USA president Obama gets Nobel peace prize for waging  war & Gandhiji does not get it  because………..read below….
                                          Mahatma Gandhi on Conversion
          Gandhiji was not awarded the Nobel peace  prize because he refused to be converted. Now that missionaries are spreading  their tentacles far and wide in India converting people by allurement,  inducement and fraud (In the north east killings and threats are becoming  commonplace) Gandhiji's message is all the more relevant in understanding and  reacting to this problem. Missionary Terrorism will become as dangerous as  Islamic terrorism if ignored. Please read & distribute.
    Compiled by Swami Aksharananda
        (Track No. 010119.1, Jan. 19, 2001)
        I Call Myself a Sanatani Hindu
    I call myself a Sanatani Hindu, because I  believe in the Vedas, the Upanishads, the Puranas, and all that goes by the  name of Hindu scripture, and therefore in avataras and rebirth; I believe in  the varnashrama dharma in a sense, in my opinion strictly Vedic but not in its  presently popular and distorted crude sense; I believe in the protection of  cow. I do not disbelieve in murti puja. (Young India: June 10, 1921)
    Why I am Not a Convert
    Hinduism as I know it entirely satisfies  my soul, fills my whole being. When doubts haunt me, when disappointments stare  me in the face, and when I see not one ray of light on the horizon, I turn to  the Bhagavad Gita, and find a verse to comfort me; and I immediately begin to  smile in the midst of overwhelming sorrow. My life has been full of tragedies  and if they have not left any visible and indelible effect on me, I owe it to  the teachings of the Bhagavad Gita. (Young India: June 8, 1925)
    I Disbelieve in Conversion
    I disbelieve in the conversion of one  person by another. My effort should never to be to undermine another's faith.  This implies belief in the truth of all religions and, therefore, respect for  them. It implies true humility. (Young India: April 23, 1931)
    Conversion: Impediment to Peace
    It is impossible for me to reconcile  myself to the idea of conversion after the style that goes on in India and  elsewhere today. It is an error which is perhaps the greatest impediment to the  world's progress toward peace. Why should a Christian want to convert a Hindu  to Christianity? Why should he not be satisfied if the Hindu is a good or godly  man? (Harijan: January 30, 1937)
    No Such Thing as Conversion
    I believe that there is no such thing as  conversion from one faith to another in the accepted sense of the word. It is a  highly personal matter for the individual and his God. I may not have any  design upon my neighbour as to his faith which I must honour even as I honour  my own. Having reverently studied the scriptures of the world I could no more  think of asking a Christian or a Musalman, or a Parsi or a Jew to change his  faith than I would think of changing my own. (Harijan: September 9, 1935)
    No Conversion Designs Upon Me
    I am not interested in weaning you from  Christianity and making you Hindu, and I do not relish your designs upon me, if  you had any, to convert me to Christianity. I would also dispute your claim  that Christianity is the only true religion. (Harijan: June 3, 1937)
    Conversion
    Conversion must not mean  denationalization. Conversion should mean a definite giving up of the evil of  the old, adoption of all the good of the new and a scrupulous avoidance of  everything evil in the new. Conversion, therefore, should mean a life of  greater dedication to one's country, greater surrender to God, greater  self-purification. (Young India: August 20, 1925)
    Aping of Europeans and Americans
    As I wander about through the length and  breath of India  I see many Christian Indians almost ashamed of their birth, certainly of their  ancestral religion, and of their ancestral dress. The aping of Europeans by  Anglo-Indians is bad enough, but the aping of them by Indian converts is a  violence done to their country and, shall I say, even to their new religion.  (Young India: August 8, 1925)
    Why Should I Change My Religion
    I hold that proselytisation under the  cloak of humanitarian work is unhealthy to say the least. It is most resented  by people here. Religion after all is a deeply personal thing. It touches the  heart.
