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Vegetarian Discussion - ramana - 03-25-2008 Column in Pioneer, 25 March 2008 <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Go green, go vegetarian <b>Swami Dayananda Saraswati</b> Raising animals for meat adds to global warming in a big way.We owe it to Mother Earth to save her from the terrible consequences of climate change The Himalayan glaciers have been the perennial source of water for our rivers such as Ganga, Yamuna, Brahmaputra and Sindhu. Now the disturbing news is that the glaciers are receding due to global warming. This problem of increase in global temperature is real and in India it will cause irredeemable damage in more than one way if it is not addressed. One will find it difficult to believe the contention of some ecologists that Ganga would cease to be perennial in six to 40 years, that the other rivers of Himalayan origin would suffer the same fate. As a human being I have a custodial relationship to Mother Earth. Global warming testifies how indifferent and careless we have been in fulfilling our care-taking responsibilities. Now that we see the seriousness of this problem we need to take certain ameliorating measures. A 2006 report from the United Nations reveals the surprising fact that "raising animals for food generates more green house gases than all the cars and trucks in the world combined." Tens of billions of animals farmed for food release gases such as methane, nitrous oxide and carbon dioxide through their massive amounts of manure. Animals such as cows and sheep, being ruminant, emit huge amount of methane due to flatulence and burping. "The released methane", the report says, "has 23 times the global warming potential of carbon dioxide." It is very alarming to note that the livestock industry alone is responsible for 37 per cent of human induced methane emissions. To make room for these animals to graze, virgin forests are being cleared. The livestock industry also needs vast stretches of land to raise mono-crops to feed the animals. The carbon dioxide that the trees and plants store escapes back into the air when they are destroyed. Growing fodder for farmed animals implies heavy use of synthetic fertilisers produced with fossil fuels. While this process emits a huge amount of carbon dioxide, fertiliser itself releases nitrous oxide - a green house gas that is 296 times more potent than carbon dioxide. Alarming though these facts are, I see in them a reason for hope. All that people all the world over have to do is to avoid eating meat. In the absence of demand for meat there will no more be any need for breeding millions of animals for daily slaughter. If this happens, the reversal of global warming is a certainty. The meat lobby cannot do anything if the change is from the individuals. A single individual by simply not consuming meat prevents the equivalent of 1.5 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions in a year. This is more than the one tonne of carbon dioxide emissions prevented by switching from a large sedan to a small car. One needs to have an honest commitment to save Mother Earth, who has been relentlessly patient and magnanimous since she began bearing life. There are a number of reasons for one to be a vegetarian. People given to eating meat think that a pure vegetarian diet is optional. But now they have no choice if they are alive to what is happening to this life-bearing planet. There is no justification whatsoever for one to continue to be a non-vegetarian, knowing the devastating consequences of eating meat. Promotion of vegetarianism does not require any legislation by the state. It does require a change of heart on the part of those who eat meat anywhere on this planet. I cannot appeal to the tigers and wolves. They are programmed to be what they are. Being endowed with freewill, only a human being can make a difference by exercising responsibly his or her choice. The threatening inundation from the melting icebergs in the North Pole is avoidable and the perennial flow of the holy Ganga and Yamuna would continue if only there is a change of heart on the part of every meat eater. If it is too much for one to become a total vegetarian, one needs to give up at least red meat. This is the only option one has. