When Vivekananda returned from America he gave series of 'Lectures from Colombo to Almora'. This was given at Chennai.
Today is Snanayatra day. May Lord Jagannath bless us all.
In speaking of the
sages of India, my mind goes back to those periods of which history has no
record, and tradition tries in vain to bring the secrets out of the gloom of
the past. The sages of India have been almost innumerable, for what has the
Hindu nation been doing for thousands of years except producing sages? I will
take, therefore, the lives of a few of the most brilliant ones, the
epoch-makers, and present them before you, that is to say, my study of them.
In the first place, we
have to understand a little about our scriptures. Two ideals of truth are in
our scriptures; the one is, what we call the eternal, and the other is not so
authoritative, yet binding under particular circumstances, times, and places. The
eternal relations which deal with the nature of the soul, and of God, and the
relations between souls and God are embodied in what we call the Shrutis, the
Vedas. The next set of truths is what we call the Smritis, as embodied in the
words of Manu. Yâjnavalkya, and other writers and also in the Purânas, down to
the Tantras. The second class of books and teachings is subordinate to the
Shrutis, inasmuch as whenever any one of these contradicts anything in the
Shrutis, the Shrutis must prevail. This is the law. The idea is that the
framework of the destiny and goal of man has been all delineated in the Vedas,
the details have been left to be worked out in the Smritis and Puranas. As for
general directions, the Shrutis are enough; for spiritual life, nothing more
can be said, nothing more can be known. All that is necessary has been known,
all the advice that is necessary to lead the soul to perfection has been
completed in the Shrutis; the details alone were left out, and these the
Smritis have supplied from time to time.
Another peculiarity is
that these Shrutis have many sages as the recorders of the truths in them,
mostly men, even some women. Very little is known of their personalities,
the dates of their birth, and so forth, but their best thoughts, their best
discoveries, I should say, are preserved there, embodied in the sacred
literature of our country, the Vedas. In the Smritis, on the other hand,
personalities are more in evidence. Startling, gigantic, impressive,
world-moving persons stand before us, as it were, for the first time, sometimes
of more magnitude even than their teachings.
This is a peculiarity
which we have to understand — that our religion preaches an Impersonal Personal
God. It preaches any amount of impersonal laws plus any amount of
personality, but the very fountain-head of our religion is in the Shrutis, the
Vedas, which are perfectly impersonal; the persons all come in the Smritis and
Puranas — the great Avatâras, Incarnations of God, Prophets, and so forth. And
this ought also to be observed that except our religion every other religion in
the world depends upon the life or lives of some personal founder or founders.
Christianity is built upon the life of Jesus Christ, Mohammedanism upon
Mohammed, Buddhism upon Buddha, Jainism upon the Jinas, and so on. It naturally
follows that there must be in all these religions a good deal of fight about
what they call the historical evidences of these great personalities. If at any
time the historical evidences about the existence of these personages in
ancient times become weak, the whole building of the religion tumbles down and
is broken to pieces. We escaped this fate because our religion is not based
upon persons but on principles. That you obey your religion is not because it
came through the authority of a sage, no, not even of an Incarnation. Krishna
is not the authority of the Vedas, but the Vedas are the authority of Krishna
himself. His glory is that he is the greatest preacher of the Vedas that ever
existed. So with the other Incarnations; so with all our sages. Our first
principle is that all that is necessary for the perfection of man and for
attaining unto freedom is there in the Vedas. You cannot find anything new. You
cannot go beyond a perfect unity, which is the goal of all knowledge; this has
been already reached there, and it is impossible to go beyond the unity.
Religious knowledge became complete when Tat Twam Asi (Thou art That) was
discovered, and that was in the Vedas. What remained was the guidance of people
from time to time according to different times and places, according to
different circumstances and environments; people had to be guided along the
old, old path, and for this these great teachers came, these great sages.
Nothing can bear out more clearly this position than the celebrated saying of
Shri Krishna in the Gitâ: "Whenever virtue subsides and irreligion
prevails, I create Myself for the protection of the good; for the destruction
of all immorality I am coming from time to time." This is the idea in
India.
