Gajalakshmi
Paramasivam
04
September 2019
Do
We Need Religion?
Why is religion more important in some countries
than in others? Is democracy a religion? Wikipedia presents religion as
follows:
[Religion is a social-cultural system of designated behaviors and practices, morals, worldviews, texts, sanctified
places, prophecies, ethics, or organizations, that relates humanity to supernatural, transcendental, or spiritual elements. However, there is no scholarly consensus over
what precisely constitutes a religion]
To my mind, the source of any
pathway that leads the truth of an individual to the truth of that environment –
is a religion.
On 05 September 2006, I wrote to the then President of Sri Lanka, Mr
Mahinda Rajapaksa as follows:
[I read in today’s reports – the following
headlines in Lankanewspapers.com ‘Rebel-held Sampur falls to Sri Lanka
military’. I am very concerned that the places of worship in the East,
including Thirukoneswaram temple in Trincomalee, would be harassed the way
Thiruketheeswaram temple which is in Government controlled area is. The people
of Sri Lanka are divided not only on language basis but also on the basis of
religion. Language is more easily detectable than religion – especially when it
comes to Muslims and Christians. When a government fails its people, people
turn to God. To the extent Hindus turn to God more than Buddhists do, the
answers that flow would benefit Tamils more than Sinhalese – because God is far
more powerful than the Sri Lankan government driven by majority opinion.] - http://www.lankaweb.com/news/items06/060906-4.html
Now I am able to not only go freely to Hindu temples
in Sri Lanka but also hold discussions relating to their fears and desires. No,
Mr Mahinda Rajapaksa did not respond to me but lankaweb.com did in action – by publishing
my work. This completed our governance at that level. I concluded that
respecting religious beliefs was important to the person who took the other
side position. That is how sovereignty of a nation is developed – citizen by
citizen. The rest is mere theory.
In that communication – I wrote also as follows:
[The enclosed documents which include my
complaint against Dr. Sumanathissa funded by your government reveal my
discoveries about Australian systems. If I did not care about Australia’s
safety more than I care about the goodwill from Australians in power, I would
have continued to work to earn money and status here in Australia and there in
Sri Lanka. But I choose to openly share my Truth because I care also about
those who hurt me. I would like to see leaders of Sri Lanka do likewise.
Otherwise the full credit for my work would go to my Hindu culture.]
Dr Sumanathissa – a medical
practitioner from Sri Lanka certified me as being mentally ill, while he was in
training in Australia. Yesterday, I observed the other side of it when I read
the following :
[The head of
Australia’s operation to combat illegal maritime migration called upon Sri
Lankans to join in efforts to warn of the dangers and long term consequences of
attempting illegal immigration by boat. In charge of Australia’s
Operation Sovereign Borders, Major General Craig who was in Colombo and Negombo
today said since the establishment of Operation Sovereign Borders in September
2013, Australia has worked with Sri Lanka to return 204 people from 12 people
smuggling boats.] Ausy calls
on SL in fight against illegal migration by themorning.lk
The Australian mind
that ‘trains’ the Sri Lankan mind now ‘tells’ Sri Lankans – as if they were one
group – without borders. The global entitlement comes not through individual countries
/ religions but through common law structure in which one is senior – or through
Truth which is universal power.
In Australia,
indigenous Australians were the first
group who had no knowledge of any other rule when others arrived – by boat.
One needs their blessings to preserve the sovereignty of this land. That power
needs to be pure of any benefits from other governments. It therefore excludes
those who take welfare benefits from the current government. Every owner of
this land – has the power to invoke those ancestral powers to protect.
On that basis – it would
have been more meaningful for an indigenous Australian to share her/his feelings through the likes
of Major General Craig. If Major General Craig
is a descendent of Boat arrivals in Australia – and he has successfully
established himself in Australia – then he is part of the community that
arrives by boat. It is by accepting this genealogy that one becomes truly universal. Major
General Craig’s position is part of Australian Government structure. To the
extent he operates outside his position borders – he actually attracts migrants
who would disregard due processes of his government. This would happen more in
sea and air spaces where the borders are not visible.
So long as an
individual is acting as per her/his truth – there is no human law that has the
authority to punish her/him. Including such a person as part of our nation
would actually strengthen our global relationships.
Often victims of religious
persecution who did not take revenge, become sources of globalization by a community
/ society that includes them as its own. Christians and Muslims in Colombo and Negombo where Major General
Craig delivered the message are part of the current communities in need of immigration
– Christians to nations such as Australia and Muslims to Muslim nations that
are sovereign through religious path.
Belief helps us
function harmoniously as one group. Religion based groups are natural so long
as they operate as per their own laws and stay within their own borders. One
needs land based divisions – only when there is no grouping strongly bound by
religion and/or other sources of belief. Sri Lanka is apparently a democracy because
Buddhism as practiced by Buddhists in Sri Lanka failed to lead them to Nirvana
/ Absolutism. In democracy – the People must lead the Administrators through
their truth. Every person who votes through her/his truth empowers Sri Lanka.
Such a voter is a winner irrespective of which side has custody of common
resources. No one can actually ‘possess’ the liberated mind.
Recently, a Tamil Diaspora leader – Victor Rajalingam forwarded
a clip on a Hindu tribute that starts with ‘Vaan ‘Muhil valaathu peiha….’ and sought
to know the origin. There was a response from an American Tamil – Gowri
Gowrishanker - giving reference to the
origin being in the sacred text – Kanda Puranam. I found my own understanding through
murugan.org – which gives the following presentation:
[Śri Kumāra Kôttam temple is located
in Kāñchipuram, one of India's seven "moksha-puris" or sacred
cities where salvation may be obtained. It is just half a kilometre to the
northwest of the bus stand, on the west Raja Street at the north end of which
is the Sankara Matham and at the south end is the Kachapeswarar Temple.
In this temple, the sacred Kanda Puranam in praise of Lord Muruga
was composed by the saintly scholar Kachiappa
Sivachariyar. According to the account of Kachiappa, each day he
would write his inspired account of the career of Lord Murugan or Skanda, and
in the evening deposit his day's work in the mûlasthānam of Lord Subrahmanya at
Kumara Kottam. Each night, miraculously, the Lord Himself would modify
Kacciappa's manuscript with His own corrections. Hence, the Kanda Puranam is
considered to be the absolutely authoritative account of Lord Murugan's career
bearing the seal of approval of none other than the Lord Himself.]
I had the parallel of Victor’s experience when I listened to the
praise of our Lord at Nallur – rendered by Rev Prasanna Aiyer. Effectively –
one has to go through mentally – the discipline by the original contributor –
to have that experience. Paying our
respects to them helps us reconstruct structure and invoke that Energy. In my own
little ways – I write on the basis of such experiences which come with the
blessings of the Lord. That was how when the call from publishers Andra came
while I was at Nallur – I felt that the Lord had blessed my work – ‘Jaffna is
my Heritage and not my Dowry’. My work was the parallel of Rev Prasanna Aiyer’s
rendering of Kanthar Anupoothi.
Had I not been a Hindu – I would not have had this
experience. This experience comes with its secular aspects – especially in
terms of Democracy. This I believe holds true in the case of all believers –
who seek at depth. The deeper our experience - and the less we show for trading purposes –
the more common the value. Once it is common – the sharing is natural.
Believing is important for self-governance. Religion
is not the only pathway to belief but is the pathway of most with little money
wealth.
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