A three-day Vedic Yajnas was started today at the premises of Arya Samaj Ved Mandir, Railway Road at Kurukshetra, on the occasion of the Solar Eclipse scheduled for October 25 from 4.25 pm to 5.39 pm. Puran Ahuti of the Yajnas would be performed after the completion of the solar eclipse. All are welcome to participate in the Yajnas from 8to10 in the morning and 3 to 5 in the evening daily.
Sunday, 23 October 2022
Friday, 21 October 2022
My middle article in the Tribune
Vijay Sabharwal
News reports about cops publicly flogging some
persons accused of disrupting a garba event transported me back to 1990, when I
had visited Saudi Arabia.
It
was an eye-opening experience, being my first trip to the Middle East. I
marvelled at how disciplined the people there were in comparison to India. The
taxi that took us from the Riyadh airport to our host’s residence patiently
waited at the traffic lights for over two minutes — the clock was nearing 2 am
and there was no other vehicle moving in any direction. I enquired why he
didn’t just ignore the lights at this time of the night, as we would back home,
to which his reply was: The road camera would record the traffic violation and
he would be subjected to public flogging the next day, as per the local law.
A
week later, the television started carrying news of an upcoming beheading of a
woman who had killed her husband.
Later that Friday, our host took
us to the local mosque where the beheading had been scheduled. After the
completion of namaz, thousands of persons sat outside the mosque in a circle.
After a few minutes, officials brought the accused in a police van. The
burqa-clad woman had her hands tied at the back. An official read out the crime
and the judgment through a loudspeaker.
The
woman seemed to have been drugged as police personnel moved her around without
any resistance. She was made to kneel, with her head towards the ground. As
soon as the officer signalled, the executioner beheaded the woman with one
stroke of his sword. After a while, doctors certified the execution, and the
remains were taken away in the van, along with relatives of the deceased. The
people witnessing the execution raised cries of ‘Allahu Akbar’ and rushed
towards the execution spot to collect the blood-soaked soil as a ‘good omen’.
We
left the venue horrified at what we had just witnessed. The initial
appreciation of the virtues of the local laws was nullified by an abhorrence of
the medieval nature of the practices. In the discussions that followed, I
recall asking our host why crime still existed in his country despite such
harsh laws, to which he had no clear answer.


