Showing posts with label Indian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian. Show all posts

Saturday, November 12, 2011

The Buddha in Hinduism (video)

Wisdom Quarterly edit of Wikipedia entry Gautama Buddha in Hinduism
() "Mystical Spirit" explores and links great pantheistic spiritual traditions including Hinduism, Buddhism, and Shinto. Traveling across India, France, and Japan, viewers are taken on a mystical journey including yoga, Swami Shivananda, the Dalai Lama, Zen master Thich Nhat Hanh, and the secrets of Tantric Buddhism and Japanese Shinto.

The Buddha in Hinduism is viewed as an avatar of the space "god" Vishnu. In the Puranic text Bhagavata Purana, he is the 24th of 25 avatars, prefiguring a forthcoming final incarnation.[1]

Similarly, a number of Hindu traditions portray the Buddha as the most recent (ninth) of ten principal avatars, known as the Daśāvatāra (Ten Incarnations of God).

Hinduism officially regards the Buddha (bottom center) as one of the 10 avatars of Vishnu.

The Buddhist Dasharatha Rebirth Tale (Jataka Atthakatha 461) represents Rama as a previous incarnation of the Buddha as a bodhisattva (being striving for supreme enlightenment) and supreme Dharma king of great wisdom.

The Buddha's teachings deny the authority of India's ancient sacred scriptures, the Vedas. Consequently, Buddhism is generally viewed as a nāstika (lit., "It is not so," heterodox) school[2] from the perspective of orthodox Hinduism.

Views of the Buddha in Hinduism

Due to the diversity of traditions within what is collectively called "Hinduism," as if it were one "religion," there is no specific viewpoint or consensus on the Buddha's exact position with regard to Vedic tradition:

In the Dasavatara stotra section of his Gita Govinda, the influential Vishnuite poet Jayadeva (13th C AD) includes the Buddha among the ten principal avatars of Vishnu and writes a prayer regarding him:

O Keshava! O Lord of the universe! O Lord Hari, who have assumed the form of Buddha! All glories to You! O Buddha of compassionate heart, you decry the slaughtering of poor animals performed according to the rules of Vedic sacrifice.[3]

This viewpoint of the Buddha as the avatar who primarily promoted non-violence remains a popular belief among a number of modern Vishnu adoring organizations, including the Hari Krishna movement (ISKCON).[4]

Other prominent modern proponents of Hinduism, such as Radhakrishnan and Vivekananda, consider the Buddha a teacher of the same universal truth (sanatan dharma) that underlies all religions of the world:

Vivekananda: May he who is the Brahman of the Hindus, the Ahura Mazda of Zoroastrians, the Buddha of Buddhists, the Jehovah of the Jews, the Father in Heavens of Christians, give strength to you to carry out your noble ideas![5]

Radhakrishnan: If a Hindu chants the Vedas on the banks of the Ganges, ...if the Japanese worship the image of Buddha, if the European is convinced of Christ's mediatorship, if the Arab reads the Koran in the mosque... It is their deepest apprehension of God and God's fullest revelation to them.[6]

Steven Collins sees such Hindu claims regarding Buddhism as part of an effort -- itself a reaction to Christian proselytizing efforts in India -- to show that "all religions are one" and that Hinduism is uniquely valuable because it alone recognizes this fact.[7]

There is Vaishnuite sect of Maharashtra, India known as Varkari. They worship Lord Vithoba (also known as Vitthal, Panduranga). Though Vithoba is mostly considered a form of little Krishna, there is an old and deeply rooted belief that Vithoba is a form of the Buddha.

Many Maharashtra poets (Eknath, Namdev, Tukaram, etc.) have explicitly mentioned him as the Buddha, though many neo-Buddhists (Ambedkaries) and many Western scholars tend to reject this opinion.

The figure of Vithoba as an avatar of Vishnu may have been identified with the Buddha in an attempt to assimilate Buddhism into Hindu tradition. The teachings of the Buddha have also been incorporated in Varkari Vaishnavism (Vishnu worship). And they have been integrated with traditional Vedic philosophy uniquely.

Hindu reactions to the Buddha

A number of revolutionary figures in modern Hinduism, including Gandhi, have been inspired by the life and teachings of the Buddha, and many of his attempted reforms.[8]

Buddhism finds favor in contemporary the Hindutva movement, with Tibet's 14th Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, being honored at Hindu events, like the Vishva Hindu Parishad's second World Hindu Conference in Allahabad in 1979.[9] More

Monday, October 10, 2011

Happy Birthday, Columbus (video)



For the World to Live "Columbus" Must Die
Russell Means, Program #MEAR003, recorded in Denver, CO on April 27, 1992
LISTEN TO AUDIO. For too many of us, for too long, the indigenous peoples of this continent have been curiosities that existed somewhere over the horizon between fantasy and reality. The popularly crafted images were of medicine men [mostly women], squaws, peace pipes, teepees, tom toms, tomahawks, war bonnets, war paint, war whoops, and war parties. The only Indians we knew were named Tonto, Geronimo, and Crazy Horse. In recent years a lot of these cliches have disappeared. The American Indian Movement has done much to break down the conventional stereotypes. AIM articulates a program of self awareness and pride. It promotes treaty and land rights and religious freedom for Native Americans.
Russell Means, an Oglala Dakota and a prominent voice in the continuing struggle for indigenous rights, is a founding member of AIM and one of its leading spokespersons. He is Chief Executive Officer of the American Indian Anti-Defamation Council, an organization which monitors anti-Indian racism in the media and politics, and has organized and lectured throughout the world.

