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Saturday, 14 January 2012

interview with Vivekananda


ON THE BOUNDS OF HINDUISM

(Prabuddha Bharata, April, 1899)

Having been directed by the Editor, writes our representative, to interview Swami Vivekananda on the question of converts to Hinduism, I found an opportunity one evening on the roof of a Ganga houseboat. It was after nightfall, and we had stopped at the embankment of the Ramakrishna Math, and there the Swami came down to speak with me. Time and place were alike delightful. Overhead the stars, and around — the rolling Ganga; and on one side stood the dimly lighted building, with its background of palms and lofty shade-trees.

"I want to see you, Swami", I began, "on this matter of receiving back into Hinduism those who have been perverted from it. Is it your opinion that they should be received?"

"Certainly," said the Swami, "they can and ought to be taken."

He sat gravely for a moment, thinking, and then resumed. "Besides," he said, "we shall otherwise decrease in numbers. When the Mohammedans first came, we are said — I think on the authority of Ferishta, the oldest Mohammedan historian — to have been six hundred millions of Hindus. Now we are about two hundred millions. And then every man going out of the Hindu pale is not only a man less, but an enemy the more.

"Again, the vast majority of Hindu perverts to Islam and Christianity are perverts by the sword, or the descendants of these. It would be obviously unfair to subject these to disabilities of any kind. As to the case of born aliens, did you say? Why, born aliens have been converted in the past by crowds, and the process is still going on.

"In my own opinion, this statement not only applies to aboriginal tribes, to outlying nations, and to almost all our conquerors before the Mohammedan conquest, but also in the Purânas. I hold that they have been aliens thus adopted.

"Ceremonies of expiation are no doubt suitable in the case of willing converts, returning to their Mother-Church, as it were; but on those who were alienated by conquest — as in Kashmir and Nepal — or on strangers wishing to join us, no penance should be imposed."

"But of what caste would these people be, Swamiji?" I ventured to ask. "They must have some, or they can never be assimilated into the great body of Hindus. Where shall we look for their rightful place?"

"Returning converts", said the Swami quietly, "will gain their own castes, of course. And new people will make theirs. You will remember," he added, "that this has already been done in the case of Vaishnavism. Converts from different castes and aliens were all able to combine under that flag and form a caste by themselves — and a very respectable one too. From Râmânuja down to Chaitanya of Bengal, all great Vaishnava Teachers have done the same."

"And where should these new people expect to marry?" I asked.

"Amongst themselves, as they do now", said the Swami quietly.

"Then as to names," I enquired, "I suppose aliens and perverts who have adopted non-Hindu names should be named newly. Would you give them caste-names, or what?"

"Certainly," said the Swami, thoughtfully, "there is a great deal in a name!" and on this question he would say no more.

But my next enquiry drew blood. "Would you leave these new-comers, Swamiji, to choose their own form of religious belief out of many-visaged Hinduism, or would you chalk out a religion for them?"

"Can you ask that?" he said. "They will choose for themselves. For unless a man chooses for himself, the very spirit of Hinduism is destroyed. The essence of our Faith consists simply in this freedom of the Ishta."

I thought the utterance a weighty one, for the man before me has spent more years than any one else living I fancy, in studying the common bases of Hinduism in a scientific and sympathetic spirit — and the freedom of the Ishta is obviously a principle big enough to accommodate the world.

But the talk passed to other matters, and then with a cordial good night this great teacher of religion lifted his lantern and went back into the monastery, while I by the pathless paths of the Ganga, in and out amongst her crafts of many sizes, made the best of my way back to my Calcutta home.
                       --------------------------


And they call this man 'great'!!

Waging War against Iran is a Criminal Act, in Violation of International Law The death toll from World War III will be incalculable...

Waging War against Iran is a Criminal Act, in Violation of International Law
The death toll from World War III will be incalculable...

By Prof. Francis A. Boyle
Global Research, January 7, 2012





Article 2 (3) of the United Nations Charter requires the pacific settlement of the international dispute between the United States and Iran. To the same effect is article 33 and the entirety of Chapter VI of the United Nations Charter that mandate and set up numerous procedures for the pacific settlement of the international dispute between the United States and Iran. And of course Article 2(4) of the U.N. Charter prohibits both the threat and use of force by the United States against Iran.

