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This Hanumān Jayantī, Hindus must look to Hanumān for Energy and Inspired Action

One of the many Heroes in the Rāmāyaṇa, Hanumān is revered by millions around the world, in India, Tibet, Japan, Thailand, Cambodia and Indonesia. Even the legends of Sun Wukong, the Monkey King, that were popular in ancient and medieval China were inspired by the tales of Hanumān that had found their way to Chinese ears.

In the Rāmāyaṇa and other related mythoi that sprung up from that great text, Hanumān is Rāma’s supreme devotee. He is the bhakta par excellence, whose mind is immersed in the thought and devotion of Rāma. It is said that wherever, and whenever, the glories of Rāma are sung, Hanumān is present there.

Hanumān is also a great warrior. He possesses incredible strength and speed and was one of the commanders in the army of Rāma that waged war on the King Rāvaṇa. His fight was for Rāma, the embodiment of Dharma. Invocation of Hanumān’s martial features were important in the ancient and medieval eras when Hindus were beset on all sides by enemies. He has inspired warriors and armies throughout history, including those who defended India from invaders and protected its temples from destruction.

A remnant of this survives even to this day in traditional wrestling akhāḍas, when Hanumān is invoked by trainees and fighters to grant them strength and vigour.

An Indian wrestler with a portrait of Hanumān affixed on the akhāḍa’s wall. Credits: mitchellkphotos.com

It is to this composite aspect of Hanumān, that of a devotee and a warrior, that the Hindus of today must look towards, for inspiration in these distressing times.

Unlike Arjuna in the Mahābhārata – who himself bore Hanumān in a banner atop his chariot – Hanumān went through no dejection on the battlefield; he was always ready to fight with full dedication. He even ravaged the lovely pleasure gardens of Rāvaṇa and set fire to the entire Golden city of Laṅkā. He was an indomitable warrior who fought without pity, compromise or apologies. He was the ideal warrior and general, just as Rāma was the ideal king.

Hanumān upheld the cause of Dharma and Rāmarājya for humanity with his entire being. Such a force is essential for our agitated world today.

Hindus continue to be shamed and humiliated as intolerant oppressors, while in fact they remain the victims, under siege by missionaries, jihadis and communists even in their own country. We have been told not to speak out, even for our own rights, because we don’t have a legitimate voice in social affairs and will be guilty of an intolerant majoritarianism if we do.

The courts in India regulate Hindu practices, while not interfering with those of other religions. Hindu temples are run by state governments, with non-Hindus or anti-Hindus on their temple boards, and temple revenues expropriated by the state for whatever purpose the state deems fit.

Hindu educational institutions face severe restrictions and cannot teach what they want, unlike non-Hindu groups.

The answer to this anti-Hindu state of things is not waiting hopefully for a miracle, for things to happen, thinking that voting or not voting a certain way is enough. Neither is it the endless stream of rebuttals and exposés that emanate from the Hindu camp day in and day out, chastising the left-liberals of their ‘hypocrisy’. The answer is lucid, passionate, fearless, and firm action.

Hindus must come out of the web of tamas (‘darkness’) and inertia, and embrace energy.

Hindus must look to Hanumān and derive the power and intensity necessary to bring about necessary changes in society. This Hanumān Jayantī must be a call for action among Hindus to alleviate the foremost ills plaguing Hindu society – inaction and ennui.

Inaction keeps us uninspired and apathetic, as our society slowly becomes so unrecognisably alien and foreign, and our nation becomes a hotbed of crime and hedonistic deviancy. This inaction further exacerbates into exhaustion and indifference, which breeds further apathy. Inaction and ennui feed into each other in vicious cycles which are truly difficult to break.

Hindus must not watch idly by as this Leviathan of a state swallows up our institutions and outlaws our rituals, traditions and practices.

Hindus must not be mute spectators looking to the state for protection in the face of aggressions where a temple procession is stoned, or when Hindu women and girls are abducted or raped or killed with impunity.

Hindus must act.

Action, however, must not be limited to the realm of cyberspace. While running Twitter hashtags may bring about some awareness to the netizens on a particular issue, it is never a substitute for action in the real world. Winning an online contest means little and does little for causes in the real world.

Action can be of different natures – social, cultural, political, legal, economic, communal, and so on.

