Posts Tagged ‘Hindu’

Art Exhibition on Lord Krishna

Monday, July 21st, 2008

The celebrated Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York is featuring an exhibition on the Hindu god Krishna from now until July 28, 2008. The exhibition will feature paintings depicting scenes from the life of Lord Krishna, most of which are from the Punjab and Rajasthan regions of India. The exhibition, named Krishna: Mythology and Worship, is a celebration of Krishna who is perhaps the most popular of the incarnations of Lord Vishnu, one of the most important Hindu gods.

The oldest paintings of Lord Krishna date from the late Kushan–Gupta period in the 3rd to 4th centuries AD and portray him as a young, martial warrior-king, as well as the slayer of demons. Lord Krishna came to be identified in the Hindu faith as the destroyer of evil in the world and loving protector of the Hindu people. By the 7th century AD, Krishna had become the focus of a newly emerging Hindu devotional, or bhakti, movement in which salvation was achieved through personal identification with the personal deity. It is his essential personal nature that allowed such a close identification by Hindu devotees.

from www.metmuseum.org
Hindu God Krishna Celebrated in New Installation at Metropolitan Museum

A new installation at The Metropolitan Museum of Art – Krishna: Mythology and Worship – celebrates the Hindu god Krishna, perhaps the most popular of all the appearances (avatars) of the Indian Hindu deity Vishnu. The installation of 23 painting, textiles, and sculptures from the Museum’s collection will be on view in the Museum’s Florence and Herbert Irving Galleries for the Arts of South and Southeast Asia through July 28, 2008. Most of the paintings on display are manuscript pages produced in Rajasthan and the Punjab Hills, illustrating popular events from Krishna’s life. The textiles were employed to enhance shrines devoted to Krishna.

The earliest depictions of Krishna date from the late Kushan–Gupta period (circa third to fourth century) and show him as a youthful, martial warrior-king, the slayer of demons. Krishna came to be identified as the supreme destroyer of tyranny in the world and protector of the people. Already by the seventh century, Krishna had become the focus of newly emerging devotional cultures (bhakti), in which salvation was reached through personal identification with the deity. It is his essential human nature that allowed such a close identification by devotees. The life of Krishna is widely represented in Hindu art, from the infant and mischievous child to divine love r and staunch protector of the good. Each guise allowed devotees a different path to bond with their god.

Narrative painters explored most fully the worshippers’ love for their god in the context of Krishna’s amorous relationship with his favorite consort, Radha. Often the couple is depicted expressing the fullness of their passion in a secluded wooded glad, typically with flowers in bloom, as seen in several versions from Rajasthan and Malwa. Another popular scene, illustrated by a folio from the famous 1560 Bhagavata Purana manuscript from Delhi and another version of the subject from Bikander (ca. 1610), is that of the youthful Krishna stealing the clothes of female cowherds (gopis) while they are bathing in a river, illustrating his amorous nature and his capacity to extend a personal and individual relationship to each devotee.

The setting for many of these works is Vrindavan, a small village near Mathura on the Yamuna River in northern India, where Krishna was fostered for safety, hidden away from a jealous ruler who threatened his life. Vrindavan became a center of Krishna devotionalism, and remains today a major pilgrimage center for Vaishnavite devotees. A centerpiece of the exhibition is a superb copper alloy sculpture of the infant Krishna being nursed by his foster-mother Yashoda, and a spectacular painted gold and silver temple hanging demonstrates the power of bhakti. Much of this installation focuses on Krishna’s essentially human nature, but his divine status is underscored by the Mughal masterpiece Krishna lifting Mt. Govardana, from the imperial illustrated Harivamsa manuscript, produced in the atelier of the Emperor Akbar around 1590.

View images from the Krishna Exhibition.

New Hindu Priests from India

Friday, July 18th, 2008

Human Resources Minister Datuk Dr S Subramaniam has announced that the Malaysia government will begin considering new applications for priests, musicians and other artisans from India. The applications from Hindu temples and Sikh gurdwaras were stopped to reduce the number of Indian priests in Malaysia, but owing the large demand for Hindu priests in the country the government will be considering new applications.

In the first part of the exercise, about 150 Hindu temples and gurdwaras will be submitting applications. The Minister however reiterated the government’s goal to produce more local Hindu priests. The move follows calls for the easing of the entry requirements for Indian priests by the Malaysia Hindu Council (MHC), of which Malaysia Hindu Dharma Mamandram is a founding member.

from Bernama

Government To Consider New Applications To Engage Priests From India

PETALING JAYA, July 17, 2008 – The government will consider new applications from Hindu temples and Sikh gurdwaras to engage priests, musicians and artisans from India starting next month, MIC secretary-general Datuk Dr S.Subramaniam said Thursday.

