Game of Money

It was about twenty years old when I was working as an Executive Engineer in Rajasthan Electricity Board in Sojat Karne of Pali district. In the same area, in a famous village, a monk of a particular society was sitting. One day sadhus were sitting at their social festival. One day Sadhu Maharaj sent me an invitation to his social festival and I reached there on time with my subordinate engineers and staff.

 

Sadhu Maharaj introduced me to the people in the meeting and told them where there are complaints related to electricity if any. Whatever the department-related complaints were noted, noted, and assured of the solution, after that, Sadhu Maharaj honored a wealthy man by garlanding him and he was awarded the word ‘Danveer’.

 

When we started leaving the meeting after taking permission from Mahatmaji, the above-mentioned Danveer Gentleman joined us and said that we should take prasadi (food). We told him that our headquarters are not far away and food is being prepared at home at this time, so let us go. But he said that this is the order of Mahatma Ji, so you go to the gym.

 

When we reached the restaurant, we saw that three or four sadhus of other societies were standing at the gate.

 

And they were saying that we have been hungry since morning, if we get two or four puris, then we will not have to sleep hungry.

 

Danveer Gentleman, who was accompanying us, scolded him and drove him away.

 

Now you see the game of money. On one hand, he left the meeting with the title of Danveer, and fed us food with a special request even if we did not want to eat, but on the other, he could not even provide two or four puris to the hungry sadhus. It is called elephant’s teeth, different for eating and different for show-offs. On the same lines, in Jangid society, some capitalists get married in big hotels.

 

They show off their money by organizing events, to show their splendor to the people of other societies and they do not remember to call their younger brother, because he is taking care of his family by doing simple ancestral business.

 

If the noble Jangid brothers cut 20 percent of grand weddings and donate them to such social organizations, which destitute elderly people who have no one to look after or who have been evicted by their families, then the arrangements for food and medicine treatment in the morning and evening can be done, then those elders will give blessings throughout their life and the name of Jangid society will be illuminated in other societies also.

 

-Er. Tarachand

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