¥¤¥ó¥Éů³Ø

[ ¥ê¥¹¥È | ¾ÜºÙ ]

µ­»ö¸¡º÷
¸¡º÷

Á´3¥Ú¡¼¥¸

[1] [2] [3]

[ Á°¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸ ]

 
イメージ 1
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
How Hinduism Seeped into American Soil 
Dana Sawyer

American Veda: From Emerson and the Beatles to Yoga and Meditation—How Indian Spirituality Changed the West
Philip Goldberg
Harmony Books, 2010
416 pp.; $26.00 cloth

 
With the exception of the Hare Krishnas, he points out, most Americans haven¡Çt been attracted to India¡Çs ornate temples, complex mythologies, colorful rituals, and pantheon of gods and goddesses. American Veda focuses on that aspect of Hinduism that Americans have gravitated toward: Vedanta philosophy and the meditation and yoga practices it advocates, a combination Goldberg refers to as ¡ÈVedanta-Yoga.¡É Derived from the ancient sacred texts collectively known as the Vedas, Vedanta is founded, he explains, on the belief that underlying the phenomenal world that both Hindus and Buddhists call samsara there is an unmanifest, eternal, limitless ¡ÈGround of Being.¡É This formless absolute, known as Brahman, is both the root of our individual existence and the root of all existence, and experiencing it directly culminates in moksha, or enlightenment—spiritual liberation through perception of the ¡Èworld soul¡É at the core of everything. Like Buddhists, Vedantists make clear that merely studying philosophy isn¡Çt enough to wake you up; some practice is necessary, and for most Americans that has meant some form of meditation or yoga. According to Goldberg, when yoga teachers in the U.S. are asked what philosophy underlies their practice, most point to Vedanta.

¥¤¥ó¥É·Ï¤Î½¡¶µ¤Î¤É¤³¤Ë¥¢¥á¥ê¥«¿Í¤Ï¼æ¤«¤ì¤ë¤Î¤«¡£
¤½¤ì¤Ï¡¢²ÚÈþ¤Ê»û±¡¤Ç¤â¤Ê¤¯¡¢Ê£»¨¤Ê¿ÀÏäǤâ¤Ê¤¯¡¢¥«¥é¥Õ¥ë¤Êµ·¼°¤Ç¤â¤Ê¤¯¡¢¿À¡¹¤Î¿ÀŤǤâ¤Ê¤¯¡¢¥ô¥§¥À¡¼¥ó¥¿¤Îů³Ø¤ÈâÔÁۤȥ衼¥¬¤òÁȤ߹ç¤ï¤»¤¿¡¢¥ô¥§¡¼¥À¥ó¥¿¥è¡¼¥¬¤È¤â¤¤¤¦¤Ù¤­¤â¤Î¤Ê¤Î¤Ç¤¢¤ë¡£
¥ô¥§¡¼¥À¥ó¥¿¤Îů³Ø¤È¤Ï¡¢¥µ¥à¥µ¡¼¥é¤È¸Æ¤Ð¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤³¤Î¸½¾ÝÀ¤³¦¤Î±ü¤Ë¡¢±£¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¡¢±Ê±ó¤Î¡¢Ìµ¸Â¤Î¡Ö¸ºß¤Îº¬¸»¡×¤È¤â¤¤¤¦¤Ù¤­¤â¤Î¤¬Â¸ºß¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë¡¢¤È¤¤¤¦»×ÁۤǤ¢¤ë¡£
¤³¤Î¡¢·Á¤Î¤Ê¤¤¡¢¥Ö¥é¥Õ¥Þ¥ó¤È¸Æ¤Ð¤ì¤ëÀäÂмԤϡ¢¸Ä¿Í¤Î¸ºß¤Îº¬¸»¤Ç¤¢¤ë¤È¶¦¤Ë¡¢¤¹¤Ù¤Æ¤Î¸ºß¤Îº¬¸»¤Ç¤â¤¢¤ê¡¢¤³¤ì¤òľÀÜŪ¤ËÂ賤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤Ë¤è¤Ã¤Æ¡¢¥â¥¯¥·¥ã¤È¤¤¤¦³Ð¤ê¤òÆÀ¤é¤ì¤ë¤Î¤Ç¤¢¤ë¡£Ä¾ÀÜŪ¤ËÂ賤¹¤ë¤È¤Ï¡¢Ëüʪ¤Î³Ë¤Î¡ÖÀ¤³¦¤Îº²¡×¤òǧ¼±¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤Ç¤¢¤ê¡¢¤³¤Îǧ¼±¤Ë¤è¤Ã¤Æ¡¢ÎîŪ³«Êü¤¬À®¤·¿ë¤²¤é¤ì¤ë¤Î¤Ç¤¢¤ë¡£
Ê©¶µÅÌ¤ÈÆ±¤¸¤è¤¦¤Ë¡¢¥ô¥§¡¼¥À¥ó¥¿¶µÅ̤âÎîŪ³ÐÀäΤ¿¤á¤Ë¤Ï¡¢Ã±¤Ëů³Ø¤òÊÙ¶¯¤¹¤ë¤À¤±¤Ç¤Ï¥À¥á¤Ç¡¢¤Ê¤ó¤é¤«¤Î½¤¹Ô¤¬µá¤á¤é¤ì¤ë¤Î¤Ç¤¢¤ê¡¢¥¢¥á¥ê¥«¿Í¤Ë¤È¤Ã¤Æ¡¢¤½¤Î½¤¹Ô¤È¤ÏâÔÁۤȥ衼¥¬¤ò°ÕÌ£¤¹¤ë¡£Ãø¼Ô¤Ç¤¢¤ëGoldberg¤Ë¤è¤ë¤È¡¢¥è¡¼¥¬¤ÎÀèÀ¸Êý¤Ï¥è¥¬¤Î¼ÂÁ©¤Î±ü¤Îů³Ø¤Ï²¿¤«¤ÈÌä¤ï¤ì¤ë¤È¤Û¤È¤ó¤É¤¬¥ô¥§¡¼¥À¥ó¥¿¤ÈÅú¤¨¤ë¤È¤¤¤¦¡£
 
