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India gave to the world the days of the
week and their names. The names prevalent
in India like Ravivaar, Somvaar, Mangalvaar,
etc. were adopted by the west in the same
sequence and were directly translated to
other languages like English where you have
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, etc.
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Pandit Onkar Nath, the great musician, appealed
to all Gujarati young men as far back as
1949 to join RSS. When RSS workers needed
some money to liberate Dadra and Nagar Haveli,
Lata Mangeshkar gladly gave a charity performance
for them in Pune.
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Gandhi and Nehru objected to the decision
of the cabinet and insisted that Somnath
Temple should be reconstructed out of public
funds, not government funds, while in January
1948 they pressurised Sardar Patel to carry
on renovation of the mosques of Delhi at
government expense.
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The United States adopted ancient Indian
catamaran-making technology to construct
fast ships which were used with dramatic
effect in the Iraq war. Among the equipment
the Americans used to win the Iraq war were
100-feet catamaran ships to ferry tanks
and ammunition from Qatar to Kuwait. The
ships, built with technology adapted from
ancient Tamil methods to make catamarans,
can travel over 2,500 kms in less than 48
hours, twice the speed of the regular cargo
ships, and carry enough equipment to support
about 5,000 soldiers. Having a shallow draft,
the boats can unload in rudimentary ports,
allowing troops to land closer to the fight.
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Researchers believe Sanskrit and computers
are a perfect fit. In 1985, Rick Briggs,
a researcher for NASA, published a paper
on the potential uses of Sanskrit as a machine
language. Natural languages are basically
too imprecise for use as machine languages,
thus programmers have been forced to create
artificial languages. However, Briggs hailed
Sanskrit as an exception. "Among the accomplishments
of the [Sanskrit] grammarians can be reckoned
a method for paraphrasing Sanskrit in a
manner that is identical not only in essence
but in form with current work in Artificial
Intelligence. A natural language can serve
as an artificial language also, and that
much work in AI has been reinventing a wheel
millennia old."
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Christmas is not the celebration of the
birth date of Christ. Different researchers
place different dates for the birth of Christ
but there is virtual agreement among scholars
that December 25th is not the birth date
of Jesus Christ, but an annual pagan festival
celebrated in honor of the sun which was
too deeply entrenched in popular custom
to be set aside by Christian influence.
The pagan festival with it's riot and merrymaking
was so popular that Christians were glad
of an excuse to continue its celebration
with little change in spirit and in manner.
During the first three centuries we find
no trace of any feast for the birth of Christ.
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An intensive research conducted by Zenab
Banu of Gujarat on the cause and effect
of communal riots since 18th century (which
was a topic of her Ph.D. thesis), wherein
she had analyzed and documented major Hindu-Muslim
riots spread over 250 years, shows that
in over 95 % cases the riots were initiated
by Muslims. Her thesis has been published
in a book entitled 'Politics of Communalism'
(1978).
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There are fifty-seven nations in the Organisation
of the Islamic Conference (OIC). Not one
is yet a democracy.
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Maulana Abdul Kalam Azad, a so-called 'liberal'
and 'secular' Muslim, led a campaign against
'Vande Maataram' on the grounds that it
was 'anti-Islamic'. He had opposed the partition
of India and Jawaharlal Nehru was quick
to declare him 'a great nationalist leader',
but the Maulana in his book "India Wins
Freedom" has discussed the reason for his
opposition. He was of the opinion that the
creation of a separate Muslim state would
divide the Muslim population and India would
have fewer number of Muslims, thus dealing
a blow to the process of Islamization of
India, hence the opposition.
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The last rites of Mahatma Gandhi, Pt. Jawaharlal
Nehru, Dr. Rajendra Prasad and Smt. Indira
Gandhi were accompanied by renderings from
the Bhagwad Geeta, the Quran and religious
books of other religions; but the final
rites of Dr. Zakir Hussain, Maulana Abdul
Kalam Azad and Fakhruddin Ali Ahmad had
renderings only from the Quran.
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In 1950, the then Maharaja of Indore, Yashwant
Rao Holkar, wanted his son Richard, born
of his American wife, to succeed him as
the ruler of Indore. However, the then Prime
Minister Jawaharlal Nehru (along with Sardar
Patel and Rajendra Prasad) objected, making
it clear that the son of his foreign wife
could not succeed him. Nehru couldn't allow
foreign blood even as a powerless Maharaja
to inherit a title, let alone power!
