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★ ROUGH ★


Conquer the angry one by not getting angry (i.e., by loving-kindness); conquer the wicked by goodness; conquer the stingy by generosity, and the liar by speaking the truth.

— The Buddha, 'Dhammapada Verse 223', [1] | more


Archives

   https://web.archive.org/

Wikipedia Library

            https://wikipedialibrary.wmflabs.org/users/my_library/

Buddhism

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FOUR NOBLE TRUTHS

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As part of the Dhamma, Buddha taught about the Four Noble Truths. These are:

1. Life is suffering.

2. Suffering is caused by craving.

3. Suffering can have an end.

4. There is a path which leads to the end of suffering.

          *Bhikkhu Bodhi
    The Nobility of the Truths
        *Thanissaro Bhikkhu
           A Study Guide


  • BOOKS;
  1. Buddhism: A Very Short Introduction by Damien Keown [2]
  2. Buddhism for Beginners, Chodron [3]
  3. The Heart of Buddhist Meditation: The Four Noble Truths in Practice by Nyanaponika Thera [4]
  4. What Buddha Taught, Walpola Rahula [5]
  5. The Buddhist Religion, R. Robinson [6]
  6. A Brief History of Buddhist Studies in Europe and America , J.W. de Jong [7]
  7. Buddha's Word in China, de Jong [8]
  8. Indian Architecture : Buddhist and Hindu Periods , Percy Brown [9]
  9. An Introduction to Buddhism: Teachings, History and Practices, Peter Harvey [10]
  10. Introduction to the History of Indian Buddhism, Eugène Burnouf [11]
  11. Legends of Indian Buddhism, Burnouf [12]
  12. Why Buddhism is True, Robert Wright [13]
  13. Bones, Stones, and Buddhist Monks: Collected Papers on the Archaeology, Epigraphy, and Texts of Monastic Buddhism in India by Gregory Schopen [14]
  14. The Foundations of Buddhism, R.Gethin [15]
  15. A Survey of Buddhism: Sangharakshita [16]

Buddha-jaya-maṅgala Gāthā

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Full Version
  • Bāhuṁ sahassam-abhinimmita-sāvudhantaṁ
    Grīmekhalaṁ udita-ghora-sasena-māraṁ
    Dānādi-dhamma-vidhinā jitavā munindo
    Tan-tejasā bhavatu te jaya-maṅgal’aggaṁ.
    [Tan-tejasā bhavatu te jaya-maṅgalāni.]
  • Mārātirekam-abhiyujjhita-sabba-rattiṁ
    Ghorampan’āḷavaka-makkham-athaddha-yakkhaṁ
    Khantī-sudanta-vidhinā jitavā munindo
    Tan-tejasā bhavatu te jaya-maṅgal’aggaṁ.
  • Nāḷāgiriṁ gaja-varaṁ atimattabhūtaṁ
    Dāvaggi-cakkam-asanīva sudāruṇantaṁ
    Mett’ambuseka-vidhinā jitavā munindo
    Tan-tejasā bhavatu te jaya-maṅgal’aggaṁ.
  • Ukkhitta-khaggam-atihattha sudāruṇantaṁ
    Dhāvan-ti-yojana-path’aṅgulimālavantaṁ
    Iddhībhisaṅkhata-mano jitavā munindo
    Tan-tejasā bhavatu te jaya-maṅgal’aggaṁ.
  • Katvāna kaṭṭham-udaraṁ iva gabbhinīyā
    Ciñcāya duṭṭha-vacanaṁ jana-kāya-majjhe
    Santena soma-vidhinā jitavā munindo
    Tan-tejasā bhavatu te jaya-maṅgal’aggaṁ.
  • Saccaṁ vihāya mati-saccaka-vāda-ketuṁ
    Vādābhiropita-manaṁ ati-andhabhūtaṁ
    Paññā-padīpa-jalito jitavā munindo
    Tan-tejasā bhavatu te jaya-maṅgal’aggaṁ.
  • Nandopananda-bhujagaṁ vibudhaṁ mahiddhiṁ
    Puttena thera-bhujagena damāpayanto
    Iddhūpadesa-vidhinā jitavā munindo
    Tan-tejasā bhavatu te jaya-maṅgal’aggaṁ.
  • Duggāha-diṭṭhi-bhujagena sudaṭṭha-hatthaṁ
    Brahmaṁ visuddhi-jutim-iddhi-bakābhidhānaṁ
    Ñāṇāgadena vidhinā jitavā munindo
    Tan-tejasā bhavatu te jaya-maṅgal’aggaṁ.
  • Etāpi buddha-jaya-maṅgala-aṭṭha-gāthā
    Yo vācano dinadine sarate matandī
    Hitvān’aneka-vividhāni c’upaddavāni
    Mokkhaṁ sukhaṁ adhigameyya naro sapañño.

