Archive for the ‘Noble Thought’ category

Life’s little Instructions

December 28th, 2009

Try to adopt the maximum in your life from the points below. It will change your life.

1. Look people in the eye.

2. Sing in the shower.

3. Own a great stereo system.

4. If in a fight, hit first and hit hard.

5. Keep secrets.

6. Never give up on anybody. Miracles happen everyday.

7. Always accept an outstretched hand.

8. Be brave. Even if you’re not, pretend, no one can tell the difference.

9. Whistle.

10. Avoid sarcastic remarks.

11. Choose your life’s mate carefully. From this one decision will come 90% of all your happiness or misery.

12. Make it a habit to do nice things for people who will never find out.

13. Lend only those books you never care to see again.

14. Never deprive someone of hope; It might be all that they have.

15. When playing games with children let them win.

16. Be romantic.

17. Become the most positive and enthusiastic person you know.

18. Loosen up, relax. Except for rare life-&-death matters, nothing is as important as it first seems.

19. Don’t allow the phone to interrupt important moments. It is there for your convenience not the caller’s.

20. Be a good loser.

21. Be a good winner.

22. Think twice before burdening a friend with a secret.

23. When someone hugs you, let them be the first to let go.

24. Be modest. A lot was accomplished before you were born.

25. Keep it simple. Beware of the person who has nothing to lose.

26. Don’t burn bridges. You’ll be surprised how many times you have to cross the same river.

27. Live your life so that your epitaph could read, No regrets.

28. Be bold and courageous. When you look back on life, you’ll regret the things you didn’t do more than the ones you did.

29. Never waste an opportunity to tell someone you love them.

30. Remember no one makes it alone. Have a grateful heart and be quick to acknowledge those who helped you.

31. Take charge of your attitude. Don’t let someone else choose it for you.

32. Visit friends and relatives when they are in hospital.

33. Begin each day with some of your favourite music.

34. Once in a while take the scenic route.

35. Send a lot of Valentine cards.

36. Answer the phone with enthusiasm and energy in your voice.

37. Keep a note-pad and pencil on your bed-side table. Million-dollar ideas sometimes strike at three a.m.

38. Show respect for everyone who works for a living, regardless of how trivial their job.

39. Send your loved ones flowers. Think of a reason later.

40. Make somebody’s day by paying the toll for the person in the car behind you.

41. Become someone’s hero.

42. Marry only for love.

43. Count your blessings.

44. Compliment the host when you have a good meal in someone’s home.

45. Wave at children in a school bus.

46. Remember that 80% of the success in any job is your ability to deal with people.

47. Don’t expect life to be fair.

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About KANNADA Language

December 28th, 2009

- KANNADA is the third oldest language of India . ( After . . Sanskrit & Tamil )
- KANNADA is as old as 2000 years.
- KANNADA is 99.99% perfect – logically and scientifically.
- KANNADA Has got 7 Gnana Peetha Awards.
- Shri VINOBA BHAVE called script as QUEEN OF WORLD SCRIPTS
- “Vishwa LipigaLa RaaNi – ”

- So called International language — English does not have its own Script. English is written in “ROMAN”
- So called National Language — Hindi does not have its own script.
Hindi is written in “Deva naagari”
- Though Tamil has a script, logically it is imperfect — as common
letters are used for many pronunciations.
- KANNADA is as old as 2000 years. You can write what you speak and you can read what you write.
- When “Kaviraja Maarga was written . . .” kaaveriyinda, Odaavarivaregirpa …” by Amogha Varsha Nripathunga,
English was in cradle & Hindi was not born at all.
- KANNADA Is the only Indian language for which a foreigner (Kittal) wrote a dictionary (Shabda Kosha)
Ragale Sahitya can be seen only in which is of a rare and different kind of literature.
- Number of literature awards KUVEMPU got, was highest among any Indian authors.
Chandassu (shatpadis) out pared all other languages
So Let us have PRIDE in using .
Be proud of being a KANNADIGA

“SIRIGANNADAM GELGE”

Note…No offence intended..This is just information

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Obama Speech on Afghanistan

December 3rd, 2009

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How poor are we?

November 29th, 2009
One day, the father of a very wealthy family took his son on a trip to the country with the express purpose of showing him how poor people live.

They spent a couple of days and nights on the farm of what would be considered a very poor family.

On their return from their trip, the father asked his son, ‘How was the trip?’

‘It was great, Dad.’

‘Did you see how poor people live?’ the father asked.

‘Oh yeah,’ said the son.


‘So, tell me, what did you learn from the trip?’ asked the father

The son answered:

‘I saw that we have one dog and they had four.

We have a pool that reaches to the middle of our garden and they have a creek that has no end.

We have imported lanterns in our garden and they have the stars at night.

Our patio reaches to the front yard and they have the whole horizon.

We have a small piece of land to live on and they have fields that go beyond our sight.

We have servants who serve us, but they serve others.

We buy our food, but they grow theirs.

We have walls around our property to protect us, they have friends to protect them.’

The boy’s father was speechless.

Then his son added, ‘Thanks Dad for showing me how poor we are.’

Isn’t perspective a wonderful thing?

Makes you wonder what would happen if we all gave thanks for everything we have, instead of worrying about what we don’t have.

Appreciate every single thing you have, especially your friends!

‘Life is too short and friends are too few.’

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Traditional India has high charitable propensities and deep philanthropic impulses

November 29th, 2009

Better know, before talking


We have in our country a long but uneven tradition of philanthropy’. Thus lamented Sonia Gandhi at the function in Delhi to give the Indira Gandhi Prize to the American philanthropist Bill Gates. That was on July 25. Two days later, the Wall Street Journal printed, unusually, her whole speech. On July 29, Paul Beckett, a WSJ columnist, taking his cue from Sonia, mocked Indian businessmen for not being even remotely close to matching Gates. He pontificated: “India’s rich, open your wallets”.