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> Vegetarian Discussion - shamu - 03-26-2008 Add following points to above report: - Approximately 4 to 7 pounds of grains is required to create 1 pound of meat. In addition to avoiding pollution of producing meat, world can support 4 to 7 times the population if they all switch to vegetarian. - You need more energy to preserve meat than vegitarian food I have always felt that without promoting vegerianism, the green movement is a big sham. Vegetarian Discussion - Shambhu - 03-26-2008 I thought it was 16..16 pounds of grain goes to produce 1 lb of beef Also --The amount of grain used as animal feed in US per day can feed the population of the entire world 5 times (Hare Krishna booklet) --If just 2 seconds of the cruelty that a hog/duck/chicken/calf/cow has to endure 24/7 is somehow applied to a puppy, the owner of said puppy would sue the **** out of the person who applied the cruelty. Just 2 seconds. But the great white man has spoken: "Livestock animals can be made to endure any kind of pain, since the ballmighty Gawd has told us that He created all those animals for us to eat". --Cancers and cardiovascular problems would go way way down if the US gave up (even cut down on) meat. Europeans eat meat, but not in the massive quantities that the Land of the Free does. And Europeans get cancers and CV problems to a much lesser degree. Vegetarian Discussion - Bodhi - 03-27-2008 The example of sage kausika having learnt the lessons of dharma from a saintly and pious butcher of mithilA known as dharmavyAdha - has been often quoted (or misquoted as I now find) by the supporters of meatism. So it happened a few days back that in an idle-argument this gentleman quoted the same example which prompted me to look up the original source. The episode is from vana-parva the third book of mahAbharata. Led by some strange incidents, Sage kausika in his youth was inspired by a housewife to travel to mithila and look for a certain butcher, and take him as his teacher. So he did, and located a butcher known as dharma-vyAdha. Finally a lengthy discourse follows and kausika stays for a few days in the house of this virtuous dharma-vyAdha and learns the lessons on dharma, ethics, morality, virtue and so on. a few parts of the lengthy tale, which are relevant to what this great saintly butcher says about he himself eating meat. ~~~~~~~~ (KM Ganguly's translation ![]() Continually reflecting upon that wonderful discourse of the woman, Kausika ... said to himself, 'I should accept with reverence what the lady hath said and should, therefore, repair to Mithila. And he traversed many forests and villages and towns and at last reached Mithila that was ruled over by Janaka and he beheld the city to be adorned with the flags of various creeds. And there the Brahmana enquired about the virtuous fowler and was answered by some twice-born persons. And repairing to the place indicated by those regenerate ones, the Brahmana beheld the fowler seated in a butcher's yard and the ascetic fowler was then selling venison and buffalo meat and in consequence of the large concourse of buyers gathered round that fowler, Kausika stood at a distance. But the fowler, apprehending that the Brahmana had come to him, suddenly rose from his seat and went to that secluded spot where the Brahmana was staying and having approached him there, the fowler said, 'I salute thee, O holy one!...Thou art now standing in place that is scarcely proper for thee, O sinless one. If it pleasest thee, let us go to my abode, O holy one!... 'So be it,' said the Brahmana unto him, gladly.... And thereupon, the fowler proceeded towards his home with the Brahmana walking before him. And entering his abode that looked delightful, the fowler reverenced his guest by offering him a seat. And he also gave him water to wash his feet and face. And accepting these, that best of Brahmanas sat at his ease And he then addressed the fowler, saying, 'It seems to me that this profession doth not befit thee. O fowler, I deeply regret that thou shouldst follow such a cruel trade.' At these words of the Brahmana the fowler said, 'This profession is that of my family, myself having inherited it from my sires and grandsires. O regenerate one, grieve not for me owing to my adhering to the duties that belong to me by birth. Discharging the duties ordained for me beforehand by the Creator, I carefully serve my superiors and the old. O thou best of Brahmanas! I always speak the truth, never envy others; and give to the best of my power. I live upon what remaineth after serving the gods, guests, and those that depend on me. I never speak ill of anything, small or great. O thou best of Brahmanas, the actions of a former life always follow the doer. <span style='color:red'>As regards myself, O Brahmana, I always sell pork and buffalo meat without slaying those animals myself. I sell meat of animals, O regenerate Rishi, that have been slain by others. I never eat meat myself;</span> ... ...Even though the behaviour of his order is bad, a person may yet be himself of good behaviour. So also a person may become virtuous, although he may be slayer of animals by profession. