This reminds me of the following story, from the Sufis: 

 The plantation owner was surprised to 
 see the unlikely figure Nasrudin applying 
 for a job.
 

 'I'll give you a chance, although you 
 don't look like the sort who could 
 fell trees. Where did you learn 
 to cut down trees?'
 

 'In the Sahara desert', Nasrudin replied.
 

 'But there aren't any trees in the Sahara.'
 

 'No, there aren't, now', replied Nasrudin.
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <no_re...@yahoogroups.com> wrote :

 
 It must be tough in the yagya selling business. The only way you have to 
promote your wares is by saying astonishingly unconvincing things like "You 
know that Earthquake that didn't flatten your village yesterday? That was 
prevented by us"
 

 A sceptic might say that we've no real idea whether an Earthquake would have 
flattened anyone's village without the awesome yagya performance. But that's 
just got to be nonsense, how could a system of reality based on the mighty 
wisdom of the veda's possibly be in error?
 

 But it looks like something did go wrong - maybe some interference from that 
Hell Pit of Shiva agitation in Switzerland forced our normally strong grip on 
the laws of nature into abeyance for just a second? - and of course, once 
you've collected the money to pay for a prayer to make good things happen and 
then something bad happens, you need a ready explanation to get yourselves off 
the hook.
 

 And here it is: It would have been worse if it had happened the day before. 
Well, you've got to have something to rally round. And this is the trouble with 
superstitious thinking, your view of the world is based on a nonsense and when 
- surprise surprise - your dysfunctional iron-age model doesn't work the way 
you expected it to you need a scapegoat, no matter how obscene, or those all 
important donations for the next round of pointless prayers to non-existent 
gods won't be so forthcoming. 
 

 But just this once, instead of giving money to the TMO why not give it to the 
Red Cross, at least they are actually doing something to help the victims and 
it won't seem like you are just throwing your money onto a bonfire...
 

 How we're helping in Nepal | British Red Cross 
http://www.redcross.org.uk/en/What-we-do/Preparing-for-disasters/Nepal-preparing-for-earthquakes/How-were-helping-in-Nepal
 
 
 
http://www.redcross.org.uk/en/What-we-do/Preparing-for-disasters/Nepal-preparing-for-earthquakes/How-were-helping-in-Nepal
 
 How we're helping in Nepal | British Red Cross 
http://www.redcross.org.uk/en/What-we-do/Preparing-for-disasters/Nepal-preparing-for-earthquakes/How-were-helping-in-Nepal
 The British Red Cross is supporting the three-year programme, which is funded 
by a £4 million grant from the UK government’s Department for Internation...


 
 View on www.redcross.org.uk 
http://www.redcross.org.uk/en/What-we-do/Preparing-for-disasters/Nepal-preparing-for-earthquakes/How-were-helping-in-Nepal
 Preview by Yahoo 
 

  


 

 

 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <WLeed3@...> wrote :

 
 
 
 -----Original Message-----
 From: William Leed <wleed3@...>
 To: wleed3 <wleed3@...>
 Sent: Sun, May 3, 2015 9:18 pm
 Subject: Fwd: Nepal earthquake report from TM Center in Kathmandu
 
 
 ---------- Forwarded message ---------- 
 From: Steve <steve@... mailto:steve@...> 
 Date: Sun, May 3, 2015 at 6:10 AM 
 Subject: Nepal earthquake report from TM Center in Kathmandu 
 To: Stephen Van Damme < steve@... mailto:steve@...> 


 TM Center in Kathmandu - Nepal Earthquake Report
  
 Namaste,
  
 I am writing a sort of general report for friends and for supporters of the 
Nepal Projects. This is going to a number of people and has nothing 
confidential in it, so anyone may freely share it with others. 
  
 There are so many enquiries about the situation here and even offers of help 
for relief work as we start to get our legs back from under us, since the 
earthquake.
  
 It is difficult for me to reply to everyone one at a time so please bear with 
the situation and not mind the generalities of this report.
  
 April 25th, just before noon, Nepal was struck by a magnitude 7.9 earthquake. 
The epicenter was approximately 50 miles from Kathmandu and about 30 miles from 
Pokhara.. roughly the center of the country…. 
  
 As anyone following the news knows there has been a lot of damage in the 
Kathmandu Valley and massive destruction in the rural districts surrounding the 
Kathmandu Valley. 
  
 At the latest count, more than 6,600 people were killed and property damage is 
at least 130,000 homes completely destroyed and maybe up to 600,000 damaged to 
some degree.
  
 Many, many people are homeless and are surviving outdoors as best they can, as 
relief efforts to provide them with the basics of survival arrive. In the 
village areas the devastation is such that whole villages were flattened and in 
many place 70-90% of all buildings collapsed. 
  
 The number of people affected by this calamity is estimated to be about 8 
million people or roughly 25% of the population of Nepal. 
  
 Right now about 650,000 people have left the Kathmandu Valley to return to 
their home villages to help their families or start relief work and salvaging 
what they can of their village homes.
  
 Kathmandu is starting to come back to life, but today (Saturday the 2nd) not 
10% of the shops were open and traffic was almost negligible. The city has a 
largely deserted feeling and the people are doing OK, most Nepalis are cheerful 
by nature and stoic by disposition so they are handling things amazingly well.
  
