

Peshwas (who were Brahmins by birth) had the civiUan commanders, generals and warriors. That
fjpid

successive ages and assumption that in three Similarly the bronze in one period, dug they only found

i^
Uter

ation
f

^^""siances. That
f k8

had overcome them unknowingly through change is to say they had not sought the change
or profit motive.
It

men

later only copper and


In

lUO only iron

is

very absurd.

L " "^'
1

temptation "^through any

nther involved
But
in

privations of uncertainties and


social divergence ee a total

field-life.

modem

wew

current of the above the

framework of the assumd


igt

from the hoary, divine Vedic

followed auccess-on of the ice-age


of single metal

by the stone-age and the

T Z conduct
,tn

needs to be totally discarded.

^derations
Dhurma
In
ii

described above. The rule today is to -grab as reckless pleasure and gain sans to lead a life of honesty, loyalty or service. of duty, consistency,

noi Religion

current parlance the Vedic

word 'Dharma'

Is inadvertantly

I,

the Inherited Profession

Rule?

'religion'. Bullet and invariably translated as and equated with be dearly understood that there is not only a world of difference
It

The above elucidation

may

lead

some

to

exclude

that Vedic

rollowone'sinh^^ wUureenioinsone W
by

between the two but in

some

respects religion

is

the very anii -thesis


Christianity

of Dharma. Vedic culture is Islam are religions

human dharma while

md

one's aptitude and ability.

Those 'reVgioni' are actually


imperial careering with a

political

parties organized

for

.*
.

THe Vedic rule i, to No contradiction is involved. nnsunc, natural course Thusfo which devolve, on one in the

MBIthe
.

book of orders (Koran or Bible) to

folio*

barber', son should


.

work

the as a barber and

caroler
1

*n

and the badge of a sole prophet


Contrarily
the

(Mohamed or Jesus) to

display.

Dharma

is la

nature or second nature. For instance.


to

^Jli
m.y be
able

equipment. urpenter. Because one has the But if one fee,, hereditary expense.

W" ^*'
where

dharma of water

dampen while the dhaima of

fire

or disinclined

to heat or burn

to give

profess ta one may take to any other o one's best in the way
is

IW*
<"'"
is

wvice. So the criterion in Vedic society

whether

On ihoat line Vedic nharma aima at training and


all

dlsdp

beings to render selfless In the service to fellow-beings rote aIIou*d to be each one by divinity. Ideal instance could An thai erf a mother who engrouw herself in serving the entire household

human

*y the profit-molive
"bile the latter is

or

selfless service

motive ? The former

divine.

How Did Duddhlim Spread ? * Christianity and Islam sweeping over vast
ri|lons

ant remuneration .nd

n.

rest. likewise

barber. -

carped
culUi*

an linear. . doctor.

.tudent

ew.

I,

auppoacd under Vedic

fcoldi

sway over considerable

territory

from Burma

9B7

unlfx* Christianity

HtZS ^wtchlnd^^ ^^ MNWtaf * *"


region.

tLo*
S

nor even

B ddhlsm neaher u*e - ow preachers * " wrt va* mulUi^

How

then did

Buddhism suffuse

Question, that

we

are

tave

Bnd nWhCr
la

bWn

^
lh

^
^

n*

*10
la**

has led scholars to conclude that Cnrurtmity jading which planted Buddhism- That Is why Hollywood films wen iUP

and

M
from *

^&
t

Baghdad

'

depicted a thief plucking

diamond

puddha statue

In a

temple

in

Baghdad,

Mumpud

before.

t presume. That

i because history

"** **
hft,

SnW
rnaiwr
f

mere misunderstood to be

muggmg

of the genealog.es of

believes (very scientifically) every pertlc^c Vedic culture * very Person t *** 8uffuBed with divine energy,

and

of battles. and the chronology

lh8

world

us

fl

deity to

pa
Is

Uddn a 100 got deified and added Qf muRi . mmion Vedic deities.
therefore.

as yet another

not beta* analytically taught or writus,. Currently histories are crucial question about this could be our the classic example of
unlike Christianity

Bu ddha
snd

deified personality of Vedic culture


,,eligi0n '

,prwd of Buddhism

and Islam

How did Buddhism

f 5eP8r8t t*> founder

preachers ? spread sans tyranny and sans

Buddha and of Vedic culture the memory of the the West caused by Christian and Islamic the rivers of blood hed off in
tyranny-

Our answer to

that

will

incidentally
is

clear
is

another

groii

misunderstanding. The answer


at all.

that

Buddhism

not o

religion
,

,.

Fj. s,

Buddha continued from Burma to Japan the


being quoted as

to

The Buddha was a Hindu (VedJc) saint, a recluse.


left

He

hasn't

SSifc was
of the

authorise

the

name

us

my

word

in his

own

writing.

He never

said that he

Buddha.

fed

up with

his native
it

Vedic (Hindu) culture and


.

was

therefore

relinquishing

or founding another religion

He remained

a steadfaji
life.

follower of Vedic culture alias


It

Hinduism

till

the end of his

empale

universal "<*"nony. juncture India lost its Jusi at that bedlmmed and even in the East got and influence

ultimately extinguished.

was only
life

his great renunciation

of princely comfort end luxury

to lead the

of an humble, simple, itinerant bhlksht. (mendicant)

******
U
th,y are

PP*

r Burma
said

u>

^".^
JJ^^S
Hmduuim
a.

ascetic that

electrified

the contemporary

world

because

In

the

Buddha's tune India was the leading light as the master-centre

|ofaV*dkwork),

" that" have come to this" or "Buddha Ved.c culture. tan. Hinduism alia, as distinct
Buddhists

t*

1*^ of Vedic culture began thereafter quoud and preached In the name of the Buddha as the late*. n**y. famoui authority.
CaaequenUy
all

to

What

b more, some

misguided or

^""
them

renounce profs, to publicly Hid ceremonially


Buddhism.
It is

fat

in

~* name L1 *"> h
of

u5e time, there was neither Christianity nor


of the

WW
In

the

wrong

history taught to

Buddha was heard even


the

I*

m*.
or

name
,

of the Buddh.

They " 8 Buddha himself was a renowned Hindu. Vedic OiKlaimed Hinduism nor proclaimed Buddhism.
indulge In

"^'""J^'hat

such

gimmicks.

n ih

**her

Easi

Wcsl

,,

lhat

lingers

Another

vc*

hundreds of in graphic proof i. foond

9ff

iM

Japan. Tfcflf

such as Burma, .he Shan .bound in countries Vietnam. Korea. China. rn.itaHD.Ctonbodta. Laos. Wo currently misbebeved lo be Buddhist

I ,Mr
and

Vedic decore. Vedic temples abound in

deiu*

Unlike Muslims and Christians so-called nu, and rituals. HW^ intermingle in those temples in so-called Buddhist* perfect

mQ
^1
!

^
'

|l(c gigani
l }

galaxies

and keeps them

In a perpetual throb and whirl.

^Ver ,p0

Shivling represents father-god while it* animating refore the symbolized by the mother goddess . Shaktl. The Shivling ' 1*

immortal divine liMS that

^tweb

stump around which and because everything in the cosmos is animated to rotate and revolve
3.

and the icons of the

Buddha nestle among a cluster of Vedic deiUa

a Dec

I"3 "P011 Pub


' '

b'

a ned in an American newspaper titled

is lacking in modern Since such a clear understanding historic a has been Irrationally Buddhism has been irrationally classified as a distinct rival * uinsuamiy and Islam. mis Hindusim along with Christianity ana ismm. This should serve server ^ writing leaching correct, an.i,.i. .,nHf--iim. the tmnortance of writiny and leachintr rorrpri underline ho importance

*3

spiritual bliss

American New-Agera Abroad reported nock to Golden Gate Park (in San Francisco) seeking A Hindus from an innocuous looking, four-foot -high 800-pound

Caucasian converts.

which constitutes the Shivllngam. He rock

analytic
r^act

"Worshippers pour milk, offer flowers and apply sandalwood


vermilion to the lingam." pasw and

history.

Such an history could lead to mutual understanding,


of
all

and unity

mankind.
'L

So we arrive at the conclusion that Buddhism dldn


b* spread by

have

to

theRuddha

Bussian cross and a autue of "Bight behind the lingam is a in the same park."

any invaders, conquerors or preachers.

It already

suffused the world in the


culturr
still

name

of Vedic alias Hindu culture. Hut

"Among

the devotees

of

that

lingam
is

is

Basul Pirik of

continues

in

countries
J

from Burma

CiechoalovaK descent. His

name

Parik

akin lo the surname Parikh

lo

Japan, The

only

flaw

is

that ancient

Vedic [Hindu

culture has come to be unknowing!)

common among Gujaralis of India."


'

designated as

Buddhism forgetting thot the Buddha himself professed,

Set

preached and practised Vedic (Hindu) culture.


Shhllr.it t*

the lingam.

Golden Gate Bridge, amid an intricate bed of rock near the history dating to some say. emerged from Spanish

no Phallic Emblem
belief that the Shivling is a

Francisco newspaper-baron. thel2thcentury. becausein 1931 the San Monastery Hearst dismantled the Santa Maria

Wdiam Randolph
Tne current
phallic

emblem wu

In
It

Spain

and shipped

it

lo San Francisco.

*prd by Christian missionaries as part of their strategy to denigrate Veaic culture in every way and enlist converts by hook or crook.

Theierm

'ling- In Sanskrit signifies a distinguishing

mark or
t0

" PPlW

thVrnauT''," W

the neU er 8ex 0ovi "sly thai is clo.st*i > of the lean lingam.
' -

Tj

* humBn Wn P

'

""K*"1

'

came

dmW

remaining stones were Many were, stolen by looters. In 1988 the as a road barn* arranged in a rock garden with the Lingam erected in SpabrpnwTnat Shivling found in the Santa Maria monastery
our finding lhai all historic

but ran out of funds. Later

He wanted to rebuTd the pane he donated the stones to

churches

in

veo Europe are captured

a very

limited.

temples.
the envy TT three horinul lines on the Shivling symbolize d !tHta that emerge from divinity to animate the cosmos.

>J!S *****
i.|*tou.. aac^d
repository of pgw*-

,5d P1 " 1 " 8

'

e lhe wort **"


indiminlsha^
is

rUCUble

wm w

""P^'h-We. **"* * lum l wWch

lh *

,10U, >'8l*

OTU T above relic Is an indication of the ? uproot **** abounded Spain which got pre-Christian
In

?^
an

"*

by neo-converts

worked-up

illiterate frenzyto a blind,

"

3T"
B7|

jWewise
dl ***^'

indulgence in unnecessary sex results in pain weaknen population -explosion, weak or handicapped
.

orogeny,

-ulcides.
|nlousy

murders, rapes

etc.

simple scientific definition it should be clear cyom the above cup of tea or coffee containing poitonoui the morning
from
to the nightly hot -drinks most persons are and caffeine nothing but sin... sin... and sin all the time every average normal citizen and he or the will and yet ask an m men i ever or whatever. have committed no sin
in

fitting
50

swear

"i

d be

that Vedic definition the Christian concept offconfeaa As against pardoned) is too mundane to be tenable while the Muslim

indulging in concept of
in

murder, massacre, plunder and squander


is totally

the

name of Islam and Allah

bizarre.

Indian Influence

incidents underline Ihe world or difference

between the comprehensive


irrationality

dogmatic Klcntific ouUook of Vedic culture against the


of prophet -bound creeds.

Scholars
vaguely

and academicians and lay-men tutored by them

often

Ulk of an India/tmeaning Hindu alias Vedic alias Aryi) notice any similarity between traditions, Influence whenever they
legends,

What

it

Sin?
gratiflcauai

languages,

culture and thought of countries from the

As per Vedic thought anything done for sensual


and not as
so
is is

Americas to Australia with those of India.


Influence radiated

But how and why

that

matter of duty,

sexual indulgence

Thus over-eating Is sfn us! with even one's own wife when progetf
is sin.

Trom India

to other countries is left un-explained

and un- understood.

not desired, Contrarily voluntary cohabitation between a


a

mm
it

Influence
the total

emanates from sword -power as may be seen from


total

and

woman who

desire a child

and ore prepared to nurturt

subversion of Europe by Christianity and


Asia
its

conversion

to adulthood Is not sin

even

if

together they ore not wedded

In

of

the worldly tense.

Wen " y
wcret?

by Islam. India has no such


influence is noticed
all

history of cruel conquest


is

over the world. What

the

The above are extreme instances mentioned deliberately


tne Vedic concept of tin very clear.

W "*
cuiw*

Tne secret
'I

is

that

from the very

first generation of

humanity

lays
in

Vedic is what down scientifically. For instance, over-eating or In***** wrong kind of diet or drink result in deranged health. P***J
at

Every sin automatically attracts punishment

offering, expenditure on medical treatment, loss of hours

wu Vedic culture and Sanskrit language which pervadsd the world or jjr;millions of vears r^y during the ]asi 1000-1600 yean ^Uan and Muslim aggression wiped out Vedic culture tnm ** w* of the world. (Vedic) traits *P P****"*
.

" l
<

and to on.

y*
**c

Yet several Hindu "^verwntly and inevitably, from Christian and Muallm reuttaf. not becauseoflndiainfluencing them butbewsofprimor<W

Hw,

surviving In India

whDe

wiped out getting almost

S72
ff?3

rwm

other regions of the world.


nutlonal

shame and

Injustice.

An analogy
flooded
dried

"H

mflke

il

c,ear

^PP^'ng

larg.

t,

off*
''

by

torrential rain.

Uter

thai water get* drained

^
|

pilbn
The
,

Indian Bulcrt Not

up from high land but remains stored


it

in pools and

1?
J?J

would be wrong to argue therefrom that

was the wat^T


it |,

the re*ervoirs which had flooded the terrain. Contrarlly

f dian '"
elding

argument that Muslim rulera from Kutubuddln Albak Ua Bahadurshah Zafar U8B7 A. D.T must be considered lorded over India by taking up residence because they

in

water which remains stored In the reservoirs Similarly


.

it is

wortdi?
n |/

i,

absurd. Does a raider

Vedic culture which remains preserved (to while getting ostensibly wiped out
Sanskrit the lit

some

extent)

ni

captures the foyer to continue robbing the inU-rior qualify to be considered a member

who

from large regions

of the world

Human Language
Broadcast!*
India

intruder tt|wde of the

7 the

family?

The

criterion is

not the place of residence but

the

towards the indigenous people

The Horizon programme telecast by the British


Corporation on the afternoon of

Congress

history text books honed by the Indian National Current Indian blunderingly and unwittingly equate a Muslim with o Hindu

November

1 1

1993 (as per

the fid paint

power and glory

of

Muslim

rulers as the

power and

time) featured a
the other that
basic

number

all

Western scholars asserting one ifuworld languages must have originated in ant
of

despite the fact that blotting out India 's native Vedic dory of India converting and subverting the local set-up remains Hindu culture and
ifae

common

language. But surprisingly each

one of them

ihkc"

sole objective

of Islam wherever

it

invades.

way

from mentioning the name of that ancient


tells

common

languigi

A
Vadic tradition

painful instance of that

mistaken and misplaced glory


with
the

Is

the

us that the Vedas are of divine

origin

mi
on

nime

Mogul

Garden
Mansion)

associated
in

RashtrapaU Bhawan
of brave patriotic

that their language Sanskrit too is a divine

tongue bestowed
all

(Presidential

New

Delhi.

A number

humanity from

its

very

first

generation. Consequently

languid

Hindu heroes
to

had waged
rule.

a bitter struggle for over three centuries


is

must be

traced ultimately to Sanskrit. History 8ih Century

end

Mogul

The proudly adopted name Mogul Garden

No ladiao

in Insult to the

Onwards
Britain

memory
it

of those heroes. Would Russia or Great


their national

consider

a matter of great glory to name

in

U*
of

not generally realized that what is termed as Indian history academic syllabi throughout the world ceases to be Indian from
la

parks after

Napoleon or Hitler?

8th century.
alien

From the 8th to the 20th century it is history Muslim or European invaders with Indians figuring only

Comparing Enemies
During the
truncated

as abject subjects. of

^^^^^^HindurulerofAfghanfatan.PrithvlraiofWW

! V?"*"

free-India

47 years of (Indian National) Congress rule in votes has its solicitous concern for Muslim

UliujU-

www "d Ironv


"

thflt

m^

,w the Congress to distort history. It is that Congress-fovourtd flavoured painted Muslims as

educational syllabus which has

7y.tr;
(aw.

m?

*" *t * "d njlB1 ^ * "ny as 668 indigenous principaU"*


l0tt

PraUp lht

patriots
*

hero of Mewflr lne

while hoisting the British as India's

sole,

hateful

**"y

Political

perception parties usually have such distorted selfish


it

N,lQry.

Actually

Is

just the opposite.

h " ***

-horn of d]

U 'InLi

heroe.

I-

*"

id*

Qm -

Wwn

two i,ncmiea lhe BritIah were mUCh dV

^^

with educated, progressive, and liberal as compared

0N
the

97*

Merateberberumsavngery of Islam which

firstly.
,

Egypt. Algeria. Somalia f>m Afghanistan to 600 years of Muslim (mis) rule it even today. Under Wftj J*>b, bribery and confusion corruption, lawlessness, while
display

t^SS
th,

conno"

lM

,rd

term AO* which Arya

musl ** noted lhBt the S8nskr" ! m ' *oa deem h prefix 'A' attached lo the root race. The "ri' y^y,
<

"

signifies to evolve, develop, nurtur.

ushered

m orderly,
army.

progressive and law -based

J**"

adminijiiiu^
**

of life which urns et finer sentiments (in human beings) of humility booing lhe inborn simplicity- honesty and selftessly serving feuow-being,

consequent

signifies the

way

a disciplined

JJTJy, m

to'

Couoirics Kcully Free? Arc Oirhiian and Muslim


All

^vTlmB
f

morally and spiritually uplia one's Atma (soul) u> the (higher soul) stage and Paramatma (divine ul) level.

countries

professing Christianity

and Islam which

Vedic culture. Therefore the term Aryanism ii a Il'/is exactly culture and jloean 't connote any haughty, exclusive

vmofVedic

themseh'estobefreeBnd independent are labouring underade) us

^
L.

To

realize this they

ago there

must re-learn their history. Just Wfcu*. was no Islam. likewise 19&1 years ago there wa

of [^Wiling millions

that the German dictator Adolf Hitler wrought The havoc Jews because of the mistaken notion that
result oT

provides a tragic instance of the were non-Aryans

Christianity. Yet today they are all

Muslims or

Christians.

Why

in world history. .vrrong grounding

Became they were

all

terrorized into

Vedic faith of ihcir forefathers


Chrisiians.

and
in

call

submission to renounce tht themselves Muslims or


total

Since

Arya

is

no

race but the Vedic way of


is

life,

anybody

subscribing to
colour,

those ideals

an Arya irrespective of

his caste.

Laier

lo

keep

them

ignorance o' thw

parent-culture their pre-Christian


slaughtered and buried. This

and pre-Islamic historic wm>


hisior)

Bn

Aryan antonym and an antagonist of an

Dravid as creed or country- Therefore to flaunt the term 'b 8 great blunder which

makes
It

all

is a graphic instance of how the difference between freedom and bondage.

generations of

academicians have thoughtlessly done.

There

precisely because of that polenlial

of history of kwpin*

race.

Had

'

was no Aryan invasion of India because 'Arya' Is no Sama] Arya meant a race the primary rule of the Arya
'

nr>
that

rratir-n

consciously aware and proud of its ancestral hniiw

organisation in India

would have been

to enrol only those as


.nlrarily

members

That is sheer international aradw* ganptcrism and cultural castration which must be srv. n '\ lindane

KbJugaUng and subduing Christian and Muslim lotrAed all eariier histories.

fundament

ho furnish proof or
concerns Itself

Aryan descent,

the Arya Samaj.


all.

with every

human

being and welcomes

If

uBm coumry
o abW
*

Therefore ih* flrsl )es30n fa

^^

whjch

^^ ^stfm #t
is

individual

must )eam and leach


Ihev have

that

WbjUKaUon

md '"^formation

Un fw

"^^ the worn


A Stmnqh,
of

land of serfdom.
.

Vcdk CuUuu
harbour difr

^^z'r ^^ *
totodi.

^ni

>d * ui

vedi:
"

many fan,*,,

^"*"

.??"' U8e lhe ^ression When the Ary." "* *,Jlr" n * Point of Indian history The* rt
,n

ihni

expressly

tm
' n-P"

977
for the planned worship ,Uon chore

irinc

VenUg0P
"*
,.

H**"

**
form*

Amida (Amitabh) " Indra. Rudra, Kartlktya, Yama. Vayu. Brahma. StraswaU, six ^hasrabahu. Surya,
lm(1ges

"

urC

Sanskrit

alacharya mentions (In hi. book titled World**, and Unity In Diversity Paget 38 to

40)

of

RubK,
'f

flvt

"j^ha and the


. .

Acharya Nagarjuna. Nagabodhl. Kaikava, Vajrabodhl, 1st Japanese scholar of Sanskrit (of modem
etc are very popular In Japan. In Japanese village*

THE VEDIC FAR EAST

^^^SbobaiBbi *"
tlm* 1
lift*

led inert

and

village

gods and goddesses, mounts

j*J* eifih ther indmt>


to the east from India Japan is furthest and was therefom As Rising Sun (depicted to its flu) Identified as the I*nd of the

are worshipped

( the latter

when starting cultivation


The Japanese
consider

mw

or

eonwc

pping off ion or ch

trees).

^^^

^ da

essential Tor attaining the westerly

ChWlUn

At royal ceremonies such as coronations and weddings JipuiB,


tovereigns
colour.

SikhavaU (Kgven au*"


**

wear orange -coloured attire because that

is

the Vedfc

>

is

the

(implying the abode of ultimate happiness alios and Saraswatl are called Banten. Soma. god of learning. Women worship the Snivling

^"Tsahano-kami
The Japanese people
'Nipun' meaning
'

call

themselves

Nipponese;

'

from'

skilful

'

in Sanskrit.

^Zv
.

Shivllngs could

be seen at

to conceive male children. Upto the last all highway squares In Japan.
deities

of Vedic Japanese equivalent*


;

ire Kubfliriiu

The ancient culture of Japan


Okyo. Shinto
while
is

is

known

as Shinto and Brahmn


(i.

a malpronunciaUon of
is

Sindhu

e.

Indus
'

region)
of

Brahman Okyo
1.

Brahma Vakynm

(fiswi-vny

The word

lT<Z'*T*ow Sva Ekasnmga

Bishamonsaint

Vanma

Sulten; Kumbhlr (crocodile


alias

Mahakel.
.

C-l
f.rf

'

1. the Vedas. Shintoism involves

worship of and

reverence
naluril

;X3,
-

(unlconD

v^akarman

BishukaUuma (Cod
.

of reenters);

<h five elements (fire,


is

water etc.) Each one of these

uhm-.ineni

revered as manifestation of divinity.

hMU
(i.

Throne

Shumi
.

Dddnl; Bhairava

Baimo;

Dan; Bodhisatw. . Kalavanka - Karyobm

Tne Japanese follow the Vedic Shraddha tradition of reverentially remembering deceased ancestors and offering them food, in front of tablet* bearing iheir names at alters kept apart for their worship.
There are about 200.000 (most of lh em small in size) temPIrt jnrougbout Japan. Many of them enshrine Vedic deities such * Uksom.. Santswaii. Gan nam. tth

M,lndr*-Taishak*ten<lx^^
.

Holy-Detty);

Naa (see-serpent)

Bye*;

pn.

^^
tUached

lhough

^ ^^
foj
.

old as

Some Japanese temples have preserved la 1400 yean, Next to India Japan

Highest

v *l
until thty

virgins lre ,1,0

mnt

jervW

way Japanese write in the Chinese ideographic manner writ* proper ns


"opted Sanikrit phonetical letters especially to

number

of

and Wii. students studying Sanskrit

M <^ ~* W
^W.

- Om

Ittkoku

3ddh^

HarlU

W.himo

btfwdjj -
i

opt to marry.
1

thJ^vT!^* ""^m temple ***** tnm d * d Uke a vow

celebrations

of sik.ee for .

w^" n^

under tang Buddhism received royal Japanese patronage ** ruled Japan In 736 A. u. from 574 to 621 A. D.

^^

m
h^
Brahmin of BharadwaJ Botra) nam*) hddN* monk then Japanese emperor and *t united by the Japan and to pan| * " the Buddhists in

979

tn,^
C
| '

01

unced as

num
"

It

means

to

bow

'

In reverential obelasnce,

orP'*

pries'

of

giant consecmuon of the

statue of Vairochana Buddha.

IU
(in
rice

oeople arf

kn0Wn

,(

"

Vietnam's Sanskrit) and

the AnnBmes* a'oce Annam main crop is indeed rice.

meam

^
Now known
as Malaysia the

Malayan peninsula was

indlsp*"*

^ble 8

f^

Vedic world for its Sandalwood plantation. in tht ancient commemorated in the Sanskrit couplet.

Tw

t0 **

^^
ally

tradition betel leaves and areca nuts sr* hoary Vedic weddings ana anniversaries in Vietnam at betrothals,

0n sucn occasions brothers and sisters, parents newly -married couples chew betel and areca nuts
paste as in India.

?*
StnuaP

of

Ume

IJPJ&

5?f? q^ft

*M*M
women

5>I* fSfl

II

soylnern At the navai naval traffic to international

up

of Malaysia is Singapore island.

It

has been

"" from Ume immemorial during -.hi.


a

meaning that Malayan


ordinary *"*

tribal

use precious sandal wood

Id

Singapore Vedic sovereignty.

is

modem corruption of Sanskrit

^sp^ meaning the Lion


who
ruled
their
li

township.

The Malayan peninsula had nine Maharajahs


principal ti

When the
.

Thar

palaces

were known as Aasthana which

Sanskrit term.
raiders

Those Rajas forced lo convert to Islam by

Aral

uQ?A D he jotted a Sanskrit ^eshvara at the entrance to a


port. outwork of the

Raffles landed there British explorer Sir Stamford inscription of the Hindu King

hul fort In the Vedic defence

have since gradually been termed as sultans.


capital of

The

term Cbolooam

Malaysia is Kuala Lumpur which is the Sanskrit Huram i.e. the township of the Chola ( royal dynasty)

^ralian
In

tribals

perform a Shiva dance

depicting a third eye

The

city of Petaling

and paint their foreheads in colour tht middle of


paint on Zealand tribals also

CP.Ol.Thi

Jaya

is

a malpronundaUon of the

Sanskrit

term tttn&i *ro^ signifying a gigantic crystal Shivling. Obviously


it

Australia) Native Tribes of Central


Australian
ii.

wu a famous pDgrim centre.

Excavations conducted in the

central

and

New

their forehead,

part of Petaling

Jaya actually revealed the remains of an extensive

red

Vaishnaviie

(U Type)

or Shaivite Mark.

auv temple destroyed by Arab Muslim invader*.


Another smaller

Australian

Origin. Aborigines are of Vcdfc

P^unoKioo
>Uil
B

township is Seramban which

ia

of

iu

mdinl

Sanakrjt
''
,

U m*TL" *"*i *"* lemp Mn.wM ium, v

W*
nam.

name

^^

modem

garbled
,,

Vtni

m
to
'"

Pages from the

from

iia

nflme th"1

1U

Joumol of the Polynesian Maories and Vol. 26 of 1917 reveal that ancient 7*aland) to be a branch of
seem
akin to Sanskrit and
their

SMy.

U*
V

* **T J
****
*

^
"
^

*r language

liVErM-NAAM

Vedic

* ttB *"" is havean e*g pantheon. For insUnce. they

whicn

Jl aWZ ^<**m.
C^bot*.

Wb1

COUnlr>

*Wng
I,

>**

border of the eestarn of t*o

Vedic Mnisya Avatar (fish incarnation). Vc d^ty goddess Ida Indra. Their mountain
too.

^^

*^

li

v iic daW

combination

**

"* Thanrnx 'iiaam' means 'name

1*

Ancient History of Muorl

is

by 1 book written

"

Ml

UuTtHE ARYAN MAORI

(in 1885).

-imiUr to those tt mark. indent, sacred sandal-naste mark. nsmnant, of the Wom

TW point out how M.ori wtoo of ancient

their chins. Up,

Egyptian,,

rbm

^
J

their forehead,ibe Hlndui on

inhabit^ Australia being, elsewhere during cut off from people got stranded and naval communication links got disrupts time* when air and fa
mnienium,.

ftr-nungconUnent the ancient Vedic

m*]^

ll**.*m.

Cambodia,

^'T^^T^
*n* 'm
lb.

II.

is

. Ramayanlc

urn* * *

A or-id ^ (IMmta) dwialn, ho.

ta

u,

Vrl|c

o-amualouta
l!?"*
PTO'

wi.,, merch, nl

ww,*

*"" " "

BoroUdur um|]to m crnin" *,, ^d w.hlp

^ m
Nuvi

,,. Th.
of

W ^ "
*"'

J '"

pr-Orf*""

SSI

Prambmam
Above
is

is

famous for

Its exquisite clustsr of Vedlc

itmpln

those temples. pancd of Vedic deities in one of

-*4

JL, cooked b to U

neriy

rt

** W

over on area

erf

njftal

the ancient

100 q. kmi. are the ruins of an andtn KhamboJ kingdom since spelled variously w

CMbodii ana Kampuchla

odjolnlnp Thailand alios

Sam

ol the east.

*
w*li

to

dotted ith such

morale

palace, and

t*mp w*

caiusry.

ni!T'sud. u
,

m "^

"" SaA,khl tarriptloni of ancient (Hindu) Vol" Jeymrini and Sooryavarma.

* *^c?iir* u ** w Aran ^^ ,pw


I

Ti^ T

nrieni sanskrii
,n lhe

nflffl

hunUn K

U u community

"

'^

L!

health.

7 f*

WOT"*^
'*..

rail L
mple A Hindu (Vedic)
.(

in

Cambodia

raised in

W7

A. D-

>- ,J -.-

We

TV Miy

In

an ondwi Japonew Vedic lemple.

MB

The

exquisite

Borobidur Hindu temple

in

Java. Cruel Arab

raidj en

Java, Sumatra. Malaysia and Borneo around 1473 A. D. forced the enure population of those countries to turn Muslim through terror, torture and

tyranny.

lot Vedlc trinity at the

Wat Phu temple


Rama. Vagaries

In or

Urn

I.

e. 1-ava country
spelling require

md

alter the

son of Lord

French

known Uva to be written as Laos. In southeast Asia temples are Sanskrit name of the Iran the banyan trees planted there. Wat U the
Suiyan.

Wat

990

ne

* oC'n

MCled "

tWnp,e - WoU ln Canibodia believed to belott

Vi,

An ancient Uos and Vedic ruler fn Indochina (comprising Cambodia. worship bathing the ShivUng (lower foreground) with milk ta

V>J<

in unit CM*P" f Khamtw) oi r between the Hindu rulers UT A. D. in which w " " d the Cambodian ruler , ounde * ped and aailed to Mexico where Arya Manas k-

naval battle

^^ ^ U

Mate kingdom.

WV

X^l'.TT

"'

"*

Maui

KhombJ *in*d m

'""'"

w
* Wlew B y

* *'
"*>l

in the defensive wall surrounding at^y Hindu Khambo) kingdom. Towering above the K

Nwar ThB

*"*<* th. Vedlc slaiuw trinity. Such trinity


Points along the

n *"

^^
J

woU

girdling the capital

M
1000

'

1002
1003
'

writ

Paflp
1 t

'

^
|l

" lw tha function *> PPa hB V uy <<* Co^^frpontiff attached to the Vedic administration In Europe.
"'
-

ifles

"^'

(qw,meaM an -"n> k***"ha- added remov*r <* or baoWer tnq*" tnm Sm


'

W8

the

UU

****

^
'P*1

derivatives of the word Pope auch aa papal * mulish prove thBt the original Word U tbe ***** ") (Sso
'

^pi-ha

*?

ti ti. a.

absolver from sin),

THE VATICAN PAPACY

IS

A VEDIC INSTITUTION

^.M ***
05/nely

Lhat

ChrisUanity revolves round the concept of sin, whole of man is born out of sin and therefore every Individual's

Americans (who are

Because of the ascendancy and domination of Europeans md all mostly Christians) in the modern world,
'.he

the Vedic origin of the Pflpacy in

Vatican

in

Rome

!? jS

be to atone for his sins and try to wash them ncem should but purely Vedic aa may be Judged from is nothing
this

has remain*!
rituili

in Sanskrit, Vedic prayers

which every orthodox Hindu mutters

unknown. But even a cursory study of the terminology and


associated with the Vatican
in
is

evening. ^roing and


<u
1

He

says

<TO-WW:>

"Papoaham. Papa

the Vatican

is

enough to reveal that the Papy a Vedic institution which Is masquerading u

hivah"

etc. etc.

which means

please born out of sin,

"Oh Lord I em sin incarnate. absolve me from the sins I may


etc-etc.

Christian.

*
is

(unwittingly)

committing day and night"

Snot

the

Truth

stranger than fiction,

it

is

said,

and so

it

is in the

totally

pre-occupied with auch a Christian priesthood Is entirely


all-enveloping sin, it is obvious that the Papacy and set-up revolving around Chrum of Christendom are a Vedic

case of Christianity.
All Christians

concept of
the whole

ought to realize that they are Chrisntans

i.

e.

md His Bhagawad Geett.


As the regional
(rftw)

followe-s of Krishna because there never lived

any person

called

Jesus Christ.

The term
His

Hindu

Christianity

is

itself

the Sanskrit term


life

Chrisnan-ily signfying followers of the

way
the

of

expounded by
He
still

Sanskrit

Krishna

(in

famous

discourse,

Bhagawad
is basically

Ceeta).

lives in

that

Vatlca, priest, the Pope uaed to live in his term meaning 'a bower' or 'hermitage. Vetica presently pronounced as Vatican \
'

Consequently, even their high priest, the


pontiff.

Pope

Vedic

Under Constantino

's

orders (around 312 A. D.) Roman

troopers

The Vatican
recognize
it

itself

would therefore, do well,


re-establish
its

hereafter, to
Vedic
learned,

cnabed the veatigea of

Hinduism

alias

Vedicism

in

Europe under
torrori

examine,

and

pre-Christian

** high
cued.

heels,

antecedents since

has a big staff of earnest, pious and


of

"* survivors into accepting Christianity

to and cracked heads with their batons Vedic and renoundng their

people at

its

command. Some

them

atleast should

be

interested

in looking into tht

Vedic roots of the Vatican.


' '

& wM
"***

at that stage

that the Vedic priest Paap-ha


royalty,

alias

Pope.

The very term Pope derives from Sanskrit. In several Europe*" d,,d languages . such aa the French, for instance, the word Pope i* s P
aa Papa as
it

to the

Roman Hindu,

succumbed to

those threats

rtouW

really

be In

Ita

original Sanskrit sens*.

2 m

^trainee, the

^formed

Vetica of Europe Hindu Vedic <* !&) Dherme haadouaitars overnight Into a Christian religious

1004

1006

pronounced as Vatican. Actually the fate of the la* and converted r slain Is unknown. Was he captured

^
J2* **
"*

.
11

by

christian

nominee?

and That needs to be Investigated.

* w
a\

God, Lord Shiva whom the Hindu the Hindu worship In his Vatlca (alias Vatican) 1. 1
.

^VuhecityofHiuna).
the

^^

Pom

aba.

The Christian Pope automatically acquired spiritual au "tborlt,


over
all

humped
'

Bull is not only the


'

mount but

alao the

priest,

European monarchs precisely because he was the V' since time Immemorial, of the biggest and most pow
of Europe, with its capital in

Hindu kingdom

Rome

alias

^ |w!

MP
SW V*

hrider

m ^

of Lord Shiva. Therefore, in every Nandi alias the Bull Is invariably potted at torn* pie a scurry about at Lord Shiva's command. front to
alias

errand boy

founded in the name of Lord Rama.

Though Christendom boasts of deep scholarshipChriatianschoWi


have conveniently closed
itself.

^Christian <**)
*
IU
'Sanskrit

used to be consecrated In the main Shiva ahrina h a one Vatlca. That Shiva temple known by

their

eyes to the origin of

Chrlrtianii)

One such

detail

which they gloss over


is

is

about the Pope's BuQ,


not

Ttine Chapel, "'^ Proper new pope. JJ


he Vatican
'"uld yield

name. Shivasthan. is being currently pronounced where the College of Cardinals assembles

as to

archaeological excavations conducted

and

in

the precincts of ancient so-called churches

Why

of

all

animals

the Pope associated with the Bull and

a number of

buU

statues suppressed and bidden by

with a tiger cr an ass, for instance ?

rjhrijUan lealots.

The Pope's
is

edicts are

known as

bulls.
i.

Even that word


'directive*.

'edict'
tbt

the Sanskrit
alias

word
in

(W&PO

aadistam

e.

Sn

jlgnlfying

Pope

Papa

Sanskrit signifies

one who absolves

people from
certify lha
paid I
this

Crdinal too

is the Sanskrit term (*pm) 'shal-je' The term 'College' word higher -than -school seat of (Vedic) learning. The when pronounced without the intruding 'n' (since

sin, the

primary function of the Pope's edict was to

such and such a person having confessed,


Tine,

repented and

V
1.

his got Inadvertently

added to a number

of
t

European Sanskrit

words) can
.

be recognized to be the Sanskrit

erm'Sardul

(lafij

was absolved from

all

sins.

Under the Vedic


Prayaschittam
'.

dispensation

process is

known as

(wrufj%wiy

In effect, therefore, the

entry into heaven, as far


absolved from sin.

Pope's Bull served as a permit for as the Pope could help, to the penw

Those Vatican (I. e. *nftw) "lias Vedic Sardul in recognition (hermitage) monks were known as Vitfca overpowering all mundane of their leonine spiritual prowess in
lion

(tiger too).

temptation .

Such devout dedicated


.

selfless souls choosing


i.

one from

amongst themselves as
rtO
his

Pope <m->

e.

'Peap-ha" (nbsolver from

The Bun was supposed to ferry the absolved sinner on back across the mortal sea (or river) to the blissful heaven.
"Hie

is

that Is atDl

pre-Christian practice therefore a holy Vedic. democratic. seal. adhered to in that ancient Vedic. Sanskrit
in

Bun came

into the picture as the

mount

Hindu of the
of

The Veda Vatica (tozrfinx) of ancient limes abounded


Lord Shiva

temples

God, Lord Shiva.


In

and

other deities such as Lord

Hindu mythology lord Shiva


decides
1

ia

the

God

of destruction-

<*nown as Hercules alias Hari-cul-eesb).

Rama. l*rd Krishna Janus, Ganesh known as

^bml
*;
-

' H. who

when

a life

should

come

and to an end

***

J****" btr behaviour.

(or reward) the deceased ahould receive for Mi In the next Wrtb.

"

^u D Rnpaglng Christendom destroyed ^ "royed Keaba temple


called

known as Shree

known as Abraham, alias Ceres. Brahma century the 4th Vista, etc, until the early years of rampaging those temples as
the Vedic
in

de

Mecca.

'

'

iom

inm
Five HhlvallngM I a. emblem*, l-ord Whlva ralelng lu hood

Ti

well

u Idol* of

mbr*
In Iht

OW

' hd are

flhlv,

part of ih.J,***

%
,

like
f

dotty, devotee. dMnlly are D derivative or Sanskrit words such as deva, devtte end *>,

Rtnieoan

Museum In the Vatican There am rntny oth*r* huj*

I museum. away mlheoslUr* of the VaUcan end alwMiflu muwum.

lnqulIUv
. .
'

>

Eirurla
1 '

In

readers may refer to heading* Etruscan -J JJ- ii.ji.-~i,,- In -._-ll 11., ,_ , lha Encyclopaedia Brftannlca u, rmiixe that 8hlviii
'

M
n|t|

tradition, the head ponUff vupervute* and regulates v#dic i0dal m r"1 Md *iuctUo,ul ***** * PWe . Uritml. corruption of the Sanakrtt term (* i puntah. lM 1*" nt|ff la a -^.grord P" Shankarachsryas fulfil thtt role. The Institution four
' '

'

meteoric ttonee mounted

on carved plinth-

'

m thoy am describe

^
<rflM
n<

India the

Rhsnkarecharys
the eighth

In lha Encyclopaedia

and Shiva Image*


In lUly.

am

often dlcovar*d

bun*j

lB

Standing statu o* of Lord Shlvi van today ereclad In public squares In lullnn cities.

by Christian vandala.

w
for

lord Slilva 'a rnnrvutmlatlv* on The IMpa offldaUd undar lha Vadlo ordar In ancient Europe. A such, lord Shhn'i

Uon of of world Hlndudom untD his seat was Furopeen region forced to turn Christian by emperor i '..wn and was
.

waa founded In the sixth century B. C. (ud c" 1101* A D " ^onwwW taught under ths WeaUirn scholars) The Pope wti the Shsnkaiachsrys
' *

waa tha only vehicle or mount at thn Pope 'a command, Any adlct ha Issued waa auppoaud to be executed by tha holy Bull.
hull

Tharafona. lha approach of tha Bull slg nlflod Iho arrival of tha Pops 'i
adJcl

udfldil

end vie* versa.

la that

Hindu, Vodie tradition which

wmsa
bal

Imparted tha nam* Bull to tha Pope'* edict.


abbreviation of the Sanskrit word Ballvard.

Even

Bull

li

in

uphold the aancUty of ceUbacy methods of birth control, and of the Papacy. A mare Chrlitlin mortal of tha Vedlc base ptonouncamenU. base cannot even conceive of such vrtthout tho Vedlc
Tb* word
'

ButomenU) emanating from the VaUcan from Urn*

to

Insist

of marital constancy, deprecate on stern standard*

Stint

'

commonly used by

the VaUcan

ta

the Vedlc

Lord tihlva with Hit holy Bull used to be worshipped

all

ovtr
of

term (*Q 'Sent.'

The word

'apostle* ii Sanskrit 'aap-sthaT


place to place
(for

Europe aa the Father Cod

In

pre-Christian

tlmw. The Oxford


In

{mm)

algnlfying

one who proceeds from

Oxford University fame and tha Uxbrldge locality

London mirk
with

preaching)

two of the Innumerable


hit ox.

allea of

lord Shiva

'a

worahlp along

Hidden Vedlc
All

Records
carefully buried of the Papacy has been day emperor Consunune world from the

The name Uxbrldge (pronounced both as Aikbrldge and Ooksbrldge) embodies tho original Sanskrit term OOkshns (Uxiul)
' '

that Vedlc origin

namely 'a bull' and


s river

'

VraJ'

means 'to proceed.'

algnlfytng fordlnf

nd hidden
terrorized

from the
the then

on

a bull's beck.
Is
ill

or himself a ChriiUan pontiff Into declaring

murdered and replaced

him by a

Christian nominee.

Thus there
tradition. It
li

nothing Christian
Hindu, Vadlo.

In

so-called Christian snd psp*

The rocstlon of tha Vstlcsn In Rome wsa of speclil significance bee*"" Rom. alias Romi Is Lord Rami lha Vsdlc Inosrnstlon s township.
'

Invasion of the hurry and flurry of that imperial war VU (til., Vatican) in Rome, some records and Icons buried In the Plundered end burnt, oome were hidden or
In the pits and some were removed to distant JrvaHon. A hunt must bo launched by genuine ** relic, which escaped Constantino's Imperial swoop.
0f In

Veda

place*

rj"*T

The Sanskrit word*

'

Purohll

'

and

'

Bhal

'

both signify-*

Vedlc prleat an. In uss In so-called Christianity aberration In spelling) .. _,


'

(with

" hl

-^*" **

IM1 ,

^d

,bool

respectively.

m
! uJJir
away "

\m
icmd "
*** Vtticao ""<* *-*>

aO >** E

AdMU

those bidden

""^
to

"

^vmuy
in

*^

tf#^*
*
**fl-" l
obelislts.

WWM Chris* h

* v c*taWy ta

fc

sacred with

UwEoptaana.
'

w*.

m Aaaarkoaa author. H-

f
d

Mm **
wen

$>eecer

U*ia wbo.
hiding

p^,^^ fab dev^m <***


secret

ibtVtio

some

*
*& J?

hmsec* art directives of Jeres

* was *sed a> an amulet. Saturn asoau^. **' bora 3ttPhr bore a *** "^ ***^T*93 Venus, a drcW with a eroae. Thto cbaractar if **t . horn; one of the coins of Dados, the great persecutor
-

** **L
We
***.

upon

have pointed out That is t carious injuioa*. rlj. aylh and no such person this vetane that Jw
Yet.

***^ans

-The

Rev. Mr- Manrice says (Maurice,

n*fieq

bora

assamting thai

torn was.

ahoaJd the Vatican have to

We anything ?
"

fact, a Jesus afa


if

** '^wdat^be..- assertioo. that the crosa was one of the aoet * thehieroglyphs of Eayptandind*a(iudr*re9|

bpS811

"Let not the

piety of the Cathohc Christian

Contrarily.

^\Z^ aawng

ther*^

any

emuine

writing in Jesus
it

own tend or about him


is

the Vanon

wotie proudly pet


days

up as

ft

permanent exhibit. espeaafiy the*


being widely questioned.
tie

asrfJJ^T w the four directtorts) '* p ^ad of the prindpal


-

fa the eave of Qephanta in


flgore.

b* *

again

may

be seen

when

the historicity of Jesus

jj llj

the front of the huge Unghara fForbe's

*!to Vol.
for

ID.

Chap-

XXOT.

page 448)-.

We

taare

from

Consequently, what B. Spencer Lewis has to say about


esacmes great importance.
those
It

bidden records of the Vatican (quoted elsewhere in this vokme)

provides

ft

very important due


the

fact that the two principal pagodas of Maurice the curious Banarea and Mathura. are bui>l to the form those of common use long before the time the cross was in

who may

in

future probe into

pre-Christian Vc*

ataeadanu of the Papacy. (* point needs


*fl

special ehicitetion'l

According to current concepts

** Jau$ Orut

ffcy

coaldn

is

iawp otig imted before the 4th century A. D. supposed to nave lived around 1 A. D. B

represented by croaa... Dr. MxuDoch iatrT... was cross was known to theGothc says "The figure of a

n^W

p.

36)

IAn

and aiso used

by them before they were


is

converted to

then Jesus-time records are hidden in the Vatican what was role before the 4th century A, D. T

Chrntianky...
sleneo near

The cross

found

in the ruins of

a ft* oty
ainonaat

vd
'

This leads us to another important deduction namely, that tie


its

aS along even ~" TO* *** *>* being made public because they viB expo*

records have been

then

before Jesvs

exampte of .t Palanque. where there are many is very reriartbl*. aa hieroglypWcs on the buildings, but one aa A^eJataJCa? idol (Descriptioo of Cb the top of it is placed an Berthoud. 65 Regenia f Moico, by FeUx Cabrara. published by
^-atrint.)" 1

mm

that the Vatican is to

a pre-Christian

Vedic seat *kk*


** '

*J* a">*>'
C*rtM*

*"

Art*/

wear the mask of a non-existent Jesus > crsckdown Vedic vatic*.

The sacred orthodox vennilion

mark

that

HWw
preferred oj

50

tissr

forehead since time

immemorial

is ftlso

*** Are Ml
*>
-

Vedfc
Christian antiquities,
cover

* in the shape of a cross. All such evidence P^J* ** nd other so -called Christian symbob continuing in the pap^j
^^boary Vedic
(1 '

U,

W which J^J[*? LSL-T r*" *"* " "* "**<* Christ** r U "^ UP arWZ!l rBnuin. **** Pre*****
Ci,

symbols.

0,

<h-n

Pfc,

of Cnin the

several of

**-Wl The

Celtic

Druids. Godfrey Hlafms-

crow

is

found-

ton
1010

all Vedlc. The too ere naturally other .ymboli Vedic. jesua Christ la a m.l

H*. when

the

Pope himself

is

a Vedlc priest,

*d

days are

^^
pronun t , m
.

successors Therefore hie

left

Rome and

re* *d at

th. term

tow

Chrisn and the

name

Bible'

(i.

** *

AVW

IS a

.a-A*
deludes

Bbagewad GeeU. The Pope ', Lord Cbrfsn '. ceremonial washing of the feet of a chDd and
Is

,*>

V^W
Vy**

a**

^
.

Souln Indlan tyP* PronunetaUon li tb iQVm * 8 " bWer "

"

""^a *' <*

lQe Sanskrit

* This analysis should not b mim* Christianity is a big ro. denigration as part of Inter-religlouB jaw. to be a ehauvinlsUc taken to be a process of historical or rivalry but ihould be world historical bare the flawg. faults end frauds in
to lay

MM,

which

age-old Vedic tradition.

Thus what

W^
Vj
author and compiler Vvesa the
reverentially
of the 18

r^Z*

Maha Pursnes.

known
-

to

all

the Intellectuals of the world

au^ at^

*
until

the

Hme

of Aristotle,

who

referred to

him with a corrupted

Pronun

ChDdran are born by a common process whether their ptnt)U are ritually married or unmarried. And yet even among the rrt
profane and mundane of societies great

md

other

BTAS .Even In recent times writers such as Voltaire vlewa mentioning hit Searchers referred to VyasVa

nM

nuT1*

"

odium attaches
a

of the Astrological Magazine, Bangalore (India* ige7 jj^ue


investigation Into the historiea of ancient cultural
wfll

gUUd s y Nareyana

Moorthy

in nil article in

to chfldn*
vtry

born out of wedlock.

Why?

Herein

lies

very subtle but

trough
literatures

Important proof not only of the worldwide

sway

of Vedic

cohm

and languages

undoubtedly make sveryone conclude

from time Immemorial but also of the supreme divine


of the
divine

authority

that:

Vedaa

via. that

procreation being an onerous, miraculom


Is

schema only that procreatiton

permissible, where a ran

and

woman have
priest he

been locked together under rules, reatrelnla md


.

Bhagev*a. Puranas. Hiimayena. MehabhareU. Affiant Sastras. Buddhism before the advent and expansion of

n Everywhere In the world. Vedlc

culture and Sanskrit implying

rwDocaibulUea laid down by Vedlc chants The

Pope being a tradition*:

i^ere^ent

Vedk

la

sul)

very strict, unwittingly, about adbsrenci

to the 1st century from the 6th century B. C.

AD

to Vedlc

norms of weddings and wedlock.


(i.

Even under Islam the word 'Talaq'


be repeated thrice because
that anything taken, gifted
triple,
it

e.

divorce) has

to

currently branches of the Vedas. only 10 are 2) Out of all 1131 form. in their pure Sanskrit ivaOable in India and Nepal alone Puranas of Veda Vyasa. etc. 3) The Vedas and the 18

Is

only according to Vedlc prtcik*


is

formed the
the world.

whole base for the ancient

literatures of all parts of


.

or renounced

to be confirmed by

contciom repetition.
in

ltoVeUcu

remained adaptations have only the translations and once for originals have been the West and the Far East, the
4)

WhDe

7*** u * ly * In .w- *?.


1
1

a ort.
the world having more employe-

of course leaving

only stray references

to the original

wor

*"*

wd

1*

their
i,

^Tbough the Vaucw


^*

Papal he-dquarters building


la

complex

*>
Sfcr

authors.

the amallert nation covering

* "*

Worldwide Honorific

Sbree (also spelled


u d

m Vedic

or
it

'Sri")

is

w n bononfic comn^y
.

culture. In Latin

was

written as 'Ser

In

tng

**" Pl under .rreat In his

own

palace by Fr***

^ptfed

as. Sir.

^ong Arabs itsurvivw as Yasserasin "YasserAraW

,.-huM

1013
1012

oftteAnWchAitofuringprenxwsuchM-d'.

^JJJ
y
Whu, ft

WMU
Chief

Hook

Tradition

secretariat in London b Whitehall, Thai the British u* nwBH EaiU"i mansion In Washington D. C. b named

colnddeoce. Russian parliament Mouc U ooi a chance noun u IN known as White House. In Hindu tradition the king w., aDhaval Gniha I. e. a While House. Therefore comprehend,

tn^^

io

lr*e to

itatenenu bsulog therefrom oo specific Issues also came ip k, unned as White Papen. The Red Fort In Delhi and Agra (which are pre-MuslIm Hindu castles) have such White Houses where the
Hindu Kings resided. Such Hindu royal
la ancient Sanskrit sculptural texts

White Houses are

described

and

in classics like

Harsha Chariu

bj Bona Bhalti and the travelogue of

Huent Sang.

m ^Stmm
J!
hiMm awoy

to

Etruscan

museum

in the Vatican

(Rome.

Italy)

hu
In

******
wfartpd
on

the one

above)

and statue, (found

Ume. csua. dfcging from time to


strong rooms.

in Italy)

or

In its

Italy worshipped TV* Popes and the people of ancient

flfata

pother

profess Christianity from ti* V!c deities before being forced to

4*ntury

Constant** and his su* snwrd. by the convert Christian emperor.


Ita Pspacy was a Vedic priesthood

known
sin.'

.s

<<*-

Snkth connoting an 'absoWer from


demands that the
"all, revive

Ration^ to*

** M

whole Christian

Pope establishment from the

and

resume

its

Vedic past.

^
1014

1016

-nturies later

neo -convert Muslims too were

t/>

mA^

This

is in

an ancient Shivljng on display

in

the

museum

in the

Vatican

Rome

(Italy).

Many such

Shiva emblems as

well

images of Shiva, uprooted from Vedic temples when Europe wu turned Christian by coercive Roman arms are historic relics exhibited
,

in

evidence, help us to reconstruct the history of Vedic culture in pre-Christian Europe.


Icons of Lord Shiva, the Mother Goddess, and other Vedic deW*. have been discovered at historic sites Europe.

Western museums. Tney,

among other

throughout

p very
i.e.

term

'

icon

is

the maJpronounced Sanskrit word Ism

Lord Shiva.
Vedic gods and goddesses in Europe
their

****_off

rudely were ignorantly and wh* pedesud, fro m lhe 4th the Hlh century Vedic *'". neo-convert Christian groups invaded and captured *"*> to rmsuse them as churches.

*n of

SSff

a standing elephant-headed Vedic deity Gtnhtnink shown to him. Maipur eating lhe offering made
in

Hi

>on

Vietnam abounds

in

such Vedic

idols.

1017

^d
23
THE VEDIC ROOTS OF CHRISTIANITY
Christianity

followers at their weekly meeting. by hit


to be added at random.

Jtni

^dflrion came

Thh b how

nan-existent of

Jesus

"s

8^ of St. P,m -, the * "tury. A w '"TsUrt of will convince the reader Encyclopaedia BriUmnica

P^

birth and death got built up by

|\^ >*
u

^sis.if^
Jwt

dbelweentbeUneS juncture the group in

of the abov,

at that

Rome

succeeded" In winning
thereafter
into

s hybrid

tnd practices.

hodge-podge of distorted v*ui C ,<

fickle emperor over the

Constantine lo join their faith. And

W*
rf

J,
jU

swung into action and beat every European Roman troops


a

bmission through

thousand-year coercive campaign.

This

years ago in Europe, following the break-up worldwide Vedic culture, several Vedie sects were vying

Two thousand

spread of Christianity. The forefathers sordid story of the of Uil > Europeans themselves suffered harrowing atrocities
udiy
in Italy.

mother

with
of

to gain popularity, recognition

and support. One

was iheChrisnian

tW

Spain,

Portugal.

(alias Christian) sect. It

ambitious, fiery, short-tempered individual Goshal. ;t is this person who later


Hitler

was joined bva frustrated" known as Copal

because
to

France and other countries. But unfortunately of wholesale conversion fit>m saint to sinner and prince
is

pauper there

none

left

to investigate into and write about

emerged as

&.

Paul

the terror

and tyranny of Christian conversions.

like Adolf

Paul used to deliver fiery speeches at several pUces from Jerusalem u> Corimh accusing his detractors of doing injustice u> htm and murdering God himself

Readers
.lesus

may

realize

from the above

analysis that
is

It

was not
fictitious

by expelling him (i. e. Paul) fron the management of the Krishna temple in Jerusalem.. An

who founded Christianity because Jesus (or the discredit?) for personality. The credit
Christianity in
a big,

the spread of

the

initial

stage

must go

lo St. Paul and later in

Matin that an ambiUous Paul hankering for leadership many enemies may be had in Ws 2nd epistle to Timothy in wmch p,^ >, -Ajejandw the coppersmith did me much evil... of him bethouwtn-.Jwfor -" he hath greatly

military

way

to Constatine. EversLnce Christianity received

imperial

support sumptuously paid preachers have been employed


all

and deployed

over the world

in

evergrowing numbers by Europeans


political

withstood our words...

and Americans especially,

as a result of their

ascendancy

PuI- incessant itinerant campaigning and angrv speeches, dran earnestness arising out of a sense of injured innocence. hfehstrung volatile elements. These Chrisnians ttiw

during the last three centuries.

But so far as theology,


Christianity is a

scripture and

ritual

Is

concerned,

mere

label

put on ancient Vedic

traditions as

we

"

I...

murdered Cod

*** *"* l ^ a few isolated cities around A. "^ to " in private houses and discuss about son*
I
'

>KaD Indicate
ttiemselvea,

hereunder by quoting a number of Christian souroaa

referred lo

by Paul.
-

^WMerlodgc-Podge
lon ***"

-^^"J" * *^ * * yW
bom Y
-

*> **

dMd Ch*
"

*m

talk ,f a

murdered Cod was br*

' us consider the Bible itself. That Is a hodge podge Testament, the New Testament versions written by several 0na "ch placea as Matthew. and John at different
Old

Mark, Luke

1019 1018

^ m*
a-,

times the

Apocope

and even angry


all

co^^
w tr**^
*
* *
0#>

iectedto-

collection is that heterogeneous

-JS^.
Si

to***

*"*
etc.

flt

a haphazard trras Wffl lh

Temples Shoe. .1
RafflOving
1

*****

when enlering nomcs ind tmpl


Vedic culture in pre-Christian

is

holy

mentors to suit

their

own convenjance
etc.

convi*^

Aramaic to Ldlkethms. from English ^Tfranch. German.

Greek. Greek to L*Un and

Veil6

<

wm
1

The evidence about this in the Bible la i dear indication

TV

term 'Aram*.

\_...i of -valence Mi* *


Tfcus

Euro*

^Aryandlheraforeaform

of Sanskrit.

Lj
' PP
'

University Press.

the Holy Bible printed by the Cambri^ The Introduction to London, informs us that Latin translalioni of

rf lh* Lort * flame of fire out of the midst of a bush. unto him in a Moses put off thy shoes from off thy feet

**

in

Chaper 3 f EXOdUS '""* "**

H'

1!id

Mea.

for

ice

whereon thou stondeth

is

holy ground.'"
...
I am that. " Thlt 'Aham Tat Suf of

ihr Old Testament

were loo

many

to be

all

good. Moreover,
versions

ifcy
anti
.

wtrr not from the original

Hebrew but from Greek

were not altogether clear. The Latin versl the Greek versions "Muddy". Some believed that Lucira and derived from it was all additions to the Old Testament, toothful had made some false

,
[j*

said unto Moses "I am that tod God Sanskrit dm. *n innslalton of the
Vedic

m)

terminology.

BKrtbm

*m Vcdk Thrcad

CCTemo"
life in

therefore. St.

Hirome and St. Chrysostome excluded them.

All thii

pre-Christian Pictures of
c,d

Europe

reveal that peopleahere


cloth,

amounts to i confession of Christian hanky

panky confusion.

wear dholies. cover their bodies with a shoulder

Now. who knows whether Lucian and Nesychius had introduced

mr
eh

new matter or

St.

Hirome and St. Chrysostome?


all

It could have

across their left shoulder and display a holy thread slung foreheads and torsos. These and sandal-paste marks on their

been ihe latter or

of

them and many many others

for

all

we

mall unmistakable signs of their earlier Vedic culture.


Even
the
1.

know
If

term
e.

Baptism

is

the

Sanskrit

term

fllfaM*)

wecan

still

lay
C.

our hands on some Greek and Hebrew

traditions

'Baipll'Sm
Sawkrll

'We have

been sprinkled with holy water.' The


spelled

of. say. .1000 B.

we

are sure that

we

shall find therein the

term Baspit-sm has been jumbled and wrongly


initial letter
'

oomn of Rriahna.

Hari,

Vasudeo and Keshav. But since these noma

u Baptism. The
topped in

'

in

the Sanskrit spelling has got

bav percolated rrom the Aramaic.


Arabic. English. French.

Greek and Hebrew

into Latin.

European pronunciation.

German

etc.

names those ancient Sanskrit

have undergone considerable change In spelling and pronunciation. For Instance, the name Chrian is being spelled as Christ and Quirinua.
Brl

According to Christian tradition young Jesus was baptized (even Wore the founding of Christianity) by John the Baptist. This has

Henri and Harry.


fl

Keshav, as Jehova. Heri-Cul-ish


i

^y

deep implications
't

which people overlook.


a professional

Hulea.Can Mha

J inUs an(

500n

indicates that

John was

Brahmin who used

,0

j*
<

A divwtity of aen.es mentioned wu *tatt '--

tranautor, pick

ancient In the margin of up any one inierpreUlion Bl


(

W
any
orfn
v
'

Jesus was nduct thread-ceremonies and that (the fictitious)


to that ritual.

J**W
J** m|

The name John

is

European corruption

J ttT

wWch

n,cl

**

' * * ve tMr

Sanskrit 4 to

nver Jesus was taken to a take a bath to the chanting of holy Vedic mantnu.

name

(^ Yuwaan.

dW

^on.Kw mo

r, nri rtJon aof their

own making**^

ia
1021

An

Indirect corroboration

of thla

may

bo found

in

another,*

Muslims tUI] wh>ri we have ihown ritual In Vedic tradiUon tho thread. * tnctent Vedic wedding Jj *> Important Vedic sacrament* in every and wedding are l* pt ' the beginning of one's educational care*,., Ufa; ont marking A. jV.,. of mariul life. Kf . n' life(he other

that Christian* iind

**

.CbrUtlBn
pr.

Saturnalia and Chriana feauvala.


in

,. [

admits

a***'

0n f "*""

Ihed by

-.1

^cM'
fa
-

Christian Organization named... a staunch Worldwide Go d P - * B X a?27, BQmb, 400 2 (India).


"

numerous publicaUona by Christian writ. l' Ued P1 "n Tnith 'boul '" Ch M

^m

Chriiimn A Vedic

Festival

booklet

apparently

Currently Christmas alias


gayest and longest Christlun

X "mas
festival

Is

fancied lo be the
it

Christian

content

makes many
its

ht

everybody thai neither the name have any Christian element within ihom.

needs to be nor the content of the

but

^^
fetuvu
|,

im

Worldwide

Church and

Christianity of it, revealing confessions. That the followers who seek to alert

pleading to

rid

'blind"

themselves blind followers of Christianity seems to dnerenia are notice. escaped their
kve

The name Christmas


the

is

the Sanskrit term Chrisn-mai

,
1

month of Chrisn as elaborated elsewhere.

(mentioned nbove) rightly points out (in pages The booklet that by nature all Christians (and of course people In
6)

general)

"

tend to follow the crowd, whether right or wrong. Sheep

bell

hangs

in

every church because so-called churchei

follow

others to the slaughter.


going...

Humans

ought to check up where


lot of things

dual Chrisn temples or their proselytized substitutes.


very word "ben"
It

In fictthi

ibty are

Most people hove 'supposed' a

la

Sanskrit (**) boj"


in

(i.

o. strength)

okaum

nteul

CbriS'mas that nre not true...

'Christmas'.... came not

adds force to the voice or prayer

invoking divinity.

from the
pasties
Is

New Testament

not from the Biblc-nol from the original

who were personally instructed by Christ ... but It gravitated


century into the

The fancied Christian phrase


of earlier Chrisn worship with a

'

bell,

book ond candle'

mlk
In

bell,

the holy book Bhagawad

the fourth

Roman

church from paganism...

Gectt
linoe

and the holy light which


the divine face.

Is

waved

in circular clockwise locus around

the celebration

of Christmas has come... from the Roman


1911

Cilholic
million

Church
published
find-

let

us examine the Catholic Encyclopaedia,

by that church. Under the heading 'Christmas'


earliest festivals
is

The 26th of December


nor
by
is
all

Is

neither the dale of Christ's


is

birth

Km

will

'Christmas* was not among the


tho first evidence of the feast

the midnight-hour tho lime of Christ *s birth, as

'*lilletl

Offti church...

Christum scholars themselves.

And yet Christmas


all all

conllnuo

to be merrily celebrated

by

all
*

Christians

over the world


thought
of

^
'

from Egypt.

customs centering around the January Calends gravitated

"JChriBlmos...."
T*he

g*i

'abandon',

u
above extract
is

literally

abandoning'

non-ChrisUan

character, because despite continue their earlier Chrlan-mas festival.

proaelylizatlon

J^elve, that Christmas

n confession by the staunchest Christiana But there is a non-Christian festival.

Cbrfsim* being . famous Saturnalia festival of Vedic l oWcure ui,Uan v * of rlv **y* uMd l!L

W&>*
1

mBnyw"orillogicaUlementsinit.

*> through family tradition. Later aa Conslantine MftriaUinUy with terror and torture the
ilw

"^

's

Roman t*W"

^*
-w

H*J

Writer of the
,wlnletI

above-quoted extract
elements
like

Is

wrong

in

assuming

ktifa**

Christmas,

Christian! birth

~a

miJr*

8,,slr

"ntl (nto Christian tradition.

which have got Christianity is a

iynctmmlted their

* lh

flctillou.

Jesus

's

'^WnaJraMgion,

1022
1023

The whole of Christianity fa a mere isolated chunk goes on examining Vedic tradition. If one ic and chuoVf*H'1r Christianity the *l non-Christian elements from remainder k?
Mil

"^ let
Ncw

26th of

December, when no Hock, wen, out In birth is entirely unknown date of Jesus 'a
does Christmas masquerade as

th.

nddi

i.

Even the name Chiislian-Ity is the Sanskrit term Chris Lord Chrisn. Jesus himself is a fictitious e. admirers of

-^ why

Christian RdllLloui

Schaff-HcrzoR

Encyclop-tdU of

fUvaH

n^^
W. any

allusion to Christ 's personal for Chrisn. Therefore, the |nA ir?*' action, to his apostles are all imaginary stuff. Had there really

Z*v
jnd

Jesus

would have been meticulously follow^ the present padding of pre-Christian festivals wouldn't hnviZ
his instructions

festwal depended that upon the (December 25) followng the Saturnalia (December Bnimalia 17-fc shortest day of the. year and the celebrating the "New &in

-the do* o the

popular

and Brumalia were too deeply pagan Saturnalia entrenched in custom to be set aside by Christian influence."

necessary or possible.
En(erUiii"ncnl

The

third assertion in the

drifted into Ciiristinnity in

above-quoted extract that Christmb the fourth cenluiy A. I), is not


trco
I

In the

early days of Christianity the earlier Vedic tradition of

What happened wds jtul the reverse, nume'y hat


with

in the 4th century,

the

supixirt
all

of

the

Roman

troops

convert Vedic

forms of entertainment such as dance and drama themes continued for several centuries. udusively around religious
fashioning all

Clmstimj

misapproprfcu-d

existing
.

pre-Cliristian

p'Tictico

TV
md
the

white apparel of the fairies

stamped then as Christian


a trick, a sleight of hand.

it

was a simple act of toUl


i.

luthoritative

is laid down in compendium known as Natyashastra


'

the hoary Vedic

by Bhnrat. Even
the Sanskrit
find that

proselyt Irallon,

Everything Pagan

term

'

fairy

will

be seen to be

a truncated
'

form of
'

e.

Vedic was

ovomitfhl

dubbed

m Christian.

Therefore,

what needs

to

be done now

Vedic
is

term Apsura. Eliminate letters


is

'

and

3
'

and we

ri

to decry individual ooseivances (he total ChiSstiun

the

remainder 'para'

pronounced by the Muslims


'

as 'Pari* ("$
'

such as Christmas but

to ouwulon *nd

mask and accept the

by the Christians as
(i.e.

fairy

'

The

Islamic terms

Khud

'

(I.e.

traditions to be Ved*.

kIO and Khuda


of

divinity)
'

are coined on the Vedic


Christians

parallel

The Encyclopaedia BriUinnlca (1964 edition) also admits thit "Cnrisimas was not among the earliest festivals of the church." It was not instituted by Christ becojse there never was any Christ. But Si Paul and his associates who were the real unwitting founder*
,

'itma' and
as

'

paramatma.

The

who

explain the term

'Devil'

a fallen god ought to realize the term


exactly his divine origin.

vWDeval

in

Sanskrit signifies

of Christianity used to observe a Krishna alias Saturnalia


in

Sunday alio Non-Christian

festfnl

December

in their

&

own non-Christian households. Utor

when

The same Encyclopaedia also reveals that emperor ConstanUne


""rporeied Sunday as a day of Christian rest
alias holiday

RlUl and his successors gradually cut themselves off from th*
I'C

because

back-round and sought out to lead a separate existence von.ty and dreams of leodtrship their *wck old Vedic festivals nnd drifted along * with them into Christianity.

of

&nday was the pre-Christian Pagan day of sun-worship.


tt-riitmus-Bon

*w

y fancied Christian practice Is

*
,

en earlier Vedic tradition.


Q(1

flr

On

1>

T
' '

8 lh0

^W"

(mentioned above) states " JauS *!

qT- ox
,Uar

from encouraging festival, some Christmas as a Christian ^ristian countries went so far. in the early top of
as to ban the celebration of Christmas by statute.

%.

N0W Yo* "Won) sutes "Our Lord was

not *""

* ULlJle

^^

|n

im A ^ by ^ Massacnusri

ts

Bay

G*y

'

1034

1Q
England. USA. prohibiting ihe observance of Chri "Public Notice - the observation of

in

New

declared.

Christy

the exchanging of gifts been deemed a sacrilege, feasting and similar Satanic*] dressing in fine clothing, pr^"* with the offender liable to a are hereby forbidden fine

wd

*J *H
f

ifie

bom*

ith evergreens.
tbe

^ebrated
Win*

above references it is apparent that Chrlttmu b world not because of Christians all over the

but

[2

shillings."

* ^rituelly ** traightB*fly

would, therefore, be more truthful, honest christians- It elevating if so-called Christians give up their separatist
declare themselves to be followers of Vedic

Similarly in 17th century

England Christmas celebrations

UW
&*
i. c

banned as "Pagan and Papish , Saturnalian and Satanic, idolttrou and leading to idleness". That term 'Pagan and Papish* \% a clear admission Lhat the Papacy
Vedic institution.
is

* what they are following in the name of Christianity culture tenets but is adored by the Vedic doctrine ^"Clrred by Christian jjabhorre". . the one ^ onA they offend Christianity by On (K^ nnfl hand thov ntremA rs*.i..i... ~
'

A 5

riiiot since

a pre-Christian Pagan

An organization known as Jehovah's Witnesses hus


In the article

above. traditions while on the other they violate Vedic a nK Vedic themselves Christians, This way Ihoy are guilty "Tre by calling spiritual heresy. ofUdua!
.

eXP-

declare]

Chmttnj*. Really Paftin 7 in

its joninal titled Awukt

(December 22. 1981 issue) that "All the standard Encyclopaedia


and reference -works agree that the date of Jesus and
that
's birth is

Europeans mistakenly declare to be ThU i what Paganism is in fact Vedic Hinduism. even Roman
Aih

Christianity or

unknown
Ihe

Wednesday

the church borrowed the date of


their

December 25 from
".

Romans, along with


Encyclopaedia
calendar
retains

customs and
observes

festivals

to

of applying ash and sandal-past* The ancient Vedic custom Christianity in the body after bath is still retained by one's

Britannica

that

"the

ecclesiastical
festivals

observance of
Souls'

an Ash Wednesday.

numerous remnants of pre-Christian


'

notably Christmas which blends elements including both the feui

All

Day
is

of the Saturnalia and the birthday of Mithra.

The so-called All Souls' Day


observance of

an exact
(eT*

translation of the Vedic

Encyclopaedia Americana records "It is usually held thai ihf day (December %S) was chosen to correspond to Pagon festivals tha' took place around the time of the winler Solstice, when the dayi begin to lengthen, to celebrate the rebirth of the Sun".

Sarva

Pitrl

Amavasya
all

fafl

awn**),

the day fixed

by tradition for Easier

the worship of

deceased ancestors.

The

New

Easter
Catholic

Is

the

name

spring, worshipped of an ancient deity of the

Encyclopaedia

"*="*

notes

that

"On

ihli

day

2JW

25) as the Sun began its return to northern ski -fcvoue. of Mithra celebrated the birthday of the Invincible

the Vedic

New Year Day


first

That was during March/April.


tribe left the

also

on which the

Yadav

** *?"'

"* h

therefore

commemorated by the Jews

as

PwtW DayLove .*
1

^I'amythhisresurrcction.dayaaidtomarkEasterbun^

**-

^'-n-dny Roman

festival

(according to

W*sJ

'J* * ^ng
<**

resurrection

**'

1 ,n "

m "* fW,,Vd WM **
-N.

was of Mndon, the God of was hjrrt disturbed the penance of Lord Shiva
from

by boisterous dnndng. tfa-givin, and by decora^

f-tW;

Lord I* * wife '^

Shiva releasing acidic lustre H* rewrrecuo* th. of Cupid, pleading inconsolably for

J^

1027

ia
was granted of ber husband resurrection which is thai her wish by the

comp 8lo

SWv, n
fl

to

has been traditionally o*kb2! celebration has been hijacked by over the world. Ttai C&rtSJJ day of Jesus s iwrectlon. Even the parade as the

_uropean

.me Cupid

is

Sanskrit (W-5)

'Cop-da'

Ui

seemin,/ *>

Lord Shiva) who caused annoyance (to


These sample instances should convince the reader thai and observances are invariably
ail

so-called Christian rituals

of hoarv

Vedic tradition and their son of Cod.


roalpronunciation of the

exactly as a God descended

3 a m term Chrisn because Chrisn was Icnonn, ( avataar : x*m j on the earth.
i
* '

namely Chrut

The Dead Sea Scrolls


Since Christianity (like Islam)
is

only an hijacked and

fossilized

branch of Vedic culture


Christianity is suspect.

we have shown how

every aspect of

so-called

throughout the centuries to clutch at

The Christian establishment therefore has been striving ham some proof of its authenticity.
' '

One such lom-tommed

find

was the Dead Sea


to

Scrolls.

But on

closer

examination they were found to expose the bickerings of some


disgruntled

persons
alloy

which
called

led

counterfeit,

synthetic
This
Is

a portrait

of St. Paul. Since Jesus Christ

is

a fictitious person
it

paeudo-spiritual

Christianity.

Therefore

they wen?

lu discussed in
Paul

suppressed

my

book

titled

Christianity

\%

Chriui-niiy)
cull

was

St.

who could be

said to

be the founder of the runaway

which has

Thr Shroud The second


body
'find*

ur*e

come to be known as Christianity.


St. Paul

We

call

it

'runaway' because
culture.

**n

was himself a follower and preacher of Vedic


but a Chrisnian
i.e. a follower of

He

which at

first

enthused
in

the Christian

*** not a Christian

Lord Chrisn. Look


still

establishment was the so-called

Twin Shivud

which

Jesus's

nil

Indian apparel

which

oil

Vedic preachers in India

wear. His

supposed to have been wrapped On after crucifixion.


scrutiny
I

unabridged and

uncorrupted Sanskrit

name was
is

obviously Sanl Copcul (WT

that loo was found to be bogus. Therfore time for all Christians to realize that they have been du ped spiritually becauae there never was any Jesus.
it

scientific

^'
jj*

The

Bible
ia

came

into being centuries after St. Paul. Consequently


left

took he

holding in his

hand

the Bhogawad Ceeta sermon


is

T*

Kri hna.

The sword
is

in

the right hand

further confirmation
to
fl|dit

* Bhagawad Ceeta

the only scripture which urges one

jj^y and " IU


(

fearlessly for

nor a righteous cause. Since neither Jaus


la

founders Christianity

iZ

nt

7
>

of Vedic o freak, unintended ofrshoot


to

San *rii term 'Sanl' continue,

be used in Christianity
I.e.

becnuM Paul

olloa

Copoul was a Vedic 'Suit'

'monk

\(&
, divinity

1029
a" reword or punishment.
iUJ
It
l9

weU-lmown

P8 0f Thst depicted aa reclining or tltttng cobras with the hoods serving as bUssful . -.ujOhooded canopies nniCl BwWty retUn "* ent *"*"" ' ' " **** *"< * W only f dlVinlly presiliing over Wewlng and hlsilng *! Sat** n* M5m0S bul *"* ilwir rn sleri0U8 such

""'

'""whom *

M
a

Vedie

deities ore

^^ raiM9 h00d bMOme aiwoyi


an

QH thot*

****

**
of

**

HSw
10 tb,

"*

^'"B^e

mundan.

good lions of

and bod. and

blissful .or fearful.

w per Christianto
Wrlh sport
date, day of birth

tradition a star guided

the divine child Jesus.

some wise men from the east If that were true why b

time and year

all

unknown?

termed x'mas. why not y'maa or i'mas7 doesn't signify Jesus, and 'Maa' doesn't mean a birthday Moreover x celebrated as Jesus 's birthday? ho* come x'mas Is
celebrations are gi, birth

His mother Mary is

claimed to be a virgin But virginity and simultaneous


.

agtherhood
nor

an

contradiction
.

in

terms.

virgin cannot be s mother


in

cm

mother Jx a virgin In fact the very word virginity


'

ha Sanskrit

origin,
li

[riiri p%) 'varian-JananamlU.

signifies a stole

wnere procreation

ruled out.

'X' Is the

Roman numeral
so
is.

10.

and 'mas'

Is

the Sanskrit word meaning

BMnuV

Therefore x'mas signifies the 10th month of the ancient Vedic

W.

In Ved.c parlance the

cosmos

u Known

as Brahmond iffnsj
.

I.e.

(The fVench word


l

monde

^ i itYlt
rvm^T
1

wL^vwL^

*"" lhe "*** war (circa 5561 B.C.) " '?" Wl tnm ^W^iivdy fragmented and MiM
depicuons r

"m)

mean(np

lhe WQr|d

ta ,

^
the

calendar.
toe Vernal toe 10th

And

it

because the Vedic new year begins

in

March at
Is

equinox. Counting
is

March aa the

1st

month December
Is

actually

month. That
i.

why the

very term December

Sanskrit meaning

and isiu,

-ZIj

^nUr' above) eome

*<

"*
"OR"*

"*

lifted

fciw-iraber

e.

the lOih port of the zodiac.

,nt0

until Chrfitianiiy

**
h

(taw

*tnmi

* "p "wntaUon
rtrio
r' dep,c,rt
)

Fathtf Cod
"

uwd

">

* worshipped
in

all

over the endrni

discovered In archaeological excavation*


left

tvw *nfc,

<* thejr B*uHPPld Unl "


,n

whTw

*B

"* "**
<*
-

^
Urd

obov'- The one at the top

Indole.

Pre-Wamlc

times,

Shiva ',

hMd
aeon"
bitlnl

Of iho

Unw Ta. bo Qr^*11

rePrwt lhe yet unfolded, unknown "* *ni ymbQUxes both the blessing and

tow

1031

J(,U'

-nd

accepted. In that cose mffliona employed mylh ge" preachers from the Pope down to the mean**
laity will feel like fish in a dried-up of Christian

a,

clergy

tf*"JZn. biblenUn,

printers and sellers wiD all lose their employment'

'Xn" ^wore
twV

W ^^ W
7^
rll

prefef n0t 0nly

comi

^u^

pond

i|mon!

finding

in their power to smother the do everything truth. the suggestion on the ground that when millions 3h away

CHRIST A MAL-PRONUNCIATION OF CHRISN


A very painful aspect of
is

thousands of Christian establishments around the jftXlWni and ' lhe e3dstence of Christ now could Jesus bD to*5*1 on Hd re myth? That reveals how most people's convictions
'

!u
life

be a

is that

if

an

historical

findin,

inconvenient and

unwelcome to the wel!-entrenched bureau

(0B0*

the

mob. Chrlsn-Mas Celebration

ihen the bureaucracy brazenly ignores that finding altogether need be tries even to actively suppress it so that the paty may not clamour for its recognition.
if

js* Ancient

nt to

all medieval constructions throughout the world, usually ascribed to Muslims are other people's captured forts, palaces,

One of my very far-reaching discoveries was that

first

seeker after the truth, who is courageous enough A genuine by the colossus of Christianity, does not realize be overawed that Jesus Christ is only a popular malpronunciation of
Sanskrit term iesus Chrisn.
'

hiitorical

lhe Vedic

garden)

Even the term


parlance,

feather in the cap

'

one comes across in European

townships, towers, and bridges

Consequently, the entire

ccncepi

the practice of tucking a feather in the European hat

of Islamic archilecture is baseless.

and the feather

seen even in

M uslim crowns originate in the imitation


in

That

finding

of mine cuts at

the very roots

of

Lord Krishna

who

is

the ancientmost person known

history

archaeology, historians, architects, museologists. tourist ^umt-guKles journalists,

of

all

that
10

wear a

(peacock)

feather in his cap or crown. That proves

officab,

government

ho* the entire ancient

world revered Krishna as an

incarnation.

officials,

jn

and

so-called

islamic art have been

propagating and proclaiming

W
I

H.Spencer Lewis, an American Christian observes


In

"The
came

and

the early Latin

language were
Sanslcrit,

identical in

form " .' That

clearly

2ZX?
htv6
'

pretended for the ,ast

w *Mra as
it ia

though

explains

how the

Vedic

name

iesus Chrisn

to

be

tny

wch **very.

or that

not worth itunllon.

pronounced as
1

TV Jew! M >lh

Jw ^W

1**

*d

wort
instance of

of "jesus Christ' in Europe. Moreover the statue world Holy Child was exhibited on Christmas day throughout the

Chriit it

iZr

concerns

my

that assertion that

the Christian era. Therefore the scenes of Christ's birth kp'oed by ancient Christians are a deceptive . proselytized form of *[>. worship.

Jwut
to

ChrUtP^I
them

'tP'^ngihiinndinLnf

worldwide Chri-ian;. HlUl,ty

V"

born flny per5n By inlll, Kentsia ' fl,most ^"^ anUrnberofF'UropeanresearcnerstnenlselVW


'

yth: there neV6r

WM

Spencer Lewis also speaks of


This
is

Christmas Day
is

Won)

lhe Christian era.

anomalous but

an historical

rn Wy
l? *"

"

'"convenient. A vast, towerinif. " collapse to rubble if the secret ih*

111

Jg San .

. Tne Myatica!

Life of Jesus by H. Spencer l*rh>. Jot*. California. 05114. USA, 1964 A.D.

R^crudan

W*""\

[OB
il is *** Msfly reejfeed fart- The P"** that l murtbere-sutetauUHlby-n'-Thatistosfly, longbefo^c^ i Chrisn-mas celebration. And 8lr then used (o be Sanskrit etymological derivation. Chrisn -mas has a sound

1033

reS0,ved

when

m
'*'

tW
ls

P
i**
h
"

Ll

same 'iesus-. Of the 10 Vedlc direction, th. kn0Wn M eesanyB because i{a guardian deity u
' '

-^ inevitable
tber
inclusion

conclusion, therefore,

that the Essene (and

V*"' j,

"' Chris,.

signifies the

month of Chrisn.

-mil

contemporary sects ) were a branch of Vedic culture reinforced by the details given is further
Britain

toward.

sound theological reason for December There be, commemorated as Chrisn 's month. In the Bhogawad Geeu fa! Chrisn explicitly states that Margasheersh (i.e. December)
is also a

of the

pVthe

passage quoted above. Queen Bodicia of Romans was an Icani alias Essene.

who

repress
fl

The

Him. Contrarily. Christmas has no etymological meaning


It is

usually explained

away as Christ
'

's birthday, but thaL

(3

1 contrived explanation
in

Mas does not


'

signify a birthday. Contrarilv

passage

its redemption mentioned in immortality of the soul and quoted above are chief Vedic beliefs. Similarly their

leader described as "'a mysterious AMI important * was obviously Lord her of Righteousness'
.

figure called

TeBC

Krishna. His

Sanskrit

'mas' does

mean a month. Consequently


is

the term
the

-lings

Chrisnmas (malpronouncedasChrismas)
of Margasheersh (alias

actually the whole month

famous discourse

about Righteousness are embodied in the Bhagawnd Geeu. He delivered on the Kurukshelra battlefield."

