|
|
September 2007
|
ARYA SAMAJ OF NEW JERSEY, INC
113 Cottage Place, Ridgewood, New Jersey 07450 www.aryasamajofnj.com
Registered Tax Exempt Non-Profit
Religious Organization
IRS ID# 22-2537355
Krinvanto Vishwam Aryan
|
|
|
Namaste.
I am sure you
all had a good summer. The education activities at the Samaj have
resumed and this was reflected in the increased attendance during the
last Havan held on September 9th.
There are few
things I wish to update everyone on.
Classes have
started and the curriculum will be mailed soon. The success of these
classes depends on children’s active participation and punctuality.
I urge the parents to bring in the children on time for the classes.
We humans are result oriented. Please help make this endeavor a
success. Any suggestions for the improvement of the program are
welcome.
Practices for
the upcoming Diwali function will start this Sunday. The function will
be on Oct 28th at Benjamin Franklin Middle School from 3 to
6pm.
Two-day camp was
organized at Om Temple, on July 14th and 15th as a joint
venture of ASNJ and ASGS and was very successful. Over 75 people
participated. Discussions were held on variety of topics and everyone
enjoyed the food and entertainment. We hope to make it even better
next time.
Please note that
the Havan is regularly held on 2nd and 4th
Sundays with a couple of exceptions for special events such as Arya
Maha Sammelan and our annual functions.
Please send me
your suggestions any time. My Email is rameshamita@gmail.com
With kind
regards to all
Ramesh
Gupta
________________________
Swami
Dayananda Saraswati
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Swami Dayananda Saraswati
(1824 - 1883)
was an important Hindu
religious scholar born in Gujarat,
India.
He is best known as the founder of the Arya Samaj "Society of
Nobles", a great Hindu reform movement, founded in 1875.
He was a sanyasi
(one who has renounced all worldly possessions and relations) from his
boyhood. He was an original scholar, who believed in the infallible
authority of the Vedas.
Dayananda advocated the doctrine of karma,
skepticism in dogma, and emphasised the ideals of brahmacharya
(celibacy and devotion to God). The Theosophical Society and the Arya
Samaj were united for a certain time under the name Theosophical
Society of the Arya Samaj.
Swami Dayananda's creation, the Arya
Samaj, is a unique component in Hinduism. The Arya Samaj unequivocally
condemns idol-worship, animal sacrifices, ancestor worship,
pilgrimages, priestcraft, offerings made in temples, the caste system,
untouchability, child marriages and discrimination against women on
the grounds that all these lacked Vedic sanction. The Arya Samaj
discourages dogma and symbolism and encourages skepticism in beliefs
that run contrary to common sense and logic. To many people, the Arya
Samaj aims to be a "universal church" based on the authority
of the Vedas.
Among Swami Dayananda's immense
contributions is his championing of the equal rights of women - such
as their right to education and reading of Indian scriptures - and his
translation of the Vedas from Sanskrit to Hindi so that the common man
may be able to read the Vedas. The Arya Samaj is rare in Hinduism in
its acceptance of women as leaders in prayer meetings and preaching.
Dayananda starting questioning
traditional beliefs of Hinduism and inquiring about God in early
childhood. Still a young child on the night of Shivratri (literally:
the night for God Shiva)when
his family went to a temple for overnight worship, he stayed up
waiting for God to appear to accept the offerings made to idol of God
Shiva. While all else slept, Dayananda saw mice eating the offerings
kept for the God. He was utterly surprised and wondered how a God, who
cannot even protect his own "offerings", would protect
humanity. He argued with his father that they should not be
worshipping such a helpless God. He started pondering over the meaning
of life and death and started asking questions, which worried his
parents. His parents decided to marry him off in his early teens
(common in 19th century India), but he decided marriage was not for
him and ran away from home. He was disillusioned with classical
Hinduism and became a wandering monk. He learned Panini's Grammar to
understand Sanskrit texts. After wandering in search of guidance for
over 2 decades, he found Swami Virjananda near Mathura
who became his guru and told him to throw away all his books in the
river and focus on the Vedas. Dayananda stayed under Swami
Virjananda's tutelage for two and a half years. After finishing his
education, Virjananda asked him to spread the concepts of Vedas in
society as his gurudakshina ("tuition-dues").
Dayananda set about the difficult task
with dedication despite attempts on his life. He traveled the country
challenging religious scholars and priests of the day to discussions
and won repeatedly on the strength of his arguments. He believed that
Hinduism has been corrupted by divergence from the founding principles
of the Vedas and misled by the priesthood for the priests' self-aggrandisement.
