Jan 01, 2015
http://www.asianage.com/mystic-mantra/light-2015-438
One evening, a blind youth was returning home from his grandma's
village. "Take a diya (lamp) with you on your way home," advised his
grandma. The youth laughed, "For me, what's the difference between
night and day?" His grandma explained, "But with a diya in hand people
will not bump into you." Agreeing, the youth began walking through the
darkness with a diya whereupon someone dashed into him. He cried:
"Can't you see my diya?" The passerby replied, "Sorry, your diya is
extinguished!"

January 1, 2015, we'll be awakening into United Nations'
"International Year of Light and Light-based Technologies". Let's
throw some light on light so as to dispel darkness and be lights in
our world, today.

Light is sublime sacred symbol. Be it during Diwali, the festival of
lights, or in a fire temple of Parsees, light symbolises divine power
and presence. In Genesis, the Bible's first book, light springs forth
as God's first creation, and in Revelation, its last, God's light will
dispel darkness: "We'll need no light of lamp or sun; for God will be
our light."

In poetic personification, the psalms exhort the sun, moon and stars
to praise God; for God "commanded and they were created". During the
Exodus, God leads his people through the wilderness "by night in a
pillar of fire to give them light". Thus, the Bible sees light as
symbol of creation, truth, goodness, awareness, judgment, blessing,
sanctification and salvation. Jesus declares himself to be "the light
of the world" and exhorts his disciples: "Let your light shine before
others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to God."
He also cautions about the perennial conflict between light and
darkness. So, beware, choose light!

Beyond religious nuances, light is of great value in the fields of
science and technology. 2015 coincides with the anniversaries of a
series of milestones in the history of the science of light: the works
on optics by Ibn Al-Haytham in 1015, the notion of light as waves
proposed by Fresnel in 1815 and Einstein's theory of the photoelectric
effect in 1905. We salute these enlightened scientists who lightened
human pathways.

You'll probably make New Year resolutions, won't you? The Latin word
re-solutus is past participle of re-solvere, meaning, "to loosen up or
break down". Making resolutions, we need to "break down" our
attitudes, behaviours into smaller parts to analyse them. Let's not
decide to do extraordinary things but ordinary things in an
extraordinary way: be more polite, work more, be sensitive to
God-others-nature, etc.

With enlightened minds and hearts aglow, let's wish each other a
"Light Year" 2015!

Francis Gonsalves is a professor of theology


-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU

Celebrating Louis Braille birthday Jan4th



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