Pages

Monday, 21 December 2015

Never 'By Chance' -- Continued

I gave earlier four examples of the use of yadRcchayA in the sense of 'By God's will'. Shri Ramakrishna-ji has given through his reference to 'vedabase' URL a whole list of uses of 'yadRcchayA' in Srimad Bhagavatam under various shades of meanings. Wonderful indeed! Thanks, Ramakrishna-ji.

His suggestion about 'yadRcchA-labhasantushhTah' in B.G.4-22 is quite apt. I was also going to mention it as a further posting. This compound word literally means: 'satisfied with whatever gain obtained'. Seen a little more deeply it means'satisfied with whatever the Lord chooses to give'.  

FOURTEEN SPECIAL NAMES OF VISHNU


Each name of God points to several concepts and ideas, not only those enshrined in the scriptures but scores of other philosophical and esoteric connotations that they suggest without actually spelling them out. There are fourteen nAmas (= names) of Lord Vishnu which are scripturally most sanctified and which are very often used for the most fundamental of all rituals, namely the Acamanam (See below for an explanation of this ritual). All these names occur in the V.S. (=Vishnu Sahasrannama). In fact some of them occur more than once. And commentators wax eloquent in producing different derivations and meanings for the different occurrences of the same name. These fourteen are made up of two sets of names, one consisting of three names and the other consisting of twelve names, with the proviso that one name (Govinda) occurs in both the sets. The first set is made up of three names: achyuta, ananta and Govinda. These three names are so purificatory that before every act of religious duty one recites achyutAya namah, anantAya namaH and govindAya namaH and sips a small drop of water after the recitation of each name and this ritual, being the first part of the Acamanam, is supposed to purify one spiritually. Without such an Acamanam no religious rite or ritual is begun and none is complete; more, at each stage of the ritual, on completion of one part of the ritual one does an Acamanam and on the beginning of the other part of the same ritual one does the Acamanam; so that during an elaborate ritual there are several occasions when one will be doing two Acamanams consecutively. The importance of the Acamanam for spiritual purification can never be overstated. The second part of the Acamanam consists of touching different parts of the body with specified fingers and movements of the right hand, saying as we go along, the remaining twelve names, namely, KeSava, nArAyaNa, mAdhava, Govinda, VishNu, MadhusUdana, trivikrama, VAmana, ShriIdhara, hRshIkeSa, PadmanAbha, dAmodara. These twelve nAmas have such a great sanctity that orthodox followers of Vaishnavism put marks on twelve parts of the body with each mark representing one of these names and this practice became so ingrained in the culture that these marks came to be called 'nAmams' in Tamil. It is significant to note that the famous Avatara-names, Rama and Krishna are not in these twelve. However, most of the names are also Krishna's names thus reverberating the general thought that Krishna's is a complete Avatara. The only Avatara referred to directly in these twelve names is the VAmana (= dwarf) incarnation in which the Lord after appearing as a dwarf later grows up in cosmic space to extend His feet to the three worlds of the universe and is therefore also referred to as trivikrama. (= the One who took three giant strides). This incarnation is mentioned in the vedas also very often. Leaving these two,  the rest are taken up below.

He is keSavaH -- which simply means one who has beautiful locks of hair. In the incarnation as Krishna, even as he was born, the description of the child makes special mention of the dense locks of hair through which the gems of the ornaments in the ears and the crown sparkle: (Shrimad BhA.10-3). Another meaning: He killed the demon keSi, so He is called KeSava, according to a statement of Narada in the Vishnu PurANa. A third etymological meaning is more interesting. KeSava is broken into kaH, aH, IsaH - that is, (according to the dictionary meanings of these monosyllabic words) BrahmA, Vishnu and Shiva - the three Lords of the Trinity. The word KeSava then means He in whose control are the three Lords. In other words KeSava is the transcendental God Supreme, of whom the three Lords are specific manifestations.

