Vegan Sudesh

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27/05/2026

*RU supporting Animal Sacrifice unknowingly?*No matter who it is ...

27/05/2026

A holy bloodshed tradition in Islamic culture is known as Bakrid. Billions of cows/goats will be brutally beheaded and then chopped into tiny pieces, also this year on Thursday, 28 May 2026. In the name of Islam, the majority of ignorant, blind-faith-practicing Muslim people will teach their children how to kill innocent, defenseless creatures without any remorse in Bakrid—the festival of cruelty, slaughter, and mourning. What kind of Islam is this, which is forcing Muslims to do this barbaric act?

☘️ VEGAN SUDESH 🐐🐄 🐪
The Global Campaign to Stop Animal Sacrifice
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[1] instagram.com/StopAnimalSacrifice

[2] campaign.sudesh.org

27/05/2026

*RU supporting Animal Sacrifice unknowingly?*

No matter who it is — if someone slaughters an animal during a festival and you send them your best wishes, then you are most certainly complicit in that cruelty.

Blood is red — whether it comes from a cow, a goat, or a human being. If you watch just one video of an animal sacrifice where the creature is writhing in agony, soaked in blood, you will never send best wishes to that person again. Instead, you will pray that they quickly come out of their cruel mindset.

Those who make innocent animals the victims of their cruelty are incapable of giving you even the slightest bit of compassion. So help them, awaken their compassion, before you become a victim of their violence.

☘️
The Global Campaign to Stop Animal Sacrifice

💁🏻‍♀️ https://campaign.sudesh.org/

🧘🏻‍♂️ Instagram.com/StopAnimalSacrifice

19/05/2026

"Surrogacy Can Be An Ethical Solution To Infertility"

*The practice of surrogacy can be traced back to the ancient Hindu culture where ‘Niyoga’ was followed, which got abolished with time. According to the most controversial Hindu Text, Manusmirity – Niyoga refers to the practice of temporary sexual relations of a woman with her husband’s brother or a revered person in society with the sole purpose of having a child in case she becomes a widow or her husband is incapable of having a child. There were some rules associated with Niyoga, such as the man would do this only to help the woman to have a child and not to have pleasure. He was allowed to do this for a maximum of three times only in his life. The consent of the woman was necessary. The child born with the help of this process was considered a child of the woman and her husband. The appointed man would not seek any relationship with the child. The concept of Niyoga might sound ridiculous to us, but it was practiced even by other cultures, like Jews, though in a different form.

*This is the additional information—not available with the published article in the book.

👨‍🏫 Prof. Sudesh Kumar
🌎 sudeshkumar.com

¶ You may order this book online:

Title: Medical Ethics (2010)
Publisher: Greenhaven Press
Publication Date: 31 August 2010
Edition: 1st
Language‎: English
Print length: 222 pages
ISBN-100737749164
ISBN-13978-0737749168
Price Approx. ₹2500/

Traditional society paints parenthood next to God, turning it into an endless emotional investment. For a woman, few exp...
18/05/2026

Traditional society paints parenthood next to God, turning it into an endless emotional investment. For a woman, few experiences are as profound; yet in an over‑populated world a child is often treated less as a conscious choice and more as a cultural expectation. In 1798, Thomas Malthus warned that “unchecked reproduction will outpace food and resources,” a warning we still ignore when we treat every child as a natural “right” without thinking about ecological and social limits. For many couples, having children is simply “the next step” they are expected to take, as if without parenthood life is incomplete—a moral burden enforced by family, religion, and custom rather than by reason.

Listen to this podcast -

🏡 youtube.com/

☘️ Prof. Sudesh Kumar
🌎 vegansudesh.com

17/05/2026
Bhutan has long prided itself as the world's only carbon-negative nation and a beacon of Buddhist compassion, proudly cl...
30/03/2026

Bhutan has long prided itself as the world's only carbon-negative nation and a beacon of Buddhist compassion, proudly claiming no commercial slaughterhouses on its soil to honor the precept of Ahimsa (non-violence) central to Mahayana Buddhism—where killing animals violates the First Precept against taking life. Yet, this stance is a facade: Bhutan imports nearly all its meat, with 2023 data from the Ministry of Agriculture and Forests showing over 5,000 metric tons of meat annually sourced primarily from India (via border trade hubs like Phuentsholing), including buffalo buff (carabeef), pork, and chicken. This reliance sustains high per capita meat consumption—28.5 kg/person/year (FAO 2022 stats), far above vegetarian norms—while dodging domestic killing to appease monastic vows and cultural taboos.

Enter the controversial Livestock Bill 2025, tabled in Bhutan's National Assembly in early 2025, which proposes legalizing commercial slaughterhouses for the first time. Proponents cite "food security" amid rising imports (up 15% from 2020-2024 per trade reports) and youth demands for local supply, but critics decry it as greedy "development" prioritizing GDP over Gross National Happiness (GNH). Why industrialize death on sacred land when 70% of Bhutanese are Buddhist (Pew Research 2020), and monastic leaders like the Je Khenpo have long opposed animal slaughter? Importing "death" was hypocritical enough; now mass-producing it locally—potentially for cows revered in Hindu-Buddhist traditions—betrays ahimsa at its core.

👨‍🏫 SUDESH KUMAR
🌎 sudeshkumar.com

I felt it—quiet yet insistent. The kind that grows from years of watching the world rush by, full of voices, choices, an...
06/11/2025

I felt it—quiet yet insistent. The kind that grows from years of watching the world rush by, full of voices, choices, and noise.

My fingers hovered over the keyboard. The blinking cursor seemed alive, asking me what truth I wanted to tell. I took a breath, the kind that clears a lifetime of hesitation, and began to type: “People share only what they have. I share ... this is my statement of life.”

For a moment, the world stilled. The fan hummed, a leaf brushed the window, and somehow, I felt the quiet approval of every being I had ever stood for—every animal, every bird, every unnoticed life.

🏡
☘️ vegansudesh.com

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