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Introduction to Hinduism
by Dr. Zakir Naik
I INTRODUCTION TO HINDUISM |
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The
most popular among the Aryan religions is
Hinduism. ‘Hindu’ is actually a Persian
word that stands for the inhabitants of the region
beyond the Indus Valley. However, in common
parlance, Hinduism is a blanket term for an
assortment of religious beliefs, most of which are
based on the Vedas, the Upanishads and the
Bhagavad Gita. |
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II INTRODUCTION TO HINDU
SCRIPTURES |
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There
are several sacred scriptures of the Hindus. Among
these are the Vedas, Upanishads and the Puranas. |
1. |
VEDAS:
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The word Veda is derived from vid which
means to know, knowledge par excellence or
sacred wisdom. There are four principal
divisions of the Vedas (although according to
their number, they amount to 1131 out of which
about a dozen are available). According to Maha
Bhashya of Patanjali, there are 21 branches of
Rigveda, 9 types of Atharvaveda, 101 branches of
Yajurveda and 1000 of Samveda).
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The Rigveda, the Yajurveda and the Samveda are
considered to be more ancient books and are
known as Trai Viddya or the ‘Triple
Sciences’. The Rigveda is the oldest and has
been compiled in three long and different
periods of time. The 4th Veda is the Atharvaveda,
which is of a later date.
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There is no unanimous opinion regarding the date
of compilation or revelation of the four Vedas.
According to Swami Dayanand, founder of the
Arya Samaj, the Vedas were revealed 1310
million years ago. According to other scholars,
they are not more than 4000 years old.
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Similarly, there are differing opinions
regarding the places where these books were
compiled and the Rishis to whom these
Scriptures were given. Inspite of these
differences, the Vedas are considered to be the
most authentic of the Hindu Scriptures and the
real foundations of the Hindu Dharma.
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2. |
UPANISHADS:
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The word 'Upanishad' is derived from Upa
meaning near, Ni which means down and
Shad means to sit. Therefore ‘Upanishad’
means sitting down near. Groups of pupils sit
near the teacher to learn from him the secret
doctrines.
According to Samkara, ‘Upanishad’ is derived
from the root word Sad which means ‘to loosen’,
‘to reach’ or ‘to destroy’, with Upa and
ni as prefix; therefore ‘Upanishad’ means
Brahma-Knowledge by which ignorance is loosened
or destroyed.
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The number of Upanishads exceeds 200 though the
Indian tradition puts it at 108. There are 10
principal Upanishads. However, some consider
them to be more than 10, while others 18.
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The Vedanta meant originally the Upanishads,
though the word is now used for the system of
philosophy based on the Upanishad. Literally,
Vedanta means the end of the Veda,
Vedasua-antah, and the conclusion as well as
the goal of Vedas. The Upanishads are the
concluding portion of the Vedas and
chronologically they come at the end of the
Vedic period.
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Some Pundits consider the Upanishads to
be more superior to the Vedas.
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3. |
PURANAS:
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Next
in order of authenticity are the Puranas which are
the most widely read scriptures. It is believed
that the Puranas contain the history of the
creation of the universe, history of the early
Aryan tribes, life stories of the divines and
deities of the Hindus. It is also believed that
the Puranas are revealed books like the Vedas,
which were revealed simultaneously with the Vedas
or sometime close to it.
Maharishi Vyasa has divided the Puranas into 18
voluminous parts. He also arranged the Vedas under
various heads.
Chief
among the Puranas is a book known as Bhavishya
Purana. It is called so because it is believed to
give an account of future events. The Hindus
consider it to be the word of God. Maharishi yasa
is considered to be just the compiler of the book. |
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4. |
ITIHAAS:
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The
two epics of Hinduism are the Ramayana and the
Mahabharata.
A.
Ramayana:
According to Ramanuja, the great scholar of
Ramayana, there are more than 300 different types
of Ramayana: Tulsidas Ramayana, Kumbha Ramayana.
Though the outline of Ramayana is same, the
details and contents differ.
