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sir,

I came upon an article which I felt I should share with you all....

It might come as a stunning revelation to many that the word ‘ALLAH’ itself is Sanskrit. In Sanskrit language Allah, Akka and Amba are synonyms. They signify a goddess or mother. The term ‘ALLAH’ forms part of Sanskrit chants invoking goddess Durga, also known as Bhavani, Chandi and Mahishasurmardini. The Islamic word for God is., therefore, not an innovation but the ancient Sanskrit appellation retained and continued by Islam. Allah means mother or goddess and mother goddess.

dear bhaskarji,

If you don't like to display links,plz delete them before posting the article on the group..http://www.hinduism.co.za/kaabaa.htm,,,,http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCH6kvCarskhttp://www.scribd.com/doc/954908/FLOODED-KAABA-AND-IN-THE-FOREGROUND-A-HINDU-TEMPLE-LIKE-BUILDING

http://www.valdostamuseum.com/hamsmith/Islam.html

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Dear Kiranji,

 

Those were very good links and information.

 

Since this is a Indian group, a Jyotish group, and related to

Spiritualism and religion too, I do not have any qualms about anybody

putting any links elated to these, as long as they do not lure people to

their own websites in cloud of above for commercialisation purposes.

 

I am personally fond of Our culture, ancient history and origins too,

and to links such as you have given, though many people do not

know about my liking for this subject on other groups, since I spent

more time on Jyotish.

 

Actually " Om " " Allah " and " Amen " mean the same thing.

 

regards,

 

Bhaskar.

 

 

 

 

 

 

, kiran dasaur <kirandasaur

wrote:

>

> sir,

> Â I came upon an article which I felt I should share with you

all....

> Â Â Â Â It might come as a stunning revelation to many

that the word ‘ALLAH’ itself is Sanskrit. In Sanskrit

language Allah, Akka and Amba are synonyms. They signify a goddess or

mother. The term ‘ALLAH’ forms part of Sanskrit chants

invoking goddess Durga, also known as Bhavani, Chandi and

Mahishasurmardini. The Islamic word for God is., therefore, not an

innovation but the ancient Sanskrit appellation retained and continued

by Islam. Allah means mother or goddess and mother goddess.

> dear bhaskarji,

> Â If you don't like to display links,plz delete them before posting

the article on the group..

> http://www.hinduism.co.za/kaabaa.htm,,,,

> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCH6kvCarsk

>

http://www.scribd.com/doc/954908/FLOODED-KAABA-AND-IN-THE-FOREGROUND-A-H\

INDU-TEMPLE-LIKE-BUILDING

> http://www.valdostamuseum.com/hamsmith/Islam.html

>

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Share on other sites

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Was the Kaaba Originally a Hindu Temple?

By P.N. Oak (Historian)

Glancing through some research material recently, I was pleasantly surprised to come across a reference to a king Vikramaditya inscription found in the Kaaba in Mecca proving beyond doubt that the Arabian Peninsula formed a part of his Indian Empire.The text of the crucial Vikramaditya inscription, found inscribed on a gold dish hung inside the Kaaba shrine in Mecca, is found recorded on page 315 of a volume known as `Sayar-ul-Okul' treasured in the Makhtab-e-Sultania library in Istanbul, Turkey. Rendered in free English the inscription says:

"Fortunate are those who were born (and lived) during king Vikram's reign. He was a noble, generous dutiful ruler, devoted to the welfare of his subjects. But at that time we Arabs, oblivious of God, were lost in sensual pleasures. Plotting and torture were rampant. The darkness of ignorance had enveloped our country. Like the lamb struggling for her life in the cruel paws of a wolf we Arabs were caught up in ignorance. The entire country was enveloped in a darkness so intense as on a new moon night. But the present dawn and pleasant sunshine of education is the result of the favour of the noble king Vikramaditya whose benevolent supervision did not lose sight of us- foreigners as we were. He spread his sacred religion amongst us and sent scholars whose

brilliance shone like that of the sun from his country to ours. These scholars and preceptors through whose benevolence we were once again made cognisant of the presence of God, introduced to His sacred existence and put on the road of Truth, had come to our country to preach their religion and impart education at king Vikramaditya' s behest."

