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Gayatri Mantra
Written by Debarati Sanjay, CIF Committee Member
It was the year 1977, when my brother was having his ‘sacred thread’ ceremony that I heard ‘The Gayatri Mantra’ for the first time. I was 5 years old then and I remember the family priest telling me that girls are not allowed to chant the mantra. In those days, when you were told not to do something, you just listened; no questions asked. In fact, asking questions was deemed to be rude. However, later I read that in the Hindu Sanatana Dharma, nowhere it is mentioned that girls are barred from chanting the mantra. Later that day, with my mother’s permission, I did chant the mantra with my brother.
Chanting the Gayatri mantra, has given me solace, hope and an overall feeling of positivity. The tune associated with it adds to the beauty of the verse.
Originally in Sanskrit, this mantra has its mention in the Rig Veda (the oldest Hindu scripture) written about 2500 to 3500 years ago. Goddess Gayatri is the mother of the Vedas who ushers in light and eliminates darkness. The verse has 24 syllables inside a triplet of 8 syllables.
Gayatri Mantra
Sanskrit version–
OM bhur bhuvah swah
Bhargo devasya dhimahi
Dhiyo yo nah prachodayat
English translation–
We mediate on the glory of the creator,
Who has created the Universe;
Who is worthy of worship;
Who is the embodiment of knowledge and light;
Who is the remover of all sin and ignorance;
May he enlighten our intellect.
Benefits of chanting
Improves concentration and learning
Removes negativity
Calms mind, reduces stress and anxiety
Best time to recite
4am to 8am and 4pm to 8pm have the sātvic quality
8am to 4pm have rājasic quality
8pm and 4am have tāmasic quality
In fact it may be chanted anytime of the day.
Reference: Astrology, TOI, 2020 ‘Gayatri Mantra-Meaning and Significance’, Times Of India, April 9, 2020
Peace Walk 2021
Tuesday September 21st
Leicester and Beyond/Belief in Dialogue Interfaith online Forum.
The next online interfaith forum is 7pm UK time Sunday 18th July.
Theme: Religion and the Climate Emergency.
We have a fabulous panel:
Arzoo Ahmed – Researcher at the Nuffield Council on Bioethics, Oxford, Muslim
Uri Gordon – Jewish Climate and Peace Activist, Leicester
Caroline Harmon – Founding member Christian Climate Action/ Christians in Extinction Rebellion, Loughborough
Ariadne Tampion – Humanist and Secularist, Loughborough
Ryan Comins is again the skilful, kind, and thoughtful moderator.
Attached is a flier for this latest event giving details. Please feel free to share this flier with others. Your friends and others who might be interested are also warmly invited to attend.
Please REGISTER by sending an email to Andrew Bolton abolton2@live.com with the words ‘Interfaith Forum 18 July’ in the subject title. You will then be sent a Zoom Meeting ID and password.
Debate on Police Diversity
IFN news bulletin
The latest issue of the Inter Faith Network for the UK’s e-bulletin is published today. You can read it at https://www.interfaith.org.uk/news/ifn-e-bulletin. Among the topics covered:
• Faith communities and COVID-19
• Faith communities, climate change and the environment
• Great Get Together 18-20 June and Thank You Day 4 July
• Places of worship and security
• Inter faith projects and developments
• Inter Faith Week
• Inter faith resources and training
• Special Weeks and Days
• Inter faith events
Words of Connection
SKIPPING OUT OF THE GLOOM TO OFFER CHEERFUL THANKS |
Dear Rev Mark Are the days of darkness on the way out? We won’t know for a while. Apparently pandemics rarely last more than two years, so we may be over the worst. Meanwhile many of us have already started to celebrate; maybe the sunshine has affected us all, along with the loosening of the rules… so it seems a great time to offer up our thanks, and adopt a note of optimism. Building on the idea of celebratory thanks, it seemed so right to open with the beautiful 30th Psalm, which closes with the lovely words… “you removed my sackcloth and clothed me with joy…” And still going with the theme of joyous appreciation, a request to “Praise the world to the angel…” by Rainer Maria Rilke, from The Ninth Elegy. This is followed by Thanks a powerful and ironic work by the Buddhist environmentalist poet W.S. Merwin. In total contrast to all the previous readings, a very recent blessing and prayer of Thanks, written for our local Health Watch Volunteers. The last reading is How the Grass and the Flowers Came to Exist, A God Tale, by the great Mary Oliver. This week’s Words of Connection includes a publicity poster for the Dialogue Society’s Virtual Ramadan Event, which will be held on Sunday 25th of April at 7pm. It arrived too late to make it into our news update. The link this week is a sweet and gentle version of Howard Goodall’s 23rd Psalm sung by the Australian boy soprano, Austin Haynes. Stay well, stay harmonious and enjoy the spring sunshine! Very best wishes, Anthea Chair IFCG |
Psalm 30
(New International Version)
I will exalt you, Lord,
for you lifted me out of the depths
and did not let my enemies gloat over me.
Lord my God, I called to you for help,
and you healed me.
You, Lord, brought me up from the realm of the dead;
you spared me from going down to the pit.
Sing the praises of the Lord, you his faithful people;
praise his holy name.
For his anger lasts only a moment,
but his favour lasts a lifetime;
weeping may stay for the night,
but rejoicing comes in the morning.
When I felt secure, I said,
“I will never be shaken.”
Lord, when you favoured me,
you made my royal mountain stand firm;
but when you hid your face,
I was dismayed.
