Significance of India

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adnan.ali
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Significance of India

Post by adnan.ali »

What is the significance of the land of suncontinent. All the avatar before hazrat Ali (a.s) are either born in subcontinent or came to subcontinent. we also believe that the last avatar will also come in subcontinent for the restablishment of truth (our imam as Qaim). Why the land of subcontinent has tremendious value.
kmaherali
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Post by kmaherali »

The following are pertinent footnotes in God Talks to Arjuna, The Bhagavad Gita on this matter.

* The testament of the Hindu scriptures is that India's civilization goes back far earlier than contemporary Western historians acknowledge. Swami Sri Yukteswar, in The Holy Science (Los Angeles: Self-Realization Fellowship), calculates that the Golden Age, in which India's spiritual and material civilization reached its pinnacle, ended about 6700 B.C.—having flowered for many thousands of years before that. India's scriptural literature lists many generations of kings and sages who lived prior to the events that are the main subject of the Mahabharata. In the Gita itself, Krishna describes the long descent of India's spiritual culture from a Golden Age to his own era, as the knowledge of yoga gradually was lost. "Most anthropologists, believing that 10,000 years ago humanity was living in a barbarous Stone Age, summarily dismiss as 'myths' the widespread traditions of very ancient civilizations in Lemuria, Atlantis, India, China, Japan, Egypt, Mexico, and many other lands," a passage in Autobiography of a Yogi reads. Recent scientific research, however, is beginning to suggest that the truth of ancient chronologies be reevaluated. (Publisher's Note)

* Of the Gita's author, the celebrated German philosopher A. W. Schlegel wrote in the foreword to his Latin translation of the Gita: "O thou sacred singer, thou inspired interpreter of divinity! Whatever may have been thy name among mortals, I bow before thee! Hail to thee, author of that mighty poem, whose oracles lift up the soul in joy ineffable, toward all that is sublime, eternal, and divine! Full of veneration, I salute thee above all singers, and I worship unceasingly by the trace of thy footsteps."

"The very name we know India by, Bharata, gives us the necessary clue. Bha means light and knowledge, and rata means devoted. Bharata means devoted to light as against darkness....We have this unique feature with regard to our Sanskrit literature, that the language, the rules of grammar, the diction, etc., necessitates the use of words for denoting objects in such a manner that the philosophy, the science, and the theology behind the whole thing is clear....The rules of the language dictate that every object is to be named with a significance of its own. Significance, not merely explaining its present condition, its present meaning, exigencies, requirements, etc., but how the name should be justified by actual action.... So Bharata is not the name of a mere geographical entity placed in some corner of the world and having its geographical, topographical, and other limitations. Bharata stands for every individual soul that has this idea of light, the dedication to the light, as against immersion in darkness. So we speak of the light that God's creation of the world began with, and we think of the Light that India claims to be its chief aspiration, its chief, its most important and most valued goal....

"Looking at the great major centers of civilization that flourished in those ancient times, we find four: (1) along the Nile in Egypt, (2) along the Tigris and the Euphrates in the Middle East—Mesopotamia, (3) along the Yangtze (Ch'ang) and the Yellow River (Huang Ho) in China, and (4) along the Indus in India. What has happened to all these civilizations?... And yet, in the land of the Indus and the Ganges, that perennial, ancient stream of wisdom still flows with the same vigor."

"In each century India has given birth to lofty spiritual personages. Though she has reached great heights in every field of culture, when that tradition declined somewhat in material terms, its spiritual luster was nevertheless upheld by these luminaries who appeared, one after another, upon the Indian scene."

At the time India was conquered by Western colonial powers, according to historian Dr. J. T. Sunderland, she was the wealthiest nation on the globe: "This [material] wealth was created by the Hindus' vast and varied industries. Nearly every kind of manufacture or product known to the civilized world—nearly every kind of creation of man's hand and brain, existing anywhere and prized either for its utility or beauty— had long, long been produced in India. India was a far greater industrial and manufacturing nation than any in Europe or any other in Asia" (India in Bondage, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1929).

"Let us remember," wrote the eminent historian and philosopher Will Durant (in The Case for India, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1930), "that India was the motherland of our race, and Sanskrit the mother of Europe's languages; that she was the mother of our philosophy, mother, through the Arabs, of much of our mathematics, mother...of the ideals embodied in Christianity, mother, through the village community, of self-government and democracy Mother India is in many ways the mother of us all."