Hindu priests discouraged common folk from reading Vedic scriptures
and encouraged rituals (such as bathing in the Ganges and feeding of
priests on anniversaries) which Dayananda pronounced as superstitions
or self-serving.
Dayananda's ideas cost him his life. He
was poisoned in 1883 while a guest of the Maharaja of Jodhpur. On his
deathbed, he forgave his poisoner, the Maharaja's cook, and actually
gave him money to flee the king's wrath.
Far from borrowing concepts from other
religions, as Raja Ram
Mohan Roy had done, Swami Dayananda was quite critical of Islam
and Christianity
as may be seen in his book Satyartha
Prakash. He was against what he considered to be the
corruption of the pure faith in his own country. Unlike many other
reform movements within Hinduism, the Arya Samaj's appeal was
addressed not only to the educated few in India, but to the world as a
whole as evidenced in the 6th principle of the Arya Samaj. Arya Samaj
is a rare stream in Hinduism that allows and encourages converts to
Hinduism.
Dayananda’s concept of Dharma
is succinctly set forth in his Beliefs and Disbeliefs. He said,
"I accept as Dharma whatever is in full conformity with impartial
justice, truthfulness and the like; that which is not opposed to the
teachings of God as embodied in the Vedas. Whatever is not free from
partiality and is unjust, partaking of untruth and the like, and
opposed to the teachings of God as embodied in the Vedas - that I hold
as adharma." Again he says "He, who after careful thinking,
is ever ready to accept truth and reject falsehood; who counts the
happiness of others as he does that of his own self, him I call
just."
He was the among the first great Indian
stalwarts who popularised the concept of Swaraj - right to
self-determination vested in an individual, when India was ruled by
the British. His philosophy inspired nationalists in the mutiny of
1857 (a fact that is less known) as well as champions such as Lala
Lajpat Rai and Bhagat
Singh. Dayananda's Vedic message was to emphasize respect and
reverence for other human beings, supported by the Vedic notion of the
divine nature of the individual - divine because the body was the
temple where the human essence(soul or "Atma") could
possibly interface with the creator ("ParamAtma"). In the 10
priniciples of the Arya
Samaj, he enshrined the idea that "All actions should be
performed with the prime objective of benefitting mankind" as
opposed to following dogmatic rituals or revering idols and symbols.
In his own life, he interpreted Moksha
to be a lower calling (due to its benefit to one individual) than the
calling to emancipate others.
Dayananda's back-to-the-Vedas message
influenced many thinkers. Taking the cue from him, Sri
Aurobindo decided to look for hidden psychological meanings in the
Vedas [1].
Sri
Aurobindo Ashram, Pondicherry.
1972.
Dayananda and the Arya Samaj provide
the ideological underpinnings of the Hindutva
movement of the 20th century, Ruthven (2007:108) regards his
"elevation of the Vedas to the sum of human knowledge, along with
his myth of the Aryavartic kings" as religious
fundamentalism, but considers its consequences as nationalistic,
since "Hindutva secularizes Hinduism by sacralizing the
nation".
________________________
Upcoming
Events:
September 22:
Arya Samaj is setting up a Booth at the Dushahra
Festival to be celebrated in Lake Pappini Park, Across
Edison City Hall, Edison, NJ On Saturday, September
22, 2007 (Rain date: September 29, 2007) from 1 p.m.
to 9 p.m.
This Festival has been drawing over 10,000 people last
few years. Arya Samaj will use this occassion to hang
Samaj Banner and distribute a two page printed
pamphalet describing Arya Samaj origin, principles,
philosophy and activities to introduce Arya Samaj to
general public.
We will also provide a list of Araya Samaj locations
in the U.S., and sell religious books.
Birendra Kumar will host this booth and plan to offer
an attractive booklet on Gita poems free of charge to
all Arya Samaj Booth visitors. Mr. Kumar needs and is
inviting volunteers to man the booth. Please contact
him at (201) 447-5264.
Oct
28:
Annual
Diwali program of ASNJ
to be held on Oct 28th at Benjamin Franklin middle school
in ridgewood ( next to valley hospital ) at 3 pm. Tea
and snacks will be available. Those who intend to choreograph and
present the programs please give the details of your item/items
to Mrs Sangeeta Sobti (email
: sangeetasobti@yahoo.com). Program
will be followed by catered dinner around 6 pm.
|