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REVIEWS
BOOK REVIEW
TITLE OF THE BOOK: GREEN YOGA
AUTHOR/AUTHORS: Georg Feuerstein & Brenda Feuerstein
DIMENSIONS: 5 ¼ x 8 ¼ paperback, 164 pages PRICE: CAN $16.00 / US $16.00
Year of Publication: 2007
Publisher: Traditional Yoga Studies Saskatchewan
Georg Feuerstein is most familiar and respected name among yoga authors. Book, Green Yoga, he has coauthored with his wife, Brenda. This book is first of their trilogy namely-Green Yoga, Green Dharma and Green Yoga Work book.
Green Yoga is a master piece in the genre of green yoga literature. It reveals the full magnitude of the environmental crisis and shows the green path of yoga as the way-out to resolve this crisis by suggesting yoga as a tool for transformation of man- the greedy, selfish animal to compassionate, generous, sensitive Human being. Authors contend that at its best, Yoga is a holistic tradition that fully acknowledges the interdependence of everything. As such through this book they have called the contemporary teachers and practitioners to translate the yogic wisdom teachings into a viable “green” lifestyle, which treats both the inner and outer environment with reverence. They have been successful in asserting the fact that ‘yoga is inherently Green’.
Book has been written with a poetic heart full of compassion towards the situation of planet in the hands of our industrialized society and future of human race. It reminded me of the famous Indian epic poem of Jaishankar Prasad-‘ Kamayani’ ,which depicts the interplay of human emotions, thoughts, and actions by taking mythological metaphors in the background of the Vedic story where Manu, the man surviving after the deluge (Pralaya) is worrying about the future of human race. Green yoga, not only shows the concern about the future of humanity, but also shows the way-out, at this juncture.
Book is full of environmental concerns based on factual data to make us think twice before making any further damage to our mother earth and it’s Biosphere. One example from book is sufficed to make the point clear-“It is only when we cultivate mindfulness that we can begin to bring our awareness all those many activities that have otherwise unrecognised effects. For example you may be very conscious about recycling paper, cardboard, plastic, glass, cans and so on, but you may never have given another thought to what happens with your defunct computer that ends up at the local garbage dump......
Just as our own unmindfulness can be damaging to others, we ourselves are constantly victims of the unmindfulness of other people. The present disastrous state of our environment is to a large extent the combined effect of the unmindful activity of all human beings.”
Green Yoga is a must read book, both for the Yoga practitioners as well as the environmentalists and ecologists in the academic institutions .As, on one hand this book calls the contemporary yoga teachers and practitioners to be aware of the state of the environment and translate the yogic wisdom and teachings into a viable “green” lifestyle, on the other hand to environmentalists, it suggests the way-out of the present environmental crisis by adopting the philosophy and practice of yoga. Most importantly it urges contemporary yoga practitioners to take yoga from merely physical (postural practices) to the spiritual level to achieve goals both in yoga practice and environmental conservation. To be real ‘Yogi’, you now need environmental awareness and to be real environmentalist you need to follow path of yogic consciousness to apply your philosophy in day today actions with mindfulness. This book is successful in emphasising both these facts through its simple, lucid and effective presentation. Authors deserve great appreciation for their contribution and commitment to environmental preservation and conservation and enlightening the path of Green Yoga.