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ (after this there are many other very complex points of discussion about morality and ethics too - including dharma-vyAdha defending meat-eaters although he himself is not one of them.) Vegetarian Discussion - ramana - 03-27-2008 Bodhi, Where can we get the full translation by Sri KM Ganguly? Vegetarian Discussion - Bodhi - 03-27-2008 Vana Parva: http://sacred-texts.com/hin/m03/index.htm The topic of dharma-vyAdha is under Markandeya-Samasya Parva. Vegetarian Discussion - Shambhu - 03-27-2008 http://news.iskcon.com/node/940 About Jewish vegetarians ..animal industry produces more greenhouse gases than all forms of transportation combined. Animal farming is going to double over next 50 yrs -- 3-4 months ago I had posted that PETA drove a Hummer (with the driver in a chicken suit)thru DC to highlight that animal farming is a leading producer of greenhouse gases. US, as usual, hardly noticed. Vegetarian Discussion - Bodhi - 05-23-2008 chaturdasha hi varShANi vatsyAmi vijane vane madhu mUla phalaiH jIvan hitvA munivad AmiSham (vAlmIki rAmAyana, ayodhyA kANDa:2-20-29) (Says rAma to his mother while bidding a farewell, before departing for the exile ![]() For fourteen years, I shall live in a lonely forest, quitting meat like a sage and living by (only eating) roots, fruits and honey. above shows that a) rAma, a kshatriya, must have been a non-vegetarian, and b) prohibition to eat meat for sannyAsI-s. Vegetarian Discussion - Husky - 06-07-2008 Found on Haindava Keralam (on the right side where it displays different quotations each time): <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->"How can he practice true compassion Who eats the flesh of an animal to fatten his own flesh?" Thirukural<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->Thirukural is sacred Tamizh Hindu literature. Vegetarian Discussion - Guest - 11-18-2008 x-post, Ramana's link: Antiquity of the Cultivation and Use of Brinjal in India Vegetarian Discussion - Guest - 01-12-2009 <b>CDC Says 1 in 200 Kids Is Vegetarian </b> Vegetarian Discussion - Guest - 02-08-2009 Source Peta - they are requesting those who want to save Earth e.g. Pelosi, Al Gore etc should stop eating Meat <b>Did You Know?</b> A 2006 U.N. report concluded that raising animals for food generates more greenhouse gases than all the cars, trucks, planes, and ships in the world combined. Producing one calorie of animal protein requires more than 10 times as much fossil fuel inputâreleasing more than 10 times the amount of greenhouse gassesâthan it takes to produce one calorie of plant protein. Being vegetarian is more effective in the fight against global warming than trading in your âregularâ car for a Toyota Prius. link Vegetarian Discussion - Husky - 07-01-2009 Original links given in an earlier post (#52) expired, so here are the archived link and relevant contents: 1. http://web.archive.org/web/20061018133609/...es/20011212.htm <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Dainik Hindustan 12th December 2001 <b>Did Vedic Hindus really eat cow?</b> By Sandhya Jain Under the pretext of disseminating true knowledge about the past to young, impressionable school children, a perverse assault has been launched upon the religious sensitivities of the Hindu community. Marxist historians allege that ancient Hindus ate beef, that this is recorded in their sacred scriptures, and that this should be taught to school children. The Hindu prohibition on cow slaughter, they say, is a more recent development and Hindus are shying away from this truth because it is intimately linked with their sense of identity. A Marxist specialist on ancient India, ignorant in both Vedic and Paniniâs Sanskrit, claims that the Shatapatha Brahmana and Vasistha Dharmasutra clearly state that guests were honoured by serving beef. She also cites archaeological evidence as reported by H.D. Sankalia and B.B. Lal. While the lady thinks her evidence is irrefutable, I have decided to pick up the gauntlet. To begin with, the Shatapatha Brahmana is Yajnavalkyaâs commentary on the Yajur Veda, and not a revealed text. As for the Vasistha Dharmasutra, the legendary Sanskritist, late P.V. Kane, said, âbeyond the name Vasistha there is hardly anything special in the dharmasutra to connect it with the Rgveda.