¤³¤³¤éÊÕ¤ÎʬÀϤϤʤë¤Û¤É¤È»×¤¤¤Þ¤¹¤Í¡£
 
¥ô¥§¡¼¥À¥ó¥¿¥è¡¼¥¬¤È¤¤¤¦¸ÀÍÕ¤â¾å¼ê¤¤¤È»×¤¤¤Þ¤¹¡£
 
Ƭ¤ò»È¤¦¤È¶¦¤Ë¿ÈÂΤâ»È¤¤¤Ê¤¬¤é¡¢Á´¿È¤Ç¿¿Íý¤òÂÎÆÀ¤·º²¤Î¸þ¾å¤ò¿Þ¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤¯¡¢¤È¤¤¤¦¤È¤³¤í¤¬Ì¥ÎϤΤ¢¤ë¤â¤Î¤Ë¤Ê¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤Î¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦¡£
 
 
Vedanta, one of the six orthodox systems (darshans) of Indian philosophy and the one that forms the basis of most modern schools of Hinduism. The term Vedanta means in Sanskrit the ¡Èconclusion¡É (anta) of the Vedas, the earliest sacred literature of India; it applies to the Upanishads, which were elaborations of the Vedas, and to the school that arose out of the ¡Èstudy¡É (mimamsa) of the Upanishads. Thus, Vedanta is also referred to as Vedanta-Mimamsa (¡ÈReflection on Vedanta¡É), Uttara-Mimamsa (¡ÈReflection on the Latter Part of the Vedas¡É), and Brahma-Mimamsa (¡ÈReflection on Brahman¡É).

The three fundamental Vedanta texts are: the Upanishads (the most favoured being the longer and older ones such as the Brihadaranyaka, the Chandogya, the Taittiriya, and the Katha); the Brahma-sutras (also called Vedanta-sutras), which are very brief, even one-word interpretations of the doctrine of the Upanishads; and the famous poetic dialogue, the Bhagavadgita (¡ÈSong of the Lord¡É), which, because of its immense popularity, was drawn upon for support of the doctrines found in the Upanishads.

No single interpretation of the texts emerged, and several schools of Vedanta developed, differentiated by their conceptions of the nature of the relationship and the degree of identity between the eternal core of the individual self (atman) and the absolute (brahman). These range from the nondualism (Advaita) of the 8th-century philosopher Shankara to the theism (Vishishtadvaita; literally ¡ÈQualified Nondualism¡É) of the 11th–12th-century thinker Ramanuja and the dualism (Dvaita) of the 13th-century thinker Madhva.

