Discussion:
LONG HAUL LIES AHEAD
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and/or www.mantra.com/jai (Dr. Jai Maharaj)
2010-04-19 02:59:43 UTC
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Long haul lies ahead

By Joginder Singh
Editorial
The Pioneer
Monday, April 19, 2010

In one of the worst Maoist attacks, 76 security personnel -- 74
belonging to the CRPF and two to the Chhattisgarh Police -- were
killed in the thick forests of the Dantewada district on April 6. Not
only were the security men butchered by the Left-wing extremists but
the latter also took away their arms and ammunition.

This is neither the first nor the last bloodbath that we are going to
see in the war against Maoists who are determined to usurp the
authority of the state. Indeed, the guerrillas top the list of
attacks on our security forces. The following are some major
instances of Maoist attacks:

April 4, 2010: Maoists trigger a landmine bombing, killing 11
security personnel of the elite anti-Maoist Special Operations Group
in Koraput district of Odisha.

February 15, 2010: 24 personnel of the Eastern Frontier Rifles are
killed as Maoists attack their camp in Sildah in West Midnapore
district of West Bengal.

October 8, 2009: 17 policemen are killed when Maoists ambush them at
Laheri police station in Gadchiroli district of Maharashtra.

September 26, 2008: Maoists kill BJP MP from Balaghat Baliram
Kashyap's sons at Pairaguda village in Jagdalpur, Chhattisgarh.

September 4, 2008: Maoists kill four villagers in a forest in Aaded
village in Chhattisgarh's Bijapur district.

July 27, 2008: Six people are killed when Maoists trigger a landmine
bombing in Dantewada district, Chhattisgarh.

June 29, 2008: Maoists attack a boat carrying four anti-Maoist police
officials and 60 Greyhound commandos on the Balimela reservoir in
Odisha, killing 38 security personnel in all.

June 23, 2008: A group of motorcycle-borne Maoists open fire in
Lakhisarai district court premises in Bihar and free four of their
comrades, including the self-styled zonal commander of Ranchi.

June 16, 2008: Maoists kill 11 police officers in a landmine attack
followed by armed assault. In a separate attack, four policemen are
killed and two others seriously injured when Maoists ambush them at
Beherakhand in Palamau district, Jharkhand.

June 13, 2008: Maoists launch two landmine and bomb attacks in a
small town close to Bokaro, killing 10 policemen and injuring several
others.

May 22, 2008: Maoists kill 16 policemen in the jungles of Gadchiroli
district, Maharashtra.

April 13, 2008: 10 paramilitary troops are killed in eastern Odisha
when Maoists attack a bauxite mine in Koraput district.

The biggest problem in dealing with Maoist violence has been that
strategies, lack of intelligence and perceptions vary from State to
State and from occasion to occasion. The authorities are simply not
decisive enough. The causes of Maoism, estimated to be a Rs 1,500-
crore empire, are variously described as a law and order problem or a
movement deriving its strength from the lack of development and
employment opportunities in the affected areas. Perhaps, it is a
combination of all such factors.

The Central forces are trying to help the States regain control of
the so-called 'occupied' or 'free zones' that Maoists have created.
It is for the States to ensure that development follows the forces.
The most important development work that needs to be undertaken in
the Maoist-affected areas without delay is the building of good roads
so that poor villagers and tribals can have access to the facilities
that are available to the rest of the country.

Nonetheless, the vicious cycle of fear and killings is something that
is always going to come in the way of the those wanting to undertake
development projects or improve the existing infrastructure in the
Maoist-dominated areas. People would rather be safe than stick their
necks in a fight between the insurgents and the Government. No
investor is going to invest in any area plagued with violence and
unabated killings.

The world has known only two ways of resolving any dispute, that is,
first, by using force and, second, through negotiations.
Unfortunately, no party that is winning a war wants to come to the
negotiating table. As long as the Maoists know that they are winning
they will not hold dialogue with the Government. They have had
undisputed run of the areas under their control due to the
indifference of the civil administration.

About 5,000 security personnel have been killed since Maoists
unleashed war on the Indian state. For Maoists -- or Naxalites or
whatever we may choose to call them -- this is a no-holds-barred war.
But on the part of the Government, there is quibbling over whether
the state should use the Army and the Air Force against the
insurgents. A specious argument doing the rounds is that a country's
military should not be used against its own people. On the other
hand, Maoists don't give a hoot about killing fellow Indians which,
by the same logic, are their own people.

When the very existence of the country is at stake, following the
policy of 'willing-to-strike-but-afraid-to-wound' is not only futile
but also counter-productive. Nobody worships the setting sun. Here,
unfortunately, the setting sun is the Government which, for one
reason or another, has not been able to establish its authority. It
has no law to specifically deal with such cases and crimes.

An important factor which needs to be borne in mind is that without
the involvement of well-trained, well-equipped and motivated State
police forces there is no way that the problem of Maoism can be
tackled effectively just by using Central forces who are neither
familiar with the local terrain nor aware of the local culture or
languages in the Maoist-affected areas. At present, State police
forces are ill-equipped, ill-trained and ill-prepared for tackling
the Maoist menace. The Centre should handsomely fund and train them
since after all Maoism is a national problem.

Unless a strong message goes out to all disruptive forces, including
Maoists, our security forces will continue to be nothing more than
cannon fodder. Any more killings of security personnel engaged in the
battle against Maoists will not only demoralise them, but also send a
wrong message to the people living in Maoist-dominated areas that the
Government and its security forces are weak. The Left-wing extremists
have already warned the authorities of more lethal attacks in future.
The Government must steel its resolve to win this decisive war, and
both the Centre and the States should prepare for the long haul
ahead.

http://dailypioneer.com/249979/Long-haul-lies-ahead.html

More at:
http://www.dailypioneer.com

Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti

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cogitoergosum
2010-04-19 20:44:59 UTC
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dhammam saranam gassami

Gautama Buddha
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Buddha)

“Buddha” and “Gautama” redirect here. For other uses, see Buddha
(disambiguation) and Gautama (disambiguation).

Siddhārtha Gautama Buddha

A statue of the Buddha from Sarnath, 4th century CE.
Born c. 563 BCE or 623 BCE
Lumbini, today in Nepal
Died c. 483 BCE or 543 BCE (aged 80)
Kushinagar, today in India
Ethnicity Shakya
Known for Founder of Buddhism
Predecessor Kassapa Buddha
Successor Maitreya Buddha

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Siddhārtha Gautama (Sanskrit: सिद्धार्थ गौतम; Pali:सिद्धाथ गोतम
Siddhattha Gotama) was a spiritual teacher who founded Buddhism.[1] In
most Buddhist traditions, he is regarded as the Supreme Buddha (P.
sammāsambuddha, S. samyaksaṃbuddha ) of our age, “Buddha” meaning
“awakened one” or “the enlightened one.” [note 1] In Hindu traditions,
Buddha is regarded as one of the avatars of Vishnu.[2][3][4][5][6][7]
[8][9][10][11][12][13][14] The time of his birth and death are
uncertain: most early 20th-century historians dated his lifetime as c.
563 BCE to 483 BCE; more recently, however, at a specialist symposium
on this question,[15] the majority of those scholars who presented
definite opinions gave dates within 20 years either side of 400 BCE
for the Buddha’s death, with others supporting earlier or later dates.
[16]

Gautama, also known as Śākyamuni or Shakyamuni (“sage of the
Shakyas”), is the key figure in Buddhism, and accounts of his life,
discourses, and monastic rules are believed by Buddhists to have been
summarized after his death and memorized by his followers. Various
collections of teachings attributed to Gautama were passed down by
oral tradition, and first committed to writing about 400 years later.

Life

The primary sources of information regarding Siddhārtha Gautama’s life
are the Buddhist texts. According to these, the Buddha and his monks
spent four months each year discussing and rehearsing his teachings,
and after his death his monks set about preserving them. A council was
held shortly after his death, and another was held a century later. At
these councils the monks attempted to establish and authenticate the
extant accounts of the life and teachings of the Buddha following
systematic rules. They divided the teachings into distinct but
overlapping bodies of material, and assigned specific monks to
preserve each one.[17] In some cases, essential aspects of teachings
attributed to the Buddha were incorporated into stories and chants in
an effort to preserve them accurately.[18]

From then on, the teachings were transmitted orally. From internal
evidence it seems clear that the oldest texts crystallized into their
current form by the time of the second council or shortly after it.
The scriptures were not written down until three or four hundred years
after the Buddha’s death. By this point, the monks had added or
altered some material themselves, in particular magnifying the figure
of the Buddha.[17]

The ancient Indians were generally not concerned with chronologies,
being more focused on philosophy. The Buddhist texts reflect this
tendency, providing a clearer picture of what Shakyamuni may have
taught than of the dates of the events in his life. These texts
contain descriptions of the culture and daily life of ancient India
which can be corroborated from the Jain scriptures, and make the
Buddha’s time the earliest period in Indian history for which
significant accounts exist.[19] According to Michael Carrithers, there
are good reasons to doubt the traditional account, though, according
to Carrithers, the outline of “birth, maturity, renunciation, search,
awakening and liberation, teaching, death” must be true.[20]

Conception and birth

Maya Devi Temple in Lumbini, Nepal.
Birth of Buddha at Lumbini. Picture of a painting in a Laotian
Temple.

Prince Siddhartha Gautama, Musée Guimet, Paris

Siddhartha was born in Lumbini[21] and raised in the small kingdom or
principality of Kapilvastu, both of which are in modern day Nepal[22].
At the time of the Buddha’s birth, the area was at or beyond the
boundary of Vedic civilization, the dominant culture of northern India
at the time; it is even possible that his mother tongue was not an
Indo-Aryan language.[23] The early texts suggest that Gautama was not
familiar with the dominant religious teachings of his time until he
left on his religious search, which was motivated by an existential
concern with the human condition.[24] At the time, a multitude of
small city-states existed in Ancient India, called Janapadas.
Republics and chiefdoms with diffused political power and limited
social stratification, were not uncommon amongst them, and were
referred to as gana-sanghas.[25] The Buddha’s community does not seem
to have had a caste system. It was not a monarchy, and seems to have
been structured either as an oligarchy, or as a form of republic.[26]
The more egalitarian gana-sangha form of government, as a political
alternative to the strongly hierarchical kingdoms, may have influenced
the development of the Shramana type Jain and Buddhist sanghas, where
monarchies tended toward Vedic Brahmanism.[27]

According to the traditional biography, the Buddha’s father was King
Suddhodana, the leader of Shakya clan, whose capital was Kapilavastu,
and who were later annexed by the growing Kingdom of Kosala during the
Buddha’s lifetime; Gautama was the family name. His mother, Queen Maha
Maya (Māyādevī) and Suddhodana’s wife, was a Koliyan princess. On the
night Siddhartha was conceived, Queen Maya dreamt that a white
elephant with six white tusks entered her right side,[28] and ten
months later Siddhartha was born. As was the Shakya tradition, when
his mother Queen Maya became pregnant, she left Kapilvastu for her
father’s kingdom to give birth. However, she gave birth on the way, at
Lumbini, in a garden beneath a sal tree.

The day of the Buddha’s birth is widely celebrated in Theravada
countries as Vesak.[29] Various sources hold that the Buddha’s mother
died at his birth, a few days or seven days later. The infant was
given the name Siddhartha (Pāli: Siddhatta), meaning “he who achieves
his aim”. During the birth celebrations, the hermit seer Asita
journeyed from his mountain abode and announced that the child would
either become a great king (chakravartin) or a great holy man.[30]
This occurred after Siddhartha placed his feet in Asita’s hair and
Asita examined the birthmarks. Suddhodana held a naming ceremony on
the fifth day, and invited eight brahmin scholars to read the future.
All gave a dual prediction that the baby would either become a great
king or a great holy man.[30] Kaundinya (Pali: Kondanna), the
youngest, and later to be the first arahant other than the Buddha, was
the only one who unequivocally predicted that Siddhartha would become
a Buddha.[31]

While later tradition and legend characterized Śuddhodana as a
hereditary monarch, the descendant of the Solar Dynasty of Ikṣvāku
(Pāli: Okkāka), many scholars believe that Śuddhodana was the elected
chief of a tribal confederacy.

Early life and marriage

Siddhartha, said to have been destined to a luxurious life as a
prince, had three palaces (for seasonal occupation) especially built
for him. His father, King Śuddhodana, wishing for Siddhartha to be a
great king, shielded his son from religious teachings or knowledge of
human suffering. Siddhartha was brought up by his mother’s younger
sister, Maha Pajapati.[32]

As the boy reached the age of 16, his father arranged his marriage to
Yaśodharā (Pāli: Yasodharā), a cousin of the same age. According to
the traditional account, in time, she gave birth to a son, Rahula.
Siddhartha spent 29 years as a Prince in Kapilavastu. Although his
father ensured that Siddhartha was provided with everything he could
want or need, Siddhartha felt that material wealth was not the
ultimate goal of life.[32]

Departure and Ascetic Life

The Buddha travelled the plain of the Ganges river, where his
philosophy attracted followers.
The Great Departure. Gandhara, 2nd century.
Prince Siddharta shaves his hair and become an ascetic. Borobudur, 8th
century.At the age of 29, Siddhartha left his palace in order to meet
his subjects. Despite his father’s effort to remove the sick, aged and
suffering from the public view, Siddhartha was said to have seen an
old man[citation needed]. Disturbed by this, when told that all people
would eventually grow old by his charioteer Channa, the prince went on
further trips where he encountered, variously, a diseased man, a
decaying corpse, and an ascetic. Deeply depressed by these sights, he
sought to overcome old age, illness, and death by living the life of
an ascetic[citation needed].

Siddhartha escaped his palace, accompanied by Channa aboard his horse
Kanthaka, leaving behind this royal life to become a mendicant. It is
said that, “the horse’s hooves were muffled by the gods”[33] to
prevent guards from knowing of the Bodhisatta’s departure. This event
is traditionally called “The Great Departure”. Siddhartha initially
went to Rajagaha and began his ascetic life by begging for alms in the
street. Having been recognised by the men of King Bimbisara, Bimbisara
offered him the throne after hearing of Siddhartha’s quest. Siddhartha
rejected the offer, but promised to visit his kingdom of Magadha
first, upon attaining enlightenment.

Siddhartha left Rajagaha and practised under two hermit teachers.
After mastering the teachings of Alara Kalama (Skr. Ārāḍa Kālāma),
Siddhartha was asked by Kalama to succeed him, but moved on after
being unsatisfied with his practices. He then became a student of
Udaka Ramaputta (Skr. Udraka Rāmaputra), but although he achieved high
levels of meditative consciousness and was asked to succeed Ramaputta,
he was still not satisfied with his path, and moved on.[34]

Gandhara Buddha. 1st–2nd century CE, Tokyo National Museum.Siddhartha
and a group of five companions led by Kaundinya then set out to take
their austerities even further. They tried to find enlightenment
through near total deprivation of worldly goods, including food,
practising self-mortification. After nearly starving himself to death
by restricting his food intake to around a leaf or nut per day, he
collapsed in a river while bathing and almost drowned. Siddhartha
began to reconsider his path. Then, he remembered a moment in
childhood in which he had been watching his father start the season’s
plowing. Looking near his feet he noticed the insects that lived there
and realized that they would die or be displaced by the plowing. He
then realized that all life is connected. With this revelation he
attained a concentrated and focused state that was blissful and
refreshing, the jhāna.

Enlightenment

After asceticism and concentrating on meditation and Anapana-sati
(awareness of breathing in and out), Siddhartha is said to have
discovered what Buddhists call the Middle Way—a path of moderation
away from the extremes of self-indulgence and self-mortification. He
accepted a little milk and rice pudding from a village girl named
Sujata, who wrongly believed him to be the spirit that had granted her
a wish, such was his emaciated appearance. Then, sitting under a pipal
tree, now known as the Bodhi tree in Bodh Gaya, India, he vowed never
to arise until he had found the Truth. Kaundinya and the other four
companions, believing that he had abandoned his search and become
undisciplined, left. After 49 days meditating, at the age of 35, he
attained Enlightenment; according to some traditions, this occurred
approximately in the fifth lunar month, and according to others in the
twelfth. Gautama, from then on, was known as the Buddha or “Awakened
One.” Buddha is also sometimes translated as “The Enlightened One.”
Often, he is referred to in Buddhism as Shakyamuni Buddha or “The
Awakened One of the Shakya Clan.”

At this point, he is believed to have realized complete awakening and
insight into the nature and cause of human suffering which was
ignorance, along with steps necessary to eliminate it. This was then
categorized into ‘Four Noble Truths’; the state of supreme liberation—
possible for any being—was called Nirvana. He then allegedly came to
possess the Ten Characteristics, which are said to belong to every
Buddha.

According to one of the stories in the Āyācana Sutta (Samyutta Nikaya
VI.1), a scripture found in the Pāli and other canons, immediately
after his Enlightenment, the Buddha was wondering whether or not he
should teach the Dharma to human beings. He was concerned that, as
human beings were overpowered by greed, hatred and delusion, they
would not be able to see the true dharma, which was subtle, deep and
hard to understand. However, Brahmā Sahampati interceded and asked
that he teach the dharma to the world, as “there will be those who
will understand the Dharma”. With his great compassion to all beings
in the universe, the Buddha agreed to become a teacher.

Formation of the sangha

Painting of the first sermon depicted at Wat Chedi Liem in
Thailand.After becoming enlightened, two merchants whom the Buddha
met, named Tapussa and Bhallika became the first lay disciples. They
are given some hairs from the Buddha’s head, which are believed to now
be enshrined in the Shwe Dagon Temple in Rangoon, Burma. The Buddha
intended to visit Asita, and his former teachers, Alara Kalama and
Uddaka Ramaputta to explain his findings, but they had already died.

The Buddha thus journeyed to Deer Park near Vārāṇasī (Benares) in
northern India, he set in motion the Wheel of Dharma by delivering his
first sermon to the group of five companions with whom he had
previously sought enlightenment. They, together with the Buddha,
formed the first saṅgha, the company of Buddhist monks, and hence, the
first formation of Triple Gem (Buddha, Dharma and Sangha) was
completed, with Kaundinya becoming the first stream-enterer. All five
soon become arahants, and with the conversion of Yasa and fifty four
of his friends, the number of arahants swelled to 60 within the first
two months. The conversion of the three Kassapa brothers and their
200, 300 and 500 disciples swelled the sangha over 1000, and they were
dispatched to explain the dharma to the populace.

It is unknown what the Buddha’s mother tongue was, and no conclusive
documentation has been made at this point. It is likely that he
preached and his teachings were originally preserved in a variety of
closely related Middle Indo-Aryan dialects, of which Pali may be a
standardization.

Travels and teaching

Buddha with his protector Vajrapani, Gandhara, 2nd century CE,
Ostasiatische Kunst MuseumFor the remaining 45 years of his life, the
Buddha is said to have traveled in the Gangetic Plain, in what is now
Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and southern Nepal, teaching his doctrine and
discipline to an extremely diverse range of people— from nobles to
outcaste street sweepers, mass murderers such as Angulimala and
cannibals such as Alavaka. This extended to many adherents of rival
philosophies and religions. The Buddha founded the community of
Buddhist monks and nuns (the Sangha) to continue the dispensation
after his Parinirvāna (Pāli: Parinibbāna) or “complete Nirvāna”, and
made thousands of converts. His religion was open to all races and
classes and had no caste structure. He was also subject to attack from
opposition religious groups, including attempted murders and framings.