â Kane also added, âgrave doubts have been entertained about the authenticity of the whole of the text of the Vas.Dh.S. as the mss. (manuscripts) contain varying numbers of chapters from 6 to 30, and as the text is hopelessly corrupt in several places⦠many versesâ¦bear the impress of a comparatively late age.â Kane tentatively places this text between 300-100 B.C., that is, long after the end of the Vedic age. According to archaeologists, the early Vedic age tentatively falls between the fourteen century BC to the first millennium BC. The later Vedic period lies between 1000 BC to 600-700 BC. But if we go by astronomical dating of some of the hymns, we get a period of 7000 BC for a portion of the Vedas. The honest question, however, is whether the Vedas offer evidence about cow slaughter and beef-eating, and if not, how the controversy arose in the first place. A few clarifications are in order before we proceed. The word âcowâ (gau), for instance, is used throughout the Vedas in diverse senses, and, depending on the context of the verse, could mean the animal cow, waters, sun-rays, learned persons, Vedic verses, or Prithvi (earth as Divine Mother). Then, Vedic society was heterogeneous, pluralistic, and non-vegetarian. In theory, it is possible that the cow was killed and eaten. The fact, however, is that throughout the Vedas the cow is called a non-killable animal, or âaghnya.â According to âAn Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Sanskrit on Historical Principlesâ (Vol. I, Deccan College, Poona), âaghnyaâ means ânot to be killed or violatedâ and is used for cows and for waters in the presence of which oaths were taken. The Rig and Sama Veda call the cow âaghnyaâ and âAditiâ, ie. not to be murdered (Rig 1-64-27; 5-83-8; 7-68-9; 1-164-40; 8-69-2; 9-1-9; 9-93-3; 10-6-11; 10-87-16). They extol the cow as un-killable, un-murderable, whose milk purifies the mind and keeps it free from sin. Verse 10-87-16 prescribes severe punishment for the person who kills a cow. The Atharva Veda recommends beheading (8-3-16) for such a crime; the Rig Veda advocates expulsion from the kingdom (8-101-15). Hence, it seems unlikely that the cow would be slaughtered to entertain guests, as claimed by Marxist historians. But before coming to any conclusion, the archaeological evidence should also be examined. Archaeologists have excavated bones of cattle in huge quantity, âcattleâ is a collective noun which includes the cow, bull, buffalo, nilgai and all other bovine animals. Nowhere in the world can experts differentiate between the bones of cows and other cattle recovered from excavations. There are good reasons for this difficulty. Most of the bones found are not whole carcasses, but large pieces of limbs. Experts feel that these could be the remains of animals that died naturally and were skinned for their hide and bones. Ancient man used bones to make knives and other tools; the splintered bones found could be part of the tool-making exercise. In all honesty, therefore, cattle bone finds do not prove cow slaughter or the eating of cow meat, especially when all literary evidence points in the opposite direction. There has been talk about cut-marks on the bones. But apart from tool-making, even if a tanner skins dead cattle for the hide, he will inflict cut marks on the carcass. Scientifically, it is not possible to say if the marks on the bones are ante-mortem or post-mortem. This can be determined only where the body is intact (animal or human), by analyzing blood vessels, tissue, rigor mortis and other factors. Fortunately, there is now clinching evidence why the Marxist claim on cow-flesh rests on false premises. As already stated, the allegation rests mainly on literary sources and their interpretation, and we are in a position to trace the source of the mischief â the Vachaspatyam of Pandit Taranath and his British mentors. Pandit Taranath, a professor of grammar at the Calcutta Sanskrit College, compiled a six-volume Sanskrit-to-Sanskrit dictionary, which is used by scholars to this day. The Vachaspatyam is a valuable guide for scholars because there are certain words in the samhita (mantra) section of the Vedas that are not found later in the Puranas. What most Sanskrit scholars have failed to notice is that Taranath artfully corrupted the meanings of a few crucial words of the Vedic samhita to endorse the meaning given by Max Muller in his translation of the Vedas. Swami Prakashanand Saraswati has exposed this beautifully in âThe True History and the Religion of India, A Concise Encyclopedia of Authentic Hinduismâ (Motilal Banarsidass). The British idea was that Max Muller would translate the Rig Veda âin such a scornful manner that Hindus themselves should begin to reproach their own religion of the Vedas,â while a Hindu pandit would âcompile an elaborate Sanskrit dictionary that should exhibit disgraceful meanings of certain words of the Vedic mantras.