The eight-lettered mantra of Narayana and the five-lettered mantra of Shiva are the two greatest mantras of Hindu religion, next only, if at all, to the GAyatrI mantra. Volumes can be written about the name Narayana, which is to be pronounced as nArAyaNa, though we shall stick to the more popular spelling, Narayana. nara means Atman, that is, Brahman itself. All the elemental principles emanated from it, therefore they are nAra. They are the effects of the Supreme which is the Ultimate Cause, the Cause of all causes, for them all. The cause always pervades the effect. Without a cause, there is no effect. Wherever there is an effect there must be a cause. Therefore the effects which are the nAras are pervaded by the original cause, which is Brahman. This is what is indicated by the word Narayana. This name has been extolled to the skies in all the PurANas and other scriptures. The Tamil veda says: it is the word which does all the good more than the mother. Whatever sense experiences one goes through, whether it is inside or outside, everything is pervaded by the Lord Narayana -- says the Upanishad. They are all in me (mayi te) and I am in them (teshu caapyaham) says the Lod in the Gita (IX - 29). That everything is in Him is the bahir-vyApti (transcendence; bahih = outside). That He is in everything is the antar-vyApti (immanence; antah=inside). Transcendence and Immanence are the T and I of the TIP of the Iceberg that is the Godhead. These two are now in capsule form in the single name Narayana, where one takes the meaning of ayana as support, or base or substratum; ayana also indicates both the 'means' (upAya) and the 'end' (upeya). So Narayana may mean 'He (= His name) is the means and He is the end' as also 'He (= His Grace) is the means and He is the end'.


The name MAdhavaH occurs thrice. mA is lakshmi. Her beloved is MAdhavaH. In Ch.U. the technique of madhu-vidyA is taught. It is a way of worship by which one considers the Sun-God as the honey tasted by the divines and through that worship one attains the knowledge of Brahman. So He is the One who is realised by madhu-vidyA, therefore MAdhavaH. The third interpretation: mA is the flow of mind. The mind needs to be controlled from its getting dissipated by the sense organs bringing in several images and impressions of distractions. The three methods of controlling the mind are silence, meditation and practice of yoga. These make one get rid of the bondage to the sense-objects. The One who thus channelises the mind away from the sense objects (mAm cittavRttim dhavati dUrI-karoti) is mAdhavaH. Also the family of madhu is one branch of the yadu dynasty. And the One who belongs to thmadhu clan is MAdhavaH. Again, mA is learning. The Lord of that learning is MAdhavaH.

The most important one of these twelve is Govinda. Already we have noted above that this name is common to the two fundamentally important sets of names. Govinda means the Lord of the Cows. Go means cow. That is why the lord is also called gopAla (the protector or sustainer of cows). Incidentally the name gopAla does not occur in the V.S. but the parallel word, gopati, having the same meaning, occurs. Go also means the word of the vedas. He confers (=vindate) the wisdom of the vedas on us, therefore Govindah. Also because He is known only by the word or mantras of the vedas. Go also means the Earth. In one of His cosmic manifestations (namely, varAha-Avatara, the incarnation as a giant boar) He recovered the Earth from the demon Hiranyaksha who had carried it away . So He is GovindaH. It is interesting to note that Adi Shankara chose this name of God to be used as the deity in his immortal poem 'Bhaja Govindam' which, within a short span of 30 verses comprises the whole of Hindu philosophy, mythology and metaphysics and is also one of the best devotional stotras that one can enjoy reciting. The folklore is that Shankara immortalised the name Govinda in his stotra because it was the name of his Guru! The name Govinda occurs twice in V.S. A lecture on spiritual matters, particularly the ones which seek to cover a PurANa or Ramayana or M.B. is usually preceded by a chorus recitation of the name Govinda, on the prompting of the speaker by the words: sarvatra Govinda-nAma-samkIrtanaM. The pilgrims who visit the Tirupati temple of the Lord always raise the cry of govindA, govindA throughout their way to the temple and to the sanctorum. The devout, almost till the previous generation, used to remember and recite the name of Govinda for every mouthful they eat. The name Govinda may thus be seen to pervade the entire cultural milieu of Hinduism.


