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Ahimsa - Ahimsa in Hinduism |  | Ahimsa - Ahimsa in Hinduism: Encyclopedia II - Ahimsa - Ahimsa in Hinduism |  |
Ahimsa - Yoga.
Yoga is one of the six schools of Hindu philosophy, and as codified by Maharishi Patanjali in the seminal work Yoga Sutra, the foundation of ashtanga and Raja Yoga, ahimsa is the first of the five yamas, or eternal vows or restraints of yoga.
Ahimsa - Gandhi.
Mahatma Gandhi was a follower of Sanatana Dharma, i.e. Hinduism, and drew many of his concepts of truth, nobility and ethics from the Bhagavad Gita and his personal love of Lord Rama, a Hindu G ...
See also:Ahimsa, Ahimsa - Ahimsa in Jainism, Ahimsa - External links and references in Jainism, Ahimsa - Ahimsa in Hinduism, Ahimsa - Yoga, Ahimsa - Gandhi |  | | Ahimsa, Ahimsa - Ahimsa in Hinduism, Ahimsa - Ahimsa in Jainism, Ahimsa - External links and references in Jainism, Ahimsa - Gandhi, Ahimsa - Yoga, Turn the other cheek, Nonviolence, Pacifism |  | |
|  |  | Ahimsa: Encyclopedia II - Ahimsa - Ahimsa in Hinduism
Ahimsa - Ahimsa in Hinduism
Ahimsa - Yoga
Yoga is one of the six schools of Hindu philosophy, and as codified by Maharishi Patanjali in the seminal work Yoga Sutra, the foundation of ashtanga and Raja Yoga, ahimsa is the first of the five yamas, or eternal vows or restraints of yoga.
Ahimsa - Gandhi
Mahatma Gandhi was a follower of Sanatana Dharma, i.e. Hinduism, and drew many of his concepts of truth, nobility and ethics from the Bhagavad Gita and his personal love of Lord Rama, a Hindu God. Gandhi's concept of life and ahimsa, which led to his concept of satyagraha, or peaceful protest, primarily stem from his association with Hindu and Jain philosophy.
Quotations from Gandhi on the subject:
Nonviolence is the greatest force at the disposal of mankind. It is mightier than the mightiest weapon of destruction devised by the ingenuity of man.
Literally speaking, ahimsa means non-violence towards life but it has much higher meaning. It means that you may not offend anybody; you may not harbor uncharitable thought, even in connection with those who consider your enemies. To one who follows this doctrine, there are no enemies. A man who believes in the efficacy of this doctrine finds in the ultimate stage, when he is about to reach the goal, the whole world at his feet. If you express your love—ahimsa—in such a manner that it impresses itself indelibly upon your so-called enemy, he must return that love.
This doctrine tells us that we may guard the honor of those under our charge by delivering our own lives into the hands of the man who would commit the sacrilege. And that requires far greater courage than delivering of blows.
Other related archivesBhagavad Gita, Buddhism, Hindu, Hindu philosophical concepts, Hindu philosophy, Hinduism, Jain philosophical concepts, Jain philosophy, Jainism, Maharishi Patanjali, Mahatma Gandhi, Marshall Rosenberg, Martin Luther King Jr., Nonviolence, Nonviolent Communication, Pacifism, Rama, Religious ethics, Sanskrit, Turn the other cheek, Upanishads, West, Yoga, Yoga Sutra, agriculture, ashtanga, civil rights, cloth, fruits, honey, life, meditation, mouths, non-violence, plant, potatoes, religious, satyagraha, sentient, vegans, vegetarians, violence, vrata, yoga
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Ahimsa in Hinduism", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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