MADHU'S CREDIBILITY IS CRUMBLING . . .
On the left, see Swami with the Kanayazhi ring HE created to show to students. This is the ring that Lord Rama sent through Hanuman to Mother Sita.
On the right see the ring displayed by Madhusudhan Naidu in Sri Lanka recently, who claimed it to be the same Kanayazhi ring!
On the right see the ring displayed by Madhusudhan Naidu in Sri Lanka recently, who claimed it to be the same Kanayazhi ring!
DO THESE RINGS LOOK THE SAME to you?
Let's examine:
SWAMI'S MATERIALISATION:
The ring on the left in Swami’s hand:
1. It looks like a large Blue Sapphire. (Blue stones are considered powerful, and have a long history of being used by royal households and monarchs.)
2. It looks like a Cabochon.
(A cabochon, from the French word caboche (meaning "head"), is a gemstone which has been shaped and polished as opposed to faceted. The resulting form is usually a convex (rounded) obverse with a flat reverse. Cutting en cabochon (French: "in the manner of a cabochon") is usually applied to opaque gems, while faceting is usually applied to transparent stones.
3. There is no filigree work on the sides , but instead what looks like a plain silver narrow band encasing, no clamps.
MADHU'S RING:
This black ring on the right is allegedly, according to Madhu in Sri Lanka, the same Kanayazhi ring!
1. This ring is much smaller in size.
2. It is black, not blue, possibly a Black Onyx.
3. It is a faceted gemstone as opposed to a cabochon.
4. In contrast to the Kanayazhi ring Swami materialised, there is ornate filigree work on a wider band with clamps to secure the stone.
SWAMI'S MATERIALISATION:
The ring on the left in Swami’s hand:
1. It looks like a large Blue Sapphire. (Blue stones are considered powerful, and have a long history of being used by royal households and monarchs.)
2. It looks like a Cabochon.
(A cabochon, from the French word caboche (meaning "head"), is a gemstone which has been shaped and polished as opposed to faceted. The resulting form is usually a convex (rounded) obverse with a flat reverse. Cutting en cabochon (French: "in the manner of a cabochon") is usually applied to opaque gems, while faceting is usually applied to transparent stones.
3. There is no filigree work on the sides , but instead what looks like a plain silver narrow band encasing, no clamps.
MADHU'S RING:
This black ring on the right is allegedly, according to Madhu in Sri Lanka, the same Kanayazhi ring!
1. This ring is much smaller in size.
2. It is black, not blue, possibly a Black Onyx.
3. It is a faceted gemstone as opposed to a cabochon.
4. In contrast to the Kanayazhi ring Swami materialised, there is ornate filigree work on a wider band with clamps to secure the stone.
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