Though the name Vishnu is commonly taken to denote the second God of the Trinity, responsible for the function of protecting and sustaining the Universe and its beings, it has a more profound meaning which transcends the legends associated with it in mythology. The word comes from the root verb vyApnoti - meaning, pervades. He pervades the fibre of every being. He pervades everything that you know of or can think of. Not only He pervades everything but He transcends them. The purusha sUkta of the vedas says: sa bhUmim viSvato vRtvA; atyatishTat dasAngulaM He pervaded all the Earth and the Universe and then exceeded it by ten inches. Symbolically it means that He transcends everything. The first two names viSvaM and VishNuh of the V.S. take care of the 'I" and 'T' (that is, immanence and transcendence) of the TIP of the Iceberg,  that is God.


There are several names of the Lord which contain a whole mythological event within the name. One such name is madhu-sUdanaH. The story is pretty complicated. We extract it from devI-BhA. Chapter 1. After each deluge, the next morning (of the Cosmic Day of BrahmA) the Creator has to create from scratch. At the beginning of one such morning, two demons arose from the dirt of the Lord's ear (who was just rising up from His Cosmic yogic sleep) and from the tamo-guNa which was the first thing that emanated from the creator. These demons were Madhu and KaiTabha. The creator caused the first sound vibration of AUM and from that the vedas arose. But the two demons took away the vedas and made them inaccessible. The Lord took the manifestation as haya-grIva and brought the vedas back. The demons were furious and began to shake up the very foundations of the divine lotus stalk which was the seat of the Creator from which He was to start His work of creation. So the Lord decided to do away with the two demons who were nothing but tamo-guNa personified. The Lord promised to give them whatever they wanted. They were arrogant enough to throw back the same question to the Lord: What boon do you want from us? The Lord now replied: I want your death! They replied very 'cleverly', 'Yes, you can destroy us, provided you do it in sky uncovered by cloth'! The Lord removed the cloth covering His thighs, put them on his lap and destroyed them. It is important to note here that in the Lord's Cosmic Form, His feet are the Earth and His thighs are the space of the sky. (cf. bhUh pAdau yasya nAbhir viyat … -- Preliminary shlokas in V.S.) So His act of removing the cloth from His thighs fulfilled the demons' requirement of a sky uncovered by cloth. What they thought would not happen did happen by the Lord's strategy. This is the lIlA of the Lord to kill the two asuras Madhu and KaiTabha. Therefore He is madhu-sUdanaH.


ShrIdharaH is His name because He holds ShrI, the divine Mother, the Goddess of Wealth and Prosperity, in His divine chest. She is therefore the most proximate to the Lord and that is why we pray to Her to plead for our cause.

hRshIkeSaH is His name because He is the Lord of the senses which bring us all the pleasures of life. harsha is happiness or pleasure. hRshIkA is that which causes pleasure. The Lord of all the hRshIkAs is hRshIkeSaH. . He is the One who remains as the Moon in our mind, as the Sun in our eyes, and other deities in our various senses and make them sense. So He is the lord of these all, therefore hRshIkeSaH. Also hRshI means the light rays from the Sun and the Moon; they are the ones which bring us the pleasures of Mother Nature. They are His keSas, that is, they are His rightful property, therefore hRshIkeSaH.

PadmanAbhaH appears three times in the V.S. Padma means lotus and nAbhi means the navel. The three meanings of PadmanAbha are: He in whose navel stands the lotus from which the creator BrahmA, the source of the universe, originated; He whose navel is beautifully shaped like a lotus; He who resides in the central part of the heart lotus - the reference here being to the vedic passage which says: It (The Supreme) lies below the heart as an inverted lotus, the stalk of the lotus reaching just above the navel:  padma-koSa-pratIkASam hRdayam cApy-adho-mukham / adho nishTyA vitastyAnte nAbhyAmupari tishTati // In addition to these three meanings PadmanAbha has an esoteric meaning derived from the fact that the word mahA-padma stands for the number million-million (10 raised to the power 12). The name symbolically states that the Transcendental Supreme is the Ultimate source of Time.