by-
Dr.Arun Raghuwanshi
President, yoga way International, CANADA
Former Professor of Ecology, Department of Bioscience
Ex-Dean of Life Science,Guest Faculty Yoga Science Department
Bhopal University, Bhopal(M.P.), INDIA
PS:http://www.traditionalyogastudies.com/videos/green-yoga_video.wmv
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FILM/CD/Album REVIEW
MYSTIC INDIA: WORTH SEEING MOVIE FOR YOGA LOVERS
Mystic India: an Incredible Journey of Inspiration is a new film that has recently been released at giant screen theaters worldwide. The world's first giant screen epic on India Mystic India rediscovers India, a land of many mysteries and fascinations, “the one land that all desire to see” as summarized by Mark Twain. A period film that reveals India’s ancient culture and civilzation, intricate architecture, colorful festivals and fascinating peoples and landscapes. More than a traditional large format film, Mystic India tells a true story as great as the country it is set in. The film follows the 11-year-old Neelkanth Varni, who walked barefoot and barebody for7 years and 8,000 miles across the length and breadth of this vast majestic land
Mystic India is produced by BAPS Swaminarayan Sanstha. The film is created by a unique voluntary effort to promote cultural co-existence, human harmony and universal values. Over 570 BAPS volunteers provided free professional services of one million honorary hours to produce this unique film. It is narrated by Sir Peter O’Toole, the legendary English actor, honored with Academy Award for Lifetime Achievement. Photographed by Kodak Vision Award winning photographer Reed Smoot and directed by the well-known and respected Keith Melton, Mystic India travels throughout the country exploring the mysteries and fascinations of the land and the culture. The film is distributed by Giant Screen Films.
Home to the oldest civilization, India is our world’s largest democracy. India is a single nation as large as all of Europe with a population that comprises one-sixth of the world. The film explores India’s geographic and cultural diversity, soars over the natural beauty of its land from the breathtaking Himalayas to the sacred waters of the Ganges. It also celebrates its amazing architecture, spectacular festivals, colorful customs and spiritual wonders.
More than 45,000 BAPS volunteers helped recreate authentic scenes for the film. The fascinating festivals seen in Mystic India are among the largest and most spectacular in the world. The epic proportions of the film climax in the 2500-year-old Festival of Chariots – Rath Yatra. Colossal, 5-storey high chariots on mammoth wheels roll past massive crowds from all corners of India. Describing the experience as immense and intense, The Director of Photography, Reed Smoot who has shot 27 lage format - giant screen films exclaims, “ Nothing like this has been shot in large format before. Out of 10, I would give it 14!” Thousands take part in the celebrations including the annual Festival of Lights and Festival of Colors.
In this 45-minute film, shot in over 100 locations, audiences are taken from the freezing peaks of the Himalayas to the nation’s scorching deserts and tropical rainforests; across fields and rivers and to small remote villages, all along witnessing the sheer natural beauty of India as well as the incredible achievements of its people.
Mystic India also takes an interesting look at the amazing power of yoga and meditation. In the film, Neelkanth survives incredibly harsh conditions, a phenomenon that Harvard scientists researching modern day yogis in India have proven to be possible. The film also explores India’s extensive and accomplished history. India has made important contributions to the world, from astronomy and aviation to atomic physics, geometry and mathematics. In fact India is credited with the invention of the ‘Zero’ and the Decimal System.
A sequence in the film documents the ‘Faces of India’ and the diversity among its inhabitants. India is the only country that speaks 18 different languages and more than 1,600 dialects. Today, India is home to a billion people of different religions, traditions and backgrounds. The real light and wisdom of India is seeking to know not how to conquer the world but how to live in peace, how to live together in harmony. The essence and message of “Mystic India” is that there can be Unity in Diversity; that we share the same sky, walk the same earth, breathe the same air; that we are a single human family, capable of living together, loving one another.
Thus, more than just a breathtaking journey and the heroic tales of the child-yogi Neelkanth’s tolerance and survival, his values of faith, friendship and fearlessness, the film presents a unique journey into the land and soul of India, unraveling her greatest gift to the world, Unity in Diversity. The cinematography is picture perfect and the stunning images are breathtaking and immersive.
Mystic India is one film which has a great entertainment value for audiences of all ages, an even greater educational value for schools, colleges, museums and science centers; a unifying inspiration for families and friends and an even more global message of harmony and co-existence for countries, cultures and communities.
STORYLINE OF MYSTIC INDIA
On June 29, 1792, Neelkanth begins his journey of awakening. Having resolved to embrace the challenges of nature, he leaves his home in the city of Ayodhya. Neelkanth walks alone into the cold stormy night, wearing nothing over his shoulders or under his feet, carrying nothing - no maps, no money, no food - except inner courage, confidence and a silent spiritual strength. At the Saryu River, he enters the cold, raging current. Neelkanth is swept away, leaving behind all that was familiar.
