On those we depend

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<http://devdutt.com/articles/on-those-we-depend.html/attachment/jagannath>

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*In Puri Temple, Orissa, every year when the chariot is made from the wood
of a sacred tree, worship is offered to the tree, the instruments that will
be used to carve the tree and the carpenter who will turn the tree into the
chariot. Even in household rituals, before the deity is worshipped, prayers
and offerings are made to the implements of worship like the bell, the pot,
the conch-shell, and the lamp. Thus every link in the chain is worthy of
worship. Does this make Hindus monotheists or polytheists?*

*This question confronted 19th century Orientalists when they first
translated Vedic hymns. They noticed that each hymn of the Veda evoked
different gods, like the Greeks, but each time the deity being invoked was
being treated as the one supreme god, like the Christians. This confused
them.*

*Some suggested Hindus were henotheistic; they worshipped only one god but
acknowledged the existence of others. Max Mueller came up with the term
kathenotheistic, which means every god was treated as the supreme god
turn-by-turn at the time of invocation. In other words, context determined
the status of the god. In drought, Indra who brought rains was valued. In
winter, Surya, the sun, was admired. In summer, Vayu, the wind, was
worshipped. So it is in business. Everybody we deal with in business is
important. But importance soars as our dependence on them increases.
Importance is a function of context, which makes all businessmen followers
of kathenotheism.*

*Sivakumar owns a small company that makes spare parts for cars. The
business has been growing well. Sivakumar allocates one day a week with
every department. Monday is for sales & marketing, Tuesday is for
logistics, Wednesday is for production, Thursday is with finance, Friday is
with human resources, Saturday is with admin and all contract workers. When
asked by his secretary why he scheduled his day so, he said, “Each one of
them contributes to my success. So I give each of them value by devoting an
hour each day for each department. Every department matters, and every
department is special. If I focus only on one department, the others will
feel neglected and even negative, which I do not want. By valuing all of
them, I ensure no hierarchy is created. Each one is important in their own
way. The business depends on all of them.”*

*Rakesh who is Sivakumar’s main rival in the market, has a different
strategy. For him customers are god and everything and everyone in the
company is geared to satisfy the customers. He values the customer-facing
department more than the rest. This ensures great revenue and clarifies the
value of customers.*

*Both Sivakumar and Rakesh do well in the market. Both make profits. But
their approach to managing their teams is very different. Sivakumar follows
the model of katheotheism: there are many gods, each valued depending on
context. Rakesh follows the model of monotheism: there is only one God, the
customer.*


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      [image: Mani_Rathinam]       *V a n a k k a m  S u b b u *  [image:
Mani_Rathinam]

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*வாழிய செந்தமிழ்! வாழ்க நற்றமிழர்!
**வாழிய பாரதமணித் திருநாடு!
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