The name dAmodara has the unique distinction of building into itself the two parts of the Lord - one, the naivete that was exhibited by Him when He as a child was bound by a few feet of rope tied around his waist by His mother Yasoda; and the other, the divine grandeur which in its cosmic form has the entire universe in its stomach. dAma means rope. His stomach (udara) was bound by the rope affectionately tied round his waist by the mother. dAma also means abode; the abode of the whole universe is His stomach. A third meaning is: he is greatly compassionate (udAra) towards even sinful people, because of his self-control (dama).


********************************



Saturday, 8 November 2014

THE CRISIS OF INTELLECT - Part 5 of 5

The crisis of intellect – Part 5 of 5
Two thousand and odd years ago, Jesus called upon man to undergo a second birth and allow the current of universal love to flow through him. But at no time has the need to heed this call been more urgent than today, when we have the power to destroy not only ourselves but everything which sustains us – to achieve the greatest feat of adharma. Dharma is that which sustains us and when we knock the earth from under our feet, when we blow it up, adharma could go no further.

The ancient Hindu scriptures have always talked of the earth as a tiny island in an immense universe of life. Today we can see that tiny island from a distance and feel the vastness that surrounds us. We must feel close to each other when we know we are very near to destruction. We cannot any longer afford to persist in the folly of misunderstanding religions other than our own. It has probably been rightly estimated that believers in God have killed more people in the name of religion than all the tyrants and invaders the world has ever seen. Half the troubles among religions are due to the rigid misconceptions concerning God.

Cooperation is one of the most fundamental lessons that religious persons have to learn from the practitioners of modern science. Our task should be to search diligently and patiently for the best principles of all the religions of humanity and, with the help of science, spread them throughout the world emphasizing their unifying and humanizing aspects, and thus make amends for the failure of science to promote these values.  If irrational dogmas which are contrary to facts are eliminated and if the enabling and unifying principles of religion are highlighted, religion will be rid of its deadweight and become an elevating force in the lives of people all over.

Our time being finite we don’t have to apologize for spending it on the best. In our study and practice of religions let us emphasize only the good things. In this matter therefore let us be more interested in values, not history. Take note of the currents of thought and aspirations of humanity as a whole. Let us not discard the canons of social justice. Let us not overlook the fact that God finds something of Himself in each religion and probably not fully in any one of them. Let us accept, as Hinduism has been maintaining, that all religions and sub-sects of religions are only several images on the different faces of a kaleidoscope, of the One Truth that is God Absolute and that is Love. Let us be iconoclasts therefore, not by decrying or breaking the idols and icons of other religions, but by ending the subtle form of idolatry in the shape of fanaticism that refuses to see any virtue in any form of worship other than one’s own.

None of the spiritual acquisitions of humanity can be set aside. Just as we appeal to those who think that science is the be-all and end-all of human endeavour and tell them they have another side to see, so also we must appeal to ourselves as followers of different religions or schools of religious philosophy that we should not waste our energies in discussing at an intellectual level as to who is right and who is wrong. It is only a misguided intellect that will discover a difference between one name of God and another. True religious life must express itself in love and respect  for all humanity and aim at the unity of mankind. A Sanskrit verse whose source is unknown says: Neither bead necklaces, nor the holding of Tulasi leaves, nor wearing the three-line mark, nor ashes, nor pilgrimage, nor holy bathing, nor ritual sacrifice, nor meditation, nor visiting temples nor having beatific visions of the divine – none of these can purify man ultimately.  What purifies him is his love of humanity and his pleasure in doing good to other humans and non-humans. Here is the solution for the crisis of intellect within each religion.