The sangha travelled from place to place in India, expounding the
dharma. This occurred throughout the year, except during the four
months of the vassana rainy season. Due to the heavy amount of
flooding, travelling was difficult, and ascetics of all religions in
that time did not travel, since it was more difficult to do so without
stepping on submerged animal life, unwittingly killing them. During
this period, the sangha would retreat to a monastery, public park or a
forest and people would come to them.

The first vassana was spent at Varanasi when the sangha was first
formed. After this, he travelled to Rajagaha, the capital of Magadha
to visit King Bimbisara, in accordance with his promise after
enlightenment. It was during this visit that Sariputta and
Mahamoggallana were converted by Assaji, one of the first five
disciples; they were to become the Buddha’s two foremost disciples.
The Buddha then spent the next three seasons at Veluvana Bamboo Grove
monastery in Rajagaha, the capital of Magadha. The monastery, which
was of a moderate distance from the city centre was donated by
Bimbisara.

Upon hearing of the enlightenment, Suddhodana dispatched royal
delegations to ask the Buddha to return to Kapilavastu. Nine
delegations were sent in all, but the delegates joined the sangha and
became arahants. Neglecting worldly matters, they did not convey their
message. The tenth delegation, led by Kaludayi, a childhood friend,
resulted in the message being successfully conveyed as well as
becoming an arahant. Since it was not the vassana, the Buddha agreed,
and two years after his enlightenment, took a two month journey to
Kapilavastu by foot, preaching the dharma along the way. Upon his
return, the royal palace had prepared the midday meal, but since no
specific invitation had come, the sangha went for an alms round in
Kapilavastu. Hearing this, Suddhodana hastened to approach the Buddha,
stating “Ours is the warrior lineage of Mahamassata, and not a single
warrior has gone seeking alms”, to which the Buddha replied

That is not the custom of your royal lineage. But it is the custom of
my Buddha lineage. Several thousands of Buddhas have gone by seeking
alms
Suddhodana invited the sangha back to the royal palace for the meal,
followed by a dharma talk, after which he became a sotapanna. During
the visit, many members of the royal family joined the sangha. His
cousins Ananda and Anuruddha were to become two of his five chief
disciples. His son Rahula also joined the sangha at the age of seven,
and was one of the ten chief disciples. His half-brother Nanda also
joined the sangha and became an arahant. Another cousin Devadatta also
became a monk although he later became an enemy and tried to kill the
Buddha on multiple occasions.

Of his disciples, Sariputta, Mahamoggallana, Mahakasyapa, Ananda and
Anuruddha comprised the five chief disciples. His ten foremost
disciples were completed by the quintet of Upali, Subhoti, Rahula,
Mahakaccana and Punna.

In the fifth vassana, the Buddha was staying at Mahavana near Vesali.
Hearing of the impending death of Suddhodana, the Buddha went to his
father and preached the dharma, and Suddhodana became an arahant prior
to death. The death and cremation led to the creation of the order of
nuns. Buddhist texts record that he was reluctant to ordain women as
nuns. His foster mother Maha Pajapati approached him asking to join
the sangha, but the Buddha refused, and began the journey from
Kapilavastu back to Rajagaha. Maha Pajapati was so intent on
renouncing the world that she led a group of royal Sakyan and Koliyan
ladies, following the sangha to Rajagaha. The Buddha eventually
accepted them five years after the formation of the Sangha on the
grounds that their capacity for enlightenment was equal to that of
men, but he gave them certain additional rules (Vinaya) to follow.
This occurred after Ananda interceded on their behalf. Yasodhara also
became a nun, with both becoming arahants.

Devadatta tries to attack the Buddha. Picture of a wallpainting in a
Laotian monastery.During his ministry, Devadatta (who was not an
arahant) frequently tried to undermine the Buddha. At one point
Devadatta asked the Buddha to stand aside to let him lead the sangha.
The Buddha declined, and stated that Devadatta’s actions did not
reflect on the Triple Gem, but on him alone. Devadatta conspired with
Prince Ajatasattu, son of Bimbisara, so that they would kill and usurp
the Buddha and Bimbisara respectively. Devadatta attempted three times
to kill the Buddha. The first attempt involved the hiring of a group
of archers, whom upon meeting the Buddha became disciples. A second
attempt followed when Devadatta attempted to roll a large boulder down
a hill. It hit another rock and splintered, only grazing the Buddha in
the foot. A final attempt by plying an elephant with alcohol and
setting it loose again failed. Failing this, Devadatta attempted to
cause a schism in the sangha, by proposing extra restrictions on the
vinaya. When the Buddha declined, Devadatta started a breakaway order,
criticising the Buddha’s laxity. At first, he managed to convert some
of the bhikkhus, but Sariputta and Mahamoggallana expounded the dharma
to them and succeeded in winning them back.

When the Buddha reached the age of 55, he made Ananda his chief
attendant.

Death / Mahaparinirvana

An artist`s portrayal of Buddha’s entry into Parinirvana.According to
the Mahaparinibbana Sutta of the Pali canon, at the age of 80, the
Buddha announced that he would soon reach Parinirvana or the final
deathless state abandoning the earthly body. After this, the Buddha
ate his last meal, which he had received as an offering from a
blacksmith named Cunda. Falling violently ill, Buddha instructed his
attendant Ānanda to convince Cunda that the meal eaten at his place
had nothing to do with his passing and that his meal would be a source
of the greatest merit as it provided the last meal for a Buddha.[35]
Mettanando and von Hinüber argue that the Buddha died of mesenteric
infarction, a symptom of old age, rather than food poisoning.[36] The
precise contents of the Buddha’s final meal are not clear, due to
variant scriptural traditions and ambiguity over the translation of
certain significant terms; the Theravada tradition generally believes
that the Buddha was offered some kind of pork, while the Mahayana
tradition believes that the Buddha consumed some sort of truffle or
other mushroom.

The sharing of the relics of the Buddha, Zenyōmitsu-Temple Museum,
Tokyo

Buddha relics from Kanishka’s stupa in Peshawar, Pakistan, now in
Mandalay, Burma. Teresa Merrigan, 2005The Mahayana Vimalakirti Sutra
claims, in Chapter 3, that the Buddha doesn’t really become ill or old
but purposely presents such an appearance only to teach those born
into samsara about the impermanence and pain of defiled worlds and to
encourage them to strive for Nirvana.

“Reverend Ánanda, the Tathágatas have the body of the Dharma—not a
body that is sustained by material food. The Tathágatas have a
transcendental body that has transcended all mundane qualities. There
is no injury to the body of a Tathágata, as it is rid of all
defilements. The body of a Tathágata is uncompounded and free of all
formative activity. Reverend Ánanda, to believe there can be illness
in such a body is irrational and unseemly!’ Nevertheless, since the
Buddha has appeared during the time of the five corruptions, he
disciplines living beings by acting lowly and humble.”[14]
Ananda protested Buddha’s decision to enter Parinirvana in the
abandoned jungles of Kuśināra (present-day Kushinagar, India) of the
Malla kingdom. Buddha, however, reminded Ananda how Kushinara was a
land once ruled by a righteous wheel-turning king that resounded with
joy:

44. Kusavati, Ananda, resounded unceasingly day and night with ten
sounds—the trumpeting of elephants, the neighing of horses, the
rattling of chariots, the beating of drums and tabours, music and
song, cheers, the clapping of hands, and cries of “Eat, drink, and be
merry!”

Buddha then asked all the attendant Bhikshus to clarify any doubts or
questions they had. They had none. He then finally entered
Parinirvana. The Buddha’s final words were, “All composite things pass
away. Strive for your own liberation with diligence.” The Buddha’s
body was cremated and the relics were placed in monuments or stupas,
some of which are believed to have survived until the present. For
example, The Temple of the Tooth or “Dalada Maligawa” in Sri Lanka is
the place where the relic of the right tooth of Buddha is kept at
present.

According to the Pāli historical chronicles of Sri Lanka, the
Dīpavaṃsa and Mahāvaṃsa, the coronation of Aśoka (Pāli: Asoka) is 218
years after the death of Buddha. According to one Mahayana record in
Chinese (十八部論 and 部執異論), the coronation of Aśoka is 116 years after
the death of Buddha. Therefore, the time of Buddha’s passing is either
486 BCE according to Theravāda record or 383 BCE according to Mahayana
record. However, the actual date traditionally accepted as the date of
the Buddha’s death in Theravāda countries is 544 or 543 BCE, because
the reign of Aśoka was traditionally reckoned to be about 60 years
earlier than current estimates.

At his death, the Buddha told his disciples to follow no leader, but
to follow his teachings (dharma). However, at the First Buddhist
Council, Mahakasyapa was held by the sangha as their leader, with the
two chief disciples Mahamoggallana and Sariputta having died before
the Buddha.

Physical characteristics
Main article: Physical characteristics of the Buddha

For the Fat or Laughing Buddha, see Budai.

The 8m tall statue of the Sakyamuni Buddha in the Tawang Monastery.

Buddha Daibutsu in Kamakura, Japan.Buddha is perhaps one of the few
sages for whom we have mention of his rather impressive physical
characteristics. A kshatriya by birth, he had military training in his
upbringing, and by Shakyan tradition was required to pass tests to
demonstrate his worthiness as a warrior in order to marry. He had a
strong enough body to be noticed by one of the kings and was asked to
join his army as a general. He is also believed by Buddhists to have
“the 32 Signs of the Great Man”.

The Brahmin Sonadanda described him as “handsome, good-looking, and
pleasing to the eye, with a most beautiful complexion. He has a
godlike form and countenance, he is by no means unattractive.”(D,I:
115).

“It is wonderful, truly marvellous, how serene is the good Gotama’s
appearance, how clear and radiant his complexion, just as the golden
jujube in autumn is clear and radiant, just as a palm-tree fruit just
loosened from the stalk is clear and radiant, just as an adornment of
red gold wrought in a crucible by a skilled goldsmith, deftly beaten
and laid on a yellow-cloth shines, blazes and glitters, even so, the
good Gotama’s senses are calmed, his complexion is clear and
radiant.” (A,I:181)

A disciple named Vakkali, who later became an Arahant, was so obsessed
by Buddha’s physical presence that Buddha had to tell him to stop and
reminded Vakkali to know Buddha through the Dhamma and not physical
appearances.

Although the Buddha was not represented in human form until around the
1st century CE (see Buddhist art), the physical characteristics of
fully-enlightened Buddhas are described by the Buddha in the Digha
Nikaya’s Lakkhaṇa Sutta (D,I:142).[37] In addition, the Buddha’s
physical appearance is described by Yasodhara to their son Rahula upon
the Buddha’s first post-Enlightenment return to his former princely
palace in the non-canonical Pali devotional hymn, Narasīha Gāthā (“The
Lion of Men”).[38]

Teachings
Main article: Buddhist philosophy

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhist_philosophy

Seated Buddha, Gandhara, 2nd century CE.Some scholars believe that
some portions of the Pali Canon and the Agamas could contain the
actual substance of the historical teachings (and possibly even the
words) of the Buddha.[39][40] This is not the case for the later
Mahayana sutras.[41] The scriptural works of Early Buddhism precede
the Mahayana works chronologically, and are treated by many Western
scholars as the main credible source for information regarding the
actual historical teachings of Gautama Buddha.

Some of the fundamentals of the teachings of Gautama Buddha are:

The Four Noble Truths: that suffering is an inherent part of
existence; that the origin of suffering is ignorance and the main
symptoms of that ignorance are attachment and craving; that attachment
and craving can be ceased; and that following the Noble Eightfold Path
will lead to the cessation of attachment and craving and therefore
suffering.

The Noble Eightfold Path: right understanding, right thought, right
speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right
mindfulness, and right concentration.
Dependent origination: that any phenomenon ‘exists’ only because of
the ‘existence’ of other phenomena in a complex web of cause and
effect covering time past, present and future. Because all things are
thus conditioned and transient (anicca), they have no real independent
identity (anatta).

Rejection of the infallibility of accepted scripture: Teachings should
not be accepted unless they are borne out by our experience and are
praised by the wise. See the Kalama Sutta for details.

Anicca (Sanskrit: anitya): That all things are impermanent.

Dukkha (Sanskrit: duḥkha): That all beings suffer from all situations
due to unclear mind.

Anatta (Sanskrit: anātman): That the perception of a constant “self”
is an illusion.

However, in some Mahayana schools, these points have come to be
regarded as more or less subsidiary. There is some disagreement
amongst various schools of Buddhism over more esoteric aspects of
Buddha’s teachings, and also over some of the disciplinary rules for
monks.

According to tradition, the Buddha emphasized ethics and correct
understanding. He questioned the average person’s notions of divinity
and salvation. He stated that there is no intermediary between mankind
and the divine; distant gods are subjected to karma themselves in
decaying heavens; and the Buddha is solely a guide and teacher for the
sentient beings who must tread the path of Nirvāṇa (Pāli: Nibbāna)
themselves to attain the spiritual awakening called bodhi and see
truth and reality as it is. The Buddhist system of insight and
meditation practice is not believed to have been revealed divinely,
but by the understanding of the true nature of the mind, which must be
discovered by personally treading a spiritual path guided by the
Buddha’s teachings.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhist_ethics

See also

Bodh Gaya
Buddha as an Avatar of Vishnu
Buddha as viewed in other religions
Buddhahood

History of Buddhism
Iconography of the Buddha
List of the 28 Buddhas
Maitreya Buddha (Future Buddha)
Prem Sanyas, a 1925 silent film, directed by Franz Osten and Himansu
Rai.
The Light of Asia, a book by Edwin Arnold

^ Turner, Sir Ralph Lilley (1962–1985). “buddha 9276″. A comparative
dictionary of the Indo-Aryan languages. London: Oxford University
Press. Digital Dictionaries of South Asia, University of Chicago. p.
525. http://dsal.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/philologic/contextualize.pl?p.2.soas.1976481.
Retrieved 22 Feb 2010. “Hypothetical root budh ‘ perceive ’ 1. Pali
buddha – ‘ understood, enlightened ’, masculine ‘ the Buddha ’;
Aśokan, that is, the language of the Inscriptions of Aśoka Budhe
nominative singular; Prakrit buddha – ‘ known, awakened ’; Waigalī
būdāī ‘ truth ’; Bashkarīk budh ‘ he heard ’; Tōrwālī būdo preterite
of bū – ‘ to see, know ’ from bṓdhati; Phalūṛa búddo preterite of buǰǰ
– ‘ to understand ’ from búdhyatē; Shina Gilgitī dialect budo ‘ awake
’, Gurēsī dialect budyōnṷ intransitive ‘ to wake ’; Kashmiri bọ̆du ‘
quick of understanding (especially of a child ’); Sindhī ḇudho past
participle (passive) of ḇujhaṇu ‘ to understand ’ from búdhyatē, West
Pahāṛī buddhā preterite of bujṇā ‘ to know ’; Sinhalese buj (j written
for d), budu, bud – , but – ‘ the Buddha ’.”

References

^ The Buddha, His Life and Teachings
^ List of Hindu scripture that declares Gautama Buddha as 9th Avatar
of Vishnu as as follows [Harivamsha (1.41) Vishnu Purana (3.18)
Bhagavata Purana (1.3.24, 2.7.37, 11.4.23 name="Bhagavata Purana
1.3.24">Bhagavata Purana 1.3.24
^ Garuda Purana (1.1, 2.30.37, 3.15.26) [Motilal Banarsidass, Delhi
1982.
^ Agni Purana (160.Narada Purana (2.72)Linga Purana (2.71) Padma
Purana (3.252) etc. (Dhere Ramchandra Chintaman) [Dhere Ramchandra
Chintaman, Shri Vitthal: ek maha samanvaya, Shri Vidya Prakashan,
Pune, 1984 (Marathi
^ Bhagavata Purana, Canto 1, Chapter 3 - SB 1.3.24: "Then, in the
beginning of Kali-yuga, the Lord will appear as Lord Buddha, the son
of Anjana, in the province of Gaya, just for the purpose of deluding
those who are envious of the faithful theist." ... SB 1.3.28: "All of
the above-mentioned incarnations [avatars] are either plenary portions
or portions of the plenary portions of the Lord [Krishna or Vishnu]“
^ O Keshava! O Lord of the universe! O Lord Hari, who have assumed the
form of Buddha! All glories to You! O Buddha of compassionate heart,
you decry the slaughtering of poor animals performed according to the
rules of Vedic sacrifice.] [http://www.salagram.net/Dasavatara-
page.htm#Sri Dasavatara stotra
^ Lecture 1974 by founder of ISKCON - A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami
Prabhupada "Because people were addicted so much in violence, in
killing the animals, therefore Buddha philosophy was needed"'
^ Vivekananda: May he who is the Brahman of the Hindus, the Ahura
Mazda of Zoroastrians, the Buddha of Buddhists, the Jehovah of the
Jews, the Father in Heavens of Christians, give strength to you to
carry out your noble ideas!] Hinduism, in The World’s Parliament of
Religions, J. H. Barrows (Ed.), Vol. II, Chicago 1893, p. 978.
^ Radhakrishnan: If a Hindu chants the Vedas on the banks of the
Ganges, … if the Japanese worship the image of Buddha, if the European
is convinced of Christ’s mediatorship, if the Arab reads the Koran in
the mosque … It is their deepest apprehension of God and God’s fullest
revelation to them.] Eastern Religions and Western Thought, New York
1969, pp. 326–7.
^ name=”Bhagavata Purana 1.3.24″/>Buddha as an Avatar of Vishnu at
HinduWiki
^ Buddha: The Refiner of Hinduism? (hinduism.about.com)
^ The Buddha as an Avatar of Vishnu (article by A. Seshan from The
Times of India)
^ Mahatma Gandhi and Buddhism (pdf file)
^ The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda/Volume 1/Addresses at The
Parliament of Religions/Buddhism, the Fulfilment of Hinduism|Buddhism,
the Fulfilment of Hinduism, by Swami Vivekananda
^ L. S. Cousins (1996), “The dating of the historical Buddha: a review
article”, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (3)6(1): 57–63.
^ “As is now almost universally accepted by informed Indological
scholarship, a re-examination of early Buddhist historical material,
…, necessitates a redating of the Buddha’s death to between 411 and
400 BCE.” Paul Dundas, The Jains, 2nd edition, (Routledge, 2001), p.
24.
^ a b Michael Carrithers, The Buddha, 1983, pages 13, 14. Found in
Founders of Faith, Oxford University Press, 1986.
^ Sue Hamilton, Identity and Experience. LUZAC Oriental, 1996, pages
110-111.
^ Carrithers, page 15.
^ Carrithers, page 10.
^ Buddhanet.net
^ [1] http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/666
^ Richard Gombrich, Theravada Buddhism: A Social History from Ancient
Benares to Modern Colombo. Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1988, page 49.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Gombrich
^ Sue Hamilton, Early Buddhism: A New Approach: The I of the Beholder.
Routledge 2000, page 47.
^ Romila Thapar, The Penguin History of Early India: From Origins to
AD 1300. Penguin Books, 2002, page 137.
^ Richard Gombrich, Theravada Buddhism: A Social History from Ancient
Benares to Modern Colombo. Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1988, pages
49-50.
^ Romila Thapar, The Penguin History of Early India: From Origins to
AD 1300. Penguin Books, 2002, page 146. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romila_Thapar
^ Sacred-texts.com http://www.sacred-texts.com/bud/lob/lob04.htm
^ Turpie, D. 2001. Wesak And The Re-Creation of Buddhist Tradition.
Master’s Thesis. Montreal, Quebec: McGill University. (p. 3).
Available from: Mcgill.ca, Accessed 17 November 2006.
^ a b Narada (1992). A Manual of Buddhism. Buddha Educational
Foundation. p. 9–12. ISBN 967-9920-58-5.
^ Narada (1992), p11-12
^ a b Narada (1992), p14
^ Narada (1992), pp15-16
^ Narada (1992), pp19-20
^ Maha-parinibbana Sutta (DN 16), verse 56
^ Mettanando Bhikkhu and Oskar von Hinueber, “The Cause of the
Buddha’s Death”; Vol. XXVI of the Journal of the Pali Text Society,
2000. See also this article by Mettanando saying the same thing:
Buddhanet.net. http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/dn/dn.16.1-6.vaji.html
^ Maurice Walshe, The Long Discourses of the Buddha: A Translation of
the Dīgha Nikāya, 1995, Boston: Wisdom Publications, “[DN] 30:
Lakkhaṇa Sutta: The Marks of a Great Man,” pp. 441-60.
^ Ven. Elgiriye Indaratana Maha Thera, Vandana: The Album of Pali
Devotional Chanting and Hymns, 2002, pp. 49-52, retrieved 2007-11-08
from “BuddhaNet” at Buddhanet.net http://www.buddhanet.net/pdf_file/vandana02.pdf
^ It is therefore possible that much of what is found in the
Suttapitaka is earlier than c.250 B.C., perhaps even more than 100
years older than this. If some of the material is so old, it might be
possible to establish what texts go back to the very beginning of
Buddhism, texts which perhaps include the substance of the Buddha’s
teaching, and in some cases, maybe even his words. How old is the
Suttapitaka? Alexander Wynne, St John’s College, 2003, p.22 (this
article is available on the website of the Oxford Centre for Buddhist
Studies: [www.ocbs.org/research/Wynne.pdf]
^ It would be hypocritical to assert that nothing can be said about
the doctrine of earliest Buddhism … the basic ideas of Buddhism found
in the canonical writings could very well have been proclaimed by him
[the Buddha], transmitted and developed by his disciples and, finally,
codified in fixed formulas. J.W. De Jong, 1993: The Beginnings of
Buddhism, in The Eastern Buddhist, vol. 26, no. 2, p. 25
^ The Mahayana movement claims to have been founded by the Buddha
himself. The consensus of the evidence, however, is that it originated
in South India in the 1st century CE–Indian Buddhism, AK Warder, 3rd
edition, 1999, p. 335.

