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Man and his natural environment are inextricably interlinked.
We create our environment-for better or for worse. Millions of
tons of toxic pollutants, greenhouse gases, that industry releases
into the atmosphere, are taking their toll. Climate scientists
from around the world have been sounding alarm bells since long.
Now they have come out openly with the warning that humans are
to blame for global warming, and if this continues, it could
lead to disastrous consequences. Their conclusions, comments
New Scientists (January 27), "send a tough message to politicians
who have reached a deadlock in negotiations on how to combat
soaring temperatures and sea levels."
This January, scientists met in Shanghai, China, to discuss
the latest assessment form UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change. In their final text for policy makers, they tersely say,
"Most of the warming is attributable to human activities."
The report cites global melting as powerful evidence that the
world really is warming. Since the 1960s, there has been a 20
per cent decrease in snow cover and a 40 per cent thinning of
the Arctic ice cap. The scientists predict sea level will rise
by between 9 and 88 centimetres by 2100, endangering millions
of people in low-lying areas.
The report also warns that temperatures will rise by between
1.4 and 5.80C in the 21st century, depending on emissions of
greenhouse gases.
We are all guilty. If we want to leave behind us a livable
world for generations to come, action needs to be taken now and
a restraint put on environmental pollution caused by overindustrialization
and other human activities.
Scientists have found life in the unlikeliest of places-in
clouds. Birgit Sattler, a limnologist at the University of Innsbruck
in Austria, has discovered bacteria that are not just surviving
but thriving in thick cloud formations. (Discover, March 2001)
Sattler identified the bacteria after examining cloud samples
collected and frozen onto Teflon plates set up on the top of
Mount Sonnblick, near Salzburg, Austria. Even at subfreezing
temperatures, the bacteria could take up radioactively tagged
amino acids and DNA bases. This indicates the microbes were still
growing and reproducing.
The bacteria could in influence climate by acting as nuclei
around which rain droplets form. In addition, Sattler says, finding
bacteria in clouds suggests that life could exist in similarly
extreme surroundings on other planets. "Why not? I've done
research in glaciers, Antarctic lakes, and in Alpine ice, but
this is the most extreme habitat in which I've found bacteria,"
she says. "If anything happens to Earth, bacteria will survive."
This is another proof, if proof be needed, that microbes,
bacteria, and the tutti quanti of the infinitesimally small exist
everywhere in the universe. These lives, though invisible to
us by virtue of their minuteness, have always surrounded us and
have worked on, obedient to their own laws, and it is only as
they are gradually being revealed that scientists have begun
to take congnizance of them, as of the effects produced by them.
Who are the Druses? The origins of this small community, evolved
in 11th-century Cairo, and spread across West Asia, still remain
shrouded in mystery. Members of the community were in India recently
"to trace their Indian connections." Shelikh Hussein
Aburukn, leader of the delegation and member of the Supreme Board
of Religious Affairs of the Druse, said: "We have a close
relationship with Sanskrit because we believe that Druse culture
and religion have some of their roots in ancient India. We're
here to trace as much of that past as possible." Piali Banerjee
writes in The Sunday Times of India (April 8):
Spread across Syria, Lebanon Israel and Jordan, the Druse
faith incorporates Gnostic and Neo-Platonic tenets. Druse history
claims that the connection between Druse and Vedic culture goes
back to the time of Al-Hakim. "At the time of establishing
the Druse movement, A1-Hakim had several discussions with religious
leaders around the world. He exchanged a number of ideas with
Indian religious leaders who had been invited for the discussions,"
explains Hussein Aburukn. "He even exchanged religious texts.
So much so that two of our books have actually been translated
from the original Sanskrit to Arabic. One of them is A1 Mon Frad
Pedateh (One Without a Second), which talks about one Supreme
Lord. The other book has a whole section on Ayurveda, where some
of the words and phrases have been retained in Sanskrit since
they didn't have Arabic equivalents."
Besides Ayurveda and Sanskrit, the main evidence of connection
between Druse and Hindu thought is the belief in the reincarnation
of the soul. Both cultures believe in it strongly.
