--- In [email protected], [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> 
> --- In [email protected], off_world_beings 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> 
> > I'd be surprised if MANY aspects of Vedic practices survive. For 
> > example, Rama went after Ravana in the Mahabharata, to get his 
wife 
> > Sita back from the kidnapper Ravena. He suceeded, but as I 
> > understand it then disowned Sita becuase she had been raped by 
> > Ravenna.
> > If this is the story, (and please correct me anyone if I am 
wrong 
> > about this) then I say to Rama, "What a sleezebag you are, you 
have 
> > no place in a future race of Love." [If it is the wrong story 
then 
> > I'll probably be struck down by lightening today...burnt to a 
crisp.]
> > 
> @@@@@@@@
> 
> 
> SSSSSSSSZZZZZZZZZZZAAAAP!
> 
> Sorry, but you asked for that.
> 
> The Ramayana is like those DVDs with "alternate endings"; Rama's 
treatment of Sita was so 
> unpopular that many story tellers refused to include it and 
altered the ending for their 
> audiences.
> 
> However, even in the original it was not claimed that Sita was 
raped by Ravanna (may I be 
> struck by lightening�). The problem, according to Rama, was that 
his subjects would 
> THINK that she had been since she had spent a night there without 
her husband, and she 
> would be as dishonored in their eyes as if she ACTUALLY had been. 
Therefore, he had to 
> send her away so that his people would believe he had done the 
right thing.
> 
> However, I think that also qualifies as "sleezebag" behavior.
> 
> There are many passages in the Vedic literature which must either 
be understood has 
> having an esoteric meaning (which only the initiated can grok) or 
otherwise regarded as 
> immoral behavior (according to human standards). This persistent 
conundrum has created 
> a great deal of confusion�not so much for scholars, I would guess, 
as for believers.
> 
> L B S



In that case. I'll go for the version where he saves her and 
protects her , even at the expense of his own ego about being an 
important king who can save all the people, or the kingdom from doom.

It would make a better Hollywood ending. (Even though I am a guy, 
not a gal, as you seemed to mistake me for in a previous post. Funny 
how there are not a lot of women on this group)

It is interesting the esoteric aspect to the Vedic lit., since the 
Bible is also said to have a completely different esoteric knowledge 
hidden within in its Hebrew text. The Kabbalah is the code, and I 
believe it has been a tradition there for a very long time (not some 
new age thing). I once read a translation of the book of 'Genisis' 
which used this translation, and it seemed very profound at the 
time. Mostly had to do with two unmanifest forces of nature (male 
and female) interacting to give rise to  the physical universe.





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