Read, View and Discuss

 

10/02/2009

How dare you ask a question “if caste system is human rights abuse”, how dare?. The hindu varnasharma or caste system is the most dangerous and pathological social system leading to systematic discrimination, abuse and utter Oppression of fellow humans.

Every single time, the UN is trying to do something about Caste System, the hindus sabotage the effort of UN, but the UN officials were either ignorant or callous, they fall for the hindu people’s manipulation of UN?.

BBC Report on UN council’s effort to announce Caste System is human  rights abuse!

08/31/2009

Google Search:

New Message: I have no idea as to what happened today, Upliftthem citation exihibited a huge no 812K but it was a temporary joy to see a huge citiation but the 812K citations seems to be not updated. Sometime it shows a large citation other times google resuts show 113k citations (not sure why?).

Early today:Huge Jump in Citations of Upliftthem: Just in about two weeks within this month of August, it went up from 113K to today: 812K, almost 7 times higher than the traditional Dalit voice and there is no dalit website as of today gained as huge a citation as Upliftthem, great!.

Results 1 - 10 of about 812,000 for upliftthem. (0.06 seconds) 

Bing: ALL RESULTS 1-10 of 2,570,000 results

The above search is google search on either IE or Mozilla Firefox, but the Bing Search surpasses these and infact Bing Search is much more robust and powerful, except that it has added lots of sites that are not related to my blog or writing. The google search sites, to the most part are related my blogs and my writings.

08/10/2009

Upliftthem google search citation and search results are interesting to note, as of today Aug 10, 2009, no of links on the interenet crossed 112,900 results!.

Results 1 - 10 of about 113,000 for upliftthem. (0.04 seconds).

 

Here some of the other dalits related sites and google results:

Buddha:Results 1 - 10 of about 49,200,000 for Buddha [definition] . (0.14 seconds)

Buddhism:Results 1 - 10 of about 28,300,000 for buddhism [definition] . (0.15 seconds)

Caste:Results 1 - 10 of about 14,000,000 for caste [definition] . (0.39 seconds)

Caste System:Results 1 - 10 of about 1,710,000 for caste system. (0.21 seconds)

Ambedkar:Results 1 - 10 of about 1,160,000 for Ambedkar. (0.40 seconds)

Dalits:Results 1 - 10 of about 974,000 for dalits. (0.52 seconds)

Untouchables: Results 1 - 10 of about 2,460,000 for untouchables [definition] . (0.29 seconds)

 

Some Indian and dalit sits, how do they perform compared to upliftthem global links?:

Blogbharti: Results 1 - 10 of about 21,300 for blogbharati. (0.40 seconds)

Dalit voice:Results 1 - 10 of about 118,000 for dalit voice. (0.09 seconds)

 

Buddhism 22.3 millionVs hinduism 13.3 million 
Dear Saint,

In the next day or so, the U.S. House of Representatives will vote on the boldest effort in our history to rethink how we produce and use energy in this country.

I recorded a video message to describe what’s at stake and how we need your help urgently. Take a moment and please watch it.


Some of the smartest ideas on energy and climate — ones that have been aired by countless hearings in our Capitol over the last two decades — are finally getting their due in this bill. And it’s deserving of our strongest support.

When people said that we couldn’t get a bill out of a House committee with a diverse base of support, we proved them wrong. But it wasn’t without the work of many people, including members like you.

Today, we need twice that effort. Please watch the video and call your Representative today:

http://www.RepowerAmerica.org/UrgentAlGoreVideo

Thanks for everything,

Al Gore

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From Bhikkhu Samahita

Keep mind focused on these 4 facts whenever it strays into fun, wrath or ill…

Buddha’s Words: Watch this Outstanding Slide Show!

Words Of The Buddha 1228851998070415 8
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The Youth Buddhist Society of India is doing a great job in educating and spreading Buddha’s teachings in India. Here is the site created by

Suresh & Nyanabhadra Sept 01, 2007. Visit the site!

tbook

headerphoto

Main Menu

Wise Words

“As the wise test gold by burning, cutting and rubbing it (on a piece of touchstone), so bhikkhus (monk), are you to accept my words after examining them and not merely out of regard for me.”

- Jnanasara-samuccaya; Buddha Shakyamuni

Home .:|:.