What follows? That on
the one hand, there are these eternal principles which stand upon their own
foundations without depending on any reasoning even, much less on the authority
of sages however great, of Incarnations however brilliant they may have been. We
may remark that as this is the unique position in India, our claim is that the
Vedanta only can be the universal religion, that it is already the existing
universal religion in the world, because it teaches principles and not persons.
No religion built upon a person can be taken up as a type by all the races of
mankind. In our own country we find that there have been so many grand
characters; in even a small city many persons are taken up as types by the
different minds in that one city. How is it possible that one person as
Mohammed or Buddha or Christ, can be taken up as the one type for the whole
world, nay, that the whole of morality, ethics, spirituality, and religion can
be true only from the sanction of that one person, and one person alone? Now, the
Vedantic religion does not require any such personal authority. Its
sanction is the eternal nature of man, its ethics are based upon the eternal
spiritual solidarity of man, already existing, already attained and not to be
attained. On the other hand, from the very earliest times, our sages have been
feeling conscious of this fact that the vast majority of mankind require a
personality. They must have a Personal God in some form or other. The very
Buddha who declared against the existence of a Personal God had not died fifty
years before his disciples manufactured a Personal God out of him. The Personal
God is necessary, and at the same time we know that instead of and better than
vain imaginations of a Personal God, which in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred
are unworthy of human worship we have in this world, living and walking in our
midst, living Gods, now and then. These are more worthy of worship than any
imaginary God, any creation of our imagination, that is to say, any idea of God
which we can form. Shri Krishna is much greater than any idea of God you or I
can have. Buddha is a much higher idea, a more living and idolised idea, than
the ideal you or I can conceive of in our minds; and therefore it is that they
always command the worship of mankind even to the exclusion of all imaginary
deities.
This our sages knew,
and, therefore, left it open to all Indian people to worship such great
Personages, such Incarnations. Nay, the greatest of these Incarnations goes
further: "Wherever an extraordinary spiritual power is manifested by
external man, know that I am there, it is from Me that that manifestation
comes." That leaves the door open for the Hindu to worship the
Incarnations of all the countries in the world. The Hindu can worship any sage
and any saint from any country whatsoever, and as a fact we know that we go and
worship many times in the churches of the Christians, and many, many times in
the Mohammedan mosques, and that is good. Why not? Ours, as I have said, is the
universal religion. It is inclusive enough, it is broad enough to include
all the ideals. All the ideals of religion that already exist in the world can
be immediately included, and we can patiently wait for all the ideals that are
to come in the future to be taken in the same fashion, embraced in the infinite
arms of the religion of the Vedanta.
This, more or less, is
our position with regard to the great sages, the Incarnations of God. There are
also secondary characters. We find the word Rishi again and again mentioned in
the Vedas, and it has become a common word at the present time. The Rishi is
the great authority. We have to understand that idea. The definition is that
the Rishi is the Mantra-drashtâ, the seer of thought. What is the proof of
religion? — this was asked in very ancient times. There is no proof in the
senses was the declaration.
— "From whence
words reflect back with thought without reaching the goal."
— "There the eyes
cannot reach, neither can speech, nor the mind" — that has been the
declaration for ages and ages. Nature outside cannot give us any answer as to
the existence of the soul, the existence of God, the eternal life, the goal of
man, and all that. This mind is continually changing, always in a state of
flux; it is finite, it is broken into pieces. How can nature tell of the
Infinite, the Unchangeable, the Unbroken, the Indivisible, the Eternal? It
never can. And whenever mankind has striven to get an answer from dull dead
matter, history shows how disastrous the results have been. How comes, then,
the knowledge which the Vedas declare? It comes through being a Rishi. This
knowledge is not in the senses; but are the senses the be-all and the end-all
of the human being? Who dare say that the senses are the all-in-all of man?
Even in our lives, in the life of every one of us here, there come moments of
calmness, perhaps, when we see before us the death of one we loved, when some
shock comes to us, or when extremeblessedness comes to us. Many other occasions
there are when the mind, as it were, becomes calm, feels for the moment its
real nature; and a glimpse of the Infinite beyond, where words cannot reach nor
the mind go, is revealed to us. This happens in ordinary life, but it has to be
heightened, practiced, perfected. Men found out ages ago that the soul is not
bound or limited by the senses, no, not even by consciousness. We have to
understand that this consciousness is only the name of one link in the infinite
chain. Being is not identical with consciousness, but consciousness is only one
part of Being. Beyond consciousness is where the bold search lies.