Neelkanth's footprints begin to map the length and breadth of India - its dense jungles, fertile plains, majestic mountains, mighty rivers, and peaceful coastlines. Flourishing for more than 8,000 years, this land has been home to an ancient and highly advanced civilization. Neelkanth's
· On the banks of the Ganges, Neelkanth takes part in the Harki Pedhi Arti (The Ceremony of Lamps) at Haridwar. For thousands of years, Hindus have gathered here to pay their respects to India's most sacred river. A priest notices Neelkanth in the distance and desires to meet him. Neelkanth poses a riddle to the priest, "Iron sinks, but wood floats. What should iron do to keep from sinking?" No matter how long it takes, the priest promises himself to find the answer. Continuing his way north, Neelkanth climbs his way to the mountain village of Sripur, famous for its grand shrine, Kamleshwar Muth. The mahant (chief priest) notices Neelkanth resting under a nearby tree. He warns Neelkanth of the man-eating lion terrorizing the village and invites Neelkanth to stay in the Muth. Neelkanth asks, "Can your doors stop death?" As night falls, the doors of every home are tightly fastened.
It is well past midnight and a chilling roar shatters the eerie silence. A lion charges through the grass spotting Neelkanth. They meet face to face. The Mahant, fearful for the young child, looks out his window and sees a strange and unbelievable sight; the ferocious lion is humbly lying by the feet of Neelkanth. The next morning, as Neelkanth leaves, the grateful faces of villagers surround him.
Hosting a diversity of faces, India is home to a colorful mixture of people. Neelkanth introduces us to the faces of India. Home to 18 different languages and 850 dialects, India is the envy of the world; no other country, even continent, has so many different people living and working together.
Continuing into the Himalayas, Neelkanth makes his way to Badrinath Temple. Standing at 11,300 feet, Badrinath is one of India's most revered temples. For six months of the year, the temple closes during the deadly cold winter. A procession begins its journey down from the mountains to warmer temperatures and safety. A priest meets Neelkanth on the steps of the temple and invites Neelkanth to join him, but Neelkanth says, "I am not going down, I am going up…to Lake Mansarovar." The priest cannot believe what he has just heard. He says "At this time of year…you'll face blizzards and avalanches. You'll never survive." Neelkanth smiles and walks down the steps, leaving the priest to wonder why such a young child would risk his life in the mountains.
For six months, in the freezing temperatures with no shelter, Neelkanth treks through the Himalayas, home to 92 of the 94 tallest peaks in the world. Crossing a pass at 18,000 feet, Neelkanth reaches the sacred peak of Mt. Kailash, and the holy shores of Mansarovar, the source of four of India's mighty rivers - Indus, Brahmaputra, Karnali and Sutlej. With no guide or maps, Neelkanth negotiates through the deepest gorge in the world cut by the Kali Gandki between Dhaulagiri and Nilgiri in the Annapurna Mountain range. Eventually, he reaches Muktinath at 12,500 feet, where an ancient temple of Lord Vishnu gloriously stands to this day, encircled by 108 waterspouts. Here he undertakes a journey without motion, a journey within. Performing severe austerities in a rare yogic posture, months turn to seasons, seasons turn to years, and Neelkanth grows older and wiser.
Descending the mountains, it has been 5 years since Neelkanth has left his home. From the peaceful villages to the mountain peaks, Neelkanth leads us through a land ornamented with grand monuments, palaces, and relics of stone. We explore Indian architecture and its paradise of styles, forms and shapes.
Neelkanth's route leads him through the rainforests of Assam, the jungles of Sunderbans and to the shores of Jagannath Puri. The annual Rath Yatra (Festival of Chariots) is celebrated here. Every year, for thousands of years, millions of pilgrims flock here to pull the chariot of Lord Jagannath. Raja Mukund Dev, King of Jagannath Puri, invites Neelkanth to celebrate Rath Yatra.
A conch shell blows and the boisterous clanging of plates deafens us. Directly ahead, we see Neelkanth sitting on a colossal chariot and the king standing by his side. Hundreds are pulling the chariot with four massive ropes. Pilgrims are cheering, singing, dancing, and throwing vermillion into the air. The huge wheels of the chariot fill our vision. We float above and let the Rath pass beneath to reveal an awesome sight of thousands. A sea of colors shines below.