For those who would like to read the Arabic wording I reproduce it hereunder in Roman script:

"Itrashaphai Santu Ibikramatul Phahalameen Karimun Yartapheeha Wayosassaru Bihillahaya Samaini Ela Motakabberen Sihillaha Yuhee Quid min howa Yapakhara phajjal asari nahone osirom bayjayhalem. Yundan blabin Kajan blnaya khtoryaha sadunya kanateph netephi bejehalin Atadari bilamasa- rateen phakef tasabuhu kaunnieja majekaralhada walador. As hmiman burukankad toluho watastaru hihila Yakajibaymana balay kulk amarena phaneya jaunabilamary Bikramatum".

(Page 315 Sayar-ul-okul) .

[Note: The title `Saya-ul-okul' signifies memorable words.]

A careful analysis of the above inscription enables us to draw the following conclusions:That the ancient Indian empires may have extended up to the eastern boundaries of Arabia until Vikramaditya and that it was he who for the first time conquered Arabia. Because the inscription says that king Vikram who dispelled the darkness of ignorance from Arabia. That, whatever their earlier faith, King Vikrama's preachers had succeeded in spreading the Vedic (based on the Vedas, the Hindu sacred scriptures)) way of life in Arabia. That the knowledge of Indian arts and sciences was imparted by Indians to the Arabs directly by founding schools, academies and cultural

centres. The belief, therefore, that visiting Arabs conveyed that knowledge to their own lands through their own indefatigable efforts and scholarship is unfounded.

 

An ancillary conclusion could be that the so-called Kutub Minar (in Delhi, India) could well be king Vikramadiya' s tower commemorating his conquest of Arabia. This conclusion is strengthened by two pointers. Firstly, the inscription on the iron pillar near the so-called Kutub Minar refers to the marriage of the victorious king Vikramaditya to the princess of Balhika. This Balhika is none other than the Balkh region in West Asia. It could be that Arabia was wrestled by king Vikramaditya from the ruler of Balkh who concluded a

treaty by giving his daughter in marriage to the victor. Secondly, the township adjoining the so called Kutub Minar is named Mehrauli after Mihira who was the renowned astronomer-mathemat ician of king Vikram's court. Mehrauli is the corrupt form of Sanskrit `Mihira-Awali' signifying a row of houses raised for Mihira and his helpers and assistants working on astronomical observations made from the tower.

Having seen the far reaching and history shaking implications of the Arabic inscription concerning king Vikrama, we shall now piece together the story of its find. How it came to be recorded and hung in the Kaaba in Mecca. What are the other proofs reinforcing the belief that Arabs were once followers of the Indian Vedic way of life and that tranquillity and education were ushered into Arabia by king Vikramaditya' s scholars, educationists from an uneasy period of "ignorance and turmoil" mentioned in the inscription.

In Istanbul, Turkey, there is a famous library called Makhatab-e-Sultania, which is reputed to have the largest collection of ancient West Asian literature. In the Arabic section of that library is an anthology of ancient Arabic poetry. That anthology was compiled from an earlier work in A.D. 1742 under the orders of the Turkish ruler Sultan Salim.

The pages of that volume are of Hareer – a kind of silk used for writing on. Each page has a decorative gilded border. That anthology is known as Sayar-ul-Okul. It is divided into three parts. The first part contains biographic details and the poetic compositions of pre-Islamic Arabian poets. The second part embodies accounts and verses of poets of the period beginning just after prophet Mohammad's times, up to the end of the Banee-Um-Mayya dynasty. The third part deals with later poets up to the end of Khalif Harun-al-Rashid' s times.

Abu Amir Asamai, an Arabian bard who was the poet Laureate of Harun-al-Rashid's court, has compiled and edited the anthology.

The first modern edition of `Sayar-ul-Okul' was printed and published in Berlin in 1864. A subsequent edition is the one published in Beirut in 1932.

The collection is regarded as the most important and authoritative anthology of ancient Arabic poetry. It throws considerable light on the social life, customs, manners and entertainment modes of ancient Arabia. The book also contains an elaborate description of the ancient shrine of Mecca, the town and the annual fair known as OKAJ which used to be held every year around the Kaaba temple in Mecca. This should convince readers that the annual haj of the Muslims to the Kaaba is of earlier pre-Islamic congregation.

But the OKAJ fair was far from a carnival. It provided a forum for the elite and the learned to discuss the social, religious, political, literary and other aspects of the Vedic culture then pervading Arabia. `Sayar-ul-Okul' asserts that the conclusion reached at those discussions were widely respected throughout Arabia. Mecca, therefore, followed the Varanasi tradition (of India) of providing a venue for important discussions among the learned while the masses congregated there for spiritual bliss. The principal shrines at both Varanasi in India and at Mecca in Arvasthan (Arabia) were Siva temples. Even to this day ancient Mahadev (Siva) emblems can be seen. It is the Shankara (Siva) stone that Muslim pilgrims reverently touch and kiss in the Kaaba.