Further reading

Armstrong, Karen. Buddha. (New York: Penguin Books, 2001).
Bechert, Heinz (ed.) (1996) When Did the Buddha Live? The Controversy
on the Dating of the Historical Buddha. Delhi: Sri Satguru.
Sathe, Shriram: Dates of the Buddha. Bharatiya Itihasa Sankalana
Samiti, Hyderabad 1987.
Susan Roth: Buddha. (New York : Delacorte Press, 1994).
Deepak Chopra: Buddha. (Newsarama, 2008).
Jon Ortner: Buddha. (New York : Welcome Books, 2003).

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Gautama Buddha
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:

Gautama Buddha

Wikisource has original works written by or about: Gautama Buddha

A sketch of the Buddha’s Life http://www.accesstoinsight.org/ptf/buddha.html
Critical Resources: Buddha and Buddhism http://www.synaptic.bc.ca/ejournal/buddhist.htm
What Was The Buddha Like? by Ven S. Dhammika
http://www.buddhanet.net/e-learning/buddhism/disciples05.htm

What Was The Buddha Like?

18. So extraordinary was the Buddha, so unerringly kind and wise and
so positive was an encounter with him, that is would change people’s
lives. Even while he was alive legends were told about him. In the
centuries after his final Nirvana it sometimes got to the stage that
the legends and myths obscured the very real human being behind them
and the Buddha came to be looked upon as a god. Actually the Buddha
was a human being, not a ‘mere human being’ as is sometimes said, but
a special class of human being called a complete person (mahapurisa).
Such complete persons are born no different from others and indeed
physically they always remain quite ordinary. But through their own
efforts they bring to completion every human potential and their
mental purity and understanding develop to the stage where they far
exceed those of ordinary human beings. A Buddha, a complete person, is
even higher than a god because he or she is even free from the
jealousy, anger and favouritism that we are told a god is still
capable of feeling.

19. So what was the Buddha like? What would it have been like to meet
him? The Buddha was about six feet tall with coal black hair and a
golden brown complexion. When he was still a layman he wore his hair
and beard long but, on renouncing the world, shaved them both like
every other monk.[ N1 ] All sources agree that the Buddha was
strikingly handsome. The Brahmin Sonadanda described him as “handsome,
good-looking, and pleasing to the eye, with a most beautiful
complexion. He has a godlike form and countenance, he is by no means
unattractive.”[ N2 ] Vacchagotta said this of him:

“It is wonderful, truly marvellous, how serene is the good Gotama’s
appearance, how clear and radiant his complexion, just as the golden
jujube in autumn is clear and radiant, just as a palm-tree fruit just
loosened from the stalk is clear and radiant, just as an adornment of
red gold wrought in a crucible by a skilled goldsmith, deftly beaten
and laid on a yellow-cloth shines, blazes and glitters, even so, the
good Gotama’s senses are calmed, his complexion is clear and
radiant.”[ N3 ]

But of course as he got older his body succumbed to impermanence as do
all compounded things. Ananda described him in his old age like this:

“It is strange, Lord, it is a wonder how the Exalted One’s skin is no
longer clear and radiant, how all his limbs are slack and wrinkled,
how stooped his body is and how a change is to be seen in eye, ear,
nose, tongue and body.”[ N4 ]

In the last year before his final Nirvana the Buddha said this of
himself:

“I am now old, worn out, venerable, one who has walked life’s path,
and I have reached the end of my life, being now eighty. Just as an
old cart can only be kept going by being held together with straps, so
too the Tathagata’s body can only be kept going by being held together
with bandages.”[ N5 ]

However, in his prime people were attracted by the Buddha’s physical
good looks as much as they were by his pleasant personality and his
Dharma. Just to be in his presence could have a noticeable effect upon
people. Once Sariputta met Nakulapita and noticing his peaceful
demeanour said to him: “Householder, your senses are calmed, your
complexion is clear and radiant, I suppose today you have had a talk
face to face with the Exalted One?” Nakulapita replied: “How could it
be otherwise, master? I have just now been sprinkled with the nectar
[…]“[ N6 ]

20. The Buddha was a masterful public speaker. With a pleasant voice,
good looks and poise combined with the appeal of what he said, he was
able to enthral his audience. Uttara described what he saw at a
gathering where the Buddha was speaking like this:

“When he is teaching Dharma to an assembly in a park he does not exalt
them or disparage them but rather he delights, uplifts, inspires and
gladdens them with talk on Dharma. The sound that comes from the good
Gotama’s mouth has eight characteristics: It is distinct and
intelligible, sweet and audible, fluent and clear, deep and resonant.
Therefore, when the good Gotama instructs an assembly, his voice does
not go beyond that assembly. After being delighted, uplifted, inspired
and gladdened, that assembly, rising from their seats, depart
reluctantly, keeping their eyes upon him.”[ N7 ]

King Pasenadi once expressed his amazement at how silent and attentive
people were when listening to the Buddha’s talk.

“I am a noble anointed king, able to execute those deserving
execution, fine those deserving a fine or exile those deserving exile.
But when I am deciding a case sometimes people interrupt even me.
Sometimes I don’t even get a chance to say: ‘While I am speaking, sir,
don’t interrupt me.’ But when the Lord is teaching the Dharma to
various assemblies, at that time not even the sound of coughing is to
be heard from the Lord’s disciples. Once, when the Lord was teaching
the Dharma a monk did cough; one of his fellows in the holy life
tapped him on the knee and said: ‘Quiet, make no noise, the Lord, our
teacher, is teaching Dharma.’ When I saw this I thought: ‘It is
wonderful, truly marvellous, how well-trained, without stick or sword
this assembly is.’”[N8]

21. Although the Buddha never gave cause for people to dislike him,
there were people who did, sometimes out of jealousy, sometimes
because they disagreed with his Dharma and sometimes because he held
up their beliefs to the cold light of reason. Once, when he was
staying at Kapilavatthu, Dandapani the Sakyan asked him what he taught
and when the Buddha told him, Dandapani was not impressed, “shaking
his head, wagging his tongue he departed leaning on his stick, his
brow furrowed into three wrinkles”.[ N9 ] The Buddha did not chase
after him trying to convince him of the truth of his message. The
Buddha responded to all criticism by calmly and clearly explaining why
he did what he did and where necessary correcting misunderstanding
that gave rise to the criticism. He was always unflustered, polite and
smiling in the face of criticism and he urged his disciples to be the
same.

“If anyone should criticise me, the Dharma or the Sangha, you should
not on that account be angry, resentful or upset. For if you were,
that would hinder you, and you would be unable to know whether they
said right or wrong, would you?”
“No, Lord.”
“So, if others criticise me, the Dharma or the Sangha, then simply
explain what is incorrect, saying: ‘That is incorrect, that is not
right, that is not our way, and we do not do that.’”[ N10 ]

Sometimes the Buddha was not criticised but rather abused ‘with rude,
harsh words’. At such times, he usually maintained a dignified
silence.

22. The Buddha is often seen as a gentle and loving person and indeed
he was, but that didn’t mean that he would not himself be critical
when he thought it was necessary. He was very critical of some of the
other ascetic groups of the time, believing that their false doctrines
misled people. About the Jains he said: “The Jains are unbelievers,
immoral, shameless and reckless. They are not companions of good men
and they exalt themselves and disparage others. The Jains cling to
material things and refuse to let go of them. They are rogues, of evil
desires and perverse views.”[ N11 ] When, through misunderstanding,
Buddhist monks taught distorted versions of the Dharma, the Buddha
would reprimand them, saying: “You foolish man, how could you think
that I would teach Dharma like that!”[ N12 ] But his reprimands and
rebukes were never to hurt but to spur people to make more efforts or
to re-examine their actions or beliefs.

23. The Buddha’s daily routine was a very full one. He would sleep at
night for only one hour, wake up and spend the early morning in
meditation, often doing loving-kindness meditation. At dawn he would
often walk up and down for exercise and later talk to people who came
to visit him. Just before noon, he would take his robe and bowl and go
into the nearest city, town or village to beg for alms. He would stand
silently at each door and gratefully receive in his bowl whatever food
people cared to offer. When he got enough, he would return to the
place he was staying at or perhaps go to a nearby woodland area to
eat. He used to eat only once a day. After he had become famous, he
would often be invited to people’s homes for a meal and, being an
honoured guest, he would be given sumptuous food, something other
ascetics criticised him for. On such occasions he would eat, wash his
own hands and bowl after the meal and then give a short Dharma talk.
Straight after his meal he would usually lie down to rest or sometimes
to have a short sleep. As at night, it was the Buddha’s habit to lie
in the lion posture (sihasana) on his right side, with one hand under
his head and the feet placed on each other. In the afternoon he would
talk to people who had come to see him, give instruction to monks or,
where appropriate, go to visit people in order to talk to them about
the Dharma. Late at night when everyone was asleep, the Buddha would
sit in silence and sometimes devas would appear and ask him questions.
Like other monks, the Buddha would usually wander from place to place
for nine months of the year, which gave him many opportunities to meet
people, and then settle down for the three months of the rainy season
(vassa). During the rains he would usually stay in one of the huts
(kuti) that had been built for him at various locations like the
Vultures Peak, the Jetavana or the Bamboo Grove. Ananda would tell
visitors approaching the Buddha’s abode to cough or knock and that the
Buddha would open the door. Sometimes the Buddha would instruct Ananda
not to let people disturb him. We read of one man who, on being told
that the Buddha did not wish to see anyone, sat down in front of the
Buddha’s residence saying: “I am not going until I see him.” When he
was wandering the Buddha would sleep anywhere – under a tree, in a
roadside rest house, in a potter’s shed. Once Hatthaka saw the Buddha
sleeping out in the open and asked him: “Are you happy?” The Buddha
answered that he was. Then Hatthaka said: “But sir, the winter nights
are cold, the dark half of the moon is the time of frost. The ground
has been trampled hard by the hooves of the cattle, the carpet of
fallen leaves is thin, there are few leaves on the trees, your yellow
robes are thin and the wind is cold.” The Buddha reaffirmed that
despite his simple and austere lifestyle he was still happy.[ N13 ]

24. Because he had such a busy teaching schedule and because he was so
often approached for advice on different matters, sometimes he felt
the need to be completely alone. On several occasions, he told Ananda
he was going into solitude and that only those who were bringing him
his food were to come and see him.[ N14 ] The Buddha’s critics claimed
that he only went into solitude because he found it difficult to
answer people’s questions and because he wanted to avoid public
debates. The ascetic Nigrodha said of him: “The ascetic Gotama’s
wisdom is destroyed by the solitary life, he is not used to
assemblies, he is not good at debates, and he has got out of
touch.”[ N15 ] But usually, the Buddha made himself available for
anyone who needed him – for comfort, for inspiration, for guidance in
walking the path. Indeed, the most attractive and noticeable thing
about the Buddha’s personality was the love and compassion that he
showered towards everybody, it seemed that these qualities were the
motive of everything he did. The Buddha himself said: “When the
Tathagata or the Tathagata’s disciples live in the world, it is done
for the good of the many, for the happiness of the many, out of
compassion for the world.”[ N16 ]

http://www.buddhanet.net/e-learning/buddhism/disciples05.htm

http://navanavonmilita.wordpress.com/2010/04/19/dhammam-saranam-gassami-sid-harth/

…and I am Sid Harth
cogitoergosum
2010-04-20 09:17:02 UTC
Permalink
Political Bog: Sid Harth

Hindu Moral Mess-Message-Age: Sid Harth
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Indian Morality Meltdown: Sid Harth
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Sex and CD Scandal: Sid Harth
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Child Labor in India: Sid Harth
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Of God, Godmen and Good men: Sid Harth
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Human Trafficking in India: Sid Harth
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Kill Bill: Sid Harth
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Opposition wants ban on IPL and JPC probe into funding
Special Correspondent

Pranab says government won't spare “guilty or wrongdoer”
— Photo: PTI

FIRM STAND:Union Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee told the Lok Sabha

NEW DELHI: An unrelenting Opposition mounted a sharp attack in the Lok
Sabha on the United Progressive Alliance government on Monday,
demanding a ban on the Indian Premier League and the setting up of a
Joint Parliamentary Committee to probe the sources of funding of the
cricket teams.

This came a day after Shashi Tharoor resigned as Minister of State for
External Affairs over his controversial role in the Kochi IPL
franchise.

The government said “no guilty or wrongdoer” would be spared and
assured the House that all aspects of funding would be probed.

While the Opposition parties slammed the IPL format of the game,
alleging that it was a “betting and gambling ring” where blackmoney
was being “white-washed,” Union Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said
“appropriate action as per law” would be taken if any wrongdoing was
found in the manner of funding.

“The department concerned has already started investigation. All
aspects, including sources of funding and routes through which the
funds arrived, would be looked into. No guilty or wrongdoer will be
spared,” Mr. Mukherjee said.

His response came after the Left parties, the Bharatiya Janata Party,
the Rashtriya Janata Dal, the Samajwadi Party, the Janata Dal
(United), and the Bahujan Samaj Party alleged that the IPL tournament
involved “laundering of blackmoney” and demanded that the government
take over it. They also welcomed Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's
decision to seek the resignation of Mr. Tharoor.

The IPL issue was raised as soon as the House assembled for the day.
RJD leader Lalu Prasad, SP president Mulayam Singh and JD(U) leader
Sharad Yadav demanded that the Centre ban the tournament.

Even as Speaker Meira Kumar appealed to them to allow question hour
proceed peacefully, Mr. Sharad Yadav said: “The moot question is the
IPL, and not Shashi Tharoor.”

Raising the matter during zero hour, CPI leader Gurudas Dasgupta said
that while he welcomed Dr. Singh's decision to ask Mr. Tharoor to
quit, the main issue related to the IPL. Alleging that the game
involved “laundering” and “white-washing” of blackmoney, he said it
was an “aberration” taking place right “under the nose of the Finance
Ministry.”

Mr. Dasgupta termed the T20 format a “caricature” of cricket, which
was only “maligning and diluting cricket, sending a message to budding
players to go to 20:20 to earn huge sums of money.” “Players are
bought like vegetables. Betting is taking place openly. It is not
cricket, but an organised gamble.” He also pointed to reports that
funds were coming from dubious sources in Mauritius and Dubai as well
as from Swiss banks.

BJP's Deputy Leader in the Lok Sabha Gopinath Munde said the IPL was
not set up to encourage cricket, but to make money. “It involves a lot
of blackmoney.”

In the Rajya Sabha, the issue was raised by Shivanand Tiwari of the
JD(U), who demanded that the funds of the IPL and the BCCI be
confiscated.

Tuesday, Apr 20, 2010
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The perils of political paratrooping
Siddharth Varadarajan

In Shashi Tharoor's rise and fall, a Congress attempt to woo middle
class

New Delhi: The petit-bourgeois mind is superficial and fickle. It is
awe struck by the accumulation and consumption that go on in the
highest echelons of society, even if outside the borderlines of
legality and good taste. But it is repulsed and outraged when forced
to confront the tawdriness and venality on which the life it aspires
to is built.

Framed by these two extremes, the long-shot and the close-up, the rise
and fall of Shashi Tharoor is a cautionary tale about the dangers of
entering public life through the constituency of the middle class. The
‘perils of political paratrooping' is how a former colleague of the
erstwhile junior minister pithily described Mr. Tharoor's fate when
asked for his assessment by The Hindu. What made his jump even more
dangerous was that it was made without the safety net that grassroot
experience or backroom goodwill provides. By the standards of Indian
politics, his impropriety in the IPL affair was relatively minor; but
unlike others whose warts catch the glare of the arclights from time
to time, there was nobody willing to pad up for him when the media
drew blood. Fatally injured, he stood his ground just a moment too
long. Had he walked back to the pavilion unprompted, he might have
survived to play a second innings. But he didn't do that. Which is why
his political career is today at an end.

This was not the way things were meant to be. A month ago, Mr. Tharoor
had successfully weathered the latest of several controversies
triggered by his infelicitously timed or worded statements. But he had
a charmed life. “Mark my words”, a former External Affairs Minister
who knows a thing or two about the ways of the Congress party told
this reporter over lunch in March. “When Rahul Gandhi becomes Prime
Minister, Shashi will be his EAM. He just has to lie low, play a long
innings.”

In the run-up to the 2009 elections, the Congress and Shashi Tharoor
were happy to court each other. Mr. Tharoor had spent a lifetime as a
highly visible and voluble international servant and the thought of
toiling away in anonymity as a lobbyist for Afras Ventures in Dubai
must have seemed pretty unappetising. He joined the Congress and, with
the blessings of Sonia Gandhi, got the ticket for the prestigious
Thiruvananthapuram seat. The fact that he chose to enter politics
through the heat and dust of an actual election campaign, rather than
through the Rajya Sabha, like most other middle class icons, further
endeared him to his constituency.

On their part, Congress leaders, and particularly Ms. Gandhi, saw in
the foppish and articulate former United Nations official a totem to
woo back the middle class. For the Congress president, this goal had
been a key element of her politics since at least 2000.

Beginning with the Narasimha Rao-Chandraswami link and the infamous
hawala diary of 1995, the middle class, which had stuck with the
Congress as the ‘natural party of governance' through most of the post-
independence period, began to cast around for alternatives. The
opportunism of the party in toppling the United Front government in
1998 and then trying to cobble together the magical figure of 272 in
1999 further sullied its reputation. Within five years of losing power
at the Centre, the Congress managed to completely lose the mantle of
being a party of stability and decency, ceding that space to the
Bharatiya Janata Party. Improbable though it seems now, all of these
qualities so dear to the middle class got neatly channelled around the
personality of Atal Bihari Vajpayee.

