Showing posts with label garuda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garuda. Show all posts

Thursday, June 12, 2025

Dead bodies everywhere, one survivor


British national survives Air India plane crash, condition unknown

(ABC News) June 12, 2025: The Civil Hospital in Ahmedabad, India, confirmed to ABC News that Ramesh Vishwaskumar, one passenger [in seat 11A] on the downed Air India flight, is alive and hospitalized there.
Korn "Dead Bodies Everywhere"

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Buddhist monk on Gender Equality (video)

Claralynn N. (United Kingdom); Dhr. Seven, Ashley Wells, Seth Auberon, Amber Larson, Wisdom Quarterly; Abbot Ajahn Brahmavamso (BuddhistSocietyWA, June 27, 2014)

BuddhistSocietyWAPERTH, Western Australia - Ajahn Brahm -- an enlightened Western Buddhist monk from England living in Australia after a decade in Northeast Thailand (Isan) at Wat Pah Nanachat, the International Forest Monastery -- talks about the banning of his United Nations' speech on gender equity, equality of the sexes.

Viewers who support Wisdom Quarterly and women's right to full ordination in Theravada Buddhism as well as supporting Ajahn Brahm's work striving for the equality of females within all Buddhist schools, particularly his more traditional and monastic tradition, are encouraged to consider signing the online petition here.
  • Sangha: nuns, monks, female, male supporters.
    Traditionally, it was thought that women could no longer secured full ordination due to a rule the Buddha laid down when his foster mother ordained. However, evidence found in the background stories (Vibhanga) of the Nuns' Disciplinary Code (Bhikkhuni Vinaya), research by the Theravada nun Ayya Tathaloka, shows that those rules or garudhammas are a historical impossibility. Had the Buddha laid them down with all the fanfare in front of the Shakyan women as is claimed, questions would not have arisen regarding etiquette between male and female monastics and ordination, as those would have been settled issues. But that questions did arise, as recorded in the stories accompanying the formation of each rule, those sexist and patriarchal garudhammas could not have been preexisted. The function of these additional rules seems to be little more than to subordinate female Sangha members to males and was clearly in the interest of monks to have hastily inserted at some point in time.
Let's invite Ajahn Brahm to present his gender equality paper at the 2015 UNDV conference
United Nations Day of Vesak (UNDV): Invite Ajahn Brahm to present his gender equality paper @ the 2015 UNDV conference
3,242 signers so far. Let's reach 10,000 United Nations' Day of Vesak (UNDV)
 
Supporting Buddhist women at the U.N.
Nuns are necessary for a complete Sangha
We, the undersigned, are astounded and deeply disappointed by the banning of Ajahn Brahm's paper on gender equality at the 2014 United Nations' Day of Vesak (UNDV) conference in Vietnam.
 
The paper was clearly aligned with the UN’s Millennium Development Goal 3 (Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women), which the UNDV is committed to uphold through its connection with the UN. Moreover, Ajahn Brahm's paper had already been approved for presentation when it was suddenly banned 36 hours before its scheduled presentation.
 
We value free and open dialogue. We therefore ask that the UNDV, in accordance with Millennium Development Goal 3, promotes dialogue about the participation of women in contemporary Theravada Buddhism by inviting Ajahn Brahm to publicly present his gender equality paper at the next UNDV conference in 2015.
(To view signers, go to petition2014.org. This petition will remain open until October 1st, 2014. The petition can be read in Chinese (petition2014.org/2001325991.html), Thai and Vietnamese (petition2014.org/3616363436253634365236073618-vi7879t.html), and Sinhalese (petition2014.org/35233538345835243517.html).

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Recycling as art: Lady Gaga, Colbert, Waste...


WARNING: Skimpy outfits, mild use of bad words, irony, sexually suggestive dancing!

