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LETTER FROM DR.YVETTE ROSSER
Dear
Professor Witzel et al,
Thank you for ccing your letter to me.
I am returning the favor to point out
that your math is fuzzy: over 70% of the
edits requested by the Hindu educational
foundations were approved. 70% is not a
rout or a "Crushing Defeat"
30% is not a
victory to gloat over. The changes that
were approved were the ones that
practicing Hindus felt were the most
important, which included these four:
1. Wherever the words 'gods' or
'goddesses' are used in the textbooks,
they will be replaced either with
'deities', or with 'Gods' and
'Goddesses' (with upper case G). This
establishes that the Board now
recognizes the fact that Hindus believe
in one Supreme Being within and beyond
creation... one God that manifests in
many forms.
The Hindu citizens who requested changes
to their childrens textbooks did not
ask that Hinduism be labeled a
monotheistic religion. Hinduism is not
monotheistic. We all know that. Monism
is a more apt label
transcendent and
pervasive. It is an error on Prof.
Witzel's part as well as a great source
of humor for him, when he says that HEF
and VF asked that Hinduism be described
as monotheistic. They did not.
All anyone has to do is read through
the suggested edits, issued by the SBE,
to see that the Hindu groups have never
claimed that Hinduism is monotheistic.
We all know that practicing Hindus
believe there is one transcendent
pervasive God behind the "multiple
manifestations of the Infinite". You may
call it polytheism in the Ivory Towers,
but in their hearts, Hindus understand
it as Monism--not polytheism or
monotheism. Why persist in calling
Hinduism polytheistic when it is really
monistic?
2. Regarding the AIT, the Hindu parents
did not ask that this theory be erased
from the textbooks. To infer this is
another error. As can be seen from the
official documents published by the
State Board of Education, HEF and VF
only requested that another sentence be
added which states AIT is a
controversial theory that is not
accepted by many scholars. Glee
Johnson, the president of the SBE,
directed all publishers to add that
sentence. [more victory than "defeat",
eh?]
The Aryan Invasion Theory is very
controversial, and the textbooks should
reflect the dynamism of changing
historiographical paradigms. Since this
issue has been bandied about, once and
for all, please take note that the
Hindus in California only requested that
their children's textbooks include
current historiographical research, and
that they are multi-perspectival and
inclusive. Ironically, Prof. Witzel
wrote in Outlook India: "The Hindutva
lobby will undoubtedly persist in their
efforts even if they are stopped in
California. The fact that there are very
culturally biased and insensitive
passages regarding Hinduism in many
textbooks provides their alibi." [Kristallnacht
anyone?] (Please note: I am Jewish, I am
Hindu, I am Black, I am a Sufi... to go
after my brother, you'll have to go
through me first....)
3. Another important SBE approved change
included:
In all sentences where 'poems',
'stories', and "myths" are used to
describe the sacred texts of Hinduism,
instead, as requested, they will be
modified, and the word 'scripture' will
be used.
4. Glee Johnson, the SBE president,
acknowledged that there were
contradictions on the recommendations
made by the Board, and these will be
resolved.
Re: Crushing Rhetoric:
Please note that Dr. Bajpai had earlier
accepted more than 90% the Hindu edits.
During his hostile intervention, Dr.
Witzel accepted only 37%. However, on
Feb 27, the SBE accepted completely or
adequately 71-75% of Hindu edits. In
sum, Dr. Witzel accepted only 46% of HEF
edits whereas SBE has accepted 80%. Dr.
Witzel accepted only 27% of VF edits
whereas SBE has accepted 62%. Overall,
Dr. Witzel accepted 37% Hindu American
edits, but SBE has accepted 71%. Where
is the "Crushing Defeat"? Entangled in
rhetoric...
Significantly, though the narrative
about Hinduism in secondary level
textbooks has been full of errors and
stereotypes for generations, at a public
meeting with a Dharma group at Harvard,
Professor Witzel admitted that this was
the first time that he has involved
himself in correcting the biased
textbooks that have been full of
mistakes for decades. Why didnt he
care? Please see:
http://www.mssu.edu/projectsouthasia/tsa/VIN1/Rosser.htm
The
venomous attack mode that Professor
Witzel employed precluded any
collaboration. Rather than an alarmist
professorial attack on Hindu-Americans,
cooperation between practitioners and
scholars would certainly be more
productive in solving the glaring
problems regarding how Hinduism is
described in Junior High and High School
textbooks. The bias and errors are
pervasive.
Please see the following newspaper
article for a different view-point:
Panel approves textbook changes
Hindu groups satisfied with corrections
to Vedas, Aryan invasion wording
By Jonathan Jones, STAFF WRITER
http://www.insidebayarea.com/argus/ci_3584032
The
state Board of Education voted Wednesday
afternoon to adopt proposed revisions to
the depiction of ancient India in
sixth-grade history textbooks.