The Druses claim that their religion had "existed since
the beginning of the world in the hearts and minds of saint"-an
interesting claim in the light of H.P.B.'s calling it "one
of the last survivals of the archaic Wisdom-Religion." In
her article "Lamas and Druses," originally published
in The Theosophist for June 1881, she says how difficult it is
to fathom "the secret of the profoundly mystical beliefs
of the Druses":
To begin with: A1-Hakim is not the founder of their sect.
Their ritual and dogmas were never made known, but to those who
have been admitted into their brotherhood. Their origin is next
to unknown. As to their external religion, or rather what has
transpired of it, that can be told in a few words. The Druses
are believed to be mixture of Kurds, Mardi-Arabs, and other semi-civilized
tribes. We humbly maintain that they are the descendants of,
and a mixture of, mystics of all nations-mystics, who, in the
face of cruel and unrelenting persecution by the orthodox Christian
Church and orthodox Islamism, have ever since the first centuries
of the Mohammedan propaganda, been gathered together, and who
gradually made a permanent settlement in the fastnesses of Syria
and Mount Lebanon, where they had from the first found refuge.
Since then they have preserved the strictest upon their beliefs
and truly occult rites
.They are the Sikhs of Asia Minor,
and their policy offers many points of similarity with the late
"commonwealth" of the followers of Guru Nanak-even
extending to their mysticism and indomitable bravery. But the
two are still more closely related to a third and still more
mysterious community of religionists, of which nothing, or next
to nothing, is known by outsiders: we mean the fraternity of
Tibetan Lamaists, known as the Brotherhood of Khelang, who mix
but little with the rest.
Human have long marvelled at the ease with which birds manoeuvre
through the air, in some cases covering enormous distances during
seasonal migrations. To unravel the mystery of how birds exert
mastery over the air, scientists have studied their uniquely
sculpted bodies and complex wing movements.
Dwight G. Smith, professor and chairman of the biology department
at Southern Connecticut State University in New Haven, U.S.A.,
writes in The World and I (March 2001):
Wings alone are insufficient for flight. The entire body must
be appropriately sculpted to achieve maximum strength and lightness.
In birds, these features govern the structures and functions
of the feathers, skeleton, muscles, and internal systems
.
Exactly how flight originated continues to be controversial.
Of the many theories advanced, the two most plausible are labeled
"from the ground up" and "from the trees down."
John Ostrom of Yale University is a leading proponent of the
theory that ancestral birds learned to fly from the ground up
.Other
scientists, however, believe that the ancestors of birds learned
to fly by climbing into treetops and gliding from tree to tree
or from trees to the ground, gradually transitioning from gliding
to true flight.
In The Theosophist for August 1882, a correspondent asks whether
the flight of birds and the swimming of fishes is produced at
will, as in the case of the Yogis who can levitate themselves
or walk upon the surface of the water. To this H.P.B. remarks:
Occult science explains the mysteries of bird-flying and fish-swimming
on principles entirely opposed to the accepted scientific theory
of the day
. "If," writes our correspondent, "we
take the position that birds have the power to make themselves
light or heavy at will, the phenomenon of their flight becomes
easy to comprehend."
And why not take up such a position? Whether by instinct or
will, whether an effect identical with another is produced consciously
or unconsciously, by animal or man, the cause underlying that
invariable and identical result must be one and the same, barring
diversity of conditions and exceptions as to unimportant details
.There
must be something more than blind instinct or conscious volition.
What is it? Occult science tells us the word: it is "a change
of polarity and of normal gravity," not yet admissible by
science. With birds and animals-as instinctive a mechanical action
as any other they execute; with man, when he thus defies the
familiar conditions of gravity, it is something he can acquire,
in his training as a Yogi. Though the former act unconsciously,
and he changes his polarity at will, the same cause is made operative,
and both produce and identical effect. There are certainly alternating
changes of polarity going on in the bird while ascending or dropping,
and a maintenance of the same polarity while sailing at any given
altitude.