Recycling in Search of Strong Women
Wisdom Quarterly
We sure do love Lady Gaga. Maybe it's because she seems like a strong woman, and they are in short supply. Unfortunately, it seems like a case of false bravado as with Sarah Palin, Ann Coulter, and other right-wing starlets. There aren't enough Chelsea Handlers, Wanda Sykes, Ariana Huffingtons, Hillarys, or Amy Goodmans. So we're stuck resorting to music for role models on how to be strong. Fortunately, they keep recycling through the dance hits, raps, and R&B themes. It may not be fresh, but it's reliable. Kwan Yin, Tara, Prajapati Gotami, the female arhats, Khema, and Uppalavanna are of course better role models, but they aren't in the media very often. Lady Gaga and others (Ke$ha, Christina Eagle, Britney, Cher, Paris, and Lindsay) are. Is there a media conspiracy to dumb down our distractions, or is it the cosmetics industry trying to convince us that women's only value is beauty, sexuality, and/or acting like a lesbian? It's a great media wasteland where trash and mash ups make the best art. We might as well have fun with it, like our comedy hero and heroine Stephen Colbert (of the Colbert Report and the Colbuffington Re-post) and Sarah Silverman, or take a lesson from Brazil.*

WARNING: Mild use of bad words, irony, pseudo aggression, transvestitism, and Sarah stabs a stuffed moose, (No moose were harmed in the making of this parody).

Lady Gaga leaves Britney Spears in the dust but can't trump Flo Rida or the Black Eyed Peas' digital hits. It's the 1,000th hit single since Billboard started the Hot 100 in 1958. Talented Lady Gaga is no "overnight sensation." "Born This Way" is Gaga's third single to top the Hot 100, but it's her first to debut in the top spot. Her breakthrough hit, "Just Dance," took 22 weeks to reach #1. Her follow-up, "Poker Face," took 15 weeks. Surprisingly, "Bad Romance" never reached the top spot. It logged seven weeks at #2. Is she recycling? "Born This Way" owes an obvious debt to a pair of Madonna hits, 1989's "Express Yourself" and 1990's "Vogue." Previous Gaga hits have also echoed Madonna. It's just like "Sarah Palin" raps in their epic battle: "Everything you do is just a rerun of Madonna! Your fans are in a frenzy like a bunch of g*y piranha."

*Brazil's "Waste Land"


Filmed over nearly three years, "Waste Land" was a hit at Sundance 2010 and is poised to take home a best documentary Academy Award. The film follows renowned artist Vik Muniz on a journey from his home base in New York to his native Brazil. His aim is the world's largest landfill, Gramacho Garden, located on the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro, to photograph an eclectic band of pickers (catadores) of recyclables. Muniz's initial objective was to "paint" the catadores with garbage. However, his collaboration with these inspiring characters as they recreate photographic images of themselves out of waste reveals both dignity and despair as the catadores begin to re-imagine their lives. In the end, Walker offers stirring evidence of the transformative power of art and the alchemy of the human spirit (Almega Projects).

Friday, September 26, 2008

Kinnaras (Flying Men) Landing


Swiss adventurer Yves Rossy demonstrates his jet-powered wing during a test flight in May 2008. Rossy -- who calls himself "Fusion Man" — landed in Britain after crossing the English Channel from France using only his a jet-powered wing (AFP/File/Fabrice Coffrini).

Icon of Garuda, Srirangapattana Temple artifact, Karnataka, India (© Vikas Kamat has compiled a fascinating array of pictures depicting the man-bird Garuda in Indian Art).

Garudas, Suparnas, and Kinnaras are half-men, half-bird hybrids. These chimeras were said to live north of India. With the ability to fly, there is a suggestion of Aryan (modern Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, upper-Indus Valley civilization) being influenced by extraterrestrial sources — sufficiently technologically advanced to fly.

The Vedas were reporting flying craft (vimana) thousands of years ago [as previously covered by WQ]. Whether utilizing jetpacks, wings, or hybrid biology, human flight were known even by the time of the Buddha (twenty-five centuries ago), and many canonical references are made to them. The Kinnaras inhabit their own kingdom.

Have such things — chimeras or the technology for individual flight — ever existed? Do they exist now? (Yes, we have video). Would it even be genetically possible to sprout wings? (They were for this modern cat).

Swiss daredevil Yves Rossy, seen here flying in May 2008, propelled by a jet-powered wing strapped to his back, an aide said (AFP/File/Fabrice Coffrini).

