Sunday, October 10, 2010

Charaiveti - Travelling Teachers

Adi Shankara is always described as Parivrajaka Acharya, or a Teacher who moves from place to place. It is interesting to examine why our ancestors created such a title for any one.

The position of a travelling teacher would be appropriate only in a context where more or less stationery teachers work in particular localities. Any one with a slight acquaintance with the principle behind the arrangement of four Ashramas would easily see that the Vanaprasthas and the Sannyasins functioned respectively as the stationary and itinerant teachers. Both these types of teachers gave their service free, and thus contributed in a large measure to the spread of learning and culture in ancient days. The Sannyasins, specially, by moving from place to place, helped to coordinate traditions in the remotest corners of the country. Let us frankly admit that this is a task which the powerful governments of the present day, with all the facilities they command for quick travel and communication, find it hard to achieve.

We know what happens when people ask for greater conveniences for educating their children. Our ministers plead that there are no funds. What is the way out? If children cannot pay, we must try to raise up teachers who can give their service for the sheer love of it. We must, in other words, organize our society in such a way that a certain number of competent men would naturally "retire" or "renounce" and become available as free teachers. In olden days it was considered an item of religious discipline to give up eshana-traya: desire for sex, wealth and subtle pleasures in this world or the next. Could not modern men (and women) develop sufficient fervor to take up similar vows and cover a portion of the educational field?

Our tragedy is that our own leaders have ridiculed and misrepresented this ideal of renunciation to such an extent that no self-respecting young man or woman would normally think of adopting such a course and leading a dedicated life. The same leaders internally chafe when they see the shameful spectacle of people very much advanced in life, going about with their progressively advancing interest in their grandchildren, or their money-making or their craving for social or political importance, engaged in unseemly squabbles and blocking the paths of younger citizens! Retire, renounce and serve: this would be beautiful motto for ennobling the lives of such people and making society better. But our leaders would not tell that. They are mortally afraid of the word "renunciation". If they have to use it, they neutralise it with many qualifying adjuncts till its significance is all lost! Mental renunciation is enough, they say; and they point out to us the example of Mahatma Gandhi! As if mental renunciation is quite easy, and the example of Mahatma Gandhi mush easier!

As against this they also show the number of formally renounced people who have not been able to shed their selfishness, or who have taken the external symbols of renunciation for earning their livelihood. This is patently unfair. When two mango trees are to be compared, it is no use taking the best fruit of one and the worm-eaten fruit of the other for comparison. Take the best of both. As against a Gandhi, take a Dayananda, or a Vivekananda, or a Ramana Maharshi or a Kamakoti Pitham Swami.

Look at the other wonderful problems of the present day. There is Communism,proposting to work for the welfare of the community; it is against private property and religion. There is also fear due to the rapid increase in the population of the world. People advocate all sorts of remedies to remove these evils. Many honest people however believe that the remedies suggested really help the spread of greater vices instead of virtues. It does not require very great insight to realise that the ideal of the Sannyasin can be made to play a great part in facing some of these problems in a manner consistent with virtue, an inner sense of moral victory and the best traditions of Indian culture. The ideal of the Sannyasins is to sublimate sex, to give up private property in letter and in spirit and, lastly, to dedicate his life for realizing God and serving Him in all creatures. He who is called Sannyasins from the standpoint of the Ashramas - be it remembered - is to be termed "traveling teachers" from the educational standpoint.

[Subandhu]

Thursday, September 9, 2010

What does Hinduism or Vedanta Teach?

What does Hinduism or Vedanta teach?
"To whom? To a pregnant lady?
'Get ready for delivery! That is Brahman...'
What else will you teach?
To a student - 'study. Make your body strong, memory strong, judgement quite right.'
To a military man - 'beware of your enemies, don't ell them the whole truth, how many soldiers you have got, how many weapons are old and rotten. Don't tell that. Bluff them. If you can avoid the fight that way, so much the better. Don't tell the exact truth.'
It depends on what is the person concerned and how he is situated. Accordingly, you teach.
To a military man, you use the military things.
To a teaching man, the teaching techniques.
To a money making man, things related to the production of wealth, the investment of wealth. How to produce further wealth, further occupation for people, and to make many more things for use among people.
To a servant? The best way in which he can get employed.
What else will you teach? You can't teach the same thing to everybody, for daily life is not the same.

Tastes and temperaments are not the same but the fact that the spirit in everybody, is the same. How to tune himself from this situation - military man from his fortress or in the impending battle area, what will he do to tune God in? He must have minimum killing and maximum victory. That is his concern. Fewer people will be killed and more peace established. So with everybody else. What is the mind that is used? What is the mind in which the revelation is expected? In what condition is it fixed day by day? That must be seen. From there you must build a bridge towards the Infinite. So Ishta Devata will change. Ishta Devata means, each person has got the right to choose from where he stands, the method to lead him to the top, the highest. That will not necessarily be the same, the final reaching point, the starting point each day will be different. So, the relativity of perception is there.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Divine Teachers Of The World

By our present constitution we are limited and bound to see God as man. If, for instance, the buffaloes want to worship God, they will, in keeping with their own nature, see Him as a huge buffalo; if a fish wants to worship God, it will have to form an idea of Him as a big fish; and man has to think of Him as a man. And these various conceptions are not due to morbidly active imagination. Man, the buffalo, and the fish, all may be supposed to represent so many different vessels, so to say. All these vessels go to the sea of God to get filled with water, each according to its own shape and capacity; in the man, the water takes the shape of man, in buffalo, the shape of a buffalo and in the fish, the shape of a fish. In each of these vessels there is the same water of the sea of God. When men see Him, they see Him as man, and the animals, if they have any conception of God at all, must see Him as animal, each according to its own ideal. So we cannot help seeing God as man, and therefore, we are bound to worship Him as man. There is no other way.