â As Hindus would not question a dictionary by a Hindu pandit, the British would be able to claim that whatever Max Muller wrote about the Vedas was according to the dictionary of the Hindus. Swami Prakashanand Saraswati focuses on two words â goghn and ashvamedh. âGoghnâ means a guest who receives a cow as gift. Panini created a special sutra to establish the rule that goghn will only mean the receiver of a cow (and will not be used in any other sense). But Taranath ignored Paniniâs injunction and wrote that âgoghnâ means âthe killer of a cow.â He similarly converted the ashvamedh yagna from âritual worship of the horseâ to the âkilling of the horse.â The Swami proves the British hand in this mischief through the patronage given to Taranath by the Government of Bengal in 1866, when Lt. Governor Sir Cecil Beadon sanctioned ten thousand rupees for two hundred copies of his dictionary. This was a kingâs ransom in those days, as even in the 1930s the headmaster of a vernacular primary school received a salary of twenty rupees a month. Today, ten thousand rupees is the equivalent of two million rupees. When the basic premise upon which all modern translations rest is thus knocked off its pedestal, what beef is left in the theory that Vedic Hindus enjoyed the flesh of the cow? I rest my case. End of Matter<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> 2. http://web.archive.org/web/20061018133545/...es/20040727.htm <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Pioneer 27th July 2004 The lion and the historian By Sandhya Jain Of course, our Marxist friends have had no compunctions in shocking young school students with the claim that our Vedic ancestors, particularly the wily Brahmins, were voracious eaters of cow meat. Undeterred by inconvenient facts like the veneration of the cow in the Vedas and the prohibition on its slaughter, they have continued to perpetuate a colonial falsehood that was invented to facilitate the conversion agenda of Christian missionaries. Discerning readers would have realized that the sudden vehemence with which Marxists are now propagating that Vedic Hindus ate beef is nothing but a crude attempt to de-sacralize the cow and assist the conversion agenda of evangelizing faiths.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> Vegetarian Discussion - Husky - 10-03-2009 Sad that the only place to discuss animals here is in a food thread. (I never think of food when I consider animals or am stalking them with my eyes. I don't know that I think at all then. Hmm, I think all I feel is wonder then. Yes, that was it. Wonder at how such excruciating beauty is possible at all. Wonder at how they are so free of me, in a way that I am not free of them, nor can be: I must look at them until they wander out of sight, while they do not heed me; I must know they are there and exist, they do not care. This freedom, independence of theirs is itself a part of the nature of their beauty.) <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->"We need another and a wiser and perhaps a more mystical concept of animals. Remote from universal nature, and living by a complicated artifice, man in civilization surveys the creature through the glass of his knowledge, seeing thereby a feather magnified, the whole image in distortion. We patronize them for their incompleteness, for their tragic fate of having taken form so far below ourselves. And therein we err, and greatly err. For the animal shall not be measured by man. In a world older and more complete than ours, they move finished and complete, gifted with extensions of the senses we have lost or never attained, living by voices we shall never hear. They are not brethren. They are not underlings. They are other nations, caught with ourselves in the net of life and time, fellow prisoners of the splendour and travail of the earth." â Henry Beston<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> <!--emo& ![]() Good to know there are people that have such sentiments (there are many in the world). And he expresses himself beautifully. I differ in that they <i>are</i> my brethren. I claim that kinship. Because I <i>am</i> part of it, and will not be severed. It is one of the oldest memories of feeling I have. Vegetarian Discussion - Guest - 10-18-2009 I was an occasional non-vegetarian some 5-6 years ago. Except my mother (a strict vegetarian) everyone else was an occasional non-vegetarian. But since then my whole family is vegetarian now. Here are my reasons to choose vegetarianism over non-vegetarianism. 