Valmiki’s Ramayana:
Unlike the Mahabharata, the Ramayana appears to be
the work of one person – the sage Valmiki, who
probably composed it in the 3rd century BC. Its
best-known recension (by Tulsi Das, 1532-1623)
consists of 24,000 rhymed couplets of 16-syllable
lines organised into 7 books. The poem
incorporates many ancient legends and draws on the
sacred books of the Vedas. It describes the
efforts of Kosala’s heir, Rama, to regain his
throne and rescue his wife, Sita, from the demon
King of Lanka.
Valmiki's Ramayana is a Hindu epic tradition whose
earliest literary version is a Sanskrit poem
attributed to the sage Valmiki. Its principal
characters are said to present ideal models of
personal, familial, and social behavior and hence
are considered to exemplify Dharma, the
principle of moral order.
B.
Mahabharata:
The
nucleus of the Mahabharata is the war of eighteen
days fought between the Kauravas, the
hundred sons of Dhritarashtra and Pandavas,
the five sons of Pandu. The epic entails all the
circumstances leading upto the war. Involved in
this Kurukshetra battle were almost all the
kings of India joining either of the two parties.
The result of this war was the total annihilation
of Kauravas and their party. Yudhishthira, the
head of the Pandavas, became the sovereign monarch
of Hastinapura. His victory is supposed to
symbolise the victory of good over evil. But with
the progress of years, new matters and episodes
relating to the various aspects of human life,
social, economic, political, moral and religious
as also fragments of other heroic legends came to
be added to the aforesaid nucleus and this
phenomenon continued for centuries until it
acquired the present shape. The Mahabharata
represents a whole literature rather than one
single and unified work, and contains many
multifarious things.
C.
Bhagavad Gita:
Bhagavad Gita is a part of Mahabharata. It is the
advice given by Krishna to Arjun on the
battlefield of Kurukshetra. It contains the
essence of the Vedas and is the most popular of
all the Hindu Scriptures. It contains 18 chapters.
The
Bhagavad Gita is one of the most widely read and
revered of the works sacred to the Hindus. It is
their chief devotional book, and has been for
centuries the principal source of religious
inspiration for many thousands of Hindus.
The
Gita is a dramatic poem, which forms a small part
of the larger epic, the Mahabharata. It is
included in the sixth book (Bhismaparvan) of the
Mahabaharata and documents one tiny event in a
huge epic tale.
The
Bhagavad Gita tells a story of a moral crisis
faced by Arjuna, which is solved through the
interaction between Arjuna, a Pandava warrior
hesitating before battle, and Krishna, his
charioteer and teacher. The Bhagavad Gita relates
a brief incident in the main story of a rivalry
and eventually a war between two branches of a
royal family. In that brief incident - a pause on
the battlefield just as the battle is about to
begin - Krishna, one chief on one side (also
believed to be the Lord incarnate), is presented
as responding to the doubts of Arjuna. The poem is
the dialogue through which Arjuna’s doubts were
resolved by Krishna’s teachings. |
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CONCEPT
OF GOD IN HINDUISM
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1.
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Common
Concept of God in Hinduism: |
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Hinduism is commonly perceived as a polytheistic
religion. Indeed, most Hindus would attest to this,
by professing belief in multiple Gods. While some
Hindus believe in the existence of three gods, some
believe in thousands of gods, and some others in
thirty three crore i.e. 330 million Gods. However,
learned Hindus, who are well versed in their
scriptures, insist that a Hindu should believe in
and worship only one God.
The
major difference between the Hindu and the Muslim
perception of God is the common Hindus’ belief in
the philosophy of Pantheism. Pantheism considers
everything, living and non-living, to be Divine and
Sacred. The common Hindu, therefore, considers
everything as God. He considers the trees as God,
the sun as God, the moon as God, the monkey as God,
the snake as God and even human beings as
manifestations of God!
Islam,
on the contrary, exhorts man to consider himself and
his surroundings as examples of Divine Creation
rather than as divinity itself. Muslims therefore
believe that everything is God’s i.e. the word ‘God’
with an apostrophe ‘s’. In other words the Muslims
believe that everything belongs to God. The trees
belong to God, the sun belongs to God, the moon
belongs to God, the monkey belongs to God, the snake
belongs to God, the human beings belong to God and
everything in this universe belongs to God.