Social and cultural action can be as simple as ensuring the continuation of the rituals and practices handed down by our ancestors. It can also be ensuring that temples function properly, in the sense that they were originally intended to.

An example of political action can be sending representations and petitions to our legislators urging them to enact a certain law or to rescind a certain legislation as well as following up on those petitions.

Legal action can be a litigation filed in the courts, seeking recourse to the illegal encroachment of temple lands, for instance. It could even be becoming an amateur specialist in law and other state regulations and helping Hindu causes, given the elaborately labyrinthine nature of our legal and bureaucratic setup.

Communal action can be as uncomplicated as discussing issues and plans of action in a group with like-minded people with focussed goals and clear-cut principles. It could also be a more difficult effort such as organising a rally on the streets in a show of strength.

Only action gets things done in this world. Sitting on your behinds whining about how things are going bad does not get us anything. As George Bernard Shaw said, “Educate, Agitate and Organise”. None of this can be without action that is well-thought-out and inspired.

And this is where we must look towards Hanumān for guidance and inspiration.

Action coupled with Devotion cannot go wrong

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Congress party workers angry at ad that parodied Rahul and Sonia Gandhi, create ruckus in Mumbai

In a show of brazen strength and lawlessness in Mumbai, Indian National Congress workers have created a ruckus in front of the office of the ad agency that had parodied Rahul Gandhi and Congress President Sonia Gandhi to promote Storia Foods & Beverages which is a company that manufactures milk and fruit content shake.

Priti Gandhi is who is the National Incharge of Social Media for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Mahila Morcha in a tweet said, “The whole world is literally fighting for it’s life, Maharashtra is in the middle of a lockdown and Congress workers have the time & priority to ransack a corporate office in Mumbai because apparently they didn’t like an ad that the company released!! *Slow claps*”.

The ad was widely seen on social media and was appreciated for its creativity to promote the product. However, it is a known fact that whenever Sonia Gandhi or Rahul Gandhi is targeted for satire, there has been retaliation from the party.

As per news reports Congress party leader Bhai Jagtap showered praises for this attack and even shared a video of the violence on his Twitter account.

In the video, one can see Congress workers holding up the Congress flag and raising slogans of “Sonia Gandhi zindabad” and “Rahul Gandhi zindabad” after vandalizing the office.

Ironically a while back Rahul Gandhi had sent out a tweet in which he said, “Our greatest strength is our tolerance. Their biggest weakness is their intolerance”.

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Farmers in Punjab and Haryana receive money directly into account under one MSP policy

Haryana Punjab farmers
Featured Image: Protesting farmers remove the barricades after breaching the routes during their
tractor rally on Republic Day at Ghazipur border, in New Delhi. Credits: ANI Photo

As the protesting farmers are again organising themselves to come to Delhi trying to force the government to take back the Farm Bill Act, farmers in the state of Punjab for the first time have started receiving payments directly into their bank accounts against the sale of their Wheat crop.

So far the government has transferred Rs 8,180 crore directly into the bank accounts of Punjab farmers and Rs 4,668 crore has been transferred directly into farmers’ accounts in the state of Haryana under the “One Nation, One MSP, One DBT” policy.

During the Rabi Marketing Season (RMS) 2021-22, the Government of India continues to procure Rabi crops at MSP from farmers as per the existing Price Support Scheme.
 
Wheat procurement is going on at brisk pace in the procuring States & UTs of Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Chandigarh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, and other States with a purchase of over 222.33 LMT up to 25 April 2021 against 77.57 LMT during the corresponding period of last year.
 
Out of the total purchase of 222.33 LMT, major contribution has been made by Punjab – 84.15 LMT (37.8%), Haryana- 71.76 LMT (32.27%) and Madhya Pradesh -51.57 LMT (23.2%) of total procurement up to 25 April 2021.
About 21.17 Lakh Wheat farmers have already been benefitted from the ongoing RMS procurement Operations with MSP value of about Rs. 43,912 Crore.

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Underground mobster Chota Rajan shifted to AIIMS after testing positive for Coronavirus

Chhota Rajan
Featured Image: Gangster Dawood Ibrahim at Chhota Rajan's wedding

Underworld don Rajendra Nikalje aka Chhota Rajan, who was once one of the biggest names in organised crime in India, has been admitted to the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in Delhi after testing positive for the COVID-19 coronavirus.

