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Dear friends,

 

The Vedic calendar accommodates both the

Purnimanata  months and the Amanta months. Lord Krishna mentions the

Purnimanta month Margashirsha in the Bhagavadgita and he also mentions

the Kusumakara (Vasanta) ritu, which has the seasonal months Madhu and

Madhava. In Vedanga Jyotish the month of  Magha was Purnimanta and was

Nakshatra-based and thus sidereal while the Month of Tapa was Amanta

and was Seasonal (ie. Tropical) related to the start of the Wnter

season, which starts from the Winter solstice. Any destructive process

with wholesale condemning of the Sidereal calendar will thus not have

Vedic sanction and nobody will accept that.

 

Secondly have you

also noticed the double-talk of the people, who condemn and ridicule

paroksha-jnana, are now saying that if the festivals are not celebrated

in the time they feel proper then they will do harm. Can these people

give any pratyaksha evidence as to how the harm will come?

 

There

may be issues as to how to combine both the Sidereal and the Tropical

calendars together such that justice is done to both the Nakshatra

-based festivals as well as the season-based festivals. But questioning

the date of the Makar Sankranti will not help. Makar Sankranti will

always be celebrated when the Sun visits the house of his hostile son,

Saturn in the Makara Rashi. If anybody wants to celebrate the Winter

Solstice day it can be an additional festival and who does not like

festivals.

 

Regards,

 

Sunil K. Bhattacharjya

 

--- On Thu, 10/15/09, jyotirved <jyotirved wrote:

 

jyotirved <jyotirved

 

 

Cc: hinducalendar ,

indian_astrology_group_daily_digest

Thursday, October 15, 2009, 2:12 AM

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dear friends,

 

 

 

The following representation was sent to the Hon’e Rahtrapatiji, with copies

 

to all the Jagadguru Shankracharyas and Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan besides all

 

the leading jyoitisha magazines etc.

 

 

 

AKK

 

 

 

Tel…… E-mail: jyotirved (AT) sify (DOT) com

 

 

 

ALL INDIA CALENDAR REFORM COMMITTEE

 

 

 

………

 

 

 

Delhi-110085 (India)

 

 

 

July 17, 2004

 

 

 

Dear Friends,

 

 

 

Namaskar!

 

 

 

A humble request that we should not mourn on the day of “festival of

 

lights†i.e. we should not celebrate Pitramavasya on the day of actual

 

Dipavali (Gujarati New Year!) on October 13, 04.

 

 

 

Every festival has a criterion. We celebrate Independence Day on August 15

 

every year. Why? Because India gained independence on that day. It is

 

immaterial whether August 15 is a Sunday or a Monday or Shravana or Bhadra.

 

Similarly, for celebrating religious festivals, our shastras have fixed

 

certain criteria. And as we know, fasts and festivals are celebrated for

 

the peace and welfare of ourselves and our kith and kin. Consequently, if

 

we do not adhere to the criteria/tenets fixed by the shastras, those very

 

fasts and festivals will do us more harm than good. Same is the case with

 

Muhurtas. We must therefore know the criteria.

 

 

 

E.g. for Vasanti Navaratra, viz. the lunar New Year, the criterion is

 

“Chaitra Shukla Pratipat†and for Rama Navmi it is " Chaitra Shukla Navmi " .

 

We must therefore know as to when Chaitra Shukla Paksha starts. This

 

information has to be based on the Vedas, Puranas and other shastras as well

 

as astronomy/geography , both ancient i.e. sidhantic and modern. Let us see

 

these criteria one by one:

 

 

 

1. The Vedas: All the four Vedas, Brahmanas and Upanasihadas etc.

 

state that the year comprises six seasons of two months each. Shishira-ritu

 

viz. winter and the month of Tapah start simultaneously with Uttarayana viz.

 

Winter Solstice i.e. the shortest day of the year. That very month is also

 

known as Magha. It is followed by other months viz. Tapasya (Phalguna) and

 

(Vasanta ritu comprising) Madhu (Chaitra) and Madhav (Vaishakha). Thus

 

solar Chaitra is the third month from the date of Winter Solstice.

 

Therefore, it should start these days three months after December 21 i.e.

 

around February 20. In fact, it started on February 19 in 2004.

 

 

 

2. Vedanga Jyotisha: The earliest recorded work on Vedic astronomy

 

is Vedanga Jyotisha also known as Rik/Yajur Jyotisha by Lagadha. It was

 

compiled around thirteenth century BCE i.e. about 3300 years back, most

 

probably in Kashmir. The fifth and the sixth verses of the same are:

 

swarakramete Somarkau yada sakam savasavav,

 

 

 

syat-tadadiyugam maghas-tapah shuklo dinam-tyajah

 

 

 

“When the sun and the moon while moving in the sky, come to

 

Vasava (Dhanishtha) star together, then the Yuga, the Magha (month) the

 

Tapas (season), the light half of the month, and the winter solstice

 

(Uttarayana) , all commence togetherâ€

 

 

 

prapadyate shavishshthadav suryachandramsav- udak

 

 

 

sarparde dakshinarkastu Magha shravanayoh sada

 

 

 

“The sun and the moon turn towards North in the beginning of Dhanishtha and

 

towards South in the middle of Ashlesha. The sun always does this (turn

 

north) in the month of Magha and (turn south) in Shravana respectivelyâ€

 

 

 

Vedanga Jyotisha has made it clear in its seventh mantra that by

 

Uttaryana it means really the shortest day of the year instead of some

 

imaginary Uttarayana like January 14 of some Panchangakars of these days:

 

 

 

dharma vridhir apam prasthah kshapa hras udag-gatav

 

dakshine-tau viparyastav shanmuhurtyaynen tu

 

 

 

“During the sun’s northward journey (six months of Uttarayana) the day

 

increases by one Prastha measure of water and the night becomes short.

 

During the southward journey (six months of Dakshinayana) , the conditions

 

reverse. The increase (of time) during an ayana is equal to six muhurtasâ€.

 

(S. B. Dikshit’s translation for all the three mantras)

 

 

 

Further, as everybody knows, and as every Panchanga indicates,

 

Vasanta (Spring) starts exactly on the day of Madhu i.e. February 19/20. It

 

is a geographical phenomenon and cannot be wished away or altered. How could

 

then Vasanti Navratra start on March 21, 2004 after one month after the

 

start of the month of Madhu i.e. the real Vasanta (Spring)?

 

 

 

Thus there is absolutely no doubt that the Vasanti Navratras

 

which we are celebrating these days are not on the correct days as per

 

either the Vedas or the Vedanga Jyotisha or the phenomenon of seasons. But

 

then why are we celebrating them on wrong days? Because our panchangakars,

 

including the Rashtriya Panchanga do not tell us the correct days! Is it

 

that they do not know the correct criteria/days of these phenomena

 

themselves?

 

 

 

Madhava cannot be equal to Chaitra if it is equal to Mesha and Vasanti

 

Navratraas cannot wait for more than a month after the start of Vasanta

 

Ritu!: If you look at any Panchanga, including the Rashtriya Panchanga, in

 

any language, you will find that they have mentioned the start of the month

 

of Madhu and Vasanta Ritu on that date viz. February 19, 2004. Rashtriya

 

Panchanga lists the month starting with February 19 as the Vedic Mina. The

 

first New Moon (Shukla Pratipat) after the solar Chaitra i.e. Madhu (Vedic

 

Mina as per the Rashtriya Panchanga) is thus Chaitra Shukla Pratipat. It was

 

on February 21 in 2004. As such, the real Vasanti Navratras started on

 

February 21, 2004. It is known as Navreh in Kashmir, Gudi Padva in

 

Maharashtra and Ugadi in Andhra etc. That would have satisfied the criterion

 

of the Vedas that madhuscha madhavashcha vasantikav ritu (Yajurveda Samhita

 

4/4/11/1) i.e. Madhu (Chaitra) and Madhava (Vaishakha) are the months of

 

Vasanta i.e. Spring Season. Obviously, Chaitra Shukla Paksha is the start

 

of the first lunar month of Vasanta as per all the Vedas also.

 

 

 

Naturally, since as per all the Panchangas, Vasanta Ritu started on February

 

19, 2004, the solar Chaitra also should have started on that date of Madhu

 

i.e. February 19 but ironically it was made to start on March 14 and the

 

Rashtriya Panchanga starts it (Chaitra) on March 21 every year, when Madhava

 

i.e. Vaishakha is supposed to start as per all the Vedas and Puranas.

 

Surprisingly, Rashtriya Panchanga itself calls this month (March 21) as

 

Vedic Mesha and Madhava! How they can call Mesha and Madhava as Chaitra,

 

they only can say! Accordingly, the Lunar Chaitra was made to start on March

 

21 (which should have been actually Vaishakha Shukla paksha!) instead of

 

February 21! When Vasanta Ritu started on February 19, 2004, according to

 

all the Panchangas, the first shukla pratipat after that, which was on

 

February 21, 2004, should naturally have been Vasanti Navratra! Thus the

 

solar Chaitra and the Navratras, both, were “postponed†exactly by one month

 

against the injunctions of all the Vedas. Why? Because either our

 

panchangakars themselves have no knowledge about the criteria of festivals

 

or they are making a fool of us deliberately!

 

 

 

Vasanta Panchami in mid-winter: Then again, do you know when we were asked

 

to celebrate Vasanta Panchami by these very panchangakars according to whom

 

Vasanti navratras started on March 21? January 26, 2004! That means Vasanta

 

Panchami was celebrated two months before even their own Vasanta Shukla

 

Pratipat! Only the insane and dimwitted can celebrate Spring in mid-Winter!

 

Evidently, either our panchangakars are either themselves insane and

 

dimwitted or they treat us like that!

 

 

 

Ramanavmi: Goswami Tulsidas says in his immortal

 

Ramacharitamanasa:

 

 

 

navmi tithi Madhumas punita, sukalpachha abhijit hariprita

 

 

 

“Shri Ram was born on navmi tithi of shukla paksha in the month of Madhu, in

 

Abhijit muhurtaâ€.

 

 

 

We have seen that Madhu or Chaitra and Spring (Vasanta) both commence

 

simultaneously around February 19 every year as per the Vedas and Vedanga

 

Jyotisha. In fact they are synonyms of one another. Let us now see other

 

authorities in this regard:

 

 

 

3. Vishnu-dharmortarap urana: As per “Alberuni’s Indiaâ€, in 11th

 

century-India all the festivals were decided as per the criteria of

 

Vishnu-dharmotarapu rana. It says in 3/9/4-5

 

 

 

…chaitro madhur-iti smritah,

 

 

 

vaishakho madhavah proktah, shuchir jyeshthah udahritah

 

 

 

shuklah proktastatha ashado nabhah shravan ishyete,

 

 

 

praushthapado nabhasyashcha ishashch ashvayujah smritah

 

 

 

urjakhyah kartikah prokto margshirshah sahastatha

 

 

 

sahasya paush ityukto maghah syat tap eva cha

 

 

 

phalgunashcha tapasyakhyo maso…

 

 

 

“(i) Chaitra is known as Madhu (or Madhu is known as Chaitra)! (ii)

 

Vaishakha as Madhava; (iii) Jyeshtha as Shuchih; (iv) Ashadha as Shuklah (or

 

Shukrah); (v) Nabhah as Shravana; (vi) Praushthapada (Bhadrapada) as

 

Nabhasya; (vii) Ashvayuja (Ashvina) as Ishah; (viii) Urja as Kartika; (ix)

 

Margashirsha as Saha; (x) Sahasya as Pausha; (xi) Magha as Tapah and (xii)

 

Phalguna as Tapasya.â€

 

 

 

As we have seen above, Madhu started on February 19 and Chaitra

 

Shukla Pratipad started on Februrary 21 which means Ramanavmi should have

 

been on February 29, 2004. Our panchangakars (including, of course, the

 

Rashtriya Panfhanga!) made us celebrate Ramanavmi on March 30, 2004, whereas

 

Madhu ended on March 20 and the real Chaitra Shuklapaksha on March 7! Why

 

did they compel us to celebrate it on a wrong day—nay, even in a wrong

 

month? Because they know fully well that in spite of claiming to be

 

educated and intelligent people, we are not going to ask any inconvenient

 

questions! But then, are we really intelligent and educated if we do not

 

know anything about the criteria of our festivals? Or is it that our

 

panchangakars also are lacking in education and intelligence and they do not

 

know even ABC of our dharmashastras? Well, they alone can answer that

 

question for themselves!

 

 

 

4. Sidhantas: The earliest “most accurate (?!)†(spashta-taro

 

savitrah) astronomical treatise of Indian astronomy is supposed to be the

 

Surya Sidhanta of 5th century AD. In Mana-adhyaya, verses 9-10, it says:

 

bhanor-makar Sankranteh shanmasa Uttarayanam

 

 

 

karkyadestu tathaiv

 

syat shanmasa dakshinayanam

 

 

 

dwirashi natha ritavas

 

tatoapi shishiradayah

 

 

 

meshadav dwadashaite masaistaireva vatsarah

 

 

 

“From Makar Sankranti start the six months of Uttarayana and from Karkata

 

Sankranti the six months of Dakshinayana. Each season starting with

 

Shishira (and Makara Sankranti) comprises two rashis (and) six seasons make

 

one yearâ€.

 

 

 

Lest there be any doubt as to what type of Rashis the Surya Sidhanta

 

is talking about, it

 

 

 

makes it clear in Bhugoladhyaya, verses 57 to 62:

 

 

 

meshadav to sada vridhir udaguttarto adhika

 

 

 

devamshe cha kshapa hanir vipareetam tatha asure

 

 

 

tuladav dyunishorvamam kshyay vridhav tayorubhe

 

 

 

deshkranti vashan nitem tadvigyanam puroditam

 

 

 

ayanante vilomena devasur vibhagayoh

 

 

 

nadi shashtya sakrid ahar nishapi asmin sakrit

 

 

 

tadantare api shashtyante kshayvridhav ahar-nishoh

 

 

 

parto vipareeto ayam bhagolah parivartate.

