DK Matai - March 16, 2007
Our friends Kevin Sullivan and Mary Jordan, the London Bureau Chiefs of The Washington Post, have been researching the global rise and participation of multiple-faiths, far flung religious communities, and advancement of collective spiritual thought enabled by 21st century communications technology...

...such as the web, search engines, blogging, mobile telephony and other virtual world developments which have an accelerating impact on humanity in the physical world. Like with all things, there are positives and negatives.
Their findings in the coming series of articles within The Washington Post are relevant to the Holistic Quantum Relativity Socratic Dialogue from the perspective of Web Science and its global, local and individual impact, of which IntentBlog is a component. Kevin's first article is worth noting and in order to assist their research as well as that of HQR, we would like to hear your views in regard to this phenomenal revolution with its attendant light and dark sides.
By Kevin Sullivan, Washington Post Foreign Service, Wednesday, March 14, 2007; A01
(Original article can be accessed from here)
TIRUCHIRAPALLI, India -- Balaji, a Hindu priest, stood before the reclining god and offered a plate of coconut and bananas. His chest bare and his face adorned with red and yellow sacred paste, he set the food at the foot of a statue that Hindus regard as an embodiment of the powerful god Vishnu.
Following ancient tradition deep inside one of India's oldest and holiest temples, he chanted Vishnu's names 108 times to beseech health, wealth and good fortune -- not for himself, but for an Indian emigrant living in London who had purchased the prayer with her credit card on a Hindu Web site.
"If you wish to make an offering, the god will accept it -- even if it's on the Internet," said Balaji, standing barefoot in the hot sand of the South Indian temple compound.
The Internet has become a hub of religious worship for millions of people around the world. Christians, Muslims, Hindus, Jews, Buddhists, Sikhs and people of other faiths turn regularly to Web sites to pray, meditate and gather in "virtual" houses of worship graphically designed to look like the real thing. Some sites offer rites from baptism to confession to conversion to Judaism.
For many cyber-worshipers, online religious life conducted at home or in an Internet cafe has replaced attendance at traditional churches, temples, mosques and synagogues. Some are coming to religion for the first time, in a setting they find as comfortable as their grandparents found a church pew, while millions of people reared on churchgoing are discovering new ways to worship.
"The first wave of religion online, in the 1990s, was mainly for nerds and young people and techies," said Morten Hojsgaard, a Danish author who has written extensively about online religion. "But now it really is a mirror of society at large. This is providing a new forum for religious seekers."
Hojsgaard said the number of Web pages dealing with God, religion and churches increased from 14 million in 1999 to 200 million in 2004. Religion now nearly rivals sex as a topic on the Internet: A search for "sex" on Google returns about 408 million hits, while a search for "God" yields 396 million.
The boom in online religion comes at a time when people, especially the young, are questioning traditional institutions, Hojsgaard said. Many are interested in religion, but they want the freedom to fashion a personalized style of worship. "Old mechanisms of religious authority are changing," Hojsgaard said. "There is more emphasis on individualism. We want to decide for ourselves."
India, with more than 1.1 billion people and a passion for technology, has become a leader in the practice of religion online, through a very large number of often very small Web sites, a pattern that reflects the decentralization of much of religious life here. Hindus sitting in the United States or Europe watch streaming live video of morning prayers from temples in their home towns. Sikhs listen to podcasts of prayers from Kashmir. Muslims download schedules of prayer times and recordings of sung verses from the Koran.
Members of India's fast-growing middle class have embraced the Internet in ways that startle their parents, many of whom were raised in villages that still barely have telephone service. At many Hindu temples, a priest's typical day includes pre-dawn prayers for a sacred cow or elephant, and time set aside to read e-mails asking for blessings.
Shopping for Prayers
On a cold and rainy January day, Kumudini Kumararajah logged on to her computer in London and started shopping for prayers.
