Traffic Cops make a success of Vastu
June 25th 2008 20:33
Category: Vastu
The Nagpur (a large district in the state of Maharashtra, India) rural police are “experimenting” with a vaastu shastra remedy to “banish bad energies” along the state and national highways to curb fatal accidents. Small vaastu pyramids (more like piles of stones), structured on the lines of the Egypt pyramids, have been installed at 12 accident-prone spots on heavy-traffic highways in the belief that those would transform “negative energies into positive fields” and avert mishaps. Superintendent of police (Nagpur rural) Yashasvi Yadav claimed accidents did drop ever since pyramids were installed beneath both sides of the road along the spots but he declined to attribute the reduction in accidents to
vastu-shastra.
Yadav categorically told: “It’s true the accidents have dropped sharply, but it may be sheer coincidence. It may be a cumulative effect of this and a number of policing measures, including installation of speed-guns, initiated by us.” “We can’t say anything conclusively today; we’ll continue the experiment for another six-seven months at other accident-prone spots to derive any inference,” said Yadav, who was approached by a city-based vastu expert and consultant Sushil Fatepuria with a request that he should be allowed to place his pyramids on the most accident-prone spots to see if his “remedy” worked.
But Fatepuria is jubilant at the outcome. “Officials and public representatives may not admit in the open given their position, but it’s a science and it works the way it does,” he said. “No one should have a problem experimenting with it.”
Fatepuria had identified the 12 most accident-prone spots along the heavy-traffic state and national highways leading into the orange city to install vaastu pyramids along the roads. Those spots, according to Fatepuria, are high in what are, in vaastu parlance, called negative fields. “The pyramids quell bad energies and create positive vibes.” “We use a special pendulum to check energy fields, which is called dowsing. Its oscillations and direction help us decide the presence of negative energy. We place the pyramid underground there,” Fatepuria said.
Of course the so called “rationalists” are not so happy about it.
Yadav categorically told: “It’s true the accidents have dropped sharply, but it may be sheer coincidence. It may be a cumulative effect of this and a number of policing measures, including installation of speed-guns, initiated by us.” “We can’t say anything conclusively today; we’ll continue the experiment for another six-seven months at other accident-prone spots to derive any inference,” said Yadav, who was approached by a city-based vastu expert and consultant Sushil Fatepuria with a request that he should be allowed to place his pyramids on the most accident-prone spots to see if his “remedy” worked.
But Fatepuria is jubilant at the outcome. “Officials and public representatives may not admit in the open given their position, but it’s a science and it works the way it does,” he said. “No one should have a problem experimenting with it.”
Fatepuria had identified the 12 most accident-prone spots along the heavy-traffic state and national highways leading into the orange city to install vaastu pyramids along the roads. Those spots, according to Fatepuria, are high in what are, in vaastu parlance, called negative fields. “The pyramids quell bad energies and create positive vibes.” “We use a special pendulum to check energy fields, which is called dowsing. Its oscillations and direction help us decide the presence of negative energy. We place the pyramid underground there,” Fatepuria said.
Of course the so called “rationalists” are not so happy about it.
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