To you, Lord, I called;
to the Lord I cried for mercy:
“What is gained if I am silenced,
if I go down to the pit?
Will the dust praise you?
Will it proclaim your faithfulness?
Hear, Lord, and be merciful to me;
Lord, be my help.”
You turned my wailing into dancing;
you removed my sackcloth and clothed me with joy,
that my heart may sing your praises and not be silent.
Lord my God, I will praise you forever.
From the Ninth Elegy
Praise the world to the angel, not the unutterable world;
you cannot astonish him with your glorious feelings;
in the universe, where he feels more sensitively,
you’re just a beginner. Therefore, show him the simple
thing that is shaped in passing from father to son,
that lives near our hands and eyes as our very own.
Tell him about the Things. He’ll stand amazed, as you stood
beside the rope-maker in Rome, or the potter on the Nile.
Show him how happy a thing can be, how blameless and ours;
how even the lamentation of sorrow purely decides
to take form, serves as a thing, or dies
in a thing, and blissfully in the beyond
escapes the violin. And these things that live,
slipping away, understand that you praise them;
transitory themselves, they trust us for rescue,
us, the most transient of all. They wish us to transmute them
in our invisible heart–oh, infinitely into us! Whoever we are.
Earth, isn’t this what you want: invisibly
to arise in us? Is it not your dream
to be some day invisible? Earth! Invisible!
What, if not transformation, is your insistent commission?
Earth, dear one, I will! Oh, believe it needs
not one more of your springtimes to win me over.
One, just one, is already too much for my blood.
From afar I’m utterly determined to be yours.
You were always right and your sacred revelation is the intimate death.
Behold, I’m alive. On what? Neither childhood nor future
grows less…surplus of existence
is welling up in my heart.
Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926)
Thanks
Listen
with the night falling we are saying thank you
we are stopping on the bridges to bow from the railings
we are running out of the glass rooms
with our mouths full of food to look at the sky
and say thank you
we are standing by the water thanking it
standing by the windows looking out
in our directions
back from a series of hospitals back from a mugging
after funerals we are saying thank you
after the news of the dead
whether or not we knew them we are saying thank you
over telephones we are saying thank you
in doorways and in the backs of cars and in elevators
remembering wars and the police at the door
and the beatings on stairs we are saying thank you
in the banks we are saying thank you
in the faces of the officials and the rich
and of all who will never change
we go on saying thank you thank you
with the animals dying around us
taking our feelings we are saying thank you
with the forests falling faster than the minutes
of our lives we are saying thank you
with the words going out like cells of a brain
with the cities growing over us
we are saying thank you faster and faster
with nobody listening we are saying thank you
thank you we are saying and waving
dark though it is
W.S. Merwin (1927-2019)
Prayer of Thanks to Volunteers
You are among us
We see you, hear you,
Feel your comforting touch
You are among us
Spirits that ask nothing
Giving everything
Without accolade
Reward or thanks
I call you angels…
Others call you volunteers
Your generosity is beauty
Your gifts defy language
In these strange times
Your dancing souls
Move freely amongst us
Supporting the weak and the sorrowing,
Feeding the hungry, caring for the sick and dying
Picking up rubbish, stirring pots of soup
Wiping the soil of life and our tears
Rewarding us with loving kindness
But then… giving is your speciality
You give without accolade,
reward or thanks
And we look up at you,
and smile and say
“How can I thank you?”
“How indeed?”
Free-spirits and angels; it is you that fly
You come from a high place and care for us
Loving and listening to earth-bound souls
And so we bless you
Givers, angels, volunteers
Your generosity is beauty
Your gifts defy language
But then… giving is your speciality
You give without accolade,
reward or thanks
We thank you
We bless you
And we thank those that created you
For you are the most special
And so you are blessed
Amen
How The Grass and The Flowers
Came to Exist, a God-Tale
I suppose
the Lord said:
Let there be fur upon the earth,
and let there be hair upon the earth,
and so the seeds stuttered forward into ripeness
and the roots twirled in the dark
to accomplish His desire,
and so there is clover,
and the reeds of the marshes,
and the eelgrass of the sea shallows
upon which the dainty sea brant live,
and there is the green and sturdy grass,
and the goldenrod
and the spurge and the yarrow
and the ivies and the bramble
and the blue iris
covering the earth,
thanking the Lord with their blossoms.
(Mary Oliver 1935-2019)
Interfaith Week
|
Peace Together Walk
MONDAY, 21 SEPTEMBER 2020 FROM 10:00
To celebrate the UN “International Day of Peace” (https://internationaldayofpeace.org/ )
CIF held a “Peace Together Walk” through Cheltenham town centre, starting at Winston Churchill Memorial Gardens (gather from 9.45am) and ending at 2pm at Pittville Pump Room for a Peace Walk Together celebration.
Just a note to say we had a powerful and lovely day today. It was wonderful to have members of the Hindu community with us and the beginning of an annual event feels very much in the making .
Here are some words inspired from today.
Spirit of Peace Here I am today Humbled before the Spirit of Peace. Here I breathe today Hopeful inside a Spirit of Peace. Here I cry today Tears for need of a Spirit of Peace Here I smile today To excite a Spirit of Peace. Spirit of Peace Bless our planet in its strangeness and glory Spirit of Peace Bless our journey as a simple story Spirit of Peace Within and beyond me Spirit of Peace Give us all the eyes to see Exactly how a Spirit of Peace could be. Many blessings in Peace
Here is a link to the radio interview Mark gave about the walk
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/p08qs27g
Listen from 1 Hour 17 minutes in.