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St. Francis Xavier, after whom many educational
institutions are named in India, feverishly
declared, "When I have finished baptising
the people, I order them to destory the
huts in which they keep their idols; and
I have them break the statues of their idols
into tiny pieces, since they are now Christians.
I could never come to an end describing
to you the great consolation which fills
my soul when I see idols being destroyed
by the hands of those who had been idolaters,"
(from The Letters and Instructions of Francis
Xavier, 1993, pp 117-8).
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In 2002, Karnataka State received Rs.72
crores as revenue from temples, returned
Rs.10 crores for temple maintenance, and
granted Rs.50 crores for madrasas and Rs.10
crores for churches. (Daily Pioneer, October
7, 2003.)
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After partition, when the Maharaja of Kashmir
was harbouring the idea of retaining Kashmir
as an independent kingdom, Sardar Vallabhbhai
Patel had sent Guru Golwalkar of the RSS
to convince the Maharaja to join India.
After discussions with Guruji, the Maharaja
was convinced and agreed to sign the Instrument
of Accession to India.
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During the China war in 1962, the Swayamsevaks
of the RSS swung into action mobilising
support to the governmental measures in
general and to the jawans in particular.
Pandit Nehru was so impressed that he invited
a Sangh contingent to take part in the Republic
Day Parade of 26th January 1963. When, later
on, some Congressmen raised their eyebrows
over the invitation to Sangh, Pandit Nehru
brushed aside the objections saying that
all patriotic citizens had been invited
to join the parade.
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When the Europeans newly arrived in America
in 1492, they took the natives to be devils
and for about forty years it was legal to
hunt down the natives like animals. It was
only in 1530 A.D. that the Pope relented
and declared that American Indians were
human!
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The concept of Reiki originated in India,
but it was rediscovered by Dr. Mikao Usui
in Japan in the late 19th century. Dr. Usui
was a Shingon Buddhist priest and a physician.
He read about an ancient healing art in
an 1100 year old Buddhist Manuscript and
made a brief synthesis of the essence of
this seven level Tantric teaching as Reiki.
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In 1895, eight years before the Wright brothers
flew their first plane, Shivkar Bapuji Talpade
and his wife gave a thrilling demonstration
flight on the Chowpatty beach in Mumbai.
Mr. Talpade, an erudite Sanskrit scholar,
constructed his aeroplane named 'Marutsakha'
based on the description of Vimanas available
in the Vedas.
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The theory of the Ion Engine has been credited
to Robert Goddard, long recognized as the
father of Liquid-fuel Rocketry. It is claimed
that in 1906, long before Goddard launched
his first modern rocket, his imagination
had conceived the idea of an Ion rocket.
However, Shivkar Bapuji Talpade used an
Ion Engine to take his plane to a height
of 1500 ft. in 1895, many years before Goddard.
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A glass-like material which cannot be detected
by radar has been developed by Prof Dongre,
a research scholar of Benaras Hindu University,
based on technology found in an ancient
Sanskrit text, Vaimanika Shastra. A plane
coated with this unique material cannot
be detected using radar.
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Only a few years ago, the Chinese discovered
some Sanskrit documents in Lhasa, Tibet
and sent them to the University of Chandigarh
to be translated. Dr. Ruth Reyna of the
university said that the documents contain
directions for building interstellar spaceships!
The Chinese announced that they were including
certain parts of the documents for study
in their space program.
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When the city of Mohenjodaro was excavated
by archaeologists, they found skeletons
just lying in the streets, some of them
holding hands, as if some great doom had
suddenly overtaken them. These skeletons
are among the most radioactive ever found,
on a par with those found at Hiroshima and
Nagasaki. Ancient cities whose brick and
stonewalls have literally been vitrified,
that is-fused together, can be found in
India, Ireland, Scotland, France, Turkey
and other places. There is no logical explanation
for the vitrification of stone forts and
cities, except from an atomic blast.
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The shrouded Qaabaa at Mecca, the holiest
shrine for all Muslims of the world, was
once a temple containing 360 different deities
which were the object of reverence and worship.
Acting upon the orders of Allah, the almighty,
Prophet Mohammed waged a jihad or holy war
against the worshippers of these deities
to gain control over Mecca, after which
he destroyed the icons and slaughtered the
idolaters.
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Neem, turmeric, jamun and cow's urine, traditionally
used for medicinal purposes in India, have
been patented in the United States.
