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The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Hindus

The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Hindus

FOCHS Event: The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Hindus

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 16 January 2016 – 6:30pm to 9:00pm

Belgrave Neighbourhood Centre 

Rothley Street, Leicester LE4 6LF



A talk by Anuradha Dooney of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies

Once again the New Year heralds hope for improvement in all areas of our lives. We all know we are capable of great intention and noble goals, yet behaviour often falls short of the plan. This talk does not promise to ‘Change Your Life’ or ‘Make you Happy’, but it does offer insights from characters in Hindu sacred texts who seem to get it together in difficult circumstance. How might a particular characteristic of Prahlad, Pariksit, Narada, Queen Kunti, and Valmiki, amongst others, help us today? This personal selection of ‘habits’ is certainly no definitive list, but aims to provoke reflection, and further discussion for drawing up your own list.

Organiser: 
Friends of the OCHS – Leicester
lf@ochs.org.uk
OCHS Academic Director leaves for Singapore

OCHS Academic Director leaves for Singapore

OCHS Academic Director leaves for Singapore

Prof. Gavin Flood, the Academic Director of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies is leaving Oxford to take up a chair in Comparative Religion at the National University of Singapore after more than ten years invaluable service at the heart of Hindu Studies in Oxford.

While at the OCHS he was Consulting Editor of the Journal of Hindu Studies and produced three books: The Truth Within: A History of Inwardness in Christianity, Hinduism, and BuddhismThe Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation; and The Importance Of Religion: Meaning In Our Strange World. His earlier work, Introduction to Hinduism, remains a core text at universities worldwide. In 2014 he was elected a Fellow of the British Academy.

Prof. Flood said: ‘I leave the OCHS in excellent health and with great potential. There is a core of young scholars ready to take on the mantle of Hindu Studies at Oxford and I look forward to seeing their progress. I aim to remain in close contact with the OCHS and look forward to coming back for conferences, research projects, and to see old friends.’

OCHS Director, Shaunaka Rishi Das, said that Prof. Flood, ‘embodies rigorous scholarship with the virtues that implies. He has been a kind friend to staff and scholars at the Centre and an excellent guide to his students. He has played a vital role in setting and achieving our high academic standards.’

The OCHS plans to continue working with Prof. Flood in the continued development of research and publishing at the OCHS.

Rama’s Diwali

Rama’s Diwali

Friends Event: Rama's Diwali

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 7 November 2015 – 6:30pm to 9:00pm

Belgrave Neighbourhood Centre Rothley Street
Leicester LE4 6LF



A talk by Anuradha Dooney of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies

Diwali is one of Hinduism’s most inclusive festivals and is now celebrated worldwide. One of the most famous of the many Diwali stories is the story of Lord Rama. What does Rama’s Diwali tell us about community and duty, morality and social responsibility? In this talk we look at the story and then go deeper to consider what insights Diwali can bring to the contemporary world.

Organiser: 
Friends of the OCHS – Leicester
A Hindu Vision of Childhood and Parenting

A Hindu Vision of Childhood and Parenting

Friends Event: A Hindu Vision of Childhood and Parenting

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 3 October 2015 – 6:30pm to 9:00pm

Belgrave Neighbourhood Centre
Rothley Street, Leicester LE4 6LF



A talk by Brainerd prince of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies and Saloni Patel

With the global effort to protect the rights of children, have we lost a healthy understanding of the role of the family as the centre of a child’s social structure? How can Hindu approaches to children and particularly their relationship to parents offer a corrective to other modern notions – is there a Hindu contribution to the current debate on child rights?

Organiser: 
Friends of the OCHS – Leicester
HUM alumni dinner

HUM alumni dinner

HUM alumni dinner

On 24 September, Oxford’s Hindu Society, HUM, will be holding an alumni dinner in support of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies.

HUM has always enjoyed close ties with the OCHS and this evening will bring together old friends for a three-course meal at the Regency Hotel, London, kindly provided by OCHS Benefactor, Mr Harish I.K. Patel.

The dinner will also be the launch of the HUM Alumni Community, allowing students to keep in touch with each other, the Centre, and Oxford.

The guest speaker for the evening will be Ramesh Venkataraman, a Senior Managing Director at Samena Capital, who will talk about why he became a member of the OCHS Board of Governors. Mr Venkataraman has also been a partner at McKinsey and Company, was a National Talent Scholar at IIT (Indian Institute of Technology) and holds an MPhil in International Relations from Oxford and an MPA in Economics and Public Policy from Princeton University.

The event is open to all HUM alumni.

Tickets can be purchased by following this link.