World religions authority Huston Smith recalls that in the 1950s the eminent British historian Arnold Toynbee predicted that in the 21st century "India the conquered would conquer her conquerors."
"He didn't mean by that that we would become Hindus," said Smith in an interview in the San Diego Union-Tribune, April 7, 1990. "What he meant was that basic Indian insights would find their way into our Western culture, and, because of their metaphysical and psychological profundity, our way of thinking in the West would be influenced by Indian thought just as Indian technology has been influenced by ours." (Publisher's Note)
adnan.ali
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Post by adnan.ali »

That was a really good information. But i am wondering why Bharat was chosen ? Did Bharat had the most disobedient beings that God had to choose india, or it was the land of devotees that deserve the glimpse of Him. My o­ne friend told me that he had heard in a waez of Abu Aly, he mentioned that Our Guru Brahma requested Vishnu to visit (menifest in) Bharat (all the time) because of some reason i dont remember. if someone had heard that waez or know some significance of Bharat please share it.
kmaherali
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Post by kmaherali »

adnan.ali wrote: Did Bharat had the most disobedient beings that God had to choose india, or it was the land of devotees that deserve the glimpse of Him.
This is an interesting observation! Mowlana Sultan Muhammad Shah in his memoir stated:

"First, however, we must ask ourselves why this final and consummate appearance of the Divine Will was granted to mankind, and what were its causes. All Islamic schools of thought accept it as a fundamental principle that for centuries, for thousands of years before the advent of Mohammed, there arose from time to time messengers, illumined by Divine Grace, for and among those races of the earth which had sufficiently advanced intellectually to comprehend such a message. Thus Abraham, Moses, Jesus and all the Prophets of Israel are universally accepted by Islam. Muslims indeed know no limitation merely to the Prophets of Israel; they are ready to admit that there were similar Divinely inspired messengers in other countriesGautama Buddha, Shri Krishna and Shri Ram in India, Socrates in Greece, the wise man of China and many other sages and saints among peoples and civilizations, trace of which we have lost. Thus man's soul has never been left without a specially inspired messenger from the soul that sustains, embraces and is the universe. Then what need was there for a Divine revelation to Mohammed ?"

As per the above bolded phrase, the people were advanced to accept the message. The divine always appears according to the capacity of the audience.....
Last edited by kmaherali on Tue Jun 07, 2016 6:57 am, edited 1 time in total.
star_munir
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Post by star_munir »

Here is another view on same aspect. I want to clarify that I do NOT agree with this. This what many of the Hindus do believe about incarnations of Vishnu in India. Accroding to Ravishankar "All the incarnations of the Lord have happened in India.Further, most of the
world spiritual giants have come from this soil. As some mahatmas says, '
Like each soil is ideally suited for specific crops, like black soil for cotton
etc., the land of bharat was custom made for spiritual awakening"
Admin
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Re: Significance of India

Post by Admin »

adnan.ali wrote:What is the significance of the land of suncontinent. All the avatar before hazrat Ali (a.s) are either born in subcontinent or came to subcontinent.
That is inaccurate. there are many names of Imam preceding the Das Avatar names in our Old Ghat pat ji Dua.

Only few names are from India out of at least 128 names of Imam we have [plus of course recently Aga Ali Shah, Sultan Muhammad shah]

Indian names do not necessarily mean they were in India. Example in ginans, sometime Mohamed Mustafa [PBUH] is called Mamad Mawji, it does not make of him an Indian or a Hindu :-)

in fact some names of Imams before Das Avatar names in our religious documents are the same as names of divinity from Mesopotamia pre-India Imamate / pre Das Avatar era.

To ponder upon...
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Re: Significance of India

Post by star_munir »

Admin wrote:
adnan.ali wrote:What is the significance of the land of suncontinent. All the avatar before hazrat Ali (a.s) are either born in subcontinent or came to subcontinent.
That is inaccurate. there are many names of Imam preceding the Das Avatar names in our Old Ghat pat ji Dua.

