Gautam Buddha gave his first sermon on Guru Purnima: A look at some of his teachings and quotes – Times Now

Gautam Buddha gave his first sermon on Guru Purnima: A look at some of his teachings and quotes 

Guru Purnima, a day meant for paying an ode to teachers and mentors in India, is observed on the Purnima Tithi (full Moon night) in the month of Ashadha as per the Purnimant calendar. This year, Guru Purnima, which also marks the birth anniversary of sage Veda Vyasa, will be celebrated on July 5. Interestingly, Guru Purnima is also a significant day for followers of Buddhism. Read on to know why the festival is of great relevance to the Buddhists.

Gautama Buddha is believed to have given his first sermon at Sarnath after attaining enlightenment in Bodh Gaya. It is said that Lord Buddha travelled from Bodh Gaya to Sarnath five weeks after getting enlightened.

Buddha's five ascetic disciples, known asPanchavargika, had moved to ipatana (Rishipatana) in Sarnath even when Gautama Buddha was in Uruvilva (Bodh Gaya). After attaining enlightenment, Buddha marched towards Sarnath to give his first sermon to thePanchavargika. And since he delivered his first sermon,Dharmachakrapravartana Sutta, on the day of Ashadha Purnima, it is significant for the Buddhists.

Dharmachakrapravartana Suttaalso referred to as the wheel ofDharmaconsists of the following:

Four Noble truths- Dukkha (sufferings), Tanha (desire), Nirodha (renouncement) and Magga (the path to enlightenment)

Ariya Ahagika Magga- right view, right resolve, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness and right samadhi.

On Guru Purnima day, Buddhists perform the Uposatha, a spiritual ritual that results in the cleansing of the impure mind. They also pay ode to their Gurus on this auspicious day.

Lord Buddha, the founder of the Buddhist religion, was formerly known as Siddhartha Gautama. He was born to King Suddhodana of the aristocratic Shakya clan and his Queen Mayadevi in Lumbini on the Purnima Tithi (full Moon night) in the month of Vaishakh. Incidentally, it is also on the same day, many years later, that Siddhartha attained enlightenment while meditating under a Peepal (Banyan) tree to become Buddha.

Interestingly, despite being born into a royal family with all the comforts and luxuries, Siddhartha chose to abandon mundane life. He stepped out of his palace in search of truth, and after performing penance for years, he attained knowledge that transcended the material world.

Here's wishing one and all a very happy Guru Purnima.

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Gautam Buddha gave his first sermon on Guru Purnima: A look at some of his teachings and quotes - Times Now

Religion and mysticism in juxtaposition, by Kola Oyefeso – – The Eagle Online

The promise was to clearly define what true born again means and to do justice to the matter, it becomes compelling to bring in Mysticism although the acceptable word is Spirituality. When we hear mysticism, the biased fickle minds are wont to conjure some sort of voodoo, occult practices, sorcerers, all kinds of magical incantations, spells and conjurations. This is how poorly mysticism has been misunderstood and badly imagined to be.

Because of this, some are so scared stiff of any assembly that has no faade of a religion. We would rather label some mystical schools such as the Rosicrucian, Grail message, Freemasonry, Theosophy, Bhagavad Gita, Yoga, Vedic, Taoism, Pateniali, Christian Science and a host of others as secret societies.

We condemn their practitioners, yet all the aforementioned sects allow people to be members and opt out, if one is not pleased with their modes of worship. Instead of satisfying our inquisition by taking the bold step of a peep into these sects and ascertain by firsthand experience what those sects stand for, we were clay-footed and in lieu we chose to be judgmental in condemning them as secret societies.

The definition of a secret society itself is very subjective. Any grouping that allows membership with freedom to pull out if dissatisfied cannot really be adjudged as a secret society. Private-membership organisations are not the same with secret societies or cultism.

The secret societies essentially are those that one must be a member as long as one lives, whether one is disillusioned with the sect or not. We wouldnt advice anyone to venture into such darkness and devilish groupings.

The word secret itself is a controversial one. There is a tinge of secrecy or privacy in virtually everything we engage in, be it in the family, associations, businesses and social engagements. Anything that restricts fellow beings in the manner we issue invitation to guests and debar others from participating or partaking in our affairs could be labeled as a secret event. But it could be argued that not all such settings are secret per se, private perhaps.

Jesus Himself could be accused of having secrecy among his disciples because when he goes out to preach he speaks proverbially and at times, the direct disciples often didnt understand him.

It got to a head that at one time Jesus was challenged as to why they dont understand him when he speaks in public. For effects, Matthew 13 vs 10, 13 and 17 are quoted to wit:

Verse 10: AND JESUS WAS ASKED WHY SPEAKETH TO THEM IN PARABLES?

Verse 11: AND JESUS ANSWERED,BECAUSE IT IS GIVEN TO YOU TO KNOW THE SECRET BEHIND THE KINGDOM OF GOD, BUT TO THEM IT IS NOT GIVEN.

Verse 13: THEREFORE I SPEAK TO THEM IN PARABLES,BECAUSE THEY SEE NOT AND HEARING THEY HEAR NOT AND NEITHER DO THEY UNDERSTAND.

Verse 17: FOR VERILY I SAY UNTO YOU MANY PROPHETS AND RIGHTEOUS PEOPLE HAVE DESIRED TO SEE THOSE THINGS WHICH YOU HAVE SEEN AND HAVE NOT SEEN THEM AND HEAR THOSE THINGS WHICH YOU HEAR AND HAVE NOT HEARD THEM.

Could all the above quotes not be given the tag of secrecy? It bothers on individual perception though. They may be secret or private, but not in the sense of being evil. Besides, some things are better revealed after the disciples have been prepared to understand them otherwise, it would make no sense if they are not ready for it. Such preparation and revelation are never a town hall affair.

The exercise of the liberty to access various religions and sects for the purpose of determining what they offer as well as their limitations will go a long way in eliminating the unfounded bias that people have developed against them. Albeit, we shouldnt hesitate to take a flight if it becomes necessary, once our tipster mission is accomplished.

Such experience will open our horizons and when we speak about any sect, we wouldnt be speculating.It is this wherewithal that puts one in good stead to bringing in Mysticism in discussing born again vis a vis Religion, fully cognisant of what they both offer. Once we havent pigeonholed ourselves in the manner of not willing to expand our frontiers, by learning from other climates, we will perceive common purpose in the world and embrace all peoples across the world from a position of expanded consciousness.

The fact remains that we all a projection of the same Lord and only requirement to come to terms with our common pedigree is the flair to broaden our horizons. Nothing more, after all, no knowledge is lost.

Therefore, from hindsight, I make bold to say that whatever religion or mysticism we wish to embrace, the core essence must be the worship of the Word of God. Any religion or school of mysticism whose main objective is not how to access the Word of God, or doesnt teach the method of attuning us with this Creative Energy of the Supreme Lord could not be regarded as holistic, all round and end-to-end.

But if we are satisfied with the exoteric aspects of religion with its attractions being befitting burials, colorful weddings, ceremonial birthdays and other worldly fantasies, which are influencing some people to embracing certain religion, such worldly people need not read further. According to Jesus, they might not be among the chosen few. This is for the fact that Spirituality is for the chosen and strictly about devotion to the Lord, completely devoid of any ceremony, ritual, rites and embellishments.

However, the comforting news is that people can still belong to any religion and still practice spirituality. It must be emphasised that spirituality is needed only if the religion we are practicing is deficient in the real practice of the Word of God. Therefore, if our religion truly practices the Word of God, and not by merely talking about it, we should discard any form of spirituality at once, because it would turn out to be an unnecessary duplication. Both Religion and Mysticism have common goal. It is to rejoin us to the Supreme Lord. Nothing else.

It is instructive that hardly would we find any school of spirituality that has rites or routine for naming ceremony, wedding, burial and other things we celebrate. Spirituality leaves such to the cultures and traditions of individual devotees, provided they dont conflict with the necessary disciplines, towards the worship of God in Spirit and In Truth.

Spirituality is accordingly brought into this discourse because the goal is EXPERIENCE. Ordinarily, Religion should suffice for our purpose, but veritable evidence abounds that religion as it is practiced these days, does not give us personal realisation of unchanging truths. Sadly too, it doesnt yield firsthand experience, which some great Prophets, Messiah, Sages, Avatars of eons of time past no doubt had and which accounts were recorded in the scriptures.

We may be depending for our faith on such writings. We are because we havent made attempt to have their spiritual in-flight. No one showed us in some of our religions because the personae-dramatis themselves dont know and it is impossible to give what one doesnt possess. We thus remain content with reading accounts of others. Certainly, this couldnt be enough. It is impractical to get the taste of sweet meal by merely reading about its recipe, just as we cannot appease hunger by the study of a cookbook.

Worse still, the holy books of different religions depend for their explanation on the mercy of individuals interpretation. This leaves room for differences and discord. Ironically, all these shortcomings are not of religion itself, but of the benighted practitioners passing from generation to generation something they have no direct experience of, beyond intellectual knowledge and emotions, both of which are not exclusive to any religion, believers and atheists alike.

Furthermore, religion as it is currently, gives us only promises of heaven and salvation. Yet, they both remain imaginary because the people dramatising religious sermons to us have no direct experience as the Messiah, Prophets Mohammed and other Saints did. The implication of this scenario is that we may be following religious practitioners who might be worse off than the biblical Nicodemus.

The purpose of all Saints, all Prophets and all sermons is none other than to enable us refrain from doing the bidding of the Negative Power. This Power is known as Lucifer,Satan and referred to as Prince of the world by Jesus. It is in the grand design of the Creator for an intervening Power whose assignment is to sustain the Creation by tempting us continually.

The truth of the matter is that the world can not run without the sins or karma that we are committing daily, through the tempting of the Negative Power and which consequences and unfulfilled desires keep us coming back to perpetuate the world in the cycle of birth and death. This shall be made clear when we go proper into Spirituality.

Meanwhile, religion as a necessity as it is, is unfortunately being made to lose its core objective, through of course those making it an instrument of commerce and exploitation. No thanks too to the gullible followers. It is rueful that religion is generally becoming more concerned with creating social status in the world for its followers. That couldnt have been the original motive. Social Clubs and Service Organisations fare better in that regard.

Nevertheless, we must give credit to religion that it lays emphasis on moral and social reformation alas at the expense of spiritual enlightenment which was the basis of its formation.

Kudos to all believers irrespective of their religions. Without religion the current prevalence of criminality in the world would have been a childs play particularly;

The extreme moral degeneracy going on in the world where babies are being raped, where politicians are emptying the treasury under the notion that the life of their Countries, especially Nigeria, is dated and may be expiring anytime.

In a world where the COVID-19 pandemic is suspected to have been induced by economic and other petty reason of one country trying to outsmart the other. Where the black are being discriminated against in forgetfulness that the Power behind every creature is the same God that has created us only differently on the surface. Internally, there is no distinction between the so called white and the dark complexioned.

The list of what religion has assisted to taper is endless. Because of this we must applaud religion and is strongly recommended for every individual for the purpose of imbibing the fear of God and fellow feelings, after all, we need pure love primarily before attempting to reach back to the Court of the Lord.

As we draw the curtain and take on Spirituality from next week, readers are encouraged to try and find meaning to some of the injunctions that prod us to the true worship of the Word of God. We will find them in several scriptures and for ease of reference I cite: Psalms 46 vs 10. It reads: BE STILL AND KNOW THAT I AM GOD.

Matthews 6 vs 6: AND WHEN YOU PRAY,DO NOT AS THE HYPOCRISIES WHO LIKE TO PRAY STANDING IN THE SYNAGOGUE AND IN STREET CORNERS TO BE SEEN BY MEN. BUT LOCK YOUR DOORS AND WINDOWS AND ENTER THY INNER CLOSET AND PRAY TO YOUR FATHER WHO IS UNSEEN.

Matthew 6 vs 22: LET THINE EYES BE SINGLE AND YOUR BODY WILL BE FULL OF LIGHT.

All the above verses and much more that we will find in the scriptures point to the esoteric method of the true worship of the Lord and they are introduced here as an attestation that the teachings of the Messiah are wholly. Nothing to add and nothing can depreciate them. TRULY WE MUST BE BORN AGAIN.

. Aare Oyefeso, a philosopher and businessman, writes from Lagos.

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Religion and mysticism in juxtaposition, by Kola Oyefeso - - The Eagle Online

The Medicine – Film Threat

The notion of consuming Ayahuasca, the plant at the core ofThe Medicine, has always enticed me. My fear has so far outweighed the magical elixirs allure. Im not sure Im ready to directly face the demons Ive repressed into the darkest recesses of my mind. Yet I keep thinking about it, as society becomes more and more suffocating, fractured and disassembled, as things become clearer while making less and less sense, as time races faster and faster, as I get older. Perhaps, sometime in the future, Ill gather the courage to shed my inhibitions and turn to the wisdom of the shamans.

Farzin Toussis documentary follows two Americans on their Ayahuasca journey. Through their eyes, the film offers curious folks like me a glimpse of what to expect. Its also an incisive look into the history of the plant actually, a combination of two plants as well as its spiritual, medicinal, and psychological effects. Perhaps most compellingly, its a reminder to open our eyes, to notice the bigger world around us for what it is, to see who we really are. Toussi never preaches, gently luring you into an utterly tranquil state, wherein you may just find yourself booking a ticket to Colombia.

follows two Americans on their Ayahuasca journey.

The driving force here, both ofThe Medicineand the people he trains and advises through sances, is Taita Juanito Guillermo Chindoy Chindoy, the spiritual guide to a very special village. Two hours outside of Bogota, Stuart Townsend narrates, an ancient culture continues to practice the ancient teachings of their ancestors. Chindoy spearheads these teachings; hes the real deal, coming from a storied line of shamans (at the filming of the doc, his grandfather was 109 years young). The earth is making a claim against man, he states, seemingly one with nature. Like a forest spirit, he floats around, imparting tidbits of wisdom, relishing the taste of bitter peppers, and sending folks on their paths to enlightenment. As a cinematic subject, hes tremendously compelling.

Our two hapless heroes, unfortunately, are less so. By no fault of their own, mind you anyone would be hard-pressed to match the enigmatic/charismatic screen presence of Taita Juanito. Still, former NFL Safety Kerry Rhodes, and actress/ activist AnnaLynne McCord, as earnest and well-ambitioned as they are, somehow derail the documentary into reality-TV territory. Toussi would have been better off following two ordinary people, as opposed to privileged celebs, if relatability was one of the goals.

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The Medicine - Film Threat

Han and Hindu Nationalism Come Face to Face – Fair Observer

As dusk fell on June 15, a bloody clash broke out between Chinese and Indian soldiers in the Galwan Valley on the northwest China-India border, where a tributary of the Indus flows westward from Aksai Chin to Ladakh. In line with Chinas recent expansionist policy elsewhere, its military had been pushing forward into territory claimed by both nations, altering facts on the ground. In line with Indias status quo policy to maintain its territorial integrity, its troops moved against Chinese intrusion, and a clash ensued. It was a throwback to the past. No one used guns, grenades or bombs. Men fought hand to hand, with fence posts, clubs wrapped in barbed wire, rods studded with nails, knives and even bayonets.

The fight took place on craggy cliffs at icy Himalayan heights. At least 20 Indian soldiers died, including a colonel. China has not revealed its casualties, but reliable sources estimate them to be higher than Indias. Satellite images show that China had been building bunkers, tents and storage units for military hardware near the site of the clash. The Chinese struck the first blow at a time and place of their choosing. They were surprised by the ferocity of the Indian response. Clashes between troops of both countries have occurred regularly along the contested border, but this is the first deadly one for 45 years.

For thousands of years, empires based in China and India did not clash. The mighty Himalayas acted as an insurmountable barrier. The bitter cold and low oxygen levels of the highest mountains in the world were too high even for a Hannibal or a Napoleon. Chinese armies that conquered Tibet were already at the limits of their supply lines, and the Himalayas were more forbidding than the Great Wall of China even for the dreaded Mongol hordes. For the Indian armies, the fabled riches of spice-laden south India were more alluring than the barren, frosty peaks of the north. Hence, many independent Himalayan kingdoms survived until relatively recently. The Buddhist Kingdom of Bhutan is the last of the Mohicans and still acts as a buffer state between two Asian giants.

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Tensions between China and India are a recent phenomenon. Both are new postcolonial states. The former is heir to the expansionist Qing Empire and is a revisionist power. It seeks to rewrite the rigged rules of the game of the international order. European powers and the United States forced this order down Chinese gullets when it was going through decline, disorder and disgrace. India is the child of the British Empire that seeks to preserve the status quo. It no longer identifies with the Mughal Empire, Britains predecessor.

Hindu India now sees the Mughals as Muslim oppressors who smashed temples, killed spiritual leaders, made Farsi the language of their empire and looked to Central Asia or the Middle East for inspiration. Today, Indias official language is English. Its laws, political systems and bureaucratic structures are legacies of the British, not of earlier empires. It has inherited the British conflict with the Qing.

At its essence, tensions between the two Asian giants boil down to one simple fact: India seeks to preserve British boundaries, while China seeks to reassert Qing ones. To make sense of what is going on and what might happen next, we have no choice but to go back into the past.

China and India share a 3,440-kilometer border. Each claims territory controlled by the other. This territorial rivalry has led to only one war, in distant 1962, when Jawaharlal Nehru was Indias prime minister, Zhou Enlai was Nehrus Chinese counterpart, and Mao Zedong was the chairman of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). India lost that war ignominiously.

Since then, India and China have been uncomfortable neighbors. In 1963, Pakistan ceded Shaksgam Valley to China and commenced a relationship that has strengthened over time. Starting from 1969, Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger used Islamabad as a backdoor to Beijing. In July 1971, Kissinger made a secret trip to China while on a visit to Pakistan. Islamabad was receptive to American blandishments, while New Delhi started the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) at the height of the Cold War. Its Marxist-tinged view of Western imperialism clashed with the American Cold War view of international relations.Naturally, the US sided with Pakistan against India when the two countries fought later that year.

Things have come a long way since 1971. The Soviet Union has fallen. China has become the workshop of the world. Pakistan is perceived more as the hiding place for Osama bin Laden than an entryway to Beijing. In 1991, India began a political, economic and philosophical transformation. Until recently, it was progressively rejecting statism. In its own gradualist manner, India has become less fearful of American neocolonialism and evolved into a more confident world power. India and the US have now made up. Both increasingly fear the rise of the Middle Kingdom.