Thus
the major difference between the Hindu and the
Muslim beliefs is the difference of the apostrophe
‘s’. The Hindu says everything is God. The Muslim
says everything is God’s.
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2.
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Concept of God according to Hindu Scriptures: |
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We can
gain a better understanding of the concept of God in
Hinduism by analysing Hindu scriptures.
BHAGAVAD GITA
The
most popular amongst all the Hindu scriptures is
the Bhagavad Gita.
Consider the following verse from the Gita:
"Those whose intelligence has been stolen by
material desires surrender unto demigods and
follow the particular rules and regulations of
worship according to their own natures."
[Bhagavad Gita 7:20]
The Gita states that people who are materialistic
worship demigods i.e. ‘gods’ besides the True God.
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UPANISHADS:
The
Upanishads are considered sacred scriptures by the
Hindus.
The
following verses from the Upanishads refer to the
Concept of God:
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"Ekam evadvitiyam"
"He is One only without a second."
[Chandogya Upanishad 6:2:1]1
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"Na casya kascij janita na cadhipah."
"Of Him there are neither parents nor lord."
[Svetasvatara Upanishad 6:9]2
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"Na tasya pratima asti"
"There is no likeness of Him."
[Svetasvatara Upanishad 4:19]3
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The following verses from the Upanishad allude to
the inability of man to imagine God in a
particular form:
"Na samdrse tisthati rupam asya, na caksusa
pasyati kas canainam."
"His form is not to be seen; no one sees Him with
the eye."
[Svetasvatara Upanishad 4:20]4
1[The
Principal Upanishad by S. Radhakrishnan page 447 and
448]
[Sacred Books of the East, volume 1 ‘The Upanishads
part I’ page 93]
2[The
Principal Upanishad by S. Radhakrishnan page 745]
[Sacred Books of the East, volume 15, ‘The
Upanishads part II’ page 263.]
3[The
Principal Upanishad by S. Radhakrishnan page 736 &
737]
[Sacred Books of the East, volume 15, ‘The
Upanishads part II’ page no 253]
4[The
Principal Upanishad by S. Radhakrishnan page 737]
[Sacred Books of the East, volume 15, ‘The
Upanishads part II’ page no 253] |
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THE VEDAS
Vedas are considered the most sacred of all the
Hindu scriptures. There are four principal Vedas:
Rigveda, Yajurveda, Samveda and Atharvaveda.
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Yajurveda
The following verses from the Yajurveda echo a
similar concept of God:
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"na tasya pratima asti
"There is no image of Him."
[Yajurveda 32:3]5
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"shudhama poapvidham"
"He is bodyless and pure."
[Yajurveda 40:8]6
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"Andhatama pravishanti ye asambhuti mupaste"
"They enter darkness, those who worship the
natural elements" (Air, Water, Fire, etc.).
"They sink deeper in darkness, those who worship
sambhuti."
[Yajurveda 40:9]7
Sambhuti means created things, for
example table, chair, idol, etc.
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The Yajurveda contains the following prayer:
"Lead us to the good path and remove the sin
that makes us stray and wander."
[Yajurveda 40:16]8
5[Yajurveda by Devi Chand M.A. page
377]
6[Yajurveda Samhita by Ralph T. H.
Giffith page 538]
7[Yajurveda Samhita by Ralph T. H.
Giffith page 538]
8[Yajurveda Samhita by Ralph T. H.
Griffith page 541]
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Atharvaveda
The Atharvaveda praises God in Book 20, hymn 58
and verse 3:
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"Dev
maha osi"
"God is verily great"
[Atharvaveda 20:58:3]9
Rigveda
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The oldest of all the vedas is Rigveda. It is
also the one considered most sacred by the
Hindus. The Rigveda states in Book 1, hymn 164
and verse 46:
"Sages (learned Priests) call one God by many
names."
[Rigveda 1:164:46]
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The Rigveda gives several different attributes
to Almighty God. Many of these are mentioned in
Rigveda Book 2 hymn 1.
Among the various attributes of God, one of the
beautiful attributes mentioned in the Rigveda
Book II hymn 1 verse 3, is Brahma.