In approving the changes, the board
rejected further review of the
descriptions of women, the caste system
and Hindu theology. But the board
directed Tom Adams, executive director
for the Curriculum Commission, to
contact publishers to correct
inconsistencies and change the wording
with regard to the Vedas, the oldest and
most sacred Hindu texts.
The board also instructed the commission
to add lines in the textbooks stating
that the Aryan invasion the
controversial theory that traces the
roots of Hinduism to a migration of
people from Central Asia is disputed.
After the meeting, members of the Hindu
Education Foundation expressed
satisfaction that the board had made
some concessions, though they did not
accept all of the proposed revisions.
"Actually, I think we got a lot of
things," said Sunnyvale resident
Khanderao Kand, a member of the
foundation. "They're going to correct a
lot of the contradictions, clarify
statements of the Hindu concept of
deities, and add a statement about the
Aryan invasion. So we've made some
progress since last week."
Shalini Gera, a spokeswoman for the
Coalition Against Communalism, which
opposed many of the revisions, said her
organization would reserve judgment on
how the directives affected the wording
in the textbooks.
But she said she was pleased overall
with the board's action Wednesday,
especially with its decision to change
the wording of God and Goddesses to
deities, which she said better reflects
the diversity of beliefs within
Hinduism.
Before the board's decision, Mihir
Meghani, president of the Hindu American
Foundation, said his organization was
close to filing a lawsuit against the
state seeking a detailed review of the
board's approval process.
In a March 3 letter to board members,
Deborah B. Caplan, an attorney with
Olson, Hageland Fishburn retained by the
Hindu American Foundation, said the
foundation was extremely disappointed by
a state subcommittee's decision to
unanimously approve revised edits
despite four hours of passionate debate
among scholarsand the Indian diaspora
regarding the interpretation of Indian
history.
"It was apparent from the complete lack
of deliberation, that the 'public
hearing' portion of the meeting was a
complete sham and that the critical
decisions had been made in advance of
that meeting," wrote Caplan, adding that
it is her contention that all actions
taken since the Dec. 2 Curriculum
Commission meeting have been in
violation of the law.
Meghani could not be reached after the
Wednesday meeting for comment on whether
the board's action may affect the Hindu
American Foundation's decision to seek
litigation.
Before the meeting, critics of the Hindu
groups, including the Friends of South
Asia and Coalition Against Communalism,
held a news conference to publicize a
letter from 17 state legislators urging
the board to reject attempts by Hindu
groups to sanitize gender and caste
inequalities from ancient Indian
history.
The board's decision is the culmination
of 10 months of debate regarding the
historical accuracy of textbooks about
ancient India.
In late summer, the Texas-based Vedic
Foundation and the Hindu Education
Foundation sent hundreds of proposed
revisions.
While many of the revisions corrected
inaccuracies, others sought to soften
the language on polytheism, the caste
system and the status of women. The
Hindu Education Foundation and the Vedic
Foundation contend the revisions are
necessary to ensure that Hinduism is
accurately described and not presented
as inferior to Buddhism, Judaism,
Christianity and Islam.
But critics, including various scholars,
contend the groups are trying to put a
Hindu spin on history and whitewash
India's past. Each side accuses the
other of deliberately distorting the
truth.
----------------------------
In conclusion, I would like to share
this observation:
I was stunned to read in his
OutlookIndia.com article that Professor
Witzel was the founder of the
indiatruth.com website. It is a
hodge-podge of slanderous assumptions
that have no substance coming from
nowhere and going down a nasty
mud-slinging path that does not address
issues but denigrates and negates. On
the indiatruth website, Hindu is a
four-letter-word.
My name is listed on the
indiatruth.com website as some sort
of conspiratorial murderess. I sent the
following letter several times to the
two email addresses associated with that
ridiculous website and no one ever
responded. It seemed as if whomever
assembled the
indiatruth.com website was
intellectually challenged. I figured
that they were a bunch of politicized
cranks trying to smear those who are
investigating alternative paradigms
and/or are creating a milieu in which
Hinduism is more accepted and better
understood. Then in Outlook India Dr.
Witzel wrote that he had founded that
webpage. He is the crack?
Witzel twists the facts and makes
spurious analogies... really rather
frightening... He accuses the Hindus of
North America of being Hiina (or lost
and confused) and he uses "furious if
not predictable slurs" against Hindus,
such as "Nazi", "Hitler", "Racist",
"Muslim hater", "Race Traitor",
"Christian hater", "Creationist", and
"obscurantist murders".
