Influence of the Bhagavad-Gita

The influence of the Bhagavad-Gita has not been limited to a single period in history or a single place in the world; it has not been bound to a single school of philosophy or a single sect of people. It transcends all boundaries and distinctions. Here is a collection of ten quotations about the Gita:

“I hesitate not to pronounce the Geeta a performance of great originality, of a sublimity of conception, reasoning, and diction almost unequalled; and a single exception, amongst all the known religions of mankind.”1
Warren Hastings (1754-1826)
First Governor-General of British India

“I owed a magnificent day to the Bhagavat Geeta. It was the first of books; it was as if an empire spoke to us, nothing small or unworthy, but large, serene, consistent, the voice of an old intelligence which in another age and climate had pondered and thus disposed of the same questions which exercise us.”2
Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)
American transcendentalist philosopher

“…probably the most beautiful book which has ever come from the hand of man.”3
Émile-Louis Burnouf (1821-1907)
French orientalist

“Among the priceless teachings that may be found in the great Hindu poem of the Mahabharata, there is none so rare and priceless as this, ‘The Lord’s Song’.”4
Annie Besant (1847-1933)
Irish theosophist

“In order to approach a creation as sublime as the Bhagavad-Gita with full understanding, it is necessary to attune our soul to it.”5
Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925)
Austrian philosopher

“…a magnificent flower of Hindu mysticism.”6
Count Maurice Maeterlinck (1862-1949)
Belgian poet

“...the Bhagavad-Gita, perhaps the most beautiful work of the literature of the world.”7
Count Hermann Keyserling (1880-1946)
German philosopher

“The Gita is the most systematic statement of spiritual evolution. It is one of the most clear and comprehensive summaries of perennial philosophy ever revealed; hence its enduring value is subject not only to India but to all of humanity.”8
Aldous Huxley (1894-1963)
English writer

“The greatness of the Bhagavad Gita is the greatness of the universe, but even as the wonder of the stars in heaven only reveals itself in the silence of the night, the wonder of this poem only reveals itself in the silence of the soul.”9
Prof. Juan Mascaró (1897-1987)
Spanish writer

“The Gita can be seen as the main literary support for the great religious civilization of India, the oldest surviving culture in the world. It brings to the West a salutary reminder that our highly activistic and one-sided culture is faced with a crisis that may end in self-destruction because it lacks the inner depth of an authentic metaphysical consciousness.”10
Thomas Merton (1915-1968)
American social critic


1 Keay, John. India Discovered.
2 Galav, T. C. Philosophy of Hinduism - An Introduction.
3 Revel, Louis. The Fragrance of India.
4 Besant, Annie. The Bhagavad Gītā: The Lord’s Song. London: Theosophical Publishing House, 1895
5 Mookerji, Radha Kumud. Ancient Indian Education: Brahmanical and Buddhist. Motilal Banarsidass Publ., 1990
6 Maeterlinck, Maurice. The Great Secret.
7 Durant, Will. The Case for India. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1930
8 Prabhavananda, Swami & Isherwood, Christopher. The Song of God: Bhagavad Gita. New York: Mentor Books, 1951
9 Mascaró, Juan. The Bhagavad Gita. Middlesex: Penguin Books, 1962
10 Merton, Thomas. Thoughts on the East.

25 comments:

  1. J Robert Oppenheimer quoting the Bhagavad-Gita:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8H7Jibx-c0

    ReplyDelete
  2. BHAGAVAD GITA
    If we delve deep into the Mahabharata, it is only a story of a war between two families. It remained a story for several centuries. During the Hindu kingdoms of Gupta, Vijayanagar and Mahratta the story aspect of the Mahabharata alone was etched in the minds of the prople. There were no philosophical discourses in temples. Devotees worshiped the idols of gods and goddesses. All Hindu scriptures remained mnemonic and there were no manuscripts, for it was considered sacreligious to produce manuscripts or to print books of the sacred scriptures. A prayer like the Gayatri mantra could be recited only by Brahmins. If a non-Brahmin had accidentally heard the recital by a Brahmin, molten led would be poured into his ears. The Asiatic Society was founded in 1784 by William Jones. While still on board of the frigate Crococlile carrying him from England to India, he prepared a memorandum detailing his plan of study. This included “the laws of the Hindus and Mahomedans; the history of the ancient world; proofs and illustrations of scripture; traditions concerning the deluge; modern politics and geography of Hindusthan; Arithmatic and Geometry and mixed sciences of Asiaticks; Medicine, Chemistry, Surgery and Anatomy of the Indians.” So even before landing in India, Jones was bent upon establishing the fact that ancient Indians were well versed in philosophy, mathematicas, science and medicine. But there were no manuscripts of Hindu scriptures and no original sources about Indian knowledge of science and medicine. The preferred method of Jones and other British scholars was to sit in the company of Sankrit-knowing Brahmins's and other Hindus, and to ask them to recite from memory Hindu scriptures. Scientists say that memory loss begins at the age of 40. How could the old Brahmins recite by heart century-old Scriptures? Recital by Brahmins contained many contemporary ideas. William Jones and other Orientalists syncretised Sanskrit with Classical and Biblical narratives, to establish transcultural correspondences by means of often crude conjectural etymologies. There were Brahmins such as Pundit Ramlochan, Balachandra Siromani, Rajendralala Misra, Bala Sastri of Benares, Radhakanta Sarman who were allowed to produce their own versions of Hindu scriptures. Brahmin scholars could get easy access to Christian scriptures and western literature from Fort William College and Sanskrit College in Calcutta established by the British. Another scholar, Francis Wilford, claimed that he had discovered the relationship among Hindu traditions, the Bible and the ancient British antiquities. Jones and other scholars, in collaboration with Brahmins, produced Sanskrit manuscripts with these fake claims. Krishna’s narration of creation in the Bhagavad Gita and the creation account in the Manu smriti produced by Jones are modified reproduction of the creation account in the Bible. Krishna’s instructions in the Gita are patterned on the book of Proverbs and Ecclesiastes in the Bible. As the modern translation of the Bhagavad Gita indicates, the work is in poetic form and in many places it is metrically exact parallel to Biblical literature. Sir Charles Wilkins translated the Bhagavad Gita into English in 1785, and he had used the Sanskrit manuscript produced by Asiatic Society scholars with so many interpolations and deletions. It was the English translation that gave worldwide publicity for the Bhagavad Gita. Deception and forgeries can be detected in the manuscripts produced by them. In 1788, Wilford, claimed to have found innumerable references to ancient Egypt, its Kings and holy places in Puranas by publishing a long text of baroque complexity in Asiatic Researches. However, Wilford was forced to admit with a humiliating note in the same journal that he had been systematically duped by his head Brahmin Pandit between 1793 and 1805. Probably the modernized version of the Bhagavad Gita was interpolated during this period.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. where you there with Williams Jones? there are old dated manuscripts. also, if you recite something all your life, it's very unlikely you'll forget it. your assertions are fallible. what is your agenda?

      Delete
  3. @Yeshuratnam:
    Whatever we know about history is only an estimate, whether or not it is backed by data. No one can be certain about what exactly happened. This is a reality that we all have to acknowledge.
    Having said this, we have to examine any text at face value and see what wisdom it has to offer. If we are able to imbibe that wisdom along with our own personal experiences and worldview, then that wisdom becomes usable and helps transform our life and the lives of people around us.
    To me, it is not so important as to who wrote a particular text or when it was written. What matters is what I can learn from it to make my life better and to improve the conditions of my circle of influence.
    Best wishes,
    Hari

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous1/15/2013

    I have heard many theories on origin of BG; but Mr. Yeshuratnam's tops it all in its absurdity!....Koti Sreekrishna


    ReplyDelete
  5. @Anonymous When true facts are presented, you should not call the presentation 'absurdity.' There is no doubt that interpolation alone made BG philosophical.I am giving an incident to prove how fake Sanskrit manuscripts were produced and forgeries were made to give exaggerated antiquity and false claims. Wilford wanted to wade through the historical, geographical and mythological literature in Sanskrit and relate the material culled from these to the known history of the west. To help him in this pursuit, he employed a pundit of Banaras and provided him with accommodation and an establishment of assistants and writers. … The pundit not only embezzled the entire account given by Wilford but also forged the ancient texts to provide a co-relation between the history and mythology of India and the west. First, altered one or two keywords in the original Sanskrit manuscripts, substituting them with words like Swetam or Asweta-dwipa, so that there seemed to be a direct reference to the western world in ancient Sanskrit literature. Secondly, he changed an entire legend to make it correspond to Christian legends; thirdly, he inserted into the abstracts the prepared legends which he remembered having seen in some form or the other in the Puranas. At times he even tremoved leaves from ancient manuscripts replacing them with leaves that he himself had prepared.( O.P.Kejariwal, The Asiatic Society of Bengal, 1784 – 1838, p.102. It will be quite evident from this incident to understand how interpolations to the Bhagavad Gita were made on different occasions by different authors to glorify violence and bloodshed in the epic.

