"Amma is the Cultural Ambassador of India"
Amritapuri, India
August 20, 2005
Sri. Therambil Ramakrishnan, the Honourable Speaker of the Kerala
Legislative Assembly, came to Amritapuri today in order to help
distribute 300 sewing machines to villagers and clothes to the children
affected by the tsunami.
The clothes were given to the 5,000 children from Kerala's Alappuzha
District who participated in M. A. Math's (Mata Amritanandamayi
Math's) free Yoga-English-Sanskrit camps last May. During the camp,
the children's measurements had been taken so that M. A. Math could
tailor-make the clothing for them.
The
sewing machines were given to 300 women who have completed the M.
A. Math's tailoring classes, which are taking places in 10 centres
throughout Alappad Panchayat, Kollam District, Kerala. Some 2,000
women have participated in the course during the past seven months.
The M. A. Math is providing piecework for the women when they achieve
proficiency. This enables them to supplement their family's incomes
by up to Rs. 2500 a month.
In Amma's presence, Sri. Ramakrishnan also took a few minutes to
address all those assembled. "After Swami Vivekananda, who
echoed the Indian culture and Vedantic principles in the West, Amma
is the only one who has been able to make the waves of the Vedantic
principles echo in the West," said the Speaker. "Amma
is the cultural ambassador of India."
Sri. Ramakrishnan lauded M. A. Math's massive tsunami-relief program,
specifically the way its social programs are helping the victims
help themselves. Speaking to the tailoring students, he said, "Amma
has given you the instruments and training so that you can stand
on your own two feet. Success in life lies in making proper use
of such training. May these machines help you to gain strength to
stand on your own two feet so you can support the future generations."
Speaking
to the children who'd come to collect their clothes, he said, "The
garments that Amma has given you are not just clothes, they are
something that a mother gives to her children out of love--they
are the strength that binds you to the divine."
Also in his speech, Sri. Ramakrishnan said that nara-seva--serving
man as a means of worshipping God--is the essence of Indian culture,
and that Amma lives this principle to the letter. "Amma has
become the consolation and love for those suffering from the tsunami.
She came to their rescue. And we have the wonderful history of this
before us. What the government body has not able to do in time was
executed through Amma's leadership. That truth we should not forget."
He also asked everyone to reflect on Amma's teachings and actions,
saying that if we do so, we will realise that we have become selfish.
"[In today's society] we feel we don't have time to think about
the rest of society and other people. But concern for others is
true culture--the thing that verily makes someone a human being."
He concluded by saying, "We are lucky to have been born in
the land where Amma was born, even luckier to meet Her, and even
more so to receive the touch of her consolation and love."
- amritapuri.org
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