Hemant Sharma speaks at the News9 Global Summit in Germany.
TV9 News9 Global Summit is being held in Stuttgart, Germany. On the second day of the three-day summit held at the historic MHP Stadium, TV-9 Network News Director Hemant Sharma delivered his speech on the theme ‘India and Germany: The Sanskrit connection’ view. Continuing to express his views, he thanked Prime Minister Modi for his speech and message at the summit. He said there were striking similarities between Sanskrit and German. We gave the world the first book in the form of a book, the Vedas. The first scholar to bring the Vedas from India to the world was the German Professor Max Müller. Everyone knows Swami Vivekananda, the first global brand ambassador of Hindu supremacy. Recognizing Max Müller’s Vedic knowledge, Swamiji met him.
TV-9 network news director Hemant Sharma said Swamiji was impressed by the German scholar and said that if there was one person in the world who understood the essence of the Vedas, it was Max Max Muller. You can understand what greater honor there is for a German scholar. The roots of India and Germany are so culturally connected that whenever we look outside India, Germany seems to be the closest to us. Therefore, News9’s arrival on the global stage began in Germany.
There is no better courtyard for conversation.
He said that our history with Germany is not a history of slavery, discrimination and violence. Our relationship with Germany is one of unity of political, cultural, cooperative and literary and linguistic roots. Therefore, there is no forum for dialogue more favorable to us. You just heard the demonstration on a gramophone. The phonograph was invented by Thomas Alva Edison in the 19th century. He invented a device that recorded people’s voices. He was thinking about what the first sound of this thing should be. He wrote a letter to Max Müller about this.
He was in Oxford at the time. He said we want to record your voice on a gramophone disc. He called him for this. He has been recorded on stage. Soon after, his voice was played to the audience. People were excited to hear Max Müller’s voice. Hearing the recorded sound for the first time. The excitement was so palpable that people couldn’t understand what Max Müller was saying.
Germany-India relations are fundamentally connected
Max Muller sings the first verse of “Rigveda” ‘Agnimile Purohitam yajnasya devamritvijam. Was. This was the first Sanskrit poem recorded on a gramophone. When Professor Max Muller was asked why he chose it, he said that the Vedas are the oldest scriptures of mankind. Such is the deep relationship between Germany and India.
The News Director of TV-9 Network further stated that the roots of relations between Germany and India are interrelated. What’s the connection? The language of the Vedic period was Sanskrit. You can see what he wrote in German. Their morphology is similar to Sanskrit. The two languages ​​are phonetically similar. Words placed in a sentence are independent, absolutely independent, almost independent in German. Perhaps this is the reason why today more than 14 universities in Germany have Sanskrit departments and are conducting research.
Sanskrit is our being, identity and history
He said that Indian philosophy is pluralistic. The Ganges consists of many streams. Hinduism is also a fusion of many religions. This is constantly flowing. Sanskrit is our being, identity and history. When I look at the West after India, only Germany attaches great importance to Sanskrit and is constantly committed to the understanding and expansion of Sanskrit. Even today, Sanskrit-German dictionaries can be easily found on the streets of Berlin.
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