Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Govt. is providing the Patronage to the Traitors like Hajji Yakoob, Mukhtar Ansari, Gillani, the conspirator of parliamentary attackWhether President of India has not committed impeachment ?/

Whether President of India has not committed impeachment to his
Constitutional Privilege in getting the verdict of hanging ordered to be
Hanged on 20th October by the Supreme Court Violated resulting in
Infringement of the Basic Structure of Constitution?. Is our present
Govt. is providing the Patronage to the Traitors like Hajji Yakoob,
Mukhtar Ansari, Gillani, the conspirator of parliamentary attack and also
to Mumbai Blast Accused? Whether it is a Secularist State? what
happened to 33% population of Hindus Bangladesh Nationalist Party and
Fundamentalist Jamaat-e Islami (JI) came to power- Hindu Temple
ransacked, Hindu Women Gang Raped- Whether we may allow to do it upon
Majority of Population of Hindu by Muslims Who are Traitors and are
Enemy of Humanity?
The concluding lines of your article glorifyies Mother Teresa, and therefore, it becomes imperative on my part to provide excerpts from Arise Arjun Awaken my Hindu Nation ISBN 81-89746-01-4. Hope this is of help in removing the Myth of Mother Teresa.
 It is very interesting that there is a common pattern amongst Christian missionaries. One that they manage to keep a beautiful face before masses. Two that they love to get crime money and hold to it for 'buying' new Christians. Three hypocrisy seems to be in their blood. Let us see another extraordinary example.
We Hindus are rather excessively grateful to those who have been good to us. Bishop Heber wrote: 'The Hindus are … more easily affected by kindness and attention to their wants and feelings than any people I ever met with.' Warren Hastings wrote: 'Hindus … are more susceptible of gratitude for kindness shown to them…' … in the 16th century, Abul Fazl, the minister of the Emperor Akbar, says in his Ayine Akbari: 'The Hindus are … grateful and of unbounded fidelity…' and we have not changed much in that respect.
Interestingly, I was no better. I had learned of Mother Teresa from her biography written after her death by a woman journalist (I forget the name but one of her chapters were titled as 'Poor on the Moon' that I remember vividly). I picked up this book from Flemingdon Park Library in Toronto and I was so impressed by whatever I read that I viewed her as the true KarmYogi of present day, and I also periodically sent money to her organization. In receipt I would receive from her office a small Chit neatly typed with a old typewriter with blessings and a message from Mother Teresa. I would perceive, how nice of them to be saving money on even such small things so that they could spend that money for the poor and the needy! Now I feel like such a fool when I learn the inner story as narrated by N S Rajaram.
"To get at the truth behind the Teresa myth, we need to go to books written by non-Indians. Bhaaratiya journalists, true to their character, have studiously avoided reporting the abuses taking place in her institution right under their noses. Fortunately, several Western writers have written honestly about Teresa and her mission. Two that merit notice are The Missionary Position by Christopher Hitchens and Mother Teresa: Beyond the Image by Anne Sebba.
In her home for the dying, no medication or painkillers are allowed even to terminally ill patients. Even her childcare institution in Calcutta is a cheerless place where children have neither toys nor playgrounds. They are told only to pray."
N S Rajaram • ISBN 81-85990-52-2
Reading this I have wondered, whom they were supposed to pray? Would that be anyone other than Jesus Christ? In the disguise of prayer, would it be a clever ploy to convert the kids into Christianity from their very childhood? These kids may not even know the difference between two religions!
"Her hospitals are in a highly unhygienic state. This happens to be the opinion not of a hostile reporter, but of Dr. Robin Cox, editor of the prestigious British publication Lancet – the foremost medical journal in the world.
Mary Loudon, another English investigator found patients sleeping on the floor - as many as sixty in a single room. Even rudimentary health procedures were not being followed. Loudon saw unsterilized needles being used and reused after being simply washed in cold water. Also, patients in need of simple surgery were allowed to die instead of being sent to other hospitals in Calcutta. It was not just patients that were treated under such appalling conditions; even health workers could not escape infections. Anne Sebba has pointed out that several of the nurses caught tuberculosis, and possibly AIDS. In all these, there is a single remedy offered to the inmates regardless their condition – prayer.
This has greatly contributed to the image of Mother Teresa as a woman driven by faith and love for Jesus; it has contributed even more to her bank balance, for prayers costs nothing. But she did not display the same reserve – not to say piety – during her own illnesses. She was always careful to get treated at the best hospitals in the world like the Massachusetts General in Boston. When she was unable to travel, as during her final illness, she was treated by the specialist at the prestigious R. K. Birla Heart Research Center in Calcutta – a Hindu charitable institution. So neither money, nor Christian faith, was allowed to come in the way, when her own health was involved. But for the poor it is different. Prayer is good for them.
From the appalling condition of her institutions, one would be wrong to conclude that the Missionaries of Charity is only doing what its limited resources allow. Nothing could be further from the truth. It is one of the richest Catholic institutions in the world. Recently, a single current account in a bank in the Bronx (New York) showed a deposit of $50 million!
Among her special favorites were Charles Keating – now serving a ten-year sentence in a California prison – and Robert Maxwell who committed suicide when the Scotland Yard got too close to him. Both had swindled hundreds of millions of dollars from their depositors and investors. Paul W. Turley, the California Deputy District Attorney who prosecuted Keating stated that Keating stole more than $900 million! Many individuals lost their life savings. Mr. Turley wrote: 'the victims of Mr. Keating's fraud come from a wide spectrum of society. … Most were people of modest means and unfamiliar with high finance.'
Why did Keating give more than a million dollar to mother Teresa? When his case was being tried, she wrote to the trial judge Lance Ito asking him to show clemency towards Keating because 'He has always been kind and generous to God's poor.' In addition, she appealed to the judge to 'look into his heart and do what Jesus would have done in that circumstances.' Learning to this appeal, District Attorney Turley wrote back to Mother Teresa: 'I submit the same challenge to you. Ask yourself what Jesus would have done if he were given the fruits of the crime, …money that had been stolen. …I submit that Jesus would promptly return the money to its rightful owners. …Do not keep the money. Return it to the rightful owners.' But Mother Teresa ignored his appeal and kept the stolen money. This was not the only such instance.
She helped produce political propaganda films for the notorious dictator Duvalier of Haiti and his wife Michele who stole billions of dollars from their impoverished country before running away to Spain. [Oxford Dictionary, Haiti: From 1957 to 1986 the country was under the oppressive dictatorship of the Duvalier family]. Mother Teresa not only accepted millions from dictator Duvalier (who was guilty of mass executions), but also honors and decorations from his bloody hands.
What is it about Christian missionaries, from Mother Teresa to Pat Robertson, – that draws them to such thieves and mass murderers as Duvalier and Mobutu?
As far as the poor are concerned, Mother Teresa's successor Sister Nirmala put it in perspective: The poor are God's gift, to us. Without the poor we would all be without jobs."
N S Rajaram • ISBN 81-85990-52-2
Finally, let us see what personal dairy of Mother Teresa says:
"Her letters and dairies present a completely different picture of the nun from her public image as a woman confident of her faith"
The Daily Telegraph, PTI London 29 Nov, Indian Express 30 Nov 2002
'…My smile is a great cloak [disguise, pretext] that hides a multitude of pains,' wrote Mother Teresa… 'In my own soul, I feel the terrible pain of this loss. I feel that God does not want me, that God is not God and that He does not really exist,' she wrote.

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