Beckett used corporate India to dent the image of India itself, courtesy Sonia. Had she not spoken the way she did, he would not have written the way he did. What Sonia did not know — therefore, Beckett, who borrowed from her, could not — is what differentiates India from the US. American corporates, which almost exhaust America, are co-extensive with it; they account for over 80 per cent of its GDP. Bill Clinton had nicknamed the US ‘America Inc’, namely, the US as the aggregate of its corporates.

US corporate endowments aggregated are highly visible, like their brands. This is to emphasise their nature; not undermine their worth. The US market cap is some 40 times the Indian. Corporate India is insignificant in contrast. Some 400 top private Indian companies account for under six per cent of India’s GDP. This includes all Sensex members.

Sonia is understandably unfamiliar with the practices of traditional India. Indian charity, widely practised at the lowest unit levels down to every home, is socio-religious, not secular, in construct. Traditional India has high charitable propensities and deep philanthropic impulses. Indian religions do not convert others; their charity is therefore less known. Here are some examples of charity where the religious power is manifest.

Look at the charity run by Bhagwan Sathya Sai of Puttaparthi. His work for the poor is unmatched; yet equally unknown. Here are just two illustrations of his work. Anantapur district in Rayalaseema region of Andhra Pradesh was known for water scarcity and water salinity and high fluoride levels in drinking water. Moved by the suffering of the poor, Sai Baba decided to do what the government could not for 50 long years; provide potable drinking water to the whole of Anantapur — yes, for the whole district.

He declared in November 1995, “Today it is ‘Raatlaseema’ (rocky region); it must be transformed into ‘Ratnala Seema’ (land that glitters like diamond)”. It took just 18 months. The work involved laying some 2,000 kilometres — yes 2,000 km — of water pipeline; building 43 sumps of 1.5 lakh to 25 lakh litres capacity; constructing 18 balancing reservoirs of three to 10 lakh litres capacity — where? — on top of hillocks; erecting 270 overhead reservoirs holding 40,000 to three lakh litres; installing 1,500-plus concrete pre-cast cisterns of 2,500 litres capacity, each attached with four taps for people to draw water.

This is how the 9th Planning Commission document describes the initiative. The Sathya Sai charity ‘has set an unparalleled initiative of implementing on their own, without any state budgetary support, a massive water supply project with an expenditure of Rs 3,000 million to benefit 731 scarcity and fluoride/salinity affected villages and a few towns in Anantapur district in 18 months’. Baba’s trusts repeated this feat in fluoride-affected Medak and Mehboobnagar districts. They provided water to some 4.5 lakh poor in 179 villages in Medak, and to some 3.5 lakh poor in 141 villages in the next. The drinking water projects in these districts covered more than 1,000 villages with some 20 lakh people.

Then, he saw the poor in Chennai struggling for water. He declared on January 19, 2002, “Today I have made a new resolve. Madras is suffering from acute shortage of drinking water. The rich can buy water. What will the poor do? I have decided to work towards bringing drinking water to Madras, no matter how difficult and how costly the task”. His central trust took up the construction of a 63-km stretch of the 150 km canal in the Telugu Ganga scheme, left incomplete for want of funds, thus denying water to Chennai. Thanks to Baba, Krishna water reached Chennai, irrigating some three lakh hectares of agricultural land on the way. These projects cost over Rs 600 crore.

The Sathya Sai trusts in Puttaparthi and Bengaluru run world-class speciality hospitals. They have performed some 24,000 cardiac surgeries, 34,000 cardiac cathertisations, 7,000 neuro surgeries, 40,000 eye surgeries, and 600 orthopaedic surgeries and treated millions more — all free. What is absent in these two hospitals is a billing department. The bill for these services might exceed Rs 1,000 crore. Baba’s trusts also run free educational institutions, cultural centres and music colleges. Secular India generously released a stamp to note the charity in Anantapur. Compare it with the Indira Gandhi award to Gates and the encomiums at the cost of India.

Take another religious charity, the Ramakrishna Mission. It runs 197 hospitals and its health-related work serves 85 lakh people annually, including 25 lakh in rural areas; 1,186 educational institutions serve 3.4 lakh students including 1.24 lakh in rural areas.

Take the Swaminarayan movement. Its 14 hospitals serve over six lakh patients annually; it runs 10 schools, eight colleges, 14 hostels; it has built 55 schools in disaster-hit areas; it aids 20 schools financially; gives 5000 scholarships annually. In Punjab, not a single man, woman or child would have gone hungry in the last three centuries, thanks to the langar in Gurudwaras feeding millions every day. Jains run huge charities all over the country. So do religious Muslims and Christians. Even the freedom movement was sustained by philanthropy. Lala Lajpat Rai gave all his properties to the movement; Chittaranjan Das and many others went bankrupt funding the movement. They never expected any Indira Gandhi Award. That is real philanthropy.

Traditional Indian business communities allocate a fixed share of their turnover for charity. The mahamai, an informal charity tax among the Nadars in Tamil Nadu has funded hundreds of the community’s educational institutions. The Nagarathars in Tamil Nadu too, through their mahamai, run huge charities. The Marwaris and others do so through the dharmada. Even today this informal system prevails in non-corporate business in India. So charity is by the community as a whole, not by individuals. But corporate India is unfortunately neither Indian nor American.