 

 

 

“During the half revolution beginning with Mesha, there is always an excess

 

of day to the north, in the hemisphere of the gods i.e. Uttarayana-- -greater

 

according to distance north---and a corresponding deficiency of the night.

 

In the hemisphere of the demons (Dakshinayana) , the reverse. In the half

 

revolution beginning with Libra (Tula) both the deficiency and excess of day

 

and night in the two hemispheres are the opposite of this. The method of

 

determining them, which is always dependent upon situation (desha) and

 

declination (kranti), has been before explained.

 

 

 

“There occurs once, at the end of the sun’s half revolution from

 

solstice to solstice---( Uttarayana to Dakshinayana) a day of sixty nadis and

 

a night of the same length mutually opposed to one another, in the two

 

hemispheres of the gods and of the demons. In the intermediate region, the

 

deficiency and excess of day and night are within the limit of sixty nadis

 

beyond this sphere of asterisms (bha) revolves perverselyâ€. (Burgess’

 

translation) .

 

 

 

Two things are clear from the above to even a layman with a bit

 

of knowledge of geography of primary school level about the phenomenon of

 

seasons: i) It is only around March 21 (Spring Equinox) Mesha Sankranti

 

every year that day and night are equal and the length of day in the

 

northern hemisphere starts increasing as compared to the length of night.

 

 

 

ii) Then around September 23 (Autumn Equinox) Tula Sankranti, when

 

the day and night are again equal, the length of nights starts increasing as

 

compared to the length of days. And in the same order the day is the

 

shortest around December 21 (winter solstice) and longest around June 21

 

(Summer Solstice). These very Equinoxes and solstices are known as Mesha,

 

Karkata, Tula and Makar Sankranti respectively as per all the sidhantas and

 

shastras. There are no other such sankrantis either in the sidhantas or

 

modern astronomy.

 

 

 

5. Puranas: I have already quoted hundreds of proofs with

 

chapter and verse in my Panchangas and other articles. It is no use to

 

repeat them here again. Suffice to quote a few only from a couple of

 

Puranas. First the Vishnupurana: 2/8/28-31 and 67-68

 

 

 

ayanasyotarasyadav makaram yati bhaskarah

 

 

 

tatah kumbham cha menam cha rashe rashyantaram dvija (28)

 

 

 

trishu eteshu atha bhukteshu tato vaishuvatim gatim

 

 

 

prayati savita kurvan ahoratram tatah samam (29)

 

 

 

tato ratrih kshayam yati vardhate anudinam dinam

 

(30)

 

 

 

tatashcha mithunasyante param kashtham upagatah

 

 

 

rashim karkatam prapya kurute dakshinayanam

 

(31)

 

 

 

“In the beginning of Uttarayana, the sun enters Capricorn

 

(Makara Rashi) there from going to Kumbha and them Mina. After having passed

 

through these three signs, it just gains vishuvati (equinoctial) speed

 

resulting in the day and night being equal on Mesha. After that, nights

 

start decreasing and the days increasing correspondingly daily. Then when

 

the sun is in the end of Mithuna Rashi, i.e. when it is just at the verge of

 

entering Cancer, the day is the longest then and Dakshnayana starts on that

 

dateâ€.

 

 

 

Sharad vsantyor Madhye vishuvam to vibhavyete

 

 

 

Tula mesh gate bhanav samratri divam tu tat

 

(67)

 

 

 

Karkatavasthite bhanav dakshiyanamuchete

 

 

 

Uttarayanam api uktam makarasthe divakare

 

(88)

 

 

 

“In the midst of sharat ritu and vasanta ritu, vishuvas (equinoxes) take

 

place with the entry of the sun into Tula (Libra) and Mesha (Aries)

 

respectively and days and nights become equal on those two sankrantis. The

 

entry of sun into Cancer (Karkata) is known as dakshinayana whereas its

 

entry into Maraka is known as Uttarayanaâ€

 

 

 

Now Shrimadbhagavata, 5/21/4-6

 

 

 

yada mesh tulyor vartate tada ahoratrani samanani bhavanti yada vrishadishu

 

panchasu cha rashishu charati tada ahani eva vardhante hrasati cha masi masi

 

ekaika ghatika ratrishu (4) yada vrishchikadishu panchasu

 

vartate tada ahoratrani viparyayani bhavanti (5) yavad dakshinayanam

 

ahani vardhante yavad uttarayanam ratrayah (6)

 

 

 

“When the sun enters Mesha and Tula days and nights are equal on those dates

 

and the day starts getting longer as compared to nights when the sun passes

 

through Vrisha etc. five rashis then days keep on increasing and the nights

 

decreasing by one ghati every month. (After the day and night have become

 

equal on Tula Sankranti) the nights keep on increasing during the sojourn of

 

five rashis of Vrishchika etc. In short, during Uttarayana days keep on

 

increasing till Dakshinayana and after that nights keep on increasingâ€.

 

 

 

Vishnurhdarmotarapu rana 3/8/6-8 says

 

 

 

tula meshagate bhanav vishuvad dinam uchete,

 

 

 

dhanvato mithunantashcha ayane soasya dakshine,

 

 

 

“When the sun is in Mesha and Tula, they are the days of Vishuva i.e. days

 

and nights are equal then. From the end of Dhanu (start of Makara)

 

Uttarayana starts and from the end of Mithuna (start of Karkata) Dakshniyana

 

startsâ€

 

 

 

Any discussion on such topics is incomplete without appropriate references

 

from Shivamahapurana: We just quote one 5/51/54 from this Purana below:

 

 

 

madhavasya site pakshe tritiya ya akshayabida

 

 

 

tasyam yo jagadambayah vratam kuryad atandritah…

 

 

 

“The tritiya of Shukla paksha of Madhava (!) is know as akshayaya tritiya.

 

One who observes a fast for Jagadamba on that date (gets immortal and

 

thousand fold results)â€

 

 

 

It is to be noted here that Akshaya tritiya is to be observed in

 

(lunar) Madhava that means according to Shiva-Mahapurana also Vaishakha does

 

not have any other existence besides Madhava! Thus the akshyaya tritiya

 

that we observed in 2003 on May 4, was against all the shastras since solar

 

Madhava had ended on April 20 and lunar Madhava on April 30! A similar

 

situation is going to crop up in 2005. We will be asked to celebrate

 

Akshaya tritiya on May 12, when solar Madhava will have ended on April 20

 

and lunar Madhava shukla paksha will start on April 8, 2005 which means it

 

should be celebrated actually on April 11, 2005!

 

 

 

Now obviously, if as per all the Vedas, Vedanga Jyotisha, Surya Sidhanta,

 

Bhagavata, Vishnupurana, Vishnudharmotarapur ana and Shiva Mahapurana etc.

 

etc. solar Shravana is another name of Dakshinayana viz sun in Karkata, it

 

starts on June 21 in 2004. The first shukla pratipat after that is on July

 

18. Therefore, that is the day when the Lunar Shravana starts in 2004 as

 

per all the Vedas and Puranas etc. As such, Shravana Purnima viz Raksha

 

Bandhan and Amarnath Yatra etc. should be celebrated on July 31 in 2004.

 

Why are our panchangakars asking us to celebrate it on August 29 instead?

 

Only because they treat the entire Hindu society as ignorant fools who have

 

no idea about the criteria of any festivals! Or is it that the

 

panchangakars do not know anything themselves but are just copying from

 

others like blind following blind?

 

 

 

Similarly, Janmashtami should be celebrated on the

 

Krishna-paksha Ashtami following that Shravana Purnima i.e. on August 7 in

 

2004. But we are asked to celebrate it on September 6! Why? For God’s sake

 

do ask your “Panditji†and let me know what he says!

 

 

 

6. To clinch the issue on the basis of Agama i.e. yogashastras, I

 

will quote the master-yogi i.e. Acharya Abhinavgupta’ s Tantraloka: 6/114-116

 

 

 

shatsu shatsu anguleshu arko hridayat makaradishu

 

 

 

tishthan maghadikam shatkam kuryat tat-chotarayanam

 

 

 

sankranti tritaye vrite bhukte chashtadashangule

 

 

 

mesham prapte ravav punyam vishuvat par laukikam

 

 

 

praveshe tu tulasthe arke tadev vishuvad bhavet

 

 

 

Ih sidhi pradam chaitat dakshinayan- gam tatah

 

 

 

The translation of these mantras, as per the commentary of Jayaratha is,

 

(Linking yogic kriyas to seasons, it says, “After every six ungalas from the

 

hirdaya (the pranas go to) Makara etc. and make Magha etc. six such months

 

from Uttarayana starting with sun’s transit into Makara. From Makra to

 

Mithuna is Uttarayana and in Magha sun transits Makara Rashi so till Ashada

 

when the sun transits Mithuna, Uttarayana lasts, After having crossed three

 

sankrantis (of Uttarayana)–eighteen unglas of Prana --= vishuvat Sankranti

 

arrives. Because on that day of Mesha sankranti the days and nights are

 

equal throughout the world that is why it is known as vishuvat. When the

 

sun enters Tula it is vishuva againâ€.

 

 

 

I do not think that there should be any doubt now in anybody’s

 

mind as to how we are being taken for a ride by these panchanga-makers. Or

 

is it that those panchangakars themselves are being taken for a ride by

 

someone else either knowingly or unbeknown to them? In either case, it is

 

literally killing our dharma.

 

 

 

As we have seen that Shravana Shukla Paksha starts from July 18, 2004,

 

therefore, Bhadra Shukla paksha will start from August 17. Naturally, the

 

first Krishna Pratipat after that i.e. Ashvina Krishna Paksha is the start

 

of Pitrapaksha, which means it starts from August 31, 2004. As such, the

 

Purnima shradha of Pitrapaksha falls on August 29, 2004, whereas the

 

Pitramavasya is actually on September 14, 2004. And by the same logic and

 

criterion Sharadiya Navaratras start from September 15 and Kartika Amavasya

 

falls exactly after about one month i.e. on October 13, 2004. And that is

 

the world famous festival of lights viz Dipavali! But tragically, our

 

panchanga-makers advise us to mourn on that day i.e. we are advised to

 

celebrate Pitraamavasa then! Why? Because they know that we have become

 

immune to all such things and are worried only about financial gains or

 

losses but not about our dharma! But we must know that by “mourning†on the

 

day of actual Dipavali we will be losers not only financially but in every

 

worldly and spiritual sphere like that of the erstwhile ruling party! So

 

whether we mourn or burst crackers on the actual Dipavali (October 13), it

 

is up to us now!

 

 

 

7. Primary School level Geography: Let us see the situation

 

in the light of modern astronomy/geography . Initially, I was myself peeved

 

as to why the ayana and vishuva (Makara, Mesha, Karkata and Tula) sankrantis

 

had been praised to the skies by our Rishis, so much so that they say that

 

it is difficult even for yogis to catch the actual moment of such sankrantis

 

and any charities or fasts on such occasions yield thousand-fold results!

 

 

 

Let me explain it in a manner that is as non-technical as possible:

 

 

 

We know that the earth hurtles around the sun at about 30 kilometres per

 

second. (2) It also rotates on its axis, causing days and nights (3) The

 

equator is “precessing†at tremendous speeds. (4) Because the ecliptic is

 

inclined to the equator (obliquity of ecliptic) the earth/sun reaches the

 

minimum/maximum declination i.e. it is at the minimum/maximum distance from

 

the equator during its revolution of the sun at particular points of time.

 

The maximum obliquity of the ecliptic has remained around 23°28’ over the

 

last couple of centuries. Therefore that is the maximum north/south

 

declination that the sun/earth can attain these days during its journey via

 

the ecliptic. On that declination depends the phenomenon of seasons, which

 

is also directly responsible for increase/decrease in day/night durations.

 

The sun attains the maximum northern declination of about 23° 27’ on June

 

21. That means it is at a maximum northern distance from the equator on

 

that date. That is thus the last day of the summer season when the day is

 

the longest and varsha ritu starts. The sun (actually the earth) has then to

 

stop for a fleeting moment---less than a nanosecond-- - before climbing down

 

from that “high pedestal†of North declination! That fleeting moment is the

 

real crucial moment and we can only “calculate†it correctly to some extent

 

with our computers with microprocessor speeds in GHz that also only with the

 

data from NASA and other overseas observatories and not from our

 

panchanga-makers including the Rashtriya Panchanga! This very moment of

 

“U-turn†in the declination of the sun is the real dakshinayana as the earth

 

has reached the maximum declination of south or the sun the maximum

 

declination of north viz. 23° 27’ and has to turn back from there. This is

 

also known as Karkata Sankranti of the sun as the sun lies directly over the

 

tropic of Cancer (Karka-Rekha) on that date. I am sure everybody has read

 

that much of geography in his primary school days! There cannot be any

 

other Karkata Sankranti as per any shastra or sidhanta or modern

 

astronomy/geography since there is no other Karka Rekha (Tropic of Cancer)

 

or any other longest day of the year!

 

 

 

Similar is the case on December 21, when the sun reaches the maximum south

 

declination (of around 23° 27’) i.e. when the sun is at a maximum southern

 

distance from the equator. It has to stop then for a fleeting moment---less

 

than a nanosecond again--- before “turning†back (U-turn!) from that high

 

pedestal. That fleeting moment is the real Uttarayana of the sun known as

 

Makara Sankranti since the sun is directly on the tropic of

 

Capricorn--- Makara-Rekha- --on that date. There is absolutely no other

 

Makara Sankranti either as per the shastras or sidhantas or modern

 

astronomy/geography since there is no other Makara-Rekha nor any other

 

shortest day of the year! That also is primary school level geography!