Chhota Rajan was once a partner of Narco terrorist and 1993 Mumbai blast accused Dawood Ibrahim. The 61-year-old had been kept in the high-security wing of the Tihar Jail after his extradition from Bali, Indonesia.

After Rajan tested positive for the coronavirus, officials of Tihar Jail gave this information to a session court in New Delhi on Monday (26 April). The security personnel posted there to protect Rajan from assassination are also being tested and have been told to quarantine themselves.

A while back, there was an attempt to poison him within the confines of the prison.

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Vedanta busts rumours, explains terms based on which the plant is to be reopened

Vedanta, the parent company of Sterlite, which was in the headlines for having gotten closed by the government for flouting rules and regulations, was given permission by the Tamil Nadu government to reopen to help with the oxygen shortage in the coronavirus pandemic. Following this, there have been a lot of rumours around this. Busting these, Vedanta issued a press release, in which it explained that it had agreed to produce 1000 tonnes of medical oxygen, amid rapid news on social media that it could only produce oxygen for industrial use in Vedanta.

Earlier, at an all-party meeting chaired by Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Palaniswami, it was decided to run the Tuticorin Sterlite plant for only four months to meet the demand for oxygen.

This has been supported by various parties, including the DMK. Meanwhile, news spread fast on social media that only oxygen for industrial use could be produced in Vedanta.

According to a statement issued by Vedanta: “We have agreed to produce 1000 tons of oxygen for medical use at the Sterlite plant. We have agreed to supply the oxygen so produced to Tamil Nadu on a priority basis and then to other states. In addition, we are in consultation with experts on improving the infrastructure to transport the medical oxygen produced to the required locations.”

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Devotees register plea to renovate Kanchi Anandha Rudreswarar Temple pond

There is a famous Shiva temple called the  Ananda Rudreswarar Temple in Pillaiyar Palayam in the Kanchipuram district. The main deity of this temple is Ananda Rudreswarar. The temple also houses the shrines of Valli Deyvanai Sametha Subramaniyar, Veerabagu, Bhairavar and other such Hindu gods. There are several hymns dedicated to Lord Rudreswarar, sung by the Sivagnana Yogis, which is compiled in a scripture called Kanchi Anandha Rudreswarar Padhigam.

There is a pond near the temple which belongs to this temple. The stairs leading to the pond are all damaged and in a state of collapse. Devotees in the area have repeatedly requested the HR&CE Department to repair the steps of the temple pond. But the HR&CE department has not listened to the demands of the devotees and has not taken any action.

The devotees lament that the main temple of Lord Shiva is clean but the steps of the temple are broken. They have therefore demanded that the department immediately repair the stairs in the temple pond.

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Google, Microsoft donates several crores towards COVID relief to India

Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai has announced a relief of  ₹135 crores from Google to India to combat the damage caused by COVID-19. Tweeting about this, he said that this will be given to UNICEF and GiveIndia for mobilizing medical supplies and rations to communities worst affected by the pandemic. He went on to attach a blog link that essayed how Google will help India get back on its feet post the pandemic.

Similarly, Microsoft’s Satya Nadella also voiced his support for India. “I am heartbroken by the current situation in India. I’m grateful the U.S. government is mobilizing to help. Microsoft will continue to use its voice, resources, and technology to aid relief efforts, and support the purchase of critical oxygen concentration devices,” Mr Nadella said in a tweet this morning.

Notably, a majority of Google’s donation is set to go towards public advertising of awareness schemes that the government has been carrying out, other than that which has been given to GiveIndia and UNICEF.

Social media has played a huge role as the second wave is raging throughout the country and people have been consistently sharing stories and messages seeking help in the form of blood donations, oxygen cylinders, hospital admissions, oxygen supplies, medicines, contacts at hospitals, information about the availability of beds, home care, ambulances and food deliveries.

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Muslim man abducts and rapes 12-year old Hindu girl in Pakistan

Pakistan Hindu

In yet another instance of the brutal persecution of Hindus in Pakistan, a minor Hindu girl was abducted and raped by a 60-year-old Muslim man.

The victim has been identified as 12-year old Rekha, daughter of Roopo Kolhi of Khipro, Sanghar in Pakistan’s Sindh province. Her abductor is allegedly Muhammad Hanif Bozdar, a 60-year old who is already married and has three children.