The Congress won the 2004 elections for a variety of reasons but Ms.
Gandhi was clear that it could stay in power only if it kept
recharging its middle class credentials. The presence of Manmohan
Singh as Prime Minister was vital but the party saw in 2009 the need
to go one step further, bringing in newer and younger faces, fresh and
articulate. Within that overall strategy, Mr. Tharoor had an appeal
that was irresistible. Globally connected but capable of acquiring
local anchorage, he was seen as an excellent candidate for a party
keen to project ‘merit', ‘talent' and civil debate over the usual din
of caste, money power and goondaism.

Though Mr. Tharoor's entry into Parliament and government caused
heartburn, few could grudge the positive energy he brought to the job.
As a well-known face on the international circuit because of his long
years at the UN secretariat, the junior minister invariably charmed
all foreign leaders he interacted with. The fact that he could slip
effortlessly into French while talking to Ivorien or Togolese
ministers or journalists was a bonus for Indian diplomacy.

Shashi Tharoor's one failing as a minister was the need he felt for
constant public articulation. The opposition and even his party
colleagues — most of them humourless apparatchiks — misunderstood or
even distorted his messages on Twitter. But his virtual constituents
revelled in his irreverence. Such was his five-star appeal that the
Indian and diasporic middle class forgave Shashi Tharoor for living in
an expensive hotel for months on end, even when it emerged that he
tried very hard to have the government pay for his stay there. Who
paid his bills and why were questions they never really sought an
answer to. In hindsight, that episode was an early pointer to the
outsider's disdain for the rules of Indian politics. A disdain that
ended in the controversy over the Rs. 70 crore worth of ‘sweat equity'
given to his girlfriend, Sunanda Pushkar, for the IPL Kochi team. The
Hindi channels are calling it ‘haseena ka paseena.' Mr. Tharoor has
protested his innocence. Only a thorough investigation will reveal the
truth. But for the Congress, matters had crossed a point of no return.
It is one thing to be accused of speaking out of turn, another to be
accused of corruption. Mr. Tharoor's indiscretions the Congress could
live with, his impropriety it could not. The party which brought him
into politics to propitiate the middle class now realised it had to
throw him out in a final act of appeasement. But only if it moves to
clean the wider rot that is the IPL will it emerge from this fiasco
with its image intact.

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Bangalore bombings cast spotlight on stadium security
Praveen Swami and Parvathi Menon

It is clear that the police did not check the periphery where the
bombs were planted; experts say poor security leaves spectators
vulnerable

NEW DELHI/BANGALORE: Last week's bombings at the M. Chinnaswamy
stadium in Bangalore have set off an intense debate on the safety of
India's sports venues.

Intelligence and security experts responsible for securing the
Commonwealth Games in New Delhi have told The Hindu there are grave
concerns over bomb threats to high-profile venues like the Jawaharlal
Nehru stadium, which will host the opening ceremonies, as well as the
roads leading to them.

Pressed for manpower, the Delhi police have been unable to maintain a
watch on workers and trucks carrying material into construction
venues. Integrated-circuit timers, which have been deployed with
increasing frequency by jihadist groups, can be programmed to detonate
up to a year after they are planted —demonstrating the need for better
security at construction sites.

Last month, the Central Industrial Security Force was asked to assist
in screening construction sites but declined, evidently reluctant to
take responsibility for security failures that took place before it
was assigned responsibility.

Few stadia hosting Indian Premier League matches, government sources
said, have clearly laid-down procedures to sanitise the venue or
evacuate tens of thousands of spectators in the event of a crisis.

Major lapses

Security sources in New Delhi say that there were potentially
disastrous security failures in Bangalore in the course of Saturday's
attacks in Bangalore. First, while Bangalore police officials say a
full anti-sabotage check was carried inside the stadium in the
spectators area, it remains unclear if there was enough time to do a
thorough job.

What is clear is that the police did not check the periphery of the
stadium where the bombs were planted. No official explanation has been
offered for how police failed to detect the improvised explosive
devices, which were packaged inside easily-visible blue-and-yellow
wrapping held together with twine.

The devices made of ammonium nitrate explosive material, similar to
those used by the Indian Mujahideen during a series of urban bombings
between 2005 and 2008, malfunctioned due to high humidity. In two
cases, police sources said, the devices only failed to explode because
of faulty wiring and a malfunctioning detonator.

Worrying

More worrying, senior officials say, was Bangalore police commissioner
Shankar Bidari's decision to allow the match to proceed even after two
bombs went off — a decision evidently taken with the conviction that
the inside of the stadium was safe. “The fact that explosions had
taken place on the periphery of the stadium,” a senior police official
told The Hindu, “meant that all was not well with security, and that
bombs could have been planted in the audience as well. An evacuation
was clearly called for once the two bombs exploded — but there seems
to have been no preparation for an emergency evacuation.”

Each venue, one official linked to the conduct of the Commonwealth
Games in New Delhi said, also needed to have a well-laid down
evacuation drill which would allow for the vacation of a stadium in
half an hour or less. “You need drills like this not just to cope with
terrorist attacks,” the official said, “but other situations like a
fire, or just mob violence”. Private security guards had been
extensively deployed inside the stadium, but do not appear to have
been trained in conducting an emergency evacuation either.

Interestingly, the Union government is contemplating legislation which
would allow private security companies a greater role in protecting
vulnerable public facilities like sports venues, hotels, and shopping
complexes. Government sources said the new law would allow private
security guards to carry weapons. However, concerns have been raised
about the lack of training and safety standards at private security
companies — concerns the Bangalore attack has underlined.

Diffused responsibility

“Part of the problem,” one official at the Ministry of Home Affairs in
New Delhi said, “is that there is no single-point authority
responsible for security at sports venues. The police have a role.
Private security guards have a role. The organisers have their own
agenda. In the end, there is no one person who can be held to account
if something goes wrong.”

“Governments need to get more serious about security,” the official
said, “but private companies are also making millions out of sport —
and they need to be compelled to spend some of that on making sure
fans are safe.”

India's poor sports-security management stands in stark contrast with
China, where each stadium used for the Beijing Olympic Games was
designed and built in consultation with security and emergency
experts. By 2005, Beijing had put in place a comprehensive security
plan, and a central control room, to monitor security. Intelligence
services and independent experts from across the world — including
India — were repeatedly invited for consultations.

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Fix responsibility up to my level, Chidambaram tells Rammohan panel
Sujay Mehdudia

P. Chidambaram

NEW DELHI: Admitting to command and control failure in the Dantewada
massacre of 76 CRPF jawans, Home Minister P. Chidambaram on Monday
told the Rajya Sabha that he had asked the inquiry committee headed by
E.N. Rammohan to fix responsibility from top to bottom.

“I have asked the probe team to pinpoint the failures from the
Assistant Commandant level right up to the Home Minister's level. The
report will be submitted by April 25 and I will share the contents of
the report with the House,” Mr. Chidambaram said, replying to the
debate on the massacre.

Aircraft for surveillance

The Minister ruled out the use of the Army and the Air Force in the
naxal-affected areas but said the government was examining whether a
special force could be used to supplement the paramilitary forces.

“The use of aircraft could be considered for surveillance, logistics
and evacuation.”

Not ruling out the possibility of peace and dialogue, the Home
Minister said while he was willing to be advised for course correction
on tackling the naxal issue, “the challenge had to be met squarely and
we have to fight the menace fearlessly.”

He said: “Let the naxals abjure violence and express their willingness
to hold talks. The State and the Central governments will do the
needful. Issues like socio-economic development cannot be overlooked,
but the fact can't be denied that naxalism is a law and order problem
and has to be dealt without fear.

“I am determined to continue providing leadership to the Home Ministry
and the paramilitary forces. I am determined to provide assistance to
the States to fight the menace,” the Minister said.

Responding to Leader of the Opposition Arun Jaitley's remarks that the
Home Minister did not have support from his own party members, Mr.
Chidambaram said: “My party and the UPA are totally united in the
fight against naxals. You will not succeed in trying to divide my
party.”

Mr. Jaitley was referring to Congress MP K. Keshava Rao's newspaper
interview, supporting senior party leader Digvijay Singh's disapproval
of the handling of the issue by Mr. Chidambaram.

AICC resolution

The Home Minister insisted that his anti-naxal policy was in sync with
the 2006 All-India Congress Committee resolution which had stated that
the issue had to be addressed as a serious law and order problem with
an underlying socio-economic process.

“We are a robust democracy. We must allow various shades of opinion
and it is the government which has to evolve a policy,” Mr.
Chidambaram said, referring to attacks by the Opposition which said
the Congress was not united on the issue of tackling naxalism.

In his intervention, Sitaram Yechury (CPI-M), in an apparent reference
to Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee, alleged that an ally of the UPA
and a Union Cabinet member had boycotted the meetings convened by the
West Bengal government and the debates in both Houses of Parliament on
the issue.

To this Mr. Chidambaram said, “Mr. Yechury's problem with an ‘unnamed
antagonist' would be resolved in 12 months from now politically,”
apparently referring to the Assembly polls in West Bengal next year.

Replying to a point made by Brinda Karat (CPI-M), , he said cadres of
more than one party were being killed in West Bengal and he had taken
up the issue with the Chief Minister.

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IPL Governing Council meet on April 26
Special Correspondent

MUMBAI: The fate of IPL chairman Lalit Modi will be known on April 26.

Shashank Manohar, President of the Board of Control for Cricket in
India (BCCI), has asked Modi to convene the Governing Council meeting
at the Cricket Centre within 24 hours of the IPL III final to be
played at the D.Y. Patil Stadium on Sunday.

Reliable sources said Manohar may have taken the consent of all the
members of the GC before asking Modi to convene the meeting. According
to the IPL rule, only the chairman has the right to convene a meeting.
Clearly, the Kochi franchisee issue will dominate the proceedings and
the senior GC members expect a hard time for the IPL chairman.

GC members

The members of the GC are: Lalit Modi (chairman), Niranjan Shah (vice-
chairman), Shashank Manohar, N. Srinivasan, Sanjay Jagdale, Mohinder
Pandove, Inderjit Bindra, Farokh Abdulla, Arun Jaitley, Rajiv Shukla,
Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi, Sunil Gavaskar, Ravi Shastri and Chirayu
Amin.

At a Special General Body meeting of the BCCI on December 16, 2007,
amendments were approved for the formation of the first GC. It was
resolved that “the Committee shall be appointed by the General Body of
the Board and the term of the members of the committee shall be for a
period of five years.''

It was also decided that the committee shall comprise of a chairman,
four members appointed by the Board and three ex-cricketers of repute
and the office-bearers of the Board during their tenure would be ex-
officio members of the committee.

It was also decided that “all decisions relating to the league would
be taken by the GC committee by majority and in the case of equality
of votes, the chairman shall have the casting vote.''

It's clear that only the BCCI General Body can bring about changes in
the composition of the IPL GC and the GC by itself can only recommend
to the Working Committee for removal of a member of the GC. Once the
Working Committee takes a decision on any matter, it becomes a
formality of being adopted by the AGM.

Come clean

Modi would be asked to make a clean breast of all matters related to
the IPL since its inception in 2008, and more so with the events
surrounding the Kochi franchise (Rendevouz Sports World). “The mood
appears to have swung against him (Lalit),'' said a senior BCCI
official and member of the GC.

When asked if Modi would be asked to resign as chairman of the IPL and
who would succeed him, the GC member said: “It's possible, and perhaps
the BCCI president may take full charge. That's the only way to go.''
— Special Correspondent

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Supreme Court upholds life term for Manu Sharma
J. Venkatesan

‘Prosecution has established its case beyond doubt'

Manu Sharma

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Monday confirmed the Delhi High court
judgment awarding life imprisonment to Manu Sharma, son of senior
Congress leader and former Union Minister Vinod Sharma, in the Jessica
Lal murder case.

A Bench of Justices P. Sathasivam and Swatanter Kumar, dismissing
three appeals, said: “The prosecution has established its case beyond
doubt against the appellants [Sharma and two others] and we are in
agreement with the conclusion arrived at by the High Court.”

The Bench said the High Court had rightly convicted the other accused
also, Amardeep Singh Gill and Vikas Yadav, and awarded four-year
rigorous imprisonment.

According to the prosecution, Jessica Lal was shot dead by Manu Sharma
on the night of April 29-30, 1999 at Qutub Colonnade, also called
Tamarind Cafe restaurant, owned by Bina Ramani, where a Thursday party
was held. While the trial court in February 2006 acquitted the
accused, the High Court in December 2006 convicted the accused.

Jessica Lal

Writing the judgment, Justice Sathasivam said: “The evidence regarding
the actual incident, the testimonies of witnesses, the evidence
connecting the vehicles and cartridges to the accused — Manu Sharma,
as well as his conduct after the incident prove his guilt beyond
reasonable doubt. The High Court has analysed all the evidence and
arrived at the correct conclusion.”

The Bench relied on the testimonies of eyewitnesses Deepak Bhojwani, a
businessman; model-turned-actor Shyan Munshi, fashion designer Malini
Ramani, her mother Bina Ramani, George Mailhot (husband of Bina) and
fashion designer Rohit Bal, who were at the party when Jessica was
shot at.

“The presence of the accused [Manu Sharma] at the scene of crime is
proved through the ocular testimonies of prosecution witnesses which
were corroborated by the three calls made to the police control room
after the incident.”

The only inference

The evidence of witnesses, if read in whole in conjunction and in
harmony with what was stated by one another, would show the chain of
circumstances of evidence leading to only one inference — guilt of the
accused, the Bench said. It was proved beyond reasonable doubt that
Manu Sharma absconded after the incident — a relevant conduct under
the Evidence Act.

On the contention that he was innocent and that the High Court ought
not to have reversed the acquittal, the Bench said the appellate court
had all the powers to re-evaluate the evidence let in before the trial
court as well as the conclusions reached.

“In this case, the High Court, by adhering to all the ingredients and
by giving cogent and adequate reasons, reversed the order of
acquittal.”

Ram Jethmalani, senior counsel for Manu Sharma, had argued that the
appellant had been specifically targeted and maligned before and
during the proceedings by the media, which proclaimed him guilty even
after the acquittal by the trial court.

Rejecting this argument, the Bench said: “Certain articles and news
items appearing in the newspapers immediately after the date of
occurrence did cause certain confusion in the mind of the public as to
the description and number of the actual assailants/suspects. It is
unfortunate that trial by the media did, though to a very limited
extent, affect the accused, but [was] not tantamount to a prejudice
which should weigh with the court in taking any different view.”

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SIT summons Togadia
Manas Dasgupta

GANDHINAGAR: The Supreme Court-appointed Special Investigation Team
(SIT), probing nine relatively serious incidents of massacre during
the post-Godhra communal riots in Gujarat and the Godhra train
carnage, has reportedly summoned Vishwa Hindu Parishad international
general secretary Pravin Togadia for questioning.

Dr. Togadia is believed to have been asked to appear before the SIT at
its office here on any day during the coming week. A message to this
effect from the SIT office was faxed to the VHP Delhi office, it is
reliably learnt here.

Dr. Togadia is currently in Jammu and is not expected to return here
in the next three days. Informed sources said if he chose to respond
to the summons, he might appear before the probe team towards the week-
end.

Even during the carnage, Dr. Togadia, a medical practioner, was
holding the same office. The VHP had given a bandh call a day after
the train carnage that led to widespread violence. After Chief
Minister Narendra Modi, who appeared before the SIT last month, Dr.
Togadia is considered to be the next key witnesses for the SIT. — PTI

Online edition of India's National Newspaper
Monday, Apr 19, 2010
ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version

http://www.hindu.com/2010/04/19/stories/2010041961301400.htm

A case of ‘stinking corruption,' says BJP
Sujay Mehdudia

Tharoor abused authority for undue enrichment of his friend: BJP

‘Sunanda giving up sweat equity does not change things'

— Photo: Shiv Kumar Pushpakar

Enough evidence:BJP spokesperson Ravi Shankar Prasad shows
“documentary evidence” at a press conference in New Delhi to claim
that the “sweat equity” offered to Sunanda Pushkar was directly linked
to Shashi Tharoor.

NEW DELHI: The BJP on Sunday termed the allocation of “sweat equity”
to Minister of State for External Affairs Shashi Tharoor's friend
Sunanda Pushkar a case of “stinking corruption.”

At a press conference here, senior BJP leader Ravi Shankar Prasad
exhibited “documentary evidence” to claim that the “sweat equity”
offered to Ms. Pushkar was directly linked to Mr. Tharoor.

“A front for Tharoor”

On reports of Ms. Pushkar giving up her sweat equity voluntarily, Mr.
Prasad said her offer did not change things.

“Stain of corruption is not wiped off by returning the money. It is
now confirmed that she is a front for Mr. Tharoor,” he alleged.

Quoting from documents, which he claimed were obtained from the
Company Law Board, Mr. Prasad said that under Section 79 (a) of the
Company Act, sweat equity was allocated only to employees or the
director of a company.

Mr. Prasad said:

“Another rule states that a company can make such an offer only after
having been in operation for more than one year and lastly, if it is a
listed company then it has to seek approval from the market regulator
SEBI and if unlisted then it is guided by the rules of the Union
government on the issue.

“The company, Rendezvous Sports World, came into being on March 3,
2010 and earlier was known as Rendezvous Cricket Management, which
started operations on August 28, 2009. Till February 25, 2010, she was
not even a director of the company. Neither there was a resolution by
the company's Board for allotment of sweat equity to her.

“No approval”

“There is no Government of India approval for such an exercise and it
is clear that Ms. Pushkar was acting as the parking lot and Mr.
Tharoor was the real beneficiary.

“The surrounding suspicious circumstances outline that he [Mr.
Tharoor] abused his authority for undue enrichment of his friend [Ms.
Pushkar].

“This is a clear case of corruption — directly and under the authority
of the Union Minister. It is a blatant violation of law; it is a fraud
on the company laws, it is a fraud on the rules, and the most
important point is that it is being done under the patronage of a
Union Minister.

“Blatant case of corruption”

“I wish to remind the Prime Minister that when he was the Finance
Minister in the P.V. Narasimha Rao regime, something similar took
place and fingers were pointed at the then Commerce Minister P.
Chidambaram for allotment of shares of certain company against his
wife's name even after payment of money. Mr. Chidambaram had to resign
his position and set an example. It is time for the Prime Minister to
seek the same of Mr. Tharoor in this blatant case of corruption.”

Online edition of India's National Newspaper
Monday, Apr 19, 2010
ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version

http://www.hindu.com/2010/04/19/stories/2010041961341400.htm

IPL misusing Indian passion for cricket, says Yechury
Staff Reporter

It has nothing to do with the game; actually being used as a backdrop
for shady ventures

Seeks probe into source of IPL funds and where they were going

Actual role of media as the Fourth Estate relegated to the backseat

ALAPPUZHA: Communist Party of India (Marxist) Polit Bureau member
Sitaram Yechury on Sunday said the Indian Premier League (IPL) had
nothing to do with cricket and that it was misusing the Indian passion
for cricket.

Inaugurating a symposium on ‘EMS and the Media,' held in connection
with the birth centenary of the former Chief Minister, E.M.S.
Namboodiripad, here on Sunday, Mr. Yechury said the IPL was actually
being used as a backdrop for shady ventures that ran into thousands of
crores of rupees. The source of IPL funds and where they were going
had to be probed thoroughly, he said.