Every religion is a blend of macro-principles and micro-setting.  The macro principles speak to man as man. They are usually understood and appreciated though not easily followed. But the micro-setting in which each religion flourishes is a rich compound of mythology and ritual and it can never make its way into the emotional milieu of an outsider.  But to say that only the macro-principles are important is not right.  The tree is not more important than the sun and soil from which it draws its sustenance. Here is the crisis of intellect among the religions.  Each religion has therefore to be understood with reference to the soil in which it has been nurtured without any attempt at invidious comparisons.  However this emphasis on the micro-setting should not lead one to develop an aggressive pride in one’s culture and nationality. Certainly, pride in one’s culture and nationality is legitimate. But this pride, to quote the words of Huston Smith from ‘Religions of Man’, ‘should be an affirmative pride born of a gratitude for the values he has gained and not a defensive pride whose only device for achieving the sense of superiority it pathetically needs is by grinding down others through invidious comparison. His roots in his family, his community, his civilisation will be deep, but in that very depth he will strike the water table of man’s common humanity and thus nourished will reach out in more active curiosity, more open vision, to discover and understand what others have seen.’ 


Friday, 7 November 2014

THE CRISIS OF INTELLECT: Part 4 of 5

The crisis of intellect – Part 4 of 5

We have been referring to the crisis of intellect within Hinduism, or to put it abstractly, within one religion. The larger crisis of intellect finds expression in wanting to adjudicate among the great religions of the world. What is important today is to come together and rediscover that this larger crisis of intellect can be resolved only by going back to the very ancient thoughts that have remained with us for more than twenty centuries now. The period of the first millennium B.C is the most important period of history in this context. That was the time when the axis of the world’s thoughts shifted from a study of nature to the study of man’s life and his inner aspirations. Then in India we had the Upanishadic seers, Mahavira the Jina and Gautama the Buddha; in China we had Lao Tse and Confucius, in Iran there was Zoroaster, in Israel there were the great prophets and in Greece, Pythagoras, Socrates and Plato. That surge of activity and investigation and the profundity of thought of that period have never since been matched. Yes, modern Science has made phenomenal, even miraculous advances. But what should amaze us is that the ancients achieved so much with so little help from outside. The gadgetry which one can command today is certainly unequalled in its sweep and power. But note that the philosophers of the first millennium B.C achieved what they did by sheer rational thinking coupled with a certain intuition of their own. The test of significance of what they left for posterity is in the fact that they have survived twenty centuries of war and peace, strife and hatred, and all the ups and downs of great empires and civilizations. It is really questionable whether anything of what we call 20th-21st century science and technology today will survive as valid knowledge twenty centuries hence!

Let me not be mistaken as decrying intellect. The heights to which reason can rise today, the accuracy with which we can make our observations even at the frontiers of the galaxy, the comfort with which we can handle nature’s forces to suit ourselves are all forward leaps of the highest order in human evolution. No doubt about it. But Science is only one kind of response of the finite to the infinite. There is another kind of response which is mystical. Mystical experimentation through meditation can never be verified by methods of science. That these experiments have to be considered valid in the total scheme of things is the lesson that we should learn from modern physics and its philosophical consequences. This is not to dethrone science from its high pedestal. But the limitations of science as a means of knowledge in revealing the universe have however to be accepted. By its only instrument of knowledge, namely sense-perception, supported of course by various gadgetry, and the inferences made from this ‘direct’ perception, it can reveal only the non-infinite side of the universe. The infinite side of the universe, has to be a fullness (pUrNaM in Sanskrit) that by its very definition and nature has to be revealed, if at all, only by scriptural authority (called shabda pramANa in Hindu philosophy) and intuition. Scriptural revelation is the instrument of knowledge for spirituality.  Can the ear corroborate or contradict the colour seen by the eye? Can the eye corroborate or contradict the decibel value of the noise heard by the ear? So also Science has no way of corroborating or contradicting the spiritual truths revealed by scriptural authority and intuition. However, let not the mystic and the religious immediately condemn science for its emphasis on intellect rather than tradition and faith. But just as the benefits that mankind derived through blind faith in the past were washed away by the primitive and superstitious jungle to which man mistakenly confined himself and thus blocked the progress of civilisation, so also, in modern times the emphasis on the intellect has done more harm than good.  The only way out of this situation is to readjust our attitudes in such a way as to restore balance between intellect and intuition.