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The Puranas speak of the creation and destruction
of the universe in cycles of 8.64 billion
years, that is quite close to currently
accepted value regarding the time of the
big bang.
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Indian astronomer, Brahmagupta, estimated
in the 7th century that the circumference
of the earth was 5000 yojanas. A yojana
is around 7.2 kms. Calculating on this basis
we see that the estimate of 36,000 kms as
the earth's circumference comes quite close
to the actual circumference known today.
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Indian astronomer, Aryabhatta was the first
to have propounded the theory that the earth
was a sphere in the 5th century.
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One of the greatest scientists of the 20th
century, Erwin Schrodinger, was directly
inspired by Vedanta in his creation of quantum
mechanics, a theory at the basis of all
our advances in chemistry, biochemistry,
electronics, and computers.
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The Purusha Hymn of the Rigveda says that
the mind is born of the moon. Recently,
by research on volunteers, who stayed in
underground caves for months without any
watches or other cues about time, it was
found that the natural cycle for the mind
is 24 hours and 50 minutes. The period of
the moon is also 24 hours and 50 minutes.
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The Nalanda University once housed 9 million
books. It was the centre of education for
scholars from all over Asia. Many Greek,
Persian and Chinese students studied here.
The university was burnt down by pillaging
Muslim invaders who overran India in the
11th century.
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The Arabs borrowed so much from India in
the field of mathematics that even the subject
of mathematics in Arabic came to known as
Hindsa which means 'from India' and a mathematician
or engineer in Arabic is called Muhandis
which means 'an expert in Mathematics'.
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The Gumbaz that we see on mosques all over
the world originated as the interlocking
dome in the Stupa of the Buddhist architectural
tradition of India.
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Those communities among the Hindus who are
called Bhangi, Mehtar, Chookad, Hela, Valmik
or Halaal Khor, etc. are actually descendants
of brave Kshatriyas, who, inspite of many
atrocities by tyrannical Muslim rulers,
had refused to accept conversion to Islam.
The Muslim tyrants, with a view to humiliate
them to such an extent that they would forsake
their faith and accept Islam, forced them
into the work of carrying the night soil
of the begums, keeps, relations, courtiers,
etc.
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The Gypsies migrated from India to the west
many centuries ago. They speak a language
called Romany which has many common words
with Indian languages and their religion
is a modified form of early Hinduism. They
seem to have been the Banjara nomads who
are still found in India.
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Christianity reached India sometime in the
5th century when a group of Nestorian Christians
landed in Malabar for trading purposes and
settled down in India. They are known as
Syrian Christians and during 1500 years
were never once persecuted by the Hindus.
Oddly enough the first persecution these
peace-loving Christians had to suffer was
at the hands of Roman Catholic missionaries
in India, who continuously coerced them
to pass under the domination of the Pope.
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The oral tradition of Vedic chanting has
been declared an intangible heritage of
humanity by UNESCO. In a meeting of jury
members on November 7, 2003, at Paris, Mr.
Koichiro Matsuura, Director-General of UNESCO,
declared the chanting of Vedas in India
an outstanding example of heritage and form
of cultural expressions. The proclamation
says that in the age of globalization and
modernization when cultural diversity is
under pressure, the preservation of oral
tradition of Vedic chanting, a unique cultural
heritage, has great significance.
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When the World Parliament of Religions passed
a resolution a few years ago proclaiming
that all religions were various pathways
to One Ultimate Reality and called for unity
and brotherhood of all religions, the Vatican
came out with a prompt rejection of the
view and emphatically proclaimed that Roman
Catholicism was the only true religion and
others could not be accepted to be true.
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Swatantryaveer Savarkar was the first Indian
political leader to call for Swadeshi, and
the first Indian leader who publicly performed
a bonfire of foreign clothes (1906). (many
years before Gandhiji).
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In a recent report, UNESCO pointed out that
out of 128 countries where Jews lived before
Israel was created in 1948, only one, India,
did not persecute them and allowed them
to prosper and practice Judaism in peace.
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In Goa neither the Shariat nor the Hindu
Code applies. To this day the common Portuguese
Civil Code applies.
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The Andaman and Nicobar islands were the
first part of India to become free from
the British rule. In 1943 the Indian National
Army freed these islands and renamed them
as Swaraj and Shaheed islands.
