u/saransh-1

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How to study Vedas from Ārya Samāj?

Can anyone tell me how and where I can study the Vedas from the Ārya Samāj? How can I join the Ārya Samāj?

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u/saransh-1 — 12 hours ago

Shudras were not mere servants

According to Panini, Shudras included all those who had skills (crafts, labor, artisanal work, and practical skills.).

(Hence, most of the architecture of India we admire today was built by them, of course theoretical/principle framework might be provided by Brahmins.)

Shudras were classified into two subgroups: 1. Aniravasita (not excluded from society) 2. Niravasita (excluded from society)

I think this exclusion was mostly profession related.

It is possible that the so-called Dalits were Shudras as well.

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u/saransh-1 — 2 days ago

Help me!

I work at Delhi Cantonment General Hospital under a private security agency called ROYAL ACHOOK. Before joining, the supervisor demanded ₹45,000. I paid ₹30,000 upfront, ₹5,000 from my first salary.

Last month, ₹29,000 was credited to my bank account, but the supervisor told me that my actual salary was ₹23,000, so I returned the remaining ₹6,000 to him. Another thing I noticed is that I received my salary under the agency name “Paranidaran Pasupathy Security Agency.” Why was the payment made under a different agency name?

Now, after working for approximately two months, the supervisor has terminated me without any official letter /notice. Also, all the money I paid was transferred through the UPI account of another security guard named Akansha. He owed me one month and 10 days' salary as well as joining fees/bribe.

Is there any legal way for me to recover that money?

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u/saransh-1 — 8 days ago

Rigveda Samhita (7.86.6)

This is in perfect agreement with what Lord Krishna said in the Bhagavad Gita about a person's nature and how his actions should be in accordance with his nature (Svabhāv). {Again not birth}

u/saransh-1 — 9 days ago

Krishna's response to modern sannyāsis and yogis

B.G. 6.1:

The Blessed Lord said:

He who performs his obligatory action (svadharma resulting from one's own nature) without depending upon the fruit of action—he alone is a Sanyāsi and a yogī; not he who has merely renounced the sacred fire (Grihastha/Worldly life), nor he who remains inactive (Simply becoming idle).

u/saransh-1 — 13 days ago