    ReplyDelete
  6. @Yeshuratnam:
    Slander is easy; seeking the truth is hard. To me, history is not important; wisdom is. We are seeking to find the truth and to improve our lives. Our book aims at providing a simple translation of the Bhagavad-Gita to readers around the world. We are interested in the message and how to practice the message. The rest are details.
    Best wishes,
    Hari

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anonymous1/19/2013

    @Yeshuratnam, can you stick with Bhagavad-Gita? Go back and read the text of Bhagavad-Gita used by Shankaracharya or Rmanujacharya or Madhvacharya or Vallanhacharya. They did not wait for colonial masters to define BG text for them! Nor for your facts! But they all used the same text (and that is what we have today as well). That is what impressed Ralph Waldo Emerson or Henry David Thoreau of USA. They had no reason to make Hindus look good. You may have some vengence as your ancestors were probably treated worse than shit. That is unfortunate part of Hindu heritage. But that does not make BG fake and charity of Christians or Western scholars. Why would they do that? Aftre all BG makes most other Abrahamic lore scriptures idiotic. Do you think Western people wanted that? Your statements are factual to the extent that you made them, so don't carried away with your facts........Koti Sreekrishna.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Anonymous1/19/2013

    While I agree with Hari that wisdom is more important than History, that does not mean we can say anything we want about History and say that it is absolute fact!-----Koti Sreekrishna

    ReplyDelete
  9. Anonymous5/04/2013

    Mr Yeshuratnam, your simply to be dismissed as a Gungadin.

    ReplyDelete
  10. @anonymous.
    The acharyas mentioned by you -- Shankaracharya, Ramanujacharya, Madhavacharya etc., did not have original manuscripts. There were no printed books of BG and , no manusripts at that time.. This is applicable to the Ramayana and the Mahabharata. So the Acharyas were glorifying gods and their acts in their own words -- devotional songs or prayers. What we have to understand is the original Hindu scriptures -- the Rig Veda, the Ramayana and the Mahabharata -- belong to war literature genre. In the Rig Veda we learn about the fight between the invading Aryans and the natives who were called Dasa or Mlechas; the Ramayana is a war between the Arya chief Raman and Ravan, the southern ruler; and the Mahabharata is a war among Aryan chieftains. It is against this background we have to trace the sacred values in these religious books. Sacred values are not inherent in these works, but by interpretation, comments and explanatory notes religious values were added to these works. Shankaracharya, Ramanujacharya , Madhavacharya, Vivekananda, Radhakrishnan and others produced their own commentaries and interpretations and gave the war literature spiritual and moral outlook. Thoreau and other Western writers were influenced by these commentaries and interpretations of modern thinkers. Shankaracharya was born 600 years after the birth of Jesus. He knew about Jesus' philosophy because there were Christians in Kerala in 1st century AD . Kaladi where Sahnkaracharya was born had Christian settlements.Ramanujacharya and Madhavacharya knew about other religions, especially Islam. So their interpretations of the war literature contained modern ideas. Christian ideals of love, peace, sacrifice, prayer, fasting and meditation were injected into this ancient literature to make it appealing to the current situation.

    ReplyDelete
  11. @Mr. Yeshuratnam: What you are saying has absolutely no basis in either tradition or scholarship. India had an oral tradition for thousands of years and all the acharyas had access to the same texts. I would recommend an excellent treatise known as "Hindu Dharma" written by the Sri Chandrasekhara Saraswati of Kanchi Matt if you are a sincere student of India's culture and heritage.

    And as for Christian ideals, just a few verses from the Old Testament are sufficient to debunk your claim. Moreover, this is not the place to discuss the Bible or its shortcomings.

    Slander is easy but doing something positive is difficult, so I would advise you to stick with the latter.