The Vedanta schools do, however, hold in common a number of beliefs; transmigration of the self (samsara) and the desirability of release from the cycle of rebirths; the authority of the Veda on the means of release; that brahman is both the material (upadana) and the instrumental (nimitta) cause of the world; and that the self (atman) is the agent of its own acts (karma) and therefore the recipient of the fruits, or consequences, of action (phala). All the Vedanta schools unanimously reject both the heterodox (nastika) philosophies of Buddhism and Jainism and the conclusions of the other orthodox (astika) schools (Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Samkhya, Yoga, and, to some extent, the Purva-Mimamsa).

The influence of Vedanta on Indian thought has been profound, so that it may be said that, in one or another of its forms, Hindu philosophy has become Vedanta. Although the preponderance of texts by Advaita scholastics has in the West given rise to the erroneous impression that Vedanta means Advaita, the nondualistic Advaita is but one of many Vedanta schools.

 
イメージ 1
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
How Hinduism Seeped into American Soil 
Dana Sawyer

American Veda: From Emerson and the Beatles to Yoga and Meditation—How Indian Spirituality Changed the West
Philip Goldberg
Harmony Books, 2010
416 pp.; $26.00 cloth

It¡Çs often said that Buddhism is the fastest growing religion in America. There are dharma centers in every major American city, and more are springing up every year. But long before Buddhism became so popular among convert practitioners, Hinduism had its turn in the spotlight. Back in the late 1960s and the 1970s, mostly through the efforts of hippie gurus like Allen Ginsberg and Ram Dass, and the Beatles, the religion of Shiva and Krishna outperformed buddhadharma by a wide margin. In the 70s, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the Beatles¡Ç diminutive guru, managed to convince more than two million Americans to try Transcendental Meditation, and when he appeared on the Merv Griffin Show in 1975, he reached an audience of some 30 to 40 million viewers. Today, even the Dalai Lama doesn¡Çt post those kinds of numbers. But given that Hinduism was so popular, why did it fade? And what made it so attractive in the first place? In his latest book, American Veda, the author, interfaith minister, and meditation teacher Philip Goldberg offers some answers.

¡ÖAmerican Veda¡×¤È¤¤¤¦ËܤòºÇ¶á¸«¤Ä¤±¤¿¤Î¤Ç¤¹¤¬¡¢¤³¤ì¤ÏÌÌÇò¤½¤¦¤Ç¤¹¡£

¥¤¥ó¥É»×ÁÛ¤¬¥¢¥á¥ê¥«¿Í¤Î¹Í¤¨Êý¤Ë¤É¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ê±Æ¶Á¤òÍ¿¤¨¤Æ¤­¤¿¤Î¤«¤ò¥¨¥Þ¥½¥ó¤Î»þÂ夫¤é¸½Âå¤Þ¤Ç¤Ê¤«¤Ê¤«¿¼¤¯Ê¬ÀϤ·¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ç¤¹¡£

¥Ë¥å¥½¡¼¥È¤Î»×Á۲Ȥˤ⤫¤Ê¤ê±Æ¶Á¤òÍ¿¤¨¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ç¤¢¤ê¡¢¤½¤Î¤¢¤¿¤ê¤ÎʬÀϤⶽ̣¤¬¤¢¤ë¤È¤³¤í¤Ç¤¹¡£

