The Gandhian Thought is Dying In India-I
posted September 17, 2007 - 1:52amIn India, the Gandhian Thought is dying. The major reason for it is that there are two categories of people, one those, who believe in the Lord Rama and the others, who do not believe in Lord Rama. The Gandhi’s vision for India was that of the Developed country, however, it is facing lots of troubles. The people, who do not believe in Lord Rama, worship the Ravana, the demon, whom Lord Rama killed. The Ravana is a character in the Indian Civilization, which represents the intellect dominating the wisdom. The people, who do worship Lord Rama, usually do not speak the National and the Native Language of India, Hindi.
The one of the reasons that the Sikhs face troubles from such people is that the tenth Guru of Sikhs, Shri Gobind Singh wrote in his autobiography, the Wonderful Cosmic Play (the Bachittar Natak) that the Sikh gurus are having the Lord Rama as their physical ancestor. Lord Rama had two sons, the twin, Love and Kush. From one the generation of Bedi’s (the scholars) stated and from the other the Sodhi’s (the soldiers) started. Thus his claim that physically they have the Lord Rama as their ancestor would seem a problem to those, who do not believe in him, the Lord Rama.
Thus with great wit of intellect the Sikhs had been facing the serious allegations of being the terrorists. The reason is simple the Sikhs also dream to see India as the developed country, but the main intellectuals do not believe in the Lord Rama. Now, the assassination of Gandhi was by motivating the killer by convincing him that He was not a Hindu. The true Hindus, who claim to the best and right people do not worship Lord Rama, instead they worship the Ravana, who was the great scholar on the earth at his times. When the ceremony for Lord Rama’s victory took place against Ravana, the Ravana himself conducted it for Lord Rama. Lord Rama honored him as the best scholar on earth, but due to his intentions to become the world dictator, he had to face death as killed by Lord Rama. It is still a national probelm, which appears to me as a big deal.

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