Arabic tradition has lost trace of the founding of the Kaaba temple. The discovery of the Vikramaditya inscription affords a clue. King Vikramaditya is known for his great devotion to Lord Mahadev (Siva). At Ujjain (India), the capital of Vikramaditya, exists the famous shrine of Mahankal, i.e., of Lord Shankara (Siva) associated with Vikramaditya. Since according to the Vikramaditya inscription he spread the Vedic religion, who else but he could have founded the Kaaba temple in Mecca?

A few miles away from Mecca is a big signboard which bars the entry of any non-Muslim into the area. This is a reminder of the days when the Kaaba was stormed and captured solely for the newly established faith of Islam. The object in barring entry of non-Muslims was obviously to prevent its recapture.

As the pilgrim proceeds towards Mecca he is asked to shave his head and beard and to don special sacred attire that consists of two seamless sheets of white cloth. One is to be worn round the waist and the other over the shoulders. Both these rites are remnants of the old Vedic practice of entering Hindu temples clean- and with holy seamless white sheets.

The main shrine in Mecca, which houses the Siva emblem, is known as the Kaaba. It is clothed in a black shroud. That custom also originates from the days when it was thought necessary to discourage its recapture by camouflaging it.

According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, the Kaaba has 360 images. Traditional accounts mention that one of the deities among the 360 destroyed when the place was stormed, was that of Saturn; another was of the Moon and yet another was one called Allah. That shows that in the Kaaba the Arabs worshipped the nine planets in pre-Islamic days. In India the practice of `Navagraha' puja, that is worship of the nine planets, is still in vogue. Two of these nine are Saturn and Moon.

In India the crescent moon is always painted across the forehead of the Siva symbol. Since that symbol was associated with the Siva emblem in Kaaba it came to be grafted on the flag of Islam.

Another Hindu tradition associated with the Kaaba is that of the sacred stream Ganga (sacred waters of the Ganges river). According to the Hindu tradition Ganga is also inseparable from the Shiva emblem as the crescent moon. Wherever there is a Siva emblem, Ganga must co-exist. True to that association a sacred fount exists near the Kaaba. Its water is held sacred because it has been traditionally regarded as Ganga since pre-Islamic times (Zam-Zam water).

[Note: Even today, Muslim pilgrims who go to the Kaaba for Haj regard this Zam-Zam water with reverence and take some bottled water with them as sacred water.]

Muslim pilgrims visiting the Kaaba temple go around it seven times. In no other mosque does the circumambulation prevail. Hindus invariably circumambulate around their deities. This is yet another proof that the Kaaba shrine is a pre-Islamic Indian Shiva temple where the Hindu practice of circumambulation is still meticulously observed.

The practice of taking seven steps- known as Saptapadi in Sanskrit- is associated with Hindu marriage ceremony and fire worship. The culminating rite in a Hindu marriage enjoins upon the bride and groom to go round the sacred fire four times (but misunderstood by many as seven times). Since "Makha" means fire, the seven circumambulations also prove that Mecca was the seat of Indian fire-worship in the West Asia.

It might come as a stunning revelation to many that the word `ALLAH' itself is Sanskrit. In Sanskrit language Allah, Akka and Amba are synonyms. They signify a goddess or mother. The term `ALLAH' forms part of Sanskrit chants invoking goddess Durga, also known as Bhavani, Chandi and Mahishasurmardini. The Islamic word for God is., therefore, not an innovation but the ancient Sanskrit appellation retained and continued by Islam. Allah means mother or goddess and mother goddess.One Koranic verse is an exact translation of a stanza in the Yajurveda. This was pointed out by the great research scholar Pandit Satavlekar of Pardi in one of his articles.[Note: Another scholar points out that the following

teaching from the Koran is exactly similar to the teaching of the Kena Upanishad (1.7)...........--- On Sat, 4/4/09, kiran dasaur <kirandasaur wrote:

kiran dasaur <kirandasaur kaaba.."jyotish ganga" Saturday, April 4, 2009, 1:07 PM

 

 

 

 

 

sir,

I came upon an article which I felt I should share with you all....