Crucial role

With the media too playing a crucial role in the mounting of the IPL
spectacle, it was essential to find the source of such money,
particularly at a time when the common man was finding it tough to
find food and to tackle rising prices.

On Union Minister of State for External Affairs Shashi Tharoor's
alleged involvement in the controversy, Mr. Yechury said Mr. Tharoor,
if he genuinely had Kerala's interests at heart, should have fought
for the Kochi Metro Rail project or for rectifying the below poverty
line (BPL)-above poverty line (APL) categorisation imbroglio in the
State.

Earlier, terming EMS a master communicator who was never afraid of
controversies and even generated them to mobilise people on various
issues, Mr. Yechury said there was no person like him in contemporary
Indian politics.

Power of media

EMS believed in the power of the media to mould people's consciousness
and to elevate people's thoughts. He was the staunchest defender of
freedom of expression and the media. However, the post-EMS era was
witnessing a distortion of responsibility of the media to make the
judiciary, executive and legislature accountable and to raise issues
that they ignored. This was mainly happening through globalisation-
fuelled trends for maximisation of profits, he said.

Lucrative institution

With the media turning into a lucrative institution and trends like
commercialisation and paid news setting in, the actual role of being
the Fourth Estate was relegated to the backseat. Cautioning against
agenda-driven media attempts to manufacture people's consent, Mr.
Yechury said this was dangerous because people were deprived of their
right to know the truth. Parliamentary democracy would be undermined
and democracy itself would be restricted to the rich.

Calling for the media too to be part of the solution, which had to be
evolved through discussions with the people and the political process,
he said the right form of regulation of media too had to be evolved
through debate.

Online edition of India's National Newspaper
Monday, Apr 19, 2010
ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version

http://www.hindu.com/2010/04/19/stories/2010041961281400.htm

Bill will benefit only rich, corrupt women: Mulayam
Says poll process will then become costlier
Mulayam Singh

LUCKNOW: Samajwadi Party (SP) chief Mulayam Singh, who had drawn flak
for his ‘sexist' remarks on the Women's Reservation Bill, on Sunday
claimed that the legislation would only benefit rich women, who would
corrupt the election process.

“If the bill is passed, it would only benefit women of the rich and
the influential class and they would corrupt the election process
which would also become costlier,” he said, while addressing a meeting
at the Samajwadi Party headquarters here.

“Not in its present form”

He said the bill was not acceptable in its present form.

Mr. Singh's remark last month that women elected through quota would
be whistled at had drawn flak from political parties and rights
bodies.

The Communist Party of India (Marxist) had slammed the SP leader for
resorting to a “low level” of debate. Friend-turned-foe Amar Singh had
termed it “sexist, Talibani and a cheap remark.”

The SP chief, however, remained unapologetic and asserted that his
statement was deliberate and made after evaluating all aspects, so as
to initiate a debate on the issue.

Accusing the Centre and the Uttar Pradesh government of being hand-in-
glove on the price rise issue, Mr. Singh said there was a possibility
of mid-term-election in the State.

“People, who are taking a beating due to the price rise caused by the
collusion of the two governments, should remain prepared for a unified
protest on the issue on April 27,” Mr. Singh said.

“There is a possibility of mid-term elections in the State, therefore
party leaders and workers should go to the people,” he said.

He alleged that the Centre and the State had made education and health
facilities expensive and had hit the poor and the middle classes
badly.

“Take the support of all sections including industrial and business
establishments, teachers, students, youths, traders, farmers, lawyers
and workers in this strike, but there should be no violence,” the SP
supremo told his party leaders and workers.

Mr. Singh said that as women were the most affected, they should
actively participate in the strike. He claimed that only his party was
fighting for the cause of backwards, the minorities and Dalit women.

State president Akhilesh Yadav said the proposed strike was against
both the Central and State governments. — PTI

Online edition of India's National Newspaper
Monday, Apr 19, 2010
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http://www.hindu.com/2010/04/19/stories/2010041961401500.htm

Ambushed personnel were trained in counter-insurgency, says CRPF
K. Srinivas Reddy

“The CRPF company had been most negligent in choosing the camp site,
which was being carefully observed by Maoists”

CRPF not trained on a par with Andhra Pradesh's Greyhounds

‘Slain company had been most negligent in choosing the camp site'

HYDERABAD: The Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) discounted the
criticism that drafting personnel untrained in jungle warfare led to
the massacre of 76 of its men at Chintalnar in Bastar on April 6. It
pointed out that its forces were trained in the basics of counter-
insurgency operations, though not on par with the Greyhounds raised by
Andhra Pradesh.

Rebuts criticism

Rebutting all-round criticism on untrained personnel becoming sitting
ducks, the paramilitary force informed the Centre that Assistant
Commandant B.L. Meena, who led the decimated Alpha Company, had
earlier participated in two major rescue operations when the CRPF
personnel were ambushed by Maoists in the same area.

Sources said that it was the Golf Company of the 62nd battalion,
commanded by Assistant Commandant Meena that countered a People's
Liberation Guerrilla Army (PLGA) ambush at Paidiguda on a 40-member
CRPF team on April 8, 2009. While the rebels managed to kill a deputy
commandant and 11 jawans, Assistant Commandant Meena successfully
fought Maoists to rescue others.

On September 9, 2009, he rushed to help the CoBRA (Commando Battalion
for Resolute Action) commandos who were ambushed and surrounded by the
PLGA forces at Chintagupha. Reinforcements led by him fought bravely
and saved the CoBRA forces. In this incident, six commandos were
killed by Maoists.

LUP mistake

However, in the April 6 massacre, something had certainly gone wrong.
The company led by Meena appeared to have made the dangerous mistake
of not choosing its camp site, called LUP or Lying Up Position,
carefully. A LUP is the tactical place where an operating unit of the
security forces stops for a brief period and the location is chosen in
a way that the forces are ready for an ambush or a raid after alerts
from sentries posted on high features.

The CRPF company, sources said, had been most negligent in choosing
the camp site, which was being carefully observed by Maoist rebels who
fired volleys of shots from

Light Machine Guns and assault rifles. The company, security analysts
say, could have been negligent as they were sent on an Area Domination
(AD) operation and not an operation based on intelligence input.

Interestingly, more than 35 companies of the CRPF and the local police
had participated in the four-day AD operation in Dantewada, Bijapur,
Narayanpur and Jagdalpur districts. The forces were briefed to move on
the peripheries of the naxal strongholds.

Purpose of operation

The purpose of the AD operation was to sanitise the area ahead of the
launch of the Tactical Counter-Offensive Campaign by Maoists, which
the Chhattisgarh police believed would commence from April 15.

With this view, the CRPF assisted operations were primarily meant to
secure the proximate areas around the base camps, since most attacks
on security forces took place nearby.

Online edition of India's National Newspaper
Monday, Apr 19, 2010
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http://www.hindu.com/2010/04/19/stories/2010041961481600.htm

Sabrina hails verdict, thanks media
Staff Reporter

NEW DELHI: Sabrina Lal, sister of Jessica Lal, has hailed the Supreme
Court's judgment upholding the life imprisonment awarded to Manu
Sharma by the Delhi High Court in December 2006.

She said she was satisfied with the verdict. She thanked the media and
well-wishers for supporting her all along while she sought justice for
her sister, who was shot dead at Tamarind Court restaurant in South
Delhi in April 1999.

As for Shyan Munshi who turned hostile, she said perjury was common in
cases involving high-profile persons.

Online edition of India's National Newspaper
Tuesday, Apr 20, 2010
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http://www.hindu.com/2010/04/20/stories/2010042056920100.htm

http://bakulaji.typepad.com/blog/political-bog-sid-harth.html

...and I am Sid Harth
cogitoergosum
2010-04-20 10:51:59 UTC
Permalink
Political Bog: Sid Harth
http://bakulaji.typepad.com/blog/political-bog-sid-harth.html
Hindu Moral Mess-Message-Age: Sid Harth
http://bakulaji.typepad.com/blog/hindu-moral-messmessageage-sid-harth.html
Indian Morality Meltdown: Sid Harth
http://groups.google.com/group/soc.culture.indian.marathi/browse_thread/thread/37334fb34fbe6d7c/d8b818f4833e131e?q=Indian+Morality+Meltdown%3A+Sid+Harth&lnk=ol&
Sex and CD Scandal: Sid Harth
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Child Labor in India: Sid Harth
http://groups.google.com/group/soc.culture.indian.marathi/browse_thread/thread/2549df32f41afcce/611166c361f27724?lnk=gst&q=child+labor+in+india#611166c361f27724
Of God, Godmen and Good men: Sid Harth
http://groups.google.com/group/soc.culture.indian.marathi/browse_thread/thread/beee6405766fa364/9da06195753e584a?lnk=gst&q=of+god%2C+godmen+and+good+men#9da06195753e584a
Human Trafficking in India: Sid Harth
http://groups.google.com/group/soc.culture.indian.marathi/browse_thread/thread/55d1782ed4144490/23de5a277a4b6730?lnk=gst&q=human+trafficking+in+india#23de5a277a4b6730
Kill Bill: Sid Harth
http://groups.google.com/group/soc.culture.indian.marathi/browse_thread/thread/f7b4e319f7a4fa28/ad4a6038f51d0cba?lnk=gst&q=kill+bill#ad4a6038f51d0cba

Indian Premier League chairman Lalit Modi denies allegations of money
laundering
Lalit Modi, the chairman and driving force of the Indian Premier
League, is facing pressure to stand down after the Indian government
confirmed that it is investigating the financial affairs of the
competition he helped create.

By Paul Kelso
Published: 8:45AM BST 20 Apr 2010

Denial: Indian Premier League chairman Lalit Modi has denied
allegations in the Indian press that he is being investigated for
money laundering Photo: AP
Finance minister Pranab Mukherjee told Parliament in New Delhi
yesterday that “all aspects” of the competition will be investigated
including how more than $3bn raised from franchise sales and
television rights have been invested.

"Some members raised the issue of the IPL and wanted to have the probe
in all its aspects. In fact, I want to assure them that all aspects of
the IPL, including the source of funding, how they have been invested,
will be looked into," he said. “No guilty or wrong doers will be
spared."

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The developments come four days after the IPL’s offices were raided by
investigators from the Indian tax authorities, and two days after a
bomb exploded outside an IPL match in Bangalore on Saturday.

In just three years the IPL has become India’s highest-profile
sporting competition, raising more than $2bn in franchise sales and
television rights deals. Its rise has attracted criticism and tension
within the Indian cricketing and political establishment, where Modi
has made some enemies, and the latest developments threaten to
overshadow the already troubled build-up to its showpiece final later
this week.

Modi has been facing concern over his management of the IPL since last
week when he revealed on his Twitter account that the girlfriend of
Shashi Tharoor, a junior government minister, had invested in
consortium bidding for a new IPL franchise. The revelation caused a
political storm in India and Tharoor was forced to resign.

Confirmation of the government probe, which coincided with detailed
allegations in India’s Economic Times about Modi’s handling of the
competition’s finances, will increase the pressure.

Reports in India last night suggested that the BCCI is ready to force
Modi to step aside, possible as soon as this weekend following the
conclusion of this year’s competition.

The Economic Times claimed that Modi’s affairs have been the subject
of a six month investigation by the Indian Income Tax Department (I-T)
which has tapped Modi’s email account and a UK cellphone in his name,
and have also examined regulatory filings from around the world
including Mauritius and Ireland.

The I-T report is also said to includes allegations that Modi is a
silent partner in three IPL teams, the Kolkata Knight Riders,
Rajhastan Royals and Kings XI Punjab. The Kolkata Knight Riders and
Kings XI Punjab denied to the newspaper that this was the case.

It is also claimed that Modi was involved in betting on IPL matches
through an intermediary, and that companies with whom he has previous
business dealings have been awarded IPL contracts.

In a statement released on Monday Modi denied the allegations and
implied that they were politically motivated.

“Mr. Lalit Kumar Modi, Chairman & Commissioner, Indian Premier League
(IPL) has rubbished the front page article that appeared today in the
Economic Times under the title ‘I-T Blows The Lid off IPL Sleaze -
Lalit Modi charged with Betting & Laundering,’” the statement said.

“Describing the article as absolutely baseless, ill founded and
motivated, Lalit Modi said that he will initiate appropriate legal
action against such defamatory and malicious campaign against him by a
motivated section of media.”

Later he added via Twitter: “Lots in media - speculations. welcome all
investigation - ready to extend all cooperation.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/twenty20/ipl/7607644/Indian-Premier-League-chairman-Lalit-Modi-denies-allegations-of-money-laundering.html

Bangalore and Kevin Pietersen were 'sitting ducks' in fresh IPL
security scare

The Indian Premier League was hit by a fresh security alert on Monday
when the Bangalore team bus carrying Kevin Pietersen travelled to the
airport without an armed guard despite passing the scene of Saturday’s
bomb blasts.

By Nick Hoult
Published: 8:36PM BST 19 Apr 2010

Nosing around: Indian security personnel walk a sniffer dog as they
scan an area at Chinnaswamy Cricket Stadium where two bombs exploded
Photo: AP
The Bangalore team were travelling to Mumbai for this week’s semi-
finals after the IPL switched the matches from their home city
following the two explosions at the Chinnaswamy Stadium before their
match against Mumbai on Saturday.

Despite the assurances that security for the IPL teams had been
stepped up the Bangalore players yesterday travelled through thick
traffic without their customary armed escort and were, in the words of
one source, “sitting ducks”.

Sport on television The Professional Cricketers’ Association is now
seeking further guarantees from the IPL organisers and its security
firm, Nicholls Steyn and Associates, that full armed escorts will be
provided in Mumbai.

The failure to provide armed police officers is being blamed on the
security services in Bangalore rather than the IPL, but highlights the
difficulty of co-ordinating watertight security operations across
different Indian cities.

It was that aspect of the IPL’s security plan which concerned player
associations before the tournament began and almost led to a boycott
by overseas players.

There is more confidence in security arrangements in Mumbai, where the
final four matches — two semi-finals, a third-placed play-off and
final – will be played this week.

“We are seeking assurances about what measures will be put in place in
Mumbai to protect the players better than has been demonstrated in
Bangalore,” Ian Smith, the PCA legal director, told The Daily
Telegraph.

The IPL is being viewed by the player associations as a dry run before
next year’s World Cup, which is due to be held in India, Bangladesh
and Sri Lanka.

“The main impact of this is going to be not just on the future of
IPL4, but primarily on the cricket World Cup next year,” Smith said.
“The IPL is primarily an Indian event, whereas at the World Cup you’ve
got a far more dangerous situation, more spread out with whole teams
of foreigners rather than just a couple of blokes.”

Organisers of the Commonwealth Games, which will be held in New Delhi
this October, have reiterated their promises of tight security for an
event that is expected to attract 100,000 foreign visitors to the
city.

“The security arrangements for the Games are constantly being
monitored by the organising committee in tandem with the Ministry of
Home Affairs and Delhi police,” organising committee chairman Suresh
Kalmadi said. “We are sure we will have a safe and secure Games and
that the athletes will be able to perform, assured that they would be
given the best protection.”

Commonwealth Games England refuses to disclose its security plans.

A spokeswoman said it received ongoing security advice from the
Metropolitan Police and the Foreign Office. As part of that, any plans
for special police to accompany the team remain top secret.

English swimmer David Davis has previously expressed concern about his
family, and this week Australian swimmers followed suit. Olympic
champion Kieren Perkins, who is due at the Commonwealth Games as part
of a trade delegation, will make up his mind whether to attend “very
close to the event. I’ve got family, I’ve got kids and I’m not going
to be risking my life for a sporting event,” he said.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/kevinpietersen/7608229/Bangalore-and-Kevin-Pietersen-were-sitting-ducks-in-fresh-IPL-security-scare.html

IPL 2010: PCA investigates claims players were put under pressure to
play

The Professional Cricketers' Association is investigating claims that
players were put under pressure to go ahead with Saturday's Indian
Premier League match between Royal Challengers and Mumbai Indians
despite a bomb blast outside the stadium in Bangalore.

By Paul Bolton
Published: 7:27PM BST 18 Apr 2010

Investigation: police and forensic officials check for evidence after
a crude bomb exploded outside an Indian Premier League match at the
Chinnaswamy Cricket Stadium Photo: EPA
Competition organisers have switched the IPL semi-finals which were
due to be played in Bangalore on Wednesday and Thursday to Mumbai in
response to the blast which injured at least 14 people. A second bomb
exploded close to the Chinnaswamy Stadium and two further unexploded
devices were found on Sunday.

But the PCA still wants more details about the circumstances that led
to Saturday's match being played after one of the non-Indian players
involved – not England batsman Kevin Pietersen who played for the
Mumbai Indians – claimed the decision was left to the players.

IPL bomb blast sparks security fears for World Cup "The immediate
worry for us, and I have heard this direct from one of the players, is
that after the initial explosion and a sweep of the stadium, the
decision that the game should go ahead was taken by the players," said
Ian Smith, the PCA's legal adviser.

"From what I have been told, the Indian guys said very quickly that
they felt unfazed. But the foreign guys then felt under pressure to
agree with their colleagues. The idea that you can determine whether
conditions are safe by a referendum of the players is outrageous.

"They were out in the middle warming up when the bomb went off. We
don't know who provided them with the information on which they made
their decision."

Smith has been unable to speak to any of the six English players –
Paul Collingwood, Eoin Morgan, Owais Shah, Michael Lumb, Pietersen and
Ravi Bopara – who are involved in the IPL.

But Smith has had email communication with them and advised them to
await a full report from IPL security experts Nicholls Steyn
Associates and Reg Dickason, security adviser to the Federation of
International Cricketers' Associations.

IPL commissioner Lalit Modi said the decision to relocate the semi-
finals had been taken reluctantly. "The incidents were assessed by
local police and the IPL's security agency as being of a minor nature
but they have forced our hand," he said. "We do not want to take any
chances and we want to ensure total safety for the players and the
spectators."

Saturday's bomb blast coincided with the start of an International
Cricket Council board meeting in Dubai and is bound to raise renewed
concerns about security for next year's World Cup, which will be co-
hosted by India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.

Meanwhile, a meeting to resolve the controversy over a new IPL team is
being put off until the event finishes on April 25.

The controversy stems from an auction last month when a group made a
successful bid of more than $330 million for a Kochi franchise. Modi
then questioned why 25 per cent of the team was given to a group that
included a friend of India's junior foreign minister.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/twenty20/ipl/7604182/Indian-Premier-League-2010-PCA-investigates-claims-players-put-under-pressure-to-play.html

Kevin Pietersen 'anxious' over IPL bombings

The Professional Cricketers' Association have expressed concerns over
security for next year's World Cup in the wake of an explosion at
Saturday's Indian Premier League match between Royal Challengers
Bangalore and Mumbai Indians.

By Telegraph staff and agencies
Published: 10:25AM BST 19 Apr 2010

Nosing around: Indian security personnel walk a sniffer dog as they
scan an area at Chinnaswamy Cricket Stadium where two bombs exploded
Photo: AP
Bangalore's England batsman Kevin Pietersen played in the match -
which went ahead after an hour-long security check at the venue,
though the decision was left in the hands of the players themselves.

Pietersen was left anxious and upset over the handling of the
incident, although the decision to switch the semi-finals and final
from Bangalore to Mumbai is likely to ease players' concerns as the
event reaches its conclusion.

IPL bomb blast sparks security fears for World Cup But PCA legal
director Ian Smith has wider concerns about security in the region,
affecting not just future editions of the Twenty20 league but also the
ICC's global showpiece, due to be held in India, Sri Lanka and
Bangladesh from February 19 to March 2 next year.