    ReplyDelete
  12. You are contradicting your own statement. First, you say that ‘India had an oral tradition for thousands of years,’ and you contradict by saying ‘ all the acharyas had access to the same texts.’ All Hindu scriptures – the Vedas, the Ramayana, the Mahabharata, the Puranas etc., remained mnemonic for centuries till the British came because it was considered sacrilegious to produce manuscripts or printed texts. Charles Wilkins produced for the first time a printed text of the BG in 1785. But this text was produced on the basis of Sanskrit manuscripts written by Brahmin priests of Calcutta and they were aided and abetted by William Jones and Colebrook with so many interpolations and deliberate additions and deletions. Wilkins Bahagavad Gita written in Elizabethan English attracted the West and it contained moral ideals like the Proverbs and Ecclesiastes in the Bible. Hastings, Thoraeu, Emerson and other western thinkers speak about this English work of Wik\lkins and not the original Sanskrit manuscript who nobody had ever seen. No wonder India’s foremost historian, Romila Thapar, calls this formation of Hinduism in the second half of 17th century as ‘constructed Hinduism.’ Shankara, Ramanuja and Madhva didn’t possess any original Mahabharata but only oral knowledge. Ramanuja who opposed Shankara’s oneness of Being believed in the concept that God and the world were related like body and soul, inseparable, but distinct. This concept is not to be seen in the Ramayana or the Mahabharata . Instead of idolatry, Ramanuja believed in the personal devotion to Vishnu – a deviation from the mainstream Hinduism and showing signs of influence of new ideas. He was born about 1000 years after the birth of Jesus. Madhva also opposed Shankara’s monism and believed that God was eternally distinct from the natural world. He was born 1200 years after the birth of Jesus and he was greatly influenced by Christian teachings.
    When true facts are given for a free and frank discussion, please don’t call it “slander.”

    ReplyDelete
  13. First of all, nobody can be so precise about history -- there are no facts in history, only theories. And theories can never be proved -- only disproved. And you're talking as if you watched the birth of Jesus Christ in a live TV program. There are several versions of the story. You should watch the documentary Zeitgeist (2007) and read the Skeptic's Annotated Bible for alternative views.

    Anyway, for the sake of argument, let's consider that your "true facts" are indeed true. It makes no difference to me. What I am interested as a student of philosophy is how to improve my life using the wisdom and insights that I can gather. The wisdom and insights from the great works of the past only make sense in the light of my life's experiences.

    Whether it is Christianity or God or Religion -- all these are after all human-made and what really matters to me is the wisdom. But since you are more interested in the chaff than the grain, you might not be able to appreciate my point of view.

    I don't wish to further discuss this matter.

    Thank you,
    Hari

    ReplyDelete
  14. @Hari HRK
    Yeshuratnam has elaborately discussed all the issues raised by you. You should look back and assess what type of Hinduism existed during the Gupta, Maurya and Mughal periods. Was there any philosophical discussion? It was only temple worship with lot of noise, drum beating, sacrifice and caste segregation without allowing lower castes to come anywhere near the temples. There was widespread persecution of Buddhists and Buddhism that flourished in a grand manner was wiped out by Hindu fanatics. But in the 18th century, after the British established schools and cokkeges, violent Hinduism based on sati, female infanticide and barbaric oppression of lower castes, that hinduism was modernized and Christianized by Vivekananda and others to make it appealing to the West.

    ReplyDelete
  15. @Rajan Rajiv: Just let the past be. It is of no consequence to me. Does the text of the Bhagavad-Gita make sense to me? Can I see value in it in the light of my experiences here and now? Yes, it makes sense to me and I see value in it, so I find it worthy to read it.

    History is such a tricky thing that no one can really be sure about it. There are many theories from many perspectives. They are mere hypotheses. But if we take the text of Bhagavad-Gita or Upanishads at face value and examine it for what it's worth, we may get some benefit from it.

    People like Yesurathnam are many in India -- they prefer slander and acrimony to appreciation and respect. They have neither scholarship nor substance and I don't think there is a need to elaborate on this further.

