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Friends Event: South Indian Religion, a lecture by Professor M. Narasimhachary

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 25 February 2012 - 6:30pm to 9:00pm

A lecture by Professor M. Narasimhachary, Shivdasani Visiting Fellow of the Oxford Centre For Hindu Studies 

 
These highly acclaimed lectures – brought to you each month - are presented by renowned, expert speakers from the Oxford Centre For Hindu Studies. They explore challenging issues connected to Hindu scripture and dharma which provide a forum for education and debate. The speakers actively encourage audience participation and interaction.

OCHS Academic Director publishes on Importance of Religion

Professor Gavin Flood, OCHS Academic Director and author of The Tantric Body: The Secret Tradition of Hindu Religion; The Ascetic Self: Subjectivity, Memory and Tradition; Beyond Phenomenology: Rethinking the Study of Religion; and the widely prescribed Introduction to Hinduism has published  with Wiley-Blackwell.

The Importance of Religion argues for the central importance of religion in modern times and how it provides people with meaning to their lives and guides them in their everyday moral choices.

Friends Event: Hindu approaches to religious pluralism

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 28 January 2012 - 6:30pm to 9:00pm

A talk by Lucian Wong Student of the Oxford Centre For Hindu Studies

Religious plurality is a pervasive feature of the multi-cultural society in which we live, presenting challenges and opportunities to persons of faith. The existence of multiple and divergent religious currents is, of course, nothing new to Hinduism. This talk will explore the ways in which Hindu texts and traditions address the issue of religious pluralism.

Friends Event: Hinduism & Christianity in Dialogue

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 17 December 2011 - 6:30pm to 9:00pm

Lecture by Shaunaka Rishi Das, Director of The Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies

 
Response by The Venerable Richard Atkinson, Archdeacon of Leicester
 
In this talk Shaunaka Rishi Das will outline some of the issues facing engaged Hindus and Christians as they develop their relationships. He will ask who writes the rules of dialogue and suggest ways of approaching relationships which may build good foundations for understanding, and a more profound practice of respect.

Sherwood Forest: Barclays cycle for the poor (of the OCHS)

Fifteen bankers from the Barclays Non-Resident-Indian (NRI) banking team in the United Kingdom took part in a ten-kilometre bicycle and tricycle ride. The enthusiasm in supporting a good cause was inspiring. This transfer from the rich to the poor in a different age took place in Sherwood Forest, once home to the famous Robin Hood. The team were in high spirits and they all had a great time. We are pleased to report that no one fell of their bicycles.

 
Barclays employees around the world are encouraged and supported to give their time and skills to their chosen community causes.

Nehru Centre Event: Women in Hinduism

Nehru Centre Event
Friday, 9 December 2011 - 6:30pm to 7:30pm

A talk by Anuradha Dooney of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies.

 
The roles of women in Hindu traditions are changing as they are throughout the rest of the world. What can stories of Sita and Draupadi, of Savitri or Sulabha contribute to  the contemporary challenges of chapati rolling ( or not!)  child-care and career-making.  This talk sketches a broad overview of varying female voices from selected Hindu sacred texts and explores their relevance to Hindu women today.
 
Anuradha Dooney was awarded her BA in Social Science, from University College Dublin, and her MSt in the Study of

Bridges and Barriers report launched at Lambeth Palace

The OCHS ‘Bridges and Barriers to Hindu-Christian Relations’ report, compiled by Dr Jessica Frazier, was launched at the Hindu-Christian Forum (HCF) at Lambeth Palace on 23 November. The Hindu-Christian Forum was hosted by the Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams. The event was introduced by the Chairs of the HCF: The Ven. Richard Atkinson, Archdeacon of Leicester, and an OCHS scholar, Ramesh Pattni, Interfaith Chair of the Hindu Forum of Britain. It was addressed by Andrew Stunell MP, Baroness Richardson, and Lord Popat.

Leicester Friends Annual Gala Dinner

 

19th November 2011
FOCHS Leicester – The City Rooms
 
Our Leicester Friends of the OCHS (FOCHS) hosted a gala dinner on 19 November to celebrate the achievements and milestones of the OCHS and the Leicester FOCHS.
 
 
The lively night began with a reception for guests to meet and mingle.
 
The programme kicked off with a short presentation about the OCHS after which Shaunaka Rishi Das, Director of the OCHS, expressed his appreciation and gratitude for the Leicester FOCHS who have worked tirelessly since their incorporation in 2008 to support the OCHS by organising fun events

Friends Event: Free will and Destiny in the Bhagavad-gita

Leicester Friends Event
Saturday, 26 November 2011 - 7:00pm to 9:00pm

A talk by Anuradha Dooney of the Oxford Centre For Hindu Studies

 
In this talk Anuradha will explore questions about free will and destiny as she finds them discussed in the Bhagavad-gita. How much choice do we really have in life, and how much is dependent on our birth, gender, status etc. Are we ruled by karma, Krishna, or our own desires.
 
These questions of free will and fate are universal, arising from a need to know how our lives are shaped and the value of our decisions. Krishna and Arjuna's dialogue in the Bhagavad-gita comes to surprising conclusions.

Nehru Centre Event: How to Understand the Bhagavad-gita

Nehru Centre Event
Monday, 21 November 2011 - 6:30pm to 7:30pm

A talk by Dr Nicholas Sutton of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies.

 
The Bhagavad-gita is widely known as one the main sacred texts of the Hindu tradition but precise understanding of the message it conveys remains elusive, as is demonstrated by the widely differing interpretations of its meaning.  In this talk, we will consider the ways in which the Gita seeks to offer a reconciliation of differing concepts, including Yoga, Samkhya, devotion and dharma and is able to emerge with a coherent revelation that is central to the contemporary Hindu tradition.

Amitabh Bachchan and Karan Singh become OCHS Patrons

Renowned actor, Mr Amitabh Bachchan is taking a leading role in support of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies.

Mr Bachchan was invited to the OCHS Patrons Council following his highly successful visit in May 2011 where he delivered the Distinguished Ford Lecture, with Prof. Rachel Dwyer. On inviting Mr Bachchan, OCHS Governor Lord Dholakia said that his presence on the Patron Council, ‘would underline the contribution of the arts to the development of Indian culture and thought through the centuries.’

Mr Bachchan said the OCHS is ‘a sure means of enhancing the study and propagation of

Friends Event: Human Rights and Right Humans

Birmingham Friends Event
Saturday, 5 November 2011 - 7:00pm to 9:00pm

A talk by Anuradha Dooney of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies.

 
Human rights discourse is increasingly at the heart of all moral debate. In this talk we will draw from selected Hindu narratives and philosophical ideas and consider what their perspectives on morality and human rights contribute to the global debate.