1) One creature is the food of other creature but we as human have conscience to cause least amount of violence. I follow principle of least violence. Plants have least number of sense organs and further when you pluck the fruits then it does not kill them (though there are exceptions). 2) Already explained in this thread is that amount of resources required to create certain amount of meat is far greater than creating same nutritious value vegetarian food. If people switch to vegetarianism then millions of people will not sleep with hungry stomach. 3) There is always a risk of great number of ailments from eating meats. 4) Raising animals for food do have severe negative effects on environment. Vegetarian Discussion - Bharatvarsh2 - 10-07-2010 [quote name='Bodhi' date='27 May 2007 - 01:32 PM' timestamp='1180290282' post='69414'] <b>Questions to Bajwa ji</b>. What is the precise scriptural position on meat-eating in Sri Guru Granth? (I am not asking about common understanding or practice, but actual scriptural reference.) You had mentioned in another thread (DSS) that Langars used to serve meat at one time? Is that backed up by any historic documentation? Also what is it about Jhatka killing being sanctioned? Also any records about the eating preferances of the 10 Gurus?[/quote] Bodhi I came across this post of yours while searching for something. This is the Sanatan Sikh position: Quote:Background: Quote:'Chatka' is essential, if one is to survive the horrors of the battlefield.On the field of battle,the foremost Sikh historian of the 'Missal' (confederacy) period (1735-1770's), Shaheed Bhai Rattan Singh Bhangu, states that there is NO place for vegetarianism: Quote:One may ask the question: ââ¬ËWhat if the British Raj did not establish itself in India?ââ¬â¢ Quote:Sant Baba Jaginder Singh, the Jathedar of the Takht Sach Khand Hazoor Sahib, comments as follows with regards to the Budha Dal being considered the ââ¬ËPanjvah Takhtââ¬â¢ and the tradition of Chatka at the Takhts: You can find more info at: http://www.nihangsingh.org/website/trad-jhatka.html http://www.sarbloh.info/htmls/article_samparda_tatkhalsa.html http://www.sarbloh.info/htmls/article_samparda_sanatan.html Vegetarian Discussion - Husky - 02-05-2011 ^ Vegetarian thread is the closest to "animal thread" I can find here http://www.chakranews.com/how-hinduism-continues-to-save-dolphins-in-india/964 Quote:Monday, November 29th, 2010 | Posted by Editor Vegetarian Discussion - Husky - 03-09-2011 Vegetarians and vegetarianism in Hellenismos Next to the well-known vegetarian Orphics and of course Pythagoras many centuries BCE, and Porphyrius (famously wrote a book on the Why of vegetarianism), and the vegetarians Plotinus of Neoplatonism and Seneca (both state the Why beautifully - will try to locate something), Plato (Republic) seems to imply that Socrates -- the one who's famous for declaring at his trial that "I believe there are *Gods* more than any one of my accusers", or so Plato tells us -- is a vegetarian. It is often considered that Platon was himself a vegetarian (not merely for being the shishya of Socrates) but from his own statements as well. Following bits (in order of my arranging) are from: - advocacy.britannica.com/blog/advocacy/2010/08/the-hidden-history-of-greco-roman-vegetarianism/ - www.think-differently-about-sheep.com/Why_Animals_Matter_A%20Religious_Philosophical_Perspective_Philosophy_Quotations.htm Quote:After Plutarch, the Greek philosopher Plotinus (205-270 CE) combined Pythagoreanism, Platonism, and Stoicism into a school of philosophy called Neoplatonism. He taught that all animals feel pain and pleasure, not just humans. According to Jon Gregerson, author of Vegetarianism: A History, Plotinus believed in order for humans to unite with the Supreme Reality, humans had to treat all animals with compassion. Seeking to practice what he preached, Plotinus avoided medicine made from animals. He allowed for the wearing of wool and the use of animals for farm labor, but he mandated humane treatment. advocacy.britannica.com/blog/advocacy/2010/08/the-hidden-history-of-greco-roman-vegetarianism/ Quote:Before diving into the teachings of the Greek and Roman philosophers, it is important that the Greek and Roman diet be understood. For the Greeks and Romans, cereals, vegetables, and fruit composed much of their diet. The meat that was consumed was usually fish, fowl, or pigs, which were the cheapest and most convenient animals people could kill for