This festival is just one of many festivals of India. They are expressions of joy for many occasions - be it the birth of a child, the changing of the seasons, or the New Year. A wide spectrum of colors, costumes and customs are portrayed in the festivals of India. Viewers are immersed in some of the greatest festivals of India; from the lights of Diwali to the colors of Holi.
Following the eastern coastline, Neelkanth arrives in South India at the ancient Rameshwaram Temple. Built in the 12th century, the Rameshwaram temple has 1,212 pillars and India's longest stone corridor stretching 1.2 kilometers. This temple is one of the most important pilgrimage places in all of India. At each of the 22 wells, people bathe as a purification rite. Standing by one of these wells, Neelkanth is pleased to find the priest he met in Haridwar five years back. The priest has found the answer to Neelkanth's riddle, "If iron attaches itself to wood, iron too can float. We are the iron ring. Enlightened persons like you are the wood." Pleased with the priest's response, Neelkanth explains that the association of an enlightened person keeps our weaknesses from drowning us in the ocean of life.
For the next two years, Neelkanth travels from the temple towns of South India, through the backwaters of Kerala and ends his journey in the village Loj in Gujarat. In the villages of India, where to this day 80% of all Indians live, it is a tradition to welcome visitors like gods.
A giant banyan tree hangs over Loj. Under this tree, villagers often gather for discussions. Neelkanth learns of a great saint and teacher Ramanand Swami in one of these gatherings. Delighted to hear such news, Neelkanth waits for him in his ashram. While at the ashram Neelkanth, who conquered the challenges of nature, sweeps the floors. Having mastered all the disciplines of yoga by the age of 14, Neelkanth shares his knowledge with others.
Neelkanth and Ramanand Swami meet on a riverbank. Ramanandji says, "Now that you have arrived, lead the people because you are the true master." But Neelkanth prefers the silence of the mountains. Ramanand Swami encourages Neelkanth and says, "Awakening was your aim and shall continue to be so. Your footprints in the sands of time will light up the path for seekers of courage, confidence, love, truth, and tolerance."
Neelkanth grows older to become one of the greatest spiritual leaders of India. His lessons continue to inspire millions. His vision, work, and wisdom echoes the essence of Indian culture - its unity in diversity. This is the greatest gift India can offer the world.
2. ABOUT: An Inconvenient Truth
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"Humanity is sitting on a ticking time bomb. If the vast majority of the world's scientists are right, we have just ten years to avert a major catastrophe that could send our entire planet into a tail-spin of epic destruction involving extreme weather, floods, droughts, epidemics and killer heat wave
beyond anything we have ever experienced. "
If that sounds like a recipe for serious gloom and doom -- think again. From director Davis Guggenheim comes the Sundance Film Festival hit, AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH, which offers a passionate and inspirational look at one man's fervent crusade to halt global warming's deadly progress in its tracks by exposing the myths and misconceptions that surround it. That man is former Vice President Al Gore, who, in the wake of defeat in the 2000 election, re-set the course of his life to focus on a last-ditch, all-out effort to help save the planet from irrevocable change. In this eye-opening and poignant portrait of Gore and his "traveling global warming show," Gore also proves himself to be one of the most misunderstood characters in modern American public life. Here he is seen as never before in the media - funny, engaging, open and downright on fire about getting the surprisingly stirring truth about what he calls our "planetary emergency" out to ordinary citizens before it's too late.
With 2005, the worst storm season ever experienced in America just behind us, it seems we may be reaching a tipping point - and Gore pulls no punches in explaining the dire situation. Interspersed with the bracing facts and future predictions is the story of Gore's personal journey: from an idealistic college student who first saw a massive environmental crisis looming; to a young Senator facing a harrowing family tragedy that altered his perspective, to the man who almost became President but instead returned to the most important cause of his life - convinced that there is still time to make a difference.