According to reports, Rekha has already been forcefully been converted to Islam and has married her abductor. Rekha, born in 2009, was studying in class 6 before her abduction.

Pakistani human rights activist Rahat Austin, who is currently on a self-imposed exile in South Korea, points out that the rape of non-Muslim women is “considered a religious obligation” in Pakistan’s society and is carried out with impunity, with no fear of punishment and backlash.

https://twitter.com/johnaustin47/status/1385536417896419332

The abduction, rape, forced conversion and marriage of minor Hindu girls is a frequent occurrence in Muslim-majority Pakistan. Reports show that on average, three non-Muslim girls are abducted in the country everyday. Only a tiny fraction of such cases even get reported. As victims’ families are typically poor and exploited, they often lack the wherewithal and the resources to file a police complaint in Pakistan’s deeply feudal and fanatical society.

In the odd instance when the police and authorities do acknowledge the crime, a set template follows: girls are quickly whisked away to Islamic seminaries like the Sufi Bharchundi dargah run by the notorious Mian Mithoo or to Punjab province (where age of marriage is 16); the terrified girl is made to sign conversion and marriage papers and a court affidavit stating she is acting of her own will; sometimes courts may send the girl to a shelter home, but even there she is not allowed to meet her family and is threatened with dire consequences for herself and her family by abductors; on the day of recording her statement in front of the judge, she is accompanied by gun-toting militias while her parents are kept away.

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Agra hospital accuses tehsildar of obstructing oxygen supplies

Agra

A private hospital in Agra, Uttar Pradesh, on Monday asked permission from authorities to shut down its COVID-19 treatment facility, accusing a tehsildar of obstructing the supply of oxygen cylinders.

In a letter to the Chief Medical Officer (CMO), Chauhan Hospital and Eye Care alleged that Tehsildar Preeti Jain had seized 15 of the 30 oxygen-filled cylinders from their facilities and accused her of causing severe hindrances in the day-to-day supply of oxygen required for the hospital.

Relating to this allegation on the tehsildar by the Agra hospital, a video has also surfaced on social media, in which the tehsildar can be seen preventing citizens from directly picking up oxygen cylinders from a plant in the Tedi Bagia area.

“I, along with my family members, touched her feet many times and requested to let us go, but our requests were not heard and we were asked to leave the spot,” said Mohan Verma, a relative of a patient, accusing Preeti Jain of being high-handed in her dealings with the public.

When contacted, Jain said that she was “trying to prevent any panic among the public and avoid damage to the oxygen plant facility”.

“I was asking family members of patients to wait outside the oxygen plant and then they would be given a cylinder. But they did not listen to me and entered the oxygen plant premises,” she said.

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KKR star fast bowler Pat Cummins contributes fifty thousand dollars to PM cares fund

In a very humane gesture, Australian cricketer, and of the best fast bowlers, Pat Cummins has contributed $50,000 to PM Cares Fund. In a tweet sent out by Cummins from his official handle, he said, “India is a country I have come to love dearly over the years and people here are some of the warmest and kindest I have ever met.”

“As players, we are privileged to have a platform that allows us to reach millions of people that we can use for good. With that in mind, I have made a contribution to the “PM Cares Fund”, specifically to purchase oxygen supplies for India’s hospitals,” said Cummins. “I encourage my fellow IPL players — and anyone else around the world who has been touched by India’s passion and generosity — to contribute. I will kick off with $50,000,” he further said. Cummins, however, said in a statement he posted on Twitter that he has been told that the Indian government “is of the view that playing the IPL while the population is in lockdown provides few hours of joy and respite each day at an otherwise difficult time for the country”.

“As players, we are privileged to have a platform that allows us to reach millions of people that we can use for good. With that in mind, I have made a contribution to the “PM Cares Fund”, specifically to purchase oxygen supplies for India’s hospitals,” said Cummins.

“I encourage my fellow IPL players — and anyone else around the world who has been touched by India’s passion and generosity — to contribute. I will kick off with $50,000,” he further said.

The money given by Cummins is “specifically to purchase oxygen supplies for India’s hospitals”. Cummins is one of the biggest stars in the Indian Premier League (IPL).

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