Swiss man flies over Channel on jet wing
David Stringer (AP)

DOVER, England — A Swiss daredevil crossed the English Channel strapped to a homemade jet-propelled wing Friday, parachuting into a field near the white cliffs of Dover after a 10-minute solo flight.

Yves Rossy leapt from a plane at more than 8,800 feet, fired up his jets, and made the 22-mile trip from Calais in France. Rossy passed over a thin strip of land in front of South Foreland lighthouse, looped over onlookers, and opened his parachute, his wings still strapped to his back.

"It was perfect. Blue sky, sunny, no clouds, perfect conditions," he said. "We prepared everything and it was great."

The trip across the Channel is meant to trace the route of French aviator Louis Bleriot, the first person to cross in an airplane 99 years ago. The lighthouse was the site of Guglielmo Marconi's experiments with radio telegraphy in 1898. Bleriot used the white building as a target during his pioneering flight, the building's manager, Simon Ovenden, said.

Several hundred spectators rushed to greet the pilot, trying to take photographs with cameras and cell phones. "It's a remarkable achievement, we saw the climax of his attempt as he came down to earth with his parachute. It's been an exciting afternoon," said Geoff Clark, a 54-year-old onlooker from Chatham, in Kent.

The carbon composite-wing weighs about 121 pounds when loaded with fuel, and carried four kerosene-burning jet turbines that kept him aloft. The wing had no steering devices. Instead, Rossy moved his body to control its movements.

He wore a heat-resistant suit similar to that worn by firefighters and racing drivers to protect him from the heat of the turbines. The cooling effect of the wind and high altitude also prevented him from getting too hot. Mark Dale, the senior technical officer for the British Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association, described Rossy's flight as a "fabulous stunt."

Yves Rossy parachutes in to land, after crossing the English channel with a jetpack, in Dover, southern England 9/26/08 (Reuters/Kieran Doherty).
.
The Mythological Story of Garuda
Jyotsna Kamat Ph.D. (Bangalore, India)

According to the Hindu Puranas, Garuda is the son of the sage Kashyapa [Kassapa] and Vinata. His elder brother is Aruna, the charioteer of Sun god Surya. Vinata and her sister Kadru once saw the heavenly horse Uchhaisravas grazing near the seashore. Vinata said it was a pure white steed. Kadru insisted that its tail was black. They went on arguing until Kadru suggested that they come the next day and check again. Whoever was incorrect would have to become the slave of the other.
.
Finding that her observation was incorrect, Kadru with her son Karkota's help, painted Uchhaishrava's tail black. And poor Vinata became her slave. When Garuda, also the son of a slave, had to serve Kadru and her sons, who were serpents (nagas), he was very much annoyed. He approached Kadru and asked how he and his mother could be liberated. She told him that the only way was to bring nectar (Amrita) from the land of "gods" (devas). With the blessings of his father, Garuda set off for the celestial realm of the gods.

After reaching that world, Garuda fought the guards who kept a vigil on the pot of nectar and crossed the hurdles of various weapons. Lord Indra had also come to recover the nectar of immortality. Garuda faced him fearlessly. Pleased with his valor, Indra allowed him to take the Amrita-kalasha (pot of nectar) but warned that the serpents should not have access to it.
.
He also blessed him that he would have a diet of serpents. Garuda flew back and placed the nectar pot before Kadru, who wanted her progeny to become immortal. She ordered them to have a bath before having a drink of the nectar. When the reptiles [Reptilians] left to bathe, Indra appeared and carried the pot back to heaven. When the serpents returned there was no nectar. They tried to lick the drops fallen on grass, which split their tongues.

Thereafter Garuda flew to freedom with his mother and later became the vehicle of Lord Vishnu. Garuda (Indian eagle) is never seen eating carrion as vultures do but is supposed a clean bird. Known for speed, it flies very high in the sky. It became a symbol of courage, faithfulness, and unflinching duty. There are many sacred places named after Garuda. Suparna (with prettier wings) is another popular name of this mighty anthropomorphic bird. Source