December) and not just one day or a mere

week as the Christians have been

mode

to believe. Therefore, what

[n

the
'

Krishna alias Sri Krishna were known Even His names Hari, West as will be apparent from H.Spencer Lewis 's observation
'

Christians blindly and fgnorantly celebrate as

Christmas

is in fact

that
ia

the

Egyptian letter or diphthong

'

KH

'

is

usually transcribed

an ancient Chrisn festival.

'CH'. The

Kheru of the Egyptians would be


Christ

therefore 'cheru'

footnote in another book by H.

Spencer Lewis, records

the

or 'ch-r'

(and)

was a

title

to be specifically applied to
deified as

"findings of such archaeologists as G. Lankester Harding, Director


or the Jordanian

md
1

attained

by one who had been especially born and

Department of Antiquities (viz. the most startling disclosure or the Essene documents so far published) Is that the i possessed, years before Christ, a terminology and practice
that has alwiiyi been considered

messenger of

God

'

3
'
.

The above passage gives one a clear indication that Krishna


used to
letters

be Egypt's

God
like

too.

His name represented by the

initial

wUd
STh!

uniquely Christian. The Essene*

'KH' only

bapiiim and shared a liturgical repast of bread and wine.


-

pronunciation signify, at best, that the Egyptian

of the

7 byapriwl

name sounded

Khrishna. Spencer Lewis further


'

clarifies

Tb* believed '" redemption and immortality

that the ta X.

rfw^T*

m0Sl

^P01 1
"

Egyptian letters

KH

'

leader

was

mysterious

figure

^WTheWherofRighUousness-.'

This should leave

no one

just get transcribed as ch, chr or Greeks loo in any doubt that the

"Peuea the

name
is

as Chrisn alias Xrisn.

Chri^^ qU0Ved ab0Ve no

^^^^!t^ ^ m
*<^?1 Mhwm*
"!,

C,e8r'y tablishes that all so-called cominUflUon or

Tnere

a mere

U* "
i

Spencer one more important point, however, which

has merely touched

mentions but glossed over. He

'

>

8t J1

dir"lt

'

<21

-^tiirta

>l0,k*

W*1 *.

&n^PS

Essenese U> idenUfy who the Essan which is a Vedic term for "~

"the cryptogram represent thr adopted by the ancient Greeks to the They stand for Lewis obviously doesn't know.
JJ2"

>?

** "Krishn PurushotUm"

alias

'

Xrisn Poramatma.\

rin

**. Ulifomia,

f Ju.
flfi

by H.Spencer

U*>

^ Mystical

H4, USA.

Ufe

of Jeeua.

by H. Spencer Uwia.

1036

MM
0-

^ *

Spencer Lewj3 231 of lb* same book addl monograms composed of the letters ms

VC<

civilization

was shattered, and

centuries and miBenia

uniUtf*

2U*tan

w
^

fatten..These abbrevi was out above the aUon

or so crudely-carved that they uwr misunderstood thjs wisea newmon( -^aertdwbeacrcw over theH. and m
evolved appearing as
is

^
^
^

L| splinter groups such aa Sadduceana. aoics. Ksaenese


were stru SgUnB for P !"18 "^' The
a big
earlier Vedic

85*1, P*

#1

\fig& ***"
1

^7

^e
long

eflnuf *

banyan tree while the sects named above hanging root -sterna. As soon as the main Vedic
its

ts

IHS with the cross on the


official

irer*!**

letu*

de9troyed

long

root-stems strove

to

find

Tna monogram

now the

emblem

as adopted by u*

*1 t-ny
'

them was the Chrisn-nity sect which One among as its chief scripture. St. Paul P d Bhagawad GeeU ^Parde
.**^

nllUl

gives us a curious insight into how Tae above observation u> cross over the letter H out of a sheer Jesuit mongram puts the
misunderstanding.

$" qint
-h

Gopal

was one of

its

short-tempered demogogic adherents

We. therefore, leave

it

out. Let us

now
IHS

clarify

""tien for rta*n


'ciflUon pf0flUn

place to place delivering fiery orations to seek gBed from himself and his sect. Since the accuracy of Sanskrit

had long since degenerated, the term Chrisn-nity had

what the Jesuits loo have long forgotten.

The

letters

in their

monogram stand

for lesus

Hari Srikrishna i.e. Lord Hari Srikrishna

to

gpelled as Christ-nity.

By

the early 4th century A.D.

and have nothing to do with Jesus Christ because there never was

^w,
iteir
,

Sanskrit

any person called Jesus Christ and because the letters IHS has*
no connection with Jesus Christ.

separate

words composing that term, instead of retaining pronunciation, hardened into Identity, meaning and

single

Christianity. word pronounced as

Tie above eJuddatJon should open the eyes of


Christiana to the great theological

Just at that
all

time the

Roman Emperor

Constantine was talked


Christianity

so-called

deception

*y have been

subjected
into

iou joining this sect.

As soon as that was achieved

to through the ages accejAing a dubious aide-tracked


'

by those

who
'
.

mot
deftly

ahead

armed with batons, clubs, tongs,

spears, swords and

inveigled their ancestors

Christianity

In so doing they were

wtthes pulverizing
path
and Its
Stoics,

surviving

every vestige of the earlier Vedic dvflizaUon Samantani. fragments such as the Sadduceans,

from primordial Vedic Chrisn-nity (i.e. the "poundad by lord Qirisn) to an imaginary Christianity. The deception about the cross mentioned above has also
other aspects.

Essenese and

many

others.

several

symbols such had all been using the earlier Vedic the Swastik. tbeShree Chakra (alias David's Star), the axe,
These sects

U the
belief that the

trident

and the cross as respective badges.

cross chosen by Christianity aa its symbol,


is

rijttua**

from Jens crucifixion

mistaken because there wasn

't

yJiandmyci%wfiiJon.
ThaiChnwan
|

three Among them was the cross which was an amalgam of ***. The horizontal projections of the Swastik were eliminated

* "foot

5 trai gnl

^J**

'rom wearing a cross symbol hanging U*r*>re. unhioncal. Moreover it is also W*W
practice of
'

^^ Uke

tne arithmetical

'

plus

'

>

*ign-

"D* wkh

'

?[*

** ""

been "tfify observed that had Jesus

m
(

Setn

^y.

in

those ancient days sects believing

brighi golden

wshiP in Sun, the Sun s cross + as their symbol representing


Syrian Chnsuans directions. So-called

* PandaA?
',Un,

"^ "*** **

CnrisUanj

** worn

ih

* "

'

fining the J ^convert Hindus,four


aU

-"' <* the Manabharat w.r

when the worldw*'

a,*!"

ancient Vbc** P by consecrating that same ^o-called churches to pay homage to and worship drvunty-

andenl unwittingly continue their

SiO

WorW

I03fi

1037

TV
.vmbol

third

Wnd

of cross used In ancient

u mes

<b*

-"^
)

,p8n,shu

'

the Wrapon thal

0*

(Vedic incarnation

wielded.

PtruW* ***

whether fair or black human belnga are the proa u v that W**?.* Goddess. That term ' progeny ia the Sajukril word Sanskrit
'

m*

bom of.
T^wrrn
,

followers-

used to be borne by St. Paul', That cross-like axe Paul's intemperate, hallucinatory aUusiona
hi*

m (^J
2.
?Ie

also

from

and denied

being expelled from tbe Chrisn-nity sense or hurt at leadership) to the murder of truth and divinity
its

w?y

^ Wrvv
,

ui

Madonna read in the reverse as Nna-Dema alias Notra Sanskrit expression 'Our Mother', tbe same turned French- The great Notre Dame cathedral in Paria.
be the ageold Vedic Mother Goddess temple

imaginative rise later to

accounts of

some

iesus (alias jesus)

and the
been
all

cross (used as on instrument of punishment naDed on tbe cross. That times) and the other types of crosses discussed abov in those Greek letter X used as an inital of (Lord) Chrism hivi

contJn ues to

^M
fl*J

mask. Incidentally the European term under a Christian goft pronunciation of the Hindu term 'Met*'. fl g

^UnMutatioaandMuUlatioa
Important detail lost
rwiiUan and
tofi.

wrapped up together confusedly to form the Christian crow. devout Christians dangle on Therefore, the so-called cross which
their chests or display

on the world

of history because of

Muslim domination for tbe

last

1400 to 1700 years,


Idols.

on their shrines and publications

is bosic*ll,

Christians

mutOated. distorted or destroyed Vedic

a Vedic symbol.

^rinWi
,rith

rituals,

language end even names of places and persons


,

zealots hordes of neo-Christian


in

clerics

and military contingenta


for total

Madonna

Christianity to spread
to Switzerland

Europe to create a precedent

From Sweden
has shrines
dedicated to

and Iberia to Siberia ChiTstehdom


churches and grotua
Neither

anulaUon later

by Muslims the world over.

known as

chapels, cathedrals,
fair

Mother Mary and a

or black Madonna.

Christian clergy
all

nor the lay intelligentsia seem to be aware


Christian

CDWl I?) rViduy


that

those

so-called

shrines

are

mere

namesake,

The day of Jesus' s crucifixion is

known as Good

Friday.

Whot
if

proselyUted, make-believe continuation of ancient Vedic Coddesi

liM 'Good' about It?


**

Is killing

a saintly person Good? And

worship under a Christian garb. This should also serve as a


instance of the deficiency of

graphic

*u

the

son of God

how come he

or hia father, God proved


All

modem
armour.

research acumen. Modem

Willy helpless In

preventing the crucifixion.

such considerations

scholars are either really ignorant or

they lack courage

to point

Wivb that Christianity is

a total concoction from beginning to end.

out tbe chinks

in the Christian

Madonna (yet another name or Mother Mary)


Sanskrit expression (TFTT *;)

is

aga^ *
mother'-

'Mala Nab" meaning "Our

This expression
alia.

ia

Matf further proof that the so-called Mother

M*Sonna is not the mother or Jesua alone but being the


humanity.
|a

moU*
h*
o f tn*

of

.11

now
-fair-

^*nUlioo

or

^.^

bul lbe Ve(Jic Mother Goddess(|

^T*
d
the

WWcb

bUck one

de,,imal* th*

representation to Kail. Incidentally that is meant

rfl0

fi

^jnuation

ImP""

IOM
UUcal

1039

has no place quid pro quo

In

an academic

appraisal

(W

of

prophetically warned followers vtvekanenda had once Buddhi8m Christianity and -centred re,, lons *Tdividua1 *>* " happens if history ever denies the existence ked what
,

NO JESUS EVER UVED


Religions centering

.hat Is
c.

precisely the predicament which faces Christianity


is

around a aingle individual are by


there that the
?

their

w
ft

motuous evidence called Jesus Christ. ^'waTborn any P^on


ast
of

now

available to prove that there

nature very fragile, shaky, dubious and untenable commodities


several reasons vi.
lived

what guarantee
is

is

man

actuiUy

W he

ere usually not mentally prepared maiority of readers readjustment. They are overawed and cowed
radical

and that hii life-atory

not a

myth
a

Why should the so-calfe)


as has been
la

d0Wn eVB0

prophet be invariably, a

man and not

woman

generiily

here.

colossus of Christianity confronting them the towering The suggestion that such a colossus has sprouted from
Is

assumed and implied everywhere ?


lb*

What guarantee

there th
tyrant or

myth

loo overwhelming a proposition for

their fragile

man

is

a genuine prophet

and not a power-hungry

WN

faculties

Therefore, they seem to mentally to grapple with.

an Importer set up by the pressure-clique wanting to wield power


in the

name

of a prophet ?

Why

should divinity choose only cw

particular person as its blue-eyed favourite to the exclusion of others ?

And what happens to the


prophet
to the
's birth ?

billion*

of persons born before the ao-calM

Could they

ell

be assumed to have gone

to beU

with the thought "Oh no! How could it be the people from the Pope down to laymen all ponitiftl " To such people following a mere chimera? over the world be world b indeed foUowin8 ' would Uk to po^t ul that lhe does reason for this situation is that hardly anybody

I the suggestion
Could
all

Aimers.

The

absence of a guiding-prophet ?

my

difficulties never arise in the case of the Vedic wsy Hinduism. There, prophet or no prophet. IncarnsUoo or no incarnation every person is responsible for his own actioni and the law of Karma automatically dispenses both rewards snd

All

such

of

life alias

and thinking. Most people follow the mob person merely because there i Christ as having been a historical stupendous, arehundreds of others who say so and because there Is a taepUve establishment all over the world.
believe in
original

Christian

Those not prepared to


oflU consequences,

puniihmenu according to one's deeda from the time human

Bft

*** Consequently,

if

someone asks

'
'

What happena

if somebody

TT"

**<

f Chritn
Is

you are denying the

existence

or are scared do any original thinking those who leave alone. But we would like to inUllectusHy n aptitude for historical investigation and are o and alive we would like them to ponder on every aspect

'Z2! *^m
\

The reply

that Vedic culture eliaa Hinduisni

h"

^I'Mlfe-story.
Eminent end learned Christians of

Mt>n ^.hn.

Incarnation

and that Vedic cul*


Moreover.
or

H^C Muinl
"W

from Incarnation, and prepheu.

**

numerous

national!

to have

*!"

"

h u tort of a political compromise-off* ? *"* *** ****. of Chriai we may concede ChrW

* *

any

historical

V*

T* *

ages doubted

ntthor.

William Durant has

J^otCMibaiion

wort his mulU-volume tne.ssu. Hi) surnmarii*) (page 663. Vol.


in

enunent Christ. An the existence of


1040
.

"
1041

tJltM 4B.C. -A.D.30.

, ubl

rl

*^

ne

New Testament

to such close analysis that the Catholic


others

excommunicated him and many

the life story DM Christ exist ? b

of the founder of c lfCh

gn-Oy

who

held

myth?
- Early
in

*H
lho

views

tfD*
"l"
yina dmy^a
.

the 18th century the circle or Bolingbroke,

Holland IW
_.

*!
nenr

discussed Voltaire, privitely


lived.

the possibfliiy that

tbehisWricltyof

Lut,

Pierson. Naber and Matbas led tbe movement nt Jesua. JesUS.


similar disbelfef.

Votaey propounded the

Empire
In

in 1791.

same doubt in his Napoleon meeting the German scholar.

JU| ?J

r^

Drews also expressed Germany Arthur


of

ttiuJ!

believed in the historicity I803aslcedhim (whether) he of Christ?"

T dscbolars UkeW.BSouth, J.M. Robertson (andG.A.WeDi) &lD any the existence


hove

S-*lrt questioned UKe" l5tf M

Jesus Christ.
built

Thus

at least for

the

last

200 years European


in

Christians

the story of a non-existanl Jesus then was


afe at length In Is discussed
,. Hpr* ' 1"J,C Chriso* "*'

up?
ta

wm

bold and honest enough to believe have doubted tbe existence of any Jesus.

their

own

raUnatts

my

book

titled Chriulanily

however,

intend to summarize the evidence

"The
' '

first

engagement

in this

200-years war,
,

mi fought in silence by Hermann Reimsrus


Hamburg- On
his death
in

adds Dunni professor of Orimui


left cautiously

"

topicon the

After

the

language* ot

1768 be

ministration broke
cut off

Mohabharat war when the unitary world Vedic down, humanity gradually became divtded and

unpublished, a 1400-page
biter

manuscript on the life of Christ.

Six

yen

Gothhold Leasing over the protests of his friends published


it

portions of

as Wolfnbuetlcl

Fragments. In 1796 Herder

pointd

groups. These groups began to vie with one was the iesus Chrisn power and popularity. Among them other incarnation. But tbe cult of God Krishna, the Vedic i.e. the
into separate for
cult

out

Uw

apparently Irreconcilable differences

between the

Christ of
ft.

Westerners
|

pronounced that

name

as jesus Christ because

and

Matthew. Mark and Luke, and tbe Christ of the Gospel of

John".

and because the were indistinguishable in early Latin U alw pronounced as Christ even in India.

name

Chrisn

"In 1828 Heinrich Paulus examining the


ftt so-called miracles to natural

life

of Jesus

ascribe!

causes in his 1192 page book.

itrong

Chrisn cult had a The important centres at which the iesus Nazareth. Jerusalem and Corinth.

lowing were Bethlehem.

"But

David Strauss in his bold and original book Life of Jews

The birth of

Lord Krishna used to be celebrated

in temples in those

expressed tbe view that the supernatural

element should be

class*!

dues with great gusto.

myths. That massive volume published In 1835-1836


furious debate.

led

"In 1840 Bruno Baur began a series of worka aiming

to *ho*
the

the personifying of a cult evolved In ntury from . fusion of Jewish. Greek and Roman theology-

Jwu "

wu

m yth.

When Josephus the Jew historian wrote his recorded Equities (of the Jews) around A.D. 93 he apparently had *1 the early of his time Chrisnian alias Christian leaders "lived **** angrily about 90 years ago
publicizing,
if

famous volume

namely that

Jew .

* A^ *
I
"

EmaW *""" " Uf


* *

of Jcw> nyle showed the unreliability of the Gospels. <* tti* century. . French author Abbe

^ *** co"^^"
U*a

ym
7

he P* he may be called, for Trutb^ works, and taught men, and Joyfully received w* Greeks. He 1* was followed by many Jews and many
holy

man,

man

rf

<"*

'"Measlah.

'

T0W,rd
*

IMS
Thai
it

1043
the rr^fle. dubious, hearsay reference structure of Christianity rests.

^ *hlch.

.C^P-'"*-"
noWd
earlier there is

aptlre lowering'

no contemporary reference
's

io Chriit

jew,

examination of it reveals a number But a close had been a genuine miracle-man how ( s It
to

^fc^not
for

almost a

93 A.D. That century there was no record of any Jesus


him
is

found

in

work

in

^ J*,,
.
,

f fl(|

occurs 93 years after Christ iLt-Bver reference


If

fancied birth,

is that reference

an interpolation.

never claims to

have met Jesus.

^^
*>
puta,
long ,

"*

And**"

BIT**"*
The

Jesus birth-place of
while others say
it

At die distance of about

93 years
called

it is

very easy to mislead the

fctWehem

some hazy figure


will

Jesus having lived long

Who

have the heart or the means to question such a claim?

J* Qhrign those temples the birth of Lord Chrisn used ^Christian days. In year at the midnight hour on the specific celebrated every

temples in

is not known. Some claim it was was Nazareth. That is because there every town and city in those early

^
day

in

Josephus being copied by hind wccessive periods there was enough scope for any neo-ChnsUm
Ancient writings, bite that of

eclat. with great

That

is

why

both Bethlehem and Nazareth

firim to

of iesus Chrisn alias jesus Christ. be the birth places


is

zealot copyist to
in

introduce a spurious passage about Jesus 'a existent

What
with the

more, the

name Bethlehem and


'. It is

Nazareth are connected


in Sanskrit

the

name of Josephus.
Christ

Chrisn cult.

The term Vatsaldham

means
is

'

the

Moreover, Durant points out that even the reference to


in

Darling Child homo (town) of the


malpronounced

that term which

being

Josephus j volume

*
'

renders the passage suspect


it

' '

and ChrisUw
the reasons

m Bethlehemterm Nandarath
in Sanskrit

scholars themselves reject


ii

as an interpolation.

One of

likewise the

means Nand 's Chariot.


nurtured.

Josephus bad really recorded that Jesus was the Messiah be would have himself become a convert to Christianity.
thai
if

Nand was the guardian at


It Li

whose village-farm Chrisn was


is

that

term Nandarath which

being misspelled as Na2areth.


fashioned on that of Chrisn
's Is

T^ud
"

The reference to Yesium of Nazareth in the Jewish scripture is of about 200 A.D. when Christianity had already begun

Even the life-story of Jesus


tfrth

is

lo enlist a

puoij c following.
-

and childhood. It had to be so rashioned because Jesus

i fictitious

n*refore

read

w may

person.
itself
is

not at

all

feel

shaky

in questioning

uihenUdty of Jesus Christ. A long

The

line

of enlightened European

name Jesus Christ

of a mere malpronunciation

who are Christians themselves, have written hundred" or volumes on h.


*****

* name Iesus Chrisn.

* Evidence
from what others have said, as mentioned
the
above.

^u
,h

The scene of Christ's


is

infancy as depicted

in In

churches on

an exact copy of the setting depicted


's birth,

Hindu homes

** **

"* ^ples celebrating Chrisn

ioto^ WrcWBeo lu"on from "'mm


hereunder.

poin* of

evidence

^o' Birth

Unknown
is

What day of the week was Jesus born

F *% obMrved Bw

** Of his

birth is

not known. Though 25th


.

unknown. likewise of December


adnuttad

M CMai

g bjrthdflyi

t i5

uni versally

|0M
h*
ihf

lOtt

ceJebrsUon on 2Slh December


ftivI and not

is

the indent

v* U rnaha

Jews

'a

birthday.

n, '">*% f.

ly

been always flcuUou. but haa .! widely vari*

to

Ew-

vc-r of BlrUi Unkoowo


's
10

and

birth Is unkm-. '" Durant (and of course We have wen many was bom in 4 B.C. Even now speculate that Jesus there ** even A B.C. Is a mere guess. date are not known. And

even the year of Jesus Uke U day and date above that Will

" Wben we irKtuire wh*thflr w is any 3 they obs** 2 or description that dates from the lime of Christ Mentation to be authentic we find that r*P there can therefore claim
!Ht

S
'

gueh 32-paga

researchers are Ernst Kitnnger and EUiebeth Samor UUe * P^raiu of Chris* on oUlt to *3 J pass.

titr

Bee*,

born in 4 B.C. what Justification had Jesus been really iTtJJJj the Christian era four years to begin the calculation of later?

,nd __j that even the most venerable of hia oortniiti and that generations. The Christ face as we know it """Id by later an achievement of the human imagination. The

'*r

uvttfore,

ftitirely

From

the above confusion

it

is

apparent that even

if

j,^
of <

do
'
i

not
It

contain

any

description

of

his

physical

bad been a historical person bom on the 25th of December B.C. our computation of the Christian era has gone wrong
years and one week.

was not

until three

or four generations after Christ


"*

by ]

8 ?HhBt people t** "

wonder what

""^ toked

like.

J/
real

ts-jBted portraits of

Alexander the Great, the images

of the

Had he been a men from

historic

person his year, day, and

dau>

, were the
ihaped.'"

worshipped as the supreme power in Pagan limes. Qpj wb0 was models after which the portrait of Guist were originally

of birth should have been on record especially

when some

vi

the East are claimed U) have predicted the birth tnd

present at the spot, guided by a special star.

We wonder
evidence

at

the

gullibflity

of authors such is

WD Durant.
in

Emit Kitzinger and Elizabeth

Semor who while themselves producing


retain
their pathetic faith
the
inquisitive researchers

Home Addrcsi

not

Known
is

to

the contrary

still

Lbeen
his

Though Jesus

supposed to have been a very popular


.

person

historicity

of Jesus.

When

even studious and


all

followed by

huge crowds delivering sermons and performing mirsclo


is

main their faith in Jesus despite


coded,
it is

the detracting evidence they

home-address

completely missing
real

Where
person

did Jesus stay


hia

sfl

no wonder that

billions of the

dumb masses

pin their

his life?

Had he been a

historical

home

addnss

Wind faith in lac Bible

a fictitious Jesus,

should have been famous ?

Ns Sermon*
Jeaus
ia aaid

Ths Bible
to

is a

very dubious term.


'

It

only
'

signifies a

"book'

have been addressing throngs of people

during

may be

judged from the terms

hia life-time. If that of his


clearly

were true we should have had

a big

compile*

" oostn'i signify either

J****** scripture of a religioua scripture or s


is is
it

bibliography

and

'

sermons with the occasion, dale and place of each sermon 00, mentioned at the top. But there isn 't even one such fen"

CWaiana. Moreover, the Bible

*"ta. The

first

half of
is

the

hodge-podge of ***"J""" OW Testament

*"***
T

Ciirm'i Fictluoui Portrait

by the Jews,

the New non-Christian. Even

"T~j

Re^a/chers who
of

tried to trace

the original authentic P"

***

persons at different "Prises the writings of four different ** ****. none Jesus. of whom had seen or heard
B

Jta

Christ,

mttf up

in discovering lbal Christ's

P<"W

*w e.

and EpiaU* the Bfble also includes the Apocrypha

1'.*,.

"

:'<
of
tfcr

the

KM
etc.

xm6
off.

by

Charts of EagJand

^^

be cosasta't

am ben nl

l,

gj

fc

see
rf

OBt
aoac*
ef
--*

raady baas B "'

&!
li

* * ** '

bbob-3 Baaia&jui

us
of

Saaawr*

m
'

W
* Jc

toe a?.*^ (Ml C)M , **

**?**** mt*mt^
^-.Gra^"-

lea gin,..

7at

ifiia
i

v mn *

*-=*

3*ie

_ VcAe

tv r

c*w
astsai af Isbbb
.

^a
/^m

SataBi
rf

**** Jam's i

aa4

Be

>-> bar
aa a--z

em

^ pace

an
kf for
<et i

> ,~

Yj|s^a

as Iwrial ia a a - . -a. H*s a>sas Spot, at >s* ai grr.* siotki


far apar:

am aeaa

aspaas
taaae

u*LiSm*

ens'

nMmetfM.

aemes

tacoad)

raM of bas
pnms
j
'

Tne i-av^f p^

ta

;-iaa>5

ir.

Waal

Asia

*w wc
Jam

lermrbacsr
facaoac)

azuwaaaCsaBaaa>

^Btaae w

b* j>aaioaa> of

Juu

a banal.
j^er

that the eo-csftai


if

%t
"a

a.

vas born on Decaxbar 25 wfcy doea toe Cfaaaoac

Taatw am giwrwow* to

oust*

t- Vadie

"-nf
Owrt
Beraaap

a
*: rcT'-*iGa>

a*oi *ea < anfede tc tat said a depsrtere to baa

eac ct daacnaea God


:

*** oaasSelsa caatf


ef t

too

pwKn
aa

end too sbrapt

a eat
aaast

avaa that *ea=_j ib soo of toeCfarataai C<c aa ao * caapx on e bogus -cscrf* sad heia^ssr/ End5as vxons.
Tbai frax >giiw.*^ io end the Jeacs story a one ag sa iraoped as a nausbr oum growth pKheraag I ficaac

S vi
fUn
t

Hi^ii; eaner Waet be


teased tfcest

dad a* caseiS

yean and

ad a*

anoiftd
of the

tawem

* ta faa
a* Jaaaa

be eo obecare?

was toe

'

aw>

meet and

the aaa*a

**

*a Tjaanc^-^j

x^^Wo^ercantanes after s-aada

*^r

?aat? ia tern

the otoe*

caw* **T *

'^flBr)yiao^.aMt.i^.iia?
k iopa;
""

**

** tortsrota
toaai
everted

au

at that

***
1

qh jm ;m

hamaeif the

am ***
-

* . **,

not at a*

,.eufiaC oy JsssVi

ChrtotiOM

Taw

an no aocooou

of

*"
"

toat Uia above

*" faaioe he*


""l"
1 '

dauij wooid

beip people

bo

the wnoi* foundation of ariatianaty

saBraiy

409i

iu

sboba an esrried aloft aa


aaa)

tsarm"

aa aa to b* a lora*

coioaaa! ipraad

and ai.
of tae

14 ot

aasanHUoa or aon of I

sbo'

myth about Scsajanao 'a sirthorsfcap two grapfcac tnstanoaa of


I

Tn

J*

sa hastory aa fsasaooa of

"
10*
motherhood
will

1(H9

"*

hood or

be visited by such

flnd lDW BPP,iCaWe to hUnUU1 " fe lhuB dexteriousw *lZe " ^ven into the ritual, and observances Lhantingly of il
,

terrible

vengeeno,

tk iou
otaf dc **

leave anybody from so as not to prince to


B" d
*

"""

WOma"

Uninformed ,nd ""influenced.

p,^

VEDIC TRADITIONS

^ uncDo'.odI>on's and
D *,-, and

sages has been enshrined in of ages everyday rfc wisdom Don "U of Vedic routine such as not touching plant-life

Vedic culture

One very important proof of Ihe ancient worldwide is tbe univerMl worship of the Mother Goddess.

my ^

That worship for nine continuous nights during early October

because they exude carbon dioxide, not sleeping with Air sunset the south so that the magnetic north pole may feet towards !b head which is the hardest and heaviest organ at the Inert

^ lug
of the
living

and on other specific


orthodox Hindu

days throughout the year

is

observed

in

il]

body enclosing a sensitive psychic mechanism, conversely. corpse with its feet to the south to ensure quicker fl

homes even today.


is

disintegration

and also to distinguish

it

from a sleeping person

etc.

Thst Goddess

known variously as Ma. Uma, Mata,

Ambi,

Amnu. Shakti. Kanya. Durga. Shanta Durga. Santoshi Ma. Vaiahnivl


Devi,

Godhead as Letterhead
Vedic practice is to
letter

Bhagavati.

Parameshwari. Kali.

Gauri.

Chandi, Bhawtni,

write (or print)

first at

the top of every


it

Lakshmi, Saraswati. Astarle. Venua. Shree. Ceres. Mother Miry.

the

name

of

some

deity or proclaim one's obeisance to

Mariamma. Madonna. Notre Dame, Allah etc.


She
is

md
'

then

proceed to write the rest of the letter.

personified as Shakti alias

'

Power

because

it

El

tf

Though this has


the original

now hardened

into an

empty

formality yet

female of every species which is the motherly

power which

reproduce!

aim

is

to

remind onself (namely the writer


honesty and

himself)

and lovingly nurtures the offspring untD the latter She

comes

of sg.
soul

d
lh

the addressee

that the contents of the letter are truthful and


all

they are

known as Shakti

written -in

affection

in

pursuance

also because a

tormented female

tf

the divine

relewes tremendous divine energy to batter the miscreant. 7h* ' why images of this Goddess are depicted in a lerror-stricldni

aim of ensuring purity of conduct and

fulfilment of

"4nty.

form
*"

--bulgW tan. hefty. Amazonian, outsize image, with eyes to *rath. . hungry red tongue menacingly hanging out eager

It

has already

been explained

earlier that one is expected by


is

vdic

tradJUon to -write'

down

only that which

'right',

n-fc* minced

meat

of desperados, long
ri

arms from 4

handUW to 16

tatiaj

""J""- ding growling tiger or \*Zr* demon *** trampled underfoot, the severed. *" <*"*Om htHd by its grizzly hair in a left

snarling Uo.

blood-drtPP'

*Jii|

is

hand,

ch***
brinP

^mother
1

of 5evera]
1'

a Vedic term signifying a happily married woman. devoted wife well-tended, bright children, a
*"<!

^^damonwith.^ordandaoon.
'

human

C "* "*

" 810

one cheerful hostess. Such a

Is

the

Wtd

V***

Presentation to impress on

*manhood. And throughout the year on

different holy

||^;?if

HBO

1061

dm, rituals wd observances

inviting

such

woman

horn,

living representative

toown

families

of the Mother Goddess. f rom and giving her a pious present is considered[T**.

!*H
1

A-

teacher.

ur^lddings

than one Suvasini. 3.,** least one. This ensures a mutual the poorest invites at social bolt,** anoC-er 'a woes and happiness. * fostering 1 stake in one
feast chore- Affluent families This

more

^ W
**

Sexual liberties have taken .ucb biiarra form. flnd uniseX "'Sbt-clubs. These In iurn arai^,^

<
l

!Lion. P

deadly viral and venereal diseases. The read of We" PWhologicfj might v9icaI

with pious Intent and purpose of inviting one another


a continuous

p ******

,,, dl to Vedic law and order is the only way to ,*** A return and happy human existence. contented united,
fosters a spirit of steadfastness, marital discipline affection

iprJJj

is iq

ng mundane life with verve, good cheer and helpful interdepend^ Other holy occasions also provide for feasting young
girls,

merry-go-round of mutual

inter-mjngli

*"?
rJ

v"edfc

valty 1"

unnuny

-!L ensures
m
his

tbe Vei7 manner in which lne famtly Unit '" nwrUai cohesive bonds in a military unit. Contrarily under

boy-students and elderly

divinity.

as invitee representatives J This contrasts with the current Western mode of


tnfaa

men

unrestrainsd individual liberty Ttions of


or her
to bits.

where everyone may


is

own sweet

direction the social fabric

bound

women

as sex dolls

and

families

living

cooped -up

^wm
Unlike
, good

inside thfr
from

firmly-shut apartments totally isolated


their next-door-neighbours.

and insulated even

other prophet -oriented religions Vedic culture lays stress


all

Vedic practice places so

much premium

behaviour

24 hours throughout one's

life irrespective

on happy married couples as units of society that a single perscn is disqualified from all pious ritual, and at all Vedic ceremonia
while the husband goes

ofifcetner
fti! Is

one

is

knowledgeable or ignorant of Vedic doctrines.


is

like

what

expected of a soldier namely patriotism and

through the motions of Vedic worship

01

nvpry in

combat and not mere erudite prattle on military theory,

the priest

'9

bidding the wife has invariably to physically support


's

the husband

IbeVedk Law of

Human

Procreation
its parallel in

hand with her

*s.

Human procreation has


Hierarchical Reverence

the metal-casting process.

bimetal-casting factory the

molten metal poured into the mould,

Fostering 1 tradition of expressing reverence for one's

seniors
of

tafcni into

the shape of the

mould and

acquires the strength

age,

relationship,

knowledge and position

is

a sure way

J characteristics of the ingredients of the liquid poured.


Tbs female

maintaining cohesion, discipline, obedience


notice this in the

and

efficiency.
in

One

rosy

armed forces where

all

juniors

the presow

of seniors are trained to stand erect, salute and obey orders. Any djI*y of amour, glamour or clamour is strictly ruled out. Vedic iditwn ensures similar discipline, obedience and obeisance. inVedic

m
lb *

womb is a

mould. The male semen

is

a liquid poured

"

Obviously,

therefore, the resulting progeny will incarnate

uwu ght5 and physical condition of the

two

at the time of

^laUon.

P*Uoe

all

juniors have to

bend and bov to

all

superior! elders and


j

Jto"

If

the

two copulate only for mutual pleasure without any

"T

refniin

tnm
'

talker,loose and
Indl^S!

>*>se talk or indecorous behaviour, especially l lhe UUer wd1 ***

j^Z^ ^"unltmenl

Mundane

float

"" to tave aimlessly or crash and flounder.


Iife

^^
* W to
*

*fll

as a divine procreation medium the progeny be a mere pleasure-seeker. pinned If the man has

WOman againBt her


* Ven8efuI

Wsh by

sheer brute force (even

if

Xr ni *

" aUawed udenla

* trampled over by

notion, of

Uy^ "Tilua)|y-wedded

wife) the resultant progeny would be

*"**

they bully

**

^ tnV'
ta

femaIe f criminal tendencies. If either mindless or drunken state the progeny wouW

'

1063

106)

retarded or of degenerat* behaviour. be menially

(inversely

if

the

copulation, in a state

man and the woman are, ,t of psychological reciprocation

^Luf. .
^JauW of
***

which lay, down that other culture h oo ^eligion, Ctrt* 0r nation h

mtU

one to the other the wish and progeny should or must be handsom 'i^ benefactor, famous tUc. world hefty, long-lived, a etc 1_ 7*result*,, of the image they bargain for. child would be
with each whispering
thai the resultant

*]'J** *

Ui^'

acUons trreapecUve K 00*1 or of whether atheist or an agnostic. Can there be anything ^rTtbeirt, more and simple than this doctrine of automatic

own

^
rean

c wm

sclenUfic

in'ung

^*

cosmic

0Ut

"*

recommendaUlr y

^tlon

mortaJ of wiy

wch

M
'

"Wlsm or meddlesome

a Jes y s OT Mohamed

From

this

it

on i proper physical
girls

and their

Vedic culi Ure ^^ and psychological upbringing for boys holy union in an arranged wedlock sannifidT

should be obvious as to

why

^
.

vedic

'Karma'Tneor, wonder how

People often

Karma

'

first started

if

n the

first

impartial divinity created


let

everybody equal.
field

divine Vedic chants. All this is to


get slocked with diseased,

ensure that the world


themselves and
live

doen'!

deformed, decrepit, ugly,


life hell for

this Xo understand
tfeere initially

us imagine a

game or

a stage-play.

destitute

the

manager

impartially allots to each the role which

criminal people

who make

for oi.vmultiply

be

is

expected to play well.

But as the play proceeds,

distinctions

Tfcb shocld serve to impress

on

all

concerned to

and

of superior

and inferior performance begin to creep

in, In a

card

onrc according to Vedic ground-rules.

amt
dealt.

loo individual skill

does play a part apart from

the cards

Tic Vtdic Doctrine of Maya


The Vedic doctrine of

Maya

is

superb and

unparalleled.

Over
It

numerous births such bad or good karma gets automatically


as in a factory balance-sheet. In such accounting
also

b
icoounted for

to

indicative of

the divine origin of Vedic culture because

of Us

grasp of the true nature of earthly

human

thefree-wfl]

Karma of any particular birth

makes its contribution

existence.
to the

continuing credit-debit account.

Maya

signifies illusion.
all

Vedic training, tradition and


beings that earthly
it

scriptura
It Is birth.

never stop reminding s ephemera] as a

human

existent* b
tet

the balance of that account which determines the next

dream. While

lasts

it

appears to be true

ooo

all

human

activities,

ambitions, anxieties and achievemtfU

Vedic

astrology

is

the science which figures out from the

re w

reduced u> total oblivion.


the Illusion of

Moreover. Vedic thought

also pointi

horoscope of

heady romance and physical

gratification

(M

'*%

to

being the balance of merit and demerit the estimate of the happiness or sorrow that the person the

human

9
1

""to or

+**l^re to be followed by every ran.

** "W torture. Vedic "mic tradition

drirOd* Pi out of sexual indulgence, and drug-addiction, MnliiA- 1. '---' !".!' "wkin, because .. they all ultimately lead to a diaease-i oislena and also at times to tragedies Uk" **;

HI undergo.

and training

therefore by mere""-

wom"^

* m <n

physics. Therefore astrology is as accurate a science as nuclear appUcaWt 'i physique being atoms the atomic physics

^fcuman destiny

^
-

EJ

the

made of physics known as astrology. Just as atomic the movement of invisible atoms astrology foretell,
is

of the invisible

alma

'(i.e.

the Soul) from the

invisible

lrv of

the planets in the horoscope.

*U everyone responsible

for

own actions

)jtt3>

1064

disparity with that


ft

Such Vedic perpUve alone enables one to im d which human life sUrta and the

1066

travail* ^

treat*

some

undergoes. Compared to that the Koranic vie* as his own pets while He deliberately

others,

and the Christian view that one

may

m u|

^^ ^
^
*

^urse of
. ,

Ume

the prostitute died.

Snce .he had no ration.

10
' 1

erf * * 9 m ~d in

perpetrate

K, and

and since her clientele of pleasure -seeker. not ^nr her her body lay unattended. eaten mrr v-., her corpse, by fleaa maggots and was ultimately carted away

on anybody and tug the cloak of Jesus for protection 2***1 **? primitive. Vedic tradition holds everyone fully responsnjfc

Z
B

aotd
in

"P"*

Wgh

Straigbl * the
divinity.

great honour by
later

sevemh beavtn to bt

^^

own thought, word and deed and points out that the rew punishment wfll be automatic and that no recommendation
any Jesus or
of Karma.

retime
Vrerus**
*

when

the

'

holy
"

man

died his disciple, arranged

Mohammed

wiD be of any avail in the

grindlriK

wkL* **

neraj witn reverential fu entry into heaven.


plained

& eai

fanfare but tbe

man

s soul

When

asked,

why?

the Karmic

k cX To enable the common man escape being


and misery
lays in that inexorable
strict routine

pulverized to torraw
prattif.

3 defiled

her body

" we here deal even -handed justice. Snce the woman it was dishonoured, but her soul which rued
her existence and pined
for a better
life,

Karmic mechanism Vedic


till

the

helplessness of

was

down a
all

from morning

night and

birth to

filled

an honoured position in heaven."

death for

human

beings whether

Brahmin or non-Brahmin. man


is

or

woman

Contrarily the
arthly existence
iwiy

and prince or pauper. There

thus nothing comporaNe

man 's body which remained holy through it* was honoured in death but his soul was turned
it

to either

Vedic theory or practice.

from heaven to lead the hellish Ufe

had pined

for.

Karma- Parable

been wrenched away from their Vedic ancestry All those who have

parable explains

how the Karmic mechanism

deals automatic,

and

call

themselves Muslims or Christians need to understand

this

meticulous justice to everyone of any status or creed.

inexorable

Karmic law.
half-slitting the throat
It

A woman eked out a


nothing else to
fall

living as a prostitute because she had


popular,
vehicle*
of

Muslims believe, for instance, that


an animal

back upon and none to help her. Being

or

human

being and leaving

kicking, writhing and


in the

at her door there used to be parked a of rich clientele.

number of expensive

wiggling in pain
of Allah

and agony becomes holy when done

name

and

is

accompanied by a few mutterings from the Koran.

Inside her home there used to be a gala atmosphere every night with people thronging, swaying to music and dance and showering money under garish lights.

likewise entire
nil

Christendom too

is

feverishly busy torturing


fearful missiles to

slaughtering

animals and

manufacturing

v *"ghlcr

humanity.

Yet the woman used to rue her fate of having to misuse her body and constantly concentrated her mind pining, and praying divinity u> relieve her from that hell.

AM such

must remember that there

is

no magic as such

in

"* nw*e of a Christ.


J^^PKllve mediaton

Mohamed or Bahaullah and that the fancied. special of a Mohamed or Jesus for gaining

**"**;

monk clad In holy apparel, ur. but craving for the riches and poputarfty of ProaUtate . establishment.

OppoaiU

her l,ved a

leading "

kZ 10 expect
lot.
!

lnl

to * chimert " open the automatic Karmic portals of heaven U> ma tf c "sesame" unlatch on of a Mahomed or Jesus or to

heaven by lhB front or back door '

'

^ttendatory note from

either.

106?

That

fa

the

for everyone

name of a who fa unable

ritual

which Vedic prtcu to keep up his daily,

ho]!*

I certain period **roro returning to his Let

norma] routine

^^ *
f

*******

P^^o *"
*

MW

icai COUrw fa Vedic Hindu) Jon l * which the deity fa placed protrudes at in lk around il eDi PUcal
-

^*

Z ?

i*^

the

^-hperambulaUon imparts the strength, sancUty. pu rity ,,

hiving to

ua take the instance of a disciplined devout, orthod XKin4u go to Europe on errand or duty. There he m

*Uon
*
the

able to take his daily bath,

he

may have

to take
if

"*

U<m

"^

himself
food
is

warm and he may have


not
available.

to eat

meat

substantial

***
*Irim

They derive "* of hanging around and going around ^animation from the 8un.
i

divine object to the devotee. This cue of is derived penimbulation or the atomic particles around the nucleus unditional seven planets around the Sun.

But once he returns

home

to India, in

order to draw

_m
U*
a
fl

^
only

ancestors of

bulate
it

on thai interregnum of aberrations, irregularities and impious way of life, and in order to impress upon him

Inju^

jydo

all those who ere Muslims today used to the Siivb'ng clockwise in the Kaba. But these days in the unnatural anticlockwise direction. That is

not

the

of resuming bis former holy routine he has to undergo known as PrayaschitUm to the chanting of
side of a

mn5

unnatural practice Muslims indulge

in.

It

fa

that which

J
,w,

perhops.
inimala

explains their nature of. say. slaughtering both

men

and

Vedic mantr*. ov

by the cruel, torturous 'hated' method, amputating the


thieves

holy

sacrificial fire.

hands of

and whip-lashing and stoning

convicts.

It

is

That ceremonial has been wrongly considered to be puniUw


fc

irony that ftai hypocritic


world

while Muslim regimes throughout the


for spreading drink and drug
it is

have been the

most notorious

persons often wrongly accuse Hinduiim >f ^tolerantly punishing a person for no fault of his during . peri*
i

character. Unthinking

addiction

(as

is

evidenced

by history)

their

heartland.

"hen. say. he

SiudJ-Arabia
whipping to a

which metes out the most heartless punishment of


person consuming liquor.
is

is

ran*

posted abroad on duty or is kidnapped and

confined

mi

an alien environment

where he

is

hii holy Vedic.

unable to keep

up

Hindu routine.

A Vedic wedding

consummated when a
fire. It

couple, hand-in-hand
to the welding

uk
Ch
proc!d

seven steps

on

d^L
'
,

KCUwUon is "i U n l Wm
I

around the sacred


It

amounts

unfair Preyaschitlam

is

not a

punliiv*

tf

two hearts that

and two bodies.

has been pointed out In a separate


to

" P urificalory ril "a' baus lhe Unhyifienic Practices can hardly ever be purifta"
'

**

chapter

from time immemorial weddings used

be exclusively

vdle

all

over the world.

tot perso

' Vef> import*nt - alulaiy role namely to

remind
lh " In

berrUo Vfc We

'"
i!

****"

*
'n

by onw and
to

not continue
eflrlier
'

Vedic practice at

numerous

festivds and rituals and on

Th

lO* ,yfc,chitu
I

d0Wn 0m again *
*

Ws
to

U5Uttl

**

^POrtant

'"nulartue.

7
I

was meant
flcl

> rixtine

ml

ali0n

and

mark the end tt "minder that the mm)

oe resumed once again.

ihT v * d

home-coming or setting out on ponderous missions women * family and neighbourhood of holy take a silver-dish full UmPl Md W8Ve them lhrice clockwise flround lh* faw of
one in welcome or farewell. This has a magic
effect of

^-thoughts of the dear-ones and the holy lights creating , ^lve M d guiding halo for bis the person concerned
***it around
hni

Wrt -

,- r-rson.

Ua^

around "to*. Prosperity and happiness.

* \W
7V
ft

Vtdtc Guild System

Western Christian tutoring has confounded the


misrepresents as the Hindu hereditary caste

<*

ayst^

* " M*
,.

*** wt

** U

once-m-e-wttl*

Elsewhere

in this

volume we have partly

1 a " lowl * P*00 do become the about the other bflliona who don 'treech anywhere

^S

discu^

Bui i more detailed understanding of the issue


lat us at the outset point out that
it

is neces,

**
10

.history

wo we may
families

point out a

number
took

of such instanoat.

was not a Hindu

caste-system (confined to India alone) but a worldwide


guild
-

system

i.e.

h***** 1111 system based on professional '* group.**

***^ripg ^t

of princely states in India were Brahmin

when

they

hereditarily

to

military

and

The second important point which needs to be noted the four main groups Brahmin. Kshatriya, Vaishya
and

came to be classed as Kshatriyas. The "fJ^Lflvt duUes they a**" .^ were Brahmins Had their rule and role as Kshatriyas
.

!niea tor

fl

longer

Ume

they t W0Uld haVe bee" dftSMd

a'
bhatriyw-

were further sub-divided into other intra-professiona] class*


that this was i frtUnti coDsiera). horizontal, graph-paper-like division of the social
is

TV

third point to

be understood

fib*

fed happy
point in

such freak, circumstantial change everyone was trained Bui for "d contented in his own social group. There was a cobbler wanting to become a blacksmith or the parade as a priest or administrator.
latter

and was not a vertical higher-lower type of


Is

classification.

Tta
Wanting to

human being a Brahmin or a Kshatriya w new considered nearer to Godhead or Codhood The Bhagevad Geeta clearly
to say. as

routine of Every individual 's

waJdng up at4-30 a.m. and cleaning

lays

down

that

anyone, irrespective of sex, profession or auiu

can attain salvation direct.

then preparing oneself to carry out an oneself and one 's house, round of duties for the day was ibrtemious. charitable, devout
common to all
tor
.

the answer

As for the question whether the guild-grouping was hereditary! is both yes and no ' because there always are Issua
' ' "

The life of each one was


They
all

equally onerous and important


in colourful,

the society.

had

social

mirth and warmth

which can never be answered with a cut and dry 'yes' or 'no'. U one asks a person Have you stopped drinking ? ' or Have >w stopped beating your wife ? if he wants to deny those Insinuations ht can neither say yes nor ' no \ Because in either case he wouM be Implicating
' ' * ' '

ptaa and enjoyable social rituals


ibe

need to
in

it all

the

and ceremonials. So where was no fun change from one guild to another? There was dislocation changeover. Such a change meant immense and hard psychological and physical labour
for the

for

everybody

hinudf.

E*non wanting to integrate himself Into a strange guild.

2X*. h **
0001

*r^
l

"kewiw, the Vedic guild-system

<n

tual practice

could be said to be theoretical There* it was hereditary.


a

thiB '

Comprehension here needs only

Wh

if an individual showed signs of being prodigy. ,B Precocious and also terribly uneasy and frustrated in the guild hisUbour he was born he could certainly, by the dint or
Y
If

be

deep thinking.

U*4
*

<

the

^J "^m
"* W

?JJ ******
aemocrwy We often claim
that any

group he wanted to join provided he


of that guild.

wu

ready to

ch-u^

himself with the requirements

uch instances

Vedic were exceptions. Otherwise


frictionless,

society

Pima

minister. But does he

*** always

2**

***

Ua.

noiseless

(individual) content with

IU

i*

^*"*l *
P*
of

ion
1080

#** wot! mechanism, where w be i psM- P"^ ** ndm

screw, nut or bolt didv

bon. The roarin g

idea ia to impress upon el,

**

***** ^-!rioP
**^U*
lfin
fc>

leonine

courage and resolve to overcome

b why the Bhagawad Geet* enjoins every devolving on himself to the best , perform tbe duties of^T!!J

H*

^^
'

mw

a- tiere.

Even mistakes or hanker after another-roie. defitieocJeTh!!' in one's own given role are preferable to

1
'

wo tbe Jupiter-Moon combination vedic astrology Known as the Gaja-Kesari (i.e. lion - Elephant)

soaebody ebe's role. That is much more perilous and rf^**j* stresses the Bhagawad Geeta. In conclusion it needs to

j^ J

fjSSn-
bjquitous Vedic

beat^

tim Vedfc practice frowns on persons changin g heredi ury prof2 gat of greed. But change of profession was certainly
front aptitude

emblem

is

tbe lotos which used to

aQo3^
useful

Wcber

"ay
It

in

or qualification a person could be more I profession in which he was not bom.

^P^

u
J

a
to

soch a social system which needs to be restored

castles, gateways and lowers, wmples, mansions, important due in identifying historic tatows sign is one ** Muslims . as Hindu . Such lotus emblems appear

^
in

^.gd

on the

walls, ceilings

and

floors of aD ancient

^,-bed to

to

u*

voM

make humanity more nappy, contented,

peaceful

***2Ls throughout

pcrposerc'.

**^o
ai

antiquity-

the ancient world thereby testifying to their The lotus has been adopted as a pet Vedic
ideal of rising
life,

?W Eastera Orientation
Vedic culture prefers tbe East. life in Vedic culture beaa

Ed order to place before every person the of mundane J^Og .hove the mud and shish attraction and contentmeot beauty,
radiating

detached soft fragrance,

win
bat

prayers facing tbe rising Sun. That is not a random caon


is

a great person's C round. Consequently

limbs are invariably

based on the scientific realization

that

our

physiologial
a"

feeteyes, lotus bands and lotus nfertd to as lotus face, lotus

tmakm

(boweJ evacuation etc.) working-day and the period

u^^ uk

Mother's Milk Resplendent

rest (at rogfat) are all dictated

by tbe Son.
Tbe Indian province

known
it

likewise

it

has been established

by

astrological science tba

the Ascendant (which is the sign rising in tbe east at the ua of birth deteraunea the ) personality of every life that is born wbttbff man or base.

pr

area earlier

than

does today.

much as Rajasthan encompassed a enure It signified the

Vna-awero
The

and Pakistan. region including Afghanistan

^^ *
ta

region

was the

training

ground of Vedic
It is

*****

India bee

** li too ha been
bub
of

been the homeland of Vedic culture lb placed by immemortf trad**


incidentally pn^

*-*norsfrocn pre-Mahabharat limes-

that tradition whs*

W*
*

it

the

name

'

Rajastban

'.

.JtTT! h0rilW * *** lhMl !**** also "**


** **
Vedic culture.

CcB*oueoUy

memories of Vedic Kshatriya


still

principles.

pracW

^WiHBBoiogy

may

up be detected and picked

there.

"

**uee

depietina-

a nhdued. croud**

"^

Z**** 2*^ **** ^

**rful phrase of those nostalgic days ot* courageous Warriors W* the Resplendent

**^

Mother "a

Mffl

'

m nip>

**

in

distinguished thernaervea determined and a spirit of detached out

^_ -

1083

1062

^dfeetoftbe'imperior'.
duty (o
resist

the rapacious
.

ninuu Hindu
(n

~ - mm and women
ii"-"

popular ballads

Muslim invasion,, to Mv* from --i rapine rape and >apiiib were " com as heroes Who Made Their
-

>,
"*|
'*

Resplendent. Their mothers' labour-pains

M th***
to!

were deemed
ih e

duly compensated by the progeny S valour, and such sacrificing sons were themselves assured

^
Qf In

^^
*
tf

W mm

numgo

evil-minded person. Evfl contact contaminate spoUs other mangoes coming in


contact.

'

different instance of tucta


ifcbtly

Wo-magic

ts that if

of a

heaven as veritable goddesses.


This tradition
is

Bc fl*^ y, *

based on a very scientific principle Whi child suckles at the mother "s breast both ore in a state of
transcendental
instilling in

"*"
***
C|

m
J

frets or fumes or feels uneasy for no app,^ ah which the Vedic household- * remove the evQ women of b

ohfld

communion with the milk becoming

th

^^

the child's bones and muscles the mother

aspirations and ideals.

'^W

f
'

it thrice clockwi* junior and throw that pinch of , stuff uito tht ""V, u produces a alight flame as it cracWes and emita an odour whfle the affected junior looks on. And k> toon ^clsisant Such actions though ordinary ' his normal self.

salt pinch of

and mustard and waving

^
1

'affected

'

.unlor

is

domestic

Touching ihc Feet


According to ancient, Vedic practice obeisance to the to teachers (i.e.Gurus) by pupils and to

rincles.

are

-mg the operation


devou.
deity by

nevertheless very handy, quick and practical remedies of intangible divine laws.

parent,

other elders

wards was done by piecing the head on bending and reverentially touching the feet of the idol or of
their

by

Z
or
the

Drif the

Holy Feel are often entreated by their admireres,

Revered personalities
in

Vedic

phraseology, to grace the latter 's

homes by shedding some


is

elder with the tips of

one 's fingera.

dut of their feet in


a roiled to

the inviter 's home. That


in

how

a great

mind

The propriety of such low obeisance being generally unknown,


non-believers scoff at
it

one "s

home

the humble Vedic manner of speech.

as unduly humiliating,

degrading and

The scientific principle


Kb!*,

behind such a request


'3

is

that

when

unnecessary
t

pious soul

visits

one

house his

feet are bound to leave

hef

Th I^d oftheCuru ne

" '"

Wg

Wisome
'

,Jule - known Propriety in

particles
"s

of dust which, being necessarily charged with

such

obeisance.

ttholy

man

isadynamoorpower-houseofdivineknowledge.
taw. and

benign, divine cerebral energy, ennoble the visited


evil

"ewi*
win

euwMndsandfeetarelikethewireschargedwiththat'encniy'.
'

Tu

the head of the loving, protective parents and other eldm rep0SlU)ry of 'wnevolent. benign, protective affection

ward off
Routine

influences.

^v
<

*dJc

or

*vvT.

pUcw n^,?***" lh
'

iUni0r

Ws

5e

fwl

^ **
-

Dapile current

on the

feet of the eWer'

of

icienUfic

ni >

nnaer-Up. the

bene^t

bombastic claims of b unique advance in achievement; no one seems to be conscious

all

of

"*! at the rapidly deteriorating standards of the

human

of^illjrT"* hclro
pl.hfcHZ'

1
-

from "* "" <* the junior by the li maKn ^m. Snitaneouslyifthe'cUler'l*>
1

alm " lhe hcad or lhe ^wing junior the energy "-* i ZH? P , * * luntoTl [""" hMd to f0l Or In other words, the body "

*** with benign energy emanating from to*

very deform ed. adolescents keep poor health, * ft!* "* ^^on looks smaller and shorter, toddlers haw to use ^* P^ica] grace and allure getting scarcer, tundards
is

1064

of

dutiNMi
Tto mty
(,

M
Wbil

10B6

mutual affection^ honesty, truthfulne*,. d word are falling and bond, of a pledged

And sure

ap^^,

*oul<*

power.

lhev have ***** Brown Into a Their 'a la a prayer which has the potential of
enoXi
t

an "terming situation.

lime

may come whn


to

torin^p

^ered

provided
is

its

objective of ushering Hindu. Vedic

bt too aick

and weak to be able even

walk up u>

^H

***
0111

bout the world

not lost sight of.

tf

The remedy doesn or introducing more police-stations


drugs-

't lie in

opening more hospitals,

more

^^

'dizene' or

'^
chemiq]
io

bit

'irdu

that prayer is misused aa a sectarian slogan to however, themselves, aa la being currently done Vedic values of the Sikhs they an bound by , Akali faction JJ
'

needed

is

abandonment of synthetic,

indolent,

p^,,

Markinga
that the tradition enjoins

the strict culture and a return to


tbe day for

Vedic routine according

in

everybody should begin at soy. 4.30 a.m. No bed a p yogic physical- fitness programm* or coffee. Soorya-Namaskar minutes and recitation of Swadhyaya (the
psychological

^
tod

home (where

the

human body
cleaned

d the body

(in

which the soul resides) should be


before daybreak.

parted

every

morn

for 30 to 60

at

lelf-drumming of vows of good conduct).

Tne

breakfast

ihould vail

be of cow's milk (with no sugar added), boiled vegetables


cereal, fruits

and fresh

home-made

chapatis. Thereafter everyboaj


a.

^fhed
I

such cleaning, for everybody to see. the blic stamp of (stone-powder white, decorative, Tantrlc design) is her helpers as entrances by the lady of the house or
duty.

pious, public

prooied to his day's

work. Lunch should be around 10


at the latest

m,.

iupe-

between 6 to "

p.m. and retiring to bed

by 9.30 p.m.
natural,

Chemical fertilizers and sprays should


herbal

be replaced by

or other

wears on the forehead -centre a holy dot Likewise every person ash after vermilion, turmeric, sandal-paste or pattern of
Soorya Namaskar physical
exercise certifying

.bluUons. bath, yogic

and organic substitutes.


take any education but should

Usown physical hygiene,

redt^^
diurnal
psychological cleansing.

Women may
Prostitution,

manage

the home.

loudly

to

himself for

On Ash

smoking and drinking should be taboo.

apply a pinch or holy ash Wednesdays Christians are supposed to pre-convemon Vedic relic of their to thdr foreheads. Tost is a
days.

TV Rationale

rf Vedic Prayers
(i.e.

behaviour muttered resolves of sterling omfoiming to Vedic standards) everybody il to is enjoined on

'9"dhyayB*

Vedic Routine

Prevents

Boredom
life

art of the day. by Vedic tradition.

feeling of

> drive

boredom is a great hazard of Even a person to madness or suicide.

on earth, which those plungm*

** Pkws
*o bavt

prayers uttered with

a firm

resolve, day

In

^serves
b
<'

a cumulative psychological effect.

Uok
f
' ,

at the

akbs

i.

e the Hindu Vedic Disciple Corps.


.

M
J

y**9-

**.***

morning and evening they

mttning lhal

the

the loudly utter

emptiness, disease,
"Piritual

-hunting are into a hectic round of pleasure afflicted with overcome with boredom apart from those n0**' rivals.

mm

(Disciple Co*"

""mains

enemies and jealous person * Vedic routine ensures that every an purposeful acidly

^^
^

an ^Tounded with loving friends, helping neighbours

busy

in

perpetual

!<W
ion

r*t*<
Idol

niefl,mdWOmCn "

Worship

brf^-<l
rf

Swc* God is everywhere He is also In an idol. TherefQ in idol worship. But Vedlc tradition ?** f nothing wrong worship or non-worship. It on concern itself with any
i

rt-B rfl

dW ~"

tb

E. Glance
glance" even of an ardent admirer (not to uDc in Hindu. Vedic practice ''""" to
It is
,

|D

-envious
is

iy

n^L**
<

fl) ,-. wishers J

-- ~ regarded
Therefore

not

uncommon

w at times, mea,

behaviour leaving the good behaviour and bad mode of *Of^D each individual 's sweet preference or total rejection.
to

* ed &P*
C,U '

trouble-

to see a devfliah mask

frorn

But the articulated Sanskrit prayers, the sounding of the ha and the waving of holy lamps to create a holy halo, accord JS a very sound
scientific principle

Uny

block
,

under construction or on old wom-out shoe on building of an automobile. For the same the bumper reason (looking like a mole) is delicately put on the speck
or

child tbe attractive

woman

to defied any chance

evil

namely that sound and

fl<

b'uhl

the two elements which can cause the greatest electromagnetic nord* fastest, thereby reverberating e distressed soul '$ anguished

*^p'

when At times or the totem the child

such

a precaution is not taken or despite

woman seema

IU at ease,

the elderly

crv

of lno

throughout the cosmos. The whole divine corpus thus shaken out of its repose automatically swings into action according to the divin*

Vcb moy
wilflfoed

Vedic household uses the mustard and salt remedy but it does work. Such b the aound superstitious
niagic of the supernatural widely
all

known,

practised and

Isw enunciated by Lord Krishna.


Vedic
tradition

fenced among
for

Hindus anywhere.

very thoughtfully provides

community
in

worship of icons made of clay which are later Immersed


and rivers.

lake

Such images, for instance, are those of Ganesh and Durgi. There could be others too. According to local custom a Ganoh image is worshipped for 1,3.5 or 10 days. The image of Dunjs
is

generally worshipped for nine nights.

AD such

idols are attractively

painted

gorgeously attired

placed

in richly decorated pandals. devoutly

worshipped by milling admirinu

crowds and ultimately, on the appointed day. tearfully taken for immersion in rivers or lakes to be dissolved into oblivion leaving
behind a vacant,
tireless

panda].

These or she

rituals

are meant to impress on every


of clay and that
all

human
to

being IhM

u a made

#cr. ricbo and affection that

** *'
duurm.

one receives
Is

the admiration, worship. end when


is

bound

uch an

.^mi mu-

tUnt on earth one

rmmbW,

p^p^ ^^

dissolved into
,

oblivion.

fajlhfu ,

mou d ^.fearin* w ..b. han,. worWn

100
-hunter
-

ion hcn engaged


nd
In final

medn*ttv pananos.

^-aui to*" " tradition. tfflj, m Vedic


*** b
Eavptlan

Gn*k
to

<M * MedWlw) * Aafawu

Sun god)

Sanskrit Ravi.

THE WORLDWIDE VEDIC NOMENCLATURE

J^t
ftu
-

the supreme name. and divine

god of ancient Egypt)

Aum,

the

ECT^ wind
the first

g0d)

ta

ShlV

'

j^gm)
Mythology . Folklores and Symbols by The diclionary of information, (mentioned in paremhni,! Jobs has tbe following (AMlat was the pre-Islamic Arab foOowei by my comment motber Allah which is a Sanskrit goddess ) It fa also referred to as synonym.

prophet

to

none other than the Vedfc Brahma.


alias

C^w

B ft

,_

Sanskrit signifies the andentmoat

the 1st. That

tbe proper
-

name
title

such aa Adam.
for sun or

(Adoney

Semetic

warm

light) to from Sanskrit

(Ama-Surnerian mother Goddess)


pronunciation of the Sanskrit

is

obviously a trunow
led lo

used by ehDdren to call

term Amba which has or signify their mother.

Amnu

linuing.

(Amaranth - name of immortal, incorruptible)

an imagmary flower.never fading. to from Sanskrit Amir.

(Aum-Egyptian
This
ihr

Hebrew and Muslim secret name


was

for Cod)

, drink in

immortality to the gods, atoo figuring (Ambros-food ensuring Greek mythology) to from tbe Suuloit, Vedic term

it says at is borne out by the Bible when word the word was with god and the word

first there

God.

vn Tw

Amrit.

(Amma
Vedic

Spiritual

Mother

in

Greece and Syria)

to

Amba. the

Koran admits the Bible legacy.


(Agnes
in
-

Mother Goddess.
- who proceeded every 9th year to Ml. Ida who handed over b code of laws to Minos).

Greek, meaning chaste, sacred, pure) That

li

Agnl

(Minos
with Zeus,
.hit

to confer

Sanskrit for fire

which

bums down

all

impurities.

Modem

lenra

Obviously

iueh as ignition derive

from Agni

legend originates in

Vedic

Manu

the author of Manusmnti

Agnar. Norse hero of light and

summers

also

from

Agnl.
tha*

code of

laws
-

meant to govern human conduct.

(Ahau Chsmhe2

Mayan medicine god). Obviously


kumars. the

carryover of Vedic Ashwini

divine physician duo.


during

Vhii music)

Uritoo

gP* m
f*

Dragon or beast swallowing the Sun or Moon Per Greek and Roman myth). Obviously it H
-

^**
.

tunea Charmer of beasts and birds with the golden music enchanted the flute player whose to Chrisn "wybody creating a mesmeric aura. (To Luke ha to * P**** ) Purushottam in Vedic parlance (To John he to a god)
(Christ
.

That

'

Bhigwan.

the cosmic serpent

and K* with Rahu as the head

lb* 2nd

coming of Christ

will

JhtGnsek hero

Wl *

**"** *****

had a vulnerable heel. An arrow nam 1***1 Uul The 3mW* origin of that Creek - the t. lord of the entire cosmos. Urd KrishnLord
Achilles

pi"**

J*

"

of the 1 pastoral rdtJ appear riding a white steed. (Christ's cows. * fuWoned after Chrisn. who spent his childhood lending
o

k only a rehash of the Vedic prophecy

K to said. be on a white horse. mcarnauon OUi Kali

who wii inadvertantly shot In the was inailvnHnmlw in

heel by 1

^day

Importance holiday pre-dates Christianity because of the

1071
IfflO

of tun worship

under the Sanskrit

name Mitra

alia,

Whn convert Christian messes stuck to the breakaway CatunwHs fasitval on December 25,
oVUj.. subtly,

u^

^
"*>

and clandestinely declared

it

forwtting^KdoesnotnttbeA. D.
1

calculation

cSSTSS ****
bagfe^
survival

CtaSl?*S

resulting in the

B.

tree worship.
.

Mihr

(The cross was not introduced until 60S A. D Babvlonian sun and fertility deity Mibir; Gaelic deity - Armenian fire god) is from Vedlc Mltra alias

(I.

Mm*

incongruity of Jesus Christ being born Christ). Chrfsmas tree a

!? *"*

wSj
J,

ASTOUNDING

PREDICTIVE COMPENDIUMS

Mihir rf*'

. divine aspect of Jamsbed. first Iranian mortal spouse or h. aster Vuneb- For showing mankind the way of death he

ftv

world and created the

all

the beings In

It

mfflioni of

*u J?
of

ruler of their realm).


lore.

They originated

in

Yama

JZ
This

Per Vedic history.


opened as a full-fledged on-going concern world therefore in which a drama begins by drawing away the

and Yami

V^

vT
(Rishis
-

way

China applied to Taoist sages). What ii t^ dayi bandly referred to as Chinese Taoism is nothing but Vtoi ihawi Tao is S malpronunciation of the Sanskrit term Deo, manlM
In

curtain-

God. fince 'dent' changes to 'tooth'


the Chinese as

Deoism

is

pronounced

ntfDoni
bj

script of that entire play and interplay lasting for jht whole compuiarized by divinity and years has already been
f

Taoism. This

is

further proof of the Chinese bnin

to happen as per that plan. Mala and changes continue


Just as film

been part

and parcel of ancient

worldwide Vedic
is

brotbabood.

reels of a

movie contain a graphic

story which
it

Consequently the theological faith of the Chinese


bat Vndicism alias
fuperflcial

not
is

BuddNn

mains unknown and unseen


u* wide screen for

until a projector bulb flashes

on

Hinduism.

Its so-called
-

Buddhism
a

a deeqtin,
is

everybody to see, the future of our world

veneer. (Cremation

a worldwide religious
it

rite. In moot
in

pre-destined but
the

remains unseen and unknown


projector -bulbs,
flash

until the

sun

Britain, central

Europe and Sweden,

was

mark

of noWebtth).
isd

(HertwiU. Aveatan river goddess identified as

Helmund and Vb&

moon,

like

those

pre-ordained

BmmU.)
(Har - one of ibe names of Idin. It is the source of uch as Harborough, Hargrave, Hardy etc.) from Her and

night. typmlngs on the worldly screen by day and by


In that

bbw
1*

every ready-made movie of worldly happenings

being

torn the tiniest

germ to giant dinosaurs,

including

human

beings.

tUu

Barvi in Vedic lore.

w robots
Vs

created

by

divinity

programmed to perform certain

(Janus
anfitton.

Roman God

of

all

beginnings)

is

Gsnesh

of the

toeuons from birth to death.

0*oi

Utin name

which 111** of nix goddess of the night)

A unique proof of this is found in the astounding Vedic predictive of "hich contain the names and life forecasts of all PP world .Those '"flntnWlons dead, alive or yet to be bom, around the
l

t8*Ph

Hebrew term for a snake)

is

Sanskrit

W-

Jtai

Predictive compendiums are n Wndred languages and scripts.

copied out in Sanskrit, later

IfffS

In

l^tosi- amjwvttumi- A number make a be.-**, to him lo know

V WW

1TJJ

on* Pundit rurvdirim h*j inh


of highly
ibeh-

piJ? * W v
,Qd fifiy

own fuiuJ** 01* *T

*I

Nadi concerns kadf -Kb some -*, Bhujandw ^pi*dictioM such aa the flattening of tht
being dislocated

fw-r^, Him*^
i
*.

aearsnd

dmroam.
Harmon,

t****^, * gsd ^U,, such as

from Ka present cosmic pen*.

inducing pregnancies without senul

jMtff S.

Washington Post

corn*^

n|hl felt Intrigued

when he occasionally heard mlnii._ *****

mighty avidly discussing their future aa * ssceruf Hrallram ' 9urya Samhite alias Arun Samhita. Surya yj"? *"*
high and a

^T

ftiry*

Uon9

wilh Havelir s said to u,s Arun SambiU conuni million people end weighs over 400 Idtoe. f 70
future In the Nandi Nadi alias Sapunhi a client's some line* on the right palm Cleft palm
**

word for tht 9un. Arun

is

a synonym signifying the

***
****

u
^he

redd!

sun. Even that name is significant because it 19 the &w olar powers which create, control, direct and retract n
life

custodian scans

**$

*2 *
Mi

msle dtart " The CU5todian men) of tbe

**

^^ **

Harriion therefore sought an interview with Hevelirams a


out a ipacfal,
detailed dispatch

that technique. The palmline signifies seme figure versed in custodian locates the client "r forecaswecord in the hich the the custodian has. stock that

on those Vedic

predictive tT**

which was published In the

Washington Post Issue dated oJ*l

-Those
rf .he

11.18*.

"

person

Agastya Nadi who possess the whose future is sought


tneir present

take the thumb impression to be predicted. A


list

of

Lo
A number of pcrsonB throughout
wantonly destroyed,
stolen

predictive texts,

owners

and' their addresses

India

stfll

have those predJeuvt


lost,

wmpandlums. But many more must have been burnt,

loom
iht
in

knowledge. AD. the addresses may not below for public the fluidity of life but those hold good today because of J^essarily
listed

or eaten away be pests during

presses
address.

wffl

for the changed at least provide a clue to search

lOBVyears-long Muslim and Christian raids and depredation


Indis

(1)

Kaumar Nadi

Astrological Bureau,

run by Pundit S-

Those extant predictive texts In South India are generally knom

Chindnisekhar.
(2)
11002.

High Road. Royapet. Madras.


Delhi -

'Nadi' while those In

North India ore usually

called Samhiuu.

DaryaganJ. Arun Samhita. Pandit Haveliram. 3

Those are usually written on palm strips about nine Incha * "id four Inches bnwd, strung together through one or l **" *> the cure
1

(3)
(4)

Misra, Bhrugu SamhiU. Pandit Jainarayan

Allahabad.

"Jon to generation,
v

ffw of ** txui re on old parchment probably copied


'

Surya Nadi, Pandit Suryanarayan

Vyss. Bharati

Bhawar

frOT
UJJaln.

?yy jEH ^
)

w of th. name, of those predictive texts ore 0> **"+r (2) ..hruv . Sutr Nndl (3) Nand
:

(6)

***
<<

aukra Nadi and Kausika

Nadi. 8. G. 8.

Chanor,
(9)

Nn(ll

(6)

J *""* tin Rmiiu

* ah*

SM,hiu <' Samlut. (12) Narad SamhJU.

^
?i

hi

N-dl (7) Bbeem

^ *

Subbayy.
Cuddalore.

ChetU Road, near the railway

station.

^^
lb

TIrowW

(8) Nandi Nadi, Pandit Narayan * Round Temple. Bombay (He Is

Shastri.

*^**^

foresaid to possess

074

107J

fT>

Bhrugu Saanhfta. S K. Dikshit, Budbana

Stj^
,,i<

<* ,**

are

preserved tn the Vaideswaran

^^ ^^
'Ww
1

Ghanekar. behind HujurPto (8) Bhrugu Samhiu. (Byroad) Duiu Mandir. Narayen Peth. Pune .

TwT l
' j

*^^

)SbreA^^ N
fl

^-^Utok0fUKU'

Col0Oy-'r

(9)

Bbrega

our Akra
(10)

Swhiw (pnnled \-wsion) 2ai/235a u tr ^**fVa 411 n2Maruti. P""*


.

'

^
'

M
.

.1*

mr her) thumb

above a client's life-forecast I. addreaa No. 19 impression obtained on the spot

idh*,
by

m-n,

<*

So.

5.

Sandhurst Road, near the

Bhrugu Samhiu. Narayan Shastri. House No aa Round temple. Bombay Surya

r*l ^itaBVP"'
j.

-^ samnitas

mentioned

in

items 15 to 18 above probably owned


of descendants

Cll)

Samhiu Mid Bhrugu Samhiia.

BabubheJ

(jaaogton Hoad. Next to


Co. RawaJ Building

YMCA

j^,

building, opposite N.

rWi
reafca.

* ** ^Ty located in the above villages in popular predictive cma *!* vary unique and
Samhiu. Bhrugu (2) Bhrugu
Sdfioor. Shastri.

divided ancestor got

among a number

who

the Punjab because which they possess.


175 Pnncess Street.

one doesn't have one's bath *? bt measures tbe Stive's shadow in the sun to locate his
No.
2. If f!2) Narad

Bombay -2

Bouse. 10th Lane. Khetwadi.

Samhiu. Iatahmen Sumri Tripathi. PaurnimaGuo* Bombay - 400 004.

Nayanar. 81 Padswatuman Kofl ra) Sbakra Nadi. T. S.

street.

j^pei. Madras

12.

District

03) Bhrugu Stmhita. Pandit Sbanti Prasad Sumna, pal* Mehsama. Guierat. He too locates the proper forecast pepm
die* from the
client's

of i

shadow

in

the sun

if tbe client

ha

a* hath chart handy.


(14) Raushik

unique ancient cGmpflaiion known as Shhr Miha^akycn fle has a review of the various available predictive texts. im -which includes a nasi those listed above.
political

Guntamani. Kumarswarnj Reddy, the Tamil

text

at

wntn on palm

bm

been forecast in

developments of various countries, regwas and nations Kaka Bhujandar Nadi. in the Dhruva Nadi

f swat trunks.

<***

14.

- leaves. That toul compendium fuTedamimber Reddy used to reside in a chaw! in KbevraS. Bombay 4.

Sy Satyacharya. in

Hora Samhiu and

in Daiva Reralam.

Besides

tbe

above written
individuals

predictive wonder-compendiums,

(Lied clairvoyant

(15) Bhrugu

Samhiu. Pandit Desraj, Railtoli. Hoshiarpur Op

wh
Ifta

was Chiero
century
Is

?N*)H> Bbntf, Samhiu. Doobli


,J

do appear from time to time- One the Europe. Nostradamus, a French jew of Nadu was on* another. At Kumbhakonem in Tamil
in
civil

village,

near Amritaar.
in

&*ind Cbetty. BBbajirao Patwardhan. bailiff in the


"*iud in

courts at

accurately Maharashtra used to chart a person's horoscope

*"*> Samhiu
***** Samhiu

in village in village

Majra Digria

Punjab

* *aj

the native's

tongue and

pulse and reeling the Native'*

8)

Tuto Majra near Hoahiarpur


Shre*
Agastya
Nadi

"^nuely predict the Native's future.


*> predictive

J"' J**^b^iunyam.

^tJ^'

hinn * Kanchipuram. CbengaJP"" u

*"** ***

texu mentioned above were wrilwn


,

lho<

* ***

ago and yet they accurately mention

in in Sanskrit

T^

^tfU-Drofesaiona

televuion. of various Natives radio.

mo*ta

'

IfTfi

107?
ship*. afcctrWly.

nmct

Income

Ux

deportment,

rtc. 1^,1 profession

^ ""u.,
^

described In AD thU fa graphic proof the (n,, round and round seemingly G<*u of the world turning intend* lives and eventa ^producing md rearranging
.

of the scenario

permutations and combinations and astrology the Vedjc p^*** *** foretell events and situations kjk has the knowhow to and * featuring in them. the nama of persons

^^
w

INDIA-EUROPE

COMMON

HERITAGE

DnnldslnE"*"*
immemorial South Indian Aryans 1. e. Hindus have nce time as they continue to be known even today. Known as Dravids Hindus both had spread the Aryan. the North Indian

JT and

administration and education In Europe. Maria uTdu Vedic culture, on pages 168-169 of the book ; Journal or a r!lham observes by Archibald Constable & Co. in India (Published
Bciidcnce
' '

Edinburgh
(after

18125

'

Hindoo tombs
-

called

by

natives Pandoo Koolis

the

Pandavas)

bear an extraordinary resemblance to


:

ib Druidical

Europe in Britanny. Cornwall. Ireland upright stones. They are composed of four or more sometimes divided and is covered by 'orming a chamber which is smaller often surrounded by circles of large flat stone. They are must have would be tempted to imagine that there stones... One
vestiges in

md

Scotland.

existed

efficiently

nations, a connection between the inhabitants of those remote customs to their Intimate to have transmitted slmDar "

descendants

although their

common

origin

is

forgotten.

OTW Tbe British Druids slfll listing the Shiv Samhita my book* Mcred books, and the numerous other proofs adduced in

J**

indicates "Great Britain was Hindu Land", clearly ** IUi Is common human heritage both in the East
"tied

thai veaic

Unlvenoy Pwinote No. 52 by Professor Krishna D. Mathur of the

HfcWet Carolina (425 S-ond

Street. N.

W.

Washington ITC.

*)

paper he panted Stressor the History of Scien (Edinburgh. ; *"> also confirms that "Among the researches astronom-a "* ^versity ceruln discovery of
to the research to the

XVth ntern StlwdlO l9Augm

w*

"*

of

Edinbumh was the

'

ion*

!* D
,

in

IW9

"^^
for

<"

EurPe

fr

,he

**

IW,'.

HtXt

ad<frtiflc

which pointed to Benares. impr ihe meridian of Sttj information coming from India, there develop^

A J* "* J
1

Son

Worship

n Britain,

UwiKh

a very short time, thai the


origin, that the

BriUshJ"^

^cyc'op** 8

a Ue Hindus had
387)
Treaiure In Grave

common

Isles'* origin in British

Hindu rel|gi 0n i^"" (the Edinburgh Review Vol. l 0(

Mllhralsni that

h **"f worship apread Sun


Rome.
It

ivm

VoU6) "*"*

und *
to

AM*

Tram Persia

U]J J

^"and Minr
&*

i
.

thence to

Christianity-

Rome

also a vigorous... and chief itself and its chief port OsUa ahvaya

waa

h"
,

Roman
is

centre of tho cult which reached as far north a great wall in London. One great drawback of Western
that they
Is tall*

London Times (of October 12, 1978) reported the discover* century B. C. Celtic chiefiian of a "huge grave of a 6ih conuinjZ
wealth

of

MRhraism

(J. e.

Sun Worship because

JJJJTjL Mithra
MiU
of

of

treasures

including

the

chieftain's

four-wh w

ceremonial chariot, gold jewellery, a beautifully decorated coach

bron

plates,

weapons und fabrics,

in

field

outside Vaihuigen
yard)

near Ludwisberg in West


dlameier.

Germany,

in

a round barrow of GO

and of the wonhip and of Lord Shiv as different cults and Molh er Goddess Ljve y call it Paganism. Their view is absolutely wrong. What separate cults are In fact facets of worldwide believe to be continuing from the very first generation of humanity.

a Sanskrit

name of the Sun)

Vrfic

culture

specially constructed out of layers of wood planks alternating with layers of stone. In the wooden inner chamber

The grave was

Sanskrit Ihe

World Mother tongue


for father,

of the grave,
lying

some 5 x S yds. was found the skeleton

"The names
ut
the

mother, brother,

sister and

widow

of the

chieftain

on a wheeled couch supported by

a gold neck-band, gold rings, a kind of gold


gold

human figures. He vor? two snake-shaped geld brooches and stomacher. His leather shoes and quiver containing

same

in

most of

the languages whether spoken on the

banks of the
o'

Europe and India had a

Ganges, the Tiber or the Thames. The ancient rehpoM common origin. Several Vedlc Gods

and iron-tipped arrows were also decorated with gold. By the coach lay a leather riding whip, a gold goblet and a bronze vessel
decorated with the figures of lions.
fabrics.

were also the


ii

adored

by

Divinity Gods of Greece and Rome; and to this day the Aryan word (Deva) by nBmes derived from the same old of England and Roman Brahmins of Calcutta. Protestant clergy

The grave had been hung


was the

with
Catholic Priests in

Peru." (Page

57.

llricf Hiitor, of India.

The most

striking object

chieftain 's wood and


Peoples,

complete with chains, harness and yoke. In it was ofdinnerserviceofM bronze plates. Otto Klesmann, Professor of Pre-hisiory at Bonn University said the grave and many of the objects were very similar to those of the Etruscans.
kind
*

iron chariot

by Sir

W. W.

Hunter. 1895).
even

his title

unaware that Sr W. W. Hunter may perhaps have been name too is Sanskrit Hunts " Sir is Sanskrit (Sri ) and his
'

meaning

'

Killer

'

All

European languages are almost

entirely

denvtd

The Valhiki

Tram Sanskrit. practised Hunter'a belief that Indians and Europeans a widevan Is not true. Since Vedic culture encompasses they are all fat spiritual practices, deities and even atheism
different

u
1

* large ares of the ancient the Valhik country. This

Hindu world empire was known

"Ugions
' "*

Sanskrit term

was

distorted to Balkh

Moslems, to Bactria by the Greeks and the Baltic by residents of Northern Europe (see page 125. Ariana Antiqua by H. h\ Wilson.
t"t!
).

common Vedic

culture.

DTti

On

the Nile

Parthia gets

Its

name from

nrjun.

the Mahabaral hero

Pa*h

'

'

^
?

That

is

W8

the heading of an article

In

India the Times of

of

June

contributed

Others

by K. were priests in the Nav Vihar Hindu

K.

Khullar.

An

astrologer

ton* " <*

1081

ton

* SiCld Anyone wp^ssmg 'X B"* w*hby l^ZZ "


lb
.

Md w

SL
lima

"In^he
'the

an ardent w, sh with the Idol. his the indication of the evidence that stQl te wide This an that the pre-Christian wortd^ nook* and corner,

Cairo and set to place .

up Ws

traditional

i-a.e of

busing,

u.