Modern man needs a spiritual counterpart to the phenomenal external advance he has made.  All his scientific temper and technological output cannot hide the inner emptiness in his life. Our modern culture in general has gone overboard in testing how far we can go with sexuality, promiscuity, pornography, acquisitiveness, selfishness, aggression and violence. Many of us, though against all this,  do not have either the inclination or the stamina to react against these and this I would say is again a crisis of intellect, namely the crisis of isolation from what happens around. The need of the hour is to turn this culture spiritually inward and to make us look Godward, thereby getting the spiritual strength of a Vivekananda to fight and correct these ills of society, which do not have anything to do with religion. Scientific intellect has certainly made major contributions to man’s needs but they are not the major needs of man. They are only his minor needs, the needs of material happiness and physical survival.  But when this physical survival itself is threatened by the very inventiveness which humanity has displayed and sharpened through its collective intellect, the threat has to be faced by sustained and conscious efforts of man.  He has to resolve the greatest problem facing him – namely the conflict between the divine and the undivine in him. If today the terrorist elements of the world are indulging in untold massacres of innocent men, women and children and property, the only way by which we may hope to stop them is not just by more intellectual advances in science and their applications to technology but by complementing them with more and more of proper education soaked in human values.  It has been rightly said that humanity is a brainwashed species indoctrinated from childhood into the prejudices of nationality, race, colour, language and of narrow fundamentalist dogmatic religion.  True religion is far more than a system of beliefs and far more than a formalized effort to wheedle a little pity out of God by offering Him naïve self-condemning prayers and propitiatory rites.  Once we enter the area of spirituality we would discover that Truth is not unearthed by Science alone, but it has an even faster rate of unfolding via Spirituality.

(To be continued)

THE CRISIS OF INTELLECT : Part 3 of 5

The crisis of intellect – Part 3 of 5

The attitude that abrogates for itself the role of an upholder of Dharma very often slips into egoism. This is the second type of the crisis of intellect, as we have already seen. Dharma is so subtle a concept that only a godlike person like Krishna can declare that He is the One  who has come to establish Dharma and so he will not tolerate such and such an act of adharma. Even an avatara like Rama who had every right to flaunt the observance of dharma did not do so; he did not have the slightest egoistic pride  that could lead him to proclaim that he was making the greatest sacrifice for the sake of dharma. His humility even prevented him from going beyond the simple statement, even in intense debates about the dilemma of right and wrong that ‘Having been told by my mother and father to do what I am doing, how can I do otherwise?’ (mAtA pitRRibhyAM ukto.aham katham anyat samachare.  Valmiki Ramayana Southern Rescension: 2-104-22)

Take that colossus of humility, Jesus Christ. Never did so perfect a man walk on earth who gave love so naturally that no one could resist loving him intensely or feeling the force of his love. Never was there such a carpenter who carved the lives of millions of men for centuries after his day. And yet, never was there a person whose concern was not that people should know what he was but that people should know God and His love for His children. Never was there such a colossus  and yet the most humble of mankind!