    -Hari

    ReplyDelete
  16. @HRK
    In all probability Bhagvad Gita as it appears today was written only in the 18th century after the establishment of AsiaWhat is the proof? You know there was no Indian history text before the British compiled it by doing elaborate research in fixing chronology of unheard of kings and dynasties. Even ashoka was known after Prinsep deciphered scripts in pillars and monuments. British scholars discovered invasions of Sakhas, Bacterians, Huns and Yeu-Chi tribes. In the Mahabharata there are references to invasions of Sakhas, Huns and Greeks (yavanas). So it is clear BG was produced in the 18th century with so many interpolations, deletions and additions incorporating Western and Christian ideals to make it modern and appeling to the West.

    ReplyDelete
  17. @Rajan Rajiv: You must have some basis to say that something is more probable or less. At any rate, it is immaterial when the Bhagavad-Gita was written. When we read the text, does it make sense to us? If so, then how can we practice it in daily life. If it doesn't make sense to you, then it is best to ignore rather than create or support useless theories.
    Best,
    Hari

    ReplyDelete
  18. Anonymous7/15/2015

    What is the need for another version of the Geeta when so many good versions already exist? Although I appreciate the effort put into this book, we need more expositions on other obscure works including the brahma sutras and the agamas

    ReplyDelete
  19. Dear Anonymous:

    PART 1

    The reason why we embarked on this translation in the first place is that among the existing versions we studied, we found many with translation errors, inappropriate word choices, misinterpretations, and misrepresentations. Here are some examples:

    Translation errors
    In verse 3.24, the word saṅkara which means ‘chaos’ or ‘confusion’ often gets translated as ‘caste confusion’ which is wrong. In 4.13 guṇa often gets translated as though it is triguṇa (sattva, rajas and tamas). While triguṇa represent the three kinds of attitudes, guṇa pertains to all inherent qualities including triguṇa; in other words, both aptitude and attitude. It is this combination of aptitude and attitude that defines the varṇa of an individual. We clearly observe this in chapters 14 and 17 where triguṇa is expounded in great detail but there is no reference to varṇa.

    In 9.32 translators often make the grave mistake of rendering the word pāpayonayaḥ (of sinful birth) as an adjective to women, traders, and laborers, instead of treating it as a separate category. Chapter 16 has a clear exposition of people of sinful birth but has no reference to gender or varṇa. In 12.5, a sectarian scholar has translated the word avyaktam as goddess Lakshmi. Even a basic knowledge of Sanskrit is sufficient to know that avyaktam means ‘formless’, ‘beyond form’, or ‘not perceivable’.

    Inappropriate word choices
    In 2.47, many translate adhikāraḥ as ‘right’ or ‘duty’, which makes the first part of verse:
    “For action alone is thy right but never to the fruits thereof.”
    This does not make much sense in general and is especially meaningless in the context of 2.37 where Krishna says:
    “If you are killed, you will attain heaven.
    If you are victorious, you will rule over the kingdom.”
    Translating adhikāraḥ as ‘control’ makes much more sense:
    “You can control only your actions;
    you can’t control the results.”

    In 12.19, many translate the word aniketaḥ as ‘homeless’, ‘without a home’, ‘unsheltered’, ‘whose home is not in this world’, ‘who owns no home’, etc. Indeed, the literal meaning of the word aniketaḥ is ‘one without a fixed place of residence’ but it makes it seem that god is particularly fond of vagabonds. In this context, it must be understood as a person who is not particularly attached to any place as his home while at the same time, he feels at home everywhere.

    ReplyDelete
  20. PART 2

    Using commentary as a crutch
    In some scholarly translations, a verse doesn’t make much sense without the help of the long commentary that follows it. Different versions of 18.70 closely matches this:
    “And I consider that he who commits this sacred dialog of ours to memory, by him I shall have been worshiped by the sacrifice-of-knowledge – such is my conviction.”
    When we translate the verse after understanding the spirit behind it, no further commentary is required:
    “He who earnestly studies this sacred dialog of ours –
    I consider him to have honored me,
    for he has made an effort to understand my words.”