God understands human failings and becomes man to do good to humanity. "Whenever virtue subsides and wickedness prevails I manifest myself. To establish virtue, to destroy evil, to save the good I come from Yuga (age) to Yuga." "Fools deride Me who have assumed a human form, without knowing My real nature as the Lord of the Universe." Such is Shri Krishna's declaration in the Gita on Incarnation. "When a huge tidal wave come,s" says Bhagavan Shri Ramakrishna, "all the little brooks and ditches become full to the brim without any effort or consciousness on their own part. So, when an Incarnation comes, a tidal wave of spirituality breaks upon the world, and people feel spirituality almost in the air."
[Atmanivedana Page38] (to be continued)

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

UNBORN, UNSPLIT

A Seed evolved is tree, full-grown,
Behind the seed it stayed unvolved.
Thus food, evolved, as body stands,
And food is matter earth provides.

All matter found in waking state
Abides involved in subtle forms.
They mould the gross sense objects five,
And organs five to make them known.

The forces mixing traits must play
In varied planes of time and space.
Behind such frame-work stands the One,
The conscious Self, Unborn, Unsplit!

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Facing Pain Continued

Question: Here you touch the fringe of a very important question. Who can say that our thoughts are quite 'right'?
Answer : True. The term 'right' yields newer and newer shades of meaning as our mental clarity increases. We may even at some stage realise that what appears as the indvidual thinker is in fact one of the infinite modes in which the cosmic can manifest.
Question : When such a glimpse comes, values must undergo a total overhauling!
Answer: Yes. Let us have one more look at the play of forces in and around us. We know that a good deal of time elapses between the first appearance of a thought in us and its final effective manifestation in physical terms in daily life. From this standpoint we can regard all pain-causing visible combinations of today as the mere expression, in the sense-world, of old thought forces. They are like ships that loaded our cargo long ago, and slowly started moving towards us down the channels of creative energy. Likewise, no doubt, our right thoughts that are loaded into the vessels of today will catch us up somethere in the future and deliver the goods duly. In other words, pain of some sort is likely to persist till evolutionary forces pick up our present right thoughts and alter the picture by depositing them in appropriate forms in and around us.
Question : The wisest course then, is to stress right thoughts whenever and wherever we can, and stoutly refuse to be thrown off our balance by the attacks of the wonderfully re-incarnating entity, Pain.
Answer : Heroes learn to ignore them, while they press forward with the best thoughts they can command. Manure in one form may be foul-smelling; but the plant transforms it into a sweet-smelling flower. Heroes similarly, take up what we call 'pain' and transform it into the divine energy that heals and saves.
-Swami Nisreyasanandaji -
[Flights To Nobler Heights]

Friday, February 12, 2010

Facing Pain - Question & Answer

Question: Why did you put a stress on pain which is past?

Answer : The principle applies equally to the present pain. What we call 'present' is in reality the point at which we experience the lump called 'future' passing into the vast stretch we call 'past'. That is the very point at which we can function creatively. But it quickly slips out of our grasp, giving place to another instalment of 'now'. By the 'time' we notice the pain of the first 'point' and snatch a weapon to hit, that 'point', and perhaps a few more are gone into the past! And as we saw, it is futile to cry over the past.

Question : So your mental discipline is a long-range programme. And your aim is to avoid the pain that is likely to arise in the future, if things are left to themselves.

Answer : Certainly; that is what any wise man should attempt to do. Many pains come because our disordered mental forces give a 'twist' to the energies that condense into 'events' and 'relationships'. The remedy is to harmonise all possible mental forces and allow them to condense into appropriate factors in the environment. We replace wrong thinking by right thinking, faulty vision by correct vision.

Question : It is not so simple as it looks.

Answer : All good work is slow. What, do we think, is life for, if we consider the practice of right thinking to be tedious affair?

Question : To what extent can this right thinking eliminate pain?

Answer : Let us regard thought as a subtle 'pulling' force. A little reflection will show that all important thoughts are charged with special emotioins and meanings. When such thoughts are repeated, knowingly, or unknowingly, we make stronger and stronger creative stresses, thus altering the total aspect of the world of suble forces. It is easy to guess what will happen if A pulls an object with a certain force, and B pulls it at the same time, in another direction, with twice that force. The object will move in the direction of the diagonal of the parallelogram, the two forces constituting two of its sides. Now apply this principle to the world of thoughts. Our right thinking will correspond to one side of the figure, while thinking of all other - good or bad - will form the second side. We cannot expect things to move exactly as we intend. For due allowance must be made to the thought of the rest; and the latter, certainly, is a major force. Our satisfaction lies in the fact that our thoughts will not go altogether in vain; for they too exert a pull. Because of this 'combined' pull, there can never be a time when pain is fully eliminated from our environment, however much we may believe that the thoughts from our side are all of the 'right ' type.

Question: Here you touch the fringe of a very important question. Who can say that our thoughts are quite 'right'?

Answer:... next instalment! :-)