Furthermore, both Iran and the United States are parties to the Kellogg-Briand Peace Pact of 1928, upon which legal basis the Nazi Leaders were prosecuted by the United States, inter alia, at Nuremberg for Crimes against Peace, sentenced to death, and executed. In Article I thereof the States Parties “condemn recourse to war for the solution of international controversies, and renounce it, as an instrument of national policy in their relations with one another." The United States has been illegally threatening war against Iran going back to the Bush Jr. Administration. Article II requires the United States only to pursue a pacific settlement of its international dispute with Iran: “The High Contracting Parties agree that the settlement or solution of all disputes or conflicts of whatever nature or of whatever origin they may be, which may arise among them, shall never be sought except by pacific means.”

Finally, both the United States and Iran are parties to the 1899 Hague Convention for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes. This seminal Hague Peace Convention establishes numerous mechanisms for the pacific settlement of international disputes between contracting parties that are too numerous to analyze here. But they are discussed in detail in my book Foundations of World Order (Duke University Press: 1999). According to article 27 thereof, if a serious dispute threatens to break out between contracting powers, it was the DUTY of the other contracting powers to remind them that the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague is open to them, and such reminder could not be treated as an unfriendly act of intervention by the disputants. Today the world needs one State party to either the 1899 Hague Convention for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes or the 1907 Hague Convention for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes to publicly remind both the United States and Iran that the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague, together with its International Bureau and the entirety of the 1899 Hague Convention for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes , are available to the two States in order to resolve their dispute in a peaceful manner.

After the terrorist assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand in Sarajevo in June of 1914, Serbia made an offer to Austria to submit the entire dispute to “the International Tribunal of The Hague”—i.e.,to the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague. Austria did not accept the offer, the First World War broke out, and about 10 Million Human Beings were needlessly slaughtered.

The death toll from World War III will be incalculable. Humanity must not allow our history to repeat itself! Otherwise, that could be the end of our Humanity.

Francis A. Boyle is Professor of International Law

Friday, 13 January 2012

Campaign In 100 Seconds: "What Has Obama Ever Done For Us?"



Water supplies may run out by 2030 in India: Study


Water supplies may run out by 2030 in India: Study
Published: Wednesday, Jan 11, 2012, 15:53 IST
Place: Sydney | Agency: IANS
Water supplies will begin running out in critical regions where they support cities, industries and food production -- including in India, China and the Middle East -- by 2030 due to over-extraction of groundwater, a scientist has warned.
“The world has experienced a boom in groundwater use, more than doubling the rate of extraction between 1960 and 2000 -- with usage continuing to soar up to the present,” says Craig Simmons, director of the National Centre for Groundwater Research and Training (NCGRT).
A recent satellite study has revealed falling groundwater tables in the US, India, China, Middle East and North Africa, where expanding agriculture and cities have increased water demand.
“Groundwater currently makes up about 97 percent of all the available fresh water on the planet and presently accounts for about 40 percent of our total water supply," says Simmons, also a member of Unesco’s global groundwater governance programme, according to a NCGRT statement.
“Not many people think of groundwater as a key driver of the global economy -- yet it is. If it becomes depleted, entire industries may be forced to shut down or move. Whole regions could face acute water scarcity.”
“Over-extraction also has serious implications for the environment, especially when the climate is warming -- as falling water tables can lead to emptying lakes and rivers and dying landscapes as the water they depended on is withdrawn,” Simmons says.
In the Middle East, depleted aquifers have been a major driver of the relocation of agriculture to Africa and the so-called ‘land grab’ by wealthy countries.
Even advanced nations such as the United States face a crisis in their use of groundwater, says Robert Glennon, law professor at the University of Arizona.
“Groundwater now comprises one-quarter of the US supply and more than half of all Americans rely on groundwater for drinking. Unconstrained drilling of new wells, as many as 800,000 per year, has put incredible strain on aquifers around the US,” he says.

CHANDIGARH: The Static Surveillance Team of the CEO Punjab has confiscated two vehicles, carrying one case each of illicit liquor, belonging to two Police officials at Mohali.

CHANDIGARH: The Static Surveillance Team of the CEO Punjab has confiscated two vehicles, carrying one case each of illicit liquor, belonging to two Police officials at Mohali.

Giving details of these catches, Special Chief Electoral Officer,  Usha R Sharma said that Jagdeep Singh, DSP Crime was in the vehicle, which was stopped at the nakka, the driver ran away with the vehicle leaving the officer there. Later he was nabbed and a case of liquor was found in the vehicle, another vehicle Innova belonging to DSP Harbhajan Singh of IRB was also confiscated at Mohali along with a case of liquor. FIRs have been registered in both the cases and action was initiated against the drivers under Excise Act.