Only few names are from India out of at least 128 names of Imam we have [plus of course recently Aga Ali Shah, Sultan Muhammad shah]

Indian names do not necessarily mean they were in India. Example in ginans, sometime Mohamed Mustafa [PBUH] is called Mamad Mawji, it does not make of him an Indian or a Hindu :-)

in fact some names of Imams before Das Avatar names in our religious documents are the same as names of divinity from Mesopotamia pre-India Imamate / pre Das Avatar era.

To ponder upon...
Ya Ali Madad,
Thats really interesting fact. Btw can you give example of some verses of Holy Ginans in which Prophet Muhammad is referred as Mamad Mawji?
Admin
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Post by Admin »

Sure, you can read the transcript of one of such ginan at:

http://ismaili.net/heritage/node/3696

Author:
Pir Sadardin
Source:
bhg5-036 - 600 Ginans published by: Recreation Club Institute, Bombay, Khoja Sindhi Printing Press, 1934
verses:
20

Eji Mahaamad Maavji aaviyaa;
nauve khandde kidhaa chhe jaann 1

......

Eji Sarve jug thi baddaa Kal-jug;
temaa aaviyaa Mahaamad muraar 19

Eji Pir Sadardin boliyaa;
saami raajaa rikhisarne paar utaaro 20
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Post by star_munir »

Thanks Admin :)
sheri
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Post by sheri »

kmaherali wrote:The following are pertinent footnotes in God Talks to Arjuna, The Bhagavad Gita on this matter.

* The testament of the Hindu scriptures is that India's civilization goes back far earlier than contemporary Western historians acknowledge. Swami Sri Yukteswar, in The Holy Science (Los Angeles: Self-Realization Fellowship), calculates that the Golden Age, in which India's spiritual and material civilization reached its pinnacle, ended about 6700 B.C.—having flowered for many thousands of years before that. India's scriptural literature lists many generations of kings and sages who lived prior to the events that are the main subject of the Mahabharata. In the Gita itself, Krishna describes the long descent of India's spiritual culture from a Golden Age to his own era, as the knowledge of yoga gradually was lost. "Most anthropologists, believing that 10,000 years ago humanity was living in a barbarous Stone Age, summarily dismiss as 'myths' the widespread traditions of very ancient civilizations in Lemuria, Atlantis, India, China, Japan, Egypt, Mexico, and many other lands," a passage in Autobiography of a Yogi reads. Recent scientific research, however, is beginning to suggest that the truth of ancient chronologies be reevaluated. (Publisher's Note)

* Of the Gita's author, the celebrated German philosopher A. W. Schlegel wrote in the foreword to his Latin translation of the Gita: "O thou sacred singer, thou inspired interpreter of divinity! Whatever may have been thy name among mortals, I bow before thee! Hail to thee, author of that mighty poem, whose oracles lift up the soul in joy ineffable, toward all that is sublime, eternal, and divine! Full of veneration, I salute thee above all singers, and I worship unceasingly by the trace of thy footsteps."

"The very name we know India by, Bharata, gives us the necessary clue. Bha means light and knowledge, and rata means devoted. Bharata means devoted to light as against darkness....We have this unique feature with regard to our Sanskrit literature, that the language, the rules of grammar, the diction, etc., necessitates the use of words for denoting objects in such a manner that the philosophy, the science, and the theology behind the whole thing is clear....The rules of the language dictate that every object is to be named with a significance of its own. Significance, not merely explaining its present condition, its present meaning, exigencies, requirements, etc., but how the name should be justified by actual action.... So Bharata is not the name of a mere geographical entity placed in some corner of the world and having its geographical, topographical, and other limitations. Bharata stands for every individual soul that has this idea of light, the dedication to the light, as against immersion in darkness. So we speak of the light that God's creation of the world began with, and we think of the Light that India claims to be its chief aspiration, its chief, its most important and most valued goal....

"Looking at the great major centers of civilization that flourished in those ancient times, we find four: (1) along the Nile in Egypt, (2) along the Tigris and the Euphrates in the Middle East—Mesopotamia, (3) along the Yangtze (Ch'ang) and the Yellow River (Huang Ho) in China, and (4) along the Indus in India. What has happened to all these civilizations?... And yet, in the land of the Indus and the Ganges, that perennial, ancient stream of wisdom still flows with the same vigor."

"In each century India has given birth to lofty spiritual personages. Though she has reached great heights in every field of culture, when that tradition declined somewhat in material terms, its spiritual luster was nevertheless upheld by these luminaries who appeared, one after another, upon the Indian scene."

