Guest guest Posted November 19, 2003 Report Share Posted November 19, 2003 VFA-family, M P Bhattathiri <mpmahesh@a...> wrote: Ganesha Drinking Milk Again, in Africa http://www.mmegi.bw/2003/November/Monday10/20243234790.html BOTSWANA, AFRICA, November 9, 2003: As they went around the shrine, devotees whispered an invocation, prostrated to Lord Ganesha, poured milk into a spoon and placed it over His mouth. The milk disappeared. This was the scene at Maruapula Temple last Thursday when members of the Botswana Hindu Society in Gaborone went to feed milk to Ganesha, reports this article. The priest Subramaniam termed it a "miracle." People joined their Hindu friends to witness the event. "I came to see the God that drinks milk," said a British woman who preferred not to give her name. Among those who came to witness were ever-skeptical journalists. "Whatever is happening here? The milk just disappeared!" one of them exclaimed after Ganesha drank the spoonful of milk he offered. Subramaniam told a reporter he received a telephone call from India reporting a "miracle unravelling." The Hindu community started to light candles and lamps around the shrine, and fed milk to Ganesha. "It is happening all over the world. Lord Ganesha is drinking milk. You can go in and say your wish," Subramaniam told curious non-Hindu spectators. The last time Ganesha was observed drinking milk was in 1996. Millions of people offered milk at temples and homes and the milk disappeared upon being offered, according to many credible witnesses at the time. This one report from Botswana is all that HPI has received about the current miracle. Schoolyard Mediators Lessen Bullying Montreal Gazette MONTREAL, CANADA, November 17, 2003: Schoolyard violence can be a problem anywhere. But at one St. Henri elementary school, staff and students decided to do something different about it. Seven years ago, Ludger-Duvernay school began developing a program to train Grade 5 and Grade 6 students as mediators to intervene in small disputes. The program went into effect four years ago. The student peacekeepers, patrolling the schoolyard in teams of four or five, have been so successful they won an award yesterday for their work. Principal Lise Cantin, special educator Soledad Dextre and five students were delighted as they accepted the 2003 Peace Medallions awarded by the Montreal YMCA. The annual world-wide awards were created in 1987 to recognize efforts to realize the peace vision enunciated in 1981 by the World Council of YMCAs. Ludger-Duvernay is one of several Montreal- area schools with violence-limiting programs called Vers le pacifique (Toward the Peaceful), Cantin said. "I am certain that these young people will develop skills that will enable them to be peacemakers later on in life," Cantin noted after the ceremony at the YMCA residence on Tupper St. Carolanne Masse, 12, said monitors like herself are getting increased respect from their peers, and often student will come to them for help. The winner in the individual category was Dilip Chowdhury, a Hindu Bangladeshi who came to Canada in 1994 and was accepted as a refugee claimant. The award citation said he had won the respect of the Bangladeshi community for "giving freely and quietly of his time and skills" to mediate in family crises. Chowdhury now works for the Tyndale-St. Georges Community Centre in Little Burgundy district, where he was first involved as a volunteer. --- End forwarded message --- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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