Tennessee: Court Rules Against Bible Classes In Public Schools (June 8, 2004)
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Alabama: No More Bibles In Public Schools (November 22, 2002)
Baseball And Philosophy is uniquely and enthusiastically recommended to the attention of two seemingly diverse readerships: baseball enthusiasts and philosophy students.
People familiar with the teaching of the Buddha will know that Johnson is, in fact, only reiterating the Four Noble Truths:
What we fail to realise is that we don’t really require bestsellers or Buddhism to accomplish this because at one level we all routinely and automatically do it without even thinking. Consider bread. It’s always there in the house and we almost regard it a permanent fixture, yet if its consumption is not monitored it’s going to finish and there won’t be fresh bread to eat. We’ve adapted to this change so thoroughly and perfectly that neither is there any sense of clinging or suffering involved nor some fancy esoteric path to be taken to overcome attachment to it.
If such an important lesson of existence can effortlessly be learnt from so humble and integral part of our lives as wheat, what stops us from incorporating the same sense of enjoyment in other forms of renewal and change? It’s simply this: houses, jobs, relationships and spouses are perceived as being incrementally harder to replace than bread. So it turns out that perception is the greatest enemy of freedom after all, and as soon as we learn that it too is not permanent either, the Middle Way comes naturally.
Living with one foot each in Indian and European cultures, I feel pained when I see my mother turn 89 in the hands of an Old Age Home nurses when she should be taken care of by loving family members. I feel equally pained when I see the campus of Santiniketan, where I live, littered with plastic bags and garbage without any of its highly educated members protesting and starting a cleaning drive. Both are shameful imbalances. If Indian family values prevailed, my mother would live in her own home in more comfort, and be in the care of an extended family. But that would have clipped my wings: I would have had to return to Germany. and would not have been able to do serve totally “alien” people of Indian society.
Traditional Indian ethos has a deeply idealistic strain. It begins with the Upanishads, continues with Buddhism and Jainism, flows into the Vaishnava mysticism of the Middle Ages and floods the writings of Mahatma Gandhi, Swami Vivekananda, Sri Aurobindo and Tagore. The herculean attempt to overcome a colonial ruler by non-violent means is inconceivable without such idealistic promptings. Much in the epics is imbued with such idealism, although Hindu mythology has very diverse strands, many of which are of an un-idealistic nature. Such idealism constitutes a spiritual and emotional energy which is manifest in the luminous face of the Buddha, in the eroticism of the Radha-Krishna narrative, in the countenance of Sri Ramakrishna. This same idealistic energy courses in the blood of young Indians too, although – alas! – it is rarely tapped for their own good and the good of society. But I’m optimistic that their idealism can give affirmative replies to my two questions.
This idealism is, in its very character, not adverse to modernism. Indeed, it operates above the pre-modern/modern duality by embracing everything that is noble and good. This idealism transcends family, rejects caste and other artificial dissections, and yearns for an ever-widening and more-embracing intellectual understanding and social convergence. It must be at the base of a congenially Indian modernity. Some modern age gurus have been preaching it in the West, thus translating this idealism into a Western social idiom. Unfortunately, such attempts have mostly failed. Either they preached a much-watered down version of Indian idealism to please their clientele, or they were unable to really strike roots in the souls of Western people.
Yet marginally, the New Man is visible at ashram communities in India – the laboratories of the fusion of old and new. This way of living together is ancient, yet flexible enough to adjust to new definitions of community life. The ashram describes the family ethos anew by broadening the definition of family and kinship. This fusion happens for example in the Pondicherry ashram and in Auroville as well as in Gandhian and Christian ashrams in India. The Santiniketan ashram, too, was meant to be an experiment of bringing pre-modern and modern India together under the guidance of an inspired poet. This answers my second question too. Obviously, such deeply Indian modernity would be the most appropriate merger of pre-modern and modern approaches to life. It will certainly preserve what is valuable and forward-looking in the Indian ethos, and at the same time absorb Western cultural characteristics wherever they complement the Indian ethos and can amalgamate with it.
Answer: An English princess with an Egyptian boyfriend crashes in a French tunnel, driving a German car with a Dutch engine, driven by a Belgian who was high on Scottish whiskey, followed closely by Italian Paparazzi, on Japanese motorcycles, treated by an American doctor, using Brazilian medicines! And this is sent to you by an Indian, using Bill Gates' technology, which he stole from the Japanese. And you are probably reading this on one of the IBM clones that use Philippine-made chips, and Korean made monitors, assembled by Bangladeshi workers in a Singapore plant, transported by lorries driven by Malaysians, hijacked by Indonesians and finally sold to you by a Chinese! That's Globalization!
“Corporate social responsibilities” made for each other I guess. I lack the verve to overlook the eminence of the mighty greased palms which enact and implement insidous policies. “The Cigarettes and other Tobacco Products (Prohibition of Advertisement and Regulation of Trade and Commerce, Production, Supply and Distribution) Act, 2003” enacted on May 18, 2004 managed to gain success in diversifying a whooping sum of Rs.2,500 million from advertising to surrogate advertising. Ladies and Gents please don’t be harsh to this pasta government by expecting a “Tobacco Cessation” drive because a disbursement of Rs.70 billion by way of excise (?) is a gargantuan figure to bloat a few Swiss bank accounts right. The fact that only tobacco and liquor giants skillfully manoeuvre policies & societies whimsically would be bigotry if we ignore the ostentatious efforts by cola giants, pharmas, PGA sponsors,et al.
Corporate coalitions possessing similar flamboyance not only ignore and ridicule gruesome realities inhabiting economies but also gnaw away at the efforts of Premjis, Gates, Chaudhuris, Bransons... Well this cataclysmic milieu has a greener side thanks to the dexterous efforts of the Tatas, an Indian conglomerate practicing & revolutionizing CSR since 1839-1904. Jamsetji Nusserwanji Tata, one of the greatest visionaries of industrial enterprise, who’s envisioned projects were adroitly brought to practical existence by his son Sir Dorabji Tata, the first chairman of Tata Enterprises. With the execution of “The Dorab Tata Charitable Trust” (which currently holds 63 per cent of the capital of the parent firm) he not only laid the official foundation of CSR in India but also sustained and multiplied his father’s legacies.
“Be sure to lay wide streets planted with shady trees, every other of a quick-growing variety. Be sure that there is plenty of space for lawns and gardens. Reserve large areas for football, hockey and parks. Earmark areas for Hindu temples, Mohammedan mosques and Christian churches” J N Tata in a letter to his eldest son Dorab about his vision for the township that eventually became Jamshedpur.
From the upliftment of women to ecology management, health services to economic development, community development initiatives to engineering industrial co-operatives and so on, the Tata Group has been dexterously contributing towards addressing imperative issues pertinent to India’s survival through its industrious corporate governance and ardent corporate citizenship. Since 1977, Tata Motors has been adopting villages as part of their community development activities, presently they nurture 22 villages tackling basic problems like water scarcity, curative and preventive services, unemployment, upliftment of women, recreation, etc. to promote and facilitate a healthy meaningful life. These efforts are carried out on principles of self help irrespective of losses. These initiatives are not undertaken for propaganda or visibility but for contentment and ardor by choice.
Hope this case motivates a few narcissistic corporate hustlers to atone for their immoral care with legacies they have mutilated, to make them realize that there’s a lot to eradicate and cure in this fragile world. Billions of rehabilitations, eradication of hunger, posse of Rodeo Bushes to trim...