At the time India was conquered by Western colonial powers, according to historian Dr. J. T. Sunderland, she was the wealthiest nation on the globe: "This [material] wealth was created by the Hindus' vast and varied industries. Nearly every kind of manufacture or product known to the civilized world—nearly every kind of creation of man's hand and brain, existing anywhere and prized either for its utility or beauty— had long, long been produced in India. India was a far greater industrial and manufacturing nation than any in Europe or any other in Asia" (India in Bondage, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1929).

"Let us remember," wrote the eminent historian and philosopher Will Durant (in The Case for India, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1930), "that India was the motherland of our race, and Sanskrit the mother of Europe's languages; that she was the mother of our philosophy, mother, through the Arabs, of much of our mathematics, mother...of the ideals embodied in Christianity, mother, through the village community, of self-government and democracy Mother India is in many ways the mother of us all."

World religions authority Huston Smith recalls that in the 1950s the eminent British historian Arnold Toynbee predicted that in the 21st century "India the conquered would conquer her conquerors."
"He didn't mean by that that we would become Hindus," said Smith in an interview in the San Diego Union-Tribune, April 7, 1990. "What he meant was that basic Indian insights would find their way into our Western culture, and, because of their metaphysical and psychological profundity, our way of thinking in the West would be influenced by Indian thought just as Indian technology has been influenced by ours." (Publisher's Note)

This may be something a bit off from this topic. I was wondering what your thoughts are on the contradiction between
1) the birth of Adam (as first man) happening around 6,000 years back, and
2) anthropologists have found modern human remains that validate that humans roamed the earth around 10,000 - 40,000 years back. They were capable of farming, language and social interactions etc as well.

Thanks
ShamsB
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Post by ShamsB »

sheri wrote:
kmaherali wrote:The following are pertinent footnotes in God Talks to Arjuna, The Bhagavad Gita on this matter.

* The testament of the Hindu scriptures is that India's civilization goes back far earlier than contemporary Western historians acknowledge. Swami Sri Yukteswar, in The Holy Science (Los Angeles: Self-Realization Fellowship), calculates that the Golden Age, in which India's spiritual and material civilization reached its pinnacle, ended about 6700 B.C.—having flowered for many thousands of years before that. India's scriptural literature lists many generations of kings and sages who lived prior to the events that are the main subject of the Mahabharata. In the Gita itself, Krishna describes the long descent of India's spiritual culture from a Golden Age to his own era, as the knowledge of yoga gradually was lost. "Most anthropologists, believing that 10,000 years ago humanity was living in a barbarous Stone Age, summarily dismiss as 'myths' the widespread traditions of very ancient civilizations in Lemuria, Atlantis, India, China, Japan, Egypt, Mexico, and many other lands," a passage in Autobiography of a Yogi reads. Recent scientific research, however, is beginning to suggest that the truth of ancient chronologies be reevaluated. (Publisher's Note)

* Of the Gita's author, the celebrated German philosopher A. W. Schlegel wrote in the foreword to his Latin translation of the Gita: "O thou sacred singer, thou inspired interpreter of divinity! Whatever may have been thy name among mortals, I bow before thee! Hail to thee, author of that mighty poem, whose oracles lift up the soul in joy ineffable, toward all that is sublime, eternal, and divine! Full of veneration, I salute thee above all singers, and I worship unceasingly by the trace of thy footsteps."

"The very name we know India by, Bharata, gives us the necessary clue. Bha means light and knowledge, and rata means devoted. Bharata means devoted to light as against darkness....We have this unique feature with regard to our Sanskrit literature, that the language, the rules of grammar, the diction, etc., necessitates the use of words for denoting objects in such a manner that the philosophy, the science, and the theology behind the whole thing is clear....The rules of the language dictate that every object is to be named with a significance of its own. Significance, not merely explaining its present condition, its present meaning, exigencies, requirements, etc., but how the name should be justified by actual action.... So Bharata is not the name of a mere geographical entity placed in some corner of the world and having its geographical, topographical, and other limitations. Bharata stands for every individual soul that has this idea of light, the dedication to the light, as against immersion in darkness. So we speak of the light that God's creation of the world began with, and we think of the Light that India claims to be its chief aspiration, its chief, its most important and most valued goal....

