Book based on the Triple Eclipse of 2009 – History and What can be expected

The book titled ‘Will History Repeat Itself? Triple Eclipse of July 2009. Ominous? Promising?’ delves into the history of similar triple Grahan (Eclipse) and finds out what happened after the earlier triple eclipses and will the happenings repeat after the 2009 triple eclipse. In 2009, there is a lunar eclipse on July 7, a solar eclipse on July 22 and another lunar eclipse on August 6.

The first recorded triple eclipse was in 3067 BCE and it coincided with the 18-day war in the Mahabharata. Another triple grahan happened 36 years later in 3031 BCE and saw Dwarka – the city built by Lord Krishna – going under the sea.

The book ‘Will History Repeat Itself? Triple Eclipse of July 2009. Ominous? Promising?’ is written by DK Hari and D Hema Hari, founders of Bharath Gyan.

DNA India reports

Using planetarium software, which has been developed to precisely date the movements of various astral bodies for many thousands of years in the past and the future, the couple has tried to collate data from ancient texts about the observation of eclipses and to juxtapose them with actual events.

The predicted path of the forthcoming eclipse and recently observed pattern of earthquakes seem to hint at certain areas being more susceptible to earthquakes, says the book.

According to authors the other episodes of tripe eclipses brought in war and destruction -

“More recently, the first half of the 20th century saw the occurrence of a series of triple eclipse between 1910 and 1945, which coincided with World War I and II, the Holocaust, and the nuclear bombings in Japan," said Hari.

From 2009 to 2020, there will be seven triple eclipses taking place.

The book is no doomsday prediction according to the authors –

"The idea is not to be an alarmist, but to see if there are parallels," said Hema. "This is not an exercise in astrological prediction, but it is an exercise to see if there indeed was a correlation between the astronomical events as they occurred in the sky and the experience of civilization on the ground."

Will History Repeat Itself? Triple Eclipse of July 2009. Ominous? Promising?
Authors – DK Hari and D Hema Hari
Published by – The Art of Living
Price – Rs 200/-




4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Good information.....
I have viewed this on 24th June on India TV channel.

keep it up.

B N Mohapatra

mnnarendra10 said...

Authors of this book are trying to make easy money by feeding into the "fears" of the people. People writing articles such as this are bringing bad name to India and astrology. An "eclipse season" occurs about every 173 days, and contains 2 or 3 eclipses (combined lunar and solar). For 1993 through 2020 inclusive, there are about 59 eclipse seasons, and the following ones have 3 eclipses. So about 8 out of 59 (14%) eclipse seasons have 3 eclipses, or about 8 times in 28 years (an average of once every 3.5 years). The probability of having three eclipses within a month is 14%. To interpret future doomsday scenarios from a natural phenomenon such as eclipses that occurs this frequent is irresponsible and incorrect. The letters S and L indicate whether the first (and last) in the series is solar or lunar.

L 1998 (~August)
S 2000 (~July)
L 2002 (~June)
L 2009 (~July)
S 2011 (~June)
L 2013 (~May)
S 2018 (~July)
L 2020 (~June)

When this happens, there is an eclipse (lunar or solar) which is followed by another eclipse 14 or 15 days later (solar if the first was lunar, and vice versa), and that is followed by a third eclipse 14 or 15 days later (same type as the first).

Anonymous said...

Authors of this book are trying to make easy money by feeding into the "fears" of the people. People writing articles such as this are bringing bad name to India and astrology. An "eclipse season" occurs about every 173 days, and contains 2 or 3 eclipses (combined lunar and solar). For 1993 through 2020 inclusive, there are about 59 eclipse seasons, and the following ones have 3 eclipses. So about 8 out of 59 (14%) eclipse seasons have 3 eclipses, or about 8 times in 28 years (an average of once every 3.5 years). The probability of having three eclipses within a month is 14%. To interpret future doomsday scenarios from a natural phenomenon such as eclipses that occurs this frequent is irresponsible and incorrect. The letters S and L indicate whether the first (and last) in the series is solar or lunar.

L 1998 (~August)
S 2000 (~July)
L 2002 (~June)
L 2009 (~July)
S 2011 (~June)
L 2013 (~May)
S 2018 (~July)
L 2020 (~June)

When this happens, there is an eclipse (lunar or solar) which is followed by another eclipse 14 or 15 days later (solar if the first was lunar, and vice versa), and that is followed by a third eclipse 14 or 15 days later (same type as the first).

Anonymous said...

But the solar eclipse occurred during the war, when Jaydrath was killed. It is a different matter that Krishna took the credit of hiding the sun!!!

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