Keeping in view the ensuing elections to the Punjab Vidhan Sabha on January 30, the Election Commission of India has declared complete prohibition in the state 48 hours before the date of polling and March 6, when counting takes place.Non-proprietary clubs, star hotels, restaurants etc and hotels having licenses for possession and supply of liquor would not be permitted to serve liquor on these days and all the liquor vends in Punjab would also remain closed. Storage of liquor by the individuals shall be curtailed and restrictions provided in the excise law on the storage of liquor in unlicensed premises shall be vigorously enforced, she added.

Clarifying on the opening of new account by the candidate, she said that although it was required for the candidate to furnish the details of the newly opened account to the Returning Officers but for want of this information their nominations papers would not be rejected.

She further said that in respect of the objections received in Form 7, after the final publication of electoral rolls on January 2, 2012 with 1-1-2012 as the qualifying date, the commission has directed that the names of only deceased voters would be deleted. The EROs shall prepare polling station wise list of all the remaining objections and give it to the Presiding Officer who shall thoroughly verify the identity of the said voter at the time of polling. The applications received in other forms the EROs shall take action as per ECI’s instructions.

Giving details of the complaints, Ms. Sharma said that the CEO has received 1210 complaints regarding the violation of code of conduct out of which 550 have been disposed off. Besides that, 167066 licensed arms have been deposited. As many as 42 unlicensed arms and 130 ammunition were seized and 7720 Non-bailabale warrants have been executed.  
 

Only six per cent of elementary education budget spent on children,points out survey

This partly explains why 95% children do not get education to help them become domestic help without extra training for years!

Because there is simply no "education" for the poor, forget about "quality education", India is unable to become a nation it has an opportunity to become. In case we could educate the 95% to the level of high school that the world accepts as a base line for the OECD countries,in terms of what they learn and get the skills to deal with, India GDP in the next 20 years can grow 10 folds.

Denying Quality Education that makes everyone contribute to their potential, rather than chained to the centuries we left behind, is one of the worst human rights abuse we do not even call human rights.

The human rights violation of an individual is like a wound on the skin but denying the education that can help people join the times human evolution has progressed to is like a cancer of Human Rights abuse.

This is a gross violation of the constitutional responsibilities of the Government that we have been ignoring for the past 65 years. 

But we are at a point when we need to take a fresh look at it and change all that and ensure that everyone gets the education they are interested in.

It will require us to rethink, not just go for a patchwork solution that we are so happy proffering without thinking for a moment.

  

Only six per cent of elementary education budget spent on children, points out survey

Aarti Dhar
Interventions aimed directly at children — providing free textbooks, uniforms and addressing out of school children – account only for 6 per cent of the total investment in elementary education. The largest investment — 78 per cent — of the education budget in India is invested in teachers and management costs while the next largest spending, to the tune of 14 per cent, is done on creating school infrastructure. Only 1 per cent is spent on improving the quality of education.
This has been shown by PAISA — a non-government group — in its analysis of elementary education funds of seven States for 2009-2010. The study covered the districts of Medak (Andhra Pradesh), Nalanda and Purnea (Bihar), Kangra (Himachal Pradesh), Sagar (Madhya Pradesh), Satara (Maharashtra), Jaipur and Udaipur (Rajasthan) and Jalpaiguri (West Bengal).
The focus of the study was to track the flow of funds from their point of origin to their final point of expenditure: the district or the school. This required analysis at the levels of the Centre and the State, district and school.
The survey says that substantial finances were provided to expand the elementary schooling system. Between 2007-08 and 2009-10, the elementary education budget increased from Rs. 68,710 crore to Rs. 97,255 crore. To put this investment in perspective, in 2008-09, the government invested Rs. 6,314 a child. However, the per child investment in each of these States for 2009-10 ranged from Rs. 3,982 in West Bengal to Rs. 19,111 in Himachal Pradesh indicating a vast inter-State disparity in investments.
Inter-State patterns of investment reveal interesting variations. Bihar stands out for investing just over half its budget (59 per cent) on teachers, followed by Madhya Pradesh and West Bengal, which invested 64 per cent and 67 per cent respectively. One reason for this low investment is a policy in all three States to substitute regular teachers for contract teachers. Bihar and West Bengal invest the largest proportion of their resources in programmes directed at children.
While funds for infrastructure development are often channelled to schools; the key decisions related to sanctions and procurement are taken by the district administration. Importantly, while a school can demand infrastructure funds, it has no decision-making power as most major infrastructure-related expenditures are incurred based on directives received from the district and State administration.
An analysis of the flow of funds from the Centre to the district or schools revealed that there was need for a serious reassessment of the current model of financing and decision-making in elementary education to enable India to make the shift from schooling to learning.
Increased centralisation
With the implementation of the Right to Education Act, funds to elementary education have seen a significant increase. However, this increase was accompanied by an increased centralisation of decision-making — the antithesis of a decentralised approach. “This centralisation is further exacerbated by the governance deficit in actual expenditure management,” a provisional report of PAISA District Studies (rural), 2011 said.
The survey was jointly done by Accountability Initiative and Centre for Policy Research.
The survey points to serious delays and gaps in fund flows across all levels of government. “These delays have a knock-on effect on expenditures, resulting in the prioritisation of recurring expenditures like salaries, at the expense of other key learning-related activities like training and quality. These problems are compounded by the fact that little time and fact was spent in developing the capacities of school and local officials to exercise discretion whereever necessary.
It advocates for greater transparency and efficient fund flow management, which was critical to ensure that the recommended move away from the current system of tied time-lined budgets to a system that focuses on children and school, works.

