Author: user

Friends Talk: The Hanuman Chalisa

Friends Talk: The Hanuman Chalisa

Friends Talk: The Hanuman Chalisa

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 27 April 2013 – 6:30pm to 9:00pm

Belgrave Neighbourhood Centre
Rothley Street Leicester LE4 6LF

In this talk Nick Sutton will discuss the Hindi text of the Hanuman Chalisa and try to place this well loved work within the wider of context of Tulsidas’s retelling of the Ramayana, noting the ways in which he builds on the earlier work of Valmiki to provide new insights into the significance of the deeds of Rama, Sita, Lakshman and Hanuman. Valmiki shows Rama as a heroic prince who triumphs over the forces of evil but he is less inclined to focus on Rama’s divine identity. In the Ramcharitmanas and Hanuman Chalisa, Tulsidas chooses to write in dialect of Hindi in order to produce a Ramayana for all social classes and he tells the story in such a way that Rama’s divinity is constantly emphasised and devotion to Rama is extolled as the highest form spirituality. In this talk we will consider the background to Tulsidas’s work and look at how his devotional ideas are reflected in the Hanuman Chalisa.

Organiser: 
Friends of the OCHS – Leicester
Friends Event: Tirath yatra

Friends Event: Tirath yatra

Friends Event: Tirath yatra

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 20 April 2013 (All day)
 
Join us on our third annual sponsored walk taking in the fifteen main temples in Leicester.

There is no age limit and you don’t have to complete the whole course, just walk as much as you wish.

All money raised goes to support the work of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies.

Register at leicesterfriends@ochs.org.uk to receive a full sponsorship pack.

Organiser: 
Friends of the OCHS – Leicester
Friends Event: Hinduism: A Religion for Non-Believers

Friends Event: Hinduism: A Religion for Non-Believers

Friends Event: Hinduism: A Religion for Non-Believers

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 30 March 2013 – 6:30pm to 9:00pm

Belgrave Neighbourhood Centre Rothley Street Leicester LE4 6LF

One of the main reasons why people in the modern world are turning away from religion is that they find the doctrines and scriptural narratives implausible in light of modern scientific discoveries. Where doubts arise about the truth of what is claimed a divine revelation, many will find it hard to continue to practice the religion based on that revelation. In this talk Nick Sutton will consider issues of faith, belief and scriptural revelation in relation to Hinduism and suggest that even where faith is lost there it is still possible to remain devotedly Hindu.

Organiser: 
Friends of the OCHS – Leicester
Nehru Centre talk: Kitchen Religion: Hindu Approaches to Food

Nehru Centre talk: Kitchen Religion: Hindu Approaches to Food

Nehru Centre talk: Kitchen Religion: Hindu Approaches to Food

Nehru Centre Event
Thursday, 21 March 2013 – 6:30pm

Nehru Centre
8 South Audley Street
London, W1K 1HF

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

From the earliest expressions of Hindu thought to Ayurvedic remedies, tiffin wallas, and temples of today, food, fasting and feasting have been at the heart of Hindu ideology and practice. This talk savours some of the ‘thinking behind the eating’ from the Upanishads, the Mahabharata and the Bhagavad Gita amongst others.

Organiser: 
Nehru Centre – London
Friends Talk: The Hanuman Chalisa

Friends Talk: The Hanuman Chalisa

Friends Talk: The Hanuman Chalisa

Birmingham Friends Event
Saturday, 16 March 2013 – 7:00pm to 9:30pm

Birmingham Pragati Mandal
10 Sampson Road
Sparkbrook
Birmingham. B11 1JL

A talk by Dr Nick Sutton of the OCHS

In this talk Nick Sutton will discuss the Hindi text of the Hanuman Chalisa and try to place this well loved work within the wider of context of Tulsidas’s retelling of the Ramayana, noting the ways in which he builds on the earlier work of Valmiki to provide new insights into the significance of the deeds of Rama, Sita, Lakshman and Hanuman. Valmiki shows Rama as a heroic prince who triumphs over the forces of evil but he is less inclined to focus on Rama’s divine identity. In the Ramcharitmanas and Hanuman Chalisa, Tulsidas chooses to write in dialect of Hindi in order to produce a Ramayana for all social classes and he tells the story in such a way that Rama’s divinity is constantly emphasised and devotion to Rama is extolled as the highest form spirituality. In this talk we will consider the background to Tulsidas’s work and look at how his devotional ideas are reflected in the Hanuman Chalisa.