Dana Sawyer¤È¤¤¤¦¿Í¤Î½ñɾ¤Ï¤Ê¤«¤Ê¤«ÌÌÇò¤½¤¦¤Ê¤Î¤Ç¤³¤³¤Ç¾Ò²ð¤·¤Æ¤ß¤¿¤¤¤È»×¤¤¤Þ¤¹¡£

º£¸½ºß¡¢¥À¥é¥¤¥é¥Þ¤Ê¤É¤Î¥Á¥Ù¥Ã¥ÈÊ©¶µ¤Ê¤É¤Î¿Íµ¤¤Ë¤è¤Ã¤Æ¡¢Ê©¶µ¤¬µÞ®¤Ë¥¢¥á¥ê¥«¿Í¤Î´Ö¤Ë¹­¤Þ¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤è¤¦¤Î¤Ç¤¹¤¬¡¢¤½¤ÎÁ°¤Ë¡¢Ï»½½Ç¯Â夫¤é¼·½½Ç¯Âå¤Ë¤«¤±¤ÆHinduism¤Î¿Íµ¤¤¬¹â¤Þ¤ê¡¢ÆÃ¤Ë¡¢ Maharishi Mahesh Yogi¤¬the Merv Griffin Show¤Ë½Ð±é¤·¤¿¤È¤­¤Ë¤Ï£³ÀéËü¤«¤é£´ÀéËü¤Î¥¢¥á¥ê¥«¤Î»ëݼԤò¼æ¤­¤Ä¤±¤¿¤È¤¤¤¦¤Î¤Ç¤¹¤«¤é¡¢¤½¤Î±Æ¶ÁÎϤÏÀ¨¤¤¤â¤Î¤¬¤¢¤Ã¤¿¤È»×¤¤¤Þ¤¹¡£¥¿¥¤¥à»ï¤Îɽ»æ¤Ë¤Ê¤Ã¤¿¤ê¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹¤Í¡£¤¢¤Î¤³¤í¤¬¡¢¥Ó¡¼¥È¥ë¥º¤Ê¤É¤¬ Maharishi Mahesh Yogi¤Î¤È¤³¤í¤ØâÔÁÛ¤ò½¬¤¤¤Ë¤¤¤Ã¤¿¤È¤¤¤¦¤³¤È¤¬Â礭¤Ê¥Ë¥å¡¼¥¹¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¡¢²£ÈøÃ駤µ¤ó¤Ê¤É¤â¥·¥ç¥Ã¥¯¤ò¼õ¤±¤¿¤½¤¦¤Ç¡¢¥¤¥ó¥É»×Áۤο͵¤¤ÎĺÅÀ¤À¤Ã¤¿¤Î¤Ç¤Ï¤Ê¤¤¤«¤È¤¤¤¦¤Î¤Ç¤¹¤¬¡¢¤½¤¦¤Ç¤â¤Ê¤¤¤È»×¤¦¤Î¤Ç¤¹¡£¥è¡¼¥¬¤äâÔÁÛ¤¬Ãå¼Â¤Ë¥¢¥á¥ê¥«¿Í¤Î´Ö¤Ë¿»Æ©¤·¤Æ¤­¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤Î¤Ç¤Ï¤Ê¤¤¤«¡£¤½¤ó¤Êµ¤¤¬¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹¡£¤¢¤Î¤³¤í¤«¤é¤Ç¤¹¤«¤Í¡¢ÆüËܤǤ⡢Transcendental Meditation¤È¤¤¤¦¸ÀÍÕ¤òʹ¤¯¤è¤¦¤Ë¤Ê¤Ã¤¿¤ê¡¢ Maharishi Mahesh Yogi¤ÎͱÛâÔÁۤȤ¤¤¦Ëܤ¬ËÝÌõ¤µ¤ì¤¿¤Î¤ò¤è¤¯¸«¤«¤±¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£
 
 
 
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, original name Mahesh Prasad Varma   (born 1917?, Jabalpur, India—died Feb. 5, 2008, Vlodrop, Neth.), Hindu religious leader who introduced the practice of transcendental meditation (TM) to the West.

Little is known of the Maharishi¡Çs early life. He studied physics at the University of Allahābād and worked for a time in factories. He later left for the Himalayas, where for 13 years he studied under Guru Dev, the founder of TM. When Guru Dev died in 1952, the Maharishi organized a movement to spread the teachings of TM throughout the world; his first world tour took place in 1959 and brought him to the United States.

TM is a type of meditation, practiced twice a day, in which the subject mentally recites a special mantra (sacred sound or phrase). Concentration on the repeated utterances decreases mental activity, and as a result the subject is expected to reach a higher state of consciousness. The movement grew slowly until the late 1960s, when the Beatles, an English rock-music group, and numerous other celebrities began to join his following. Since then, many have left the movement, but TM remains a popular form of relaxation, especially in the United States. The principles of transcendental meditation are discussed in the Maharishi¡Çs books The Science of Being and Art of Living (1963) and Meditations of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (1968).