Event details:
6.30pm, Thursday 24 September
The Regency Hotel, 100 Queen’s Gate, London, SW7 5AG

Conversion in Hindu Culture

Conversion in Hindu Culture

Conversion in Hindu Culture

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 1 August 2015 – 6:30pm to 9:00pm

Belgrave Neighbourhood Centre
Rothley Street, Leicester LE4 6LF



A talk by by Shaunaka Rishi Das of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies

The word conversion conjures up images of determined zealots, waving their book, and haranguing a fallen soul to turn to the one true God. The issue of conversion in India has resulted in death and the destruction of sacred places. Some Hindus stand firmly by the assertion that there is no conversion in Hindu tradition. Some say you become a Hindu only by birth, and others maintain that the impure should not even be allowed into temples. In this talk we explore Hindu ways of thinking about conversion, change, and transformation, and try to explain different approaches to these ideas, and how they may apply in a modern context.

Organiser: 
Friends of the OCHS – Leicester
lf@ochs.org.uk
 
Friends Event: Yoga Solutions to Stress and Suffering

Friends Event: Yoga Solutions to Stress and Suffering

Friends Event: Yoga Solutions to Stress and Suffering

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 11 July 2015 – 6:00pm to 9:30pm

Belgrave Neighbourhood Centre 

Rothley Street, Leicester LE4 6LF



A talk by Ramesh Pattni of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies

Patañjali’s Yogasūtra (c. 300CE) gives a framework for understanding the causes of stress and suffering. What is the nature of suffering? Why do we experience anxiety and pain? How and from where do these arise? Are there solutions to suffering that can be long-lasting? These are some of the questions that Patañjali addresses in his compilation on Yoga in which he gives techniques by which stress and suffering can be alleviated and even eliminated.

Organiser: 
Friends of the OCHS – Leicester
lf@ochs.org.uk
Friends Event: Emotions in Hinduism: The Bhakti Traditions

Friends Event: Emotions in Hinduism: The Bhakti Traditions

Friends Event: Emotions in Hinduism: The Bhakti Traditions

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 6 June 2015 – 6:00pm to 9:30pm

Belgrave Neighbourhood Centre 

Rothley Street, Leicester LE4 6LF



A talk by Dr Kiyokazu Okita of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies and The Hakubi Center for Advanced Research, Kyoto University, Japan

Have you ever fallen in love? Or have you become angry with someone? Strong emotions are often seen negatively since they can paralyse us and make us lose self-control. This is why detachment from worldly emotions and disciplining the mind are so important in the religious traditions of South Asia. However, emotions are so fundamental to our being that it seems impossible to do away with them completely. However, the Bhakti traditions within Hinduism, that emphasise devotion to God, teach that emotions can be transformed and used for spiritual elevation by directing emotions towards God rather than towards matter.

Organiser: 
Friends of the OCHS – Leicester
lf@ochs.org.uk
Friends Event: Is Hinduism a religion?

Friends Event: Is Hinduism a religion?

Friends Event: Is Hinduism a religion?

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 2 May 2015 – 6:30pm to 9:00pm

Belgrave Neighbourhood Centre 

Rothley Street, Leicester LE4 6LF



A talk by Brainerd Prince of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies

Is Hinduism is a religion? The simple answer is yes – and no. It depends on how we understand the word ‘religion’. We will look at the discussion on what religion is and what constitues a religion and try to understand how useful the very term ‘religion’ is in representing the life of most people of South Asian origin. Is Hinduism a religion as we understand the term or is it a diverse collection of traditions that reveal alternative ways of life?

Organiser: 
Friends of the OCHS – Leicester
lf@ochs.org.uk
Friends Event: The Idea of Faith in Hindu thought

Friends Event: The Idea of Faith in Hindu thought

Friends Event: The Idea of Faith in Hindu thought

Birmingham Friends Event
Saturday, 11 April 2015 – 7:00pm to 9:00pm

Shree Laxminarayan Mandir
541a Warwick Road
Tyseley
Birmingham B11 2JP

A talk by Shaunaka Rishi Das of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies

Faith is an English word with baggage. In Sanskrit there are many words that cover the ground used by the word faith, and extend beyond that ground. But the Hindu ideas of faith don’t distinguish between faith and reason, as is common in contemporary discourse, and don’t often link faith and belief. To explore the concept of faith in Hindu traditions, some of which are theistic, some atheistic, and some non-theistic, we will refer, among other things, to a paradigm of the development of faith in the Bhagavat, Hindu cultures most influential text.

Organiser: 
Friends of the OCHS – Birmingham
bf@ochs.org.uk