In fact, India has real fears of a two-front war. What happens if Pakistan and China gang up against it? There are also concerns about the string of pearls China has built around India ports in the Indian Ocean in Myanmar, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Pakistan. New Delhi fears that Beijing might use its string to garotte India. Then there is another tiny little matter: In remote Tibet, looming high above the Indian plains, lies the source of the Brahmaputra, the Indus and other important rivers. Chinese dams could pose an existential risk to hundreds of millions living downstream.

Just as India fears China, the Middle Kingdom fears an alliance of India, Japan, Australia and the US the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (QSD), also known as the Quad. The Chinese still face what then-president Hu Jintao termed the Malacca Dilemma in 2003. About 80% of their oil goes through the Strait of Malacca. A visit to this strait is shocking for a geostrategist: At any given time, dozens of ships are visible, funneling their way for 900 kilometers through a body of water that at its narrowest point is no more than 2 kilometers wide.

If geography is destiny, then China and India seem fated to clash. After all, how can two rising giants with competing strategic interests fail to clash? Graham Allison of the Harvard Kennedy School has popularized the term the Thucydides Trap. As per Allisons argument, the probability of bloodshed runs high when a rising power confronts a ruling power. Allison posited that the US and China might be facing the Thucydides Trap. In the Asian context, China and India might be walking into the very same trap.

If we were to view the world through Samuel Huntingtons prism, both China and India have laid claim over Tibets soul. After the Tibetan Empire collapsed by the 9th century, Lhasa frequently fell under Beijings yoke.Both the Mongol Yuan and the Manchu Qing dynasties exercised suzerainty over Tibet. However, Tibet has always been connected to India culturally. The founder of Tibetan Buddhism arrived from Nalanda, the legendary university of the fertile Gangetic plains. Nalanda no longer exists the Turks sacked it. Buddhism is a religion practiced in certain regions and limited sections of Indian society. Yet Tibetan philosophy has more in common with its Indian counterpart than with the philosophies of Confucius, Mencius or Lao Tzu.

Indian philosophy might have found fertile ground in the barren Tibetan Plateau, but it was China that took charge of this territory. Often confused as a nation-state, the Middle Kingdom was, in more ways than one, an empire. In 1998, Nicola Di Cosmo published an iconic paper analyzing Qing colonial administration in Inner Asia. He concluded that the modern notion of China as a timeless union of many nationalities obscures the tensions and internal contradictions inherent in the process of Chinese empire building.

The Qing were Manchus. Like the Mongols, they were outsiders who seized control of Beijing in 1644. A peasant rebellion led by Li Zicheng gave these northern barbarians their chance. They purported to ride in to rescue the Ming and promptly took over. Like previous conquerors, the Qing made enormous efforts to assimilate into Chinese culture, retained Han officials who served the Ming and promoted Confucian values.

Remembering how they had taken over Beijing, the Qing recognized the threat of a Mongol-Tibetan alliance. They embarked on an empire-building project of territorial expansion, which was accompanied by military occupation and a new administrative structure. The empire of the Qing came to comprise thrice the size of the empire of the Ming. Its population grew from about 150 million to over 450 million.

Mongolia, Central Asia and Tibet were all annexed. In 1720, the Kangxi Emperor sent troops to Lhasa. The Lifan Yuan, the court for the outer provinces of Mongolia, Tibet, Qinghai and Xinjiang, sent two ambans, or frontier specialists, to Lhasa. The powers of the ambans gradually increased through the 18th century, but the Qing ruled Tibet with a light touch.

Even as the Qing were expanding, the mighty Mughals were declining. Akbar died in 1605, and his successors did not prove as able. His grandson Shah Jahan took charge in 1628 and is famous for building the Taj Mahal, but it was paid for by oppressive taxation. The English traveler Peter Mundy observed putrefying corpses of the victims of famine and paints a sorry picture of the Mughal realm during his journey through the country.

In 1658, Shah Jahans fanatical son, Aurangzeb, killed his brothers and imprisoned his father. He smashed temples, persecuted non-Muslims and triggered widespread rebellion. Until today, Aurangzeb is one of the most hated names in Hindu and Sikh families with children told tales of his cruelty. The last of the mighty Mughals died in 1707, and the empire disintegrated. Just five decades later, Robert Clive won the historic 1757 Battle of Plassey. An expansionist British India replaced a crumbling Mughal India.

In Rudyard Kiplings Kim, the eponymous hero of the novel becomes the chela, the Hindi word for disciple, of a Tibetan lama. Together, they wander through dusty plains and the invigorating Himalayas. Indeed, it is the lama who pays for Kims education. The former seeks enlightenment while the latter learns the art of espionage, a sine qua non to play a role in the Great Game. The spellbinding yarn of Kim has some basis in reality. Like the Ottomans and the Mughals, the Qing were declining precipitously by the 18th and 19th centuries. Internal disorder and external invasion threatened the dynasty. The Qing military had become pathetic and its mandarins useless. Corruption stalked the land, and the peasants were grossly overtaxed.

During this period, Warren Hastings, the first governor general of India, dispatched George Bogle to Tibet. The Scottish adventurer met the third Panchen Lama in 1775 and established friendly relations. He purportedly went on to marry a close relative of the lama. Bogles mission was not followed up by much. The British had the rest of India to conquer and consolidate. The 1857 uprising and transferring sovereignty from the British East India Company to Queen Victoria put Tibet off their agenda in the 19th century.

Even as the British kept themselves busy in India, they eyed China. The British thrashed the Middle Kingdom in the First Opium War of 1839-42. The war was fought on the principle of free trade. The British insisted that they have the right to export opium to China. Naturally, they grew poppy in India to make the opium. As spoils of victory, the Chinese ceded Hong Kong to Great Britain to serve as a comptoir to China. The British extracted a hefty indemnity as well. More importantly, they now had the legal right to export opium to the Middle Kingdom perversely about the only good the Chinese seemed willing to buy from the barbarian British.

The Chinese capitulation to British arms demonstrated that the Qing emperor had no clothes. The Taiping Rebellion, with its fanatical local version of Christianity but fundamentally a manifestation of a China in utter disarray and decay, broke out in 1850 and lasted until 1864. Even as this revolt raged, China lost the Second Opium War of 1856-60. Both Britain and France teamed up to carve out the Chinese carcass.

It was the era of mercantile imperialism, and the Europeans rivaled with each other even as they cooperated to divide up the hopelessly self-absorbed and utterly sclerotic but potentially lucrative Chinese empire. The Europeans wanted to expand the opium trade to the interior and, of course, more reparations. At home, European leaders justified much of their expansion to their own peoples by demanding freedom to preach Christianity.Sometimes, they were even sincere about advancing the word while planting the flag. In 1860, the two reigning European superpowers, Britain and France, achieved total victory in what The New York Times called a dashing little campaign.

Lord Elgin, the son of the man who took away the Elgin Marbles from Greece and later the viceroy of India, commanded an overwhelming British-French force that involved some Indian troops. When his messenger was killed by the Chinese, the great lord responded in a manner befitting none other than the great Genghis Khan. European troops torched the magnificent Summer Palace to the ground and engaged in an extraordinary orgy of loot. Patriotic Chinese still feel a burning sense of shame about this incident. Many still resent and distrust the West.

Barely had the dust settled on the ruins of the palace when the Dungan Revolt broke out in 1862. This time it was Muslims instead of Christians who struck out against Beijing. Riots broke out between the Hui minority and Han majority in many areas after Taiping rebels invaded the northwest province of Shensi. Ethnic cleansing became par for the course, and the rebellion lasted 15 years. What the scholar Wen-djang Chu wrote in 1958 stands true today: This revolt covered 3,191,680 square kilometers and is still greatly underestimated. The surge of Muslim revolts in the far west of China in fact was more responsible for the final collapse of the tottering Qing dynasty than the red-haired barbarians from the West.

Like the Ottoman Empire, the Qing Empire was ripe for the picking. Internal revolt was the order of the day. Foreign powers sensed their chance. After the Meiji Restoration in 1868, Japan joined the party. The First Sino-Japanese War of 1894-95 ended in calamity for China. Japans British-trained navy and Prussian-modeled army crushed the Qing forces, altering the balance of power in East Asia and whetting Japans appetite for empire. Now, the land of the rising sun was the rising Asian power.

Tibet increasingly enjoyed de facto independence after the First Opium War, as China struggled to stay afoot. This was also a time when Tibetans had to deal with invasion from the west, not the east. A new Sikh Empire emerged in the east. Its Dogra generals conquered Kashmir. Zorawar Singh Kahluria, the most dashing of the Dogras, led audacious campaigns in high altitude to conquer Buddhist Ladakh, a tributary of Tibet.

Kahluria tried conquering western Tibet but in 1841 ended up with a lance in his chest. The Dogras avenged their general by winning the 1842 Battle of Chushul and then signed a treaty establishing the status quo ante bellum. The Sikh story did not last long by 1849, the British crushed them. The new masters of Indias northwest gave Kashmir to the Dogras for having stabbed their Sikh overlords in the back. Notably, the Dogras still retained some territory in Tibet, especially in areas holy to the Hindus.

The British seemed to reach the limits of their power of expansion to the north of India in the disastrous First Afghan War of 1839-42. The Afghans killed the entire British expeditionary force of 4,500 soldiers and 12,000 camp followers under General Elphinstone. Only one person survived. He was an army doctor who rode into Jalalabad to tell the sorry tale. Despite this disastrous British defeat, the Great Game continued without. Both Britain and Russia continued to expand their influence into Afghanistan. Eventually, the Second Anglo-Afghan War broke out in 1878. From the British point of view, it was an opportunity to avenge the rout of 1842 and contain Russian expansion.

Now, the theater of the Great Game shifted to Tibet. Ngawang Dorjee, a Russian-born monk, was received by Tsar Nicholas II at St. Petersburg as Tibets special envoy in 1901. Naturally, this made the British nervous. In 1904, Colonel Francis Younghusband appeared at the gates of Lhasa with a significant body of troops on a so-called diplomatic mission, designed primarily to forestall Russian inroads to Britains sphere of interest extending north from India, Britains crown jewel. The 13th Dalai Lama, the predecessor to the current one, fled to Mongolia.

The British did not build upon their success in Lhasa. They did not want an international incident. Tensions in Europe were rising, and Britain was coming to view an alliance with Russia as desirable. Therefore, the British government ignored Younghusbands Anglo-Tibetan Convention of 1904. Instead, they took the indemnity China offered on Tibets behalf and signed an Anglo-Chinese convention in 1906, recognizing Chinese sovereignty over Tibet. A year later, an Anglo-Russian agreement on Tibet affirmed the 1906 accord.

The European intervention in Tibet provoked a response. After nearly two centuries of ruling with a light touch, the Manchu Qing, even though it was on its last legs, decided to reassert control over Tibet. Ethnic Tibetan areas east of the Yangtze River were put under Beijings direct administrative control. They are now a part of Sichuan Province. In 1909-10, an army led by Zhao Erfeng arrived in Lhasa.

The 13th Dalai Lama fled to exile again, this time to Darjeeling, a lovely hill station in British India. He developed a close friendship with Sir Charles Bell, the British political officer in the then Himalayan kingdom of Sikkim. It was here that the 13th Dalai Lama organized a military force to win back power. Destiny would smile on him soon. The 1911 Revolution led to the end of the Qing dynasty by 1912. The very next year, the 13th Dalai Lama expelled Chinese troops and officials from Lhasa. He also declared complete self-rule, and Tibet achieved de facto independence. It was to last nearly four decades.

It is important to note that none of the Chinese leaders of the 1911 Revolution accepted Tibetan independence. Yuan Shikai, the man who took over from the Qing, claimed the Five Races [Han, Tibetan, Manchu, Mongol, Muslim] deeply united into one family were all part of the Yellow Church. Sun Yat-sen, the father of the revolution, called for the creation of a strong Chinese state that would expel the Japanese from Manchuria, the Russians from Mongolia and the British from Tibet.

Thanks to the 1911 Revolution, the Han were back in the emperors palanquin. The Manchus were out after a 268-year rule. It was time to restore China to its millennial greatness. Regaining control of Tibet became an article of faith. Luckily for the Tibetans, the Chinese disintegrated into yet another civil war and then had to deal with a brutal Japanese invasion. Tibetan elites ran the country the way they deemed fit.

However, Tibet was unable to gain formal independence. Unlike Sikkim or Bhutan, Tibet did not end up as an Indian protectorate. The British summoned Chinese and Tibetan representatives to Simla, the de facto capital of British India in 1913. After months of discussion, the Simla Convention was signed in July 1914 by Tibet and Britain. China refused to sign this agreement even though it acknowledged Chinese suzerainty over Tibet.

Like most British treaties, this one was rather advantageous to them. It obtained for British India a vast territory east of Bhutan that now forms the state of Arunachal Pradesh. Tibetans lost Tawang, a large Buddhist monastery they revere greatly. Only in 2008 did the Dalai Lama finally accept Tawang to be a part of India. In 1914, Britain was curiously willing to accept vast territory from Tibet without Chinese approval but was unwilling to recognize Tibets independence.

Such lack of formal recognition came to haunt Tibet, starting on October 1, 1949, when the Peoples Republic of China (PRC) was founded. Maos communists were good Chinese nationalists and wanted to reunify the disparate parts of China under a strong central government. The Red Army invaded Tibets eastern province in October 1950, posing as an army of liberation from Western imperialism. This was roughly as accurate as European claims about 90 years before that Christ must accompany the flag into China. In May 1951, the Dalai Lama signed the Seventeen Point Agreement with the Chinese. For the first time, an agreement formally recognized Chinese sovereignty over Tibet.

Initially, the CCP followed the Soviet Unions nationality system. As Melvyn Goldstein observed in 2004, the communists even allowed the feudal system, with its serflike peasantry, to persist, allowing the Dalai Lama to rule with relative autonomy. The CCP officials presented themselves to Tibetans as the new Chinese, who were in the country to develop, not exploit. As soon as it had consolidated its power, however, the CCP reverted to its guiding principles. In 1955-56, officials launched socialist land reform in the Kham and Amdo regions of Sichuan and Qinghai provinces. This effectively meant the abolition of private property. Bloody rebellion followed. Starting in 1957, Tibetan refugees streamed into Lhasa. By this time, the Cold War has been defining international relations for over a decade. The US had fought China in Korea from 1950 to 1953. It sensed an opportunity to create a problem for the Chinese.

The CIA began training and arming Tibetan guerrillas. Despite the fact that monasteries and feudal lords still controlled their estates and serfs in Tibet, an anti-Chinese uprising erupted in March 1959. The Chinese government crushed the Lhasa uprising. The Dalai Lama renounced the Seventeen Point Agreement and wearisomely fled Tibet yet again to India, where he remains to this day.

This was a bad time for China. The Great Leap Forward resulted not in progress but in the Great Chinese Famine of 1959-61. As Cormac Grda wrote in 2015, it was the greatest famine in recorded history. Like Joseph Stalins first five-year plan of 1928-32, Maos forced collectivization resulted in cataclysm. Estimates vary widely but, as per modern demographic analyses, between 20 and 30 million died.

Han nationalism did not die, however. The more revolutionary CCP cadres blamed Maos moderation in Tibet for the Dalai Lamas duplicity. They remembered how his predecessor had also fled to India and plotted to overthrow Chinese rule. They feared an encore. Emulating the Dalai Lama, the CCP abandoned the Seventeen Point Agreement, terminated traditional Tibetan government, confiscated monastic and aristocratic estates and closed down thousands of monasteries. Out went the gradualist policy of accommodation, in came domination by Han CCP apparatchiks promoting class warfare and proletarian solidarity. Under Mao, this was inevitable. Like the laws of physics, Maoist ideology has proven to be totalitarian, inexorable and inescapable over time.

Just as the CCP is the inheritor of the Qing empire, India is the successor to British India, the jewel in the crown of the once-global British Empire. Neither the British nor the Qing came to an agreement over the border. Once the Qing fell, its successors rejected the Simla Convention of 1914, which the British and the Tibetans agreed upon.

The British themselves were never clear as to the border. To begin with, W.H. Johnson drew an expansive line in 1865 that included all of Aksai Chin in what was then the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir. In 1873, the British drew a Foreign Office Line, which stands largely forgotten. In 1897, Major-General Sir John Charles Ardagh followed suit. In the light of China waning and Russia waxing, he proposed a boundary line along the crest of the Kunlun Mountains north of the Yarkand River. This line is now known as the Johnson-Ardagh Line.

Barely was the ink dry on the map, when George Macartney, the consul general at the oasis city of Kashgar in Xinjiang proposed a revised boundary to the Qing in 1899. Lord Elgin, the sacker of the Summer Palace turned viceroy of India, took a fancy to Macartneys idea. The new border was to run along the Karakoram Mountains, forming a natural boundary. British India and its allies would control the Indus River watershed, while the Chinese would be in charge of the Tarim River watershed. Colonel Sir Claude Maxwell MacDonald, Queen Victorias minister in China, authored a diplomatic note proposing the new border to the Chinese. This line is now known as the Macartney-MacDonald Line. Notably, the Qing court never responded to MacDonalds note.

After the 1911 Revolution, the British reverted to using the Johnson-Ardagh Line as the border in official documents. However, they did not attempt to establish posts or exercise actual control over Aksai Chin. As if these lines were not confusing enough, the Simla Convention that led to an Anglo-Tibetan agreement forged a new boundary named after Lieutenant Colonel Sir Vincent Arthur Henry McMahon, a swashbuckling multilingual military man-turned-diplomat in charge of the British delegation. This line lay to the east of the Foreign Office Line and the west of the Johnson-Ardagh Line, which India claims as its rightful border on the northwest. Each of these lines matters because choosing one or the other as a reference point might make China or India gain or lose valuable strategic territory.

McMahon went on to serve in the Middle East as World War I raged. His career ended when the newly formed Soviet Union revealed the secret Anglo-French Sykes-Picot Agreement to carve up the Ottoman Empire. This revelation came when Colonel Thomas Edward Lawrence the famous Lawrence of Arabia was promising independence to the Arabs to get them to fight the Turks, and McMahon himself was championing a pro-Arabist policy. His reputation was now tarnished. Therefore, the British quietly dropped references to the McMahon Line with Tibet, which now enjoyed de facto independence. Lhasa even controlled territories such as Tawang that the Simla Convention had deemed a part of India.

Only in 1935 did the colonial British government resuscitate the McMahon Line. It feared renewed Chinese interest in Tibet. When Tibetan authorities arrested English botanist Francis Kingdon-Ward for entering the country illegally, the British made their move. In 1937, the Survey of India published a map showing the McMahon Line as the official boundary. As if on cue, Captain Gordon Lightfoot marched to Tawang in 1938 but met fierce Tibetan resistance. For the moment, Tawang remained in Tibetan hands. This changed during World War II. In 1944, James Philip Mills, a noted colonial administrator, took charge of the area south of Tawang.