This is India, about which Sonia is singularly ignorant even after 40 years of domicile. When she said India has an uneven tradition of philanthropy it only exposed her ignorance, besides exporting it to the WSJ. The result? The WSJ is preaching to Indians about charity; the Indian media reports this nonsense without challenging it.

QED: To talk about Indian traditions, she first needs to know about them.

-By Gurumurthy

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Jaswant Singh on his book, his perceptions of Jinnah…take time to read

November 29th, 2009

“I have not written to please — it’s a journey that I
have undertaken…”
Jaswant Singh on his book, his perceptions of Jinnah,
and the political milieu of the time…
The text of an interview that Karan Thapar did with
Jaswant Singh, for the television programme ‘Devil’s
Advocate’ that was broadcast in two instalments over
CNN-IBN on August 16:
Karan Thapar: Hello and welcome to Devil’s
Advocate. Tomorrow sees the publication of a
biography of Mohammed Ali Jinnah which challenges
the way we in India have seen the founder of
Pakistan. It reassesses Nehru’s role in Partition, it
sheds fresh light on the relationship between the early
Gandhi and Jinnah.
If my hunch is correct, this book will attract considerable
attention and may be even a fair amount of controversy.
Today, in a special two-part interview with the author I shall
discuss the book and his conclusions. He is, of course, the
former Defence, Foreign and Finance Minister of India and
also a former soldier, Jaswant Singh.
Mr. Jaswant Singh, let’s start by establishing how you as the
author view Mohammed Ali Jinnah? After reading your
book, I get the feeling that you don’t subscribe to the
popular demonisation of the man.
Jaswant Singh: Of course, I don’t. To that I don’t subscribe. I
was attracted by the personality which has resulted in a book. If
I wasn’t drawn to the personality, I wouldn’t have written the
book. It’s an intricate, complex personality of great character,
determination…
And it’s a personality that you found quite attractive?
Naturally, otherwise, I wouldn’t have ventured down the book. I
found the personality sufficiently attractive to go and research it
for five years. And I was drawn to it, yes.
As a politician, Jinnah joined the Congress party long before
he joined the Muslim League, and in fact when he joined the
Muslim League, he issued a statement to say that this in no
way implies “even the shadow of disloyalty to the national
cause.” Would you say that in the 1920s and 1930s and may
be even the early years of the 1940s, Jinnah was a
nationalist?
Actually speaking the acme of his nationalistic achievement was
the 1916 Lucknow Pact of Hindu-Muslim unity and that’s why
Gopal Krishna Gokhale called him the Ambassador of Hindu-
Muslim unity.
In your assessment as his biographer, for most if not the
predominant part of his life, Jinnah was a nationalist?
Oh, yes. He fought the British for an independent India but he
also fought resolutely and relentlessly for the interest of the
Muslims of India.
Was Jinnah secular or was he communal?
It depends on the way you view the word ‘secular,’ because I
don’t know whether secular is really fully applicable to a
country like India. It’s a word borne of the socio-historical and
religious history of Western Europe.
Let me put it like this. Many people believe that Jinnah
hated Hindus and that he was a Hindu-basher.
Wrong. Totally wrong. That certainly he was not. His principal
disagreement was with the Congress party. Repeatedly he says
and he says this even in his last statements to the press and to
the constituent Assembly of Pakistan.
So his problem was with Congress and with some Congress
leaders but he had no problem with Hindus.
No he had no problems whatsoever with the Hindus. Because he
was not in that sense, until in the later part of his years, he
became exactly what he charged Mahatma Gandhi with. He had
charged Mahatma Gandhi of being a demagogue.
He became one as well?
That was the most flattering way of emulating Gandhi. I refer of
course to the Calcutta killings.
As you look back on Jinnah’s life, would you say that he was
a great man?
Oh yes, because he created something out of nothing, and
single-handedly he stood up against the might of the Congress
party and against the British who didn’t really like him.
So you are saying to me he was a great man?
I’m saying so.
Let me put it like this: do you admire Jinnah?
I admire certain aspects of his personality. His determination
and the will to rise. He was a self-made man — Mahatma
Gandhi was a son of a Dewan.
Nehru was born to great wealth.
All of them were born to wealth and position, Jinnah created for
himself a position. He carved out in Bombay a position in that
cosmopolitan city being what he was — poor. He was so poor,
he had to walk to work. He lived in a hotel called Watsons in
Bombay and he told one of the biographers that there’s always
room at the top but there is no lift and he never sought a lift.
Do you admire the way he created success for himself, born
to poverty but he ended up successful, rich?
I would admire that in any man, self-made man, who resolutely
worked towards achieving what he had set out to.
How seriously has India misunderstood Jinnah?
I think we misunderstood because we needed to create a demon.
We needed a demon and he was the convenient scapegoat?
I don’t know if he was convenient. We needed a demon because
in the 20th century the most telling event in the entire
subcontinent was the Partition of the country.
I’ll come to that in a moment, but first, the critical question
that your book raises is that how is it that the man,
considered as the ambassador of Hindu-Muslim unity in
1916, had transformed 30 years later by 1947 into the ‘Qaide-
Azam’ of Pakistan? And your book suggests that
underlying this was Congress’ repeated inability to accept
that Muslims feared domination by Hindus and that they
wanted “space” in “a reassuring system.”
Here is the central contest between minorityism and
majoritarianism. With the loss of the Mughal empire, the
Muslims of India had lost power but majoritarianism didn’t
begin to influence them until 1947. Then they saw that unless
they had a voice in their own political, economical and social
destiny, they would be obliterated. That’s the beginning. That’s
still the purpose.
Let me ask you this. Was Jinnah’s fear or anxiety about
Congress majoritarianism justified or understandable?
Your book in its account of how Congress refused to form a
government with the League in Uttar Pradesh in 1937 after
fighting the elections in alliance with that party, suggests
that Jinnah’s fears were substantial and real.
Yes. You have to go not just to 1937, which you just cited. See
other examples. In the 1946 elections, Jinnah’s Muslim League
wins all the Muslim seats and yet they do not have a sufficient
number to be in office because the Congress party has, even
without a single Muslim, enough to form a government and they
are outside of the government. So it was realised that simply
contesting election was not enough.
They needed certain assurances within the system to give
them that space?
That’s right. And those assurances amounted to reservation,
which I dispute frankly. Reservations went from 25 per cent to
33 per cent. And then from reservation that became parity, of
being on equal terms. Parity to Partition.