^J** p^*
,

*
*P
Hi)

.amotion

hitherto by Wertern

lWt
<*

Hindu CUllU "' tfadk ll Thal totals wrong is


'

""

*t

^Mn w " """"^

achobn and u* p*,*,, nfln *1 ***** to *ons


unta
it

Jjjjy

and

cruelly wiped out

by ChritUan and Muslim

* **!!l!.h

tyranny, taxation and temptation terror, torture,

?,&*

md

hired

some article adds that in a - r contention. The ndlnl Indian Heel, pepper, parrots and Arabs bought cotton men i.e. Voidyas. Hindu medical

Shh Abroad
of the entire God Shiv is known aa used to be worshipped (along with other Vedk world) because be world. Mosaics and IconB of Lord Shiv miy deities) throughout the
all ancient countries. An article Weekly of India (August 8 to Shivlingas and a few idols, omotvir 14, 1978) noted that "Three them a five-headed Shiv with snakes and a crown, are to be found

Vishwanalh (meaning Lord

be found in the by A. K.

museums

of almost

Snha

in the Illuslnild

in the

Vatican in the Pontirico

Museo Missionario

Entologico... The

Museum has no Information on the history of the Shiv emblems,"


Ganesh Abroad

The Greeks and


to install the

the start

usee a!) Europeans. Romans, being Hindu", image of Ganesh over gates and worship Ganesh it of of all rituals. Rome was spread over seven hillocks

which one was named as Janiculum.

The

original Sanskrit

of (Lord,

word is Ganesh -alayam i.e. "The temple God) Ganesh. Food and drink used to be kept in front
be
later

of the deity as offering to

Some Roman images

of

Ganesh

may

partaken by the congregation. one be seen to grip a key in


icons had the
figui* the

band and a club in the other. 300 in one palm and the
tola!

Some other

figure 65 in

another representing

days of a solar year.

ICourt** Earunun. book by


Publishing, P.
_

S1U* The Geometry or Loudon', ancient Sacred HeimiU* E. Street.

'Sr

WnUam

the Indian

Gantu with

Jones has so carefully and eloquently compa^ sc-rcely the Roman Janesa that we can

SLF O. Box 1383 Lo"dw NM

A- "Plained by the author C.E. Street In hi. book


sacred (tempi...

doubt their identity. They both... thebeginnu* equally presided over of thing, and action...Crab**. (Letter* on India by Maria Longman & Co. London, 1814).

*ff* -t.b^nen ob*rv.tori C.)


(

UUed

^^ihoutBriulnwbenchartedrev-lU-t rlC d ttoNi * ** U Vlc book, and i>


diagram found in Tantrtk

^TwW.

1083
.ton* po**>r

10B3

mi*

rtVnniM

to orthdo* Hindu

"produced

hom* trr*

^^

**

Criidilow.
Wuatrntion,

*tfi

^
thit

**">'
Ml

method of
Pfrat,
i

uke

"** ^"J;
rop.twiWtthnTj'fc
irnomon won then
to
It

uPrIght known .. ,"" *

WK^

ycpiC DEITIES

AND FESTIVALS AROUND THE WORLD

aUarttf

mid uwd a. o
and

ut^
|l.

Hon

Celebration

Around the World

to trace o circle round

unriae

m
.

tunw
of

advent of Spring a certain levity end spirit of amour With the This needs to be noted as an astronohumanity.
-astrological
it

tfi,

ahadow

(^
which

mical -cum

phenomenon.
manifests
itself in April

imomon interacted coukJ be Joined up


to temple
colled the

the circumference of the circle at two point*


io give
or.

accural* east wcol uli.

On

page 63

countries In cold
Diy practices.

Fool and Valentine

hit book Street hai specificoliy

mentioned Dial "written record!


in

retail

wMtruction are lo be found


Mnnaaaro Shllpo ShnBirn.
It

actually

an ancicnl Hindu mDnuvnp! m'vo detailed InitrucUcai


Mecca

In

warmer regions

it

takes the form of a

festival

in

which

of awrnirinc procetaea, necessary to layout the alte of a temple accuntrij

even

strangers are playfully drenched

with water or smeared with

ollpied to the four cardinal points.

The Kaho temple


In ihJi

in

brine

rf

colour
placea.

with impunity in streets, at road squares or at other public


In India that

pre lilomlc onjrin

is

built

os per thot some geometric method

may

observance
it

is

known

as Holl. In countries
festival

be ae*n from

lis

around plan reproduced

volume

eiaewbere.
city,

nch

as

Burma and Siam

survives as a water

and

Is

Thai the buildlnim themselves

ond

their locations charted In I

country or vail rei(ion should add

up

to a

pontic

complicated

ewttrfc.

of an ancient worldwide united Vedic humanity. Reproduced hereunder is an article which appeared in the Times
in important relic
of India

pomeirlc chart
only by supra e

comic alKmTicant* is o miracle which could human being* who figured in Vedic eplca and
of

be oeMarrt

dated

March

13, 1993.

Puraiu lb
nd

"A crowd
Ui*0*'

ancient histories)

of water of high-spirited revellers carrying buckets non-coloured water -guns gather at a street corner. Sjddenly.
accosted erupt from the group as they are bunch of youngsters who shower them with buckets put*. water and smear with handfuls of powder

Eric

Von Doniken has

In his

books (such as the Chariot

of

puUnhed photoKrophs of iriKnnUc topographical markings


C E
tftrcet'a finding Illustrated

patttn In pcrfcet

creams and laughter


by another
f cold

over vail terrains for guiding aircraft* or apnceahlpa. oa he

""T*

above

fa

complementary

to

whol

their faces

dtaeovervd yeora bock In thoae two and of Keith Crilchlow ore a very strong indicotion of U>* P ?^Wrti the Ma of worldwide Vedic culler, of supra human beings upto *ar (droa ttBl B C ) which tapered off by the lima Chru>u* with bro Islam * Unpoaed on large aecllons of the worir> public

Tbt countries across the Atlantic

^'Zm

* water war' breaks

out between the two groups which,

of course.

**

1"

a lot

of fun Tor everyone.

"But surprise, surprise

^Played **** *n

M This familiar out in Mathura or Varanasi. or. IW " - "J-"*; capital or India. It is taking place in Bangkok, the
!

tableau

is

not

'

10M
Thailand.

108S

^rations

to their

only country where passers-by India isn't the The Thais celebrate own stride once . year.

t^

''l*^

^^T>
yj**}

*** pities

the traditional three-day Thai daring Songkran.

Ne*

^r-*^

are tbe UveUeat at Chiang Mil. TneaW. water-throwing continue, for thr* dty. The day, culminate in tbe crowning of the 'Queen

of tfai the

air* on

I2th April.

(be Sanskrit
'

Tbe word Songkran. incidentally, derlv* word Sankrant, signifying the Sun's entry biu,
the festival by bathing Buddha

^
mark

the DaJ tribes of Yunnan crther East

(m

southern Chine)

Traditional Thais observe

food and water to wat (temples), and offering monks, into the hands of their elders people pour scented water
in

Inw
y own

J* g *

wo

of respect,

and seek their blessings.


is also 8

^ Swashing ^ !!^* s ^

Festival.' Tbe festival, -Water splashing which begin. of Buddha images, apans three to five days.

Oo

the Dais sp,Bsb friends and "^Uves with clean. nd day. waWr B W8V of mv oWng blessings. So te^ Pla3hing

gets splashed, the luckier t person

he

will be.

Songkran

of high-spirited water-throwing.
water, scented with jasmines, in
of tbe forest) flowers
to

time for beauty parades, dancing and plenty The Thais use plain (not coloured)

much

were

earlier

same way as Tesu (fa-. used in some parta of Info


the

'

trace their water festival to the legend of Nongxlang, ,. xhe Dais and courageous girl who had been abducted by a demon.
uuful
night,
d hi,

when the demon was deep

in a

drunken slumber, she


off his neck.

long hair around his neck and

wrung

The

perfume and colour the water used for playing Holi. And instead of multi-hued abir and gulal, the Thais smear each other with
white powder.

fell to the ground roUing about and setting ablaze dawn's head touched. As the girl screamed in terror, her neighbours mjrytbing it

tubed

her rescue, splashing water

on the

head" tai the

fUmw

"There
of throwing
rain

is

an old Thai legend that the Nagas (mythical snaVo)

win extinguished.

brought on rain by spouting water

from the

seas.

The

tradition

water might have originated as an invocation

to tbe

Water

"As a tribute to Nongxiang's courage, the Dais celebrate the Splashing Festival every year to rid one another of evil and
'

gods.

invoke bJessingsj.

"Songkran
Ifun).
-

gives young Thais an opportunity for n lot of sanul Young men and women look forward to having some socially

Hindu riles In

the Ancient

West

European research scholars in their ignorance and ineptitude

endorsed fun with the opposite sex.


is fair

As

in India, so in Thailand.

Uk

of

many

everybody

oriental

religions

and diverse
All that

cults

existing

in

thrown at
of cold
to

game. Not even tourists can escape having water them. Children and young people run about with buciwu
is

["Christian times.
Vidic
*'

They are wrong.

was Hinduism

alias

water and anyone venturing out into the streets


a drenching.

But as

this is the holiest period of

tbe year,

culture. Cumont description of some of those rites (page to hook Oriental Religions) proves the observance of Hindu

,v*dic)

tbe deluge can actually

be quite refreshing.

"H U
growing

believed thai

wa*r

anyone on him wfl


,

* "^ P"P
want to get *
-

^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^
do

who

another rejects the kindness of


not

rites. He writes "Three timea In the depths of winter. ""Juvenal, the devotee of Isis will dive into the chilly waters Tiber, and around the shivering will drag herself

J"* p,

upon

with cold, her bleeding knees; if the goddess commends, she


the sanctuary.

Those who may sometimes encounter dose of bad luck * a *y may have to brib. their way out with a donation-

happily submit to the soaking.

m* ** Uhta
fciJi
.

the outskirts of

Egypt to take water from the ND# The clergy went entirely absovbsd
their temple*.

nd

bo'y

office

and Uved only for and by


1087

Iff*

Moihff

Goddrt*

Phrygia. .Mtte goddess of

id.

worshipped

**m l* PWple of - recced the name (among

iw * **
3*,,*
carrl^
by

from the beginning of the creation right yery that *i** Christianity Vedic culture and Sanskrit Unguagt Our of now providea the master link to the
.

^Twole world
ld

co-HaU
puzzling

ded tb
rfrv

the master-key to aoWe ) evidence and

all at

h,cal ;h p* **! nf history. nf


Unified Fiela
Thi"

^olk aerolite iPP** to t citizen ^ved .t Ostla by the best


the

the abode of the of the land and

iu*j

i- ui^,
first

n tinuous

account of

human

history from the

matrons to the Palatine, where most esteemed

hailed

iJ
,,

^looaroi-rngtoert

multitude cheers of the solemnly Installed

>

and surrounded by fumes of hcen* A temple waa erected to her '^


on

Sanskrit
Hifldu

Origin of

Worid Culture
world stems from Vedic, Arya, Sanatan

Palatine wrnrnit of the


scenic plays,
dedication of

enhance the Ludi Megalinses. commemorated the date the sanctuary and the arrival of the goddess
-

and every year a

celebration

fa
tf

Hindu

the Tizetion in

Sanskrit the language or the Vedas, u . Consequently cultureworld languageillustration

April
|t

4th
ii

the

Cumont's book Oriental Reiiglom.) 10th." (Page 47 of Hindus who have this tradition of representing divinity ..-.<.
a

,.

bUdi stones. Thus, for instance,


aithered
while

round, smooth

black itoni,

from river-beds and known as Baana represents Lord Sly. another similar one, known as Shaligram represent! Lord

booktiUedBriiannicaWorldUnguagel957.Theoriginal M aksn meanin 8 slrike press or condenw word is ^Tkrit word shampoo is also a corrupt form of the
tne

"

we mention

the origin of the word 'massage'

W
is

w
.

'

related Toe Other

Vishnu.

Smdcritword
riding

champ meaning

'to press'

In modern Indian languages

"In mythology as wefl as in art the lion remained the


or driving animal of the Great mother...
oiled

in bead-massage
Hindu Origin of

called 'champi*

from the same Sanskntword.

goddess of

the earth,

Music
'Historians'^History

Ma

or Cybfle

was revered... as the mother of

all things...

a god AtUs alias

Papas wbs regarded as her husband, but

the Tint

[Art
of

in this

divine household belonged to the

woman"

(page*3

Cumont's book Oriental Religions).


<J*

Russeau observes in his treatise titled which is preserved World.'*The old Spanish music, that ete. Canas. Roundenas. Playeras in Andalusia under the name of eluding tN differing Boleros of comic operas and
J. J.

the

greatly

from the
is

as Christian sects,

cults

bang and churches, though

modem notation
bva preserved
it

certainly of

Arab

origin.

Who

are they

who

Hindu!** flrnm, do constitute but a single religion, similarly

Vtdlc culture,

with
faith.

Its

diversity
title

of

gods and goddess*


H*>

""**. but one

"bony Sanskrit

Magna Mater Deum meaning Mahan Mala Devi Idea


The

f.

eastern race. the tradition of this country ? An **** momidic race, that of those Bohemians, who. coming from India, spread tout the 14th century perhaps before that from
in

and

**** Goddm

Selves throughout Europe end were


2npri
in Italy ,

called Gitanon

worthy of Worship.

-J"

"> MUi. and Papas of Lord Shiva prevalent in *** "wuonrt above) expUint the origin of tbe "

"^m whilst naming themselves

Gypsies in

and Tiigam England. Zigeunar In Germany is Pharaons." GUa-non

-ul '

M-r>rtaUumw

^^*a.raginled.thfrf |iiwnuiiwfl* rtb


.

10W

ion

^.Uon

of the

word Cala-ka

signifying .

(mechanbed) U**

.^P. nd
^*

from the splii n0w sta^ U Vedic to..


.

"cond

'

to

And out how

th,

THE WORLD KEEPS HINDU TIME

60 minutes cakulaUon is Hindu mathematla. 60 second. Hindu computation 60 Vipalas make one pais and f to 0I<ilng in fact this division is more minute and A* ghsti ke one 8 Western, because every Ghati is just 24 minutea. P* than the

of

primary dimension governing human attain,, n^ on humanity by Divinity at the begin^ lb* Vedas were bestowed among other things, the the creation is apparent from

term 'hour'

is

a mal-pronundation of the Sanskrit word


identical.

nnw

is

\L

remains almost nh the spelling


is

uniform

'day' The word

a com*!* form of the Sanskrit word 'dm'.

computation of time

all

the world over according to Vedic dictum,.

Hindus also are the only ones

who

have, from

Ume

Immemoru!
tally of thu

worked out and are keeping a meticulous doy-to-day


cosmic dimension,
viz.

the period that has lapsed and has

yK

of the week are not only named after the heavenly Wl the days by the Hindus but they also follow the order hJjes as chosen from hoary antiquity. For instance. Sunday down by the Hindus uld Monday (i.e. Moonday) follows Saturday (day of Saturn) and
foBows
u,e

io

elapse before the next cataclysmic

end of worldly

life.

day of the

sun

etc.

Of the current Kali era 5084 years have passed. Of thot


present day scholars

period

know only

a bare,

heavily dented

outline of

uniformly unless
educated the
of the

not have followed this Hindu time system The whole world could Hindus ran the world administration and paternally world from the dawn of civilization to the beginning

history of only the last

about 2000 years. Of the balance

of 30*1

years of remote history they


It

know

practically nothing at

all.

Christian era.

wis during that remote,


the

unknown
to

period that Hindu monirchi

After the
the

week comes the month. This again


It

is

according to
Zodiacal

administered

world

according

Vedic

tenets.

We

hfl

Hindu system.

was the Hindus who conceived of 12

multifarious proofs to to deal with only

support that claim, But here we one for the time being, and that concerns

propaw
it*

divisions

or time with each

month corresponding
relativity

to one division.

Ume

This

time-space

continuum

concept

had

been
that

dimension.
formulated
is

remote and perfected by the Hindus. In time so

H
Vedic

not generally realized

that the world

still

keeps Hind"

Itt

beginning Is untraceable.

Ume as laid down by the Hindu administration *orW for mQlenU since the dawn of history.
T* *. modem word Calendar

which educate

Wanur.

*"- UVfwlw

r^^ rtgnito ,
th.

Sanskrit That is the march depicting tht chflrt

itself.

word Clock that

la

Europe an improper

The present notion of several Western scholars and their oriental months that ancient Europeans divided the year into only 10 11 n correct. Those making that assertion must then check whether **> month fad Europe also was calculated to comprise 36"2 days. In

Mowers

* had

any separate Ume-syatem of

Its

own. as

"dmlnlstratlon

was

The year has rooted in the Vedas.

d U* **^* *

BSD

1081

,dl

month. In th* pa* f mWu dged and was m.staken to end wj f began -n March th ^jj* *l that that if it begun on March ] S ** not rralixod 0P 2&T It 1* comspondingly on March 14 or 24.
contain only 10
It
1

tradition

and education.
to

a incidentally "L brings us Webster s dictionaries. * nn


,
ii

blunder of the erudlu

mpn

us now lura names of the months. The terms September, attention to the Octow December are the Sanskrit Words November and
Ashtamber.
* ' j

the After checking

number of months

dictionaries explain
let

Christmas aa Christ's birthday. They


in their

"^

Sapu^'
Nava

word for

Navamberend Desamber. where amber 3 the San,!*' the lodiac. while tbe numbers SapU. Ashta,

^T
ii

10th Dssba signify the 7th. 8th, 9lh and

months
like the
in a

**?fo only
Chrisn-

How then could Chrismu mean Christ's "t signify nobody knows when Jesus was bom. That 7 Moreover European mal -pronunciation of the Sanskrit term lesui
The Mystical
Life or Jews,

K- blissfully a birthdBy.

unaware that even

own language 'ma*-

respectively,

Thaw
in ancient

Sanskrit remnants indicate,


all

gaps

in

the tttih

of old men. that the names of

times since the

year were in Sanslmi word calendar is Sanskrit Calanter. (*ap>r,


school

months

or AMORC. Printing and Publishing (Supreme Grand Lodge San Jose, California) reproduces sketch of aepartmenl. Holy child (on page 135 of his book) and observes

of the book Xpe author

Spencer

crown -wearing JW

Incidentally this

emphasizes the importance of questions in


fill

"milar statue
|

of a Holy child was exhibited on Christmas Day


era.

cxaminalions. which require pupils to


leniences. That inculcates in
the fitting missing
in

in

the gaps

in broken
divining

the Christian many lands before

them the
life

habit of logically
that training
fill

words. In adult
in

comes

On Page 157 that


or diphthong

same autnor notes


is

tn8t tne Egyptian letter

handy

"KH"

a highly aspirated

and by the Greeks


of the Greek

conjuring

up the missing links

history to

up gaps

in past,
is

forgotten, destroyed

or distorted history.

usually transcribed as

and vice versa. Tne value

X b usually transcribed as
Even the Sanskrit word 'Mas' signifying a
by the Europeans. Their
the

"ch". The Kheru

of the Egyptians

month

is slill used signify

would

terms Christmas and Michaelmas

months
Michael

in

which celebrations concerning Christ (alias Chrism)


observed.
of

the famous be therefore Cheru or "Ch-R" These latter form personally "XP" or the cryptogram of the early Christians which ! Catacombs saw and traced on several stones of the tombs in the
. . .

nd

ut

of

Rome. Incidentally, the term catacombs

is

the Sanskrit expression

Western scholar* are so oblivious of the Sanskrit meaning term 'mas'

&U Kumbha signifying 100 pitchers alias chambers.


exirsct it is

From

the above

(Month)

that

they equate Christmas with

only

obvious that "Chr"

is

the

in the first Sanskrit letter

^Dtcember

of

25 (or sometimes

one week, from

25th
day.

ordChrisna.

The 'P' added

to it

Purushottam stands for the epithet


Christian

December) and Michaelmas also with only a single


,

%ifying Krishna to be an ideal


>ymboI
*>* is

3ST
""**
Tnl

B*1-UnS

r:hn --"n.i'. wiih


is

wJuLTT" -l * lh J"' one day not matWi uy *9urd because *

one day or even a only terminologies


it

M*

XP

being. The fancied exactly as therefore stands for Chrisno Purushotlam

human

referred to

by the Hindus.
in

-4*T Wnwwj, or a day,


u
Pin

amounts

to equaUng

The so-called Christmas celebration

the west,

*'

that of
In India

Chrisnmas

i.e.

a month

dedicated to

is U*fe* Urd Knshnr

^ **i f^
,ram

*r

* the enonnousiy long period

**

JJ

Kannadigfs and Bengalis, for

Instance,

prononunoi

Ume

that

Hindu. Europeans Ion touch with

"* "

Christ.

Europeans pronounced

it

that way.

m
iw-nber X

observed

Chrisnmas for two

re^

TZb Chnsn.

^2;
Htd
Christ as

d*

nights-

a dark month beta* the month Secondly. It corresponds u> Margasheersh

U.

J '>

s mentioned by Krishna lord Krishna

.>

Mm*,'**

Bh^wadGMU.
genuine religion it should hav. Christianity been Jusim or Christism after it* alleged found* j toown
happened
in

W
" G 'dence ^* " that the P
'n

SUMMATION

the

ewe

of

Buddhism and

MohamnwUn^
is

pa!

that consideration also Indicates

Jesus Chrial

ffc^
cited

figure.

and arguments advanced heretofore have


of

ChrifUanJty
be*- tempered

to

invention

of

scheming,

Big Bang and monkey-brand explanations

autocnUc,

subjla rising

Roman emperor Constanline whose ConsUmtine 'a position in revolt made

officials ln i

shaky.
the public
raided

^^ur* which

as the stock stork -transportation explanation calm-off to children inquisitive about their own birth. e.ders y
naive ion are as
f tn e
'

leaders Id those days spiritual

had a greater hold over

birth

'

of humanity is a matter of clear and


generation to generation
as the

matter of regal strategy mind. Therefor* ConsUmtine. as a


the

Vedic history as

handed down from

Vitkan (which was Veda Vatica


UT1

i.e.

Vedic Shanxaracharyi
or slaying
the

hermitage

about 312 A. I).) and imprisoning

Vedir priest installed a

new Christian nominee as the supreme pontiff,


be subdued with both regal and
rellgioui
floated

M
A

recorded in

cosmic Sanskrit chronicles such


.

Rrahmand

rti,

so that his opponents could


edicts. Christianity is

physiological

about Puran Any physical or chemical speculation and Matsya th misleading as the speculation based on t to be as BP lineage, would be. examination of a child or unknown

thus a make-believe pseudo-religion

to tide

over an imperial predicament. This calls for a thorough


and the origins of the Christian papacy
to

the creation

InveaUgatfv* probe into

lbs sudden seizure and transformation

of a Vedic hermiUgelniai

explanation of a super-power ushering Consequently the Vedic on-going concern has been shown as a full-fledged ana however mysterious, miraculous be the most plausible,

unbelievable it

may appear

to

maXe-believ? Christian pontificate.

scientists

who me conclusion. For instance Fred Hoyle.


of

have been able to get over

modern mundane minds. Discerning human vamty vo.ee the

..omy and experimental

philosophy at Cambndge

*'W*^"Z UrfW*
'a

(U.K) told an audience of scientists at

Undon

Royal Inrtiiu
ere

Hie January 1982 that the chemical structures or of complicated to have arisen through a series

wd

iWhiUmbta
border,

believe.

"Bio-materials, with their

aman

^ ^

must be the outcome of

intelligent design.

Another

**

Grcut

modem European scholar Gordon Evolutionary (Secker.278

WW ^J^| ****

pp)

IflW

1096

^ MUr
'

un.bni.y of lb.

tar-Bum

concept of

cv,,^

p! oTlnuMn ^ " -

rationality of

much more

than merty

Eduction

JJSS-

p ** s
'

all

over the world need not

^ r*
y^

^"Lalons ^contemporary

lhat is because of the stranger*,, ln wtuttian, a unratUsfc thai keeps creeping In with the pas^ of tim,

hopes.

aspirations.

Ideals,

objective,.
politics

.-**

p^i^ doctrine

when Taylor

survey shows how

Jife
in recent
all

^^nt moU
*iV
unreal

Prices,

modes of drew,
.

food, transportaUon.

suffocrfing Darwinian

dominance is bemg thrown off in


trial

inii with and > uiumaginflry

those of. say 300 years ago

nd

m}iam aeehow

impossible lhat bygone age appears.

direction,.

more d-inflnilum.

in such Instead of indulging intellectuals

and error

'

conjecture,

would do well

to return to

^
lhf
ft

of Vedic tradition asserting thai human affairs reliabflity T** firms opened with the Kruta (ready made) Yuga of divine " Ter by two other dues. One Is that things la corroborated

creation. Besides it is not a question of lhe Vedic doctrine of the sustenance also is equally important. alone. The question of crceUon constant heal and light, and its movements need

^P'
""

ttaUon.

lhdr

^t

when brand new and

then deteriorate as time


ages from

The cosmos
it

an

intelligent

super- power Creator which also sustains the


calls that

come.

jjj
Xbt

holds good Tor humanity down the The same w Kali Yuga-

Vedic theology

designer Vishnu and

by

a thousand other

Prophecy
factor The other
krit
is

agnostics too shouldn 't have any hesitation names. Atheist* and the cosmic complex since accepting a Creator and sustainer of
in

that

all

the prophecies recorded

In primordial to

^lures,

such as the Motsya Puran are turning out

they

know

that

every

factory

has

to

have

an

enin>
be

remarkably true.

For instance,

it

has been stated therein

lhat

preneur-cum -manager. The only difference between theists tnd atheists could be that the former regard the Creator as a kind,
paternal, compassionate father-figure
letter regard the

with every

rfueawflldimirfsh progressively
lUndards and stamina of
trade

advancing yuga the standard of human behaviour and by 1M* each time; that the physical

amenable to prayer while the

human -beings wiQ


rife

Creator as an heartless impersonal robot. For

unionism
will

will

become

(*"

continue to deteriorate.

**).
will

sensual pleasures

purpose of history

we have no

objection to either view because

and

power

be the chief pursuits, lowliness


all

be

at

a premium, and

wp

should like to carry with us all along readers

of every

shade
material

connections will break

traditional restraints flBil

of opinion as long as they believe in the

supremacy of

rationality.

family lies will

Vedai and Sanskrit the Primordial Heritage


It is

wQl
wfll

become effeminate while women human sentiments become manly, and towards the end all finer
wane, males
will

that Designer and Sustainer

who

Vedas also provided the

for

wlf-gratification

lusty scramble disappear yielding place to a free-for-all In a sans all considerations

and self-preservation
or
justice.

-tradi and Sanskrit language to humanity as the starling slock- in and the basic knowhow

* duly,

morality, truth

We

gradual are witness to that

dUne during the past 5000 and odd years of the Kaiiyug.
Considering
lhr all

Obviously,

therefore.

Vedic culiure

and

Sanskrit languaiP

fiZT**a

human Uv*
l

that the Vedas and that evidence the tradition

for mflUons

r?"

r veara througn th0


is

***"' Y <W- The


Chronid

history of those eras

^Hi summari^
the Purint.

language. Sanskrit

have been humanity's


at.

primordial

dmw

" ^o*" Sreemad Bhagavatam, "K-nayanindth^Mahabharat.


Iw**n*nui

^ge cannot be scoffed


^Prehenslve.
r

Moreover that tradition


e-r

becomes

still

more

trustworthy by th
in

narrrted and phraseology used therein PP

^0,n K

and the v#uk pages, of the Vedic past of every region

worldwide

historical

evidence presented

1096

*,

of

*WV * **

rdigf0n
"

*chn0,0y

^hiUctur,

'

and restoring tne and aU regions jl people' the world. VedTredtaiion throughout

therefore *"< <* charter for inv XU, volume into the details of the Vedj^?* MOtl* more intensively,
Edition of h

* t U ^Cmugh mU" pertaining to their particularmes glean torn* ** luV guidance topic of inquiry ** instance was that of the late Shankarachary. of P^ri S* BharaU Krbnn ' w Do * a Kholar of A ^gfiO A.D.)
liv
,

cosmic

knowledge wherefrom Kfflm.


concentration

may

^^

^
I0B7

61

1'^**'
*'fllh

should have had a single-source, sophiat^ That humanity beginning (and not a freak, savage, cave-man.! systematic Vedic from another consideration namely thai jurt) is also apparent w, globe in a clock-work solar system wh^ Uve on a well-rounded ii pre-planned everything
'

T Mng
,

dc3 and

Sanskrit gleaned from the Vedicwording simple complex mathematical problems. Only one volume

"**
f

remarkable

discovery

is

available in annotated, translated

lb*

^^y

Vedic Mathematics, The other volumes were lost by titled before prinUng perhaps due to somedlvinehoodoo. isher even
corroboration in Urd Krishna's reply to conclusion finds question as quoted in the scripture Sreemad BhagavaUun
's

Our

by World Vedic Uoily Shattered

War
human
Vedic cultural
unity ^

What
This

then shattered that universal

J* ..^e

ocean-like depth and expanse of the Vedas

wfll

coninue

Mahabharet war <c. 5561 B.C.


polity into regional bits
bits of

volume provides the answer that the colossal carnage of the ) fragmented the unitary world Vedic
since

defy ordinary minds. Utaflte and

"

known

as Syria. Assyria etc.

Tom
Zend

ijpf-ijury

tradition of meticulous Vedic recitation through Even so the intonaters must be continued just as tellers of the World

Vedic scriptures

emerged as the Talmud of the Jews.

Hank continue

maintain an accurate account of the fabulous

Avesta of the Iranians etc. Similarly since Sanskrit tuition came to a screeching hall the regional variations of Sanskrit hardened

mlth which

is

beyond the reach of

common

people.

u Arabic. African. European.


Incidentally this should

or the Tne Talisman Role


The Vedas also

Vcdus
to play

Mongolian and Indian languages.

seem

a talisman -like

role.

So long aa
wfll

induce world leaders to actively promote


ihf

hereditary recitation

of the Vedas continues humanity

the resurrection

and restoration of Sanskrit and Vedic Curulcul

mnlimio lo populate the earth. !ffhere


Vedic recitation is

education throughout the world.

comes a time when hereditary discontinued humanity may also become extinct.
it

This publication thus provides


for a comprehensive
|
T

not only

all

the missing

links

Since

humanity began with the Vedas

may

also end

up with

understanding of history

from the

beginning

U* Vedas.

may be taken

to be a corollary of cosmic history.

of time but also supplies guidelines to

world leaders for restructuring

^1

tat

human

Veda not a Monopoly


The practice of hereditary professional recitation of the Vedas
Soften

unity

Wok

Riddle Solved

2 ** *

volume ha. for the


tt. Veda..

first

time

in

modern times Our

solved

Ifotoic.

For mflleniums scholars have wrestled t*k


tail.

flilHl to mBke y had or UtllT.^,^*n bUnd * "*" a i*"T* lual <hTnlZ^ ""*

cni

Seated

divine

conglomern* of

^^ H*

WW

view U supercilious, commerical exploitation. Sich a ,mou5 are the because the professional redters of the Veda* mwi indigent, *> abstemious, simple, frugal, god-fearing. lftferin volunU"'y t*"*"1 * f0,k are renderin a ^** <o humanity and techniqua by keeping alive the tradition

secretive. misunderstood and misinterpreted as monopouxed.

^y

fl Vedic rotation,

lb

ecu*

L^MWe fringe of
^LTgnMt.

" cons,der them : ,* i* w iniu * ** society, amount to mocking


rf

tudi people of cornering lh,


Bl

divine treasure or

comprehensive

H
OMtfllf-

at the Sun and ^advert amounts 10 spitting

co^ ^ Uy

ui2> ^ ***
<*>,

JJJ^. ^^Topen
^*Tid

up - is nothing in the Vedaa to bewtloualy and aacretly a^^ oughtto be rlix* u* Y-l
,t

^*

out only partudly even

to

ab^emjou, dedicS

^
PlUft,

meditative souls.

**.<""*
A
this .fc-i, of

Purao '

preservation of the Vedas to professional. Confining the reciters does not imply monopolizing ipdicawd. hereditary Contrarily that knowledge is meant for lhe knowledge.

d^ V **
p,^
a

Thistory.

i^narkaWe feature and also a proof of the validity of the volume is that it is able to soWe almost every riddk For instance, the Purans were hitherto

being largely

anybody of Vedic knowledge^ amission. Far from depriving Vedic. Hindu practice generously and far-sightedly
SHMUn,
free-est, for the widest,
within

voluntary dissemination of Vedic knowing, everybody s hearing. To that end Vedic tradition provid

as fairy tales at least by the West-orimtad ^^Hgwtaia. This volume, perhaps for the first time, rehabilitate, them as histories of bygone ages, pointing out that dovetails tfd and phraseology of those past times the actions

ignored iLsaed and

tf

generations

stream of gratuitous professional singers, preachers, minsirtli, solicitously-trained daughters, sist*^ sums, poets, preceptors

ippear

garbled and incomprehensible to us that


to

is

because of our

&

Inability

comprehend the motivations and capabilities of a vanished

wives and mothers to carry the message of the Vedas


individual

to every
holy,

and group at every level so that

all

may

lead a

Hinduism

is

World Culture
has been hitherto universally misunderstood and

helpful, altruistic

and abstemious

life.

Hinduism
The ancient Vedic order also provided a worldwide
network of priests to disseminate Vedic
in a

spiritml
all live

misinterpreted as
ind Islam for
pointed
of the lhe

one of several

religions competing with Christianity


It

knowledge that we

a place in the Sun.

has been for the


is

first time

miracle-world governed

by

mysterious mechanism

whlcb

out

In this

volume that Hinduism

only a modern synonym

deals

automatic justice independent of

any prophet or middle agency.

primeval,

universal Vedic culture which was practised by


.

Sanskrit stanza expresses that

Vedic axiom tersely as:-

ancestors of Jews

Buddhists Christians Muslims and everybody


, ,

Two
All

pithy

maxims of Vyas summarize


Vedic scriptures advise

rise for

millions of years.

that the

Worldwide Vedic Priesthood

""rming others entails Sin Rendering loving service doth

Merit win
at

continued to

Our research has revealed that so long as Vedic dvflizaiion be intact throughout the world there used to be a

J**"**nUy
1

"

the complaint voiced Vedas have been


j,

times by misinform"*

worldwide
ln

network of Vedic priests

(like the several Shankaracharyas


social.

secreted away or

monopoly

IndIs)

who

***

used to ensure and regulate the hereditary


individual,

Brahmins'

i^ly
to

unwarranted.
for

Z2L

IWu

* *e *"*

any

M *L

Wwsfcmnl guild-system under which every


PWjp

family.

n*

organization

adhered

to

the

Vamashram

Dharroa

^oUons.
Itose Priesthoods are

**aht

^^ md M

still identifiable.

Fpjars

^^

They are known

as Phra

thot. christians. Both

&

the Sanskrit term Pravar. corrupt**" of

m*"**.*,

!I01

monk
priest for Europe was <m-j> The chief Vedic

rtttmlWd

conVrWd
4th in lb*

u> Christianity

by emperor Constants 3 ConsUnUne-,i ihn h

p^^ nR^
.
'

^i,

volume must not be regarded even as a wonder achievement. It chore or hu


in this
&

m
.

?*

<lnlty

century A.D.

*V
nM "*

^^
frem

*
'

oul the P intlng for wor,d ,e8dera

tTfcUn

ridden worid its p

Way now

** * unity,
to

tine Vedic "niiy.

~* *

Britain also Hii counterpart in


functions as the

converted by Christian

Archbishop of Canterbury.

Their assistants
lo

known as

'

Sflnt

change in be known with a slight


In

Vedic terminology conu"^ pronunciation as 'Saint'


in

the

ihinVers

Muslim tradition similar spiritual assistants are known Sheikhs from the Vedic term Shishya (i.e. disciple)

, British

world began with the Vedas and Sanskrit being increasingly recognlied by discerning of the Chnst,an West itself. end educators For iniUnce educational organization with its headquarters at
truth

that the

Knita Yuga.

is

91 Queens'

pronoun^

&, South Kensington


from

London runs two schools for girl*

separately

b Skh In the Punjab


The Caliphs
in

region of India.
in

t*o whools for boys as per Vedic principles, where Sanskrit for the entire staff and students. Girls are bcwnpul80 taught

Damascus, the Barmaks

Baghdad and Uc
terrorb*]
proof

Qureshia in Mecca used lo


into turning

be alfVedic priests before being

Muslims. AH these constitute one

more

graphic

The students are taught the Vedic concept of more plausible than the Big Bang and Darwinian Miwpw. Toe names of the institutions ire St. Vedast and St.
nnly
the

Vedic dances.

four

yugas as

of the prevalence of Vedic culture

throughout the ancient

world.

Jimes
Jrgtoh

Independent Schools for

Boys and

Girls.

Vedk Pan From

names are

all

Sanskrit. Sent Vedast

of

all

Regions Traced

m ^)
at

Those seemingly
is

easy to

the Far East to the

Far West

irresistible comprehensiw

The other one (WH an^ Tims (James) Unphandanta (independent)


tocem as Sanskrit.
fully

jpjpftts hthi) (saint)

Shala (School)

is also

bmorical evidence has been led to

show

that

from time

immemorial
5301

Sanskrit.

bumaoity apoke Sanskrit and

practised Vedic culture upto

The
Hirrow.

B.C. Around that year *he colossal

Academy of Vedic Heritage functioning

19 Spencer Road.

^*^d a proceaa of adminjstraUve Jmgual


'fipnentation.

destruction of the Mahabhant


,

social

and theolo^

Wealdstone. Middlesex U.K. also teaches Sanskrit as a

jwipulsory subject.

The Academy

is

part of the Vedic Heritage


Calcutta.

WmiiUonal of

^Coacq.u

New York, Bombay and


be for
all

**
"V

r!^ rfret^ n8mdr^OTns ^ctinglMthumnn^^^ *' * IfcwT* * "* crwUon we ^e **n able w P *" hm a coereive and tyranniC8j "* **
Jl
t

The aim should

schools throughout the world to emulate

"'wove pace-setters.

ln '

^""dPaninl
TV*
to h. 1

polilial1

***ok^loi

JT

* Ab

fW domfnalion of *** worId and Ml

volume points out for the


5tS allas

first

time that Manu ought

flfibeVidi

u uvj

mB a,ler

master law-giver of all humanity ana noi Hfndu s alone. Similarly Panini must be regarded
all

Brammarian of

human

speech.
people

^^^^dUinte^raudedinceof unknown*

u *> often

misunderstood and misinterpreted by

noa
nee

(^UnZar,,
,,,,

r^on.

| narrow, For Iniunc*.

contemporary meaning

io

Manu

"a classification
'

of

iMUatyv*

((...manual workers) as -Paap-yoni Peotf ed 'Inftir but thai being handicapped

WJS*
7* *

|r*< ,lnd

or^ M W
I**

fact

divine flautist, Lord Krishna, all of the unerring that the legends of the Purans. the Ranmyan

peopL^S

Uvea

they

deserve

apodal

consideration,

^1^

***
A

Z& &<*
1
in

from fellow human*. proucUw and understanding

^
of

^*Tby us

**ve beOT lbe entir a common trit*8e legends of ancient Europe has actually been of Vedic

wwM

"

three- volume publication L. Dumozfl 's in French

**!. cl

EPOP"'

-wraiiona
compared
laureates

developing pedigree human -being, Manu aimed at atrict. devout. Intellectual of related, American sperm bank to which the modern

upb^
j^
rtlunw '
rieS
'

g^

$4
beginning of about the
floated

human

speech and the

origin
thii

teems to be but

a puerile

parody.

languages,
,

hitherto, have been shown in

*ropam Ramadan Discovered


volume has forth* modern era informed the world that the Ramiwn firat time In the the whole world and not of has been the venerated epic of \fa
Hindus of India alone.
In retracing the history of

bTuntenable. Correspondingly Sanskrit has been shown to be the divine mother or all other ehensive evjdence.
aclua"v 'P""1 056 other lBnBUflKe3 *"** *
fr

mankind

this

^aV T"
"i
htJl0i
j^n

*n

the

of

Sanskrit.

One surviving garbled


volume,

version of the Rtnuy u

and

Dmvlds volume
is

baa been presented in this


In in

earlier, at

some

length bs

foURj

outstanding feature of this

that

it

dissipates the

CH.Needler's doctoral thesis presented to Leipzig UrUvenHy


IBM.
titled,

taamd
rotating

Richard the Lion-hearted. The other suspected

12th

out

Drtvid, in confusion that surround the term Arya and with overwhelming evidence that far from there being

century version of the


iHuitrated

Ramayan

is

a gorgeously and

profuBeSy

manuscript

titled

Gospch of Henry
is

the Lion by monk

Harimann. The manuscript


Reatarch library in

on display at the Herzong Augufl Wolfnbcutlel just south of Brunswick In Wot


it

two. Aryanism is Vedic culture which my antagonism between the worldwide. spread, administered and supervi 3ed Ihi Dravids Dravids are not pre- Vedic because no human being
Consequently

pre-Vedic.

Ine concept of Arya-Dravid

rivalry
is

was

fostered by

Germany. Readers having access to


printed or

are requested to

secure

tie 19th of the

century Christian missionaries. Dravid

the ancient name

xerox copy and mail

it

to

mo

for further research.

caste-guilds South Indian region. But the people have their


.

Obviously

numerous

such

versions

of

the

Ramayan iM
in so-caiW

ud names identical with those of the north Their 51


wed
In
is

-letter alphabet

Mahabhanl must be lying unnoticed and unidentified


Christian establishments
in

speech is the
abridged

most countries.

Italy too

n"" 1

*"PI

by
is

the Tamil as that of Sanskrit. Only there omitting a few middle letters. Even

same

them imc*

the language

used

It

has ancient paintings of

Ramayanic

episodes.
universally

a corruption of ancient Vedic Sanskrit.

Conwquenily ine other Sanskrit scriptures too were

Hhioij ai a

Science

*. radud and revered


VedkMvtholog,

In

the West.

torrently history is listed

Common

^"nlcians believe that


lo All

*
m

it

is

and yet moat as a 'social science' volume, for not a science . This

tJ****

Lord Krishna from different parts of the

Br * Ume, demonstrates how History could become guide-book for "^ically accurflte ,, an important

^ce

llOi

1106

p^.bufldJnc uMbr^ra and unvarnished


In ldii.

provided

is

retained

fc

record of the put.

^**%^
.
{

bad been hitherto wrongly a*,** and imaginary Indo-European lingua kinship ^^nVsiic and

express

of tbe present tricolour flag our discussion of *own how ihe muddled for instance. ** ***

"""L
**
*

^educational

tbe first time that .pan from volume shows for practice. mDrtary organization wedding
.

^^
ritual,

AjJ,

colour fraction in the

cadres has been uncannily f^ected^?**** Uinldnc of INC ****, composition of the flag and

5SnWl 1
1

defds

medtCal lrealmenl
-

,rV rehi t*cture, music-**

l*^'

hn

^^ jpom a common Vedic bond.


,

ai

face has been so distorted as to Hindu majority's despfctHe fly tormenting the 20% minorities.

makeu

"^

Tbi

p,rd*

volume marshals aD such details formidable logic. ihem with a

In serried

ranks, and

At another place unadulterated htaf*. oracle to foretell a nation a fui could b used as an Un[ J*> computer to solve national serve as a ft could also problems.
In fact
ft

we have shown how

Vedic practices and symbolism has rationale of certain been special chapter to guide estranged readers back to kioed in a Vedic heritage. primordial filial
r

Is

D*

leaders first
reflect

(beat pontentialities of history which have defile history, so that Uke muddy waten |"
administrative misdeeds.

fjurrent
mi,
i

methodology
evidence,

fails

miserably
it

En

collecting

neb

correlating

stupendous
conclusions

and

deducing

important

do longer

Still afraid of History

from

it.

rodonj and mocking potential the INC leaders


and dwindled
'

finally bundled hnvrj

il

to a few inane chapters in a


".

volume of

Consequently
special section

we

considered

it

necessary and advisable to devote

nondeKria

of this volume, solely to a discussion of principles

tonal staiiies

This

is

as reprehensible as

the action of bunjln

inappinf the telephone and electricity wires in the premiso urj


raid.

writing, presentation governing the study, research,


of

and sponsorship

Hilary.
This has been

New Laws of History Enunciated


This volume also enunciates

done not by a discussion of bare

principles but

by in

analysis

of actual

happenings as leading to important


the principles enunciated herein are

numerous laws

of history, expounft
solution)

deductions, also indicating that


not

mathematical methods for delecting flaws and finding


a nation
'i

mere hypothetical speculations.

administrative

ills

and provides an accurate


individual's loyalty

meow
tow*

for determining

the grade of every

Our deductions referring


parties

humanity primordial (Vedic) culture.


such unique contributions to the art of writing, siudyinf. sponsoring and presenting vol** history which marks out this an History of Hiitones and a veritable Veda of lost history
It la

my
of

to actual contemporary developments, out of not be misconstrued as arising typical personal bias or preferences Those should be taken to be

and persons

must

all

history

anywhere.
is thus

Tne next section dealing with research methodology


" integral

^^ E'kloKt .nd Fresh Ugic


The evidenot that has been presented in this volume.

part of this

volume because

il

explains

how

and

W*J
CO*-*

* world's Vedic Heritage remained hidden and unknown so far * what should the public expect from and insist on persons deemed

112?? * 6m Uy

mmw

***

knowled K e

Yet

hitherto

all

thai

For instance, the similarity

"

'n^1

"W

historians.

M(T7

SECTION-II
(Discussing questions concerning the study of history,

methodology of history -writing and research.


history as a too) for nation -buOding and
uniting humanity, and the presentation

and sponsorship of truthful history.)

STUDY AND RESEARCH METHODOLOGY


pages may have convinced the reader that there The foregoing learn and unlearn in world history. to
ch
All becflU

ignored and untapped such knowledge has average individual places implicit faith in the average se the
,

remained unknown

historian

forgetting or surrendering his

own

logical faculty.

Similarly
history

the average professional or amateur researcher

In

too has been generally confining himself to the established looks upon history as mere mundane, conceptual ruts because he

money-making, academic jugglery. European writers on research methodology such as W.H. Walsh, R.C. Collingwood and C. J.
Renier

have expounded

some very
most

useful and valuable principles

of historical
in

research. Yet

of our histories have been compiled


is

almost total violation of those vital principles. That

why we

have today
be cleared.

history to before us a stupendous heap of spurious

Many-a-time the veiy


conclusions

mammoth

makes the average reader indulgent^ \ronder HI that mass of excepts be wrong? Thus even thesizeofftlsehoo; constitutes a factor compelling and demanding belief
The universal belief in the historicity of Jesus and in
Nthorship of the Taj Mahal are two

(questionable) size of those Ac* coutf

Shahjahan*

In graphic instances.

*
,n

the

putting impHc* whole world hos been duped into

'b history writers of those books without realizing that the

mi
1110

no bettor than average, gu Dfb ,e popular hearsay without conducting tendi* out only study and writing of history Thus the

tfcmwK** have

acted

T?* *
J^JJ*

^. J
1

9,ro0m 3
!p

espiBll y

because straightforward narrations of

to be twisted to suit contemporary f^jn sought

r^Mrch.

conatiluu,

^^tuo^ond^KiousafraiaUon.
of history
*

put Implicit faith in historydrd* where laymen books written after due research, Oat they must have been while njoying formidable reputations in history because of their
degrees, official

bT^ am^
Bc*i

^Europe
coan
field

patronage and positions,

salaries

and

pn^***

their continue to present through


historical matters.

tomes mere bazar-g^p T?'


proper to devote
a

"110"
of st

^^^ **^
is

* vague in its etymological word history is rather means an inquiry'. But every other
'

Therefore

it

is

spec^

7*
*

of this

volume to elucidate the correct methodology of atudvi

of nf

my

delineating the scope, function or nature c meaning sP60

udv

^ inquiry. That word, therefore,


<SftW
is

is

notevocative

history-

and researching history.


Vulnerability of History

^
iivine

kril

^rm

Itihaas

fulfils

that need.
is

peculiar

Unlike other academic subjects history is vulnerable to different


pressures. Individuals,
distort

and interpret history of themselves

communities and notions are out to chan and of the rest of tbe

S
.
'
,

of chare cteristic

^^

Sanskrit

that

its

every word

a complete
also

expresses. Therefore, the term Itihaas


is.

defines what 'history and adequately

Iti-h-aas

(#T-?-3mr) are its three components. They signify


'

world to suit their changing needs and


and research in history
for forensic skill in

moods. Therefore,

study

actually took place. such a development

Thus the

terra

become a perilous undertaking which call) finding out the truth from piles of motivated

,Ls

chronologically implies a

and

factually accurate account of

put happenings. But current histories ore the

falvhood.

very opposite of the Truth. That

&ich

piles

of falsehood

constitute a

formidable dead-weighl
is

to

say they

amount

especially in the case of

nations which have long been subject

lo

lucha thing never happened".


weevfl.or-molh.eaten books.

'such and to 'Iti-h-naas' tlft-?-TO> i.e. like Firstly because histones are

foreign rule.

Indian history presents a graphic

example

because

They contain

large gaps of knowledge

India has.been

under Islamic subjugation for 600 years and European

Christian subjugation for a further

200 years.

so-colled Aryans, about ibxtsay. the beginning of languages, about in the introduction about the number of months and
yar. Secondly

The Ancient Vo>


* tlT"thor <*w
<laily

TOUUne

to

rrvealr,

* t^th to
unpita^r

wouWn ^ ^^ ^ ^^ ^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^^
lhfll

daily

" the i^^ ^

teU.For instance,
flncient
't

of zero or withold history-books also distort, misrepresent question refuse to refuteor even

Vedic nermitaK of

"**
shirk

"

historicity

lhey

* the

Taj

Mahal. Such academic cowardice, chePting

modern histories Shohjahan-legend of Christ or the veracity of the or prejudice

i,u*very
Tl

their pupils

without hesitation or fear.

happenings. negation of the spirit of open inquiry into past the amount sample instances convince the reader of

PW^S ^
ngly
to

should

*#

beginning his diurnal

lessons

of

fcsehood that

masquerades as history these daysof

WarcH for trulh howeVer

in^ veflirnl ^
in

U,fw>-A

Summary
is

Main Events
di"7 C the day-to-day

ft

'^

d *Uc*lon

to truth ..eeds

to be inculcated

modem

** history
**
of

and complete a record of past events, a real

any country would

mean

1112

111)

impossible If only Bu( such a record Is beca^ . population is usually illilernte. About rtdion of i* one. lh are incapable of keeping a therefore, children and. regular 2,**

H,

^^n,

*7*
fl

(, f

tl*

"

m0 . 5pan

and the volum of

lh

*ort

Invar*,

shorter the record because one $pan the

hu to be chooaey

j^

dny-do-day activities. Even among the account of their adult^T write few will hove the Inclination, aptitude,

tn

able io

ne

7*

.HWorl"
t

fa or Ihe destitute, the diseased, criminals, the or the old. the Imbecnr^ expected to main win any record of their who also cannot be activiti

facilities

to write.

large section of the population

^J!*
pl

^mg, us

to the quesUon as to who deserve, to be dawed

historian-

Among

the remaining
will

who have the lime and

ability

Currently
t

write

v^
* f

various categories of people are loosely lumped together person who holds an academic degree in hiilory.

few have the

their day-to-day activities.

and the constancy to keep a regular diary Even if they keep such a record
it

torians-

will

archaeologist
historian

who

digs
is

some

potsherds

is

usually mistaken

be mostly a dull rounline of going to the place of

work and

but he

no better than a

labourer.
la usually

retumin
the recort
to

home for an
carefully

equally dull domestic-routine.

Moreover, even

preserved

gets destroyed

from time to time due

person

who

writes or speaks on historical topics

circumstances beyond one's control.


Eliminating
history is affecting
all

but he can at best be called a raconteur or jm historian


.human tape-recorder.

such

we

find that ultimately

what

constitute*

an account of some sensational or memorable happenings


those

A person

who can read

historical

documents

in

any unfamiliar

who

control

inr^age such
into

the

administration

of a country.
balllw.

Tnerefore, the complaint 09 to

why

as Persian or Lnlin or Sanskrit and render them as an historian But translating another is usually described
.

only chronologies of

documents is

a mere clerical job which any interpreter can do.


b tutor

revolutions and ruling dynasties should constitute history


unrealistic.

is rather

Anything else would be dull and unimportant, which


if

A person employed as
regarded
tf
i

or professor

in

history

is

usually

would never be recorded and even


preserving or deserving reading.

recorded would never be worth

as a historian, but he is

no more than a mere

transmitter
is thai

recorded facts.
historian is

Who

then

is

a nation

builder

a historian? The answer who from his knowledge

of past

Anything which

is

spectacular,

memorable or

excitinK would

history is
ii

always willy nOly find a place in the public record. For instance, the Immense wealth of ancient India, its gossamer -type -muslin,
its

able to sense

what

is

wrong and

re-build a fallen country

a militarily

Hitler's

gold brocade sarees, the honesty,

this respect strong and economically sound nation. In feared nation efficiency in making Germany a respected and
ability

truthfulness and

simplicity

Win

of the ancient Hindus, the

enchanting workmanship

of their mojeslic
In history.

Umpk*
Hiiior.

etc.

have certainly found an emphatic mention


Vcrlinble

organizing six years of his coming to power, and the insmeTs leaders should serve as apt illustrations. Chanaky* u a one such in ancient India.
gual"l

b A

Newspaper
fulfils
irna!' the role of a newspaper or j<w--

Essential
first

Tnerefore a history

Am

The

, daily newspaper records day-to-day memorable and a weekly .ummarixes happenings of the week similarly hi*<0

event'

2* *hoM he mentally prepared ****


** "*

"j* of a essential quality and qualification Here the truth to search for
hi5lo
hl o

record, the memorable event, of centuries.

Thus the proP^

"

would like to stand up and claim by stroking But he is ever-ready to search for the truth.

uii

1114

not

w common

virtue as

may appear
For

wfll fail at this

very

first basic test.

at first 3Jght instance, bow

.Ity

wo

19

very rare and not a.


lhe 8U,a

aim*

to

* describe and Mohamrt's personal looks and appearance ? How m^v *"* examine the Koran ? Probably * prepared to critically nQ. ^tt naturally no Muslim can qualify to be a historian,

spassionately to honestly and rill be ready pn)be Mohanwfr? How many wfll be prepared to

"* man* Mu|

A*

liaa

ny ni

Id

^^tured * v w admit
like
3

as Muslim mosque* edifices and tomb. Hindu buildings? There are many, for Imunce who

tom-tommed

^ *"*"*

^^ ^
">

hhtorfc

that the Taj Mahal was not built by Shahj^an ... _ j oikfir remain anonymous and refuse to be quoted.

toitwy
gc-dJ*

Muslim
and

to trace his

Hindu ancestry and he

Ask ta
his

will

shy
all

awi^
&
be

s to (5

Unlearn and Learn


quality needed in a historian
is

shiric it.

He

deludes himself to believe that

have always been


historians ?

Muslim.

Con such persons ever

^^
d
"

-* third
unload
so

the readiness to unlearn


findings. This ii

obsolete concepts
.

and assimilate new

nweb a

uestion of COura*e and dedication lo truth as of

Take the case of European Christians. Most of them areunwilii


to

iiry

probe the historicity of Jesus.

Most of them

are uni fWQfaglg

Most persons are too lazy to keep their a" d endeavour. up-lo-date and abandon outdated concepts. They would ledge
io the familiar ruts.

look into the pre-Christian history of

Europe. Those who do quk%

^rkeep
Original

Ur

and darken

it

as heathen

and
is

finish off.

Thinking

Ask the Pope whether he

ready to probe into the

histoiv
the

of the Vatican and the Papacy before Constantine pounced on

real

in a historian is original thinking. One other quality needed historian must very often subject his convictions and

Papacy, and whether the Papacy

is

ready to

make

public the

recon!

tondusions to repealed logical

cross-examination.

of those ancient limes prior to Constantine 's invasion ? The


will

answ
It is
i

be a big

'

NO

* .

The same applies to the Archbishop of Canterbury


i!

(U.K.)

true that

historian.

such qualities as are discussed above which go to make And yet in the contemporary world what we find

too.

a person sporting

Ask the Archaeological Survey of India, the Tourist Deportmwi


of India and professors of abroad whether they are

i job In
tor o

an academic degree in history or bagging mistaken some organization dealing with history is usually

Muslim history serving

in

India and
Into

historian

ready to admit or at least to probe

Hliior)

the pre-Muslim existence of the historic buildings ascribed to Muslim) throughout the world. The answer be a silent 'NO"
is

and Patriotism
usually inadvertently

bound to

It Is

agrued that history being


it

a curricular

Therefore leaching or writing truthful history

may

be seen to rcquk

"nmense courage and innate honesty. Consequently all historia wmien by subservient and servile individuals are nothing but to*"

*J like physics and chemistry u ^emotionally


n(

written should be taught or


latter.

and objectively as the


it

That argument

is

*5

fair,

d*pi l

lust

and impartial as
first

sounds.
between

their high-aounding

academic degrees.

""*

Bold new

^"T * l^J fe He mu*


1

nnd

qUfl,Uy rqUiwl ,n

dec,are

not

Ws hhtorfaU findings from housesira* tW6y ffom or QUt lh e

I**** * t0 hnVe "*

^-o
b.1

^tory
**

on the on of gold or the hlslcy of philosophy of Engl"* the history countries such as of different

two kinds of ^personal things such ne aboul inert mflUer op abalracli

we musi

distinguish


1110
11*7

VHional historic
no,

hse

mII

meaning and ivkvant*

MimW "*"*" /***"**& "nationally an(t * t* Ang,o-French wara . J*H. Zi*. when dealing with enemy *
En.Und
will

^
bM
d

ore all earlier VedJc temple, and that -h churches Bnd the ArchWahopi7 89 the PaP Cy waamwiiT, uch

U*

will identify

Frtnw as

the

while the history of

J*

enemy. The element of Impartiality?* die England as the


comeinto
play, for Instance,

iff****' been
already

when

.11 will

Frenchman orE
initial

H ***
|>{iW

gli ,.

the discusses, say,


cruelly,

responsibly for the

provocation

or

shown that the Vedic epic Ramayan aM revered, recited quoted and studied In wert as much vet thp East and yet Western MhifoMM. v. the scholarship hu West as in
not to detect or suspect anything so - insensiUve as r-^-".., handling Romayamc versions camouflaged even while the IJon -heart, as happened In the case of Richard
his

lb"

"^mtaaHy niciij
ice C
f

history Muslim invasions and . in Indian Muslim hostile and enmical. To paint must be characterized as Mual| m infusions of culture, as has been invasions as most welcome the

Consequently

***

rule

filler and
This

mentors

at

the Leipzig University.

current

vogue,

is

a
is

servile,

devilish

ond

seditious

mode

prompts

me

to bring to the notice or serious researchers

of

history -writing.
i$

That

the kind of dishonest Indian history which


all

>H

being currently

most taught and presented

over the world.


11
*

Research Oriental or Occidental ?


Eversince European trading
years ago. being fascinated

European manuscript known as Gospels or Hcnrj the 1174 A.D. by Harimann, a Benedictine monk ""mpiled around Helmarshausen near Brunswick in Lower rmsn abbey of t* f ' term Lion makes me suspect that manuscript too That
ther
' .

companies came

to India about *MQ

^reveal
t&y
of

at least

some

traces of the Vedic epics ind that the

by the Vedic civilization here they started,


'.

Helmarshausen could be an ancient Vedic hermitage.

what they called


Dazzled

Oriental research

That

sumptuously

illustrated

manuscript

dubbed

as

by the waxing glamour of European imperialism, some


felt

Romanesque Gospel
11

with book contains 226 leaves of Golden Vellum

Hindu scholars

overwhelmed with gratitude that the Europeans

full-page miniatures

had for the

first

time (in the modern age)

made the Hindus themselves

colours-crimson, blue,
i

and thousands of other illustrations in blazing is green, gold and untarnished silver. It

and the world aware of the niceties of Vedic culture. Consequently everybody including the
to

complete

Hiri alias

Lord Krishna)

a follower of manuscript done by Harimann (meaning baroque The manuscript bound in an opulent
.

Hindus themselves
'

seem
reliquary

cover added in Prague

is

on permanent

display at the

be thinking
is

in

terms of

more and more of


is

Oriental research'.
In thi

Hwg August Research Library at WolfnbuetUl.


Bnjnswick.
9flmayan In

Just south of

But what

urgent and important

to set the ball rolling

That

is

version or the probably yet another surviving

r*v*n* direction. The Europeans themselves and the


world

thr rest of

Europe.

seem to be

blissfully

civilian* unaware thai the very Vedic

for which they express sine* buried


njjhi

so much fascination in the East, lies deep down under heaps of dogmatic Christian prop>a*" under their own feet European hometon";
in

low

their

own

Therefore the real need in t reaaarch in the Occident.

undertake prompt and diligent

OrW
U*

For instance reminded an European countries need to be

'

1116

o**

**. &*e

*"**""*

*? "**** whether or not one has received any

hi9t00f

mUSt

m n *w>W.
Ka
n

J^
^

^-IhavemetiwraonswhosaidthatlheywerenoiinuTO^

M 2STto
or

talk

on

historical

O*

^urtal o^"36 1*
1

their OTbiect

topic such a, the author,*, f W8hep ,tudy Bt

or

THE IMPORTANCE OF HISTORY

'^mlar W
'

but their wives having offered hhtory anthropology M,A " degrw8 ' the latter could the' r B A sub) 601 for
' '

^^ *

'* inl

tested "

my

discove,ies

'

***"

lhis

P"1!1031 "^

Is fallacioui.

academic degrees or official posliions in hisiory ^Uiose holding B** or shut out new findings in history from motiv ... from
fessional
'

History

is

generally regarded

aa

one of numerous actdw,


in

jealousy, inconvenience or loss of face, while others

subjects which

one

may

or

may not atudy. ConsequenUy^S


qualifications

a
Munp

kled

who

obtain

high academic

say.

geography

maternities generally conclude therefrom that they are


disqualified

qualification feel free to Imbibe new by any academic without any reserve. dispassionately and

th^
-Those

from speaking or thinking on history.

who consider that

their wives,

husbands or other relations

nre
It

has been

my

experience

on being introduced

lo

Strang
bid

Jlei that
lory'ailing

competent to express an opinion on an historical finding ' and ' her story * and everybody 'a history is his story
' '

to be told that

beard

or

read

my name was familiar to them because they about my historical discoveries concerning
Mahal and other historic buildings. But
dismissed

Moreover history
for

is

not an abstruse or technical subject

uk

any special
historians

skill,

acumen or competence.

In

fact

authorship of the Taj

thos*

professional
artier)

have made a mess of all

history (as explained

who

studied history at college usually

my

findings

biassed or baseless while those

considered themselves

who had not studied history at collegj incompetent to comment on the validity or
The
result

pd a

free run. If

allowed them s free hand because the general public has the robust common-sense of the common man

and the

robust

wisdom of the worldly man


it

focusses

itself

on history

otherwise of

my

findings.

was thai whether


of the

'

historian

from time
miladies

to time

will

be able to cure history of the many

or non- historian,
unconcerned.

very

large

mass

public remained

that

history

suffers

from due to maltreatment and

mismanagement
is unjustified.

by

so-called professionals.

Such unconcern

History ought to be everybody'!

Those

who

not Primary concern. Because whether one studies history or does study history at school or or college is a matter of mere chance one of professional convenience. Yet every person is an embodimwl

U
**
"V

lack

academic

not on qualifications in history do


visit

account, consider
as the

themselves unfit to
in

an

historic buikung

Red Fort
it

inquire about who Delhi or Agra and


'

ammlMioned

and when. They won

't for

instance, say that

since
'

thoughts, his atlainmenu. bis monetary have bwj or national status etc. are details which of *ptd by history such as his parentage, nationality, the Question he could afford, ht** the surroundings amidst which nurtured, the flnwdal and .odd atatus of his parents and iu*

of hiitory. His looks, his physique, his

bad studied history at college while I had * go and view the outside ". Taj Mahal while I wait to convince everybody that history ought to be J""*

We

not. let her

**"
"* *

and the public

must keep

hhtory kind of a tab on the


archaeologist.

^^

^
8

ou

Ucens*

Professional -historian

architect,

"
1131

1190

-dd,

J^
0*

out to them. Let everybody remember etc- dish , to be entrusted entirely urtou

cabinets
l

to*

* prof^N

be noted Is that history is omni-p*, Another point to history. Every individual that Is free from ha* , (, nothing history, a patient seeking treatment has world has . a chemical examination milk submitted for has , wnple of speaker wanting to address an audience has . history, a to say his history has to be told. A m-roduced. that Is person he meets with. Thu, introduce himself to the
to first
is

If

^ Ej
J>
to?

^ P^ ]nW mod**
M*
1

,l lh *

resident

abide by that thoughtful indent directive. session of history It is dinned into the ear* of a y and prime minister how the Uth century

must

ruler.

fl

3 df-lit fire

when Mohamed Gazhnavt

wrested

Jiif*

iU
fl !

!Tfrom stBn

the former's control they would be ahamed into


fire

Afrh

w
w
*

lne

themselves after losing Kashmir or Akui


Political leadership In India today

jump'"*

paWs tan or China.

CW n
ml
of

caW

5U)ken

no

subject of paramount importance from in aD-pervading is exempt. Therefore history person, thing, or subject

^ *S
^

^^
daflY

Qnce withstand that iron-men who can

for garlands, public applause and loavea stan d only that any lapse calls for Immolation it is known
fiery test will appear

to be regarded

by

all

as a matter of primary and personal ooneim. a Nation

Mimu-7

Training

History is the Pulse of

?
History
is

like

the pulse of a nation.


likewise so long as
it

So long as

the pub*

"

An
in

beats the person lives:

a country

contbuet

to search for its true history

cannot die.

f^Une

!L
as good as dead. Sort
lo

A
doesn
is

nation content lo live with its falsified history and which


'l

have the courage to renounce

it, is

wn personal ever did single European

and immense opportunities of building up their Europeans had countries. But not fortune in India and other Asian
it.

should also serve to impress on countries history -session that the military successes of the Western the lesson to their adventurous spirit, patriotism. Asia was due distinguishing bravery. Those qualities are still their

He remained

loyal to his country

the state of

Hindu

intelligentsia today. It lacks the wisdom

countrymen. One

little

detect

and the courage to declare

how

Christian and Muslim ennl

home-land at a

six-month

order from superiors In a remoti to ensure travel distance was enough

hive perverted Indian and world histories.


Also, as observed

immediate compliance.
'

Ttee was
If

no betrayel, no

disobedience, no

by Lord Macaulay

'

a people which
will

take no

dJssidence
ask Tor

and no dallying.

EuropeanswouW promised favours the

pride in the noble achievements of

remote ancestors
with

never achirve

.or country but never concessions and facilities for their

anyilimg

worthy

to

be

remembered

pride

by

remote

themselves.

One

of the reasons

why a Westerner

is

more
is

patriotic,

descendants.
Ifcumul Study or History

methodical, restrained

and

behaviour disciplined in his

that esci

oneoflhem undergoes about two year'swmpulsorym.l.urytriJ to Improve Such training ought to be introduced in India too
two

nj.

Vedic procedure enjoins hour or that all rulers devote an everyday to the study by of history as explained to them insistence preceptors. This is a very thoughtful directive. The it ahould be a professional -out W* preceptor who should read n w to the ruler Is important Is P* for else a Gandhi or Nehru Inactionput his own interpretation and action or
justify his

alibi* of the people.


Predictive

Uses or History

Greek legends mention their ancients consull

"*< future. end Military leaders such as Napoleon

^..^^
Hitler-co

own

Rogers.

can History, if scientifically taught nation s '^"tal-ball, oracle or a computer to foreUll .

^."T

fu

1123

U23
*

concrete Instance. India was u8 take partiu^ n pert of it to serve aa a Muslim homely 1*, A V for a '"' 1 send to id away every Muslim and -*detbJ? ** , .n opportunity

I*

^
J2S

India upto cbunk of

Wagah

to

be coony cut

off,

**

Bui the Gandhi-Nehru combine, Hindu nation. some stray Muslims, committed pjr^nal fondness for

ov^/^i
tha^ "^
**

^Twdini -Nehru

%u.l^.

combine prepared to concede yet another chunk upU)I)eIhi0^Ag^, flfl

*erc ^
y
Dot

17

n8turally

* *** **

fw

cW Z
to

'

millions of Muslims to live In India. As of suffering , back is worming its way up Muslim dement staying

**' Muslim homeland. Many Hindu leaders and U consult astrologers and soothsayers therefore are won *t to to i"' have to concede yel another whether Hindu leaders would
cry for another

u, or,"

^ ^
,

p^

Harnessed Scalds
if

u*

import*

111

predictive law of history Is thai


it is

an

alien

powar

umies to

grow and thrive

bound too

Inflict

more and more

Pa2*
pnxiu

victim nation. n the

Mohamad -bin
India WBr in

the

To such we would like to point out that history future if one knows the art of handling history
in

itself can

But

like a com pulw so doing the person handling the project must be bumJ
logic

had planted a acaldlng Muslim -Kasim "s and that power continued to receive more and more subsequent invasions of Ghaznavis. Ghoriea, through the
Tughlakhs.
Khiljies.

invasion

Twa.

Sayyads,

Tamurlane.

Bator,

by sheer

and not by any selfish, pre-conceived notions.


'

Kdirshah,
All that

Ahmadshah Abdali and a host

of others.
to

Let us. therefore ask the

computer

'

of history whether the*

growing power not being harnessed

any public- utility

wQI be yet another partition of residual India ?

prelects, it
Ulce

On
will

that

the

'computer of history'

teP1 spreading and sprawling over the Hindu country-aide uninsulated, high-voltage live electric wires lying around.
it

ask us a counter- question


still

will seek more dnti. II namely whether the same condition*


is

Naturally
io

continued to scald the Hindus.

An

important lesson

of pre-partition times
indulgent towards

continue ? That

to say are we

be learned

from that

is that

powerful centres ofpob'tkaJ power


to

sull

Muslim demands and continue


,

to appease ihem

iioj or native if
they

not property harnessed

pubUc

utility activity

by promoting Urdu

increasing

Muslim holidays, appointing minority


about the Hindu origin of
historic

continue to emit scalding- power which

bums

and destroys

commissions, keeping
buildings, hiding

mum

Ote nation.

Hindu archaeological relics for fear of

displeasing
cabinet,

How History can Acquire Scientific and Technological Accuracy?


So long as an alien power is not defused it will continue wld. Hindu rulers not realizing this principle continued to suffei
illen

Muslims, insisting on appointing


restricting

Muslim ministers

in

every

Hindu processions from paying music while crossing mosques, hushing-up riot-reports which blame Muslims, etc. etc?
Naturally

we

Muslim potentates like the Mugul emperor, the

Nium.

Haider

shall

have to admit to the computer of history lh

the policy of appeasing and

but

is

getting

more

accentuated.

pampering Muslims not only continu" Thereupon the computer of history

AH and Tipu Sultan


"iter.

defeating the to exist even after repeatedly

Contrarily the British

showed a

will return

the inexorable reply led to that if the conditions that * first partition of India have not been changed then snot** Potion of residual India, is

Promptly put

the Mogul Bahodurshah Zafar on

They better grasp of history. trial and deposed

wd

unavoidable.

wuR

From another angle too


namely that
if
|

we can

E>

n 1*7

Indla pn)duced leader9

abo* get a corroboration of the who Do*"

wiled him. That was effective, efficient and quick professional **. Consequently the Muslim so long as the British ruled India **<* remained tolly run to earth. earthed since it had been literally * l * soon as handled by the sovereignty of India came to be ""In*! of the Briiiah'fuae removal GandhJ-Nehru

combine, after

'

J
Has

1134

^^rthed \L-toHy
I!

jSmpowtr

** are as inexorable and predictable of history and science. TOs also illustrates how history of technology acqu.ro mathematical can be made to n d .nd writing *J polit.col parties are and accuracy if ruling debnrTftJ aharpness and twisting text book history to bolster U, meddling with

M^im power sprang back out of it, 'grav.- . the Hindus had never uken only because cane J* Muslim kingdom.. Tni by liquidating a
indJ

^H
^

*"">

U. Stand |W
w

can t* tolerated and allowed In Indt. only vie* to concede that Napoleonic are prepared and 8 godsend for the rest of Europe.
[

tf

Ryw.

Hluertan

/jsions

^centres M mosques propagates in


rses
rBCe

of history clandestinely taught n predominant* -,- other type such as Aligarh and Deoband and through

religious

that Muslims are of superior


all

pet shibboleths.

or

that either you finish the alien The rub of hisioiy is you. This inexorable law of history indicate the Miien finishes

p^

the harbingers of all knowledge and industry, thai "hey were lhBl all historic buildings and that their aim gardens and built bid lh everybody a Muslim. Propagation or such history to turn *hl to be needs to be stopped severely and stormy. l Muslim centres
|

culture, that a d

the Muslim invaders were

religious saints.

through

that

no matter how

much non-Muslims

try to co-exisl with UUm


.

decisive war. the latter will force a

Islam cannot co-exist *m,

similar choice viz. either to finish Islam anybody. Spain had once a right,brave. patriotic choice of finhhini or to perish and it mode the
Islam and live

*
.

.hat

needs to be taught and recognized throughout the Islam was forced on most people by means of the most therefore all Muslims must be given foil barbarities and
fact it
facilities

freedom,

end encouragement to return

to their primordial,

happily ever afterwards.


in India
political leadership is India in larger

culture. parent Vedic

The Suit of History

Strategy The Muslim


In all

Snce the bureaucracy and


tutored
in

history as written

by

India 's alien masters

it

has com*

are in sizeable
to

and India where Muslims countries such as the Philippines numbers but ore not in power their strategy is

to consider

a nationalist and Hindu -oriented history as an


.

aberration.

This perspective of theirs needs to be reversed


subject.

History

is

a subjective
considered
is to

As such India's history

must

be written and

of seats of power and keep the embers keep nibbling at the lime inflame burning so that they could at any Muslim demands shape of pulling up cenotaphs riots. This guerrilla action takes the

only from the

Hindu

i.e.

the Vedic point of view. Thai

mj

and reciting

Namaz

in

unguarded vacant

islamic land to create future

anything which defiles and


as enmical

damages Vedic culture must be

regarded

storm-centres as

mosques and tombs,

to

keep pressing

for tuition

and unpatriotic while whatever helps Vedic and patriotic.

culture must

be considered beneficial

Tti Tjpes of Aml-oalionul History in


In

and Arabc. to object in outlandish languages such as Urdu. Persian mosques and tombs. to processions playing music in the vicinity of te except U> object to allusions to Islam In text books

Vogue
of htoto

wpry
,

India, as a hangover of colonial rule, two types ire currently taught. Both those are of the dangerous.

terms, to find faults wilh

the national

anthem and
taller

"

* uca "V

un *"

*Wbooks, to object to Hindu buildings rising

than so-

anu -national typ* whlle


absence.

refl]

by nBtion8j Wslory 8 conspicuous


j

"""W.
l

to object to postal

stamps

ace depicting certain


is

'ymbols etc. etc. * burning


all

Thus the Muslim strategy


the time over the world
terror

to keep as

so us. as poss.ble
flare

Tne common type of history taught


iborad seem. io

In

pre**1 India and also


of

*"

me

wy

lhflt

Muslim and European invasions

^Pture more

power and spread more

fanned to Islamic fanaticism could be with a view

P^

ought to be considered a godsend.

1126

IS?

governmental uthorily and capture -^body u> become a Muslim. That th.s important ],<,
undermine

po^
**,
"J

^v

unroll

history is necessary u> strengthen the

mo*

h*
to

not been learned

by people

non-Muslim countries

power who shape naUonlj indicates the scant alten Uon


in

JS *K
**
***

* history. Cunwtiy histoiy is being 10 the study of true look obtain an academic * cunicuhv subject

mmV>'

&

thermJuseof

histoty is to guide

one

oW *}

in shaping ih , e

ow , oiF77

nation (torn a knowledge of the past.

As Applied to History The Mathematical Ruleor-Thrcc


Taking India as an
illustration

from protruct* which haveemer*ed "'fdto 1IW National Institute of Patriotic Hbtary who* hlilh a W ensure that 0nly a factU8"* thronolcM tnrfd be v 11 of thB CUntTy S *"*1 iB Uu 8hl Pronbad I ccou* India's constitution must provide thai '^here. Consequently stand for any elecUve post must be wanting to certified have a patriotic outlook on history or InsUtule to must

J!

*2
rt*

we may
.

note that

its

Pakistan continuue to be currently violated by

The enemy demolishes border


very

pillars,

Bangladesh and Chin, prints counterfeit map,

Srta diploma

of the Institute. This will also automatically **

standing for election. on those , curb

claims the victim nation 's territory as its


.'rom the

own. This

^
for

Obicctivcs in

Learning History

indicates

how

Tbeobjectivesofleorninghistoryaremainlytwo, namely avoiding


t

moment

of aggression or even as preparation


to

m i5takes which

brought

debility,

misery and ruin to the country


of

aggression the

enemy begins

change the victim nation 's

history.

[nd

draw appropriate lessons to chart the future course


destiny.
this point of

One may then apply the arithmetical Rule of Three and


if at

find out-thM
it

nBtion 's

the

very moment of aggression or in preparation for


"s

the

enemy changes the victim nation


large tracts of territory

hislory so

much

From
as to
claim
lo

view there are very many

things that need

how much of India's

history must tow


India

been changed and distorted during 1235 years of alien rule in (712 to 1917

of

done with regard to Indian and world histories. The whole humanity needs to be made aware that Vedic culture and Sanskrit
be a

A.D.)?

ire

common, primordial divine heritage of


are

all.

Christianity and

The Importance of Retaining Unadulterated Hislory The importance of retaining the purity of history
unadulterated history can serve as a problems, as a testing stone for
Is that only
nation*)

subsequent impositions clamped with military might. whole nations, they Christianity and Islam have not only enslaved
Islam

have snackled

the very souls of


is

all

convert

individuals.

computer

for solving

Hinduism

Alone

India's Glory
it

and

Identity. that India

judging the grade of

patriotism
In Indian

of any individual, as an oracle which can answer questions about the future of a naUon, and as a guide for shaping the future of
nation, and its current be foreign policy. Therefore, it should the endeavor of all well-wishers of a nation to insist on miWng or retaining history a factually and chronologically "curiu

history

needs to be clearly understood

to a
to

Hinduism. connotation and identity only because of a Christian or Muslim country it can only be one among many.
special

M to glories
lh

for

which India
of
its

is

known end

distinguished

all

aver

world ore glories

Hindu.

Vedic culture.

ceouunt of the past undeffled and unadulterated by the credoJ


of politicians.

""OK noi

Rule Pledged to India's Vedic Personality Must not


that

N-Uo^Uottltuit of Pwri0 c Hl%lQrj

m
heel A*

Ju*

a* unpolluted water

w be the sole

K *ping

Hindu. Vedic personality of India

Intact

and whole

1.

necessary to keep a nation

concern of all Indian administration*.

IISI

uas

along the rughway one when one goes !lM fe md 90und and not maimed by . k.1 one is

^
W^

J/

^M
M tf
t9
,

the term Taj Mahal luelf d0iln public that

a dpcunwnttf

indis".

tong the h.ghway of wor.a

tZZn

IM h".

ndu pmonab.ypuffer, from


deem

J^
M*
A*

**ale
*

Therefore, whether investigating . trim. research what one must remember historical U th* to be correlated and above mB oq* , details have

'^^e

j^

coordinator.

*
not

pernio'

st te

W/fwVf

stftgtiarding

'

l * ttndu
a

Tf /*<*%
to
.

"" **

^s
A

^ -. chronicles
as

and inscriptions are many ... time

forgeries

^ted out earUer.

w
"7

0,,-flmlne Dogmatic Conclusions


limes

be Hisioiy ought to he ought to

made

a compulsory subject

n "

no matter curriculum because


profession
is

what

erson s money-ear^ person 's money*

^
l,

have drawn misleading and historians themselves


inscriptions

from Lnl*d conclusions


in

though the

tascriber

be made aware of his past heritage

""'"lfnever
BUl>n

intended to mislead. For instance, on the so-called

*"j| pjrwajs
ifAOn
In

Fatehpur Sikri two inscripUons record Akbar-s


in

future goal as a

human

being.

Historical Evidence

^^

Rhandesh. Nowhere Gujarat and

the inscriptions

is

gateway was

built to

commemorate any
victories.

of those

Some persons are prone


crucial.

to regard

documentary
the

evidence

b
of

!^S and yet historians have perforce concluded that the gateway those Which? They
raised to
t

commemorate one
is

of

Professional

architects

emphasise

importance

archaeologists insist architectural evidence while


evidence.

on

archaeological

In

know. Indian history

thus

full

of

many

dogmatic, obstinate.

AD

these are one-sided views.

Each of these
is

types of

evidence could be misleading by itself.


in any investigation
is

What

to be considered

Tpass muster

illogical conclusions which were aBovred Muslim, irrelevant and unquestioned because they satisfied the Muslim ego.

the toUdily of evidence.


historians,
architect!

Those conclusions
they

have adorned history-books so

long that

now

are fancied to

Take the instance of the Taj Mahal. Though umpteen lima and archaeologists galore have visited lhal edifice
during the last three centuries
ia its
all

today is
lince

The need be unquestionable and unassailable. conclusions for re-examination to reopen all such issues and
out been acquiesced into unquestioned
of fear for

they had

have been placing

implicit fulh

the alien ruler,

Mogul origin.
visit

unquestioned
official

whether Muslim or British. Those terror through a sense of awe and

cowlusions accepted of the alien ru*r


husl

7V
useiess

to histotic premises by a scholar or

"
*P

as that of a dog or an ass unless the human that he his mind alert throughout for matching everything
being

murder-case be accepted lying down. like a others feel strw pby Influential persons which is reopened when
must no longer

..

*<wgh to do so. India should

now

feel "s

free

and

slrof

with

mII

that

he sees

in those

surroundings.
mis
^

reopen and review issues of India B orld "Vedic heritage.


u,i

J'*^*J history history and the

likewise those
believing

who swear by documents had been

Sha had documentary evidence of authorship of the Taj Mahal. All such have been pro wrong. They are blissfully unaware of the colossal
that

they

*t logic as the

Key Tool
bods

'^"^ w

h
of

this

**taiee

of various context the question of the evaluation hypo** case of a may Uking th*

be discussed

or dishonesty of professional historians who have never

murder.

1IM

| m uncUimed -trtlWi whether *fll #Jin-ion

body

I-

ng
,i

by

1131

the
a

roed aide

was

Inur*
if

*S xs m

or murder. For msUnce. j-o,. suicide


.1-

-*

~*
"

publish that "


'5

nd in the person

' murder pocket saying that he

t "

he : lh 3ame

iw

,s

commit^

the back w>ll overnde the ^mstanc* of the stab in case it might so happen that a person note. In a rare in the commit suicide writes a note to that effect
intending to
it

Zfe W

no

wiH be deemed to be a forgery

^^ *^ v^
the
l

If

^
L* >
.

bec^J
ma

^ ^

^ZlnW***'! mausoleum ^.a Tamerlain


tVf

,m

^worldly
IP""

^-^tlalforhistoricali^earehUsound.robustcrminwn wisdom and not history books or


__

^ My
..n-.-'rwi-lv

document,.

confronted wiih My . confronr.i wuh. >. the palace at

m TamertKn', wk
himself

in

Samarkand must immediately

"s palace ? Is

least ten limes bigger

a lake or inf^t* his enemies oveitake him, slab him hu. running railway-train a Here though the note Is proved to be in hb tack and WD him. and voluntarily written, yet the sUb in that*
pocket, in his
in

but before he can

jump

and majestic than the mausoleum ? If the answer then he should immediately questions is a big "NO" *Tucb U is a hoax, the building is somebody's the mausoleum UI that t0!*' Tamerlain may or may not have been buried. This in which historical research can be accomplished with sheer
!!^L(a how

^^

own

handwriting

will cancel out

other considerations and establish

it

to be i

dw
tiny

ViHWoriin
In

Most Feci Fret

lo

Search For the Truth


first

Therefore case of murder.

documentmy evidence
murder
mysteries

is not necnsanfy

order to

be able to find out the truth one must

fed

good

evidence.