 

 

 

Similarly, during its sojourn around the sun; the earth, the equator and the

 

ecliptic join together for a fleeting moment---here also less than a

 

nanosecond-- when the longitude, latitude, declination and right ascension of

 

the sun/earth are zero! The sun (actually the earth) is in exact

 

“conjunction†with the ecliptic and the equator! It is thus a “Triveniâ€

and

 

that is the moment of Spring Equinox. With the declination of the sun being

 

zero degrees South it has to start moving away (cross the equator) again

 

from that “conjunction of the equator†from that moment of zero degrees

 

longitude-cum- latitude- cum-declination- cum-right ascension! That fleeting

 

moment is Vishuva – Mesha Sankranti of the sun (Tula Sankranti of the

 

earth)! It is Vishuva because the earth is conjunct with the Vishuvat Rekha

 

i.e. the Equator. That is the moment when days and nights are really equal

 

throughout the globe. That is the zero “moment/point†for all the

 

calculations of longitude, Right Ascension, Declination etc. and it is known

 

as Vernal Equinox. Vishuva also means, as per Jayaratha, the commentator of

 

Tantraloka, the days when “days and nights are equalâ€. Spring Equinox also

 

means the same thing i.e Equi-nox: day is equal to night in the midst of the

 

spring season! This is the real Vaishakhi and the sun enters Uttara Gola

 

then i.e. it starts gaining in northern declination! There is no other

 

Vishuvat Rekha (Equator) with which the earth can be “conjunct†during

 

Spring and therefore there cannot be any other Vishuva or Mesha Sankranti

 

since day and night are not equal during Spring on any other day. All the

 

panchangakars list Uttara-gola on that date but then why do they want us to

 

celebrate Vaishakhi/Vaishakha di/Meshadi i.e. solar New Year on April 14/15!

 

Because they know that we do not know ABC of geography! Or is it that they

 

do not know it themselves?

 

 

 

Then again after six months of that phenomenon, a similar situation comes

 

again, when the longitude and Right ascension of the sun are 180 degrees

 

(earth zero degrees). The longitude of the sun also can be taken as zero

 

degrees on that date if we measure it from Autumn Equinox instead of from

 

Vernal Equinox! The equator, the earth and the ecliptic have a confluence

 

for a fleeting moment---less than a nanosecond-- -again! As the earth is

 

conjunct the equator i.e. Vishuvat Rekha again, it is also known as

 

Vishuva----Autumn Equinox (Jala Vishuva or Tula Sankranti) around September

 

23. It is the midpoint (second month) of the Sharat-ritu. (That is why

 

Sharadiya Navaratras should start with the first Shukla Pratipat after

 

Sharat Ritu starts---on September 15 in 2004—and not when Sharat-kala is

 

almost over—October 14, 2004----as is being done by our panchangamakers) .

 

 

 

The declination of the sun is zero degrees at that particular moment.

 

Again, all the panchangakars list it as “the sun enters dakshina gola†as

 

the sun (after crossing the Equator) starts gaining southern declination

 

from that moment. There cannot be any other Tula Sankranti/Jala Vishuva as

 

the earth is not conjunct Equator---and thus the day and night are not

 

equal---on any other day in Autumn! But then these panchangakars make us

 

celebrate Tula Sankranti on October 14/15! Why? Only because they will

 

lose their sinful crumbs if the tell us the facts! Or is it that they do

 

not know the facts themselves? A sad state of affairs, in either case!

 

 

 

Naturally, in ancient times, it was almost impossible for ordinary mortals

 

to calculate accurately to the nearest minute, leave alone the nearest

 

second, such phenomena as lasted hardly for nanoseconds! Really, hats off

 

to our Rishis! Obviously, our present “Vamadevas†and “Parasharas†who

 

advocate such Mesha etc. sankrantis as do not exist at all, are a slur on

 

the real Rishis and such fakes must be banished without delay from this land

 

of real Rishis.

 

 

 

8. Day-to-day experience: In fact, we do not need to brush up

 

even our primary school level geography since our day to day experience also

 

tells us that the sun does not rise daily from the same place. It is

 

exactly above the equator (bhumadhya-rekha) on March 20/21 dividing the day

 

into two “equal halves†of 12 hours each! That is why it is known as

 

Vasanta-Sampat or Vishuva or Mesha Sankranti or Madhava! It does not rise on

 

any other day from that point till its revolution around the sun is

 

complete. (That is why there cannot be two Spring Equinoxes or two Mesha

 

Sankrantis in a year!). After that date, we observe it rising in further

 

north (Uttara-gola! ) till June 21. And that is what is known as

 

Dakshinayana Day or Karkata Sankranti or Nabhah (start of Varsha Ritu) and

 

there cannot be any other Karka Sankranti as there cannot be another longest

 

day at all for the next 365 days! From that moment onwards the sun stops

 

rising towards north but turns back from there towards dakshina (south) till

 

it is exactly above the equator again on September 22/23, dividing the day

 

once again into two “equal halves†of 12 hours each. That day is known as

 

Sharat Sampat (Autumn Equinox) or Tula Sankranti or Vishuva or Urja and the

 

day and night are again equal on that date. Obviously, there cannot be

 

another Tula Sankranti for at least next 365 days! From that date onwards it

 

moves i.e. keeps on rising towards south (Dakshina Gola) rising in extreme

 

southern direction on December 21. That is the Uttarayana day since from

 

that date the sun stops moving further south and starts turning towards

 

north. It is this very day that is known as world famous Makara Sankranti or

 

Pongal or Udagayana or Tapah! That was the day for which Bhishma was

 

waiting to shed off his mortal coil! There cannot be another Makara

 

Sankranti as there cannot be another shortest day for the next 365 days from

 

that date onwards!

 

 

 

9. We have made a laughing stock of ourselves: Now we can see for

 

ourselves as to how artificial, illogical, unscientific and irrational and,

 

above all, anti-Vedic our Makara, Mesha, Karkata and Tula Sankrantis are

 

these days which are celebrated on January 14, April 14, July 14 and October

 

14 instead of December 21, March 21, June 21 and Sept. 23 respectively! All

 

the world is laughing at us that we do not know even the actual days of

 

solstices and equinoxes! When these very four cardinal points are such

 

topsy-turvy how can the other sankrantis (solar ingresses) be correct! As

 

these panchangakars do not let the solar months start from proper days,

 

lunar months also are made to lag behind by at least one month!

 

 

 

And we can rest assured that what is illogical, unscientific and irrational

 

could never have been advised by our dharmashastras, as seen above. It is

 

only our panchangakars who are prescribing such farcical festivals and

 

fairs! Why? Because they are worse than Duryodhana. Why? Because

 

Duryodhana had the courage to admit that though he could differentiate

 

between Dharma and Adharma yet he was in no mood to follow Dharma and desist

 

from Adharma! But these panchangakars do not have the courage to admit that

 

they have been fleecing the entire Hindu society for the last several

 

centuries just for some crumbs and should stop now from spreading that

 

adharma further. Or is it that they are so insensitive to even the natural

 

phenomena like sunrise and sunset or winter and summer that they cannot

 

differentiate between a natural Mesha Sankranti and an artificial one? But

 

then it is equally our fault as we never questioned them about the criteria

 

they adopted for such festivals/phenomena !

 

 

 

10. Muhurtas: When the dates of sankrantis and lunar months are

 

wrong how can the muhurtas fixed on such basis be correct? No wonder we are

 

celebrating marriages during the actual shradha-paksha and “enjoyingâ€

 

shradhas during the period actually auspicious for marriages!

 

 

 

CRC Report: It must be put on record that even the Saha Calendar Reform

 

Committee had warned in no uncertain terms about the situation these

 

panchangamakers have created for us, and I quote, “In continuing to follow

 

the nirayana system, the Hindu calendar makers are under delusion that they

 

are following the path of dharma. They are actually committing the whole

 

Hindu society to adharma†(Page 260 of the Report of the Calendar Reform

 

Committee, 1955)

 

 

 

Earlier these Panchanga-makers used to boast (wrongly though)

 

that as they made correct predictions on the basis of such (imaginary)

 

rashis that is why they were following them for festivals also. But now even

 

that “gas-ball†has been deflated since they have met their Waterloo with

 

the failure of their predictions about NDA forming the Government under

 

Atalji with the result that these Panchanga makers themselves are in

 

mourning these days! (Please see the attachment proving that there are no

 

rashis, much less astrology in the Vedas!)

 

 

 

In view of the above, I am listing below some of the most

 

important festivals from June 1 till December 31, 2004, as per all the

 

Vedas, shastras, sidhantas and modern astronomy. Just celebrate them

 

accordingly and do confront your panchangamaker/ panditji with these

 

unpleasant facts because unless and until we revolt against this anyay

 

(injustice), they will continue to hurtle us towards the abyss of adharma by

 

making us mourn on Dipavali!

 

 

 

There is a saying that you can take a horse to the river but you cannot make

 

it drink water! I have done my job by pointing out all the glaring

 

anomalies. I have substantiated my arguments with all the proofs in a

 

nutshell which even a layman can understand. It is up to the readers

 

whether they want to be like vegetables being tossed by panchangamakers

 

(including the Rashtriya Panchanga) or they want to really have some zest

 

for real dharma!

 

 

 

Please feel free to email or post this letter-cum-request to anybody you

 

like since everybody must join this dharmayudha for streamlining our

 

calendar.

 

 

 

With best regards,

 

 

 

Yours sincerely,

 

 

 

Avtar Krishen Kaul

 

 

 

………

 

 

 

(Email: jyotirved (AT) sify (DOT) com Tel: 27516483)

 

 

 

 

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Dear friends,The Vedic calendar accommodates both the

Purnimanata months and the Amanta months. Lord Krishna mentions the

Purnimanta month Margashirsha in the Bhagavadgita and he also mentions

the Kusumakara (Vasanta) ritu, which has the seasonal months Madhu and

Madhava. In Vedanga Jyotish the month of Magha was Purnimanta and was

Nakshatra-based and thus sidereal while the Month of Tapa was Amanta

and was Seasonal (ie. Tropical) related to the start of the Wnter

season, which starts from the Winter solstice. Any destructive process

with wholesale condemning of the Sidereal calendar will thus not have

Vedic sanction and nobody will accept that. Secondly have you

also noticed the double-talk of the people, who condemn and ridicule

paroksha-jnana, are now saying that if the festivals are not celebrated

in the time they feel proper then they will do harm. Can these people

give any pratyaksha evidence as to how the harm will come?There

may be issues as to how to combine both the Sidereal and the Tropical

calendars together such that justice is done to both the Nakshatra

-based festivals as well as the season-based festivals. But questioning

the date of the Makar Sankranti will not help. Makar Sankranti will

always be celebrated when the Sun visits the house of his hostile son,

Saturn in the Makara Rashi. If anybody wants to celebrate the Winter

Solstice day it can be an additional festival and who does not like

festivals.Regards,Sunil K. Bhattacharjya--- On Thu, 10/15/09, jyotirved <jyotirved wrote:jyotirved <jyotirved Cc: hinducalendar , indian_astrology_group_daily_digest Date: Thursday, October 15, 2009, 2:12 AM

 

 

Dear friends,

 

The following representation was sent to the Hon’e Rahtrapatiji, with copies

to all the Jagadguru Shankracharyas and Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan besides all

the leading jyoitisha magazines etc.

 

AKK

 

Tel…… E-mail: jyotirved (AT) sify (DOT) com

 

ALL INDIA CALENDAR REFORM COMMITTEE

 

………

 

Delhi-110085 (India)

 

July 17, 2004

 

Dear Friends,

 

Namaskar!

 

A humble request that we should not mourn on the day of “festival of

lights†i.e. we should not celebrate Pitramavasya on the day of actual

Dipavali (Gujarati New Year!) on October 13, 04.

 

Every festival has a criterion. We celebrate Independence Day on August 15

every year. Why? Because India gained independence on that day. It is

immaterial whether August 15 is a Sunday or a Monday or Shravana or Bhadra.

Similarly, for celebrating religious festivals, our shastras have fixed

certain criteria. And as we know, fasts and festivals are celebrated for

the peace and welfare of ourselves and our kith and kin. Consequently, if

we do not adhere to the criteria/tenets fixed by the shastras, those very

fasts and festivals will do us more harm than good. Same is the case with

Muhurtas. We must therefore know the criteria.

 

E.g. for Vasanti Navaratra, viz. the lunar New Year, the criterion is

“Chaitra Shukla Pratipat†and for Rama Navmi it is "Chaitra Shukla Navmi".

We must therefore know as to when Chaitra Shukla Paksha starts. This

information has to be based on the Vedas, Puranas and other shastras as well

as astronomy/geography , both ancient i.e. sidhantic and modern. Let us see

these criteria one by one:

 

1. The Vedas: All the four Vedas, Brahmanas and Upanasihadas etc.

state that the year comprises six seasons of two months each. Shishira-ritu

viz. winter and the month of Tapah start simultaneously with Uttarayana viz.

Winter Solstice i.e. the shortest day of the year. That very month is also

known as Magha. It is followed by other months viz. Tapasya (Phalguna) and

(Vasanta ritu comprising) Madhu (Chaitra) and Madhav (Vaishakha). Thus

solar Chaitra is the third month from the date of Winter Solstice.

Therefore, it should start these days three months after December 21 i.e.

around February 20. In fact, it started on February 19 in 2004.