He fears a worst-case scenario in which the tournament may have to be
moved away from the region - echoing the 2009 Champions Trophy, which
was taken away from Pakistan.

The latter country has already seen its World Cup games relocated due
to ongoing security concerns - particularly after Sri Lanka's team bus
and that carrying match officials were attacked by gunmen en route to
a Test in Lahore - and Smith fears an even bigger decision may yet
have to be taken.

South African security firm Nicholls Steyn and Associates were
employed by IPL organisers to formulate a security plan for the
tournament, and are scheduled to do likewise for the World Cup.

Smith has no concerns over their efforts, but focused instead on the
implementation of the plan by local police and armed forces.

"Players are not supposed to be stuck in traffic, stationary in the
bus, but they are," he continued.

"We ought to have a visible uniformed presence on every bridge that
crosses the road on the way, and every player will tell you they've
never seen a bloke on a bridge.

"We've only got a few games left in IPL, and they're in one venue
(Mumbai) after today. That's a controllable situation so I'm not
overly worried about that.

"Mumbai police have been excellent, the only implementation better was
in Nagpur, which is obviously a much smaller venue.

"The ICC use the same security advisors as IPL, so they will be
expecting a full report post-IPL.

"The main impact of this is going to be not just on the future of
IPL4, but primarily on the cricket World Cup next year.

"The IPL is primarily an Indian event, whereas at the World Cup you've
got a far more dangerous situation, more spread out with whole teams
of foreigners rather than just a couple of blokes."

This October's Commonwealth Games in Delhi will provide a further
barometer of the situation, and Smith said: "That's slightly easier to
control because it's in one city. They've got a good security plan,
we're aware of that, so the test is can they implement it?

"There are a lot of very bad people out there, doing things for
different reasons - but when a bomb explodes, who cares why?

"But if they can keep the Commonwealth Games safe, that might start to
make you believe that they can keep the other venues safe in the
Cricket World Cup."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/twenty20/ipl/7606305/Kevin-Pietersen-anxious-over-IPL-bombings.html

English counties set to follow Hampshire's link-up with IPL's
Rajasthan Royals

Formal links between counties and Indian Premier League sides are set
to grow as fears increase over the threat to grants from the England
and Wales Cricket Board.

By Nick Hoult
Published: 9:05PM GMT 08 Feb 2010

Batting partners: The Rajasthan Royals of the Indian Premier
League ... now officially linked with Hampshire's Twenty20 side Photo:
REUTERS Sources suggest that up to six counties are in talks to
replicate Hampshire's deal with the Rajasthan Royals, which was
revealed by Telegraph Sport and formally announced at Lord's on
Monday. Hampshire have joined Cape Cobras, Trinidad and Tobago and a
team from Australia, likely to be Victoria, as part of a global
franchise entitled Royals 2020 and led by former IPL winners, the
Rajasthan Royals.

"They [counties] have to look at this," said Sean Morris, chief
executive of the Rajasthan Royals. "It is tough commercially for a
county club. Things are very tight. They have all got a similar
problem. If they can only make money in the summer what do they do in
the winter? They have costs, 12-month contracts, it is hard. If they
don't qualify for the Champions League what can they do? So it is no
secret that there are a variety of leading county chief executives in
Mumbai every week at the moment."

Sport on television With the threat of a reduction in broadcasting
income, due to the ongoing Government consultation over the
preservation of Ashes series for terrestrial television, counties fear
their ECB handout, worth £1.5 million annually, cannot be guaranteed
in the future.

"The longer game is to create a genuinely valuable worldwide franchise
which will leave our county less dependent on the central distribution
from the broadcasting rights and other deals that at the moment are
the lifeblood of the game," said Hampshire chairman Rod Bransgrove.
"You can see the benefit immediately."

All teams under the Rajasthan umbrella will incorporate 'Royals' into
the name of their Twenty20 sides. Plans for tournaments around the
world between the Royals 2020 teams were also revealed yesterday, with
Lord's and the Rose Bowl set to be the first venues in July. All five
clubs will pool winnings, but the main source of income will be
sponsorship deals in India.

Bransgrove said: "Royals sell the primary position on their shirts for
something in excess of $4 million. At Hampshire we aspire to
£200,000 ... a massive difference."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/twenty20/ipl/7191423/English-counties-set-to-follow-Hampshires-link-up-with-IPLs-Rajasthan-Royals.html

Graeme Swann turns his thoughts to IPL deal
The Indian Stock Exchange sits just a few blocks from the hotel which
will host Tuesday's third Indian Premier League auction, where 66
cricketers will be traded by some of the world's richest men.

By Nick Hoult in Mumbai
Published: 5:48PM GMT 18 Jan 2010

Spin king: England's Graeme Swann has had a terrific 12 months in
international cricket, and is now poised to be given his chance in the
Indian Premier League Photo: GETTY IMAGES
One player hoping his base price does not panic potential buyers will
be Graeme Swann, the England spinner who Telegraph Sport has learnt
will have the highest reserve value on Tuesday.

Swann has been priced at a minimum of $250,000 (£153,000) by the IPL
and will be drawn in the first group of cricketers to be sold by
British auctioneer Richard Madley.


Related Articles
More on the Indian Premier League
Ramprakash joins IPL auction
Morgan emerges as glittering IPL prospect
Swann in line for IPL payday
IPL reveals auction shortlist
Sport on television Last year Swann's England colleagues, Andrew
Flintoff and Kevin Pietersen, were the biggest winners at the IPL
auction in Goa, walking away with annual contracts worth $1.5 million
(£920,000). Both enjoyed little success, Bangalore improved markedly
and reached the final after captain Pietersen's return home while
Flintoff's injury has ruled him out this season. Lessons have been
learnt.

Swann may find the fact he is not available until March 26, three
weeks after the start of the IPL, due to England's tour to Bangladesh,
will harm his chances of a few lucrative weeks in India.

The same cannot be said for Eoin Morgan, who has valued himself at
$200,000 (£122,000), and with around three of the eight teams looking
for a specialist batsman, he could be the subject of a bidding battle.
Mark Ramprakash is also thought to be rated in the $200,000 region, a
high price for a 40 year-old. Monty Panesar and the five other English
players will have a maximum reserve fee of $100,000.

"Batting all-rounders are the most prized," said one IPL source.
"Probably around three teams are looking for guys who can score runs
so the specialist Twenty20 batsmen such as Morgan and even someone
like Rob Key might have a sniff."

Kieron Pollard, of Trinidad, is attracting interest along with New
Zealand fast bowler Shane Bond and Australian Phillip Hughes, with
each franchise having $750,000 (£460,000) to spend and 12 vacancies to
fill.

Ricky Ponting (who is not available this year), Nathan Bracken and
India fast bowler Mohammad Kaif were all bought out of their contracts
on Monday as franchises looked to free slots for Tuesday's auction.

Sources have indicated that teams will not be bidding for Pakistani
players fearing they may be denied visas by the Indian government.

One England player has already landed an IPL contract, with Hampshire
opener Michael Lumb signing a $50,000 (£31,000) move to the Rajasthan
Royals. He has not played international cricket and can therefore be
bought outside the auction room.

Splash the cash...

Graeme Swann (reserve price $250,000)

Mark Ramprakash ($200,0000)

Eoin Morgan ($200,000)

Tim Bresnan ($100,000)

Jonathan Trott ($100,000)

Anthony McGrath ($50,000)

Monty Panesar ($50,000)

Rob Key ($50,000)

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/twenty20/ipl/7020058/Graeme-Swann-turns-his-thoughts-to-IPL-deal.html

http://bakulaji.typepad.com/blog/political-bog-sid-harth-1.html

...and I am Sid Harth
cogitoergosum
2010-04-20 13:25:50 UTC
Permalink
Taj Mahal: Sid Harth

Taj Mahal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For other uses, see Taj Mahal (disambiguation).

The mausoleum of the Taj MahalThe Taj Mahal (English pronunciation: /
ˈtɑːʒ məˈhɑːl/; Hindi: ताज महल [taːdʑ mɛɦɛl];[dubious – discuss]
Persian/Urdu: تاج محل) is a mausoleum located in Agra, India, built by
Mughal emperor Shah Jahan in memory of his favorite wife, Mumtaz
Mahal.

The Taj Mahal (also "the Taj") is considered the finest example of
Mughal architecture, a style that combines elements from Persian,
Indian, and Islamic architectural styles.[1][2] In 1983, the Taj Mahal
became a UNESCO World Heritage Site and was cited as "the jewel of
Muslim art in India and one of the universally admired masterpieces of
the world's heritage."

While the white domed marble mausoleum is its most familiar component,
the Taj Mahal is actually an integrated complex of structures.
Building began around 1632 and was completed around 1653, and employed
thousands of artisans and craftsmen.[3] The construction of the Taj
Mahal was entrusted to a board of architects under imperial
supervision including Abd ul-Karim Ma'mur Khan, Makramat Khan, and
Ustad Ahmad Lahauri.[4][5] Lahauri is generally considered to be the
principal designer.[6]

Origin and inspiration

Main article: Origins and architecture of the Taj Mahal
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origins_and_architecture_of_the_Taj_Mahal

Shah Jahan, who commissioned the Taj Mahal -"Shah jahan on a globe"
from the Smithsonian Institution Artistic depiction of Mumtaz Mahal
In 1631, Shah Jahan, emperor during the Mughal empire's period of
greatest prosperity, was griefstricken when his third wife, Mumtaz
Mahal, died during the birth of their fourteenth child, Gauhara Begum.
[7] Construction of the Taj Mahal began in 1632, one year after her
death.[8] The court chronicles of Shah Jahan's grief illustrate the
love story traditionally held as an inspiration for Taj Mahal.[9][10]
The principal mausoleum was completed in 1648 and the surrounding
buildings and garden were finished five years later. Emperor Shah
Jahan himself described the Taj in these words:[11]

Should guilty seek asylum here,
Like one pardoned, he becomes free from sin.
Should a sinner make his way to this mansion,
All his past sins are to be washed away.
The sight of this mansion creates sorrowing sighs;
And the sun and the moon shed tears from their eyes.
In this world this edifice has been made;
To display thereby the creator's glory.


The Taj Mahal incorporates and expands on design traditions of Persian
architecture and earlier Mughal architecture. Specific inspiration
came from successful Timurid and Mughal buildings including; the Gur-e
Amir (the tomb of Timur, progenitor of the Mughal dynasty, in
Samarkand),[12] Humayun's Tomb, Itmad-Ud-Daulah's Tomb (sometimes
called the Baby Taj), and Shah Jahan's own Jama Masjid in Delhi. While
earlier Mughal buildings were primarily constructed of red sandstone,
Shah Jahan promoted the use of white marble inlaid with semi-precious
stones, and buildings under his patronage reached new levels of
refinement.[13]

Architecture

The tomb

The central focus of the complex is the tomb. This large, white marble
structure stands on a square plinth and consists of a symmetrical
building with an iwan (an arch-shaped doorway) topped by a large dome
and finial. Like most Mughal tombs, the basic elements are Persian in
origin.


The Taj Mahal seen from the banks of river YamunaThe base structure is
essentially a large, multi-chambered cube with chamfered corners,
forming an unequal octagon that is approximately 55 metres (180 ft) on
each of the four long sides. On each of these sides, a massive
pishtaq, or vaulted archway, frames the iwan with two similarly
shaped, arched balconies stacked on either side. This motif of stacked
pishtaqs is replicated on the chamfered corner areas, making the
design completely symmetrical on all sides of the building. Four
minarets frame the tomb, one at each corner of the plinth facing the
chamfered corners. The main chamber houses the false sarcophagi of
Mumtaz Mahal and Shah Jahan; the actual graves are at a lower level.

The marble dome that surmounts the tomb is the most spectacular
feature. Its height of around 35 metres (115 ft) is about the same as
the length of the base, and is accentuated as it sits on a cylindrical
"drum" which is roughly 7 metres (23 ft) high. Because of its shape,
the dome is often called an onion dome or amrud (guava dome). The top
is decorated with a lotus design, which also serves to accentuate its
height. The shape of the dome is emphasised by four smaller domed
chattris (kiosks) placed at its corners, which replicate the onion
shape of the main dome. Their columned bases open through the roof of
the tomb and provide light to the interior. Tall decorative spires
(guldastas) extend from edges of base walls, and provide visual
emphasis to the height of the dome. The lotus motif is repeated on
both the chattris and guldastas. The dome and chattris are topped by a
gilded finial, which mixes traditional Persian and Hindu decorative
elements.

The main finial was originally made of gold but was replaced by a copy
made of gilded bronze in the early 19th century. This feature provides
a clear example of integration of traditional Persian and Hindu
decorative elements. The finial is topped by a moon, a typical Islamic
motif whose horns point heavenward. Because of its placement on the
main spire, the horns of the moon and the finial point combine to
create a trident shape, reminiscent of traditional Hindu symbols of
Shiva.[3]

The minarets, which are each more than 40 metres (130 ft) tall,
display the designer's penchant for symmetry. They were designed as
working minarets — a traditional element of mosques, used by the
muezzin to call the Islamic faithful to prayer. Each minaret is
effectively divided into three equal parts by two working balconies
that ring the tower. At the top of the tower is a final balcony
surmounted by a chattri that mirrors the design of those on the tomb.
The chattris all share the same decorative elements of a lotus design
topped by a gilded finial. The minarets were constructed slightly
outside of the plinth so that, in the event of collapse, (a typical
occurrence with many tall constructions of the period) the material
from the towers would tend to fall away from the tomb.

Base, dome, and minaret

Finial

Top of finial
Main iwan and side pishtaqs

Simplified diagram of the Taj Mahal floor plan


Exterior decoration

Calligraphy on large pishtaqThe exterior decorations of the Taj Mahal
are among the finest to be found in Mughal architecture.[citation
needed] As the surface area changes the decorations are refined
proportionally. The decorative elements were created by applying
paint, stucco, stone inlays, or carvings. In line with the Islamic
prohibition against the use of anthropomorphic forms, the decorative
elements can be grouped into either calligraphy, abstract forms or
vegetative motifs.

Throughout the complex, passages from the Qur'an are used as
decorative elements. Recent scholarship suggests that the passages
were chosen by Amanat Khan.[14][15] The texts refer to themes of
judgment and include:

Surah 91 – The Sun http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ash-Shams
Surah 112 – The Purity of Faith http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Ikhlas
Surah 89 – Daybreak http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Fajr_(sura)
Surah 93 – Morning Light http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ad-Dhuha
Surah 95 – The Fig http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/At-Tin
Surah 94 – The Solace http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Inshirah
Surah 36 – Ya Sin http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ya_Sin
Surah 81 – The Folding Up http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/At-Takwir
Surah 82 – The Cleaving Asunder http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Infitar
Surah 84 – The Rending Asunder http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Inshiqaq
Surah 98 – The Evidence http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Bayyina
Surah 67 – Dominion http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Mulk
Surah 48 – Victory http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Fath
Surah 77 – Those Sent Forth http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Mursalat
Surah 39 – The Crowds http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Az-Zumar

The calligraphy on the Great Gate reads "O Soul, thou art at rest.
Return to the Lord at peace with Him, and He at peace with you."[15]

The calligraphy was created by the Persian calligrapher Abd ul-Haq,
who came to India from Shiraz, Iran, in 1609. Shah Jahan conferred the
title of "Amanat Khan" upon him as a reward for his "dazzling
virtuosity".[5] Near the lines from the Qur'an at the base of the
interior dome is the inscription, "Written by the insignificant being,
Amanat Khan Shirazi."[16] Much of the calligraphy is composed of
florid thuluth script, made of jasper or black marble,[5] inlaid in
white marble panels. Higher panels are written in slightly larger
script to reduce the skewing effect when viewed from below. The
calligraphy found on the marble cenotaphs in the tomb is particularly
detailed and delicate.

Abstract forms are used throughout, especially in the plinth,
minarets, gateway, mosque, jawab and, to a lesser extent, on the
surfaces of the tomb. The domes and vaults of the sandstone buildings
are worked with tracery of incised painting to create elaborate
geometric forms. Herringbone inlays define the space between many of
the adjoining elements. White inlays are used in sandstone buildings,
and dark or black inlays on the white marbles. Mortared areas of the
marble buildings have been stained or painted in a contrasting colour,
creating geometric patterns of considerable complexity. Floors and
walkways use contrasting tiles or blocks in tessellation patterns.

On the lower walls of the tomb there are white marble dados that have
been sculpted with realistic bas relief depictions of flowers and
vines. The marble has been polished to emphasise the exquisite
detailing of the carvings and the dado frames and archway spandrels
have been decorated with pietra dura inlays of highly stylised, almost
geometric vines, flowers and fruits. The inlay stones are of yellow
marble, jasper and jade, polished and leveled to the surface of the
walls.

Herringbone
Plant motifs
Spandrel detail
Incised painting

Reflective tiles normal exposure
Reflective tiles under exposed

Interior decoration

Jali screen surrounding the cenotaphs
Tombs of Shah Jahan and Mumtaz Mahal
Cenotaphs, interior of Taj MahalThe interior chamber of the Taj Mahal
steps far beyond traditional decorative elements. Here, the inlay work
is not pietra dura but lapidary of precious and semiprecious
gemstones. The inner chamber is an octagon with the design allowing
for entry from each face, although only the south garden-facing door
is used. The interior walls are about 25 metres (82 ft) high and
topped by a "false" interior dome decorated with a sun motif. Eight
pishtaq arches define the space at ground level and, as with the
exterior, each lower pishtaq is crowned by a second pishtaq about
midway up the wall. The four central upper arches form balconies or
viewing areas, and each balcony's exterior window has an intricate
screen or jali cut from marble. In addition to the light from the
balcony screens, light enters through roof openings which are covered
by chattris at the corners. Each chamber wall has been highly
decorated with dado bas relief, intricate lapidary inlay and refined
calligraphy panels, reflecting in miniature detail the design elements
seen throughout the exterior of the complex. The octagonal marble
screen or jali which borders the cenotaphs is made from eight marble
panels which have been carved through with intricate pierce work. The
remaining surfaces have been inlaid in extremely delicate detail with
semiprecious stones forming twining vines, fruits and flowers.

Muslim tradition forbids elaborate decoration of graves and hence
Mumtaz and Shah Jahan are laid in a relatively plain crypt beneath the
inner chamber with their faces turned right and towards Mecca. Mumtaz
Mahal's cenotaph is placed at the precise center of the inner chamber
on a rectangular marble base of 1.5 metres (4 ft 11 in) by 2.5 metres
(8 ft 2 in). Both the base and casket are elaborately inlaid with
precious and semiprecious gems. Calligraphic inscriptions on the
casket identify and praise Mumtaz. On the lid of the casket is a
raised rectangular lozenge meant to suggest a writing tablet. Shah
Jahan's cenotaph is beside Mumtaz's to the western side and is the
only visible asymmetric element in the entire complex. His cenotaph is
bigger than his wife's, but reflects the same elements: a larger
casket on slightly taller base, again decorated with astonishing
precision with lapidary and calligraphy that identifies him. On the
lid of this casket is a traditional sculpture of a small pen box. The
pen box and writing tablet were traditional Mughal funerary icons
decorating men's and women's caskets respectively. The Ninety Nine
Names of God are to be found as calligraphic inscriptions on the sides
of the actual tomb of Mumtaz Mahal, in the crypt including "O Noble, O
Magnificent, O Majestic, O Unique, O Eternal, O Glorious... ". The
tomb of Shah Jahan bears a calligraphic inscription that reads; "He
traveled from this world to the banquet-hall of Eternity on the night
of the twenty-sixth of the month of Rajab, in the year 1076 Hijri."