    Why should I change my religion because  the doctor who professes Christianity as his religion has cured me of some  disease, or why should the doctor expect me to change whilst I am under his  influence? (Young India: April 23, 1931)
    Missionary Aim: Uprooting Hinduism
        My fear is that though Christian friends  nowadays do not say or admit it that Hindu religion is untrue, they must  harbour in their breast that Hinduism is an error and that Christianity, as  they believe it, is the only true religion. So far as one can understand the  present (Christian) effort, it is to uproot Hinduism from her very foundation  and replace it by another faith. (Harijan: March 13,1937)
    Undermining People's Faith
    The first distinction I would like to  make between your missionary work and mine is that while I am strengthening the  faith of people, you (missionaries) are undermining it. (Young India: November  8, 1927)
    Physician Heal Yourself
    Conversion nowadays has become a matter  of business, like any other. India  (Hindus) is in no need of conversion of this kind. Conversion in the sense of  self-purification, self-realization is the crying need of the times. That  however is never what is meant by proselytization. To those who would convert India (Hindus),  might it not be said, "Physician, heal yourself." (Young India: April  23, 1931)
    Missionaries: Vendors of Goods
    When the missionary of another religion  goes to them, he goes like a vendor of goods. He has no special spiritual merit  that will distinguish him from those to whom he goes. He does however possess  material goods which he promises to those who will come to his fold. (Harijan:  April 3, 1937)
    If I had the Power and Could Legislate.
    If I had the power and could legislate, I  should stop all proselytizing. In Hindu households the advent of a missionary  has meant the disruption of the family coming in the wake of change of dress,  manners, language, food and drink . (November 5, 1935)
    The Only Begotten Son of God?
    I regard Jesus as a great teacher of  humanity, but I do not regard him as the only begotten son of God. That epithet  in its material interpretation is quite unacceptable. Metaphorically we are all  sons of God, but for each of us there may be different sons of God in a special  sense. Thus for me Chaitanya may be the only begotten son of God. God cannot be  the exclusive Father and I cannot ascribe exclusive divinity to Jesus.  (Harijan: June 3, 1937)
    Western Christianity Today
    It is my firm opinion that Europe (and  the United States)  does not represent the spirit of God or Christianity but the spirit of Satan.  And Satan's successes are the greatest when appears with the name of God on his  lips. (Young India: September 8, 1920)
    I consider western Christianity in its  practical working a negation of Christ's Christianity. I cannot conceive Jesus,  if he was living in flesh in our midst, approving of modern Christian  organizations, public worship, or ministry. (Young India: September 22, 1921)
    Christianity and Imperialistic  Exploitation
    Christianity in India has been  inextricably mixed up for the last one hundred and fifty years with British  rule. It appears to us as synonymous with materialistic civilization and  imperialistic exploitation by the stronger white races of the weaker races of  the world. Its contribution to India  has been, therefore, largely negative. (Young India: March 21, 1929)
    No Room For Them
    In the manner in which they are working  there would seem to be no room for them. Quite unconsciously they do harm to  themselves and also to us. It is perhaps impertinent to say that they do harm  to themselves, but quite pertinent to say that they do harm to us. They do harm  to those amongst whom they work and those amongst whom they do not work, i.e.,  the harm is done to the whole of India. The more I study their  activities the more sorry I become. It is a tragedy that such a thing should  happen to the human family. (Harijan: December 12, 1936)
    Outrage!
    Only the other day a missionary descended  on a famine area with money in his pocket, distributed it among the famine  stricken, converted them to his fold, took charge of their temple, and  demolished it. This is outrageous. (Harijan: November 5, 1937)
    Let the Hindu be a Better Hindu
    I came to the conclusion long ago that  all religions were true and also that all had some error in them, and whilst I  hold by my own, I should hold others as dear as Hinduism. So we can only pray,  if we are Hindus, not that a Christian should become a Hindu. But our innermost  prayer should be a Hindu should be a better Hindu, a Muslim a better Muslim, a  Christian a better Christian. (Young India: January 19, 1928)
    Welcome Them Back
    If a person through fear, compulsion,  starvation, or for material gain or consideration goes over to another faith,  it is a misnomer to call it conversion. Most cases of conversion have been to  my mind a false coin. I would therefore unhesitatingly re-admit to the Hindu  fold all such repentants without much ado. If a man comes back to the original  branch, he deserves to be welcomed in so far as he may deem to have erred, he  has sufficiently purged himself of it when he repents his error and retraces  his steps. (Collected Works: Vol. 66, pp. 163-164)
Sudhir Srinivasan
B.Arch, MSc.CPM, Dip.ID, Dip.CAD, Dip.PM, Dip.LD
| Architect |
Sudhir-Architect <ar_sudhirkumar@yahoo.com>
 

 