Consciousness is bound by the senses. Beyond that, beyond the senses, men must
go in order to arrive at truths of the spiritual world, and there are even now
persons who succeed in going beyond the bounds of the senses. These are called
Rishis, because they come face to face with spiritual truths.
The proof, therefore,
of the Vedas is just the same as the proof of this table before me, Pratyaksha,
direct perception. This I see with the senses, and the truths of spirituality
we also see in a superconscious state of the human soul. This Rishi-state is
not limited by time or place, by sex or race. Vâtsyâyana boldly declares that
this Rishihood is the common property of the descendants of the sage, of the
Aryan, of the non-Aryan, of even the Mlechchha. This is the sageship of the
Vedas, and constantly we ought to remember this ideal of religion in India,
which I wish other nations of the world would also remember and learn, so that
there may be less fight and less quarrel. Religion is not in books, nor in
theories, nor in dogmas, nor in talking, not even in reasoning. It is being and
becoming. Ay, my friends, until each one of you has become a Rishi and come face
to face with spiritual facts, religious life has not begun for you. Until the
superconscious opens for you, religion is mere talk, it is nothing but
preparation. You are talking second-hand, third-hand, and here applies that
beautiful saying of Buddha when he had a discussion with some Brahmins. They
came discussing about the nature of Brahman, and the great sage asked,
"Have you seen Brahman?" "No, said the Brahmin; "Or your
father?" "No, neither has he"; "Or your grandfather?"
"I don't think even he saw Him." "My friend, how can you discuss
about a person whom your father and grandfather never saw, and try to put each
other down?" That is what the whole world is doing. Let us say in the
language of the Vedanta, "This Atman is not to be reached by too much
talk, no, not even by the highest intellect, no, not even by the study of the
Vedas themselves."
Let us speak to all the
nations of the world in the language of the Vedas: Vain are your fights and
your quarrels; have you seen God whom you want to preach? If you have not seen,
vain is your preaching; you do not know what you say; and if you have seen God,
you will not quarrel, your very face will shine. An ancient sage of the
Upanishads sent his son out to learn about Brahman, and the child came back, and
the father asked, "what have you learnt?" The child replied he had
learnt so many sciences. But the father said, "That is nothing, go
back." And the son went back, and when he returned again the father asked
the same question, and the same answer came from the child. Once more he had to
go back. And the next time he came, his whole face was shining; and his father
stood up and declared, "Ay, today, my child, your face shines like a
knower of Brahman." When you have known God, your very face will be
changed, your voice will be changed, your whole appearance will he changed. You
will be a blessing to mankind; none will be able to resist the Rishi. This is
the Rishihood, the ideal in our religion. The rest, all these talks and
reasonings and philosophies and dualisms and monisms, and even the Vedas
themselves are but preparations, secondary things. The other is primary.
The Vedas, grammar, astronomy, etc., all these are secondary; that is supreme
knowledge which makes us realise the Unchangeable One. Those who realised are
the sages whom we find in the Vedas; and we understand how this Rishi is the
name of a type, of a class, which every one of us, as true Hindus, is expected
to become at some period of our life, and becoming which, to the Hindu, means
salvation. Not belief in doctrines, not going to thousands of temples, nor
bathing in all the rivers in the world, but becoming the Rishi, the
Mantra-drashta — that is freedom, that is salvation.
Coming down to later
times, there have been great world-moving sages, great Incarnations of whom
there have been many; and according to the Bhâgavata, they also are
infinite in number, and those that are worshipped most in India are Râma and
Krishna. Rama, the ancient idol of the heroic ages, the embodiment of truth, of
morality, the ideal son, the ideal husband, the ideal father, and above all,
the ideal king, this Rama has been presented before us by the great sage
Vâlmiki. No language can be purer, none chaster, none more beautiful and at the
same time simpler than the language in which the great poet has depicted the
life of Rama. And what to speak of Sitâ? You may exhaust the literature of the
world that is past, and I may assure you that you will have to exhaust the
literature of the world of the future, before finding another Sita. Sita is
unique; that character was depicted once and for all. There may have been
several Ramas, perhaps, but never more than one Sita! She is the very type of
the true Indian woman, for all the Indian ideals of a perfected woman have
grown out of that one life of Sita; and here she stands these thousands of
years, commanding the worship of every man, woman, and child throughout the
length and breadth of the land of Âryâvarta. There she will always be, this
glorious Sita, purer than purity itself, all patience, and all suffering.