Blowin¡Ç In The Wind

 
イメージ 1
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

7. Blowin¡Ç In The Wind

Beatniks, Hippies, and Consciousness Expanders Trip Toward the East
From the book: The twenty or so years between the end of World War II and the volcano we call the Sixties are associated with conformity, materialism, suburbanization, songs of innocence, and gray flannel ennui. But beneath all that, a subterranean current was making the culture a fertile field for a bumper crop of gurus and Yoga masters.
The chapter describes the cultural evolution that led to a perfect storm of receptivity to all things Indian: its music, its fabrics, its food and especially its spiritual bounty. Along the way it describes the remarkable legacy of two towering figures who died in 1950 and never set foot in America:

The chapter recounts the fascinating origins of the Esalen Institute and the human potential movement, both of which were influenced mightily by India, and culminates with the Summer of Love.
 
イメージ 1
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
2013/11/28 ¤Ë¸ø³«


Pragna Bharathi 
Swami Vivekananda 150 th jayanthi utsava samithi conduct a talk on "Influence of Indian philosophy on the west" by shri Philip Goldberg.
Philip Goldberg is a spiritual counsellor,meditation teacher and ordained Interfaith minister and the Author of 'Amirican Veda' which covers the history and influence of India;s spiritual teachings in America, and founder of spiritual wellness and heating associates.
 
イメージ 1
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2010/11/28 ¤Ë¥¢¥Ã¥×¥í¡¼¥É


In 1968, the Beatles went to India for an extended stay with their new guru, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, a spiritual retreat that exploded the ancient philosophy of Vedanta and the mind-body methods of Yoga into popular Western culture, an introduction that actually began when translations of Hindu texts penetrated the thinking of John Adams and Ralph Waldo Emerson, and the ideas spread to Thoreau, Whitman, and succeeding generations of receptive Americans, who absorbed India's "science of consciousness." Philip Goldberg, author, director for SpiritualCitizens.net, and Huffington Post blogger on religion, traces this movement from Emerson to the Beatles to Yoga and Meditation. www.philipgoldberg.com

¾¦ÉʤÎÀâÌÀ

¥ì¥Ó¥å¡¼

"American Veda is an illuminating, gracefully written and remarkably thorough account of  India¡Çs spectacular impact on Western religion and spirituality."
– Deepak Chopra

"American Veda shows us how we got to where we are. It chronicles a revolution in consciousness and describes India¡Çs lasting influence on our culture, from gurus, meditation, and yoga to sitar music and aromatic  curries. Savor it."
– Michael Bernard Beckwith, author of Spiritual Liberation: Fulfilling Your Soul¡Çs Potential
 
"This book demonstrates the far reach of Indian thought into the American psyche and sense of spiritual self. A well written, superbly researched book, it should be read by all the 15 million Americans practicing meditation and yoga!"
– Christopher Chapple, Doshi Professor of Indic and Comparative Theology, Loyola Marymount University
 
"Wonderfully comprehensive, positive, tremendously insightful, and illuminating. For anyone interested in the deep influence of yoga philosophy in American culture, I highly recommended this masterful book." 
– John Friend, Founder of Anusara Yoga
 
"Immensely smart, wise and brilliantly written. This book should be required reading for everyone interested in ecumenical spirituality which is the one hope for the survival of the human race, and India¡Çs great gift to us in our crisis."
– Andrew Harvey, author of The Hope: The Guide to Social Activism and The Sun at Midnight
 
"In this important and engaging book, Philip Goldberg chronicles the long neglected history of Hinduism's encounter with the US. He astutely examines how Hinduism has been constructed and consumed within the larger American spiritual landscape.  A must read for those interested in Hinduism and its transmission."
- Varun Soni, Dean of Religious Life, University of Southern California
 
"American Veda documents an important cultural change and is an impressive book: informed and informative, well researched and readable."
– Roger Walsh MD, Ph.D., University of California Medical School, author of Essential Spirituality: The Seven Central Practices
 
"Intriguing reading, fascinating profiles and great storytelling of Yoga luminaries adapting the teachings to fit modern American life. This book inspires us to continue to deepen in our body, mind, and spiritual journey."
– Lilias Folan, PBS Host and author Lilias! Yoga Gets Better with Age
 
"Goldberg weaves a tale as only a true storyteller can, drawing the reader into this Vedic web that has no weaver, providing us with a fresh view of how Vedic strands have woven their way into the daily fabric of every American. He masterfully unfolds this ancient play of spiritual unfolding that is just now beginning to emerge into early adolescence in America."
– Richard Miller, PhD, author of Yoga Nidra: A Meditative Practice for Deep Relaxation and Healing, co-founder of the International Association of Yoga Therapy and the founding president of the Integrative Restoration Institute.
 