Hinduism

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  • Also k/a Sanatana Dharma.
    • Historical Roots of this word [17]

BOOKS and COMMENTS

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* RIGVEDA ;

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  1. The Hymns of the Rigveda V1, by Ralph T. H. Griffith [18]
  2. The Rig Veda, by Wendy Doniger [19]
  3. The Rigveda : The Earliest Poetry of India 3 Volume sets by Stephanie and Joel [20]
  4. A Vedic reader for students by Arthur Anthony Macdonell [21]
  5. Rig Veda Sanhita Vol 1 by H H Wilson [22]

* YAJURVEDA ;

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  1. The Satapatha-Brahmana Pt. 1 by Julius Eggeling [23]
  2. Yajurveda English Translation by Satya Prakash Sarasvati [24]

* SAMAVEDA ;

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  1. The Hymns Of The Sama Veda by Ralph Griffith [25]
  2. Translation Of The Sama Veda by Stevenson [26]

* ATHARVAVEDA ;

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  1. The Hymns of the Atharva Veda Vol.2 by Ralph Griffith [27]
  2. The Atharvaveda Described : With a classified selection of hymns, explanatory notes and review by Ralph Griffith [28]
  3. Atharva Veda Complete Volume 1 & 2 by Dr. Tulsi Ram Sharma[29]

THE UPANISHADS

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  1. Upanishads by Patrick Olivelle [30]
  2. The Principal Upanishads by S. Radhakrishnan [31]
  3. The Thirteen Principal Upanishads by Robert Ernest Hume [32]
  4. The Upanishads by Eknath Easwaran [33]
  5. The Principal Upanishads by Swami Nikhilananda [34]
  6. Eight Upanishads, With the Commentary of Shankaracharya (2 Vol. Set) by Swami Gambhirananda [35]
  7. The Philosophy of the Upanishads by Paul Deussen [36]
  8. The Upanishads by D. S. Sharma [37]
  9. The Hidden Teaching Beyond Yoga by Paul Brunton [38]
  10. Source Book Of Indian Philosophy by Radhakrishnan [39]
  11. The Advaita Tradition In Indian Philosophy by Chandradhar Sharma [40]

THE BHAGAVAD GITA

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BOOKS AND COMMENTARIES ;

  1. A Commentary On The Text Of The Bhagavad Gita by C. Hurrychund [41]
  2. The Bhagavad Gita : Commentary Based on the Original Sources by R. C. Zaehhner[42]
  3. The Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation by Gavin Flood [43] [44]
  4. The Bhagavad Gita: A Critical Introduction by Ithamar Theodor [45]
  5. Exploring the Bhagavad Gita: Philosophy, Structure and Meaning by I. Theodor [46]

Others (Religions)

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  1. The Hindu Mind by Bansi Pandit [47] [48]
  2. Decolonising the Hindu Mind by Koenraad Elst [49]
  3. The Hindus: An Alternative History by Wendy Doniger [50]
  4. The Archaeology of Hindu Ritual: Temples and the Establishment of the Gods by Michael D. Willis [51]
  5. Indian Temple Sculpture by John Guy [52]
  6. India : A History by John Keay [53]
  7. @ The World's Religions by Huston Smith
  8. Great Transformation begining of our Religions [54]
  9. Ancient India: from the Origins to AD 1300 by Romila Thapar (2002) [55]
  10. D N Jha books.
  11. WIKI ; १) Vedic Tradition , २) view on evolution, ३) science history ...