Brahma means ‘The Creator’. Translated into
Arabic it means Khaaliq. Muslims can have
no objection if Almighty God is referred to as
Khaaliq or ‘Creator’ or Brahma.
However if it is said that Brahma is
Almighty God who has four heads with each head
having a crown, Muslims take strong exception to
it.
Describing Almighty God in anthropomorphic terms
also goes against the following verse of
Yajurveda:
"Na tasya Pratima asti"
"There is no image of Him."
[Yajurveda 32:3]
Another beautiful attribute of God mentioned in
the Rigveda Book II hymn 1 verse 3 is Vishnu.
Vishnu means ‘The Sustainer’. Translated
into Arabic it means Rabb. Again, Muslims
can have no objection if Almighty God is
referred to as Rabb or 'Sustainer' or
Vishnu. But the popular image of
9[Atharveda Samhita vol 2 William
Dwight Whitney page 910]
Vishnu among Hindus, is that of a God who has
four arms, with one of the right arms holding
the Chakra, i.e. a discus and one of the left
arms holding a ‘conch shell’, or riding a bird
or reclining on a snake couch. Muslims can never
accept any image of God. As mentioned earlier
this also goes against Svetasvatara Upanishad
Chapter 4 verse 19.
"Na tasya pratima asti"
"There is no likeness of Him"
The following verse from the Rigveda Book 8,
hymn 1, verse 1 refer to the Unity and Glory of
the Supreme Being:
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"Ma cid anyad vi sansata sakhayo ma rishanyata"
"O friends, do not worship anybody but Him, the
Divine One. Praise Him alone."
[Rigveda 8:1:1]10
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"Devasya samituk parishtutih"
"Verily, great is the glory of the Divine
Creator."
[Rigveda 5:1:81]11
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Brahma Sutra of Hinduism:
The
Brahma Sutra of Hinduism is:
"Ekam
Brahm, dvitiya naste neh na naste kinchan"
"There
is only one God, not the second; not at all, not at
all, not in the least bit."
Thus
only a dispassionate study of the Hindu scriptures
can help one understand the concept of God in
Hinduism.
0[Rigveda
Samhita vol. 9, pages 2810 and 2811 by Swami Satya
Prakash Sarasvati and Satyakam Vidyalankar]
11[Rigveda Samhita vol. 6, pages 1802 and
1803 by Swami Satya Prakash Saraswati and Satyakam
Vidyalankar]
as from
the sun." The Prophecy confirms:
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The name of the Prophet as Ahmed since Ahmed is an
Arabic name. Many translators misunderstood it to
be ‘Ahm at hi’ and translated the mantra
as "I alone have acquired the real wisdom of
my father".
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Prophet was given eternal law, i.e. the Shariah.
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The Rishi was enlightened by the Shariah of
Prophet Muhammad. The Qur’an says in Surah Saba
Chapter 34 verse 28 (34:28):
"We
have not sent thee but as a universal (Messenger) to
men, giving them glad tidings and warning them
(against sin), but most men understand not."
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Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) in Hindu
scriptures
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I |
Muhammad (pbuh) prophesised in Bhavishya Purana
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According to Bhavishya Purana in the Prati
Sarag Parv III Khand 3 Adhay 3 Shloka 5 to 8.
"A malecha (belonging to a foreign country
and speaking a foreign language) spiritual teacher
will appear with his companions. His name will be
Mohammad. Raja (Bhoj) after giving
this Maha Dev Arab (of angelic disposition)
a bath in the Panchgavya and the Ganga
water (i.e. purifying him of all sins) offered him
the present of his sincere devotion and showing
him all reverence said, "I make obeisance to thee.
O ye! The pride of mankind, the dweller in Arabia,
Ye have collected a great force to kill the Devil
and you yourself have been protected from the
malecha opponents."
The Prophecy clearly states:
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The name of the Prophet as Mohammad.
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He will belong to Arabia. The Sanskrit word
Marusthal means a sandy track of land or a
desert.
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Special mention is made of the companions of the
Prophet, i.e. the Sahabas. No other
Prophet had as many companions as Prophet
Muhammad (pbuh).
