Narendra Nayak

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Narendra Nayak
File:Narennayak1.jpg
Born (1951-02-05) 5 February 1951 (age 73)
Occupation Rationalist, sceptic, columnist and biochemistry professor
Website Narendra Nayak's blog
File:Narendra nayak-miracle exposure.jpg
Prof Narendra Nayak during a miracle-exposure program conducted at Ayodhya on 5 November 2007 during the First All India Conference of Arjak Sangh, an affiliate of FIRA

Narendra Nayak (born 5 February 1951) is a notable rationalist, sceptic, and godman debunker from Mangalore, Karnataka, India.[1]

He is the current president of the Federation of Indian Rationalist Associations (FIRA). He founded the Dakshina Kannada Rationalist Association in 1976 and has been its secretary since then.[1] He also found an NGO called Aid Without Religion in July 2011.[2] He tours the country conducting workshops to promote scientific temper and showing people how to debunk godmen and frauds. He has conducted over 2000 such demonstrations in India, including some in Australia, Greece and England.[3] He is also a polyglot who speaks 9 languages fluently, which helps him when he is giving talks in various parts of the country.[4]

Life and work

Narendra Nayak was named after Swami Vivekananda (born Narendra Nath Datta).[5] He has stated that seeing his father's business premises being repossessed by the bank and his father buying a lottery ticket on the advice of an astrologer to pay off the loan with the total confidence that it would get the first prize made him turn to rationalism.[6] He married Asha Nayak, a lawyer in Mangaluru in a non-religious ceremony.[7] Narendra Nayak started out working as a lecturer in the Department of biochemistry in the Kasturba Medical College in Mangalore in 1978.[8][9] In 1982, he met Basava Premanand, a notable rationalist from Kerala, and was influenced by him.[6]

He decided to take on full-time anti-superstition activism in 2004 when he heard that a girl had been sacrificed in Gulbarga in Karnataka.[3] He was an assistant professor of biochemistry when he took voluntary retirement on 25 November 2006,[1] after working there for 28 years.[8][9]

Before the general election in 2009, Narendra Nayak laid an open challenge to any soothsayer to answer 25 questions correctly about the forthcoming elections. The prize was set at 10,00,000 (about US$15,000). About 450 responses were mailed to him, but none were found to be correct.[10][11] The Federation of Indian Rationalist Associations has been conducting such challenges since 1991.[12] During May 2013 Karnataka state assembly election, disappointed at the challenge being one-sided, Nayak had decided against the idea of challenging astrologers this time. But when a Bengaluru-based astrologer Shankar Hegde made claims to predict the election results accurately, he received the challenge.Narendra Nayak offered to hand over a cheque of Rs.10 lakh (after deducting taxes as applicable under income Tax Act), if 19 out of the 20 results were proven right.[13] However, later on astrologer Hegde did not turn up.

Through the organisation named Aid Without Religion which was registered in July 2011, he has been helping people and institutions where there are no religious rituals, superstitious practices, unscientific systems of medicine and such supernatural beliefs. The registration was done at Rahu Kalam, a time of the day which is the most inauspicious - so it was a double rather a triple whammy, a Saturday, new moon day that too in the month of Ati which is considered to be the most unlucky time and at Rahu Kalam![2]

He has been featured on National Geographic's television show Is it real?.[14] He has also appeared on the Discovery Channel.[6] He has been a regular columnist at the newspaper Mangalore Today since its inception.[9] He also serves on the editorial board of the Folks Magazine.[15]

He has admitted to have been attacked for his activism a few times.[16] He also has stated that his scooter's brake wires were once found severed, after an astrologer predicted his death or injury.[10]

Views

Nayak advocates that more people should be taught to perform the so-called miracles of godmen. He also advocates that people should be trained recognise pseudoscience and demand scientific evidence. He holds the opinion that well-known scientists should be convinced to join the cause and form pressure groups against pseudoscience.[17] He is also lobbying for a bill for the separation of state and religion to be introduced in the Indian parliament.[18][19] After the murder of anti-superstition activist Narendra Dabholkar and enactment of the anti-superstition ordinance in Maharashtra state, Nayak expressed the need of a similar law in Karnataka.[20]

Awards

See also

References

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Further reading

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External links