MANY LENSES ;

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  1. Upadhyaya, K. N. (1997). Early Buddhism and the Bhagavadgītā. [56]
  2. Myths of the Hindus & Buddhists by Nivedita and Ananda [57]

Mathematics

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1. Number: The Language of Science by Tobias Dantzig [58]

2. The History of Mathematics: A Brief Course by Roger L. Cooke [59]

3. What is Mathematics? by Richard Courant and Herbert Robbins [60]

4. Journey through Genius: The Great Theorems of Mathematics by William Dunham [61]

5. The Art of Mathematics: Coffee Time in Memphis by Béla Bollobás [62]

6. Mathematics for the Nonmathematician by Morris Kline [63]

7. The Foundations of Mathematics by Kenneth Kunen [64]

8. Mathematics: Its Content, Methods, and Meaning by A.D. Aleksandrov and A.N. Kolmogorov [65]

9. Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy by Bertrand Russell [66]

10. Mathematics and the Imagination by Edward Kasner and James Newman [67]

Calculus Focused ;

1. Calculus: Early Transcendentals by James Stewart [68]

2. The Calculus: A History of the Origins of Mathematical Analysis by Carl B. Boyer [69]

3. A History of Mathematics by Carl B. Boyer and Uta C. Merzbach [70]

4. Calculus: A Complete Introduction by Hugh Neill

?

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Pictures

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  1. Sugata
  2. Samadhi state

Myths & Others

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EKLAVYA
Myth, Memory and Identity
Story from Adi Parvan of the Mahabharata

Once Drona, a Brahmana who taught archery to the Kuru princes, was approached by Ekalavya, a forest-dwelling nishada (a hunting community). When Drona, who knew the dharma, refused to have him as his pupil, Ekalavya returned to the forest, prepared an image of Drona out of clay, and treating it as his teacher, began to practise on his own. In due course, he acquired great skill in archery. One day, the Kuru princes went hunting and their dog, wandering in the woods, came upon Ekalavya. When the dog smelt the dark nishada wrapped in black deer skin, his body caked with dirt, it began to bark. Annoyed, Ekalavya shot seven arrows into its mouth. When the dog returned to the Pandavas, they were amazed at this superb display of archery. They tracked down Ekalavya, who introduced himself as a pupil of Drona. Drona had once told his favourite student Arjuna, that he would be unrivalled amongst his pupils. Arjuna now reminded Drona about this. Drona approached Ekalavya, who immediately acknowledged and honoured him as his teacher. When Drona demanded his right thumb as his fee, Ekalavya unhesitatingly cut it off and offered it. But thereafter, when he shot with his remaining fingers, he was no longer as fast as he had been before. Thus, Drona kept his word: no one was better than Arjuna.

Theme three — Kinship, Caste and Class; Early Societies (C. 600 BCE-600 CE) p.62, Themes in Indian History-I, Class–XII, NCERT[3][4],
Note : घोर राजनीति
  • Understanding the power of the symbol of Eklavya and its use by the BSP and the SP, the BJP also tried to appropriate this myth for gaining support of the Nishads and other Dalit communities. Extensively discussed by Badri Narayan in his book Fascinating Hindutva: Saffron Politics and Dalit Mobilisation[5]
  • Generally, the story of Eklavya has been central to the political discourse of lower castes in UP and Bihar.[6]

The round earth.
A steel lever
in my hand.
But no leverage?
Oh Eklavya
you ideal disciple!
Give me
the finger you cut off;
that will be my fulcrum.

— Tryambak Sapkale (Translated by Jayant Karve and Eleanor Zelliot with assistance of A. K. Ramanujan)

Q

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  1. 𑀲𑀘𑀮𑀺 𑀆𑀫𑀡𑀤𑀸𑀭𑀺 𑀯𑀳𑀺 𑀅𑀫𑀺,
    𑀤𑀼𑀦𑁆𑀦𑀸𑀲𑀺 𑀪𑀦𑀺 𑀅𑀓𑀼 𑀯𑀚𑀺𑀕𑀺𑀢 𑀓𑀼𑀡𑀺 𑀅𑀚𑀺𑀕𑀺𑀓𑀺 𑀅𑀕𑀼𑀟𑀺,
    𑀅𑀚 𑀧𑀱𑁆𑀱𑀺 𑀲𑀡𑀢𑀼𑀲𑀺 𑀪𑀸𑀢𑀺 𑀲𑀺।

    — 🙋🙋🙋

Know Truth as Truth and Untruth as Untruth

~ Buddha

कहते हैं ज्ञानी, दुनिया है फानी
पानी पे लिखी लिखाई
है सबकी देखी, है सबकी जानी
हाथ किसी के ना आनी
कुछ तेरा ना मेरा
मुसाफिर जाएगा कहाँ…