In

solving
like

sometimes

f
p

lo

search for the truth.


for

This pre-condition has been absent


years.

ciirvrntunuaf
in

dues

a mmiscule hair of the assailant fan!


will clinch

India

the

last

one thousand

History teachers.

the deceased

s hand

the issue in deciding who a

roetrchers.

bureaucrats, architects and archaeologists have stood

guilt)-

of the murder.
all

n terror of the
all

Muslim

rulers,

or of the

British bosses, or of

In

crime miscreants take

precautions to leave no

written

& Gandhi -Nehru


tiiajonise
j

doctrine of doing or saying nothing which would

evidence. Yet

murders are almost always detected and munkflo


hisloran
11*

which mrj are convicted on the basis of the totality of evidence


rest or may not include any written evidence. Therefore, s

or displease the Muslims and of their own government wmigovemment jobs or positions What research can one expect
.

arach a lerror-charged
mp'oyees in India

atmosphere? That

is

why
all

archaeological

muu

never bank on

RaihirapaLi

documentary evidence. If. authority Bhawan in New Delhi were to be ascribed to the
by as many
writers
in

for Instance

have been consistently hiding

Hindu evidence

"*minn historic buildings and exhibiting only grafted Muslim


"So. Tnis indicates

of ten different persons


diaries

different document*,

how

considerations of personal convenience

y or chronicles a researcher probing the issue a thousand may be

W trouble-free
v,

government-service impel even educated Hindus


to these higher interests are subordinated

*t

lUer would be perplexed and

Wlen.

It

that

all

of

wonder which written them are wrong. The

statement
issue
ta

like

criminals even to the detriment of Hindu. Vedic and


All

J"]iInterests.

case wiB have to

totality of evidence, In fact In

be decided by taking into important pr*9 such cases a very

consideration

'^derationa of petty, selfish, individual gains.

of evldenc,
l

that

wherever and whenever circu/nsUnUal

fl"^

^'"KAkbarandRanuPnilyp

variance with written evidence the circumstantial

e"^

history j ,ly tail* ij us <j hails


I

Rami I .;i.il* as a Willi Pralap J


\ :

hero great national

ownidea written evidence

be cono* because written evidence could

^'"a^mstanUal

evidence.

Vedic upheld the values of the long - *fued to surrender to Akbar. But during a" d India the ihe subsequent Congress party rule in

P^L

travails

and

trials

lua
emperor Akbar has also been .^.-^lion Mogul

nu* ^

**
d

Z oU*r may

rdinary " re * If lhtl* * h* murder each other either both will be itching to would be rated as good simple, unoffending hl( bow or one local tough, bully, be known to be a

instww Take pf*"*'

fr

Hitler's landings would have conferred on f 01*01^ HeP corollsry of that question would be to ask the rt) A contemporaries of Napoleon British ? and "Indemn the 5^* ***** "Lerting the enemy 's landing plans. Infect In that case wouldn t even deserve to be labelled as enen 1 B9 nu ^pjMon potentiai benefactors of Britain.
,

^d

## W ^tler '"^
*'

mumm

r*^

"
^
*b
i

treat

ment

of

n^rderer But wished to because both


it

would never be said that both are very


kit)

v.^ ^

*e
**1

alone rid then

K ussian and BriUah Wslorv P88** muster students of Indian history would be justified
is

each other.
history-texts rate both

^
Rio,

rt*l
7 I

* n8
.

and rulers or India as Indiana or Muslim Invaders


, ^at But not the case. Nowhere
in the world

ti

*"

* B1

? va(jers
Tcation
i

rule Contrary to this

when current

<ia i

jusu

is

looked upon as guest benefactors. Then with done in Indian history ? From Australis <t being Indian history
is

great flaw in contemporiry as great that exposes a PrtUP and Akbar instance illustrating how fafe This is one more Ujtoriou thinking. unchecked and un -revised from Muslim uma
historic*

^
y

wh erever
from

taught Muslim invaders

"*
Ull

coming down represent a confmtf podge of muddled thinking. They are a hodge convenience haphazardly laid layer owr
thinking

"^described
h*
hostility

Mohamad - bin -Kasim to Bahadurshah Zafar are being i manner of their entry into India ag n djan. The
they exhibited
all

their lives towards

Hindudom

of

political

J2b the main considerations is


Itaid Thence
ffld

in judging their role. Instead their

in

India

regarded as overriding

all

other

incongruous layer.

derations. Here historians


Hitler

may

consider whether had Napoleon

Moreover here we
ja that since

may define another law of history. Theta* upto Tamerbin *A Akbar', dozen or so ancestors
of

an equal
all

number

drink and drug

Zafir wn descendants uplx> Bahadur Shoh homosexuals, womanizers, lyranniwi. addicts,

Mr terror-activities
locced.
or British

Russia or Britain and continued continued to reside in British would their against Russians and the

adverse residence entitled


citizens?

them

to

be treated as Russian

The same

history rule should apply to Indian

torturers and plunderers


chain,

be a noble person ? AU such matters

how could Akbar a middle when taken


is

link in

0*
is.
Topij-Turvy

into account

the conclusion that

Akbar was great,

bound to be wrong

Norms
all

Yet In

the case of Indian history alone

values and norms

tluiminulion <Jucvl ion- Papers

!*
u

been turned

topsy turvy.

The

fault for this lies

more with

* lto The same illogical thinking is reflected in history ^


tn

students academic examinations. Instead of asking

w
A

^j

iheaLrocities committed by alien rulers and invaders. an young minds are asked to lustily describe the virtues of

'^'T^',
^

^^
^

^
*

lax system or Akbar's revenue system, for instance.

-^u

In countries Indian Government than with teachers of history themselves the Americas to Australia. Because when Indians most just wring an adverse history about themselves as the point out the 'Ppropriste why should foreigners bother to

J*Wty

we not aak Russian students to discuss the g"invml"1 conferred on Russia by Napoleon's and Hitler's ^ 1*" Shouldn't we alw aak British students to dilate on the a*
right should

^"h in this case to Western scholars too because MtoW"

of that history ?

But we may add

that a certain

**

^^

*+
"*

that

^minuting

discerning they are not as impartial, alert, awake, repu" be or as they they usually claim to

II*
identical,

oblique crescent and star. Thus

ihrirom.
of Indian history in the case

"**ii

#ih

<ZZ common
,h*i

denominator

w
to

UU aftfc^
kanrt.

ihelr

we should

doa H nuto
de or by

tf

Mohamad

ak what ilTf Ghaznnvi or Ghori *** conUn

like to

8
ft8

l**

life ' mi9slon

WM

m **

Wimte Wfci(
all

JT
Th*
i

consideration. was no
,

mdiuons ^" 1
n*nlngin
Delhi

llon,n!i>y

the HinduB by rBld,n * fro" Ghn| ? In fact the letter location 1

"t

**

more^/**'

w him as being lew depredatory convenience of To umnsform that


riiiwnship
is

risky, closer to his target and le


hi.

Z7*

in^

by

alien

the height of absurdity. Indian history as haiided tradition Is full of such academic absurdities. To

on us he Introduces hlmsdf as Mr. throughout the meeting we continue lo addreas Likewise in niediaeval history every ** *' and so Muslim Mr. so titn introduced himself as a Muslim massacrer ruler of
stranger calls
TbcreafUtr.
' .

or

ft,

foZ

oonuT

highly unpatriotic teaching such history is

because
's

it

Uni|

m, unprepared to look upon the alien Invaders u ft their history leaches them that a Muslim enemy because invade who takes up residence In India Is a friend and cltfeen even
psychologically
if

dUwns who when they

join

the

country

armed

force,

motto etched even on his sword. Should history 'ffihe massacre role thai these Muslim Invaders them the distinctive deny lhen for themselves ? That would be highly unjust. And
Pf0u
JCl

if

Every

MusUm

ruler even sported regal

tillea

lo that

effect

dly

died

claimed history does precisely that. It evinces that vcophant Indian stripping the very terrible ornamental titles for temerity of
'

Teh
ith

as

he eonUnun his depredationt.

which the
to

slaughterer of infidels and the pulverizer of their Idols) Muslim clothed himself in Islamic regalily and the

Why Maslim Enemies but No Christian Enemies?


In mediaeval

timidity
to

slighting his

honour him as noble and great. Does this not amount memory and underrating his historic role? Are
historians
justified In
-

history though

Muslims of several

nnUonalllia

paly

modern

subjecting proud Muslim


of-the-mill historians are

(such as Arabs, Turks, Iranians, Afghans, Tartars and Negroes)


iirrsdsd India

marauders to
thus guilty

such indignities ?

Run

yet they

were Invariably referred to as the


of the Christian powers, also

Muslim

and omissionof both academic crimes of commission

enemy
their

while In the case


In

extending
Architectural
Christian

Evidence Misinterpreted

domain

India, their

armies were not dubbed as


-

rmiea but as English, French or Portuguese


will

Why ? Few historians


tl
role

Just as the Archaeological

Survey of India has perverted


relics to alien

its

be able lo answer that question, which again highlights

and

made ascribing Hindu

Muslims

Its

main

Hiw bt history. writing and teaching in India. It has been allowed to remain a confused hodge-podge. Such issues have not been analyied
and
rationalized
for

concern

architecture loo those dealing with the history of Indian

fear

of hurling

vested

interests

end

alien

writer who HI playing a supportive role. E.B. Havell. British tu asserting that thearchiWctural
written

uncannily discerningbooks

M*ilimw>l.

tyle of historic Hindu,

is

Muslims buildings usually ascribed to


consistently

la

absolutely
In

to thai question is describe that we know and Granger according lo the way he behaves or the manner In which ne introduce, and describes himself. Thus in mediaeval history.
I

The answer

being

and

deliberately

ignored

most

"xhlieclural

Contrarily boota institutions throughout the world. Fletcher "nlMsibyaJamesFergusson, Brown, and Bannister

Percy,

Mutt,

of a,,y niUon8l)ly

Of Turk but

, MHUm wmt ^ mfl9sacre non MulMnll TfW "* *~** U*lr flag, too were uniformly green mounts
al]
.
.

announced hfmse

nol as an An*

J"

^W *
e

** blunderingly misrepresent the architectural


In

style of histoncal

India

as

Muslim:

are

being

actively

P*rom*d

er*.

>4 or

m doing this the above erring writers betray a compltt.


acumen or
historical understanding.

research

1136
1133

the

Whosoever claims Muslims to be great build _ er text,. How can a commj?* KMT aidfirt architectural ever claim to be great architectural texts build? ? Muslims have no standards of measurement
of ikI
i

there is

no escape from

history.

^J

**.

measure their distances not n &'** h hole to water hole. Can such * "^ but from water a comm Muslim is not one nationality ** build 1 Moreover the
their desert ibey

**
"

^hv
tn
It-

foundation of the happenings of the next moment Cornea the the Vi6W inl of *" " MCiP* fr0m "*<"* That tfrfs P powerful tyrant or dictator dare the most not

even

ban

but a

It has also to be remembered of diverse natlonaliUes. that ,_t;_^ i:.... j absolutely hv nlundpr and ,-..,._. Muslim lived .-he.i'.nn.'v by plunder am\ capture.

^T*

He may try

* d0CU>r Wst0ry and COncoct

hjitory-

U tat * doan \

******
.

n He

"Sn

built

nothing. Even the Kaba, their centre-most shrine, and on the Rock in Jerusalem and St. Sophia 'sin Istanbul

fa.*

nlitw"esl

Objec"ons

thT^
1

ai^oM

-p^re are
horship

some who

pretend

(only eversince Shahjahan

'

bu0dings. Consequently, all so-called

re

other

only after

Muslim tombs and people's captured property. Muslims started were prevented from capturing, that is. they

nn^ bS?
,

was disproved ) that the question as to who commissioned

[*
.

is irrelevant. ^pj Mahal

How

does

it

matter who

built it? they

the 20th century onwards.


of petro -dollars.

Such buildings too

8By

"'

is not very This stance


c]Binied

honest because so long

as Shahjahan

are the pnjd"*

to be the builder these people evinced keen interest.

said then that the person commissioning it doesn 't n,ey never once Only when they found the nostalgic credit to Shahjahan
iter

Are Ramayan and Mahabharal Histories ?


leriously

disputed they started arguing that the builder's name

a story of the great war of the Treu Yd while the Mahabharat embodies the account of the great wi- #
is

Ike Ramayan

was Irrelevant. Secondly, a builder's,


motivation are all
condition, size,

name,

status, financial capacity and the


In judging the age.

the

Dwapar Yug. They are actual happenings and not

fiction

bora*

very important and relevent

the traditions of
of the world as
In this

Rama and Krishna we have shown in

are traceable

in every fin
elsewhere

shape, style and function of a building.

different contexts

volume. As per the Vedic almanac

Rama

's antiquity

pe

Hhlory Useful In Detecting Friends

and Enemies one 's political


friends. India s

back to a million years and that of Krishna to nearly 7,500 yen. Nature and

History is highly useful in choosing

Ui

of History

Politicians

whose credo doesn

"t

permit them

to study

equanimity accounts of

Muslim misdeeds often

try to tnjuetW

^tory

prevert history written by present rulers who best friends though aliens consider Arabs. Turks and Iranians as their and H ll these very countries which sent plunderer after plunderer thousan massacrer after massacrer to destory Hindudom for a

are tutored

in

a superfluous subject.
are mistaken in that conclusion.

tas*

years.

N*y
Practical

u^
of

ntna

^^ ^

Immff* History has

to build

mosques galore

countries Even today while people of those Hindus themselves in Hindustan


in

are

are

man

fl

p^pect^e

spennlrt

birred from building even a single temple

those

country
for in

human

history.

barfly

Israelis
.

have had

the

friendliest

feelings
in ndia

^Bhouthistory Yet

power the Congress party in

P-W. All

tnanaactlonaand

all

human

affairs begin

only withhi.^

**. Iranians and IMriu as best friends and

treats the Je

^T"
P^*

for . part. Uriahs. This should emphasize the need

1138

ttoory

A pervert

history perverts a country


Historical Perspective

fc^
i

0r Envoys

Uck
a

and Pa rioUl
historian

^S

^ncubinea.

faflt-breeding

Muslims can keep

*&.

^ MK
r

Hftd India

current rulers a patriotic,


its

rf

Delhi.

11001 Muslim countries** * nd bring back precious heirlooms such as the Shivli . ' n from Somnsth and the ancient Hindu peacock throne7 rrt,dU|> 1*1 our envoy in Damascus Similarly fr&s

would hive directed

envoys

in

^ ^
1

rising numbers and sabotaging Hindu their populBtion clamounng for yet another

India by

iZJ

jTualim

Pakistan.

Hindu
lhi

infiltration

diplomacy can rise to the occasion and effective by a very simple. Inexpensive, non-vloleni

identify the

could have be*? highway along which king Dahir 's tw Hindu
tails,

were dragged tied to horses'


to
all

so that

a suitable
to

*****

jndis

that eve,y infiltrator should declare with a Hindu

wW

^^J*

Cneefc

lr>

mdu

womanhood could be

raised there.

Our envoys

SnT^

highly

census papers, on electorol rails and for passport purposes. This strategy ration cards will beneficial from every point of view namely as

name

be

r^isJe7u

Hindus the

for instance negotiate for

the import of the saffron planting

because that
in

a valuable cash crop which Spain produce a climate like that of large areas in India. And yet not
is

Ux^
Z*
i*f
a

Indian

envoy under INC rule

Is

known

to have

shown such
all

Muslim demand*, they infiltrators any grounds to riot and Hindus will be in a majority. won t have even if till Bangladeshis infiltrate into India an empty On this basis again be turned into Hindu land. The Bangladesh can once sour
't

won

hove their usual

typical

iniiaiive, historic
til

perspective or awareness of his duties.

engrossed in

mere routine humdrum. That


that

Uw
stent

such

Jive in India with Hindu names will itself prow i of having to All those who have already infiltrated into greet effective deterrent.
India

not being laken proves

Indian

's

political

leaders lack bMh

should be registered as Hindus or asked to get out

wisdom and patriotism.


The Jerusalem Issue
Yet

Encyclopaedia of Ignorance
This

volume has
intellectuals

cited a

number

of topics on which even the

Mother

illustration

of the practical uses of history concmw


mikin$
it.

so-called

are not well

informed, for Instance, the


of the
*

the status of Jerusalem.

Currently the Jews are keen on

connotation of the

term Jerusalem, the relevance on

Bachelor'

Jerusalem their capital while the Arabs are opposed to


history

Hot

degree conferred
of the

women and

married men; and the meaning

this

comes to our rescue. It has been pointed out volume that the term Jerusalem signifies Lord

elsewhere

term matriculation: Therefore,

we

thought that there could

Krishna*!

very well

township. Since the Judaisls belong to Lord they have the


first

Krishna
Besides.

Yedu

tribe

claim

to

Jerusalem.

Individuili,

be a compilation called the Encyclopaedia of Ignorance. And we were delighted to find that there is indeed a publication of that name published by a London firm known as Pergamon.
But whether that Encyclopaedia elucidates the areas of ignorance A reviow dted in it doesn
this
f that

orvinittiion, (such as

1SKC0N) and communities who


Jerusalem but not the
iconoclasts.

revert

"Mushms

fire entil,ed

l0 access to

Arabs wh>

are

worn

Encyclopaedia appeared

volume we Bre not sure. Perhaps in the December

4,

Iff" Issue of

****.

to Sunday Times, London.


Muslim Inmtnuion Problem

1*0^^
**"*

'**

a vei>

** problem

The present volume


In the
infiltration

is

also in a

way a unique

Encyclopa*dii

frying

issues

about which even the world

vague. intelligentsia has

veryaay

Pe^,^,

w|ve3

md

umb" , nV n

**f ia

BC under-estlmalion

-Podge notions or

no information

instance, he at all. For crediUn, the Veda*; of the antiquity of

w*&>
1140
raised inv-de^ with Iftttll haphazard explanation of the ten* MuOfm times^the
historic

1141

buildings

>** the city of Tthe Kncyclo.-odia ficlilious Romulus. All these flJuatraw "' to some th. scribed which abound in stark dark ignorance world many areas of current Encyc.op.cdiu of 0Cc therefore even the
Judaic,, and

^ ?**

^le

of^ngs made
Assumptions

to them.

Rome

r^W

^tfu.
lot

wise to be put
Bojjui

over numerous matters

W^
h!^
bog*, Sfei)
fmciri

Names
names attaching to most historic buildings are terms like Buland Darwaza ( in Fetehpur
(in Delhi).

history is vitiated by frightful of current assumption, the assumption that because there are cenotaphs inside e-, stance, towering edifices from the Taj Mahal in India therefore to ' Egypt were raised as sepulchral structure.; Pyramid!* in congregations are using numerous Muslim buildings hi because for their prayers and calling them mosques therefore

the

world

structures

were

built basically as mosques.


frightful

Islamic

For instance,

Of the

same category another


i

assumption

In current

KutbKCnar

the so-called
so-called

Etmad Uddaula and Chini ka RauzainApa, Jama Masjids and mausoleums of various fakirs, %
all

H
f

about scholarship. For instance, because the names (elder brother of Mogul emperor Aurangzeb) and Dara Shikoh
ry-t**13
s
ftmir

Bibi-Ka-Makabai-a in Aurangabad and the numerous

Khusro

a general of Sultan Altauddin's time) or

of

mosques are
buildings.

bogus Muslim names foisted on captured

Hindu

They are not based on any historical record nor evw

on circumstantial evidence.
Aurangicb's Fake Grave in a

Khan Khana ( a courtier of Akbar 's time) are associated abdur Rahim devout Sanskrit or Hindi writings therefore those with erudite, potentates are very facilely assumed to be great Sanskrit
Muslim
or Hindi scholars

Goddess Temple- Yard


in

Such an assumption

with a benign attitude towards Vedic culture. absence of is absolutely unwarranted in the

few miles

from Aurangabad
as

the Deccan
It

is

an ancient Hindu
ancient Hindu

strong corroborative
established that

township

Islamized

Khuldabad.
obviously

has

an

temple-complex
marauders

which
lived

was

desecrated

by

Muslim

Khana were in
that it

evidence. For example, it must first be firmly Khan Dara Shikoh. Amir Khusro and Abdur Rahim scholars. To establish fact great Hindi or Sanskrit
to

who

and died there. Consequently the ancient Hindu


a",

would have to be found out as

how many hours

everyday

sanctorums there are


could be fake.

littered

with Muslim graves some of which


is

and for

how many years

Aurangzeb *s cenotaph there

obviousely one

such

which Hindu scholars ? Unless


the conclusion

languages and under did they study those available such corroborative proof is
Sanskrit

fake because Aurangzeb died or

was slain near so-called Ahmednagsr.


seven)

And there

is

no record on his festering corpse being carried


is

scholars

were Vedic, that those mediaeval Muslims appended to some Urdu merely because their names are
unjustified espeoi

hundred miles away. Moreover what


is in fact

cenoupn pointed out as his


trading The holy Hindu ii one withers away

the bed of the sacred Tulasi plant.

of substituting a

new

plant

if

the earlier

renderings of Sanskrit scriptures is that "hen there are stupendous contra-indications namely were arm writers mediaeval Muslim regimes
or Persian

continued.
'

To

satisfy coercive

lflnl Muslim sentiment the P JT

Sabja alias

Rama

Tulasi.

On

the entrances to the

s"^^*
**

associated with

ddicta (

and wo they were incorrigible sodomites

wctumt

of Muslim graves hang heavy wreaths bangle, offered by from childless women seeking fertility

Uttered with

JnvwWt

Why

erstwhile goddess idols desecrated by Muslim .hould Muslim raider, buried there have tacongnwu-

#**
ft*

"ere all the time engrossed in court intrigueand murder Vedic culture TPw

f"^
n

and

and they were deep haters of Sanskn "* Hindus. Can such people ever acquire deep '"* Put in effort n the concentrated

^j"^ .*
"anguo,

continued

***

Philosophical

o Vedic scriptures into

Mu*m

^^^?

1142

ll
conc,us on proper ! translation and ascribed

tiff** *
dit did the

T^ *
it

lhfll

to the

some mundane reward.


Hindu Races Admits Muslim Mccci-McdiM Holy

*h. MuiUm H^] ***

"wu

^unu*
""

.rid

Hitopadesha.
versions of those legends are
titled a*

European

&** h

Ataop't

theSevenSagesofRome.andGestaRomanorum.GoMht FonUin also draw heavily on the Chauce r and La memortai

^W
,

of In his let ter

August 12. 1984 Jai Bhagwon Arya of the ?-,,

.P.O.Gwalkdam.(VtaAlmoraU.P.)wre iu>m e M

*
'

Ahmid

a long chat with an aged Muslim Hip happened to have orchard where I had been Bijnor in his apple of

r^

Since his Utle Haji indicated that he phonographic mission. asked him about that. On that he pilgrimage to Mecca I a Son. since I am an Haji I won't like to bluff. with great cordiality Mecca and Medina are centres of hoary Hlnfiu fact is that

m m

on ,

Thorpe also echo the hoary Vedic tales. Shakespeare-, Wi" mBy bC lr8Ced to lhe KalhaMrilaBr thfll end9 ^f'weu W Brahmin's Daughter. N. M. Pemar Mooladeva and the
fl f

m Li
edited

of the the stories

Grimm

Brothers, Coelho. Rabaliaa.

translation of the Towny's English

Kathasaritsagar.

has

The

He had read the Sair-ul-Okul (anthology of pre-Wmfc .tWW) He pointed out a number of similarit The Kashi Viswanath Temple (in Varanasi, India) and .. Knbi (temple) in Mecca. According to him the Sange Aswad (theRerk
pilgrimage"
Arabic poetry).

Stone)

is

one of the 12 (famous) Jvotirlingas (of the

Hindus).

According to

him 365 Hindu

idols

are

still

there.
.

He

asserted lh

Mohammed and his uncle Khali fa Usman Abbas etc were all Hindus Mohammad's uncle remained a Hindu till the end Kissing the wen*
.

stone and the seven perambulations

around

it

and wrapping onwelf

with while sheets (for the pilgrimage) are ancient


"Hie Haji

Hindu

tradition!

added that

all

level-headed

Muslims admit
In

that

Mara

and

its

traditions are all of

Hindu

origin.

many

respects the

Koran

of th is a mere copy of Hindu scriptures." Yet inspite knowledge Muslims generally continue to be adamantly antagonistic

The Worldwide Spread of Vcdic Legends


Evidence
lies

acatttrcd

authors of the worldwide

through books written by sway of Vedic legends. Yet

European
they al

Buddh^ mistakenly ascribe that spread to Buddhist missionaries. cult" appeared on the scene much later. Earlier it was all Vedic autw* and Semkrit language everywhere. Dr. Caster is one such

Bahar-i- Danish. the Book of Sndabad. the Harar Afsana are all adaptations

rtmian

UUeaTuUNama,
of

therfGuH-B^ of*
pePsUj
such

Wcrit

ta^nfc

Ved[c

Qf

1144

1M6

**
16

orange

knowledge. hope and


9Carlet

V*J*

*"
'

U.

* coW
*** seine*,

or

jinl""

-.

has been chosen by Vedic monks

8b0Ve of the

connoUUon3

as iheir apDBT_,
service

<*

*"**

Is
,

that

Hag which

represents

Hinduism.

Whai

.iHcation

THE NATIONAL FLAG

Sre^
M
of i
thai
it

can one have to recogru>e that Hinduism and Vedic convertible terms.

^^

flag represents The orange

Hinduism not because

it

has been

standard of

any conqueror, marauder, invader or emperor but represents the Vedic motto that humanity is all ont,
on which

TIw supreme importance of history as the touchstone


nation
's

entire elan

and ethos

may

also

be

realized

by

the earth

man

lives is one. that the sky under which

analyzing
is all m8n lives

one. that

we must
lives for

all

co-exist, that one must


child, that

how

history helps in determining

the validity and rationality

of
live

the national flag at a time

debased tbeselecUonof a
rag.

when the mushrooming of nations has flag to the choosing of a mere distinctive

for

others as a

mother

her

mundane

life

it

transitory, that sins

of usurpation, aggression and coercion are

These rags have therefore become

mere

bound to

rabble-raisers, emblems

Hinduism is represented
itgnifies

be punished by the automatic laws of Karma. In short. by the orange flag because that colour

of factional strife

and rallying points for

man

killing

man

or one

the ideals of purity, simplicity, altruistic service, humility,


spirituality
life

enslaving another.
sacrifice,

and self-immolation which

are the ideals of

Such was not the original idea. The


to represent all
It

first

and only

flag chosen

Hindu,

Vedic

and should be the

ideals of every person-

mankind

is

the saffron- coloured flag of Vedic culture.

Modem India's Hugged Blunder

represents the colour of the blood that runs through everybody's


therefore,

vans and

represents the basic unity and brotherhood


tbe
il

of humanity.

Modem India commitledagreat blunder under the guidance of Gandhi-Nehru combine in opting for a tri-colour nag- The way
a nag looked upon
Persons

The

*M

saffron colour also represents the

hue of the

early morning
the

fodia

sun which nourishes all humanity and heralds the starting of working day of mutual
service.

chosen indicates that the persons responsible for choosing This exposes it merely bs a national rag-tagunder alien in wrong history saddled with decisions when

^rlackorgraspof history. Consequently, thatchoicealso illustrates


ba*
njle

^ting sun symbolic

The almond-coloured Vedic flag also represents the hue


or a usefully spent

of thj

who have been tutored * un aWe to take the light


gnlv

day and heralding

a I*ri

ovcrti

of well -deserved rest.

TV

^" " * *

crimson vUc nag

al

M represents
l

the flame or

fire

which

impurities and reduces incurable things to ashes. nourishing rood

the tricolor flag was concocted by Madam Cm-. -j^nlng Parg , , faraway BVri^ idIe periods In ady in one of her J j^** were vttiatin woman can never Rr*|y.

and mparts warmth.

W? ^

K factors. A <J* nd orain-chfld Firstly ss In a wrong environment.

**tam Cama was woefully

Hindu th.nk.ng. deficent in robust

Z
M47

1148

Thai

explains

the

pale,

sickly,

anaemic,

non-representative white strip which afflicts the very cent


so-called national flag, drivings

meaj

n8,es,
<

,,

convince

permanent wedge between

saffron and the Muslim green colours. Again, if the white rep

th e

***

*f
Jl

ilHlcri
of

every rational reader and naUonal leader dogma) that the first basic step for
* dmlnistral,on

(unchM^

!"'
of
its

the
'

.mprcCS
( *

tfj*
"ton**
*

policymakers should be to

of h. people and
replace

the minorities the


necessity

it

should obviously include the


for

M uslims too and

any

green

minority-complex
led

Madam Cama

strip. Thus, suffering naturally gave birth to a flag

jZ^
Jw

her 10 an undemocratic madness of permanently yokinu ,? to the minority grind-wheel. Eversince. the mino cloud the thinking of INC leaders syndrome continues to who

Hindu majority

^
md

orange-coloured flag pledged to protect the defence^ and at any cost. India can never prosper and prog*,, hTrighteou* the tricolour.
Cr

IN C

H>P* i$y
colour-strips in the current flag have been chosen Though the communal considerations yet officialdom has posiUoned on
it

been governing the country.


a flag of freak-conception of a

majority of Hindus plumping r*


is itself

minority- woman,

symptomauc

of the effeminacy and dementation of

governmental authority to imbecile and

entrusting id inimical leaders

Hindudom

uughi to cover
pUnfltion.
colour

up

been hypocritically with a facile and misleading

In 1928 the flag

had only two

colours.

The

saffron

When a woman
dark cold night
in

on top represented the Hindus and the green

in the

lower

of an infinitesimal minority reclining in a long

put represented

the Muslims.

A charkha
flag

(spinning wheel) was


is

faraway Berlin, succumbs to a lusty

patriotic
else

jumped
tnd yet

in

the middle.

The present

a derivative of that

emotion, unwedded to any logic and conceives a flag what could she deliver but a tricky tricolour.
Thereafter, like Vasudeo

suddenly in a national self-deception the Congress leaden


the

hive foisted
the

myth

that the saffron signifies courage and

sacrifice,

who

carried the

new-born
in

white

stands for peace and purity and the green symboltaes


tell

Krishna
fertility

from Kamsa's prison


the flooded

to

freedom, on his head,


tricolour

and productivity. Will the Congress leaders

us which

a basket, acrws
International

Yamuna, the
to

was smuggled

dictionary of colours sets out such attributes of the


It

into India across


different

the stormy seven seas, past British guards inside the head of some
visiting

colours ?

is

such deceitful myths which have

lulled

INC man,

parade at the head of India

's

freedom -struggle.

Hindudom Into cowardly

compromise and

insulatory inaction.
lengths of cloth

But unlike Krishna

who was a
itseir.

legitimate divine miracle-child

Madam Cama cutting pieces from variegated


"*
stiching

the Constituent Assembly

eyeing the tricolour as a freak,


it

them together was

also symptomau'c of hodge-podge

onaprio, of

illegitimate,

Wnldng,

conception resolved that

ZLfT on of

tuidudom a sacred, traditional, saffron-coloured flag. But flouting '^ Candhi - Neh -co"ibine schemed for the seen*
the tricolour itself, arguing that a

be replaced by

And actually today India


' '"iched

under Congress
'

leadership represents

nation with the

'

stitches

coming

off

one after the other

mere

heart-transplant.

Ll^LtT m
Iwll,? 1 **"* ,e* Umac*
tricoW
f

yarns P inni n 'charkha- at the centre of f " * w "<*> would do the

^y
'Nu
Hut?

riots inspired

on the by communities awkwardly patched

the

flag

coat.

trick of

tricolour as a national nag.

^"8

Ch ice of saffron aj> th*


't

Hindu co,our

*"

rf

WUrt*

only

/3

representation

was gross

furthar injustice. This


thinking.

oonirived

^ ^L m^Zl
*

*peri " M * * governance under that trig* and miX&1 "iruiu - Muslim -Parse* parentage mydtUcd nurtu by novice Candhl-Nehru 01* <**>

8hu the minority syndrome in

Madam Cama's

"

* ^lour made up

of three par* of equal

saffron. strips of


1140
whit*

wdg^iM democraUc absurdity beca use

U4S
tt ti

Hindus.

numerically
the case.

Muslims and Christians eU. constitute more equal parts of the country's population.
Hindus are 85% while non- Hindus are only 15^

^ ^
^
top**

Than

^MrtV
111
rtliiicia

"*

the builder of the Taj. AH .uch muddled v.n *s not and tWnWng Is due to the colouring of the brain of ruBna used in the tricolour flag. DV the dyes

the

absurdity of the tricolour The oUwr arithmetical 15% non-Hindus have been given a 2/3-rd

flag

1.

M
w
lb*

ther

the nag while the

85% Hindu population has been

nprmttmJjj
given only
i

hit*

5 /a

SOf

u there

band. There who wffl any minority


i9

sbsurdity in the tricolour flag is the introduction of was no minority who ever asked for it. own that white band
.

Consequently

representation.

tri P hit* 9

a meaninglesl3, USeleS3 "PI*" 08** and s dispensable

burden-

That

Is

to say,
:

outnumbered 2
though
6:1
in actual

the Hindus have allowed themselves to colourwise and stripwise in the national

be

Yet another
*"

monstrous incongruity

is

the equating of the saffron

Hag

numerical strength they

outnumber all others almo*

the

The tricolour not only injects a sense of green strips^ Muslim mind of being equal In number and weightage
Lhe

Consequently the Hindus though in an overwhelming

majority In their

but also ^htfie Hindus the Hindus. further outstrip*


Psychologically
because

further injects in them the wicked ambition

have been reduced psychologically to a despicable minority

own

ancestral homeland.

And

thai

is

not a mere academic conclusion. That


administrative thinking*

heady

Arabs,

Turks

and sentimentally too that equation is wrong they are Afghans. most Muslims vehemently assert that regard or Iranians, that is to say most Muslims
everything but Indians though they are
all

colouration actually colours all

since on
il

themselves as
Hindus.

convert

every issue the ruling

INC caucus blatantly

declares that

U
of

committed to safeguard minority' interests as against those


the majority. Hit

practical illustration of

it

was provided by

the

holiday

time India be

precedent namely if The tricolour also sets a dangerous of the had unwise leaders who allowed 2/3rds

at

one

flag to

drawn up by the Congress party-in power in Delhi, for 1983. There three naLional days and all minority holidays were listed a compulsory while Hindus were asked to fend for themselves- This tutored in ** a graphic Illustration of how Hindu politicians,
anti-national history, with texts

^ approved and prescribed by

that at some it not stand to reason which would similar imbecile Hindu leadership be a stripped saffron to be very easily allow even the remaining W3rd day emboUlen 0". Indulgence in such political striptease might one * 1 minorities to strip Hindudom naked and turn it out of its

future

non-saffron does
there could

dale

powers, have turned

all

the majority cater to lne minorily

norms of governance topsy turvy by Can proclaimed traitors


.

maWng
betis*

Iceland.

wor*e than this ?


,Ql

^eral leaders

in

fit

laud of absent-mindedness
is

RWu

** Another illustration of the ft* this syndrome is found in though the Taj y wh . Mahal has been proved to be pre-Shahjohan pre-Sr W.media and even academic and other org""'*"
1
1

inalitulions

iTl^r
Taj Mahal

*V,7

f0Alms

"^

I)en

lowing even

foreigners to

f>Jf h0 ** saffron not mathematical^ does the the w2 2/3 rd intolerant minority represented or pounw 2 uov unceremoniously turn out the Hindus
strip in
flag,
it

*ce. Since that Hindu tolerance


th* ne

represented

in

"*""* Shahjahan's feigned authorship while comply discovery ahutUng out the opposite

* "a. ,how s the dichotomy


*

in their thinking

and the

^tenUons and the result of their actions-

im
1160
the choice of the tricolour Thus in mathematical rule and intellectual nationil principle,
I1B1

every

way

vj

iB)

consi.

**>

As to how the Hindu-MusUm cleavage


demonstrated 1977

tricolour

represent*

cornm^,.,,
cohesion d

instead of an

homogeneous

and personally Is Vedic and the colour of VMc 0PI B WWCh h ** -Is *a"ron alon *"on-wffron we hove i*"i 2/3rds of Vedic emu*. *" ,1 aaying lh* to logical question wilt be which 2/3-rdt has l* been Al next XW(i defend the totality of Its Vedic India has to
B1 culture

2Mt

leaders to the contrary, protestations of Congress


in

wM

L?

culture

jlJJ*'

when a multi-party combine which

polls had 2/3rds of its (pa rty the Congress party at Ue ) nDg that coalition had an and only I /3rd green because overwhUmi

2
J^
^
kA

*f .hcrefore. her Vedic culture is freedom for saffron. Snce one different modalities L basic tenets of olone

flag

must remain

totally

fW0Rhip
ent of

rrent

sflffron nag **" cnsure r"*tom of worship. a louJ,y 2/3-rd non-saffron Hag wfll always Involve a 2f3-rd

dement of the Hindu-based RSS

in it.

That RSS element


It

obv-iou^ wHj,

whit* strip and replaced shunted out the meaningless Hindu orange colour. Naturally no minority protested
minority ever owned
vindication

coercion, which

is

dangerous for the so-called minoritiea

themselves.

because no

that white

strip.

This

is

indication

-e
torn in

political

parties mentioned above are ephemeral


culture. Yet

entities

enough of the irrationality and incongruity of the so-oite!

pjidering the

permanence of Vedic

we have Included

national flagit

A whole
felt

and yet none

be unceremoniously removed from any the worse for it.


strip could

perspective of
jnnjyse,

illustrate to the reader how a correct our discussion only to history applied to any situation helps one lo correctly twists and turns that history explain and even foretell the

The multi -party


improved the 2 to
ratio in
1

(Janala)combine
ratio in favour of

flag

though

somewhat
will

take in
of

any given situation, with mathematical accuracy. The

non-Hindus by a 2

to

Uws

favour of the Hindus by adopting a party flag 2/3rds


it

saffron
totally

and W3rd green, yet

came nowhere near adopting a

flag

mathematics as we have history are governed by cosmic calculations above. Therefore history taught ihown even by fractional mathematical science. rationally turns out lo bean exact,
logically

and

saffron or 6:1 saffron and non-saffron.

This

should

impress on

political leaders that


stifle

no amount of
"s

poliUcal
logic.

Contrarily

it

demonstrated thai even the RSS.

swearing by

total

tinkering

with history can

the voice of history

rtcnul

Hinduism, suffers from a Muslim heart-disease with a


of its

third put

The voice
a little

own

"

heart

'

remaining green in not insisting on a

flag loudly population

and clear can always be nrnde to come out loud are defied. effort when coercive political pressures

with

safTron or at least saffron in proportion to the


in li.dia.

Hindu

flag

That the recently formed Sanjay Vichar Manch has adofrfj which is hair while and half green with a saffron map * on
it

the fact The above analysis should also serve to highlight and "* , real historian is a national thinker and planner transU J"*J mercenary teacher of history, digger of potsherds,

that

documents or an underling

and running dog of

politicians.

India sketched

only serves to highlight how That continues to colour the thinking of all political leaders. the lingering effect of 600 yeara of Muslim rule in India. K

syndrom' the green

*"

U"* Tm various national, rational and mathematical n5* e not the ng citftl "bove indicate that random rag-picldng is

"

of

flag-making.

how

history dyes hard.

II
of If lost sight

*>

*< 1 thU colour-business psychological highlights a basic

that India's Congress rulers faiher-cullura

become colour-blind .India must always *****

have


1162

^
lltt

unccs-

T^

lt

mUSl

^ rwnembered

lhit

t notoriou,

U* "^Jl

^ri
be
1

times tell

"**

totally

the truth while a man with thebett of repuUUow calculated misleading statement. That Islo aay none a believed ipso facto. Every utterance will merit

port acceptance depending on the other r rejection or

(CCflptan

avid*"*-

been grossly violated thb rule has

In India. For instance.

MISLEADING MUSLIM

AND CHRISTIAN

single

CHRONIC!^

1,01

*
f

entlon

any

contemporary Muslim chronicle makes any credible Muslim sultan or emperor or courtier building any
and yet buildings and
cities

"^"building or city U ri

Historians

must remember the low that officialdom

to <ldessTy ascribed indrecKi

have been merrily

one Muslim or the

other.

invtrtoj

favours a history slanted to its

own liking.

Accordingly during MujSj,


a ring

tscendancy In the world


authority. later during

Muslim chronicles acquired


Yet

European Christian ascendancy their nwina


it

also mention thai Muslim rulers and Invaders Those chronicles women in their harems; they perpetrated greet thousands of A converted multitudes other barbarities and forcibly

and

were considered more authoritative.

needs to be now bow singly or together they have concocted a lot of


One common
trail is that

realo*)
bisierj.

rTL
!jd

both Christian and Muslim

writing* hivt

conferred a sainthood on invaders

and massacrers such

u Xavifr
trnrA

f being cwrenUy msde for suppivssfo vm \r Muslim chronicles India S Vedic heritage, must to the disadvantage of

But approved damning mentioning any of those

text

books of history
details,

in India carefully

Art pen,

use

tSU AW
stop.

or Moinuddin and Salim Chistis.

The towering myths that Europeans have allowed to be


a non-existent Jesus of the falsity or
entries

buili

sheer motivated Some Muslim chronicles are

concoction, and

and his 12 apostles are a graphic

classic exunp'*
like fonjH

European versions of history. Yet even

or misleading clues concocted by criminals mlslwN Eumpcan and Muslim writings too are highly valuable hiilorieal
source material even for adverse inferences at times

big lapse of time fabrications written after a J.bnca instance, there is such they feign to describe. For years after S*ab chronicles written about 150 employe* and claiming give details about the people

^^ I^T
o

Mn

M
In

*tan^d

w*m
have

to

Mahal. Incurred on the fancied raising of the Taj London and the library of the former

TneBnUs
of

Nawab

Ton* e-cn

MuiUm

Chronicles
India had

. copy of

Snc*

suffered

from islamic

invasions,

chronicle*

fooled.

ritun by the henchmen or Muslim invaders are doubtlessly

lo

such a chronicle. That of a pen* Nobody questions the locus standi Mahal 150 years p record some details of the Taj

^'*"^^J<
Batohn8mfl

f^gm
|dJ-

*~

woe of Indian history


This,

of those times.

*hcn Shahjahan "a


in

own

chronicle, the
also

however, doesn't

**

mean

that

all

that

is

noted

mention the
chronicle

term Taj Mahal, and

."-,, such nobody quesuon.


,

*** n^w omt an noting and usances


**> *wd*rathn *,

,h<ld be believed or disbelieved ipso facto-

W"

should be at

Tonk of

ill

places ?

co^f^, dnwn

fWfl ,rf

^*" *

^CripHonal Forgeries

Some Muslim inscriptions too are

similar ex-post


1164
forgeries.

For instance.
so-called

some Muslim

I1M
idler

with

a chisel

on

the

Hoshangshah

mausoleum

Mandavgadh) that he was sent there by Shahjahan


plan of the building so as to construct a similar

m m

u^
1

***
{%

new and revised version dieted

of the

same dinau

Mumtai
That

in

Agra.
inscription bristles with

m...-^ mau'Wtttrn

h
* for

Wore,

little

many

Ha "
incongrultj
Uy
"

contents

0.
..

new vers.on hough beanng lht nunf from the earlier one. Moreover, in thi, n individual scribes could make subtle channel
the

court chronicle mokes no mention of tho t or of sending anybody to Mandu to study any building
Shahjahan 's

own

Anient ,n lent
thus

favour their to Wvour

plan

ftHH^
a

._ it i

-- not

.,. ana aemgraie fnendB and famllie3 md d %8ie adversaries. .mrnrnmon to come across Mu<*Um **. .fj_. across Musu unCommon ^ 'm chronlclea bearing
. ,

^^
>

It

is

now widely accepted

that the so-called


It "s
is,

Hoshangahtr^'
abs
f
ii

and the Taj Mahal are both temples.


claim that Shahjahan

therefore,

but wHtten 8t different Umes therefore tampered fi name the 8wn meddlers, and differing considerably In by interested length Rh
gnd content.

wanted

Mumutz

mausoleum
in

**

to

plan of the Neelkanlheswar Shiva Temple


it

is it

Mandavgarh. Inj h true that the Taj Mahal also being a captured Shiva similar in plan to the Neelkantheswar temple in Mandu.
noted that no Muslim ovei-wriiing

TW

provided

bewildering variety of editions of a single chronicle Such a enough scope for absolute strangers to fabricate their own

may be

versions of the
flattering

same

title to

earn

on any building^

version lo a potentate or to

some reward by damn some

presenting a

adversary or

claims that a

Muslim

built it.

boost the
in

name or claim

of

some

friend or favourite.

Muslim chronicles were also written


Hindu royal family or courtier family a

order to give D

convert

Ghoil -Written Chronicles Chronicles written


such as by
in

new Islamic pseudo pediattc and respectability by pretending that its family connections reach back to Mohamed or to some other Muslim elite of Arabia. Inn, Turkey or Afghanistan.
Coococied Chronicles
Chronicles

first

person

in

the

name

of potentates

Tamerlain and Jahangir are known to be ghost-written

some hired scribes.


In several

cases embarrassing or inconvenient

earlier version*

were suppressed, superseded, officially withdrawn, revised or new

were often dictated by Muslim potentates


their behalf to claim credit for

or by
cart
is

orws substituted

wmebody on
necessary.

to take their place as old writings though

fabricated

themselves and

much

later.

wperatons on adversaries. Therefore, reading between the

lines

Thus the world of Muslim chronicles


o>1d of fivuds in
than.

all

over the

mM

is

Sn
*

chr0nicIes

haAU)}K hand . written


made
in

not

m ore

ij to

lo copies used to be

at a lime.

The copyW

Z?T"

m,de ,ubUe changes

a* frlT** ***** -d

**

**

fflV0

the dictated texta they

w*

which a resweher has to urad BrtiM Elliot has actually dubbed Muslim chronicles as knpudmt collection rf totertsted frauds. - in the preface to his S-volume
r Muslim
chronicles.

my gingniy-

b,e

themselves or

their

W*
in*

slanted against detested people.

R t that

does not

mean

be chronicles should that Muslim


art of

**"** or ignored. They are highly valuable and useful In i^aarrt

unav^u' J?

^ nr

*"**

Whw lhow

Wiw

* ofn<* and generals

were all distributed came to power the so****"

" nN
fo

entries
in

"1P0rUnw

evidence and concealed and distorted

vu*

unravelling a crime.


H66
1167

HJstoriw of Muslim invasions and lalamic ru] ft of murdera. massacres, raids, justifiably be records
court-intrigues, arson

in

. n,u

* astm^ U ***, and maiming orgies because tho*


'

***

written

during

Muslim

"*
alien

the

rr*^
buftW

main happening* of ihose limes and


of Islamic invasions.

were the inevitable

n0ting* f Cunnln8hflm ^S-rftffc"1 or other asset to .very virtue

""*

* historic

Muslim invaders

ttaJ^ *" "^Sft

^andusefu.gia.
Consequently
Mdertto'P in

W*e^

Yet a sycophant tradition of history -writing has


India because of political

compulsions to ignore, suppr^

p-^ Up
0r

Mia.

under the twin M. K. Gandhi and fonharial Nehiv under *** British ^ministration and after

^^

J"
thn

WfiofAugust.
tf

iWinapoliticallyfreelndia. histories whitewashing

over those happenings.


Until 1857 the

Moguls were the rulers

was mainly Muslim. Even the non up


to the

in Delhi. Their nobni ^ -Muslim elite had then to u


ftf

*k Hindus and a0tt

and flattering Muslims as being no wone than Muslim misdeeds in some cases presenting the Muslims even in a the Hindus, received instant favouivble light than patronage

standards and values of the Moguls. At that tin* want of printing facility all writing had to be done by hand.
script that these elite

vd ,ich rewards.
exclusively
the Indian

Tfe

of its royal
script

favoured was obviously the Persian beam* patronage. Therefore, all mediaeval writing in the Penan

histories slanted in favour of Muslims have been palpably false chosen as approved text books because they boosted

National Congress (INC) credo.

It

was a case of each

meant for a Muslim or para-Muslim or pro-Muslim couU be nothing but sugary flattery of the Mogul court or of IiUm.
Only such writing could,
rewarded by the
writing which
elite.
if

icratching

ihe back of the other namely the Congress leaden

patronizing
writers

pro-Muslim

historical concoctions and the authors and

at all,

hope

lo be appreciated and

duly
of

supplying pseudo historical cotton enabling the Congress


spin their political yarn with. Historians writing such

There was no scope for any other

type

leaders lo

would dare question or indict the Muslims.

slanted history

alone were patronized to occupy positions of power.

They in turn wrote

more

The

British

Compounded (he Muslim Fraud


declared

thus creating

a vicious circle for perpetuating

slanted history lo reap rich rewards, falsified pro-Muslim

Then came the British. Their officials cunningly


historic buildingsand

history

townships to be of Muslim origin

Consequently.
under

generations or Indians
the British

who obtained

their

academic degrees

the

by this time and Only because the printing press had arrived the lay public sell his books lo author could look forward to
genuine, outspoken. the railing elite, did a few their appearance independent histories begin to make

regime had lo toe the line taken by General Alexander Cunningham. When those authority degree -holders began wielding Pressors and authors Ihey too thoughtlessly relayed *W

not subservient to
dissentient,

"

M rtray
help, it

they had learnt in their

classrooms.

Some fraud Further Compounded by Indian Leaders

administrauon co exceptions. But so far as the fNC discourage iny f* did everything within its power to order to divert appraisals *ji Muslim regimes. Not only that, in " of musum regimes, iiui- "j
:

""

T" * cj^^'"*** ^^
whkh

Challenge the

British administration

was the

Indian

Ni*
110"

WWc

attention

from Muslim misdeeds

It

thai subtly insisted

^Penng **

coaxing, cajoling, entreating.

1**?"*
'

*tfl

Invader's or ruler's mal

not -administration should

* concern J "gage

Muslim, with a view to enlist their coop*"


against the British.

of histories. After

The

Indian

*w

" handicrafts,

the paintings
's

(uNC)

therefore,

considered

the

falsified

account

the historian

major

common weal, paw all. the rule, et^ made under Muslim And in orderU*
attention-

Nonary

channels

of

pseudo-history

should

PP*

more

ntf
topic* rapectable the suggested

H mr imply,

misleading and high-sounding

Reforms under the Moguls or the Fiscal

moont lo be highlight *"* names such


Policies of .k '

K
-

MM
met Wl lining ** among the **lnv Thomas

ortheEnlightenedRevenueAdminstraUonoflheTughlak, ' ofpsetxh doctorates have been confeired on writers or **??*** theses and it is that cud which is being

^b

rf

one

version saying that

he died

in Afghanistan

Wd

who,

in

* '*

.not.

If

of his having ventured out of Jerusalem. ".uthenUc account

early Christian prosdyUzen, thenT-

* JTSl

che,^
nm

Jodian-histoo'-cirdes

of

the

Muslim

pei-fad

thLJ'* k

Political-quarantining, denial of college jobs, text-book

^
8''

^ some
3

o-called apostles

cases. At the time that

old"

ln

were mostly of Jesus *s own age or ev Luke wrote his Acts of

withholding of awards, showering rewords, examinerships lecturership. presidentship of the Indian History

.L| (around 90A.DJ- Thomas was supposed to belnJeruMiem


not in

ihc

h"** *'*

** membership of university senates etc. have proved so effect' mares and tempters that it is hard to come across any ^L" who would have the heart to write, investigate or teach any ho
to British Columb Anybody daring to shout against the tradition of pseudohistory and pseudo- archaeology is outdone by a deafening silence. Ev
Indian history in universities

Congr*?

Id

ILrdous.

J^

South India. If. therefore. Thomas did s out on a protracted journey lo India that could be only when 90 years old. Can anyone undertake such an over
bnardous

journey

stlh* 11*67

from Australia

. brotherhood.
church was

Moreover during the 1st century A,D. Christinnily was only The idea of establishing and propagating a Christian
adopted only in the 4th century when emperor Constanline

the editors of leading English dailies


to have a nose for the

and periodicals who are suppose

threw-In the
Christian

migth of his

Roman

legions

on the

side of the budding


visiting India

u to
of

make them

sniff

news are so nose-led by the official lobby at anything which down 't accord with the
it.

group. Therefore too the story of

Thomas

ta establish the

church,
is

is

a concoction.

official

view in history, and reject

This

is

a typical

instinct

how

The

real

story

that Nestorian Christians were hounded out

repeated lies displace the truth.

of Syria in the of

dth century A.D. as a social menace. Large numbers

As an instance of the falsity of


quote how the legend of St. Thomas

European writings we nj

them

fled

the region.

and even a

fictitious grot
imperial

{South India). tMi

Some of those sought refuge in Kerala Among them could be some namesake Thomas. But
to belong to

BCWa

In

Madras have

all

been steadily built up by sheer

Thomas of the 4th century cannot be mistaken

Christiin pressure.

three centuries earlier

and be misrepresented as one of the l2aposlles

"I*

of Jesus.
Si.

Thomas Myth
This should Illustrate

Snoe Christianity and

Islam

spread

by dealing death
lhe*

and

and review of entire


lafW-scale

the need for a thorough, critical re-openlng they are Christian and Muslim histories for

T^T*
fiction

* ,round through mafta, y


'

mihl

* concocWi

motivated, chauvinistic fabrications.

^
{ *

Fr *" sUnce tiw nl Jesui to * re life-story of ft**' Snce there was no Jesus there was no 'last supp*

ibow

U *

^&
'

12 Bpo9Ues> Consequently the story of one


"

myth

1WnM havin * wi9itd ,nd,fl and dIed ta

of

* We il0'>

* Thomas

la

myth

is

apparent from

1100

Ufll

physical, archaeological and architectural appraiaal .iito visual, building in India has ever been mad*.
of

**
* ,n
.

historic

r*jj
on

professional architects, archaeologist* and historian. and hearsay claims of Muslim authorship bazar gossip

ju^ ^

by

gj,

documentary and other

physical, visual proofs,

_,nirsrj

have regarded any and every Muslim writing Historians stone to be of historical significance unmindful hment and

0fl

UNPARDONABLE LAPSES OF INDIAN HISTORIANS

0ftb

""rt being
called

Jama Masjid

post-faclororgeries. For instance, the plaque ascribing in Agra to Jehanar* the (English) marble

B
Mt Ul>

in tbe

fixed

Those dealing with Indian history including even archaeologistj,


(ournalists

Ifc

so-called Jama Masjid in Ahmedabad. the Urdu marble above the entrance to the so-called Fatehpuri moeque of Delhi, the Urdu marble tablet on the 'chandni Chowk

'"

and architects have

all

been guilty, by and

large of i
'

celed hi

Safdarjang

mausoleum

in

New

Delhi, the

Urdu

tablet near

staggering
(1J

number of

lapses.
led

war ascribing the


hbtoric sites

Verinaag relics to Jahangh- and the innumerable

(mis)

They have generally allowed themselves to be nose

by

tablets raised by the Archaeology Department Informative stone throughout India are monuments of docile and

the findings of alien historians.


rule their subservience could

So long as

India

was under

ilim

anffsnt reliance
masters.

on conclusions dictated by India's

erstwhile alien

be understandable but even

after 47

years of independence Indian historians


positions they

who

matter because

of the

occupy show

no signs of original thinking.


is

For instance, a very graphic point


buildings

that very

many
is

historic

and townships in India are built with saffron -colour stone.

overwriting on historic buildings has often (S) Irrelevant Muslim evidence of the Muslim authorship of those ben presumed to be the so-called Kulub Tower in Deihi buildings. Thus for instance, Luckfly. some Muslim sultans etched on them. fats the names of
they

That
to

is

the precise colour of the

Hindu

flog

and as such

anathema

Muslims and yet those buildings are merrily ascribed to Muslim

authorship without any proof


buildings are given

whatsoever

ochre In several places


lb?

a coat of Muslim

lime to camouflage

nowhere claim having buDt the lower of in the infallibility somnolently Indian historians believing the tower to Musflim their erstwhile British bosses continue to ascribe ludicrous length o luihorship. historian has gone to the

or any part of

it-

And

Many

usurpation

tower to differed bribing the authorship of different stories of the


luluuis.

(2) Muslim claims regarding authorship of historic building*

proofwhalsoeverwhile claims to the conven (wily re so holly contested that even Muslim confessions are
are admitted without any

contrary

) Indian historians have totally ignored themselves "Wemporary Muslim chronicles or court papers

the

faci
.

U*

and blatantly ignored. For Instance, the admission

in

Shrti*""

M" even

the

own coun
he buned

chronicle, the

Badshahnama (page 403 Vol.

"

'

'

***
***

name

of the building that

is

being

*"*"?
*

to certain

Muslim potentates. For

Instance, the

Mumt*

in

. palatial,

domed
*'

building of unique
is

spWo

Mlnar has never even been mentioned in

*****'

known

as

RflJ , Manaingh

palace

away being brushed

>

inconnqutftti.,1.

J* **ly ascribed

"tanwh-. papers. And yet all those buildings potentate to those Muslim

lies

n
questioning

historians are still evincing the (7) Indian sa,e Muslim claims 10 historic building,

which

^%
kick!

have evinced

if

those cruel tyrants hod been living and

^
b,

Igniffcance great f
rf

and importance

if

historiani

Utm

to

1 tW"

dosely;3)

all this timidity seem to --- be their win rrluri and be counted, their fear of losing Lheir jobs to jtand up no reluctance to offend Muslim and power, and their

,o^ (8) The reasons for

"-

Township

The land

of fallacious logic that

I,

curnmik.

ta

history

circles, vitiating their conclusions,

may

sentlm^

* m
A

undermenUoned two
|f

illustrations.

* *

nuJ "*

INC bosses.
(9) Indian historians

easily

records and chronicles with


that

have never studied even Muslim due caution and attention. They

rircubad

hnu.dshab.

bearing th, , was founded by some Firozshah. and Ahmedabad by If that were so then Allahabad should have been
founded

assumed that a

city currently

p,^
for

buildings.
the

Muslim sources would naturally claim authorship of hblo* No contemporary Muslim source ever claims credit
of

by

ABn himself.

construction

any building. Only latter-day

chauvinijuv

of

Information

slipshod

Muslim assertions have misled historians

into

vapdy

1510 A.
in

instance relates to a magazine Issued by the Directorate The other and Publicity of the West Bengal Government. About D. one of its issues carried a photo of a so-called mosque

conjuring

up Muslim claims.
informed of a new
's
historical finding
Mahej)
in their

Murshidabad. which

front

was obviously a captured temple with Hi verandah-wall bearing a long line of massive Ganesh images
The caption underneath explained that the Muslim
secular that to satisfy
Idols.

(10) Even after being duly


(such as that disproving
historians
still

ill

badly mutilated .

Shahjahan

authorship of the Taj


it

sulun

who commissioned the mosque was so


he decorated even
fulfil

continue to ignore examining

and persist

Hindu sentiments
At the
idols

his

mosque with Ganesh


all

old dogmatic beliefs.

same time to

Muslim dictums he had


is

those Ganeah

(11) Indian historians also deliberately confound, misinterpret

badly mutilated.

Such

the ludicrous logic employed by India's


is

or hide

vital

current

evidence. For Instance, they persist in believinn

bureaucrats and historians. Thus tbere


political

a persistent,

thai

Babur defeated Rana Sanga at only a skirmish between their


victorious) while
it

Kanwaha (though

actually that

we

pernicious,

attempt to gloss over or


and mutilation. Such

twist the truth of

vanguards in which Rana Sanp w was the subsequent battle at Fatehpur 3W


is

Muslim usurpation
been

historical distortion

ho

reduced to a bureaucratic fine-art


(14)

under INC

rule in India.

which Rana Sanga lost. This

clear

from Babur

's

own memoin.
Fatehpur

>W engagement during Bahur "s time because they fondly but fall*
"rib* the founding of Fatehpur Skri to Akbar two genera**'
<12) Historians are totally unmindful of the traditional
building

Yet historians deliberately avoid

taking cognizance of the

tw
^L

Madarw : A number of historic buildings In India have known from the days of Muslim conquest as some sultan '
potentate s
this

Qr other

Madarsa
curious

e.

g.

Mohamad Gawan
(i.e.

S Madsrsa. schools or

explains

crop of Madarsas

nw

of.

which

may be found many-a-lime


For in9Un- ihe name

to a

be prtP*J or
tJl

of the most India associated with the names midst alien barbarian invaders? How come that In U* T*"* **dl ferocious activity these marauders were so particular about

juries) throughout

.TbTT"
a

dues

?*
*

8ch0Ql after school

for the very people


it
it

whom

they

w*

!
*u!!i llst

mowin down? tod how


of

that in

none of them found?

m^

any teachers, headmasters and


Is

pupils ever

Theref0ret even such clues of nomcncU'"

n,wer to that baffling problem

found

in Ito

Sw W

) M t

-ShBli
of iho

'

meaning both
in

bundingT Shala. o.g.Vcda-shal. tabli.hmenU were known at (Vjc observatory), (astronomical


Vedha-shala
Raja-Sha],

parimMta

a lounge and a school or ancient royal Hindu

un
u
.

bll

^
*^
7>.
f
1

(Kitchen). BhoJ Shala .wptlon room). Paak-Shaln CdlrUni* (Entertainment Apartment). Yojnya Shala Ranghala (Flr*^*"
pavilion) etc- etc.

JSU M^
a

ue* one

w h09e

very

lif

- m,Mlon

harm and dishonour,

* to protect hi. ^u^ to* la why throughout*^

f
by

When

all

those buildings

fell

lnto

Mu^T^
'

Li
afe

about the names of the various apa^. * ubiquitous term 'Shala". Its I aiflmlc came across that term 'Madarsa'. Therefore, a building cuirently kno^ ,, the
inquiring the conquerors

W men *" masse immota virtory toi tfajnZZ had their husbands, brother, and bonHre or th0y l"" 1 **1 a feW of deethmw T hM to prin and shame In being treated .. sex
'

mommU

f*w!!Z

of

kitten, and hartou

alien

Muslim ruffians steeped in drugs and drinks.


blunder of this variety
is the assertion that the Jaipur

typical

Mohamad Cawan

"s

Madaraa fin Delhi)

Modarsa (in Bidar) or Ferozshah Tu^" should be understood to signify ancient

ruling

Hindu

!he

famay of the K" 1*"*8"8 Rajputa gave their daughters to generation after gcneraUon from Mugals in marriage the 16th
onwards. The
usually asserted
first to do this, It is said, was Boarmal. that Bharmal Bought emperor Attar si a

buildings captured or occupied

by the invaders whose nun* rtl|ti

rtPtury

to them.

Is

filling

husband for his daughter.


'I

Origin of

Madras When historians come across such a statement they muatn


is

Madras

an important east-coast port and Slate

capital

In

Ipso

faco believe

it

because they ought to be aware of the Rajput

South India. Since that


school

was the

location of an ancient femoui V&


it

penchant for protecting their


After-all

womanhood from Muslim


propriety

molestation.

(under Sage

Agaslya)

was considered an
that the coast there
It

Important

Bharmal was a proud and honourable Rajput. He dared

navigational station
to
il

by Arab sailors. In their language they refmrt


is
still

not

go against the

norms of honour and

common
is

to his

as MBdarsa-

Another proof
i.e.

baan

community. Under such circumstances to assert, as


In

usually done,
all

the

name Vedaranyam

the Vedic Bower.


fortifications

was

a fortlfM

text

books patronized by Congress Governments for use


that

over

establishment. Those

same ruined

were

later occupied

the world,

Bharmal offered

his daughter to Akbar as a rare


in Indian

by the British and named os Fort St. George.


the rancied

Ironically ew.tf

honour
history,

makes nonsense of prime Indian motivations. Yet


written under 1235-year-long alien tutelage,
practice not to
it

European

name George

is

niav also the ancient Sanskrit

has become

Garg of Vedic Rishis.


(IS) So-called Marriages
almost
alt
:-

Mmmon
One great
falsehood common

demand, look

for

or produce any evidence

" one

comes across a convenient pro-Muslim assertion.


I

Hindu pnnw history-books is about their assertion that

gave their daughters In marriage to


great

Muslim

invaders. Thli

To expose that mol- practice of falsifying history


*PMiBl chapter titled

have Included

it* poorest

calumny from several considerations. Firstly, even >v* Hindu regards it as a mortifying misfortune if hi*
Is

Akbur's
titled

Blalani so-cullcd Marriages were

*WucUaoi
,l

in

my book

Who

Sujs Akbur was Great?


Hindu that not a sln^W
in

or sister elopes with or

abducted by a Muslim.
and

may be noted here by all readers "^ or commoner ever gove his daughter
lnev
'7 single case

marriage

to a

Mualwv

With the Kihatriya princes


principle to ice that their

was a matter of ^T^,, byj^ womanhood is not moteswd


il

Kihoiriya lived and died for that. In fact tho very

git le'*"1

**n were abducted arter terror and

*W ihr monstrous campaigni by Akbar

women the where Muslim harems had Hindu ifc<* horror raid,. In
led co the

*"

1187

ilw
Of
litre*

princes

Jagannath.

Rajsuigh and
"

Khangar.

ItoMtfi

*ith ,imb b*
Alto"
to

wmndCNd.
)oftds

Muslim enemy
of

it was a pracUc, demand under the surrender-terrna

Umb t0rture eve* "<* campaign

il

was *n

^
that

^udtfl

,> * *

Ctions

to

there would have bwn reccro the eliuof both sides and Uit

w
of

negouauon,

^re

mournings. Hindu women being * wos a matter of deadly, lifelong ,h*n. for l0fl m harem the whole- communty. To call that . nan ^sehold and

women from

the household of the defeated

Hindu

TO
dub

called the Doli

system. But when Indian histories


(

ln nooenl)

S ^
'

J.^*
^
away
to

fe^^"*

vesty

and insult to history.

. one-sided traffic.

may *. bo realized tnTthi, Only H^ndu women were carried


It
ties Muslim

that is adding insult u> these as doli marriages,


for a
doli

nj urv

MuJlim

harems- Had they been mutual marital

princes*,

synonym

marriage

is

'rape

marriage'

which

Marriage is a holy sacrament contradiction in terms.

whD e

n*

In marriage the bride's party offers the hi* is a horror-drama. groom who is chosen for his qualities L-. of the daughter to a
capabilities of providing

been wedded to Hindu rulers. It is not that "should have Kshatriya, married alien Muslim princesses. Even in much .ouldn 't have more more orthodox times Hindu princes had taken Creek jndent and case of the Muslims their households were vice-dens But in the
brides.

her a secure

home and

happy

life,

tha

reeking

with

dnj 8.

drink,

crime and every conceivable


a marital
tie

vice.

involves and pre-supposes mutual consent, happiness and

honour.

Therefore,

no Hindu prince ever coveted

with the

Since

all

these were absent

when Hindu women

had

Muslim household.
to be
slur

surrendering
strangulating

When military coercion and women that was looked upon as


Hindu honour.
is

compulsion forced

a nooae or shame

surrendered to Muslim lust after every capitulation it is i Hindu honour and an insult to historical truth to assert

on

that

Hindu nilers offered their princesses to Muslim invaden. Became


that

These
to

sham marital references

one of the items which mad


misleading history

amounts

to nullifying the
lived.

most cherished

principle by which

be stripped

away from current mnde-lo-order

Hindu prince

texts.

so-oUtd if historians look for evidence for the names mixed marriage they won't find any. Even the bride's

After realizing this

Embculcmcnl of Evidence
Evidence of Muslim chronicles, court documents and inscriptions
has

absent.

No

feasting marital invitations or records of mutual


it

wit

been misused,

misinterpreted and suppressed to bolster pet

be round. Moreover in each case


in

has been usually

mentions!
theories
called en
t

of politicians,

by subservient

historians. For instance.

so

many words

that a Hindu and

a Muslim

general

Aurongzeb 's letter testifying to repairs to the ancient Hindu


Mshal aliasTejo

Ta]

the surrendering Hindu prince, seized his

women and

carrying

away dumped them

This was happening everywhere, in cities

's Muslim Badshah 's or Sultan offl" and the countryside.A s* of Hindu households from prince to pauper were being carried in Muslim raids conducted by every Ahmad and Mohamed prince to pauper. That is why the harems of even so-eeu sosaints' rivalled those of the emperor. And Akbar's

in the

WW"*

Mahalaya which was leaking even while

Sfcahjahin
it

*as
in

on the throne has been completely ignored though


"t

appears
via.
If

least

three

contemporary

Muslim

chronicles

MuraKka-e-Akbai-abadi.

Aadaab-e-Alamgiri and Yaadganuuna.

'

fondness for Salim ChisU

was

9pln wl" not for the letter's

any) but for the latter "a harem. This is discussed in ntf tilled Who Soys Akbur Great, by quoting contemporary

^ ^
_

would of such notings would have been taken historians were ever built '^mediately have known that no historic buddings "V Muslims. Contrarily third-parly chauvinistic bluffs record* J being n Wm ahady and shoddy chronicles of a subsequent era are

Stance

foisted

n a

gullible

world as evidence.

Had Hindu prinoswes been formally and

w solemnly married

1168

tub
Imcripflor-ICfa^lKno^
hislorians located a Sanskrit Over 70 "years #> in^. *"" mentions the construction of a palace and tin. U t Shiva temple of extraordinary beauty. -white

.,h,#ofi

building could be ascerWned. On.

fe

^fSl

*ben the bricks used


is

In the edifice were

crystal

and there are indications that ih* Taj Mahal the sj| in a pavilion in the Taj garden, was inscription found Up Shahjahan a orders. British archaeologist, d thrown away at dubbed it as the Bateshwaf inscription to put it, deliberately

ObvfoJ!^

^method

dondochronology namely determining u*


College Radiocarbon

nrtTS

JZ
ha.

hiM^

J^

Z, YoVk
ln
.

rtor of the Brooklyn W00den Pl6Ce n a

Ihe
.

corroborated USA. has


several

my

11 l* r rivW doorwZ' "V "*

UbcZT

finding that the Taj Mahal

off the scent.

Known by

that

Museum.

Foisting such

a fanciful

name it is deposited in the Ufa!!! name on it has misled


associate
it

centuries prior to Shahiahan.

generation,

Hbiorica!

References Misquoted

unnecessarily of researchers to

with a diversion^ township. Indian scholars taking cognizance of it merely wuKa the tablet, translated it and called it a day. That they did
fee)

of historians long line

have suppressed

vital parts of historical

not

constrained to look for the


in

unique crystal white Shiva


pinpoints
the
fault
in

tempi,

mentioned

the

inscription,

For instance, Tavernier's noting at the very outset "'Shahjahan purposely buried Mumtai near the mentions that clearly implies that the building known "Xas-i-Macan". That as
rferences.

modern

research -motivation and methodology. If the inscription would hive

UwTsj already

existed

contained directions to an hidden treasure


fulfilled

would the

historians have
in Epigrspbii

il lead to the
Inter

same

His subsequent misleading b'nes when analyzed conclusion. Most historians quote only the

misleading

port.

Thereby they mislead

the readers while

their duty

by merely listing that inscription

Indica?

Would not any sane person expect them to make

betraying their
practical
tats.

own

lack of analytical talent or malicious pro-Muslim

use of the secret instructions and

hunt

for the treasure?

Similarly

when an
was
it

inscription refers to a majestic crystal -white Shiv temple,


But

Mauwlcums In Anticipation of Death?


A speculative myth invented by historians
potentates built palatial
of their is

not the duly of the scholars to locate the temple?


it.

that

Muslim

they didn't do
piece to

They merely treated the inscription 8s

literary

mausoleums

for their corpses


a

in anticipation

be translated into English and forgotten. That


obviously the Taj Mahal

magnificent

own deaths. Inventing such


when historians couldn
't

monstrous myth became

temple
Nil

is

necessity

explain

Archaeological Exumioulion
It li

ran when the hateful successoi-s couldn

"t

how palatial mausoleums care a damn to raise

a sorry

commentary on the functioning of the Archaeology*


it

wy mausoleum for the deceased. The real solution which eluded wm is that neither the deceased nor the successors bum the so-called
""oleums but that those fancied mosques and mausoleums are Captured Hindu property.
The Marathwada University
(

Survty of India that

has not conducted even a single

archBeoktficij

examination of even a single building during over a century


it* existence.
It has gone to sleep eversince the English feeding-fathers namely Cunningham. Beglar and Carlleyle

J*>
did

dty of located In Aurangabad


this respect
local

initial

The bosom those blunderaome hearsay nolings. Thereto* * historic building being *"
to the
to this

fraudulent Muslim listing.

with huoP ASI is content

Jwwwhlra
r

Slate in India) committed a blunder in


in

inferring a Ph. D. degree

the year

982 on a
that

Murijm

though of pre-Muslim authorship is or that Muslim. There are at least three physic*! <*

ZT "^Makabra
'

f0r

his

tncsis

concluding
in

the

so-called

historic

mansion

Aurangabad was

raised

oy

170

U7i

h,^,

her death. For that tbe tor htr body .Jtor

**
*>*
.

c0*
of

oin

^^

fpmt . fumofR.6M.OOO/and
rank

7V historians who recommended Out thesis for , doctor


juDty of
I

Kcepted the Muslim professor's version? Conversely *^ w**n ^o! cct has not -..-.-.-irv *- . 1MtgPaS f "** university and the Muslim i professor insisting not lbe l *W Survey of India to change the plaque on

H*

a9crt>iM

bow la it that tha Archaeological the building lbe utnorahi P <* lhe '"osolBum to toddler

a^
prince
the

w w

criminal

neglect

incompetence

formance of

6dn 1

their duty because in examining the thai. .? consider the following very plausible question* nun^j

"Le0 logical * A ^TuKbt ^ the P fessor


-^-rt are

'

lhe8is?

many more such


lbe history

considerations which should have

\Twitb

worthies

who

approved the Muslim

(!) If the

woman Wins Banu

could raise such

stupa*^

her dead body how many palter mulU- storied mansion for live in while alive? <U) Snce tht she raise for herself to buflds*. replica of the Taj Mahal and the letter In Aurangabad to a
ha

J*or's

decree. thesis for a Ph.D.

temple been proved to be a Shiva design for her opt for a Shiva temple
is said

why would
mausoleum ?

a Muslim

wq^

JJJS

made them decide in his favour was the inane Pmbably what Bibi-Ka-Makabara is a Muslim after aQ the (so-called) ^l oat vaguely ascribed earlier either to Though it has been
eb
prince or his son
professor")
(

Mohamad Azam.

since a third Muslim

(IQ) If Sbabfct*

to have chopped off the hands of the workmen who rtbtd (?) the Taj Mahal (for him) so that they may not buildacompmu, building for anybody else how should his own daughter-in-law fa defy him during his
(iv) Dilras
life time itself by raising afl identical buflfinj? Banu as the daughter-in-law of the Mogul emperor was a resident of Delhi. She was at Aurangabad only becau* tw

SSTfte

such a degree Moreover, conferring

Th Muslim

viz

wants to give the authorship -credit to a Dilras Banu herself) why stand in his way?
would please a Muslim colleague.

Ld^tifytheMusUmcommimityandwouldmakethe pro-Muslim
rZ-Congress Party happy.

^c achCment
V
proof. His

to any bygone

In India any wnter .Kritai MusUm doesn't have to


accepted. is automatically

An*

husband, prince Aurangzeb

premoniUon or
to die and that

was temporarily posted there. Mm forecast told her where and when she wu fttot town* within that limted period she must get
life

or her assertion

U
into

to

such bizarre, unacademic

'

id

deciding the present shape

and structure

mausoleum ready? (v) During her short


htr ambitions so thoroughly

had

Dilras Banutf

Therefore, that partisan,


uf

to be toUlly concocted historyneeds

^^* ^' *^*


Um

purged

fulfilled as to wish mausoleum for her corpse? (vi) A tomb means b cenoti?\** antfapn** not a buDding. She ould .at the most order a cenotaph In

only for a

w"

such motivated manipulations.


I

Mjih of Mixed

ndo -Saracenic Architecture

of her death, but not

a building,

(vii)
is

Where

is

the

**?"*,
**uW

Another concocted

myth

hisorians

**

her ordering the building ? There


In the

no mention

of

II

ipag soluUon to the problems confronting


)

J^^
18

rf

court papers or any


l

contemporary

court chronice.

j^

Even the cenotaph doesn

Consequent bear her name.

^
<

he architecture

not even buried there, (Ix) She died in Devgiri fort ., in Art way. consequently she couldn't have been buried ..^^.K.,n*ndsoi"^ r*s lu-tB-i.. . (x) Snce Dilras Banu was thousan ds ffl only one among the ^ Aurangzeb's harem where are other comparable n ** of Aurangzeb's If other wives? (xi)
i

"nightway

Muslim of these so-called jj" recognizing that these

miusoleums represent
Ptured

oew Hindu architecture


historians

"^

^
^
-

^
ll

Hindu

buildings

Hindu themselves that the buildings displayed debris of 'hey were either raised with the

W**
WW

co(ivin0(d

en 5 ucs btcau*
,nd/or

w'lh Hindu workmen.

1172

U73
.

Both these argument* ore very fallacious. Workm*. work to the owner 's plan and according to the
materia]

oncelveo'-

"

r -

^
1

nol make any alterations In the to than. They dare business and authority to do because they have no ii. if h they not only stood to lose their fanciful alteration!
,

own^

11

porirul*

pi*

'

gallows. even get hung on the

homework
thousands

lo suggest
will all

any alterations. and quarrel

A workman also doesn 'id Workmen employed


l

w^L"^'

JJJJ and Mumtaz.


*
***
fcv
veiled
ll

depict portraits of Muslim queens such -v-books often Snce il is well known that Muslim women
ls

^P039 8

lhal thefr fBCes were

<*

ik?

clash

in

working
and

at

crow pui^l

^o-n
**1

painter. Therefore, the by any

portraits of medUcvil

are

all

fakes.

permitted

to

keep

on

vacillating

altering

u*

The workmen will also be adding to the owner's bint^T A workman moves away from the building he helps to rai* rt has no connection with it later throughout his life. Therefor,,
at will.

Suppressed Abuses

t, hi

has no Interest

in altering

the owner's plan. As a

"*

V m
k

dian

..

have suppressed an important detail history text books Government and the public. That secret from the
jt

workmm

imost

Muslim chronicles
such

refer to

Hindus nol as Hindus

also lacks an overall plan.

He

part of the overall job.

Thus looked

only attends to his assigned minbcufc at from every point of view

inveclives veral vile

as thieves, scoundrels, devih

mddogs.
Bluffs

the argument that the

workmen were Hindu

mosques and mausoleums look Hindu became is most bizarre. Moreover, even U*

about

Mausoleums

concocted post-facto Muslim chronicles


planning any buDding.
as the chief architect.

don

't

credit any Hjnduwilh


fictitious Muslim

They always mention some

mean ihe grave or cenotaph i tomb should be understood to cwoUphs The real solution is that Muslim
not the building.

As

for the

argument that mosques and mausoleums were

raised

ownership, Hindu buUdingsas sheer stamps of at irate in caP tu.-ed theirown purpose Hindus from using the buildings for Jrevent the cenotaphs Hindus Horn recapture. Even the

*
M

to

dissuade the

with debris of Hindu temples that too is equally untenable


fallacious.

wd

to

A Muslim who
it it

hales the

Hindu decore or a
have
't
fit

building
raise

them.

name most cases fakes because nobody's pedeslfll* ftm Muslim cenotaphs are in fad usurped
.

****" *
Delhi -.
.

so
il

much

as lo strike

down would not be so

foolish as to to raise

H.du temples

plae* persons died at distant In several cases the

again as
il

was, stone by stone.

He

will

It again

whle their graves are in

some other

cities.

For

"*
buned. -ceo
i

as

was because thai same material

won

any olher

pUn.

away from toys was murdered several hundred miles


lber H rave
*riH
is said

A potentate who has the power to destroy a temple and re-end


elsewhere with enormous as " labour, cost and delay could claim lb* building as it Muslim' is and call it his own. That is what did. Carrying the would debria elsewhere and depositing it in heaps olro m.ke It impossible to sort the stones and determine *Nch pari of the building they belong to. Redrawing a plan to fit non-descript stones would be a very wild and weird idea impost* woo to execute. Pelllng . building and re-erecting it elsewhere also be impossible from the engineering point of view. Econom^ **a too It *.iutd be a monstrous sane person project
it

fcFerUhta. in
in

to be in Delhi. Abul Agra while according to


palatial

Humayon

il

Faza),
'

Humsyun

Srhind and yet a

" din - comp C"

Wng misrepresented as Humoyun"s mausoleum. m moleym


Hloria ni

yyffl ^ ^^

every so-c insistencies arc associated wilh almost


all

over the world.

Have Even Falsified Names


of Shahjahan's wife

^ name

mentioned

In

which no

1174

^url-chronicle (the Baduhahnama) is Mumtax-m.^ have attached t Mumux Mahal. Yet historians ne 9fni name to mislead the public that Mihal to MumlM't
derives

nn
a

^ **

lu name from her.

** S*2 Mu^ *)
'

v*

becw

of ton*

^P "
8

"-

P^W

cenotaphs

Garden Bluff
Several gardens in India are ascribed to
ii

*tL*it
Muslim
invader,

nverwriUng. fr nearly

and becaute the Muslims having n**** ycar9 nobody *** * "^ to t WJOn

a travesty
plant

w
in

of history. Invaders come to ravage gardens Ihem. Gardens and porks in Russia cannot
be

lo Napoleon

and Hitler. likewise the Nishat and Shalimar Kshmir and the Pinjore garden in Haryana cannot be

^ *
nrfZ

^Su^t

of

Mogul Rulers
of

Mualim chronicles may be

illustrated with another

falsity

Muslim invaders. Weie the Muslim invaders professional garaw and caterers come to serve and delight the Hindus by
lo

i^
k,

jtuul

cision
'

\tfha

MMl
ol

rhronicles

plant lush gardens ? Did

Napoleon and Hitler plan invasions of Briuin

to demonstrate to the British


in

how a

belter garden could be pUniaj


this.

rthered

SunnBt Is a traditional Muslim rile. Snot were written by abject hangers-on at court they framework of presenting the Muslim U> a famOiar
gji^
*

superman. As a part of

that they lustily described

Hyde

Park?
's wife

Not

understanding
India

American

Som*
him
only

""^tSTrmance

ceremonies to satisfy orthodox of certain routine

Moynihon

when in

around 1975A.D. went about ascriWnii


to

SXo^onatcourt.^^

a garden blighted

by Bobur three miles from Dholpur

because the garden finds a mention in

Babur 'a Memoirs. Thu

S3
Jj
I the

ion the

the world has been tutored in reading history topsy-turvy by crediiir^

performed on Mogul princes Sunnat too having been when the last Mog^ however, let out of the bag by the BriUshl subm.l* . P*Uon Tzeenat Mahal ( deposed

-.

Muillm Invader* with planting the very gardens and


very buildings that they ruthlessly ravaged.
Falie Assertions

British authorities that

from Akbar onward, none


is

of

U*

raising (bt

L*

circumcised. That sovereigns had been

proof from

Mora

,5s
exposed have

own^n.
in

Remain Undetected Muslim chronicles Instead of being

..lever
performed.

-chronicles had no Yet Muslim court orthodox ceremony recording routine


,

he*uo

False claims In

Modern

historians

rnrt*. -j have generally db*yril.


Muslim

t*en tacitly admitted. For instance. Abul Fazal has in his Aln-e-AkbiH

ineptitude in

claimed that Akbar had provided for

a building complex
his

containing

mtically ^mining

**?\**
is

portions that do seem to cavil at certain

60QO sullen for that

many inmates of

nutters trying to

prove that tweedledum

harem.

they

may seem

to

creful chronic* to have subjected the

*^** ^**^"^
cross n

FaWhpur In none of the sites associated with Akbar namely conl*n Skri nd Agra i* there a single building complex which even 1000 independent Theoiw apartments not lo talk of 5000. Mm*" insinuation namely that Akbar ( or for thnl mailer any
ruler) built large buildings is also wilhoul

questioning.