Doctors have joined psychologists in making people aware of
the benefits of optimism. Researchers have documented health
risks incurred by a negative outlook, and benefits conferred
by a positive one. A fast-growing body of studies-104 so far-is
proving that optimism can help people be happier, healthier and
more successful. Claire Safran outlines what researchers are
saying today (Mira, February 2001):
Pessimism leads to hopelessness, sickness and failure, and
is linked to depression, loneliness and painful shyness. "If
we could teach people to think more positively," says psychologist
Craig A. Anderson of Rice University in Houston, "it would
be like inoculating them against these mental ills."
"Your abilities count," explains psychologist Michael
F. Scheier of Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh, "but
the belief that you can succeed affects whether or not you will."
In part, that's because optimists and pessimists deal with the
same challenges and disappointments in very different ways
.
"If people feel hopeless," says Anderson, "they
don't bother to acquire the skills they need to succeed."
A sense of control, according to Anderson, is the litmus test
for success. The optimist feels in control of his own life. If
things are going badly, he acts quickly, looking for solutions,
forming a new plan of action, and reaching out for advice. The
pessimist feels like fate's plaything and moves slowly. He doesn't
seek advice, since he assumes nothing can be done
.
Many studies suggest that the pessimist's feeling of helplessness
undermines the body's natural defences, the immune system. Dr.
Christopher Peterson of the University of Michigan has found
that the pessimist doesn't take good care of himself. Feeling
passive and unable to dodge life's blows, he expects ill health
and other misfortunes, no matter what he does
.
Positive thinking leads to positive action- and reaction.
What you expect from the world, the evidence suggests, is what
you are likely to get.
Indeed, we are what we think. To a great extent, what we expect
is what we get. Pessimism might seem a hard habit to break, but
the dynamic power of thought and will can overcome all obstacles.
Isis Unveiled provided several instances of the skill of the
ancients in various arts and sciences, among them surgery. instances
of the skill of the ancients in various arts and sciences, among
them surgery. Modern discoveries amply bear this out. A recently
discovered 3000-year-old female mummy from an Egyptian necropolis
at Thebes-West has a well-shaped artificial big toe, consisting
of three pieces of carved wood fitted onto her foot with leather
straps. This is considered to be the world's oldest known prosthesis.
Skin regrew where the toe was amputated, proving that the surgery
was a success. X-rays and CT scans of the mummy revealed that
the actual toe had been surgically removed. (Discover, April
2001)
Truly, "modern science has little or no reason to boast
of originality," as H.P.B. said in Isis Unveiled.
Misunderstanding and dead-letter interpretation of religious
terms and concepts has caused much mischief in the world. Jihad
is one such term which is commonly understood by Muslims to mean
"religious Holy War against unbelievers in the mission of
Allah and his Prophet Muhammad." In The Times of India (March
27), Sujata Ashwarya Cheema explains the true meaning of jihad:
In the literal sense of the term, jihad means "an effort
or striving."
.Al-Jihad al-Akbar or "the greater
warfare" is against one's own demons
.The perception
of jihad in this sense is subjective and has moral implications.
It involves a way of life in which fleeting temptations have
no place. Individuals become discerning subjects who comprehend
that worldly temptations are ephemeral and have to be fought.
It is also the ability to suffer virtuously the afflictions caused
by the foe by following the commandments of Allah and to preach,
through education, art and literature, the precepts of Islam,
the religion of Allah
.
An Islamic scholar, Syed Qutb, observes: "Those who state
that Islamic jihad was mainly for the defence of the 'homeland
of Islam' diminish the greatness of the Islamic way of life and
consider it less important than their 'homeland'. The jihad of
Islam is to secure complete freedom for every man throughout
the world by releasing him from servitude
.so that he may
serve God."
jihad has become a casual term for all
acts of violence perpetrated by an Islamic group, individual
or regime. Such groups and individuals need to be reminded about
the "Greater jihad," only through which all the people
on earth can find redemption. |