It might come as a stunning revelation to many that the word ‘ALLAH’ itself is Sanskrit. In Sanskrit language Allah, Akka and Amba are synonyms. They signify a goddess or mother. The term ‘ALLAH’ forms part of Sanskrit chants invoking goddess Durga, also known as Bhavani, Chandi and Mahishasurmardini. The Islamic word for God is., therefore, not an innovation but the ancient Sanskrit appellation retained and continued by Islam. Allah means mother or goddess and mother goddess.

dear bhaskarji,

If you don't like to display links,plz delete them before posting the article on the group..http://www.hinduism.co.za/kaabaa.htm,,,,http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCH6kvCarskhttp://www.scribd.com/doc/954908/FLOODED-KAABA-AND-IN-THE-FOREGROUND-A-HINDU-TEMPLE-LIKE-BUILDING

http://www.valdostamuseum.com/hamsmith/Islam.html

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Share on other sites

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Dear Kumar ji,

 

This information has come today through these websites, but I knew of

this truth since long, and have mentioned it a couple of times in the

groups, in last few months.

 

As per what I have gathered from the elders down the ages (Vocally),

actually there is a Shiv Linga there, and it is said that if any Hindu

takes some Ganga jal and offers it on the Shiv Linga there, then from

then on would mark the end of this community(The Muslims) all over the

world. I cannot elaborate more than this.

 

regards/Bhaskar.

 

 

 

 

 

 

, S kumar <kumar_8134 wrote:

>

> Was the Kaaba Originally a Hindu Temple?

>

> By P.N. Oak (Historian)

>

> Glancing through some research material recently, I was pleasantly

surprised to come across a reference to a king Vikramaditya inscription

found in the Kaaba in Mecca proving beyond doubt that the Arabian

Peninsula formed a part of his Indian Empire.

>

> The text of the crucial Vikramaditya inscription, found inscribed on a

gold dish hung inside the Kaaba shrine in Mecca, is found recorded on

page 315 of a volume known as `Sayar-ul-Okul' treasured in the

Makhtab-e-Sultania library in Istanbul, Turkey. Rendered in free English

the inscription says:

>

> " Fortunate are those who were born (and lived) during king Vikram's

reign. He was a noble, generous dutiful ruler, devoted to the welfare of

his subjects. But at that time we Arabs, oblivious of God, were lost in

sensual pleasures. Plotting and torture were rampant. The darkness of

ignorance had enveloped our country. Like the lamb struggling for her

life in the cruel paws of a wolf we Arabs were caught up in ignorance.

The entire country was enveloped in a darkness so intense as on a new

moon night. But the present dawn and pleasant sunshine of education is

the result of the favour of the noble king Vikramaditya whose benevolent

supervision did not lose sight of us- foreigners as we were. He spread

his sacred religion amongst us and sent scholars whose brilliance shone

like that of the sun from his country to ours. These scholars and

preceptors through whose benevolence we were once again made cognisant

of the presence of God, introduced to His sacred

> existence and put on the road of Truth, had come to our country to

preach their religion and impart education at king Vikramaditya' s

behest. "

>

> For those who would like to read the Arabic wording I reproduce it

hereunder in Roman script:

>

> " Itrashaphai Santu Ibikramatul Phahalameen Karimun Yartapheeha

> Wayosassaru Bihillahaya Samaini Ela Motakabberen Sihillaha Yuhee Quid

> min howa Yapakhara phajjal asari nahone osirom bayjayhalem. Yundan

> blabin Kajan blnaya khtoryaha sadunya kanateph netephi bejehalin

> Atadari bilamasa- rateen phakef tasabuhu kaunnieja majekaralhada

> walador. As hmiman burukankad toluho watastaru hihila Yakajibaymana

> balay kulk amarena phaneya jaunabilamary Bikramatum " .

>

> (Page 315 Sayar-ul-okul) .

> [Note: The title `Saya-ul-okul' signifies memorable words.]

> A careful analysis of the above inscription enables us to draw the

following conclusions:

>

> That the ancient Indian empires may have extended up to the eastern

boundaries of Arabia until Vikramaditya and that it was he who for the

first time conquered Arabia. Because the inscription says that king

Vikram who dispelled the darkness of ignorance from Arabia. That,

whatever their earlier faith, King Vikrama's preachers had succeeded in

spreading the Vedic (based on the Vedas, the Hindu sacred scriptures))

way of life in Arabia. That the knowledge of Indian arts and sciences

was imparted by Indians to the Arabs directly by founding schools,

academies and cultural centres. The belief, therefore, that visiting

Arabs conveyed that knowledge to their own lands through their own

indefatigable efforts and scholarship is unfounded.