Organiser: 
Friends of the OCHS – Birmingham
 
Obituary: Prof. M.N. Narasimhachary

Obituary: Prof. M.N. Narasimhachary

Obituary: Prof. M.N. Narasimhachary

Prof. M.N. Narasimhachary passed away in Chennai on Wednesday 6 March 2013. Here he is remembered by Dr Ravi Gupta…

Some thirteen years ago, I met Prof. M. Narasimhachary for the first time when he arrived as a visiting professor at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. That fortunate encounter changed my life in more ways that I can describe. In the years that have passed, Prof. Narasimhachary served as my doctoral examiner, wrote a reference for my first job, offered advice on all my writing projects, attended my wedding, and showered blessings on the births of both my boys. But more importantly, Prof. Narasimhachary was for me a life-long mentor, a loving well-wisher, and a model of Vaishnava scholarship.

Prof. Narasimhachary’s depth of knowledge was breathtaking. In Oxford I met with him several times a week to read Sanskrit texts. Every phrase that he read became a doorway to an entire area of Sanskrit learning. When that door was opened – perhaps by a well-timed question, or a fortuitous recollection – streams of wisdom would flow, leading to explorations of Vedānta, Sāṁkhya, rasa-śāstra, Kālīdāsa, and numberless other themes.

Knowledge of this caliber sets a person apart from others. Yet Prof. Narasimhachary’s most noteworthy quality was that he used his scholarship to win people’s hearts, not to create distance. On his students especially, he showered affection like a father, asking about their welfare and maintaining contact with them throughout his life. No student’s concern was ever too small for him. His humility was endearing. I recall once expressing amazement at the extent of his knowledge. He responded by saying, “My knowledge is like that of a glowworm. You should hear about my teacher,” whom he described with great humility.

Perhaps the deepest impression that Prof. Narasimhachary had on me was how effortlessly he balanced – indeed, embodied – the dual responsibilities of scholar and practitioner. He wore his Vaiṣṇava tilaka with dignity as he lectured in public and yet did not hesitate to engage in historical critical scholarship. He expressed his devotion deeply in his poetry and his daily practice, and yet engaged comfortably with colleagues and students in a secular environment. He was as comfortable in Western universities as he was in Śrīvaiṣṇava Maṭhas. He embodied the best of both worlds, and that is a very rare thing.

Prof. Narasimhachary’s departure is an inestimable loss.

Dr Ravi Gupta is one of the OCHS’s first D.Phil. students and is currently Associate Professor of Religious Studies at The College of William and Mary (USA).

Renowned Sanskritist, OCHS Fellow, Prof. Narasimhachary Passes Away

Renowned Sanskritist, OCHS Fellow, Prof. Narasimhachary Passes Away

Renowned Sanskritist, OCHS Fellow, Prof. Narasimhachary Passes Away

Professor M.N. Narasimhachary, twice OCHS-Shivdasani Fellow and OCHS Director of Academic Affairs has passed away in Chennai, India, on Wednesday 6 March 2013, aged 74.

Born in Arthamuru village in East Godavari district, Andhra Pradesh, Prof. Narasimhachary was educated in Chennai. He earned his Ph.D. in Sanskrit from the University of Madras for his work on Yamunacharya.

He was revered at the OCHS as an excellent scholar, a gentleman, and a friend to all who met him. OCHS alumnus Dr Ravi Gupta remembers him thus: “Some thirteen years ago, I met Prof. Narasimhachary for the first time when he arrived as a visiting professor at the Oxford Center for Hindu Studies. That fortunate encounter changed my life in more ways that I can describe. In the years that have passed, Prof. Narasimhachary served as my doctoral examiner, wrote a reference for my first job, offered advice on all my writing projects, attended my wedding, and showered blessings on the births of both my boys. But more importantly, Prof. Narasimhachary was for me a life-long mentor, a loving well-wisher, and a model of Vaishnava scholarship”.

C.S. Radhakrishnan, Professor and Head of Department of Sanskrit, Pondicherry University, describes Prof. Narasimhachary as “an indomitable researcher, an inspiring teacher, an impromptu poet, an eloquent speaker and an easy exponent of the most terse principles of Vedanta, who charmed the scholars and the students alike.”

Prof. Narasimhachary started his career as a lecturer in Sanskrit in Vivekananda College, Chennai. Subsequently he became Reader in Sanskrit in the University of Madras. He also founded and chaired the Department of Vaishnavism in the University of Madras. After a short stint as a professor of Sanskrit in the University of Malaysia, he was appointed the first Head of Department of Vaishnavism at the University of Madras.