 

2. Vedanga Jyotisha: The earliest recorded work on Vedic astronomy

is Vedanga Jyotisha also known as Rik/Yajur Jyotisha by Lagadha. It was

compiled around thirteenth century BCE i.e. about 3300 years back, most

probably in Kashmir. The fifth and the sixth verses of the same are:

swarakramete Somarkau yada sakam savasavav,

 

syat-tadadiyugam maghas-tapah shuklo dinam-tyajah

 

“When the sun and the moon while moving in the sky, come to

Vasava (Dhanishtha) star together, then the Yuga, the Magha (month) the

Tapas (season), the light half of the month, and the winter solstice

(Uttarayana) , all commence togetherâ€

 

prapadyate shavishshthadav suryachandramsav- udak

 

sarparde dakshinarkastu Magha shravanayoh sada

 

“The sun and the moon turn towards North in the beginning of Dhanishtha and

towards South in the middle of Ashlesha. The sun always does this (turn

north) in the month of Magha and (turn south) in Shravana respectivelyâ€

 

Vedanga Jyotisha has made it clear in its seventh mantra that by

Uttaryana it means really the shortest day of the year instead of some

imaginary Uttarayana like January 14 of some Panchangakars of these days:

 

dharma vridhir apam prasthah kshapa hras udag-gatav

dakshine-tau viparyastav shanmuhurtyaynen tu

 

“During the sun’s northward journey (six months of Uttarayana) the day

increases by one Prastha measure of water and the night becomes short.

During the southward journey (six months of Dakshinayana) , the conditions

reverse. The increase (of time) during an ayana is equal to six muhurtasâ€.

(S. B. Dikshit’s translation for all the three mantras)

 

Further, as everybody knows, and as every Panchanga indicates,

Vasanta (Spring) starts exactly on the day of Madhu i.e. February 19/20. It

is a geographical phenomenon and cannot be wished away or altered. How could

then Vasanti Navratra start on March 21, 2004 after one month after the

start of the month of Madhu i.e. the real Vasanta (Spring)?

 

Thus there is absolutely no doubt that the Vasanti Navratras

which we are celebrating these days are not on the correct days as per

either the Vedas or the Vedanga Jyotisha or the phenomenon of seasons. But

then why are we celebrating them on wrong days? Because our panchangakars,

including the Rashtriya Panchanga do not tell us the correct days! Is it

that they do not know the correct criteria/days of these phenomena

themselves?

 

Madhava cannot be equal to Chaitra if it is equal to Mesha and Vasanti

Navratraas cannot wait for more than a month after the start of Vasanta

Ritu!: If you look at any Panchanga, including the Rashtriya Panchanga, in

any language, you will find that they have mentioned the start of the month

of Madhu and Vasanta Ritu on that date viz. February 19, 2004. Rashtriya

Panchanga lists the month starting with February 19 as the Vedic Mina. The

first New Moon (Shukla Pratipat) after the solar Chaitra i.e. Madhu (Vedic

Mina as per the Rashtriya Panchanga) is thus Chaitra Shukla Pratipat. It was

on February 21 in 2004. As such, the real Vasanti Navratras started on

February 21, 2004. It is known as Navreh in Kashmir, Gudi Padva in

Maharashtra and Ugadi in Andhra etc. That would have satisfied the criterion

of the Vedas that madhuscha madhavashcha vasantikav ritu (Yajurveda Samhita

4/4/11/1) i.e. Madhu (Chaitra) and Madhava (Vaishakha) are the months of

Vasanta i.e. Spring Season. Obviously, Chaitra Shukla Paksha is the start

of the first lunar month of Vasanta as per all the Vedas also.

 

Naturally, since as per all the Panchangas, Vasanta Ritu started on February

19, 2004, the solar Chaitra also should have started on that date of Madhu

i.e. February 19 but ironically it was made to start on March 14 and the

Rashtriya Panchanga starts it (Chaitra) on March 21 every year, when Madhava

i.e. Vaishakha is supposed to start as per all the Vedas and Puranas.

Surprisingly, Rashtriya Panchanga itself calls this month (March 21) as

Vedic Mesha and Madhava! How they can call Mesha and Madhava as Chaitra,

they only can say! Accordingly, the Lunar Chaitra was made to start on March

21 (which should have been actually Vaishakha Shukla paksha!) instead of

February 21! When Vasanta Ritu started on February 19, 2004, according to

all the Panchangas, the first shukla pratipat after that, which was on

February 21, 2004, should naturally have been Vasanti Navratra! Thus the

solar Chaitra and the Navratras, both, were “postponed†exactly by one month

against the injunctions of all the Vedas. Why? Because either our

panchangakars themselves have no knowledge about the criteria of festivals

or they are making a fool of us deliberately!

 

Vasanta Panchami in mid-winter: Then again, do you know when we were asked

to celebrate Vasanta Panchami by these very panchangakars according to whom

Vasanti navratras started on March 21? January 26, 2004! That means Vasanta

Panchami was celebrated two months before even their own Vasanta Shukla

Pratipat! Only the insane and dimwitted can celebrate Spring in mid-Winter!

Evidently, either our panchangakars are either themselves insane and

dimwitted or they treat us like that!

 

Ramanavmi: Goswami Tulsidas says in his immortal

Ramacharitamanasa:

 

navmi tithi Madhumas punita, sukalpachha abhijit hariprita

 

“Shri Ram was born on navmi tithi of shukla paksha in the month of Madhu, in

Abhijit muhurtaâ€.

 

We have seen that Madhu or Chaitra and Spring (Vasanta) both commence

simultaneously around February 19 every year as per the Vedas and Vedanga

Jyotisha. In fact they are synonyms of one another. Let us now see other

authorities in this regard:

 

3. Vishnu-dharmortarap urana: As per “Alberuni’s Indiaâ€, in 11th

century-India all the festivals were decided as per the criteria of

Vishnu-dharmotarapu rana. It says in 3/9/4-5

 

…chaitro madhur-iti smritah,

 

vaishakho madhavah proktah, shuchir jyeshthah udahritah

 

shuklah proktastatha ashado nabhah shravan ishyete,

 

praushthapado nabhasyashcha ishashch ashvayujah smritah

 

urjakhyah kartikah prokto margshirshah sahastatha

 

sahasya paush ityukto maghah syat tap eva cha

 

phalgunashcha tapasyakhyo maso…

 

“(i) Chaitra is known as Madhu (or Madhu is known as Chaitra)! (ii)

Vaishakha as Madhava; (iii) Jyeshtha as Shuchih; (iv) Ashadha as Shuklah (or

Shukrah); (v) Nabhah as Shravana; (vi) Praushthapada (Bhadrapada) as

Nabhasya; (vii) Ashvayuja (Ashvina) as Ishah; (viii) Urja as Kartika; (ix)

Margashirsha as Saha; (x) Sahasya as Pausha; (xi) Magha as Tapah and (xii)

Phalguna as Tapasya.â€

 

As we have seen above, Madhu started on February 19 and Chaitra

Shukla Pratipad started on Februrary 21 which means Ramanavmi should have

been on February 29, 2004. Our panchangakars (including, of course, the

Rashtriya Panfhanga!) made us celebrate Ramanavmi on March 30, 2004, whereas

Madhu ended on March 20 and the real Chaitra Shuklapaksha on March 7! Why

did they compel us to celebrate it on a wrong day—nay, even in a wrong

month? Because they know fully well that in spite of claiming to be

educated and intelligent people, we are not going to ask any inconvenient

questions! But then, are we really intelligent and educated if we do not

know anything about the criteria of our festivals? Or is it that our

panchangakars also are lacking in education and intelligence and they do not

know even ABC of our dharmashastras? Well, they alone can answer that

question for themselves!

 

4. Sidhantas: The earliest “most accurate (?!)†(spashta-taro

savitrah) astronomical treatise of Indian astronomy is supposed to be the

Surya Sidhanta of 5th century AD. In Mana-adhyaya, verses 9-10, it says:

bhanor-makar Sankranteh shanmasa Uttarayanam

 

karkyadestu tathaiv

syat shanmasa dakshinayanam

 

dwirashi natha ritavas

tatoapi shishiradayah

 

meshadav dwadashaite masaistaireva vatsarah

 

“From Makar Sankranti start the six months of Uttarayana and from Karkata

Sankranti the six months of Dakshinayana. Each season starting with

Shishira (and Makara Sankranti) comprises two rashis (and) six seasons make

one yearâ€.

 

Lest there be any doubt as to what type of Rashis the Surya Sidhanta

is talking about, it

 

makes it clear in Bhugoladhyaya, verses 57 to 62:

 

meshadav to sada vridhir udaguttarto adhika

 

devamshe cha kshapa hanir vipareetam tatha asure

 

tuladav dyunishorvamam kshyay vridhav tayorubhe

 

deshkranti vashan nitem tadvigyanam puroditam

 

ayanante vilomena devasur vibhagayoh

 

nadi shashtya sakrid ahar nishapi asmin sakrit

 

tadantare api shashtyante kshayvridhav ahar-nishoh

 

parto vipareeto ayam bhagolah parivartate.

 

“During the half revolution beginning with Mesha, there is always an excess

of day to the north, in the hemisphere of the gods i.e. Uttarayana-- -greater

according to distance north---and a corresponding deficiency of the night.

In the hemisphere of the demons (Dakshinayana) , the reverse. In the half

revolution beginning with Libra (Tula) both the deficiency and excess of day

and night in the two hemispheres are the opposite of this. The method of

determining them, which is always dependent upon situation (desha) and

declination (kranti), has been before explained.

 

“There occurs once, at the end of the sun’s half revolution from

solstice to solstice---( Uttarayana to Dakshinayana) a day of sixty nadis and

a night of the same length mutually opposed to one another, in the two

hemispheres of the gods and of the demons. In the intermediate region, the

deficiency and excess of day and night are within the limit of sixty nadis

beyond this sphere of asterisms (bha) revolves perverselyâ€. (Burgess’

translation) .

 

Two things are clear from the above to even a layman with a bit

of knowledge of geography of primary school level about the phenomenon of

seasons: i) It is only around March 21 (Spring Equinox) Mesha Sankranti

every year that day and night are equal and the length of day in the

northern hemisphere starts increasing as compared to the length of night.

 

ii) Then around September 23 (Autumn Equinox) Tula Sankranti, when

the day and night are again equal, the length of nights starts increasing as

compared to the length of days. And in the same order the day is the

shortest around December 21 (winter solstice) and longest around June 21

(Summer Solstice). These very Equinoxes and solstices are known as Mesha,

Karkata, Tula and Makar Sankranti respectively as per all the sidhantas and

shastras. There are no other such sankrantis either in the sidhantas or

modern astronomy.

 

5. Puranas: I have already quoted hundreds of proofs with

chapter and verse in my Panchangas and other articles. It is no use to

repeat them here again. Suffice to quote a few only from a couple of

Puranas. First the Vishnupurana: 2/8/28-31 and 67-68

 

ayanasyotarasyadav makaram yati bhaskarah

 

tatah kumbham cha menam cha rashe rashyantaram dvija (28)

 

trishu eteshu atha bhukteshu tato vaishuvatim gatim

 

prayati savita kurvan ahoratram tatah samam (29)

 

tato ratrih kshayam yati vardhate anudinam dinam

(30)

 

tatashcha mithunasyante param kashtham upagatah

 

rashim karkatam prapya kurute dakshinayanam

(31)

 

“In the beginning of Uttarayana, the sun enters Capricorn

(Makara Rashi) there from going to Kumbha and them Mina. After having passed

through these three signs, it just gains vishuvati (equinoctial) speed

resulting in the day and night being equal on Mesha. After that, nights

start decreasing and the days increasing correspondingly daily. Then when

the sun is in the end of Mithuna Rashi, i.e. when it is just at the verge of

entering Cancer, the day is the longest then and Dakshnayana starts on that

dateâ€.

 

Sharad vsantyor Madhye vishuvam to vibhavyete

 

Tula mesh gate bhanav samratri divam tu tat

(67)

 

Karkatavasthite bhanav dakshiyanamuchete

 

Uttarayanam api uktam makarasthe divakare

(88)

 

“In the midst of sharat ritu and vasanta ritu, vishuvas (equinoxes) take

place with the entry of the sun into Tula (Libra) and Mesha (Aries)

respectively and days and nights become equal on those two sankrantis. The

entry of sun into Cancer (Karkata) is known as dakshinayana whereas its

entry into Maraka is known as Uttarayanaâ€

 

Now Shrimadbhagavata, 5/21/4-6

 

yada mesh tulyor vartate tada ahoratrani samanani bhavanti yada vrishadishu

panchasu cha rashishu charati tada ahani eva vardhante hrasati cha masi masi

ekaika ghatika ratrishu (4) yada vrishchikadishu panchasu

vartate tada ahoratrani viparyayani bhavanti (5) yavad dakshinayanam

ahani vardhante yavad uttarayanam ratrayah (6)

 

“When the sun enters Mesha and Tula days and nights are equal on those dates

and the day starts getting longer as compared to nights when the sun passes

through Vrisha etc. five rashis then days keep on increasing and the nights

decreasing by one ghati every month. (After the day and night have become

equal on Tula Sankranti) the nights keep on increasing during the sojourn of

five rashis of Vrishchika etc. In short, during Uttarayana days keep on

increasing till Dakshinayana and after that nights keep on increasingâ€.

 

Vishnurhdarmotarapu rana 3/8/6-8 says

 

tula meshagate bhanav vishuvad dinam uchete,

 

dhanvato mithunantashcha ayane soasya dakshine,

 

“When the sun is in Mesha and Tula, they are the days of Vishuva i.e. days

and nights are equal then. From the end of Dhanu (start of Makara)

Uttarayana starts and from the end of Mithuna (start of Karkata) Dakshniyana

startsâ€

 

Any discussion on such topics is incomplete without appropriate references

from Shivamahapurana: We just quote one 5/51/54 from this Purana below:

 

madhavasya site pakshe tritiya ya akshayabida

 

tasyam yo jagadambayah vratam kuryad atandritah…

 

“The tritiya of Shukla paksha of Madhava (!) is know as akshayaya tritiya.

