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Saturday, April 4, 2015

Re: [MTC Global] another great reading

Dear Sir, The Modern University is the place where the caste system can be destroyed. A
person choosing a course of study and then a profession to pursue as a gainful occupation
will make it redundant for caste to operate. Already, marriages are happening based on
the concept of a viable lifestyle between two people. If to this we add the fact that a
man should save for his own life then caste will lose the backing of the inheritance from
the parent to continue the same profession over the generations.
Best regards,
K.Paranjpe

On Sat, 04 Apr 2015 10:50:58 +0530 Bir Bahadur wrote
>Give the meaning or defination of Kayasths like
LBShastri,A.Bachan,RajendraPrasad,Yaswanth Sinha,SSBHatnagar,Sonu Nigam ete and  of
course meProf Bir Bahadur
On Sat, Apr 4, 2015 at 8:37 AM, Sri Joydip wrote:
The division of work are basis of varna .As some of the work at that point of
civilization is invalid right now,so some of the varnas are also outdated at this point
which are based on division of work.
On 04-Apr-2015 6:29 AM, "Prabhakar Waghodekar" wrote:In
Indian culture, host of things are scientific based and tested successfully over a long
period of time. One of them is Varna.



Varna means profession like:

1. Brahman: thinkers, brain work

2. Kshatriya : protectors of society.

3, Vaihya: dealing with commercial activities, logistics

4. Shudra: service people.



These four are the vital elements of "Samaj Pusush", brain, hands, stomach and legs. They
are all equally important and vital to keep alive the society, no one is superior or no
one is inferior. Varnas are decided on the potential of a person, a Brahman kid by birth
can adopt anyone of the remaining three Varnas as per his potential, attitude, etc., and
vice verse, i.e., persons were allowed to take up any Varna as one';s capacity/potential,
e.g., Ramayana and Mahabharata were written by Shudras, Walmiki and Vyas, Shudras by
birth but of Brahman';s Varna later. Though Dr. Ambedkar was Shudra (in fact; Kshatriya)
by birth, he was a Brahman by his deeds.



But as the time passed, in the self-vested interests we converted Varnas into castes
spoiling the glory of India, There is one more point, all these Varnas (may be of male
or female) are having Gotra and all persons used to perform such Sanskars as Upanayan,
putting sacred thread, etc. Unlike UK we do not connect ourselves with some ruling clans,
but we connect to our origin with a knowledge teacher, Gotra Rushi, who might belong to
any Varna by birth. In fact, all teachers and scientists are Brahmans, all Police and
Soldiers are Kshatriyas, all trading community Vaishyas and all service people including
production and IT professionals are Shudras. Please note one will find all these four
Varnas in all society, in all countries world over, independent of religion, castes,
faith, etc. I appeal that the terminology of Varnas be taken in the right spirit, e.g.
Shudra does not stand for something of inferiority as we understand. British recognized
the capacity of Shudras, mainly of Mahar, who could work as the best messengers (running
30-40 kn at a stretch who could withstand against Hitler army like a rock!).



Let me end up with the following one more note:



Indian Rushi did a great experiment introducing Non_Varna_Sankar (no hybridizing) with
the hypothesis, as to day we know, the next generation can be made stronger if marriages
are not allowed between Varnas (Varna Sankar, prohibiting inter-Varna marriages), namely,
a Brahman girl or boy must marry only with Brahman boy or girl, etc. But this hypothesis
failed as it was against the nature! Mind well such things as Varnas, castes, religion,
etc., are man made systems, nature only made male and female.



_________________________________________________________________________________________
__________



On Fri, 03 Apr 2015 21:15:45 +0530 "Virendra Goel" wrote

> We are again talking of 'varna' – It means Vyapar or Profession – varna by birth will
go out and we shall be back to the original varna system.RegardsVirendra GoelFrom:
join_mtc@googlegroups.com [mailto:join_mtc@googlegroups.com]

Sent: Friday, April 03, 2015 6:06 PM

To: join_mtc@googlegroups.com

Subject: Re: [MTC Global] another great readingafter 50-60 years there will not be any
castes or religions. already it started. in future there will be only professional
differences. means son of a politician becomes politician or a gunda. son of an actor
becomes an actor. doctors children becomes doctor. their profession becomes their
castes. so people need not have to worry about any religion.ushaFrom: Usha Gowri

To: join_mtc@googlegroups.com

Sent: Friday, April 3, 2015 9:59 AM

Subject: [MTC Global] another great readinglovely write up by PAK...sharing it without
his permission...Ananthakrishnan Pakshirajann and philosophy. And don't ask clever,
rhetorical questions simply for scoring points, when you clearly know what I mean. I
concede that you are devilishly clever and there is no need to prove it here. Please
don't use this page to preen yourself.

1. Yes, a person who is born a Hindu and feels that he is a Hindu can be an atheist or an
agnostic. I am one. Though I am an agnostic, I am culturally a Hindu and cherish its long
tradition. I choose what is good in them and throw away what I consider is the rubbish.
You may come back and say that the entire tradition is rubbish. That is your choice.

2. Every religion has used violence as a mean of propagation and for imposing the will of
a few on the hapless others. Even Buddhists and Jains have done that, though not on the
scales of other major religions. Hinduism is no exception.