"Looking at the great major centers of civilization that flourished in those ancient times, we find four: (1) along the Nile in Egypt, (2) along the Tigris and the Euphrates in the Middle East—Mesopotamia, (3) along the Yangtze (Ch'ang) and the Yellow River (Huang Ho) in China, and (4) along the Indus in India. What has happened to all these civilizations?... And yet, in the land of the Indus and the Ganges, that perennial, ancient stream of wisdom still flows with the same vigor."

"In each century India has given birth to lofty spiritual personages. Though she has reached great heights in every field of culture, when that tradition declined somewhat in material terms, its spiritual luster was nevertheless upheld by these luminaries who appeared, one after another, upon the Indian scene."

At the time India was conquered by Western colonial powers, according to historian Dr. J. T. Sunderland, she was the wealthiest nation on the globe: "This [material] wealth was created by the Hindus' vast and varied industries. Nearly every kind of manufacture or product known to the civilized world—nearly every kind of creation of man's hand and brain, existing anywhere and prized either for its utility or beauty— had long, long been produced in India. India was a far greater industrial and manufacturing nation than any in Europe or any other in Asia" (India in Bondage, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1929).

"Let us remember," wrote the eminent historian and philosopher Will Durant (in The Case for India, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1930), "that India was the motherland of our race, and Sanskrit the mother of Europe's languages; that she was the mother of our philosophy, mother, through the Arabs, of much of our mathematics, mother...of the ideals embodied in Christianity, mother, through the village community, of self-government and democracy Mother India is in many ways the mother of us all."

World religions authority Huston Smith recalls that in the 1950s the eminent British historian Arnold Toynbee predicted that in the 21st century "India the conquered would conquer her conquerors."
"He didn't mean by that that we would become Hindus," said Smith in an interview in the San Diego Union-Tribune, April 7, 1990. "What he meant was that basic Indian insights would find their way into our Western culture, and, because of their metaphysical and psychological profundity, our way of thinking in the West would be influenced by Indian thought just as Indian technology has been influenced by ours." (Publisher's Note)

This may be something a bit off from this topic. I was wondering what your thoughts are on the contradiction between
1) the birth of Adam (as first man) happening around 6,000 years back, and
2) anthropologists have found modern human remains that validate that humans roamed the earth around 10,000 - 40,000 years back. They were capable of farming, language and social interactions etc as well.

Thanks
Welcome to the Rabbit Hole Alice.

It depends on what Adam you are referring to - Kmaherali probably can explain it better...there was the Adam that fell from the sky..and there was already an evolving Adam - Abul Bashr (unless I have that reversed like i usually do).

Shams
kmaherali
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Post by kmaherali »

sheri wrote:This may be something a bit off from this topic. I was wondering what your thoughts are on the contradiction between
1) the birth of Adam (as first man) happening around 6,000 years back, and
2) anthropologists have found modern human remains that validate that humans roamed the earth around 10,000 - 40,000 years back. They were capable of farming, language and social interactions etc as well.

Thanks
There is a difference between the historical Prophet Adam and Adam as the symbolic first man. There has been a discussion on this subject in this forum at:

Pre-Adam --> How many Adam

http://www.ismaili.net/html/modules.php ... 26c6bbfd8f
agakhani
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Post by agakhani »

And if any one like to listen waez of Rai Abu Ali on two Adams ( Adam Shafiullah and Adam abu Bashar please listen the waez # 522 this waez available in Ismaili.net waez section.
haroon_adel
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Re: Significance of India

Post by haroon_adel »

adnan.ali wrote:What is the significance of the land of suncontinent. All the avatar before hazrat Ali (a.s) are either born in subcontinent or came to subcontinent. we also believe that the last avatar will also come in subcontinent for the restablishment of truth (our imam as Qaim). Why the land of subcontinent has tremendious value.
Significance of India to who?


I am an Ismaili and I haven't heard the term Das Avatar before. Can you explain what is Das Avatar, please? Pardon my ignorance. You might very well know that Ismailis come from anywhere in the world and not only from India. I believe term Das Avatar is mainly in India, and I am not from India. Please someone correct me if I am wrong, and explain what does this term mean.