After India became independent in August 1947, Tibet protested British acquisitions. In October 1947, it demanded that India return Ladakh, Sikkim and Darjeeling. It did not. In October 1950, Chinese troops routed Tibetan forces at Chamdo. When India demurred, China brushed aside its protests. This led to a rift in the Indian government. Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, the deputy prime minister, wrote a letter to Nehru expressing anxiety over the problem of Tibet. Patels views mattered. He was a close associate and friend of Mahatma Gandhi. Under Patels leadership, India had assimilated the more than 500 princely states that comprised 40% of the area of pre-independence India and 22% of its population. It had earned the deputy prime minister the epithet of the Iron Man of India.

A month after the Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) invaded Tibet, Nehru categorically declared, Our maps show that the McMahon Line is our boundary and that is our boundary map or no map. With this parliamentary statement on November 20, 1950, the die was cast. In February 1951, Indian troops took over Tawang town and removed the Tibetan administration.

Patel saw Chinese action against the Tibetans as little short of perfidy. Chinese officials had assured India they would settle the Tibetan question peacefully but had gone back on their word. Patel felt betrayed because India had been the first non-socialist country to recognize the new communist regime and was championing Chinas entry into the United Nations. He worried about China as a threat to Indias borders and that it was encouraging communists within the country to foment a revolution.

Even at that early stage, India was facing insurgency from armed communist groups, and many in its intelligentsia were seduced by the success of the communist revolutions first in the USSR and then in the PRC. Presciently, Patel warned against Chinese irredentism and communist imperialism. He took the view that the Middle Kingdoms ideological expansion concealed racial, national or historical claims. Patel recommended a reconsideration of [Indias] retrenchment plans to the Army in the light of the new threat as well no longer advocating Chinese entry into the United Nations.

Nehru disagreed with his older deputy. On November 18, two days before declaring the McMahon Line as the international boundary, the prime minister responded that India could not lose its sense of perspective and world strategy and give way to unreasoning fears. The idealistic, anglicized Kashmiri Brahmin and the realpolitik-oriented, earthy member of a Gujarati landowning caste seemed headed for a showdown over China. Patels death on December 15, 1950, averted this crisis. From now on, the Nehruvian view occupied the commanding heights of Indian foreign policy.

In 1954, India published maps showing Aksai Chin as part of the country, setting the Ardagh-Johnson Line as its northwest border with China and adding 37,244 square kilometers to its territory. The Middle Kingdom had never accepted this to be its border and claimed this territory as its own. In 1957, India was incensed to discover that China had built a road through Aksai Chin, connecting Xinjiang to Tibet. China National Highway 219 is a marvel of civil engineering. The Chinese began work on it in 1951 and completed it in 1957. Today, this 1,455-kilometer road runs from Yecheng in Xinjiang to Shiquanhe in Tibet and is known as the Sky Road because it goes through vertigo-inducing elevation of 5,248 meters above sea level. Right from the start, this road had a military purpose and increased India-China tensions.

To cool down these tensions, Zhou Enlai wrote to Nehru on September 8, 1959, about the Sino-Indian boundary question. He argued that the current boundary was a result of British imperialist aggression and was therefore decidedly illegal.Zhou declared that the Chinese government absolutely [did] not recognize the so-called McMahon Line. He complained that Indian troops were trespassing into Chinese territory and harboring Tibetan rebels. Instead, Zhou proposed maintaining the long-existing status quo of the border and resolving the issues step by step over time. This disputed border has come to be called the Line of Actual Control (LAC).

It is poorly defined. Indian and Chinese troops constantly patrol it and occasionally clash over what neither Beijing nor New Delhi accepts as a legitimate boundary. Writing on June 22, 2020, Lieutenant General P.J.S. Pannu observed that both India and China are still defending a historically undefined border line. Both sides still control the territory that the other claims.At stake are thousands of square kilometers of the Himalayas.

A simple question arises: Why was Nehru so naive about China and communism? In a magisterial piece, M.J. Akbar explains the basis of the Nehruvian view. Indias first prime minister was a passionate anti-imperialist who believed in the solidarity of the subjugated peoples. Very early, he saw India and China as two ancient civilizations emerging as modern nations and acting as harbingers of a more just world. Nehru romanticized not only China but also communism.

During a 1927 visit to the USSR, he was deeply impressed by Soviet economic policy, which became an exemplar for Nehruvian socialism. Notably, Nehru considered Vladimir Lenin to be the greatest man of action in the 20th century and the most selfless. In contrast to Patel, Nehru was fascinated by communism and thus blind to its dangers.

The key to understanding Nehrus benign view of China comes from his youth. As a student at Cambridge and a barrister in London, he had sought inspiration from thinkers of the Fabian Society. In an age of empires, he felt the pull of the left. In 1927, Nehru attended the International Congress against Colonial Oppression and Imperialism in Brussels. It rightly discussed Britain and presciently warned against American exploitation of Latin America. The conference designated three nations to lead the world out of oppression: China, Mexico and India.

Nehru was a member of the presiding committee and an inaugural speaker. It was a heady experience for this Harrow-educated dreamy-eyed idealist. For most anti-imperialists of the late 19th and the first half of the 20th centuries, communism was the obvious champion for colonized peoples. More importantly, Nehru made some Chinese friends in Brussels. One of them was Soong Ching-ling, the widow of Sun Yat-sen. Soon, Nehru became friends with Chiang Kai-shek, Sun Yat-sens successor. Nehru saw China as Indias sister in ancient history and closer relations between the two countries as a civilizational imperative. In 1937, he declared September 26 to be China Day. In opposition to Japans invasion of China, he called for the boycott of Japanese goods and for donations to support the Chinese war effort. He went on to visit China in August 1939 as Chiang Kai-sheks guest.

When Nehru became the head of the interim government before independence in September 1946, the first conference he organized was not on national unity but on Asian relations. It was here that Indian romance would first crash against Chinese reality. When Nehrus old friend Chiang Kai-shek learned that Tibetan delegates were attending, he threatened to pull China out of the conference. Nehru promised that Tibets status would not be raised and instructed Tibetan delegates to hold their tongues.

Nehrus generosity to the Chinese soon turned excessive. In 1950, the US offered India Chinas permanent seat in the United Nations Security Council. In 1955, the Soviet Union made a similar offer. Nehru spurned both offers because he did not want a break between India and China. In the 1954 Sino-Indian Treaty on Tibet, Nehru agreed to withdraw Indian troops from the country. He also gave away postal, telegraph and telephone facilities that India had operated in Tibet. China gave India precious little in return.

In 1954, India and China signed the Panchsheel Treaty, which comprised five principles of peaceful coexistence. Zhou Enlai showed up in New Delhi to sign some form of peace treaty and to rally India against a potential American invasion of Vietnam. The slogan Hindi-Chini bhai-bhai, which means Indians and Chinese are brothers, was in the air. Nehru visited China later that year and was cheered in the streets. It did seem that India and China would lead an Asian resurgence together as per Nehrus statesmanly vision. Everyone loves a parade.

Yet trouble was brewing. Noted historian Neville Maxwell records that neither side raised the boundary question. China did not bring it up because it wanted to avoid any discussion about Tibet. India assumed that the boundary was well-known and beyond dispute, and there could be no question regarding it. In 1954, its maps showed Aksai Chin as part of Indian territory. As mentioned above, the discovery of the road through Aksai Chin in 1957 and the Dalai Lamas flight to India in 1959 hardened positions on both sides. Indias romance with China started souring. The first border clash occurred at Longju in August 1959. Nehrus romance was dead, Patels realpolitik was back.

In 1959, Zhou proposed maintaining the status quo in his famous letter proposing the LAC. He followed up with a visit to India in 1960 with an offer: China would recognize Indias claim to the 84,000-square-kilometer area that now comprises Arunachal Pradesh despite its historical connections to Tibet if India accepted Chinas claim to the 38,000-square-kilometer area of Aksai Chin. Nehru rejected Zhous offer.

In 1961, Nehru took two bold decisions. On November 2, 1961, he kicked off the so-called forward policy. Indian troops were to patrol as far forward as possible toward the international border recognized by India. The next month, he ordered troops to liberate Goa after years of diplomacy had failed. Portugal had conquered this coastal state in 1510 and held it for 451 years. Western powers such as the US and the UK condemned Indian action, but African and Asian countries supported it wholeheartedly. Nehrus stock was flying high.

In 1962, Nehru continued with his foreign policy. Once inconvenient generals were replaced by pliant ones, he no longer met any opposition from the army high command. Indian troops set up forward posts on the China border, some even north of the McMahon Line. This riled Beijing, and by mid-summer tensions were running high. Domestic criticism of Nehru was rising by the day. Many accused him of being too conciliatory with China. So, Nehru put a key precondition to talks: Indias boundaries were non-negotiable.

Yet even as Nehru took what he believed to be a hard line, every Indian forward post was being outmatched by more numerous Chinese garrisons. Indias position was increasingly untenable. China called Indias bluff. After a limited action on October 20, 1962, Chinese troops waited for a few days. Then, between November 15 and 19, they destroyed or broke up every organized Indian force in the disputed areas at key points across a front more than 3,000 meters wide. Then, Beijing announced a unilateral ceasefire on the same terms as Zhou had suggested in 1959.

The 1962 war is still a source of shame in India. Its troops were ill prepared and lost badly. Nehru made far too many blunders. He first viewed China romantically and gave it a carte blanche. Then, Nehru embarked on an ill-advised forward policy, with insufficient force that left Indian troops exceedingly vulnerable. Perhaps the biggest blunder of all was Nehrus appointment of Vengalil Krishnan Krishna Menon as defense minister in 1957.

Energetic, eloquent and brilliant, Menon had made a name for himself in London and New York as a passionate advocate for Indias independence, Nehrus policy of non-alignment and freedom for long-oppressed colonies. Like Nehru, Menon was a great champion of China and was convinced that Indias only threat came from Pakistan. This line of thinking proved to be disastrous. He sidelined outstanding officers like General Kodendera Subayya Thimayya and Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw. Menon shamelessly promoted sycophants like Pran Nath Thapar and Brij Mohan Kaul, both relatives of Nehru. Menon also weakened Indias defense production, which had been the best in Asia when the country won independence in 1947. After Indias defeat along the McMahon Line, Menon resigned but Nehru did not. Like Mao and unlike George Washington, this Harrow and Cambridge man would die on the throne.

Only five years after the 1962 war, Indian and Chinese troops clashed again at the passes of Nathu La and Cho La connecting Sikkim to Tibet. In 1967, India had increased the number of its mountain divisions, improved equipment and beaten Pakistan in 1965. Indian troops held the higher ground, and China had just embarked on the Cultural Revolution. As a result, China came off worse in this brief battle, bolstering Indian morale. In the 1971 Indo-Pakistani War, China sided with Pakistan. Its support for Pakistan was, and remains, an obvious way to put pressure on India. In 1975, India absorbed the Himalayan kingdom of Sikkim as an Indian state. Soon thereafter, the Chinese ambushed an Indian patrol, killing four soldiers. Those were the last soldiers on either side to die for 45 years until the evening of June 15, 2020.

Starting from 1978, relations between the two countries improved. That year, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, then foreign minister and later prime minister, visited Beijing to reestablish diplomatic ties. China softened its stand on both Sikkim and Bhutan. Tensions flared in 1986 when Indian troops encountered Chinese occupation of Sumdorong Chu Valley. The following year, India created the new state of Arunachal Pradesh, angering Beijing in the process.

Tensions eased in 1988 when then-Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi visited China. The two sides established better relations, which improved further after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991. In 1993, India and China signed a peace and tranquility border agreement. For the next two decades, India and China avoided any major confrontation. In 1996, both sides even agreed not to conduct blast operations or hunt with guns or explosives within two kilometers from the Line of Actual Control. Leaders visited each others countries, increased trade and signed mutual cooperation agreements. Yet despite 22 rounds of talks, they have failed to settle the boundary question.

In recent years, confrontations between Chinese and Indian troops have been on the rise. Scuffles, fistfights and stone-throwing often break out between patrolling platoons. Both sides have embarked on infrastructure projects such as roads, tunnels and bunkers along the poorly defined LAC. Each side views the others steps as threatening the correlation of forces and capabilities. Both sides refuse to accept the others measures.This has led to three major confrontations: at Depsang in northern Ladakh in 2013, at Chumar in eastern Ladakh in 2014 and at Doklam on the China-Bhutan border in 2017. Now, in 2020, Indian and Chinese tensions are at their highest since 1962. Two questions arise: Why, and why now?

China has become more assertive globally since Xi Jinping took charge in 2012. Xi has consolidated power and launched a personality cult reminiscent of Mao. Indeed, he is the son of a Maoist and has dethroned Deng Xiaopings more moderate acolytes from the CCP throne. Xi had the rubber stamp congress in Beijing remove term limits for the numerous positions he occupies. He is modernizing the military and adopting a more muscular foreign policy. In 2013, Xi launched the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and has invested billions into projects in numerous countries. China is becoming a great power once again. However, for the first time in history, China is seeking to assert its power beyond its traditional borders.

In 2018, former Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd gave a lecture at West Point on understanding Chinas rise under Xi Jinping. Rudd is a career diplomat, speaks Mandarin and studies China closely. He made a very important point: Xi looks closely at the past for inspiration. Since the very day Xi came to power, he has declared Chinas national mission to be guojia fuxing a national renaissance. This red engineer, an alumnus of the fabled Tsinghua University, has concentrated enormous power in his hands and in his party. The CCP now plays a bigger role in daily life, business and even the military than at any time since perhaps the death of the Great Helmsman in 1976. Xi has cleaned up the government and, in the process, eliminated all his political opponents.

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Superficially, Xi may appear to be a technocrat. Importantly, however, Xis father was aligned with the left revolutionary wing of the CCP. This leftist faction opposed the economic and political reforms implemented by Deng Xiaoping and his allies. Xis views on the role of the state and the supremacy of the CCP are far closer to his fathers and to Maos than to any of his post-Mao predecessors. Additionally, there is the weight of Chinas history and culture, despite the CCPs often murderous efforts to stamp it out. Xis views on the role of the state, harmony, and social and personal hierarchy are closer to those of a mandarin or an emperor in the Forbidden City than to reformists like Deng.

For 40 years following the death of Chairman Mao, all Chinese leaders have moved away from the cult of personality. But, in a touch of hubris, Xi has formally enshrined Xi Jinping Thought in the constitution.Xiis now chairman of everything and the great atheist god of China. In this brave new China, blasphemy does not go unpunished. Those who post seemingly innocuous photos online comparing Xi to Winnie the Pooh find themselves in jail for creating a negative social impact. After decades of incremental liberalization, Xi has turned back the clock. He has destroyed any alternative power or authority to that of the CCP.It seems that Xi and the CCP fear that their communist state lacks legitimacy. Also, like all previous Confucian leaders, they believe that the exercise of power by the masses would disturb the harmony of the state and could destroy it.

The solution, again as with all totalitarian states, is to identify the legitimacy of the regime with that of the nation. Chinese nationalism is now arguably the essential component of CCP ideology. Confucius has been incongruously married to Marx to legitimize a strong, modern, authoritarian hierarchical state. Xis CCP subjects people to constant propaganda and consummate censorship.

In Xis and the CCPs version of the world, China is encircled by revanchist imperial powers. Chinese greatness and strength will return by rectifying all the wrongs to Chinas borders, and that government and society suffered during the century of humiliation. China has always been the Middle Kingdom, the center of the world, and has to resume its rightful place in it. To do so, China cannot be passive. It must extend its direct influence beyond its borders. This will win Xi the support of Chinas population, affirm the leadership of the CCP and assure the stability and increasing strength of his country so that in the coming decade or two China assumes its rightful place as the worlds greatest power.

Yet something is not quite right in the realm of Emperor Xi. The domestic security apparatus has a larger budget and employs more people than the PLA. Like the Qing, the CCP worries deeply about separatism, disorder and downfall because it seized and continues to maintain power through the barrel of a gun. It remembers the lesson of 1989, when on the night of June 3, tanks rolled into Tiananmen Square, crushing student protests and massacring some 10,000 pro-democracy protesters to preserve communist rule. In contrast, German and Soviet communists capitulated on November 9, 1989, when millions flocked to the Berlin Wall.

The specter of communist collapse and Soviet disintegration haunts the CCP to this day. Rudd tells us that the CCPs top two priorities are to continue its stranglehold on power and maintain the unity of the motherland.

Under Xi, the CCP has tightened screws on Tibet, Xinjiang and, most recently, Hong Kong. Human Rights Watch tells us that new regulations in Tibet now criminalize even traditional forms of social action, including community mediation by religious figures. In Xinjiang, over 1 million people have been detained in Chinas infamous reeducation camps. They are mainly Uighurs. Under Chinese communism, reeducation is merely a sick totalitarian euphemism for the destruction of Muslim Uighur culture that is seen as a threat to the unity of China.

Xis CCP has been forcibly Han-icizing the entire Uighur population, which simply put is a policy of cultural genocide. As per a recent report by China scholar Adrian Zenz, the Chinese authorities have been forcibly sterilizing Uighur women or fitting them with contraceptive devices. Zenz also calls Chinas coercive birth control a demographic campaign of genocide against the Uighurs.

For quite some time, Chinas security services have been kidnapping book store owners, journalists, students and other dissenters from Hong Kong. Selling books or sponsoring gatherings or making speeches that the CCP considers threatening to its primacy brings swift and severe retribution. Beijing has passed a security law giving it new powers over Hong Kong. In the name of national security, the CCP can now curb free speech, the right to protest and undermine Hong Kongs largely independent judiciary.Hong Kongs autonomous status no longer exists. Winnie the Pooh is no more safe in Hong Kong now than in what used to be called mainland China.

Even as China tightens the screws at home, it is now acting more aggressively abroad. There is a new nationalism in and an excessive prickliness to Xis China. The Middle Kingdom now squabbles more with its neighbors. A new wolf warrior diplomacy has emerged. It is building artificial islands and air bases in the South China Sea. It is making all sorts of territorial claims and alienating its neighbors. China now challenges more openly and aggressively the legitimacy of international agreements, boundaries or conventions when they do not serve its national objectives. Beijing denounces them as unjust impositions by an imperialist West. International rules were made without Chinas fair input and, therefore, are invalid. Thus, woe to states with border or maritime disputes with China and to any state that dares challenge a position that the CCP takes on Chinese domestic issues such as Hong Kongs civil rights or international issues such as the sovereignty of the South China Sea. To be fair, China has resolved some border disputes peacefully, but that was in the pre-Xi era.