their flesh. However, only the wealthiest citizens could afford to eat large amounts of meat on a regular basis.what Pythagoras said on animals and the Why of his vegetarianism www.ivu.org/history/greece_rome/greek.html Quote:Orphic Communities (c540 BC - ?) Even earlier than Pythagoras and the Orphics: the vegetarian Hesiod, writing on the "Yugas" of the Hellenes (c.f. the "Yugas" of the Daoists) - www.ivu.org/history/greece_rome/hesiod.html Quote:Hesiod (c. 8th century BC)Etc. But it is oft stated that Romans didn't sacrifice animals until later (until Ceres). IIRC Numa - first King of Rome - had instituted vegetarian sacrifices in Romans' Temple worship. Don't know why there's a page for Julian. (All those interested already knew he was very frugal and usually ate vegetarian fare. But this does not imply he was vegetarian, i.e. at all times.) Also, he deliberately made the all-important specified animal sacrifices to the Gods at times, for the good of his nation and its future. www.ivu.org/history/williams/julian.html Note: this page quotes from some (clearly) highly anti-Julian/anti-Hellenistic author. But it does refer to a statement from Gibbon's Decline And Fall for something honest: Quote:"he [Emperor Julian] was heard to declare, with the enthusiasm of a missionary, that if he could render each individual richer than Midas and every city greater than Babylon, he should not esteem himself the benefactor of mankind, unless at the same time he could reclaim his subjects from their impious revolt against the immortal gods."<img src='http://www.india-forum.com/forums/public/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/smile.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=' ![]() Vegetarian Discussion - Husky - 03-09-2011 ^ Vegetarianism in Hellenismos (Very cool) Apparently the next is not as common knowledge as you'd have thought, though it would be at IF I suspect: 1. Buddhism didn't invent Indian vegetarianism (let alone global vegetarianism) despite modern claims about this that have been posted even on Indian fora/blogs that no reader knows/cares to correct; 2. Buddhism isn't actually vegetarian per se. Only the (later) Mahayana branch of Buddhism has text insisting on it. (And of course, it got its vegetarianism as a *reaction* to the vegetarianism pre-existing in India.) But as it's not admissible to point to earlier Hindu texts to prove that vegetarianism (among other things) pre-existed in Hindu religion, one must instead point to what's known of Buddhism itself. The following link is mainly on the postulations of whether the Buddha did or did not in fact die from eating poisoned pork, as per the semi-ambiguous statements about his death that have been handed down by tradition (the quite plausible alternative being poisoned mushrooms - my random opinion favours the latter*, but western scholars and even some surprisingly Buddhist Chinese ones have been more than merely divided about it. * However, pork being a part of Buddha's diet is not at all an impossibility, since Theravada claims that the Buddha himself - with proviso - allowed pork and beef, among other meat. And it is only the later Mahayana Buddhist branch that has Buddha himself insist on a more vegetarian diet. But don't ask illegal questions like "So which one is it, since the two sets of statements attributed to him are mutually exclusive?", because scholars on Buddhism - western at least - will tell you that IIRC *everything* the Buddha is to have said was written down after his passing. So I think the Theravadins may have the better memory, being the earlier branch). But the speculation on the food item that caused Shakyamuni Buddha's death is - or so you thought - general knowledge and therefore not the interesting bit in the following. Note that I'm not saying it - www.ianchadwick.com/forum/index.php?/blog/1/entry-15-buddhas-death-reconsidered/ Quote:[...](In an earlier era, Mahayana Buddhism in Chinese lands was generally strictly vegetarian. But "apparently" Buddhists weren't the first vegetarian ascetics there either. This should not come as a surprise.) The writer of the above ends his piece well, with a decent argument for why Buddhists can choose to be vegetarian *regardless* of whether the Shakyamuni Buddha was vegetarian or not. This next is better than I anticipated: I'd expected Wacky to say the very opposite. Instead, Wacky factually indicates that Mahayana Buddhism adopted vegetarianism reactively, instead of claiming M/B innovated it (maybe one should save the wacky page before the crucial para disappears?): en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhist_vegetarianism Quote:In Buddhism, the views on vegetarianism vary from school to school. According to Theravada, the Buddha allowed his monks to eat pork, chicken and beef if the animal was not killed for the purpose of providing food for monks. Theravada also believes that the Buddha allowed the monks to choose a vegetarian diet, but only prohibited against eating human, elephant, horse, dog, snake, lion, tiger, bear, leopard, and hyena flesh.