With wit, smarts and hope, AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH ultimately brings home Gore's persuasive argument that we can no longer afford to view global warming as a political issue - rather, it is the biggest moral challenges facing our global civilization.
Paramount Classics and Participant Productions present a film directed by Davis Guggenheim, AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH. Featuring Al Gore, the film is produced by Laurie David, Lawrence Bender and Scott Z. Burns. Jeff Skoll and Davis Guggenheim are the executive producers and the co-producer is Leslie Chilcott. |
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PONDER IT:
Story of Life
By Lennie Bennett:
"The rifts within society today stem largely from our inability to recognize the truth and its full meaning. In considering what religion is, perhaps this is the starting point we all need to come back to: Is religion the little ceremonies we perform once a week in our churches, synagogues, or mosques? Is it the prayers we say to our gods, or the belief in these gods? Is it the set of rules we choose to govern our lives by? No.
Religion is an idea! Nothing more, nothing less. It's the idea that there is a higher purpose to life, that there is meaning to life even though we can't always fathom it. The idea that we are all the same, brothers and sisters journeying through life looking for that purpose and meaning, is the one religion.
There is beauty and sadness in looking out into the world and seeing hundreds of versions of religion.. The beauty resides in the fact that they are all the same idea, merely expressed differently -- portraits painted by different peoples trying to capture the essence and beauty of life. The sadness is when people look at their own religion and believe that their portrait is more important, more correct, than anyone else's.
Fundamentally, religion is a portrait of the unknowable and therefore beyond our criticism. All we can really do is admire the similarities and try to understand the differences. Religion is the story of life, and while we may prefer one story to another that doesn't make the other invalid, for a story is a story is a story."
But ,IF you want to take Religion Beyond Story to the level of a reality in life YOU will have to follow the Path of YOGA,the real authentic SPIRITUAL YOGA.Making Religion a Realization,as Vivekanand has proposed in his writings.
The New Age movement offers a whole range of techniques and courses, including hatha and tantra yoga, which are supposed to enable us to develop paranormal powers, obtain contact with other entities, recall past lives, and achieve enlightenment. Many of the practices offered are of highly dubious value, and the ability to distinguish the genuine from the counterfeit has never been more necessary.
The Truth of Myths
By Lo Guest
What do we mean when we say something is a myth? Until recently scholars have been very skeptical and usually understood it as a fable, invention, or just plain fiction. But over the last half century Western scholars have begun to approach the study of myths differently, looking at their meaning in the way they were traditionally regarded: as a true story. Only gradually have they understood that myth carries within it a sense of sacred tradition and primordial relations, while also serving as an exemplary model.
W. S. W. Anson in his introduction to Asgard and the Gods (pp. 3, 21) points out a
connection between the stories of the gods, and the deep thought contained in them, and their importance, in order that the reader may see that it is not a magic world of erratic fancy which is opened out before him, but that . . . Life and Nature formed the basis of the existence and action of these divinities. . . .
These fairy tales are not senseless stories written for the amusement of the idle; they embody the profound religion of our forefathers.
H. P. Blavatsky adds:
Not only their religion, but likewise their History. For a myth, in Greek muthos [mythos], means oral tradition, passed from mouth to mouth [sic] from one generation to the other; and even in the modern etymology the term stands for a fabulous statement conveying some important truth; a tale of some extraordinary personage whose biography has become overgrown, owing to the veneration of successive generations, with rich popular fancy, but which is no wholesale fable. -- The Secret Doctrine 1:425
Myth is an extremely complex cultural reality which can be approached and interpreted from various viewpoints. It often relates to the whole of reality, as in the creation of the cosmos; at other times it may be a fragment of reality. Myth in a certain fashion answers the questions: Who am I? How do I fit into the human and natural world? How should I live? Different cultures in their creation myths find the most basic answers, for they view the first causes as the essence of what their culture perceives as true, the first understanding of humanity and the world, of time and space.
However fantastic a myth may seem, it simply tells what really happened. The actors often appear as superhuman beings known primarily by their deeds in the transcendental time of beginnings. It is part of our incompletely developed human nature to interpret what we cannot understand as the action of supernatural beings. It is not a long step from there to making gods of these beings.