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He is referred as the pride of mankind (Parbatis
nath). The Glorious Qur’an reconfirms this
"And thou (standest) on an exalted standard of
character" [Al-Qur'an 68:4]|
"Ye have indeed in the Messenger of Allah, a
beautiful pattern (of conduct)".
[Al-Qur'an 33:21]
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He will kill the devil, i.e. abolish idol
worship and all sorts of vices.
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The Prophet will be given protection against his
enemy.
Some people may argue that ‘Raja’ Bhoj
mentioned in the prophecy lived in the 11th
century C.E. 500 years after the advent of
Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) and was the descendant
in the 10th generation of Raja Shalivahan.
These people fail to realise that there was not
only one Raja of the name Bhoj.
The Egyptian Monarchs were called as Pharaoh and
the Roman Kings were known as Caesar, similarly
the Indian Rajas were given the title of
Bhoj. There were several Raja
Bhoj who came before the one in 11th Century
C.E.
The Prophet did not physically take a bath in
the Panchgavya and the water of Ganges. Since
the water of Ganges is considered holy, taking
bath in the Ganges is an idiom, which means
washing away sins or immunity from all sorts of
sins. Here the prophecy implies that Prophet
Muhammad (pbuh) was sinless, i.e. Maasoom.
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According to Bhavishya Purana in the Pratisarag
Parv III Khand 3 Adhay 3 Shloka 10 to 27 Maharishi
Vyas has prophesised:
"The Malecha have spoiled the well-known
land of the Arabs. Arya Dharma is not to be
found in the country. Before also there appeared a
misguided fiend whom I had killed; he has now
again appeared being sent by a powerful enemy. To
show these enemies the right path and to give them
guidance, the well-known Muhammad (pbuh), is busy
in bringing the Pishachas to the right
path. O Raja, You need not go to the land
of the foolish Pishachas, you will be
purified through my kindness even where you are.
At night, he of the angelic disposition, the
shrewd man, in the guise of Pishacha said
to Raja Bhoj, "O Raja! Your
Arya Dharma has been made to prevail over
all religions, but according to the commandments
of Ishwar Parmatma, I shall enforce the
strong creed of the meat eaters. My followers will
be men circumcised, without a tail (on his head),
keeping beard, creating a revolution announcing
the Aadhaan (the Muslim call for prayer)
and will be eating all lawful things. He will eat
all sorts of animals except swine. They will not
seek purification from the holy shrubs, but will
be purified through warfare. On account of their
fighting the irreligious nations, they will be
known as Musalmaans. I shall be the
originator of this religion of the meat-eating
nations."
The Prophecy states that:
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The evil doers have corrupted the Arab land.
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Arya Dharma is not found in that land.
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The Indian Raja need not go the Arab land
since his purification will take place in India
after the musalmaan will arrive in India.
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The coming Prophet will attest the truth of the
Aryan faith, i.e. Monotheism and will reform the
misguided people.
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The Prophet’s followers will be circumcised.
They will be without a tail on the head and bear
a beard and will create a great revolution.
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They will announce the Aadhaan, i.e. ‘the
Muslim call for prayer’.
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He will only eat lawful things and animals but
will not eat pork. The Qur’an confirms this in
no less than 4 different places:
In Surah Al-Baqarah chapter 2 verse 173
In Surah Al-Maidah chapter 5 verse 3
In Surah Al-Anam chapter 6 verse 145
In Surah Al-Nahl chapter 16 verse 115
"Forbidden to you for food are dead meat, blood,
flesh of swine, and that on which hath been
invoked the name of other than Allah".
-
They will not purify with grass like the Hindus
but by means of sword they will fight their
irreligious people.
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They will be called musalmaan.
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They will be a meat-eating nation.
The eating of herbivorous animals is confirmed
by the Qur’an in Surah Maidah, chapter 5 verse 1
and in Surah Muminun chapter 23 verse 21
-
According to Bhavishya Purana, Parv - III Khand 1
Adhay 3 Shloka 21-23:
"Corruption and persecution are found in seven
sacred cities of Kashi, etc. India is inhabited by
Rakshas, Shabor, Bhil and
other foolish people. In the land of Malechhas,
the followers of the Malechha dharma
(Islam) are wise and brave people. All good
qualities are found in Musalmaans and all
sorts of vices have accumulated in the land of the
Aryas. Islam will rule in India and its islands.