Perhaps increasing economic pressures also contribute to Chinas new nationalism. Chinas phenomenal growth has been centered on global integration and strong exports. The Middle Kingdom became the workshop of the world because of three key factors. First, Chinas leaders have allowed the Chinese to engage in de facto private enterprise and investment. Second, the state invested heavily in public infrastructure in the form of telecommunications, broadband, road, rail, port, power generation, transmission and distribution. Third, small enterprises took to low-wage, labor-intensive manufacturing.

This Chinese model can no longer drive economic growth as it once did. When Deng Xiaoping embraced market economics in 1979, wages were low. Today, China has become a higher wage economy with numerous low-wage rivals and has a declining, aging workforce that peaked in 2011. By 2018, it had shrunk by 2.8%. Besides, the country has now reached economic and scientific maturity in many sectors. Its high catch-up growth rates are bound to slow down.

In manufacturing, Vietnam, Bangladesh and Indonesia are emerging as new rivals. They have lower wages than China, making them more competitive for labor-intensive industries. Also, a new form of smart manufacturing is emerging in Europe and the US, threatening Chinese dominance. High-quality products are increasingly manufactured through a combination of research, robotics, new materials, additive manufacturing and cheap computing. A new economy based on interdisciplinary collaboration, international talent and cutting-edge technologies has emerged.

In geopolitical terms, China threatens the US, and the ruling superpower is determined to stay top dog. President Barack Obama negotiated a gargantuan trade deal in the form of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). He sought to create a free-trade regime to strengthen the economic system that has underpinned international economic relations since 1945. Pointedly, the Middle Kingdom was not part of the TPP because the trade deal was meant to counterbalance Chinas rise and to pressure China to adhere to and embrace these hard-won free trade, free market norms. Obamas Asia Pivot was also designed to check China.

Unlike Obamas collaborative, multilateral effort, Donald Trump has opted for a bar fight by unleashing a full-fledged trade war on Beijing. He is following mercantilist and isolationist policies. Trump has steadily withdrawn the US from the Pacific, weakening its post-World War II role as global hegemon.Nonetheless, Trump has directly, if in a ham-fisted way, called China out on decades of intellectual property theft and unbalanced domestic market protectionism. It is increasingly clear that the US-China trade war has rattled the CCP leadership. As if these pressures were not enough, there are persistent fears that Chinas gigantic debt bubble might burst. This could cause huge numbers of bankruptcies, a crash of the renminbi, a fall in growth rates and a potentially destabilizing surge in unemployment.

Xi might appear serene, but he must be deeply worried about the stresses and creaks in his realm. With many nations, internal tensions have often led to external aggression. This phenomenon might be contributing to Chinas aggressive actions against India.There are six other proximate reasons why China might be ratcheting up the pressure on Indias borders.

First, China has been touchy about Tibet, Aksai Chin and its border with India since the days of Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai. In 1962, it taught India a lesson after it refused to back down on its forward policy and turned down its boundary deal. Last year, India ended the special status for Jammu and Kashmir. New Delhi also carved out a brand new union territory of Ladakh. Official maps show Pakistani-held Gilgit and Baltistan as well as China-held Aksai Chin to be a part of Ladakh. In 1954, Maos China was not pleased with Indias maps. In 2019, Xis China is similarly displeased.

Furthermore, India has built the worlds highest airfield at Daulat Beg Oldi, a spectacular feat of effort and engineering. Once this was an old campsite on the base of the strategic Karakoram Pass that leads to the Tarim Basin in southern Xinjiang. It lies on the fabled Silk Route where travelers rested on their long journeys from Beijing to Constantinople. Located at 5,065 meters above sea level, this airfield is close to Siachen Glacier, where Indian and Pakistani troops face off. After 20 years of work, engineers also have built the 255-kilometer Darbuk-Shyok-Daulat Beg Oldie road that offers India far better access to the LAC.

India has been belatedly building its border infrastructure to match its Chinese counterpart. Naturally, the CCP wants to preserve its advantage. Ma Jiali, an India analyst at the China Reform Forum, a think tank affiliated with the CCPs elite Central Party School, blames the June 15 clash on Indias forward-moving posture in the disputed area. He claims Indias infrastructure development triggered a Chinese response.

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Second, Pakistan was incensed by Indias fait accompli in Jammu and Kashmir but wishes to avoid a full-out war in response. For decades, China has maintained close relations with Pakistan, which it uses as a lever to pressure India.Chinas increasing pressure on India along the border is a way to help Pakistan meddle in Kashmir, and both China and Pakistan want to make India pay some price for its unilateral action.

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Legendary occultist Aleister Crowley’s son from Cornwall who tried to take over the government – Cornwall Live

Aleister Crowley is one of the 20th centurys most infamous characters.

The self-styled Great Beast also dubbed The Wickedest Man In The World was a leading occultist, linked to the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, and black magician.

Crowley lived his sexually freewheeling life very much by his own edict of "Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law".

He visited west Cornwall and it is said by some that he summoned up the very Devil himself in Carn Cottage, which led to a womans death, and performed a black mass down the hill in Zennor church.

What many may not realise is that in 1934, Crowley, then aged 58, was introduced to a 19-year-old from Newlyn named Patricia Doherty.

Three years later she gave birth to the boy Crowley considered his son and heir, Randall Gair Doherty, who was nicknamed Aleister Ataturk.

Ataturk, who was based in west Cornwall for many years, lived a life that was both colourful and tragic; blighted by schizophrenia and the pressure of being Aleister Crowleys son.

Also known as Aleister Macalpine and Count Charles Edward D'Arquires (or D'Arquies), he was best known for considering himself the Adjudicator of the Supreme Council of Great Britain.

According to the Cornish writer Des Hannigan, who knew Aleister Ataturk, the Supreme Councils Acting Private Secretary, Peter Bishop, believed that everyone should sit at the bottom of Cornish mine shafts and be transformed into super beings when a shaft of sunlight struck them.

Writing on the Art Cornwall website, Mr Hannigan said: I was walking down Madron Hill one day when Aleister stopped in a fairly smart car. I was delighted to see him although he had become very pompous and even more otherworldly.

He gave me a lift into town and right there and then offered me the job of Fisheries Minister in his 'Government'. 'You would be ideal, Hannigan', he said, 'not just because of your fishing background but because you have the right appearance. Blond hair and blue eyes...' I decided that Aleister, who was always right of centre to say the least, had tipped over into the (fascist Oswald) Mosley mindset. I declined the exalted position.

Ataturk was very serious about taking over the UK government by persuasion.

In 1976 he hired a posh limousine, complete with Supreme Council pennants, and was chauffeur-driven to London with Bishop alongside him.

Always renowned for his dress he was often seen around west Cornwall in jodhpurs, riding boots and sunglasses Ataturk left Madron for 10 Downing Street, dressed in uniform with gold trimmings, epaulettes and velvet cape.

The colourful pair tried to get into Downing Street for an audience with Prime Minister Harold Wilson in order to persuade him to join their Supreme Council.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the PM refused their offer after receiving their message. Ataturk and Bishop stayed in the Dorchester Hotel all the same.

In the 1960s, Ataturk lived in a caravan in the grounds of his mother's house Wheal Betsy at the top of Chywoone Hill in Newlyn.

Later he lived in the imposing former Madron Workouse, which was built in 1838 and intended to accommodate 400 inmates.

It was while living there that Ataturk started a family and styled himself Count Charles Edward D'Arquires (or Darquies), a title given to him by his father when he was young.

The Cornishman newspaper reported how he was asked to quit the property by bailiffs in 1976. A crowd gathered to see him leave, in full regalia, as he set off in a chauffeur-driven Austin Princess for London where he was planning to meet the French ambassador to see if our granite heritage can be saved.

The newspaper reported: The Supreme Council aims to save the nation from its dilemma and darkness and in a bid to save his home, a former isolation hospital now known as Mount View Flats, he decided to appeal to France for help.

The Tricolour of France was hoisted to fly alongside the Union Jack, and he asked for the protection of the Republic of France, and wrote seeking the support of the President, M Giscard DEstaing.

I have done this because I am a French count and also because this was built by French prisoners of war in 1836, he said.

His bid to create a Supreme Council fizzled out and in the ensuing years Ataturk became deeply religious and, sadly, his mental health deteriorated. At one point he was found living on a park bench, just off Talbot Road in London with his suitcases neatly organised beside him.

He died in a car crash in Chalfont St Peter, Buckinghamshire, in 2002 aged 65.

Many people in west Cornwall still remember the tall, formidable man and his outlandish dress and behaviour.

The son of a devout Christian couple, Edward Alexander Crowley was born in Leamington Spa in 1875. His father was a preacher, but after his dad died of tongue cancer when Edward was just 11, he turned to the dark side.

After Malvern School and Tonbridge College, he read Natural Sciences at Trinity College, Cambridge. He would outright defy all Christian morals by smoking and having sex with prostitutes. For his behavior, his mother referred to him as the Beast, a title which he reveled in.

On a visit to Sweden, he experienced a life-changing vision which persuaded him of his spiritual vocation, a calling which he marked by changing his name to Aleister.

In 1889, Crowley met a chemist named Julian L Baker, a member of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, which he subsequently joined. The order was devoted to studying paranormal activity and all matters of the occult.

Crowley continued to experiment with his bisexuality and sex with prostitutes. However, while the lifestyle for him was eye-opening and spiritual, the higher level members of the Golden Dawn considered it too libertine and refused to allow him entry into the upper levels, writes All That's Interesting.

Crowleys interests combined the erotic and the esoteric. He published poetry, including a volume of verse described by one critic as the most disgusting piece of erotica in the English language'.

Gradually he evolved his own set of beliefs which drew on Oriental, ancient Egyptian, and an assortment of other traditions. His sexual preoccupations were equally various. He took many lovers both male and female and practised a form of sex magic.

A brilliant climber, big game hunter, and inveterate traveller, Crowley explored Mexico, India, Egypt, America, and much more besides. In the first two decades of the 20th century, he wrote a series of tracts outlining his philosophy.

The Law of Thelema a word taken from the Greek for Will was, he claimed, dictated to him by an ancient Egyptian spirit. It laid out the key principle of life, as Crowley saw it: the pursuit of each individuals will, unconstrained by popular opinion, law, or conventional ethics.

In 1920, he moved to Sicily, where he established the Abbey of Thelema as the headquarters for his new religion. Here he pursued spiritual enlightenment, declaring himself Ipssissimus beyond the Gods in 1921.

He also experimented with sex and drugs. In 1923 an Englishman died in mysterious circumstances after a ritual during which he was said to have consumed the blood of a cat. The British press and the Italian fascist government were equally appalled. Crowley was expelled from Sicily, the Abbey closed, and the group dispersed.

During the Thelema Abbey scandal, one newspaper referred to Crowley as the wickedest man in the world. He would have denied this, claiming that his work was truly good because it freed men from earthly rules and opened up truly spiritual experiences.

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Although impoverished, disgraced, and a near-skeletal heroin addict, Crowley never lacked followers.

He fathered several children (including Cornwall's Aleister Ataturk), most of them illegitimately, and was still in demand as a medium and a magus to the end, designing a new sequence of tarot cards and commentating on it at some length in his Book of Thoth of 1944. He died, in Hastings, in 1947.

His fame only increased after death. There are still groups who call themselves Thelemites, and his tarot cards and books are still popular.

He was taken up by the counter culture of the 1960s and can be seen on the cover of the Beatles' Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album and featured in David Bowie's song Quicksand.

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Legendary occultist Aleister Crowley's son from Cornwall who tried to take over the government - Cornwall Live

Top 50 leadership books and quotes according to Kindle and Goodreads data – Digital Information World

A strong leader can motivate and inspire people to work towards a shared goal. All other elements of business essentially hinge on whether you are able to build a cooperative and collaborative work culture, and this can affect the success of an organization.

If you are hoping to develop your business leadership skills, youre already off to a good start. Great leadership isnt a one-size-fits-all quality that can be picked up without effort and consideration. It requires a growth-mentality that is willing to question your own strengths and vulnerabilities, striving to understand what motivates other people to work effectively, and learning how to encourage and nurture people in your workforce to achieve their potential.

There are various different types of leadership style. Some managers are more effective than others, but that doesnt mean there is a definitive correct way to lead a team. For example, there is a misconception that extroverts are better at sticking their necks out and getting results, but Susan Cain argues in Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Cant Stop Talking, that introverted people can be great listeners, and this is a perceptive quality that can help in negotiating and collaborating with others.

You might want your business to run like a finely-oiled machine, but its really important to consider what will motivate your employees to make their best contribution to your organization. This requires a human approach, that shows appreciation for peoples needs, values, and sense of purpose. In Start with Why: How Great Leaders Inspire Everyone to Take Action, Simon Sinek explains that There are only two ways to influence human behaviour: you can manipulate it or you can inspire it. An inspired and well-motivated staff are naturally going to be more dedicated to meeting targets and deadlines.

Another great quality that many successful business leaders display is the ability to organize and delegate clearly defined goals that recognize and utilize the talents, interests, and experience of individuals within an organization. This requires a strong understanding not only of your goals, but also of the resources that are available to you - including human resources. As Daniel H. Pink explains in Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us, successful people have autonomy over the four Ts: their task, their time, their technique, and their team. Making sure you have a clear idea of what youre doing, and who youre working with, will help things run more smoothly.

Learning to be an effective business leader involves taking some responsibility for your own success. Its about thinking about what you want to achieve, and working with your employees to tap into each others potential. If you approach it with a positive and constructive attitude, you will find leadership truly rewarding.

Fortunately, there is a wealth of resources available to offer guidance to prospective leaders, company owners, and business managers. From philosophers and academics in the fields of economics, social sciences, and psychology, to pioneers in tech, media, and other industries, whatever your business focus, Resume.io have collected top-rated expert leadership advice that can help you achieve your goals.

Using Goodreads data, they found the top 50 rated leadership books of all time, and then used Amazon Kindle data to determine the most-highlighted quote by users for each book.

The result gives us fifty inspirational quotes to turn to whenever we need some inspiration:1. Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson

2. Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner

4. The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference by Malcolm Gladwell

8. Who Moved My Cheese? by Spencer Johnson

13.The Prince by Niccol Machiavelli

20. Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity by David Allen

29. Emotional Intelligence: Why It Can Matter More Than IQ by Daniel Goleman

44. Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies by James C. Collins and Jerry I. Porras

46.Extreme Ownership: How U.S. Navy SEALs Lead and Win by Jocko Willink and Leif Babin

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Top 50 leadership books and quotes according to Kindle and Goodreads data - Digital Information World

International Yoga Day 2020: Yoga and its connection with Vedas; know what scriptures say about it – Catch News

As the international yoga day is round the corner we are trying keeping our viewers updated and motivated regarding this event. So far we have talked about benefits of yoga, why it is celebrated on 21st June and how to celebrate the day amid the coronavirus lockdown. Today, in this article we are going to talk about what our sacred scriptures say about yoga and how old is this concept.

Yoga that we all practice today has had a more thoughtful meaning than being only a set of asanas for the body as well as the mind. What is popular worldwide is the dhyana or abhyasa form of Yoga. However, it is believed that the real meaning and purpose of Yoga includes the various aspects of life or the fundamental features of a person's journey on earth.

The word yoga is derived from the Sanskrit word Yuj which means join, connect or merge. According to the scholars, yoga was first found mentioned in the Rig Veda. Subsequently, in Upanishads Yoga is mentioned as a method incorporated to control the mind through meditation, regulate the thoughts, and to attain the knowledge of the consciousness (Purusha).

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Bringing you the excerpts from Katha Upanishad it says:

Ta durdara ghamanupraviaguhhita gahvarha puram.Adhytmaygdhigamna dvamatv dhr harakau jahti.Meaning: One attains the knowledge of the existence of God with the spiritual realization (Yoga), the Supreme Being who is infinite and universal. Only those who do away with agonies and ecstasies attain enlightenment.

Whereas, another verse describes Yoga as:Yada panchaavatishthante gyaanaani manasa sah .buddhishch na vicheshtate taamaahuh paramaan gatim .taan yogamiti manyante sthiraamindriyadhaaranaam .apramattastada bhavati yogo hi prabhavaapyayauMeaning: When a person can keep the mind and the five senses, intellect in control without letting it waver, he/she has attained the state of realization. This spiritual practice is called Yoga that helps the mind concentrate. Yoga helps in meaningful creation and destruction.

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Not just in Rig Veda or Upanishads but also in Bhagavad Gita one can find in innumerable definitions of Yoga. According to the holy book, Yoga includes every aspect of human life. There are eighteen kinds of Yoga, namely, Visadh Yoga, Sankhya Yoga, Karma Yoga, Jnana (Gyana) Yoga, Karma Vairagya Yoga, Dhyana or Abhyasa Yoga, Paramhamsa Vijnana (Vigyana) Yoga, Aksara Parabrahman Yoga, Raja Vidya Guhya Yoga, Vibhuti Vistara Yoga, Vishwaroopa Darshana Yoga, Bhakti, Kshetra Kshetrejna Vibhaga Yoga.

Various scriptures define Yoga differently, nonetheless, they all highlight on Yoga being a tool or a method of realization. Therefore, the asanas and pranayam that we practice today are one of the many aspects of the broader system called Yoga.

Also Read:International Yoga Day: Know why celebrated on June 21

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International Yoga Day 2020: Yoga and its connection with Vedas; know what scriptures say about it - Catch News

Summer Solstice: the longest day and shortest night of the year – RTE.ie

Opinion: the ancient Celtic festival acts as a timely reminder and celebration of who, where and what we really are

For northern hemisphere dwellers, Summer Solstice - the longest day and the shortest night of our year - is usually celebrated on June 21st. This year, the exact time of the cross-quarter moment between Bealtaine (early Summer) and Lughnasadh (early Autumn) is Saturday June 20th at 21.44pm (Irish time).On the Dark New Moon, we do have the added excitement of an Annular Solar Eclipse from 4.00am on Sunday 21stvisible from East Africa to North India and China.

In Gaelic, Solstice is "Grianstad",literally 'sun-stop' and this is one of the two great peak moments of the light and dark interplay in our universe. Directly opposite Winter Solstice, this Saturday is the peak of the sun's highest climb into maximum light. However,it is the earth which is on an elliptical orbit around the sun which uniquely brings about this phenomenon.

For several days after June 20th, the hours and minutes of daylight will remain almost exactly the same and near June 25th, the light will imperceptibly begin to lessen as we move deeper into the second half of this season. In terms of light, Summer Solstice day is 9 hours, 30 minutes longer than on Winter Solstice in December.