Zeenat

Mahal's petition disclosing

Lhn

wvereigns
'"

foundation.

There

circumcised from Akbar onwards was book tilled Spot on the Mutiny by Keay-

'J^ o^lid
#+

absolutely

no proof whatsoever

that tin** lo sustain the assertion


of

buildings In India are of

Muslim authorship.

"W

When Keey started reading through the ^"JV M|hi|. To* b -, he was intrigued lo find a piUUon Mrflhah
stated that

WUon
100

was though Fakhruddin

^
wu

ought not to be recognized

heir to the

lhroM

1196
ittl

,inc h# had been

drcumcised while the

tradition

Urn*

cuslom she had very far-sight^ In keeping with that and thereby kept her own son to be circumcised
qualified to claim the

wm that no Mogul claimant U? the throne should be d


him

aw ****
'i

JSZ
Zt

Mtantb oven Aurangwb and his sons were


Hght upto the .at

Mo.,

rie^*^

"^
1

du|

*vTco*om

of

circumcswn BahadunuW,
-

Mogul throne.

"*

The BriUsh author, Keay was bewildered. He was una circumcision or its orthodox Muslim significance. Therefore
the advice of

TZ^ came W !*
LisUc

wa3 circumci9ed And


'

DMuCk WouW

**

he*

Sr Syed Ahmed,

the founder of the A%,rh

(S**

University

The

latter explained to

him the whole

lhe lbr0ne " iS *"*" molher Mahii kept her own son undrcumciaed in readme far-sightedly to tA throne because she was in possession of the precox \!L the Mogul -circumcision as a qualification secret of non for the thmn*.
it was a But while chroniclers

*SSS^ Z ^ ^2 **
f_
eldest *,
It

issue.

British author Kaye

who

disclosed this,

Tracing the tradition

of

Mogul sovereigns abandoning

is.

orthodox Muslim cuslom of circumcision Zeenat Mahal's petite disclosed that because Akbnr was bom in the desert of Snd *fcn.
his father

Muslim

and authors have not

only

malntaincd

afispiratorial

chauvinistic silence about non -circumcision by Mogul


in recording fictitious

Humayun was

a fugitive

and homeless wanderer Aldw

sovereigns

but have even gone out of their way

circumcision

ceremonies.
dicussion

could not be circumcised during childhood. Later at

the age of 13

when Akbar ascended


medically

Toe
the
thront
politically

above

should

convince

readers

about

the

fslsincation

of world history by Muslim authors.

circumcision

was

considered

unsafe

and

inconvenient. Being a person of independent will and wielding greA

Sluing

on the ftOCC of
professional
prestige

authority Akbor

was no longer prepared to submit

"himself to

tat

Considerations

of

historians

and

very painful circumcision ritual.

convenience of agencies of
'

the Government of

India in willy nflly

When Akbar 's sons came of age he didn


because he didn
'l

t allow

their circumcision

ticking to
of a Taj lo

believe in its religious validity


it.

and

necessity
hfld

nd

the myth of Shahjahan 's authorship thorough probe into the antecedents of buildings such

stand In the woy

the

because he himself had prospered without


to believe that

In fact he

earn
have

Mahal. Bureaucrats

and professional

historians, therefore, prefer


vital issues

had he been circumcised his realm too would

maintain

an enigmatic silence on such


conferences.

even at periodic

been circumcised.

professional

By the time Shahjahan came


grown
Babur
in the

to the throne a superstition Mogul royal house that circumcision spelled doom.

W
Hii
arri

With regard to the Taj Mahal,


"wtoer of the

a Turkish

national All Oxveren.

who

on Humayun who
dnv

had been circumcised ruled only for four yeanhad been circumcised had been defeawl

>
'

Royal Institute of British

Architects, reveals

Turkey

we are taught

ongmaity Taj Mahal, in schools that the Shahjohn into a mausoleum by

Hindu temple

was converted

out of India.

On

a victorious return

he

lived only for

*wl
u
j"

mwitn11

Thai

review

convinced

the

future

MoguU *

non.urcumd.ion ensured better luck.


Since Akbar and Jahangir ^umciHon. had prospered

who came

to the throne

Shahjahan too was not circumd*

V "ubsequent
An

the Stupendous structures like the Taj Mahal and use as burial-grou never be studied as mausoleums. Their

W"^*

generations has misled historians.

without

m *""**

Wthor working out the man-hours


of a certain section of the Great

Wtem

^"^..^^ R-W -

IITB

1178

with the labour expended on sparing the figure U, p. oouldn t have built the that the Pharoahs concluded mausoleums.

I^J *
1

*'

TV Ormau

K-Hngo Vcdlc Empire

by the devastating
naturally bigger.

fragmentation of a united Immediately after the Vedfc Mahabharat war the first Tew
It

emp^ *

course of time that they sub-divided. One of those big world further divided and empj^ was of the Shakos and the thini was of the Choles, another

was only

in

W
ir

^
THE ANGLO-MUSLIM ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONSPIRACY
thai

of the Kalingas Earlier of the first

we have

discussed intercontinental
history

Wa
The
i

two. In

ancient

Indian

we

hear of Aioft
years

Kalingas had in ancient vanquishing the Kalingas. Those timei

Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) was set up over 13}

under their sway. The close similarity of large part of the world and those in Cambodia and the temples in Kalinga (i.e. Orissa)
the dance and music (clanging of dishes intermixed with the
of bells)
still

then British adminstratlon. ago by the

General

Alexander Cunningham, an army


the archangel chosen to head
it

officer

(bom

to

1814

tlnkJt

pj Was

because 20 years

earlier

extant in regions
It is

from Rangoon to Vietnam

are c!r
held

while serving

proof of that sway.

the Kalingas

who

also

seem

to have

(1836*1810
to

as A.D.C. to the Governor General. Lord Auckland A.D) he had conceived a plan to misuse even archaeology
.

sway

in

Korea. Borneo, the Philippines, Hawaii and the American

condemn the Hindus and play-up the Muslims against them


the consolidation of the newly-won British domain
in

continents.

Dewan Chamanlal's book


it.

titled

Hindu America

give
and

to facilitate
IftdJa,

some
music

clues to
is

Such identity of architecture, stage-plays

and later convert Indians to Christianity.


's letter

a kind of evidence

which historians have generally

ignored

One gets a hint of that plan in Cunningham


15.

daUd Sept.
British East

heretofore.

1842 addressed to Col Co.

Sykes, a Director of the

India

(Page 246, Vol. 7. Journal of the Royal AsiaUc

Society

toadon. 1843

A.D.)
in

Cunningham cunningly wrote that archaeological exploration

Mi "would
Indian

be an undertaking of vast importance to the


politically

(British}

Government

and to the

British public religiously


religion in India

(wd

that) the

establishment of the Christian

must

WnsWy succeed.'
Similarly

MaxmueuVs

letter to the

Duke of

Argyll the then

?**

2 ^d

echoed the same unholy "' U.conquer* ndI ' has been conquered once, but India must by ed-cUoo. that second conquest should be a conquest
of Stale for India also

amNUor.

Ill*

aeon how hi K h official may U be of an unseemly hurry to uii lminWrUoo was In hI , Hindudom by hook or crook by d for subvening

every

iim
**,.,
orn

I,

^
*' S Taj

ther

assistant
fo-"

th

^Irt
flS**
af'W
Todrt y

Wl-TO) "Gen Cunningham


possession a complete

Carlleyle h.. recorded (pigt 67>

y
meihat
(of lht

maniputaUon

in his

own

field

of operation.
Policy

"

;t,,

'v<

] already

In bis

SoKWOrCharlcr-ABUinulion

^,T

U n9 W,d mPflS^,Tmenl, "* *** parucu^

^^ ^
*

Informed
inn

building

condemned and snubbed | 5 A person constantly calculi commit suicide. or mud go .1* Accordingly iiihfr
craracier-assassinntion of the Hindus by the British, met with t k the veiy first remarkable success that from

va,uub,e r0C rdS Br n0whcre to l **l. l"<** villainously destroyed by Cunningham have been

ObvkmiW

gene,^^
section
If

^Evidence

of Taj Mahal

European -trained Hindus


the Hindu* has been

upto our own day a sizable


all its

wist tog

enei vies

and lime only in discus^

and deploring

all its

own

'faults' pointed out

by

their detractor!
inactivity

mil lapsing into a slate of inconsolable melancholia and


It

that original From what Hindu documents and the drawings of the Taj Mahal, did rffnl pased into Mogul possession from the Jaipur Mihiraji 'i lit. They wben Shahjahan suddenly confiscated the To)

Cunningham

told Carlleyle

it is

apparenl

(nmn-ship

Mahal

<ras in

pursuance of that British

game

pjp.palace

complex with

all its

fabulous wealth.
last

of Hindu boiling thu


in I8flt
,

Cunningham was appointed archaeological surveyor


from 1fK2to

Director
Ti|
,ti

Later

with the deposition and expulsion of the

Mogul the

18 and

Director General

from 1871

to 1885.

Mahal

India

documents passed into the hands of the British Viceroy Cunningham was specially chosen by In 1858 A.D. Since
administration
to head
the
Archaeological Survey,

A very imriguing detail is that the archaeological deportment remained

wspended during 1865-1870.

Why?

ihe

British

That needs

thorough
Cunning-bam

took charge of not only the Taj MuhoJ papers but

probing. That

probemay reveal some more eerie skeletons of Britain 'j

iln the papers of


iWiberalely

anil-Hindu scheming

burned them
ascribe
all

many other monuments throughout all so thai he may have the

India and
field

open

Cnnmntrum Fouled Archaeological Records


In addition

to devilishly

historic towns. ciUes. mansions, lowers,

bridges,

forta. palaces,

canals and tanks to Muslim authorship.

to

Cunningham

's devilish

plnn delineated

in his letlir
fellow

to Col. Sykes we. luckily,


Britisher,

hove an unguarded testimony of o James Furgusson (see pp. 32-33 and 78-'8.

Whoteialc Deflection

'*
Of

lt is

that fiendish transaction of wholesaledefalcalion lodefiectlon

Archaeology, by J. Fergussion,

18M)

that '"During the

M-yew

Hindu architectural treasure to

Muslim

credit,

and contrived
the
wflj!

been employed

in

the Survey,

he

(Cunningham) h

kirucUon or obfuscolion

ributed almoft literally

or

all

Hindu records by

or

"^*unA

nothing to our knowledge of archaeology geography." Nalurallv. Cunningham looked upon

^Ingham
hHtorica!

that

is

praised as being ignoranlly or deliberately


'

vttmKAo/ merely

M , slick

wdence of Britain of India "s solicitous service in the preservation


heritage.

l0 beol lh(l

njndu5 witn .
'.

Conwouently

cce when Cunningham


haughtily over, ruled

assistant. J.D(in Delhi


)

^^^"igham

*hf view that the so-called

Kutub

** m
It

Hindu, have

him

to usscri that

">

**

everything been robbed of all credit for anything and


poetrj. music, musical Instruments.

*nd artistic such as

*"

^n.

potter*. P-inting, colour-decoratlon, gardens, fountains.

carvings, etc. even

when found

All In India.

those

haw

1182

Afghan. Greek Bnd Iranian bMo attributed "> r an anti-Hindu British and Muslim piX pt aourc* through dominance in India ^v^al centuries of their and
,

UB3

oU,

**

tfc

"**^

ev

merely acquiesced. and others


quotes a Hindu court document proving
i.e.

world.

gingham
"^iT that
i^ioned

lhtl

Thus Hindudom and its worldwide pristine Vedi c made to feel small and despicable been humiliated and

been made to appear as puny, insignificant. good-for wretches flitting furtively in the long shadows of

^ ^ and ?
T**
f

the Red Fort in Delhi SSSl UK*5th-generaUon Muslim and yHC^nJngSm


the

monarch Shahjahnn the Red Fort while AnangpaTa Red Port was r<n

haw

h
w
^
nun

sround the so-called Kutub Minar.


ColonU.1

towed*,,

(?) structures. This


to which Hindus

is

nothing short of an international

European

Cume

consa^

react soonest with requisite speed and to reclaim their rightful role as world leaders, teachers,

must

and pioneers

in

every

field.

*fae

Western academic world has to this day faithfully TTml the Cunningham s curious and cunning conclusions and not round
'

foult i

n0t surprising because that has been their

common

Academic Villainy Monstrous as


this

t in Asia-

After 'hey themselves got converted to Christianity

^rope
academic
villainy

through

Roman tyranny European

Christians wanted to

was

it

was

of

piece m,

bvert Asia
nf

loo through villainy. But that none from generations

the earlier Christian record of subverting the of Islam terrorizing the

whole of Europ* *j

for the last 100 years could see through or Hindu intellectuals

whole of West Asia into Mahomedanbm,


skill in

fldn'l

Yet Cunningham

's

consummate

conceiving and

delivering

is bureaucratic fraud,

speak hve tne courage to surprising.

up

against Cunningham's mean

diabolic

architectural

grind-stone with a Muslim

label to bt

The

Shrouded Truth
The big veil of secrecy that

permanently hung like a halter around the Hindu neck, must ute
the cake for masterly

academic

villainy.

Cunningham

deliberately threw over

the Toj

pressure Mahal and which he strove to hold in place with the


military

This explains the various


in the fresh,

myths subtly
files

planted by Cunrunghwi
of his
101

blank archaeological

opened by him wtaWnfL*


the very

end of his cheaty and cheeky career

robes high boots hidden under his en:haeo!ogical is further exposed


after the lapse

linking In indelible ink

almost

all

historic slniclures throughout

by the
of

the world to

Muslims wherever they were not claimed by ChrirUmi

remarks of his assistant Carlleyle that even


1

For Instance, he wrote

20 years' "The Taj

Mahal (is) yet unsuiveyed'

(see 1899 Annual

down

in

his newly-opened archaeolcgla!

fB

for dictating a camp-directlw unquestioned obedience thot around W* scattered in the terrain re the ruins of six ancient Delhis raroptf* all built (? ) by different

toport of

the North

West

Provincial Circle of

A3).

in

the style of

Genera!

Cunningham
<

's calculated

cunning
in

the Taj Mahal in crediting

Muslim authorship is

exposed

well

-documented bookW
painstaking

Muslim invaders at erratic Intervals. To this day all P*'*** historians have meekly '$ mJ'W obeyed that dictum as a General

wWihBd around the 1980s,


jsuwgeous Hindu scholar

tnd

by an

intrepid,

Mr. V.S. Godbole

residing in Bedford,

**. Nobody

has questioned

how Cunningham

arrived at

thcW

* ho- ho delineate

their boundaries ? This Illustrates ^nitingham nor anybody after him has done any **"%! *idy or uwesUgaiion hecunn^ Cunningham concocted whatever
.

how n*

J* W

" b

matter of no

mean

gratification that

7 **
?
,b

knowledgeable Hindus
fear

are keeping their

when millions mouths taeunv

fcm ^e

or favour and while quite a few Hindu


11111

j^rwW
drumn^g

*"*n>
1

feel mightily

fancied Taj

mystenously from Mahal drawings emerging

proud

in

hysterically

\\M
Ihi

Shahjahan-Mumla* bedroom on toilet-paper


not only Industrious and

rofe

honest, trulh- loving and least one brave, bold, iruih

t^L^

tl%
B

intelligent enough the fraud but also courageous enough lo shout shot *T* Ul " housetops.

who

is

H
'

**

.inns.

*r,t

g- dens " nd P i^iiB dihTrt w Hindu archaeological credit u, . w. , per cent


ata

UN
tolterflM

.^ons
s|Uj&P

Plated

V
^

J '<

It

is in

pununnce of that
in

gigantic,

flindu palace near Lahore, ancient Hin

has

mausoleum. the fort urn.


as

Lahore and
have been

P,fln thu | been advertised as j I ^''^ the city na '

demoniac

TJiv
!

W*

publicized a the garden pavilions and Kashmir such as Nishal, Shalimar. Verinag. (Trafafci

BadshahJ

Mosque)

commissioned by Muslims.

All

..,.,.. explain j to e*pi*" away the tell-tale Hindu make. 1**, mflKfl# to order In historic constructions, several monstrous """-' monstrou, a and ,flW dinning of **<* noated by Cunnin hBm savi "S that those t_. seeming Trom the from lr.e employment of Hindu workmen, ngruIUes arise congruitles or that Muslims reinforced debris, or with stone of Hindu he use Hindus made only of mud and wood, that structures which

-~ .-

^
.

Uw

the

(translated in Persian as Shahi

p^ ^ Chasma) and Dal-lake hnv^l

were blue tiles and blue paint in historic buildings wherever there Inspiration was obviously Persian, that Muslim architects India the
nly

Muslim authorship though Siinagar, the very nanthe capitaJ of Kashmir evokes a prosiwrous Vedic Sanskrit mm In Haryana the Pinjore gardens with their Hindu pavilions hp
ascribed lo
all

details

broad outline of lowering edifices leaving the sketched the will by Hindu workmen etc. etc. to be filled in at
Following

A SI

Faithfully

Same

Policy

Still

been ascribed lo the Moguls. All the historic edifices

In Delhi

Agra.

Mandavgodh. Ihe Hindu palaces and temples

in

Ajmermi
Bijapsr,

so-called

Ahmedabad.

which has inherited


Inception a

Survey of India No wonder, therefore, that the Archaeological from its very bastard British conception and
tradition

Asirgarh.

Burhanpur,

Miraj,

of thievery and fraudulence,

is

lo this day

Guibarga. Bidar. Mysore. Bangalore, Srirangapalnam,

Aurangilafl

very faithfully
out In
of its

and Golcouda have been dubbed as having been built by the ita Muslim invaders. What is then left on the vast Indian sub-ccniintm
lo be claimed of years ?

numerous

executing that unfaithful legacy (as has been pointed contexts in this volume), though a vast mijonly

by

billions

of Hindus

who have

lived there for milBom

out

terrified to speak employees ore namesake Hindus (who are jobs for their only because of their abject dependence on their

Were

they content to live in tents amidst ferns, fonsu

upkeep),

by

spiriting

away and

hiding

Hindu

Idols.

Sanskrit

fallow fields

and wild beasts?

inscriptions

and Hindu writings from India's

historic edifices, and


India

Ccni percent Hindu Credit Transferred to 'Nil' Muslim Account


It is apparent, therefore that Cunningham's consumm* devn-dance of concocted. pro-Muslim, archaeographicchoi'eotfi'i^

hastDy putting
to

up hazy myth

notices at historic sites Ihroutfhoul

perpetuate the

of their Islamic origin.

fake Cenotaphs Planted

Mtcnded to almost

wu

* rair,v

* archaeological sites in India. No 1 thorough weep to sweep away all Hindu rch.t.cM
all

nd(!rl1

There

is

now a very

frier to justify

strong, valid reason hanging the false notices that he was

to suspect that
at hi

credit lo

be cast into the Muslim dustbin.

* and the

false nolings that


litiered
all

he was making
sites

in

"***^"

(quoted above) carff Cunni nham had charted for himself a cunnln* 'J* , blank ch" J*n after .nfliury to lrflnsfer by ,nUr Hlndu * -rchitectural credit for casUes. cities, towers.

betrayed by

Cunningham's

letter

**

m Cunningham
"*
0f

historic

with

^**T
o

^nnmi.

Government expense. A curious ^Mnulng fraudulent sepulchral fo.*ery by the A^*1


at

W*

>* may

'Safdarjang monumbe noticed at the so-called

"^ * "

legacy

11
urn
(ric) in
is

Nw

Delhi. Tfcal building

though

Hindu
l

p.^
1

. Safdarjtng

" advertised as a mausoleum being misleadingly n th."* ** who lies buried in U.P. (Ref: The F|

nt

vJI?*"
****

Yet obviously at Cunningham '.bidding > rt there. ,Ml Humayun 's name has been raised over th. ho, y h in so that they might remain permgnemly

Mu^.t^

*
"

Ashirwadilal Shrivaslav). of Oodh. by Dr.


In that

bunding only one single marble cenotaph bead name has been raised in the central hall on the main floor. Undem
that in the basement, arched
is

foc-tprin"

Ic-rgotten-

Thus,

far

from

conserving

historic

fariwm

contrived to

murder Hmdu

burW buiw,^
lhf

archaeology and

p^

columns

rtfMi^m ghOB*

myths over them.


'

in

the centra]

spc*|w

Yet the ASI assiduously maintains thons j^! own expense to sustain heaps of loose redbrick dust at the myth of "Mr" and 'Mrs'. Safdarjang being jointly buried there-

^e fake
flWn
tAlfr

'

Islamic

cenotaphs planted

In historic Hindu

mansions

no cenotaph

at

all

Cunningham

s inspiration

and

instigation are apparent

own

cur*"? look Khas and J) lodi tombs (?), Hauz

at the cenotaphs in the so-called Chlnika

Rnuu
all

so-called Chlisaddin'i
are
of

were

\* indicate that

even death did not pail them.

! ^ D e|hi. Their

brick,

mortar and workmanship

This situation involves several imponderables. Firstly, how come


that there are

JTB .iUshP.W.D
Cuanlogham
also

brand.

two mounds of loose brick powder

in the

bas*mwi

Faked Documents
"s villainy is documentary.

with only one marble cenotaph


is
it

on the upper floor?

Secondly, wty
then
buried
.

that

nowhere are the names of the persons buried (?)

mentioned ? Thirdly, when Safdarjang


several hundred miles

away

in

known U.P. how could


is

to have been

order

dimension of Cunningham The third fraud that his archaeological

Safdarjang

*s
is

ghat

claim a second burial in Delhi ? Fourthly, since Safdarjang


to

known

Ud

have been maintaining hundreds of consorts which of them ii supposed to be buried with his real self in U.P. and which other with his alter ego in Delhi ? And if those who buried him there.
If

the planting of faked Muslim title-deeds with even financed in usurped Hindu buildings. Thus, for imams and fakirs stationed have referred to some false, a number of historians instance written in Persian and Urdu,
Utter-day.

w he could

help)

may carry Cunningham seems to have

conviction

(as

abetted, helped

imaginary

accounta

at all. didn't care to

mark the spot with a masonry mwnd


in

purporting to describe the Taj


and a fake

Mahal as

a creation of aihiahan

document possessed by the

grave-tenders

In

the Taj

what business has the Archaeology department


expenditure on replenishing those dust

incurring

recurrinf

Mahal.

mounds, merely
Is

to throw
design

dust

in

the eyes of the lay public?

Why

the decor and

A number of Hindu shrines also retain


to have

title-deeds purporting

of the building entirely Hindu ? annexes

in its eight comers ? marble for raising * single cenotaph on the central upper

Why hBS the central palatial building ihil H* Why is it widely asserted
cruunt*'.

who prided been issued by the very Muslim sultans


Idols.

themseivei

ravagers of temples and destroyers of

Obviously tnos.
n

"wiled Muslim
Probability

documents are
on
the

forgeries.

Those were Hindu

was

stolen

(of course

by Cunningham) from
is

Khans monument ? This


to spend a sizable part

a graphic instance of
its

how

the so-called the ASI cent

W
Ml

forced

custodians

of

shnnt.

of

very budget on cheating the


It

I"

be Cunningham's peremptory orders. They couldn't ** Imply an Allauddin or Aunngnb suddenly transforming

'*

from whose taxes the ASI draws


Another instance

fierce

sustenance.
0,Dlla

Muslim

of soft-hearted saviour iconoclast to a

Mm H

Klines.

pawns

to another huge P
*s

mlileadlngly dubbed as

Humayun

Lomb

(In

New

J., Dei

cmlury-old French publication cam'eaa

'si00 photo of Vishnu

** "hrlnes farsightedly managed

The other possibility

is

Muslim that under

fake deeds to obtain

>^

T"^*
cert*

IIW
1119

the

men** S^nut

* gracious protection

tfirine.

rtaff.

that

by bribing or otherwise humouring iho Muslim admi those deeds could possibly deter the

and pot TOnaw to

Ahrnedabod)
*>

declaring

it

as

Jam. Mujy

p^

rf

notvan

ever-rJ**
could

^
?1.
.

marauder* of Muslim
Thst was just
for self-protection.

from ravaging and plundering iJ*}**


ifo
tf

force suit to

one of many safeLy- devices Hindus

1
SJ

that
to

ASI

Activities

Need Probing

Cunningham's

the firm lo demolish their manaion on iw, tha the S" Callcd most " ue > Murtim. precipiWtely withdraw the suit. Tnal muat have mad, ghost turn in its grave.

" rose

W * her

The ASI
the time of

s
its

own

'

underground

and underhand

in

implanting

that marble plaque

it

1*

qu

p^jy,

dealing, r

inception lodale could, therefore, provide ,W| topics for numerous doctoral, historical or forensic research

These could focus


his

'worthy' successors;

Uw attention on the doings of wily Cunningham on the secret instiuclions,


and

funniigbam

may have

uprooted the

original Sanskrit Inscription

planted his English

pro-Muslim forgery

there.

Cunninnham
In the

Destroys Hindu Evidence or Tuj Muhul

uctivfUn

case of the Taj Mahal alias Tejo Mahalaya temple- palace

that the

AS

has been chained to; on the

false notices at historic sites;


idols, inscriptions etc.

on the

way it manner and

has cooked up the number


of

Cunningham played the role .of a super-devil In destroying and loo Hindu evidence of its origin by destroying or dispersing colossal
displacing

the AS! surreptitiously removed or

buriid;

Hindu idols and Sanskrit

inscriptions.

on the bluffs that


to
last

it

has deliberately spread to transfer Hindu credit

Muslims; and on the

way

it

has spent

its

funds during

thr

stone inscription testifying to black basalt massive Sanskrit

IS years,

etc. etc.

Cunningham

's

soul

must be
it

slyly laughing behind


in

lis

ikw
by

Taj Mahal as) a "peerless crystal -white ShW branded by Cunningham as Temple" misleadingly and deliberately was shunted away to the attic or the distant Ibe Bateswar inscription
the erection of (the

on the phenomenal success

achieved

sending entire

academic

Lucknow
Muslims,

Museum, though

it

was

actually found

in

the Taj as can

and tourist fraternities sky-rocketing in a misleading trajectory


crediting

be inferred

not-so-cunnmg from the noting of Cunningham *s own

Hindu buildings and townships lo usurping

assistant, Carlleyle.

parading Islamic destroyers as master-builders and misrepresent

Muslim destruction as construction.


Bui as the adage goes
"'all

persons can't be

fooled

all

iX

time' and there have arisen


detect

a P.N

GodbokW Oak and a V.S.

onftTl -2 on Agra (pp. 121/5. Volume the base pillar which w.th the great square black basaltic in the garden nd capital of another similar pillar once slood
Carileyle's report

A.DJ

"cords

"

Taj Mahal.'" etc.

and expose that colossal academic fraud.


Encyclopaedia Rriuinnku

CuoainKhjm'* Tampering with Hindu Evidence


like murderer* and embezzlers trying to cover

up

lW tr*

How eomribuuw lo encyclopaedias loo "nknowinyly perpetuate that academic deception II P>

^ouiS
"

Cunningham

did his worst In trying lo destroy or dislocate

**-,

evidence of the authorship of historic buildings-

The

falae

*" ancient Bhodrakall temple In the central Bhwli-a locality of

marble plaque that Cunningham got

'^^J^

SWLF. ANALYSIS OF A GREAT DECEPTION) U* %0 f'on of Encyclopaedia Briwaniw <PP =+" V ^Wuxiure headins B.P. Spier. derlb- "'

booWe. observation (on p. 20 of his

***>**

^
of

19"

1191
,.

archrtertuie

*uch as Assyrian. Babylonian

ever.

*'

Mohan*-

not Indian (or

Hindu)."
his booklet

^"V
ni

On pane 2S of

Codbole points out how

as hated Hindu convert* lhey Were STpoor because

-%

re

them are descendant* of good old forced to turn Muslim, through

pariotic,
terror

became

*** of *** **
alien

hlihwto pretending that India had been a barren country assiduously attributed aD "Music, dancing, literature,
gardens, fountains, art. architecture"
etc.

^'
1'

2Tto.

by their en.-,

Musbm

JT^ ^ITc* J* "

qW, w * Hkl A

master,.

*
*

pain

everything

tyrant, has become eainct these h.gh and dry as psychological and been lea .enumenu
of -lien

Mushm

t*?*

found in India either to Muslim invaders or to their

good'!?
"Vitfch

successors.

Horses alienated frem their own or Trojan erstwhile Hindu Z, kflU lhG m0Sl U nt P'^mary * 0UgM l te

Xn

Ether*.
riders

duty of

These are but stray samples of the deep, dork tragedy systematic destruction and distortion of India's history
enemies of Hindudom.

those

by UV

enmity

and bureucrals of India to undo that injustice and absorb Hmuudom so as to do away wtih pwPle bsck inl muum and suspicion between those convert* and their and kin.
left

erstwhile

Hindu kith

Consequently

all

those

who have

written books,

articles and

The other Trojan Horse


British is

by the French, Portuguese and


forcibly converted

research papers, obtained doctorates and occupied high position) in history and archaeology, guiding generations of impressionable
students, and counsellinggovemmenls.

on the same analogy the Hindus who were

Christianity.

museums

and en cyclopaediiu Cunningham's

around

the world

quoting Muslim

writings and

But the third Trojan Horse


Itself,

is

the Archaeological &irvey of India


to advertise and parade

saddled by a crafty

Cunningham

cunning noting*, have not only befooled themselves but have duped the whole world.
That Cunningham should play the veiy role in actual
is b'fe

also

Hindu architectural wealth as

Muslim. The way Cunningham misused

which
divine

Ms tenure as the head of the ASI to forge and plant sham cenotaphs ind plaques to misrepresent Hindu buildings as Muslim mosques
end

implied in his

surname seems

to

be a case of a mysterious

coincidence.

For instance, over 10 years ogo

mausoleums must rank as one of the biggest academic fnuds. when I visited Namnul foit (near
in

Imagine the agony of a situation where for the

Guna
last

Madhya Pradesh)

noticed at the lop of the approach

120 long

yean
faith

all

Hindu

Intellectuals
lies

and others placed implicit unquestioning


and supplemenUu-y defolcolory moves

way where one enters the fort


the culvert is a
in it

of small culvert. By the side


wall.

in

the acrabalic

knee-high remnant of the ancient


in

Embedded

of the

AS.

was a modern stone plaque displaying

bold Knglfcb carved


for

Nock letters the

Ihc Enemy's Trojan Horses


Throughout India along the approaches to forts and other historic

My kind

of congregation and yet

place word MOSQUF.. That was an impossible enough for mischievous it was good

archaeological

I building* which
'
,

^"ius and and ahontie, on e.ther


inwei.

Muslim capture a* moiques ' one sees a long line of lowly Muslim shacks
are being misused eversince

and pro-Muslim forge.y. A real parotic W*"J* Slushm saddle '** adminisvaUon would have first to iwihw entire setup, thoroughly cleanse, disinfect and overhaul the

aide. There these poor people eke out nondeecript livelihood tending poultry or engaged in other menW

P'ycho/ony

and working of the AST.

J-D Cunningham and his two assistant*. "*fj buildings C, %!e thus compiled all their basic notes about histonc

\M
\\9f>

1)93

by concocting spurious versions. This h archaeological horror of horrors vfc. one alien ... lhe E 'J^fc the Muslim who J prompting another alien (i.e. consider,
In

India

._

*
yr(|D oincr

(- of the Islamic style because it the author knows that It fa an


British

i,

w. '

usurp^"

be an Arab. Turk, Iranian or Afghan though every MiwH U Hindu) to claim the desecendont of a captured authorship 1?
to ai-chaeological townships and of India s precious building, ln 8S
*"
I in ih.

h,

VilUiny

n-

name of

Islam.
in

J Z
India

of BriUsh writers (a that even other cupidity In caa combed to admit the pre- Muslim origtn
of ,
it

CeneraUons tutored
all

that fabrication have since fanned

over the world to hold tmpoitant positions as lecturers,

mte^
curai

vice-chancellors, presidents of history

congress sessions,

as Buddhist or Jain but never characters Hind? will StUdied anfmosit "d* to e,iber8te ond y be vi gonwsw Mi dPthoroughly exposed and roundly condemned. Not only Mtud out. rest of the world it U all but even in the Hindu,
elaborated by us earlier In this volume ^liecture os
ante**.
,

^
wW

Vedic

of

museums,

advisers

in

ail

and architecture lo government

In several

administrations, art critics in journalism

ond as editors of magazine

devoted to art. architecture and archaeology.


Yet other groups namely of journalists

Buddha or
is

The Idols in Mahavir is no criterion

the sanctum or

In

the cornices being of

to classify the architecture

fail

temples dedicated to Krishna.

Rama

or Hanuman do not

and authors of

volumes

ihireby signify

different styles of architecture. Historians. architect* art critics

on India's historic monuments, such as

James Fergusson, Pern


articles

ifchseologtsts,

and

journalists need us learn this

vital

Brown and Bannister Fletcher who have oil written books ond
and their continental cousins

lason of histoiy.

who have
of

compiled encyclopaedia

Toe absurd result of


throughout the
nperts In
to

all all

sucn

falsification

and bungling

ii

that

describing India's historic buildings lo be of

Muslim
and

origin, have

world in

academies and

universities, so-called

thereby

further

set

the

seal

approval

authority

on

Muslim architecture and their students, from primary


standards are lustily citing Hindu buildings as
glorious

Cunningham's

basic fraud-

doctoral

James Fergusson who has rightly branded General Cunningham


as a good-for-nothing archaeologist better is

tamples of

Muslim architecture.
has led the august
of hushing up
all

has proved himself

to be no

This initial falsification


of India

Archaeological Survey

an architectural assessor. Because even after discovering

cultivate the habit

embarrassing Sanskrit
idol!,

that tht so-called mosques and mausoleums are usurped temples James Fergusson declares (p. B8. Vol. II. History of Indiun and Kaucro Architecture). Be this as it may. Tor our present purposes the one fact that is certain Is that none of them are no* J""n

iwcriptions
ff

and Hindu (including Jain and Buddhist) time


in

found

time to
In

ny

u-mples. Ail are

Muhemmaden mosques and

it

will

therefor* be

"^ of any Independent.

them India *s historic buddings and hiding some unknown places so that they may not come to the
journalist. Inquisitive researcher or

mure

the logical as well as more convenient lo group them with Utter rather than with * the former class of buildings. Were it f Ufa the Arhai-din-ka h Jhopra at Ajmer... -might be and

Hereunder area few sample instances of such stealthy "* """-academic Survey of activities of the Archaeological
.

anti-Hindu
India

m ^*

** d*Cribod M

**"

of temple... .So might a great pari

U*

th-Qutub near Delhi."

b aghi

mch

7^ Ration
** tal

Kutb Minor "j Around 1976 when the area around the so-calW dug up to reinforce the foundation with
Hindu began to yield valuable evidence of

^"f^T *
id

BriUsh

]og c

wnjch

classifies

"'criptions. This

went

against the

ASTs

assumption of

UM
the

MuSm

UM

authorship of the tower. Therefor*. te {canvas curtain) was hastily raised aD


off privacy of the

J
1*

>IK
'***
t

Thereafter for days


inside the curtained

oo end clandestine foundation -di^m


-

around* ***
all

*v

of er portion uPP

its

facade on

all

four

fa

d*oom*,

A*

lower and

Hindu finds were stealthily removed during the night utmost secrecy to some unknown destination. Was
intended to bide the nudity of the tower or the archaeological falsehoods ?
l

J** ^',
u

**?
f

v*
tk

"*
1

HaWd*** intai

That a governmental organization functioning under


of the Education Ministry of the to

Government

of India

ahouHi?
Tannic designs of two

behind a curtain, at the dead of night (&! some burglars digging into underground bank vaults) forwhataw!

work

stealthily,

have been a normal,


full

fair,

above-aboard, honourable

serous such
ejdDsing

inlaid

activity u^j

irrterloAed inaogfe
Sri

public view,

amounts to a graphic confession

lotus.
is

This

emblem known
is

as

Chafe,

of the fasti

eSs

of Indian archaeological shibboleths.


This leads one to the inevitable conclusion that
in
all

gaUJ-Chakra

a goddess symbol. Obviously,


's

therefore, what

Humayun tocfaj lobe


Hindu
evident,

mausoleum
is

an ancient temple of Goddess


footprints

(jTohmi.
mi stone,
f

A supporting proof

a photo of Vishnu's
tilled

Hindyjthan has been deliberately and systematically removed !n those precincU year after year over the last century and hat' Sj
the British and earlier by the Muslims. (2) Inside the Red Fort in Delhi
as Chhota
is

published on page "8 of a French book

The World

Aocieai India written


lis

by G. Le Bon and

published a century

tp.
Co.

English translation
in

was The

published by the Tudor Publishing


Archaeological Survey of India has

of

New York

1JTM.

a royal apartment town


--*.'*

no effort to trace those Vishnu "s Footprints. In fact bacause


past record,
it

Rang Mahal

in

which Government maintains

mustm
< iti

is

which exhibits only Muslim finds while pieces of red -stone eJepha*
statues with

obvious that the A3

itself

has either

remowd

loan to be
i

hidden away or has buried those sacred

footprints under
of

mounted

riders slaughtered

by Muslim

invaders fouai
two-inch layer of lime

concrete
is

in

the basement centre

th*

inside the fort are kept out of public

view

in the store room.


as

toMing. That

concrete piece
's burial

being currently misrepresenied as


it

(3) Inside the

same

fort is

an ancient temple known


it

N#

wrting

Humayun

sport. But

has no semblance to a
to Ferishtt

Mandir. But the

A3

misrepresents

as a

mosque

"butt* *>
of iff*

anotaph or grave at all.


toned in

Moreover according

Humayun

Aurangzeb. Consequently, the find of the marble footprints

&iva

in that temple (desecrated and declared to be a mo**** Aurangzeb) has been kept a closely gunrded secret and the fOTt

Humayun is buried DcU. Smind. Therefore, the so-called Humayun tomb in New
Agra while according to Abul
Fazal

too are not being exhibited in the fort

museum

would upset
Red Fort

all

historical

and archaeological

^" ^ assumption! ibout


for fear in*

ancient temple of Goddess Lakshmi. Here too the AS b guSty ^Ppressing the truth and misleading the very PP" wbw*
"

**

Pay for the

upkeep of the AS. Such


that several grand,

taksa public deception


historic.

in Delhi,

being of Muslim origin.

^nwntlrous forms

Hindu <*!.*

(-1) The o -caned Humayan tomb in Delhi ***j mulU-atoreyd palatial saffron-coloured Hindu temple paUc*

Jfcwi India are merrily


*****""
of

whispered by ASI

gran staff to be the

^^

Muslim bearers, barbers, enochs.

prostHutes

mi

"

1196
1191

even doff

^^
m EL ,2N

.f*r they were dislodged from vsrfou,

p^

thit

deception which the ASI (5) Another public indub* of the so-called Safdarjang mausoleum

described earlier.

Hi

on tbMiht Mpw Road is an ancient ravaged Hindu temple palace complex, lu, C,Jn *S Sultan Gharry suggests that its earlier Muslim name HJrnJ was Raj-Garhi. There several long and massive red-ston*
decorated with the facials of a boar

(6) About four miles

from Mehrauli

(in Delhi)

SOori. apart rrom the number of idol, found Ume ovw * from Um* *,*. n j umpteenth time idols of Ganeab and rUrUW for W i*8 cri Ptional uU * WCTe fQund M* tn tndZi M n*
,9) In

Fat^pur

, hidde"

->

"

"

^.sione

gH***- The

teblet

^ *
ab Ul

of an erased

Sanskm

and

a celestial

w
m

cow

wj"

pulicbing this important find the archaealogfctl 'iLpUon- Far from the digging were sworn to secrecy. Thouih '^nnel conducting

towards each other from either end, and a Sanskrit

hneriS

were found, as reported in the Statesman an English


Delhi.

L^beaten Into silence by a

daily of N#.

place

But the ASI has spirited thorn away to some secret to perpetuate the myth that Sultan Gharry is a Muslim buildta

century-long anU-HJnduand pro-Muslim ASI. Therefore, they dare not mention the find to ^icy of the
mybody.

W&

HUlduS nd

an

^^

**

flnd

h4

" been

complex, and a
(T)

mausoleum

at that.

Thus
to mj

in India

a curious situation has arisen. While

ill

over

An employee of the AST. named E.R.Sathe. wrote

lome years back that around 1959 S.R.Rao was inchargeof u* Taj Mahal. One day Rao noticed a big crack in a wall of theTij,

mostly only intelligence establishmenta and foreign affairs ibc world reason to maintain secret files, in India even fccertments have maintaining light-lipped secrecy about all Hindu finds. die ASI is

When he
bricks bricks

called in the

overseer to undertake repairs a number


wall.

of

Why has
and art

the ASI

come

to this sorry

pass? Because

It

feeh

had to be removed to properly reinforce the

Ai

Iht

Ithns a fraudulent

commitment

to the entire history, archaeology

were being removed out popped Hindu

known as Ashta Vasu (w

idols of goddeno
nrfems)

When

an embarrassed Rao

Ids out the secret that

world. If it and architecture establishments all over the from time to time immense Hindu evidene

the matter to Delhi for directions

Abdul Kalim Azad. and

fiom the then education miniiur, Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nchm to low*

townships hu been obtained proving that historic buddings and all academic reputation! in India are of pre -Muslim Hindu origin throughout the
buildings

whether he should probe other walls similarly stuffed with Hindu mouth Idoli, he was asked to ahul up both the walls and his
This
is a dear indication that Hindu idols and Sanskrit Insert have been found everyW* in the Taj Mahal from time to time but from the minister down sinister silence.

market o world would crash like the share The only other undermined by a severe earthquake.
the ASI.

HemaUve to such a reputotional disasater, so thinks


to

continue

its

policy of suppressio veri

has been maintaining a

thraten all its

(8) In th, Safdarjang Development Area (C-5/2B)

W* In Ne*

tocovery of

employees against letting any Hindu evidence and about what

and suggesUo falsi any outsider know o


is

happening in*

ASI.

>"* P-N-Sharm. who had a peep ^marble baaemeni of the

inside the

chamber under*"*
Iheerurr
#*"

Thus

terror stalks the entire archaeological

W^ *
1

Chtmt*r'-

Taj Mahal through a hole In work with which Sahajahan or Cunningham had

* * in

WJ

who serve in the ASI should have to ^career under the crack of a whip counts to. wnycomm"^
II those

work

*D throu*

hrtd. the dark chamber with the help * 1932 a number of Hindu idols obviously

4ww

^sUU-toV.,; s-heASibosseaha^
*
they have been taking their

.und on

the

W*

^Cuimingham.

11
Ii

ii

common

experience in every walk of


initial

lif

^
m

..

ins i*ad

an of confessing to

he has

explaining keep hiding and

fraud continues to ! cui lfl away all lncrim inaljn

***

*"S

up from Um e i ti mf deeper and deeper in the morass of effort he sinks fa, example of such a predicament. The AS is a classic Thus ^ Archaeological Survey of India has been reversed and
that keeps

embarrassingly popping

2"*

ud In mBU50leum ,n ^"andto Cardov, In Spam "^lud 1Wn>" buflding8 have bwfl bUndl CrttUl*i *' Wsloric to Muslims * Zntf archaeologists. It was only my hint In my \an um Ett TEMPLE PALACE which Induced an American W jMAHAt IS A
,

worldwide phenomenon. From the Shah-I-BM

Moil

^
lS

or the

j*,^
tvi^
w^

H. MiUs) to re-examine the antecedent* of those {jor Marvin surprisinB lhat the Spani5h wh0 displayed

From an

organization founded to unearth historical

**aWil

evidence^
country

ll

is

patriotic

In

exterminating

their

Muslim oppressors,

lacked

ths

organization to hide historical turned into an hanky-panky its personnel. That in a false notices and gag
ertci

^Tmic
fldir-gs

the architectural credit for historic sagacity to reclaim misappropriated to own credit by Muslim conquerors t

population, and 99fc Hindu bureaucracy au|. an te% Hindu 1)ltiil0(l Hindu authorship of historic buildings of evidence of the

H^rd

Muslim Lured I*

Money

should

become the main concern of

official policy is a

deep

tragedy,

&j

the ghosts of the fraudulent British bureaucrats

and or the tynumiai


in

academic tragedy doesn't end there. It continue to But the through the contagion of Muslim lucre. For , ij^j cancer
'"ttanct:

Maslim Suiuns and Badshahs of the Government of India ?

still

rule the roost

the

officii

the prestigious

Harvard University, has been

provided

How

long can this perversion


is

u<j

Lu-miHion Muslim
in-depth

dollars

by the Aga Khan,


of

to undertake an
Islamic
(sic)

suppression of archaeological evidence continue? It

a pity iha
lib
'a

academic

study
wfll

(non-existent)

though historic buildings are inert matter and not aggressive


barking and biling dogs the histoiy
so scared of

iixhileclure.

So Harvard

turn out some more pseudo- experts


will

and archaeology

fraternity

them

as to

keep completely

mum.
beginning sometime

and they in turn d pseudo volumes more. And thus the ind more and
somnolent

chum
I

out some more

archBeological Wind-nun's

Muff continues

its

merry-go-rounds.

have, therefore,

Sensing the need for


to rescue the ASI

somebody

to

make a
circle in
I

from the vicious


's

which

ll

has been

sent spinning

by Cunningham

basic plot

addressed a
.

letter iwri

faculty through a or the concerned Harvard buildings ail over the world are Utter that since so-called Muslim impudent to study them mere captured properly it would be

drswn the attention

February 6. 1983 to the Joint Director General


that as an initial step the pieces of

Mrs MIU* suggraunj


Lonl

'Itlsmic*.

red-stone elephants and

Shiva ' footprints in marble should

be kept on

display

In

IbeW

Considering the

manner

in

have which enemies of Hindudom of the Nrforteai

Fort

museum

remaifW along with other relics. Bui the letter has

mule minced

unreplied.

The ASI ought


aD the
relics

that

to be made to restore to their use have been spirited away for hiding b*

origin

*
,oc

Hindus meat of Hindu history at least Wrchy (Including architects, archaeologists and journals) to clean her conscientious persons should come forward

town

litter them. Stables of the piles of falsehoods that

pilferage misleads historians, tourists

and the lay public

haeid

of dreading the ghost of

WtHdwid* ArchacoloaJcul Misrepresentation


*"wever a matter of
t

filing to his colossal untruth Hindu historians < m reverential awe or their own Vedic
10

Cunningham shouW

^d

mee^

some

satisfaction (or

r is ll

that

the

ragic

archaeological

misrepreseniQiion

favounw

truth

and boldly rcpudit

th *

^f**^^* ^^"^
'"

00 lh *m

through academic tutoring.

tan

1*0
Hindu historian ehould no longer cocw _ The avenge df meddy hurtTing to the armtul tn^.

te bt

m^ m

end then furtively sucrrying back ConpWI Mniona.


bote.

u> hi,

'"Km

^ S*
.

sessions historians should no longer con u Al loose congress * to toe the establishment ' themselves constrained and J, views as accord with the such 'mewior speak out only ' imagining him to be the proverbial big

Cunningham

LESSONS OF HISTORY

cat

ovffbf.ringtbeirdeUber.Uons.
It

la

time for Hindus to first

arm themselves

with knowl*)Peal
d

bout their breat primordial

World Vedic

historical

genius

lies first in

sensing discrepancies, anomalies


quality

heritage, then thurxJa


to that unj Wi

nd

roar to be heard

and then lead humanity back

traditional distortions in
is

versions Thereafter .the second

perseverance and wisdom to find out the

truth.

And

unitary, peaceful,

purposeful, pious, Vedic culture.

Mtded

JJ

lhinl quality

needed

is

the courage to speak out the new

finding

ihe face

entrenched vested of fierce opposition from

Interest*.

Puri

Temple
In

the context of

the above observations the current

versions

(boot the origin

of the

famous Jagannath temple

In Puri

on the

outem coast of India could stand

some

re-erarninalJon.

erected in the 12lh According to local versions the temple was since been fashioned nlury A.D. and the three icons therein have
from

Mergoza timber every 12 years or to.


reads like a fairy
thai tale. It says

The story of its origin

Ow then ruler of Puri had a dream. As *bil to a forest and met a princess. The
k>
lift

ns directed In the dream

^prince princess helped the

and carry

away the stone

idol

which har of Lord Krishna

own father

used to worship. But on the way back

^f*V^

-Weriously vanished from the grip of the Puri


1

ruler.

*T
u

^ce from the heaves

fashion ihre*. instructed the ruler to

[mm Mergoza timber w"3 and build a temple to that capuai. That was in the 12th century end

*" *
1

-n

is

r th Puri

temple end

its

wooden

legendicons, says the

ia
lb

120a

my

mind

all

those details

do not make a cog*^


p]|

wnt. account

^*

**
If

lM

TV
flimsy. I,

dream and other details appear to he story of the be . fairy-tale variety and therefore unconvincing.
a

WV<!

The incongruity of wooden


idols
is

massive towering stone temple buty

also very glaring especially

when

fo,

only aj .-*
tall

that the present temple had four other predecessor* winR out intricately carved portion of an earlier plinth dot* l high, 5 A *^ on the northern flank of the present temple. survive

taTln the

tr8ces of Very 8nclenl ^l3mBin, Thfrefor* P even f the 12lh Wnlu, n^nt wmple *""'* '" * IUM even more massive, artljtk and * preceded by 851 And lr3diti0n dM8 l" deed Cnnrm mv

4-d re**

RIM

^^

"***

away

is

an equally lofty stone temple of Konark with


(since

statues of the Sun

wrecked by Muslim invaders),

jl^thU

Lord of the World


'

Grotesque Idols

The crudh\y of the current divine idols as against the majUf temple edifice and the artistically carved statues of lions, hono and such other animals at the four gales is yet another Jarrinj
inconsistency.. Vedic culture
realistic depiction

'pay more

Jagannath* i.e lord of the World* deity tide of the close historical attention. Modern historians ought cilli for attention to a detailed analysis of even such popular
tradition.

^es of ancient
'

has always believed

The
were
to

title

Lord of the World

'

belongs to a time when there

in beautiful, Uf*-0

of divinity whether in picture or images.


therefore, is that

boast

Christians to whom Hindus would want no Muslims and no sway of their deity- Consequently about the worldwide
Vedic culture alias Jagannath belongs to a time when sway throughout the world. Therefore

My

conclusion,

wherever

in India important

the title

ancient shines have civde icons those were improvised substitutes

Hinduism held unrivalled


the idol
It

for the original beautiful images


Accordingly
1

smashed by Muslim

invaders.

believe that the original life-like aesthetically came*

stone idols
violated

in

the^agannath temple

in

Puri and the sanctum wot

would Its
In

alias Vishnu was consecrated of Jagannath alias Krishna the world. Then only numerous other stately temples throughout And so it was. In England. title Jagannath be Justified,
Cadiz, in

by iconoclastic Muslim raiders. Historians and archacologliu may verify this by a close examination of the sanctum which muit
reveal signs of having

Rome,

in

Jerusalem, in Mecca

etc. as discussed by

us in earlier

chapters.

been patched

up

after

Muslim

ravage- In
British

my

view, therefore, the tradition


idols of the

make-to of the currently crude


of the

Etymological Error
also another

wooden
Muslim
for the

Puri temple, originates from the time


idols

raid on

it.

Wooden

must have been


an

hastily Improviied

is The term Juggernaut in the English dictionary of the name 'mporUnt a malpronunclation

pointer.
is

annual celebration

after

iconoslastic

Muslim

n#

%uinath
fcve found

Everaince. that has been the

custom.

must that the term admitted. But the assumption Bnis only after the a place in the English dictionary
India about 300

That

it

fa

Hoar, OuipoM of Vedic Culture

*"< India

^her very
*
of
!r

Important consideration

is

that the Puri


i.e.

^'

Company started trading" with "*. must not be believed ipso facto. That 10 ta* as Britain was not known to be a

explanauon was Vedic court*. 1


Itself.

Si* *Wbj Oft hub of


*
<** J rt*

f0Ur

-"P

^"

r*A

the Vedic

'Chi*-*** a"" world. Since Hinduism


outposts

Immemoriri antiquity the Puri shrine

** *" too b <


i**

!***
1 1

by us in

tutor chapters

Britain

Hkt

**",

JM

has a hoary Vedic past. Consequently the India wcient English malpronunclation of pre-East

COmpm ^*J^

J*

present study of the aurroundings of the

1
IflW

m
dictionary

TV

explanation that the l*rm J Ug8m ,

Iul

.v.

lta-f) U- npntie crushed is a mistaken explanation. Even In J?J rUch propte g* term Juggernaut aignifiea the deity llMf BrfW, parlance the

(rather chariot of the deity

than the deity

rrprteenu

timely

divinity

and also because


in fact,

as

deacnW

^
th, ih,

Jj

,^wbicb
hetireen

a* to which of them them wonder the student?

th,

n^ * W"
r

**

Idol

their

them intrude the Arabs claiming aimfi. r clow affinity thC 0rigin,l0T, of *n Claim nd Uao

"

ortj

Lord Krishna had ihe Mahabharat, gajm*. til-devouring,


,

manifested Him*!/

of both

astronomy and astrology.


controversy a subtle historical
'

terrifying.

Kuruksheira

battlefield.

TWs

also incidentally illustrates

monslroua form 0n how

lexicographers of their own undemanding of English lawless. The reason is that the history th^ English li not >*>* many of their philological conclusion, lamed at school being wrong,

Im^

* A*
lC

irattnanguk"" into play

Might is Right'

comes

Tnal
.

is

to say whosoever wields aovereign

%iiUvinisUcany grabs

all

such

credit for himself.

"n j8hHBdcdAn,bai, 1vH


since the per that rule
jC

Arabs were

at the root of the Muslim to the 18th century

in

mistaken too.
in Britain jfj

The Parj Townships

lho

the world from the 8th wh h dominated was a long-enough usand-year stretch

period for them to

Yrt another proof of the existence of


of pre-Christian

Jagannath
the

idols in Britain

days

is

the

prevalence of

name

of Lord
as

ud

Islam

Arab homeland. Consequently Arabs thousand virtues to the to be proclaimed from every minaret of every

came

Jagannath s township 'Pury' in

Britain slightly mis-spelled


like.

world mosque in the


airly
or all

by every muezzin,

five times a day

from

'Bury'

is in

Shrewsbury, Sevenbury and the

moming
that is

till

late at night, in

as the originator and propagator

good

the world.
high-handed

Even the term Rath (alias Aswarath) of Sanskrit Vedic

tradition

continues to be misspelled in English as chariot. All this proves


that

In logic
ind

the Jagannath shrines in Puri and elsewhere in the

world

such misappropriation of credit through Argumentum ad Baculum. toud-mouthed bombast is termed as


to say

represent a tradition reaching

back to the days of the creation


in

and

that is
credit.

whosoever wields the big

stick claims the choicest

mutt not be misunderstood to originate only


A.D.

the 12th century

The Vcdic Lotus Emblem or France The three icons


in the

aid world teachers of all 'to

Word was therefore sent round that the Arabs were the corollary knowledge and culture. The
was that earlier
it

originators
to

Kriihw, temple in Puri are those of

was

all

abyssmal chaos, ignorance and

His elder brother Balaram

and sister Subhadra. The

chariot of

brknen.
Consequently

Subhadra bean i lotus flag.


had lotuses alias
lilies

The
it.

flag

France wo of monarchial
is

depicted on

That

an additional,

Incidents"

* Pioneering,

astronomy and astrology also and Inventive genius of the Arabs

were

^*|*
Moh

proof of the Vedic past of France as gleaned


tradition.

from

the Krishni

^asUoloay *munion with Allah in the 7th century A.D. Tnat both In the "tronomy were known to be at their zenith even

1 ^'Mi|M

*"**
li

K|a>i*Uef

History

and astro gr B.C. dldn 't bother the Arabs. Astronomy


pulled out

The

cloae similarity or

Or** even Identity between Indian and

"* Wore,

from

their dark origin,

-^

astronomy *

tMofr*

t^^ hu

scno so baffled

^"brand-new Muslim sciences. When everyonean * of the eW** * ** could be converted Islam at the point
to

^
*

^''
I20fi

1OT

could poor, pure Muslim sword how


Since thai

knotted* be

left

taken as a

self-evident truth'
fro

search hectic scurry to

ul for

80mp Wugh Begh


Mogul horem

^ _
Ru

ff0od.

r* l

ond nob1
?.

80t a3Cribed to

ei*i
f

ch ri8Ute.

*M

Mohamed

Shah Rangila from the

in Delhi

**

$ **
World

***** fQied
history
is

in

**

the

nBmw

c-o*^r.

thai 'story'

hero-

Sawai Jaisingh n. ruler of Jaipur,

'^ An <Kcasional Hindu. Kafir underlie* was also thrown

^"n*

thus like a palimpsest where eh new


its

r^

iJ[l*J*

story for good

Of the hukka-puffing

measure to serve as a novice, factotum 'Grand Mogul Mohamed Shah.


'

n J?

^
jU

erases er

out the claims of

predecessors and overwnt*,

0*nfenorant
of that

law of history, the past few generations of

Muslim Arabia must rank as the most barbarous, juju community in world history but for the receding traces it
of
its

-H
riiims

scholars,

ca,^

Lilian and

including the Hindus themselves, tutored in the Arab dream -schools of world studies echo the

alien

earlier

Vedic culture.

taught to them.

Just when that lesson of


astrology
euit.

Muslim expertise

in

astronomy

was being drummed about there was a

Vicarloui

European Credit

to

Greece

violent coup d'


of world

The Mogul was toppled and the Muslim dream-school

feeble

grouse and growl of the woir on prowl accusing the like the that either she or her father must lamb of Aesop's Fables

studies got

summarily dismissed, dispersed and dissolved.

lave abused
ihey

him the European powera claimed

that even though


all

European Cljirm

themselves

were too young yet the

legacy of

knowledge

mil culture

hod

come

to

them not from

the East but from their

Then came a

number

of Western

power* such as

the

British.

own European

Greek God-fathers.

French. Dutch, Portuguese

and the Ameiicans. They were Christiana


It

and were

now

in

the ascendant.

was

their turn

now

to run
and

They reinforced that claim


even identity of

by

pointing to the close similarity

me dream -school
the
their

of ancient world studies with their clergy

replacing

oW Muslim mullahs. Their world -sway though veiy


own
histories

recent and

branches

nomenclature and terminology in numerous history of knowledge between India and Greece. Thus in
often mistaken for the son and vice versa-

though untraceable beyond a thousand yea*

the father is

they too started telling


*pire the ringing claim

fiom every pulpit and


that starting with

tolling
it

from
is

every

Consequently

while

the

ruling

European

group

and

its

Darwin

they who

amp- followers confidently asserted that the Hindusleamed astrology


from the

pulled out

mankind from the

monkey -status and


This
illustrates

scholar* it is their

who

Greeks a powerless group of independent,

original thinkers

for the first

time put humanity on the high road


all

to great

tomed
In
ll

achievement,

spheres.

how

claims

md *

that India

was the master while Greece was


it Is

the pupil.

"nter-doimi continue to be
another. One

made in history
world crown

as

one power dethrone,


robbed

such a situation

to arrive the job of an historian


r

who

loses the

is

automatically

" d>im'

* * knowledge.
U

And the
does
it

farther that claim

*&

fa point of time the less credible

sound.

fh Chnatian.

/?**!* *
fa

* Wl

taCM * of

lhe

pendancy
lw0

world .ffair, durinB lhe !8St

<orrt conclusion. Solving such problems or history calls distinct from universal or even cosmic calibre and elevation, quite * ** of humdru associated with the teachers and writers *ory.

of EuroP""

eve^hlnV

I3W

UBft

TV Or** of

AilrtHHWV

""

Astrolow

*he rfi in

*, instance of

anwethe

right solution
cited

such (ncisive. decisive analytical , even through a tantalizing

<ly-day***

BhBBflWad Geet* for embody U, n. Therefore if one of them to the borrow*


ring in

^2.
***Z

^v.
dTnng

may be

from his^ry

Itself.

Nana

Pha^*

Horology

borrowed astrology from the Hindu, though may have acquired . Greek
title

of the Chief Minister the tort

'** Peshwns (the Martha ruling po Wer Q^er of the 18th century) w

"*

is that the proof of this

'HonbhrtJ^," *;

T^ ^ **
1

ZJ*

to

BU per intellect

which defied every problem. Hi,

contempt*

^'eot to astrology) socommordyusedlnrndtotodeacrTUemhwrrt known to be used anywhere In modem Rogers is not Grce
polemics apart what jLver. such
That

iherefore.

revelled in confronting

him with

needs to be

really

challenging

p^.

understood

w be regaled by
He
ai sent

his investigative solutions. identical size

One such was iheNh^

two mares of

and shape for identified

liure

too like the rest of the world practised ancient Greece Vedic been alienated from it because but has long since it km

punle.

For Nana that was a mere primary.^ mother and offspring. the midstream of a river. He had the pair driven to Them.

|Lh with Hinduism


Vedic culture J .w.t
Terminology

and Sanskrit. Yet Greece


which
is

retains

enough

traces

found in profusion

in India.

confused by the strong current one tnimn] toft being scared and instinctively followed. The front on#wu the lead while the other as the mother, and the follower as the offspring.

Entirely Sanskrit.
it

Incidentally

may

also

be noted further

that

the entire

marked

terminology of astrology

which Europeans use

is entirely Sanskrit.

likewise

when both

India and Greece

seem

to be using

IdenUctl

\#

us begin

astronomical terminology and scholars are baffled as to

who

laugh
while

needs to
the

be

left

from the word 'astrology' itself. The prefix 'as' out as a redundant Arab mannerism. For instance,
to greet others to not

whom and
to Toid

the

European

tries to pull

the credit to Greece


it is

Arab

way

mere

'

salam walekum

'

but

the pro-Hindu

group claims that credit for India


answer.
in

for historian

u-salam walekum

\ The remainder
'

'tra-logy' are the Sanskrit


Sanskrit

logical

words 'Tar-laga' (Hff-c*l) i.e.

connected with stars '.The


in India,
is

Astrology

and Astronomy Rooted

the Vcdus

term 'jyotish'
the

commonly used

an exact synonym of
In European

term 'Tar-laga' alias 'astrology' which survives

In the historical
userul.

One

ii

that

prow analysis of the above problem two dues astronomy the sciences of astrology and

parlance.

w
w

rooted in the Vedas.

The Vedas are the proud

possession

of

Ills

Hindus

In India,
if

Therefore

which
it

is

akin to that of India,

from the start in an unbroken hoary terminoW Greece uses astrological and astronomical l**"* that the Greeks
it is

lnjdlU *^

Suryas Sun is an abbreviation of the Sanskrit term dropped out. Th Suryan. There the letters 'rya' have got And "*m 'Moon' (s the Sanskrit word (w) 'Mun' I. e. mind.

The term

In

astrology the

moon does

indeed signify the mind


'

obvious

from India.

Mars

is

the Sanskrit

to*
Relation -ilh the

'

because in

'word 'Mar-fen ' (** armies Vedic tradition Mars leads the

th* of

'

****

Karma Theory
are rooted
In

10 bittto.

In astrological reading

Mars sign"* of horoscopes too

Secondly,

all

astrological results
'a

the

T**

to

o aay

a person

***

bad or good.

woe and weal is Thai Karma theory

the

V ^ result o
Karm *
autno-

^Putos, hot words, firearms and wars.

^
11
,,

Itself is e

fadkm Hindu, Vedic

ori g in

and haa been elaborately

*f

M en*ry if read without Its* last * r * would be Mercuy ' JJj* * Sanskrit word 'MaharsW (<) meaning 'a *"*J*V
'

** h

Wtrologfcal connotation

Mercury doe*

for indeed stand

1210

mi
learning. Kbolirahip and

Jupiter Is

Sanskrit term

'

Devas pit*.

and thence to 'Jupiter'. Tt signifies ll|e to toifPSttr Jupiter alias Brihaspati is the In Vedic lore the Gods. since the father is the first teacher of the Gods. But of Devas-pitar alias Jupiter is meaningful.
. '

^^
f

rf^ answers W set


^Bnt

quesuons.

pj* 0f J?**
r

"

^ rtfc E^pe.
in

by

* ven

50C ely
'

'

8
it

ln public

is

n<* fnnmed
In

therefore there

isn 't obscene.

But

1*0.

it

ibe

name

Venus

is

merely a

Roman

^inly"
spelling of the Sanskrit 1

obscene.

nameV*

This

intruding 'r' would read Saturn spelled without the 'Saiun* the European term ' Satan and will reveal the origin of
'

Muslim

term

ShaJtan

fraudulence in
is

because Saturn does indeed connote, falsehood and the astrological study of horoscopes. Satun alias Sat*,
'

be sc, ened in bldia? ,f their 'obscenity (, and exhibition in India why should not Indian jtartd exposure allowed the same liberty ? In 5UCh situation tfe-malters be
'

such acts cut across national and social boundary at when is hard put to decide. For Instance, should ucrat concerned hurel

^nvwood

mvies

the Sanskrit term 'Sat-na


in India for

(n=F)' i.e.

untruth. The term

Shani

commonly used
However

Saturn stresses

its lethargic movement.

from lher reslriclions Bvernjn8 Import) should taniBng (*$*** those alien films would be allowed entry whkh meet lh|t oniy Jj of morality. Naturally then Indian movie -producers
Hindu standards

in astrological

study everywhei e. Saturn does indeed stand

won't suffer
But let

from any sense of discrimination.


a liule

for fraud and underhand dealings also.

us consider the question of 'obscenity*


all

more

The two
in

orbital bisectional

points

known

as Rahu and

Ketu

deeply so

as to evolve a criterion applicable to

humro

society

Vedic astrology ore called the


'

Nodes of the Moon

in the West word

anywhere.
Obscenity Arises

That term
'

Node'
i.e.

is

also a

malpronuncialion of the Sanskrit

From
is

Physical Indulgence
question of
for one's

Naad

'

f^j

resonance alias echo of the


the hoi-oscope.

Moon. And

thai indeed

is

their exact role, in


It

For this

it

obscenity arises

necessary to understand that the mostly in an act of physical Indulgence

may thus be seen


in

is

nothing

the

(here that even in the field or astrology and world anywhere which is non-Vedic

non-Sanskrit. In judging
has to consider their age.

who came
Thus
if

first

among two

similars

ow

defecation, khuni own satisfaction e.g. eating, sleeping or bathing, murdering somebt and sexual intercourse, or even torturing or
In

each

an

similaniy eight -year -old bears o

one of those cases the act

is

pleasure for the personal

to an BO-year-oH the latter is obviously the predecessor.


is

Su

of one

or

two

individuals. (in case of sexual intercourse)

India.

Thus, for instance,

when and where

persons are a number of


is

w*ing
The Uw of Obscenity
con Historians as nation -builders must be able to provide the solution to every national is or social problem. One such often of obscenity. Bureaucrats the Judicial?

eating or sleeping. Tor one person to aUrt 'decent- |. e . obscene. But at a party or commumty

n,,

**My

is

^^Lptf

eating that

is

not obscene. That

is

and

officials
'

of

of giving i fool-proof definition of


is

obscenity

'

for instanCl,

J^
jurW

because

logical

faculties

are allowed

** to remain

"mi time are usually common and since all t**n * "* they don enjoy eating 'l mind eating they all Ptnoti to ,^ Ime wnere everybody Is no obteenw ' limitary where all are reclining there is

^J**" <**W

^J
p,

^* V**"

ttu
sexual Intercourse, the urge to faBui defecation, common timings- Tney are physical indulgence,

mi
jj
$ ** *Z*
iii*^

convenience and physical readiness. GonJs} J admit of simultaneous, community ihey do not perto^J^
Individual rooodi.

depJlL^

^^rJerta**

occasions and recepUons aa they eat together to The reason why mas, W rtb anniversaries. copuUtlon i** 1 there ' no Phv*cal and i Psychological psychological
1

indulrence.

*
arrive at is that acts of physic] timeless individual variable,

j> ,Bl0ni

the participants.
'

Therefore the law

we

Vedk ^rn Confounds

Tradition

induw,

which

depend

on

moods,^***

convenience and physical abilities, are considered obscene by otT^ when indulged inpublicl.e. in front of people who are mere loot*, .^ and are not active participanta and therefore do not apprecUl*
In such cases the act

speaks of divine Incarnations first ts culture "italic rippling water), then as fish, tortise. boar posited on |U 3 ancestors too were rooted In the worldwide qncTDarwi"' that progression rooted in his psychological heredity
tradition ^ ^understood and

n^

misinterpreted by Darwin to propagate


life etc.

that

stench. Seeing others

becomes more detestable if it kissing becomes obscene for a mere


because that doesn
't

1*4,

te

* solved
Sg

life

from the proto-plasm to marine


is

What

looker-on

if at all. iradiUon implies

not that one species evolved


divinity

but he doesn

'l

detest

it

cause him any sunch,


or

the other

but

that

each species was created by


first the

But

in

matters like defecation, sexual intercourse, torture


act is

L
m<
Bo-

dently in the

stated order i.e.

proto plasm, then

murder the
he
is

not only obscene for the


ft

mere looker-on

(because
it

then pu^ne animals,

amphibious beings and ultimately the human

not a participant) but

is

also detestable because

iho

exposes him to stench.


This elucidation should enable
to rule that kissing in public Is

hlnm Leads to Degradation

even European or American society


is

Tne average

Hindu bureaucrat,
present time
is

politician,

academician, and

obscene because kissing

physical

tonagogue of the

certainly as greedy, dishonest,


of other

indulgence in which lookers-on cannot simultaneously participate.

Mfldenl, Indisciplined, corrupt

and self-centred as men

Another inhibiting factor

Is

the disparity in

indulgence.

In

ma,
Bui what

community -eating for instance, eveiybody shores a common


T^ere loo obscenity
for different people.

repast.

accounts for his abyssmal

fall

from the

divine Vedic
helpful

may
But

creep-

in

if

the fare served

is

different

W|hu of

allruistic

abstemious, disciplined, dutiful and

way

all

those sharing a

common menue would

ofVedic lire?

The moment the menu discriminates between one person and another they Thtf wouldn't enjoy dining together. > why at work-centres dinirtf people bringing their own food and
together usually ahare each other's dishes.

enjoy eating together.

^
* lh

answer

is

*** Judge

in

found in a letter addressed by J.DDacca by the erstwhile British East India Company.

Pallerson,

ThA

explains

why copulation is never marked -out


if

for community

kT m
I
,,'
"

President of
-

performance. Even there

we Imagine an

hypothetic*!

siW-U"

*****

the Police Commitee in Calcutta, havoc Ry ^al time Islam had completed its lOtf-year capita) Bnd il mav .<"- ff2 Dacca Is the *> noted that
Bangladesh,

dated 30th

. group of aduU men |denlicaJ (n shape . si. ; * and body-odour and grP also a similar indenlical 1 adult women they would certainly opt for community cop"*"*
I.

where there

cvmpW

aj^ "To C* ? ***** ^^


wrote

account of the give the Board a true

firsl * " is *** * lhe with the manners and morals of the people

pUc

^w -P^

'

ISU
1214
sort. th# lower

rf ti* Mw eviction of

to**

""^ beam* COnvnta to


Its
ll

tbfl

Mohamedm

^
w
in

As
p^i

ptoure of human degradation and deputy ^reflecting mind. I shall be as brief 1

eTpo^
Possible.

^m
**<

i bwflU9e ?rort.
.

being more rational than what few >h * ,t * rtd lhem from lhe
rise.

P**cuum
To*

LotC

V|rttftheVcdlc

Guild System

"-, de5po usm

but the mind experienced no had aurfered. their rulers still kept it down.

of

classed were classed learn and

dominion the ranks and profession, -Under the Hindu Into 36 castes, and the individuals of each
follow

tf

we~ JO*

H fovtrn* 55
r

" Un rttecwd. B'"80"*"18 ent. the

however and unsupported by

the authority of

oppr*

the

profession

of

his

ancestors.

fyT
tf

individual of a caste had the means establishment, each of ,JJ* These castes were under the direction his profession. of

f***
U

discipline. Their learning the gncfent


of

lnemselve9 alnWng under centuries

toQ

mucn

involved In the general wreck lo think


fell

Into neglect,

t^e
it

the Brahmins came


their

to' want

that Instruction

* d *"

*
1(1

which

was

duty

to afford to others. Missing


life,

Punchnyats. or General Assembly or the Pundits and the cm, the conduct of the member of their lociMy and used to examine was sometimes a total exclusion the consequence of their censure,
and the of the guilty individual from

^""Tsdfish

squabble of

common

they gradually

lost,

by

**

0W1

eyes of the Hindoos, that respect which xample, in the Lrv to give force and energy to Instruction".

community.

**No Brahmin was supported by the public who was unlearnti or who did not contribute his assistance Informing the mfndi d
the lower classes, and teach

them morality, and


form an

the duties

enjoined

Judge Patterson, therefore, Islam Is responsible isordlng to chaos, coiruption and moral breakdown. He has loUi sociBl Hindu (Vedic) system because he saw Inuud that with the able to assess the* side by side aid w
,

A, Hindu
Native

and Muslim

by laws. Under such an establishment for the instruction


lower classes,
it

of u

worth. have

was not

difficult to

efficient Police.

"But

the cruel reverse,

which
,

the invasion of the unprlndpM

and bigoted Musalmans introduced

may

account for the wide wmrt

with equal force to lands which Patterson 's remarks apply Muslim. History bears Seated Vedic culture and turned totally turns moment any individual, family or country sham that the

of corruption that has overflowed this country."

IMim
u

the rot sets in

mi into
Muslim Tyranny
and "They considered the conquered Hindus as infidel* w*J them with unrelenting persecution and cruelty. They thou*
every injury end insult upon them,
pointed

contact

fall

and they and all those degradation. from degradation to


wherever there
is

with

whom

tfcey

Bee*
there

out by Patterson,

Islam

and tapoUim. slavery, torture, bigotry, corruption


Sociologists

Immoral
*

were

acts pleasing

the prophet. Their destructive bigotry attached the books an au of the Hindus, and the Brahmins, pereecuted with incessant

<*Md to exercise their


In this

functions. The spirit of the the corruption of morals, end in process or time,
country,

despotism co^

from PfllWr and economists may take a cue unity how peace, good order, prosperity, **y prevailed In the world human brotherhood when P^N In hereditary guilds under Pundits and Panchayats.

*%!

to realize

hum

jj ^^

^
l,)

everything hinges

systemon the Vedic

Tb^^

was completely revolutionized.

In thia

.^
^vfi-

mt centuries,

under the Pathan Government, they * ""' ft>*ancient discipline lo fall from degftd* 110"

&' No. 2. Paperj RvlflUng to Bait India AIM* ** "


Undated
June 3, IB13

^^

1216

1217

*ociiy

back on the

rails historians,

bureaucrats

may put their heads

economist, together and

.-pipe ot.
j*"

.nU s^
f

out above the propeller, o.inch diameter Jute


'

regro'

guild Into the hereditary


selfless,

system with a supervisory

** ^ "*!?%

**

wler from

lW0 ' BW,rey ****

rait,voir

{M

jtrortf J*

learned Pundit priesthood.

, rfvff
'

3ian>

Wn8

It is

the present

'

get rich quick

In

rightly describes

a free-for-all that has plunged the world Into (whit p *** as) a selfish squabble with everybody

mania with no h

of

**,. *"
jffl

in

the Intricate. Ingeneou.jft* condition though dry having been wrecked by Muslim

^ ^^ ^ ^ ^

out of

t^

pipe and striking the blades

lumlngi

^m
1"
a

"^

mad scramble where everybod ray for his rights and shirks his duties. This way humanity JJi bring down the whole globe crashing down on Its hotd
cheat- rob

and

kill

others

In

*MXt ***
^au
**
that it

*"

*urvives
It

rrW

humanity to shreds in evei^ sphere.


Grain Grinding

^ T^
.MM
m
rotating at

string because engineering^

^ ^ ^^
speeo

f dean. provides noiseless, inexpensive,


mKhJncry
Moreover no maintenance.
feeflt

"

SPKlmen

tha

Jnuras
a
slo_

practically

Water Power
is

precious out the


proliferating industrial funo
feri&nn.

nutnUonaJ conu
U

^ ^ ^^ ^ * m
ao

Modern

society

menaced by

^^tthe C^ ThTvisitor by
indicated

the fact

pesticide-poisoning, malnutrition arising from chemical


etc.

At such a juncture a specimen or ancient Hindu engtaei* dangers and providing


clean, daiwu;

|Uached shrine sepulchre. . Muslim


, (lour

carefully skirling all those

mDI could be

power for a flour mill

is a

marvel to see.

wpiM Hlndudom
forfto histoiy

That rare specimen of ancient Hindu engineering mtybesw


at the historic site

has been yoxea

^ V^ * ^^ ^ u ^J"*^ * w
du MmpIe omouflaged
a.

that tb. fans to detect

^ ^^
ultt.

SU

J*
'
it

'

***' "

"*

Installed.

', TO.

how a lustration of

rails

to

known

as Paan-Chakki alias water-mill


in the State of Maharashtra

in Ik

.*,**.*
(o

"^""""^'^^^
n may b. "01

city of Kataki alias

Aurangabad

In Infci

The
an

entire premises in the good, holy

Hindu

past, used to compn"

Tto captured temple


tu

artifical waterfall,

a lush garden and a Shiv temple. Everi"


It

outer walls side. Bui H.


attitude

J*

hBV

hl* ^loprf **
cap""

Muslims invaded the place


cemetery.

has as usual been reduced

to i

Mb*

ma. HU.

' dumb, helpless hem* complex t*i"S .boulthalMusUm sepulchral th.i Muslim

' &*.*****
'
lsu *d.

il"*5 In fact that city needs to be classed as a tourist


lao for its ancient Shiva

Temple which

is

-' a smaller P r

the famous Taj Mahal alias Tejo Mahalaya in Agra. Shiv. Temple Is currently being misi-eprwented Bibi-ka-Makabara, I.e. the (Islamic) wife's sepulchra.

^^^ 1 "^
ai

Umpleprem.se,.
Protrntonul

HWortWI

Behave

. LIW fc

a*- I*"
ng ,

For the last 30 year, II.eraHyhur.dredsofnewlasuessuchthough scribed to Muslim


property.

my

1>* ftour-mill mentioned above consists of two huge


*onta placed

P^
|ir
.

***

^l^dfl*-*"^ '^ ^^ -

^^ ^ ^

,.

one over the other.

A vertical

MS Iron shaft P *V

JWrcwtralhole.Belcmlhelevelofthegrindingstor^.P^ pi"** '" ** are alUched a circular


to the shaft in

Yet

not

even

irchBeologlsu. curators

jasizz^
-

rm
taken up those issue* for a decisive discussion it meeting* Ihough they never Tall to demand

1219

j^
m* l, U*
*"**

perks at those meetings, Imitating factory labour. This the malaise and mnlnfides of the present academic

wage ntta*^**!

i *** Workers
-..jtoaT*"

jnlst Commu

dogma

too has the

same basic faulty postulate.

*
'

worM

*,,

-h)et*W

Shame Paraded

&
U
hi 01 *'
.,

^
*'

at Pride

Ler and

of the world unite", for instance Is the moat everybody from the diminutive \ to lWs wor ld and the mere labourer to a foreman. t entre P reneur is a worker When everybody

woriWr

Instance* ere not locking of all-round Ignorance of mistaking a matter of shame to be a badge of honour. The of !ndIa,Pakislan and Bangladesh often boast or having
for

eb*n

ed

"
i

all

m"
l2

uiAin|f

ruledT^
ihlrking

usefui. But as of work total stoppage

'workers unite against shirkers' It wiU be both matters stand el least in India trade
if

the management punishes

over 500 years. That claim

is

often inadvertently

conced

workers.

the non-Muslims without realizing

who

ruled

whom. The n
i

crore Muslims of these three countries are the abject desctnd of hapless Hindu victims of alien aggression who were puDfd mm of their homes screaming and forced to turn Muslim through lb most excruciating torture, while those who ruled India were

entire gamut of political ideologies be seen that the Itmsy thus the Communist chooses and uses to t Capitalist
:

"^^sanctimonious, mouthful
their

the

slogans without anybody

Zoning

logic

aliens

from Afghanistan

to Iran,

Arabia and Turkey.


valid Indian Christians could tin

Had the Muslim claim been

claim to have ruled India for 200 years because the British. French

and Portuguese who ruled India were Christians.

historian to test the validity of those n ii left to the true such as that of Thomas Jefferson cast a magic mims yet names The Declaration of American Ll on an average historian. overawes him. Consequently he stifles the carping dependence conscience with the admoition that such high quarters
nilic in

his

own

The lesson
Christians
to

to be learned

from

this Is that both the convert


stigmi

cmnot do
ind

abdicate any wrong. That thought makes most persons

and Muslims must regard their conversion as a


it

surrender their rational faculties.


Individuals

be cast off instead of parading

as a regal insignia, Muilim


th*

converts of the Indian subcontinent are mistaken in regarding

Arab shoe which kicked their ahins to be a royal on their head

lamlne the validity of every issue


from

who have the strength of character to critically and every statement no mntter
it

insignia tucked

which quarter

emanates, can alone qualify as


In

historians.

hi wch persons are one

a mDlion.

The

Self Evident Untruth


As between the Capitalist

and Communist slogans

cited

above

Thomas
evident truth
If

Jefferson

entrusted
in

with

drafting

the

American

Declaration of Independence
'

1776 A.D. Inscribed

In ll

'*

Vdic culture

that

'

all

men

are created equal.


It

courage alone has the sagacity, poise, honesty and * "cognize that all individuals are created unequal. Therefore Vedic Jvtum lays down that every person confine himseir to his hereditary

one comes to think of

that claim

(s. in fact,

a aelf-evid|

and not Intrude into or


Divinity

hanker

after

anybody else's

role.

untruth because on looking around one finds that no two


are equal In any respect.
In his cooler

pw*^

a^fllng

Thomas Jefferson
later confessed

chaliwi^ himself when

momenta

that

men

are all c

10

"*

divinity

^J* Wcific

unequal.

brand

Is all one yet human factions keep names and shapes of divinity.

warring

U"l w

'

1221

1220

Hnoot them
(be greatest

champions of ADah and Joeua massacres and patronixed slavery.


the

^ ^^
u

Vedic

Wpttf

****
l

n*i

different

rcognlring that there Contrwfly Vedic culture could ba concepts of divinity as there are individual.,
all.

^
^
Jj

U ,19

\mosten

over all other faith, is culture scores that a u^ha B pi U9 ' deV0Ut ' dC8n bs,*mlou". ltnuc, > le8d God-fearing, unassuming life ulUou9
' '

of dadlcatad

^'ervlce and

good-neighbourllnesa.

all

day.

allowing

tccom^
**

them

^d ^
"^^Z
rf

his to choose

own brand

+&

of divinity and

form of wonhlp.

certain Yet, even there

divinity instead n pet brand of


tolerance, respect
to terror lo

groups tend to be adamant about tw of imbibing the spirit


of

and accommodation.

and torture as

Of course they don t 'wort Muslims do. They keep their reservi^

v2

^tegBraVunokumories. AryasamaiUU.Vlshwa Hindu Parishad


hold occasional conferences and draw a aw. could
t**

w to

but Incumbent upon sects and not only possible cults It fa retain their own brand of Vedic bellefi and culture to propagate and revive universal Vedic culture. For this

taint

themseJwes.

numbers pUnofictlon.
for

ISKCON and Brahma Kumari3 are two such groups. Both devout followers of Vedic culture. Both hove a worldwide following
t

new entrant he

may

choose from a wide assortment

and network of theological centres. They could unite Into a slro^ force to revive Vedic culture throughout the world.