– Guide

यूँ तो मेरा इलाज क्या न हुआ
कम मरज़ ही मगर ज़रा न हुआ
मुझपे अहसाँ तबीब का न हुआ
दर्द मिन्नत-कश-ए-दवा न हुआ
मैं न अच्छा हुआ बुरा न हुआ !
Mirza Ghalib

करा गलत वक्त से सामना
है करा शुरु जबसे भागना
कभी आँख बन्द करते ही सो जाऊ
चाहु एक दिन हसके जागना !
(Calm - SM)

     What is IDEOLOGY
* Right ❌ , Centre ❌, Left ❌
* Theist ❌, AgnosticAtheist ❌, Neutral ❌.         * Rational Yet Biased 🤔
Three poisons at hub of wheel
¹ Delusion or ignorance
² Greed or sensual attachment
³ Hatred or aversion.


User Pages

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Books (Not my need)

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  • Michelutti, Lucia (2008). Vernacularisation, Ethnicity, and the State: A Comparative Study of the Politicisation of Ethnicity in the Postcolonial World. Routledge. ISBN 9780415467322. Archived from the original on 2023-01-25. Retrieved 2025-01-19.


Others

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Religious Breakdown among Scheduled Tribes (STs) in Jharkhand – Census 2011
"Source: Census of India 2011, Table ST-14".
Religion Total ST Population Male Female
Total STs
(All Religions)
8,645,042 4,315,407 4,329,635
Hindus 3,245,856 1,631,769 1,614,087
Muslims 18,107 8,972 9,135
Christians 1,338,175 659,136 679,039
Sikhs 984 491 493
Buddhists 2,946 1,512 1,434
Jains 381 200 181
Other Religions and Persuasions (ORP) 4,012,622 2,000,898 2,011,724
Religion Not Stated 25,971 12,429 13,542
Chronology of Minor Political Parties and Organizations, 1910s–1940s
Source ??
Year Political parties and organizations
1912 Khilafat Movement, significant until 1924. Led by Muhammad Ali and Shaukat Ali. Adopted Gandhian no-cooperation pledge in 1920.
1918 National Liberal Federation (in Bengal, Moderate Party) founded by Tej Bahadur Sapru and M. R. Jayakar.[citation needed]
1919 Jamiat ul Ulama-i-Hind, founded by Maulana Mahmudal Hasan Shaikh-ul-Hind of Deoband School, nationalist Muslim clergy.[citation needed]
1920 Congress Democratic Party, founded by B. G. Tilak to enter elections. Base for Democratic Swaraj Party of 1937.
1921–22 Communist Party organizational work begun by M. N. Roy et al.
1922 Congress-Khilafat Swarajya Party founded as offshoot of Congress to ‘wreck’ councils from inside, led by C. R. Das, Motilal Nehru & others.
1923 Hindu Mahasabha (founded in 1907 in the Punjab) became active politically after Benares session, led by M. M. Malaviya.
1929 Majlis-i-Ahrar, founded by Congress-Khilafatist Muslims in Lahore, based in Punjab, also active in Kashmir, U.P.
1931 Khaksar movement, founded by Inayatullah Khan Mashriqi of Lahore; based in Punjab, also active in N.W. Frontier Province, towns of Sind and U.P.
1934 Socialist Party, founded as Congress offshoot by Jayaprakash Narayan et al.
1936 All India Kisan Sabha, joined by Andhra group founded by N. R. Ranga in 1931 and Bihar Kisan Sabha founded by Swami Sahajanand in 1929; intermittent Congress orientation.
1936 Independent Labour Party, founded by B. R. Ambedkar in Bombay, some influence also in Central Provinces.
1939 Forward Bloc (AIFB), founded by Subhas Chandra Bose in Calcutta. (Strongest in West Bengal at that time.)
1940 Radical Democratic Party, founded by M. N. Roy in Bombay.
1942 Scheduled Caste Federation, founded by B. R. Ambedkar in Nagpur.
1945 Jamiat ul Ulama-i-Islam, founded in Calcutta with Maulana Shabbir Ahmad Usmani as President; pro-League.
1948 Peasants and Workers Party of India, left-wing (Marxist).

Languages of Banka

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Source - "Linguistic Survey of India: Bihar".

