Now its turn of Dwaraka Sankaracharya
Its the turn of his holiness Sankara of Dwaraka to be insulted by none other than Indian airlines pilot and that too on a domestic flight within India. Welcome to secular India, welcome to land of milk and land of saints, where old habits die hard but old traditions often gets trampelled. All it would take is a person of authority to decide what he thinks is right (or left for that matter). There is no need for public consent to do anything. I think we Indians deserve this treatment, because we as a civilization seldom gone through any kind of revolution - the only behavour we are accustomed to is to pick up the bones left by our masters, be it the british and mughuls from yesteryears or political goons of today. India should be named land of thousand cuts and million bruises.
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Flight offloads Dwarka swami- By Our Correspondent
Mumbai, Oct. 19: Swami Avimukteshwarananda Saraswati, the successor to Swami Swarupananda Saraswati, the Shankaracharya of Dwarka Peeth, was made to disembark from an Indian Airlines flight for carrying his holy dand, a thin bamboo stick which is a symbol of their spiritual designation, inside the aircraft cabin.
The swami was in Mumbai to attend the Hindu Sabha Acharya Sabha, a first of its kind organisation which held a two-day conference at Sanyas Ashram, Vile Parle. Despite repeated attempts to contact Indian Airlines, no airline official was available for comment.
Speaking to this newspaper, Swami Avimukteshwarananda Saraswati said, "Our work takes us on flights often. I have travelled on an aircraft over 225 times till date but never have I had such an experience." He added that it was the pilot of Indian Airlines flight IC-147 who objected to him carrying the five-foot, eight-inch long stick on board the aircraft.
According to the swami, he had been cleared in the security check stage and it was only after he occupied his seat that Indian Airlines staff came and requested him to keep the dand in the cargo compartment. He refused to part with the dand, saying it is always kept with his person, is a symbol of his mutt, and that keeping it away from his person would be sacrilegious.
"The behaviour of the pilot of the flight, which had over 50 per cent foreigners, made me feel like I am indeed a terrorist and I just wondered what the foreigners would be thinking of Hindu saints," the swami said. He said he got off the plane because he feared an incident could be created by Hindus on board the plane.
Swami Avimukteshwa-rananda Saraswati met senior Indian Airlines officials who apologised to him verbally, but refused to issue a written apology or refund the ticket. He had to wait at the airport for three hours before returning to Sanyas Ashram at Vile Parle. "They just want me to forget the incident as a one-off incident and did not assure me of anything. Tomorrow, any saintly person of the Hindu dharma could face such treatment," he said.
Swami Vishveshwar Anand, the mahamandaleshwar of Sanyas Ashram at Vile Parle, Mumbai, said, "The dand is so small that it cannot injure anyone. We will definitely agitate against it and there are many Hindu organisations that will be happy to raise this issue of ill-treatment of a Hindu saint of Swamiji’s stature. Just yesterday we had discussed such issues of ill-treatment of Hindus at our conference. Today we are observing it."
There was a record attendance of 138 sampradayas and heads of akhadas, mutts and acharyas from all parts of India. Former President of India R. Venkatraman also attended. There were several translators for the diverse religious heads. Seven sampradayas from Assam attended this meet.
2 Comments:
Every one in public service must be made to undergo a complete awareness programme, highlighting the situations that person may find himself in during his discharge of duties.
In this case, atleast the higher officials could have intervened to help the swamiji to continue.
Very dangerous trend indeed for the future of natives of the land themselves
If swamiji was asked to leave the flight within India (where the tradition of carrying the dandam is well known), you cannot expect these traditions to be understood anywhere else.
A ridiculous and a sad thing to happen.
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