In the manner in which a Vedic theological beliefs f lays out all his wares before a new entrant '"maker or a jeweller what the "entrant' wanta. SJLjar) and allows the latter to buy

When

discussed

that

suggestion

with

some

ISKCON
of

Kumari organization's A, for the Brahma


Ihjl lac

specific assertion

representatives they ruled out

any cooperation on the ground

the Shiva delivered


claim) there could

Bhagawad GeeU

(if

they do indeed make

fundamental doctrinal differences.

As an instance, they cited a

Brahma Kumari

On
tenet that the
of

according could be that

be two or more grounds for their claim. to them Shiva is but another name

Bhagawad Geete was delivered by Lard Shiva.

Shiva I.e. Lord Krishna because divinity. of a single, indivisible

to

one of the

attributes

"How
ask,

can such an absurd claim be occepted ? the

"

They

angrily

name Bhagawad Geeta?"


I

"when

of Lord Krishna is writ large acrow

the

hlmseir (in the

may

cite yet

another instance where Vedic groups

differ.

It

be the statement or Lord The other explanation could bid Impart* Bhagawad Geeta) that the knowledge he earlier by other been delivered umpteen times lo Arjun had as a ^aniresutionof mmifesutions of divinity. Therefore. Shiva
divinity

Krishna

it

widely held

by a very wide section of VedfsU that an

individual

could also

have had an occasion

to deliver the

Bhagawad

aoul could gradually elevate Itself

through meritorious

action to

Gui discourse earlier.

ultimately

merge with

divinity.

However, staunch ISKCONites as"*

that this could

never be possible because an individual soul alwy

taa^cmihwbnopc^
Ming
Uw
Both
walls in Vedic culture.

Such matters should


for himself
if

m
d

n a devout servant or divinity.

individual to

ponder over and decide

be

culture allow* precisely

such doctrinal

differences toW

**U the dictum

(<**

fan
it

*$* ***>

Brahma Kumaris and ISKCON must


Krishna represent a

'IHy

all

one though people term

differently.

common ^QfVansnasiisknovmMVishwa^^
Vl'hnu or

divinity.

^" ^j*^ why


That
is

differences are not at all the

W"ch n*' essence of Vedic

*" Krishna

of Jagannath Puri

Is

also

known as

J**

1223

12H

mnin*
on I pKwt
the

l**

<* the Universe").

So where

ii

ihe

dinw^

doctrinal differences Vedic While welcoming such cullur, **& Vedic rw,Une ll '* that P10"" TOWIne
'

common denominator
of Vedic culture

for

1SKCON. Brahma Kumaris

w^ ^
*

j*?'

lltf

that

Europeans and West Asians ought to context cur* they have been such total vlctlma of
-t

aggrewio,,

"^

iW^'^jjn
**1
lh

left

among them even one soul who would


total cultural

complain

wcUon*

their ! nn them sbout

massacre by ChriaUanlty

Asia Subjugation of Europe und West

^UUm respectivelyM.n.^nt
A
days
(if

Studies
these

Though the rampage, ravage and dominance in India of barbarou Muslim invaders from the West for over MO long yean was cmtSHk
a it

and academies around the world mber of universities


conduct

rueful episode

viewed in other historical perspective, throws some new glints demanding attention and close study.

by

itself

yet

If

management courses. What


it)
is

generally tbey achieve

achieve d when they


'

turning out graduates


In

who

rise

Spain too

was overcome by MusUm invaders

for

the Spanish people displayed great courage, patriotism


In

700 yea n but and sagacity


leaden

silions of 05 10 big P

power and affluence

commerce, industry and

business

exterminating the Muslims.


in

Compared to them Hindu


's

-.

,trut

yardstick of success is generally that they bouses. The the morning with one hand thrust In a about late
1

proved very stupid


offered

not grabbing even the non- violent opportunity


insistence on
partitioning India

JrtMUig
[h

gown pocket and another holding


rubbing
their

smoking pipe

at the

about at cocktail parties indulging In or lounge


shoulders
'

humdrum

by Mohamadall Jinnah
child.

fort Muslim homeland, to get

rid of

every single Muslim

^puJlt,
man.

with

'celebrities'

mighty pleased

woman and

inwardly" with
It

paying

'

careers.

earlier has been point** out

how

historians belong to different

Christlun and Muslim Dccimution

But take another instance. See swept clean of


its earlier

how the whole

of Europe was

teachers or researchers of a local historic categories such as mere concern themselves with wider areas of research lite or those who
luch as the

culture by Christianity, and

how

history of a town, district, province, country or the

a large

chunk

of the globe

from Afghanistan to Algeria was gobbled up

whoW of humanity.
likewise

by Islam
in

like a cannibal.
is

The decimation of the erstwhile

culture
left

managers too are of similar corresponding

categories.

those lands

so thorough that there is not even one soul

Soma could be merely egocentric, bent on enhancing their


personal interest
1 luccess

own

to lament

or complain of loss of their ancient culture.


all

All Christiana

of Europe and

Muslims

or

West Asia and

Africa talk and behave

or the

make by hook or crook; others would like to concern or concerns they heed; some others would
on improving the
lot of

as though they were Christians and Muslims respectively from the

Hki to concentrate

district,

province,

beginning of time. Thereby they have lost even their soul and
i

Identity

nJon or of

all

humanity.

and briini and memory, In contrast Hinduism maintains a strong


Identity despite in unprecedented

thousand-year-long warof attrition

M""

lfca

Supcr-Manugcr

with lalam. which

Is

certainly very creditable.

Hindu

success should

The Great

Manu, the law-giver was


'

manager of

that supreme

appear all the more remarkable because Hinduism has been perpetually handlcappad by a soft, weak leadership which has been Invariably leadership indulge* to the Muslim enemy. that such

^ty who planned the management of all humanity by prescribing w of duly for each person. If everybody does bit duty then
' 1

The

result

was

baa been as

much

a liability to

HIndudom as overt

traitors.

* *ghi, one of others are automatically rettod. But where each strifes <ly on his righto that only results In fights, *J* trtit *Me duties get neglected; consequently rights too remain

"

1225

oiou,

Such

is

t*

a*"*

lra*d>' of the

"^mi

|i

gs

an Impossible theoretical Utopia.

comrn,-*.,

*a lPs*vely estranged
According
for instance,

from Vedic

prindpiT^
Mano*^ purpoW
or her

t*
^.flO*
fl

Experiment

human

VedJc public management expounded in life should be a contented, peaceful.


fulfil

a decades ago
in

group of Englishmen
South Kensington
at 91

In
.

London ** up

everybody should endeavour where and


voluntarily.

his

duties cheerfully

The discipline and regulated

^
'

*jof Economics
'

Qua*

rou Uftl

of Vedic

life

machine where

society like a smooth, ensures the working of wen-oil^ every component performs its functions autom.^

Unlike pan of a common whole.


rich quick'
is

that of

modern

society

group they were not content with merely theory but wanted to probe basic human modern economic and spending money. That led them to earning a *jJ*J-, [n But they found that to be only a halfway philosophy.
conscientious

"tf Greek
.

not the Vedic motto. It is just the opposite, ntmdy That is the Vedic ideal placed befo* renunciation and service. cheerfully performing one's own duty uj everybody. Thus while ability under the Vedic dispensation no individual
the best of one's,

, they

iShl ultimate
^d

proceeded to study Vedic philosophy. There they answers. Eversince they felt the need to re-educate

to mould ila m ivaUons the primary 9laKe so MAtdtt from Consequently they set up two schools
beginning. the
Hs
fdffytog

demanded as

a matter of right a

commensurate commercial

return.

the other lor ooys separately as per vedic practice


practice in

from others performing their own The return accrued automatically duties. Since the profit and affluence motive was ruW
prescribed

co-educational the current

modem

Britain)

y the conviction that

the

life -pattern,

motivations and emotions

out there

was no question of any

artisan or Kshatriya or Brahmin

jjpuid women
i

are totally different. In their schools Sanskrit


nnri rhi-v LPiK'h only Vedic (innrvc and they teach onlv Vfldic dances

wanting

to leave his guild

to join another.
full

The

life In

every

guild

for compulsory tnr

nil all

ilictlnri as distinct

provided for an enjoyable routine

of mirth, cheer and bonhoml*.

fntn the

mundane, amorous or erotic variety.


seemed at
first

There wasn That

'l

duD moment.

Whil

to

be a

queer,

quixotic drift from


to

ideal

may seem

to be a far-cry from the

of a scramble for power, position and riches.


results in progressive

modem mouVition Yet the modem system

(onUjmporary British practice,


i

has

now come

be recognised as
life.

rtluble pointer to a

way back
it

to the Vedic pattern of

That

boredom, murder, massacre, disruption and no substitute chaos. For better management of human affairs there is cheerfully for the Vedic system, where, for instance. Lhe mother

prop has since set


of

up another pair of boys and


sbouldn
't

girls schools because

growing

demand. And

be a matter of
in Britain.

surprise

if

Arid

lead to

a chain of such schools

on an day aO her life without ever making any demands demanding! and without ever threatening to go on a strike or memberi wage-hike. Even menial servants become lifelong devoted not at m of a Vedic household because acquisition of wealth is
toils

anybody

!* ftbova is a valuable illustration

of

how

all is

not

lost.

We

^to'i dispair that

we have

strayed too far away from Manu


In Britain ia

*
^

"We to steer back.

The four schools

have shown

"V

and Indicated that

the motto in the Vedic

Manu

"s

system

the best. Schools


3lutJeolJ

way

of life.

The regulation of ancient Vedic life in India was so P* that Manu held it out as an ideal for the world to emulateSnoe. that
all

hS?** "" over the worid snouId P toce twfor* theIr of no1 mere
t,

J?

commercial and business management but


ta

***

0VMlU hui71Bn man8 m ent 8

Manu

Md "*

Vedk

Ideal
It

is

there for ut

all

know

thai

was once universally

^SB* to see and study followed one need

*"

ft

would be advisable for them not only to maka t*

f
nlldefll9
<

1227
rich quick by hook or crook, lazying, g et eosure-orienUtion Including pre-mariul aex
'

Sanskrit the

Sanskrit compulsory but rtudy of Manusmriti and medium of instruction.

evm

to

^Wrf*8
***'
*,

fU

rrt

DI
''

a the

^t^^^'ewy
|

sociBl l8bour ore

growing arrogance and aggressiveness wWch need to * *

m me

Sunkkrll Modern Munigcmcol TcrmlnoloRV U

that

compulsiv. [f t tl That suggestion will be found to be in use even today Is all of Sw,^ the management terminology
That
the
will

origin.
Is

become more

Intelligible

and meaningful

If

Sta^n
subjict.

molneni * n9 emP^3 against the current j nvK n,,a noods to be restored as _. . hoUSh , , , wnOUS slavery. 5-star-hotel luxury or ioT n jn hflrcm
iUl"

tf
.

omen

W*

'

^'

made

medium

of instruction

or

at least

auricular

of the

Management <R-3-*D is a Sanskrit (Manaje-menl) compo^ ' total thinking is devoted to (the runnin, implying a person whose The term manager' i, concern entrusted to him).
'

of the
-

same
*

genre.

The word 'inspire'

is

Sanskrit

(wr^
Imparl.

intesphuran

enables

us

to
i.

meaning the urge which springs from within. Tha. unravel the word 'institution' as (Mn$WB|
e.

to n..h Tsed . nu^h toilets; enc nvers ***" Zy rffluents turning all rivers into enormous ^"^r^fluents ^induiintl some of the <** polluting the air. ore fumes luting
tbc
atiti
i

rtnW *"nW0

of natural

resources such as enormous


of the release of that sullage
gutters;
civic Qls

* "^
'
5

intisdhyan

an organization inside which

tuition is

Enterprise

is

the Sanskrit term

i^-^i

'

enterpreraj

|,

,.

**

which

term (**?!*>

an inner urge. Consequently launched or prompted by a garbled spelling of the Snskft entrepreneur may be seen to be who has an Inne 'enterpreriinar' i. e. a person
is
'

SSi
,

-heritage-trained to oe cureu uy .cum-hcms.-....^. wiU have is the quickest, cleanest absorbed dry in earth ttLofl *MT, 'J? mnde of it* disP0581 aPP3 1 in the expression TW hole. Besides, that 'toilet-welT

"**

Mrh
as

wva

meaning valuable manure.

practice rtt mediaeval

venture). prompting (to launch a commercial

afcoauheadloads.

unknown

cans of of compelling slaves to carry to Vedic culture, originated from


in

' MunusmrlU u World Munugcmcnt

to marauders
Um
countries,
>

encamping

hordes on predatory missions in

1 thisshouid convince scholars of management and Manusmnti integral parts of

thenecessitytomake^sVKt stud.es. Ir so **

ftwrtol Interpretation

W me

maligning
in

and

demeaning

notions

Impregnated

some

sections of the scholastic

^ ~J; world -**


ImpW
U.
_

fibiory is

not always a

etched.

Manu's classification of been explained as 'paap-yoni' people has already


treatment. At

^^J*^
ail

I'oirtw proper interpretation in

matter of straight record. At times the context of the contemporary


preferred view, or inexperience

Wlon. In such

an Interpretation though vested interests try to


to their

W* U hippenings
*k
to i

own

mother

place also

Manu emphas,**

aperitl. loving protection

females and cushioning for

wrong conclusion yet there is a way to reach the central '*' fto different types of instances OJ*e riled hereunder.

Sock) Replannig

sod* also lead to A study of this volume should away from and reconstruction to wean the world

'

^^

my volume. titled
flal

WHO

SAYS AKBAR WAS GREAT

have

^ U^

he finding
,n

that
I

^ w

ln d'a.

Akber was as notorious as any other read a research paper based on the same

AH India History Congress session.

4nd synthetic culture and lead

it

nurture. Lo natural

1229

101

look
.

upon

all

that aa but an additional

volume mad, (J" the Muslim professor thought was a out to be? This aiaii.iawdB^ ffffif the opposite camp. it was from

wrd

urged Aurangwb lo adopt . concflUtory himself In hit letter t-d been done by Akbar eerl* the Hindus as

W,

on thit theme a Muslim professoBurin* 11* disunion lhe MahralU ***

nM * P<**

whm

bf

"*r ShlwiT!

l<)

vol*1

""P^hoW
*
rf

Vedic scriptures. This should illustrate

historical interpretation.

J*
.

Akbar bt Ihe nJer how could

villain thai

my

d H***
ut*

WarHdpt^"
^wrribes

bow

after the

end of the war and


tried

raw

"l*

^ntlr^*
c

unsuccessfully ^^sbna to the forest Arjunplunder at toe hands and


1

^ p^rica from
''

ravage
'

In which thai statement such cases the circumstances consideration. Shivaji s endeavour wto made have to be laken into coax and cajole Aurangwb into abandoning hit tyrannic] In to

^r^
T* **"
the

0fdeSl>e 8tJO8

warrior

who

only a short while ago played a

aomehow

arf"*

^e

at attaining such passing, objectives such ways. Statements aimed persuasion, do not necessarily contain abiding truths as

tf to

Kauravu should become ^nrbQaUng ihe mighty unable to save the citizenry from rreebooUrs

impromptu

distraught mother threatens a whlnint For Instance, when a would hand him be continues to fret and fume she
that
to
if

chfld
to

little fact this

detail is

one more proof of the authenticity

ovtr

outside, ihe policeman waiting

or to a passing hawker,
lo

flLfrral

Consider the case of a as a historical record.

her

assertions ought lo be recognized


for

be laudable

bluffs adopt*]

battlefield victories to his ^fltM-marshal having a string of breaks out in his home years later if mass-rioting

temporary convenience.

Sane

triad

the

Marshal is called upon,

on the basis of his past


totally ineffective.

Sanskrit Criminology

Wnxord
is

lo

subdue the rebels

he would be

Another instance

of a

large volume of

forensic literalum

& nord
-j

of war-victories
loyal,

would be of no

avail

because now he

European available in chaste RinsVrit verse. Indological scholars of the of Christian bent of mind lend lo interpret it bs a 'Science'
burglary and other crime.

oo trained,

motivated troops under him. The entire

r tee

armamental build-up is also lacking. Consequently even

Vedlc culture which insists


in thought,

There n needs to be remembered tbn on Ihe holiest of attitudes and behaviour


never

fatoniUmina, dedication and courage left in


"Anuria could

him how many

be tackle Individually ? The result would be that

word and deed, of every human being, would

niibtaitirewar-machine behind

him missing the most redoubtable

include

crime'

among
is

its

64 arts.

*frwa]d bt

i total failure.

The solution
for centuries

Sanikrii that since ihe world spoke nothing but

"** Christian
1
itoi*'
*

And Muslim Histories

even after the Mahabharat

and cheats too spoke nothing conducted *nv*i|aud those crimes and proceeded against criminals U a proceedings in Sanskrit. Vedic-system lawyers. lnffiudfc
"riten. novelists etc.

*7 war burglars. polk* rt but Sanskrit. The Vedic

munJe

MusUm
tolcaHy
11 **'

md Communist

factions and their underlings

prone to regard their

own

versions of world

But
the

Wr ""

all

made use

detai of those forensic

?]n
^

^tahwi

mb people
1

Proceeding! and writings. All that has


in

trickled

down

Hfe

mfly consider *" anaIo8y- A d would forget all his ante* .dents and y a incoherjiUy. Applying mav recall that a Christian Europe
1

JJ?

our own era

various

titbit

of en" compilations alias scrapbooks

^saliwto
'^vfcum

inconaisr *^'

orT! an Rom

d U,t0,y one
armies; a

Muslim West Asia

is

the cripple

1231 13*'

invmtoni while communism t<i a product of Arab of therefore. .11 the hislo-y that th tyranny. Naturally, OSo

.ummer

out

is

"

ihT*>
ehl

disjointed,

incoherent

and

^S
**e
i

window-dressing.

The Vcdk Mould

of

Kuropcan Culture
is

It it

misfit

The current Christian face of Europe on Europe ' primordial Vedic

only a

^^
^
B

culture.

The n ,^*

died hereunder should be regarded merely as pointers to exhaustive. direction of research and not as

in

breaking open the gales of Lanka.

Ramrod and 'ramming' commemorate the prowess Rampart also has

of

Rw

j^

origin.

the

name

The word 'Triumph' is a mnlpronuncialion of 'Tryanbil;' of lord Shiva whose images placed in chariots in todu
in victory parkin

Europe used to be followed by marching troops


lustily

shouting Tryambak,..

Tryambak.

In course of time iha

came

to be pronounced as
is

Triumph.
also

The word Terminus

a corruption of Tryambakesh

(it*

name

of Lord Shiva) because as per ancient Vedic custom 9*1*1


cities, districts,

temples used to be erected at the boundaries of


regions and

realms.

Therefore Tryambakesh (malpronounced u

Terminus)

signified

the end. boundary or limit.

Creek legends of gianU


in the

known

as Cyclops having a

big eye
tf>W

middle of the forehead originate from Lord Shiva's

eye misused by Christian zealots

W subtly denigrate Vedic cuHati.


commemorated
in

How

other Vedic deities are also

Europe*

parlance has been described earlier in different contextsln

England

Risborough. In that
Sanskrit equivalent
t.

township bears a peculiar hybrid name s M"" J by If the firat word Prince is substituUd
iU1

* Raj ' the whole name raffg Rajarshlpun V* township of the regal sainl) reveals itself in its origin*

glory.

"

<>OrWny
*"""*0<ll0

*******

Tnl

u!
l

kPPt l0Cked lHe ArCnae0,0 iCal SUFVey f '* y5ta rca5edow^ ania ssive, octagonal, seven-stori'Hl premiBes In Agra. This is one of the many del: %
''
'

m
prosing ihoi

ll.f

1233

Tttf

Mahal

Ii

Mn.lim msusoJeum.

A dead Humlai wouMn 't need

Te)o Mahalaya. a a,lvn '*mp,

mo i living Muslim
The above
royal edinces.

makes do wfih scanty water.


tall
r. -i
.\.
, .

"M M m,,Ch "* ta

%jj!

well Is enclosed In a

M ^^
*"'
could
^

The coohh

to treasury staff. Treasure- chests used to

tt*nn of the water provided *"1 nniural aj' h r c 0*dlueri be loj-pj . jp

itorey so that In cast of siege or surrender the

chu

"

"

iht rail for safe, secret custody.

^Uaa^
well-house ore
built

Thf apartments

In

the aeven-storied

primitive dry-lalrines too.

Hod Shahjnhan

that

eon edincT
1

*"*

have provided such toilets in several great building complea. All such detail are kept hidden
'i

Mumtai he vouUn

" ** nT" ftj h^.^

Wi h th. dom. of the

famous Taj
lu base.
all

^^'?Z
^
od ru"
vedic features
.

**
taN
Tejo

lo

Inbywork

girdling

""***

thai the

ShamanouVgrteratlon Mogul emperor. on grafted Koran Mahalaya Sttva wmple.


Mumtai.

and the trident pinnode are

cenotsph matde In the name of NvUag. An auch tempie-reaturea

*^^ ^****
TO "

(ln

^^ ^ ^ ^

^ilUcne*

^ y^i
us"*'-

^ ^

the

lulllibto

viattora

who

the doily throng

Muslim mausoleum.
1.

Tha dom.
*

not a Muslim

central shrine or Islam.

lt*W doatn

^ ^. B^*"^
t

ever been artabUsbcd

fatmn

W*

""

-omt

h*""*

1235

0M
ft. dome

P-Mohomed Vedic pa,.,

beo^

lt

^oJ^Ttbe

*nd divinity. bead or royally

a*

J^"
to them.

mosques and V,cb pinnacles on so-called


p*ve
that they are

**

**

wWl

Vf

row

of

fmou

chera ore

tellmiU

* - v, lc

captured Vedic btnldings.

^^

Scholars and

laymen

.omoketheir^o^^Uon
or ^Ides idl them
in

mor, instead of putt.n K blmd faith in*h a t m misleading government brochure, what put

alike

must, hereafter be a

little

^ ^
^*.*.T |**-*"- * # "
,

make a apecial study of the Taj Mahal may naj Those desiring to de-luxe edition of P. N. Oak", re** profu*ly illustrated a MQ-page. TEMPIJ. PALACE, price R, ,. - THE TAJ MAHAL IS A booK tftied

,,,,,

In

Agra (India).
in

are identical The two flanking buildings to the one in the foreground (being lneu* while the one in the background is

^^
^pM**

w^
u
[0
fl

m09quf

lymnwtrical adjunctHuffs. If
of

An

historian

must

<iev

_^

**** oa "

mW*

two buDdinga are

identical their
if

U*m

cannot be a mosque

th. ouner

^^^ 4 ^ ^^.^
It

y^

^ ^ ^^ ^
*,
was by Shahjahan.

deWct such

ConsequenUy both the

capture templ^.palace. Only after


the building at

^^^'^Lpriation and rnisap^

the misrepresent
Is

That .o-called mcaque


disproving
httU its

^^

role

may

m"*^*

^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^
was ladeed
a reception

tiny tower

al -jthtr ^/^-.toreyed wU (d^ribrd earUer)

^
ri

side of that

so-calW moaqw-

Th. tower un U
with a .org.

**'

rT ghtdoi

to th.

tuir--

^"^.oleum

-by

sbouk.

water to*. Had th. Ta] rNer It have had a

Mahal original

1237

13*
at lu
r.

mr and
i

seven-storied well at ihe front for

dd

Bvinjt

Muslim has no use for so

much

water.

M Umu

seven -storeyedBoii) those buildings ore

Con or should a

arm-iunycd?

***t|
of
It

TUn
floor to

are two cenotaphs in the nether storey and

the

name

Mumuu

two on

th.

ond Sbahtahon.
oil

hat two corpse*?


nil) ties

could be that

Why four the four are fak e and i

aJ

^
*

buried in far-away

Burhanpur.

The
all

public abould insist that the Archaeological

Survey

of India

thf four cenotaphs to verify their authenticity.

ll to

be *

MulU

locked.

1239

is*
of
ri

events, recorders of

which
.

synchronlcaJ
cities

compel
*"*

> ^ W!d
'

rf of

MmmemoratIon The

of

..maour Un,pUr

H"

^^,Te *"* * T*?Z*

and . _.. ,, fthiitore. the shrines of Aboo t. and Chittore. u!ni of Delhi many Elephant* and Ellora. are so temples of
imagine that the age fact.. Nor can we an hfstonan. were creaUd was without works

ind^stha.

AnhOwara and Somnath^ the

^!
"

Vs^ans should

oblation, to .harden leom from the above


constant was subjected to

PAUOTY OF HINDU RECORDS?

.^r

deductive logic. faculty of

rm 712 to 1M7 A. ? a hnttles wars battles. destructive nuds,


have often Short-sighted historians

D.

India
pillage,

complained of the

PjJ

arson and alien subjugauon.

paucity

and concluded thai while Hindus were of Hindu historical records Kmi writers on diverse subjecls from medicine to metaphysics
and education to erotics they were singularly disinclined to writ* histories and maintain historical records.
writings

invaders. by Muslim and Christian

TNi compliinl
historians.
prolific

ilwlf reveals a basic fault in the logic of


if

modem
'I

Is still

records asked to produce its


an estate

Is it

m e

They ought to understand that

Hindus were such

writers on o
left

comprehensive range of subjects they couldn

has or a manor-house

-*-

have possibly

out history. If then there is there

a paucity of Hindu
it.

and remains
years will
hi.
it

occupa under the Invader's


pertinent to as* be prudent or

^
^

^^

historical records

must be some other reason for

of his Uille-deeds and the records

"V

Col.
political

James Tod has rightly argued that "If

we

consider the

And yet In

spite of

Hinduism such havoc

^M m
-

ounUinous

since

changes and convulsions which have happened in Hinduslhan Mohamed's invasions, and the intolerant bigotry of many

records and other evidence.

of his successors,

IU

nations)

we shall be able to account for the paucity of vorks on history, without being driven to the improbable
were ignorant of an art which has been
other countries

Registering Births

and **>"; Notniw

observes Vincent Smith


observer. astonishing to the
deaths-

M^^- ^
*
alion of births and

odusion that the Hindus

^Ud
"-torn

in

from almost Lhe

early ages, (s

it

U>

And

it is

impossible"

'"fined

that i nation

u
3

eXBCt

^mm

so highly civilized as the Hindus, amongst

nouriahed

jn

p^pcuon, by whom
and

ths

fiat

an,, ircbltecture.

sculpture,

"T**
,
1

bul

^hi *nj
mind

defined by the nicest

only poetry, music were not most elaboriw

anxious that birth and the beconcealed. Even European^ organisation -id
Vol. t.

A^-.n^ ^

^ ^.^^mistration
*
oW

"\

fashioned Raja f-Ung not ,ni] tow m(l[ ht

^ ^^
with
its

complex

rf

*"""

**'*"'
l

totally
>

** *r
f*

unacquainted with the simple art of record"*


i

(1) P.

fl.

of their princes and


exist

Wbe* he acts of their reigns ?


there hardly believe thai

of

we can

Tod.

1M1 1*0

^C SC^-*
,

lrtm

attempt (be collection of vita) 8liU, u did not

*n. -*

-W

had experienced

In the figures

'-

w 4^
a
>

J2m3

Consequently, those recorda were either posing or dangerous. changed to convey a different meaning, and or suitably
fabricated to simulate an honoured
in the

n#

accounts were * rtneoewd


convert nKtion for the

very thorough about maintaining metlcujou, .bout every individual bom. AH Wcn iTdeufled record which are currently being mlsuM( In temples

TO, observation
very

indicates

how

ancient Hindu admlnl stniU

Hindu prince

Muslim hierarchy.

particular and

JJ
,

Lost Archives

Destitution

maintained

nH^es

and mausoleums.

courtiers,

thousand-year war of attrition that Hindu princes, During the noblemen and land-holders bad to wage against the

Uoallnvenemy
TOr fteihwi Archives

many were
all

slain or

reduced to destitution. Having


fell

had to flee their


ih.

realms their records which


destroyed.

In the

hands of

Ifarstha

Peshwas. the last administrators of The archives of the power, prior to the consolidation of British rule,

the

enemy were
Archives

1*

private

preserved in Pune.

coDfctkm
11

If

said

They are known as the Peshwa Daftar, Ttai to contain 30 million documents. The collection

so staggering in its
to

immensity thai nobody dares suggest


for study,

my

Throughout India hundreds of important seats of learning like Madura and Vsranasi. Ujjain. Prayag. Nalanda, Kanchipuram.

plan even
pubficetiori.

open thos# records,


has
thfl

classification and
olber

Who

mtney. time, expert man-power,

and the institution of priestly families at centres of pilgrimage But these were miinWned a large library of books and documents.
Bijapur.
either looted

resources, and the will

and thtzest for such a task ?

destroyed
Rcttooa)
India

by

Archhcs
has several other archives in state capitals and
in places like in

were wrecked

raids, or were or burned during frequent Muslim neglect when their homes fire, water, termites or when the or were lost as and

New

Hindu fomDies owning


Priestly families

by Muslim invaders, them were reduced


of those places
still

.Even to destitution

now

DeM

ancenl maintain In their vaults

and

Bikaner, Darbhanga and Tanjora.

"Tilings

and family genealogies.

Kulm'

Private Archives

Archives in Neighbouring Countries

When

India attained

freedom on August 15, 1947

it

had about
of than

native ruler* of principalities, big


hi> private, collection

and small. Each one

Sri

ny from the general Slate archives.


*"***
-ith

of lop secret

documents which were kept

Tibetan monasteries but


Similar records in
to

ft^WUnka, Java. Sumatra. who the- to

Muilim

K u| cn
Muslim Invasions
and Band8
a

have been lost due to


Islam.

^'^^^ ***.
*"""

^^ ^^^
ftJ

onsllU({n[s of Christianity

nd
number
of

During the thousand-year-long


Prtnce- were forcibly

(U. K.) had


hidden

The Papacy In Sensknt Immense Hindu.

Archbfsho P ry in Canterbury which have all been re

^^

^7^^ ""*"
'

h'UrpUP
*

U*y found

m&- Uharu

convert*! to Islam such as the


'

N*

away or destroyed-

retention of their

^"Ur" l6r Hindu record*


W-

Ancient Chronicles
India does possess chronicles 1 ,<-imciion colossal -J' Despite such

***

""^ <* IndU. by yinaaai) Smith,

124,1

1*2

Mano and GrW ,h by


PilUiicd

others.

Records

^chimmensecollection.
nd the

of India's documents and ...... , ^>nus considerable porucm considerable portion A very either after -d Bwav by invading powers_away ~* -, - * fa fon^I Wenlun wis carried lure . ... .-.n-hase. purchase. The India Office Library in Land | ^filiation or Portuguese. the Dutch. The

c*m ^ m

theFn^

^
,

away Cffmms have earned


and
historical

a lot of valuable Indian technlod

BLUNDERSOME HISTORICAL CLICHES


about are prone to bandy Modern-day historians
several pet

documents, so

much

so that

it [
1

literature
thai
in
ii

*e

sludv of lh8t li,eralure whicn

"dP*

s suspect Eu rope uihp

scientific age of industrial,


start

and technological advancement

from the

of the I9lh century.

J^Togm^^
We UUend
thinking, lo

Andrnl Literature

Z :u*ennotionsw*^^
to cite

some

as examples of them hereunder

Bidw

the categories described

above India

atill

has

vohmn

reposing warn riders against

too

much

faith

and volumes of a very high calibre of literature ranging from the Vedas to the Upanishads. the epics, and the Puranas and lechnict)
lexis

expertise of so-called historians.

(l)Vedai

dealing

with

mechanics

to

metallurgy,

medicine

tfti

architecture.
ii lull
erf

Most of them contain valuable data. Much


it

of 1W1

The tendency these days


ballads

is

to

the presume )K vedas

to oe

untapped since

remains hidden and neglected

In the vaults
forts

ancient scholar families

and the vaults of palaces,

nd

composed by
for

composed by some primitive ago in. monks 3500 yean

some

temples.

some

historical

and geographical

clues

^^J^^^^ ^ ^^
of the earth.

^^

ruaw

to look

Vedas
Considering
all

came at

this

astounding and colossal range of

writlnp

history
of

and topography but not

time. ** the beginning of the school-type

^ ^^ ^^ ^^
w

not only unsurpassed but can

even unparalleled for


that the

its calibre
flair

and

rwr

our conception.

my historian still assert

Hindus had no

or

aptiiud*

(2)

Vcdlc time.
Scholar, these <V>.

for writing history ?

ver,

0enu the term


UOO
B.

^ ^"L^d to* *-* * "^ 'VedlcUm- w pj*


. <*

-round

>

blunder. Vedlc time.

urn^en.Uonofhum.nb** .**_
devlc. i. produced

<&* " .to-" m * 7U* "*


u

Mlh,

Jh

*. -**

^'^^^""'^'T Z ^,% > ^n,

^^

rnln '

^
f thinking.

*,

^ f. V

vnth hum-nlty.

^,0-Moo.hVc.rt

p^lcd*
tWl *
lt

^V
10

-,

"^
\.
rf

Bui
to

thai the ancient year consist* often said Qf mechanically repeating that all those al4lto

12W EuropeMnvolve, y rt anothrr ndaconcepUoo nam*, wfls the enurprising Arab trader, who
to also purveyed

ft** tether
The error seems

each
lo

month was

then

have arisen from the

JS q

merchDndise

Hindu learning through par*

SJ5 ^*
In

wh5

"^^naiingtheywwithDecemberandtheearlierp^

Merely because
conclude that

trader goes fro

S^
(4)

oflSmonthswhetherfrom March toFebruary or Janui|>

to he also purveys educaUon? What an t t^d-', educational qualifications ? Where does he have the Urn. or inclinaUon learn and teach ? Is educaUon In our limes

port to port to

It

i*

lo December.

or

teachers?

We
fa

imparted by trader, even


to

know from

experience
is lo

that

useh

Europe Arab. Teaching

primary-level students our endeavour

appoint doctoral level

is

commonly

believed that
is

Arabs taught Hindu science

t,

Europe

Underlying this cliche

a subtle misconception viz, th*

transmitted Hindu knowledge to Europe. That . Muslim Arabia from being able to teach anything to error- Arabs far
i,

the qualification gap between the leacher and Under such circumstances Is it reasonab* to the taught. assume chance. Illiterate or semi-literate Arab trader emerfng that a an to sell his merchandise In haste will waste his tints alien port
teachers.

Such

first

a grass

themselves plunged in an age of abyssmal ignorance, the world were with the adoption of Islam. On turning Muslim. illiteracy and crime was not ready lo learn anything from anybody. Its obstinw
Arabia

in

assimilating profound knowledge himself and later

in

conduciing

acme tuition classes ? Besides want of academic qualification) and enough lime on hand will a trader's smattering acquainlanw with an alien language serve as a good and adequate medium and quantum
of

maxim was
if

that everything

worth learning was


it

in the Koran. And


.

education ?

The implied assumption

thai Arab inulen were ox,i

anything was not in the Koran

was not worth learning


is

Therefore,
Arabia

academicians
the

who

obliged the countries they visited by coaching


in up-to-date knowledge.
la

what historians must understand

that during Ihe time that

'backward' people there

a very

worldwide Vedic culture Europeans used loloara Ihe Hindu sciences in Vedic academies in Hindu Arabia becausa
was a pari
of the

bizarre concept.
level

How

is the

presumption

justified that the

Arab's

of erudition

Chriiiian onslaught

had destroyed Vedic academies in Europe. This European pubic leads us to an important corollary namely that the had no resenting the destruction of Vedic academies in Europe,

with

whom
all

was much more than that of people in the counirits their original wxt Arabs traded ? Can thy produce
branches of learning?
facilities will

books in

othw

alternative

but lo flock lo nearby countries such as

Arstfi.

Moreover, what authority and


lo

an Arab trader

hm

Turkey, where Hindu academies Warn blew out the torch of learning from West
Iran and

rampart flourished unlO a Asia too. foUovnnn

impart academic tuition lo the people of the


for trade?

alien country hi

visited

the example of Christian

vandalism

in

AraW Europe. Therefore.


of

Was

the

number

of

Arab traders so enormous

all

ltw time

teaching Europe
Christian

must be understood lo mean a Hindu Arabia l**""*


in the

Europe

interregnum between Constantino


Arabia. (622 A. D.)

nW

wloenablethem lo educate all Europeanseverydsy of


Such logical questioning
will

every century?

expose Ihe

fallacy

onerous

(512 A. D.) and


15)

Mohamed of

Tnidcn Spreading Knowledge Tot erroneous


belief that a

Muslim Arabia disseminated

"* dose

modern concept, concernu* history. Incidentally ** subject! ng every < 'mpress on historians the need for this method
questioning.
Unfortunately

^^ w
*c*
of

'

1948

0
Is

B*

,, authentic

rf" *" euthonty.


**
a

wed r -m * *
Mus!im or

every step .rtionini at ' , qg totally be almost

being so
in

complete
,

^T

unknown
ded !
,

the
b

field

of

J*
*Si

":er

?*- n 8

^mosi
d tn ai

-iu

"^ ?

^oncea race called


.

Aryans; that those people looked


in

toaiy oellevw that ft*.


like

they migrated from aomewhere

EuroZ!
to

two main branch*,

Hind" 2cro i6 ,The

Europe This whole Aryan theory la absolutely mUconcetv* dia and ,n foundation whatsoever. Aryanism Is a culture, has no a

^a

thought

TV
'

belief

"s^ouBhilessly

Hindu came along and added a zero to 9 which the rest of the world already kn^ from 1 10 repeated rather too often and is unquestioni^
look that But on a closer

which all persons are expected to abide by. Since then called Aryans there was no migration. Arya only slgnifW was no race enlightened way of Ufe fulfilling the divine civilised, purpose of ,
process,

statement

will

pd.
be absurd.

turn

Rigvedic motto Make the whole world Aryan human existence. The
*

to
,v;o

a directive to

aim at developing auper-men

through

i strict

Vedic routine of life-

obviously That belief is

based on the

Roman

practice of

us^
(8)

Comparative Philology And Mythology


This
is

M alphabets to represent certain numerical


Into i

values.

yet

another blundering doctrine which modern-day

rest of the world was gradually plungl That was because the after the Mahabharat war, while Vtdie state of ignorance

scholars continue to

hug

as a sacrosanct concept. When William

pundits (n India continued to

retain

the traditional writing ml

simflarity running through Jonea discovered that there wasathread of languages that was the end of it. How does it become a science
all

into billions counting of figures running


19
to

and

trillions,
.

say, upto
according
such

of comparative

philology?

In fort Jones erred in making an


it

wroa on I as a routine affair. Indian tradition, is of a million -year antiquity, mentions

Even the Ramayan which

unnecessary mystery out of


similarity

and

In not concluding that their


ft

arose from their being be realized


that world

dialects of Sanskrit. Staulariy

iitronomica)

the context of scouting parties sent out Vedic word* and to locate Lanka. 'Hie exact mathematical count of being repeatal letters running Into hundreds of thousand is also

numbers

in

ought to

mythology,

theology,

reflgioos

Inter-related because ihey terminology and practices are closely worldwide Vedic civflixaUon. all chips of the primordial,

are

thw from limes immemorial. Under such circumstances the belief ago ii rero was known to the world only a few thousnad years

(9) Saracenic

Architecture
architecture beaua. thing as Saracenic

untenable. In the pre -Mahabharat

war period people

in the

mi

W-

There
always

is

no such

taUr. were well-versed in that high count. But systw since the worldwide Vedic administration and educational

of the world too

made

captured edifices do with other people's


All that Islam

had any building-measures.


inside

*d

" *^
^^
rrtm

broke down, countries other than India


of backwardness and ignorance.

sunk
is

bI*w gradually into a

Hindus M* the rest of the world. con used the iero from the very an exact first generation since

That

why

subsequently

foi

plaster them * captured buildings and pedes the exterior. Even those cenotaphs are

Ppored

to lend the 'zero* to

waged umples. Such umpering

with captures

^^

mistaken to be original construction.


Role or

of letter? in the

Veda* had to be strictly maintained.

Women
by th. modem

^^

Therole assigned to. vroman

1M
^p^Uon.
regarding her omrfv of * namely o> n. n 7ih7m8le. Is

^*^
-.

u 8 m IUv,

fo

3ubsiUw nost unscientinc'oeca^ unseieniin.. . _ *

^u" &*

nd

Ta "C al
cited

The
'*

^inn

aft**1 ph> iqUe

*X

differeenl

conducive lo the female mind which ere and . fenm those in which men *^_ from Ihoso op**,.

have namely cocktail and rUer we tailcoat F4 Europeans would not be able lo justify. European cocktaQ Ncb the * neither cock nor tall. What then explains that strange have
rtles ?

two terms

^ wanned
.

****
T-^Z

Tia*

improper to

Win women

for modelling, night


its it is

rime

M 8Uch
Sanskrit,

unclures Sanskrit

is

helpful because ancient Europe


is

Lve
Ijouors

Kak-Taliya (*i*miAm)

a Sanskrit expression

jobs etc. twndace. secretarial


forces-

lo

rec^

accidental combination. Jjnifying an

The random mixture of several

therefore bears that Sanskrit name.

1 m<

JiZZ great law-giver's ^ for herself the wide,


in

nature to be a daughter, sister, wife, man is equipped by and goddesss of the home and not mother, queen ilnd what is reaUy meant the streets. This b fey tramp injunction "Don't make the woman
outer male-dommated world." Sat

The tailcoat has

become

the hallmark of the European

elite
(i.

md

diplomats because in

the ancient European Ramteela

gjmayanic stage- play). Hanuman and other envoys of Lord Rama, appeared in tailcoats. Since Rama has been regarded as an Ideal

monarch

all

over the ancient world the dress worn by His envoys

^ould

family preside over the

home.

on the stage
corps.

was automatically adopted by

the European diplomatic


that the

That illustrates the tremendous influence

Ramayan

Misnomer The 'Mogul Miniature '


miniature* or "'Mogul painting' used the* The term 'Mogul and museologisls in
All

wielded all

over the world and the dire academic necessity

of realising

the Vedic origin of all

human

culture.

art-criUcs. historians days by journalists.

misnomer.

ageold Indian classic those paintings are in the

style

seen depicted on

tenements to palaces.

parchment or on walls of dwellings from Many a time they are known by regwnil
run!

paintings. To dub names such as Basholi. Kangra or Rajput some Mufti Mogul only because it was done while
painting as

sovereign ruled in India

or because

it

earned some remuneritwi


wmflsr as dubbing another
British
nito

from a Mogul potentate,


painting as
in India
*

is us fallacious
it

British'

because

was executed under

and received some reward or award from a British

govern**

anything or viceroy. Stripping ffindudom ihui of total credit for

from art to architecture has been a deep-seated British


relentlessly

wn

*J**' MorU and systematically executed from Macaulay to

These,

only a few instances.


realize

many There might be


danger inherent
in

"

Tbt reader should

from

this the

too much credence in popular concepts.

None should

ever be

wsihawnds

u. tt

thorough logical cross-****"*

-Vi
1281

,_,

common

*i

m of all historians everywhere bee**.,

Zati volume.

^
U
other

Sanskrit language and VedJc culture fan,

^^ JT!
One.
tt

heritage. twin world

pilot*!

Reconstruction
practical steps

Some

need to be taken
all

In thii direction.

w welcome
religions.

back to Hinduism

those

who

have

left

to >c4n

PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF HISTORY

The other step would be to restore the original Sanskrit names which have been given outlandish names (such as Ghaxjibad of dties

md
Reading history for entertainment or merely
for knowledge
j,

Moradabad) by invaders. Leaving them

in their present
it

uie

dJUce feeling proud of a fractured foot instead of having

repaired.

a very primitive use of history. The ultimate aim


utilize

should be

to

&ch reconstruction has been mBde in several Instances unknowingly.


For instance, Delhi, Agra. Varanasi. Nasik and NfiraJ though named

that

knowledge to (plan for the nation's


left

future and

hei)

the

many wounds

by history.
traffic

Shahjahanabad.

Akbarabad.

Mahamudabad,

Gulshanabad

and

person involved in a

mishap

Is

not

at ease unltn
personality.
its

Murtazabad respectively
by their ancient

by Muslim

invaders continue to be known


others such

he regains, as far as possible, his original health and


likewise a
personality

names. But there ere innumerable

nation
is

must never be

content unless

wounded

Ahmedabad and Allahabad which have yet to be

reverted to their

mended.

indent Hindu names.

historian,

must

therefore,

not be a mere

academician

For those
bat

who would

like to
is,

know

to what point to levert

In

must be a super -statesman bent on scars and wounds and once again
personality and activity.

repairing the notion

*s historic^

reconstruction the

answer

to the VedJc.
all

restoring the nauon'i oiwinl

Yet another step would be to restore the lemple status of


historic

mosques

arid

mausoleums.
Is

Indijn Historian has Long

Way To Co

Another kind or reconstruction


India's sciences

of to restore the primacy

has a lon *V From this point of view an Indian historian average Indian historian (* to go. Currently the role of an

and arts such as architecture and Ayurved which an unrivalled status of and
excellence.

no^

v*n today retain

party in powerthan thaL of a hackney horse on hire for the status of a sUt an historian must raise himself to the m the nation once counsellor suggesting measures to make

.^

India's village industries

local skats

muii be given the

ilPjr4

monopoly to housing and cater to civic needs such as clothing, tfriculiure U> military while heavy should be limited mostly
industries
wedi.

and glorious.

As such an historian must


ia

that Hi first realize id


*h0

aim the Vedic personality. Therefore, the

JJ

^w
jlwu

^
]d

.^
Military

* m *le

fix*

incidentally Vedic culture and Sanskrit language,

training and Sanskrit Swadhyaya every a compulsory to all citizens to inculcate in them dedication. ^triotlam. discipline, honesty, obedience and

momma

must

1252

period of Rccovcf?
hi tniU'

prop]* have often


their

World War

II

wondered al Japan and Germany ov wage and again becoming


120

a group of vagrants. - was kidnapped, by onW put a pistol In her hand and mad. her
.

-iscrranls
In

prosperous within about


In

y!*"** years from the end of that

eco*^*

"*

Uler
v,

^"photographed

raid on a bank 'har terror raids. In one such by an automatic TV camera totalled

comparison, people believe. India has failed to

progress.

Why?
answer
is,

mnuV Hv

W^ve
"

device against

such crime..

Tne

firstly

that

India

's

econom

pre-war n |Sj administration was not as advanced as that of Germany and

muitary-armament

industry

under

the

ZtaMU

Jbum

not a question of recovering DMnfl from World War n impoverishment but from a 12*5 year-ta* period of plunder, murder, massacre, conversion and
Secondly, for India
II

is

lescen r,he menu,

girl. Later the gang wo nabbed helped identify the 'fli Photo relieved but court of law for prosecution. Tne Placed In a the court-hearing hoping U, be reuniud would appear vmnessed a daughter soonest. But the court ,T,heir belnv.d had ' months spent with the de,per*is

destructf!!!

orgy-

;"Lg cL
WtomiMd

M
T^
*
fold

rich heiress balance of the impressionable her doting parents and she openly ranted against graphically dq* to- J" rapists and kidnappers. TO.

jM

and nurtun, since birth gefc

Rccomtnkin Problem
of Muslims and Christians in India whose customs. winners, dress and complexions are not different from those of the vast majority of Hindus surrounding them are generally conscious are descendants of Hindu converts: though

OTBons

w,th crnnmal <un,Uon of forced companionship of millions of rifch hold, back descendant,

,M

'*<
,l

^ ""*

" ""V""

Charnavi, and Ghori, and

other, forcing

ihem

to turn

Mudlm

^^Jl'^Z omt P
or

Orat-n

* B*

12D0 years.

^dmg

many

of

Own

otherwise are

overtJy

unwilling

to

admit

It

unless

compelled.

**w

To r^assimflate them into Hinduism would lead to


amity nd a strong India.

everyMus^m alHhose converted soon after and tamed and tyrant died or was defeated
operations been undertaken
Christian

Hindu, of yore

made

the mistake

of-

cohesion.

shock raid
it

tomi wouWn the problem

^^
Il

^^.^ '^
MujIim
Jfld

*^

-^

tflum ihw ed tbecolosaal

Buao persuade Christians


*****

and Muslims to come back to Hinduism


ta

proportions

today. has assumed


ft

a enat AMm! tw "^ htve*""* aboutthemselveslransformaUo "^ **ir for a *1 ^j' ^7 "*** the Bhagwsd Geeu Hindus KUV
to
***

But even today

big driveart

loo late.

Good actions should

^ w
De

nl

*ronvotU^importanc.

of

end necessity is realiwd-

** tber H^ti^. the ** aeZaT^iW "iclilr ^ "w **" ^ the USA " auractrve teen-agerabb iST GM
"
ptf
f
1

"

* tomplacent be abolished.
*

Also
It

all

the privileges such as by dl her

_R

.^ to* P**"** was the rep***1

i,

such extra perks which

fr^ds -nd r-*


<*" h-r

^ ^
Panwla

ban*
ftm y
"

mWuD)

^ ^k ^ home
of

and

recall

incident

^.

ir-t th*

humw

aM tfta eorfWon-d

*BM)rteso

n*d

Hurst,

daughter

1256

^imern^

I"

***

,l

tovm
h ""

'

,ny

m"' BW *' ^ui

'IT -^

- W**w
w
hrr
-

r *'

m,nd Ww,Uf,od

w mw
which

whiu

^
7,

^-niMllon

the Hindu fold. Lei every Hindu individual Chrlstlnn to repenUKlly. every day, every time, el every step start

"I

""

552
,

am"

I*

parent. ""J "'"lion,


'

|,

t-wfl
family

"n,,,lu i mlml "wung bnck to "

*UWWnd coC

reminding every ng ,(]

Muslim and

Christian to corns back.

*<*
nW

association*. ln fBCl
r0r|[rt

"

lhta

w,mo >*

Hindus mount such an Insistent campaign wfD any 700 million Christian have the heart lo stay away I Muslim *nd

ZfB

*** "
'a

P8rCn

" nd

W 1*
'

Draiilc

Remedies

,) husband

family I*

Rebuilding India as the

hub

of th> Vedlc world calls for crash

,,,

holding uV-k Christians ond Muslim, It i. Hinduism. like Pamela they arc fliy voionmnly returning to group which had. .ubjectcd to Iho lulorin of the

(Ml taw which

dissolution of the slate and central DTOsTsmmes. such as the cabinets. A unitary government legislatures, governors and slate
of the

niM

country should instead be entrusted

lo a

brave patriotic

Ihelr ancesslor*. amnrthmii lack. kMnippod

fighting leader

and Defender of Vedic

faith.

He

should choose his

""" ptyChotoffcat pressure nnd bmimvnshlng /tan Christian mind the Hindus will have to mount the VuanVn ("^ mammoth psychologist campaign *& passing resolutions, issuing
Tj und*
all

the Home through Member whose writ should run throughout the country

be own council of eight members. Among them should

district collectors.

ItHJWtrfWfffr.

"''"'"A' "/'

reconversion centra, repeatedly inviting

Quick Justice
within a maximum of six days All legal suits should be decided dealing with the concerned of continuous hearing with the Judge
litigants direct

MfaaJbS <"*/ Christians to


that th.\\

amie back

to

Hinduism, assuring them

iiywM br

made sn

integral part

of the guild

to which

bM

Hindu .vxrstors behtnged, etc. etc.


I'

and pronouncing Judgment.

run nwny from home. After o few month* the boy gets Inured to hit new life. Impression* of hli the lift horn. de begin lo fade nnd however atrocious or unstable
i boy

who

hiii

should be made to take milk Students, oihletes and soHIars

shunning tee and coffee.

if ("

nrw companions be he considera himself n pail of

It.

high school stage

compulsory Mi'itary training should be level. the college degree

^ -^V
All

ex-servicemen

u P to

To dltlodge him from that his parents, friends and


relay

relaiives

should be reemployed on such

duties.

whim equally strong mid repealed assurances of their conllnuintf


for

low

him They tnlreat him with tears in their eyes to nMui"


all

Swkidhyayu

honv. they (iromiie that


Ifctt
t

his

demands

will

hl

absence

hu

left

I big void In

their

"" be met, they moth* lives, up


in
>

dlsronsolale, father is

sisters yew" worried, that brothers and


Is

mpsny and bo on and on. There


ft*4

no

let

campaign until thy have him bock. Until then they

move

hea

m Hv '**"*,, "I won't Ssnw repeating lo oneseir dcmBn(J 0P 0CMpl , won't ulter a falsehood. amJ) taw l0 my ,,, bribe. shall honour "^ my counlry etc. etc. should " * elders.
Tne
. ,

traditions

ii

it*

morning Swadhynya

in

^ m

of

loudly
steal,

as.

teachers and

ML
"

every ""<* reverberate through


office.

[ft

^^ homCi

n5lilu ilon

ond

W ^>m.

mu.i l.m . | win

tnm

that.

mo-n^ Tney must

loving campaign for the recall of every

1257

lnCO

u r

x oiiioais

who do

not complete

all

assessment formaliUn

Sl-" -N

Ar maintain a standing "*,A -.v. and

army of

m
if

S
Otily

of the a week the on all along

filing

of the lax return by any assets**

line.

OM Central Government
Central Government and no State
alien

from depicting obscenity H^aid be banned

i.

e. anythln,

two should be only one

omenta *" "

History teaches us that India was overrun by

^
any

be banned. Elections trade-unionism should be organization should .


unit

it ders because

was divided into several principalities. Thepresent


are a repetition of that same
if

on an

individual basis.
India

.I)

J"held

for

cm* Governments
Parljlcss

past foul.

^^Se
in

dissolved

and de-recognized and

from Kashmir to Cape Comorta.

Parliament

at all

tJZ^Zi
ftf

the national and international should be declared national language, Devanagari script the only

19*3 to ihriit. the davs (

IMS) when the Provisional Government


its

India
I

was conducting
as

fight for

freedom from
National

British

domination

an

official

at

the

Indian

Army's
type

had submitted heodqu.rters (in Singapore)

a scheme, of the

bribed

trainee

Chandra to., for the fului* above to Nelaji Subhas of that Government and Supreme of India. As head
thai

kind of a Parliament Is deemed even for the Centre some be on a panyless basis. Intending candidates it should only from the constituency where they should stand for election members may vole for a Prime Minister or work. Such elected live should arrange for Uw amongst themselves and he or she from maJu.'V. Such issue as decided by a simp* execution of every .!* and debate national development ft-4 a Parliament should
If

necessary

not legislation.

a year and examine every

The Parliament should member on

for only

month*

the

^*^T"
qua.ineal.ons she

Commander of

army

Nelaji

scheme. This has been recorded


India's
hiblic

by

Subhas had accepted the suggested me in my Morolhi volume titled


194? A.
I).

Second

War

in of Independence published

towns and viUages of have brought about in the If he has during the preceding 11 months. nothing or don, should be rewarded; if he has done
be punished.

*"< ha^h *

"^
.

Chuuiicmcni
chastisement

Only people holding

graduote-levei

be allowed to vote.

to
in

My scheme of national discipline Includes public pledged word all those who do not carry out their
keeping 10 their lime-schedule e. .

or are

IB

Too Many Idlers The main drawback


of Indian

tailor,

dry -cleaner
date,

w
many
tafr.

****
M
'

photographer not delivering the goods


eeountin*
the account
official

on the promised

idlers

such and hangers-on

^
.feat*.
crushing

who iuun a bouncing cheque, the dealing assistant who doew^


p>its rece customer 's letter within a week of res the UPSC. defaulUng in conveying to every candidate the

who doesn 'l complete the retirement ^ a perw^ Qr retiring employees by the day of retirement;

papers

UrlinJ(

secretarial

orderlies

and other staff. governors, mushrooming

legts..tors,

P^ urt " i

^^^ m (dd>-men.
_

commission agents

these ate. All

reply to a citizen a or

burden on a weak, emaciated.


UcRgurs
All Hi. in.--

rty dwind^.P*'-

^*"

trtmWulou>.
.riddin

v*****-

liMn

e1 a month of any selection examination or interview an the o ho oonn-t report on time and also doesn't leave
;

"^
'

beggan ought

to

-d P* grounded up

mimaryW

Uw closing Ume

(unless specifically detained for

emergency

UN

^
amp

TV

.**
1**
Lin '

*ouM

I*

It

through

nldiir-IVPe

"*Une

Under xservicemen 8nd USed


ffluenl of the re

TwbSc

project*.

ir
Ablu?

***?
Ashmm

*Ork Tort, * on wh0 n* lo niwM


d

^
m^

scheme illustrates how naltonal rejuvenation is the -** above historian. A historian alone has an overall perspective
r

of

It tided

national

development

in ihe contexts of bolh the

pan

and

aute **

rrrp)n5ibfliiy

all of financing

such charity homes.

^^ s

is the duty of national leaders to train historians future. It about notion-building. Real historians are those such thinking do ond fldvice lhe natio! administration on good and can guide "to

UOU
.

governance. Instead what

wc see today is that


is

both historians
'i

completely oblivious of a historian pational leaders are

real

Ashram signifies a home which promi^ That term Abhay needy. India (and in Tact every country) protection to the

role

and function.

An

historian

currently looked upon as


in

hm a
person

chain of such
feel

homes

lo shelter, the defenceless e. g.

w jfc

who doesn't

safe in her

husband's home; en old or

feeble

mBnlpulator prefer. For instance, historians and aichaeoJogistj the way lh ey discouraged from stating anything which hurts Muslim and

who can be

hired by politicians lo present history

rt

nowhere to go; a child terrorized by its elders, and such others lo ensure on parents deserted by their children,

who

has

Christian interests.
histories
in

Consequently those dealing with Indian and world


all

India ore provided

incentives lo falsify
likely to

all

history

hiven

for

everyone

living

in

terror

of

assault,

starvation,

by tfossing
Indian s

over mailers which are nol

be palatable to

lO-lreaimcnt or death.

own

erstwhile enemies. And since such history

hn

been

Vedic culture's
revered

most cherished

ideal is

Ramrojyam. Rami

falsified in
li

India 's

own homeland

it is

thai

same hostile.

anti-Hindu.

onti-Vedic-cullure history which

is
'

over being taught aD the world

and remembered exactly for the kind of administration saint-pott described above. The glory of Rama as epitomized in
Tulsidai's famous couplet conveys.

and proudly propagated as India "s

proud

history.
'

Vedic culture
for India.

and Sanskrit language


"l

-re lhe
this

P
b.

A leader who doesn

reali

must not

<*J* jflw*

"The motto

of

Rama's household was.


dcuih
*s

to wield

any power. A historian who doesn even from


the universal

Flinch not in duty even in


If

Jaws,"
pinnacle

history. must be debarred from dealing with

Hmdudom

has fallen lo obyssmal depths from the

considerations

of sterling character

which had
it

alt reeled u ni versa!

applause in andeni
that Wed-

and Sanskrit ore the only hope for

wton

*2J ^^/^ ^ ^Un*


'C

^'*wd "*
"
,,,

times that

is

because

has strayed far far


is

away from

An average Hindu of today


the

person the most undependable

unitf factors which could ensure peace, cons-derau the world. This brings us to a
thinkingthe different levels of historical

hout h-nnofty lhrDU|(

^ gallon

of

Unpunctuality and non-fulfilment of the pledged

word has

become

norm with him. The only remedy for this

is

public chastise**"

vrU a Grades of Hlsloricul Gcnlui Historical

at every default.

Tnwe

Indications

of what could

be

done

to

ch39U^

ill (f

of could be historian "a perspective merely regional or sheeriy

^^ ^^
rf of

wCn
.

MiaHm>

dmlnlHnrtion and

make

the world a belter place to

D*

in

nd some Christians). qucerly


"ationnl

f ^"'
It

comrnunbts

v *dk amirusimtion should suffice.

or universal. But

there

"f^^r

(W th.l

rung <*

**"

"^ ,%<*

.^who^f
TV

capable of taking a cosmic

I.

,.

on
,- invasion

SXi
^u, a*

^IT^

was Valmikl the historian 0/ and reunion boun\ merely earth-bound tends to dwarf th* inn. of
a one

rJ^J

was welcome
by

Ma)

^ ^

Anting sultan
Panlput Batiks of

for the Hindui because another.

h WMkw, W"KW*1

rustic ballads.

conwt of thf Ranuyan


ifwon

to enpond ^ eternal time is capable of cosmic space and f tht dimensions lhe Vedas and lhe remo,e f lbe elerflily of nifq.m, ipo-TiiMl

0^ n

genius elastic historian with a

enough

BM

Three battles of Panipat ere prominent in Indian history The was between Ibrahim Lodi and Babur; in 1526

1&56

was between Behrom Khan (guardian of Akbar) and Hemu


. .

ih. other In

Jld

the

Mihabhamt. Others with myopic


of the post a? magnified

historic

general who had proclaimed himself (he Hindu at Vjkrtmadltya Hindu emperor; and the third In 1761 between Ahmod Shah Abdali. Muslim invader and the defending Maratha power. 1

wrt

ascribe

remote happenings closer to their own lima


trivialities

nd dismiss mighty achievements own surroundings. of the poverty of their


tecum

The current trend of leaching Indian students


tattles

to dilate

on then
is

impersonally, impartially, coldly and unemotionally

highly

unpatriotic.

The Indian student must


In the last

identify himself with


it

Hemu

Thf way historians have been misinterpreting history isiDustnud


instances. by in* following

and the Marsthas


be forgotten

two

battles because
is

must never
The power
is

that India 's basic personality

Vedlc.

which
Mlilnding Claims or Muslim Patriotism
During Muslim sultanate rule in India

pledged to defend and strengthen that pesonalliy

the

hero while the

one opposing
in

it Is

the villain. If

Hemu

would have
defeated

some

of the

sultaii,
ii

won the battle


in 1761 that

1556 and had Ahmadshab Abdali been

who were.

say.

Turks, had to resist

Mongol

invasions. This

would have been

to the advantage of India as a whole.

somKimss hoisted by Muslim or pro-Muslim professors as


of the
'

proof
earlier

As to

who won the

battle in 1526 hardly mattered because both


atrocities

Indianiution

' ,

patriotism

'

and identification of

the

the contenders

were Muslims. Whosoever won. Muslim

Tmid Muslim

sultans with India.

Since such sloppy, shoddy

history

were bound to continue. Such subjective nmlysii is essentia'especially

wiled the appeasement policy of


the Indian National Congress)

some

politico)

parties (such as

such faulty doctrines hove became


outlook
in

pun of the

official

historical

India.

To

those easto

when m coitnuy 's own fuiuiv Is linked \rith $n event. English and French students, for example, will always discuss the bottles must also of Trafalgar and Waterloo subjectively. Indian students
be taught to deal with history subjectively.

coated by such casuistry,

we may

point ouL that


if

when

a won

Wis a man and

is

feasting

on the carcass

he holds at bay anoH*


it

Tnc Credit -Deli It Law

of History

wolf wanting to share the flesh


U> laud thf curlier

of that carcass would

be wise

wolf as the champion and

WW protector of the
>**'

ACredii-Debitlawope^les^
Hindu. Vedic metaphysica, for instance.

man
***

body

Students of history

*" by a H"Cm ^d"-'' Are Indian students Wjew that a Muvl.m sultan

"^^

difference did

must beware of such TanKy * Hlndudom whether Turk Muslim already in Delhi or a new U<*&

to

atone for
a

its

sins and only

when the

*?Z^
credit

a make

to mediaeval

'hows

n i| balance does

attain salvation.

""*

"*'1 be cheated by t*1 bri* already In India was


to
In
* ort

*'

In history the

same

law

may be Win u P|
enslaves
it

*
*"

*ho overruns a country and


<n of the

P">

fc

Mai*g

new Mongol Muslim invader ?

men

and materia, he

.*-"*

onoa*i. To

1363

IS3
Iht

noUPfl

tDd

n*l

freedom <be enslaved coum t>


f l,V

* !lTta *
from TI2 to

X-^rT N"^""

numbCr

" "nd

lher resou "*i.

^
|

^? Munin ftw po*** ""

' tho Artbia t0 Ar*hnms,an hnd for l houBnd UIBn( ... in* ,nv lm *" ta (nearly) >* A D
' "

indian his,ory

**

flrd ,hat ihe

Mu *

"

m
HISTORY TAMPERING WrTH INDIAN

n U Convene HiruJudom
def 1 t n crush" *

invariaby refrained

Trom

inflicting decisive

Mla
up

touoed

10 patch

. thru ui.i,.j Hindudom nlwayi on Islam. Far from after defniin K Mutin, an adverse truce. Even

ALIEN

!^" lhf
W

rs

wch as

the Moguls.

Mam.

Haidarall

and Tlpu Hindu

vicioi,

not asinine mistake of

only reinstating the Muslim

but

subservience to accepting implicitly

Muslim sovereignly.
from the
British

their ntle ta BHOsh during


writings believing

^
f

tnoian

Greeks were that since the

J^S^P **
consider the t vt.nt as to exte to such an wWch

^^tt
U
**
t-

apparently free Consequently though India is

which had remained dormant and hidden yoke th Muslim yoke reappeared around the Hindu neclc like a British rule has
during

n-Wto

In fact the British

went

hther

In the

form of ever-tightening Muslim demands.


political

m9
ill

Alexander's invasion

Even the

freedom

won from the British

after a deceptive
birth.

other chronology B.

C. or A.

be related

^wuM
|hf

non-violenl struggle

is

a deformed, anaemic, freak and sickly

Infallible

point of reference.

law of Consequently, according to the inexorable credit-debit


history defined above the so-called

AU that history
Greek writers in

now

stands

freedom won by India

is not

whom
number

a buxem, healthy baby but a freak

monster with

its

right and

denounced

by

the British histom of discernin,

^ ^^^di t*

^^
faith

wry

^a
'

have been

. ,* of

**

leA thnuWers toil lo Pakistan and Bangladesh


dull, lack-lustre,

and

its

torso leodin*

Unreliability

of Greek Author*
nourf no,.
.r.

headless existence unable to take

any

decisive

u ha, hM
II

action

on any national issue

be *
to

* - .1
1

few

ftwtotwho

WPP* *

t^tr: h>w Kcomp"."*


,*,b!.
,,

^m

iting* of

demented For Instance, people seem to lack the wisdom, like a

are n<* hi. Indian campaign

psnon, to recognize that every historic mosque and tomb rt the captured temple Even when that proposition is presented W
public as i ready discovery
validity

- h. U on.y ^'"'lM "" "."^ * *-> olhrn. Such account . hM


,o .

.u^'* "

,
In

.h,

amine/' they lack the courage to e* in*" They would rather have a Muslim falsehood continue

McCrtnd!.

hM * ,
'

mj

anything which deflates the

Muslim ego and credo.

^>'-Eit^"'
<t

pna.rIbyn." " up and do"T>

m
-it**.
>

**** * h
,,

" ,M
'"

,,,

h"
"
-i

I2M

^h-i
Into
'

'.*"'"'

'"'

miiiifc
M^w^thin
,

,nd

fanciful

otawveUoni ntxml
'

''

ll>0" Indian '

TV MS*I

IN* It* rwr


<*i

<>f

mlllnu

IikIIn in KihlnpJ,,
In, In.

A, K
f

i,

nklns

nr>

H, has observed "All the h,,w mw, on l copulated In the open like cattlenil or the seme colour, much like th*
Indie.

Ethiopians!

Wwf
Mi

|l

(*.v* Ni.nl-)

nwhlnit

MMl(

^" W
(

In mil Their hciikii

white

like

other people's but black

like their

ownnKln."
That
nil

mi

Ifc

Orw)

i'''v-

Ki

wpiunir McCrindlfm

undent Indian history construed from ouch scandalous


as authoritative
all

^mpjCoTM
.,, p|
I

k)'

hlitlwnii

>IWfc

Cn*k wrillnKB should be reyorded


I*

over the world

^"'""'TorlunoWyvJiJJj

tragedy which

calls for suitable rectification.

Tlwrn cun be no end

to Instance* of

how

nt every

sup
It

alien

Uuwida

'l

'>*

!"'

"'

'"dlaareauppnang^j^

writers

luivtf

ployed

havoc with tndfon history. And


Is

Is

that

bwx

nwiilill by

numbw
WCt*.

oi

tiiwk "riwiUfic
<

ivtowl u. hl*t

owmpwlcd

nktMiiHlt'i-

mw" whon, iiwlilly m acribw. 71^,


Nraithui.

iliifaimiloi-y

and

false history of India which

being (aught as
in

authorltolive even In Indlo because the educational system


iiill

India

iHogcHiHus,

OnnHwu,,
nil

moves
Tlio

tlirounh the British ruta.


call

KtUrihann nml others


th*.
...!.
i

ThHi worki

me

Ion.

w
to

obove Greek accounts


Is o

for a genuine Investigation as

"'

"> ,H

"

r,)mHl '"il , i'*l

by Stmbo.

Pin*

whether Alexander

mythical figure and whether his Invasion

of In. 'in is a concoction, since


lilkltoott

on the Indian side there

Is

no mention

MrCriiullrobwm's. "Theondvnlwiflm

of

Alexander anywhere.
I

mTm

ttnm

Uniuf/mMw
fc**i

jwww '*" iwflwa whom/Cm


"
''^ir/(ypflatt
. >

I)uhlr'.i

)c fa mil I (on

*>(* wirf r*r


IV

worthy of cmHt.
t>

Dahlr
*r.bu <e< m<hi

wm

the Hindu sovereign

who

ruled over

Snd

and was

m.'mii.m.

!-*

slain

durinK Mohamad- bin -Kasim

's Invasion.

The Muslim chronicle.

mm mm
|

>ur MUWrtt "'"fro

iwi

l/v rf/fr/o

ftxtt

wrr

ChKhmimu

havlrv married hi. has defamed Dahlr as


Is

own

sister.

fJMfftMiIltamKhMh0l>l"lM.M'(ril plinvmlnHhl

Mr||Mlj
**

Such chnrncier-assasslnollon
to ,bou,g, the

rimn

undctaken by the enemy


and mete public op-ruon

fomn

thai

nml
litr*t

Mngnsthoncs coined
Mtoui u sleep
In.

'*'

mm-'
any*
i

mm ""

Hymen,

with

otil)

one eye, with an***

morale of th. victim-nation em society of any .gainst the adversary. Hindu person nev,.r ..Urate of

DrtuV, time would

noM ^

^>**
own
,

end rth fotfrrs bent backward


tolerate as tljeir

sov^^s.

snd .h, husband and

* IM -iktMrAiV

(..

leu*- lAraV *Y.v

'

*M<

.be

Muslim *.JJ ^^,,, fal)ndou) CIUCHNAMA b ^^^ef'con^uently. ev^-

^
1

fc

tSUZ
Nidatwtmbftta!n*iontoi;nvk
l* Ct

writer* .-

S^M

^^cal

account written by

iMBtm Ine*

nu

tt

m.

1387

wM

routine for

Hindu sovereigns
'

to
-

^st
M .hi. Om*>

f" of

birthdays

distributed

g". bul,,on c,olhl *[n Wc on coronation* and other anniversaries oo that the material may bt among ihe needy sections of the population.
Such charity

have themwlv*, WriKhw]

Wm*

duv1ntaUc
subtle

^/ ^.^n
..

., M

,.* chronicle.

Iv^cMion.

and

or

nd Wutttr open Zander

of the Hindu,. allowed

to time in a person's life Ii enjoined by Vedlc practice from time that ihe affluent must keep on off-loading their wealth which rules time to time boih for their good and thai of Ihe public.
from

nJllt

haw

Muslim statements to go

unchal^

Moguls were too stingy, too


distribute their

avaricious end loo Inimical to


thulr

^^1 ^ ^ry u
di

lhey hnd no *** *w unjftr rule Hindus hod no voice. The British years of British o subject to seek any Hindu help simple
y*rt of Muslim

"^

plundered treasures to the veiy victims of

too

the raxxle-da7jleof i public welnhing-In plunder. Yet they indulged In empty glamour -ceremony lo hoodwink the public without
Of

an

^r.tind.nK

intricacies of or unravelling the

Hindu

history.

part'nt with even a rupee.


Isckintf

Such

analytical exposure
aliens

It

completely

in

current texts written by

or their Indigenous

cognisance even of
la talk of

altitude the British didn't care to take prop* With such an European travelogues and other records, not

under-siudies and

camp

followers.

Muslim chronicles.

Evaluation and Analysis

The above
Mailim DcicpHoo and

that Muslim elucidation should convince the reader

European

histories

are

motivated

coneOcUoni

or

hostile

The

British

envoy. Sir

Thomas Roe.

for instance, has recordtd


and yet

misrepresentations
Public

by the the deceitful weighlng-in

Mogul emperor Jehangir

Indian history lake every are Khool and college text-books of sing the glories of such derogatory references and shield off
to

RcccpUvUy
playsagreat part receptivity of the public
in

theproW'on

The

Mogul

rule.

of irue history.

The account says

" At Mandu Roe saw the emperor

(Jehwtfr)

U always
enlightened
of wailing

general advisable for the

metals in fighed on his birthday against, u variety of precious of golden set ihe sal on one side of a pair

in^st in new Hndings concerning^.J

Pf^/ * "^ *
g,

turn

emperor

while lags of gold


b> the

urn* weight

other folio wen- placed to balance him on the food precious cloth and
In silver. Jewels,

'^

for the those i professional historians. because prcs ifc (such as their power, position,

a^va,

^J*^?^*** m ^ rinm
^
npV)
>

were noi Hoi was unimpressed because the precious metals a and he rgues thai since the sneks were earned inside Ogata In u wm not likely thai ihe goods would be distributed

ami si adopt a iIicy or total unconcern once ago"' in history. This has been enthral on the part of the
the Indian intelligentsia in

lack of (eJ (n lhe


j

h thy
<> Pp.

were intended to be. '"

^~
tndlo.
> 615
'

building, (such a. the

TnimBhal)^
construction.-

\$J^ t*&"

^J^VW **"

)P

pf

m. m.

*tt*J by

The Embassy o( Mir Thomas Roe. 10 w. Fouer. London. 102*5.

Skri) to be pro-Muslim

m
, KnoH" ^ilenl and
gwn
.nUquliy
f

seem to agree nor do the UiniliUoni plausible meaning.


the
to

laad to anv

Yaska.

*"***

* onlv

nncientmoal commentator of Immemorial


"Peculating about the real meaning omniscient even the multflaleral

the Vedas,

naturally, because

in

wr

branch of learning

no man can be how then can he fathom

conglomerate truths of the Vedas ? The


itiempts lead to only

mull

ii that individual

some absurd

translations.

ALIEN DESIGNS

AGAINST HINDUDOM

let us take an instance. Atharvs


line.

Veda

(lfl-1-l) hat the following

WhO* tbe 1000-year- long


ibunoered
it*

line

"" ' destroying

of Muslim invaders openly Hindudom b- either massacring

In the translated edition of the Shaunik-Sankhya Alharvaved

the Hindus to Islam or converting


Portugal) were bent on using

European powers
subtle

(excepting

Samhila edited by
1866 A. D. the

W.

D. Whitney and published from

Berlin in

more

means of

snbolaginu

above

line has been translated a* :-

and engulfing

Hindudom

into Christianity.

"Let go the

bulls of water;

let

go the heavenly

Dm.

"

Sw after the European powers established


Indui CSristisn missionaries

trade contacts wiih


T.

started sending back to Europe some

H.

Griffith translates

as

let go.

fake abracadabra as translations of

the Vedas so as to give

India

- The

bulls of the waters hath been

The heavenly

fire*

a bad name and impress upon Europeans the necessity of stepping

have been let go.


In either

"
this

up

effort! to

subvert

Hindudom and convert Hindus to

Christianity,

Ttw MusCim and Christian methods differ but both eye Hindudom
aa

connection

let

any tense. In case the translation doesn 1 make us consider some modern phraseology.

dek*ble morsel to be swallowed,

like

a wolf ogling

at i

lamb

HmGuitm

Snee tat Vedas constitute the source and the sap of lif* <* i number of translations or the Vedas began to appear

'

**A

newspapers and books motion For the last few decades our between Russia and . -aU war Ul
,0"K

draW"

Wia,
1*1 no

future Mstonan would vears hence to make any heed or isB

J* :^tbouMnd wndtr

in Earopesn languages.

why USA and USSR should


India and abroad
tbtt

* *
he

not realized even today both in are

common

borders?

*"

Vfte

PH
U

* **n
of
tfc*

uniraruUuUe because their letters, syllables enut couutute a mysterious complicated code of the ienl m,4,ni of IH> dlimilable cosmos. As such any

wd

rms? What were the objective. fMght ? How is ft no

"JJ^

^ ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^ ^ *
<*J

hart put, say. a

whm

U*

^^

whBW

the baiUea

, ^ther a.dc?
or

Ww

^-u^k

common
Or

cold or a

cold

war the

onU
li

or syllables as they seem to ^ d bound to be totally absurd and irrelevant

freeiing of each other

'"^^JV^ ****
'

or eapiUi '

*u

mutual

bombardment with
"ceberg.7
If

** *!*

"umerwis translations and interpretation.

that*

w** '"**
je*a

jump* wrtncfwd from lowed did lh* ir remain cold?

in

m
T^ IjjijhW
i I

-1 ; I *wsW irm at il. o*


I

'.-

*****

^^^^ ^

^^, *

t Starve

Be

-**.'*

to ta*i-

render *a*ti*r c ** bapt taciB,,-

i_Tj1i
5a

if

T1A
."

jaiar

Veda* as iiii'Miri' tnBthticos rf tht

-..- -

~- --=-'. ^--*--~

af

at

firm, mm

cKrrfw Eanpefa ?
thekftg He

*fipwf<r<i(

^^^^

. *

* *

***

:-s.r*r--

"

1273

SLTwih
,

stated most explicitly fa, hi8 Col. Boden !llThl 1 f^der l ,h* 'P*1 ob,M of his m^nldam August 1I ) "*

^^T^
,
of

TL

BO
I

M*r-WOK""
n

observes

must-draw .u^,

occupant of ihe Bodcn only the second

Ch*

^
*

14

***

1*

Valentine P
>

-.christian

Europeans observe on February Day which the times, greeting one another with cards

Vat

believing that birds choose their ruddy heart and the celebrated Vedic Vasanta day la nothing but

it. Mtt

a***

Mil

translation of scripture* in Sanskrit to promcrt* to proceed in the conversion of hh> countrymen the Christian religion. ' to the

^haml)

festival.

Thai

should continue this festival of Vedic India


is

Europe '^observed In a Christian

yet another proof of the

^er
Mch

Vedic unity of

mankind.

Mbw
fxa
man

lV his objective behind that publication S^irn of >hc Hindus. Explaining "These lectures were written to help candidaua too notes. John Muir. a well known old Hafleybury prise of 2000 given by
and great Sanskrit scholar, for the best refutation of the Hindu

Uttr H. H. Wflwn volume author of

wu

appointed to the Boden Choir.


-

He b

Missionary's Vedic

Name

titled

The Religious and

Philosophical

Ceylon Philip Baldaeus who visited A Dutch Christian missionary. from his name Baldaeus of the 17th century derived , lhe middle
arldevas.

Krishna. the elder brother of Lord

discerning AD such evidence should convince


Christianity Is

CWgjlM

religious system.

Chrism" covering ancient only a misleading cloak

In his letter dated

December

16.

1838 Maxmueller too had

written

alias

Vedic practices.

to the then Secretary of State 'or India.

"The

ancient religion
in

Christian hrbliun

and Muslim Coercion


and mother sucUHng
alias

of India
wfll it

Lb
1

doomed and

if

Christianity

does not step

whose

fault

be"

" Thus

while Mu'rtim rulers did their best to convert

like an affectionate
of

the

Hindu with

their

swords. European Christians did their worst

diverse

temperaments Vedic culture

to convert the

Hindus with their pens. The Haileybury mentioned


i.

faith in

above

is

the Sanskrit term Haileypuri

Sun-city.

cspaaaus n the world which has the

JJJgJJS ^ ^^
^ ^ ^v
n) t0
'

widely actually accept people of 0 warmth of its heart and the cooltr

>*.

The Bd|MD Missionary


Vedic culture doesn
A Belgian Christian missionary.
't

any clash with

^ ^^
1*1,.^

)wuJl!niflIum

CammQe Bukke who

grew

old

flndblamltinduismdoesn't^rveanyooc
or perish'

and cued (around 19R3) fo India revealed towards in a weak moment, the end of his life that nanw hia birthplace In Belgium, bore the ma-. CimpeJ |. e country's nam*

but graciously

fomt't Temple. Even

his

d plants) as members Mnglv catered toIt i,

^"^l W*
of the

nndu din animals **** *" *


*hlch nurtured

krit

Belgium
atrcngtB

is

Sanskrit

Balam-ajeyam meaning (people) *of invindl*

hat

VUe

culture

and

*", ,*> War The

BWHhM
Urn
Th. awmin^iy ..,,, Chriitian unnauan turnun* Ravenshaw is the u aumanv.- Ravens-haw

ranoilcism, intolerance

and"*

S^^

since then

may bo )ud*H uw )y |R

^ (oimm
Inc

**

sun

was subordinate

1275
Iff*

UW

Promoting
Its

of the minorities by pampering them promote the interests their ever-widening, parochial and archaic demands

tel. anttta
,vi. tf

Wwwi Romnn Catholic*,


'

atheism

8N0

dwffiM.
, |

wm"

wultri * n ih(t P,under n ,d desecration or murdPr of ,fit0m p,ie8ls nn <l U

Btlu f f

X aW*
*
JJ

""i
"

own

peril.

This

may be

sheer suicidal

folly,

but there
death

to see. that even to the paint of his own *Tfor everybody averse to impose anything of his own on othen.
Hindu
Is

,xher

PP*- The treaty of

Ky down

wfll ih.1 Catholicism

1861 between the warring bo regarded oa the sole reU^

Though that

may be

a saintly virtue, In today's world

it

has

vice. a self-destructive

Hinduism
It

Is

beset wilh so

many

nmioa

Internal

and external that

must

for

sometime abandon

Ponu^t
wfll

It*

concordat of liMO toys

down

thai Caiholldim

guide

all

education and administration in that country,


Article

look in Goddess consecrated, personified expression


and

stand, pick up its sword once-again maternal, ascetic, neutralist Bround for its enemies. This role of Hinduism finds

Duma.

constitution (framed in 1809 A, D ruin thai the kin* and his ministers must belong to the cvangell^i

Sweden

2 of

Its

filth

In schools religious

instruction in the native faith

is

compulioty
apostasy
life.

role

recent memory. Once in the Hinduism has done that twice in 1680) and again In the role of of the Great Shivaji (1630 to

for Christian pupils.

from the Stale

Upto the end of the IJMh century religion was punished wilh banishment for

D.) Guru Covind Singh (in 1699 A.


religious To meet the growing menace of subdue self-assertion and must once .pin enter a phase of

fanaticism Hinduism
all

Hating

lt

constitution also declares the evangelical Lutheran

doctrine to be the Stale religion

and

that

over 60% of the

ruler's

Intimidation

and discrimination.

minburs musl profess that

faith.

UVe
is

the Chris.!*,. Muslim.

u ta*
wilh s.v

Utnmurk
ruler

The Lutheran church


It

the Stale religion and

lh#

discrimination

which

is enforced

W W""
*
to

. very

Nr *M
nv
-

muii own

Gmcc

The Eastern Orthodox Church of Christ


is

In Is

the

officii)

Muslim

state,,

throuuhou. .he world

"

rrtgwn and conversion to other religions


Great lUiwin

not permllled.

.rmln.

The catalog

the Hindu, Muslim discrimination ap-lns.


, 1 i

** * " "'""^ *

Institution o*

" "* "w-profto

The Church of EnglnnJ alias the Anglican Church "'won. The king, the Queen and the Wed CrumcrlK*
-

No Hindu (Sikhs and Buddhists


or run any educational

^^\
unit

,j*j\

allowed to establish
i$

otfn

erf**
A
,

"d
.

Mj|jfl on(J

j((ni

ihatfwth.
i>

language
Shintoism the State
"a faith.

in

country. any Muslim

universities In India.

*N
**

^ fa
m
'

Hinduism

Is

the State religion.