It is humility and surrender to God’s Will that is most important and must be emphasized in the context of any crisis of intellect  which expresses itself as an emotional intoxication in the belief that one’s way of doing things is the right way.  Rama and Jesus knew what they were doing was the right thing but there was not an iota of arrogance in them. It is easy to say that everything happens according to God’s Will but extremely difficult to live by this belief. Surrender to God’s Will is not a pose but an attitude. When things happen which are not to one’s taste and wishes, in spite of all the best efforts one has put in and the precautions one has taken, the weak react by grumbling and apportioning blame, the strong by throwing their weight around, criticizing all and sundry and protesting noisily.  But the truly religious man will take it as God’s Will and submit to the flow of the current. While the self-conceited man will feel that his initiative has been lost the truly spiritual man will concede that the initiative had never been with him; it was always with Him alone.  It is not our will, our mind, or our intelligence that works out things for us. The agent provocateur is within us.  Every action is His.  (More technical explanation of this is in verses 13, 14, 15 of Ch.18 of the Bhagavadgita.) The only action that should be ours is to surrender our Will to Him. A nineteenth century Christian hymn says: ‘Oh Lord, take my Will and make it thine; it shall no longer be mine; take my heart, it is thine own; it shall be thy royal throne!’ In spite of any such prayer, this surrender of ours or God’s taking over our Will He never does for us according to Hindu Bhakti Yoga literature, because the wise say it has to come out of our free will.  He creates only the circumstances for us to surrender to Him.  If we don’t voluntarily give ourselves to Him, in thought and deed, He allows us, in His infinite mercy, to be tossed about by the waves of birth and death in the ocean of samsara and take our own time to come to Him, perhaps after going through every labyrinth of the crisis of intellect. Finally when one reaches the ultimate limit of spiritual progress with the help of intense sAdhana (spiritual practice) he experiences the nirguNa (attributeless) nature of the Absolute and remains in oneness in that Absolute. And then, all the ideas, such as you and I, subject and object, bondage and liberation, vice and virtue, merit and demerit, etc. are all annihilated.

(To be continued)

Thursday, 6 November 2014

THE CRISIS OF INTELLECT - Part 2 of 5

The crisis of intellect – Part 2 of 5

The other manner in which the crisis of intellect expresses itself is in an orthodox setting. It is that of a dogmatic pursuit of a ritual or what one holds to be a dharmic principle. Since external exhibitions or expressions of dharma change from age to age a dogmatic pursuit of such an exposition beyond the times for which it was valid can ultimately lead us into a situation where the primary dharma of compassion  and non-violence is jeopardized. In my own experience once in my younger days when I saw the ancient custom  of shaving the head of a middle-age woman who had just been widowed I protested to my heart’s content, spoke to the elders who were responsible for it, tried to argue it out, but  I could not succeed.  I was totally bowled by the elders and I could never get over that bad feeling, more so because it was my elder sister who was the victim!

It is in this breed of arrogant upholding of the so-called Dharma that practices like sati perhaps got generated without an eyebrow being raised. While it is true that Manu Smriti talks of a woman having no independent status  because ‘in her childhood she is dependent on the father, in her youth and middle age on the husband and in her old age on the son’ – the same Manu Smriti insists very emphatically that every man should act in such a way that not a single tear rolls down the cheek of a woman, for, if it does so, continues the Smriti, ‘the person who caused that tear-drop will be destroyed with his whole clan’! If the followers of Manu Smriti had only taken this seriously, women in Hindu society would have been put on the highest pedestal – which is what perhaps is indicated in the Indian habit of addressing or greeting every unrelated woman as ‘Mother’ or ‘Sister’.  But custom and tradition forced themselves away from the spirit of ancient times.

The touchstone of Hindu Dharma is therefore the mental  attitude (bhAva-samshuddhiH, as per B.G.17 -16) with which one acts. One has to analyse oneself constantly. After all the complexities of human life are taken into account, the answer to the question: What is dharma?, repeatedly raised in the Mahabharata, is given by Bhishma to Yudhishtira in Shanti Parva (259-25): Whatever one obtains from being agreeable and loving to all, is in the opinion of the wise, what distinguishes dharma from adharma. An ordinary grocer, Tulaadhaara, instructing a vain ascetic Jaajali, says: (Shanti Parva: 262-9) He who has in his heart always the well-being of others and is wholly given in acts thoughts and speech to the good of others, knows what dharma is. Again Shiva tells Parvati in Anushasana Parva 142- 27 to 32: ‘He who frees himself from the disorder of violence and offers freedom from fear to all beings is the one in unity with dharma. Such a one will have kindness and compassion for all beings and the same sense of unity with all. Simplicity  is dharma, deviousness is adharma. Simplicity and straightforwardness (Arjavam) of character are more important than the acquisition of knowledge. He who aspires to dharma should cultivate these two traits’.


