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Atomic analysis of an Idol AAA.

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prasad1

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This is a parody - No truth in it, and No belief was damaged.

idols-may-15-sl.jpg


Ihled AAA, Idol is believed to have been made and installed by Sri Sri YYY a senior Siddha.


He prepared the Idol, according to some traditions with a strange mixture called Hokus-Pokus.(Ninety None Poisonous materials)

This mixture could have been prepared by mixing NintyNine rare herbs of poisonous nature .
The resultant mixture was used by Sri Sri YYY to make the Idol. The other option for the Idol’s raw material is granite.

It has been observed that the AAA Idol at Palani became weak below the neck and the lower portions looked as if they would fall at any time.


A suggestion was mooted to repair or change the Idol. But the devotees out of Ignorance and superstition would not allow anyone to inspect the idol.
This was not agreeable to the devotees as it would be against the Shastras.
So the Government of Tamil Nadu appointed a committee to study the issue and submit its recommendations.

1.The Idol’s face was fresh as though it was installed recently.
2.The lower portions were damaged.
3.On testing with an Atomic Analyser, it was found that the Idols was made of neither Granite, nor minerals.
4.The Sceintists were unable to determine what it is made of.

Though the preliminary visual examination of the idol revealed the possibility of the material being of granitic origin. It could not be confirmed, as neither a microscopic examination nor a chemical analysis could be done in the absence of loose material from the idol being available for such detailed investigation. But we were aware that the abhishekam materials flowing over the idol could possibly absorb some of the ingredients from the idol to acquire the medicinal property, curative qualities and offer relief to many devotees from their ailments.

When other samples were tested, the instrument showed positive results but for the sandal wood paste left overnight on the idol of the lord, the result was zero absorption. It was revealed to us as a stupendous moral – that even modern scientific analysis cannot penetrate the Divine Structure.a sophisticated instrument, the Perkin-Elmer 707 atomic absorption spectrophotometer to identify the trace elements. A standard solution required for the experiment was made to calibrate the instrument.’
The Study was by Dr. Prof. Koda, Ph.D.,(an expert in corruption awaiting Jail) is an an earth scientist and mineralogist and former Director of the Bihar Mines and a minister in Bihar Government Minerals Limited and a one-time close associate of other criminals.


Then one day Mr. ZZZ,an honest human being with curiosity went to the idol, and tipped it over and found the label stamped "made by Li-ling corporation. China". On contacting the Li-ling corporation is china, they informed Mr. ZZZ that they produced the Idol with resins. They mass produce it for India Navaratri function.
Of course it was neither Granite or any other know mineral.


It is easy to sound very authentic even when you are totally ignorant of the facts or just wants to fool others.
 
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You've probably seen the photo. Grainy and gray, it shows the neck and head of some type of large sea monster rising from the water -- the freshwater of Scotland's Loch Ness. When the photo first appeared in 1933, many people believed it was real. After all, it was taken by Colonel Robert Wilson, a respected doctor, and stories of a monster in the loch had been swirling around Scotland for more than 1,400 years. But in 1994, the photo was exposed as a hoax. A man named Christian Spurling confessed that he, his stepfather and Wilson created it by attaching a piece of plastic to a toy submarine [source: Owen].
Hoaxes have been around for centuries, created by people as jokes, or for profit or attention. And as crazy as some of them seem in hindsight, people are always willing to buy into them. Maybe believing in seemingly unbelievable things is part of the human psyche. Or maybe we just like to believe in whatever scientists and experts don't. Whatever the reason, don't think you'll never be fooled. Because sages and fools alike have been tricked by the following 10 hoaxes.


10-hoaxes-1.jpg
Orson Welles narrated the War of the Worlds radio play. He was a master at this art.







In the 1930s, the world was drawing closer and closer to a second global war. Radio broadcasts were constantly being interrupted to bring news of what was happening near and far. Technology was also rapidly evolving, with space travel looming on the horizon. And science fiction was emerging as a literary genre. So maybe it wasn't too surprising when, on Oct. 30, 1938, thousands and thousands of Americans believed Martians were invading the United States. Why shouldn't they? They'd been listening to the radio, when the program was interrupted by a news bulletin that Martians had landed in New Jersey and were preparing to attack.
 