3. Yes, Hinduism is a set of myriad and, at times, even contrasting belief systems. But
ask any ordinary person anywhere in India, who is a born a Hindu, there is an
overwhelming probability that he will unhesitatingly say that he is a Hindu. This has
absolutely nothing to do with his caste. This was so in the near past. My grandmother had
never set foot in a Shiva temple. She would not eat in an Iyer's house. She would not
allow the maid in the kitchen. If somebody had asked her what the religion of the Iyer
neighbour or the maid was, she would have said Hindu without batting an eyelid. The Iyer
neighbour and the maid would have heartily agreed.

4. Yes, the varna system was hierarchical and it was absolutely condemnable that a set of
people were considered beyond the pale of this unjust social system. Varna had scriptural
sanction. But for the last few centuries at least, it has no legal sanction. But castes
never had scriptural sanction. For instance, until about 50 years ago, it was quite
difficult to find an Iyer-Iyengar couple, though no scripture speaks against such
alliances. Today such marriages are common place. The circle keeps widening. Caste is
more a socio-economic phenomenon than a religious one. What is to be kept in mind is that
today there is absolutely no legal sanction today for both Varna and caste. Hinduism is
still thriving. I know what Ambedkar has stated about this subject and therefore don't
throw his book at me.

5. I repeat. It should be obvious to everyone that Hinduism is a religion that is
operating merrily, though what some consider is its core ideology – Varna - has no legal
sanction whatsoever. Caste never had a scriptural sanction to begin with and has no legal
sanction now. Socially caste is still strong, there is no doubt. But religion has not
much to do with it. It will be instructive to take a survey to find out the percentage of
inter-caste marriages among Christians – that is, marriages between Nadar and Dalit
Christians and marriages between Parava and Dalit Christians. Or the marriages between
Nat, Chamail or Abdal Muslims and other Muslims of non-Dalit origin.

6. I am of the view that the stranglehold of caste is showing signs of loosening. There
are several factors operating against it. The first is that the quiet social acceptance
of caste is being questioned strongly now, which was not the case a few years ago. The
intensity is uneven, but it is happening all over India in several forms. The second is
that urbanization of India also means that these distinctions will slowly disintegrate.
There are signs that endogamy is weakening, albeit at a very slow rate. When
modernization takes place it will further weaken and eventually disappear. Yes, the
dominant castes have used the opportunity given by the advance of democracy to monopolize
the levers of power. But I am sure this is a temporary phenomenon. The internal
contradictions within the dominant castes will ensure the collapse of this monopoly. Yes,
there will be caste organizations in future, but they will be like the old boys' clubs,
where people gather and lament about the good old days. Of course the forces of caste are
fighting tooth and nail in several ways. It will be idle to expect that they will quietly
accept the slow disintegration of their social system. But I am convinced that theirs is
a losing battle. But this is a long drawn battle and it may take years, even centuries.

7. Now in the event of this disintegration, Will Hinduism remain a recognizable religion?
My answer to this question is this: even now, it is an amalgam of various belief systems
and it is still called Hindu religion. Will the name of the future religion which has
done away with caste system remain Hindu? I am not sure and I don't care. We will do well
to remember that this Indian religion or group of religions acquired the name Hindu very
late and it can as well shed it without losing its identity.

8. What is its identity? You may say it is caste. Then you must explain to me as to why
Muslims and Christians in India strive to keep their caste identity intact. You may say
that it is the remnant of their Hindu past. But they still hold this identity and remain
Christians or Muslims, aren';t they? Thus it is much to do with social and economic
relationships and not religion. I knew of several families in Tirunelveli in which the
husband was a Hindu and the wife Christian. They lived peacefully without losing their
caste identity.

9. Religiously speaking, what will be the Hindu identity, if it is not the caste
identity? Forget the philosophical shibboleths. At the popular level, it will be the
basic urge to worship (or view with awe) every aspect of nature and what the Hindu
believes is the operating force behind it in an idolized form or even other forms. It
will be the belief that the human form is just a temporary gift - it could well be any
other form of life. The final overarching belief, common to all religions, will be that
there is a supreme being who controls our activities. The Hindu's supplementary belief
will be that it is every life's goal to be as near Him or Her as possible.​( italics all
mine)​There will also be a minority within this religion (a minuscule one without doubt)
that may not believe in any of these but will still be culturally recognizable as Hindu.
Apostates will have no fear in this religion that their heads will be chopped off.

10. I am also sure that as civilization advances human beings will come to the conclusion
that they no longer need the crutch of religion to tackle the uncertainties of existence.
When that happens all religions will disappear. This may not happen like the Big Bang
happened. It will be gradual and maybe what we call Hinduism will be the first religion
to bid us goodbye. Who knows?--

MTC GLOBAL- Educate, Empower, Elevate

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Regards,



Dr. P H Waghodekar, PhD (Egg), IIT,KGP, IE&M, 1985,

Advisor (HR), IBS & PME (PG)

Marathwada Institute of Technology,

NH 211, Beed by pass road,

Aurangabad: 431010 (Maharashtra) INDIA.

(O) 02402375113 (M) 7276661925

E-Mail: waghodekar@rediffmail.com

Website: www.mit.asia

and

Chairman, Advisory Board, MTC Global, Bangalore.





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