[1] Buddha did not prohibit any kind of meat-eating for his lay followers. In Vajrayana, the act of eating meat is not always prohibited. The Mahayana schools generally recommend a vegetarian diet, for they believe that the Buddha insisted that his followers should not eat meat or fish. "Amazing" that Buddhism didn't invent "compassion and egalitarianism" but that such things as vegetarianism pre-existed in (gasp) Hindu religion hence society. Truly, "amazing." (Actually amazing is the scale of the collective amnesia among Hindus today on what should be common knowledge to them.) And so ends another claim from superiority. (India's neo-'Buddhists' claimed - and it's reposted on an international Buddhist site - that Buddhism invented vegetarianism and that Hindus got it from Buddhism, and moreover made vituperative accusations concerning the latter. And when such assertions get dumped on Indian sites frequented by presumably Hindu readers, no one sets the story straight.) Not that anyone would suppose it (but ya never know - I'm just pre-empting silly declarations to the effect): Since the Mahayana branch of Buddhism came to exist long after Pythagoras, and MB's vegetarian tenets after that, one can work out that Buddhism did *not* influence Pythagoras' vegetarianism either. (The above is a reference to the frequent mention in the west that Pythagoras had been influenced in his teachings by some unspecified "Indian" religion. Whether this claim included Pythagoras' view of *vegetarianism* or not, I can't recall. But if at all it did, then Buddhism at least could certainly not have influenced it). But whatever. Hesiod predates known Indian contact with GR, so vegetarianism in the Hellenistic space doesn't require any Indian (Hindu or otherwise) precedent. Even though Buddhism didn't devise vegetarianism, many ancient (religious) traditions around the world have - on their own - come up with: 1. individual (i.e. conscious) vegetarians, 2. frugal ascetic vegetarians and 3. communities of vegetarians. Vegetarian Discussion - Husky - 06-25-2011 This is not a post on vegetarianism. In an introductory chapter of a work which is otherwise on a rather different matter, there is a passing reference to "The 64 Skills" to be studied by all Hindu wo/men (to which list the author wants to add his own work's topic). One of the 64 listed skills is the following: Quote:meShakukkuTalAbaka-yuddhavidhiH (The print was such that I can't make out whether it's lAbaka or lAvaka or something... It's probably some animal, I think.) It seems to me to mean one of either: (a) a reference to the sports of cock-, ram- and lAb/vaka-fighting (i.e. spectator sports) (b ) or I guess it could turn out to be technical terms for some fighting techniques named after animals (as exist in Chinese martial arts) I actually suspect it may be (a), since the study of our own martial arts was already listed elsewhere in the same list of 64 skills. IIRC the work itself - and it's probably not the first to mention it, plus it wasn't written in TN to my limited knowledge - was dated by the Brits to around 2 millennia ago (give or take some centuries). I guess that makes it ancient enough for the following argument: Ancient Indian (Hindu) cultured society was expected to learn some/all of the 64 skills. Therefore, if (a) is the approximate meaning, then it's not exclusively Tamizh Hindus who hold cock-fighting events. They're merely those continuing an ancient event in pan-Indian/Hindu society. (<- Can use that argument - again, only if (a) is the case - to tell snobbish Hindus looking down on "barbarians" in their midst to get off one's back: if it is barbaric, then it was no less barbaric centuries ago as well, when more than just Tamizh Nadu's Hindus engaged in it and when it was moreover considered a feature of cultured society.) Disclaimer: This post is not a recommendation of cock-/ram-/fighting, just as it is not a condemnation of the same. It's just a post on: if you're being hassled about this very topic and declared a "barbarian" on account of it, look up a listing of "the 64 skills" (or however you translate it) and see whether it is indeed relevant. |