One who observes a fast for Jagadamba on that date (gets immortal and

thousand fold results)â€

 

It is to be noted here that Akshaya tritiya is to be observed in

(lunar) Madhava that means according to Shiva-Mahapurana also Vaishakha does

not have any other existence besides Madhava! Thus the akshyaya tritiya

that we observed in 2003 on May 4, was against all the shastras since solar

Madhava had ended on April 20 and lunar Madhava on April 30! A similar

situation is going to crop up in 2005. We will be asked to celebrate

Akshaya tritiya on May 12, when solar Madhava will have ended on April 20

and lunar Madhava shukla paksha will start on April 8, 2005 which means it

should be celebrated actually on April 11, 2005!

 

Now obviously, if as per all the Vedas, Vedanga Jyotisha, Surya Sidhanta,

Bhagavata, Vishnupurana, Vishnudharmotarapur ana and Shiva Mahapurana etc.

etc. solar Shravana is another name of Dakshinayana viz sun in Karkata, it

starts on June 21 in 2004. The first shukla pratipat after that is on July

18. Therefore, that is the day when the Lunar Shravana starts in 2004 as

per all the Vedas and Puranas etc. As such, Shravana Purnima viz Raksha

Bandhan and Amarnath Yatra etc. should be celebrated on July 31 in 2004.

Why are our panchangakars asking us to celebrate it on August 29 instead?

Only because they treat the entire Hindu society as ignorant fools who have

no idea about the criteria of any festivals! Or is it that the

panchangakars do not know anything themselves but are just copying from

others like blind following blind?

 

Similarly, Janmashtami should be celebrated on the

Krishna-paksha Ashtami following that Shravana Purnima i.e. on August 7 in

2004. But we are asked to celebrate it on September 6! Why? For God’s sake

do ask your “Panditji†and let me know what he says!

 

6. To clinch the issue on the basis of Agama i.e. yogashastras, I

will quote the master-yogi i.e. Acharya Abhinavgupta’ s Tantraloka: 6/114-116

 

shatsu shatsu anguleshu arko hridayat makaradishu

 

tishthan maghadikam shatkam kuryat tat-chotarayanam

 

sankranti tritaye vrite bhukte chashtadashangule

 

mesham prapte ravav punyam vishuvat par laukikam

 

praveshe tu tulasthe arke tadev vishuvad bhavet

 

Ih sidhi pradam chaitat dakshinayan- gam tatah

 

The translation of these mantras, as per the commentary of Jayaratha is,

(Linking yogic kriyas to seasons, it says, “After every six ungalas from the

hirdaya (the pranas go to) Makara etc. and make Magha etc. six such months

from Uttarayana starting with sun’s transit into Makara. From Makra to

Mithuna is Uttarayana and in Magha sun transits Makara Rashi so till Ashada

when the sun transits Mithuna, Uttarayana lasts, After having crossed three

sankrantis (of Uttarayana)–eighteen unglas of Prana --= vishuvat Sankranti

arrives. Because on that day of Mesha sankranti the days and nights are

equal throughout the world that is why it is known as vishuvat. When the

sun enters Tula it is vishuva againâ€.

 

I do not think that there should be any doubt now in anybody’s

mind as to how we are being taken for a ride by these panchanga-makers. Or

is it that those panchangakars themselves are being taken for a ride by

someone else either knowingly or unbeknown to them? In either case, it is

literally killing our dharma.

 

As we have seen that Shravana Shukla Paksha starts from July 18, 2004,

therefore, Bhadra Shukla paksha will start from August 17. Naturally, the

first Krishna Pratipat after that i.e. Ashvina Krishna Paksha is the start

of Pitrapaksha, which means it starts from August 31, 2004. As such, the

Purnima shradha of Pitrapaksha falls on August 29, 2004, whereas the

Pitramavasya is actually on September 14, 2004. And by the same logic and

criterion Sharadiya Navaratras start from September 15 and Kartika Amavasya

falls exactly after about one month i.e. on October 13, 2004. And that is

the world famous festival of lights viz Dipavali! But tragically, our

panchanga-makers advise us to mourn on that day i.e. we are advised to

celebrate Pitraamavasa then! Why? Because they know that we have become

immune to all such things and are worried only about financial gains or

losses but not about our dharma! But we must know that by “mourning†on the

day of actual Dipavali we will be losers not only financially but in every

worldly and spiritual sphere like that of the erstwhile ruling party! So

whether we mourn or burst crackers on the actual Dipavali (October 13), it

is up to us now!

 

7. Primary School level Geography: Let us see the situation

in the light of modern astronomy/geography . Initially, I was myself peeved

as to why the ayana and vishuva (Makara, Mesha, Karkata and Tula) sankrantis

had been praised to the skies by our Rishis, so much so that they say that

it is difficult even for yogis to catch the actual moment of such sankrantis

and any charities or fasts on such occasions yield thousand-fold results!

 

Let me explain it in a manner that is as non-technical as possible:

 

We know that the earth hurtles around the sun at about 30 kilometres per

second. (2) It also rotates on its axis, causing days and nights (3) The

equator is “precessing†at tremendous speeds. (4) Because the ecliptic is

inclined to the equator (obliquity of ecliptic) the earth/sun reaches the

minimum/maximum declination i.e. it is at the minimum/maximum distance from

the equator during its revolution of the sun at particular points of time.

The maximum obliquity of the ecliptic has remained around 23°28’ over the

last couple of centuries. Therefore that is the maximum north/south

declination that the sun/earth can attain these days during its journey via

the ecliptic. On that declination depends the phenomenon of seasons, which

is also directly responsible for increase/decrease in day/night durations.

The sun attains the maximum northern declination of about 23° 27’ on June

21. That means it is at a maximum northern distance from the equator on

that date. That is thus the last day of the summer season when the day is

the longest and varsha ritu starts. The sun (actually the earth) has then to

stop for a fleeting moment---less than a nanosecond-- - before climbing down

from that “high pedestal†of North declination! That fleeting moment is the

real crucial moment and we can only “calculate†it correctly to some extent

with our computers with microprocessor speeds in GHz that also only with the

data from NASA and other overseas observatories and not from our

panchanga-makers including the Rashtriya Panchanga! This very moment of

“U-turn†in the declination of the sun is the real dakshinayana as the earth

has reached the maximum declination of south or the sun the maximum

declination of north viz. 23° 27’ and has to turn back from there. This is

also known as Karkata Sankranti of the sun as the sun lies directly over the

tropic of Cancer (Karka-Rekha) on that date. I am sure everybody has read

that much of geography in his primary school days! There cannot be any

other Karkata Sankranti as per any shastra or sidhanta or modern

astronomy/geography since there is no other Karka Rekha (Tropic of Cancer)

or any other longest day of the year!

 

Similar is the case on December 21, when the sun reaches the maximum south

declination (of around 23° 27’) i.e. when the sun is at a maximum southern

distance from the equator. It has to stop then for a fleeting moment---less

than a nanosecond again--- before “turning†back (U-turn!) from that high

pedestal. That fleeting moment is the real Uttarayana of the sun known as

Makara Sankranti since the sun is directly on the tropic of

Capricorn--- Makara-Rekha- --on that date. There is absolutely no other

Makara Sankranti either as per the shastras or sidhantas or modern

astronomy/geography since there is no other Makara-Rekha nor any other

shortest day of the year! That also is primary school level geography!

 

Similarly, during its sojourn around the sun; the earth, the equator and the

ecliptic join together for a fleeting moment---here also less than a

nanosecond-- when the longitude, latitude, declination and right ascension of

the sun/earth are zero! The sun (actually the earth) is in exact

“conjunction†with the ecliptic and the equator! It is thus a “Triveni†and

that is the moment of Spring Equinox. With the declination of the sun being

zero degrees South it has to start moving away (cross the equator) again

from that “conjunction of the equator†from that moment of zero degrees

longitude-cum- latitude- cum-declination- cum-right ascension! That fleeting

moment is Vishuva – Mesha Sankranti of the sun (Tula Sankranti of the

earth)! It is Vishuva because the earth is conjunct with the Vishuvat Rekha

i.e. the Equator. That is the moment when days and nights are really equal

throughout the globe. That is the zero “moment/point†for all the

calculations of longitude, Right Ascension, Declination etc. and it is known

as Vernal Equinox. Vishuva also means, as per Jayaratha, the commentator of

Tantraloka, the days when “days and nights are equalâ€. Spring Equinox also

means the same thing i.e Equi-nox: day is equal to night in the midst of the

spring season! This is the real Vaishakhi and the sun enters Uttara Gola

then i.e. it starts gaining in northern declination! There is no other

Vishuvat Rekha (Equator) with which the earth can be “conjunct†during

Spring and therefore there cannot be any other Vishuva or Mesha Sankranti

since day and night are not equal during Spring on any other day. All the

panchangakars list Uttara-gola on that date but then why do they want us to

celebrate Vaishakhi/Vaishakha di/Meshadi i.e. solar New Year on April 14/15!

Because they know that we do not know ABC of geography! Or is it that they

do not know it themselves?

 

Then again after six months of that phenomenon, a similar situation comes

again, when the longitude and Right ascension of the sun are 180 degrees

(earth zero degrees). The longitude of the sun also can be taken as zero

degrees on that date if we measure it from Autumn Equinox instead of from

Vernal Equinox! The equator, the earth and the ecliptic have a confluence

for a fleeting moment---less than a nanosecond-- -again! As the earth is

conjunct the equator i.e. Vishuvat Rekha again, it is also known as

Vishuva----Autumn Equinox (Jala Vishuva or Tula Sankranti) around September

23. It is the midpoint (second month) of the Sharat-ritu. (That is why

Sharadiya Navaratras should start with the first Shukla Pratipat after

Sharat Ritu starts---on September 15 in 2004—and not when Sharat-kala is

almost over—October 14, 2004----as is being done by our panchangamakers) .

 

The declination of the sun is zero degrees at that particular moment.

Again, all the panchangakars list it as “the sun enters dakshina gola†as

the sun (after crossing the Equator) starts gaining southern declination

from that moment. There cannot be any other Tula Sankranti/Jala Vishuva as

the earth is not conjunct Equator---and thus the day and night are not

equal---on any other day in Autumn! But then these panchangakars make us

celebrate Tula Sankranti on October 14/15! Why? Only because they will

lose their sinful crumbs if the tell us the facts! Or is it that they do

not know the facts themselves? A sad state of affairs, in either case!

 

Naturally, in ancient times, it was almost impossible for ordinary mortals

to calculate accurately to the nearest minute, leave alone the nearest

second, such phenomena as lasted hardly for nanoseconds! Really, hats off

to our Rishis! Obviously, our present “Vamadevas†and “Parasharas†who

advocate such Mesha etc. sankrantis as do not exist at all, are a slur on

the real Rishis and such fakes must be banished without delay from this land

of real Rishis.

 

8. Day-to-day experience: In fact, we do not need to brush up

even our primary school level geography since our day to day experience also

tells us that the sun does not rise daily from the same place. It is

exactly above the equator (bhumadhya-rekha) on March 20/21 dividing the day

into two “equal halves†of 12 hours each! That is why it is known as

Vasanta-Sampat or Vishuva or Mesha Sankranti or Madhava! It does not rise on

any other day from that point till its revolution around the sun is

complete. (That is why there cannot be two Spring Equinoxes or two Mesha

Sankrantis in a year!). After that date, we observe it rising in further

north (Uttara-gola! ) till June 21. And that is what is known as

Dakshinayana Day or Karkata Sankranti or Nabhah (start of Varsha Ritu) and

there cannot be any other Karka Sankranti as there cannot be another longest

day at all for the next 365 days! From that moment onwards the sun stops

rising towards north but turns back from there towards dakshina (south) till

it is exactly above the equator again on September 22/23, dividing the day

once again into two “equal halves†of 12 hours each. That day is known as

Sharat Sampat (Autumn Equinox) or Tula Sankranti or Vishuva or Urja and the

day and night are again equal on that date. Obviously, there cannot be

another Tula Sankranti for at least next 365 days! From that date onwards it

moves i.e. keeps on rising towards south (Dakshina Gola) rising in extreme

southern direction on December 21. That is the Uttarayana day since from

that date the sun stops moving further south and starts turning towards

north. It is this very day that is known as world famous Makara Sankranti or

Pongal or Udagayana or Tapah! That was the day for which Bhishma was

waiting to shed off his mortal coil! There cannot be another Makara

Sankranti as there cannot be another shortest day for the next 365 days from

that date onwards!

 

9. We have made a laughing stock of ourselves: Now we can see for

ourselves as to how artificial, illogical, unscientific and irrational and,

above all, anti-Vedic our Makara, Mesha, Karkata and Tula Sankrantis are

these days which are celebrated on January 14, April 14, July 14 and October

14 instead of December 21, March 21, June 21 and Sept. 23 respectively! All

the world is laughing at us that we do not know even the actual days of

solstices and equinoxes! When these very four cardinal points are such

topsy-turvy how can the other sankrantis (solar ingresses) be correct! As

these panchangakars do not let the solar months start from proper days,

lunar months also are made to lag behind by at least one month!