"A breathtaking trek across time, American Veda shows us something extraordinary, surprising, and precious about where we come from, who we are at this moment, and what we may yet become."
– Chip Hartranft, author of The Yoga-Sutra Of Patañjali: a new translation with commentary

"In a delightful, compelling way, American Veda shows how India¡Çs ancient wisdom has permeated our lives, including many of the self-improvement teachings that have benefited millions.  I loved reading this book."
– Marci Shimoff, NY Times bestselling author, Happy for No Reason and Chicken Soup for the Woman¡Çs Soul

¡ÈNothing short of remarkable. Within the pages of this fairly short volume, Goldberg manages to cover every major figure, movement, and idea that originated in India¡Çs spiritual terrain and arrived on our shores to forever alter the landscape of our thought and culture¡Ä.Writing with empathy and discernment, he covers highly controversial issues regarding the impact of the transmission of Indian spiritual culture in a way that inspires deeper understanding. American Veda is an insightful guide to the fascinating history of a phenomenon that will be seen in the future as one of the watershed moments of American history.¡É
– Rita D. Sherma, Ph.D., Executive Director, School of Philosophy & Religious Studies, Taksha University

¡ÈAmerican Veda is a bright light on the historical path to enlightenment in America. Philip Goldberg is an acharya of words and research. Highly recommended.¡É
– Larry Payne Ph.D., coauthor, Yoga for Dummies, Yoga Rx and The Business of Teaching Yoga

"We imagine the United States as a Christian island far from the exotic teachings of India. We imagine wrong. As Phil Goldberg's masterful American Veda shows we have been under the sway of Hindu spiritual thought for centuries. If you want to understand American spirituality today, and get a glimpse into its future, read this book."
– Rabbi Rami Shapiro, author of Recovery, the Sacred Art

"This book, American Veda is a landmark! Easy to read it shines a light of understanding on the American Vedic Hindu path which started with the transference of knowledge from India, and equally important by its acceptance by the Americans of western orientation. It is a path on which now, the immigrant Vedic Hindu community and its progeny are grafting on to and traveling along with many in the mainstream community, resulting in, we hope increased understanding. The integrated approach of this book helps fill in the gaps of this historical journey, especially for those of us who see ourselves as fellow travelers working to bridge the east-west divide."
– Anju Bhargava, Management Consultant and Founder of Hindu American Seva Charities

Ãø¼Ô¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ

PHILIP GOLDBERG is the author or coauthor of nineteen books, including Roadsigns: On the Spiritual Path and The Intuitive Edge. Based in Los Angeles, he is an ordained interfaith minister, a public speaker and seminar leader, and the founder of Spiritual Wellness and Healing Associates. He is director of outreach for SpiritualCitizens.net and blogs regularly on religion for the Huffington Post.

Á´3¥Ú¡¼¥¸

[1] [2] [3]

[ Á°¤Î¥Ú¡¼¥¸ ]


.
¥¢¥¯¥¨¥ê¥¢¥ó³×Ì¿
¥¢¥¯¥¨¥ê¥¢¥ó³×Ì¿
ÃËÀ­ / Èó¸ø³«
¿Íµ¤ÅÙ
Yahoo!¥Ö¥í¥°¥Ø¥ë¥× - ¥Ö¥í¥°¿Íµ¤Å٤ˤĤ¤¤Æ

²áµî¤Îµ­»ö°ìÍ÷

ͧ¤À¤Á(1)
  • ++¥¢¥¤¥µ¥¤
ͧ¤À¤Á°ìÍ÷

¥¹¥Þ¡¼¥È¥Õ¥©¥ó¤Ç¸«¤ë

¥â¥Ð¥¤¥ëÈÇYahoo!¥Ö¥í¥°¤Ë¥¢¥¯¥»¥¹¡ª

¥¹¥Þ¡¼¥È¥Õ¥©¥óÈÇYahoo!¥Ö¥í¥°¤Ë¥¢¥¯¥»¥¹¡ª

Æü ·î ²Ð ¿å ÌÚ ¶â ÅÚ
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30

Yahoo!¤«¤é¤Î¤ªÃΤ餻

¤è¤·¤â¤È¥Ö¥í¥°¥é¥ó¥­¥ó¥°

¤â¤Ã¤È¸«¤ë

¤ß¤ó¤Ê¤Î¹¹¿·µ­»ö