2) Unlike

Urdu medium

'"'"^"^ Vedlc Institutions,


"JjJ'JJ

^M

Mlu|||||

country allows Sanskrit

^JhlmijthtSutreUgion.
3)

^^ ^ ^^ ^^
***
^
ft.iu.vd

* ! thiv

No
nor

correspondence In
is

induu,

**** U* nut only will Hinduism not be the stale n*J* "* H b ih, )T1Hl lfldeovour r the (Hindu-majori*'

N>% Hindu poDutoUon

has *.ted

n*j*|

any holiday

*w

J^u

by the Radio*

ONoHind.orS^-Kritpn*

J?T6

1*

rf

f^dav V W ordinal "r^***"


"
'

Wl-^ Muslim mass media do


. ,

Far from sponsoring any Muslim country. Indian language. news. in any

no! broadcast ,

^
,3)

1277
is

publicly feasted

upon

(In India)

by Muslims.

No Hindu must
of
his.

fa elects
!

51

<?Z

l^Tanv Z minority
of

national presuleni no Hindu Muslim as lis elective post or take any pa rt lft stand for any to country, so much so that even

publish, display or U any religiou* 9aipin such as the Vedas, Ramayan or the Geela in any Muslim

country.

Swami Dayanand

's

Salyartha Prakash

is

totally

banned

by
14)

all

Muslim countries.
in
in

Muslim

rf^teion
Hindu 6) So
,chool in
is

to a

community he cannot claim any right any Muslim country. school or coUege in

No minority regions and regimes are allowed to nourish any Muslim county unlike the Muslim administration
Kashmir (India).

any land for his allowed to buy

own home

or 15)

a Muslim country.

While Muslims are allowed lo retain and tend their graves


even in the midst of Indian highways a Hindu
to raise
is

forbidden

portraits of a Muslim president India displaying Unlike office* in display any portra.1 of his leaders in is allowed to

any shrine even


is

in a desolate region In

Muslim countries.
his

Hindu

16)

No Hindu

permitted lo work wearing

usual apparel,
Is

country. any Muslim

thedhoti in any Muslim country. Likewise a Sikh too

disallowed

H Unlike a Pakistan President


in

being suffered to recite

Namaz
his

even

from keeping his Kiipan


In Saudi Arabia 17)

(religious dagger or sword) on himself.


is

Delhi's presidential

mansion no Hindu can perform

own

a Sikh

nol permitted even lo enter.


lo the military

or idol-worship in any nl. such as fire-worship, place in any Muslim country.


holy 9) Unlike religious
India,

public

Far from recruiting any Hindu

or police forces,

even ordinary government jobs are denied


countries.
18)

to Hindus, in Muslim

no Hindu in any Muslim county procssions through public highways


10) Far
in

the Mis) ftj Muslim processions (such as organic redout allowed to play music or is ever

No Hindu may

purchase any land

In

Muslim countries for his

factory or other business. He

Is also

disallowed

from conducting

Hinduism allowed to from any mass conversions being

any

Mushm

conversion of Hindus in

the Muslim countries (on the lines of n0 Meenakshipurnm. India)

ms

business onl> any independent business. He may set up such a a minimum or if a local Muslim or Muslims a.e allowed

share.

permitted even to profess his


.-.'ountiy.

own

U> religion openly

IS) Rversince India


In India

became

free In

1M7

Mi.-hm

over Muslim

Insistence on
is

11) Unlike Halaal (torture killing)


(in

meot shops P*''

Muslim custom) no Zatka co ihops are allowed in any Muslim will oe P any Skh kQii pork in any Muslim country he loo
deference to
Ingle atrokt)

^" ^ a (sloug

110

Arabia
20)

itself

cow-s.aughter

^^

|f

^
la

Blaffl in Hangerrsbrt (tot allowed to be freely

>^lndtoh^^^^^S^
AH cenl " (as In educational centres l '"

^^^

ld

death sentence. punished with a

"^^^*
. ^.^^
Jam ia
Milla,

several not,

have

rwd

Wheaded and beaten into pulp.


12)

WhO, no Hindu
of beef In India

demand a ban as though he regards the cow


it

on^
*

permitted to

to flourish with Hindu


tolerates anything Hindu-

ZZZ^f&b,

M(i-(im no Muslim country


_

^ n

1279
I

IT*

2,1

SU -d "in*
*
'""

*j.Mr

ever included '" any ne,d loom. hockey in countries.

1Mb,
'

m **
,

Jft

black
-The

burqa closing in on them to the very

tip

f their

now.

Ahmedios who clnim to bo Muslim


I

and SBudi Arnbln

whi,e ,ndi n

are persecuted by the

tl

iher

Muslims.

extend them a welcome to Hinduism,

X
-

Th** no non-Muslim or lhp


of the

and hateful discrimination enforced noihff irksome is suffered to live within Kaba UP>*

In Saudi

Tho Bo-called Khojaa are lahnna Hindus of Gujcml terroriwd conversion. Another group known Abdalls were those Into mass

Pa,8ce of

he Sfludi m,er '

fc.^ HNh.

who were forced to become Muslim at the orders of the invader

Ahmedshoh Abduli.

md

fUCh inhumanity

^ntrr-measures such as

non-Muslim nations too muji banning punlnh and namai in


every Muslim only to one

^
wife,
all

When the Muslims


really

cluim that they have no castes what they


in

puUjc

mean thereby

is that

decimating non-Muslims they are

y-bwy,

torture-slaughter of animals, removing Ki-avwfrom banning (hnlaal) disallowing cow-slaughter and other public places,

restricting public vehicles, IiCr, or

one.

Mohyols in Punjab, known as Husenl Brahmins migrated from


Arabia to India

and

u)f rf 'beef',

preaching violence banning Muslim scriptures

for safety.

Thai proves that

until

the lime of

againtt

impose reciprocal restrictions on Muslims in India non -Muslims and in Muslim countries. This is a item re imposed on Hindus
tt

Mohamed's grandson, Arab


(f

society did have Brahmins. Even todny

a proper,

detailed study is

made

of Arab society, groups

who

impartiality and mutual reptei *lmim*trative necessity to restore sections of humanity world w'*re sectarian tyranny has held large
in i

secretly retain

memories and

traditions of ancient Vedic Brahmlnhood

as distinct

from others could be

detected.

to

mnwrne. TTus

ts rot

only the right

and duly of Vcdlc


It is

culture
thil
e.

but

the very life-mission


alias

of Hinduism.
is

in

this sense

Hinduism

Vedir culture

known

as Sanatan Dharma

i.

ih* <-verlasting social order. Its alternative title

connotes the righteous, enlightened order

'Arya Phamu' nto meant for the impJuW

and affectionate upliflment of every individual.

Uljuik Cuittism
d

Hmmsaboul

Islam having ushered a caste- free


are

brolborha

tnj liberated

women
in

empty chauvinistic bombast.


titled

A book
11*28)

Marnlhi
list

Mumbai

llakyntil

JaU <PUuli

ipvo i long

of

Si Muslim castes and classes.

1>*t classes nnd castes continue to stick to Islam

y. Prove*
_,

their deep roots in

systemthe Vedic guild


Miborfltl'

T>*

Mamie

claim of b-.ving

b0Mi

from liberating them Islam has Hfc-long Utrk. llt flry conf.nement by "utling

F"

women u condemn^
l

u ^, p
.

an t**

them

1281 |9*>

Mahal marble Toj

In

Agra (India)

[a

surrounded by numerous

palatial,

red -stone pavilions which escape visitors' attention,

Mr*

Sl^hon-Mumta! legend. The Taj Mahal ( the concocled "fied by temple- palace complex built several centuries be/ore Jl-Mahalaya a Hindu

1 5th -generation
-

Moirul ruler Shohjahan. (Reference,

my

research book

liUed
jdifice.

The TmJ Mnhul

Temple Palace). Shahjahan

requisitioned the

roW**

il

r it3 c05lly nxlurCT ond fumlture (such

silver doors,

a gold pitcher, gems stuffed In the marble grill, strings of the Shivllng and the legendary peacock throne) and misused peorl hanging on recklessly as a Muslim cemetery. Thus history has been turned so
-old- railing',
It

topsyturvy as to credit the very person


the To)
all

who

robbed, ravaged and desecrated

Mahal with having built

it.

Such

Is the appalling state of nistory

the world over.

1283

MO

"j T*)o Mohalaya. for over 300 year* vlsitora hod bm completely obHviou,

Lm
1

public my

discovery in 196fi A. D. that the Taj M*al fa mlwwl Hindu tanpit-pdn, rawleum bul coptun,d

* abounding holy Hindu


*

futures

in the edifice

wch

tht ont tfwwn

*' lM ^c

jLoJ

in a

n,,e Wustrotea lhe wori(l * difference in viewing the ToJ mausoleum or oa a temple palace.

When one stands ^-^j


flip*

nearMumtta'acenotaph (which has buried


Inside

the indent

Shlvllng)
the holy

and looka up above, one sees

u>

concave domed

Hindu pattern shown at the back. A

metal chain bangs

iom
i

mw
Shiv.

centre or the dome- Stemming out from the from a hook In the the eight Vedic direction!. Around them li ore shafts pointing to

duiter of IB cobras, since Lord Snlv la always associated *ith them,

in the circle

around the cobras ore 32 tridents, the


circle
is

special
All

mlaiUt of lor]
these concentric

The outer wider

made up of 64

lotus buds.

circles

represent petals of the mystic Vedlc lotus made up of multiples

of eight.

The chain hod a suspended


to drip

gold pitcher attached

li

hlch used

pnetkt. water on the ShMing OS per holy Vedlc

excuse to commandeer used Mumtax's death as an were to rob his main objectives peacock Una. ailm gold pitcher, it of Its fabulous wealth (such as * ShivDng and p.. door,, string, of pearl overhang the

When Shohjahan

the

Hindu Tejo Maholoyo temple palace

enclosure marble lottices forming on octagonol bearing holy pitchers in ft, tap

weaken the Mohoraja


the Hindus,

of Jaipur

who owned Tejom.-*

^? "^ g^^f^
inside

Ua

whom

hated. Shohajahan deeply

I
See the Caption

on next page

1286

, Al

Cunningham the
'

first British archaeological chief fixed

nt,r ble

lUpaH wl ue "* * c*l


ff

the buDding declaring It to be a Muslim ploi ue in3 de A. I). It didn't occur to him that his fraud in |4i4
:

*on"-*
nfVer
to
'

8S

reasons such as for several

that huge building can


is also

"j /

up

jn

one year.

Its

ochre colour

anathema

h,tm

intricately carved stonework also betrays (rodjljon> its glhorship.

A Muslim rno3que must

never have

pillars.

serried ranks and bend and rise with closed Muslims pray in 9nCt be 50 casualties per day in the 5-lime Namaa there could such so-called mosques.

U "

^ions

in

article in such reasons I had asserted In an ruin* several Masjid of Ahmedabsd to a captured n that the so-called Jama

Hindu temple, of

Goddess BhadrakaliBrother,

M/SK.C. neighbouring hosiery firm. Soon thereafter a structure. and raised a towenng demolished their old shop
hereupon
l0 in

theMusl^sofAhmeda^

an handle to sUut demanding thai M/S a local law-court


find

***
it

demolish their mansion the the maiesty of and had thereby belittled
to

smce

had

nan mjn

^ ^*^^^
Mwnm
for nelp.

talintam(wqU ,

suggests and
to

advice from

all

and
I

know of

-finding rny research

and cc

"W, me

Thereafter, on
claim
Is

my

advice.

and

made a counter-demand
It

an occupied temple

the Hindus.

the

Tnai Muslims of

This phot* depicts the interior of an historic, ancient wmpj


in

were afraid thol far from have MinilMDH UKJ www mansion they would
were occupying as a
., .
.

* g f^****J* f^J **$ h ^f^t^, s"^ * w*


*
effect
threat
,

M *f*^ ^
thai

lhe so-called

^^ ^ ^ m<

^
a*

thev

rf

_ ..nCrtlltN

Ahmedabad

(capital of Gujerat province in India) which

H"

mow*
=, the

to cca

misrepresented as the

Jama
city

Masjid.
building is located
to

>

The part of the

where the

*j

Historians a.l-ov esse to realize lha thraughout the


edifice

** ", ^p,,-, property

world

may

^
M"

UOa n0l . of

rjh*

w wnc

township or
tocanceivtn*

* wo^

c-l*"^* ^ndrnrf a
.

uM

Bhadn because Goddess BhadrakaU,


Bhadra
is

to be enshrined In this temple.

the word a Sanskrit

' pi-esJdfn de >

^^

Historians.

those township*

artWwettanJJ^ and *

, f

'auspidou.' aliju

blessed.'

'in,,.

in* *M
Vjiitora

I2S7

mfea -'wal

wfi

Important

tutum

of tb

nb u

^wllng
I

Tejo Mahalaya temple palace preml*, when *!

misguided.

mMmerfwrf manner
la

m
"

ln

as a

MuUm

mwnkum

TV

Taj -Mahal

compU*

of several

man*on,

seven aiorltd

hnjh, each

comprising hundreds of room*.

Including a

Kvtn-arM

Vialwra are shown a very tiny pan of the


of

entire premiaea. Hundred,


li

rooms, corridor*, passages,

ataircaiet and paviUana

myiurfoualy

barred, buried,

valed and hidden,

Hindu details of the kind mentioned above prove ho* proMonal

Government licensed guides make money by telling viators totally irraioniuve


ttories

about the origin of the Taj Mahal; how

journalists

wnt* uueiew

news reports and anldei In ascribing the Taj Mahal


eareleta hiatorian*.

to bhahjanan.

how

art-rrlUcs. archaeoktfiti and architects have been


in conjuring

depending on Muslim baiar gosiip


Sbabjahan's romantic
a

up

wild details about

fidelity to

Mumtu.
of

A-vatlng sEm to the status of

great builder

and wnnojeur

an, how btodiy twydopwlJao purwty

kJB
ninth th4i pattern planta.

auch baseless information through their

Wmes and lioworeteidy unhide,


of doctorate* on

around the world confer the

liberal largess*

thaw

writing

Bheer balderdash about hiitoric buildings

embossed

in

marble panels, may!*

lumug

the central octagonal Te/^ohaby,, Ulli| ToJ MahaJJ wIWjfB the an(Hcnt hQ|y
In

-he outer surface of the wall of

undum
mvang

*** "der Humus't cenotaph.


"*

Agra

India ).

HuhUm
[
l<

*v,nU
9
(br the

* pobe.
i

"* tmanaA* Mwciat^ with Vedic idols and twh **Jta prove that the ToJ Mahal was
and not

have no
built

mhm, turned

T^ ^
afjj

mausoleum for

his wife. MuirUB

MujpU
f%

""*" Shahjahon.

ua has been

wren*

I2*i

|3*

The Aula Devi temple in

Jaunpur (Uttar Pradesh region of


it

India)

known

ai

AlaU Devi mosque eversince

came under Muslim

occupation

tmtutiaigo.

The spore quadrangle and the multi-storied central tower are un-Iilamic
frtujrw
People stating, walking
in

or working in stories obove the KJbb

eoaadend sacrDepout

Islam.

Therefore that edifice couldn't have


it

ties denied at s mosque. Rut

when

is

a captured building Islam has


is

*
HW
i

qwimi Because anything captured from o kafir


e. htfy

considered

and scceptabl*.

Vishnu's footprints
"Vff
'
li

in (so-called] In (*** In a

an ancient Vedic township

known as Yauwan^ur

(1. t-

by a Frenchman. G. Le Bon Frenchman,

book

mm

* ** ** Jmtdi

"*"* ywtnJ because young lads used to flock there to study h to spodoui prtmises or the Atala Devi temple. Iu numerous
and doss,

Uuea- 1* An English translation titledNew) by the Tudor Publishing House, the

^'^ ^ ^^^
*

'
e

"

||hed 0Ver

Tomb (Delhi) III"** 1 )*" *" , yr. ago

**

pubUihtd pybUihtd

rooms

Vcdic of the ancient Hindu

The

so-cal-ed

multi-storeyed. palatial Jlti-storeyed. spread out over a vast area

"^'^f;^
^
--' mansion

-^
d

|974i |n |974

^-coloured. ^re-coloured.

"

ve ^^ defend u.. * , ,n
r

en*"* end-- *
-*
3

The parapet
Chnkra.

of

... s- -to she**


1

tantric design of Inter'****

^Ung

^ *-**>* ^^ M
-

*^ ^ *
, ,

wi*tb with *

an esoteric

P*"""

under-

"

I2PI
I

J"

$ $ $
Tomb
to

Vedlc l**" *** <l* " ri Humflyun mlMPPrapri"^ <>" ptuw.

lempIe

f lh8

UBn(

which

d*""**

fln(t

by

Muslin,

hM0M
SBW
lht

con***** r !hf British


Obvipusly, "I*'

Le Bon visited India in the early day, Frmrh author nnd l* 0,0*r:, Pn lhc ** MU,d * footprinu. n eVCT local Mu,Jim3 corrwl, y described then

' r*

Vishnu's foot-marks
they vanished Hut where have
ion disclaim
nil

now 7 Nobody knows. Archaeology offlelali


iterations hove passed
lies

?s*
Seen above
ot the right is

knowledge. Because several

and

if- huff, rflvwnoui


with flocks of large

basement of the entire mansion

dark nnd

Infested

a red-stone

lintd with the Celestial


left

Cow (Kamadhenu)
fa

because the
of

tan Hardly anybody ventures inside thosedork chamber* ruling GoiujitM po"y ' vovtd not to pry Into the myths
willy nilly got ascribed to

and a boar carved at to.

Obviously into

an indent

Hindu royal emblem.


Several such lintels and

monuments whlrh have


Tns
holy
to

Muslims.
nre

Sanskrit

Vishnu footprints photographed by the French author


it

RaJ-garbi Hindu pdace-tempie-complw. known a.

not

now

be teen even In the basement. Since


being there

was

a Ijikshml temple
It

a*ut
of

four miles from Mchrnu.

o^
wim

Viihnu'i

footprint*

was very oppropriote. Bui

seems

Delhi)

have been

Cunningham had them crtflUy uprooted and disposed of. Or they have been revered up with a three- Inch thick layer or lime concrete seen In
in.

the Archaeological Survery of India the

^^^.luve
a o-o

myth that

the- -aid building

eomp

~ ^

herlpUon found
(i.e.

in

an andent
.

the

kmg

a*

namely to continue

rent*

of the

upper dark basement exactly below the cenotaph on the


Is

fk
t*

But nowhere

Humnyun'i name

inscribed on

It.

Therefore

this

and to save the professional rflw clau-roo and historians whose books and

0ftn(lKl9 ^ ^ __,-turns adhere to the blundering

^^^

Is
'

MuiIim lnvadc .

y mother

graphic instance of

Cunningham's archaeological

forgery.

myih InlUated by Cunningham. The locoUon.


In India.

currently
rf

Wnfnm o "
llJtc

S^n

Gharry.

tom-lommed

* !L- n*rd "* <> ^TJ tn(UB(ti R was RaJ-Codhl which since * ln doesn't make any ^own ei Sultan Cadhl but was speiled Sul""1 capture by a Muslim (2) Tnough a son of the Chulam " >Wurpy tuppowd "> be buried there, there e,*" by early BrlUsh < lin (,B. *!"' premises- (3) A look at the premises dynast/a second |n *, Muslim Isn't a sfngla r (UsShtaUm|JwhIl.lht surrounding thai"* Indicate* (> All those are tuiiiy wrecked because
theoldest Muslim ePul

mausoleums trend for royal Muslim

^' i*ulun Ghan

That

li

bh a greet

*"

^^^,

clearly

^w

1 buildings form*

unrltr they come

"^J^

Muslim stiacki. Had the enclav* been

MusJim

2*2 been ravaged because Muslim no, -uldn'i have

13W

^
hZ
Inu^^
fav^

Hindu buildings as mosques and mausoleum* migujed captured tried blunderingly to attribute the Hindu features .Cniwham and others One who can demolish a building, carry u* of temple debris. to tht uk to call it a mosque or mausoleum. it once again Moris elsewhere and rais* all that trouble, expense and delay and name wfl save himself vQukl itself as a mosque or mausoleum. That ft what raptured structure

hTuldfrinf

buildinn? ,*; . . ttV, a ia) iW^* ft lintels enrw-l._c.w -,Jt pnffj,^ 1 sepujcnre and o boar) which ore deeply n^res (namely o cow aakoal i. uw ' make ,hin **PlonaUon lhot M u U mB rtun <") "n* mosques (s a n-leaf their mausoleums and 4*ri io raise of realizing that Muslim scholarship. Instead

i
'
1

num,,rou, ren"* ***<* *" d . ._ n ^.Hn'i how hod "*""" "


lfc

urrou

ndlm

"

British

MM

IGNORANCE OF HISTORY LEADS TO NATIONAL SUICIDE


why there cannot Some persons often inadvertently wonder as to
be one such a

-J* Muslims did sacred

all

over the world. (8)


it is

The Sanskrit

inscription and the


did have

Hindu animals prove that

amprring, ravage and


the tocaiiw to be of

relics of

a Hindu building complex. (9) Muslim Shiva worship found there, all indicate
(10)

Hindu

origin.'

Had the enclave been


Survey of

raised by

common history for the entire world. The world wu common history so long as aD humanity
untO the Mahabharat war.

a Vedic

Muslims

why

should the Archaeological

India carry away the

brotherhood
Ciihenshlp

Hindu rein to be hidden or destroyed ?

no Guarantee of Pulriotlsm

In efftri traditional scholars

have blundered in holding up that captured


But
merely under the pressent schism
is

Muslims for ancient Hindu temple as the earliest model devised by the Muslims only their sepulchres. The proper conclusion would be that the
raised
IT

government

no guarantee

of sharing

aa

at all. real or

fake cenotaphs in captured Hindu

buildings. Therefore

For instance,
India

a large section of

Mu^VtV
l

"^^^J, f^oml
cltluim of

urn

Is

no such thma as hinoric Islamic archiieclure In the world.

look

upon Turks. Arabs.

Iranians.

continue pan-Islamic kins and and ho are to be overcome, subdued e* Intra-natSowl pockets <*
their

"^"J^num. "

Bangladeshis

as enemfea

* one common htsW for h-ve to be iw* w oe as many histori* S3


*rt two parallel hlstone*. *fl aaim by suppressing

* J*^*-*- ** % "^ b* thereby , -TO" ,m. Nation, HdW*j2^ M^^


as
1

&'***, **-*
"
"

^- w ^ ^^

HW
* ffl

eWfl0,

1>rf^,

..

^du history has m acrer and cruel


^er
* great

"^ prca*/*^
to
1

h*

Wultfa

'-^
,

' *

umW M"

^^ ^
lndJa

Muslim

Zafa/ a fl-htilurih*h

and courtier fro*

W a.

alien

Muallm hero *"* invader,

^f!!^**^ ^SL lad* * ",* ^V^lW Muslim *

to

"courwneca*-**"*

^t*^"

history

in
because national history will lose ill meaning If Blroefc) U,,Jl*n,nv,, are boosted as national heroee and benefactors
of ih

m
S
because the same could be said of every other country in Turkey. Iran and Arab countries take the stand thai not Muslim nations because non-Muslims tbay form part of population and if European countries too thair

AcoepUnee or adoption of such a pro-Muslim country and culture by the Hindu* would be
tine* India's

^j
&

^t

conglomerate of heterogeneous i composite people

bttlc4lh

hjiu,

world. If

totally uJ * myopic Congress rulers have half ** accepted" "* such an history for the last few centuries it has a]r*advh i*** * the Hindu spirit and the consciousness that Hindu cullu^^ primordial Vedic faith of all humanity which muii * ** compromised and must be preserved In its pristine

fU|

J*

assert that they

not Christian countries because people profeasfng other faiths make up their citizenry, then alone wfll India be Justified In assuming composite nation. India to be a
it,

purft

cost*.
Purit;

yM|fl

Numerically, mathematically and democraUcaDy too


10 consider India

It is

absurd

of History Esscnllul
therefore, to be Krupul^fc
v*ust as Impurities
in tfeoi tf

ire

a composit nation. Sine* 80% of indie's people Hindus, India must be known and gowned as Hindu moon.

The pu rity of a nation "a history has


guarded
like the purity

Defender or (he Faith

of one's blood.

One of the
faith'.
It

titles

of every head of state

Is

make a person HI. impurities In its history make community sick. A remarkable Instance of this Is the
non-resistant,

'Defender of the

i nation
present

should,

therefore, be the duly of tba Indian head of

M,
tht

state to realize that he (or she) is the defender of the Vedic faith
I.

meekly submissive, over-tolerant

altitude of

e.

of the Hindu

faith. India

must
Its

be the defender of the Hindu


geographical expanse but

Hindus because they have allowed the national blood-ttreamoflMr


history to

alias

Vedk

faith

not only for

own

be polluted, since 712 A. D. when Mohamed -bin -Kara

for the entire globe.


that

That

Is

to say India has to remind the world

invaded India.

Consequently, histoiy must not be understood

to

mam s an
for

1400 years ago there was no Islam and 2000 years ago there was no Christianity. For that long stretch of time, from the beginning
of the

chronological account of past rulers end their struggle for ptnw

world to the beginning of Christianity VedJdsm


sole faith of the whole world.

alias

Hinduism

"as the
Indlii

That view of history


children

may

be considered adequate

kW
roj^

und Hinduism Are Synonymous

such

naUona'adoiW, but for people who govern and administers Joumsliw* parliamentarians, politicians.

bureaucrats,

other Intellectuals In general

(who are supposed

to apart
:

o people and wield authority on their behalf) a knowledge

should

mean something much more Important.

Hiuory Musi Identify

Nation's Personality
r m hla s>uW*-^

up Just as an Individual's personality is made nation complexion and manners of dress and speech, a
is

with the alone In everybody's mind 'Hindu" stands for Vedic dvfliaaUon Vedas. Rameyan. Mahabharat. the term India also connote, the or the world Yog, and Senekril IBarauins all
'

Even on cultural grounds India has no other alternative but lo hold on fast to Hinduism alias Vedidam and amura that It to day-by-day expanded to encompass HI humanity. Because, what paraons mind anywhere In ! the Image whieb'to conveyed to a the world uUeranca of the name 'Hindu ? While the term

The Test
There
to

made up
Is

of

Its

basic cultural thinking

and

liters*

Bracttoal historical teat to Illustrate the point alao

!a*W

A Hindu

Nation
Is

-0c
of not a Hind"

bW

lust discussed

To

believe and assert that India

'

1397

r**r u^l reling ** - - OiflW' sns ^b^. ^d Aurangzeb. All the four = * akw. ^rhb * the stood for . .V onf "* but nm ^ n on* hand " *, bul U first wo who s,00 'or some m "^ * .nd ruled m ^^ ^ j^erheads with the other two lotcgerhcads ^.^ wrt , U d

iMchcr or

politician

^
t

would be puzzled and SWv "ii H RanS Pr8U' P *

^hes

or works to damage, deprecate,

India's Vedic personality must be or obstruct Contrarily any person who helps prornolei

downed* h** L

rwtnW ^L^*^-

"*

common wm

to"!**n auth * ,

m^V* .!^ * **" jd nou ^ V nne8nother?The composite- nation theory


!.>>
1

"^
!

,nd patriot.
That
test

-wnefacior

UBlic"! a

.Anbic-POTian islamic point of view. rb be damned for disturbing iU the four


miserably on this uft.
of the

lV,

^r^TLnd-i

would not only rdp anybody to . benefactor from a betrW and , patriot from a traitor but would afS0 help determine the 'Jl of the treachery or patriotism of every person,
distinguish a

and

definition

fnend from

foe.

,^ hol!o*ne*

Communist

interpretation of

whether an ordJrTry passer-by, bureaucrat. PoUticianoraminister.ConsequenUy.lndia'. internal and external policy could be faultless only

when

it

encourage*

hi

* 00

^rr^i
ta

1 inXd to damn both contenders as representatives Wore, Communist dabbling with


tciety. .
other vonety permitted. Likewise every never be to be a composite nation which fancies India thought with In*', history.

and supports elements which are friendly and


its

affectionate towards

Vedic personality.

Vedic Pledge Essenlhl

JS*
mufnever

Among
election to service,
Is

qualifications prescribed for s candidate -landing for

be trusted

any

public, national body, or for one Joining government


that

Km Ptbup and Shivail shall JTthTpUvered in the

continue to
preservation

be deemed heron
of India's

the first basic requirement should therefore be

Vd*

he

firmly pledged to uphold and defend India's Vedic personality.

Son^nLly
Sdtand
them

history

mustcondemn an

A^randAuran^
That the lest or criterion mentioned above
to hist

to batter down villus because they strove

and

togJceJ

may be proved by an

Illustration. Let us take the

enmpli

of in

and obliterate Vedic

civilization.

Her. then

we b-ve
in

the better criterion to judge


narrative

value of

ordinary pedestrian walking along a thoroughfare. He wiD regard any vehicle or person assaulting him, as an enemy, since the assault
leads to a loss of his limb, injury,

human

being

any historical

omnm^
Any
person

damage, discomfort,

pain. *ngulh.

standard. pan-laUmitm cannot provide such a world


anywhere
the
in the

humiliatiion

and

purse or personality has financial loss because hit

world
life is
all

Vedk way

of

or preserv who drives to establish, promote good and g> should be rated in history as

suffered

damage.

because

Vedidsm
best for

In the

hentage not only a primordial, divine nalton human beings irrespective of their
It ii

Likewise

when

India too

is

coursing

Its

of worldly affairs its


;'
io
(

murt primary concern

^ *^
<n
it

eobur. caste, creed or religion.


ncriflce

and renunciation

rather

devo based on truth. coer than on tyranny,

*V

precious. Vedic personality.

Olher Varieties of Ignorance


of to Apart from the basic question *jj^'ot detail* "her. there are other minor dangerous uld bo shown to lead to bad and

cqutoruon. greed and


Definitions of

dogmaliam.

Pwriot and Traitor

W.

"P^
C

toW

to

dew TbecriterWnatated above also, incidentally, helps one pstr art India friendi and well-wishers abroad and or batpara within the country. Any Indian who overtly

**o> School-level histories often


r

Planting large, shady

tree, along

^ ^
r*

pr**

^^^^ **

"
129B
fruit, fodder.

Umber,
to (be

fuel.

medJcint,
traveller.

the needy

and

fe 8r

wea,y

* BfBl .

1299

m* ^

, notorious
of historic

Modem
they -V
In

bureaucrat* sewn to be loudly oMfuk. letmed at school, since the trees they

and leakage whJJe buildings made from lime hav.


for seepage

^
been completely

sucking the moisture and water underground, as

public perks, these days, are flimsy. ornarnt, plants like eucalyptus, which far from providing for the use of any Indigent passer-by. render the

n^'^k "****
*if?***
'
f,UJl

* lack of maintenance. Toey also provide jgtinsl extremes of the weather.


Ajurvfd

W d moisture proor despite centuries of buffeting by noun. (rmi


,

yril

lnso[iUon

n w ***

alleg'tf

Yet another lesson of history, concerns Ayurved, the tndmt


is a simple. unpretentious, dicenlrsJIwd unostentatious, inexpensive and comparatively painless method of treatment.

?rc*-LIncd Highways
times India's naUonal highways and the of rural roads used to be lined with huge shady trees banyan. peepuJ. tamarind, amla. jamun.
'

icience of healing.

Ayurved

In ancient

mango 2 (washerman's) nut and mergoaa which were rich sources tfft? fuel, shade, timber, fodder and herbal medicinal remedies

kT*
7^. w

According to this ancient Vedlc medical system every


had to gather, process and administer
himself.
disease.
local.
all

practitioner
ill

htrba! remedies
skills

by

He combined

within himself

all

medical

to treat any

of India's

bureaucrats who are maintenance, end horticulturists

His remedies were mostly not only indigenoui but even


and curative and not merely
believes a disease to be

in

who

charge of roed-liytng t* supply the plants setm

The remedies were nourishing

palliative.

be completely unaware of their duty or selecting the right typ of trees for roadside planting, because an Important lesson of history
taught to

An

Ayurvedic practitioner never

Incurable while an allopath generally always characterise, every Ilment as Incurable. An Ayurvedlst specUIIw In diagnosing every

them

for passing

at school was considered by them to be good enoutf an academe examination but of no value for nUonI

disease only
is

by

allopathic diagnosis feeling Iht puis*. Contnufly

getting

more and more dependent

on hug. commenrfol. industrial

application.

Architecture

time such tests also pmuK mechanical devfees. Besides consuming to the patient and also reduces In consld-rable frustration and fatigue the patient to economic penury.

An Ayumdlrt never

ask. a patient

Another lesson to be derived from history concerns archilecur*. India's ancient townships and historic buildings testify lo Ho*
expertise in this
field.

and

.11

n,ea,CiJ l medical treaunent,

waterworfc. Sanskrit texts of town-planning,

, , lso doesn't permit

raising forts, palaces

and temples are available And yet today even after 48 years of freedom

bundr In their that great

physical distress of

^JT^
wn

nrtcUtlonw

code of conduct according to Ayurvedic make money out of the

* , winU h* P*uwu.

ire

p^,*

for by the community.

or Hindu architecture and town-planning is allowed to lw*v^ abandoned, deserted, neglected, scorned and forgotumnot a single school which teaches
of lorn-planning
it,

while the Western,

^ "^
trtW

^*

must ra system. The world too

... . to free India ought

rtvfve and encourage the Ayurvedic ^^ vMm , hsadlny.

and architecture is being actively P* sponsored and promoted all over India.

On. additional virtue of Hindu architecture I* "**_-. bkh can be locally processed by every builder for Prooaw u ch-p, tfn dent d 9peedy Modern cam" "-J

ms*'

i*>

^
TV

noi

emperor

In

MM

1.

A.

,h.

H U -| m

court

Mu

^
,h,

rtH

5 ~* roW ^ed TS
In hliih

Si? rzf* T ""^ B,nw sw,,, " UUR ^be,


A. D. the caption ri*hUy

*^
ton
In

pnirtler It

perch of the throne and th* marble pedestal on whfct| t standing under the Imperial aeal arc details which can nil) identified ln*id th so-called IXwnn.l-am pavilion
of th fetf

WW

ConKquenily according
Red Fori
In

record the inc year In

Delhi with

to thli precious, contemporary Mogul royal Ita reception pavilion cilned even
In

which Shahjohan was crowned

king.

And yet Indfan Maori*

uught n" over '** wor| d and palronlied by

fndla'a poit-Tndepcndenc*

Congress government. 11" Watanily and btundorlnuty

auen

thai the Red

Fori In Delhi watt raised at cihahjahan's ordere from I*K io IftW A. D.

by a (fictitious)

Muslim

nrchliect

named Hamld.

Archaeological notices

on stone put

up

Inside oi

the entrance io the pavilion make the same.

toielcM, blundering declaration In Hindi and English.


Thfa Is only

one graphic Instance

of th* unverified bluff and bluster

lhat characterizes all

Muslim

history throughout the world


reveal

Such instance, which

an

legion,

Hut

British

admlnbirators

who

Government 0( archaeological detriment of the Wnored the fact that the plan India dcuboratolv perverted history They
set

up the modern

and decor of the historic building

In

India,

ma^ueradtog

mqu.

prow them mausoleums or other Muslim construction.,


misused Hindu property.

to be. captured,

that

never advantageous myth obviously

ra**a
i

of self-interest

even though

quit* foW

^^
mum
,

iuipi*d

OAHjauaN
IV 1

>Kri

lA JVrjioii

Amt*u

the

Muslim claim. Such

discreet* would also

B lrtp(daiton

Of the

.rath of their fono.le

resist..
murt

l** l>Mr,

(.

O'Ml

In.tlH^t.lConsequently Hindu too loo dense-headed. too eo*ard*.


their

J Vf
-

In
Is

no,

homework we.. .s -rehaeo.^'. inrtln. -he hWV *

'-'"'"V

,.r**rvr4 In .he Hodlebn library, 0*t**-

"" Bw * * I^hn .mb^adoi',

.nu,mporory. court -pjtawr

,0 to

gr Ml hior.cfraud.from house untruth be allowed to

*"*Uia"

^^'^^17^^ "^ ,
,

^ ^^ ^

^^ ^ ^ ,rw. "^ ^ *

^ ^
,
<olnf

prwnuHon

of hi.

crtdtt*

.rcharc^lcalrv.d.nc.to.h.ton^*

5
1303

1**

grades
^jahan

T.| Mahal has now been proved l0 , &nce the Shiv lemple. But architectural t.m. , obviously vWttn. of Pnw'W misfortune. Whll. the Taj Mahal as a mausoleum raised by the 6th iteration Mogul

g^

27 "
l

n A

(for his wife.

Mumuz)

terror
been"

this building In

Aurangibad ha.

.^resented by historians as of Suhjahan) for his

a mausoleum raised by Aurangab (l


wife. Rati. Durani and
I.

wcce0'
hft0

consequent

#n

as

Bibl-ka-Makabara

(i.e.

wife's mausoleum).
faults of contemporary historical and
traditional

n,ts

myth rxpows numerous


If

archaeological scholarship.

has allowed

Muslim myths io pass

muster.

None of them has done any home-work or even intcVm

ffosschKkinn. For instonce. there In Agn one li Informed that Bhahjahan amputated the hands of the masons to hat they may not raise another
prototype for

anybody

else. In the

same breath one


mausoleum

Is lofd that

Shahjahan's
wife whll*

own son. Aurangxeb raised an


yiahjahan

Identical

for hi*

own

was

still

on the throne. by
n local

A thesis submitted

Muslim

professor (and blindly approved

-faculty or the Marathwada University In IW2 for By a somnolent history funnily suggests (without furnishing Ihe award of a doctorate to him)
thai the mausoleum was raised by onv contemporary proof whatsoever) own untimely burial In anticipation of her i voung Rabla Durani Tor her own supervision cooperation, consultation and death with the active.delecu.ble .his sinister ic.1-of fci of her own husbano. Aurangzeb. Ievoked the wrath of Rame.

<r"
0t

historical tuition

which

rightly

.0 protest

to the Chancellor about .he

hut**-*

" " <*

ihe

Marathwada University-

en
courage

a lay

man endowed
detect
.he

with a mrf-cum
of ih*

may

absurdity

ttbi-Ka-Makabara. from the

W^^
,imllorirfS'>n !
,

<fZ
J*

U a

o'

a hi-orir building i" Auraneabad. a city in the


inflj.

one of Knee Rabla Durani was only

"*^)|winl0
A

)nmaltt

AurafWieb's

**ifMhui ncion <J

< * Mahal of

'fcviously this

Is

an Interior iwto of the

Auraruneb's harem where ore

Aj^lt u

Raukeahwar ahlv temple.

other pre-deceased wives'.' "" five mile.

hou^her'^be ave be
mound and not
Muslim court-;
I

^^3? ^T^.

*
b

<**>
-

Ttr* ., ...(Ming. There

*^_ wrJh
,

Habla Durani built no

pa^^'^!

*he be

a P** bothered about

iar

(Owirtety Mra

.luyn Oatnla

and V. 8. Codbola)

***"'-, *" "

mi**m
,0

rpr

hfrwl/

lB

fin'" AV Au "cabad
ll,hlfl

>

Twn-^

**

*"" "*

ma,,">W"n

At .K.

*>'nl

ai t

HHri
'

ami*

M cwM wrO

br

annealed

to pre decaa*
l

ft*

0("W

was pfni on in* buifctinc where

th,

^,rtv

MM *

***
ill

*hr

Wh,

d(Vs

^^^

UWK*,

|M |W <KUBtfuUr ' Why U

door metal v \ut4 ?

*>(lipn-ill*lwhwlWhwfii U r> manufanun-r imonoctam.


<a ***! have even (rw ftartm m Utadrtn myth.

refer

ip

any hUtoriri

in

doing tort

mart* * *t

tmtmmom
Tkn

*#m UraM
aVwr

rrta-al

They are *o brink and vulnerable as proddiiv Yet nobody to ha*

wmi

after fuflibk
aetf

CTMnwri U

repeotm,;, lew-nina
history.

""*** b t* nuiht
n y

tame dmiitivr. unverified Muslim

tagolalnv mieOfeeacc and countf* are a matter of aharr*

and rot In ihe mUt aatrwh lev the convenience of the vested Interests el eauaentd bw^aaucrac* and continue to mislead myriads

mrkj.

Mun mankind

nm

anMucu
*!

and icuntu

all

over the wort*

nm-

aa Uaaaaar?

the ancient

Kaiakewar

templt.

Narby r**^tfi ten

RMHut*

tWn ^p,,^

**r UaAm M*,

of B jnfBiB

t3m!!T^T

^*

a.

phmd^ ind ewecraied the buM* Vnm *RftwK*"''templeforthem*ehdonii.-ii.

'Diw

*- occwpaiBo.
B,
'

mtdof^l subuliui*

for the

wauMv

anrlrfll

H*i

uTaa*Jl!!l' Q n

*,a*W <rTO> h ruMhef apportnl "" "* * Bollw J-7r T "l0tt,w lhe" cUim "** "* *uW"* "* Mh''

---

ri

the anrtonl Hindu

afapakat aoaattLT
a>

Tho*

fow
,

only

)"

AOo
ril,.

an

A^a^^ aMbLr*^ tam*' * hMU '^ * * Aeun


K M--_

building

^^

Wore
u

Rabia

drain of later

was commla*""* ' T>*

tVira tn JordJ"

""""^V *
,firf
'

6.1

_^ a"^ * "" Nrtclwn

'

"

Jurdan

aM"l*> W-^*Is thf

r*wkii

the Sanskrit terw.

w ,.

M
*

1J07

W*
,

'

<""

Pr

"ur1

'

"'

*'

B, ne>

,lnw

"

a ft*
'

**tlr*-\

^^
I,

IWtf

*ur

Thai

**.

I.

San**

the irn 'pHriiy

Karblod form

" f this 4n Mnmisu*** 1**" 1 iv MJ' Ptw'*r O^

"n

inciem
t

VftI *

cultumi

Zo
h

A, cw^nUon

^mre of ih, rock-cut cave*. All Vedic rituals begin with faosdf of the divinity. of - ptKhtr lo represent
I>

* n

"' thp

SOLAR PHYSICS

IN

SURYA SIDDHANTA

nandaid practice throughout the ancient world to carve for gurukul VftJir studio Munulii-iiaff Provfdf premises pundits and sages. In bermuagt,. ortuctcd by teamed Sanskrit

hundreds of locations in India. In Sach raves ane at


rftQ'
frftlfti in

Afifhanisian. In

Russian Turkemania.

at

iheBamiyan Margate in the

The
i>

The solar dynasties of kings have an Immemorial antiquity Roman emperora of Europe were of the aolar dynasty. That why the Sun was part of tbeir royal emblem and Sunday uaed

blrs and fuch other sites alt

over the world

to

be a Roman weekly holiday.


Sanskrit name Roman was the European pronunciation of tba Roman tradition of luh' was alias Raman. Therefore the

Anmawlogica! dating* of such caves usually based on some


aaer runic caricaturing of Buddhist
In

or other images or Inscriptions

Rama
the

the nxk-cul fades have underestimated their antiquity.

European continuation of

the

Rama uadJuon

of Ayodhya.

The advantages of such mountain retreats

was

thai they were

ray
of

from

and

'above'

the

mountain- tides could be dug to

distractions of urban life. The any extent to provide any amount

A*

that

thereat

accommodation
onofvrd.

No raw-material was needed.

No

constructiion

at

The car**j

No maintenance was required. There was no leakatfe. apanmems provided excellent natural insulation againn
The surroundings provided scenic beauty and
implictiy and austerity required for Vedic studies.

name Rama. Therefore the themselves Ramesii I, lour**


compound meaning 'Rama.
i.

^^^^^J: ^ 3^
Pharsoh rutera

D.

U*

"Father flacuaiiom.

the Sanskrit term Ajap.il.

Rama i,yn0nym rf
hlmnif
fn

^ ^ ^^ _^

ATgypt

jn

vaa

uV

c-Blng himself
throne.

Ram.

Those mouaiah-ipaninems are the

taming

md

therefore

anciemmost seats of Vedic resounded to Vedic chants. The cave to which


used to retire for meditation was one

ItiaR^therXwhoia-^^^^^^^^
Even
Chitral.
itself

The aamese emperor

(ft, orides

"P"

^ M 9imPr
to

ohamri and
audi.

his ancestors

no
Ranva

hich calls

*" u*w

^^
of

-" because Manu, lb* "n


from the Sun.
,\*rl ., The Vedic Gey*"

The

J.p H.

* r*
1

^^ de>Moi ^ ^ ^
nnJdnd earned descant
aria*

Warn.

kilh* recognition

**

M* "*on *^ .-.a ,

m ^vocation of the Sun, rooud from and Is auilainad

1MB
a beam and m _, **!^altarn*t*ly from the nave of the Sun. At the tip of thoae g0,den girdle B*yond lhtt a BtUe ipaca J2ti <* u8 nt is
'

that sunlight

streama

forth both

* * **
1*
andr*

^*W mury-go-round P*"^


f

0f

oun *

k <* WrSo,

***"

^d
d]

golden girdle. by another

^ ^W
1b *

pre-***"

r^^
tn

^ ^
'

djn

in

our corner of the high be,Vwu

jtudied by ancieni
'

Vedk

n^ ^
I.

the larger -It while

girdle at the Up of 24 shafts of light baa 64 notch* flu golden golden girdle beyond has 128 notcbta.

Toon

m'9WrKWnPendiUm
is

multiples of 8.
is also

It

may be

recalled that

modem

computer

wxt

known as Sunn

Si dd ham a

Ration
e.

based on

octal reckoning.

**"*

g^
form
10

. Docirtw.

n w

it - master i

treatise of VedJc solar physics,

On December 30. 1990 a lecture on Inside The Sun was announce


&,

2 STrf ^ ^
uk o>

^,,

c-nskrit

compendium
tuition of the

of solar physics ought to

the local

(Pune)

dailies.

Ian

Roxburgh of tot

faculty of

modem

iMtted

and Ph. D. lev* mailing themselves of that


Sc.

M.

yironomical Mathematics of the London University was to deliver


tbr

kclure at the Mathematics Department of the Ferguason

College

^iCwrw*

modem

sch0lan f 90lar Phy3iC3

"*

COn,

*n

cnder the

auspices of the local organization known as Jyotirvidya

JjE*

with their and fidgeting

own

speculative theories about

Pirisanstba (a
'

body of those
'

interested in astronomical stadias).

1
Vf

Sun which provide, wonder cauldron i. e. the nrkiog of the to the entire universe. aomff and power

Inside
title.

The Sun

was on the
is

So long as the Sun

very face of it a vary scalding know to instate the Sun none can

toe Vcdk

nM

woven round the Sun and solar dynasties Sun have been COmm tttmrM. d*grem d modds of lne
culture is

.ben even multi-million miles


Son

away
sit

in

our own of*

makes

it

too hot for us to


if

for any

naoomVedfctradJiioo.
The Romans had their

.coder,

therefore,

modem
was

toUr stud*.

Sun emblem. The Maharana of Udaipur

fuD of nwuletions of a preliminary nature


tan

M " many '^J^


gaDm
kaH"
'

fm oq to
by

desk a golden solar model.

The Red Fort

in Delhi (baft

Roxburgh

's lecture too

of lbs*

has a diagram dynasty niter. King Anangpal in 1060) throne. of lb* Sun embossed in the arch above the spot of the
u
solar

At the end of

his

v lecture he drew

"hich he said consisted

diagram -k^ And* of carbon.

W-

Onfeokeri are

likely

to dismiss

random those sketches as


in

Kmperature regions to lower

uwosraiu

^ ^^

^ ^^
of

a"* art
fmm
h

^bff
.

from the
0(llw

hMdiwarki
fen

of artists in
it

the

manner

which children

depict ihr

botte.1 central portion of the

"Stans of the
of

Sun and beyond

they fancy

to be.

Tow ansa
<* "*ir physics
t

a possibility thai those

models and sketches

to* Sun art scientific

Sanskrit diagrams based on the ancient

if

Beyond the carbon-hub * circular portion around and

*********> w ^ ^u (be iphere

^J^.^^ ^^

mirking

-"

Um

the so namely the Surya Slddhanta- Therefore,

aoiar

diagram could be mutually complementarylike


1** central hub P** of ?J| * hub emanat*. spoke-Uke. 24 hafU Dhitti-** akamauly and wavy

Beyond that girdle b*dr* ^hydrogen. That wast*-**


In fact,

Tkm aUch u

V ***

*"**

. wheel with

** aM"* <*? the Red t** cofcJlU, rf


,

^
c-"

dui>. via.... lb.


1

frwn that
ere

uw-whiie (mien*" * 34 ahafU of ****

in>*

"^

^ ^vy,^

e-fbon P

"^*

cr055ina

atrmight

un
in

*?* J5W.2!
com-*

- *

d^^J
^ *".
I

U.*!*****"

rf (ha

A* avaflaW* m Romr
rtte**'h

* nd ,n

lmU "-

s.

Kd$r HI Yan*r* !"

mR> tbo

im I*

maw the Solar Mivhaniwn. ^feaKbai and * Srj SWdhama U r# |rhaj m^


Ijpj )anir artualh

tton U pwaat* oaniiclural a(**v of solar phyiks in rm in Wirn uniwiiiiiM bfcau* C U* irf ad*w*i flaculUaa

MKlw Sm*

Madaaaia

latt

and tht tolar Art^-lw* are navclaiory mMana)

itf

A?wn

fc>

*upv

hcmm

touli

u ajrainat mod*rn minds *ctte*


Wrt
though

hniH onb W
i0

(I.

lh* Sun as In HrtopllU) and W

pw maMUnf 'ram

tht son) art

ancimt scicnUfc

San

may

b.

*omln,

* ah ^t U
k

Hindu

mMna; isrms 0/ VaJjc vinUf and


* twfcad mi (pund in India ft oouU
was
fT

noi of modern ori#a

tanj 5 ihrone In the Fed Fort

in DeBtf.

*M a tht Vac* VHK' Mhrmi authored by ao Mat mm aac Mr smm 1 lytoh to la* ouwid* ww*d thou** at ta
be that the S-f?
caK-erftnauoft

<ioadnuny

fc-if

ta ih. r^

Ton *

***

a^aiyafltbt Slh gn*ralion Mojul rukr

u * fJ

- ^"^T^ ^^T^ h~
b.

iW

and Kudavd

wth mrtJUtiw

**
"*

at^^t^bvgulflBkhistoriaiia).

** *

tm ^w'to^
"aawwand

modem soar

physics

aj taw-fed* of the cauldron

may make I known a* " **

*"
nl ab of"* ** mm*u M bans of fottan lbt *** *' Hefcm art *^*t awatoaj * 4.-uraaU> rtr** * ^Z..bJ#* * M fa * !onB rf *(,,?^ |fci-t 91 aaafti of lnt urrm* at ApfMm^ ihay t-am. *i pa^*ai ^,j^ >rtwC3 a* iaang,
Tb
Fciii

*"
r * *ai

** "" > Nom


Viattte
eff ft*

fWBUc BMdtre aVM wwiW

corn* to
or.

nmM Ua

M wr;^
tor of tha

aann

w^ -#*

^
*

hiw

a*i aaarhaa

Sun

tnaj

lb.

drvumfra
hytfraiaai

w ar%d ihr v**** h

ocCjt*

*T^^ rmt P-

****** ""^^ **!> ^ ^a** ,A *****. Modem <*


s

tfc,

j^^ ^ iht hcter OM


ra^T"
4jji
'

on ataer *J 4
*** rb7T

*****

ti!roe'h

* V3
vo*:

M
Mmnc
Vaale

sociology

st ensuring a sxaootb.

cokcre

bdX up a

hr*|
aly

p~ttt* ^>

5bf rorss
aodety

of coodect *er*

aaaM
.

TSs* tCT

(1> Sa*>*

ML <

efiaa

Mft-Mcag. a-on-g^bce*;. dod aaaaaanpmr


t

^x

;-*T_nj

afmaogja
-

not
.

B)

3ra-rr-.acsfc.-yi

lm

aac

ip aaaar

oSoacy-

Acualy

it

arpiaa

ofr^^earf*

coasocaoce **is

an </?*"

ddttaodk*
vaadtefeat
To

TbeanjaaaaliaBtfc**-

atrife.

farrow

ti

aiuw

**

* "iti the ra y*flf** ' "" aperimced Wbv ***

^ae of
-

ifc*

abert-

*** *
3

*.fuaraote* / a ,H,

^ _^
r

-"

a^

btaait

T^

1114

1315

#-n.w

Vrflr Culture of "">' not *

^*w

,W

"UnCl

rSfti * *
to

lb* ***

of Ihiir

nsidcraUonS

^^

nvuihering Vedic values


f0r

in

Western

society.

htt

up four

f '"'*** or , uperibl ,he fn,ition f their ,ives nd

m '<* *

jchools
St.

1) ft.

James Independent

School for jmlor boys, 2)

James Independent School for senior boys and two similar schools
and senior
girls,

c.z

for Junior

ruling out co-education (because the

rPtive physiology and psychology.

|lB ft

conceptions and deliveries. has her " Beta, A woman sundry cast covotuous g| ancM ittrtciiw all wd iik0t and Taking all such peculiarities to adorn her body.

needs reflexes requirements and emotive responses of male and female minds are different J and made Sanskrit a compulsory
of study for every class

subject

from primary

to the

'

'

level.

That paiiem
countries

needs to be adopted

all

over the Christian and Muslim

iV

of ih, consideration Vedic Culture has ensured for the woman femak- into of the home. When ushering a bride the empress
rofc of

to resurrect their Vedic Heritage.

Vedic Display-Signs

into

the priest actually utters her marital horn?

the words

Saiunnjni

A system of visual

self- certification is a part

of Vedic

culture.

Bmii tmrt Si

Sw ii of

Be ye the queen of this (new) household." course the apprentice queen under the other elder 'queens'
in

For instance, every household has


every morning and

to be

swept and cleaned early

as a certification uj everybody, concerned

*ho have preceded her

the household.

prominent,
is

artistic,

geometric pattern
at

Is

drawn

Just outside the

Id such a family-setting the of stringf*- She has social

woman

safe from the

gazes

entrance
It Is

In

white stone-powder (with

time*, somecoloursdded).

occasions and

company

galore to show
her

band' up n

all

her finery

and charm and generally spends

known as Rangavali alias colour-design. Absence of ouch a some calamity such design In front of any house usually Indicated
The dolgn at the entrance as mourning, disease or destitution. and cleaned Tor the household had been swept signified that the vftfla by others. daily routine of the Inmates and welcome
other, of hi. or her phys.ca!

lime in congenial
Corn-rarity ihe
anfl

company.

mere male with his rough

tough and blunt

nature
the

no great physiological handicaps is

supposed to cope with

hurty burly of the outside world.

Wotcn Atomic*
In

the eyebrows after bath to assure chore.. cleanliness to begin the day's
.
,.,

0*
of

aftermath of the

Mahabharat war and the

imposition

An adolescent

girl

ij fmwird to tohnjP rwarx.^


l

marriage and . married

Aristianity

nw

Westerners gradually drifted away from the Vedic conduct and adopted the drink and dance mixing of th*
tar school stage
rr

both wear a red ma distinguish between them a

woman

^
.

fQrehf-d ,

,. woniin
_

^w

onwards, with the result that


is

In

I*
and

(auspicious) Sootra tnec

'

^
-

further wears a Mangala

JJ*T* * ** and 1

wife-capping

getting

common

her neck and

on silver ring,

h
i

Wack bda and gold around *, That made the distinction

Ss-i

W JZ1 ^T
'

cn H>0^nou, crim P. 'Pread of incurable diseases '*'*** * vuU* chndren nibl * ions such as old men.
'

married an clear between the

^ ^ ^^^
1

Considering

li

*** bul^rK

this Vedic

a*Bin.t

arranged marriages breakup of homes and f*W-

W*

A woman

*%***

*" hanto tnd ' r a , Dlfihof. p pragnsncy *> that sh. should be

*J

**"

wree or

blouse ***

mi ^

accorded tha convenI<-"*

(t-|

Mrphy*'**1 ltatu demanoed.

A widow

tooWB

tb#

&*

of the vermQIon dot on

* roup

of

aducaiioniau has taken a laudable

**

tf

jg^SW-

^ D-N" may Wp
b*

her find .

^ oow

beginning to re.fi*

lhrt( decades into

making

^u^

natural

programming

* aidy done about

aa*BtM

T*

,r

'r^Trf
ic*

^Z

society

*>
that

**

**W*

"**

receh,

co-cpfr***

or her situation

dm-nd,

k,m * ,oBcil ***** ***! -^aW****** ***taictioning Kkc


society tfgflri Vedfc
-,31 af

renoved in lime, space and culuns ^o^aaeb a "u grammarian aeems to have provided inT^L!* ** to todayr computer problems.

^ST^r^

" * bat t eWlpw

***

a wtfl-oued

"TV grammarian
rales of Sanskrit

Panirri

SK*

anowb-M,^.^^

aw nobe(i

aan. without the hardware. And thnbc>7

********

^ ^ nrr bek? marriedwwoman the sancuty vvU Kr tobaad whs not be violated by any
i+mm********'

i
if.

S^t,

the sacred necklace)

abo

impfcaty

aod logical in

grammar that he evolv* manner that they dote*

j^ **> 1000 **"*****


*

twbJ*

by

computer

scientist, throughout the

""****

wait

**

-a*,
ailed

the

ankbemen art**
in

grammar was discovered

Mr

* A(B(rtl ^
dfflScoll
-

Rick Brigga. Sdentiat*.

a kfettn* profession involving meticokwa tbarecoary evocation Women transplanted

o ti yean, bad beat hogged


mc a**p#sr
aacL
Ifr.

^^^ ^ ^
f

down by ambiguities

nature! languages and efforts

processing were proving too

by

Mniaje,

swag in hoaxboM cbor*

Br*g

(web

dbmnd
wo

Snsknt. Snce then, mCkoi of


research with
the subject.

doaarr hr*e

ben paged

gmaag.

cooaang. oorxore of babies

and preparing

many

Western coaatnae

doing esteaam work ob

anjdpaung
i

soo* functions) and with phyaotogkal

senses, conceptions, deaveries


1 1* tr

and ohOd-ctre

ouaSfy for wboJetim* professional

Vedk

erenow wart? Gnasaar k teafcsay At a rrfr. gnmaar eseaty wr*im Aera language has developed. Abb** b *hrfa
does Pmini's

"How

m abstraction of the bogus*

sarej

waa not child's

pky Ske

picking up

"^^T;
f

g oat a aereery rhyme. Vedic coamings woi

QWrVumsatheoa'yonewakwwtow^*^'^''"^

1are to yiefc prafscad

secretspertaining to different

*= eaprus*
*

ia

retxation needed full-time


at the preceptor s

6e&a&*-

wn

at i

aweb,

* "** abnost the entire r** Pwvr^r can be traced bsc* * *^* *" wee to computer language**- *T a
ftir Coalmen:
-

--' f

*^

the age of

home where only Snce stxs o upbrnaw* *oe*B womanhood was considered Homad into that taboo any c
5 cr $

By

**

the Vedaa wh>ch

0"^
1

of divioe origin. Their Si

Li-PI

/a,Dofbiim
Asa*.

wracraMcBcance

*%. "RiatBwhyitwof
^*ni
ia

the Tw*ur-u**
.

*ar
^i-< a Vedk arikurw

05 ihe language.

-* tae Time, * wtii 22. 1933

of India (a dafly
naad.

pub**
Even computer

COMPUTER

awry be dedwewi ftw

1319

^ -

lK W*P
i*-'

rt,<fid<

**,,

rt ***** wW^

unborn individuals, deduort billWW of permutations md ct from ihe

messen^*"
alone is

Gather

all

for

namn.

for your good,

because Allah

worthy of worship.

Allah is great."
is

2^' TV ^

Tp-* y

each of the 12 house., the i 2 dnfttS of the *' * 34 hours constituting the

The

Allah referred to above

the Sanskrit

name of the Mother

**

^^pdfed out by some gifted TrikaWarshi


see

u,d *tirrf* v c

** thai tho9 horo8cp

she was the family deity of the Kureshi family (to Goddess. Since belonged) that name came lo represent divfoiiy which Mohamed
in Islam.

a* *** ** 'f***^ en

P -8*'

preswl

"^

fulure'

psalm (as in Saam Veda) Indicate Biblical stanzas known as currently professing Chritunity, also used to recite that regions
' '

pr.

._* fcbba*

r*

computer

scientist at the Louisiana State

tbe

Vedas

in ancient times.

^ t ptfvW TV code re 813 tne "-" and *** ^.iLrLid the solar year to be of 364 .24675 days. ^v.aoon distance
*****
'* 11

^discovered an

ancient astronomical code

iwaoiomMI * reinforces
a. ta.

our "n**"* 00 lhat the Vedas

'

^Tm 2
to

Mag

rustic

muttering* as has been

assumed by

scholars

West*

*.

** a conglomerate of codified cosmic

(oaaif* formulae.

**

of the code in

Wgved reveals that the Sun


earth

is is

Iff

,hll
Modem
107.8 (or u*

sway from

ine

while

the

Moon

106

Uoon dimeter* away from the earth.


figures lo be astronomical studies believe the actual mm sod 110.6 for the moon . May be modern calculations

k*

imperfect-

boamuDy.

the above cosmic,

mathematical

the detail explains

prepooderaneatf figures 8. 106, 1006 etc. in Vedic social

and spiritual

raoxn

on
It

far

rWn lo Saam Vedfc Tun


lhat the

a not fmeraDy known


fiv*

Muslim Arabic
is

call for

prt^
Vetttc

> *rom monaie-tops


and tune This
" ten
it

times -a -day

intonated in Saam

one more proof that Arabs followed pn-latamic timaa. The " I aver that Allah call says
la

VadK

aW-

worth of worship.

aver that

Mohamed

is

A1W>

1321
Iflfl

also Danavt Greeks are


In UUn. Greeks are referred to u Danav a Latin saying . Timeo Dnnaos et Dona Ferrets" meaning "I fMr (he Greek* offer gifts. That derives from the Sanskrit even when they tdage
' '

^OTf&a

ftmnni,

m^\

stto:

Even

in

Creek language the Greeks

ansDanao.
All

scholars throughout the world must therefore hereafter look

HUMANITY THE GENESIS OF


of all creation and atone has rational history Vedic culture start of iho cosmos millions of years humanity in it from the o< corroborates thai own day. Extant terminology fully .,0 lo our
biitory

upon Vedic tradition as the source of iD human origins and treat Christian, Muslim or any other divergent beliefs to be mere recent
aberrations.

The Great Flood

guided

The Vedic account of the great Flood fa which the fish mearnation Manu, a founding father, to land at a safe, high land with
life is

chosen species of various kinds of


itself

the andentmort.

Ai per that history divinity


of
all

created the first generation

That same legend

is

automatically repeated fa the Bible and

bangs to Hart procreation.

the scriptures Of Other

That 1st generation of men was

fathen while the


i.

women

are reverentially

known as Prajapalis i e. founding remembered as Matrukas


.

carnage of the Mtnabham r*rts of Vedic culture. It was Ito . .i_,j. fabric of V*lk rivflual cm and t>rofc# *.t.j. f veoic cm shaturodtheworldw.de

WCU beau* *0K Bt

NM **

which

e primordial mothers. It

was

bice

starling a poultry farm with

a wrung basic siock of hens and roosters obtained

from somewhere.
etc.

Cabalists.

writer The founding fathers were sage


Kaahyap bad 13 wives such as

Kashyop, Manu. Dakshn

In

and tb. above cts the teachings of the

Uuls

K'^^^^TLern* ml
Jacolle baa

^J
f

a close
Vfrdic

scanty

Brlhmln,

Dili alias

Danu. Aditi. Kadru, and


ares* noo legend of the

Vmata
The children of DiU
thuyas
alias

alias alias

Danu have since come to be known Aaunu.

The Vedic
to start life

Danavas

a few repreaenUUvea of

anew

h-

^*
r*J

v'*"^* . num ber of wm.


"~

^ ^^ ^ ^
For
the

The white (Europeans), black (Negroid Africans), the brown


Indian,}

md

^ y^

Instance the
ffch

Sumer**

<

Mon|o|oM Ctinwti Japanese etc-)

" Pn*ny of iho*

different wfvet.

rivers Tigris and

facamaUon from I* *Ph

A corrooonjUon of

mu ~J *U'l>*n)mA the Dunes (from r*nav) communities r ^^utodoerive. its name from the Dar-v I"**

that Vedic history is

found

in

the Du"*

Erudu aa Ur. Nippur and

u^P^ch ^ ^. * * ^ "^ ^pe** f?


in

J*

Wihu
u*

aba.

Veny*

ttnd

watered by the

number

of

u^

a. fa Negpur

and rUnpur. In

*"-*

<

yhfchtalttbiud

1UQenlUi

p $ m^^
aaj

a,

V-*

Nf*"*. '"dicMinf thai tkmmim,

^^

*
b
(fraaaaa *
*

^
"n"1h*

avrtfymg

Ur

Krlahn.

m o taMnajifa. Ja^"* 1 **

"

"*

(I.

VJahnu lha aiipnam*

OoABflJ

"**0t,

nfVu Firm

Hi****
t* ooaartad

-".
,n

fjrtiZATVA
Mrf of

d0-*

MM * Wf"

Tlir.

0ROWT7I
lh

OP
.11

d||||| '"*<.

ov*r th.

a^^nl <^M

*MrtM

fcm 'ndl.

u> lh# Am*rw*

.bbraviaUd thrt

woH
In

^ nr

Uv*

md Kin****** m ih* bw* UUad IK. lfl*ory of p^ UW tkMMpdt o' ymn Uaf<r ';hrUUnUy f| in4tJ
1

vara 0>atroy)
tha Baltk

r*&jn
la

th. B*4c Tna Umpto. of ft^, th l*An cnU,ry whan QwniM Armcniana loo woraMppad Bbajvan

f>

wWa.

^m

to Bo^j

^ _.,
w Pmvm

a.

.^^ WWT-

Kaat Afrtr.
h>n

finw B
l la

ofbm pronu/w*!

ia

P tht

tarrn
ai

8ha|v

U*>

o* /

wwihlp
'

UanakrU nam*

aom* r^.na
|

arUc.iI.urf

n Vadj.

Payan

And K

th word

|W **v
I

**Jib

iwat
I

Pttn

aufnifylntf *

bywmhJp

matpfWMifMijuioB of Uu Mh ropoU. j t UUcally


It

which

la

";rr <-nHy aptfbwj **


wiit lfh*ir*ntt*

P^n.

Pngjinhm

lam

Mahaiiar puraa.

Oh

Hatium

a riouUr
"

< to

um dm| frvn iuii th. run whii. fkviikm


pohV
aa-U-5
i

**w
hanpa

'

<

Mthtaoffli
tt
t

Thor afora whan ChrtaUan or MuaHm laatify to (ha aaritar away of foipinfam what lhay maan la thai Rhaavan tha Vada: aunnm. tort wsa woraNppad avat > whara, wtwrh maam that It wa> Vada:
cuhtir* which hold away from on# and of tha 3fM to
I. t.

mm

prmundnUwi

of lha Sanaknt Unit

othar

um

rtalm of fWhuUitJ fa

fumou.

Vi-Jic Jan*).

from the Amarkaa

to Auatraila
Indian.

Tnwwtora what art evrmtiji

a An>MrN vtw.h n tfnmmaiw.Hlly


'

unjuallflibU In btropaan

mlatakenly btrfkvad to be only


hlatonaa aucta

Wndg tatu.
of

itTtptor- and

* " ', ""Aauw of

ih claaalc

bnnaknl nama

BahouaJi

t>m

Vadaa,

Punmat.

MM'biaakUd
Hmm.,nw
|

Mahabharat. Ayurvad fth. Vadk


<tlU,r

dm

Upantohada.

Ramayan.

*d.) and

U
^0

with th. aru of

mi.* *
In othar

*" " "- -0-

"

. r* rtlrt it.rl.n-a that in. law ar iho*. KJeh war* Inn] down by thr aun

Of th. whole of

h um*Uty.

rda. J- upto a

"^r; m

ran*

toj.

7'"'" "*"in

.,

KjyMy .rufluffc ,)oce


la

ftur

*k*a
all

*" Hammurabi

lUrif tha oanakrll

mwklnd forming,
Tore, of

and

of hom.niiy. And bc*h '*^

*C1'-K
IWCa TW to
**

fWca

mn. to

b *iKaiI ,lB "" "^"'H-l I" nUthun *" w** othar Kl1>hmi And

T** *"*" 1
""R.n.K

"

*"d

thai

Htrcu)

""^
l"

Vllc eoltor. and ir* mp _, earnratfmmUllMd pracUoa.

""^X* ^TT
,

^5^^ *. w .^^

. OT .p^,
f h.

llw

rommon

*"* uri^' ""*.


iha UrtaL of .

*,**,

*" V

Whlfn

""

<hl|*ad

-,nuft
IC

iwlMdual caJlad a propnv*dtc Caftan


vrr<niiyb-^

annuM
in

w Htod""01 ">^"i'*d In India

10*

M
Mi

in

I**

worM "^ .,-- "*


mt[imt
,

nan-owing, """''"H *lown Ut | ndJa

Siniidra Munthim

132ft

IB****'

"W"

upheavals. of historical
fl '

ih.

** .* Ph.*
niler

,',,lod

to lh "

"tUre

K,obe

nil*

TJ MB
mm
"

"I"""

" d

* succoMors and
'

fief -holders.

could have been of the ocean) that or the Medj of Its central location beLween the Europe,,
masses.

Thus for instance, the legendary SamUdr,- MiM u

hum,n

BuNf a""" 1 * 1

n ty * Chri,,U "

BhWBtvnjh came

Mcdkerranian

is

toe

buckled The non Chrt.tin applied *> non -Muslim and uV term BhOTtvimhi l, km h WM ,hU " *** by " * P Bnd piwe by Pift* * frnmm "*<* 4V,l wcd from "*lon nnvr re fion ^e w Ved* o#eW P*w
t
' ,

region.- *" wht,n

to

Arta

signifying the central location of that

** T* 8amkrii^l u" "tty Dh*n "'y

JT?**' A,l,n

*""*

*.

Consequently in studying the history to be charted on the glob.

i.

,'n-adual.

Sindhu (Indus) region and thence acquired nvthnsd only I" lh* Sndhuism alios Hinduism. ngwnal "entity as

n
In

Madra Desh

N
may

L ,r
-

mmtioned

-^Ct^S?
ta

of Vedic

be the region around Madrid.

^^
wu standard practice
modem
Sutala.

cult, a

The Seven Strata


somMtaisj-Uke in* Japanese Bonsai technique by which

-%

rw a Ian* banyan W

Hun'**1

lnl

* miniature bottled

exhibit.

Raising seven storeyed octagonal mansions

Vedic culture. Like the stratosphere, atmosphere etc. of times Vedic terminology talks of seven strata vb, A tali.
to shrink,
the term
i

4*

worhtwde Vtdic culture continued


Mtatltv
signifying

Vitala, Talatala. Mahatala, Rasatala and Pauls

That

h why

Vedic

******** prm-mmMy

the

whole

globe

connoted

temples and palaces comprised of seven

itnreyei.

dwindling region.

The

result is that legends of the


tflobe

bom

The modern European


state of
is

expression

'Sseenth

Rcmn"

aa the

Vedw imptunm and historic* which had the whole

liar nra

w oow
>of
a

optimum

happiness out of reach of lbs common people

believed to

have been confined to the current

reminiscent of that same ancitnt common universal Vedic concept.

India.

Maisya
As

Yam
"

paraDs Instance

II

may be noted how much


y*srs ago Afghanistan
it

India

itself

na Abo*

!0m

was

a part of

The mariner

compass of modem

Ham

is

tht

aoar^ta* of

"*

lit*aad

Olami

** *
' ***
na
'

having wrested

away the Khyber and


the

the Matsya Yantra in Vedic ships.

fcacame India a

most western outposts. On

Woridwlde Vedic Shlpp*f

lftr India shrunk further

extending only to about


every coocavabJe port- This
i*rrninolog>- rooted hi

of Amritaar SUB we call it India alias Bharatvarsh "A shrink*, theatre the seme of Vedic legends too "*" Pforwahwr, confined .n the pubtic mind W

SKakT

^ b^^
i. ,,

...

~*

> ^ *^ ^ -.^* *"* w*h U^ h * map


"1
-crid

n^fcapohioal control Consequently * u*jfl> * V **c ""oat such as Rama and Krishna who
ago shuffled only between Amrilsar and

bbrevution of the

and

o>^

*-*

*e Skuukrit wnrdNaa^- .nsai-pronunci*iorf^^f ., a* s^krit >r

**^~*rZZr * ** J**
.

*y*~^^ ^ wvi M tim \y ^ndrt O* *apr. *vy


*s

<

"****

'"

^.j*

aw > d
"

Sanskrit

word

EnwJu*. The *ar

Cam*

+**~rm

'-"" "SiV Z*m'**


*- -

**-*' CMpta

U27

-, gMft * ""^^T^

***
,

"

IO "*

(rtfftc.

TV term
safinr

"* '* PSlUon by loWn, Manner is in fact *,,..


'

is

an

ikMI

Vedic healing system based on the

wbm pjino and ^r^^f. uiiiT have


eotfimw
,* atd burnt
1

circuits in the

human body. Copies of been discovered in China and other


Christian and
in the West got Muslim onslaughts. In
i.

$kmtor teste which existed

du*

Ajaponcwre wis known


system.

"

Soochi-Vedha-PaddhaU

VEDIC PHYSICAL FmVESSEXEROSE PAR EXCELLENCE


Vedic culture has .
basic

^ mOi tar*
Taffa*
ft

problem

modern times the homoeopathy system

was

conjured
of

solution tor etery problem. One ruch physical fitness. Vedic culture lay. down an ideal

for
live

every

human

being- Tail says **>rs

aa by tat German doctor

Hanemann

yet the Sanskrit origin

S* ctj maantag [ must


'

(ably) for (at least) 100


It
is

tac tans suggests that


Saaai-eq-ratby

It

via an ancient VedJc system treetment.

yaw."
to live out that
in
full,

the Sanskrit

term signifying (medicine)

similar

the duty of every person


life

natural

m
tat

tat path (of the disease).

max

joe* people
baaed

( Sndhu came
is

Snce S and
to

are interchangeable

span of
(in
in

human

so that

the

fnvertmeM made

him by society
by
his

be pronounced as Hindu)

the form of nurture by

his parents and other kin.

teachen

imaa
Ob
I

on the principle of prescribing a medicine which

educating him, etc.) U


fit

proparry compensated by

him by keeping

1 healthy person)

symptoms

similar to that of the

himself
to

and rendering return aervfce for an average of 100 Jrs


in his

t-

aama-fvi-pethy

being currently pronounced as

sodety

own

rote in

Ht.

TT*re are four main *****


active
lift viz.

** h* o fang *d
rtatog

healthy,

ti

***"

p.m. to 4.30 ..)


to toilet

_ rf
)

from bed early: going


a

and having "

^J^Tl-fc. *** moUl&

'^m>
j^r

minimum
and
Include

preferably after bath

of 100 yogic Soorya


then
jetting out to

r*gflI,

'\J w*\
J

dM-

This should

nwa* breekfast and two


and around ' ?
fonD

li

* "*^ *,*. * -mking. w1 '

!*#***

a m. and noon (hinch) - No tea. no coffee.


no alcohol. <4)

no tobacco in any Proper AvurvWicnwdiowt

L*

-'

r'i*^aQn* "*> *rive.

tm

mfw:l(on y m *d Him-* J^-U-rUiUnH. AlMh^havetoUMn^^^


,e*dku

do

cW

Imparl,,..*.

|(Ii

und.ge.UH, food which

poiaon.^

drainage

system resulting

in tack-lu.tr,

^
(ftr

factors which ensur* phvi to .bov* four

U-

<*>'

by of
*
"he

Mt*

"1 '^

pjn, weakness, non - funcUonlng of painful, lingering or abrupt

varln

^V* Nmni*lttr ex*rcl,


being riecw, arv
directions.

pramaiur. end'
,,

^
'

* ,U d,*rd
l,,n

'"' <""

* ""

*'

<ff f<ral*t>

mo-i important.
of

JUst a. a
julco-content.

fn.lt

has to bt

que#M

the food-lnUke

Kopk
nwniaui

gffgQ)
1

ulk

physical

exercise

frr

huiM
at It la

In the Int*-ti

'

U mtin

lime, to yield

its

nutriUonal

2^?**"*
mmi "*
"1*1 to.

^a* hM' l h

but they branch off in

wronK

axcreU

one go.
the Soorya Nomaakar

Mom pvlf get confused


ihf
reef

If

asked to define 'exercise'

In reply

a, the

-^ - *one abides by the


till

exercise which

Physic,

mil

long
as

lltt

of activities

am** web

logging,

which In (heir view constitute running. mountaineering, balthnka.


field

therefore

four factor,

to live a painless, active, whole, full Ufa, wfth

J^TTl^ ^
listed

sum.

ltav.

* m<y

ail

ma&hamb. imnb, badminton,


rinas

limb, ruacuonlna

games,

parallel burs,

Roman

properly

the very end of one's


is

Ufa.

a^M -Lifting,

various kinds of luga


if

nnd pulb at gymnasium

pdgeu Mr. These are mere Instances


assrra." What
is the definition

at nil

But whnl consilium

Soorya Namaskars

cyclic exercise of 10 .elect yogic future.


for i youna, healthy

of exercise?

Sedom

Uking just about


ICY)

aecond each. Thui

will

anybody

psrun

br ablr to answer thai question

Soorya Namaskars should

take Just 20 miunute. non-nop. Aged

and weak persons


AS tht abovr
activities

may

take more time, guping for brasth or raaUng

may remit

In

mi y*

exhaustion and exertion

tholr

Urod limbs.
also should practise

tiwy

fill

u>

me*

the definition of exercise


nighfsJl all of

Women
result

SNB

except during pregnancy and

jMact from moming

till

one's activities So

monthly periods. After menopause women (likaman) .hould precise


100 to 300

-Una

exertion and

w r and

tear of the body.

SNE

P^ofahaT
ibum

^> rtuaDy net* I. rest and rejuvenation and not * * by acuviua. which cause additional exhaustion m **>* barefoot all of one's life the aol "^ "** 10d XW ConlrBril one has to buy a new y
,f

fc-Hh. good look., a .h.pely body and a


life.

after sblutton. to ensure good eerly every morning long. .lht. P-ini-s

The
fi.a0..

ideal

time

to begin

<*** fue SNK afUf

sblul'on. .hould be
'-

8 or

0r m in w the lnn*r ' yw "V*

'

m nth>

m .luv.r1ou.F

r-.r.iIl^dWo1 t-l U

k ' Ut kind of rejuvenation

organ, too.

"

tfft

** " m n*mW Whkh WiUrw maximum 'nwr *


bodflv

0ur danjutkn /

"

,tofC,B,

WouW

lhDt

lde<u

"rdi'

digsstion

-mto

^th min.mum exertion.

* b

** Oajsatai #

, '<* hch reluvm.^ lht body.

Con"**

*J

1331

f^^Pm*a*j*
posture.

In this

posture everybody's body miy ax

to

flank*
and

to

too*

tfw forehead to the knee* with the legs kept


hips to the feet.

mfcta

stiff

from the

This should not be

uy
tail

enst

for dispair.

One idouM

Utain as near and neat a posture si

one tod proceed 10 the

nee

one

ai the next second. Breathing

sbooM be normal.

(3)

Mm
*Ma

w "Oj.M

^^Pm^!
to^

Bend backward with extended arms form a graceful eurre from the calves to the up of y*"
fingers. This

posture

is

important

1332

1333

(6)
I" thii

pogture the

left

leg Is

etretdied at the back with the knee


i

Le
the floor

rafght with the two

inching ibe floor while the righl leg


f0

* >pwMg
fl

s folded ai the

knee with

the

rfcni

the neck and chert taken

"
hb

firmly

pre*r*

* the floor and

tIlrnilUlBllO0P

the

be

and the hip.

>**

1335

Let us

call this a

cobra-like pose

ftb pastor*
para
rf

ii

middle pofnt of ihe cyclic exercise. In this eight

body touch the floor.

^T^

f3) PlIra5 ThSt makeS Thai makea eight. Therefore this exercise
'

Those eight parts ore (1) two

feet

P1 " 9 the f0rebead *nd


is alternatively

""> *""*"' - prostration

known

with eight parts of the body (touching

**** *fJ 1 forehead ** *** ftl"**tv"^ x*lng the

iV
mj

b * lld

taVe

^^
^^

piKe f d0th <5UCb

"*
(7J
i

IK

feet,

<au>

flinBl knees and palms other puru


fl

lhe noor l0

^ ard

In

nma^ ar^

" ***

Wme ^

this posture

_,

mm

are arms .

with the acta held straight,

in coniact

with the noor or an

palm" t merely ._., , h. .

ss.-st-.-s=srrr.r:=s
with eyes looking at the
ceiling

or aky above-

**** aW."* *""

**** PWtl0n belween l* knees tlou the Hoor

and

chest

in held

1396

1337

1*1

This is the renin counterpart of posture No. 4. In posture No. 4 first, with the right leg fokJrt at the lea foot was stretched backward
the knee

ThU u U* sune

u posture no.

Puir

5 suiting a sequence

of other similar

forward

at the first it gets folded

posture the left leg having been brought In the above return knee while the right leg remain,

^ched
craned

leading to the

Parting pose eventually.

backward

The chest

is

peralW

to the wail infront.

The neck

is

so that the body

is

symmetry

1X19

nUlriUonaJ content of the food-lntake under

I*

intestinal

_.

That

b why

repeating that 'doubling' of one', body

l5 possible is advantageous.

u many timl

redeeming 'actor Involved in thie form of exercise is the bending, straining and curving of the spine backward and forward. This is a very important feature. Right from the cerebral column to the waist and then bifurcating Into two
legs
it

Another very unique

is

the spine which

is

the minstay of the bodily frame and nervw.

The suppleness of the spine ensures proper functioning of the network


of nerves that of
all

branch off from the spine and the vigorous

flow

liquids in the body.

In

reviving the Vedic

way

of

life

throughout the world the


role to play In

iim tht
1.

POKUTT

of the cyclic

Soorya Namaskar (prostration*

Soorya Namaskar habit has an Important

human
every

te

wl

ata Swnn

N-m^-r-

After Uih straighten

up

to

po*

happiness and discipline. Popularizing Soorya Namaskars

In

homo and famDy needs


Tnwe weak
or ailing

therefore to to taken

up

i form of

may

take their

own time

for each posture.

social service.

Tte b a
fli

cycle of select yogic

postures to keep a person fighting

The Islamic namaz postures

are broken eurvivali of the Soorya

Practising to

SNI

fast is no( essential if

your body and breathing


is

Namaskar which formed


of

part of the Vedic routine of the Arabs e.a

renin

cooperate.

But practising

numerous SN

what

is

pre-Mohamed times

I.

mere

1-17.3

years ago.

avlaM
SNE was
Whili or* ahouM practise at least

practised by

hermitage schools the inmate, of Vedic


unhindered social service

100 of these early every


practises this

around the world for

physical fitness,

morning there

is

no

maximum

limit.

The more one

and healthy, handsome progeny.

cydic excrete the

become more healthy and handsome one can

provSW

the other factors are also

Imtud fwoi twice or

<

^Hee

nutritious, attended Lo namely

avoid caesarian

8 hswnUon

from drugs,

alcohol,

^- T

coffee, fast

foods, fried, fried food,

and sweets, ba7.ar-bread

long healthy

life.

, populating In fact

*% an

L tan*

to fam-Ty

.;

early to

bed and early rising. Abiding

&>>* by the
cataract.

good and house lo house could be

serial aervic*.

tMm u

""""ti

Tor those

who are keen to

healthy. lead a long,

*Werr*fromdJ.b*M, blood pressure, heart

trouble,

* ttuit. flytpepgu. constipation,

cancer etc.
f ld9

******* *" Namukar the *** ** U " * which helps extract the m*--**
action

1M0
other city of antiquity record

aucb

Why

is

Rome an

exception?

1*

1341 dat* of Its formal ,

em

*??
Ram.'. birthday
lunar calculation,"

There s no mutalnng

have been celebrating Rama-navami which about it. According


I

is

to

Rama-navami does mdeed


that a city

fall

named

after

Ram.