From RT Archives,Alasdair Jackson reports for RT News on druids celebrating the Summer Solstice at the Hill of Tara, Co Meath in 1997

As a sunflower will twist and turn throughout the day to face the sun, when we humans look upwards, open to the solar energies of Summer Solstice, we are no longer separated from ourselves or the environment.Our ancestors saw this key turning point in the Celtic calendar as momentous a time of blooming,blossoming and wild abandon. Even though it does herald the light starting to lessen, we can imagine they revelled in the height of summer and the fresh earthy freedom seeking new pleasures before Harvest.

The eternal ancestral voice from spiritual traditions is remembered in ceremonies and rituals in nature that can remind us who, where and what we really are. It is a traditional time for weddings, fires, garlands of colourful blossoms, and dance rituals.

For a species that defines being spiritualised as enlightenment, the peak moment of light on our planet is extremely special. We are consumers of light through our diet made possible by photosynthesis. Many healing modalities are built on the phenomenon of our chakra system as being made of the constituents of light.

No matter how we find our lives at this time, we cannot be immune from the abundance of light, heat, radiation and electromagnetic energy peaking in our natural world. That immensity is poetically evoked in one of the great mythological stories of Ireland.

Our ancestors had many references to deify the sun, outstanding is Lugh the Sun God, known asLugh Samhildnachor Lugh of the Many Arts. His entry to the court ofKing Nuada of the Tuatha D Danann (in Gaelic the "Tribe of Mother Earth") at Tara, the nexus of supreme power, was only possible by his response to the tests heaped upon him by the gatekeeper.

From RT Radio 1'sMarian Finucane show, Folklorist Patricia Lysaght talks about midsummertraditions

As told in legend and lore, he offered his services as a wright, a smith, a champion, a swordsman, a harpist, a hero, a poet and historian, a shaman, and a craftsman, but each time is rejected as theTuatha D Danannalready have someone with that skill.

However, when Lugh asks Nuada if they have anyone with all those skills combined, Nuada has to admit that he is the first to possess all these talents and so Lugh joins the court asChiefOllamof Ireland, (Ollamis broadly equivalent to Professor in Gaelic).

Untangling the metaphor, when we too foster 'enlightenment within as Lugh did, we can discover and claim multiple potentials and gifts inherent in ourselves and take our place in the Tribe of Mother Earth, identified by our wisdom.

We are called to remember too that Summer Solstice heralds the slow return of the dark, which must be accepted with a knowing awareness

There is no greater invitation in the years turning than Summer Solstice to shine our own inner light like the sun. We may allow the light to illuminate what is known and unknown in ourselves, accepting both our light and darker sides. We are called to remember too that Summer Solstice heralds the slow return of the dark after June 20th, which must be accepted with a knowing awareness.

Just as our ancestors gathered to celebrate together for three days of feasting and revelry, there are many modern-day equivalents likethe Body & SoulFestival in Ballinlough, Co. Westmeath or the the Lough Gur Summer Solstice Festival in Co Limerick. However, these festivals, like many others, have been cancelled this year due to Covid-19. However the hipster city village of Dublin's Stoneybatter Festival has morphed online so you can still sample the delights of Woofstock and Batter Chatterthis weekend. Perhaps life hasnt changed as much as evolved as the old ways remain alive and well in our hearts and souls.

The views expressed here are those of the author and do not represent or reflect the views of RT.

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Who is known as the father of yoga? Know history and other details – Republic World – Republic World

The practice of yoga is a physical,mentalandspiritual discipline that has helped andbenefited people across the world to maintaina state of physical and mental well-being. Originally, yoga was introduced in India and later was practicedall over the globe.India hasmany yoga gurus, yoga teachers, who have been travelling the world to teach the art of yoga to millions of people. But did you know, according to religious writings,Lord Shiva was the father of Yoga? Read ahead for more details.

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Lord Shiva is known as Adiyogi Shiva, i.e., the first yogi. According to the scriptures and its teachings, in the yogi culture,Lord Shiva isconsidered as the Adiyogi (the first yogi), Lord Shiva was the father of Yoga. It waspenned about 15 thousand years ago thatShiva reached to the stage of complete wisdom. As the Hindu writings suggest,Lord Shiva went to the Himalayas and because of his happiness, he started dancing. He danced so wildly that he became very fast or still. People were amazed to see that and wanted to learn the secret of this happiness.

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People gathered but Shiva cared the least and didn't stop. However, in the end, only seven people waited.These were thesaptrishis, the seven sages. These saptrishis asked Shiva to teach them about his enlightenment and how to achieve such a pleasurable ecstasy state. But Shiva didnt respond as he was in complete stillness and unaware of the outer world. As time and years passed, yoga was developed and it resulted in modern yoga. Modern yoga includes arange of techniques,asanas(postures) andmeditationderived from some of the philosophies, teachings and practices of the yoga school.

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According to various speculations,Patanjali is known as the father of modern yoga.TheYoga Stras of Patajaliare an aphoristic collection of Sanskritsutrason the theory and practice of ancientyoga. These commentaries mentionfollowing twelve postures but provide no details:Padma asana,Veera asana,Bhadra asana,svastika asana,danda asana,sopasraya asana,paryanka asana,kraunchanishada asana,hastanishada asana,ushtranishada asana,samasansathana asanaandsthirasukha asana.TheYoga Sutrasof Patanjali has been a celebrated text for some who practice modern yoga.

In some parts of India,Tirumalai Krishnamacharya is also considered as the father of modern yoga. Hewas an Indianyogateacher, ayurvedic healer, and scholar.Krishnamacharya is widely regarded as one of the most influential yoga teachers of the 20th century.

Also read |Nature Photography Day wishes: Wish your photographer pals with these interesting messages

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Instrument of the Machine No More – James Moore

I am a 29-year-old survivor of child abuse, poverty, and substance addiction. I am also a clinical social worker and now a graduate student seeking my Ph.D. in psychology. From the age of 25 until I entered graduate school at 28, I worked twelve-hour days, four days a week in a university psychiatric hospital as the lead inpatient therapist. In this story, I reflect on my actions while working in the inpatient ward and how this work changed me. Throughout the essay, I put certain words in quotation marks. They indicate words I once used compulsively as a psychiatric provider. These terms came to influence how I saw patients and, eventually, the world around me. These marks also reflect the fact that, after I learned the purpose and harm of these words, I chose to no longer use them.

When I began my work, I truly believed that forced hospitalization, psychoeducation, medication, and confinement were viable solutions for healing mental illness. I believed this because I was taught that mental illness manifests from within the person. Thus, during my month-long training in the inpatient ward, the mechanisms of medication (involuntary or otherwise) and confinement were explained as pivotal in reducing illness and promoting well-being. But mostly I believed in psychiatric hospitalization and medication because I witnessed hypomania replace hypermania, elevated mood states supplant depression, and trust replace paranoia. Mere days after hospitalization, I watched people re-regulate and de-thaw from the icy hand of illness. I thought inpatient treatment was a panacea.

After training, I was champing at the bit to help people and to shift from believer in traditional care to provider of traditional care. After all, I felt I was uniquely qualified to do so. My history of child abuse, poverty, and substance dependence granted me a perspective that I perceived many other professionals lacked. In fact, I would be lying if I stated that I did not feel as though the patients gravitated toward me more than my nurse or psychiatrist colleagues. Whether or not this was because I was a therapist or because kindred spirits sense one another, I do not know.

My schooling and on-ward training with the psychiatrists had indoctrinated me into the traditional medical model of health and well-being. I acted out this programming almost immediately. In my first week, I met a young woman who was delusional. She said snakes were crawling in her stomach. She wanted to get them out. The nurses impressed upon me that she was refusing medication and that she had requested therapy. They hoped I could persuade her that medication was a good idea (perhaps the most common request I received during my time as a therapist). So, I set forth on my first solo encounter. I recall listening to her talk. I remember noting that her feelings seemed real and that her belief about the snakes appeared as strong as any belief I held. But I did not remark much on her feelings or beliefs. I told her that her medication would help. When she refused, I told her the snakes wouldnt go away unless she took the medication. That seemed to do the trick.

She only grumbled to me about snakes once more during her weeks-long stay. We perceived her reduced complaints as proof that the medication had worked. A chalk mark in the win column. Thus, I perceived my first encounter as a victory and was hungry to continue. Yet, I remember hearing this patients remark that she frequently talked about the snakes among her peers in the ward. Today, I cannot help feeling that she stopped talking about the snakes to me because shed lost trust in me, not because the medication worked. That chalk mark should have been in the loss column.

Some months later I was put in charge of running group treatments. I thought this was a great opportunity to educate group members on the reasons they were sick. During each group, I drew a large circle on the whiteboard. I then cut the circle into four pie slices labeled Biology, Psychology, Social, and Spirituality. I instructed the patients that their biology was faulty. I told them how this faulty biology influenced their psychology, causing deregulated thought processes. I told them how their illness prevented them from having social engagements, which in turn minimized their spiritual well-being. I usually concluded by telling them how their medication could be combined with a good diet and good friendships to make them less ill. I failed, however, to tell them how to establish good nutrition or to find friends and rebuild trust with others. Nonetheless, I went home many nights to sleep well, feeling assured that I was helping others find freedom from their illnesses.

Shortly after working at the psychiatric hospital, I began to notice personality changes. When I would go out to the gym, grocery store, or to socialize with friends, I began to expect people to talk to themselves or to shuffle amotivationally. At work, I would frequently hear a high-pitched buzzing sound. This meant that I had to spring into action because someone was having a violent outburst and I had to calm or hold someone down long enough to allow a nurse to inject emergency medicine. Sometimes in public, I would hear a similar sound. The hairs on my arms would stand on end. I would stand up in my seat, ready to act.

Furthermore, I began to diagnose my friends, family members, and romantic partners. I could be with no one without seeing sickness. I left several partners because they expressed some thought I found bizarre; I assumed they had the gene for schizophrenia. And I did not want to be around when some stressor activated that gene. Though I would hear friends express understandable emotions stemming from stress, I would mentally label them with some diagnosis. I even occasionally suggested they pursue medication. I became guarded in personal relationships, indifferent to suffering I could not cure, and advocated for hospitalization or medication whenever I saw people in emotional distress.

This was the insidious effect of psychiatric work. I became an instrument of psychiatry. Wherever I went, I anticipated illness and sought out people to diagnose and treat. I became a boundaryless tool of psychiatry.

For about two more years, I worked with unskeptical enthusiasm. But during my final year, my skepticism mounted. There was an intimidatingly large person who came into the unit about every three months. He had a low, booming voice and spoke eloquently. He always had disheveled hair, patchy facial hair, and was usually dirty when he entered care. Slowly, he and I became friends. Building this friendship took considerable time.

The last time I saw him, he was dirtier and more disheveled than usual. I left him alone for the first day, knowing that he would want to sleep. The next day, I engaged him. He told me the governor was throwing thought bombs into his head and that his thoughts were being broadcast. This was a normal conversation for us, but this time he was unusually animated. I was worried. I asked him if he wanted to take medication. Often when I made this suggestion, he would say yes. This time he yelled at me: THESE MEDICATIONS DONT WORK A DAMN! IF THEY DID, I WOULDNT HAVE TO KEEP COMING HERE!

I was shaken. He had never yelled at me before. Moreover, this was the first time I had been forced to reckon with this idea. If these medications were supposed to cure, why were these people still coming and why would medication stop working? Did it ever work at all? I felt a seed of doubt plant itself for the first time. As it turns out, this seed would sprout more quickly than anticipated.

Later that day, my friend raised his voice at the psychiatrist. Undeterred, the psychiatrist turned to the nurse and swiftly told her to get his meds to avoid an emergency. To this day, I know the psychiatrist misjudged the situation. My friend only wanted to be heard. However, I dared not speak up. Fear of losing the clout Id gained rocked my bones.

My friend knew the psychiatrists words meant forced medication. He barricaded himself in the television room. The buzzing alarm was sounded and a troop of technicians dutifully rolled into the ward. Their militant posture betrayed any notion that they were there to help. They were eager to engage. My friend held the door and they pushed and kicked it in. The door lurched inward on my friend and scraped off his toenails. He howled and my stomach turned as I watched them pull him to the ground while the nurse injected him with medication. He never spoke to me again. In many ways, this episode mirrored my first therapeutic encounter at the ward. Trust built through laughter, candidness, and months of earnest sharing dissolved instantly as I stood by watching the psychiatric machine swallow my friends dignity.

Days after the incident, I filed a complaint. My complaint disappeared into the ether of the healthcare system, where all things that enter dissipate, never to be seen again. I also spoke with the attending psychiatrist. She reminded me that had my friend not barricaded himself and taken his medication, the situation would not have unfolded the way it did. I soon recognized that my complaint would not be heeded and that the psychiatric treatment team could see no harm in what they had done.

During my last year at the hospital, many incidents occurred that I found unsettling. Strangely, many of them were things that would not have bothered me in previous years. When I would see people readmitted to the hospital only days after theyd checked out, I could no longer place the blame on lack of adherence to treatment. I conducted a survey and found that over the past year, our re-admission rate was higher than 50 percent. This was hardly a re-admission rate one would expect to see if medications and inpatient treatment definitively worked.

Then I began to run groups differently than I had before. Instead of drawing pie charts, I asked people the reasons for their hospitalization. The answers ranged from child abuse to drug dependence. Many individuals were homeless. Mothers had been admitted to the hospital after their childrens deaths. Young adults checked in because they felt suicidal after a devastating breakup or the loss of a loved one. These answers to why are you here? differed drastically from the reasons ascribed by our treatment team. Not one person mentioned that theyd been hospitalized due to atypical treatment response or medication non-adherence. Though their charts attributed their hospitalization to these reasons, I heard no mention of these terms from the people themselves. We could not treat the real problems, though, if they were not identified in the charts.

I also stopped psychoeducating in groups. Instead, I began to ask for peoples stories, and we all took turns sharing. When someone refused medication, I no longer saw a renegade with anosognosia. Instead, I saw a person making a choice, and connected them with a peer who then connected them with alternative recovery methods.

In my final months at the hospital, I recognized that people entered care for understandable reasons. I discovered that sharing stories brought people to life and created connections that sometimes went beyond the hospital walls. I stopped diagnosing my friends and family. Id learned that diagnoses can be isolating labels disguised as treatment tools (and evidence from research indicates this as well). Of equal importance, I dove into literature on psychiatric medication. I learned about the iatrogenic effects they can cause and that medication effects often mimic illness symptoms. I wondered: How can I disentangle the degree of current distress from medication side-effects?

During my last month at the psychiatric hospital, the facility released a survey asking former patients their thoughts on treatment. Overwhelmingly, those who responded hated being locked up and given medications or ECT (obviously). On the other hand, I am proud that in the survey section labeled enjoyable activities during stay, many people discussed how sharing their life stories in groups made them feel human. I recognized that the prerequisite state for this comment is that previously, people had felt dehumanized. That I had done something to reawaken their humanity is the reason I embarked on the professional course I am now pursuing. Paradoxically, to do so, I had to eschew traditional treatment paradigms.

In this story, I reflect upon actions I took that hindered peoples freedoms and perhaps violated their human rights. People sent back into the community often came back to the hospital in similar or worse distress than upon our first meeting. They often lost trust in us providers and frequently complained that the medications we gave them prevented them from working, driving, talking, and living. To me, this meant that our treatment methods did not work. These realizations drove me to apply for a Ph.D. in psychology. I realized that I must research new ways to help people recover from distress.

Today, I refuse to use terms such as mental illness, opting instead to use words like distress. I also refuse to use the terms patient client or recipient and instead call those I work with people. I advocate for the use of peer-supported treatments and press my peers to ensure that any help we provide is collaboratively developed and engaged in voluntarily.

Though I am still in the belly of the beast, I am aware that traditional psychiatric and psychological treatment can be colonizing, labeling, harmful, and dehumanizing. If we are going to change traditional mental health care, researchers need to actively seek and share critical voices for whom the traditional model does not work (which is a considerable number). Until transformative system change occurs, new communities of practice must be developed and instituted. During my studies, I read a journal article stating that psychiatrists often involuntarily hospitalize people because they have no less restrictive alternative. These alternatives must be generated. Experts-by-experience and experts-by- study can be the stopgap between distress and hospitalization.

I look back on my work at the psychiatric hospital with mixed emotions. There were times when I saw people get connected to housing services after being homeless for long periods of time. I also saw people get rest in a safe, warm bed after days of little to no rest. At other times, I saw nurses and doctors act with sincere compassion. But I recognize that whatever good I have witnessed, all of it can be accomplished in less restrictiveand less harmfulsettings. For me, an abrupt awakening altered my worldview completely. I suspect that for traditional psychiatric hospital care, gradual enlightenment backed by mountains of evidence and social activism will be the means by which we can dismantle this machine and replace it with more helpful, collective, and humanizing means of recovery.

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Instrument of the Machine No More - James Moore

The statue-topplers are obsessed with white men and white history – Spectator.co.uk

On my visits to Bristol in the past, there was always a certain statue peering over the city centre that would trigger heightened emotions in me. Im not talking about the recently toppled monument of slave-trader Edward Colston, but the memorial to another representative of empire: the radical scholar and reformer Raja Rammohan Roy, who came to London in 1830 as the ambassador of the Mughal Emperor (who was by then a titular sovereign under the rule of the East India Company), and died in Bristol three years later. He now stands in pride of place on College Green, outside the cathedral, about five minutes walk from where the Colston statue stood, until last weekend.

Both statues commemorate quintessential products of the British Empire. And yet they couldnt have been less alike. The moneyed, dandyish Colston, portrayed with cane in hand, was an unscrupulous capitalist who earned a fortune from the enslavement of 84,000 Africans, whereas the austere, scholarly Rammohan Roy, seen wielding a hardback, was a spiritual reformer who wrote and campaigned in five languages, notably against child marriage and widow-burning.

About Colstons neighbour, there remains a telling ignorance. Roys name doesnt come up in discussions about Bristols public space, despite the prominence of memorials to him throughout the city. The decolonise movement pushing for the removal of imperialist monuments (distinct from Black Lives Matter) is curiously apathetic about recognising the achievements of such black and Asian luminaries, even though it might have learned something from a man who was decolonising society two centuries ago. Once in Britain, Roy campaigned for a parliamentary crackdown on the East India Company and for democratic enfranchisement in the Reform Bill, threatening to quit the empire if it wasnt passed.