No one ever answered my letter to
indiatruth, whom I dismissed as
crack-pots who winnow information until
they satisfied their dubious theories:
From: Yvette Rosser <yvetterosser@yahoo.com>
Subject: Please note my other
significant associations
To:
info@indiantruth.com,
press@indiantruth.com,
To the people who created the
indiantruth.com web site,
I saw references about me on your
website and I would ask you to please
add links to my other significant
associations:
http://www.pashtuninstitute.org/index.html
I am
a founding member of The Global Pashtun
Institute for Peace and Democracy, a
nonprofit organization working for the
realization of the following objectives:
* Support and strengthen peace,
democracy and stability in Afghanistan
initiated under the Bonn Process by the
United Nations and the Coalition;
* Press for democratic, human
rights and legal-administrative reforms
in the Tribal Areas of Pakistan;
* Support and conduct
non-partisan research, educational, and
informational activities about the
language, history, culture, economy and
politics of the Pashtun people;
* Impart skills, training and
education to the Pashtun youth to avoid
their falling into the hands of
extremists and militants propelled by
obscurantist ideologies;
* Raise awareness about issues of
ecological and environmental concerns to
the Pashtun people and the international
community;
* Improve human rights situation
among Pashtuns, particularly women and
children rights and;
* Increase international
understanding of the language, culture,
history and society of the Pashtuns.
In addition, I am a founding member of
The G M Syed Memorial Committee
http://
www.gmsyed.org/
Objectives:
To educate the international
community about G. M. Syed's message of
non-violence, democracy, secularism, and
the right to self-determination for
Sindhis and other oppressed nations.
To sponsor the following programs:
Organize community outreach events to
celebrate the life and work of G. M.
Syed.
Give awards recognizing the
exceptional contributions of activists,
scholars, and leaders who are striving
to achieve peace and justice for the
Sindhi nation, or who have promoted
awareness about the Sindhi language,
culture or people.
Promote the teachings of G. M. Syed
through the publication of reports,
books, research articles, and other
works, and the dissemination of these
works on a website.
Establish G. M. Syed Memorial Centers
around the world.
To advocate and support other
organizations promoting human rights,
religious tolerance, environmental
responsibility, equal rights for women
and religious minorities, as well as
conflict resolution and peaceful
initiatives in Sindh.
I am on the advisory board of the Baacha
Khan Research Centre in Baacha Khan
Markaz, Peshawar; and founder of the
Badshah Khan Peace Initiative (BKPI), a
worldwide movement to promote the life's
teachings of Abdul Ghaffar Khan/Frontier
Gandhi. The main priority of the BKPI is
to correct the flaw in standard
historical treatments of the
Subcontinent, in which Badshah Khan has
been expunged from history. Our goal is
to amend the historical record so that
he is included along side Mahatma Gandhi
in our children's textbooks.
Friends at
indiatruth.com, since you have taken
the time to list my name, please be sure
to include my other very important
associations supportive of Pashtuns and
Sindhis.
I am also cofounder of the International
Day Without Violence:
http://www.infinityfoundation.com/mandala/s_pr/s_pr_peace_walk.htm
Additionally, instead of links under my
name that lead to articles by others in
which I am not even mentioned (duh, what
it this?), please add links to my actual
writings:
http://www.mssu.edu/projectsouthasia/tsa/VIN1/Rosser.htm
http://www.infinityfoundation.com/mandala/s_es/s_es_rosse_EAA.htm
-----
Please update the information about me
on your website. Perhaps, the broad
spectrum of my interests and commitments
does not jive with your narrow, negative
view of me, but be brave and break the
mold and add these links to reflect my
other activities. Thank you very much.
All the best,
Yvette Rosser
PS On your web site I see that Hindu is
a four letter word.
-------------
To whomever was cced on this letter,
thank you. And please note
that South Asianists and Sanskrit
scholars cannot flood the moats and
raise the drawbridges to keep practicing
Hindus at bay. There seems to be a fear
in the Ivory Towers that the academic
study of Hinduism is being high-jacked
by Hindus. The key words to solve the
dilemma are cooperation, collaboration,
and respect.
Move over, the future is here. Cease and
desist the arrogant, academic battle
regalia and start the interactive
dialogue.
All the best,
Yvette C. Rosser,
PhD Curriculum and Instruction
MA & BA South Asian Studies
PS Undoubtedly, my email will bulge from
the yahoogroups in which I am not a
member such as Indo-Eurasian_research,
RISA, and indology. In support of
fairness, if members of those groups,
who receive this reply to Prof. Witzel's
letter, would please forward it to the
group, I would be appreciative.
Thanks again!
Cheers!
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The Groan
02/10/09 13:05:16 -0800.
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