April 21. It was but natural should be consecrated on His birthday

around

CONCLUSION

This little detail

must awaken

the

Romans and
is

all

others to the

fact that their capital city's

founding day

toe birthday of Lord

Rama.
Baitered

by Roman and Arab armies and demented through

Rumayanic Tradition or Roman Statues

Oratim
ant!

imv and

Muslim torture the world has been blabbering


its

stammering out an incoherent and inconsistent history of


in

The ancient statue of a she -wolf in Rome represents an Etruscan


symbolization of Sta (wife of Rama) because she
life,

led

pot.

i state of shock and delirium.

an angry

in

incommunicado

isolation, in sage Valmiki'a forest -retreat.

This volume represents the first

attempt at reminding a dazed

The two human male

babies

shown

suckling under a she-wolf

humanity of

its

common

VedJc history.

The

validity of that history

at recorded in the Sanskrit

Purans

is

apparent from Lhe terminology

were added during lhe Renaissance (see p. II of the book ROME In Colour) to represent Lava and Rush (the twins that Sita gave
birth to during her exile).

suca as deit>. devotee, divinity. Daitya.

monastery, saint. Sur,

Roman

tradition

remembers them as
All

etc. that continues,

from those ancient times to our own.

Remus and Romulua

both -derivatives of Rama.

such details

Ffttiimm

<)

EtugwuiUin
Heathenism
alias
(i.

Tw

of Rama's pest, unknown even to Romans get lucidly explained by Vedic history. Such is the importance of the latter for world
e.

terms

Hinduism)

and

studies.

(U

Bbagwanism
Sri

Vedic culture) and the port-city


in

uy
banir

"** 0*

Bhagwan)

China

is

faraway Brunei (whose

Hindu Land
is China.

ruler

misbelieve* himself to

fV a
a^,

be a Muslim) are

some

of the

At the other end

Myopic contemporary historical tf.ions


possessing . distinct language
earlier lh- t China

Tl *%
***"*

U"t lon* time-chain *"" Rme P000

unravelled in this volume

"^

as

Roma,

fancied to be a

have tended to view conclusion discussed and culture. But our


as

China

u always

was
finds

has been
it

shown

to be an ageold centre of

mrh

. oart of

Vedlc-Sanskrit culture as

any other region

derives its

name from the

incarnation,

remarkable

lecture delivered by . ^rroborstlon in the

Chinm

^'^"uaaaW, ** * (M. hT?* ROME


C.

?
funded on 21st of
April 763

,?! M^ru,

on March 27. |9B ,

report

In

the

EngUsh

have

>

<rf

i. Catour.

by F. C. Pavilo). Does any

-^Be*thB uddhlsm md pnMw it 7Z* chin- swhtit * Hinduism Buddh im


ruins of ruins t in B
BJ,.t

,urther

u;-ji

^^

of Hindu!*"*

Jfl

werepatroni, iced

^
IM3
1343

wm a, *.
,
'

A. D. the royal family *.. * o, Hind, frtnnwin Tang dynasty r dvniW ( 7lh following |CMnt*ii- The

h century w Ip the

^
.

^
.

^f ^
.

'

c***> A

I)

, )

nduism and Buddhi .w, P*""** both Hinduism d Budrihu^ **> ,-mwized bolh 8m

temples
la

the ChinT Tbe resurgence of Hinduism and the decline for Durga. of century had its echo in India art*r the 7th IMrfntsm Chto, up. The temples had Hindu of Mehadeva coming

r wes * *c-nt C*.

but

branch of Hinduism
.1.

.rU.'nJuirm Qnli.*i-Li -.on Religious wars were ubw!!


'

**J ** t_
,

pbilologisw hold suggest that the blabber and chatter of monkey. Indian forests somehow developed |ving in into Sanskrit l whfW Italy led to Latin and so on ad infinitum. in

too*

T*

Chinese worshipped

Shivambu

this Unique Role of

Volume
all

mm

Correcting such mistaken notions

along the line in every

sphere of history such as about the so-called Aryans, the connotation of the term Druids alias Dravids. the origin of 'Zero' the Jesus

priejt,

Chinese ruling family were u b century members of a know, N'arayan and Siva Dasa their Hindu pet names as respectivtfy
fUJ! exists in

myth, the Vedic roots of Christianity and blim. the Vedic


of every region of the globe,
this
is

past

role which should

mark out

HWinsm

China in the guise of Buddhism. Buddho,

volume as a

veritable encyclopaedia or

VEDA

of lost history.

mnwwrifc DPT i Hindu touch and many of them could be misukm for Kodo temples as they are full of idols similar to the Hindu
pantheon."

Lessons of History

But besides being a compendium of information of


history has

the pest.

some

lessons for the future

too-

For instance, early

AD soch'evtdence makes
on* look) into the past

it

clear that

wherever and

whenever
culture

in

December 1983 the Department of


warning to the public to keep
in

Erivironment. 0. K. issued

one comes across nothing but Vedic

beaches off the aea-weed along the


it

and Sarakrii language worldwide.


Histories are

of SeUafield. Cambria

Great Britain because

was radioactive

Truocaied TUBits

Cm

that

drew the
in

to attention of tbt said office

pnM
trestinf

recorded

Compared with that cogent and connected account presenUd


the foregoing pages,

of the Mahabharat.

the the Mausal Parv. (U. which the according

current histories should appear as


starting abruptly

a simaar warning by con

up

T*"* mBt "d ** titbits,


%rie. Assyria.
-

from a

latter-dV

the the radioactive weed along

Dwarw cow
ia *

^ *^^ -^^
*
#~
that

"J Mb* Oaptar)

The other important


,

i K^n

*
d

a time

when

ware

all

*** * man *** ng fabric vey threads of evidence


it

of

my

narrative has been wovan


historians possess

getting

more and more "''p"

warring against on.

that

modern

m?"** *

ts isolated

and inconsequenUal. That imp#d

Sunnis, as Shiss and or Protestants and Catholics,

Mu|lljn>

Christiana,

or

another

saeaioo of this volume to correct research


*

m etbodology

the mortal shadow of

there blasts, clouds of nuclear

i*^ ""f^fcu** >


the

lb0uW irJT^?****** '^ *

* jr ^ ^ **mu
n

*"*
D

single-source begin** appear quite plausible and consit"*

***

we

could and ahouldjH

the

live

under

'

oh*!!!!! ******

<ommon Phere

common sky. emotion.' and have common


a

breath*

shared happiness. th-nealv* abould address

u *** uth- nat.


It >

^ WW ^'^ ^ ^
.^..nd
OMO

^^

communists under mushrooming


h-ven to which

M0B>

-this ancient

o*** W

& taan *

*** Vedk Herit*, ^ **7 ce^^ry W bring

and behavioural patterns.


"

***** 0bfcL **<

G0d

,' V*n

* U*

"***

prin^j a part of thai m*** the confused concept, which

***** tZ^*'*"**"*^ U*t*


kno*

m
^ ^ ^ ~* J^a.
9
.

jrl

"

'

r*

****^ <*

' <*

V|Jc

,* uw

V-*v rn*.
''

To

p
(ft

m4 t*rm ***** further nmtn^


th.

i******

,/^
,

nr^T^^^^. a^
SmrftJ

JT^ ,* "
.

OrvKhti N*U N*y"hrt Md Una,.


,

m0un

t|| ft pi

M* Ifl-r**"* *

'"

<op*c

"*

iJiurrnJ KoutiflC

i_

iin

'" TIp ^^r HflhW> -"" "* '** ,v '"

d"ny
""'' ''

#fll

.i^
-''
|t

p,^^
--.yt
.

a* | *aul
.MMi-a*

a-lminiaiii-K.
a-dn.Jy

under i un jud world

wfl|

^7*
c

,t'^Z

from

^ phyM fluw^

."l ?:??*-* *****-y.4. . sVVi^l? * v*'


lo

and

ma*i.
man*

umtmlnttrm on
Varifc

T^r ^^"^^^rZr^
UP

,i

ih.

*h

am

tfvttrtaJw

my

meairrh

m wn
i

V*c

u,JU|f

^, '
*
f

"*

*rtd twar thai

Ih* Vl, -r

worW depending on

tb,

mfWK

r^n^ ,v^
bringing

^
-

rf

aaaMMg 16 IV iwo

chartahtng and ttmtampIaiJng


of ftttlysK

on

n--y ,

frtl (Un((Bl

aw) (ranalatlon thai thi-v ara being


d*.
i

uh u hrfp of ordinary Ubh


to

lonarlra

.%in*krli
fnath

tmm T*Ayo U Harvard- by P-> profmaing n.V


<*.*,>
ftndl

nubjuw n .cMemw

Setting up .ucn . nd turc^t .ingle lWp

Unh^y ^
h

which

ta

ot hW

wi

m It2 15^:
h

b Worth J afnaad) Img urubfUkan by hurtdrnJ* of collo** and acade/ni* Th. WmM vdir ltvii.jp, Unlvtraity wouldn't want to duplk*. ur -on. n-^prt, . lhwn v, lc ronu fr (on v*" n ,,fp wh *
, '

V-ltc

mwrrh.

for

whnu

from nuddhi tm

annlhiUUon by mean,
It will
la

p^;^; KpTi mr n^^^


of

.bm 17

"^
*ilU 1

n^l

hoped, therefor., tbtt

ddmw*

forward to wt up i WorW V*die Hertag, Univwaii, Such a venture should have a fu j of Rs. iff, m

come

m drilow r*,^
moa

sun

with.

-"" ^

Under the

Indian law at ImtI. a Unh-rniiy coi be


lejrtilaiunr

wi up

only

ta
l

" m> watninrt on divinity.

on. other .ranch of kn owIwi KR and th*.

by blalute paased by aome SUle


If

or cmlral Parfiament

therefore we can

get such a ilalulory University functioning


if

that will be beat. But

governmental iponaoraHp or help eludes

^^r* *
"
or

" ,v,M*"" v

wou,d
h '"
'

conduet

^r,lu*i

^ W

ma "***"

">*"**

Md
'

us the public may on


h'

ill

own

n-gir a charrtable trust in ihe

of

" * ,7 curriculum "*


lb
,Url' ,,,
l!

Ti

V " l,,,

"

" mi Vw,,c i*" 1 r ih wor,d "' V"'* kuro *> fom

v of World

sunt
letfal

VbJmartlvtJaya and Vedlc Heritage Vidyapeeth or or Acadmiy by getUng over the functioning aa a Unlvenlly immovable property of a,.ch a TtjH nd, Inn-die. Registration
building.

such oa land or
lh" Kjlmi, vn. ",l I*"""

* *"*1

bu,,!, -,

"""fiOuwon,,

^
(

tho Mi^uibhnPBl ind


will

and reader,
fulfilment of

p.t willing to

"

BhntU
|(|I

foim api

In"
'

W 1**9 *""*"*"

^^^ZlZZ^L **V? ^^ ^
for
in

ii tl(in W|| |

n|( Jf)

a^.^t,
from
lh

^* r1mi* ami

"W^iUp.^

fw,|v,lJ
"
,fl,(,'

d
,

wnmionlw
1

tai7* hrm

'"
f

" M,
(

'"'

"

"''" " f lhB r*A

"Vit

*rt

h, cognw.

I*
#)
The Vcdic Inca
rul

PIOTJHEJNDEX

29)

prisoner by Spanbh Christian nVidaf, Ancient Vodlclwnpie,,,,^'^


,

w being Uk*

1347

660

I)

^0^
rtw*l
wwiflDl
Plan

plundered, ravaged by
KieHfilf* Vishnu
,| H

30)

o^b.

in

Mecca

^"^^"'ndupaJace^T^^
Pl-eddtywithro^lns^-^'^^^
mined by rerocioua. unscrup^. A Keralite masque UBed
ln

Europe ChnT

661

I28 162 444

31)

662

I)

a^^Sltam
I)
II

fUnCtwnill-"0' Chine* Ball"

32)

^.tdSijln Chmm
'

*Z? ** **"
t

663 664

Ball*

445

n
)
Tl

|,

Uul Spun*

I wUVBl

Kri,hM Slam|W
K nsh nfl

*
490
491

34)
36)

fnm,

Bock V*die Temple in JerusaJ.n


1

Lord Ganesh as Bangkok Munldpd


Vediccflve hermitage Mhool A Vedic temple ceremony
in

666.668
logo

676
fa China

H
)
10)

Jip*i* ft** Temple Mosaic forwid fCn*cr) Kruhna >*h Vedic inbol. David a Star
l

3 *m P depicting

36)

677 indent China: 578

492

Moon Pyramid.
37) 38)
39)

Mexico
in China

TV

495

A Vedic temple

An Aunnkin Aborigine Wwring a Vedic Forehead


Vedic iWitn in Jipancte

Mark

511

II)
.

Temp!

Vedic temple entrance

579
In

China

S22 624

680

Htnumao

to

Mvoto
in

Vedic Shiv temple of ancient China with


central spire and towers at four comers
681

13)
It)

Mrann Woman
Mrocan man
in

Hindu Apparel

537 539 539 S40

40)

The octagonal Vedic wmple


nncient China

in

Hindu appard

It) it) If]

Mnoean Woman from Hindu Rajnpura Township

682

Moan Womm
UaBcan

41

Octagonnl pavilion with octagonal


lop lower in Beijing. China
683 684

in Indian Attire

Womm

carrying child In the


in

Hindu manner

511

42) 43)

Mrncun Woman Clad


lb)

A swan -mounted

goddess Saraswaii (China)

Hindu Sari

542 543

Chinese icon of Shiva later proclaimed


to be that of Ihe Buddha

TWrbocMnd-pillirrf Temple ruin* at Mitle (MilhJla;

686

.,

an ****

44)
wonhippin, the Solar deily wiih

Sahasrabahu. the Vedic

deity of 1 Ihouaand arma. called

*> %* ai Hindu Temple*. Royal Crematorium '^<^ha(min|K,n) Vedic deity


ofaaatnilniJo.Chin,

Cuanyin
644

In

China

666

45)
46)

Vedic deity on a *n.

CM"

686

goddtw (China) Mahakall Durga Vedic


Vedic deiUa on
lotua

587

645

47)

u & Ch

i^^**-^*phi Undo-Chlna)
**

54B 546

690 60)

"SL^

CuWema

" "iaB

Gnuu,ma,fl yo

647 648

Anclem Rom."

W*^^

692
*,,.,
593 694

ancisii

America

648
596

649

) )

G.10

62)

Pompey. Consul or ***,*


Ancient

vw

Ml 8J) R
' '

Roman empero r wsri.


,

fW2 Ann 84)

MohofLordCanMhrromi,

830
831

rTW

dVikpl.nrtorvdel.y
An.b

Mm*
.

wwon

AM
87ft

86)

M.erorTOen UsofBome

V^coppa,,,.^,^
Ine Vrukodflra 88)
Verily

832

m ilM Mark on forehead


cmWor imNwn
in

TV

ciwcan* vllr Sun ami cn*n< Vfdlc Ain and


nct

of pre- Islamic

AmhlaATO

TV
^i,

Vonl Hut of
nk
Rata

Brahma

Kabn

Road^dewaUpan^t^;'^'"* J,^"* " *


Roadside wa>l pnncl

m-m

J
Roman,

XH
837

fcflislin

lurwd Krishna devotee Vlw brettlamp of ancieni *rabru 90)

ahinlH nf

u ..

UaM,e
.

.-

nn gl |,e
Zagnouan

A typ.calVedlc
Vedic temple

Po r, rai1 of.Vedicdei,,
tempi, w,,er . lBlk

Arabia A holv ft* llnad of prr-lnliunic

Goddm Bsmwall
*:

o* pre -Mamie Arabia

M>
Eumpc
.-

in Taniila (Africa)

Orum
v*v
Runts

Wol worship!**) In pre-Christian

92)
F.urope

British coi'Maiion chair

^ ^^
moUfa
In
In

860

, mM

882

m
807

wi

Solar

Chanel worshippni in pre-Chris'i

93)
94

So-calM TamrHoin' Mausoleum in Samorcunii


ii

Sage ^gastya Peacock and Cobra

motif* in ancient Britain


indicate exfutence of

An Hindu Palace
Vedle Incsmaifori

95)
Sunn,
In

SwasUk and

m
aft
911

fXW

totut

Mm-liim

Germany

7611 TfiR

Vedic temples

in pre-Christian Britain

SaMing Poiul Stamp,

Cmnany
Germany

96)

Mary queen of
Vedic
I,ord

Scots

Vedic namaskflr poi*

lanl Cancih In ancient F-urope

812

97) 98) 99)


100)

Idols of Siberia and Mongolii


In

9*8
9*7

Corpse or i Vetbe adminisirator of ancient

818 819
82n

Hi Tnm
Hindu 71)
R*tn>.

Ganesh

China and Japan


San Francisco. USA

tvr of Daihareih shoring the fertility potion

Women

ut Ball

festival

procession
u> the

A A

Shivling fro n Spain

wall-carving
In

In the Vedic

RorobUur

ami. Utcihman proceeding


*n single (He

temple
821 101

Central Java

***

m
*!

"na on way
chief,

io

me Rama

822

3D ****

Kamayanic scene panel in a Cambodian temple of Brahma 102) A hislorir \ wlic Wmplo In Cambodia
103) Carved
ancient Vriic Utnjtl wall panel in on

980

vtl and

Su*

.gabbling
Va]j

ovrr the abduct.*, of

Ian*',

Mh hy
to

823

in

Prambanam. Cambodii
of

01

* pwidaa of aiding Rama **" >- iPPMI


J**

101)
825
82A

wal. apiial royal edifice in Angkor Hindu kingdom lha nndent Cumbodi-n

A
A

981

Ravan to release

Sit;

105)

ancient Java Vedlc lemple of

983

my

a vrik

w* <*"**' i*^

jA

1*>

!W

1361

Rritain's ancient Vedic shrines

128) Ticked doorway of the seven-storeyed in the Tajmahal complex 129) The Hindu (Vedic)

1081 well

1231

dome of

the Tajmahal

130) An aerial view of the Tajmahal 131) The octagonal seven -storeyed

1233 1235

,B,

r^'^- ."*Zte7ne-

** *T^W bIm *<**' Brahmin arch" NU


of
CI.

red-stone tower enclosing the


132)

well

I2j7

The

"***
133)

royal red -stone lounge it th* right when one itepi Into the gBlen of the Tajmahal (ancient
|280 the concave

i**" shi P

Tejomohalay) Shfv temple complex.

The Vedie

design in multiples of 8

dome

above Mumtax's

fancied cenotaph in the octagonal


alias

sanctum of the Tajmahal


Shiv temple. Agra. India

Tejomahalaya
1282
to

134) Captured Temple in Ahmedabad claimed


Masjid
.

be

Jama

1281

*ubhc

Tta( wi m

on* and an
in the

tL > put* vcrfomuc*


4

wljwni P"*"

135) Conch-shell design foliage on a waD of the Tajmahal,

[HI

bat* brtwwn VrJfc

mko of
Khamboj kingdom
"**

which

Is

one of the proofs of

its

Hindu origin

I28S
India) being

Owbq mi Owni
lift)

kMi M^un
* Wd
ft

(If 136) The AUla Goddess temple In Jaunpur from the wrongly puWicrted as a .mosque

of the defeated

i*i> bj Champa's victorious iroops


ta

Ll)

j0tmy
,

detail v* will

surrounding Nogar Thorn

time of Mu-nm capture 137) Lord Vishnu's footprinla

in the so-called

Humavun tomb
999

In Delhi

Hr**rt

ihf ci('ial of the

Hindu Khamboj
1000

adorn** spiritual digrams 138) Esoteric Vedic

ti Tte
It
I

taai

Kvunoit
o*

of the

Cambodian Hindu palace


in

so-cafled
'

to

fW ndr
noo

139) Tfcs cow and

"X l-r^
erioW

.in*

Khamboi on elephant -bock

a
1001 hiding
all

^ ^ <*<
^
iaro

W**m

V4r inn

M*ue

seen lowering above the


picture

v> it* cap*ul in the adjacent

*H*|rftWiimwhmthf Papao

wu
tots 1014
101

Hindu

to con

W W a***

v*> ftartarafji,
rf

wi
Pw-Chri*ian
Italy

140) Scene from

WhJ

8*"
I.K8
(ipdlal

* H*aY.*,md*r

102?

anoent 141) Thr


142)

U a pr.9-^ *j^W now so-ouT*

Brt.U Xlaqc-^*j71(ir-IWi. 1 Ano rock"-^

J^V^

Jordan

^_^

Ml

1363

1311

l>"

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iZTlEy*
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1,

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.

Leigh and Henry Lincoln.


163) Shakespeare
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A Documentary

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^ P^T' ?^.Z^'
Jtol^i i.' *
of Hit Itf. v.
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* * -

Mohamad
i>

Habib

rfAligsrb y Atasrb

Muslim University. Alfgarh. India.


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in)7btHiswr)of MinWnd Organiser Weekly (May


133)

TIMFC/VI UN1300
9. 1993)

ntihlicntinn PubUcaUon.

167) Observation on a Gold Ring


I

29 Rani Jhansi Road. New

on^May

13.

1830. reaearch paper read by

MH110M5.
1M)
The Hindu. English daily.
1,1840]

Z M^ XZ< J
U.
Co,.
Britain

Madras. India (July 30 to August

158) Transactions of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great pp. 559-571, Vol. II. Article XXVI.

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Geography

159) India 3000 Years Ago.


in

by Dr. John
by the

Wilson, (first published


Indologlcal

IK) A Voyage to the East Indies, by Fra Paolin Da Tan Bartolomeo 137) The Last Two-Million Years. Readers Digest History of Man.
publiahed bv the

1868,

later

reprinted

Booh House,

Varanasi 160) Book of the Dun Cow, an


161
)

Readers Digest Association,

London

1974,

old Gaelic manuscript.


Figgis. Dublin 1968.

1*J The Evening News of India.

Bombay 30th August

1982.

Encyclopaedia of Ireland. Allen


Itihas

1*) London Times of October 12, 1978. HOI National Geographic Magazine. March I960
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162)

Patrika (research Journal), published by Dr. V.V.

Bedekar,

Bedekar Hospital, Mabarahl Karve Road, Thana

Tb fibeun Dictionary
Narrative of a

400601, India.

1C)

Journey Overland from England to India, by Mn. Col. Hwood, two volumes. Henry Colburn. London, 130.

163) Journal of the Diacovery of the Source of

the NU*. by Col.

John Speke.
R. HaO. 164) Ancient History of the Near East, By H. Herald 165) Letter to Editor. Nation*

JndkandtheEngluh.byBarbaraVyTngrield-aratford, Jonathan
C*!*. London 1922 A. D.

CD")***

1.

JJ^waw on Sanskritand its Literature,

Upendra FoUdar. 1926-20E

Eastchester

ft*. Bronx.

N. V.

by Professor Bournouf.
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"^IWery
lttj
1 )

of

Hinduism, a collection of essays by

America..* M^cfcrn* 166) Myths of Pre-Columbian

USA

by 167) History of East Afrk,


Polynesian 168) Journal of the

***
m

^^J^ ^
va
hvWhlw
TV-gw.
of Wtatoo. by

v-

..

** ta ml "w * *cofoirrtMi*8Zine _ vnu>nUtnitv h.. ..""**


i

1UmbU> AlTCrica by Mckenzie -

26 of 1917. I8
-

lulv
,

Vo,s

,69,

by Joseph Bernard.
-

n. Andent
Aryw
PuMUnrd by

170) The
171
,

*<*

lJTVcll!r
ltt *

e'

h,&nilh

H a^T' * (W "
"* *

Description of

(En sh translation. London^ Holy GraD, by Michael BeJgent.

W**

172) Holy Bible,

printed

^%^ 1^ ^Sm\Z utMy ^.*^^^ IW


i

Wto

And-i
by

Cabrsr.

^ n* T*th Abo* ^J^GodOrpni"^'


l!f;

Christmas, published by the

P.O. Box 6727.

Bombay^
J^hov,-,

WorW

195) Washington Pott. October 196) Journal of a R^dence in

j]

(ftM

fad*

^;W

Encyclopaedia of Religious Knowfcfr. <knf Hrrxog

by

Arched Con*aWe * Co.

AKE(Dec^^22.19fil) publish^ by
by Gordo

1ST) ABrief History of 19R)

Wta 1%^,
<**.

-^ ^ *

w_

Earthstar*. by C. E.

^Gflat Ewkiuon M>**?


{Ssdcr. 27S pp
I

^^y

Box 1383. London.


Taylor

p^L ^Jl**; ****. P

J, ^^

m
Iff))

- W*a- Epopee. byL- unril Hr> the lion (Compiled around 1174 A. D.) i*) Gaasatf * Benedictine monk at the German abbey ay Haraaw. i of near Brunswick, in Lower Saxony, Germany. nihna I'm
ii

199) Chariot of the Coda, by Erie Von Danlkeo 200 J The Geometry rflijnoQDi and C*aal8r*iAadBBiVfc

Shrines
201

Briiannica World Language


India,

202) Early History of

by Vacant Smfth <19U)

203) The Embassy of 3r Thomas Sot

scot cd is* Mutiny,

by Keay. by Junes Fergusson.

tab* 1416 to 109.


of tae

*ft*

by W.

Foster, London.

Mke AnAaeoloiy.

204) The Religious H. H. WCson.

IZS A D and FtaVaupUial Systara

Hbto.

ajr

If]

vcfctKtopa! Sarrey of India Report for 1871-72.


in lb*

IB) (Mark's noting

1893 Annual Report of the North

Wbk Previa! Orek of the Archaeological Survey of India. IB) Tat Ft* tvn Nmbi of Oudb. by Dr. Ashirfaadilal Srivastava.
1st)

205) The Growth of Ovunauon by Dr. W. H. Pany 208) The History of East Africa by Marsh and Kagaawth.

(Meyk't Report on Agra (Pages 124125. Volume of 1871-72

i.aU
IB)
Tij

Matt

Smok

Analysis of a Great

Deception, by V.

W)

ftnory

y *"*

and

Eastern

Architecture,

by James

FcnjoHB...

W =*??* "^
tf*W.
'

***

bwn

Published

in

USA by

thr

r *
1

****"*

to East India Affairs,

House

<^

H*bok*y.

Folklore, and Symbols, by

Jl

I*
nami: INDEX

77.300;

Ao-iibhnUi

M;

A ^. MananUp.
;

|SI, 1178.
630.

AshUVn.ni U96

AdmoWW

W ^T-^.' AUhunBp ^ 0.H77; AIUS803; AucW^.I^^^ "


Alale Dovi I2B8; Al
.

MH. M9;

^_

: "''

A ' hot,
'

BOn. 877;
1171.

AuKustu.

214;

AUfwWeb

1187.

MM.

i^L T
~T.

1228. 1298, ,
829.

ahAr to**

W
'

Kh-n> IMI:

ft*

Abubakar

* * OT ** MB <* *' n

^
.

AMUr Rnhm " n


*'
*****

"'

ffl5;

Abu Amlr AWul


<,

Ay 1Knr (lyen^r, Azom (prince) 1304.


88ft;

^ W ^ k^.^^J
,

, lw

~*

''
u

""

,VW;

nuUhasiri Havjl Kshwrugir


*.
.

MM a U
Eh

174; Babur 27S. (123.

*^

IMS, UTi

'

***

41*'

"*"

BM Vn.wui

JulhU 960;

Addun * a,7: A*. Khun MSB;


H4: Ann!

1178. 1261; Bacchua 161.377.478, 7ffl.7.BicUI2A|;Bah*d U rthaK

1123. 1132. 1133. 1176; lUhauHi 75. I0U; fUimm

m.

fkhubaK

S-mw
tv

(41*11} <

t9. 1*7. ft.

2.

32ft.

tgvuru

Vlrtw 474. <i **"ih- C*

M H *
K

<Nm#d

Abmrt

h H. A*

Vnwal V. * MBzd,t rtl2 Airawa*


: *

**.

812; Heitfcnt

8ft3;

Raluhl621;

Bal4M;Sd;
Bam

Balmarcoda* 003.

804; llnlnath 882: Bolnro

1204;

Hhacia Ml,

BQ.

9ft. 1012;

Band'
901
.

Ummayya

698; Ranian 977; BiriM(ajki


724, 72".

AM; Barrow. Oaonat


A.

U>w#r (lywr)
19)
13*1 TTO.

640; Aji 622;

AtouN Yvushl
1

771;
I

924; BartholonMO

W. MB; Barton G
C.

I; Baad.

Utar Ml. I*'

CD. 7W. *. IIS>. USt, 1132.

11

1162,

Ho,

St. 782; Beailfdw 487. 4B9;

BaMan

Doo

438; Raaul Parih

IS*.
AJafln

AkhmMon

ft29;

Akhilosh

1068;

Bayazid BisUnJ 663;


1191;
lffi:

B*br

Dr. V.

AWrllt

W:
MM.

bin Tbrfm
A)

iVam> 6S; Alakshymtira 967:


789. 930. 1016- 1045,

ftnim 2M, OX. 094; Albuquerq 1263; Alcinoua

fc

N iWw-WlC .J7f.346,U,B|4.23.7!C
18
tSft
aj

Joseph 817; BenhoM


llhngiralh

BehrBmKh*l.;B-^^^ ^'h^ eTiiprV - aft w** aft


W m.^i^V^^^^a^^u;.
jj>.
1

^^
aa
-

rm Ml
Afeat

TT |h-r>tfw

na. 19" 80S, Khar*

U Hikvn

856; All 608, 607, 610.

MO;

Hh-nl

(m
MO
N

II-

Kmtuiwrmy IK;
361,

Allah 94. 380. 443.

Khan* 37ft. 412. 801.822.


116ft;

PMvwnufira MA. Hhw


Bhfll

mm CM*
1

IB.

I*

AWuddin
tt;

1132; AH*ro

John M. 4,
24ft;

Bhaakara !:
664, 7B2, 8**i

ff m.

Klrw I4B
-'. ".

Aktf Huaain IU1I. Maulana

Al

'
IMS
ISl

Aaabi I0W.
1141.

|0; Ambkjalua 211;

AmWa

977;

Amlr

MftUbbrr. AmmianutMarwtUnu.293; Amman Urt JBJ, JT, Aim-bn-tttkii al Jahij 663; Amni
*

KU3. lUln<brak w-*- .*^r7. fff. Bal** ^frw. pop* 1010; Bofv. Frana ^,677;Boc-*'''^

UQ.

CbuM >H.

Bicknrf

wi

HMO. Bonap7;*)

**

How

Nftaji

aubhas

***

612.
;

Anar* tVo 3K>; Annnpnl Ha>a

Borl*

Awnjw. 7 ij^^

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9l8

Ajiinidilha

t'handni !'
100.

4W- AnUmacnua 724; Aniiochui 101 ><fa ** V^lo 217. 234. 784 843.868:
(Baa488

103'^''

3W.378.
Hrvvtuf

{!*_
- il*

7W. Brahma . 88. si*. 2i. asr. a. i. i. ^ |K ,. ,n 2.4. ffX 7J, . 873. BBS, 888, |* ,pu IU. Bnaa M6. Bramt. Hfl

"TTiu

BhW

*i

Ibca

W.

Bnhn>pati 190. 80S;

knM6i2;

ArdMwlA
I.

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*

M. ^ *"** w

'*'"

WJ

814, B16. 101 1. Arjun

jpUba

....

4.

72. 0A7.

o- in um UB BW.

cm. 6^).

*n ^n.

1323; Arrlan729. 96.


(

Arnnd Ya*

AuroUndo

iihoah)

,wrf

1*4

r< ** !^
ji-*^

T ir '

* *

afll

m n m*fflO

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* h-nU nw WI
-

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-

"ft; Budh.

1006.

HOI. 1213

Drt^,.,

IMA

bh
l; f>*nr
89);

**"""* *****&>.

210. ^urrowi

2*

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in*

"*

,41

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,lh

. M l Cr *
^

"

222

'

2M
;

2ai
-

** fm
784. 79
;

'

wi. rm. Caiman* 877;


Canaad
1161

Gum tow

* c*n
fifty

M* to.
900;

70;

. 1141

;i*:

'Canada) 623

Canon Kormoda

!T|M
I

CryWlinN.

IIM. UB\:

CnmltrZtl; Cutor

Dnimmond. 3r W.

"pui> 920: D^rani

W
m.

Chakredhar 176; Chamanlal 627, 530. 637, Caraa 7*. 1006. * Chandrairupu 1239; Chendrika 617. 774, i|T* C** * WB- BQft 906 m4, 9,R; Choripmnifmt M* , . *. * Chaucer 143; ChufhAd CMtatra B C II"; Onriaa V Kinn 800;

niony.,^^^-0^^,^ J^ ^ ""': '*, ^


hur
ffa.fli?

Draia

willtan,

6W:

664. 666, 762. 92). S6A

im

J^ *

?;W -

,0M;

*"P

<

'

'

Champa*** AM; Chanel Khan 744; Chrian (Sri Chrfans.


487,4. 606,
filO.

Rmnn,. 4*2 4M

618, 680, 6ft6. 736, 737, 798, BOB,

1045;

E.wn

1032;

H
fix

m H
7W
I'll'.

A**. . -^ 4(

"i

"*), 784, 786. 787, 790. 781. 793,


.

^^
fffi;

WiD

J^

109 M. 850. 861. 877. 880, 883. 921

960. 1002, 1003.


1031, 1033. 1034,

Iff*
(lift

HU KM, 103M0U.
lift HBO,
788,
1 1

1027, 1030.

Faber. Rev. 917;Fafl.al-HodHN1; Fikhruddln 1178-1177; Fartia

1141

W. Chrftt

Untu)
IOO2,

231, 326-328. 482,


Chriatine 673;
Churchill,

Mor

889; Fatlmi fM; Faalbhoy. I. A. 682; Futjuuqo 614. 1136,

<C1

M, W,
* MM]

840.

964.

1010;
74;

1180, 1192; rVrIihUH73, 1193, Fmnlcui Maicmui


1

Flroahah

0*ya*a*>u

ChulH. Pandli

IHnmih

WnaUia

Mi
T.

OaaaHanui 290; Cleopatra 623.


1003. 1(07.

62ft;

Clerk;

Br Adam

163,

I1M; FlWdarenoi 8K;

Flann Slnni

913,-

PkHcher, Rnnlitr

730, 963; 136, 1192; KorHtr. Ctoraf 723.


9fl0;

\W

OMonMB.
'*

1013. 1017;

Coolho 1143: Colburn;

729. 962; Fotadan UpnlmJar


Prof. 442. 443; Friod

Fowler. H.

Fontw. John Rnnho!d W. 939. Frandteo,

Vk

*nam

239; Collinjrwood 1100; Columbia 526. Concord 607; Confuclua 662. 666; CotiUintlno 129, MO). 1023. im. I244-, O^rnlcu. 40, 147; Cortliek, 813; Corny*. Humbwlo 52fi
. .

nm. OoMKook

W.

*** ;

Crawford 168. 928; Criichlow, Keith 1082:


'

mTT I17i mb

.?""'

KrM

o-IC E' i!* '*" i ^>W.Bi<Vb*8(B


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791
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*t 714, 727. im.

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966, 95", B70.


671,

m6; Qifa 8, ft Cirv

nw

Qi^to

1 '

M- 1142; Ciulav 830-40; Gcurl 690.


1306;Got<ht

0ypn,,fl04

690. 771,

*Wi ftrtOifOm. 1161; Ghad Abdulla Khan **JJ U4( *' P8,C 1188-1190.

<^hldfltf;OW>^ --ng J
730;

tf H

.|ia7:0odbolall8|,
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Covlnd Singh 1276; Grafton

II*
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Uriua 604; liarwln

A77;

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Maria MR. 1077, 1000, Greory

Guy John

672.

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111
:

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KaboUlfthlfl??;!^^!.*]

ia

IlmhmMhari WW;
730. 799; 930;

Kikull

JtaWd ML

Z* ttta>W: Ui.
Kifai

'

: '

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I2fi4-

2 ^^

49*' *"

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740. 840, .32,;
1177;

7*

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,,onl " r

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1175,

n M
IIX nn.

if)

4 7B Ifc^lHW. IHppclylui **i Hlrnnyakiwhyap I.**** Mi* Mfc HBI lltromt.tt 101* HJUtr Adolf 704. 976. 1010. 1121, Ml W; Hopktni 816; Honw IIU, 1174; Hoffmwin. .Sunley
F**d

'" ** - ** '** Wi WBlMi Godfrey 4H4. Ml. 916,

K^hw.

Kb

W^kI'^
Kmh*
87,

711; Krfe- 991;

|Q. KhmprllflJ
;

KhulUr 864,

1079; King Divfd A.


1078;

*.

KHHnumn

762.

Kotobodiyo *B>.

9 Wngi*th 90; Krimm 411; Kmhni


6.
654.
1221. 1273. 1323. 1326;

(Srfkrishns; Crlthoi) 570, (79, AM, 917, 918, 622, &,

*W. !M*wi* IIM. ""yl'. Hunk* IBTi llunW, r W


Pimrti 14U IUM;

MHO. Huwrt-winit MO, 1012;


|07t;

666, 609-673. 679. 899.

1193. 1201, 1204.

Huol *no 742; Hunt,

KrlBhnsnand 954; Krbbu


977;

Dm
1161-

fU

m. Kuben

A22. 571. 733.


fltt,

Kumirjwi

8S3; Kuplo

ffllj

Kuih (Cuihi) 626; 849,

Hu-Mln

flirt,

*W7, 610.

B28. 836, 1346; Kolubuddin


86fl;

limn wo.
iKuniuMi
74*.

It* Idtwn

MM; Ibrahim AdOihah


1201;

Idn 970;
671,
lulu

(lUuunuiM
|fl

1111
"il

Ind
(

606. 521.
1179;

Ml.

AM,
798.

TM.

NT.

1PM.

M7
672

font 439;
!i77,

Ubi Bwniy r cL.| H

UW-bm-i-Akhiib-bm-e^rf- 7*. 707


1143-

Wolunm
.

161. 821, 825:

Ukthml

226.

Ini 979;

**"*^.i n
Hir^
ffi Blc?

,45;

Ut

ffl5;

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232. 233;

7,

MA ;.

Uiivaj) fl74.

Imw

Uv.603. ^ 8'T -.
749: Ubedorr. 616^

Jwfc. Iaui 1322. JhoUoU aoa, n-lIB, Jrtiimba flirt, .Inhmmni

Jagiinnnlh

1168.

694;

Wh

11*11,

JohmiKlr 115o, 1170.

* UH
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'

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W,
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j73i j, 4(

fl72(

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Itahitminjl 200,
;

J fl nr<lnn 006;

n21; jnmodoan, mO; Junui 124.


VII 439;

863; Uoyd Jom N"" 438, 441: toWj


'

^ ^ |wji *; r,, m ^ y^jjaCD. mmhlm


itfM.

u fc,.

C.

1289,

1231. kvtfiirmiii
.

5|2
.

Unco|r)

Hmy

1301

fcknh Chwdra

L"n 167; Lucleo 209. 1018.

gn>

fJjdvfeo

BtKhemn

711; Ludwf* 148;

Jw "" 818 Jwdftfh27a Jiyavwrnwi


,

1143;

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Jnyuwrnw
:i9.

!^,
jj

.017. 1040. 1159.

jIJ^'
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lu

m m
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<Chriil) 0.
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43,

j7| ;
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Miculoch. Dr. 1009; Mncdonnd

1018
-

"M7

W-MW.
(imnjd.

ia-

,nMl

u&M

|,a0,

& 04.

W:

M d*n

803. 8tM,

1026;

*W

laai; Jlrrtuim

lnUilB.

100ft;

.John Kr7. 1017, 1019.

Uflfl

7 u MitfoMl^ I" -" * W.O*.*j

M**"

218; Mahfldpv" 219, 7; Miniddto L-nfijMihiiluilinurgaWTiMahnvir

Muaawiah 613

m u(p

. .

JJ*"^

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2 |!.

Ml.

496. SWI;

Mahfdhor 12ft.
'

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ILTnCl
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212.

Mi M*"*
2*;

" 0I I * m&'w,s. i. Mo 158.498. Ml, 5fi9.


u*-*mi
.
109; MarifhiKifi; IIS. 224.

* M-n-l* ****" ^ ^^ * ** *
MflnU

Manat 696; Mnnoka

Naa,-d

(N0rad)

V'*.

|90

<* (Nah;

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295.

629;

Neh.

277^

hs,

6' 6

6,n -

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1223t ,225

,m

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107
'

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882;

March 962; Mai^ao 528; Mnrichus 731; Mark 1017. 1010; Mama
793;
*^ 6
-

^ ft
7M; Pmdu

I"

7'

Aft t *

"2

627:'

^"J

Mm
incfl
-.

*2: Martand
249;

ffl5 =

Marv

106. 651, 912,

IOH
-

Maandi

Mothir-bin-Mukaddasi 250;

Malta* 1041; Mauyagandha R3; Malleo Ricci

Maihur K. 80G; Malthew


142. 182,

0.C0U
608;

P
:

Orph^s

301; Oscat Bc4to 4^;


769;

KMO, MetfmaflM, 801: Maurice 140. 168. 207. 210, 620-622,

Osoma do Coro
Pan

o^-SZ^." * O^S^^^i:^ "


81

OwtaJ^^'a
856; raninl 27,

lis MumuHlcr

10, 26. 46, 53.

71. 72, 86.

Ml,

66

'

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Umutafu

626. VSS, 768. 815,. 899, 929.


.150.

1179. 1243. 1260.

1272^

Pallas 299;

771.

Uavi LB. 3S.

764;

Maccrindle 13>3.
476, 1263,

1264;
1264;

Medusa 659;
Menelaus 791;

M. 387, 388, 816. 938,


83; Para-iuram 276, Parks. Fanny 1U, 782;

1101, ,102, 1348;

m,

TO;

Mfpalhmn

Mm .

295, 293, 668, 6.9, 1036; Pari. 112. 797. 798; Parth 787,
73;

a m ft^^
ffi,

Matthew 471Parun 7ft'


ftffl,-

Mercury 224; Merk 778; Michael 326. 470, 882, 109o!

1078;

.-

WaoBirfitti; MDli Marvin H. 864, 866, 1199;

Mum

Minerva 224. flu,


805." 842*

Parvati 162, 671; PaUakir, Pund/t

Patrick 227.

Sr.

Ellis

146;

Mithral

(Mitra) 230. 804,

Pattabhiram 612;
1027,

ra.ra.W. 10M.UK0.

Patterson 1213, 1216. 1216; Paul 1016. 1017, 1022,

1198;
1

Moavia608;

Mohammad (Mohamed)
'

1036, 1042; Peine 621; P*"**. Dr. V. V.836, Penelope


628; 627; Pen*er
.46;

,'
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278 '

568, Peon, Dr. Magma

N. M. 1143; Perry Dr.


Philip R,

^<.

,^,

W. H,

1323;

Peine W. P.

PMby

653, 665.
Sfi9 .

Kin

* |. '03-05. 707-709. ,M2 "* 1205 123 i2:w


'

529. PhUip. Rav. Morrii

.46.

?">'*"

<

Phikwtratui 623,

<-

!** Ia*h
IttlZ!

* SJh iSi^^.
'

M0hd Gh0" "33. .

.253;

Mohd

fl-on I0" ; Ptov" r" : 959; Phoebus 784; PW* M JoI* Hli Rnro *. *= P^ek; Pisistratus 612' ,2M: ^0UnU 2M 877; 8 30 11 Rato *>-.

m,

F E

- Momtntun or
,0B
-

'. 1266, 1283, 1291; Moinuddin 1152; Mi.fi-:,,!,-

* ^.

V^^
**;

u Monon t* 521

""iwms. air aui. lif.z; Mom..-., ma. .. B. : Mom. 621 Moses Mourn 668; Moynihan 1174;
;

Podgorny 762. Ponnempenioi


791; Pous.

M ^8 J^ ^ WW
237.
241 , Iin
'

"^

'

Mo ^^
969. 829:

295-297.

. . *

877; jttr nfc,

. .. PoDu, 784; Pompey

Wi

773.

p,^^

^ ^^
:

p^j^
,

fPnUhadJ 671, 621, 622. 746

F* tb*r
At h

lJft;

rYWi
:

Prasannakumar

*f? Prtie0 rtam

1131, 1132. Price 689; Princep878; Prithu

9^2.

1061.

1296;PmUP*itty*

*.;?

j^
* *\n;C~" ~, , W*WI 2M
,'
'

372; Prosperina 784; 431. 432.

,:

fi

,,q

fMO;

Plolemy Purandar 190; Puruhu 637. ,84 8i <:


'

799. Sevaye251;Shahiahan
1154. 1160, 1162, 1167

mi
'

'

...

. i.
1

i^^^..iiu2:
Sb

u"'

"09. 115. ,16


'

"37.114A ti
J

no
ijuirimis 796.

^IZ^Z
*
-

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Shankarrah 626. 627;

karangadhar^l
anjin <r

^ te7^"V*!!' W.1SH, *^*


1.101,

160

'

Sr

^TW^him'll9;
1.

,ua tatM Durtmi 1004-1006; Raghovan Dr. V. 75; uk'o-8 379 8. R-jendra Chola 960; Rajsmgh 1,66;

1304: Rabia

Mansuri 063;

Raffles;

Sherman 818; Shimaji


111 123. 113. 101

i,:,.. I,-,. 160-168. .*. 196.

WtoMi&L^^
..
'

,90i

*
'

8
376.

20],

S" *
MBB
12S

TaL W
72s!

***mV*\n
i

1M.

252-

*> *

314
'

3 .
761
ffil

370.

382. 392. 449. 466. 476. 478 479 ,' 617, 625. 633. 635. 656, 659

STo^** **(.) m, *?'


3,fi
'

338

8.

W. 530. S; . .
8W
8,

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571. 574-576. 598. 617. 619. 622. 626.

798

801. 609. *>

^ 8M
'

7.4.721.727,745.751,752

734, 751

7w
S22

798-800, 803. 804. 806. 813 814


901. 908, 914. 923.

m ^' *
98,

BBa'flUto

** ^a'!* I* " . L "^ ** **'


'

8I7

'

819

'

SM.'fiSG.

872. 680. 883. 953. 957. 119.3. 1230.1249,

9**0.

960.

1344; 1272 1307. 1325. 1343.

Rama Mena

526. 528;

Rama
S. R.

.
1080

iooi. 1005. 1013. ,0,4. 1086.

Vn
1185,

Rambaud

751;

Ramai*

622; Ramkali 781;

Rao

U54.

m imlm;21290

*
y
574. 1346; Shotoku.

1168. ,170. ,198, 1216. VSD, ,221

7,

Rsvan 150. 188. 276. 318. 412. 679. RbU 799. 803. 1025; 827. 953; Ravenshaw 1 272; Ravindranath 734. 761 800. 825. 826.
.

1233. 1283 1292. 1302-1301;

Shlvijf 127, 431, 433, 844. 972.' 1061.'

1227. 1275. 1296; Shivambhu 574; SWv

Dan

nakur

(Tagore) 308; Rawlinson 635;

Remus

44. 796. 800. 824.


Cecil

King 977 Showerman


;

298; Shubhttkirwfmhi 977;

Shuddhodana 615;

828, 834; Renier G. G. 1109;

Rhndamanthus 377; Rhodes. Sr


Robertson 10*'
:

ShukJa R. N.

160; Sbukrs 190; Shundi 773; SMdiqui 639. 641-643;

952; Richard 761,111". Rigby; Col. 958;


122: Roe.

Robinson

Sigfried 780; Singhal, Dr. J. P. 929; 3nhi A. K. 1080;

Sry

211;

Sr Thomas

1266;

Rommel

433; Romniel 713;

Romulus

Sita 150, 182. 575, 821. 826 827, BM, 835, 1245; Staua IV 127;

796. 79B, 800, 807, 824. 828, 834.

1140; Rosenthal Ethel 27,

Smith 533.

829. 830. 1239;

Sxnta
775: 958;

787. 8,4. 815;

Soonund

778.

BMburfb. San 1309; RubinkofT 751: Ru:kert 730; Rudro


906. 877. 1270;

163. 164,

789; Solomon 232, 493.

494, 870; Soor>* 225;

Soory. Varma 964;


-

Ruma

823;

Russeau 1087.

Sophia; Queen 657; Sorer**


John Wtffred 6o5. SpcKe wi Wilfred 655- Swke CoJ

**" '^ Spwcr Uwis 478-481.


157 , 376.

Saadl 305. Sachau,

Edward 601; Safdarjang 1185, 1186. Segar

1008. 1031-1034, 1186; Stalin 746;

53

W0; Sahonbahu 977; Sakuni 836. 853: Salim Chisli 1152. II*. Salim Sulun 698; Salon 623; Sang. Rana 1162; Sankar 286;

729. 787,

788, 793. ffl0,


212;

^^Wm
"r^
h
,

W"'***^mSMn$Un (SrivaWlvl) 476-478.


723-725,
1040;

^
Sir

) 483.

,,

,264;

SUaus,

Subhadra 1204; SubuJcUgin

*****
WB.

376. 384. 385, 584. 665. 897.

*77. 1070: Saunralekar S. D. 701;

218. 843. 663:


*****

904. 909, 918. 955, 968. Sathe E. R. 1196; Saturn Satyawati 83; Savang Vatthana 439; Scan*

Stukeley 123. 278, 694; Sudhakant


576; SuWeh 318- Sun

^ m
'

Magi)lt

mvr^B23.8^;
,

SuharM

Nimmbi^
672;

S"**.

- &***. Augustus 142. Mfe\ Schlegel W w. Wwnbmm 871; Schopenhaur 730; Schawanback 1264;
lh '? ***

WukW8

*~\,

^m

^mut 500; SuIpJUua 813; SumaU


a^dev
28; Susrut 161.

ja).

SYKJiM

746: Syed

Ahmed.

333:^344-3^^,

SepUmiua Sernnu. 813; Serapic 956: Set

^ -* m
5 *

**;

w
s2
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in
Waddell. L. A. 145, 243Walker. Cora. Mlaa 528;
Sir
146;

^^-i-1W
-^Tnffl

(Tkm^n;
3I.
'I

Talmur) 278. 368. 615-617, 634.

nH

,l99:
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:W1;

T*"

W^k-
;

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ll43:

<nwie B27: TBy,or ,4- **.


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Walsh;

W.

110fl ;

ij}"*!* **
Wt*jl

i* *

1 "'

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** ,n "

I^'1v UiwllM7.fl5B.W: niomsSl.


"

Web,r
UM-llfifl;

Tfcon* 1143:

menu.

805. 33; Tilak B. G. 148.

25. 309. 455; Webster 927 Weismann 344; WellaG. A.


I0tl-

*?*** **
l

336. I^Chv 1016 Tln-ae-Hwangrti 512; "Hpu Sul.an 882, 431. 995. 758. 1258; Jl VS ita. IM 513: Tod. Jame* 239.

Mortimer 1240; White


Wilson

980;

ii
m.

iff:

Trgr 980; Trindlay.

James 335: Tnpurari 914;

Wilberforce; Samuel 81; Wilford 5; 146. 238. 243, *.

.V* 7 WWuVhMsS*. * **'

W'dd,Q :

aVwVS? m
.

834, ,27*

rZnahSQ:

Tusrfllha (Dasharath) TrUhala 385. Tulsidas 1258:

Barbara 786; WintemiU


181
,

72.

182.

Wu

is

*ur "^

Changen

1Vph0 799,
Ugresen 775; Ulugh Beg 1206.
707;

512;

WyU.

509.

SJ2 ^H? ^ fJ"' *"


gb
fflfc

Uaoimhi MB: Uddhav 1097; 703. 705. ttr. jmr-bava-Haaam


T -nan

Xavier St.882. 1152.

1251;

Xewphon

X
.

167.

2.

Umayads

521

522; Urwick

Yajnavalkya Sage*77; Varna


1070;

Abbas Khalifa 1142.

125, 832. SS0, 921

977. 1070;

Yonl

Yang.

Quinzhang.

Dt
251,

670,

57Ji

Yang Tlng-H 672:


1299;

Vatshampayan 190: Vaisravan 522.

Ml

Vajrabodhi 917: Vaientia

Y^qub- bin -Tank 841; YaquU


(Sri Haripad)

WO;

Yb

Yimr

Ara/ai

QA

V*K 823. Valiancy. Sir Charles 617. 917-919. 923. 924. 959;

123; Yezfd 607. ftB\ Yua* Ml: Youmui Maulvi


1345; Yuan

VafcnftMlO. 57<, 828. 12fin, 1345,


35. 916. 608; VardhaJd 350;

Vaman

683; Vamberi. Arminlua

679; Yuag Xianji 573.

awang MS: YudhWhlr

863;

Varun

125. 564. 651,

781. 782. 801.

Yule. Sir Henry 471. 654.

btm
Itt.

m. m,
!W
413,

Vase da

Gama

156. 188; Vashistha

(VasisU)

188.
Mal-I Zaradusht 917; Zeenai

UlMm *

AM: Vasudev

190. 484; 178.

Vasumitra Shunga 500; Vayu


188.

fm

K.

171. 172, 174.

193; Vetlaprakssh 75;

ftmmZl,

VtnflgQpalacharya Dr. S. 530, 547, 977;

Venus 784.

* \'mjn \Z2: V*rfcov2 782; Verne, Jules 182; Vibhishan 188. . Vfenmadhya 199. 605. 696-698, 700, 710. 1297; VinaU 1321;
r

**rtk ** T

W4i Virajanand 37; Virudhaka 522. 601;

J^^vhhBtoW.a^ipa.

I09-108.UO. in.
G06,

m.

12s.

216. 219.

W. W.

ZM. aft W-572. &.


Ia *'

318. 328. 375, 477. 482. 483.


G05,

6,7
.

620. 651. 657.

W^,
ft

9(S. 901. 950. 954. 981

1005. 1086. ***.


190.

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'

"*

Vishwakarma
i

V,,nw "",h >22I

Vtou 800; Vithoba

^"n* *

Sage 306. 1*139. Vyas

ir

*>***

torn*

iftw,

OURPUBUCATONS
MAKATHJ
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^uown
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about a revolutionary change


therefore attracted world 1
(3) ni*hft-i =n?

ttlwBUDrlh^
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remp,,

p^

(hardcover delux edition

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Some Blunaers

^^^U^HiBiorical u"<"
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arafl'ijirf

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(6) Drih**

Chapter, of

World History

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wi

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Report*
i>

Hindu Ulkot

t^j mufti

(PnwhTn fenft l^w

f6)Ap, Red Fort


(7) Lucknow's (6)

a Hindu

BuDding

BENGAU

Imambaras are Hindu Palaces

Wfe says Akbar was Great


was Hindu Land
is

(?) Great Briuin


1101 "Hie Taj

KANNADA
A Shiva Temple

Mahal

Tejo Mahalaya

(11) Christianity is Qtrisn-nily (12) Toe Rationalf of (14) Fowler*'

TELUGU
(1
)

Astrology

The Tajmahal

is

Tejo Mahalaya

A Shiva

Twnpla
ihi author
007,

Howlers

The above
A History of Histories

English publications
10 Goodwill

may beordnrd from

(15) World Vedic Herliage

P.N. Ook,

Plot No.

SocWy. Aundh. Pun? 411

118) Tajmahal

The True Story (American paperback edition)


in

India. Tel (0212) 338449.

U")

Islamic

Havoc

Indian History

Publishers desirous of
publications

writ* n of tht.bov, out -of-toc*


,

HMM

may

"^^"
tbj*J. Sadan. 3WW

Hindi cdiUons of

M/a
Wl

Bhsrati Sahltyi
.

fo^fm w^ ^ ^
b* ordtred from

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Tel 343667.

fen

ffe

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the

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Am^.

t^ W.^^^. ^^
tow

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may

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from

U/.

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Public.

***'

1376

1377

****.***,

MP"*

^
^
"

IT NSK Rir

fk-i thu ihll

Jl wM

TERMINOLOGY OF i'.-*-*'--

ALL HUMANITY
before

should have been known as


the
life -

mzancc c ,0 ,ake cognizance of \\ 'he "<*ds (0 , ake S

while "'' c inert

tnl* o Christianity * cncUrit Sanskril


^
Vedjc

AD

and

Chri;^. story of Jesus, to be a hereunder to critically 1" -^ examine e t d "W'tional weoum Jesus's life. of

T^T ^^^^ m
**
!'

hiirnrv rnv*F> history covers a

"^T 5^B
threats

from the very

first

generation Of of

One is told that Jesus was born f basic statement very absurd si ce virgin!*
contradictory terms!
If

and when

luUlUn

^m^^RSAL
far

^Thtoc.1

descendants dChnsiians are or temptations

of Hindus converted

indeed deliver a c W ,d. doe,


or deep reverence '
1

r^SS
a

nonCl''""

2. ^

CHRISTIAN DECEPTION
wise
a

About

Jesus's birth

it is

c^ conscientious European Christian scholars have


exposing .-nnpn.number ofbooks

men from the East were guided to the exact


star

blandly asserted that three


location by

theconcocnon
Wells,

that passes

moving

which descended on
star

the exact birth spot

Hu

teach

is by G A Chnoamtv One of those Oriental German, at the School of

who used to And Afr.can

anybody seen a

moving

like

kite in the high heavens 1

And
was born in
in

if Jesus's birth-spot

was indeed

so accurately

Stud**,

m London
dogma,

That book

is

titled

DID JESUS EXIST ?


and others, who

pin-pointed, what explains thevagueness about whether Jesus

Thai book besides


Christian

exposing the concoction of the

Bethlehem, or Jerusalem or Nazareth and whether

cites

instances

of

priests

house or crypt ?

hiving functioned as Christians for

decades, suddenly
as

The day of the week The


birth L

on which Jesus was born (such

announced

in

great disgust that

they were no-longer

Monday, Tuesday or any other day) is also totally unknown


time of his
birth too
is

unknown The year of his

Christians since they


spiritual

were convinced that Christianity was a

hoax which had cheated

Such persons,
continues to spread

and mislead them. when asked, why Christianity and proliferate Their answer was
*>

have

version asserts that Jesus may too is not known One the result t u B ,^!4 Run thai case consider even n4 RC In been bom

viz that Christ

may

have

bom rn^BM
offt*

"Seflrag Christianity is the

biggest business in the

world

"

La

us therefore

probe Christianity, as the police do


It

Christ being bom any sense? There too

^S*-*-*"^
the day

they suspect foul-play


I

is

**

generally believed and

time of birth are

totally

iwaflB

*w

that Christianity is
itself is

rooted in a person

That

JJ** ^^ *kwm

a big

hoax Because
aj

Naturally therefore,

named
flS

Jesus

Now
personality

let

us

WW*** wli
to*

^^

lbouI Je5U 5'


all.

all faiths,

centering

such

Buddnism

advocating
consistent?

We are iu-1
Then

**

*^w co-^ ^rbyhanmenngn.,..


such a noble

^^

.he nobles, of

on onc

penon

"nit, the rehgion, if any.

had there been a stemming from him.

,(,(,m

donetodeathi"

'

1378

1379 Chrismas

*orld VedtcHerl(
is

iff**

^
ni
and f*,

& to ^J^i^Laoa asa saviour of


'

all

humanity

is

the

why
its

explained away as Christ'* hiM is the celebration accompanied bv

save himself Tha,s, 0ry jrZ. ^couldno,over Jesus crucifixion

to? Mt"^ H-ngsummariscd^


logical

!*Twm any

public protest

doctnnes and practices have no


shall

^^udrtv
,fivT

.n thai

concocted story

celebrated as
is

Good

since the day of Friday, the succeeding


is.

We

now

explain

how

it

all

arted

T"* ^ *"

Hinduism

alias

?T*^I jesus
u
a

said to

have resurrected, ought to be

bilhon-year history from the very first generation

Vedic Sanskrit culture has . mu l.iof humanity


is

Bad Sunday S>ad and dubbed as aSupper" painting depicting Jesus


Thecelebraied "Ust

An account of

the ages past and the ages ahead available in the opening introductary pag ofelaborate

Vedic

able

wih to

12 followers

is

also an absurdity because in

almanacs available with


boggles at that accurate,
in great detail.

book-sellers any day One's mind


multi-billion-year account recorded

tfiow

squat timo Romans used to

on mats on

the floor for

meal* Since there

was no Jesus and no crucifixion the 'sign

That antiquity is reflected even in modem European terminology. For instance untitles* time is known as
*kaal' in Sanskrit. Therefore the word 'calender'
is

of the cross' gesture by so-called Christians is a meaningless meaningless unless formality Moreover, a mere cross sign is Ktompanied by gesture simulating the
Jesus'*

Sanskrit

ka-la-mari.e a chart

indicating divisions of time (such as day,


a

hammering of

nails in

body

week, month, year etc ka indicator of time'.

Similarly the term 'Clock'

is

fcul

The Christian dogma,

that

no matter how heinous one's


be, all

behavior throughout one's life

may

one has to do

is

compendium of divine

and they Since the Vedas are in Sanskrit knowledge .0 guide all hurnani.y

consutuie the
the

omulaie a formal rcgretul confession before a cleric just


before one s death, to

-hem by tradition of reciting

hn

has

commucd unbroken
war

ensure a total divine pardon and a

^UghPCoW^^X ^ahabhara,
ln ' hat H

owme

seat

m the high

heavens
the day. the date,

KC the time,
tow'i

the place and the year

lasted for

iriScr 8 days from


Kn*
it

bmh 1'*% unknown, the celebrations of <w midnight between December 24 and 25. to the

war C. After that

December 3 of 5561 God-head rf u thc


15 .o jon

^
.

g^

r^pect as a divine

who

commanded iin
discourse,

^^ofbdlvis an irrational observance

personality as

^Sex.empore to his wamor deliver

^ worid

fiuno us

'Bhagavad
admirer

mm J^J!^
<*

Chmmas

'-

Chris

'

is

no < Chrisl nor doe5

Geeta*

^-ttrtn^
iS^-i *
,he

""* thCn
x
a
"

lhal

ChnSmaS

' iS Cel

i^uaninMoflheworld Vedic empire

ierm

mas ,o-' x ' d esn, 5iand

for

mean

binhday,

How come

then that

studies,

a***

1380
American. WestHmii *" European.
la

1381

forW fcd/j.

H'tltag,

earlyinthelMcen.u^AD^
management and worship
of the Sanskn. erm
t

^tal

**" **

^
M)

"*^*Jni

lingua are exlanl


is
r

regional splinters

in Chri

" ^Wing

liw

."Latently BIW"

8 onal

dc cncra,c fonn

}^^^(^) Ehm "Hello'


in
i*

Vatsald,^

''^P'onunc,.,

the exclama.
|

darling ch.ld

i.e.

Chrisn.)

Sanskrit "Hal*

ifcMOM
Edda
is

>'d to he

ok refl l^ouwd is

of the world

common even in Europe The Veda compendium was


Europe Edinborough. the
'

in uitte.-day

jumbled pronunciation YeruM,cm * *o a of the SanskriT Y U i5halflyam meaning "The Township of * God v ; dan Both Peter and Paul ' who I.W, dun " tbe H v A D when Nero was the Roll
.

JerZ^T* "* ,kode "*e

iniul ofScrtland

basically Sanskrit

Vedannm-puram'

(i.c

pu he m-b.ic menace bee* because


d.l

is Sanskrit 'KslmtrastharT uVVtdk- township) Even Scotland Kshatriyas c iSc land of the warrior Clan the
I

erem

sections of the

^^ ^^
* '

cZ^

they

to

Vedic

.Lew*

the

name of the

latest

divine incarnation

knshna (Oman) has undergone a number of regional pronun-

delivering angry speeches in the name of an imaginary Jesus Since both Peter and Paul, were a social menace, provoking public riots against the then Roman regime, and
setting fire to

coi,^^

canom

c-.cn in India
tB iht In

In

Bengal Chrisn

is

pronounced as

public property, they were

arrested, tried

and sentenced to

krw
a*
In

Kamatak province in India Chrisn is pronounced

death Accordingly

Peter

was crucified and Paul wasbehcaded


Is

Chut

South India thai

tuiopean mannerism the

name is pronounced as Christian. deity was alluded to as Christian

with a sword

for high treason

Chnstian deification of such

drawn

Vrcfart the term Chnstian-ity (alias Christianity) signifies ilits devotees of God Chrisn

criminals justified it wis their followers who set fire to pubthe rumour thai Nero was lic building in Rome and spread
fiddling white
cifixion which

Rome

wu buying

Therefore

it

is

Petcr"s

cm-

and Paul, like pwtr> Europeans, were pan of Christianity


dcuMccy tollowm of the Chrisn cult

Consequently both Peter

all
i

is being

misrepresented as an imaginary Jesus s

c
i

CR

'

CifiX

"

The(*)Mty

..

^phrenic lament at

being thwarted in his

Wntmeamng-assuch'

^22K^ S
< Um* i
^

r^

Therefore the term * European pronunciation of Chrisnan-ity i.e


,hf

attempt to emerge

is.

dream

in

which an

*"' **c incarnation


0t

Therefore

all

>v grieve" , "On Thee


indeed skrit does

^ T^^
^^
(

^.^ ?eta ..^


\

!SES2r w

kc ,hc modcm -day ^ Knshna Consciousness)

mw

^
I

pe,,, a

Prosier.

San-

bu)ld

molh cnurcn

for vou

f,SKC0N

" n-aaw*y '* So-**^ vT^d m the si century \ D Those peter *^ ^Ljfc culture prevailed all over Europe
,hu5
hoc,;

1382

1383

wortd\-edicHer,ia

fet

AFP"**

^ 0dWPI!^esanHislft
^"^^rihe

rfihe world

the Sine* Chrisn was

latest

Vedic

realize that they professed Vedic

!
d"*C

^ Z^cTrLwn
the
letter

His gospel And sermon were of the temples of world The forecourt

before being converted to

tyranny, trickery, treachery taxation

onw cS^J *****


i

u_

(uM) i.e. venues of DhArmA ChurchA Thus the word duties nd behivior
is

Roman army

f^7^%*^ * *
*L
' -

lonure

too *Tbe word'-convent*

Sanskrit,

where the
'

The irony

is that the

very

ml
to

tf ought to pronounce the word

retAin its bAsic

pronunciation See"

* *Sanwani <>**) which in Sanskrit

which executed Peter and Paul as enemies of the realraTn^ century, glorified them as demi-gods 300 years later

Roman monarchy

That word pnest Pnesu conduct the holy discourse one may remember that S toots Sassfcrh To understAnd thAt word semi-sphere is and H are mier-changeable, as the
nronaMy
Pufohrt
spelled as
is

cflBDOAeihoh' premises

...

Around 312
the

Roman

when Constantine was Emperor administration was getting corrupt, cruel aod
.

AD

dictatorial

Frequent public uprisings continued


the

despite

military repression throughout Europe

hemisphere
is

'

The SAnskrit word being

As
the Vatica,

last resort. Constantine fancied that if the

Vedk

thai

which

being pronourced in Christian

high- priest for Europe, the Shanlcaracharya (with

his seat in

ncacoce at 'purosrT abas pnest

alias Vatican) issued a sacred directive ordering loyal

Ifmav thus be seen


culture *hich held

that

it

was

all

Vedic Sanskrit

the public to be
eternal
hell,

and peaceful,

lest

they be cursed to

sway throughout Europe under the


first

Roman empire During those years of the so-called


cemun.

But as

public uprisings could end lead a per Vedic traditions Shankaracharays


life

an attempt to show-off as a distinct group, they


for

detached

spiritual

with no mundane interest bent low to pay

Therefore,
to

toutued Amen
haU-oart

AUM*

Their rebel rabble then started

even miehty sovereigns


n.gr> priests

homage

Aose
caI

carrying and displaying crucified

Peter's ponrait as their

so

upon

public to order the

AH thu should auaken so-called Christians to their <niuai decoi and misguidance If at all they need a

misrule Thus, havmg


obliging the emperor

U>t

Cor^tanune

^^tf CfrT
to

Sh<Wld fCmber lhaI lhCy

"'

ChrislianS

Vatican)

itself,

wil

Shankaracharaya,

^S?
*m*A?2 H?
1

C^IT?*

'^

' Id

lhM before

lhcir

conversion

premises have
history,

m<n ^'*>rfto-^

n5 ' 1*

[^''J^ Ev^e. .he Vatican of Vedic


.

^^^ ^^^^
S hankaracharaya

mMy |0 Iyrann

fed graveyard

Pasans

ThaI lerm pa an is a * nl lerm Bhauv:,n mlina ,he t term Bhagvan meaning the
all

aw^ng P"f" '"TS edicia ore known as


because^ 5
'

^
Bu

make

Christians

everywhere

precisely

1384
Apr****
Vl .ion

1385

World Vedic Heritage


It is

nomenclature

continues

W be Vedic Sanskrit.
all

not generally

known

ihf :ance tl

the pope) used term Papa (lor

over

pay an heavy tax to the Church

that every Christian has to

Stffie

Graf the German

tennis

Champion, who won

uSansL...
-

remains siliem That tcmunal 'Ha'


*

irMhe term Papa

elects a

which the College of Cardinals The Sistme Chapel (in a deceased Pope alias Papa) is the
successor to

prizes worth millions of pounds, when ordered to remit a large chunk of it to the church, was so disgusted as to announce her intention to quit Christianity

Sinskrn term Shiv-Sthan

chaapaul(taH

orasi)

meaning a

Therefore a through worldwide inqniry needs to be conducted on the church-tax on every Christian in every country all over
the world. Such a tax amounts to paying for the very
fetters

museum

curved ceiling. Sh temple with a bow-like, has numerous relics of its Vedic past
uprooted (Shivlingas), Shiv
Since the

The Vatican
For instance

which bind persons to

Christianity Christian publicity-media

me

emblems are on display. Roman sovereign now needed a name-sake


occupy the seat of the slain Vedic
carry out the

too cunningly suppressed the news of Steffi Grafs disgustful


discard of Christianity.

ftce-uvuifl-high-pnest 10
high-priest

Since Christians, numbering over a


largest

billion,

from the

who would

emperor's dictates, a

human community

in

the

modem world, we hope that

representative

of the Peter-Paul faction

which had led an

inpy. separatist existence, attracting to itself, disgruntled, riffraff;

among them will take the most conscientious and inquisitive themof the above exposure, disown Chnstianity
cognizance
selves and

from time to lime, for nearly

300

years,

was

installed as

awaken

rorcgoing facts and others regarding the

0*

high priest

That

is

the beginning

of the so called

some more

Christian

(which is a European malpronumciation of the Vedic tyChnsn) Papacy Hence the history of the Papacy and the

ceieoraiea d celebrated as Christ's

(I) Since Chmmas u details listed hereunderimdnjghi between birthday on the

PaU' WC

anTblooT"

*" blUfred 3nd b' 0lched

bIuffS

T tl

mion m January I? (2) Since

)S

M* * &
Smc

^
^

AJ>

bfig|n

from

Jesus's birth not the time of

commencC mcnt of the

ChrismascelebrB. onJ(3)

* -he

Shani.araci^

S
An

'

IT*"* trac,,on
'

Pe,er sbi * h

So when a nominee rc P laced the murdered Vedic


'

doesn't s.gmty a assertion thai


in (4) Similarly mas dosen't

^hday-w

t hr,sm the synonym

"
.
i

^ ^.^ ^^^
for

mean b.rthfl

^.x'doesn'i signify Christ mas b wme


y.

'" lhC Val Can ^Wuffrfimobdi^n l "KthatChnstianity


'

A D>

lhC WOfId

and

Jeiu 312

? Christ birthday
~

n*Iprrounc

yewi a
''on(.f,t!c

started with

US ChrisI

is

9*
fftcl

vh^im
bi
ii

* Sanskri

""' thts

term lesus a " 5 nced therefore awaken to the Climsof a


i

some the European Chrisn e God

U
a,,

bluffand *>'*'

m l^\VM *>
ruulso^.
fe

Citation-

rVapo ,con Mich as

^^

rhB ,

in h.s

^called Christianity .s n-Votumc 'Story of

Ru4seau suspccIcd , he

spiritual

hoax

*!**
Christian lore about
tHmiiicitv

l386

for Christian*'

Jesus. of the so-called pointed out by us at the start, what pass* \* already basically the Krishna-devotion cult in Eur
is

1387

World Vedic Heritage

Sanskrit ihe

term lesus Chrisn

was pronounced as

'

pc Jesus

proof of Vedic culture having permeated the whole world from


time immemorial It is because of
that, the

Cans' both because


ihr
i

Chrotians

accurate pronunciation and of and j in latin handwriting Therefore similarity world need to realize that they better all over the of laxity
.

in

terms September, October,

November and December


is

are Sanskrit, Vedic ordinals saptum


alias

Sanskrit for 7th, Octo.

Ashtam

is

Sanskrit for the 8th,


is

Sanskrit ulhere to the original


irajead

pronunciation lesus Chrisn of ns mal-pronunciation Jesus Christ As explained above, the terms X'mas and Chrismas
in

Navam is Sanskrit
The
is

for the 9th and

Dasham

the 10th

suffix 'ember'

bong meaningless

European Christian lore,

it

ought to be
a

realued that they are Sanskrit

'Mas* In Sanskrit signifies

the Sanskrit completing a yaw represent the different phases of the Sun, general public, whether Christian or nowd, The
lian
is

common to three out of those four, term for the heaven Therefore the 12 mom m

p>

month

Therefore the term

Chrismas

is

popular
(i.e.

milpronunciation of the Sanskrit

term 'Krishn mas'

and Patft unaware of the fact that the lives of Peter Papacy have been allowed to and" the history of the

the

month ofChnsn) where the


got blurred in popular

last letter

in

the

name Krishn

because remain unexplored and vague

they are too btzarre

European pronunciation, with the waning

IO

of nnct iccuTBcy of Sanskrit


Similarly in the

speech

in

Europe
signifies the 10th

term

X'mas

the letter 'X'is actually

women got centuries ago a amorous favour won her nc* a-m the Vaucan There her ht Va .can employed & sia the Vaucan

^"VoTinstance some
,

Roman numeral 10 Therefore

popularity

among

X'mas

hofthe>tar, since the Vedic new year commenced with

runcuoned a male-attire she


years, while part*
infiinaied he child That

,he

God

ten
:

a
has asserted in

W^S 2
P*

^ ^^ ^W^^^
bou( two

was lynched This


-he author

^^^BBCIondan
He b
of the

His famous 'Bhagvad

^theMargaSheersh (i.e. December) month


'

ni^by I^^Jn,
Since Chrwt

momhofChn ! B
rf Gnat*

SWhy

Chris

alias

CClebraied *" over the the Ck *?


birth

Chrisn-mas (the world from 556 '

"

"

had ft. biSt wh.1 ngl><

^KC
Mtt

uBDm) *te loliuce

^
i

n dm8hl (because !hal is Ihe exacl h0Uf l nn l Smg of bells (because that is a

*Cember 24-25 because that marked

** l^r

Ch ,0 havc been *e fii month of the ^ncien! Vedic world That is further

<^&*#*sff&*
ft***"*

,v

""

1388
and _rAn or n hoax
a fraud.
*

389

Worte y etlic Heritage

^*iflaw ^^
.

'*:

?L
I

1%
]t is

discourse on the battle.Xmcd Bhagwad Geeta in 5561 B.C. oHhe Mahabhara. war tradition the initial staning era of life on
*i per Vedic

wj,oU

their real

Iha ' " Was Iesus(i e basic deity who delivered the
instcad

whose children die young, pray to God that if they are blessed with another child they would give him the insignificant
name
Praster (later deteriorating to 'Peter' in European, speech From this, one may deduce that Peter's mother had other
short-lived children earlier
In

contemporary

tradition, Peter as the devotee

-nl, H know*

era as the Kruta

The

Sanskrit term 'Kruta'

of

Chrisn

by .amines -Readv-midc'

Divinity.
first

was termed a Chrisnan-ity (i.e He was connected with a number of


native

a devotee of Chrisn)
Chrisn temples
in his

mentioned

in

Vedic tradition that ai

the sound

God

firmament Then on the coils of a huge water From His navel emerged a 'Tlm^ se^pem floating on loiumem Brahma, the Creator was seen squating on that

ON^as 'AUM'

reverberated through the

etc)

West Asia (Palestine, Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Nazareth There he and his acqaintance Saul alias Paul, fell out
Being barred entry
in Chrisn-choirs

reclining Vishnu appeared

with Chrisn temple managing groups


and temples Peter

felt

deeply hurt Being

very sensitive person he began to

lotus 4ult

He then

created

all life

including the

first

generation of

suffer

from

hallucinations In his acute mental distress he used


Chrisn), in segregating

men and women and other species of life Readers may now take a look at what the Bible (The
on
its

to prattle

"Oh Christen (i.e.

your temple company) these people have not way) but also
It

stabbed

me (from me (in a

Old Testament) records

very

first

(opening) page The


(i

crucified you."
Peter, Paul

Aum),Then the spirit of God (i e Vishnu, the Supreme Deity) was seen floating on water. At first the world was of one speech" (i e.
BiWe
states

"At

first

there

was the word

was that angry, grumble which led to a are dissident groups and company disgruntled group (as there
in every

Sanskrit

was ihe first common, basic language of all humanity.)


at

The blowing of the conch


functions
at.

the start of all

holy Vedic
note

non-descript major movement) which led a suddenly around 312 A for about 300 years. Then "uroVcd Roman Emperor Constance

existence

marks the reproduction

of the divine 'AUM'

Shankaracharya. the high


ancient Vedic. holy
seat. -

priest for

ibentn of the creation


It

emperor needed a name-saxe


speech which
group dissident Peter-Paul both Peter and
and why
[hcy were
hrt
>

was

nominee

-^'^IS^' *
rft
(

that

Vedic culture and Sanskrit

*wued
'

throughout (he world

*m bora in thai
in
'

from the day of the creation

Vedic tradition Since Chrisn

was

the
-as

Carta

CfaS p

devotees were known f* h Ch was .""'-Pronounced in Europe


rna "on his

administration

as
called

Chnst-n"

Stonc IwnauneJL^ """* of lht Sanskrit word

nWan,ng

'

aIias

'

rock

'

is

J^^*M ^ho* ^ *^^Z? ^ * 0OO-M ^


l w ec
P
fa>

^^
fc
of

^Ve
^

D. when

nMt md criminal ong- onjB


on pilching up
wor(d .s fl vK,,.

;^';;;iIu

prastar

Orthodox women

spurious corpu*

^^^
Append*'

1390
public, to function and cmcfied by the
ill

Appendix
.

II

1391
bv i virgin

a i lW

naSioor of

humanity

p 0s

sp,ntul

Are not so-called Christians then victims of a blaiam hoax' Every conscientious Christian thus
is

needs t0

TOTAL FALSITY OF MUSLIM


HUtory
is

HISTORY
is

reaii thai he or she

a Christian i.e

a follower

of Chrisn

an account of the past which whole truth and nothing but the truth

the truth., he

since both Christianity and Islam were spread by terror, torture, tyranny, trickery.treachery, taxation and

But

temptation, countries converted to Christianity or Islam never talk about or teach their prc-converssion histories

Since

UNESCO

is

a part of the United Nations


Christian and Muslim

Organization the former must compel


countries not to skip over
the brutal
their

p re-conversion histories and


to convert

methods which forced them

Currently

both Christian and Muslim countnes pretend as though their religion originated from the very first generation of humanity

There is a slight difference in modern times in Chnstian *ould not Christian and Muslim reactions While a that no Christianity exgenerally react violently to suggestions rrom nontherefore he is descended isted before tA.D and en has been trained Christians, every Muslim suggest.-" that a. taut and brutally to even any ancestors were non-MusIrrm
I

pre-Mohamad

MOHAMMAOSOWN VEDICHERITA^

n<n

mwlJlhiic Heritage
first life,

Api>eiHiix

1393

will have the courage and honesty to toMiroimd ihe wrM toudh and clearly" How many Musthai base fret ** hrra

^Mushm orJv for ibe


know

h^f was i non-Muslim for (heyears 52 years of his How many Mus10
last

signifying proceeding on a pilgrimage

The Islamic greeting 'Salam Valekum' is a jumbled pronunciation of the Sanskrit term 'Jshalayam BaiakanV greeting in the name of the implying a child-deity
Knshna,

that or arc read> to admit

Mohammed was born

enshrined in the Kaba shrine.

of parents who

spo^

Sanskrit

and followed Vedic culture^

Arvasthan (currently pronounced


abbreviated as Arabia
is

as Arabastan)

a Sanskrit term

signifying a land

of

(pedigree) horses.

(SUM'S VEDIC SANSKRIT TERMINOLOGY


Let us
that

Mecca, Madina, the two cities in Arabia mark the two ends of 400 kms, stretch of land Those are Sansknt terms 'Makha-Medini' signifying a land of fire-worship In all Vedic
worships, a holy
fire is lighted

examine Islam's basic terminology to realize


times.

and worshiped to the chanting


divine energy on Earth
idols,

m pre-Mohammad

eastern region* such a*

West Asian countries and far Malaysia and Indonesia, who are

of Sanskrit hymns, as representing

The Kaba
hub of

shrine housing

360

was the

spiritual

Muslims today used to speak Sanskrit and practise Vedic


culture
Syria. Assyria derive their

the Vedic world from times immemorial As such


father and the entire Arab community revered
the deities enhrined
in that

Mohammad's
names from the Sanskrithis

prayed to and worshipped


storeyed temple.

seven-

leaking Sur. Asur communities Palestine gets its name from


an

eoiea Vedic saga

Pulastin

who had
is

Vedic seminary

toe

Jordan derives its

name from

HOW AND WHY MOHAMMED BROKE AWAY ?


were a SanSince Mohammad ancestors and parents is how, why skrit-Speaking family the basic, vital question from that hereditary and when did Mohammad break away
9 universal Vedic tradition question which It is that vital

the Vedic deity Janardan

tfusalrm.

pronounced as Yerusalem

nple of God knshna.

Zi fr^'f

an ancient Sanskrit ******* a ,0wnsh] P raised ound a

who headed emp

the

Yadu clan

XL2^ SSSm>T
-ho

feme Islam* mfanoa


to us

-^
own

'

e (CUfTen!l

,s Mufilim v

* <y c

known

a * he

has

left

leading unanswered and unexpired

and embarrassing disadvantage

"tu.
570

MOIWMr^D'SEA^ViaFE
in

nC mCcVd ::

r^osuvjiheearhHV^

X^l:^

'

00

^^ ^ambulation

f r;

,ionTheon,ycha P ermb ulatc ami clockwise,

Mohammad was born

AD

Bui

his father

hid

^".corrupuonoftheSanskmtermVraj

World \Wic Heritage

"*** J "^ Xi .eihh md >"*"

_,__

robbing ,he populace


,s

Thanhem

led .he

ihem of their contemporary


Those meaning a

ri^S
fto coders
sinister*

groufMeaacrw^

TS5KS-

C-)-teAIe* ^,
,.

Arab citizenry

to stigmatize the

sr* ?: alias

AhanvnedisalsoaSanskn, synonym
all

towering over himself unique and


generations

oihers

URGENT Ml SUM AWAKENING

wonder how It IS a 1400 years, from realizing the the *orld for almost over and implications of the terms defametory
all

of Muslim, spread

Mohammad

suffixing them to their Ahmed, have been proudly affixing and Sultan Mohammed and Altaf Ahamed etc names such as

URGENT NEED TO REVISE MUSLIM HISTORY


conscietious
tory
;

The above analysis should impal at least some Muslims to take a second hard look at their his-

and realize that they too form an integral part

of the world
from the

poly Vedic Sanskrit brotherhood that existed


first
It

very

generation of humanity
is

hoped, therefore, at least that

some modern,

conscientious Muslims

would come forward to breakaway

from the

terror, torture, tyranny, trickery, treachery, taxation and temptation tradition of Islam to awaken all Muslims to

the fact that they are

all

pan of a World Vedic brotherhood

where each one

is

expected to lead an affectionate and helpful

n7J^^
a

fCinB

^ttrr;rbat

L?JkI

anyb0dy t0 ^y s P ecific m <**e of worship ***** includcsan d welcomes everybody from

is,solon8asheorsherenders

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