She who suffered that life of suffering without a murmur, she the ever-chaste
and ever-pure wife, she the ideal of the people, the ideal of the gods, the
great Sita, our national God she must always remain. And every one of us knows
her too well to require much delineation. All our mythology may vanish, even
our Vedas may depart, and our Sanskrit language may vanish for ever, but so
long as there will be five Hindus living here, even if only speaking the most
vulgar patois, there will be the story of Sita present. Mark my words: Sita has
gone into the very vitals of our race. She is there in the blood of every Hindu
man and woman; we are all children of Sita. Any attempt to modernise our women,
if it tries to take our women away from that ideal of Sita, is immediately a
failure, as we see every day. The women of India must grow and develop in the
footprints of Sita, and that is the only way.
The next is He who is
worshipped in various forms, the favourite ideal of men as well as of women,
the ideal of children, as well as of grown-up men. I mean He whom the writer of
the Bhagavata was not content to call an Incarnation but says,
"The other Incarnations were but parts of the Lord. He, Krishna, was the
Lord Himself." And it is not strange that such adjectives are applied to
him when we marvel at the many-sidedness of his character. He was the most
wonderful Sannyasin, and the most wonderful householder in one; he had the most
wonderful amount of Rajas, power, and was at the same time living in the midst
of the most wonderful renunciation. Krishna can never he understood until you
have studied the Gita, for he was the embodiment of his own teaching. Every one
of these Incarnations came as a living illustration of what they came to
preach. Krishna, the preacher of the Gita, was all his life the embodiment of
that Song Celestial; he was the great illustration of non-attachment. He gives
up his throne and never cares for it. He, the leader of India, at whose word
kings come down from their thrones, never wants to be a king. He is the simple
Krishna, ever the same Krishna who played with the Gopis. Ah, that most
marvellous passage of his life, the most difficult to understand, and which
none ought to attempt to understand until he has become perfectly chaste and
pure, that most marvellous expansion of love, allegorised and expressed in that
beautiful play at Vrindâban, which none can understand but he who has become
mad with love, drunk deep of the cup of love! Who can understand the throes of
the lore of the Gopis — the very ideal of love, love that wants nothing, love
that even does not care for heaven, love that does not care for anything in
this world or the world to come? And here, my friends, through this love of the
Gopis has been found the only solution of the conflict between the Personal and
the Impersonal God. We know how the Personal God is the highest point of human
life; we know that it is philosophical to believe in an Impersonal God immanent
in the universe, of whom everything is but a manifestation. At the same time
our souls hanker after something concrete, something which we want to grasp, at
whose feet we can pour out our soul, and so on. The Personal God is therefore
the highest conception of human nature. Yet reason stands aghast at such an
idea. It is the same old, old question which you find discussed in the Brahma-Sutras,
which you find Draupadi discussing with Yudhishthira in the forest: If there is
a Personal God, all-merciful, all-powerful, why is the hell of an earth here,
why did He create this? — He must be a partial God. There was no solution, and
the only solution that can be found is what you read about the love of the
Gopis. They hated every adjective that was applied to Krishna; they did not
care to know that he was the Lord of creation, they did not care to know that
he was almighty, they did not care to know that he was omnipotent, and so
forth. The only thing they understood was that he was infinite Love, that was
all. The Gopis understood Krishna only as the Krishna of Vrindaban. He,
the leader of the hosts, the King of kings, to them was the shepherd, and the
shepherd for ever. "I do not want wealth, nor many people, nor do I want
learning; no, not even do I want to go to heaven. Let one be born again and
again, but Lord, grant me this, that I may have love for Thee, and that for
love's sake." A great landmark in the history of religion is here, the
ideal of love for love's sake, work for work's sake, duty for duty's sake, and
it for the first time fell from the lips of the greatest of Incarnations,
Krishna, and for the first time in the history of humanity, upon the soil of
India. The religions of fear and of temptations were gone for ever, and in
spite of the fear of hell and temptation of enjoyment in heaven, came the
grandest of ideals, love for love's sake, duty for duty's sake, work for work's
sake.