 

And we can rest assured that what is illogical, unscientific and irrational

could never have been advised by our dharmashastras, as seen above. It is

only our panchangakars who are prescribing such farcical festivals and

fairs! Why? Because they are worse than Duryodhana. Why? Because

Duryodhana had the courage to admit that though he could differentiate

between Dharma and Adharma yet he was in no mood to follow Dharma and desist

from Adharma! But these panchangakars do not have the courage to admit that

they have been fleecing the entire Hindu society for the last several

centuries just for some crumbs and should stop now from spreading that

adharma further. Or is it that they are so insensitive to even the natural

phenomena like sunrise and sunset or winter and summer that they cannot

differentiate between a natural Mesha Sankranti and an artificial one? But

then it is equally our fault as we never questioned them about the criteria

they adopted for such festivals/phenomena !

 

10. Muhurtas: When the dates of sankrantis and lunar months are

wrong how can the muhurtas fixed on such basis be correct? No wonder we are

celebrating marriages during the actual shradha-paksha and “enjoyingâ€

shradhas during the period actually auspicious for marriages!

 

CRC Report: It must be put on record that even the Saha Calendar Reform

Committee had warned in no uncertain terms about the situation these

panchangamakers have created for us, and I quote, “In continuing to follow

the nirayana system, the Hindu calendar makers are under delusion that they

are following the path of dharma. They are actually committing the whole

Hindu society to adharma†(Page 260 of the Report of the Calendar Reform

Committee, 1955)

 

Earlier these Panchanga-makers used to boast (wrongly though)

that as they made correct predictions on the basis of such (imaginary)

rashis that is why they were following them for festivals also. But now even

that “gas-ball†has been deflated since they have met their Waterloo with

the failure of their predictions about NDA forming the Government under

Atalji with the result that these Panchanga makers themselves are in

mourning these days! (Please see the attachment proving that there are no

rashis, much less astrology in the Vedas!)

 

In view of the above, I am listing below some of the most

important festivals from June 1 till December 31, 2004, as per all the

Vedas, shastras, sidhantas and modern astronomy. Just celebrate them

accordingly and do confront your panchangamaker/ panditji with these

unpleasant facts because unless and until we revolt against this anyay

(injustice), they will continue to hurtle us towards the abyss of adharma by

making us mourn on Dipavali!

 

There is a saying that you can take a horse to the river but you cannot make

it drink water! I have done my job by pointing out all the glaring

anomalies. I have substantiated my arguments with all the proofs in a

nutshell which even a layman can understand. It is up to the readers

whether they want to be like vegetables being tossed by panchangamakers

(including the Rashtriya Panchanga) or they want to really have some zest

for real dharma!

 

Please feel free to email or post this letter-cum-request to anybody you

like since everybody must join this dharmayudha for streamlining our

calendar.

 

With best regards,

 

Yours sincerely,

 

Avtar Krishen Kaul

 

………

 

(Email: jyotirved (AT) sify (DOT) com Tel: 27516483)

 

 

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On 10/16/09, Sunil Bhattacharjya <sunil_bhattacharjya wrote:

> Dear friends,

>

> The Vedic calendar accommodates both the

> Purnimanata  months and the Amanta months. Lord Krishna mentions the

> Purnimanta month Margashirsha in the Bhagavadgita and he also mentions

> the Kusumakara (Vasanta) ritu, which has the seasonal months Madhu and

> Madhava. In Vedanga Jyotish the month of  Magha was Purnimanta and was

> Nakshatra-based and thus sidereal while the Month of Tapa was Amanta

> and was Seasonal (ie. Tropical) related to the start of the Wnter

> season, which starts from the Winter solstice. Any destructive process

> with wholesale condemning of the Sidereal calendar will thus not have

> Vedic sanction and nobody will accept that.

>

> Secondly have you

> also noticed the double-talk of the people, who condemn and ridicule

> paroksha-jnana, are now saying that if the festivals are not celebrated

> in the time they feel proper then they will do harm. Can these people

> give any pratyaksha evidence as to how the harm will come?

>

> There

> may be issues as to how to combine both the Sidereal and the Tropical

> calendars together such that justice is done to both the Nakshatra

> -based festivals as well as the season-based festivals. But questioning

> the date of the Makar Sankranti will not help. Makar Sankranti will

> always be celebrated when the Sun visits the house of his hostile son,

> Saturn in the Makara Rashi. If anybody wants to celebrate the Winter

> Solstice day it can be an additional festival and who does not like

> festivals.

>

> Regards,

>

> Sunil K. Bhattacharjya

>

> --- On Thu, 10/15/09, jyotirved <jyotirved wrote:

>

> jyotirved <jyotirved

>

>

> Cc: hinducalendar ,

> indian_astrology_group_daily_digest

> Thursday, October 15, 2009, 2:12 AM

>

>

>

>

>

>

Dear friends,

>

>

>

> The following representation was sent to the Hon’e Rahtrapatiji, with copies

>

> to all the Jagadguru Shankracharyas and Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan besides all

>

> the leading jyoitisha magazines etc.

>

>

>

> AKK

>

>

>

> Tel…… E-mail: jyotirved (AT) sify (DOT) com

>

>

>

> ALL INDIA CALENDAR REFORM COMMITTEE

>

>

>

> ………

>

>

>

> Delhi-110085 (India)

>

>

>

> July 17, 2004

>

>

>

> Dear Friends,

>

>

>

> Namaskar!

>

>

>

> A humble request that we should not mourn on the day of “festival of

>

> lights” i.e. we should not celebrate Pitramavasya on the day of actual

>

> Dipavali (Gujarati New Year!) on October 13, 04.

>

>

>

> Every festival has a criterion. We celebrate Independence Day on August 15

>

> every year. Why? Because India gained independence on that day. It is

>

> immaterial whether August 15 is a Sunday or a Monday or Shravana or Bhadra.

>

> Similarly, for celebrating religious festivals, our shastras have fixed

>

> certain criteria. And as we know, fasts and festivals are celebrated for

>

> the peace and welfare of ourselves and our kith and kin. Consequently, if

>

> we do not adhere to the criteria/tenets fixed by the shastras, those very

>

> fasts and festivals will do us more harm than good. Same is the case with

>

> Muhurtas. We must therefore know the criteria.

>

>

>

> E.g. for Vasanti Navaratra, viz. the lunar New Year, the criterion is

>

> “Chaitra Shukla Pratipat” and for Rama Navmi it is " Chaitra Shukla Navmi " .

>

> We must therefore know as to when Chaitra Shukla Paksha starts. This

>

> information has to be based on the Vedas, Puranas and other shastras as well

>

> as astronomy/geography , both ancient i.e. sidhantic and modern. Let us see

>

> these criteria one by one:

>

>

>

> 1. The Vedas: All the four Vedas, Brahmanas and Upanasihadas etc.

>

> state that the year comprises six seasons of two months each. Shishira-ritu

>

> viz. winter and the month of Tapah start simultaneously with Uttarayana viz.

>

> Winter Solstice i.e. the shortest day of the year. That very month is also

>

> known as Magha. It is followed by other months viz. Tapasya (Phalguna) and

>

> (Vasanta ritu comprising) Madhu (Chaitra) and Madhav (Vaishakha). Thus

>

> solar Chaitra is the third month from the date of Winter Solstice.

>

> Therefore, it should start these days three months after December 21 i.e.

>

> around February 20. In fact, it started on February 19 in 2004.

>

>

>

> 2. Vedanga Jyotisha: The earliest recorded work on Vedic astronomy

>

> is Vedanga Jyotisha also known as Rik/Yajur Jyotisha by Lagadha. It was

>

> compiled around thirteenth century BCE i.e. about 3300 years back, most

>

> probably in Kashmir. The fifth and the sixth verses of the same are:

>

> swarakramete Somarkau yada sakam savasavav,

>

>

>

> syat-tadadiyugam maghas-tapah shuklo dinam-tyajah

>

>

>

> “When the sun and the moon while moving in the sky, come to

>

> Vasava (Dhanishtha) star together, then the Yuga, the Magha (month) the

>

> Tapas (season), the light half of the month, and the winter solstice

>

> (Uttarayana) , all commence together”

>

>

>

> prapadyate shavishshthadav suryachandramsav- udak

>

>

>

> sarparde dakshinarkastu Magha shravanayoh sada

>

>

>

> “The sun and the moon turn towards North in the beginning of Dhanishtha and

>

> towards South in the middle of Ashlesha. The sun always does this (turn

>

> north) in the month of Magha and (turn south) in Shravana respectively”

>

>

>

> Vedanga Jyotisha has made it clear in its seventh mantra that by

>

> Uttaryana it means really the shortest day of the year instead of some

>

> imaginary Uttarayana like January 14 of some Panchangakars of these days:

>

>

>

> dharma vridhir apam prasthah kshapa hras udag-gatav

>

> dakshine-tau viparyastav shanmuhurtyaynen tu

>

>

>

> “During the sun’s northward journey (six months of Uttarayana) the day

>

> increases by one Prastha measure of water and the night becomes short.

>

> During the southward journey (six months of Dakshinayana) , the conditions

>

> reverse. The increase (of time) during an ayana is equal to six muhurtas”.

>

> (S. B. Dikshit’s translation for all the three mantras)

>

>

>

> Further, as everybody knows, and as every Panchanga indicates,

>

> Vasanta (Spring) starts exactly on the day of Madhu i.e. February 19/20. It

>

> is a geographical phenomenon and cannot be wished away or altered. How could

>

> then Vasanti Navratra start on March 21, 2004 after one month after the

>

> start of the month of Madhu i.e. the real Vasanta (Spring)?

>

>

>

> Thus there is absolutely no doubt that the Vasanti Navratras

>

> which we are celebrating these days are not on the correct days as per

>

> either the Vedas or the Vedanga Jyotisha or the phenomenon of seasons. But

>

> then why are we celebrating them on wrong days? Because our panchangakars,

>

> including the Rashtriya Panchanga do not tell us the correct days! Is it

>

> that they do not know the correct criteria/days of these phenomena

>

> themselves?

>

>

>

> Madhava cannot be equal to Chaitra if it is equal to Mesha and Vasanti

>

> Navratraas cannot wait for more than a month after the start of Vasanta

>

> Ritu!: If you look at any Panchanga, including the Rashtriya Panchanga, in

>

> any language, you will find that they have mentioned the start of the month

>

> of Madhu and Vasanta Ritu on that date viz. February 19, 2004. Rashtriya

>

> Panchanga lists the month starting with February 19 as the Vedic Mina. The

>

> first New Moon (Shukla Pratipat) after the solar Chaitra i.e. Madhu (Vedic

>

> Mina as per the Rashtriya Panchanga) is thus Chaitra Shukla Pratipat. It was

>

> on February 21 in 2004. As such, the real Vasanti Navratras started on

>

> February 21, 2004. It is known as Navreh in Kashmir, Gudi Padva in

>

> Maharashtra and Ugadi in Andhra etc. That would have satisfied the criterion

>

> of the Vedas that madhuscha madhavashcha vasantikav ritu (Yajurveda Samhita

>

> 4/4/11/1) i.e. Madhu (Chaitra) and Madhava (Vaishakha) are the months of

>

> Vasanta i.e. Spring Season. Obviously, Chaitra Shukla Paksha is the start

>

> of the first lunar month of Vasanta as per all the Vedas also.

>

>

>

> Naturally, since as per all the Panchangas, Vasanta Ritu started on February

>

> 19, 2004, the solar Chaitra also should have started on that date of Madhu

>

> i.e. February 19 but ironically it was made to start on March 14 and the

>

> Rashtriya Panchanga starts it (Chaitra) on March 21 every year, when Madhava

>

> i.e. Vaishakha is supposed to start as per all the Vedas and Puranas.

>

> Surprisingly, Rashtriya Panchanga itself calls this month (March 21) as

>

> Vedic Mesha and Madhava! How they can call Mesha and Madhava as Chaitra,

>

> they only can say! Accordingly, the Lunar Chaitra was made to start on March

>

> 21 (which should have been actually Vaishakha Shukla paksha!) instead of

>

> February 21! When Vasanta Ritu started on February 19, 2004, according to

>

> all the Panchangas, the first shukla pratipat after that, which was on

>

> February 21, 2004, should naturally have been Vasanti Navratra! Thus the

>

> solar Chaitra and the Navratras, both, were “postponed” exactly by one month

>

> against the injunctions of all the Vedas. Why? Because either our

>

> panchangakars themselves have no knowledge about the criteria of festivals

>

> or they are making a fool of us deliberately!

>

>

>

> Vasanta Panchami in mid-winter: Then again, do you know when we were asked

>

> to celebrate Vasanta Panchami by these very panchangakars according to whom

>

> Vasanti navratras started on March 21? January 26, 2004! That means Vasanta

>

> Panchami was celebrated two months before even their own Vasanta Shukla

>

> Pratipat! Only the insane and dimwitted can celebrate Spring in mid-Winter!

>

> Evidently, either our panchangakars are either themselves insane and

>

> dimwitted or they treat us like that!

>

>

>

> Ramanavmi: Goswami Tulsidas says in his immortal

>

> Ramacharitamanasa:

>

>

>

> navmi tithi Madhumas punita, sukalpachha abhijit hariprita

>

>

>

> “Shri Ram was born on navmi tithi of shukla paksha in the month of Madhu, in

>

> Abhijit muhurta”.