Arch of Jali
Delicate pierce work
Inlay detail
Detail of Jali

The garden

Walkways beside reflecting poolThe complex is set around a large 300-
metre (980 ft) square charbagh or Mughal garden. The garden uses
raised pathways that divide each of the four quarters of the garden
into 16 sunken parterres or flowerbeds. A raised marble water tank at
the center of the garden, halfway between the tomb and gateway with a
reflecting pool on a north-south axis, reflects the image of the
mausoleum. The raised marble water tank is called al Hawd al-Kawthar,
in reference to the "Tank of Abundance" promised to Muhammad.[17]
Elsewhere, the garden is laid out with avenues of trees and fountains.
[18] The charbagh garden, a design inspired by Persian gardens, was
introduced to India by the first Mughal emperor, Babur. It symbolizes
the four flowing rivers of Jannah (Paradise) and reflects the Paradise
garden derived from the Persian paridaeza, meaning 'walled garden'. In
mystic Islamic texts of Mughal period, Paradise is described as an
ideal garden of abundance with four rivers flowing from a central
spring or mountain, separating the garden into north, west, south and
east.

Most Mughal charbaghs are rectangular with a tomb or pavilion in the
center. The Taj Mahal garden is unusual in that the main element, the
tomb, is located at the end of the garden. With the discovery of
Mahtab Bagh or "Moonlight Garden" on the other side of the Yamuna, the
interpretation of the Archaeological Survey of India is that the
Yamuna river itself was incorporated into the garden's design and was
meant to be seen as one of the rivers of Paradise.[19] The similarity
in layout of the garden and its architectural features with the
Shalimar Gardens suggest that they may have been designed by the same
architect, Ali Mardan.[20] Early accounts of the garden describe its
profusion of vegetation, including abundant roses, daffodils, and
fruit trees.[21] As the Mughal Empire declined, the tending of the
garden also declined, and when the British took over the management of
Taj Mahal during the time of the British Empire, they changed the
landscaping to resemble that of lawns of London.[22]

Outlying buildings

The Great gate (Darwaza-i rauza)—gateway to the Taj MahalThe Taj Mahal
complex is bounded on three sides by crenellated red sandstone walls,
with the river-facing side left open. Outside the walls are several
additional mausoleums, including those of Shah Jahan's other wives,
and a larger tomb for Mumtaz's favorite servant. These structures,
composed primarily of red sandstone, are typical of the smaller Mughal
tombs of the era. The garden-facing inner sides of the wall are
fronted by columned arcades, a feature typical of Hindu temples which
was later incorporated into Mughal mosques. The wall is interspersed
with domed chattris, and small buildings that may have been viewing
areas or watch towers like the Music House, which is now used as a
museum.

Arches in the Taj Mahal Mosque interiorThe main gateway (darwaza) is a
monumental structure built primarily of marble which is reminiscent of
Mughal architecture of earlier emperors. Its archways mirror the shape
of tomb's archways, and its pishtaq arches incorporate the calligraphy
that decorates the tomb. It utilizes bas-relief and pietra dura inlaid
decorations with floral motifs. The vaulted ceilings and walls have
elaborate geometric designs, like those found in the other sandstone
buildings of the complex.

Taj Mahal mosque or masjidAt the far end of the complex, there are two
grand red sandstone buildings that are open to the sides of the tomb.
Their backs parallel the western and eastern walls, and the two
buildings are precise mirror images of each other. The western
building is a mosque and the other is the jawab (answer), whose
primary purpose was architectural balance, although it may have been
used as a guesthouse. The distinctions between these two buildings
include the lack of mihrab (a niche in a mosque's wall facing Mecca)
in the jawab and that the floors of jawab have a geometric design,
while the mosque floor was laid with outlines of 569 prayer rugs in
black marble. The mosque's basic design of a long hall surmounted by
three domes is similar to others built by Shah Jahan, particularly to
his Masjid-Jahan Numa, or Jama Masjid, Delhi. The Mughal mosques of
this period divide the sanctuary hall into three areas, with a main
sanctuary and slightly smaller sanctuaries on either side. At the Taj
Mahal, each sanctuary opens onto an enormous vaulting dome. These
outlying buildings were completed in 1643.

Construction

Ground layout of the Taj MahalThe Taj Mahal was built on a parcel of
land to the south of the walled city of Agra. Shah Jahan presented
Maharajah Jai Singh with a large palace in the center of Agra in
exchange for the land.[23] An area of roughly three acres was
excavated, filled with dirt to reduce seepage, and leveled at 50
metres (160 ft) above riverbank. In the tomb area, wells were dug and
filled with stone and rubble to form the footings of the tomb. Instead
of lashed bamboo, workmen constructed a colossal brick scaffold that
mirrored the tomb. The scaffold was so enormous that foremen estimated
it would take years to dismantle. According to the legend, Shah Jahan
decreed that anyone could keep the bricks taken from the scaffold, and
thus it was dismantled by peasants overnight. A fifteen kilometer (9.3
mi) tamped-earth ramp was built to transport marble and materials to
the construction site and teams of twenty or thirty oxen pulled the
blocks on specially constructed wagons. An elaborate post-and-beam
pulley system was used to raise the blocks into desired position.
Water was drawn from the river by a series of purs, an animal-powered
rope and bucket mechanism, into a large storage tank and raised to a
large distribution tank. It was passed into three subsidiary tanks,
from which it was piped to the complex.

The plinth and tomb took roughly 12 years to complete. The remaining
parts of the complex took an additional 10 years and were completed in
order of minarets, mosque and jawab, and gateway. Since the complex
was built in stages, discrepancies exist in completion dates due to
differing opinions on "completion". For example, the mausoleum itself
was essentially complete by 1643, but work continued on the rest of
the complex. Estimates of the cost of construction vary due to
difficulties in estimating costs across time. The total cost has been
estimated to be about 32 million Rupees at that time.[24]

The Taj Mahal was constructed using materials from all over India and
Asia and over 1,000 elephants were used to transport building
materials. The translucent white marble was brought from Rajasthan,
the jasper from Punjab, jade and crystal from China. The turquoise was
from Tibet and the Lapis lazuli from Afghanistan, while the sapphire
came from Sri Lanka and the carnelian from Arabia. In all, twenty
eight types of precious and semi-precious stones were inlaid into the
white marble.

Artist's impression of the Taj Mahal, from the Smithsonian Institution

A labour force of twenty thousand workers was recruited across
northern India. Sculptors from Bukhara, calligraphers from Syria and
Persia, inlayers from southern India, stonecutters from Baluchistan, a
specialist in building turrets, another who carved only marble flowers
were part of the thirty-seven men who formed the creative unit. Some
of the builders involved in construction of Taj Mahal are:

Ismail Afandi (a.ka. Ismail Khan) of the Ottoman Empire — designer of
the main dome.[25]
Ustad Isa and Isa Muhammad Effendi of Persia — trained by Koca Mimar
Sinan Agha of the Ottoman Empire and frequently credited with a key
role in the architectural design.[26][27]
'Puru' from Benarus, Persia — has been mentioned as a supervising
architect.[28]
Qazim Khan, a native of Lahore - cast the solid gold finial.
Chiranjilal, a lapidary from Delhi — the chief sculptor and
mosaicist.
Amanat Khan from Shiraz, Iran — the chief calligrapher.[29]
Muhammad Hanif — a supervisor of masons.
Mir Abdul Karim and Mukkarimat Khan of Shiraz — handled finances and
management of daily production.
History

Taj Mahal by Samuel Bourne, 1860.Soon after the Taj Mahal's
completion, Shah Jahan was deposed by his son Aurangzeb and put under
house arrest at nearby Agra Fort. Upon Shah Jahan's death, Aurangzeb
buried him in the mausoluem next to his wife.[30]

By the late 19th century, parts of the buildings had fallen badly into
disrepair. During the time of the Indian rebellion of 1857, the Taj
Mahal was defaced by British soldiers and government officials, who
chiseled out precious stones and lapis lazuli from its walls. At the
end of the 19th century, British viceroy Lord Curzon ordered a massive
restoration project, which was completed in 1908.[31][32] He also
commissioned the large lamp in the interior chamber, modeled after one
in a Cairo mosque. During this time the garden was remodeled with
British-style lawns that are still in place today.[22]

Threats

Protective wartime scaffoldingIn 1942, the government erected a
scaffolding in anticipation of an air attack by German Luftwaffe and
later by Japanese Air Force. During the India-Pakistan wars of 1965
and 1971, scaffoldings were again erected to mislead bomber pilots.
[33]

More recent threats have come from environmental pollution on the
banks of Yamuna River including acid rain[34] due to the Mathura Oil
Refinery,[35] which was opposed by Supreme Court of India directives.
The pollution has been turning the Taj Mahal yellow. To help control
the pollution, the Indian government has set up the Taj Trapezium Zone
(TTZ), a 10,400 square kilometer (4,015 square mile) area around the
monument where strict emissions standards are in place.[36] In 1983,
the Taj Mahal was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[37]

Tourism

Then President of Russia Vladimir Putin and wife Lyudmila Putina
visiting the Taj Mahal in 2000.The Taj Mahal attracts from 2 to 4
million visitors annually, with more than 200,000 from overseas. Most
tourists visit in the cooler months of October, November and February.
Polluting traffic is not allowed near the complex and tourists must
either walk from parking lots or catch an electric bus. The
Khawasspuras (northern courtyards) are currently being restored for
use as a new visitor center.[38][39] The small town to the south of
the Taj, known as Taj Ganji or Mumtazabad, originally was constructed
with caravanserais, bazaars and markets to serve the needs of visitors
and workmen.[40] Lists of recommended travel destinations often
feature the Taj Mahal, which also appears in several listings of seven
wonders of the modern world, including the recently announced New
Seven Wonders of the World, a recent poll[41] with 100 million votes.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Wonders_of_the_World
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Wonders_of_the_World
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Seven_Wonders_of_the_World

The grounds are open from 6 am to 7 pm weekdays, except for Friday
when the complex is open for prayers at the mosque between 12 pm and 2
pm. The complex is open for night viewing on the day of the full moon
and two days before and after,[42] excluding Fridays and the month of
Ramzan. For security reasons[43] only five items—water in transparent
bottles, small video cameras, still cameras, mobile phones and small
ladies' purses—are allowed inside the Taj Mahal.

Myths

Ever since its construction, the building has been the source of an
admiration transcending culture and geography, and so personal and
emotional responses have consistently eclipsed scholastic appraisals
of the monument.[44]


Jean-Baptiste Tavernier, one of the first European visitors to the Taj
MahalA longstanding myth holds that Shah Jahan planned a mausoleum to
be built in black marble across the Yamuna river.[45] The idea
originates from fanciful writings of Jean-Baptiste Tavernier, a
European traveller who visited Agra in 1665. It was suggested that
Shah Jahan was overthrown by his son Aurangzeb before it could be
built. Ruins of blackened marble across the river in Moonlight Garden,
Mahtab Bagh, seemed to support this legend. However, excavations
carried out in the 1990s found that they were discolored white stones
that had turned black.[46] A more credible theory for the origins of
the black mausoleum was demonstrated in 2006 by archeologists who
reconstructed part of the pool in the Moonlight Garden. A dark
reflection of the white mausoleum could clearly be seen, befitting
Shah Jahan's obsession with symmetry and the positioning of the pool
itself.[47]

No evidence exists for claims that describe, often in horrific detail,
the deaths, dismemberments and mutilations which Shah Jahan supposedly
inflicted on various architects and craftsmen associated with the
tomb. Some stories claim that those involved in construction signed
contracts committing themselves to have no part in any similar design.
Similar claims are made for many famous buildings.[48] No evidence
exists for claims that Lord William Bentinck, governor-general of
India in the 1830s, supposedly planned to demolish the Taj Mahal and
auction off the marble. Bentinck's biographer John Rosselli says that
the story arose from Bentinck's fund-raising sale of discarded marble
from Agra Fort.[49]

In 2000, India's Supreme Court dismissed P.N. Oak's petition to
declare that a Hindu king built the Taj Mahal.[48][50] Oak claimed
that origins of the Taj, together with other historic structures in
the country currently ascribed to Muslim sultans pre-date Muslim
occupation of India and thus, have a Hindu origin.[51] A more poetic
story relates that once a year, during the rainy season, a single drop
of water falls on the cenotaph, as inspired by Rabindranath Tagore's
description of the tomb as "one tear-drop...upon the cheek of time".
Another myth suggests that beating the silhouette of the finial will
cause water to come forth. To this day, officials find broken bangles
surrounding the silhouette.[52]

Replicas

Among the buildings modeled on the Taj Mahal are the Taj Mahal
Bangladesh, the Bibi Ka Maqbara in Aurangabad, Maharashtra, and the
Tripoli Shrine Temple in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taj_Mahal_Bangladesh
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibi_Ka_Maqbara
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tripoli_Shrine_Temple

In Popular Culture

As a famous world landmark, the Taj Mahal is used extensively in films
and other forms of media.

In the film Mars Attacks!, the Taj Mahal is blown up by martians.
In the film Supernova, the Taj Mahal is destroyed by meteors coming
from a supernova.

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Taj Mahal
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Taj_Mahal

Agra Fort http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agra_Fort
Fatehpur Sikri http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fatehpur_Sikri
Humayun's Tomb http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humayun%27s_Tomb
Indian architecture http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_architecture
Itmad-Ud-Daulah http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Itmad-Ud-Daulah
Origins and architecture of the Taj Mahal
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origins_and_architecture_of_the_Taj_Mahal
Persian architecture http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iranian_architecture
Taj Mahal Bangladesh http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taj_Mahal_Bangladesh

Notes

^ Hasan, Parween (November 1994), "Review of Mughal Architecture: Its
outline and its history", The Journal of Asian Studies 53 (4)
^ Lesley A. DuTemple, "The Taj Mahal", Lerner Publishing Group (March
2003). pg 26: "The Taj Mahal, a spectacular example of Moghul
architecture, blends Islamic, Hindu and Persian styles"
^ a b Tillitson, G.H.R. (1990). Architectural Guide to Mughal India,
Chronicle Books.
^ History of the Taj Mahal Agra, Retrieved on: 20 January 2009.
^ a b c Anon. "The Taj mahal". Islamic architecture. Islamic Arts and
Architecture Organization. http://www.islamicart.com/library/empires/india/taj_mahal.html.
Retrieved 22 may 2009.
^ UNESCO advisory body evaluation.
^ "Public Broadcasting Service". PBS.
http://www.pbs.org/treasuresoftheworld/a_nav/taj_nav/main_tajfrm.html.
Retrieved 2010-02-02.
^ "Taj Mahal History". http://www.ourworldwonders.com/TajMahal/History.htm.
^ Muhammad Abdullah Chaghtai Le Tadj Mahal D'Agra (Hindi). Histoire et
description (Brussels) 1938 p. 46.
^ 'Abd al-Hamid Lahawri Badshah Namah Ed. Maulawis Kabir al-Din Ahmad
and 'Abd al-Rahim u-nder the superintendence of Major W.N. Lees. Vol.
I Calcutta 1867 pp384-9 ; Muhammad Salih Kambo Amal-i-Sal\lih or Shah
Jahan Namah Ed. Ghulam Yazdani Vol.I (Calcutta) 1923 p. 275.
^ Mahajan, Vidya Dhar (1970). Muslim Rule In India. p. 200.
^ Chaghtai Le Tadj Mahal p. 146.
^ Copplestone, p. 166.
^ Taj Mahal Calligraphy.
^ a b Koch, p. 100.
^ "Public Broadcasting Service". PBS.
http://www.pbs.org/treasuresoftheworld/taj_mahal/tlevel_2/t4visit_3calligraphy.html.
Retrieved 2010-02-02.
^ Begley, Wayne E. (March 1979). "The Myth of the Taj Mahal and a New
Theory of Its Symbolic Meaning". The Art Bulletin 61 (1): 14.
^ "taj-mahal-travel-tours.com". taj-mahal-travel-tours.com..
http://www.taj-mahal-travel-tours.com/garden-of-taj-mahal.html.
Retrieved 2010-02-02.
^ Wright, Karen (July 2000), "Moguls in the Moonlight — plans to
restore Mehtab Bagh garden near Taj Mahal", Discover,
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1511/is_7_21/ai_63035788
^ Allan, John (edition = First). The Cambridge Shorter History of
India. Cambridge: S. Chand, 288 pages. p. 318.
^ The Taj by Jerry Camarillo Dunn Jr.
^ a b Koch, p. 139.
^ Chaghtai Le Tadj Mahal p54; Lahawri Badshah Namah Vol.1 p. 403.
^ Dr. A. Zahoor and Dr. Z. Haq.
^ Who designed the Taj Mahal.
^ William J. Hennessey, Ph.D., Director, Univ. of Michigan Museum of
Art. IBM 1999 WORLD BOOK.
^ Marvin Trachtenberg and Isabelle Hyman. Architecture: from
Prehistory to Post-Modernism. p. 223.
^ ISBN 964-7483-39-2.
^ It Never Disappoints; The Taj Mahal has the sort of majestic beauty
that catches you unawares
^ Gascoigne, Bamber (1971). The Great Mughals. New York:Harper&Row. p.
243.
^ Lord Curzon's Brass Lamp.
^ Yapp, Peter (1983). The Traveller's Dictionary of Quotations.
London:Routledge Kegan & Paul. p. 460.
^ Taj Mahal 'to be camouflaged'.
^ Acid Rain and the Taj Mahal.
^ Oil Refinery Impact on Taj Mahal.
^ "UNESCO". UNESCO. 1997-04-30. http://www.unesco.org/courier/2000_07/uk/signe.htm.
Retrieved 2010-02-02.
^ Taj Mahal World Heritage Site Page.
^ Koch, p. 120.
^ Koch, p. 254.
^ Koch, pp. 201-208.
^ Travel Correspondent (2007-07-09). "New Seven Wonders of the World
announced". The Telegraph.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/main.jhtml?xml=/travel/2007/07/09/etsevenwonders109.xml.
Retrieved 2007-07-06.
^ "Archaelogical Survey of India: Night Viewings of Taj Mahal".
Asi.nic.in. 2004-11-28. http://asi.nic.in/asi_monu_whs_agratajmahal_night.asp.
Retrieved 2010-02-02.
^ DNA India: Going to the Taj? This is all you can carry.
^ Koch, p. 231.
^ Asher, p. 210.
^ Koch, p. 249.
^ Warrior Empire: The Mughals of India (2006) A+E Television Network.
^ a b Koch, p. 239.
^ Rosselli, J., Lord William Bentinck the making of a Liberal
Imperialist, 1774-1839, London Chatto and Windus for Sussex University
Press 1974, p. 283.
^ Supreme Court Dismisses Oak's Petition.
http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report_going-to-the-taj-this-is-all-you-can-carry_1145100
^ Oak, Purushottam Nagesh. "The True Story of the Taj Mahal". Stephen
Knapp. http://www.stephen-knapp.com/true_story_of_the_taj_mahal.htm.
Retrieved 2007-02-23.
^ Koch, p. 240.

