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Our Cultural CharacteristicsQ : With all the multitude of faiths, sects, castes, languages, customs and habits, how can you call this a single society at all? Where is the single way of life you call 'Hindu'? Q : How do you define 'Hindu culture'? Q : What is the use of a thing which we cannot define? Q : Hindu culture is often dubbed as being anti-progressive, against equality, and a shield for all money bags and express of define it. Q : In the cultural sense in which you use the term 'Hindu', does it mean that Muslims, Christians etc., can be Hindus without giving up their respective religions? Q : If behavior is to be the test, it will be observed that many Hindus are just like Muslims or Christians in the method of eating, drinking and living. If you could assimilate such Hindus, why not the Muslims? Q : Don't you think that culture changes according to time? Q : Can you mention any one of the aspects of Hindu culture you want to emphasis? Q : Don't you think that bread is more important than culture? Q : May not the development of Hindu culture hinder the evolution of a composite culture? Q : Does the revival of Hindu culture involve of 'Varna Vyavastha' also? Q : Is it (Varna Vyavastha) not a must for Hindu Society? Q : Does Hindu Dharma advocate war as the remedy for conflicts between countries? Q : Is there any place for violence in the life of a society? Q : Is belief in rebirth well founded? There is an instance of my own experience. Some years back, I went to a village for a Sangh programme. That was the first time I was going to that village. I was taken to the house where I was to stay. It was an old house - more than hundred years old. As soon as I reached the house, I went directly to the room where arrangements had been made for my stay. The host was amazed. I told him that I had a feeling that I had once stayed in that very house and in that very room. Q : Are the followers of RSS strict vegetarians? Q : At least is it (vegetarianism) recommended in the Shastras? Q : Then, why banning of cow slaughter by legislation? Q : So you don't plead for the stopping of slaughter of other animals? Q : The cow, the very embodiment of humility, beneficence and innocence is taken as the symbol of our culture. A lion which is described as 'the king of animals by his own prowess' is also our cultural symbol. How can both of these contradictory things be reconciled? Q : What is the speciality of Hindu culture in respect of womanhood? Q : What is the special feature of Mahabharata? Q : There is a common notion that our scriptures preach only individualism and not corporate life. How far is it true? Q : What is the proof that the Hindu way of life is founded on a firm base? Q : No man is born as Hindu or Mussalman or Christian. It is only later on that distinctions are made. Q : Usually Muslims and Christians are not allowed inside the Hindu temples, whereas there is no such bar for the Hindus to enter mosques or churches. Why? Q : In these days when power has come to mean only a means to wallow in luxuries and enjoyment, Lal Bahadur Shastri alone appeared to be an exception. His family continued to live in a rented house even while he was the Prime minister. Q : What was the role of the Joint Family in our social set-up? (With the Editor, Illustrated Weekly, November 1972) Q : How can you say that? The evidence is the other way. The only religions which are standing firm and even increasing their hold on the people are based on dogma - Catholicism, and more than Catholicism, Islam. (With Moulvis at Coimbatore, 1956) Q : But Hindus themselves are taking to converting Muslims and Christians nowadays? (With friends) Q : Who is a Hindu? Q : Today all the important movements have a world-wide base. Whether they are economic systems like Capitalism and communism, or religious systems like Islam and Christianity, they all work on the international plane. By comparison, Hinduism sounds parochial and limited. I consider Hinduism the one true system of peaceful international living. It is a truer base for internationalism than all other 'isms' put together. (With friends at Thane, November 1972) The social order, if it has to secure maximum happiness to all, must be able to ensure shreyas to one and all. The philosophical basis for the incentive to do this lies in our concept of the community of soul and its realization. Bhagavad-Gita has said Ishwarah sarva-bhootaanaam hriddeshe:rjuna tishthati. Such a categorical assertion of the identity of soul in all living beings is found nowhere else. |
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