Guest guest Posted November 25, 1999 Report Share Posted November 25, 1999 >> Mataji Madhusudani's quoting of >>statistics in order to discredit Indian society > >You know very well that this is not what I'm doing. I do not want to >discredit Indian society. You don't exactly give it any credit either. Besides offering some platitudes, I have yet to see you point out something about Indian culture (at least those things that Srila Prabhupada thought were suitable for his disciples) as something you and others should emulate. Of course, you will say, "The men should be protective, caring, religious, etc., etc.," and offer quotes from Srila Prabhupada, and that's fine--I agree they should be, but when it comes to women, immediately the plea is there for relaxing the standards Srila Prabhupada expected (read "hoped") his ladies would also follow. Seems to me like a double standard. For ladies, for example, Srila Prabhupada speaks about shyness and chastity, but that is a big no-no in your camp. Certainly it was and will continue to be a no-no with the ladies who refused to cooperate with the management in Vrindavan. Of course, I know you will disagree with this, but then offering respects to sannyasis, brahmacaris and other celibates never seemed to be one of those aspects of Vedic culture that was something western women were obliged to follow. Men respecting ladies, yes, that they must do; ladies respecting sannyasis, well. . .whenever they feel like it, if they feel like it. >Don't try to attribute motivations that are not there You've got a track record (read, lots of COM texts) that makes your plea difficult to believe. >and don't try to change the subject. I simply presented a *different* >side of India than the one you are always holding up to advance your >agenda. And what is "our agenda"? >Both parts of the picture are true. If you think that discredits >India, that's a reflection of your mind, not mine. Again, your track record speaks for itself. If you ever said anything about Indian culture (at least those things that Srila Prabhupada had high regard for, and, in particular, with regard to your own gender) that was something you should emulate, I'll take your claim seriously -- honestly. >I think India is >wonderful, in spite of its problems. When you idealize anything to the >extent that you do India, chances are that you become blind. When assessing something, we don't go outside the limits of guru, sadhu, and shastra. At least as far as I'm concerned, you should know by now I'm particular on this point. Sati yes, bride-burning, no. :-) Because you seem to have a preference for empiric sources, and a disdain for sabda (or at least lets say that you seem to consider empiric sources as the basis for acceptance and rejection, even over scriptural testimony), particularly when scriptural testimony (guru, sadhu, shastra) runs contrary to feminist doctrines (by feminist, I mean the belief in the social, political, and economic equality of the sexes), your views will necessarily be faulty, because without sabda (scriptural testimony), your sensory perception and inference are subject to defect. Without shastra-chakshush, can we not say that your alternative "view" of things is necessarily "blind" (read "erroneous")? >That's >dangerous. > Speculation is, indeed, dangerous. I hope you agree that the guru-sadh-shastra that was valid in the ritvik debate is also valid in this discussion, and that pratyaksa and anuman is subservient to guru-sadhu-shastra. ys KKdas 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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