Saturday, 12 August 2017

His Call Beckons

Joyesh

In Swamiji, the soul heard, as it were, its own voice calling to itself. Marie Louise Burke

The century we live in is characterized by the unprecedentedly painful dualities of unimaginable affluence and mind numbing poverty, centralised autocratic power and hopeless powerlessness, surreal flights of knowledge and abject ignorance, hypertrophy at one end and atrophy at the other. This pain is accentuated further by the cold indifference that world shows towards amelioration of these and instead propagates ruthless and heartless steps towards ‘managing’ the conflicts that arise from these. Furthermore to satisfy the insatiable lust for wealth and power the rich and the powerful are incessantly developing devious and despicable ways of self aggrandizement at the expense of the helpless majority.  

The century is also pregnant with possibilities. Perhaps greater than ever before the world has affirmed Swami Vivekananda’s keen insight that the problem of life is becoming deeper and broader every day as the world moves on highlighting the solidarity of all life. There cannot be any progress without the whole world following in the wake, and it is becoming every day clearer that the solution of any problem can never be attained on racial, or national, or narrow grounds. Every idea has to become broad till it covers the whole of this world, every aspiration must go on increasing till it has engulfed the whole of humanity1. On the one hand globalised networks have enabled the slow permeation of the vedantic principles to give rise to the varied New Age movements. On the other hand recent history has proved that technology assisted anonymous networks of concerned courageous individuals, can amalgamate to engender social waves that bring supposedly invincible tyrannies to their knees and weave dreams of freedom and liberty.

Amidst the pleasure and pain, struggle and resistance, exuberance, chaos and volatile expression of life  that world witnesses, an either-or is slowly taking shape – either spiritualise or descend into barbarism. Swami Vivekanada’s agenda of spiritualization of whole human race is gradually occupying an urgent and prominent space in the mental sphere of humanity. Either the world discovers an unshakable, deep-lying and permanent basis and support for the democratic and libertarian ideals honed over the ages or those ideals will inevitably degenerate, just as do all things in this world that are nor rooted in and nourished by spiritual truth.

The life and teachings of Swami Vivekananda have been illuminating the paths of innumerable souls, giving a new meaning to their lives. Renunciation and service were the twin glowing ideals that Vivekananda placed before humanity. The power behind his persona is slowly uncoiling itself in the world stage over the last century. Countless people have attempted to mould their lives in their own way and as per their own readings of the ideal of Swamiji and as a process  have silently moulded the 20th century leaving behind their mark in diverse fields of human activity – in spirituality, monasticism, service, culture, art, politics, philosophy, literature, science and many others.  However, a practical question faces all those who struggle to express in their lives the ideals presented by Swamiji. Standing in the inception of the 21st century how does one translate one’s life in light of Swamiji’s call. Responding to the call one develops an intense desire to realize the truth and yet one has to live in the world of anguish, suffering and resistance. To live with an intense inward search and the pain of the outward social existence is a challenge for all spiritual seekers.

Characteristic of the age
The world presents a scenario of clashing ideals and aims in life where scientific knowledge and technology have accumulated immense power in the hands of a few which however are widely being used for narrow sectarian, nationalistic ends at the expense of humanity. Lived experience has led to the keen disappointment of the realization that happiness and peace does not accompany affluence and material prosperity. Humanity’s cold technical knowledge has outstripped humanity’s expansiveness for warmly embracing the world. The mind has raced way beyond the heart.

However this is also the age of ‘Man’. Everywhere in the world the common man – the laboring classes, the lower classes, are struggling to assert their inherent rights as human beings to a decent and dignified way of life : the right to live with dignity, to work, to play, and to grow. Man is, indeed asserting his birthright to be a man. Swamiji is the prophet of this upward surge of humanity – the struggle to manifest the blissful divine in each and every one of us. 
The past century has been the century of politico-centric activity with its political ideals and political solutions. The twentieth century history has shown the pitfalls and the limits of this political centrality and reiterated Swamiji again and again that humanity cannot cling to the belief that political and social changes are the only panacea for the evils that confront us. No amount of political and social manipulation of human conditions can cure the evils of life. No amount of force, or government, or legislative cruelty will change the conditions – but it is spiritual culture.2 Spirituality and spiritual life encompass far greater field of human life than political doctrines can ever envisage.