Thanks and Ya Ali Madad.
kmaherali
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Re: Significance of India

Post by kmaherali »

haroon_adel wrote:I am an Ismaili and I haven't heard the term Das Avatar before. Can you explain what is Das Avatar, please? Pardon my ignorance. You might very well know that Ismailis come from anywhere in the world and not only from India. I believe term Das Avatar is mainly in India, and I am not from India. Please someone correct me if I am wrong, and explain what does this term mean.

Thanks and Ya Ali Madad.
In short ‘Das Avtaar’ literally means ‘Ten Manifestations’. According to Satpanth view of history, the Lord manifested himself as or assumed ten physical forms to bring about major changes of cosmic significance. Their appearances brought about a new phases in history.

Further explanation and allusions are given in this forum at:

Anecdotes --> The DARSHAN OF DAS AVTAAR

http://www.ismaili.net/html/modules.php ... opic&t=344
haroon_adel
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Re: Significance of India

Post by haroon_adel »

kmaherali wrote:
haroon_adel wrote:I am an Ismaili and I haven't heard the term Das Avatar before. Can you explain what is Das Avatar, please? Pardon my ignorance. You might very well know that Ismailis come from anywhere in the world and not only from India. I believe term Das Avatar is mainly in India, and I am not from India. Please someone correct me if I am wrong, and explain what does this term mean.

Thanks and Ya Ali Madad.
In short ‘Das Avtaar’ literally means ‘Ten Manifestations’. According to Satpanth view of history, the Lord manifested himself as or assumed ten physical forms to bring about major changes of cosmic significance. Their appearances brought about a new phases in history.

Further explanation and allusions are given in this forum at:

Anecdotes --> The DARSHAN OF DAS AVTAAR

http://www.ismaili.net/html/modules.php ... opic&t=344
Thanks KMaherali for the reference. Can you tell me if there's any Farman of Imam(s) pertaining Das Avatar?
kmaherali
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Re: Significance of India

Post by kmaherali »

haroon_adel wrote: Thanks KMaherali for the reference. Can you tell me if there's any Farman of Imam(s) pertaining Das Avatar?
"The philosophy of Ten Incarnations (DAS AVTAAR) should be taken and explained in the light of Islamic principles; also the understanding of ALLAH'S NOOR, whose lineal descent is from even before creation, should be given. These principles, Pir Sadardin during the time of Shri Islam Shah has explained, they should be explained in a similar manner.
(Kalam-e Imam-e Mubin, II, p473).
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Re: Significance of India

Post by haroon_adel »

kmaherali wrote:
haroon_adel wrote: Thanks KMaherali for the reference. Can you tell me if there's any Farman of Imam(s) pertaining Das Avatar?
"The philosophy of Ten Incarnations (DAS AVTAAR) should be taken and explained in the light of Islamic principles; also the understanding of ALLAH'S NOOR, whose lineal descent is from even before creation, should be given. These principles, Pir Sadardin during the time of Shri Islam Shah has explained, they should be explained in a similar manner.
(Kalam-e Imam-e Mubin, II, p473).
Do you mean "...during Mawlana Islam Shah", by "Shri Islam Shah"?
kmaherali
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Re: Significance of India

Post by kmaherali »

haroon_adel wrote:Do you mean "...during Mawlana Islam Shah", by "Shri Islam Shah"?
Mowlana and Shri are titles of honour. They have the same meaning....
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Re: Significance of India

Post by haroon_adel »

kmaherali wrote:
haroon_adel wrote:Do you mean "...during Mawlana Islam Shah", by "Shri Islam Shah"?
Mowlana and Shri are titles of honour. They have the same meaning....

That maybe. Then why in our Du'a it's mentioned as Mawlana, as apposed to Shri. I would stick with Mawlana since it's mentioned in our holly Du'a.[/i]
ShamsB
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Re: Significance of India

Post by ShamsB »

haroon_adel wrote:
kmaherali wrote:
haroon_adel wrote:Do you mean "...during Mawlana Islam Shah", by "Shri Islam Shah"?
Mowlana and Shri are titles of honour. They have the same meaning....

That maybe. Then why in our Du'a it's mentioned as Mawlana, as apposed to Shri. I would stick with Mawlana since it's mentioned in our holly Du'a.[/i]

Now you're talking about changing the words of Farman.

shams
haroon_adel
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Re: Significance of India

Post by haroon_adel »

ShamsB wrote:
haroon_adel wrote:
kmaherali wrote: Mowlana and Shri are titles of honour. They have the same meaning....

