Guest guest Posted November 25, 1999 Report Share Posted November 25, 1999 >The real issue is about understanding that India is not the ideal paradise >you and the GHQ-club make it out to be. That we never did. There are aspects of Indian culture, as it exists today, which are still models for us to look to. Srila Prabhupada personally thought that marriage was one such aspect of Indian culture that his disciples should emulate. Srila Prabhuapda also spoke about nonsense that goes in India, in the name of religion also, but marriage as it is practiced in India, is something he had high regard for. >It's a very complex country with >strengths and weaknesses, with some very saintly people and with some >grossly immoral people. And many kinds of people in between. >It's a country with the most beautiful temples in >the world and where women sometimes get burned to death because of >insufficient dowry. Here is where Indian society is more complex than you might give it credit for. In these bride-burnings, the mother-in-law is often the instigator. In Indian family life, the elders, the mother in particular, are highly regarded. When the parents are good people, this is especially beneficial for the children and other family members. But when the parents are greedy, avaricious, etc., the respect they command makes it very easy for them to blackmail the other family members into doing their dirty work. Dowry deaths are a "family affair", not simply just husband hates the wife. Contrary to western feminist thought, the mother, or mother-in-law, is a powerful entity within the family unit. If she desires to be rid of her daughter in law, that is as good as a death warrant. My wife's biggest worry before marriage was what mother in law she would get. >It's a country where you can find posters of Krsna in >stores in virtually every street and where some girl fetuses are aborted >because of their sex. You mention "posters", "temples", "burnt brides", "fetuses", but what about relationships? This is why your use of statistics paints an inaccurate picture of Indian society, and further perpetuates cultural biases which, unfortunately, many western devotees maintain against Indians, and Vedic culture. You may not think these biases are there, but many Indian devotees have complained to me that they are treated as second class by visiting western devotees. I have seen this to be factual. >It's a country full of contradictions and much >beauty. You can have a better understanding of those contradictions by staying for some time in India, and living with the people, as they live. The contradictions are not so contradictory once you become familiar with the intricacies of Indian culture. Certainly, I'm not familiar with all of them, or most of them, but my exposure to them, for me, certainly illustrates and exemplifies many things Srila Prabhupada talks about in his books. Or even from your observations, you note that there are very saintly people and very sinful people. Aparent contradiction, no? Note how the respect for elders in the family manifests both extremes: excellent upbringing and care for all members, or cruel murders. Both phenomena are grounded in respect for elders. >And you're not doing anyone a favor by pretending it is. I never said it was "a paradise". Show me where I said it was. Specifically, I have been talking of marriage as Indians generally practice it, which Srila Prabhupada himself had high regard for. Your attempt to demonstrate that marriage, as it is in India, is something that has become at least as inebriated as it is in the west, is in actuality a disservice. Because, in general, marriages in India are still quite strong, healthy, happy (meaning they can tolerate each other), and those marriages are the norm. This is my personal experience. Inebrities are there, but they are exceptional, not the general rule. In India, if a man and woman are walking around together, it is assumed they are married. Here in the West, you cannot assume that a couple are married, or rather, would probably assume the opposite. And yes, men are generally dutiful with regard to taking care of their wives, children, and parents. How many convalescent homes are there in Mumbai or Delhi? Not many, for sure. >Just get off this comparison trip. > For the record, Srila Prabhupada himself made these comparisons. And he did so, usually to point out examples for his disciples to follow, or not to follow. Marriage as it is practiced in India is one such institution that he hoped his married disciples would emulate, and he often referred to marriage in India, and compared it with the marriage in the west. I'm sorry that you find these comparisons inappropriate, because you are missing a chance to understand something Srila Prabhupada thought was important, and something that his disciples should learn from. You might as well say Srila Prabhupada was on a comparison trip and just dismiss his comments as archaic. If by quoting statistics, by editing these things out of Srila Prabhupada's books (or annotating them into irrelevance), you try to cover Srila Prabhuapda's desire for his disciples to take up Vedic culture, then you are doing a great disservice. Your servant, Krishna-kirti das p.s. New articles at www.ghqd.org : "The Myth of Equal Rights", by Sri and Srimati Jivan Muktaji Table of Contents http://ghqd.org/articles/toc.htm Introduction http://ghqd.org/articles/intro.htm Section 1 Parts 1-4 http://ghqd.org/articles/1.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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