Tag: Spiritual coexistence

  • Where Is Humanity Today? A Dharmic Blueprint for Compassion, Ahimsa, and Unity

    Where Is Humanity Today? A Dharmic Blueprint for Compassion, Ahimsa, and Unity

    This essay reframes “Where is humanity?” through a dharmic lens that treats compassion, ahimsa, and service as trainable capacities and civic responsibilities. It explains how Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism converge on a shared blueprint grounded in Dharma, dayā, karuṇā, aparigraha, mettā, and seva. Readers gain a research-informed view of how breathwork, meditation, and loving-kindness…

  • Flood‑Hit to Future‑Ready: Locana Prabhu’s 3D Printing Path to Preserve Devotional Heritage

    Flood‑Hit to Future‑Ready: Locana Prabhu’s 3D Printing Path to Preserve Devotional Heritage

    A May 19, 2026 tour of Locana Prabhu’s workshop revealed serious water damage alongside the installation of a 3D printer intended to bolster preservation-focused production connected to Srila Prabhupada’s legacy. The report explains conservation-grade stabilization: environmental control at 45–55% RH, HEPA filtration, safe mold mitigation, and triage methods that prioritize unique masters and production-critical assets.…

  • King Charles III’s Lambeth Summit: A Powerful Step Toward Interfaith Harmony and Dharmic Unity

    King Charles III’s Lambeth Summit: A Powerful Step Toward Interfaith Harmony and Dharmic Unity

    King Charles III convened about thirty leaders from Muslim, Sikh, Baháʼí, Christian, Hindu, and other traditions at Lambeth Palace Library to advance interfaith dialogue and social cohesion in the UK. The setting underscored scholarship and stewardship, framing the meeting as both symbolic and practical. Grounded in the UK’s 2021 Census realities, the piece explains why…

  • Beyond the Bodily Concept: SB 10.4.20 on ātmā, family ties, and fearless devotion

    Beyond the Bodily Concept: SB 10.4.20 on ātmā, family ties, and fearless devotion

    This analysis of Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam 10.4.20, as presented in a morning class by HG Bhurijana Prabhu, explains how mistaking the body for the ātmā intensifies attachment and vulnerability to the pains of union and separation within family, society, and nation. It offers a precise Vedic framework (tri-śarīra and pañca-kośa) to clarify identity and reduce suffering. Practical…

  • Bhagwan Parshvanatha: Life, Four Vows, and the Enduring Legacy of Jainism’s Compassionate Reformer

    Bhagwan Parshvanatha: Life, Four Vows, and the Enduring Legacy of Jainism’s Compassionate Reformer

    Bhagwan Parshvanatha, the 23rd Tirthankara, helped shape Jain ethics through a clear fourfold discipline—ahimsa, satya, asteya, and aparigraha—later integrated with Mahavira’s expanded code. Born in Varanasi and widely regarded as historical, Parshvanatha’s legacy is visible in sacred sites like Sammed Shikharji and in distinctive serpent-canopied iconography. Texts such as the Kalpa Sūtra and the Uttarādhyayana…

  • When Sacred Sound Met the Beatles: Srila Prabhupada’s 1969 Kirtan at Tittenhurst Park

    When Sacred Sound Met the Beatles: Srila Prabhupada’s 1969 Kirtan at Tittenhurst Park

    In September 1969 at Tittenhurst Park, Srila Prabhupada brought rigorous bhakti practice into dialogue with leading artists of the age. This article reconstructs that setting and examines chanting — kirtan and japa — as a precise method for liberation within Gaudiya Vaishnavism. It explains how sacred sound functions theologically and technically, from breath mechanics and…

  • Brahmadaitya of Bengal: Enigmatic Scholarly Guardians of Sacred Groves and Memory

    Brahmadaitya of Bengal: Enigmatic Scholarly Guardians of Sacred Groves and Memory

    Bengali folklore presents the Brahmadaitya as a benevolent, scholarly spirit linked to banyan and peepal groves rather than a fearful ghost. This portrayal reflects a cultural ethic that honors wisdom, compassion, and restraint, resonating across Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism. The narrative supports environmental stewardship by sacralizing trees and groves, encouraging community-based conservation. Rich oral…

  • Eclipses and Deity Worship: ISKCON’s Guidance, Dharmic Harmony, and Temple Practice

    Eclipses and Deity Worship: ISKCON’s Guidance, Dharmic Harmony, and Temple Practice

    Eclipses prompt thoughtful practice across dharmic traditions and raise practical questions for temples. ISKCON’s Deity Worship Ministry advises that daily deity worship continue without interruption during eclipses, with the option to close public access while maintaining private puja. This preserves ritual continuity, respects local sentiment, and aligns with broader dharmic principles emphasizing mindfulness, seva, and…

  • Work to Live, Not Live to Work: A Dharmic Guide to Career, Purpose, and Inner Balance

    Work to Live, Not Live to Work: A Dharmic Guide to Career, Purpose, and Inner Balance

    Modern life often blurs the line between work and identity, but a dharmic perspective restores balance by placing career in service of higher values. Career still matters, yet it is not the ultimate goal; it supports duty, relationships, learning, and inner freedom. Drawing on shared insights from Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, this approach reframes…

  • Sacred Stillness, Lasting Clarity: A Dharmic Guide to Mindful Observation over Endless Seeking

    Sacred Stillness, Lasting Clarity: A Dharmic Guide to Mindful Observation over Endless Seeking

    Modern life rewards endless seeking, yet dharmic wisdom demonstrates that mindful observation offers deeper clarity and freedom. Drawing from Hindu philosophy—sakshi-bhava, pratyahara, dhyana, and aparigraha—this piece shows how observation refines attention and aligns action with dharma. Convergences with Buddhism’s vipassana, Jainism’s samayik, and Sikhism’s simran and sehaj reveal a shared contemplative core that nurtures unity…

  • Ishta – Swami Vivekananda on why Hindu sects don’t quarrel

    Ishta – Swami Vivekananda on why Hindu sects don’t quarrel

    Swami Vivekananda’s teachings on the concept of “Ishta” highlight the profound wisdom behind the harmonious coexistence of diverse Hindu sects and spiritual paths in India. He emphasizes the importance of recognizing that individuals have different natures, requiring various methods of worship and spirituality. This acceptance of diversity is contrasted with certain missionary efforts that seek…