All of this was search for space?
All of this was a search for some kind of autonomy of decisionmaking
in their own social and economic destiny.
Your book reveals how people like Gandhi, Rajagopalachari
and Azad could understand Jinnah, or the Muslim fear of
Congress majoritarianism, but Nehru simply couldn’t
understand. Was Nehru insensitive to this?
No, he wasn’t. Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru was a deeply sensitive
man.
But why couldn’t he understand?
He was deeply influenced by Western and European socialist
thought of those days. For example, dominion status would have
given virtual independence to India in the 1920s, but Nehru shot
it down.
In other words, Nehru’s political thinking and his
commitment to Western socialist thought meant that he
couldn’t understand Jinnah’s concerns about
majoritarianism? Nehru was a centralist, Jinnah was a
decentraliser?
That’s right. That is exactly [the point]. Nehru believed in a
highly centralised polity. That’s what he wanted India to be.
Jinnah wanted a federal polity.
Because that would give Muslims the space?
That even Gandhi also accepted.
But Nehru couldn’t.
Nehru didn’t.
He refused to?
Well, consistently, he stood in the way of a federal India until
1947 when it became a partitioned India.
In fact, the conclusion of your book is that if the Congress
could have accepted a decentralised federal India, then a
united India, as you put it, “was clearly ours to attain.” You
add that the problem was that this was in “an anathema to
Nehru’s centralising approach and policies.” Do you see
Nehru at least as responsible for Partition as Jinnah?
I think he says it himself. He recognised it and his
correspondence, for example with late Nawab Sahab of Bhopal,
his official biographer and others. His letters to the late Nawab
Sahab of Bhopal are very moving letters.
You are saying Nehru recognised that he was as much of an
obstacle.
No, he recognised his mistakes afterwards.
Afterwards?
Afterwards.
Today, Nehru’s heirs and party will find it very surprising
that you think that Nehru was as responsible for Partition as
Jinnah.
I’m not blaming anybody. I’m not assigning blame. I’m simply
recording what I have found as the development of issues and
events of that period.
When Indians turn around and say that Jinnah was, to use a
colloquialism, the villain of Partition, your answer is that
there were many people responsible, and to single out
Jinnah as the only person or as the principal person, is both
factually wrong and unfair?
It is. It is not borne out of events. Go to the last All India
Congress Committee meeting in Delhi in June of 1947 to
discuss and accept the June 3, 1947 resolution. Nehru-Patel’s
resolution was defeated by the Congress, supported by Gandhi
in the defeat. Ram Manohar Lohia had moved the amendment. It
was a very moving intervention by Ram Manohar Lohia and
then Gandhi finally said we must accept this Partition. Partition
is a very painful event. It is very easy to assign blame but very
difficult thereafter. Because all events that we are judging are
ex-post facto.
Absolutely, and what your book does is to shed light in terms
of a new assessment of Partition and the responsibility of the
different players. And in that re-assessment, you have
balanced differently between Jinnah and Nehru?
All vision which is ex-post facto is 20/20. It is when you
actually live the event.
Quite right. Those who have lived it would have seen it
differently but today, with the benefit of hindsight, you can
say that Jinnah wasn’t the only or the principal villain and
the Indian impression that he was is mistaken and wrong?
And we need to correct it.
Let’s turn to Jinnah and Pakistan. Your book shows that
right through the 1920s and the 1930s, or may be even the
early years of the 1940s, Pakistan for Jinnah was more of a
political strategy, less of a target and a goal. Did he
consciously, from the very start, seek to dismember and
divide India?
I don’t think it was dismemberment. He wanted space for the
Muslims. And he could just not define Pakistan ever.
Geographically, it was a vague idea. That’s why ultimately it
became a moth-eaten Pakistan. He had ideas about certain
provinces which must be Islamic and one-third of the seats in
the Central legislature must be Muslims.
So Pakistan was in fact a way of finding, as you call it,
‘space’ for Muslims?
He wanted space in the Central legislature and in the provinces
and protection of the minorities so that the Muslims could have
a say in their own political, economic and social destiny.
And that was his primary concern, not dividing India or
breaking up the country?
No. He in fact went to the extent of saying that let there be a
Pakistan within India.
A Pakistan within India was acceptable to him?
Yes.
So, in other words, Pakistan was often the ‘code’ for space
for Muslims?
That’s right. From what I have written, I find that it was a
negotiating tactic because he wanted certain provinces to be
with the Muslim League. He wanted a certain percentage [of
seats] in the Central legislature. If he had that, there would not
have been a Partition.
Would you therefore say that when people turn around and
say that Jinnah was communal, he was a Hindu-hater, a
Hindu basher, they are mistaken and wrong?
He was not a Hindu-hater but he had great animosity with the
Congress party and Congress leadership. He said so repeatedly:
I have no enmity against the Hindu.
Do you as an author believe him when he said so?
I don’t live in the same time as him. I go by what his
contemporaries have said, I go by what he himself says and I
reproduce it.
Let’s come again to this business of using Pakistan to create
space for Muslims. Your book shows how repeatedly people
like Rajagopalachari, Gandhi and Azad were understanding
Jinnah’s need or the Muslim need for space. Nehru wasn’t.
Nehru had a European-inherited centralised vision of how
India should be run. In a sense, was Nehru’s vision of a
centralised India, a problem that eventually led to Partition?
Jawaharlal Nehru was not always that. He became that after his
European tour of the 1920s. Then he came back imbued with, as
Madhu Limaye puts it, a ‘spirit of socialism,’ and he was all for
a highly centralised India.
And a highly centralised India denied the space Jinnah
wanted.
A highly centralised India meant that the dominant party was the
Congress party. He [Nehru] in fact said there are only two
powers in India — the Congress party and the British.
That attitude in a sense left no room for Jinnah and the
Muslim League in India?
That’s what made Jinnah repeatedly say: but there’s a third force
— we. The Congress could have dealt with the Moplas but there
were other Muslims.
So it was this majoritarianism of Nehru that actually left no
room for Jinnah?
It became a contest between excessive majoritarianism,
exaggerated minorityism and giving the referee’s whistle to the
British.
Was the exaggerated minorityism a response to the excessive
majoritarianism of the Congress?
In part. Also in response to the historical circumstances that had
come up.
If the final decision had been taken by people like Gandhi,
Rajagopalachari or Azad, could we have ended up with a
united India?
Yes, I believe so. It could have. Gandhi said let the British go
home, we will settle this amongst ourselves, we will find a
Pakistan. In fact, he said so in the last AICC meetings.
