---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: p.v. narayanan
Date: 11 September 2012 19:11
Subject: Fwd: The value of Sanskrit abroad
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: narayanan chakravarthy
Date: Fri, Sep 7, 2012 at 2:37 PM
Subject: The value of Sanskrit in abroad



Vedas in HMV




*HMV Company had once published a pamphlet giving the history of
gramophone record. Gramophone was invented by Thomas Alva Edison in
the
 19th century. Edison, who had invented many other gadgets like
electric light and the motion picture camera, had become a legend even
in his own
 time.

When He invented the gramophone record, which could record human voice
for  posterity, he wanted to record the voice of an eminent scholar
 on his first piece. For that he chose Prof. Max Muller of Germany,
another great personality of the 19th century. He wrote to Max Muller
 saying, "I want to meet you and record your voice. When should I come?"

Max Muller who had great respect for Edison asked him to come on a
suitable time when most of the scholars of the Europe would be
 gathering in England.

Accordingly, Edison took a ship and went to England. He was introduced
to  the audience. All cheered Edison’s presence. Later at the request
of
 Edison, Max Muller came on the stage and spoke in front of the
instrument.  Then Edison went back to his laboratory and by afternoon
came back with a
 disc. He played the gramophone disc from his instrument. The audience
was  thrilled to hear the voice of Max Muller from the instrument.
They were
 glad that voices of great persons like Max Muller could be stored for
the  benefit of posterity.

After several rounds of applause and congratulations to Thomas  Alva
Edison, Max Muller came to the stage and addressed the scholars
 and asked them, "You heard my original voice in the morning. Then
you heard the same voice coming out from this instrument in
 the afternoon. Did you understand what I said in the morning or what
you heard this afternoon?"

The audience fell silent because they could not understand the
language in  which Max Muller had spoken. It was `Greek and Latin' to
them as they say.
 But had it been Greek or Latin, they would have definitely understood
 because they were from various parts of Europe. It was in a language
which
 the European scholars had never heard.

Max Muller then explained what he had spoken. He said that the
language he   spoke was Sanskrit and it was the first sloka of Rig
Veda, which says "Agni
 Meele Purohitam." This was the first recorded public version on the
gramophone plate.

Why did Max Muller choose this? Addressing the audience he said,
"Vedas are  the oldest text of the human race. And Agni Meele
Purohitam is the first
 verse of Rig Veda. In the most primordial time, when the people did
not  know how even to cover their bodies and lived by hunting and
housed in
 caves, Indians had attained high civilization and they gave the world
 universal philosophies in the form of the Vedas.”

Such is the illustrious legacy of our country!

When “Agni Meele Purohitam” was replayed the entire audience stood up
in   silence as a mark of respect for the ancient Hindu sages.

This verse
 *
 *means:

"Oh Agni, You who gleam in the darkness, To You we come day by day,
with  devotion and bearing homage. So be of easy access to us, Agni,
as a father
 to his son, abide with us for our well being.



-------------

kooram narayanan



--
P.V.NARAYANAN

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