Whether it is a question of interpretation of caste rules, or a question of the meaning of partnership between husband and wife, father and son, teacher and disciple, elder and younger – whatever it may be, the choice between dharma and adharma should be made only on the basis of the presence or absence of an internal selfishness, Even if there is an iota of selfishness in what one is doing or saying, there is the contamination of adharma in it. Selfishness may be of two kinds: one which aims at an ultimate personal benefit or mundane return or psychological satisfaction; or it may be of sense gratification. Only action, word and thought which are totally free of either type of selfishness are dharmic. Pursuit of a dharmic principle as a dogma (irrespective of its social consequences) may ultimately end in nothing but self-gratification that one is upholding dharma. Any time the thought comes to you that you are the upholder of dharma and without you this dharma will decline, you may rest assured that egoism has set in and you have strayed from dharma. This is what may be called the second type of the crisis of intellect.

(To be continued)

Wednesday, 5 November 2014

THE CRISIS OF INTELLECT : Part 1 of 5

The crisis of intellect – Part 1 of 5

There are two kinds of the crisis of intellect:  that which concerns only one religion, say, Hinduism and the other one which is larger, which dreams of an adjudication among the great religions of the world. We shall first consider the one within Hinduism.  This one again, has two facets.  The first one arises from the often-asked question : Why are the Upanishads being interpreted by different Masters in different ways?  Shouldn’t there be one, unique, correct interpretation of the Upanishads?

The very nature of the Upanishads does not allow one unique interpretation. The Upanishads are a collection of free, candid and detailed discussions between teacher and disciple and it is for the reader to draw his or her own conclusions after assimilating the analysis thus presented and in the light of one’s own spiritual experience, if any. It is here that a Master teacher like Sankara or Ramanuja helps. Even to understand them you will need the physical presence of a teacher before you – a guru. It is therefore not fair to expect the Upanishads to tell you categorically whether this is right or that is wrong. The privilege of making categorical interpretations of the Upanishads has devolved on the great Masters. The fundamental differences in the interpretations by the Masters  should not deter us from understanding the totality that is Hinduism and its philosophy that emanates from the Upanishads. Any attempt to sort out these differences at an intellectual level can become an exercise in futility.  It is desirable rather to follow one of these Masters with single minded faith and try to understand that Master  and his perception of what the Upanishads say. That itself is a life-time occupation.

I know of several friendly Hindu groups in various parts of the world, away from their homeland, who, being well-motivated and genuinely interested in passing on the tradition of Hindu religious culture to the next generation, take off an hour or so every week and collectively attempt to simulate the so-called Indian atmosphere of a bhajan, puja, recitation or a lecture-cum-discussion and the like.  So far so good. But more often than not, a significant part of the time is spent on discussing questions like: Which of our great Masters has the ‘right’ philosophy? The intellectual exercise thus started leads them into a mAyA of confusion and doubt.  Ultimately they see no end to this labyrinth and finally the project itself withers. This is an expression of a crisis of intellect.  Intellect has to bow to faith and intuition in such matters. It is intellectually arrogant to believe that by sitting together for one hour a week and by reading translations (at what order of removal, one knows not) of the great Masters as a hobby, one can adjudicate among them!

The spark of realization and the onset of spiritual becoming have to come through faith and intuition, not through study of books, though the latter may certainly trigger the process initially. The Soul can receive impulses from another soul and from nothing else, says Swami Vivekananda. According to him, ‘this inadequacy of books to quicken spiritual growth is the reason why, although almost every one of us can speak wonderfully on spiritual matters, when it comes to action and the living of a truly spiritual life, we find ourselves so woefully deficient. To quicken the spirit the impulse must come from another soul. The person from whom such impulse comes is called the GURU’.

(To be continued)