It was therefore Nehru’s centralising vision that made that
extra search for a united India difficult at the critical
moment?
He continued to say so but subsequently, after Partition, he
began to realise what a great mistake he had made.
Nehru realised his mistakes but it was too late, by then it
had happened.
It was too late. It was too late.
Let’s… [consider] the portrait you paint of the
relationship between the early Gandhi and the early
Jinnah. You say of their first meeting in January 1915
that Gandhi’s response to Jinnah’s “warm welcome”
was “ungracious.” You say Gandhi would only see
Jinnah “in Muslim terms,” and the sort of implication
that comes across is Gandhi was less accommodating
than Jinnah was.
I’ve perhaps not used the adjective you have used. Jinnah
returned from his education in 1896. Gandhi went to
South Africa and was returning finally — in between he
had come once — to India [and] it was 1915 already.
Jinnah had gone to receive him with Gokhale and he
referred fulsomely to Gandhi. Gandhi referred to Jinnah
and said that I am very grateful that we have a Muslim
leader. That I think was born really of Gandhi’s working
in South Africa and not so much the reality of what he
felt. The relationship subsequently became competitive.
But you do call that response “ungracious”?
I don’t know whether I call it ungracious.
You do.
But I might have. Jinnah is fulsomely receiving Gandhi
and Gandhi says I’m glad that I’m being received by a
Muslim leader.
So he was only seeing Jinnah in Muslim terms?
Yes, which Jinnah didn’t want to be seen [as].
Even when you discuss the impact of their political
strategies in the early years before 1920 you suggest
that Jinnah was perhaps more effective than Gandhi,
who in a sense permitted the Raj to continue for three
decades. You write: “Jinnah had successfully kept the
Indian political forces together, simultaneously
exerting pressure on the government.” Of Gandhi you
say “that pressure dissipated and the Raj remained
for three more decades.”
That’s a later development, because the political style of
the two was totally different. Jinnah was essentially a
logician. He believed in the strength of logic; he was a
parliamentarian; he believed in the efficacy of
parliamentary politics. Gandhi, after testing the water,
took to the trails of India and he took politics into the
dusty villages of India.
But in the early years up till 1920 you see Jinnah as
more effective in putting pressure on the British than
Gandhi?
Yes, because the entire politics was parliamentary.
The adjectives you use to characterise their
leadership in the early years suggests a sort of, how
shall I put it, slight tilt in Jinnah’s favour. You say of
Gandhi’s leadership that it had “an entirely religious,
provincial character.” Of Jinnah you say he was
“doubtless imbued by a non-sectarian nationalistic
zeal.”
He was non-sectarian. Gandhi used religion as a personal
expression. Jinnah used religion as a tool to create
something but that came later. For Gandhi religion was
an integral part of his politics from the very beginning.
And Jinnah wanted religion out of politics.
Out of politics. That is right — there are innumerable
examples.
In fact, Jinnah sensed or feared instinctively that if
politics came into religion it would divide.
There were two fears here. His one fear was that if the
whole question or practice of mass movement was
introduced into India then the minority in India would be
threatened. There could be Hindu-Muslim riots as a
consequence. The second fear was that this will result in
bringing in religion into Indian politics. He didn’t want
that — the Khilafat movement, etc., are all examples of
that.
And in a sense would you say events have borne out
Jinnah?
Not just Jinnah, Annie Besant also. When the Home Rule
League broke up, resigning from the League Annie
Beasant cautioned Gandhi: you are going down this path,
this is a path full of peril.
Both Jinnah and Besant have been borne out.
In the sense that mass movement, unless combined with
a great sense of discipline, leadership and restraint,
becomes chaotic.
As you look back on their lives and their
achievements, Jinnah, at the end of the day, stood for
creating a homeland for Indian Muslims. But what he
produced was moth-eaten and broke up into two
pieces in less than 25 years. Gandhi struggled to keep
India united, but ended up not just with Partition but
with communal passion and communal killing. Would
you say at the end of their lives both were
failures?
Gandhi was transparently a honest man. He lived his
political life openly. Jinnah didn’t even live his political
life, leave alone his private life, openly. Gandhi led his
private life openly — [in] Noakhali with a pencil stub he
wrote movingly “I don’t want to die a failure but I fear I
might.”
And did he, in your opinion?
Yes, I am afraid the Partition of the land, the Hindu-
Muslim divide, cannot be really called Gandhiji’s great
success. Jinnah, I think, did not achieve what he set out
to. He got what is called a moth-eaten Pakistan, but the
philosophy which underlay it, that Muslims are a
separate nation, was completely rejected within years of
Pakistan coming into being.
So, in a sense, both failed.
I’m afraid I’ve to say that. I am, in comparison, a lay
practitioner of politics in India. I cannot compare myself
to these two great Indians, but my assessment would lead
me to the conclusion that I cannot treat this as a success
either by Gandhi or by Jinnah.
Your book also raises disturbing questions about the
Partition of India. You say it was done in a way “that
multiplied our problems without solving any
communal issue.” Then you ask: “If the communal,
the principal issue, remains in an even more
exacerbated form than before then why did we divide
at all?”
Yes, indeed why? I cannot yet find the answer. Look into
the eyes of the Muslims who live in India and if you truly
see through the pain they live — to which land do they
belong? We treat them as aliens, somewhere inside,
because we continue to ask even after Partition you still
want something? These are citizens of India — it was
Jinnah’s failure because he never advised the Muslims
who stayed back.
One of the most moving passages of your biography is
when you write of Indian Muslims who stayed on in
India and didn’t go to Pakistan. You say they are
“abandoned,” you say they are “bereft of a sense of
kinship,” not “one with the entirety” and then you
add that “this robs them of the essence of
psychological security.”
That’s right, it does. That lies at the root of the Sachar
Committee report.
So, in fact, Indian Muslims have paid the price in
their personal lives.
Without doubt, as have Pakistani Muslims.
Muslims have paid a price on both sides.
I think Muslims have paid a price in Partition. They
would have been significantly stronger in a united India,
effectively so — much larger land, every potential is
here. Of course, Pakistan or Bangladesh won’t like what
I’m saying.
Let’s for a moment focus on Indian Muslims. You are
a leader of the BJP. Do you think the rhetoric of your
party sometimes adds to that insecurity?
I didn’t write this book as a BJP parliamentarian or
leader, which I’m not. I wrote this book as an Indian.
Your book also suggests, at least intellectually, you
believe India could face more Partitions. You write:
“In India, having once accepted this principle of
