Hi C'da:

>They are vegetarian fundamentalists, that's all. They take it way too seriously.

Don't know about the fundamentalist part, as one can also be kind and less opinionative :) to say they have strong will power. :)

Vegans won't even eat any dairy products and not just meat, fish and eggs. So, no milk, no cheese, no yogurt, no cream (& mihir-dana combo), no poneer and all the other good stuff.


From: Chan Mahanta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Ram Sarangapani" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Barua25 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
CC: assam@assamnet.org
Subject: Re: [Assam] Fw: HPI, May 2, 2006
Date: Wed, 3 May 2006 07:47:42 -0500

They are vegetarian fundamentalists, that's all. They take it way too seriously.










At 12:24 AM -0500 5/3/06, Ram Sarangapani wrote:
While this discussion about vegetarian is going on here, just heard over the TV that the some police dept. people (I think Alabama) had some "Vegans" on surveillance (for Homeland Sec.) The Vegans were protesting some honey-baked ham factory.
 
Don't know much about Vegans, are they the pure vegetarian types like them Hindus?
 
 

 
On 5/2/06, Barua25 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
It is interesting to note that the word "non-vegetarian" is a misnomer in the sense that all non-vegetarians are also vegetarians also.
In Hindi what we call 'amish' and 'nir-amish" make sense.
But 'vegetarian" and 'non-vegetarian" does not make sense. They need to come up with some other words.
 
Now here is a joke:
The Air Hostess was asking each passenger, whether he was vegetarian or non vegetarian, and everybody was saying either vegetarian or no vegetarian.
When the Air hostess asked the Indian guy, he replied promptly :"Both"
RB
 
 

----- Original Message -----
From: Chan Mahanta
To: Ram Sarangapani
Cc: Rajen Barua ; assam@assamnet.org
Sent: Tuesday, May 02, 2006 9:03 PM
Subject: Re: [Assam] Fw: HPI, May 2, 2006

 
They are a few cuts above (or below) on the veggy index. Perhaps only the Jains surpass them.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
At 6:56 PM -0500 5/2/06, Ram Sarangapani wrote:
Thanks C'da,

 
I did not know that - but are they "vegitarian" ie. eggatarians/fishatarians or are they like the "pure vegitarians"  like some Hindus, Buddhists or Jains?

 
--Ram

 
On 5/2/06, Chan Mahanta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Correction Ram.

 
Seventh Day Adventists are strictly vegetarian. They don't drink cofee or te even.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
At 4:40 PM -0500 5/2/06, Ram Sarangapani wrote:
Hehehe Barua,

 
>Is Vegetarian a Hindu thing? Or is it a 'feel good' thing for the vegetarian Hindus?

 
I don't know. But why bother about what the Hindu press regurgitates? If you look at any Christian or Islamic slanted press you will find similar things (not not food but other things) - my view, these are not the best places to seek information.

 
But on a slightly different note, the only religions that I know of that tout vegitarianism as Hindism and Buddhism.

 
BTW: on major airlines, if you ask for vegitarian food - you would likely get eggs/fish (obviously not considered vegitarian). You have to ask for a "Hindu meal".
The airlines obviously think there is a close relationship between such foods and Hinduism.
I guess, you will have to differentiate between a " Vegitarian food" and the "Hindu meal"

 
-:) -:)
--Ram

 

 


 
On 5/2/06, Rajen Barua <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>FLORIDA, USA, May 2, 2006: On April 25, the Florida House of Representatives enacted the Florida Healthy School Lunch Resolution (HR 9095) >recommending a daily vegetarian school lunch option. (HPI note: A legislative resolution carries no weight of law, rather is advice or a recommendation from the >legislators.)
 
I absolutely don't understand why the above is in Hindu Press News? Is Vegetarian a Hindu thing? Or is it a 'feel good' thing for the vegetarian Hindus?
RB

 
----- Original Message -----
From: Hindu Press International
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Sent: Tuesday, May 02, 2006 3:00 PM
Subject: HPI, May 2, 2006