Would-be decolonisers are ostensibly in favour of an inclusive, warts-and-all history of Britains entanglements with the world. But they seem obsessed by a very particular congealment of warts (Cromwell, Clive of India, Cecil Rhodes, Churchill), which has the effect of making their version of history a Eurocentric pantomime in which the fate of vast swathes of the world lay, improbably, in the hands of a band of nefarious British statesmen alone. If the cast list sounds familiar, its because the movement is ironically replicating the Whiggish Island Story narrative public schoolboys were once suckled on, and its no coincidence that everyone I know who is active in this movement was privately educated. Its hard to avoid the sense that the white guilt they have made their collective shibboleth is a subconscious form of white pride.

And thats why a figure like Rammohan Roy, whose life demonstrates how colonial subjects werent just passive victims of white men like Colston, gets short shrift. The father of Indias Renaissance in the 19th century was much the son of empire, his genius fomented by the arrival from Britain of empirical science, constitutional liberalism and the Protestant zeal for literacy. But he also fused these with traditional Sufi and Vedantic scholarship, thereby inaugurating what would become the prevailing outlook of the postcolonial world, which reconciles science, technology and European languages with modernised customs and reformed beliefs.

Thanks to Roy, Hindu widows are nowhere obliged to leap into their husbands funeral pyres. Colonial governors played their part by getting legislation passed, but it was Roys original polemics in Bengali and Persian that persuaded Hindus to spurn this ritual. Brief Remarks Regarding Modern Encroachments on the Ancient Rights of Females, from 1822, may be the first non-European work of feminism. It was written in the seething intellectual climate of empire in which all the worlds traditions were being plundered, and not just by Western orientalists; this was a two-way street.

The modish trashing of the Enlightenment as racist exposes the decolonise movement unwittingly exalting Europe as the fount of knowledge. Its critical energies are lavishly spent on Western thinkers, as if Europe were the only place doing any thinking at this time. Theres an urge to dethrone Immanuel Kant, but none to study his contemporary: Rammohan Roy. He offered Asia a vision of emancipation to challenge, even influence Europes. Spains 1812 constitution was dedicated to Al liberalismo del noble, sabio, y virtuoso Brahma Ram-Mohan Roy, to the liberalism of the noble, wise and virtuous Rammohan Roy.

A hundred million Indian schoolchildren could proudly tell you about Rammohan Roys achievements. But the decolonise movement here is unmoved by these nuances of empire. Roy simply cannot compete for attention with Colston. To the decolonise movement, the latters villainy irresistibly affirms the centrality of the white race to history, a source of much subliminal comfort.

Meanwhile, the now-derided Bristol City Council, which has been run by parties of the centre-left for 50 years, has sympathetically recognised black and Asian history in its public space, diligently honouring Rammohan Roy. Besides the statue, a bronze bust sits in the town hall, a symbol for ethnic minority councillors of successful political engagement. Roys mausoleum a lovely limestone pavilion erected over his grave in 1844 was recently restored, and is a focal point for Bristols Indian, Bangladeshi and womens associations. A plaque marks the spot where Roy died. His portrait (see p27) is in the city museum. (So is a lock of his hair.)

Civic inclusion of this kind is more fruitful than toppling statues. But the decolonisers never build anything. The #RhodesMustFall Oxford mission statement reads: Statues and symbols matter; they are a means through which communities express their values. Rhodes must therefore be removed from his perch at Oriel College, Oxford, because he is emblematic of white supremacy. Fine. But if this were a sincerely held conviction, it should follow that there would be a push to commemorate the black and Asian minds produced by that university. There is only a half-hearted murmur to do so. In Bristol, a bid to replace Colstons statue with one of a veteran black campaigner is blatantly an afterthought. The rule is to fixate, with Oedipal vigour, on the great white men of history.

If the real mass of black and Asian people in this country were consulted, as opposed to an unrepresentative (though often very eloquent) set of activist-journalists who make this cause credible, it would be obvious these mute, lifeless effigies are not experienced as a micro-aggression, a notion that sounds frivolous to anyone who experienced the racial animus of earlier decades.

My father left school in what was then Pakistan (now Bangladesh) at 16, and came to this country to work first in textile mills, then in curry houses. Lost in the obscure streets of a strange country, he would, upon seeing the familiar names engraved on imperial plinths, regain his bearing. To him, they were signposts of a shared history. Londons epicentre was thus marked, strangely, by the statue in Trafalgar Square of Charles Napier, who conquered Pakistans Sindh province.

Of their sins my father was far from ignorant. Taking me on walks when I was little, hed be prompted by such monuments to pass down the experience of empire: how Clive of India overthrew us, the Muslims of Bengal, at the Battle of Plassey in 1757, or of how our rural community starved during the 1943 Bengal famine, which Churchill arguably exacerbated.

Later, when I worked in Whitehall, Id walk past the Clive memorial outside the Foreign Office several times a day. I came to identify with it. To my mind, this statue, more than Gandhis round the corner at Parliament Square, revealed why Id ended up here, why I wasnt ploughing rice paddies in the old country, embodying the truth that we are here because they were there. Black and Asian people have something in common with these slabs of stone and bronze, flotsam from the same shipwreck of the past.

I am bitterly aware of the iniquity of empire. But that Bristolians now know far more about Colstons sinister dealings, but precious little about the achievements of the more extensively commemorated Rammohan Roy, suggests that antagonism nowadays cuts through better than glorification.

Todays decolonisers would end up sanitising our cities into bland, inoffensive spaces, untethered from the complex, often tragic forces that shaped them. Without these tokens of the past, we risk becoming ignorant, as well as deracinated and unmoored from history. I have a feeling this, in fact, is the intent. In some people I spy the zeal of the felon wishing to strike out his criminal record. Or worse: the utopian desire to make of our past a blank slate on which to project back without the hindrance of inconvenient facts the brave new ideologies of the future.

Rammohan Roy, a prolific theologian who attacked irrational religious practices, would have recognised in the actions of last weeks iconoclasts an abject ritual quality. They ceremoniously dumped Colston into the river Avon, just like the annual immersion into the Ganges of sculpted effigies of the goddess Durga, a baptism meant to purify, to wash away the stain of sin. Whatever absolution this may offer to the psyche, its not what history should be about.

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The statue-topplers are obsessed with white men and white history - Spectator.co.uk

10 books Amazon editors say you’ll want to read in June – Business Insider – Business Insider

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Alyssa Powell/Business Insider

At this point, chances are you've binged everything on your watch list and finished an extensive array of at-home DIYs. While the need for safe social distancing persists, satisfy your desire for adventure by getting lost in a good book.

Reading is also a great way to enjoy the warmer weather when you can embrace sunnier days by lounging outside with a page-turning read. For inspiration on what to choose, look no further than Amazon's Best Books of the Month, which is sure to add some riveting titles to your reading list.

June's picks include a thrilling horror narrative exploring a fictional eco-community terrorized by a legendary creature in the aftermath of a devastating volcano eruption, as well as the story of a joint family vacation that's gripped by personal distractions and an unexpected murder.

Captions have been provided by Erin Kodicek, editor of books, and Kindle at Amazon.com.

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10 books Amazon editors say you'll want to read in June - Business Insider - Business Insider

Siddhivinayak Temple Mumbai yet to open; check out aarti timings, other details and where to watch it live – Times Now

Siddhivinayak Temple Mumbai live Tuesday darshan details 

The Siddhinivayak temple in Mumbai's Prabhadevi region is one of the most famous shrines in the country. Those who visit the city for the first time, do pay obeisance to Siddhivinayak, the 'lord who fulfills wishes' or the 'lord of enlightenment' or the 'enlightened one.'

Tuesdays or mangalvar are generally meant for worshipping Mangal Moorti Ganpati Bappa. He is called Sukh Karta (giver of happiness) and Dukh Harta (remover of sorrow). Therefore, he is Mangal, meaning auspicious. Devotees usually walk barefoot from their homes on Tuesdays to take the first darshan of Bappa in the morning. It is believed that people's wishes get fulfilled, and therefore, Siddhivinayak is considered as the one who grants people's desires. Devotees pay a visit to Bappa before asking for a wish and after it gets fulfilled too.

The idol of Siddhivinayak is unlike the other Ganesha idols. Here, Bappa looks resplendent in red, has the third eye on the forehead, four hands and the trunk titled towards the right. This is a rare sight because most of the idols elsewhere have his trunk inclined towards the left. Siddhivinayak Bappa holds a lotus, an axe, ajapmala(garland of sacred beads) and a modak in the upper right, upper left hands, lower right hand, and lower left hand respectively. Goddesses Riddhi and Siddhi are seen seated on either side.

The Siddhivinayak shrine is one of the most visited temples in the country. Thousands flock the temple throughout the week, but Tuesdays are considered more special. The temple is presently not open to the public owing to the lockdown implemented to contain the spread of coronavirus. However, you can take a virtual Darshan of Ganpati Bappa.

You may click this link for the LIVE darshan. http://www.siddhivinayak.org/virtual_darshan.asp

Tuesday's special (early morning Shree Darshan) - 3.15 AM to 4.45 AM

Kakad Aarti and early morning puja- 5.00 AM to 5.30 AM

Shree Darshan - 5.30 AM to 12.15 PM

Naivedhya -12.15 PM to 12.30 PM

Shree Darshan - 12.30 PM to 8.45 PM

Aarti - 9.30 PM to 10.00 PM

Shejaarti (final aarti of the day) - 12.00 AM

Ganpati Bappa Morya, Mangal Moorti Morya.

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Siddhivinayak Temple Mumbai yet to open; check out aarti timings, other details and where to watch it live - Times Now

Rugby World Cup injury left me in a wheelchair but I wouldnt discourage anyone from playing the game – iNews

The voice on the line from Talence in Bordeaux belongs to a tragic figure but the message from Max Brito is patient and clear: Accidents happen in rugby and other sports and everywhere in life. If we stop playing sport for fear of injury you might as well stop doing anything.

Twenty five years ago on 3 June 1995 Brito broke his neck playing for Cote dIvoire in their one and only World Cup finals, held in South Africa. In the second minute of the teams third pool match against Tonga in Rustenburg, Brito a quick and nimble wing who was in the squad only because of an injury to his older brother Patrick caught a box-kick from a scrum and ran towards the Tongan forwards.

He was tackled to the ground and as he tried to lay the ball back, players of both sides fell on him, forcing a blast of huge pressure through his head and neck. He is said to have called to Jean Sathicq, the Cote dIvoire captain: Its over.

It was and remains the most shocking injury at a major rugby tournament. Britos spinal cord was severed at the fifth vertebra, and he was left in a wheelchair for life, unable to walk, though today he can tap his fingers and has about half the normal range of movement in his arms. I am very limited in what I can do, Brito tells i, speaking through an interpreter. All the same, I manage to move about the house, to do certain things. I dont have a job but I read about naturopathy [healing through natural therapies], and that takes up my time.

Read more: Premiership Rugby to ignore new coronavirus World Rugby law changes

Britos father Charles, from Senegal, passed away last year, but he sees his mother Yolande, who was from Cote dIvoire, every so often, 70km away in Biscarrosse. Not so his two sons. I live by myself, Brito says, I had a friend but we are no longer together. It is not straightforward with the nurses and home help, etc. I have help every day.

It was the Biscarrosse Olympique club in Frances fourth division that Brito was playing for when he was picked for the World Cup. During an hours conversation the phrase laccident occurs a lot, as he describes the long struggle to overcome what befell him. I would say there were 13 or 14 years of fog where I didnt know where I was. The accident was very violent. But after that I had a spiritual enlightenment and I understood that it was necessary to accept my handicap. And from that moment on, all the doors were open.

In the second pool match, Brito had faced France, the adopted country of his parents, and little Cote dIvoire put two tries past the eventual semi-finalists. His opposite number was Philippe Saint-Andre, a great of the game. Its a fairy tale to play at the World Cup, says Brito, who was an electrician at the time.

You dont even think it could happen, but to get there all of a sudden, it was extraordinary. They remain happy memories up to a point, of course. I wanted to know what happened, so I watched it. Once youve accepted what happened, its easier to watch it back.

He watched last years World Cup on TV and only declined an invitation from World Rugby to go to Japan due to a misunderstanding over his wheelchair on the flights. Overall there appears to be no bitterness towards the sport that changed his life.

I was in the wrong place at the wrong time and the accident happened, Brito says. If you look at the game as a whole, there are injuries sprains, pulled muscles etc but there are not very many violent accidents like mine.

I think rugby is very physical. Players are much more musclebound nowadays; that has changed the game. But we cant stop the game because it is dangerous. I think young people should play the sport that most interests them. You are not protected from injury whether you play football or rugby or whatever.

The Cote dIvoire rugby union has recently announced the Max Brito Academy, a fund in the west African country to train hundreds of young players while providing medical provision and teaching them a trade. Its the start of a great sporting adventure, Brito says. Its been four years of waiting after rugby in the country slowed down.

His own financial status is more delicate. There was an initial insurance payout, but he says people mistakenly believe he is receiving money from Frances Albert Ferrasse Foundation. I didnt have the right because I was playing for Cote dIvoire. In 1995, Marcel Martin [the late French director of Rugby World Cup] told me I would have help, but over time that has diminished. I just about get by now.

Brito has always been erroneously stated as 24 years old at the time of the injury. He was in fact 27, and he is now 52. He has a shaven head and says of the dreadlocks he wore that fateful day in Rustenburg: They annoyed me a lot once I had had my accident. And his greatest pleasures are reading and following the news.

Willie Lose was a flanker for Tonga facing Cote dIvoire in the 1995 World Cup match when Max Brito was injured.

Speaking from his home in Auckland, New Zealand, Lose told i: Its hard to believe it was a quarter of a century ago as it still seems like yesterday.

It was a beautiful day in Rustenburg and we as a squad were desperate to finish third in our pool in our final match.

It felt like we had just kicked off when the fateful accident occurred.

We kicked for position and the left winger Max Brito collected the ball and looked to return possession. I was the second player to arrive at the contact area and we held Max up he wasnt a big guy for what felt like a few seconds, looking to turn his body and ball to be on our side of the maul. Other forwards arrived simultaneously and it soon became a ruck. This happens in a rugby game perhaps close to a hundred times and Ive replayed it over and over, thinking why this time?

The only sound I recall was of someone exhaling due to the weight of the players on top. We all immediately untangled ourselves and it still wasnt clear, the severity of the injury. Ive played rugby all my life and seen twisted ankles, knees and other broken bones and the pain from the players is deafening. Sadly for Max it was a silent killer.

On the greatest rugby stage in a players career, the World Cup, it was a moment Ill never forget.

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Rugby World Cup injury left me in a wheelchair but I wouldnt discourage anyone from playing the game - iNews

Ramy: the smartest, darkest TV comedy that you’re not watching – The Guardian

Ramy, a sharp, POV-based comedy by Muslim-American Ramy Youssef, was one of 2019s most original and promising new shows. The joint Hulu/A24 production spent most of its 10-episode first season upending, with a wink and plenty of heart, both the audience expectations of idiosyncrasies within a Muslim family in New Jersey, and the protagonists bumbling attempts to live a more spiritually enlightened life.

The first season was a boon for critics an underrepresented perspective, daring, underseen, worthy of a major Golden Globe win but its second season, which premiered last week, lifts it to a must-see: an ambitious, contradictory and refractive exploration of one mans sisyphean trek toward meaning and spirituality in a deeply profane, messy and sometimes wondrous world. And, more pointedly for viewers in the fractious summer of 2020: a portrait of the many ways self-improvement turns self-serving, apologies mask as empty pleas for absolution, and enlightenment serves as exploitation of another.

Ramy is a contradictory character, a spiritual jester attuned to both Friday prayers and Friday night Im like at both. I wanna pray, I wanna go to the party, and Im breaking some rules, Im following others, he tells his cousin in Egypt in one of his many attempts to justify spinning his wheels.In the first seasons final two transfixing episodes, Ramy travels to Egypt, a country he has romanticized but not visited in years, in search of a magic clarity pill on who to be, but instead of a Muslim panacea finds a real country of complicated people naively Trump-supporting relatives, alcohol. His one moment of communal release and transcendence, at a Sufi center in Cairo, manifests as an attraction to his cousin.

For its second season, Ramy recruits two-time Oscar-winner Mahershala Ali to play a Sufi sheikh leading a mixed congregation at an adapted church picketed by Islamophobic locals. Reeling from his problematic tryst in Egypt, called out by his friends for skipping prayers and masturbating too much, Ramy seeks the sheikhs mentorship with the energy of a skittish puppy dog. I feel like I have this hole inside of me thats always been there, this kind of emptiness, and Im always trying to fill it with something, he unspools to the sheikh. His comedy lies in small justifications and mundane excuses he had sex with a married woman during Ramadan, but I just want you to know, he reassures, that it was during eating hours. Ramys intent seems straightforward enough: to kill the ego. But the application proves harder, the glitch of the whole season. Ramy commits to honesty, then dodges the truth on the last time he masturbated with a technicality.

Ramys enduring at times, too enduring passivity in the face of consequences defines the whole second season, which like the first contains several side-character capsules in which he disappears entirely (Hiam Abbass, as his brittle yet deeply sympathetic mother Maysa, once again delivers a standout turn). The sophomore outings 10 episodes are darker and more damning of Ramys self-justifying antics each thrust into the journey of enlightenment, leavened by good intentions and his flirtatious charm, only digs deeper into a mountain of self-obfuscating deflection and deception. (Im sorry, I feel like this is all my fault, is one of his fallbacks, guilt relief masked as a probing apology). His recruitment of an Iraq war veteran struggling with PTSD to the Sufi center models being a good Muslim, but ultimately serves more to impress the sheikh; likewise with his attempt to amend for his disastrous outreach with a fever-dream fundraising trip to a rich Emiratis Connecticut estate.

But the most egregious deception is his earnestly enacted delusion that hes in love with the sheikhs daughter, Zainab (MaameYaa Boafo), a wary, if underwritten, spitfire deeply committed to her faith, including saving oneself for marriage. The relationship goes (stop here to avoid spoilers) foreseeably awry, and when Ramy wakes to an empty marriage bed, hes greeted with the sheikhs death stare. The scene is a masterclass in flailing appeals to likability filling a bottomless hole of deferred personal responsibility; swaddled in a sheet as if an overgrown, diapered toddler, Ramy pleads before the sheikh for unearned forgiveness, for an explanation, for opportunity as a place to grow from. Under pressure, guilt-ridden and exposed, Ramy mistakes using someone as reciprocity. The rest of the world exists so you can reflect on it and perfect yourself, is that it? responds the barely composed shiekh. Fuck you, Ramy you little fuck, you little fucking boy. You hurt people.