>

>

>

> We have seen that Madhu or Chaitra and Spring (Vasanta) both commence

>

> simultaneously around February 19 every year as per the Vedas and Vedanga

>

> Jyotisha. In fact they are synonyms of one another. Let us now see other

>

> authorities in this regard:

>

>

>

> 3. Vishnu-dharmortarap urana: As per “Alberuni’s India”, in 11th

>

> century-India all the festivals were decided as per the criteria of

>

> Vishnu-dharmotarapu rana. It says in 3/9/4-5

>

>

>

> …chaitro madhur-iti smritah,

>

>

>

> vaishakho madhavah proktah, shuchir jyeshthah udahritah

>

>

>

> shuklah proktastatha ashado nabhah shravan ishyete,

>

>

>

> praushthapado nabhasyashcha ishashch ashvayujah smritah

>

>

>

> urjakhyah kartikah prokto margshirshah sahastatha

>

>

>

> sahasya paush ityukto maghah syat tap eva cha

>

>

>

> phalgunashcha tapasyakhyo maso…

>

>

>

> “(i) Chaitra is known as Madhu (or Madhu is known as Chaitra)! (ii)

>

> Vaishakha as Madhava; (iii) Jyeshtha as Shuchih; (iv) Ashadha as Shuklah (or

>

> Shukrah); (v) Nabhah as Shravana; (vi) Praushthapada (Bhadrapada) as

>

> Nabhasya; (vii) Ashvayuja (Ashvina) as Ishah; (viii) Urja as Kartika; (ix)

>

> Margashirsha as Saha; (x) Sahasya as Pausha; (xi) Magha as Tapah and (xii)

>

> Phalguna as Tapasya.”

>

>

>

> As we have seen above, Madhu started on February 19 and Chaitra

>

> Shukla Pratipad started on Februrary 21 which means Ramanavmi should have

>

> been on February 29, 2004. Our panchangakars (including, of course, the

>

> Rashtriya Panfhanga!) made us celebrate Ramanavmi on March 30, 2004, whereas

>

> Madhu ended on March 20 and the real Chaitra Shuklapaksha on March 7! Why

>

> did they compel us to celebrate it on a wrong day—nay, even in a wrong

>

> month? Because they know fully well that in spite of claiming to be

>

> educated and intelligent people, we are not going to ask any inconvenient

>

> questions! But then, are we really intelligent and educated if we do not

>

> know anything about the criteria of our festivals? Or is it that our

>

> panchangakars also are lacking in education and intelligence and they do not

>

> know even ABC of our dharmashastras? Well, they alone can answer that

>

> question for themselves!

>

>

>

> 4. Sidhantas: The earliest “most accurate (?!)” (spashta-taro

>

> savitrah) astronomical treatise of Indian astronomy is supposed to be the

>

> Surya Sidhanta of 5th century AD. In Mana-adhyaya, verses 9-10, it says:

>

> bhanor-makar Sankranteh shanmasa Uttarayanam

>

>

>

> karkyadestu tathaiv

>

> syat shanmasa dakshinayanam

>

>

>

> dwirashi natha ritavas

>

> tatoapi shishiradayah

>

>

>

> meshadav dwadashaite masaistaireva vatsarah

>

>

>

> “From Makar Sankranti start the six months of Uttarayana and from Karkata

>

> Sankranti the six months of Dakshinayana. Each season starting with

>

> Shishira (and Makara Sankranti) comprises two rashis (and) six seasons make

>

> one year”.

>

>

>

> Lest there be any doubt as to what type of Rashis the Surya Sidhanta

>

> is talking about, it

>

>

>

> makes it clear in Bhugoladhyaya, verses 57 to 62:

>

>

>

> meshadav to sada vridhir udaguttarto adhika

>

>

>

> devamshe cha kshapa hanir vipareetam tatha asure

>

>

>

> tuladav dyunishorvamam kshyay vridhav tayorubhe

>

>

>

> deshkranti vashan nitem tadvigyanam puroditam

>

>

>

> ayanante vilomena devasur vibhagayoh

>

>

>

> nadi shashtya sakrid ahar nishapi asmin sakrit

>

>

>

> tadantare api shashtyante kshayvridhav ahar-nishoh

>

>

>

> parto vipareeto ayam bhagolah parivartate.

>

>

>

> “During the half revolution beginning with Mesha, there is always an excess

>

> of day to the north, in the hemisphere of the gods i.e. Uttarayana--

> -greater

>

> according to distance north---and a corresponding deficiency of the night.

>

> In the hemisphere of the demons (Dakshinayana) , the reverse. In the half

>

> revolution beginning with Libra (Tula) both the deficiency and excess of day

>

> and night in the two hemispheres are the opposite of this. The method of

>

> determining them, which is always dependent upon situation (desha) and

>

> declination (kranti), has been before explained.

>

>

>

> “There occurs once, at the end of the sun’s half revolution from

>

> solstice to solstice---( Uttarayana to Dakshinayana) a day of sixty nadis

> and

>

> a night of the same length mutually opposed to one another, in the two

>

> hemispheres of the gods and of the demons. In the intermediate region, the

>

> deficiency and excess of day and night are within the limit of sixty nadis

>

> beyond this sphere of asterisms (bha) revolves perversely”. (Burgess’

>

> translation) .

>

>

>

> Two things are clear from the above to even a layman with a bit

>

> of knowledge of geography of primary school level about the phenomenon of

>

> seasons: i) It is only around March 21 (Spring Equinox) Mesha Sankranti

>

> every year that day and night are equal and the length of day in the

>

> northern hemisphere starts increasing as compared to the length of night.

>

>

>

> ii) Then around September 23 (Autumn Equinox) Tula Sankranti, when

>

> the day and night are again equal, the length of nights starts increasing as

>

> compared to the length of days. And in the same order the day is the

>

> shortest around December 21 (winter solstice) and longest around June 21

>

> (Summer Solstice). These very Equinoxes and solstices are known as Mesha,

>

> Karkata, Tula and Makar Sankranti respectively as per all the sidhantas and

>

> shastras. There are no other such sankrantis either in the sidhantas or

>

> modern astronomy.

>

>

>

> 5. Puranas: I have already quoted hundreds of proofs with

>

> chapter and verse in my Panchangas and other articles. It is no use to

>

> repeat them here again. Suffice to quote a few only from a couple of

>

> Puranas. First the Vishnupurana: 2/8/28-31 and 67-68

>

>

>

> ayanasyotarasyadav makaram yati bhaskarah

>

>

>

> tatah kumbham cha menam cha rashe rashyantaram dvija (28)

>

>

>

> trishu eteshu atha bhukteshu tato vaishuvatim gatim

>

>

>

> prayati savita kurvan ahoratram tatah samam (29)

>

>

>

> tato ratrih kshayam yati vardhate anudinam dinam

>

> (30)

>

>

>

> tatashcha mithunasyante param kashtham upagatah

>

>

>

> rashim karkatam prapya kurute dakshinayanam

>

> (31)

>

>

>

> “In the beginning of Uttarayana, the sun enters Capricorn

>

> (Makara Rashi) there from going to Kumbha and them Mina. After having passed

>

> through these three signs, it just gains vishuvati (equinoctial) speed

>

> resulting in the day and night being equal on Mesha. After that, nights

>

> start decreasing and the days increasing correspondingly daily. Then when

>

> the sun is in the end of Mithuna Rashi, i.e. when it is just at the verge of

>

> entering Cancer, the day is the longest then and Dakshnayana starts on that

>

> date”.

>

>

>

> Sharad vsantyor Madhye vishuvam to vibhavyete

>

>

>

> Tula mesh gate bhanav samratri divam tu tat

>

> (67)

>

>

>

> Karkatavasthite bhanav dakshiyanamuchete

>

>

>

> Uttarayanam api uktam makarasthe divakare

>

> (88)

>

>

>

> “In the midst of sharat ritu and vasanta ritu, vishuvas (equinoxes) take

>

> place with the entry of the sun into Tula (Libra) and Mesha (Aries)

>

> respectively and days and nights become equal on those two sankrantis. The

>

> entry of sun into Cancer (Karkata) is known as dakshinayana whereas its

>

> entry into Maraka is known as Uttarayana”

>

>

>

> Now Shrimadbhagavata, 5/21/4-6

>

>

>

> yada mesh tulyor vartate tada ahoratrani samanani bhavanti yada vrishadishu

>

> panchasu cha rashishu charati tada ahani eva vardhante hrasati cha masi masi

>

> ekaika ghatika ratrishu (4) yada vrishchikadishu panchasu

>

> vartate tada ahoratrani viparyayani bhavanti (5) yavad dakshinayanam

>

> ahani vardhante yavad uttarayanam ratrayah (6)

>

>

>

> “When the sun enters Mesha and Tula days and nights are equal on those dates

>

> and the day starts getting longer as compared to nights when the sun passes

>

> through Vrisha etc. five rashis then days keep on increasing and the nights

>

> decreasing by one ghati every month. (After the day and night have become

>

> equal on Tula Sankranti) the nights keep on increasing during the sojourn of

>

> five rashis of Vrishchika etc. In short, during Uttarayana days keep on

>

> increasing till Dakshinayana and after that nights keep on increasing”.

>

>

>

> Vishnurhdarmotarapu rana 3/8/6-8 says

>

>

>

> tula meshagate bhanav vishuvad dinam uchete,

>

>

>

> dhanvato mithunantashcha ayane soasya dakshine,

>

>

>

> “When the sun is in Mesha and Tula, they are the days of Vishuva i.e. days

>

> and nights are equal then. From the end of Dhanu (start of Makara)

>

> Uttarayana starts and from the end of Mithuna (start of Karkata) Dakshniyana

>

> starts”

>

>

>

> Any discussion on such topics is incomplete without appropriate references

>

> from Shivamahapurana: We just quote one 5/51/54 from this Purana below:

>

>

>

> madhavasya site pakshe tritiya ya akshayabida

>

>

>

> tasyam yo jagadambayah vratam kuryad atandritah…

>

>

>

> “The tritiya of Shukla paksha of Madhava (!) is know as akshayaya tritiya.

>

> One who observes a fast for Jagadamba on that date (gets immortal and

>

> thousand fold results)”

>

>

>

> It is to be noted here that Akshaya tritiya is to be observed in

>

> (lunar) Madhava that means according to Shiva-Mahapurana also Vaishakha does

>

> not have any other existence besides Madhava! Thus the akshyaya tritiya

>

> that we observed in 2003 on May 4, was against all the shastras since solar

>

> Madhava had ended on April 20 and lunar Madhava on April 30! A similar

>

> situation is going to crop up in 2005. We will be asked to celebrate

>

> Akshaya tritiya on May 12, when solar Madhava will have ended on April 20

>

> and lunar Madhava shukla paksha will start on April 8, 2005 which means it

>

> should be celebrated actually on April 11, 2005!

>

>

>

> Now obviously, if as per all the Vedas, Vedanga Jyotisha, Surya Sidhanta,

>

> Bhagavata, Vishnupurana, Vishnudharmotarapur ana and Shiva Mahapurana etc.

>

> etc. solar Shravana is another name of Dakshinayana viz sun in Karkata, it

>

> starts on June 21 in 2004. The first shukla pratipat after that is on July

>

> 18. Therefore, that is the day when the Lunar Shravana starts in 2004 as

>

> per all the Vedas and Puranas etc. As such, Shravana Purnima viz Raksha

>

> Bandhan and Amarnath Yatra etc. should be celebrated on July 31 in 2004.

>

> Why are our panchangakars asking us to celebrate it on August 29 instead?

>

> Only because they treat the entire Hindu society as ignorant fools who have

>

> no idea about the criteria of any festivals! Or is it that the

>

> panchangakars do not know anything themselves but are just copying from

>

> others like blind following blind?

>

>

>

> Similarly, Janmashtami should be celebrated on the

>

> Krishna-paksha Ashtami following that Shravana Purnima i.e. on August 7 in

>

> 2004. But we are asked to celebrate it on September 6! Why? For God’s sake

>

> do ask your “Panditji” and let me know what he says!

>

>

>

> 6. To clinch the issue on the basis of Agama i.e. yogashastras, I

>

> will quote the master-yogi i.e. Acharya Abhinavgupta’ s Tantraloka:

> 6/114-116

>

>

>

> shatsu shatsu anguleshu arko hridayat makaradishu

>

>

>

> tishthan maghadikam shatkam kuryat tat-chotarayanam

>

>

>

> sankranti tritaye vrite bhukte chashtadashangule

>

>

>

> mesham prapte ravav punyam vishuvat par laukikam

>

>

>

> praveshe tu tulasthe arke tadev vishuvad bhavet

>

>

>

> Ih sidhi pradam chaitat dakshinayan- gam tatah

>

>

>

> The translation of these mantras, as per the commentary of Jayaratha is,

>

> (Linking yogic kriyas to seasons, it says, “After every six ungalas from the

>

> hirdaya (the pranas go to) Makara etc. and make Magha etc. six such months

>

> from Uttarayana starting with sun’s transit into Makara. From Makra to

>

> Mithuna is Uttarayana and in Magha sun transits Makara Rashi so till Ashada

>

> when the sun transits Mithuna, Uttarayana lasts, After having crossed three

>

> sankrantis (of Uttarayana)–eighteen unglas of Prana --= vishuvat Sankranti

>

> arrives. Because on that day of Mesha sankranti the days and nights are

>

> equal throughout the world that is why it is known as vishuvat. When the

>

> sun enters Tula it is vishuva again”.

>

>

>

> I do not think that there should be any doubt now in anybody’s

>

> mind as to how we are being taken for a ride by these panchanga-makers. Or

>

> is it that those panchangakars themselves are being taken for a ride by

>

> someone else either knowingly or unbeknown to them? In either case, it is

>

> literally killing our dharma.

>

>

>

> As we have seen that Shravana Shukla Paksha starts from July 18, 2004,

>

> therefore, Bhadra Shukla paksha will start from August 17. Naturally, the

>

> first Krishna Pratipat after that i.e. Ashvina Krishna Paksha is the start

>

> of Pitrapaksha, which means it starts from August 31, 2004. As such, the

>

> Purnima shradha of Pitrapaksha falls on August 29, 2004, whereas the

>

> Pitramavasya is actually on September 14, 2004. And by the same logic and

>

> criterion Sharadiya Navaratras start from September 15 and Kartika Amavasya

>

> falls exactly after about one month i.e. on October 13, 2004. And that is

>

> the world famous festival of lights viz Dipavali! But tragically, our

>

> panchanga-makers advise us to mourn on that day i.e. we are advised to

>

> celebrate Pitraamavasa then! Why? Because they know that we have become

>

> immune to all such things and are worried only about financial gains or

>

> losses but not about our dharma! But we must know that by “mourning” on the

>

> day of actual Dipavali we will be losers not only financially but in every

>

> worldly and spiritual sphere like that of the erstwhile ruling party! So

>

> whether we mourn or burst crackers on the actual Dipavali (October 13), it

>

> is up to us now!