 
May 2, 2006
1.      Restored Brahma Deity To Be Reinstalled At Thailand Shrine

2.      Ancient Stone Ax Found in Tamil Nadu with Indus Script
3.      Florida Legislature Recommends Vegetarian Lunch Options
1. Restored Brahma Deity To Be Reinstalled At Thailand Shrine
www.manager.co.th
THAILAND, May 1, 2006: The restored image of the four-faced Lord Brahma will be reinstalled at its Erawan Shrine at Ratchaprasong Intersection in the next 10 days, said caretaker Deputy Prime Minister and Culture Minister Surakiat Sathirathai yesterday morning, following an inspection of the progress of the repairs to the holy Deity, which was completely destroyed by a mentally ill man on March 20. "I'd like to publicize [the event] and invite faithful Thais and foreigners to join the ceremony together in the next 10 days," said Surakiat. The auspicious date and time for the installation ceremony will be computed by brahmans and experts after the restored image of the famous four-face Hindu deity, which is made from the remains of the old Deity, is covered with gold leaf. On that day, the image of Brahma, locally known as Than Tao Mahaprom, will be carried to the Erawan Shrine in an elaborately decorated car procession that will pass several significant pla ces in Bangkok like the City Shrine, the Temple of the Emerald Buddha and the Giant Swing, to allow people to worship it. Following the installation, the Culture Ministry will carry out a gold-casting ceremony for the production of another image of Brahma that will be made from auspicious nine metals and kept at the National Museum. The image of Brahma was originally built in 1956 with plaster and covered with gold leaf. It is deeply respected by Thais and foreigners.




2. Ancient Stone Ax Found in Tamil Nadu with Indus Script
wwwhindu.com
CHENNAI, INDIA, May 2, 2006: (HPI note: The significance of this discovery is unclear. Additional links are given at the end for more technical information.)

A Neolithic stone celt with the Indus Valley script has been discovered by a school teacher, V. Shanmuganathan, in a village called Sembian-Kandiyur near Mayiladuthurai in Nagapattinam district, Tamil Nadu. The celt, a polished hand-held stone axe, has four Indus Valley signs on it. The artefact with the script can be as old as 1,500 BCE, that is, 3,500 years old. The four signs were identified by epigraphists of the Tamil Nadu Department of Archaeology, according to its Special Commissioner, T. S. Sridhar.

Iravatham Mahadevan, one of the world's foremost experts on the Indus script, called the find "the greatest archaeological discovery of a century in Tamil Nadu." The discovery proved that the Indus script had reached Tamil Nadu. He estimated the date of the artefact with the sc ript to be around 1500 BCE. "I have cautiously and conservatively put it between 2000 BCE. and 1500 BCE.," Mr. Mahadevan said. It was in the classical Indus script. He ruled out the possibility of the celt coming from North India because "the material of this stone is clearly of peninsular origin."

Harappa and Mohenjo-daro, where hundreds of seals with the Indus script were discovered, are in present-day Pakistan. Neolithic means New Stone Age and it is datable in India between 2000 BCE. and 1000 BCE.

According to Mr. Mahadevan, the first sign on the celt depicted a skeletal body with ribs. The figure is seated on his haunches, body bent and contracted, with lower limbs folded and knees drawn up. The second sign showed a jar. Hundreds of this pair have been found on seals and sealings at Harappa. Mr. Mahadevan read the first sign as "muruku" and the second sign as "an." (HPI note: There is no accepted translation of the Indus script. ) In other words, it is "Murukan." The earliest references in Old Tamil poetry portrayed him as a "wrathful killer," indicating his prowess as a war god and hunter. The third sign looked like a trident and the fourth like a crescent with a loop in the middle.

Mr. Mahadevan commented that the latest discovery was very strong evidence that the Neolithic people of Tamil Nadu and the Indus Valley people "shared the same language, which can only be Dravidian and not Indo-Aryan." He added that before this discovery, the southernmost occurrence of the Indus script was at Daimabad, Maharashtra on the Pravara River in the Godavari Valley.

See also: here, here and here.


3. Florida Legislature Recommends Vegetarian Lunch Options
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
FLORIDA, USA, May 2, 2006: On April 25, the Florida House of Representatives enacted the Florida Healthy School Lunch Resolution (HR 9095) recommending a daily vegetarian school lunch option. (HPI note: A legislative resolution carries no weight of law, rather is advice or a recommendation from the legislators.)

HR 9095 states in part: "Whereas school children who identify themselves as vegetarian or vegan or are from families who avoid meat and dairy foods are currently at a disadvantage if no appropriate school lunch meals are offered in their respective schools, be it resolved by the House of Representatives of the State of Florida that ... all school districts and parents of school children in the state are urged to emphasize the importance of and to provide plant-based diets consisting of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and legumes; including daily vegetarian entree options." (Click here for full text.)

The resolution was introduced by Representative Susan Bucher at the request of FARM's CHOICE (of vegan school lunch) program headed by Susan Wieland. It follows on the heels of similar resolutions passed by Hawaii, California, and New York legislatures in recent years. For assistance in passing a similar resolution in your state, please contact Susan at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or 877-6CHOICE.



NOTICE: Some source URLs cited in HPI articles are only valid on the date the article was issued. Most are invalid a week to a few months later. When a URL fails to work, go to the top level of the source's website and search for the article.
Daily Inspiration
This was in the late 70s, I was eating when I suddenly felt that the meat tasted dead, like ashes in my mouth. It was nothing spiritual, it was just that my body told me. I realized then I wanted fresh life taste in my food, and with meat, we do not even know how long it has been dead. Former "Golden Girls" star Rue McClahan on how she became a strict vegetarian
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