reservation, then of Partition, how can now we deny it
to others, even such Muslims as have had to or chosen
to live in India.”
The problem started with the 1906 reservation. What
does the Sachar Committee report say? Reserve for the
Muslim. What are we doing now? Reserve. I think this
reservation for Muslims is a disastrous path. I have
myself, personally, in Parliament heard a member
subscribing to Islam saying we could have a third
Partition too. These are the pains that trouble me. What
have we solved?
In fact you say in your book how can we deny it to
others, having accepted it once it becomes very
difficult intellectually to refuse it again.
You’ve to refuse it.
Even if you contradict yourself?
Of course, I am contradicting myself. It is intellectual
contradiction.
But you are being honest enough to point out that this
intellectual contradiction lies today at the very heart
of our predicament as a nation.
It is. Unless we find an answer, we won’t find an answer
to India-Pakistan-Bangladesh relations.
And this continuing contradiction is the legacy of
Partition?
Of course, it’s self-evident.
Let’s come to how your book will be received. Are
you worried that a biography of Jinnah that turns on
its head the received demonisation of the man, where
you concede that for a large part he was a nationalist
with admirable qualities, could bring down on your
head a storm of protest?
Firstly I’m not an academic. Sixty years down the line
someone else — an academic — should’ve done it. Then
I wouldn’t have persisted for five years. I’ve written
what I have researched and believed in. I have not
written to please — it’s a journey that I have undertaken,
as I explained myself, along with Mohd Ali Jinnah —
from his being an ambassador of Hindu-Muslim unity to
the Qaid-e-Azam of Pakistan
In a sense you were driven to write this book.
Indeed, I still search for answers. Having worked with
the responsibilities that I had, it is my duty to try and find
answers.
And your position is that if people don’t like the truth
as you see it — so be it, but you have to tell the truth
as you know it.
Well, so be it is your way of putting it, my dear Karan,
but how do I abandon my search, my yearning and what I
have found? If I’m wrong then somebody else should go
and do the research and prove me as wrong.
In other words, you are presenting what you believe is
the truth and you can’t hide it.
What else can I do, what else can I present?
In 2005, when L.K. Advani called Jinnah’s August 11,
1947 speech secular, he was forced to resign the
presidentship of the party. Are you worried that your
party might turn on you in a similar manner?
This is not a party document, and my party knows that I
have been working on this. I have mentioned this to Shri
Advani as also to others.
But are they aware of your views and the contents of
the book?
They can’t be aware unless they read it.
Are you worried that when they find out about your
views, and your analyses and your conclusion, they
might be embarrassed and angry?
No, they might disagree, that’s a different matter. Anger?
Why should there be anger about disagreement?
Can I put something to you?
Yes.
Mr. Advani in a sense suffered because he called
Jinnah secular. You have gone further, you have
compared him to the early Gandhi. And some would
say that Gandhi is found a little wanting in that
comparison. Will that inflame passions?
I don’t think Gandhi is found wanting. He was a different
person. They are two different personalities, each with
their characteristics, why should passions be inflamed?
Let a self-sufficient majority, 60 years down the line of
Independence, be able to stand up to what actually
happened pre-1947 and in 1947.
So what you are saying is that Gandhi and Jinnah
were different people, we must learn to accept that
both had good points.
Of course.
And both had weaknesses.
Of course. Gandhi himself calls Jinnah a Great Indian,
why don’t we recognise that? Why did he call him that?
He tells Mountbatten “give the Prime Ministership of
India to Jinnah.” Mountbatten scoffs at him, “Are you
joking?” He says: “No I’m serious, I’ll travel India and
convince India and carry this message.”
So if today’s Gandhians, reading the passages where
you compare between the two, come to the conclusion
that you are more of praise of Jinnah than of
Gandhi…
I don’t think I am. I am objective as far as human beings
have ability to be objective. As balanced as an author can
be.
As balanced as an author can be?
Indeed, indeed. How else can it be?
Your party has a Chintan Baithak starting in two
days time, does it worry you that at that occasion
some of your colleagues might stand up and say —
your views, your comments about Jinnah, your
comments about Gandhi and Nehru, have
embarrassed the BJP?
I don’t think so, I don’t think they will. Because in two
days time the book would not have been [read]. It’s
almost a 600-page book. Difficult to read 600 pages in
two days.
No one will have read the book by the time you go to
Shimla!
Yes (laughs).
But what about afterwards?
Well, we will deal with the afters when the afters come.
Let me raise two issues that could be a problem for
you. First of all, your sympathetic understanding of
Muslims left behind in India. You say they’re
abandoned, you say they are bereft, you say they
suffer from psychological insecurity. That’s not
normally a position leaders of the BJP take.
I think the BJP is misunderstood also in its attitude
towards the minorities. I don’t think it is so. Every
Muslim that lives in India is a loyal Indian and we must
treat them as so.
But you’re the first person from the BJP I have ever
heard say, “look into the eyes of Indian Muslims and
see the pain.” No one has ever spoken in such
sensitive terms about them before.
I’m born in a district, that is my home — we adjoin Sind,
it was not part of British India. We have lived with
Muslims and Islam for centuries. They are part…. In fact
in Jaisalmer, I don’t mind telling you, Muslims don’t eat
cow and the Rajputs don’t eat pig.
So your understanding of Indian Muslims and their
predicament is uniquely personal and you would
say…
Indeed, because I think what has happened is that we try
and treat this whole thing as if it’s an extension of the
image of the U.P. Muslim. Of course the U.P. [Muslim]
is… Pakistan is a step-child of U.P., in a sense.
The second issue that your book raises, which could
cause problems for you, is that at least theoretically,
at least intellectually, you accept that their could be,
although you hope their won’t be, further partitions.
Could that embarrass you?
No, I’m cautioning. I’m cautioning India, the Indian
leadership. I have said that I am not going to be a
politician all my life, or even a Member of Parliament.
But I do say this: we should learn from what we did
wrong, or didn’t do right, so that we don’t repeat the
mistakes.
In other words, this is — how shall I put it, a wake-up
call?
Wake-up? Shaking….
A shake-up call!
Yeah (smiles)
My last question. Critics in your party allege that you
are responsible for the party losing seats in
Rajasthan, they allege that you are responsible for
asking questions about the sanctity of Hindutva. Now,
after this book, have you fed your critics more
ammunition against yourself?
Time will tell (smiles)
But does it worry you?
Do I look worried? (smiles)
With that smile on your face, Mr. Jaswant Singh,
thank you very much…
Thank you very much.