Brief Info

Buddham Saranam Gacchami
Dhammam Saranam Gacchami
Sangham Saranam Gacchami

 

Buddha’s Noble Eightfold Path Now on Your iPhone

The Buddhist Channel, May 8, 2009

San Diego, CA (USA) — Buddha meets Benjamin Franklin in a unique fusion app that incorporates Franklin’s time-honored self-improvement system with Buddha’s Noble Eightfold Path – with an iPhone twist.



With Noble Paths, the very same technique is successfully applied to incorporate each of the Buddhist Noble Eightfold Path tenets into your life, resulting in a gradual path toward self-improvement as you track your progress daily as you live in accordance with each “Right” Path:

• Right View
• Right Intention
• Right Speech
• Right Action
• Right Livelihood
• Right Effort
• Right Mindfulness
• Right Concentration

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Wash, Cover & Protect your Health from H1N1

Wash, Cover it. Wash your and your child's hands with soap and clean running water. Visit www.cdc.gov/h1n1 for more information. Show your child how to wash his hands. Visit www.cdc.gov/h1n1 for more information. Stay home if possible when you are sick. Visit www.cdc.gov/h1n1 for more information.

Bhimrao Dr.B.R.Ambedkar's Conversion to Buddhism, The Greatest and largest Gathering ever in Indian History...

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One of the Most Powerful Speech in the Indian Parliment by Dr.B.R.Ambedkar

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Asia Pacific

The Dalits of India

Crusader Sees Wealth as Cure for Caste Bias

Slumdog bosses donate £500k to educate poor kids in India

London:

Slumdog Millionaire bosses have donated 500,000 pounds to kick off a programme aimed at educating poor kids in India.

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Concerns to the Citizens of the World
Bird Flu Crisis
Starvation, Malnutrition & Food Crisis
Saturday
14Feb2009

GS,S&H:- Scholar of the Year?

Coming up Soon: Scholar of the Year 2009: Jayarava Rave's Author Jayarava

                              Scholar of the Year 2008: Caste Views-Dharma's author Refractor

Friday
30Jan2009

Buddha's Teachings in Alabama?

Dhammabrothers.com



Tuesday
30Dec2008

Dalit Art in Delhi: SAVI SAVARKARs Art in Delhi Exhibit

SAVI Savarkar's art work is full of life, an insightful and thoughtful expression of Dalits by a Dalit himself.

He is the rarest of young talents from India whose art work can't be matched by yet another upcoming artists of India. It all sounds and looks like this is the beginning of his art work, if the beginning has so much of extraordinary display to offer to us, the future contributions and creativity of Savi is something his art speaks for itself.
Savi Savarkar is GSS&H's The artist & Great Scholar of the month of Dec 2008. Let us congradulate and support Savi's work.

Tuesday
30Dec2008

Flickr

This is a test post from flickr, a fancy photo sharing thing.

Thursday
18Dec2008

The grinding miseries that are ailing humanity? By Ven Bhikkhu Bodhi

In this insightful message to the world Buddhists, Ven Bhikkhu Bodhi one of the most scholarly and revered American Buddhist monk discusses the sufferings of Humanity world wide, he also points to the role of Buddhists in reaching out to the needy and socially, morally  and economically oppressed and suppressed, this is exactly what our great Buddha himself taught and practiced,
if we can eliminate the suffering from innocent and underprevileged humans around the globe, lot more better humanity can be build around us, this is not anything new in Buddhists society, Buddha did this 3500 years ago, but, the Buddha's Dhamma should not be sabotaged by the few elite or educated or one who can afford to take it for introvert purposes, after all such great tool as eliminating one's suffering must be shared with others, then to others and then to others ultimately taking the Dhamma to as many as possible.

What a great thoughts Ven Bhikkhu Bodhi brings to us so often as we need, just like a glowing light in the darkness of this era we live with so much sufferings.

While you are reading this great piece of information, do not forget to read our great P.P.LakshmanJi's remarks and vision about today's Buddhists (look at the left side bar in this blog for PPL's remarks). Lakshmanji is another scholarly writer and a revered Buddhists within our Dalit Brotherhood/sisterhood who often enlightens us.