Having known these facts, O Muni, glorify
the name of thy lord".
The Qur’an confirms this in Surah Taubah chapter 9
verse 33 and in Surah Al Saff chapter 61 verse 9:
"It is He who hath sent His Messenger with
Guidance and the Religion of Truth, to proclaim it
over all religion, even though the Pagans may
detest (it)".
A similar message is given in Surah Fatah chapter
48 verses 28 ending with, "and enough is Allah as
a witness".
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II
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Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) Prophesised in Atharvaveda |
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In the 20th book of Atharvaveda Hymn 127 Some
Suktas (chapters) are known as Kuntap Sukta.
Kuntap means the consumer of misery and
troubles. Thus meaning the message of peace and
safety and if translated in Arabic means Islam.
Kuntap also means hidden glands in the
abdomen. These mantras are called so
probably because their true meaning was hidden and
was to be revealed in future. Its hidden meaning
is also connected with the navel or the middle
point of this earth. Makkah is called the Ummul
Qur’a the mother of the towns or the naval of
the earth. In many revealed books it was the first
house of Divine worship where God Almighty gave
spiritual nourishment to the world. The Qur’an
says in Surah Ali-Imran chapter 3, verse 96:
"The first house (of worship) appointed for men
was that at Bakkah (Makkah) full of
blessings and of guidance and for all kinds of
beings". Thus Kuntap stands for Makkah or
Bakkah.
Several people have translated these Kuntap Suktas
like M. Bloomfield, Prof. Ralph Griffith, Pandit
Rajaram, Pandit Khem Karan, etc.
The main points mentioned in the Kuntap Suktas
i.e. in Atharvaveda book 20 Hymn 127 verses 1-13
are:
-
Mantra 1
He is Narashansah or the praised one
(Muhammad). He is Kaurama: the prince of
peace or the emigrant, who is safe, even amongst
a host of 60,090 enemies.
-
Mantra 2
He is a camel-riding Rishi, whose chariot
touches the heaven.
-
Mantra 3
He is Mamah Rishi who is given a hundred
gold coins, ten chaplets (necklaces), three
hundred good steeds and ten thousand cows.
-
Mantra 4
Vachyesv rebh. ‘Oh! ye who glorifies’.
-
The Sanskrit word Narashansah means
‘the praised one’, which is the literal
translation of the Arabic word Muhammad (pbuh).
The Sanskrit word Kaurama means ‘one
who spreads and promotes peace’. The holy
Prophet was the ‘Prince of Peace’ and he
preached equality of human kind and universal
brotherhood. Kaurama also means an
emigrant. The Prophet migrated from Makkah to
Madinah and was thus also an Emigrant.
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He will be protected from 60,090 enemies,
which was the population of Makkah. The
Prophet would ride a camel. This clearly
indicates that it cannot be an Indian Rishi,
since it is forbidden for a Brahman to
ride a camel according to the Sacred Books of
the East, volume 25, Laws of Manu pg.
472. According to Manu Smirti chapter 11 verse
202, "A Brahman is prohibited from riding a
camel or an ass and to bathe naked. He should
purify himself by suppressing his breath".
-
This mantra gave the Rishi's name as
Mamah. No rishi in India or another
Prophet had this name Mamah which is
derived from Mah which means to esteem
highly, or to revere, to exalt, etc. Some
Sanskrit books give the Prophet’s name as
‘Mohammad’, but this word according to
Sanskrit grammar can also be used in the bad
sense. It is incorrect to apply grammar to an
Arabic word. Actually shas the same
meaning and somewhat similar pronunciation as
the word Muhammad (pbuh).
He is given 100 gold coins, which refers to
the believers and the earlier companions of
the Prophet during his turbulent Makkan life.
Later on due to persecution they migrated from
Makkah to Abysinia. Later when Prophet
migrated to Madinah all of them joined him in
Madinah.