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Quotes

November 1st, 2009

“We never ask the meaning of life
When we are in love.”

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“When there are no unnecessary thoughts in your mind Everyday is a good day.”
Ummon
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Zen and the art of love

November 1st, 2009

We are meant to live a life of love. When we’re not in love, something’s the matter. However, no matter how successful some are in other aspects of their lives, they don’t feel it’s possible to have the same success in love. They tell themselves to “be realistic.” Being realistic about relationships” is considered natural as we “grow up” and give up the fantasies, foolishness and dreams of childhood. But nothing could be further from natural. Being in love is the most mature and realistic thing you can do. It energizes your life, fills you with positivity, creates generosity and makes every moment beautiful. The body heals the heart is happy. The real question is, why aren’t we in love all the time? How can we learn to fall in love with all of life? The world of Zen is filled with guidance and practice that permits us to open our hearts, clear our minds, become present, be who we are and be able to discover the wonderful secret of falling in love with all of life. As a great Zen Master says, “When there are no unnecessary thoughts in your mind Everyday is a good day.” Ummon Here are some directions from the world of Zen. The following exercises, (based upon the Zen And The Art Of Falling In Love, ) will show us how to turn our lives upside down, clear away weeds in our gardens and be ready to feel love wherever we are. As Zen practice reminds us – “the entry point is right where you are.”

1) THE ONE RIGHT BESIDES YOU Most of the time we are searching and searching for the right person. Zen suggests that we stop running around seeking and see what is right in front of our eyes. Look at a person who is close to you right now – anyone it happens to be. Notice the ways in which you push him away. Stop doing that. Allow the two of you to be together in whatever way you are. Let all of it be fine just as it is. Do the same thing tomorrow with someone else. We dismiss so many people who are in our worlds, while waiting for the “right one” to appear. The more we can be “right” with everyone, the more we can open up to what is being offered now, the fuller and more joyous our lives will be.