    Unclear in spite of commentary
    In some instances, even with the lengthy commentary, a verse does not make much sense. Verses 8.24 and 8.25 explain how the time of death of a yogi (a realized person) determines whether he/she is liberated or is reborn. Many versions translate those two verses like this:
    “Fire, light, day-time, the bright-fortnight, the six months of the northern path (of the Sun) – there departing the knowers of Brahman go to Brahman.
    “Smoke, night-time, dark-fortnight, the six months of the southern path (of the Sun) – there obtaining the lunar light the yogi returns.”
    Day and night, as well as bright and dark fortnights are present all through the year; therefore no amount of commentary can help clarify the verses unless the metaphor is understood. The many attributes like fire, light, day, bright, etc. are simply adjectives to the six months of the apparent Northern path of the sun. Smoke, night, dark, etc. are adjectives to the six months of the apparent Southern path of the sun. Also, there is no need to translate bright and dark as bright fortnight and dark-fortnight. In sum, the verses simply mean:
    “The yogi who dies during uttarayana,
    the symbol of dazzling white daylight
    goes forth to reach brahman.”
    [Uttarayana is the period of six months following Winter Solstice. During uttarayana, the days grow longer and hence it is regarded as the ‘bright-half’ of the year.]
    “The yogi who dies during dakshinayana,
    the symbol of hazy dark night
    attains the lunar light and is born again.”
    [Dakshinayana is the period of six months following Summer Solstice. During dakshinayana, the nights grow longer and hence it is regarded as the ‘dark-half’ of the year. These verses suggest that only some of the realized people get liberated. The rest of them are perhaps among us, guiding us towards liberation.]

    The verse 18.14 deals with the five factors that govern the outcomes of all actions. There are many versions that translate it like this:
    “...the ‘seat’ (body), the ‘doer’, the various sense organs of perception, the different functions of various organs of actions, and the presiding deity also, the fifth.”
    What does this really mean? How can one separate the doer (karta) from body, senses, sense organs, and organs of work? Also, translating the word daivam – in its literal sense – as ‘presiding deity’ only adds to the confusion, especially after Krishna says in 5.14-15 that god cannot be held responsible for human actions. In essence, the verse means:
    “...the situation, the individual, the tools he has,
    how he uses the tools, and unknown forces.”

    ReplyDelete
  21. PART 3

    Force-fitting
    Some translations awkwardly try to force-fit a given verse to the dictates of a latter day sectarian scholar of their inkling, often at the cost of being dishonest to the original. The result is that the eternal truth is sacrificed at the altar of dogma. One such translation of 3.9 is:
    “Work done as a sacrifice for Visnu has to be performed, otherwise work binds one to this material world. Therefore, O son of Kunti, perform your prescribed duties for His satisfaction, and in that way you will always remain unattached and free from bondage. “
    The verse has been distorted with the use of non-existent ideas. What the original really says is:
    “Humans are bound by their actions
    except when they do it for the sake of yajña.
    Arjuna, free yourself from attachment
    and do your work in the spirit of yajña.”
    [Yajña is ‘an act of self-dedication’ or ‘service above self’.]

    Misinterpretation
    In 3.35, the word svadharma is misinterpreted; almost everyone translates dharma as ‘duty’ and some translate it as ‘duty that is pertaining to your caste’, thus reinforcing the misconstrued views about the social structure:
    “It is better to practice your own duty (pertaining to your caste) deficiently than another’s duty well. It is better to die conforming to your own caste duty (or religion); the duty (pertaining to caste or religion) of another invites danger.”
    Like most Sanskrit words, the word dharma too has different meanings in different contexts. Here, it refers to ‘the state of mind’ or ‘innate nature’ and the translation simply yields:
    “Excelling in one’s own dharma, even if it is less glamorous
    is better than trying to excel in another’s dharma.
    It is better to die upholding one’s dharma;
    following the dharma of others is worse than death.”
    [Here, ‘one’s own dharma’ refers to ‘work in tune with one’s inherent nature’.]

    Misrepresentation
    A major drawback in existing translations is that none of them really address the numerous fallacies of Arjuna. Worse yet, time and again, the orthodoxy has sided with Arjuna’s psyche and has offered the justification that “it has been said in the Bhagavad-Gita”, failing to realize that the words of Arjuna are those of a confused person. In fact, Arjuna’s preoccupations with the outdated post-death rites, heaven and hell, disruption of the social structure, and misplaced pacifism have had many supporters. Ironically, all these notions are opposed to the way of life envisioned in the noble thoughts of the ancient Indians.

    Thus, when we tell someone that we are studying the Bhagavad-Gita, a natural question that follows is: “Whose version are you studying?” They might even steer us to a version that reflects their preferred dogma or upbringing. These people are interested in some scholar’s interpretation of the text or another scholar’s best-selling book rather than Krishna’s words or the Bhagavad-Gita.