  • Maithili (p.164–165): extremely low, Only 99 people in Banka district reported Maithili as either their language spoken or mother tongue out of a population of over 2 million. (2011 census)
Category Total Persons Rural Persons Urban Persons
Language Spoken (Maithili) 99 44 55
Mother Tongue (Maithili) 99 44 55

Notes

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  1. ^ _ Implicit sources & Other misc. ;
    • Bayly, S. (2001). Caste, Society and Politics in India from the Eighteenth Century to the Modern Age. Cambridge University Press. p. 260. ISBN 978-0-521-79842-6. ...both Gandhi and Ambedkar who together with Nehru must rank as the subcontinent's most important twentieth-century politicians...
    • Vajpeyi, Ananya (2012). Righteous Republic: The Political Foundations of Modern India. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-07183-4. Preface(X); The history of India's decolonization, so far, has focused for the most part on how the Indian nationalist elite understood raj, or political sovereignty, and how they came to wrest it back from their British rulers through both violent conflict and nonviolent resistance, spread out over about seven decades, culminating in the foundation of the new nation-states of India and Pakistan. Many men and women were involved in this long struggle, which unfolded over large parts of South Asia, but it is unquestionable that a few names stand out when we really want to identify those who led both the battle for sovereignty and the search for the self. In this list, undoubtedly, among India's founders we may count as first among equals Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948), Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941), Jawaharlal Nehru (1889-1964), and Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar (1891-1956).
    • Shepherd, Kancha Ilaiah; Manikanta, Pallikonda (5 September 2022). "Who are the True Founding Fathers and Mothers of Indian Democracy?". The India Forum. Retrieved 19 June 2025. We list eight names—six men and two women—who could be called the main pillars of the present democratic set-up. They are Gandhi (1869-1948), B.R. Ambedkar (1891-1956), Jawaharlal Nehru (1889-1964), Vallabhbhai Patel (1875-1950), Rajkumari Amrit Kaur (1887-1964), Maulana Abul Kalam Azad (1888-1958), Jaipal Singh Munda (1903-1970), and Dakshayani Velayudhan (1912-1978).
    • Guha, Ramachandra (2010). Makers of Modern India. Penguin Books Limited. p. 1. ISBN 978-81-8475-289-2. The striking thing about modern India is that the men and women who made its history also wrote most authoritatively about it. The country's leading politicians were its leading political thinkers. This is especially true of the trinity of Mohandas K. Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru and B.R. Ambedkar. The first was the father of Indian nationalism who, between the 1920s and 1940s, forged a popular, countrywide movement against British colonial rule. The second was the architect of the modern Indian nation-state, serving as prime minister from the nation's birth in August 1947 until his death in May 1964. The third was the great leader of the country's oppressed castes who also oversaw, as the country's first law minister, the drafting of the Indian Constitution, which came into effect on 26 January 1950.
  2. ^ _Ideological differences, clashes & related themes_
    • Kapila, Shruti (2021). Violent Fraternity: Indian Political Thought in the Global Age. Princeton University Press. p. 11, 281–82. ISBN 978-0-691-21575-4. The focus on some of the most powerful figures of the last century is deliberate. The recent thrust of popular biographies of India's founding figures seeks to amplify or multiply the official canon of national heroes. The concern has been primarily to 'balance', to revise or to reposition the partisan matrix of this period. In particular, two figures from opposite ends of the ideological spectrum have come to the fore. On the one hand, Ambedkar and his foundational role have been receiving hitherto unprecedented attention, and he is increasingly positioned as the antithesis to Gandhi. Patel, on the other hand, has recently received much revisionist attention, not only from political parties but also from writers who increasingly argue for his foundational role to be seen as certainly equal to that of Nehru, if not overwhelming him, and others too. (p.282); Gandhi's victory in his lifetime over Ambedkar was pyrrhic; his subject-oriented political project was overwhelmed by Ambedkar's agonism. The Republic's constitutional architecture, and the trumping by sovereignty of the concern with fraternity, makes Ambedkar's ideological longevity and final victory all too obvious. While the repeated return, in contemporary Indian political discourse, to these two figures testifies to their shared foundational and inexhaustible role, contemporary contestations over their relative reputations and receptions nevertheless