Ramys second season dropped on 29 May, as protests over the killing of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, and of racist police brutality in the United States erupted across the country. Obviously, the show was not made in that context and, of course, it is a show firmly rooted in one mans perspective of Islam and his self-serving attempts to adhere to it but, as a white person, its hard not to view the characters unworked attempts at introspection and their resulting damage in the second season as depressingly timely. In the past week, white people across the country belatedly woke up to systemic racism with a series of, often, performative posts, barrages to black people asking for educational resources and well-meaning but silent black tiles crowding out critical space on the Black Lives Matter hashtag (I am not exempt from this).

To be clear, Ramy is a brilliant show for many reasons, especially the space devoted to its female and middle-aged characters; nor is the new season unimpeachable (see: acapsule episode for his sister Dena (May Calamawy), which does little to expand her character beyond the first season). But perhaps the most potent insight in this second season is the leads amenable but pathological defiance of personal responsibility, his well-meaning and winsome brew of good intentions and self-obsession. Ramys perspective might be hyperspecific, but that complex is not.

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Ramy: the smartest, darkest TV comedy that you're not watching - The Guardian

THE KILLINGS IN CROSS RIVER – THISDAY Newspapers

This is the age of enlightenment. The killers should be brought to justice

The recent tragedy in Cross River State in which no fewer than a dozen persons were set ablaze over allegations of witchcraft is a sad reminder of how deep-rooted superstition has become in our country. According to reports, a political appointee in the state, accompanied by some young men, stormed Oku community in Boki Local Government Area and set ablaze about 12 persons alleged to be witches and wizards. These innocent citizens were reportedly brought out of their homes and burnt alive. The survivors were also denied medical treatment following a threat by the leader of the killer gang that anyone who offered them medical attention would also suffer similar fate.

This callous act of unscrupulous men waking up from their beds in 21st century Nigeria, moving from house to house and carrying out blatant acts of murder without being challenged is totally unacceptable and must be duly punished. It is more disheartening that public officers could have the audacity to take laws into their hands, condemn people to death and carry out the execution. This political appointee was said to have been accompanied by some youths, one of whom was said to be using a mirror to show who was a witch or wizard and had to be destroyed.

More disturbing is that cases like these have become prevalent in the South-south, particularly in Cross River and Akwa Ibom States, where people have over the years cultivated the habit of unjustly accusing their neighbours of witchcraft after which they mete out jungle justice. We therefore challenge both Governor Ben Ayade and the Cross River State Police Commissioner to immediately fish out these murderers and promptly bring them to justice. Only deliberate punishment for this callous act can serve as a deterrent to others.

However, there is also a challenge that we must deal with. Given the nature of our society, people usually reduce things they dont understand to spiritual attacks, witchcraft, etc., and such labelling and embellishments often push them to seek false solutions. Leo Igwe, President of the Advocacy for Alleged Witches (AfWA), who named the principal suspect in the tragic incident explained how some traditional priests claim they can look into the occult world using a mirror to find answers and solutions to individual and community problems. He added that these supposedly spiritually powerful persons are usually invited to point out witches and wizards and other evil persons in their families. They usually place the mirror in front of any suspect or ask the person to look into it as they try to certify if the person is evil or not. These charlatans are hired and paid huge sums of money to come and identify witches and wizards.

While we therefore condemn the Cross River State killings, there is also a need for a sustained sensitisation of Nigerians, especially in rural areas, on the dangers posed not only by jungle justice but also by a retrogressive belief system that has no regard for human lives. This tragic episode is a throwback to the primitive age when might was right and stronger personalities oppressed the weak and vulnerable in the society. We hope that the authorities in Cross River State will join hands with the security agencies to fish out the principal character in this most heinous crime and all his collaborators after which they must be brought to book for this depraved social behaviour.

In all, we strongly voice our opposition to the spate of indiscriminate killings. Nigerians should seriously work against any form of bestiality that portrays this nation in bad light before the international community. We are not a nation of sadists and savages.

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THE KILLINGS IN CROSS RIVER - THISDAY Newspapers

How War lead to the advent of Market Economy – Modern Diplomacy

In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is important to acknowledge that three prominent intellectual figures spanning the 19th and 20th centuries forecasted the cataclysm of modernity. Thomas Carlyle, Ren Gunon, and Jacques Ellul provided reasoned accounts to justify their views that modernity is engulfed in a state of crisis on the basis that the not-mutually-exclusive hegemonies of technology, capitalism, and globalization are not invulnerable.

While each offered a slightly different viewpoint and a slightly different description of what they took to be the crisis, their views all coalesce around the general thesis that the continuous expansion of the material and technological built landscapes will eventually prove to be catastrophic. This is for two reasons. The first, because an ever-more complex system becomes ripe for error, an error which could cause the whole system to go haywire. Essentially, the bigger it is the harder it falls. The second reason is that in constructing an external environment as its hegemonic priority, humanity is neglecting giving attention to spirituality, philosophy, and developing the human inward nature. The external and material becomes the fog that humanity becomes ensconced in to such an extent that pursuing such things as the ascertainment of spiritual reality through intuition, the project Plato inaugurated academia with and inspired Christianity and Islams later development with, becomes wrested away wholesale from the consciousness of humanity. The two factors work in a type of synergy in that they mutually reinforce one another and precipitate cataclysm. The renunciation of the pursuit of constructing an ever vaster and more complex material system, which ostensibly implies a turn toward the spiritual as a premise, is the only means to stave off ever-greater cataclysms as the material system continuously grows more complex and more globalized.

Since the Industrial Revolution of the 19th century, technology, capitalism, and globalization have exerted their unquestioned domination only increasinglyuntil COVID-19. Technology, capitalism, and globalization have been unquestioned to such an extent that in hindsight it is obvious, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, that a global emergency of major proportions was necessary to even entertain the question that they were bound all along to eventually lead to a breakdown and inflict unprecedented harm to global health and the global economy. World War II was a destructive moment, but in no way did it impede the post-war expansions of technology, capitalism, and globalization in the latter-half of the 20th century and the first two decades of the 21st. The COVID-19 pandemic is dissimilar even to the catastrophe of World War II because of the magnitude and the nearly-universal geographic scope of the economic toll it has taken in such a short time. Moreover, while there was room for technology, globalization, and capitalism to both re-emerge and expand following World War II, their room for expansion from their forms immediately prior to the economic contraction COVID-19 exacted is likely to be minimal and is more likely to be non-existent or even negative. The contraction of the technological globalized capitalist system would inherently imply the beginning of a new post-globalization era.

What makes Carlyle, Gunon, and Ellul interesting to entertain in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic is the grand, global, and esoteric natures of their philosophies of modern history. It should be noted that the dominance of scientific rationality, mechanization, and materialist economy in the modern era itself was the lens through which enabled their philosophies to bereceived as radical and esoteric, or not based on empirical, positivist, scientific evidence. If their views had found a way to usurp the hegemonic position in the popular collective consciousness, they would not have been seen as radical or off-base.

Thomas Carlyles Sartor Resartus is an 1836 fiction book that essentially inaugurated and epitomized modern social criticism toward the blind commitment to the Enlightenment and the resulting emergence of the non-spiritual materialistic basis of 19th century European politics, economy, and society. It was a chief inspiration for Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau and a foundational book for American Transcendentalism as an intellectual movement in general. In Sartor Resartus, Carlyle offers a cryptic diagnosis of the ailment of modernity during the midst of its advent, the Victorian industrial age.

Speaking through the voice of the books protagonist, Professor Diogenes Teufelsdrckh, Carlyle theorizes of a phoenix that can be forecasted to take place roughly sometime in the 21st century. Carlyle writes, we are at this hour in a most critical condition; beleaguered by that boundless Armament of Mechanisers and Unbelievers, threatening to strip us bare! The World, says [Teufelsdrckh], as it needs must, is under a process of devastation and waste, which, whether by silent assiduous corrosion, or open quicker combustion, as the case chances, will effectually enough annihilate the past Forms of Society; replace them with what it may. This is flowery language that communicates Carlyles view that the world is destined to be consumed and destroyed as a function of the domination of those who uninterruptedly pursue the boundless construction of the material economy single-mindedly as their highest/only priority in conjunction with those who are non-spiritual, the Unbelievers. The Armament of Mechanisers and Unbelievers are synergistic and largely synonymous in that they are those who acknowledge only that which is material and perceptible by their senses.

To Carlyle, the Armament of Mechanisers and Unbelievers, by promoting the material economy, are inherently ignoring the spiritual realm, a realm that would be a moderator and reign in all-consuming materialism by embodying the virtue of renunciation (a virtue in nearly every theological and spiritual tradition). Humanity loses consciousness of the spiritual because modernity inherently divests the world of its spirit. Such a process is unsustainable because the finite nature of the world and its finite resources cannot sustain the pursuit of infinite material consumption and the increasing chaos that inherently manifests with a system that grows ever more complex. Thus, the materialist economy is bound to come into its full being, just like the mythic phoenix, before returning to ash and emerging in a different form. Carlyle reflects, what time the Phoenix Death-Birth itself will require depends on unseen contingencies and that it is a handsome bargain would she engage to have [it] done within two centuries.

Ren Gunon, a 20th century intellectual and metaphysician, offered what is perhaps the most sweeping and all-encompassing critique of the historical trajectory of Western civilization. He is also noteworthy in the contemporary sense as an inspiration for Steve Bannon, a chief political and policy adviser to President Donald Trump and a prominent promoter of traditionalist conservatism through such channels as Breitbart News Network. For Gunon, the West is in precipitous decline and he forecasted that it will reach a breaking point since the world is progressively displacing the realization of the quality of what he called the Essence of the transcendental realm (i.e. what lies beyond time and space and is perceived through the use of Platonic/spiritual intuition) with the realization of ever-greater quantity of the substance of what is material on Earth. Essentially, the progressive development of civilization corresponds to a cheapening of it and what he refers to as a reign of quantity rather than a reign of the quality of what can be nominally cast as the timeless Platonic Forms. Rather than conceiving of an ideal (i.e. a Platonic Form) through the use of intuition and then pursuing its realization in the Earthly material realm, everything modern defaults to gravitating around what Gunon takes to be the lowest-common-denominator, which is the measurement of everything by its quantitative rather than qualitative value. In other words, we are losing our ability to grasp and realize by intuition the ideal incarnation of all objects, concepts, and phenomena that are timeless and unchanging in the transcendent realm yet ephemeral in the material Earthly realm.

In The Crisis of the Modern World, published in 1927 shortly after World War Is explicit embodiment of the rejection of the narrative of continual progress in modernity, Gunon reflects: the belief in a never-ending progress, which until recently was held as a sort of inviolable and indisputable dogma, is no longer so widespread; there are those who perceive, though in a vague and confused manner , that the civilization of the West may not always go on developing in the same direction, but may some day reach a point where it will stop, or even be plunged in its entirety into some cataclysm.

Gunon parallels Carlyle in Sartor Resartus in that he acknowledges the deeply problematic nature of cutting material existence on Earth off from any transcendent/spiritual/divine reality, a phenomenon which is only increasingly taking place in the context of modernity and not in previous ages. Devoid of any collective consciousness of transcendent reality that may prove effectual to moderating the continuous expansion of materialism and the reign of quantity, Gunon thinks modernity takes on a dimension antithetical to the transcendent and thus can be deemed satanic in the simplest nominal and non-theological use of the term. This narrative, Gunon maintains, explains the eventual dissolution of the modern world, as the reign of quantity will maximize the realization of quantity to its farthest limits, before triggering a cataclysmic contraction. According to Gunon in The Reign of Quantity and the Signs of the Times, the rectification of modernity presupposes arrival at the point at which the descent is completely accomplished, where the wheel stops turning. Gunon concludes that until such a breaking point is attained, it is impossible that these things should be understood by men in general

Jacques Ellul, who was perhaps the foremost philosopher-critic of technology in the 20th century (and a chief inspiration for the Unabomber), largely reincarnated without citation Carlyles original criticisms of modernity. Ellul felt that modernity was synonymous with one vast global technical civilization that was autonomous and not subject to human control since its overall historical development as a system and long-term consequences are not subject to human control.Ellul defines what he takes to be technical civilization in his magnum opus The Technological Society, published in 1954: technical civilization means that our civilization is constructed by technique (makes a part of civilization only what belongs to technique), for technique (in that everything in this civilization must serve a technical end), and is exclusively technique (in that it excludes whatever is not technique or reduces it to technical form).

Ellul made known his theory that the technical civilization will have to perfect itself and sustain its perfection, as the only other alternative to perfection is the commission of an error, either small or large, that has the ability to cause the vast and interconnected system to go haywire. Ellul declares, the technical society must perfect the man-machine complex or risk total collapse. For Ellul, technical civilization is a Behemoth and it can rest easy as nothing will prevent him from consuming mankind. Such an elucidation of the stakes involved in creating an ever-more complex and gigantic globalized and technological system are deeply relevant to the narrative of how COVID-19 wreaked havoc on global health and the global economy so quickly and so easily. Air travel and other forms of transportation infrastructure were technological developments that had reached a zenith at the time of the onset of the pandemic as a function of globalized capitalism also being at a zenith. The totality of the network of global transportation infrastructure manifested by technical civilizations progressive global development since the Industrial Revolution was compounded by the growth in the levels of global travel on the part of the largest global population in history at the time of COVID-19s onset.

Ellul denounces liberal political economy for providing the favorable climate necessary for the unquestioned manifestation of technical civilization and refutes prospective critics who would maintain that liberal economy and technical civilization are compatible for the long-term:

It will doubtless be pointed out, by way of refutation, that production techniques were developed during the ascendancy of liberalism, which furnished a favorable climate for their development and understood perfectly how to use them. But this is no counterargument. The simple fact is that liberalism permitted the development of its executioner, exactly as in a healthy tissue a constituent cell may proliferate and give rise to a fatal cancer. The healthy body represented the necessary condition for the cancer. But there was no contradiction between the two. The same relation holds between technique and economic liberalism.

Just as Carlyle documented what he took to be the crisis of modernity at its advent during the initial industrialism of 19th century Victorian England, Gunon documented in the context of retrospectively accounting for the catastrophes of both World Wars I and II, and Ellul documented in the context of the post-World War II exponential growth of technology, the COVID-19 pandemic provides another milestone with which to, at a minimum, revisit their mutually compatible theses with respect to the cataclysm of modernity. Whether COVID-19 proves to be the big one and arrests the hegemonic triumvirate of technology, capitalism, and globalization remains to be seen. At a minimum, what can be gleaned from Carlyle, Gunon, and Ellul is that modernitys improvement of the material standard of living for so many globally needs to be balanced with a view toward moderation and long-term sustainability. Liberal political economy, science, and technological innovation have until now been single-minded seekers of continuous growth without acknowledging the need to at some point ossify or plateau the technical civilization they have each been instrumental in constructing so that it does not become a phoenix and burn to ash.

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How War lead to the advent of Market Economy - Modern Diplomacy

The Talk of the Three-in-One – Patheos

Holy Trinity Fresco (Masaccio), Wikipedia

Trinity Sunday is often joked about in Christian circle as that day anyone can easily fall into heresy via poor analogies for an incomparable mystery. Some insist the topic should not even be broached unless one has a theology degree, and even then its a matter that treads thin ice. I, however, take for granted that analogies are inherently imperfect, not depicting what a thing is but rather highlighting certain aspects that are loosely comparable. They are useful in as much as they draw the faithful to meditate upon revealed mysteries and to expound upon them to others, and to humble us, in realizing that no matter how we ponder, we shall never know the full truth of it until the life to come.

In light of a bunch of interfaith conversations with Muslim friends regarding the Trinity and Incarnation, I think, perhaps, I have come to understand at least one of the root points of divergence, or perceived divergence, between Muslim and Christian understandings of the divine essence. It has to do with our different levels of comfort with revelation that transcends our ability to understand it, and as such are differing views of paradox as either antithetical to truth or a means of unveiling it. It also has to do with some misconceptions about what Christians actually believe when we speak about the Trinity.

When I hear a Muslim say that God has no partners, it doesnt make me, as a Christian, automatically think its meant to disclaim the Trinity, because I dont view the Trinity as some sort of committee board meeting of disparate parties. They cant just take off in their own directions and fall to quarreling, like pagan gods are often depicted as doing. If anything, the Muslim objection is a foil to Christian heretical movements, but certainly not orthodox Christianity itself. When it comes to God for the Christian, They *are* He, and He *is* They. Confused? Good, thats probably the right place to be, honestly. It proves we have finite human brains which cannot grasp divine mysteries.

If we were to make any pagan analogy at all, it would be the different faces of different deities, such as the Maiden, Mother, Crone of Celtic lore or Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva in Hindu mythology. But even that is exceedingly loose at best, and probably comparable to apples and pears. All the same, the Celts remained deeply connected to the mystical resonance of the number three, both in their paganism and their Christianity, and thus Celtic Christianity was and still is deeply Trinitarian in emphasis. The knot design symbolizing the triple goddess was converted into a token of Father, Son, and Guide, sometimes poetically depicted as three hands protecting a pilgrim through the journey of life. This is not dissimilar to St. Hildegard of Bingens description of three wings, one which is above (Father), the second below (Son), and the third which is everywhere (Holy Spirit).

But in keeping with our Abrahamic heritage, our understanding of the divine is not merely a super-powered being from another dimension of reality, as many pagan gods tend to be portrayed, but rather the essence of all realities, and indeed, unrealities (all that is seen and unseen, all that is and is not). All potential, whether realized or not, arises from God. Indeed, as Islam affirms in the Arabic tongue, la ilaha illallah. There is no god but God, or as the Sufis reflect upon it, there is no reality but the one reality. My belief in the Trinity does not in any way compromise my belief that God is, indeed, the only source and center of reality. If anything, it affirms it, in that I often believe I can see the Trinitarian mystery revealed in the world around me.

The human body, for example, has multiplicity within singularity in the various organs that keep it working, which in turn is played out in the many parts of the Church, which acts as the Body of Christ in this world. I see it when light shines through a multi-faceted prism, casting from a single crystal many colors. I can see it in the yolk, white, and shell of an egg, or the leaves on a clover. I can see it in the forms of water, ice, and mist. The triune aspects of mind, heart, and soul, or intellect, emotions, and will, further reveal this truth. There are three dimensions of reality found in length, breadth and depth, and three dimensions of time found in past, present, and future. God can be said to be Lover, Beloved, and Love itself, as well as the Knower, that which is Known, and the Knowledge itself.