And what a love! I have
told you just now that it is very difficult to understand the love of the
Gopis. There are not wanting fools, even in the midst of us, who cannot
understand the marvellous significance of that most marvellous of all episodes.
There are, let me repeat, impure fools, even born of our blood, who try to
shrink from that as if from something impure. To them I have only to say, first
make yourselves pure; and you must remember that he who tells the history of
the love of the Gopis is none else but Shuka Deva. The historian who records
this marvellous love of the Gopis is one who was born pure, the eternally pure Shuka,
the son of Vyâsa. So long as there its selfishness in the heart, so long is
love of God impossible; it is nothing but shopkeeping: "I give you
something; O Lord, you give me something in return"; and says the Lord,
"If you do not do this, I will take good care of you when you die. I will
roast you all the rest of your lives. perhaps", and so on. So long as such
ideas are in the brain, how can one understand the mad throes of the Gopis'
love? "O for one, one kiss of those lips! One who has been kissed by
Thee, his thirst for Thee increases for ever, all sorrows vanish, and he
forgets love for everything else but for Thee and Thee alone." Ay, forget
first the love for gold, and name and fame, and for this little trumpery world
of ours. Then, only then, you will understand the love of the Gopis, too holy
to be attempted without giving up everything, too sacred co be understood until
the soul has become perfectly pure. People with ideas of sex, and of money, and
of fame, bubbling up every minute in the heart, daring to criticise and
understand the love of the Gopis! That is the very essence of the Krishna
Incarnation. Even the Gita, the great philosophy itself, does not compare with
that madness, for in the Gita the disciple is taught slowly how to walk towards
the goal, but here is the madness of enjoyment, the drunkenness of love, where
disciples and teachers and teachings and books and all these things have become
one; even the ideas of fear, and God, and heaven — everything has been thrown
away. What remains is the madness of love. It is forgetfulness of everything,
and the lover sees nothing in the world except that Krishna and Krishna alone,
when the face of every being becomes a Krishna, when his own face looks like
Krishna, when his own soul has become tinged with the Krishna colour. That was
the great Krishna!
Do not waste your time
upon little details. Take up the framework, the essence of the life. There may
be many historical discrepancies, there may be interpolations in the life of
Krishna. All these things may be true; but, at the same time, there must have
been a basis, a foundation for this new and tremendous departure. Taking the
life of any other sage or prophet, we find that that prophet is only the
evolution of what had gone before him, we find that that prophet is only
preaching the ideas that had been scattered about his own country even in his
own times. Great doubts may exist even as to whether that prophet existed or
not. But here, I challenge any one to show whether these things, these ideals
— work for work's sake, love for love's sake, duty for duty's sake, were not
original ideas with Krishna, and as such, there must have been someone with
whom these ideas originated. They could not have been borrowed from anybody
else. They were not floating about in the atmosphere when Krishna was born. But
the Lord Krishna was the first preacher of this; his disciple Vyasa took it up
and preached it unto mankind. This is the highest idea to picture. The highest
thing we can get out of him is Gopijanavallabha, the Beloved of the Gopis of
Vrindaban. When that madness comes in your brain, when you understand the
blessed Gopis, then you will understand what love is. When the whole world will
vanish, when all other considerations will have died out, when you will become
pure-hearted with no other aim, not even the search after truth, then and then
alone will come to you the madness of that love, the strength and the power of
that infinite love which the Gopis had, that love for love's sake. That is the
goal. When you have got that, you have got everything.