    In spite of the many failings of prevalent translations and the divisive mindsets, the Gita has widely inspired and enriched people from all over the world ever since it was first translated into English more than two hundred years ago. We wondered what would be result of freeing the translation of the drawbacks and presenting it in a pristine state.

    The aim of our book is to liberate the translation from all short-sighted and divisive ideas, and to present it in a language that is as simple as the Bhagavad-Gita itself, and free from lengthy explanations. Upon reading the text in an unpolluted form, the reader may choose to understand, interpret, and implement it as best suited to him/her. This, in itself, will have fulfilled the purpose of this work.

    Koti Sreekrishna
    Hari Ravikumar

    ReplyDelete
  22. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  23. I would like to bring to your critical notice my 'Bhagvad-Gita: Treatise of Self-help' in rhythmic verses sanns 110 inane interpolations such as chãturvarnyam which has been accorded the pride of place by 'Great Books and Classics' site among its translations http://www.grtbooks.com/bhagavad.asp?idx=0&lng=al&lst=al&aa=AA&at=BH&yr=-400

    Here's its synopsis and the link to its audio book besides its text in PDF, that was originally published by Project Gutenberg http://self.gutenberg.org/eBooks/WPLBN0002097652-Bhagvad-Gita-Treatise-of-Self-Help-by-Murthy-B-S-.aspx?
    "Bhagavad-Gita is the most beautiful, perhaps the only true philosophical song existing in any known tongue’ so opined William von Humboldt.

    In this modern rendition, the beauty of the Sanskrit slokas is reflected in the rhythmic flow of the English verse of poetic proportions even as the attendant philosophy of the song that is the Gita is captured in contemporary idiom for easy comprehension.

    The general consensus is that the in vogue Gita of 700 slokas has many an interpolation in it, but no meaningful attempt has ever been made to delve into the nature and extent, not to speak of the effect of these on the Hindu society at large. The methodical codification of interpolations carried out here puts the true character of Gita in proper perspective. Identified here are hundred and ten slokas of deviant nature and or of partisan character, the source of so much misunderstanding about this book extraordinary, in certain sections of the Hindu fold. In the long run, exposing and expunging these mischievous insertions is bound to bring in new readers from these quarters to this over two millennia old classic besides altering the misconceptions of the existing adherents."

    Dropbox link https://www.dropbox.com/s/jhux7w2sma7n0cr/bhagadvadgita.mp3?dl=0 and YouTube link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6vFU3-LD4iM&t=38s
    Hope you would like to take note of this new outlook of the ancient text sans 110 interpolations the codification of which is summarised in my "Mundane distortions in the Divine discourse of Bhagvad-Gita" https://www.academia.edu/27053858/Mundane_distortions_in_the_Divine_discourse_of_Bhagvad-Gita

    ReplyDelete
  24. May like to read my new free ebook "Inane Interpolations in Bhagvad-Gita (An Invocation for their Revocation)"
    Blurb:
    The Manusmriti, the social doctrine of yore, and the Bhagvad-Gita, the spiritual tome in vogue that lay down the discriminatory dharma (duties) of the four social classes (castes) have been the bugbears of the Hindu backward classes. However, to their chagrin, of late, as the latter is being mindlessly promoted even though the former was constitutionally debunked, they began advocating that it too should be dumped in a dustbin.
    Ironically, the improbability of their progenitor Krishna, the architect of the Gita, relegating his own ilk to the social margins failed to dawn upon these that Gita supposedly slights, even to this day! Thus, their intellectuals, instead of seeking to reclaim their priceless heritage, albeit after ridding its interpolative garbage, tend to rubbish it a la throwing the baby with the bathwater, and needless to say they must ponder.
    This ‘overdue’ work, may lead the ‘denied’ Hindu castes as well as the favored folks for an objective approach to the in vogue Bhagvad-Gita which could dispel the misgivings of the former and the delusions of the latter, thereby bridging the Hindu emotional gulf with its abridged book that restores its original form. Whether or not one concurs with its propositions, this original work could be of interest to the students of logic and reasoning as well.
    Links to the free ebook at https://g.co/kgs/eUFBpi

    ReplyDelete