Even in our subconscious archetypes, made manifest in tales told in almost every culture and century, there has always been something numinous about the number threewhether it be three kisses or three wishes or three tasks necessary for a hero to accomplish before the kingdom might be unleashed from a deadly curse. Always threeness finds completion in oneness, just as the family is a reflection this mystery, through masculine and feminine union bringing forth the new life of their children. Yes, all these things are symbols and signs, only as good as a metaphor can carry, and yet it intuits some greater truth beneath the surface that has always haunted us. All this lends credence to the metaphysical concept called The Law of Three.

As Chesterton wrote in his epic Ballad of the White Horse, capturing the mystery of the interaction between the human draw towards the internal workings of the divine: The meanest man in grey fields one behind the set of sun, heareth between star and other star, through the door of the darkness fallen ajar, the council, eldest of things that are, the talk of the Three-in-One.

When a Muslim says that God is indivisible, again, I wouldnt automatically think that was intended to disclaim the Trinity, because I already believe the Trinity is indivisible, not pull-apart like a breakfast bun, or a patch-work quilt loosely stitched together. It is not God + a man + an angel/bird/what have you. God is the divine essential which binds the aspects into a full motion, like a spinning pin-wheel, where the prongs are made one in the singular swiftness of the motion. Each person is no less divine than the other persons, making the relationship distinct from them being parts of the pie that can be removed, thus reducing the quantity of God, since after all, God has no quantity, as we understand it.

They are equal in being and substance, but subordinate or superior only in role or position. The Father creates the world, and sends forth His Son to redeem it, and the Spirit proceeds from the love between the Father and the Son, which comes to rest within hearts opened to that indwelling. One analogy might be the fact that both yours truly and the Queen of England are equal in substance (our shared humanity) but differ in role (Im a broke author, and shes constitutional crown-toting corgi owner). However, unlike that example, there is oneness of essence that belies the separateness of individual mortals, and the outpouring quality of the Trinity is eternally co-existent. There has never been a time when the Son was not begotten of the Father, nor a time when the Spirit did not proceed from both.

Jewish mystical writings, such as Kabbalah, emphasize that God is more a verb than a noun; a dynamic force, a whirlwind, a dance, and this, I think, is at the heart of the Trinitarian concept. God is motion, and interplay, and as such, from a Christian perspective, has never been alone even before time and space were created. Kabbalists would suggest this interplay takes the form of male and female aspects of the divine, the transcendent male Creator (En Sof) and the immanent female component through which all that is must flow (Shekinah). Christians would describe a similar concept in light of the Father (transcendent) and the Son (outpouring). As with any two distinct parts in dynamic, there must be, in some way a resolving force, the Love itself that kindles of the flame of the relationship. This, to us, would be the Holy Spirit. As such, God is one in essence and three in subsistence.

I often feel that poetic language fits the mystery better than sterile philosophical terms. There are many quotes from the saints that fulfill this mystical quality, and which I wish more non-Christians familiarized themselves with before broaching the discussion topic. It also helps to show the way in which the Trinity is spoken of in Christian devotional life, as a living, breathing force of faith.

For example, St. John of the Cross wrote: The Blessed Trinity inhabits the soul by divinely illuminating its intellect with the wisdom of the Son, delighting its will in the Holy Spirit and absorbing it powerfully and mightily in the unfathomed embrace of the Fathers sweetness.

St. Catherine of Sienna prayed: O Eternal Trinity, my sweet Love, You Who are Light, give me light; You Who are Wisdom, give me wisdom; O supreme Fortitude, give me strength. O Eternal God, You are the calm ocean where souls dwell and are nourished, and where they find their rest in the union of love.

St. Julian of Norwich reflected: For the almighty truth of the Trinity is our Father, for he made us and he keeps us in him. And the deep wisdom of the Trinity is our Mother, in whom we are enclosed. And the high goodness of the Trinity is our Lord, and in him we are enclosed and he in us. We are enclosed in the Father, and we are enclosed in the Son, and we are enclosed in the Holy Spirit. And the Father is enclosed in us, the Son is enclosed in us, and the Holy Spirit is enclosed in us, almighty, all wisdom and goodness, one God, one Lord.

St. Hildegard of Bingen again waxed mystical: Therefore you see a bright light, which without any flaw of illusion, deficiency or description designates the Father; and in this light, the figure of a man the color of a sapphire, which without any flaw of obstinacy, envy or iniquity designates the Son, Who was begotten of the Father in Divinity before time began, and then within time was incarnate in the world in Humanity; which is all blazing with a gentle glowing fire, which fire without any flaw of aridity, mortality, or darkness is the Holy Spirit, by Whom the Only-Begotten of God was conceived in the flesh and born of the Virgin within time and poured the true light into the world.

St. Elizabeth of the Trinity wrote in ecstasy: O my Three, my all, my Beatitude, infinite Solitude, immensity in which I lose myself, I surrender myself to you as your prey. Bury yourself in me that I may bury myself in you until I depart to contemplate in your light the abyss of your greatness!

None of this, as you can see, takes away from a grounding belief in Gods greatness, beyondness, and essential quality. Muslims excel upon the focus of these attributes of God, which are revealed in the 99 Names of Allah, and which are expounded upon at eloquent length in the Quran and various sermons and prayers from famous figures in the Islamic tradition, such as Ali ibn abi Talib and his son, Hussain. Most of what they have to say I actually already believe in as a Christian; its what they reject or limit themselves from believing about God where we tend to part ways. This is because most Muslims perceive Christian belief, most especially those involving the outpouring and self-sacrificing aspects of the divine life itself, to contradict the greatness and omnipotence of God.

As I said earlier, perhaps this is simply because of my own comfort with Christian resolution paradox, with the mysterious both/and that has always been at the heart of our tradition. Ive been asked if that bothers me at all, and can easily respond that it is this facet that actually makes me more in love with my faith. The Trinity, the Incarnation, and the Cross are the three things that attract me to Christianity most deeply, and they are the three things which most Muslims find most distasteful and mind-boggling. Indeed, I feel a special attraction to those saints who reflected upon and wrote about these mysteries most. Quite simply, Im used to saying yes and yes to things that Islamic thought would interpret as being inherently incongruent and therefore categorically wrong.

However, once that plunge is made, it opens up a sort of drop-down menu that expands on the common page of reference Muslims and Christians share. Once one sees the menu, and if it actually click something inside that makes it resonate, theres no way of looking at the world the same again. That having been said, others who havent had the same click moment with the menu think the cheese has slipped off our collective Christian cracker. And trying to put myself in their place, and see the world through their particular set of goggles, I can understand that.

The question of whether these doctrines are simply inventions of men, or tools to serve a given end, comes up in conversation as well. I am obviously aware these issues were settled in Church councils made up of men; I also believe that God works through (you got it) men, in councils, bearing upon their shoulders the weight of the Holy Spirit, unfolding the destiny of the Church. I believe these doctrines were providentially inspired and intended to be formulated and finalized , not just as tools, but also as end to themselves, as a revelation of a dynamic within God (yes, just the Scriptures, the Word of God through the words of men). They are gifts to us I cannot dream of giving away.

They show us something about Gods nature that we, and the world, otherwise would lack. It is the revelation that makes us what we are, this Trinitarian Monotheism, upon which we bear and imprint in our souls through Baptism. Thats why the early Church hashed these topics out so fiercely, because this stuff was vitally important to our relationship with God and our standing with the world. As a result, the Christian understanding of who God is reveals a divinity that is integrally active rather than static, intrinsically relational rather than monolithic. God did not create us because He needed us for communion, but rather He did so out a superabundance of desire to share the communion already intrinsic to His Trinitarian nature. The divine reality is an overflowing chalice. It is this endless movement we see as making sense of the statement that God *is* Love, as opposed to God *has* Love, since dynamic must exist within Gods very essence and internal workings for such an attribute to exist.

The same is true of the nature of the Incarnation. For Christians, its this revelation we believe we have, an idea that is planted by seeds, passed onto us by word of mouth and pen, one that grows and develops and flourishes through the life of the Church. It is something we believe really and truly happened, something that makes itself manifest to us the more we open our eyes to its mysterious pull, something we can see hints of in the world around us, a point at which eternity infuses itself into a very specific time and place to undergo the tortures and triumphs of the human experience in solidarity with us, making all hardships grafted to the root of the cross.

This is why we might sing of the scandalous grace of One being crushed and defiled by sin and death, so that we might call Christ, the God-Man, our brother, and share a new life of grace by becoming part of His Body. Just as He rises from the dead, so we too are raised to new life. As St. Paul said in one of my favorite verses, If any man be in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away. Behold, the new has come. We might say this new creation shows a more important aspect of God than the old creation. One emphasizes power; the other emphasizes love. It is sort of an overflowing the Trinitarian principle into our world, like a triple water-wheel of filling and emptying, ever-turning, simultaneously all-powerful and all-vulnerable, lover, beloved, and love all at the same time.

This is why in all things, Christians are called to mark themselves by making the sign of the cross over their bodies, in the Name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. It is one of the things that kept me religious even during dark nights of the soul; if I had been from another religion, say, Judaism or Islam, I believe I might have left. But Christ on the Cross would not let me go. It is this inheritance of the faith, one grounded upon the concept of the divine authority expiating itself and imbuing itself in the imperfect world of men. This view of heaven and earth being wed in Christ also enables me to see enlightenment, to greater or lesser extents, present in all the other religious traditions that have come into the being.

The wind of the Spirit I believes blows where it wills, and all peoples through history have been affected by it, relating to it through different levels and layers of Goodness, Truth, and Beauty. God knows what we do not, and I can easily believe the divine dance is more than capable of including those we deem outsiders within its cosmic rhythm. Perhaps, as the Archbishop of Canterbury once mentioned, Christianity and its worldview are more than just a gift for Christians, but rather a gift to the world which we share through thought, word, and deed based in the theological virtues of faith, hope, and charity (still more Trinitarian connections there).

The fact is, this cycle or argument over the Trinity is likely to continue as it has for centuries, frustrating as it can be for Christians and Muslims alike. Most of us have the best of intentions trying to knock some sense into the other party, but casting a glance down through the trundle of history, we usually wound up just killing time at chronicled Crusade parleys, somewhere between taste-testing Mediterranean cuisine and watching the sultans belly dancers at the cross-cultural crash-bash. But on another note, perhaps God has actually been testing us all this time to learn to debate with grace, and make sure that in the process of discussing the divine we do not cease to see the divine presence in one another, which sadly has happened far too often.

If you believe in the Trinity and the Incarnation as I do, I would say one of the very worst things a person can do is to defile those beliefs by reducing them to sticks with which to hit people or undermine the sincerity of their own devotion to God. If you believe in the Trinity and Incarnation, then they should be transformative beliefs about Gods internal dynamic as Love itself, ever in motion in the divine dance, filling and emptying like a water wheel that never end, flowing out with such power that it incarnates in the dense, jagged reality of human existence, even to the chasm of death itself, so that divine life might be drawn even up from such depths.

To be Trinitarian, to be Incarnational, is to me to seek out the Lover, Beloved, and Love in everything, to see the image of God generously incarnating in this world through so many signs and wonders, simple and extraordinary. We should be able to see the workings of the Trinity not just in the things that strike us familiar, in Latin chants and vespers, in Renaissance painting and sculpture, in the crossing of ourselves at prayer, but also buried deep in the secret sanctity of the eyes of a friend from another land, in the kaleidoscope of geometric art that spells out order and sublimity.

It can be found in the rolling tongues foreign to our ears that sing of the tears of repentance to Ya Ilahi, in the poetry that could break ones heart with its passion and poignancy, and beyond all this, in the complexity and confusion, and hurt and humility that should come with all attempts at bridging gaps, for we are all struggling, all stammering in our own ways, all on a journey, a caravan, all trying to remember who we are, where weve come from, and to Whom we shall return. As St. Augustine was reminded by the angelic boy on the sea, the mysteries of God are less likely to be understood in the here and now than the ocean can be emptied out by a sea shell.

If you believe in the Trinity, you should see it reflected everywhere, and if you believe in the Incarnation, you should see the face of Christ so strongly in your neighbor you would grant the kiss of peace to the stranger, the outcast, the other, even to your worst enemy in awe that you should be blessed with such an opportunity. After all, our souls are part of the divine dance too. We are all created in the image of God, but its up to us to reflect His likeness, which is inherently a call to communion, loving God with our whole heart, mind, and soul, and our neighbor as ourselves. Perhaps that is the beating heart of the mystery most deserving to be contemplated in our daily lives.

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The Talk of the Three-in-One - Patheos

Faith in the Vortex – SpokaneFVS – spokanefavs.com

By Sophia Maggio

Recently, one of my friends and I enjoyed a winding discussion about the concept of vortexes: specifically, what our personal vortexes might look like.

By vortex, I think we just meant our make-believe worlds or multiverses that we hope to inhabit some distant day in the future when we are no longer lady babies, as we jokingly call ourselves. On this day, I imagine that well each enter into our respective vortexes, no longer reliant on microwaves or the affirmation of peers; suddenly, well become real adults, strutting around the world with an air of certainty and competence.

On this day, we will stop pitter-pattering around the questions of whether were good enough, smart enough, strong enough. Well suddenly feel settled in our bodies and our souls, able to recognize and articulate our emotions as soon as they bubble to the surface, and will bid sayonara to self-deprecating humor, ridiculously hesitant emails, and self-sabotage in the romantic sphere. On this day, Ill stop embarrassing myself by accidentally waving to people I dont know, or pretending to not know people I do know because Im worried that I actually dont know them, and will therefore wave at them. On this day, I will perfect the body roll and use it at a post-pandemic dance club gathering.

Perhaps most importantly, Ill gain my adult phone voice, the one Ive been waiting on since the days of fake (plastic) phone calls with fake debt collectors. Beautifully rounded words will gracefully fall out of my mouth into the ear of the other caller, who will be so impressed with my articulate, smooth voice that theyll offer me an unrelated yet alluring job on the spot.

On this day, Ill be so spiritually, emotionally, and financially secure that I wont need this job, and so Ill relay the caller to another young woman, a budding lady-baby, who will accept the job offer and enter the long-awaited vortex of self-assuredness, glitter, body rolls, perfect pancakes, and spiritual enlightenment.

This day will never come. Still, when Im lying on my bedroom floor, taking a moment of respite from the assorted struggles of life, I sometimes try to enter into my vortex. I imagine that I might ascend into the vortex by climbing a bare tree that extends from my forehead, where most of my imagination and stress is concentrated. I envision bubbles of pain, annoyance, frustration, self-doubt, and sadness rising from my forehead and leaving my body as I scan to the tip of the tree, where I visualize a better or even best version of myself. Still, I have an intuitive sense tied to my heart that in this particular stage in my life, my purpose is to simply nurture and support this spindly, rapidly-growing tree not recklessly climb it like a crazy person. Im lying on the ground right now, and I may always be on the ground, supporting this tree. I also have an intuition that Ill never gain my adult phone voice, nor will I reach spiritual enlightenment or feel entirely self-assured. Yet lying on the ground grants me the ability to spend time refining my values, honoring my roots, and cultivating my sense of belonging and connectedness to others in an unruly, virus-y, awkwardly unpredictable world.

It seems as though were all working from the heart right now, with little control over anything else. Personally, it feels like my contacts have fallen out of my eyeballs; I havent worn hard pants in weeks, and we are all clearly integrated into a system far more powerful than our physical bodies. What I can do is choose to remain rooted to this tree, which challenges me to aspire to the vortex version of myself. In this moment, I also choose to remain connected to my fellow humans: who, in a time of crisis, have been revealed to be just as awkward, stumbly, and skeptical as I am just more brazenly so.

To me, this realization is as humanizing as it is endearing: the realization that were all sprawled on the ground like potato bugs, working from our hearts, endeavoring to climb into these bright, glittery, otherworldly vortexes that may or may not even exist. Like any religion, however, perhaps the existence of the thing isnt quite what matters. Rather, its the act of declaring faith in that thing, the thing that keeps you going. Hopefully, this supports a mission to simply connect to yourself and to other humans, and to one day rise from the ground, doubtless and maybe still clueless, yet carrying on bravely with a questionable interpretation of the body roll.

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Faith in the Vortex - SpokaneFVS - spokanefavs.com

Alton Masons Debut Short Film Is an Ode to the Creative Spirit of Lagos – Vogue

The song hes referring to is Masons first single, titled Gimme, Gimme and produced by Kevin-Dave, that is the soundtrack to a coming-of-age short film titled Rise in Light, codirected by Nigerian-American filmmaker Amarachi Nwosu and the Persian-Canadian artist and cinematographer soof Light. The video was initially planned as an introduction to Masons nascent career as a musician, though as the current pandemic began to spread globally, both Mason and Nwosu decided to use it as the foundation for a fundraising effort to support the Khan Foundation, a Lagos-based nonprofit that is currently providing relief supplies to some of Nigerias most vulnerable communities.

Ive worked with the Khan Foundation for two years now, and I have actively seen them change the course of many of these childrens lives in a way that has brought the light out of them, says Nwosu, who is based between Washington, D.C., and Lagos and is the founder of Melanin Unscripted, a creative platform and agency focused on dismantling cultural stereotypes. We wanted to use art and this film as a vessel to do so and lend a supporting hand. For Mason, too, the timing of the release feels strangely apt as an opportunity to help those less fortunate during this time of crisis. Many of us are losing loved ones and businesses, but also our faith and hope, he adds. The film is a call for change, and an expression of love and joywe just hope it can inspire and uplift.

The songs gently rhythmic, laid-back groove feels reflective of Mason himself, who is softly spoken but articulate, deliberate with his choice of words. Writing has been something that I have cherished ever since I was in grade school, Mason explains. Ive always loved poetry and spoken word and kept journals with me wherever I traveled to, so writing music felt natural. The video, meanwhile, begins with Mason playing with a white lion cub in a Lagos apartment before walking the citys streets in a dazzling purple crushed velvet suit designed by the cult Nigerian label Orange Culture (also serving as a wink to one of his musical heroes, Prince). The purple suit represented the aura that was exuded while on the mainland, Mason explains of his collaboration with stylist Ugo Mozie. A purple aura symbolizes healing, spiritual enlightenment, cleansing, and freedom, which are all elements that I felt during my entire trip in Nigeria.

While the films core purpose wasnt about fashion or clothing, we really wanted to represent African designers through this film and spotlight them, Nwosu continues. These designers dont get nearly enough recognition in mainstream media, so this was a chance to place them at the same level you would see other high-end brands and designers. In this sense, the video acts not just as a reflection to the thriving fashion scene at work in Lagos today, seen in the rising profile of the citys annual Arise Fashion Week and the international success of labels like Orange Culture, Kenneth Ize, and Maki Oh, but, with its charitable element, as an act of giving back to the city and its people.

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Alton Masons Debut Short Film Is an Ode to the Creative Spirit of Lagos - Vogue