A challenge to Buddhists

By Ven. Bhikkhu Bodhi
Each morning, I check out a number of Internet news reports and commentaries on websites ranging from the BBC to Trutbout. Reading about current events strongly reinforces for me the acuity of the Buddha's words: "The world is grounded upon suffering."
Almost daily I am awed by the enormity of the suffering that assails human beings on every continent, and even more so by the hard truth that so much of this suffering springs not from the vicissitudes of impersonal nature but from the fires of greed, hatred, and delusion raging in the human heart.
Seeing the immensity of the world's anguish has raised in my mind questions about the future prospects for Buddhism in the West. I've been struck by how seldom the theme of global suffering - the palpable suffering of real human beings - is thematically explored in the Buddhist journals and teachings with which I am acquainted.
It seems to me that we Western Buddhists tend to dwell in a cognitive space that defines the first noble truth largely against the background of our middle-class lifestyles: as the gnawing of discontent; the ennui of over-satiation; the pain of unfulfilling relationships; or, with a bow to Buddhist theory, as bondage to the round of rebirths. Too often, I feel, our focus on these aspects of dukkha has made us oblivious to the vast, catastrophic suffering that daily overwhelms three-fourths of the world's population.
An exception to this tendency may be found with the Engaged Buddhist movement. I believe this is a face of Buddhism that has great promise, but from my superficial readings in this area I am struck by two things.

First, while some Engaged Buddhist seek fresh perspectives from the Dharma, for many Buddhism simply provides spiritual practices to use while simultaneously espousing socio-political causes not much different from those of the mainstream Left. Second, Engaged Buddhism still remains tangential to the hard core of Western interest in Buddhism, which has fastened upon the Dharma principally as a path to inner peace and self-realisation.

If Buddhism in the West becomes solely a means to pursue personal spiritual growth, I am apprehensive it may evolve in a one-sided way and thus fulfil only half its potential. Attracting the affluent and the educated, it will provide a congenial home for the intellectual and cultural elite, but it risks turning the quest for enlightenment into a private journey that, in the face of the immense suffering which daily hounds countless human lives, can present only a resigned quietism.

It is true that Buddhist meditation practice requires seclusion and inwardly focused depth. But, I ask myself, wouldn't the embodiment of Dharma in the world be more complete by also reaching out and addressing the grinding miseries that are ailing humanity?

I know we engage in lofty meditations on kindness and compassion and espouse beautiful ideals of love and peace. But note that we pursue them largely as inward subjective experiences geared towards personal transformation.

Too seldom does this type of compassion roll up its sleeves and step into the field. Too rarely does it translate into pragmatic programs of effective action realistically designed to diminish the actual sufferings of those battered by natural calamities or societal deprivation.

American Jewish World Service doesn't aspire to convert people to Judaism but to express Judaism's commitment to social justice by alleviating "poverty, hunger, and disease among the people of the developing world regardless of race, religion, or nationality."
Why doesn't Buddhism have anything like that? Surely we can find a supporting framework for this in Buddhist doctrine, ethical ideals, archetypes, legends, and historical precedents.

I recognise that many individual Buddhists are actively engaged in social service and that a few larger Buddhist organisations work tirelessly to relieve human suffering around the globe. Their selfless dedication fully deserves our appreciation. Unfortunately, however, their appeal has as yet been limited

Buddhist teachers often say that the most effective way we can help protect the world is by purifying our own minds, or that before we engage in compassionate action we must attain realization of selflessness or emptiness.
There may be some truth in such statements, but I think it is a partial truth. In these critical times, we also have an obligation to aid those immersed in the world who live on the brink of destitution and despair.

The Buddha's mission, the reason for his arising in the world, was to free beings from suffering by uprooting the evil roots of greed, hatred, and delusion. These sinister roots don't exist only in our own minds.

Today they have acquired a collective dimension and spread out over whole countries and continents. To help free beings from suffering today therefore requires that we counter the systemic embodiments of greed, hatred, and delusion.

In each historical period, the Dharma finds new means to unfold its potentials in ways precisely linked to that era's distinctive historical conditions.

I believe that our own era provides the appropriate historical stage for the transcendent truth of the Dharma to bend back upon the world and engage human suffering at multiple levels - even the lowest, harshest, and most degrading levels - not in mere contemplation but in effective, relief-granting action illuminated by its own world transcending goal.

A special challenge facing Buddhism in our age is to stand up as an advocate for justice in the world, a voice of conscience for those victims of social, economic, and political injustice who cannot stand up and speak for themselves.

This, in my view, is a deeply moral challenge marking a watershed in the modern expression of Buddhism. I believe it also points in a direction that Buddhism should take if it is to share in the Buddha's ongoing mission to humanity.

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