2) PLAYING AT LOVE So many complain that they are not loved. The reason for this can be quite simple. They are so busy playing roles and games that the partner never gets to know who they really are. Notice what roles (or games) you play in relationships, and what roles you demand of others as well. See if you are in love with the person, or with the role he is playing right now. Turn this around for a little while. Try playing different roles. Try being with someone who plays roles you are not accustomed to. Now, become aware of the difference between who you are and the roles you play. Let the roles go and simply be who you are. Who we are is always loveable and beautiful. It’s the roles that get in the way.

3) LETTING HIM COME AND LETTING HIM GO One great obstacle in living a life of love is the tendency to hold on. We grasp and cling to each, preventing the freedom of love from arising on its own. When someone comes into your life (or day) practice letting him come. Welcome the person – whoever he is. Enjoy what it is he brings. When it is time for a person to go away, practice letting him go. Do not turn the person’s leaving into an experience of rejection, loss or abandonment. Realize that his leaving has nothing to do with you. It is simply time for him to go. Do this with yourself as well. Let yourself come and go freely in life, not tying yourself in unnecessary chains. The more we free others and ourselves, the more easily we fall in love.

4) PUTTING YOUR BAGGAGE DOWN Many feel that love is not possible unless all their demands are met. They can be quite amazed to discover that these demands don’t lead to happiness. They just may be obstacles to falling in love. Take a look at what you feel is absolutely necessary in relationships. Now look at it again. Realize this is baggage you are carrying that may be keeping all kinds of people and possibilities away. Not only that – this baggage can be making you fearful and rigid, not open to what is available for you. Let one of these demands subside. At first let it go for just one day and see how it feels to be without it. (Remember you can always take it back again). Now try another day. As we do this many times, we may find that that which we thought was crucial for our lives was really getting in the way. The more we do this the more light and happy we will feel. Not only that, but all kinds of new people, possibilities and situations we never noticed will start coming onto our path. We have made room for them by putting our baggage down.

5) GIVING GIFTS Giving and receiving are the essence of relationships. When we are in love this is never a problem. We naturally give and are happy with whatever is offered in return. To open up to falling in love, it is important to adopt this state of mind – start giving naturally. What gifts do you give others in relationships? Take a few moments and also see what you hope to receive in return. Now find something new you can give to somebody. Give it. Do this everyday. Each day give something else. It does not have to be fancy or expensive, just something that will add to his or her day. Then do this with all kinds of different people. Do it quietly without great fanfare and without expecting something in return. Then do this with yourself as well. Each day take a moment to find out what kind of gift you would like today. (Can be simple – a walk in the park, new lipstick, time with someone you care for.) Now give this to yourself each day. Although this exercise is simple, it is extremely powerful. Doing this daily in your relationship can turn everything around. When you give, remember not to look for anything in return (not even a smile or thank you). Just give to give, no expectations, no demands. By living with this open, generous mind, all kinds of other gifts come to you naturally.

6) MAKING FRIENDS WITH YOURSELF Many say they are lonely, even with a partner at their side. This is simply because they have not yet made friends with themselves. Once they make friends with themselves and are able to be who they are, it is impossible to be lonely anymore. Make friends with yourself. Spend time noticing who you are. Accept all parts of yourself. Stop judging and rejecting what is going on inside. Be still and look within. Pay attention to your breath and just notice what is going on. Let it be. Accept it, and return to the breathing. Understand that breath by breath, underneath the clamor, you are perfect just as you are. Can you choose to be this natural self in relationships? Can you choose to have relationships with those who want and appreciate just what you are?

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Hand Book for Health, Personality & Happiness

November 1st, 2009

Health:

1. Drink plenty of water.
2. Eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince and dinner like a beggar.
3. Eat more foods that grow on trees and plants and eat less food that is manufactured in plants.
4. Live with the 3 E’s — Energy, Enthusiasm, and Empathy.
5. Make time to practice meditation, yoga, and prayer.
6. Play more games.
7. Read more books than you did in 2008.
8. Sit in silence for at least 10 minutes each day.
9. Sleep for 7 hours.
10. Take a 10-30 minutes walk every day. And while you walk, smile please.

Personality:

11. Don’t compare your life to others’. You have no idea what their journey is all about.
12. Don’t have negative thoughts or things you cannot control. Instead invest your energy in the positive present moment.
13. Don’t over do. Keep your limits.
14. Don’t take yourself so seriously. No one else does.
15. Don’t waste your precious energy on gossip.
16. Dream more while you are awake.
17. Envy is a waste of time. You already have all you need.
18. Forget issues of the past. Don’t remind your partner with his/her mistakes of the past. That will ruin your present happiness.
19. Life is too short to waste time hating anyone. Don’t hate others.
20. Make peace with your past so it won’t spoil the present.
21. No one is in charge of your happiness except you.
22. Realize that life is a school and you are here to learn. Problems are simply part of the curriculum that appear and fade away like algebra class but the lessons you learn will last a lifetime.
23. Smile and laugh more.
24. You don’t have to win every argument. Agree to disagree.

Society:

25. Call your family often.
26. Each day give something good to others.
27. Forgive everyone for everything.
28. Spend time with people over the age of 70 & under the age of 6.
29. Try to make at least three people smile each day.
30. What other people think of you is none of your business.
31. Your job won’t take care of you when you are sick. Your friends will. Stay in touch.

Life:

32. Do the right thing!
33. Get rid of anything that isn’t useful, beautiful or joyful.
34. GOD heals everything.
35. However good or bad a situation is, it will change.
36. No matter how you feel, get up, dress up and show up.
37. The best is yet to come.
38. When you awake alive in the morning, thank GOD for it.
39. Your Inner most is always happy. So, be happy.

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