·  78 p.c. of budget spent on teachers while 14 p.c. is spent on school infrastructure
·  West Bengal showed highest per child investment at Rs. 3,982 in 2009-10
http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/article2789083.ece

Justice delayed

http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-newdelhi/article2794508.ece

Justice delayed

Divya Trivedi
Photo: Arunangsu Roy CHowdhury
Photo: Arunangsu Roy CHowdhury
Even as the Lokpal Bill engrossed the popular national psyche as the most significant piece of legal enactment, several important legislations got delayed. In a setback to the onward march of social justice, a private members' Bill to be introduced in Rajya Sabha, was overlooked.
The National Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Special Economic Development Plans) Bill, 2011, proposes to ensure an acceleration of economic growth of SC/Ts by providing additional and special funds for attainment of their overall development on par with the other developed sections of society. It is primarily meant to stop the diversion of funds from the Special Component Plan and the Tribal Sub Plan. It envisages the setting up of authorities at the national, State and district levels to formulate, approve and monitor the welfare and developmental schemes for SC/Ts under special component plans.
A mid term review of the Eleventh Five Year Plan showed that a number of Ministries and Departments were not allocating population proportionate percentage of funds for the SC/Ts in their annual plans in spite of repeated directives by the Planning Commission. The Statement of Objects and Reasons of the Bill further states that in 2005, the National Development Council (NDC) in its 51st meeting resolved that the funds earmarked for the SC/Ts shall not be diverted to general schemes and should also not be lapsed in view of large scale diversion. It is with this objective that the Bill was presented by Member of Parliament Syed Azeez Pasha, and was listed on the day's agenda to be taken up for discussion in the Upper House on December 9. “The agenda was listed at number 32 and so it never came up for discussion. Only three amendment Bills by the BJP were introduced,,” says Karthik Navayan of the National Dalit Forum.
The Bill proposes to set up a council on the lines of NDC to oversee and review policies. It would prepare Special Central Annual plans and Five Year Plans for SC/Ts . The committee would consist of the Prime Minister as Chairperson, Finance Minister, Minister for Social Justice and Empowerment and Tribal Affairs, Chairpersons of National Commission for SC and ST and Chief Ministers . There would also be nominated experts and scholars working for the upliftment of the SC/Ts.
“This Bill is moved to lay down the legislative framework for a new system. The population-equivalent proportion of the total Plan outlay of the Centre and each State would be set apart before it is allocated sector-wise, ministry-wise or department-wise. A corpus would be created. This corpus would be placed at the disposal of empowered authorities in the Centre and state to undertake Planning for SCs. They would also make allocations for programmes and schemes relevant to SCs and sanction funds within this corpus, in accordance with the needs and priorities of SCs. All this would be done keeping in view the overarching goals of the economic liberation, educational parity at all levels, equality in all parameters, security and social dignity of the SC/Ts,” says Mr Pasha. The Bill has now landed in the archives and can be re-introduced only when taken up by another member.
An important legislation for scheduled castes and tribes misses the bus in Rajya Sabha