Image Gallery: Kumbh Mela 2013

Image Gallery: Kumbh Mela 2013

Image Gallery: Kumbh Mela 2013

The OCHS’s talented Artist-in-Residence, Param Tomanec, has been busily documenting this year’s Kumbh Mela for us.

Param’s experience as a photographer and film-maker has been a great gift to the OCHS, supplying us with hundreds of images capturing the life of the Centre. Now he takes us to Kumbh Mela, one of the world’s great religious gatherings, where a reported 30 million pilgrims bathe at the rivers’ confluence on one day.

Click here to view the gallery.

Click here to learn more about our Artist-in-Residence programme.

Friends Event: The Concept of God in the Bhagavadgita: Hindu Views and Christian Responses

Friends Event: The Concept of God in the Bhagavadgita: Hindu Views and Christian Responses

Friends Event: The Concept of God in the Bhagavadgita: Hindu Views and Christian Responses

Leicester Friends Event

Saturday, 23 February 2013 – 6:30pm to 9:00pm

Belgrave Neighbourhood Centre
Rothley Street Leicester LE4 6LF

Dr. Kate Wharton, Deputy Adviser for Inter Religious Affairs and Ramesh Pattni, Co-Chair of Hindu Christian Forum

Each speaker will give a short presentation in response to the text of the Gita.

Ramesh Pattni will show how the Gita has been read by a variety of Hindu traditions to depict God in different ways. Is Krishna in his highest essence a divine being beyond personhood, a divine person coextensive with all creation or as first among equals, one divine person among many? After Ramesh has set out the different views that can be derived from the Gita, he will speak about his chosen interpretation and his devotional relationship to the words of Krishna.

Kate Wharton will respond by speaking about her experience of first encountering the Gita and how it inspired her to become involved in inter religious dialogue. In her work for the Archbishop of Canterbury, she has curated many discussions on the Gita, particularly drawing on the Sri Vaishnava tradition. In 2010, she organised a dialogue between the Archbishop and five Hindu swamis in India and several passages from the Gita were key to the discussion. Kate will present slides from these events and talk about how the Gita continues to influence her in her work.

Each speaker will speak for 10–15 minutes with time for discussion.

Dr Kate Wharton has a PhD in the interpretation of the Upanisads from SOAS University of London and has worked for three and a half years for the Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams. She studied Sanskrit in Mysore and is very interested in the theology of Ramanuja. Ramesh Pattni is Inter Faith Chair for the Hindu Forum of Britain, Co-Chair of the national Hindu Christian Forum and a leading member of the Chinmaya Mission. He is currently studying for his PhD in the interpretation of the Yoga Sutras at Oxford University.

Organiser: 
Friends of the OCHS – Leicester
leicesterfriends@ochs.org.uk
 
OCHS gets first Writer-in-Residence

OCHS gets first Writer-in-Residence

OCHS gets first Writer-in-Residence

Young author, Prajwal Parajuly, has been selected as the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies (OCHS) first Writer-in-Residence.

At 28, Prajwal’s first book, The Gurkha’s Daughter, a collection of short stories set in Nepal and among the Nepali diaspora, has been called “Crisp, inventive and insightful” by The Guardian. Of his own work, Prajwal says, “I wanted to give the world a taste of my culture, my world, my people. We have fascinating cultures, great stories, wonderful history, but much of our literature has been closeted because it has been written in Nepali.”

While at the OCHS he will be completing work on his first novel, Land Where I Flee, due for publication this year. Prajwal will also be blogging on life at the OCHS and giving public readings of his work in progress.

To quote Prajwal: “To have the time and space to work on my own writing while simultaneously being surrounded by discourse on the religion I was born into, and about which I know little, will be a wonderful experience. “

OCHS Director, Shaunaka Rishi Das said: “When Prajwal first came to us last year, it was clear that this is a young man of prodigious talent and an enormous future. It was immediately clear that this is someone whose work we would like to foster.”

The Writer-in-Residence programme is a part of the OCHS’s Artist-in-Residence programme, which supported the work of Param Tomanec, an exceptional photographer who has since gone on to become a film-maker.

Prajwal is from Sikkim, in India’s northeast. Recognised as a writer at a young age he moved to the US where he began work on The Gurkha’s Daughter. Following this he went on to complete a Masters in Creative Writing at Oxford. He has also served as Senior Editor of The Oxonian Review of Books and Senior Advertising Executive at The Village Voice.