>

> Â

> An ancillary conclusion could be that the so-called Kutub Minar (in

Delhi, India) could well be king Vikramadiya' s tower commemorating his

conquest of Arabia. This conclusion is strengthened by two pointers.

Firstly, the inscription on the iron pillar near the so-called Kutub

Minar refers to the marriage of the victorious king Vikramaditya to the

princess of Balhika. This Balhika is none other than the Balkh region in

West Asia. It could be that Arabia was wrestled by king Vikramaditya

from the ruler of Balkh who concluded a treaty by giving his daughter in

marriage to the victor. Secondly, the township adjoining the so called

Kutub Minar is named Mehrauli after Mihira who was the renowned

astronomer-mathemat ician of king Vikram's court. Mehrauli is the

corrupt form of Sanskrit `Mihira-Awali' signifying a row of houses

raised for Mihira and his helpers and assistants working on astronomical

observations made from the tower.

>

> Having seen the far reaching and history shaking implications of the

Arabic inscription concerning king Vikrama, we shall now piece together

the story of its find. How it came to be recorded and hung in the Kaaba

in Mecca. What are the other proofs reinforcing the belief that Arabs

were once followers of the Indian Vedic way of life and that

tranquillity and education were ushered into Arabia by king

Vikramaditya' s scholars, educationists from an uneasy period of

" ignorance and turmoil " mentioned in the inscription.

>

> In Istanbul, Turkey, there is a famous library called

Makhatab-e-Sultania, which is reputed to have the largest collection of

ancient West Asian literature. In the Arabic section of that library is

an anthology of ancient Arabic poetry. That anthology was compiled from

an earlier work in A.D. 1742 under the orders of the Turkish ruler

Sultan Salim.

>

> The pages of that volume are of Hareer †" a kind of silk used

for writing on. Each page has a decorative gilded border. That anthology

is known as Sayar-ul-Okul. It is divided into three parts. The first

part contains biographic details and the poetic compositions of

pre-Islamic Arabian poets. The second part embodies accounts and verses

of poets of the period beginning just after prophet Mohammad's times, up

to the end of the Banee-Um-Mayya dynasty. The third part deals with

later poets up to the end of Khalif Harun-al-Rashid' s times.

>

> Abu Amir Asamai, an Arabian bard who was the poet Laureate of

Harun-al-Rashid's court, has compiled and edited the anthology.

>

> The first modern edition of `Sayar-ul-Okul' was printed and published

in Berlin in 1864. A subsequent edition is the one published in Beirut

in 1932.

>

> The collection is regarded as the most important and authoritative

anthology of ancient Arabic poetry. It throws considerable light on the

social life, customs, manners and entertainment modes of ancient Arabia.

The book also contains an elaborate description of the ancient shrine of

Mecca, the town and the annual fair known as OKAJ which used to be held

every year around the Kaaba temple in Mecca. This should convince

readers that the annual haj of the Muslims to the Kaaba is of earlier

pre-Islamic congregation.

>

> But the OKAJ fair was far from a carnival. It provided a forum for the

elite and the learned to discuss the social, religious, political,

literary and other aspects of the Vedic culture then pervading Arabia.

`Sayar-ul-Okul' asserts that the conclusion reached at those discussions

were widely respected throughout Arabia. Mecca, therefore, followed the

Varanasi tradition (of India) of providing a venue for important

discussions among the learned while the masses congregated there for

spiritual bliss. The principal shrines at both Varanasi in India and at

Mecca in Arvasthan (Arabia) were Siva temples. Even to this day ancient

Mahadev (Siva) emblems can be seen. It is the Shankara (Siva) stone that

Muslim pilgrims reverently touch and kiss in the Kaaba.

>

> Arabic tradition has lost trace of the founding of the Kaaba temple.

The discovery of the Vikramaditya inscription affords a clue. King

Vikramaditya is known for his great devotion to Lord Mahadev (Siva). At

Ujjain (India), the capital of Vikramaditya, exists the famous shrine of

Mahankal, i.e., of Lord Shankara (Siva) associated with Vikramaditya.

Since according to the Vikramaditya inscription he spread the Vedic

religion, who else but he could have founded the Kaaba temple in Mecca?

>

> A few miles away from Mecca is a big signboard which bars the entry of

any non-Muslim into the area. This is a reminder of the days when the

Kaaba was stormed and captured solely for the newly established faith of

Islam. The object in barring entry of non-Muslims was obviously to

prevent its recapture.