reveal the lineaments of new partisan hostilities and identifications, and the dramatic change in their respective reputations suggests an initial set of landmarks whereby to trace changes in political languages under democracy. The search for a new 'father' to compensate for or replace Gandhi demonstrates that such a figure, in this time of no kings, retains its potency in the direction of India's political life and future. (p.282-83); Apprehended as political thinkers, founding political actors are far from dead or frozen in the deep archives of history. As they haunt and animate politics in India today, they remain the objects of passionate identification. Their living role is not merely to service partisan views of the past, though it may also be that. Ambedkar is resurrected anew by the young and by a wide coalition of popular Indian politics today, while Patel is pirated for the pantheon of Hindutva; shifing allegiances and renewed attachments to these figures offer an initial insight into dramatic changes in Indian democracy and its underpinning fraternity. The names of these iconic figurations function as invocations and labels: as a powerful shorthand that distils as it conveys the transformative power of political ideas.
  3. ^ _ Other Sources;
    • Karaganis, Joe (2018). Shadow Libraries: Access to Knowledge in Global Higher Education. MIT Press. p. 190. ISBN 978-0-262-34570-5. An Indian lineage for the shadow library would almost certainly pass through the story of Ekalavya, a minor character in the Mahabharata, the Indian epic with origins in the eighth or ninth century BCE. In the story, Ekalavya is a lower-caste tribal boy who wants to become the greatest archer in the world. In pursuit of this goal, he approaches Dronacharya, the famous warrior (and teacher of the Panadava princes whose story forms the center of the epic) for instruction. Dronacharya, however, refuses Ekalavya: his lower caste status excludes him from martial training. Ekalavya retreats to the jun gle but does not give up his dream. Instead, he makes a clay statue of Dronacharya to guide his training. Months later, the princes are out hunting in the jungle. They hear a dog bark, then fall silent. When they find the dog, they discover that its mouth is held closed against a tree by arrows, shot so precisely that they left it uninjured. Of course the archer is Ekalavya. Amazed by this feat, the princes ask Ekalavya to name his teacher. Ekalavya replies that it is Dronacharya. This news is unwelcome because Dronacharya has promised one of the princes, Arjuna, that he would make him the best archer in the world. When Dronacharya confronts Ekalavya, the boy shows him the statue. Although touched by Ekalavya's devotion, Dronacharya feels bound by his promise to Arjuna. He tells Ekalavya that if he truly considers him a teacher, he must offer a guru dakshina-an offering that a student makes to a teacher. When Ekalavya agrees, Dronacharya demands the thumb from his bow hand. Ekalavya complies.
    • Doniger, Wendy (2014). On Hinduism. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 446. ISBN 978-0-19-936007-9. The myth of the weavers' thumbs may also have grown out of the famous Mahabharata story of Ekalavya, a dark-skinned, low-caste boy whose skill at archery rivalled that of the noble heroes, the Pandavas; to maintain the Pandavas supremacy as archers, their teacher demanded that Ekalavya cut off his right thumb.
    • Waldau, P.; Patton, K.C. (2006). A Communion of Subjects: Animals in Religion, Science, and Ethics. Columbia University Press. p. 343. ISBN 978-0-231-50997-8.
    • Nayak, M.A. (2018). Evil in the Mahabharata. Oxford University Press. p. 100–101. ISBN 978-0-19-909183-6. ...Ekalavya, who belongs to the Niṣāda tribe (a śūdra) but feels naturally inclined to be a warrior. He is not only rejected by Drona because of his caste, but he is also made to suffer the extreme consequence of aspiring to be a kṣatriya by cutting off and giving his right thumb to Drona, which deprives him of the ability to use a bow and arrow (Mbh 1.132.31–56). Moreover, while the low-caste Ekalavya suffers this grievous injury, the kṣatriya prince, Arjuna, who is the catalyst of this incident, is able to salve his jealousy with impunity. The epic is silent about the wrongness of Drona's and Arjuna's behaviour in this incident of gross injustice.
    • Barash, M.; Assmann, J.; Baumgarten, A.I. (2001). Representation in Religion: Studies in Honour of Moshe Barasch. Numen Book Series: Studies in the history of religions. Brill. p. 68–69. ISBN 978-90-04-11939-0. One of the earliest accounts of the ritual treatment of a portrait statue is the story in the Mahābhārata, adiparvan, of the young tribal hunter Ekalavya. Ekalavya had asked the archery master Droņa to accept him as a student, but Droņa refused, because Ekalavya was of too low a caste. Undaunted, Ekalaya made a clay portrait statue of Drona and fervently wor-shipped it as his teacher. By worshipping the statue he attained the skill in archery that he sought.