To come down to the
lower stratum — Krishna, the preacher of the Gita. Ay, there is an attempt in
India now which is like putting the cart before the horse. Many of our people
think that Krishna as the lover of the Gopis is something rather uncanny, and
the Europeans do not like it much. Dr. So-and-so does not like it. Certainly
then, the Gopis have to go! Without the sanction of Europeans how can Krishna
live? He cannot! In the Mahabharata there is no mention of the Gopis except in
one or two places, and those not very remarkable places. In the prayer of
Draupadi there is mention of a Vrindaban life, and in the speech of Shishupâla
there is again mention of this Vrindaban. All these are interpolations! What the
Europeans do not want: must be thrown off. They are interpolations, the mention
of the Gopis and of Krishna too! Well, with these men, steeped in
commercialism, where even the ideal of religion has become commercial,
they are all trying to go to heaven by doing something here; the bania wants
compound interest, wants to lay by something here and enjoy it there. Certainly
the Gopis have no place in such a system of thought. From that ideal lover we
come down to the lower stratum of Krishna, the preacher of the Gita. Than the
Gita no better commentary on the Vedas has been written or can be written. The
essence of the Shrutis, or of the Upanishads, is hard to be understood, seeing
that there are so many commentators, each one trying to interpret in his own
way. Then the Lord Himself comes, He who is the inspirer of the Shrutis, to
show us the meaning of them, as the preacher of the Gita, and today India wants
nothing better, the world wants nothing better than that method of
interpretation. It is a wonder that subsequent interpreters of the scriptures,
even commenting upon the Gita, many times could not catch the meaning, many
times could not catch the drift. For what do you find in the Gita, and what in
modern commentators? One non-dualistic commentator takes up an Upanishad; there
are so many dualistic passages, and he twists and tortures them into some
meaning, and wants to bring them all into a meaning of his own. If a dualistic
commentator comes, there are so many nondualistic texts which he begins to torture,
to bring them all round to dualistic meaning. But you find in the Gita there is
no attempt at torturing any one of them. They are all right, says the Lord; for
slowly and gradually the human soul rises up and up, step after step, from the
gross to the fine, from the fine to the finer, until it reaches the Absolute,
the goal. That is what is in the Gita. Even the Karma Kanda is taken up, and it
is shown that although it cannot give salvation direct; but only indirectly,
yet that is also valid; images are valid indirectly; ceremonies, forms,
everything is valid only with one condition, purity of the heart. For worship
is valid and leads to the goal if the heart is pure and the heart is
sincere; and all these various modes of worship are necessary, else why should
they be there? Religions and sects are not the work of hypocrites and wicked
people who invented all these to get a little money, as some of our modern men
want to think. However reasonable that explanation may seem, it is not true,
and they were not invented that way at all. They are the outcome of the
necessity of the human soul. They are all here to satisfy the hankering and
thirst of different classes of human minds, and you need not preach against
them. The day when that necessity will cease, they will vanish along with the
cessation of that necessity; and so long as that necessity remains, they must
be there in spite of your preaching, in spite of your criticism. You may bring
the sword or the gun into play, you may deluge the world with human blood, but
so long as there is a necessity for idols, they must remain. These forms, and
all the various steps in religion will remain, and we understand from the Lord
Shri Krishna why they should.
A rather sadder chapter
of India's history comes now. In the Gita we already hear the distant sound of
the conflicts of sects, and the Lord comes in the middle to harmonise them all;
He, the great preacher of harmony, the greatest teacher of harmony, Lord Shri
Krishna. He says, "In Me they are all strung like pearls upon a
thread." We already hear the distant sounds, the murmurs of the conflict,
and possibly there was a period of harmony and calmness, when it broke out
anew, not only on religious grounds, but roost possibly on caste grounds — the
fight between the two powerful factors in our community, the kings and the
priests. And from the topmost crest of the wave that deluged India for nearly a
thousand years, we see another glorious figure, and that was our Gautama
Shâkyamuni. You all know about his teachings and preachings. We worship him as
God incarnate, the greatest, the boldest preacher of morality that the world
ever saw, the greatest Karma-Yogi; as disciple of himself, as it were, the
same Krishna came to show how to make his theories practical. There came once
again the same voice that in the Gita preached, "Even the least bit done
of this religion saves from great fear". "Women, or Vaishyas, or even
Shudras, all reach the highest goal." Breaking the bondages of all, the
chains of all, declaring liberty to all to reach the highest goal, come the
words of the Gita, rolls like thunder the mighty voice of Krishna: "Even
in this life they have conquered relativity, whose minds are firmly fixed upon
the sameness, for God is pure and the same to all, therefore such are said to
be living in God." "Thus seeing the same Lord equally present
everywhere, the sage does not injure the Self by the self, and thus reaches the
highest goal." As it were to give a living example of this preaching, as
it were to make at least one part of it practical, the preacher himself came in
another form, and this was Shakyamuni, the preacher to the poor and the
miserable, he who rejected even the language of the gods to speak in the
language of the people, so that he might reach the hearts of the people, he who
gave up a throne to live with beggars, and the poor, and the downcast, he who
pressed the Pariah to his breast like a second Rama.