That maybe. Then why in our Du'a it's mentioned as Mawlana, as apposed to Shri. I would stick with Mawlana since it's mentioned in our holly Du'a.[/i]

Now you're talking about changing the words of Farman.

shams

Which Farman are you talking about? Where did you I mention about changing anything?
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It is quoted in Quran as ' TEN NIGHTS"

Post by agakhani »

Haroon,
It is true that, it is very hard to digest 'DAS AVTAAR" theory for those peoples, who do not have much knowledge about our religion and Hindu religion and do not have much knowledge about the evolution. First of all they get shock when they read or listen the Hindu names and strange incarnation births of some avataars.
There is one waez available on Das Avtaar by Rai Abu Ali, also
there are 3 ginans available composed by Pir Sadardin, Pir Imamshah and pir Shams, find it and read it if you can, but as I told above that it is very hard to digest the story, if you compare the theory with Hindu beliefs, Hindu names and strange characters like animal, bird, half lion and half human being of avataars.
Mowlana Sultan Mohammad shah once instructed the missionaries to explain the Das Avatar theory with Islamic principal.
As per the Rai abu Ali it is also quoted in Quran but not the word 'DAS AVATAR' but Allah mention as "TEN NIGHTS" interpreters has different view and understanding on ten nights, no body's interpretation matches with other interpreter.
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Re: It is quoted in Quran as ' TEN NIGHTS"

Post by haroon_adel »

agakhani wrote:Haroon,
It is true that, it is very hard to digest 'DAS AVTAAR" theory for those peoples, who do not have much knowledge about our religion and Hindu religion and do not have much knowledge about the evolution. First of all they get shock when they read or listen the Hindu names and strange incarnation births of some avataars.
There is one waez available on Das Avtaar by Rai Abu Ali, also
there are 3 ginans available composed by Pir Sadardin, Pir Imamshah and pir Shams, find it and read it if you can, but as I told above that it is very hard to digest the story, if you compare the theory with Hindu beliefs, Hindu names and strange characters like animal, bird, half lion and half human being of avataars.
Mowlana Sultan Mohammad shah once instructed the missionaries to explain the Das Avatar theory with Islamic principal.
As per the Rai abu Ali it is also quoted in Quran but not the word 'DAS AVATAR' but Allah mention as "TEN NIGHTS" interpreters has different view and understanding on ten nights, no body's interpretation matches with other interpreter.
Thank you Agakhani for the info. I am just sometimes thinking that since Ismailis are coming from all over the world, and therefore brings a rich diverse culture along with them. However, our base of religion is the same. We believe in the same principles. I personaly think that cultural values shouldn't shadow religious aspects. Please correct me if I am wrong.

And to Shams brother: I have never said anything about changing any Farman. It's simply how your mis-interpretation. During different times, Imams has been in different countries and parts of the world; and hence, giving most of the Farmans to local murids in their local languages. So, coming back to my original question. Since in our Du'a it's mentioned as "Mawlana Islam Shah" and not "Shri Islam Shah", I personaly would say Mawlana Islam Shah. I totally understand that the meaning is the same. And by that, I don't mean to change anything. Who am I to talk about changing the holy Farman? Or who are you to talk about chaning the holy Farman, either? So, please don't mis-interpret and creat unnecessary noise where there's none.
kmaherali
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Post by kmaherali »

"Welcome To India" Padharo Mhare Des Times Music M2p

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star_munir
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Post by star_munir »

As per many hadiths India (Ceylon) was the place of Adam's descent to earth after expulsion from paradise. On mountain peak of Sri Lanka there is massive foot print, which is believed to be of Adam. Ghulam Ali Azad of Bilgram, who had written biographical works on Mughals mention in his treatise "The coral rosary of Indian antiquities" that India was the first site of revelation, the first mosque on the earth and using sufi mystical concept Adam described India as the first place where the eternal light of Muhammad manifested in Adam whereas Arabia is the place where it found its final expression in the physical form of Prophet Muhammad. The black stone was descended with Adam. Since it was India that Adam first exercised the authority that God gave humanity over earth it has unique status of being the first place on earth where human vice regency was established. (Source: Religions of India in practice by Donald S. Lopez, Jr)
kmaherali
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Post by kmaherali »

Easy to love, hard to forget....

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