  4. ^ __Continued;
    • Das, Gurcharan (2010). The Difficulty of Being Good: On the Subtle Art of Dharma. Oxford University Press. p. 171. ISBN 978-0-19-978147-8. This Ekalavya is different. His is a cry for social reform. The epic's Ekalavya did not revolt against the caste system. While the Mahabharata understands why Drona could not teach a person who was outside the society of its time, it also makes Ekalavya a charismatic figure. We are horrified at Drona's command, which the epic calls daruna, 'terrible', and it tarnishes the ruthless teacher forever in our eyes. The more sensitive Arjuna does not come out well either. When the dusky hunter cuts off his thumb, the Mahabharata reveals Ekalavya's humanity, and in doing so it honours the lowest of the low born, who live in tribes in the jungles outside the pale. It teaches us that they too are human beings who are owed dignity and respect.
    • Kirkup, J.R. (2007). A History of Limb Amputation. Springer London. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-84628-509-7. An extraordinary sacrifice of a thumb, chroni-cled in an ancient Hindu legend of the epic battle of Mahabharata, concerned Prince Ekalavya of the lower Hunter's Caste, an expert archer instructed by Drona, a veteran of fighting techniques. When Drona demanded his teaching fee, he said cal-lously: "O Ekalavya, if thou art really intent on making me a gift, I should like then to have the thumb of thy right hand." Having promised there was nothing he would not give his teacher and despite the cruel demand, Ekalavya cut off his thumb and gave it to Drona.
    • Doron, Assa (2008). Caste, Occupation and Politics on the Ganges: Passages of Resistance. Ashgate. p. 67–68. ISBN 978-0-7546-7550-1. The Eklavya story, in particular, is one in which the link between the political and the social constitutes a prominent theme. This myth is a branch story within the Hindu epic Mahabharata, and is essentially about a young prince, called Eklavya Nishad, and his ardent devotion to his guru. The story tells of the young Eklavya who wanted to learn archery from Drona, a Brahmin who taught warrior princes the mastery of weaponry. The latter refused to accept him as his student since he was a low caste Shudra. Motivated by supreme devotion and determination Eklavya installed a clay figure of his guru Drona to worship and practise archery before it. Before too long he became an unrivalled archer. Meanwhile, Drona was determined to make his favoured disciple, Arjuna, the most competent archer in the land. However, following an incident on a hunting trip, Drona and Arjuna became aware that there existed an archer even more accomplished than Arjuna. To their surprise this was the low caste Eklavya, who attributed his skilled archery to Drona. As his guru, Drona demanded the disciple pay his customary fee (dakshina) in the form of his right-hand thumb. Undaunted, and with due humility and devotion, Eklavya cut off his thumb and placed it at the feet of his guru. Thus, Eklavya could no longer remain the best archer in the land.
    • Howard, Veena R. (2017). Dharma: The Hindu, Jain, Buddhist and Sikh Traditions of India. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 100–101. ISBN 978-1-78672-212-6. Ekalavya, on the other hand, also from a "low" caste, is a character from the Mahabharata who sought to elevate his status to that of a warrior, and was quite brutally punished for doing so, being forced to cut off his own thumb by a Brhamin Guru.
    • Long, Jeffery D. (2011). Historical Dictionary of Hinduism. Bloomsbury Publishing PLC. p. 111–112. ISBN 978-0-8108-7960-7. EKALAVYA: Character from the Mahabharata. Ekalavya was a boy from one of the lower castes who wished to study with the great martial arts teacher Droņa in order to become a warrior. Droņa rejected Ekalavya because of Ekalavya's low caste status. Undaunted, Ekalavya fashioned an image or mürti of Drona and took it as his teacher, training before the image and showing it the devotion that one would normally show to one's teacher, or guru. Ekala-vya progressed quickly in this fashion and his fame began to spread. Drona, hearing of Ekalavya's prowess, confronted him and demanded the customary payment that a student would give to a teacher, given that Ekalavya claimed Drona as his teacher. After Ekalavya promised to pay Droņa in any way he requested, Drona demanded Ekalavya's thumb in payment, which Ekalavya cut off and surrendered to Drona without hesitation. This of course prevented Ekalavya from living as a warrior, for without a thumb he would be unable to perform the basic duties of a warrior, such as stringing a bow, holding a sword, and so on.
  5. ^ Narayan, Badri (6 January 2009). Fascinating Hindutva: Saffron Politics and Dalit Mobilisation. SAGE Publications. p. 121–136. ISBN 978-81-7829-906-8.
  6. ^ _Complexity of politics behind "Ekalavya"_