>

>

>

> 7. Primary School level Geography: Let us see the situation

>

> in the light of modern astronomy/geography . Initially, I was myself peeved

>

> as to why the ayana and vishuva (Makara, Mesha, Karkata and Tula) sankrantis

>

> had been praised to the skies by our Rishis, so much so that they say that

>

> it is difficult even for yogis to catch the actual moment of such sankrantis

>

> and any charities or fasts on such occasions yield thousand-fold results!

>

>

>

> Let me explain it in a manner that is as non-technical as possible:

>

>

>

> We know that the earth hurtles around the sun at about 30 kilometres per

>

> second. (2) It also rotates on its axis, causing days and nights (3) The

>

> equator is “precessing” at tremendous speeds. (4) Because the ecliptic is

>

> inclined to the equator (obliquity of ecliptic) the earth/sun reaches the

>

> minimum/maximum declination i.e. it is at the minimum/maximum distance from

>

> the equator during its revolution of the sun at particular points of time.

>

> The maximum obliquity of the ecliptic has remained around 23°28’ over the

>

> last couple of centuries. Therefore that is the maximum north/south

>

> declination that the sun/earth can attain these days during its journey via

>

> the ecliptic. On that declination depends the phenomenon of seasons, which

>

> is also directly responsible for increase/decrease in day/night durations.

>

> The sun attains the maximum northern declination of about 23° 27’ on June

>

> 21. That means it is at a maximum northern distance from the equator on

>

> that date. That is thus the last day of the summer season when the day is

>

> the longest and varsha ritu starts. The sun (actually the earth) has then to

>

> stop for a fleeting moment---less than a nanosecond-- - before climbing down

>

> from that “high pedestal” of North declination! That fleeting moment is the

>

> real crucial moment and we can only “calculate” it correctly to some extent

>

> with our computers with microprocessor speeds in GHz that also only with the

>

> data from NASA and other overseas observatories and not from our

>

> panchanga-makers including the Rashtriya Panchanga! This very moment of

>

> “U-turn” in the declination of the sun is the real dakshinayana as the earth

>

> has reached the maximum declination of south or the sun the maximum

>

> declination of north viz. 23° 27’ and has to turn back from there. This is

>

> also known as Karkata Sankranti of the sun as the sun lies directly over the

>

> tropic of Cancer (Karka-Rekha) on that date. I am sure everybody has read

>

> that much of geography in his primary school days! There cannot be any

>

> other Karkata Sankranti as per any shastra or sidhanta or modern

>

> astronomy/geography since there is no other Karka Rekha (Tropic of Cancer)

>

> or any other longest day of the year!

>

>

>

> Similar is the case on December 21, when the sun reaches the maximum south

>

> declination (of around 23° 27’) i.e. when the sun is at a maximum southern

>

> distance from the equator. It has to stop then for a fleeting moment---less

>

> than a nanosecond again--- before “turning” back (U-turn!) from that high

>

> pedestal. That fleeting moment is the real Uttarayana of the sun known as

>

> Makara Sankranti since the sun is directly on the tropic of

>

> Capricorn--- Makara-Rekha- --on that date. There is absolutely no other

>

> Makara Sankranti either as per the shastras or sidhantas or modern

>

> astronomy/geography since there is no other Makara-Rekha nor any other

>

> shortest day of the year! That also is primary school level geography!

>

>

>

> Similarly, during its sojourn around the sun; the earth, the equator and the

>

> ecliptic join together for a fleeting moment---here also less than a

>

> nanosecond-- when the longitude, latitude, declination and right ascension

> of

>

> the sun/earth are zero! The sun (actually the earth) is in exact

>

> “conjunction” with the ecliptic and the equator! It is thus a “Triveni” and

>

> that is the moment of Spring Equinox. With the declination of the sun being

>

> zero degrees South it has to start moving away (cross the equator) again

>

> from that “conjunction of the equator” from that moment of zero degrees

>

> longitude-cum- latitude- cum-declination- cum-right ascension! That

> fleeting

>

> moment is Vishuva – Mesha Sankranti of the sun (Tula Sankranti of the

>

> earth)! It is Vishuva because the earth is conjunct with the Vishuvat Rekha

>

> i.e. the Equator. That is the moment when days and nights are really equal

>

> throughout the globe. That is the zero “moment/point” for all the

>

> calculations of longitude, Right Ascension, Declination etc. and it is known

>

> as Vernal Equinox. Vishuva also means, as per Jayaratha, the commentator of

>

> Tantraloka, the days when “days and nights are equal”. Spring Equinox also

>

> means the same thing i.e Equi-nox: day is equal to night in the midst of the

>

> spring season! This is the real Vaishakhi and the sun enters Uttara Gola

>

> then i.e. it starts gaining in northern declination! There is no other

>

> Vishuvat Rekha (Equator) with which the earth can be “conjunct” during

>

> Spring and therefore there cannot be any other Vishuva or Mesha Sankranti

>

> since day and night are not equal during Spring on any other day. All the

>

> panchangakars list Uttara-gola on that date but then why do they want us to

>

> celebrate Vaishakhi/Vaishakha di/Meshadi i.e. solar New Year on April 14/15!

>

> Because they know that we do not know ABC of geography! Or is it that they

>

> do not know it themselves?

>

>

>

> Then again after six months of that phenomenon, a similar situation comes

>

> again, when the longitude and Right ascension of the sun are 180 degrees

>

> (earth zero degrees). The longitude of the sun also can be taken as zero

>

> degrees on that date if we measure it from Autumn Equinox instead of from

>

> Vernal Equinox! The equator, the earth and the ecliptic have a confluence

>

> for a fleeting moment---less than a nanosecond-- -again! As the earth is

>

> conjunct the equator i.e. Vishuvat Rekha again, it is also known as

>

> Vishuva----Autumn Equinox (Jala Vishuva or Tula Sankranti) around September

>

> 23. It is the midpoint (second month) of the Sharat-ritu. (That is why

>

> Sharadiya Navaratras should start with the first Shukla Pratipat after

>

> Sharat Ritu starts---on September 15 in 2004—and not when Sharat-kala is

>

> almost over—October 14, 2004----as is being done by our panchangamakers) .

>

>

>

> The declination of the sun is zero degrees at that particular moment.

>

> Again, all the panchangakars list it as “the sun enters dakshina gola” as

>

> the sun (after crossing the Equator) starts gaining southern declination

>

> from that moment. There cannot be any other Tula Sankranti/Jala Vishuva as

>

> the earth is not conjunct Equator---and thus the day and night are not

>

> equal---on any other day in Autumn! But then these panchangakars make us

>

> celebrate Tula Sankranti on October 14/15! Why? Only because they will

>

> lose their sinful crumbs if the tell us the facts! Or is it that they do

>

> not know the facts themselves? A sad state of affairs, in either case!

>

>

>

> Naturally, in ancient times, it was almost impossible for ordinary mortals

>

> to calculate accurately to the nearest minute, leave alone the nearest

>

> second, such phenomena as lasted hardly for nanoseconds! Really, hats off

>

> to our Rishis! Obviously, our present “Vamadevas” and “Parasharas” who

>

> advocate such Mesha etc. sankrantis as do not exist at all, are a slur on

>

> the real Rishis and such fakes must be banished without delay from this land

>

> of real Rishis.

>

>

>

> 8. Day-to-day experience: In fact, we do not need to brush up

>

> even our primary school level geography since our day to day experience also

>

> tells us that the sun does not rise daily from the same place. It is

>

> exactly above the equator (bhumadhya-rekha) on March 20/21 dividing the day

>

> into two “equal halves” of 12 hours each! That is why it is known as

>

> Vasanta-Sampat or Vishuva or Mesha Sankranti or Madhava! It does not rise on

>

> any other day from that point till its revolution around the sun is

>

> complete. (That is why there cannot be two Spring Equinoxes or two Mesha

>

> Sankrantis in a year!). After that date, we observe it rising in further

>

> north (Uttara-gola! ) till June 21. And that is what is known as

>

> Dakshinayana Day or Karkata Sankranti or Nabhah (start of Varsha Ritu) and

>

> there cannot be any other Karka Sankranti as there cannot be another longest

>

> day at all for the next 365 days! From that moment onwards the sun stops

>

> rising towards north but turns back from there towards dakshina (south) till

>

> it is exactly above the equator again on September 22/23, dividing the day

>

> once again into two “equal halves” of 12 hours each. That day is known as

>

> Sharat Sampat (Autumn Equinox) or Tula Sankranti or Vishuva or Urja and the

>

> day and night are again equal on that date. Obviously, there cannot be

>

> another Tula Sankranti for at least next 365 days! From that date onwards it

>

> moves i.e. keeps on rising towards south (Dakshina Gola) rising in extreme

>

> southern direction on December 21. That is the Uttarayana day since from

>

> that date the sun stops moving further south and starts turning towards

>

> north. It is this very day that is known as world famous Makara Sankranti or

>

> Pongal or Udagayana or Tapah! That was the day for which Bhishma was

>

> waiting to shed off his mortal coil! There cannot be another Makara

>

> Sankranti as there cannot be another shortest day for the next 365 days from

>

> that date onwards!

>

>

>

> 9. We have made a laughing stock of ourselves: Now we can see for

>

> ourselves as to how artificial, illogical, unscientific and irrational and,

>

> above all, anti-Vedic our Makara, Mesha, Karkata and Tula Sankrantis are

>

> these days which are celebrated on January 14, April 14, July 14 and October

>

> 14 instead of December 21, March 21, June 21 and Sept. 23 respectively! All

>

> the world is laughing at us that we do not know even the actual days of

>

> solstices and equinoxes! When these very four cardinal points are such

>

> topsy-turvy how can the other sankrantis (solar ingresses) be correct! As

>

> these panchangakars do not let the solar months start from proper days,

>

> lunar months also are made to lag behind by at least one month!

>

>

>

> And we can rest assured that what is illogical, unscientific and irrational

>

> could never have been advised by our dharmashastras, as seen above. It is

>

> only our panchangakars who are prescribing such farcical festivals and

>

> fairs! Why? Because they are worse than Duryodhana. Why? Because

>

> Duryodhana had the courage to admit that though he could differentiate

>

> between Dharma and Adharma yet he was in no mood to follow Dharma and desist

>

> from Adharma! But these panchangakars do not have the courage to admit that

>

> they have been fleecing the entire Hindu society for the last several

>

> centuries just for some crumbs and should stop now from spreading that

>

> adharma further. Or is it that they are so insensitive to even the natural

>

> phenomena like sunrise and sunset or winter and summer that they cannot

>

> differentiate between a natural Mesha Sankranti and an artificial one? But

>

> then it is equally our fault as we never questioned them about the criteria

>

> they adopted for such festivals/phenomena !

>

>

>

> 10. Muhurtas: When the dates of sankrantis and lunar months are

>

> wrong how can the muhurtas fixed on such basis be correct? No wonder we are

>

> celebrating marriages during the actual shradha-paksha and “enjoying”

>

> shradhas during the period actually auspicious for marriages!

>

>

>

> CRC Report: It must be put on record that even the Saha Calendar Reform

>

> Committee had warned in no uncertain terms about the situation these

>

> panchangamakers have created for us, and I quote, “In continuing to follow

>

> the nirayana system, the Hindu calendar makers are under delusion that they

>

> are following the path of dharma. They are actually committing the whole

>

> Hindu society to adharma” (Page 260 of the Report of the Calendar Reform

>

> Committee, 1955)

>

>

>

> Earlier these Panchanga-makers used to boast (wrongly though)

>

> that as they made correct predictions on the basis of such (imaginary)

>

> rashis that is why they were following them for festivals also. But now even

>

> that “gas-ball” has been deflated since they have met their Waterloo with

>

> the failure of their predictions about NDA forming the Government under

>

> Atalji with the result that these Panchanga makers themselves are in

>

> mourning these days! (Please see the attachment proving that there are no

>

> rashis, much less astrology in the Vedas!)

>

>

>

> In view of the above, I am listing below some of the most

>

> important festivals from June 1 till December 31, 2004, as per all the

>

> Vedas, shastras, sidhantas and modern astronomy. Just celebrate them

>

> accordingly and do confront your panchangamaker/ panditji with these

>

> unpleasant facts because unless and until we revolt against this anyay

>

> (injustice), they will continue to hurtle us towards the abyss of adharma by

>

> making us mourn on Dipavali!

>

>

>

> There is a saying that you can take a horse to the river but you cannot make

>

> it drink water! I have done my job by pointing out all the glaring

>

> anomalies. I have substantiated my arguments with all the proofs in a

>

> nutshell which even a layman can understand. It is up to the readers

>

> whether they want to be like vegetables being tossed by panchangamakers

>

> (including the Rashtriya Panchanga) or they want to really have some zest

>

> for real dharma!

>

>

>

> Please feel free to email or post this letter-cum-request to anybody you

>

> like since everybody must join this dharmayudha for streamlining our

>

> calendar.

>

>

>

> With best regards,

>

>

>

> Yours sincerely,

>

>

>

> Avtar Krishen Kaul

>

>

>

> ………

>

>

>

> (Email: jyotirved (AT) sify (DOT) com Tel: 27516483)

>

>

>

>

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