Experience reading like never before
Sign in to continue reading.
"It was a wonderful experience interacting with you and appreciate the way you have planned and executed the whole publication process within the agreed timelines.”
Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalSATYA SHRI: He is the founder of 'Ek Samaj', a religio-social organisation nurturing Hinduism as an organised religion with its 11 postulates emanating from 'Brahmajnana', deemed a scripture encapsulating true essence of the Vedas, Upanishads, Bhagvadgita, Ramayana, Mahabharata and various saints' treatises. It disseminates scripture in the vernacular to all, recognising no intermediary for communion with God, for which ‘nishkam sewa’ is ordained as the most divine path. 'Ek Samaj' worships the monotheistic formless Brahm in congregation as each member vows to adopt tRead More...
SATYA SHRI: He is the founder of 'Ek Samaj', a religio-social organisation nurturing Hinduism as an organised religion with its 11 postulates emanating from 'Brahmajnana', deemed a scripture encapsulating true essence of the Vedas, Upanishads, Bhagvadgita, Ramayana, Mahabharata and various saints' treatises. It disseminates scripture in the vernacular to all, recognising no intermediary for communion with God, for which ‘nishkam sewa’ is ordained as the most divine path.
'Ek Samaj' worships the monotheistic formless Brahm in congregation as each member vows to adopt the 'five essentials' while treating the '13 excrescences' as repugnant to the faith. It recognises that lack of shaastra (scripture) and shastra (arms) among all caused invidious varna distinctions and prevented fostering of equality and brotherhood among its ranks. As it celebrates the 'annihilation of castes', it mandates five social obligations upon all in the service of the Lord so as to bestow a dignified life to self and future generations.
Read Less...
There is nothing more miserable than to feel that emancipation is in the air and yet suffer the slavery of a mistaken idea.
The author seeks to re-invent Hinduism by bringing to the fore its most fundamental postulates as:
1. Worship of the monotheistic formless Brahm.
2. God-realisation through Nishkam Sewa (selfless service).
There is nothing more miserable than to feel that emancipation is in the air and yet suffer the slavery of a mistaken idea.
The author seeks to re-invent Hinduism by bringing to the fore its most fundamental postulates as:
1. Worship of the monotheistic formless Brahm.
2. God-realisation through Nishkam Sewa (selfless service).
3. Social equality and brotherhood (vasudhaiva kutumbakam).
4. Self-realisation through Jnana Yoga, Karma Yoga and Bhakti Yoga.
5. Salvation through worldly life of Purushaarth (Dharm, Arth, Kaam, Moksha).
'EK Samaj' repudiates the following attributes as excrescences and repugnant to the faith:
1. Mixing philosophy and religion made Hinduism an unorganised religion.
2. Worshipping numerous deities and limiting religious service to mere darshan of the idols fragmented Hinduism.
3. Hereditary priesthood, as permanent intermediaries for communion with God, polluted the religion.
4. Occupational ‘purity’ and ‘pollution’ camouflaged iniquitous social divisions.
5. Individual instead of congregational worship smothered Hindu brotherhood.
6. Pretensions of attaining Siddhis through ‘meditation and penances’ eulogised.
7. Escapism in worldly renunciation honoured.
8. Fatalist karma theory made Hindus pessimistic and other-worldly.
9. Transmigration, reincarnation, 84-lakh births used as props for gradation of castes.
10. Acceptance of Ahimsa made Hindus a doormat for the ruthless barbarians.
11. Karma kand and Mantra, Tantra, Yantra etc. justified as the sole religious expressions.
12. Lack of proselytisation prevented Hinduism from becoming a world religion.
13. Devdasi tradition made temples the venues of entertainment and recreation.
‘Religion is a tool in the hands of the oppressor against the oppressed solely because he frames the commandments and calls them the God’s’, is an apt description of the Hindu social order.
The book rips open the raw nerve of Hinduism—its invidious castes, positioned as a ‘God-ordained’ institution, commandeered by its freebooter priestly class while clandestinely establishing its reli
‘Religion is a tool in the hands of the oppressor against the oppressed solely because he frames the commandments and calls them the God’s’, is an apt description of the Hindu social order.
The book rips open the raw nerve of Hinduism—its invidious castes, positioned as a ‘God-ordained’ institution, commandeered by its freebooter priestly class while clandestinely establishing its religious, social and political hegemony through interpolation of its pristine and effulgent scriptures.
The author boldly analyses this imbroglio through a microscopic analysis of these and more related issues:
How priests controlled the Hindu religious, social, educational and political apparatus?
How the dominant priestly class fractured the society into mutually antagonistic subordinated hierarchical segments, and ruled it by reserving all elite jobs for itself?
How the fiendish priesthood emasculated shudras by depriving them of the ‘shaastra and shastra’ (education and arms) and made them permanent ‘village servant classes’?
How the pretensions of attaining siddhis through 'meditation and penances' established priests as the ‘gods on earth’ for their assertions of ‘purity and effulgence’?
How ‘karma’, ‘reincarnation’ and ‘84-lakhs births’ theories were devised to justify fatalism and hierarchical gradation of varnas?
Can India be rightfully called the ‘vishvaguru’ and the mother of all civilisations?
How Buddhism effeminated Hindus and made them the doormats for the ruthless?
Why Hindus had to abandon their own, to adop foreign institutions of governance?
Why Hinduism should become a universal and proselytising faith and fight demographic challenges posed by Islam and Christianity?
Are you sure you want to close this?
You might lose all unsaved changes.
The items in your Cart will be deleted, click ok to proceed.