You all know about his
great work, his grand character. But the work had one great defect, and for
that we are suffering even today. No blame attaches to the Lord. He is pure and
glorious, but unfortunately such high ideals could not be well assimilated by
the different uncivilised and uncultured races of mankind who flocked within
the fold of the Aryans. These races, with varieties of superstition and hideous
worship, rushed within the fold of the Aryans and for a time appeared as if
they had become civilised, but before a century had passed they brought out
their snakes, their ghosts, and all the other things their ancestors used to
worship, and thus the whole of India became one degraded mass of superstition.
The earlier Buddhists in their rage against the killing of animals had
denounced the sacrifices of the Vedas; and these sacrifices used to be held in
every house. There was a fire burning, and that was all the paraphernalia of
worship. These sacrifices were obliterated, and in their place came gorgeous
temples, gorgeous ceremonies, and gorgeous priests, and all that you see in
India in modern times. I smile when I read books written by some modern people
who ought to have known better, that the Buddha was the destroyer of
Brahminical idolatry. Little do they know that Buddhism created Brahminism and
idolatry in India.
There was a book
written a year or two ago by a Russian gentleman, who claimed to have found out
a very curious life of Jesus Christ, and in one part of the book he says that
Christ went to the temple of Jagannath to study with the Brahmins, but became
disgusted with their exclusiveness and their idols, and so he went to the Lamas
of Tibet instead, became perfect, and went home. To any man who knows anything
about Indian history, that very statement proves that the whole thing was a
fraud, because the temple of Jagannath is an old Buddhistic temple. We took
this and others over and re-Hinduised them. We shall have to do many things
like that yet. That is Jagannath, and there was not one Brahmin there then, and
yet we are told that Jesus Christ came to study with the Brahmins there. So says
our great Russian archaeologist.
Thus, in spite of the
preaching of mercy to animals, in spite of the sublime ethical religion, in
spite of the hairsplitting discussions about the existence or non-existence of
a permanent soul, the whole building of Buddhism tumbled down piecemeal; and
the ruin was simply hideous. I have neither the time nor the inclination to
describe to you the hideousness that came in the wake of Buddhism. The most
hideous ceremonies, the most horrible, the most obscene books that human hands
ever wrote or the human brain ever conceived, the most bestial forms that ever passed
under the name of religion, have all been the creation of degraded Buddhism.
But India has to live,
and the spirit of the Lords descended again. He who declared, "I will come
whenever virtue subsides", came again, and this time the manifestation was
in the South, and up rose that young Brahmin of whom it has been declared that
at the age of sixteen he had completed all his writings; the marvellous boy
Shankaracharya arose. The writings of this boy of sixteen are the wonders of
the modern world, and so was the boy. He wanted to bring back the Indian world
to its pristine purity, but think of the amount of the task before him. I have
told you a few points about the state of things that existed in India. All
these horrors that you are trying to reform are the outcome of that reign of
degradation. The Tartars and the Baluchis and all the hideous races of mankind
came to India and became Buddhists, and assimilated with us, and brought their
national customs, and the whole of our national life became a huge page of the
most horrible and the most bestial customs. That was the inheritance which that
boy got from the Buddhists, and from that time to this, the whole work in India
is a reconquest of this Buddhistic degradation by the Vedanta. It is still
going on, it is not yet finished. Shankara came, a great philosopher, and
showed that the real essence of Buddhism and that of the Vedanta are not very
different, but that the disciples did not understand the Master and have
degraded themselves, denied the existence of the soul and of God, and have
become atheists. That was what Shankara showed, and all the Buddhists began to
come back to the old religion. But then they had become accustomed to all these
forms; what could be done?
