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PANCHAAMRITAM - 1-5...

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Dr. Jai Maharaj...
Posted: Tue Nov 03, 2009 7:40 am
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panchaamritam - 1-5

173 Pancha is five
in Sanskritam, Amritam is nectar

Poornima, Kali Yugaabda 5111, VIRODHI
Aippasi 16 (November 2, 2009)

ONE

Premraja, a Shri Lankan Tamil who had come from Denmark on a tour,
hired an autorickshaw on July 26, from Gopalapuram to Teynampet.
While getting down at the destination, the passenger forgot to take
the suitcase containing Rs 1.87 lakh in both Indian and foreign
currencies and passports. When Premraja realised that he left the
suitcase with cash in the autorickshaw, he lodged a complaint at the
Teynampet Police station. Meanwhile, auto driver Vel Murugan who
found the suitcase in his vehicle returned it to the police control
room. The police personnel alerted the Teynampet station which in
turn informed the passenger. The Commissioner handed over the
suitcase to its owner. Vel Murugan was rewarded for honesty by the
Chennai City Police Commissioner T Rajendran. NEWS TODAY (JULY 27,
2009)

TWO

People of India are sending petitions to the Hon'ble President of
India to demand that the cow (Gomata) be declared as the `national
animal' and cow slaughter be banned by law throughout India; this
petition- campaign is part of the ongoing nationwide mass movement -
`Vishwa Mangala Gau Grama Yatra'. Parents of the students of
Vivekananda Vidyalaya, Mathur, near Manali (North Chennai) took
active interest in collecting signatures on the petition. Father of
Sayi Prasad of Class 2, is one such. All 5 of his family readily
signed the petition. He also secured 10 signatures from his co-
workers at his place of work. Sayi's mother, a working woman, took
the petition slip to her office. She was amused when her colleagues
refused to sign the petition saying they consume beef. The lady
presented before those gentlemen the case of cow-based agriculture,
agro-based village economy and the need to cherish the noble village
culture based on cow and agro-crafts. The gentlemen, all 15 of them
at the office that day, listened in rapt attention and silently
signed the petition. They also voluntarily vowed that they won't
touch beef ever again in their life. As narrated by Shri.
G.Bhaktavatsalan of RSS to Team PANCHAAMRITAM

THREE

Nagini and her husband, Madan Lal of Mohalla Amarpura in Ludhiana
(Punjab, Bharat), were in a very difficult situation after they came
to know that their only son - 14-year old Durga Dass - had a huge
hole in his heart. He was examined by Dr Harinder Singh Bedi, Head of
Cardio Vascular and Thoracic Surgery, at the prestigious Christian
Medical College and Hospital, Ludhiana. Dr Bedi realised that the
hole was leading to a shunting of blood with resultant tremendous
strain on the heart and lungs. Durga was not growing as his body was
not getting enough blood. He needed an emergency surgery. His case
was further complicated by the fact that he had a prior surgery for a
defect of his food pipe at birth. The problem now was that his
parents were unable to raise the finances even after a significant
concession from the Institute. On getting to know of Durga's dilemma,
some of previous patients of CMC contributed for the surgery. A major
open-heart surgery was successfully performed after putting the body
on a heart lung machine and stopping the heart. Durga Dass is now
doing well. According to Dr Bedi, he should now have an absolutely
normal life. He will be able to follow any profession of his choice
and in fact can even join the Armed Forces as he is fully fit now.

Express News Service, July 24, 2009

FOUR

Shri Nandakumar Sai (59) is a former president of Chattisgarh state
unit of Bharatiya Janata Party. He has been elected to the Lok Sabha
several times. He is in constant touch with his constituency and his
interaction with the people is laced with utter sincerity. Once,
during a visit to a village in his constituency, Nandakumar found a
large number of people addicted to alcohol. He tried to persuade them
to give up the habit. One of them retorted, `Can you live without
salt in your food? Salt is indispensable to you; alcohol is
indispensable to us!' Nandakumar resolved then and there that he will
no more use salt in his food. Ever since, for 18 years, he has kept
his vow. The moral force had the desired effect. The villagers gave
up alcohol. That is the spirit with which grassroots level
functionaries work and media should not fail to take note of this, in
addition to covering the macro level happenings.

From a write up by Shri V. Shanmuganathan of BJP carried by THUGLAK,
October 7, 2009.

FIVE

On Dhan Teras (the day preceding Deepavali, when families consider it
auspicous to purchase precious metals), he had a date with destiny.
But, Jugalkishore Jangid, 32, a carpenter of Ahmedabad (Gujarat,
Bharat), who earns just Rs 7,000 a month, chose honesty over greed.
When Jangid went to a Punjab National Bank ATM to withdraw cash on
Thursday (October 15) early morning, he was shocked to find that he
had suddenly turned into a 'crorepati'. His balance had jumped from
Rs 2.5 lakh to Rs 59.30 crore. "I thought it was a mistake and went
to another ATM, but it was the same," he said. He still couldn't
believe it, so visited another ATM after two hours, but the result
was the same. He contacted his friend Anuj Shekani, who took him to a
Chartered Accountant, and, on his advice, to Gujarat Chamber of
Commerce and Industry executive committee member Durgesh Buch. Buch
informed the bank authorities, who approached the bank's headquarters
in Delhi and confirmed that a technical error in the server had
caused the transfer. They have planned to felicitate Jangid for his
honesty.

The Times Of India, October 16, 2009 and www.dnanews.com

End of forwarded article

Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti

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...
Posted: Tue Nov 03, 2009 8:38 am
Guest
What I enjoyed most about these examples was that principles of morality
and human rights were first considered and labels were of no import in
the least. It was humans treating other humans based on the principles
and not the failures born of labels among the various examples.
 
 
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