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Sardar Patel, Swantantryaveer Savarkar and
Dr.B.R.Ambedkar had asked Nehru to protest
against the Chinese invasion of Tibet. They
had warned Nehru that China's take over
of Tibet would destroy the only buffer state
between China and India and would threaten
the Indian borders. The 1962 Chinese attack
proved their fears to be correct.
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'Hindu Kush' means Hindu slaughter. The
Indian name for Hindu Kush mountain range
was 'Paariyaatra Parvat'. Until 1000 A.D.
the area of Hindu Kush was a full part of
Hindu cradle. The name 'Hindu Kush' was
given by the muslim conquerors indicating
the Hindu genocide that took place in this
region.
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Gandhiji's ashes were immersed in all the
major rivers of the world like Nile, Volga,
Thames, etc. except the Indus in Pakistan.
The Pakistan government refused to immerse
his ashes in the Indus, saying they didn't
want to pollute it with the ashes of a kafir.
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Nathuram Godse's ashes are kept in an urn
in his brother Gopal Godse's house. It was
his dying wish that his ashes be immersed
in the river Indus when India stands undivided
again. " The percentage of Hindus in Pakistan
and Bangladesh after partition in 1947 was
17 and 25 respectively. Today their percentage
is almost nil in Pakistan and 10.5 in Bangladesh.
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The so called Akbar, The Great - whose rule
is said to have been secular and tolerant
of the Hindu faith - had a victory tower
erected with the heads of the captured and
surrendered army of Hemu after the second
battle of Panipat. Later, Akbar again slaughtered
more than 30,000 unarmed captive Hindu peasants
after the fall of Chittod on February 24,
1568.
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Islam is the fastest growing religion in
the world and also in North America.
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The original name for 'Lahore' is 'Lavapura'
and for Kusoor is 'Kushpura'. These cities
were originally founded by Lava and Kush,
respectively.
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Chess originated in India. It was known
to Indians as Chaturnaga. It was taken to
Persia in the sixth century where it came
to be known as Chatrang, which according
to the Arabic phonetic system became Shatranj.
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The Sanskrit term 'Yogakshema' in the Rigveda
meant some kind of insurance, which was
practised by the Aryans in India nearly
5000 years ago. Manu, the ancient lawgiver,
enjoined that a special charge be made on
goods carried from one town to another,
to ensure their safe carriage until handed
over to the consignee at destination.
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According to official figures, 28,825,000
Indians starved to death between 1854 and
1901. The authority's carelessness and lack
of foresight accentuated the misery caused
by famines.
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The World's first university was established
in Takshila in 700 BC. More than 10,500
students from all over the world studied
more than 60 subjects. The campus accommodated
10,500 students who came from as far as
Babylonia, Greece, Syria, Arabia, and China
and offered over sixty different courses
in various fields, such as science, mathematics,
medicine, politics, warfare, astrology,
astronomy, music, religion, and philosophy.
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The Grand Anicut, Kallanai, located on Cauvery
River in Tamil Nadu, is the oldest dam in
the world that is still in use today. This
masonry dam was built in the 2nd century
by Chola king Karikalan. It was remodeled
and fitted with sluice gates in 1899-1902.
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Christianity always associated bathing with
vulgarity, lascivious thoughts and bathing
in public baths, rivers and lakes, even
during summer months, as sinful. St. Agnes
never took a bath. St. Marget never washed
herself. Pope Clement III issued an edict
forbidding bathing or even wetting once
face on Sunday. Since 18th century nuns
were asked to take bath with their robes
on. In 1736, in Baden, Germany the authorities
issued a warning to students against the
vulgar, dangerous and shocking practice
of bathing.
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Baudhayana gave the 'Pythagoras theorem'
centuries before the Greeks in 800 BC.
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Pingala (400 BC) invented the binary number
system which is the basic of computer operations.
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Pakistan proudly mentions the great Sanskrit
grammarian Panini, who was born at Shalatula
near Attock in the North West Frontier Province
of Pakistan some time between the 7th and
the 4th centuries B.C., as its national
hero. Many postal stamps sport Panini's
pictures.
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The Caspian sea, which in Vedic times was
called Kasyapa Mira, has got its name from
Rishi Kashyap.
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USA based IEEE has proved what has been
a century old suspicion in the world scientific
community that the pioneer of wireless communication
was Prof. Jagdeesh Bose and not Marconi.
http://www.indpride.com/didyouknow.html
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