>

> As the pilgrim proceeds towards Mecca he is asked to shave his head

and beard and to don special sacred attire that consists of two seamless

sheets of white cloth. One is to be worn round the waist and the other

over the shoulders. Both these rites are remnants of the old Vedic

practice of entering Hindu temples clean- and with holy seamless white

sheets.

>

> The main shrine in Mecca, which houses the Siva emblem, is known as

the Kaaba. It is clothed in a black shroud. That custom also originates

from the days when it was thought necessary to discourage its recapture

by camouflaging it.

>

> According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, the Kaaba has 360 images.

Traditional accounts mention that one of the deities among the 360

destroyed when the place was stormed, was that of Saturn; another was of

the Moon and yet another was one called Allah. That shows that in the

Kaaba the Arabs worshipped the nine planets in pre-Islamic days. In

India the practice of `Navagraha' puja, that is worship of the nine

planets, is still in vogue. Two of these nine are Saturn and Moon.

>

> In India the crescent moon is always painted across the forehead of

the Siva symbol. Since that symbol was associated with the Siva emblem

in Kaaba it came to be grafted on the flag of Islam.

>

> Another Hindu tradition associated with the Kaaba is that of the

sacred stream Ganga (sacred waters of the Ganges river). According to

the Hindu tradition Ganga is also inseparable from the Shiva emblem as

the crescent moon. Wherever there is a Siva emblem, Ganga must co-exist.

True to that association a sacred fount exists near the Kaaba. Its water

is held sacred because it has been traditionally regarded

> as Ganga since pre-Islamic times (Zam-Zam water).

>

> [Note: Even today, Muslim pilgrims who go to the Kaaba for Haj regard

this Zam-Zam water with reverence and take some bottled water with them

as sacred water.]

>

> Muslim pilgrims visiting the Kaaba temple go around it seven times. In

no other mosque does the circumambulation prevail. Hindus invariably

circumambulate around their deities. This is yet another proof that the

Kaaba shrine is a pre-Islamic Indian Shiva temple where the Hindu

practice of circumambulation is still meticulously observed.

>

> The practice of taking seven steps- known as Saptapadi in Sanskrit- is

associated with Hindu marriage ceremony and fire worship. The

culminating rite in a Hindu marriage enjoins upon the bride and groom to

go round the sacred fire four times (but misunderstood by many as seven

times). Since " Makha " means fire, the seven circumambulations also prove

that Mecca was the seat of Indian fire-worship in the West Asia.

>

> It might come as a stunning revelation to many that the word `ALLAH'

itself is Sanskrit. In Sanskrit language Allah, Akka and Amba are

synonyms. They signify a goddess or mother. The term `ALLAH' forms part

of Sanskrit chants invoking goddess Durga, also known as Bhavani, Chandi

and Mahishasurmardini. The Islamic word for God is., therefore, not an

innovation but the ancient Sanskrit appellation retained and continued

by Islam. Allah means mother or goddess and mother goddess.

>

> One Koranic verse is an exact translation of a stanza in the

Yajurveda. This was pointed out by the great research scholar Pandit

Satavlekar of Pardi in one of his articles.

>

> [Note: Another scholar points out that the following teaching from the

Koran is exactly similar to the teaching of the Kena Upanishad

(1.7)...........

>

> --- On Sat, 4/4/09, kiran dasaur kirandasaur wrote:

>

> kiran dasaur kirandasaur

> kaaba..

> " jyotish ganga "

> Saturday, April 4, 2009, 1:07 PM

>

sir,

> Â I came upon an article which I felt I should share with you

all....

> Â Â Â Â It might come as a stunning revelation to many

that the word ‘ALLAH’ itself is Sanskrit. In Sanskrit

language Allah, Akka and Amba are synonyms. They signify a goddess or

mother. The term ‘ALLAH’ forms part of Sanskrit chants

invoking goddess Durga, also known as Bhavani, Chandi and

Mahishasurmardini. The Islamic word for God is., therefore, not an

innovation but the ancient Sanskrit appellation retained and continued

by Islam. Allah means mother or goddess and mother goddess.

> dear bhaskarji,

> Â If you don't like to display links,plz delete them before posting

the article on the group..

> http://www.hinduism.co.za/kaabaa.htm,,,,

> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCH6kvCarsk

>

http://www.scribd.com/doc/954908/FLOODED-KAABA-AND-IN-THE-FOREGROUND-A-H\

INDU-TEMPLE-LIKE-BUILDING

> http://www.valdostamuseum.com/hamsmith/Islam.html

>

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