Kumararajah, 36, is a Hindu who moved to London from India eight years ago. She prays every day, she said, at home and in a small temple in Tooting, a south London neighborhood popular with Indian expatriates. Every morning and evening she performs a puja, an offering to a god, seeking a blessing of health and happiness. But she said performing pujas in London was never as meaningful to her as doing them in the ancient temples of India, where Hinduism was born.
"The gods there are very powerful," said Kumararajah, sitting in the storefront of her family's software company. "I always want to pray there, but it is not possible for me because I live in London."
Then she heard about Saranam.com, a Web site based in Chennai, in southern India, that sells "Hindu rituals and products," whether they are prayers or auspicious names for a baby.
Clicking her way to Saranam.com, Kumararajah recalled, she arrived at a site that looked like the home page of bookseller Amazon.com, with colorful graphics and a slick menu of products and services -- and a link to check on "my stuff."
She clicked on the "pujas" tab, which brought her to a page where she could choose from a menu including "pujas for health" and "pujas for children." She chose a puja for wealth, health and happiness -- asking for help in finding a husband and having a family, and for the family software business to prosper.
Then she clicked on the "temples" tab and chose Sri Rangam, a thousand-year-old complex near Tiruchirapalli, about 200 miles south of Chennai near the southern tip of India. She had grown up in Chennai but had never visited the temple, one of India's most venerated religious sites. The centerpiece of the temple is a reclining image of Vishnu, which draws Hindus from across the world. Kumararajah was thrilled to find it on the Web site's list of temples available for pujas.
She clicked again and put her puja in her "shopping cart," then hit "proceed to checkout," filled in her billing address and paid with her Visa card over a secure server.
She chose a package of 12 pujas, one a month for a year, to be performed each month on her "star day" according to Hindu astrology. She also chose a second puja to be performed each month to a goddess at the temple. Total price for her personalized package of worship: about $140, or about $6 per puja.
"I could never do this before," she said, her chestnut eyes beaming. "The gods are happy when we perform pujas."
Saranam.com was founded by Mahesh Mohanan and Mervyn Jose, a pair of young computer software engineers in Chennai, the steamy port city formerly known as Madras. It is home both to some of India's most magnificent old temples and to some of its most cutting-edge technology firms.
Mohanan said he hit on the idea shortly after his marriage in 1999, when his new mother-in-law insisted that he and his new bride visit 15 Hindu temples over three days to seek blessings. "It was exhausting," Mohanan said. "I thought it would be so much easier if I could just do it on the Internet."
With financial backing from a local businessman, Saranam.com was up and running within weeks as a for-profit company.
The site now gets about 100,000 visits a year and about 200 orders each month, the company says. Most customers buy pujas to pray for sick relatives, to ease marital or financial problems -- or even, in the case of some Indians living in the United States, to help get a green card.
According to Mohanan and Jose, Saranam limits its advertising and marketing to avoid offending users who visit the site for serious religious purposes. "We can't say 'Winter Sale!' or things like that, because it would damage our credibility," Jose said. But it does use a time-honored promotional technique of posting articles written about it, including a news service account that appeared in The Washington Post.
At first, most of the customers came from the 20 million or so Indians who live overseas. But now most are Americans, Europeans and people from the Middle East who have become interested in Hinduism, at least in part because of information available on the Internet.
Shaunaka Rishi Das, director of the Center for Hindu Studies at Oxford University, said Hindus traditionally give little formal religious instruction to children, who learn largely from family tradition.
Now the Internet is allowing many Hindus to learn about their religion in depth for the first time.
"Hindus have jumped on this technology," he said.

Filling the Order
A few weeks after Kumararajah ordered her puja in London, 5,000 miles away in the 92-degree southern Indian sun, T.K. Jayaraaman walked barefoot into Sri Rangam, a 156-acre complex of 21 towers decorated with colorful and ornate carvings.
The retired schoolteacher, 65, is the local contact for Saranam.com. When someone orders a puja at a temple here in Trichy, as this city is known, the people at Saranam call him and ask him to arrange it; he has handled scores of orders in the past couple of years. Now he was here to take care of Kumararajah's, on her star date, Feb. 27.