 The old parts of the city have been badly damaged  and we have lost many 
wonderful, ancient Temples and national monuments. The Holy Temple of 
Pashupatinath was hardly damaged although many surrounding buildings were.
  
 Bhakatpur suffered a lot and I read that about 25 % of the houses came down, 
along with many temples, including the Natyapol temple, which is the biggest 
and most majestic of them all. 
  
 In Kathmandu amongst other collapsed structures was the KASTHMANDAP… dating 
from the 12th century, Kathmandu supposedly took its name from this ancient 
mandap in the Durbar Square.
  
 In contrast to all of this... much of the city shows little to no damage.. It 
seems to depend on the quality and age of the building construction. However 
many of the new apartment buildings have damage and it is too early to know if 
it is just cosmetic or structural and if they will have to come down.
  
 The economic loss is in the billions of dollars and the tourist industry will 
take  huge hit and time to recover. 
  
 Now that all sound rather harsh and certainly it is, but here is another angle 
and this is the underlying reality…
  
 The geologists and seismologists have been predicting a major earthquake could 
come at any time.. and in fact is considered long over due. The last major 
quake to hit Kathamndu was in 1934 and was proportionately even more 
devastating, considering the population of the Valley was less than 10% of what 
it is now.
  
 The predictions of the seismologists were very dire, with estimated fatalities 
in the 100s of thousands… Now here is the thing,.. the quake hit at noon on 
aSaturday, the day off in Nepal. 
  
 The timing was such that schools were closed and many places of business and 
all government offices were closed. In the rural areas most families were out 
in the fields planting the spring crops or preparing their fields. 
  
 If the quake had struck at night or the morning hours the death toll would 
have in fact been in the hundreds of thousands. These village homes are largely 
made of mud and stone with no mortar and they simply crumbled in a heartbeat. 
  
 There is no way to get around it… the Himalayas is one of the most seismically 
active areas of the world.. In fact this earthquake moved Kathmandu about 10 
feet south and raised the Valley up about 3 feet… all in one go.. (Mount 
Everest sank by about an inch…)
  
 So, when you consider the Laws Of Nature, it is in fact almost a miracle that 
the damage occurred in a relatively narrow window of the day and day of the 
week that could mitigate such a potential calamity. People here are very much 
aware of this and deeply grateful that Nature’s timing was as kind as it was..
  
 This is not to belie the extent of the suffering and destruction.. It IS 
MASSIVE, but it could have been so very much worse. 
  
 Now that is interesting from our perspective in that these days in Nepal there 
are very many Maharishi Yagyas going on… None of the Maharishi Pandits were 
harmed although many lost family village homes.. They have been working for the 
last 6 years to create coherence for Nepal and the world….
  
 During this time, we have seen a marked increase in coherence in the political 
field. The Maoist party lost their destructive edge, were sidelined by the 
political process and have now faded largely into irrelevancy. The political 
parties have a long way to go, no doubt, but the situation has improved like 
the day from the night.
  
 In many areas of society we have seen all the predicted signs of increasing 
coherence and especially since we have had the first TM SIdhi Courses in Nepal. 
  
 I am writing these points because it is important to have a perspective during 
times of natural calamity… they can seem so arbitrary and the suffering can 
seem so vast. In truth, yes we are suffering now in Nepal… but it is a fraction 
of what was predicted and considering everything we are very grateful.
  
 Another area of gratitude that I must acknowledge is the response from the 
International Community. Relief aid is flooding into the country. Even I 
received 95 concerned emails from friends and Foundation supporters, the very 
morning after the earthquake… 
  
 So, I am confident that Nepal will rebuild… it is going to be an on going 
effort for some time, but the Nepalis are a self reliant people. getting 
through the next months will be hard, no doubt, but they will do it. I have 
told friends that ‘if’ I have to face such a situation as this, in my life, 
then there are no better people to go through it will than our Nepali friends. 
I love these people and for me this is home.
  
 I want to thank all the friends and supporters for your kind attention and the 
sincerity of your hearts.. It has been a great honor for me to have helped host 
many guests these last years and watch the marvel on your faces as Nepal 
unfolded HER magic for you.
  
 If anyone wants to participate in the relief efforts or offer support in any 
way, it is welcome. But, neither Atmaram-Dai nor I are soliciting any donations 
from anyone or anywhere. If you contact us individually we can steer you to 
legitimate Foundations that can accept donations and give you a tax exemption.
  
 Our work is to create coherence and support the Cultural Integrity of Nepal 
and it is the most heart felt work that I have ever done in my life. I consider 
it to be the greatest gift that I have ever received and sharing it with others 
has been just a huge and wonderful part of my life. Thanks.
  
 Jai Guru Dev 
  
 and all the best to all of you.
  
 Ramprasad
  
 ============================================
 Nepal earthquake in 75 photos:  All about the disaster that killed 6,100, 
destroyed 6 lakh houses| May 01, 2015
 
http://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/nepal-earthquake-all-about-the-devast%20ating-disaster-that-killed-thousands-affected-millions/article1-1342182.aspxhttp://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/nepal-earthquake-all-about-the-devast
 http://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/nepal-earthquake-all-about-the-devast 
ating-disaster-that-killed-thousands-affected-millions/article1-1342182.aspx






 




 
  

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