[h=2]Cardiff Giant[/h]

10-hoaxes-5.jpg

In 1868, atheist George Hull hired a stonecutter to carve a slab of gypsum into a 10-foot-tall man with 21-inch-long feet. He then had it buried on the farm of distant-relative William Newell in Cardiff, N.Y. [sources: Brown, The Skeptic's Dictionary]. The following year, workers digging a well on the property discovered the stone man, and people all over were quickly enthralled [source: Radford]. Was it an ancient carving? Or a fossilized giant? If it was the latter, some said, it was proof the Bible was literally true, for Genesis 6:4 says, "There were giants in the earth in those days ..." [source: Radford].

Experts smelled a rat, and tried to warn people not to get too excited. But it was too late. People flocked to the remote farm site -- hundreds and even thousands per day -- paying 50 cents a head (a whole lot of money in those days) to see "Goliath." Even more amusing, P.T. Barnum quickly created a duplicate which people paid to see, thinking it was the original. So they were double-duped [sources: The Skeptic's Dictionary, Brown].
Hull created the behemoth as a practical joke, and also to make those who believed in a literal interpretation of the Bible look foolish [source: Radford]. He confessed after an associate sued Barnum for claiming Barnum's giant was the original one [source: Brown]. The fake fossil is still around for viewing at the Farmer's Museum in Cooperstown, N.Y. [source: The Skeptic's Dictionary].
http://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/everyday-myths/10-crazy-hoaxes.htm#page=5
 
10-hoaxes-8.jpg

P.T. Barnum, depicted in this illustration, operated a 19th-century sideshow full of curiosities like the Fiji Mermaid.

Transcendental Graphics/Archive Photos/Getty Images


There's a sucker born every minute, as P.T. Barnum is famed for proclaiming. (Although someone else actually said it. But that's another story.) Barnum, a circus operator and huckster, operated a popular, 19th-century sideshow of "curiosities, freaks and oddities." Many of the people and objects in his sideshow were real: the Fat Lady, the little person Tom Thumb, the Bearded Lady. Then, in 1842, he included the Fiji Mermaid in his sideshow. The Fiji Mermaid, Barnum said, was the mummified remains of a real mermaid [source: TruTV].
People came, saw and believed. But a few skeptics were out there, and they dug around until they found out the truth -- Barnum was a liar. Gasp! The Fiji Mermaid wasn't a deceased sea maiden after all. She wasn't even necessarily a she. Barnum had simply attached the head and torso of a baby monkey onto the tail of a fish, then covered the whole thing in papier-mâché [source: TruTV]. Kinda gross, really.

http://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/everyday-myths/10-crazy-hoaxes.htm#page=8
 
Thanks for the info. Regarding the Palani temple idol, one rumour which was current some years ago was that the idol had actually tripped on to one side because for centuries, the portion of one calf muscle portion of that idol was being scraped diligently and the precious pAshANam dust was being sold to the many "Siddha" doctors flourishing around that temple town!

The idea of installing a new, granite idol originated then. The broken idol was somehow straightened by some cleverly built props and that is how the business is going on even now. What we now have is a lame murugan, in other words!
 
The abovementioned message is true it seems. The influence of some people cannot be ruled out. The medicinal value of the idol is proven fact.
 
Thanks for the info. Regarding the Palani temple idol, one rumour which was current some years ago was that the idol had actually tripped on to one side because for centuries, the portion of one calf muscle portion of that idol was being scraped diligently and the precious pAshANam dust was being sold to the many "Siddha" doctors flourishing around that temple town!

The idea of installing a new, granite idol originated then. The broken idol was somehow straightened by some cleverly built props and that is how the business is going on even now. What we now have is a lame murugan, in other words!
Sangomji, I did not give any information about Palani deity. My story was about an idol in Ihled, a fictitious town.

Lame idol is better than lame deity.
 
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