Swami Vivekananda’s call

It is our divine nature that propels us towards freedom. ‘It  is God  within your own self that is propelling you to seek for Him, to realize Him’3. Our lives are a struggle to manifest the being under circumstances, external and internal, that tries to press it down. We are born rebels – rebellion against the thralldom of the senses to break free and realize absolute freedom. Consciously or unconsciously we are all seeking  this freedom and this human essence is the reef on which all the mighty and powerful, all tyrants and institutionalized tyrannies have foundered.

Swamiji’s ideal was not that of a permanent spiritual recluse and his heart ached for human misery and degradation on every level – physical, mental, emotional, intellectual, political, of course spiritual. He cried for the ignorant, for the bereaved, for the suppressed, for the miserable of all nations and creeds. His clarion call was the embodied voice of a faint echo from the distant past – that each soul is potentially divine and the goal is to manifest that divinity within. His message was a song of freedom for the essence of the goal is freedom – material, mental and spiritual.

With pain and passion he had declared “Him I call a Mahatman (great soul) whose heart bleeds for the poor, otherwise he is a Duratman (wicked soul). Let us unite our wills in continued prayer for their good. We may die unknown, unpitied, unbewailed, without accomplishing anything -- but not one thought will be lost. It will take effect, sooner or later. So long as the millions live in hunger and ignorance, I hold every man a traitor who, having been educated at their expense, pays not the least heed to them!”4

And again warning against those cold and indifferent supposed spiritual seekers he had admonished ‘Do you think that a man who does not exert himself at all, who only takes the name of Hari, shutting himself up in a room, who remains quiet and indifferent even when seeing a huge amount of wrong and violence done to others before his very eyes, possesses the quality of Sattva? Nothing of the kind, he is only enshrouded in dark Tamas.’5 To engage with the world selflessly, constructively, courageously , with empathy and with ‘manliness’ is the ideal which Swamiji presented for the modern age.

Manliness

Vivekananda laid immense stress on ‘Manliness’ as the most important quality for spiritual seekers of the age. Manliness is one of the first expressions in the body, mind, heart and will of the manifestation of the divine, the self – which is an ocean whose shores are defined by infinite bliss, knowledge and existence. To have the quality of manliness was to be established in the Self, to rejoice in the Self, to want nothing, to fear nothing, to dislike nothing, to serve all. Free and strong men and women thinking their own thoughts, speaking their words and hewing their own route to the infinite are the ones who will be able to make the future which Swamiji envisioned. “Perfect sincerity, holiness, gigantic intellect and an all-conquering will. Let only a handful of men work with these, the whole world will be revolutionized … It is patient upbuilding of character, the intense struggle to realize the truth, which alone will tell in the future.6 [Vol. iii p.335]

Be a man; be free; be strong! Only spiritually free and strong men and women, taking their stand on the Self – the Atman – can truly deify this world, can truly revere it and work in it tirelessly, without desire or fear, motivated by love alone. And only such men and women can meet the unprecedentedly terrible challenge of this age. Only such men and women will have the mental strength and will power to renounce and serve without the desire for wealth and name and fame that is required for the realization of the divine and welfare of the world.       

Renunciation

Ramakrishna – Vivekananda tradition has emphatically reiterated that renunciation is the most important foundation of all spiritual disciplines. Though it is one clean thread that runs through the spiritual history of mankind nevertheless it runs counter to the modernist and post modernist thought currents of the world. However, Swamiji was categorical that renunciation, is the flag and the banner of the civilization of India, floating over the world, the one undying thought which India sends again and again as a warning to dying races, as a warning to all tyranny, as a warning to wickedness in the world. Renunciation is the necessary category and fact of life that all sincere seekers sooner or later stumble upon in their journey to the divine. In Swamiji’s words ‘The absolute or the Infinite is trying to express itself in the finite, but there will come a time when it will find that it is impossible and it will then have to beat a retreat, which is the real beginning of religion … Renounce and give up”7. Give up the world as we think of it, as we know it, as it appears to us – know what it really is – Deify it, it is God alone.

If one oneself is divine, all others are equally that same infinite and adorable being  … one’s every action becomes service and that service is worship. Material goods and facilities at once take a subordinate place in the society. They become a festival of offerings wherein every man, woman and child is being worshipped and served  - that is all.
                                              
The ideal of renunciation also works to solve how little a man needs to have in contrast to the modern ever receding horizon of how much a man can possess. It presents an ideal of simplified joyous and expansive life at play with the divine as a riposte to the unsustainable society of affluence with its contracted, insecure and alienated lives. 