The 10 chaplets or necklaces were the 10 best
companions of the Holy Prophet (pbuh) known as
Ashra-Mubbashshira (10 bestowed with
good news). These were foretold in this world
of their salvation in the hereafter i.e. they
were given the good news of entering paradise
by the Prophet’s own lips and after naming
each one he said "in Paradise". They were Abu
Bakr, Umar, Uthman, Ali, Talha, Zubair, Abdur
Rahman Ibn Auf, Saad bin Abi Waqqas, Saad bin
Zaid and Abu Ubaidah (May Allah be
well-pleased with all of them).
The Sanskrit word Go is derived from
Gaw which means ‘to go to war’. A cow is
also called Go and is a symbol of war
as well as peace. The 10,000 cows refer to the
10,000 companions who accompanied the Prophet
(pbuh) when he entered Makkah during Fateh
Makkah which was a unique victory in the
history of mankind in which there was no blood
shed. The 10,000 companions were pious and
compassionate like cows and were at the same
time strong and fierce and are described in
the Holy Quran in Surah Fatah:
"Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah; and those
who are with him are strong against
unbelievers, (but) compassionate amongst each
other."
[Al-Qur'an 48:29]
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This mantra calls the
Prophet as Rebh which means one who
praises, which when translated into Arabic is
Ahmed, which is another name for the Holy
Prophet (pbuh).
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Battle of the Allies described
in the Vedas.
It is mentioned in Atharvaveda
Book XX Hymn 21 verse 6, "Lord of the truthful!
These liberators drink these feats of bravery and
the inspiring songs gladdened thee in the field of
battle. When thou renders vanquished without fight
the ten thousand opponents of the praying one, the
adoring one."
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This
Prophecy of the Veda describes the well-known
battle of Ahzab or the battle of the
Allies during the time of Prophet Muhammed. The
Prophet was victorious without an actual
conflict which is mentioned in the Qur’an in
Surah Ahzab:
"When the believers saw the confederate forces
they said, "This is what Allah and His Messenger
had promised us and Allah and His Messenger told
us what was true." And it only added to their
faith and their zeal in obedience."
[Al-Qur'an 33:22]
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The Sanskrit word karo in the Mantra
means the ‘praying one’ which when
translated into Arabic means ‘Ahmed’, the second
name of Prophet Muhammed (pbuh).
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The 10,000 opponents mentioned in the Mantra
were the enemies of the Prophet and the Muslims
were only 3000 in number.
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The last words of the Mantra aprati ni
bashayah means the defeat was given to the
enemies without an actual fight.
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The enemies’ defeat in the conquest of Makkah is
mentioned in Atharvaveda book 20 Hymn 21 verse no
9:
"You have O Indra, overthrown 20 kings and 60,099
men with an outstripping Chariot wheel who came to
fight the praised one or far famed (Muhammad)
orphan."
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The population of Makkah at the time of
Prophet’s advent was nearly 60,000
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There were several clans in Makkah each having
its own chief. Totally there were about 20
chiefs to rule the population of Makkah.
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An Abandhu meaning a helpless man who was
far-famed and ‘praised one’. Muhammad (pbuh)
overcame his enemies with the help of God.
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III |
Muhammad (pbuh) prophesised in the Rigveda |
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A
similar prophecy is also found in Rigveda Book I,
Hymn 53 verse 9:
The
Sanskrit word used is Sushrama, which means
praiseworthy or well praised which in Arabic means
Muhammad (pbuh). |
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IV
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Muhummad (pbuh) is also prophesised in the
Samveda |
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Prophet
Muhammad (pbuh) is also prophesised in the Samveda
Book II Hymn 6 verse 8:
"Ahmed
acquired from his Lord the knowledge of eternal law.
I received light from him just as from the sun." The
Prophecy confirms: |
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The name of the Prophet as Ahmed since Ahmed is an
Arabic name. Many translators misunderstood it to
be Ahm at hi and translated the mantra
as "I alone have acquired the real wisdom of my
father".
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Prophet was given eternal law, i.e. the Shariah.
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The Rishi was enlightened by the Shariah
of Prophet Muhammad. The Qur’an says in Surah Saba
chapter 34 verse 28
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"We
have not sent thee but as a universal (Messenger) to
men, giving them glad tidings and warning them
(against sin), but most men understand not." [Al-Qur'an 34:28]
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