"Where Next Columbus?"
Crass
Another's hope, another's game
Another's loss, another's gain
Another's lies, another's truth
Another's doubt, another's proof
Another's left, another's right
Another's peace, another's fight
Another's name, another's aim
Another's fall, another's fame
Another's pride, another's shame
Another's love, another's pain
Another's hope, another's game
Another's loss, another's gain
Another's lies, another's truth...

Marx had an idea from the confusion of his head
Then there were a thousand more waiting to be led
The books are sold, the quotes are bought
You learn them well and then you're caught

Another's left, another's right
Another's peace, another's fight
Mussolini had ideas from the confusion of his heart
Then there were a thousand more waiting to play their part
The stage was set, the costumes worn
And another empire of destruction born
Another's name, another's aim
Another's fall, another's fame
Jung had an idea from the confusion of his dream
Then there were a thousand more waiting to be seen
You're not yourself, the theory says
But I can help, your complex pays

Another's hope, another's game
Another's loss, another's gain

Satre had an idea from the confusion of his brain
Then there were a thousand more indulging in his pain
Revelling in isolation and existential choice
Can you truly be alone when you use another's voice?

Another's lies, another's truth
Another's doubt, another's proof
The idea born in someone's mind
Is nurtured by a thousand blind
Anonymous beings, vacuous souls
Do you fear the confusion, your lack of control?
You lift your arm to write a name
So caught up in the identity game

Who do you see? Who do you watch?
Who's your leader? Which is your flock?
Who do you watch? Who do you watch?
Who's your leader? Which is your flock?
Einstein had an idea from the confusion of his knowledge
Then there were a thousand more turning to advantage
They realised that their god was dead
So they reclaimed power through the bomb instead
Anothers code, another's brain
They'll shower us all in deadly rain
Jesus had an idea from the confusion of his soul
Then there were a thousand more waiting to take control
The guilt is sold, forgiveness bought
The cross is there as your reward

Anothers love, another's pain
Anothers pride, another's shame
Do you watch at a distance from the side you have chosen?
Whose answers serve you best? Who'll save you from confusion?
Who will leave you an exit and a comfortable cover
Who will take you oh so near the edge, but never drop you over?
Who do you watch?

Thursday, September 8, 2011

The Truth About Titans, Giants (video)

Wisdom Quarterly


Steve Quayle was interviewed on a classic Coast to Coast episode discussing the mountain of evidence for giants (called asuras or "titans" in Buddhism).

There is a growing body of fossil evidence that is hidden away -- except in Central and South America and a jaw and enormous artifacts in the US. Quayle's book LongWalkers explores the story of a fresh redheaded giant with extra digits and two rows of teeth brought out of Afghanistan by the US military.

There is a worldwide history of giants as well as architecture built for and by them -- Sumerian, Egyptian, Mesoamerican, Judeo-Christian. Many modern giants are regarded as anomalies or simply relegated to basketball (such as Shaquille O'Neal, shown alongside his new girlfriend Nicole Alexander).

But the giants recorded in histories around the world were strong, voracious, war-like titans, the hybrid result of miscegenation with humans. Documented scientific cases of skeletons, sightings, interaction, artifacts, uncounted burial mounds, and native legends go back hundred of years by early explorers in the US and elsewhere -- many of them concerning Native American tribes of "savage" giants among ordinary nations.
  • Buddhism speaks not only of asuras but also nagas (which can mean reptilian or any massive creature), cannibalistic cave and forest-dwelling ogres (yakkhas), and hungry "ghosts" (pretas and bhumma-devas) who are often chimeras (crossbred animals from bestial acts).
Not only giants, but bestial fallen angels (inimical visitors from space), mermaids, and monsters are recorded in the histories of Sumerians, Aztecs, Incas, Peruvians, Native Americans, Irish, British, East Indian, Pharaohs, biblical figures, and many other "mythological" creatures. More interestingly, some small percentage exist to this day on the planet.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

OM: Meditating on the Sound of the Universe


Enlighten the day through the spiritually intoxicating chanting of AUM (indianmoksha)

The Dhammapada ("Imprint of the Dharma")
Chapter 20, The Path

273. Of all paths, the Noble Eightfold Path is best; of all truths, the Four Noble Truths are best; of all things, passionlessness is best; of all beings, the Seeing One (the Buddha) is best.

274. This is the path; there is none other for the purification of insight. Tread this path and bewilder Mara [Death].

275. Treading this path makes an end of suffering. Having discovered how to draw out the thorn of lust, I make known the path.

276. You yourselves must strive. Buddhas only point the way. Those meditative ones who tread the path are released from the bonds of Mara.

277. "All conditioned things are impermanent" -- when one sees this with wisdom, one turns away from suffering. This is the path of purification.

278. "All conditioned things are unsatisfactory" -- when one sees this with wisdom, one turns away from suffering. This is the path of purification.

279. "All things are not-self" -- when one sees this with wisdom, one turns away from suffering. This is the path of purification.

280. The idler who does not make an effort when there is opportunity. Though young and strong, one is full of sloth, with a mind full of vain thoughts -- such an indolent person does not find the path to liberating wisdom.

281. Let one be watchful of speech, well controlled in mind, and not commit any unskillful deed in body. Let one purify these three courses of karma, and win the path made known by the Great Sage.

282. Wisdom springs from meditation; without meditation, wisdom wanes. Having known the two paths of progress and decline, let one so conduct oneself that wisdom may increase.

283. Cut down the forest (lust), but not the tree. From the forest springs fear. Having cut down the forest and the underbrush (desire), be passionless, O meditators!

284. For so long as the underbrush of lust, even the most subtle, of one towards another is not cut down, the mind is in bondage, like the suckling calf to its mother.

285. Cut off attachment as one plucks an autumn lotus. Cultivate the path to peace, nirvana, as made known by the Exalted One. More


Mahayana-style heavenly meditation music