This man making religion of renunciation and freedom is Swamiji’s antidote to the thick brew of problems – economic, political, social, spiritual – cooking in the world today.

The cult of Nobodies

One has to incessantly work to purify the mind from all selfish desires to give oneself away without any expectation of return and bereft of any hankering for wealth, name or fame with complete self abnegation as the ideal. A difficult or rather an almost impossible ideal it may appear, but whether ones likes it or not it has to be attempted for the benefit of oneself and the world. The nameless but bold, brave and the fearless have to clear the road for the others to follow. Swamiji in his clear vision had forecasted “Sacrifice in the past has been the Law; it will be, alas, for ages to come. The earth’s bravest and best will have to sacrifice themselves for the good of many, for the welfare of all. Budhas by  the hundred are necessary with eternal love and pity.”8

One has to stand on one’s own strength and struggle on in bad time and good through drear and painful road for inscrutably that is the divine order of things. The anonymous, humble and poor but bold, brave and free are the ones who are most likely to change themselves and the world. Swamiji had been emphatic “Trust not to the so - called rich, they are more dead than alive. The hope lies in you -- in the meek, the lowly, but the faithful. Have faith in the Lord; no policy, it is nothing. Feel for the miserable and look up for help -- it shall come.”9 And again “We are poor, my brothers, we are nobodies, but such have been always the instruments of the Most High.”10

As a part of spiritual discipline one has to undertake activity as spiritual practice, but have no eye to its results. Giving up the fruits of work means not to perform work for the good of one's own body or mind  i.e. not for seeking one’s own happiness. One works for the welfare of others with self abnegation as the end. Whatever work he does without attachment for its fruits brings only good to the world -- it is all "for the good of the many, for the happiness of the many".

One works in pursuance of one’s professional life – in the realm of necessity - where one’s freedom to a large extent is constrained. One also involves in activity beyond one’s professional life – in the realm of freedom so to say – where one has opportunity to give full play in working out one’s spiritual disciplines. However, in both the cases ones endeavour as spiritual seeker remains to work like the sincere maidservant with one’s mind constantly on one’s real home – one’s divine aim. The promise of the prophets is that if the yearning is sincere and strong then one looses all capacity to do evil and using Ramakrishna’s metaphor one does not sing out of tune or dance out of steps.

The world is in dire need of courageous and constructive work towards material amelioration, knowledge sharing and spiritual unfoldment. The principle of raising positive waves to attenuate the negative tendencies of the mind effectively applied in the microcosm is bound to be also effective in the macrocosm – the social world. Steadily albeit silently, gently and imperceptibly gigantic waves of constructive thought, word and deed will have to be generated that will inundate the world drowning all wickedness, hatred, inhumanity and uncharitable thought, word and actions. Constructive energies have to be channelized through lines of least resistance with activity fundamentally premised on the principles of indifference to evil, rejoicing with the happy, mercy for the sad and afflicted. The transformation of oneself and of the world – materially and spiritually – is the ideal which Swamiji embodied and presented.

Spiritualisation of the human race

History has stamped each civilization with its distinct signature – a civilisational ideal or a unique note in the grand symphony of the human civilization. Each civilization so to say provides its inimitable fragrance in the bouquet that is formed by the accumulated life experiences of humanity. As per Swami Vivekananda for good or for bad India’s uniqueness has been stamped long back in history and that her main note remains her spirituality - waxing and waning in intensity through the ups and downs of her fortune. It is her task to nurture its expansive religious acceptance, its ideal of oneness and the grand solidarity of life, its renunciation and also the myriad different routes for the realization of the ideals. History has entrusted the responsibility of gifting these ideals to the world as her own distinctive note in the grand orchestra. Not only this, there is an associated urgency too – for the world needs it and eagerly awaits this gift. In Swamiji’s words “This is the great ideal before us, and every one must be ready for it -- the conquest of the whole world by India -- nothing less than that, and we must all get ready for it, strain every nerve for it. …… Up, India, and conquer the world with your spirituality! Ay, as has been declared on this soil first, love must conquer hatred, hatred cannot conquer itself. Materialism and all its miseries can never be conquered by materialism. Armies when they attempt to conquer armies only multiply and make brutes of humanity. ……….  The world wants it; without it the world will be destroyed. The whole of the Western world is on a volcano which may burst tomorrow, go to pieces tomorrow. ….. We must go out, we must conquer the world through our spirituality and philosophy. There is no other alternative, we must do it or die.”11