References

Asher, Catherine B. Architecture of Mughal India New Cambridge History
of India I.4, Cambridge University Press 1992 ISBN 0-521-26728-5.
Bernier, Françoi' Travels in the Moghul Empire A.D. 1657-1668
(Westminster: Archibald Constable & Co.) 1891.
Carroll, David (1971). The Taj Mahal, Newsweek Books ISBN
0-88225-024-8.
Chaghtai, Muhammad Abdullah Le Tadj Mahal d'Agra (Inde). Histoire et
description (Brussels: Editions de la Connaissance) 1938.
Copplestone, Trewin. (ed). (1963). World architecture — An illustrated
history. Hamlyn, London.
Gascoigne, Bamber (1971). The Great Moguls, Harper & Row.
Havel, E.B. (1913). Indian Architecture: Its Psychology, Structure and
History, John Murray.
Kambo, Muhammad Salih Amal-i-Salih or Shah Jahan Namah Ed. Ghulam
Yazdani (Calcutta: Baptist Mission Press) Vol.I 1923. Vol. II 1927.
Koch, Ebba (2006) (Paperback). The Complete Taj Mahal: And the
Riverfront Gardens of Agra (First ed.). Thames & Hudson Ltd., 288
pages. ISBN 0500342091.
Lahawri, 'Abd al-Hamid Badshah Namah Ed. Maulawis Kabir al-Din Ahmad
and 'Abd al-Rahim under the superintendence of Major W.N. Lees.
(Calcutta: College Press) Vol. I 1867 Vol. II 1868.
Lall, John (1992). Taj Mahal, Tiger International Press.
Preston, Diana & Michael (2007) (Hardback). A Teardrop on the Cheek of
Time (First ed.). London: Doubleday, 354 pages. ISBN 9780385609470.
Rothfarb, Ed (1998). In the Land of the Taj Mahal, Henry Holt ISBN
0-8050-5299-2.
Saksena, Banarsi Prasad History of Shahjahan of Dihli (Allahabad: The
Indian Press Ltd.) 1932.
Stall, B (1995). Agra and Fathepur Sikri, Millennium.
Stierlin, Henri [editor] & Volwahsen, Andreas (1990). Architecture of
the World: Islamic India, Taschen.
Tillitson, G.H.R. (1990). Architectural Guide to Mughal India,
Chronicle Books.

External links

Archeological Survey of India description http://asi.nic.in/asi_monu_whs_agratajmahal.asp
Government of India - Description http://www.indohistory.com/taj_mahal.html
Taj Mahal travel guide from Wikitravel http://wikitravel.org/en/Taj_Mahal

Links to related articles

v • d • e

Tourist attractions in Agra

World Heritage Sites

Taj Mahal ·
Agra Fort ·
Fatehpur Sikri .

Mughal architecture

Sikandra ·
Itmad-Ud-Daulah ·
Chini Ka Rauza ·
Mariam's Tomb ·
Gyarah Sidi .

Mosques Jama Masjid · Moti Masjid

Other Religious places

Swamibagh ·
Mankameshwar Temple ·
Guru ka Tal ·
Bateshwar .

Shopping

Sadar Bazaar ·
Sanjay Place ·
Raja ki mandi ·
Loha Mandi .

Gardens Ram Bagh ·
Mehtab Bagh ·
Paliwal Park .

Wildlife Sanctuaries

National Chambal Wildlife Sanctuary ·
Keetham Lake ·
Patna Bird Sanctuary .

Fairs

Taj Mahotsav ·
Ram Barat .

• d • eWorld Heritage Sites in India

North

Agra Fort ·
Buddhist Monuments at Sanchi ·
Fatehpur Sikri ·
Humayun's Tomb ·
Keoladeo National Park ·
Khajuraho Group of Monuments ·
Mountain Railways of India (Kalka-Shimla Railway)1 ·
Nanda Devi and Valley of Flowers National Parks ·
Qutub Minar and its Monuments ·
The Red Fort complex ·
Rock Shelters of Bhimbetka ·
Taj Mahal .

Northeast

Kaziranga National Park ·
Manas Wildlife Sanctuary .


East

Mahabodhi Temple Complex at Bodh Gaya ·
Mountain railways of India (Darjeeling Himalayan Railway)1 ·
Sun Temple at Konark ·
Sundarbans National Park .

South

Great Living Chola Temples at Thanjavur, Gangaikonda Cholapuram and
Darasuram ·
Group of Monuments at Hampi ·
Group of Monuments at Mahabalipuram ·
Group of Monuments at Pattadakal ·
Mountain railways of India (Nilgiri Mountain Railway)1 .

West

Ajanta Caves ·
Champaner-Pavagadh Archaeological Park ·
Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus ·
Churches and convents of Goa ·
Elephanta Caves ·
Ellora Caves .

1 Shared with other region/s

v • d • e

Mughal Empire

Emperors

Babur ·
Humayun ·
Akbar ·
Jahangir ·
Shah Jahan ·
Aurangzeb ·
Later Mughals .

Events

First battle of Panipat ·
Battle of Khanwa ·
Second battle of Panipat ·
Battle of Haldighati ·
Battle of Karnal ·
Battle of Buxar .

Architecture

Taj Mahal ·
Fatehpur Sikri ·
Humayun's Tomb ·
Red Fort ·
Lahore Fort ·
Akbar's Tomb ·
Agra Fort ·
Shalimar Gardens ·
Jahangir's Tomb ·
Bibi Ka Maqbara ·
Badshahi Mosque ·

more

Adversaries

Ibrahim Lodi ·
Rana Sanga ·
Sher Shah Suri ·
Hemu ·
Maharana Pratap ·
Gokula ·
Shivaji ·
Khushal Khan Khattak ·
Guru Gobind Singh ·
Nadir Shah ·
Hector Munro .

v • d • eNew Seven Wonders of the World

Giza Pyramid Complex ·
Chichen Itza ·
Christ the Redeemer ·
Colosseum ·
Great Wall of China ·
Machu Picchu ·
Petra ·

Taj Mahal .http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Taj_Mahal

Coordinates: 27°10′27″N 78°02′32″E / 27.17417°N 78.04222°E /
27.17417; 78.04222 (Taj Mahal)

Categories:

1654 architecture | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:1654_architecture
1654 establishments | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:1654_establishments
Monuments and memorials in India | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Monuments_and_memorials_in_India
Mughal architecture | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Mughal_architecture
Islamic architecture | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Islamic_architecture
Indian architecture | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Indian_architecture
Agra | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Agra
Domes | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Domes
Taj Mahal | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Taj_Mahal
Tourism in Uttar Pradesh | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Tourism_in_Uttar_Pradesh
Tourism in Agra | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Tourism_in_Agra
Buildings and structures in Agra | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Buildings_and_structures_in_Agra
Mausoleums in India |http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Category:Mausoleums_in_India

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India rocked by cricket scandal
An Indian government minister is forced to resign over a friend’s
stake in a club in the Indian Premier League, and a financial
investigation of the funding of the nation’s top cricket teams will be
launched.
April 19, 2010|By Mark Magnier, Los Angeles Times
Reporting from New Delhi — Combine two of India's favorite pastimes,
cricket and politics. Add allegations of corruption, greed, and tax
evasion. Throw in the implosion of a highflying political career and
it's not difficult to understand why India's hyperactive broadcast
media are on a tear.

On Monday, India's finance minister announced an investigation of the
funding and sources behind the nation's top cricket teams, suggesting
that more bombshells are to come. The scandal underscores the cost of
operating a business on steroids without creating adequate safeguards,
analysts said.

http://articles.latimes.com/2010/apr/19/world/la-fg-0420-india-cricket-20100420

Bloomberg

India Starts Cricket League Probe After Minister Tharoor Quits
April 19, 2010, 12:37 PM EDT
By Bibhudatta Pradhan

April 19 (Bloomberg) -- India ordered an investigation into the
funding and operation of a cricket body after a minister quit
yesterday over allegations that he influenced the award of a
franchise.

Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee told lawmakers today that the
government won’t spare anyone in its probe of the Indian Premier
League. Junior Foreign Minister Shashi Tharoor resigned after
dismissing opposition claims that he benefitted from free shares given
to a friend by Rendezvous Sports World Ltd., which heads the group
that won bidding for the IPL team in southern Kerala state with a $333
million offer.

An investigation into the IPL issue by “the concerned department” has
already begun, Mukherjee said in Parliament. “All aspects, including
sources of funding and routes through which the funds arrived would be
looked into.”

IPL Commissioner Lalit Modi will “welcome all investigation,” the
Press Trust of India reported, citing a comment on his Twitter Inc.
page. Modi was unavailable for comments today, said Jitendra Jha, an
executive at Adfactors PR, IPL’s public relations agency. Tharoor’s
aide Jacob Joseph did not answer calls to his mobile phone.

President Pratibha Patil accepted Tharoor’s resignation on the
recommendation of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, the president’s
office said in a statement. Singh has had a tough few weeks with two
major legislative bills stalled and opposition pressure mounting over
rising prices. Frequent adjournments in Parliament risked delays to
the government’s agenda, including approval of this year’s budget.

The ministries for finance and companies plan a detailed inquiry into
the affairs of the Board for Control of Cricket in India, the IPL and
its multiple franchisees, the Financial Express reported citing
officials it didn’t name.

‘Pressure on Government’

The “episode added to pressure on the government,” said N. Bhaskara
Rao, chairman of the Centre for Media Studies in New Delhi, referring
to corruption scandal and the minister’s resignation. “Smooth
functioning of Parliament is essential.”

The decision by Tharoor, 54, a former UN undersecretary general, to
step down ended a year in office punctuated by embarrassments to the
ruling Congress party including a five- star hotel stay during the
government’s austerity drive and controversial tweets on his Twitter
account.

“My role in mentoring the Kerala consortium was throughout within the
bounds of appropriate conduct of a member of Parliament,” Tharoor said
in a statement on April 16. “As a minister, I was in no position to
influence the bid process, let alone its outcome.”

Tharoor, who has lived overseas for most of his life, was elected to
the lower house of Parliament for the first time last year and
appointed to a senior position in India’s foreign ministry.

Hotel Stay

In September, he vacated a luxury hotel after a senior minister
advised him to stay in a government-allotted house as the government
grappled with ways to cut expenditure. Tharoor said he was paying his
own bill as his official house was prepared.

Tharoor was criticized by party colleagues after posting a Twitter
message saying he would be flying “cattle class out of solidarity with
all our holy cows,” as Congress cut back on official expenses.

The eight teams playing in this season’s IPL tournament include owners
such as Mukesh Ambani, the world’s fourth-richest man and chairman of
Reliance Industries Ltd.; billionaire Vijay Mallya, chairman of UB
Group; and movie star Shah Rukh Khan.

The IPL has more than doubled its brand value to $4.13 billion now
from $2.01 billion in 2009, according to Brand Finance Plc.

--Editors: Mark Williams, Sam Nagarajan

To contact the reporter on this story: Bibhudatta Pradhan in New Delhi
at ***@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Hari Govind at
***@bloomberg.net

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-04-19/india-starts-cricket-league-probe-after-minister-tharoor-quits.html

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India to probe IPL corruption claims
(AFP) – 2 days ago

NEW DELHI — The Indian government promised on Monday an in-depth tax
and financing probe into the country's cash-rich premier cricket
league, warning that "no wrongdoer will be spared".

The move came after high-profile government minister and former UN
undersecretary Shashi Tharoor quit Sunday after he became embroiled in
a scandal over the ownership of a new Indian Premier League (IPL)
franchise.

Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee told parliament that the tax
authorities, which raided the IPL's Mumbai headquarters late last
week, had already started investigations.

"All aspects including sources of funding and routes through which the
funds arrived would be looked into. Appropriate action as per (the)
law would be taken," Mukherjee said.

"No guilty (person) or wrong-doer will be spared," Mukherjee said.

Tharoor, 54, the junior foreign minister, had been under pressure
since news broke a week ago that a female friend -- said by Indian
media to be his girlfriend -- was given a free stake in a new IPL
team.

Opposition parties say the stake, worth 15 million dollars, was for
Tharoor's behind-the-scenes services in putting together the
consortium that bought the Kochi team, which will be based in Kerala
state.

Tharoor has denied any wrongdoing.

The main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party has demanded an
investigation into the IPL, accusing it of being "the Corruption
Premier League."

The ownership details of the Kochi team was put under the spotlight by
IPL founder and boss Lalit Modi.

But now scrutiny has also focused on Modi with opposition politicians
saying in parliament that the IPL is a front for "gambling and
betting."

Modi has denied the allegations, calling them an "attempt to discredit
the IPL."

Copyright © 2010 AFP. All rights reserved.

Scrutiny has focused on Modi with the opposition saying that the IPL
is a front for "gambling and betting"

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iRIPHvddChOQQdcL4hAFRfGDlqJw

Cricket scandal bowls politician
4:10 AM Tuesday Apr 20, 2010

An Indian minister resigned yesterday over allegations of corruption
in winning a cricket league franchise.

The row was over junior Foreign Minister Dr Shashi Tharoor's role in a
southern city winning a US$333 million ($470 million) bid for the
cricket franchise in the Indian Premier League.

The controversy erupted after Lalit Modi, the chief of the Indian
Premier League, said the winning consortium allotted stakes worth
about US$15 million for free to a woman Indian media identified as
Tharoor's girlfriend Sunanda Pushkar. Modi said Tharoor had asked him
not to reveal the shareholding details of the consortium.

Pushkar's lawyer said she had decided to give up her allotted stakes.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/news/article.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=10639464

IPL row continues to rock Parliament
Headlines Today Bureau
New Delhi, April 19, 2010

The Indian Premier League (IPL) controversy continued to rock
Parliament on Monday even as the Minister of State for External
Affairs Shashi Tharoor quit his post a day before.

While the Rashtriya Janata Dal president, Lalu Prasad Yadav, came down
heavily on the IPL demanding that the tournament be scrapped, the Left
too joined the attack on the government over the issue. On the other
hand, Congress blamed the BJP leaders' links to IPL chief Lalit Modi
in "glorifying the gambling event"

The former railway minister raised the issue in Lok Sabha and said
that black money was involved in the running of league. He said the
sports ministry should take over both the Board of Control for Cricket
in India (BCCI) and the IPL.

"There is mass scale betting in cricket, especially in the IPL.
Government should scrap both-the IPL and the BCCI-and take charge of
the bodies," the MP said.

CPM leader Brinda Karat sought a joint parliamentary committee probe
into the IPL controversy. She said that Tharoor's resignation alone
would not suffice.

Not only the Opposition, the issue also found echo within the ruling
Congress. Senior party leader Vayalar Ravi mounted a scathing attack
on the mega sporting event, equating it with a glorified gambling
event. He however said that the BJP leaders had links with Lalit Modi
which needed to be probed.

The row, which started with the revelations about its Kochi
franchisee, seems to have opened floodgates against the IPL. It has
already claimed the team's mentor Shashi Tharoor his post as a junior
minister in the ministry of external affairs.

Roles of two more Union ministers, both belonging to a Congress ally,
have been under the income tax department's scanner. Even the IPL
chief Lalit Modi's seat is under threat after the I-T sleuths launched
an investigation on the IPL and its commissioner.

Gadkari faints at BJP rally
http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/Story/93900/LATEST%20HEADLINES/BJP+protests+inflation,+Gadkari+faints.html
Nithyananda arrested in Himachal
http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/Story/93890/LATEST%20HEADLINES/Nithyananda+arrested+in+Himachal.html

Nithyananda arrested in Himachal
Headlines Today Bureau
Shimla, April 21, 2010

Police on Wednesday arrested tainted godman Swami Nithyananda in
Himachal Pradesh.

Nithyananda was arrested from Arki region of the state's Solan
district in a joint operation by the Himachal Pradesh and Karnataka
Police following the orders of a court in Sriperumbudur, Tamil Nadu.

Nithyananda had landed in a controversy after a video allegedly
featuring him and a Tamil actress surfaced. But the swami had called
the video a conspiracy against him.

Nithyananda resigned as the head of Dhyanapeetam last month, saying he
would live a life of spiritual seclusion for an indefinite time.

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/Story/93890/LATEST%20HEADLINES/Nithyananda+arrested+in+Himachal.html

BCCI didn't want Modi to reveal IPL owners
Javed Ansari
New Delhi, April 21, 2010

IPL commissioner Lalit Modi had wanted to disclose the ownership
details of the league's teams but the BCCI stopped him.

Headlines Today has accessed emails that show how BCCI president
Shashank Manohar did not allow Modi to reveal the details.

Modi emailed IPL top guns

Modi wanted to disclose the ownership details along with the names of
directors of all IPL teams. He sent an email regarding this on April
14 to 71 recipients. Among the recipients were members of the IPL
governing council and team-owners.

Text of Modi's email

This is what Modi wrote in his email:

"Dear Friends,
Propriety and fair play demand we should as public body disclose
ownership details along with name of directors of all franchisees once
again. Earlier we...at the time of bidding....only disclosed the names
and share holding.

If everyone is okay with this, we will issue the same right away, that
way all doubts and aspersions being cast on IPL franchises and members
of GC appropriately rebutted. I hope you all agree with the same.

Warm Regards,
Lalit Modi
Chairman and Commissioner, IPL"

Among those who got the email are Shashank Manohar, Vijay Mallya, N.
Srinivasan, Chirayu Amin, Sunil Gavaskar, Rajiv Shukla, Arun Jaitley,
Manoj Badale, Mohit Burman, Shah Rukh Khan, Preity Zinta, Ness Wadia,
Shilpa Shetty, Raj Kundra, Inderjit Bindra, Mukesh Ambani, Nita
Ambani, Suresh Chellaram, Lachlan Murdoch, Gaurav Burman, Sid Mallya,
Niranjan Shah, Ravi Shastri, M.A.K. Pataudi, Farooq Abdullah, M.P.
Pandove and Sanjay Jagdale.

Modi even CC-ed the email to Agriculture Minister and ICC president-
elect Sharad Pawar, Laila Mallya and others.

BCCI chief's response

But Manohar stonewalled Modi. In his reply to the email, Manohar
wrote: "The issue is complex and needs detailed deliberations and
legal implications need to be gone into and hence can be considered at
the governing council meeting where all documents and papers relating
to the bids are available."

After Manohar's response, Shah, Jaitley, Amin, Srinivasan and Shastri
replied saying they agreed with the BCCI president.

"I agree with the president. Let's tread cautiously. Let's not hurry,"
was Shastri's reply.

Jaitley replied saying he endorses Manohar's stand that details should
not be released now.

Shah too replied saying he agreed with the BCCI chief's view.

"I completely agree with the President," wrote Srinivasan in his
reply.

The BCCI's response to Modi's email raises questions. Why did the BCCI
president prevent Modi from revealing the details? What is it that the
BCCI is trying to hide about the IPL team ownerships?

IPL row: I-T officials conduct raids
http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/Video/93824/42/IPL+row:+I-T+officials+conduct+raids.html

More stories from IPL 2010

Lalit Modi, BCCI spar over IPL meet date
http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/Story/93917/Sports/Lalit+Modi,+BCCI+spar+over+IPL+meet+date.html
Nationwide I-T raids on IPL teams
http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/Story/93916/Sports/Nationwide+Income+Tax+raids+conducted+on+IPL+teams.html
BCCI didn't want to out owners
http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/Story/93903/Sports/BCCI+didn't+want+Modi+to+reveal+IPL+owners.html
Chennai eye revenge against DC
http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/Story/93874/Sports/Super+Kings+aim+for+revenge+against+Deccan+Chargers.html
'BCCI to take harsh decisions'
http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/Story/93864/Sports/BCCI+ready+to+take+harsh+decisions:+Shukla.html

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/site/Story/93903/LATEST%20HEADLINES/BCCI+didn't+want+Modi+to+reveal+IPL+owners.html

http://bakulaji.typepad.com/blog/political-bog-sid-harth-2.html

...and I am Sid Harth

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