One of the earliest creation myths we know of comes from Egypt. It envisions Atum, the complete one, rising out of the primeval watery chaos and producing the world. Another ancient creation myth is found in the Rig Veda of India. In its early stanzas it bears a great similarity to the Hebrew Genesis, but the last verse sharply differentiates it:
Whence has this emanation arisen? Whether God created it, or whether he did not, only he whose eye controls this world in highest heaven -- he only knows, or perhaps, even he does not know.
This last stanza sets the tone for the continuing search for truth which enriches the religious philosophies of Asia. In India we find the myth of endless time and the idea of the endless repetition of birth and death which brought forth the desire to escape from it and transcend it. Those early thinkers visualized the idea of enlightenment as deliverance from cosmic time. We find the same idea in Judaism and Christianity, which declare that there will be an end of time with the coming of the Messiah.
Chinese creation myth relates that only chaos or no-thing existed in the beginning. Inhering in it were the principles of yang and yin. Yang represents the principle of rightness, activity, and strength; its most obvious symbols are the sky, the masculine, hard, dry, forceful elements. Yin represents the principle of darkness, receptivity, and weakness, and is most often associated with the Earth, the feminine, and all that is soft and tranquil. Philosophers held that during winter yang is overcome by yin and undergoes below the frozen soil an annual trial from which it emerges invigorated. When the yang escapes from its prison at the beginning of spring, the ice melts and nature reawakens. Thus the universe shows itself to be constituted of a series of opposites which form it in an inner cyclic manner.
Of course not all myths are centered on creation: great heroes with the passage of time acquire superhuman stature and become a measuring stick for behavior, morals, and all other activities that their society has produced, and by that very fact give meaning to life. We are all familiar with a number of these figures from various cultures: King Arthur of the Round Table and his knights; Lohengrin of the Nibelungen saga; Odysseus, Achilles, and Hector of the Homeric epics; Arjuna and Krishna of the Bhagavad-Gita; and the Sumerian Gilgamesh, to name a few. One reason for the importance of myth is precisely that it describes the acts of superhuman beings and the manifestation of their sacred powers, thereby becoming the exemplary model for all significant human activities. Myths help us understand people different from us in cultural, traditional, and social outlook.
To religious minds all of nature is sacred: including animals, people, localized spaces within buildings, and even time itself. A good example is the Australian aborigines who in their dreamtime vision declare certain geographical areas sacred. This sacredness, present in the history of religion from the most primitive to the most highly developed, contains within it a great number of initiations and manifestations of sacred realities. Whether we consider a very elementary initiation, such as the manifestation of the sacred in some ordinary object, a stone or tree -- or the supreme initiation, which for Christians is the incarnation of God in Jesus Christ -- we are confronted by the same mysterious act: the manifestation of something of a different order, a reality of a higher order than our known world.
The modern Occidental mind experiences a certain uneasiness before many manifestations of the sacred. Westerners find it difficult to accept that with many human beings the sacred can be contained in a stone or tree. What they fail to understand is that veneration of the object itself is not involved. The sacred tree or stone is adored not as a tree or stone; it is worshiped precisely because it is thought to become imbued with something sacred which makes it no longer just a tree or stone.
Myth is intimately involved with symbols which preserve contact with the deep sources of life. They express the spiritual as a life experience, and translate the human situation into cosmological terms, and vice versa. In this way symbol reveals the unity between human existence and the structure of the cosmos. Mankind does not feel itself isolated in the cosmos; it is open to the world which, thanks to the symbols, becomes familiar.
Attempts were made from the time of Socrates and Plato, by historians as well as philosophers, to de-mystify myth by employing a strict and systematic philosophy which aimed at doing away altogether with mythical thoughts and ideas. However, no amount of logic and reasoning was able to erase myth from the long remembering folk-memory, nor from the legends which are part of every society.
If we think about myths, legends, and symbols, we come to the conclusion that every symbol has a story and a reason behind it, and every legend and myth contains some truth, often veiled by words except to eyes that want to see, ears that want to hear, and hearts that want to understand.
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