The vedantic ideals which were the exclusive possession of a select few need to be disseminated far and wide in thought, word and deed for the good of humanity at home and abroad. In Swamiji’s words  “To become broad, to go out, to amalgamate, to universalise, is the end of our aims… the more you go out and travel among the nations of the world, the better for you and for your country. .. . The first manifest effect of life is expansion. You must expand if you want to live. The moment you have ceased to expand, death is upon you, danger is ahead.”12
The process of permeation has to be slow, silent, unperceived without disturbing even the ‘roadside dust’. It is on a par with everything in India. The one characteristic of Indian thought is its silence, its calmness. At the same time the tremendous power that is behind it is never expressed by violence. It is always the silent mesmerism of Indian thought.13 However there are several dangers in the way which need to ruthlessly shunned. One is that of the extreme conception that we are the  people in the world and rest are inferior to us. The other is that in the guise of spirituality all kinds of pervasive superstitions, mystery mongering, magic have taken deep roots and these have to be weeded out and thrown aside, so that they may die for ever. Instead of reasoned out spiritual disciplines debates have raged on ‘momentous’ questions of touchableness and untouchableness, and dress, and food and loads of other crystallized superstitions in our conduct and minds. Conquest of the world by spiritual thought is the sending out of life - giving principles, not the hundreds of superstitions that we have been hugging to our breasts for centuries. Swamiji had warned that “I would rather see every one of you rank atheists than superstitious fools, for the atheist is alive and you can make something out of him. But if superstition enters, the brain is gone, the brain is softening, degradation has seized upon the life.”14

Swamiji was categorical that “Every system, … which weakens the mind, makes one superstitious, makes one mope, makes one desire all sorts of wild impossibilities, mysteries, and superstitions, I do not like, because its effect is dangerous. Such systems never bring any good; such things create morbidity in the mind, make it weak, so weak that in course of time it will be almost impossible to receive truth or live up to it. Strength, therefore, is the one thing needful. Strength is the medicine for the world's disease. Strength is the medicine which the poor must have when tyrannised over by the rich. Strength is the medicine that the ignorant must have when oppressed by the learned; and it is the medicine that sinners must have when tyrannised over by other sinners”.15

Incessant Practice

As a strange mystical law the infinite – the essence of our own souls – at times embodies to adjust and present the route of ascension suited for the age. In Ramakrishna – Vivekananda the soul as it were embodied itself to call forth the soul within us all to realize its divinity. It is well known that Swamiji’s, indeed Sri Ramakrishna’s, ideal of a well rounded personality was  the integration of the four yogas of work, devotion, psychic control and philosophy. They have also vivified that life is much more than mere conformity with the rules of self preservation and aggrandizement but is an incessant struggle, internal and external, to manifest the divine.  Intense and sincere practice of spiritual disciplines internally and continuation of spiritual practice by selfless engagement with the world outside is the ideal which they established.

Swamiji or the rather the whole Ramakrishna movement he represented stands for actual practice and realization of the spiritual truths and not mere intellectual assent to doctrines and dogmas. Religions is not parroting thoughts of others but is being and becoming – it is realization. The world is a gymnasium where one has to live and work to transcend ones desire and ego to joyfully act and play in the divine unfolding. One has to be akin to a candle that burns from two ends – to intensely pursue spiritual disciple internally and externally to work in the world informed by spiritual discipline. When the two ends coalesce – the world is deified and one dissolves into the blissful play of the Mother.

1 : The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda, v.3, p. 269.
2:  CW, v.3, p.182.
3:  CW, v.2, p. 81
4:  CW, v.5, p.58
5:  CW, v.5, p.352
6:  CW, v.6. p.335
7:  CW, v.2, p.99
8:  CW, v.7, p.501
9:  CW, v.5, p.16
10:  CW, v.5, p.58
11: CW, v.3, p.277
12:  CW, v.3, p.272
13: 3, 274
14: 3, 278
15: 2, 201


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