Subramaniam, who is Human Resources Minister, said, however, that the visas and permits for these people would only be valid for a maximum period of three years, and based on a set of strict guidelines.

“The decision was made after I had a meeting with Home Minister Datuk Seri Syed Hamid Albar on the issue concerning the approval and renewal of visas and permits for priests, musicians and artisans from India for Hindu temples and Sikh gurdwaras,” he told reporters after opening a forum on the development of industrial jurisprudence near here.

The forum was organized by the Malaysian Association of Human Resource Consultants.

Subramaniam said that about 150 Hindu temples and Sikh gurdwaras throughout the country would be involved in the exercise in the first stage, and the government would study the needs of other temples and gurdwaras from time to time.

Commenting on the need to increase the number of local priests, he said more and more Malaysians would be trained to reduce the dependency of Hindu temples and gurdwaras on foreign workers.

Religious Tolerance in Southeast Asia

Friday, July 18th, 2008

Religious tolerance has been a critical facet of all the countries in southeast Asia, one that has allowed relative prosperity and happiness for the region. Relations between peoples of different religion, race and ethnic origin have been rather amicable. Countries such as Indonesia, Cambodia, Thailand and Malaysia have been directly influenced by by Hindu and Buddhist cultures. The influence of China and India on the region is unmistakable, and goes back to ancient trading routes.

While Cambodia and Thailand have remained largely Buddhist with religious elements incorporated into governance as well as daily life, other countries like Indonesia and Malaysia are today majority Muslim nations. In fact, Indonesia is the biggest Muslim country in the world. But Hindu and Buddhist elements remain, in the form of culture, language and values.

The form of Islam practiced in the Muslim countries of southeast Asia is a moderate form of the religion, preaching tolerance to other religions and understanding between different peoples. This formula of peaceful coexistence has served the region well. While ethnic clashes have occurred in small scale  on occasion, such as in Malaysia in 1969 and in Indonesia as recently as 1999, large scale clashes like Rwanda or Yugoslavia have been successfully prevented in southeast Asia.

But this history of tolerance is at risk from extremist elements within the region. Radicals in the Muslim faith have taken root and are gaining strength. Taking cue from the ideology of terrorists in the Middle East, Afghanistan and elsewhere, religious fundamentalists have attempted to create new social orders in the region.

Largely rejected by the modern, mainstream Muslims, radicals nevertheless pose a great threat to the stability of the region and security of Hindus, Buddhists, Christians and other indigenous peoples. Groups like Jemaah Islamiyah and Abu Sayyaf have brought the problem to the fore. And while their targets so far has been largely western interests in the region, their growth will be a risk for nation building and religious tolerance within the region.

The continued prosperity and coexistence within southeast Asia depends on moderates rejecting extremism.

Preah Vihear Hindu Temple a World Heritage Site

Thursday, July 17th, 2008

Preah Vihear Hindu Temple

Cambodian Hindu Temple Declared World Heritage Site

The ancient Hindu temple of Preah Vihear on the Cambodia-Thailand border has been accorded World Heritage Site status by UNESCO at its meeting in Canada. Most of the Preah Vihear temple complex was built by Angkor kings Suryavarman I and Suryavarman II in the 11th and 12th centuries AD. At the center of controversy due to its proximity to Thailand, the International Court of Justice ruled in 1962 that the Hindu temple belonged to Cambodia.

Like other Angkor temples, Preah Vihear is a representation of the Hindu universe, with five peaks representing Mount Meru, home of the Gods. The temple also boasts an enormous depiction of the ‘Churning of the Ocean’ episode from Hindu mythology.

Also accorded World Heritage Site status by UNESCO this year are colonial trading towns of George Town and Malacca on the Straits of Malacca in Malaysia.

Government Urged to Ease Entry for Hindu Priests

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Malaysia Hindu Council(MHC) chief Datuk R Nadarajah has urged the government to ease entry requirements for Hindu priests from India to work in Malaysian temples. He cited the shortage of priests in many Hindu temples across the country as the reason more priests from India needed to be recruited. Malaysia Hindu Dharma Mamandram is a founding member of MHC.

from Malaysia Nanban
Ease entry for foreign priests, Govt urged

MALAYSIA Hindu Council chief Datuk R. Nadarajah has called on the Government to ease entry of foreign priests into the country, reported Malaysia Nanban.

Nadarajah, who is Sri Maha Mariamman Devasthanam chairman, said they had invited priests and musicians from India to conduct training courses to train locals but the response has been poor.

He said the younger generation was not interested in becoming priests as it involved the learning of many scriptures and the need to follow a strict discipline.

Furthermore, the income was not encouraging.

He said many temples in the country were having problems conducting daily prayers and rituals, solemnization of marriages and other religious prayers as they do not have trained priests.

He urged the Home Ministry to look into the problems faced by the temples and make it easier for the recruitment of priests from India.