Then came the brilliant
Râmânuja. Shankara, with his great intellect, I am afraid, had not as great a
heart. Ramanuja's heart was greater. He felt for the downtrodden, he
sympathised with them. He took up the ceremonies, the accretions that had
gathered, made them pure so far as they could be, and instituted new
ceremonies, new methods of worship, for the people who absolutely required
them. At the same time he opened the door to the highest; spiritual worship
from the Brahmin to the Pariah. That was Ramanuja's work. That work rolled on,
invaded the North, was taken up by some great leaders there; but that was much
later, during the Mohammedan rule; and the brightest of these prophets of
comparatively modern times in the North was Chaitanya.
You may mark one
characteristic since the time of Ramanuja — the opening of the door of
spirituality to every one. That has been the watchword of all prophets
succeeding Ramanuja, as it had been the watchword of all the prophets before
Shankara. I do not know why Shankara should be represented as rather exclusive;
I do not find anything in his writings which is exclusive. As in the case of
the declarations of the Lord Buddha, this exclusiveness that has been attributed
to Shankara's teachings is most possibly not due to his teachings, but to the
incapacity of his disciples. This one great Northern sage, Chaitanya,
represented the mad love of the Gopis. Himself a Brahmin, born of one of the
most rationalistic families of the day, himself a professor of logic fighting
and gaining a word-victory — for, this he had learnt from his childhood as the
highest ideal of life and yet through the mercy of some sage the whole life of
that man became changed; he gave up his fight, his quarrels, his professorship
of logic and became one of the greatest teachers of Bhakti the world has ever
known — mad Chaitanya. His Bhakti rolled over the whole land of Bengal,
bringing solace to every one. His love knew no bounds. The saint or the sinner,
the Hindu or the Mohammedan, the pure or the impure, the prostitute, the
streetwalker — all had a share in his love, all had a share in his mercy: and
even to the present day, although greatly degenerated, as everything does
become in time, his sect is the refuge of the poor, of the downtrodden, of the
outcast, of the weak, of those who have been rejected by all society. But at
the same time I must remark for truth's sake that we find this: In the
philosophic sects we find wonderful liberalisms. There is not a man who follows
Shankara who will say that all the different sects of India are really
different. At the same time he was a tremendous upholder of exclusiveness as
regards caste. But with every Vaishnavite preacher we find a wonderful
liberalism as to the teaching of caste questions, but exclusiveness as regards
religious questions.
The one had a great
head, the other a large heart, and the time was ripe for one to be born, the
embodiment of both this head and heart; the time was ripe for one to be born
who in one body would have the brilliant intellect of Shankara and the
wonderfully expansive, infinite heart of Chaitanya; one who would see in every
sect the same spirit working, the same God; one who would see God in every
being, one whose heart would weep for the poor, for the weak, for the outcast,
for the downtrodden, for every one in this world, inside India or outside
India; and at the same time whose grand brilliant intellect would conceive of
such noble thoughts as would harmonise all conflicting sects, not only in India
but outside of India, and bring a marvellous harmony, the universal religion of
head and heart into existence. Such a man was born, and I had the good fortune
to sit at his feet for years. The time was ripe, it was necessary that such a
man should be born, and he came; and the most wonderful part of it was that his
life's work was just near a city which was full of Western thought, a city
which had run mad after these occidental ideas, a city which had become more
Europeanised than any other city in India. There he lived, without any
book-learning whatsoever; this great intellect never learnt even to write his
own name,* but
the most graduates of our university found in him an intellectual giant. He was
a strange man, this Shri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa. It is a long, long story, and
I have no time to tell anything about him tonight. Let me now only mention the
great Shri Ramakrishna, the fulfilment of the Indian sages, the sage for the
time, one whose teaching is just now, in the present time, most beneficial. And
mark the divine power working behind the man. The son of a poor priest, born in
an out-of-the-way village, unknown and unthought of, today is worshipped
literally by thousands in Europe and America, and tomorrow will be worshipped
by thousands more. Who knows the plans of the Lord!
Now, my brothers, if
you do not see the hand, the finger of Providence, it is because you are blind,
born blind indeed. If time comes, and another opportunity, I will speak to you
more fully about him. Only let me say now that if I have told you one word of
truth, it was his and his alone, and if I have told you many things which were
not true, which were not correct, which were not beneficial to the human race,
they were all mine, and on me is the responsibility.
SOURCE: LECTURES FROM COLOMBO TO ALMORA [VOLUME-3]
1 comment:
excellent story
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