Jayaraaman walked past a buzzing hive of vendors near the temple gate, where ancient meets modern: Three-wheeled motorized rickshaws compete for space with Mercedes buses full of tourists; an elderly woman weaves traditional Hindu floral garlands from sweet-smelling jasmine, while a more tech-savvy hawker approaches tourists, saying, "Mister -- digital camera memory stick?"
Wearing a sarong-like garment wrapped around his waist, Jayaraaman walked through the main gate of the temple, a 236-foot-high structure with ornate carvings in soft pastel blues, pinks and greens. He moved through the dark, shady places where scores of pilgrims were escaping the broiling midday sun by lying on the cool stone worn smooth by a millennium of use, and approached a line of fruit vendors.
He bought a small basket with a coconut, two bananas, a few sprigs of basil and some flowers for the equivalent of about 50 cents. He carried the plate of fruit to a barefoot priest, who cracked the coconut open for him -- opening it loudly in the presence of the reclining god is considered rude.
From another vendor, he bought a small packet of red and yellow powder, made from vermilion, sandalwood and turmeric, and placed it in his basket.
Jayaraaman walked deeper into the temple complex, arriving at a door that only Hindus may pass through. Inside, he said, he stood before the reclining god, bowed his head and handed the offering basket to Balaji, the priest. Balaji tossed flower petals and basil sprigs onto the statue and called the god's names 108 times. Jayaraaman told him the customer's name -- Kumararajah -- and the priest chanted it loudly, praising Vishnu in her name: "You are great! You are good! Bring her good health, good fortune, a good life!"
Balaji blessed the powder, tucked it into a folded bit of white paper and handed it back to Jayaraaman. Eventually the packet would be mailed to Kumararajah in London, along with a letter certifying that her order with Saranam.com had been filled.
For his efforts, Jayaraaman earned about 75 cents.
"I don't know anything about these people -- except their name and star date," he said. "But it makes me very proud to send them God's grace."
Outside the temple later, Balaji said he liked the temple's mix of old and new. Many people live far away and cannot travel here, he pointed out, so Saranam.com and other Internet-based services are bringing a new wave of worshipers to his ancient temple in spirit, a phenomenon the temple encourages.
"Of course," he said, "we have a Web site, too."
Back in chilly London, Kumararajah awaited her shipment in the offices of the family software company; her mother and sister also purchase pujas regularly from Saranam.com. Dressed in a flowing pink traditional dress, Kumararajah said she couldn't wait to get the red and yellow paste, blessed at a temple she dreams of visiting someday.
When it arrives, she said, she will mix it with a few drops of water and wear it on her forehead, in the traditional Hindu style indicating the presence of God.
"I will put it on every day," she said. "It will give me peace of mind."
[ENDS]
The copyright for this article belongs to The Washington Post and the original article can be accessed from here.
Holistic Quantum Relativity Background
For those who wish to understand the genesis of this Socratic Dialogue on IntentBlog, which has led to the preliminary efforts towards Holistic Quantum Relativity (HQR), please visit the following strings in sequence:
1. Maulana Rumi: 2007 is his 800th Anniversary!
2. Unified Force, Sub-nuclear Physics & Love of Rumi
3. Holistics: Embracing Science, Art and Spirituality!
4. Complex Holistics: Hegel's Logic, Spirit and Mind
5. Simple Holistics: Hegel Triangles & Unified Pyramid
6. Holistic Pyramid, Sahasrara, Sri Yantra, Creation
7. Holistic Relativity: Spiritual Planes & Consciousness
8. Holistic Quantum Relativity: Spirituality and Science
9. Holistic Quantum Relativity Project: Glossary
10. Holistic Quantum Relativity Evolution on IntentBlog
11. HQR: Tagore Einstein: Science, Spirituality & Music
12. HQR: Albert Einstein Quotes on Spirituality
13. HQR: HH Master Kirpal -- Nature of Thought
14. HQR: HH Master Kirpal -- Indira Gandhi & Quotes
15. HQR: Quantum Physics -- The Holotropic State
16. HQR: Bringing All Together & Another Perspective
17. HQR: Quantum Computer, Einstein's Spooky Action
18. Holistic Quantum Relativity Project: Glossary v0.2
19. Holistic Quantum Relativity Project: Glossary v0.3
20. Holistic Quantum Relativity Project: Glossary v0.4
21. HQR: HH Master Kirpal: Consciousness & Free Will
22. HQR: Sir Karl Popper: Paradox of Science & Truth
23. HQR: Sir Tim Berners-Lee: The Future of The Web
Similar information in a more accessible format is available from The Alliance for a New Humanity's Global Wiki Project
This is presented as an amalgam from a number of sources with attendant errors and omissions. Please forgive the same and we welcome your submissions, thoughts, observations and views.
With warm wishes to you and family
DK with family
DK Matai
The Philanthropia, ATCA, mi2g.net
Digg this entry
Add to Del.icio.us
Share on Facebook
Subscribe
Posted by DK Matai at March 16, 2007 02:15 AM
Dear Keith
I share and agree with your concerns. It is absolutely not right to have to buy prayers globally for a local service when Divinity is omnipresent and omniscient.
However, it is important to know that the use of the web is imaginative and it will sooner or later lead to the wiping out of prejudices associated with the localisation of divinity towards absraction and turning within.
Well articulated!
With love
DK
DK Matai
The Philanthropia, ATCA, mi2g.net
Perhaps through www (internet) the Gaia (Living Earth)is entering samadhi at mind (unification of thoughts)level, with www of worship it is doing so at soul level?
Keith,
There is that realization that religion is mostly a fiction, truth cloaked in the fabrications of man. Yet it has served a divine purpose in the past and today. For some it is just right for their path at the moment.
That being said the Internet will be that which brings the fictions to light where they will be dissolved leaving that the Spiritual Nature and Wisdom that is the foundation of all Religion before it got all it's egoic dressings.
Religion is always fitting for the current level of consciousness, as we raise consciousness, so will religion as we know it change in fact one might call what is coming "secular spirituality", wisdom and understanding.
The Internet has allowed a higher consciousness to interface with humanity and permeate the minds of man as it streams with growing bandwidth all throughout the land, destroying the illusions that divide mankind, and the ignorance that leads to pain, suffering and conflict.
It moves quickly now, snowballing intelligence I like to call it.
Dear Richard
Concur completely! Main purpose of posting this article is to demonstrate the schism between spirituality, higher consciousness and the folly of religion.
With love
DK
DK Matai
The Philanthropia, ATCA, mi2g.net
Dear DK,
I think your article succeeded in doing that. The nice thing about the Internet is it is not so easy to shut someone up for political or religious reasons with a crucifixion in our modern times.
Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)
(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)
(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)Dear DK,
I think your article succeeded
Dear Richard
Concur completely! Main pu
Keith,
There is that realization that r
Perhaps through www (internet) the Gaia (Living
Dear Keith
I share and agree with your
Dear D.K.
In the first place, I don't like the idea of having
to buy prayers from an intermediary negotiator.
I asked this question earlier and I would still like to define
'superstition' and 'sacred' or 'blessed'.
If God is immanent in all things down to the smallest whatever,
how can anyone make it more so through prayer?
'Religious artifact' or magical thinking device?
Sacred lands, artifacts, wailing walls, Holy temples...
mine, mine, mine...it's all stuff to get greedy over.
Ours, ours, ours!
Anyway, it is in one's own mind that some things are more 'special' than others.
It usually has to do with history and gold-containing memory banks.
"Is nothing sacred?" Thinking of North...
"Is all special?"
No ugly, disgusting, get down dirty mean anythings?
While I wait for answers I will still bless my food and thank God.
Just in case...I'll pray for everyone here, too.
Cheers! Going in peace, Keith~