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Any event, transformation or tragedy over the years may trigger this germination
--- In adishakti_sahaja_yoga@yahoogroups.com, "jagbir singh"
>
> Even if they decline the message will remain buried for a long time
> in their consciousness, a dormant mental seed that will forever
> have the potential of future germination. Any event, transformation
> or tragedy over the years may trigger this germination - religious
> maturity, spiritual knowledge, mystical experience, sickness,
> divorce, disillusionment, declining morality, drug culture, global
> wars, ecological disasters, epidemics, etc. Thus those seeking
> Self-realization under such tragic circumstances will have deep
> faith and conviction that Shri Mataji was indeed telling the truth
> all along:
>
> "The world is in turmoil today. People everywhere are anxious about
> the future. What they need is the soothing, uniting, elevating
> spiritual message of Sahaja Yoga. They have to be enabled to
> experience "Self Realization" and thereby attain inner
> transformation. Only then will they begin to regard all human
> beings as members of one global family regardless of their race,
> culture etc. Only then will they discard hatred and violence.
> Sahaja Yogis have a momentous responsibility at this crucial time
> in human history. They have to spread Sahaja Yoga in all the parts
> of the world by written and spoken word.... For this purpose, a
> well thought out approach is required."
>
> The way things are going in the world today the worst is yet to
> come. It is imperative that we have the soothing, uniting,
> elevating spiritual message of Sahaja Yoga in all transparency and
> detail, and a well thought out approach too to enable Self-
> realization. We are definitely on track to complete it as per Shri
> Mataji's instructions and vision by February 21, 2013. So please
> help in any way possible in this collective and momentous
> responsibility at this crucial time in human history.
>
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/adishakti_sahaja_yoga/message/6901
>
Pakistan suicide blast kills 42
BBC 8 November 2006
A suicide bomber has killed at least 42 soldiers at an army training
school in north-west Pakistan, officials say. It is the deadliest
attack by militants on the army since it began operations against
pro-Taleban and al-Qaeda fighters close to the Afghan border.
MAJOR ATTACKS IN PAKISTAN
14 people killed in car bomb explosion in Karachi in May 2002
12 people killed in a car bomb explosion on Karachi in June 2002
Up to 47 people killed in suicide attack inside a mosque in Quetta
in July 2003
15 killed in suicide attack on President Pervez Musharraf's
motorcade in December 2002. Gen Musharraf is unhurt
At least 44 people killed in a sectarian attack in Quetta in March
2004
At least 40 people killed in a car bomb explosion at a rally in
Multan in October 2004
43 people killed in a bomb explosion at a shrine in Balochistan in
March 2005
57 people killed in a suicide attack on a religious congregation in
Karachi in April 2006
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6127262.stm
Israeli shelling kills 18 in Gaza
BBC 8 November 2006
Water stained with blood filled the street where the shells landed
At least 18 Palestinians have been killed and 40 wounded by Israeli
tank fire in the northern Gaza town of Beit Hanoun, Palestinian
sources have said. Palestinian officials said a barrage of tank
shells hit civilian homes, and women and children were among the
dead.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6127250.stm
Lanka army 'kills 45 civilians'
BBC 8 November 2006
At least 45 civilians have been killed in eastern Sri Lanka when
shells fired by the military hit a camp for the internally-
displaced, Tamil rebels say. Another 125 were wounded in the
shelling in the Vaharai region, rebel spokesman S Puleedevan told
the BBC.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6128094.stm
Indonesia beheadings trial opens
BBC 8 November 2006
A Muslim man has gone on trial in Jakarta over the beheading of
three Christian schoolgirls in the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.
Hasanuddin is the first of three suspects to face trial over the
October 2005 killings, which shocked Indonesia.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6127378.stm
Kenyans flee deadly gang battle
BBC 8 November 2006
Hundreds of people are fleeing several days of deadly gang violence
in Kenya's capital, Nairobi. Four people were hacked to death in
skirmishes in Mathera slum between the outlawed Mungiki and Taleban
groups that started on Sunday.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6127902.stm
Baghdad cafe blast leaves 17 dead
BBC 8 November 2006
At least 17 people have been killed and 20 injured in an explosion
in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad. The blast happened on Tuesday in a
Shia neighbourhood in the north of the city. A suicide bomber
detonated his explosive belt after walking into the crowded Greyaat
cafe in the district at about 2140 local time (1840 GMT).
DEATHS SINCE MAR 2003
Iraqi civilians: Estimates from 47,000 (Iraq Body Count) and 655,000
(Lancet, 2006)
Iraqi security forces*: 5,556 (*Since June 2003)
US military: 2,812
UK military: 120
Other coalition military: 119
Journalists: 77
Source: Brookings Institution
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6126746.stm
Darfur 'genocide crosses to Chad'
BBC 7 November 2006
Chad's government has accused Sudan of "exporting the genocide" in
Darfur across the border. It says there have been "numerous victims"
of recent clashes between Arabs and non-Arab groups just across the
border from Darfur.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6124538.stm
Haiti tops world corruption table
BBC 6 November 2006
Haiti has been ranked as the most corrupt country in the World by
Transparency International (TI), followed by Burma and Iraq.
The Berlin-based anti-corruption watchdog said that for the first
time, Haiti topped the table.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/6120522.stm
US pastor admits sex 'immorality'
BBC 5 November 2006
Disgraced former US evangelical leader Ted Haggard has confessed to
his followers that he was guilty of "sexual immorality". "I am a
deceiver and a liar," Mr Haggard said in a letter - a day after his
New Life Church fired him for what it called "sexually immoral
conduct".
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6119226.stm
The children of Colorado's jails
BBC 30 October 2006
Every day, tens of thousands of children around the world wake up
behind bars. As part of a three-part series, Vera Frankl examines
the fate of some of the young people locked up for life in the US
state of Colorado.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6089702.stm
Malaysia analyst held for murder
BBC 5 November 2006
Police in Malaysia have arrested the head of a leading political
think-tank and three policemen, in connection with the murder of a
Mongolian model. The body of the model, named as Altantuya
Shaariibuu, was found earlier this week on the outskirts of the
Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur. She had been shot and her body
blown up with plastic explosives.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6127226.stm
Corruption cases soar in Russia
BBC 7 November 2006
Mr Buksman said 28,000 corruption cases were opened this year
Corrupt officials in Russia take bribes amounting to $240bn (£126bn,
188bn euros) - a sum almost equal to the annual state budget,
officials say. The first deputy prosecutor-general, Aleksandr
Buksman, said his office had uncovered 9,000 cases of bribery in the
first eight months of this year.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6125702.stm
Rome police tackle child sex ring
BBC 7 November 2006
Italian police have arrested at least 28 people suspected of being
in a paedophile ring that preyed on Roma (Gypsy) children in Rome.
Police carried out a series of raids on Monday. They said children
living in camps had been given mobile phones or sports shoes in
exchange for sex.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6123870.stm
French rugby star in murder trial
BBC 7 November 2006
A court in France has heard how former rugby captain Marc Cecillon
was depressed and drunk when he killed his wife at a garden party
two years ago. Mr Cecillon, 47, shot his wife Chantal five times at
point-blank range. The nine-member jury must decide whether it was a
premeditated murder - carrying a mandatory life sentence - or
involuntary manslaughter.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6124070.stm
Girl, 4, 'suffering depression'
BBC 8 November 2006
A four-year-old is suffering from depression because she cannot
attend the same primary school as her nursery friends, according to
her doctor. Mollie Murphy from Sunderland struggles to sleep and
vomits before lessons, so her parents are keeping her at home.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/wear/6127694.stm
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