ॐ
वीरेश्वराय विद्महे विवेकानन्दाय धीमहि । तन्नो
वीर: प्रचोदयात् ।
He was one of the “Seven Sages”, brought down by Sri Ramakrishna
for the good of the world. What are the implications of this, for
our society today? As I study him I see him as a mind of the first
order, applying itself not only to the traditional science of the
spiritual life, but to all human problems, as far as he
encountered them. We have an important question here: Should
philosophers become kings? i.e., how far into society as an
organism should one go who is vowed to be “out of society?” Does
his detachment make for better wisdom? The Greeks usually said
yes. The Hindus usually no. Swami Vivekananda, however, was more
than a traditional monk: he was patriot and prophet as well, and
in this respect joined in his own body of thought both Eastern and
Western elements.
Swami Vivekananda is one of the very few sannyasins to turn his
mind to more than just “religion,” and he has spoken on many of
the issues of his day which remain issues for ours. Importantly,
he looked upon religion itself as “the fulfillment of the
perfection in man.” He was a great humanist, who picked up
European social ideas and fleshed them out with philosophic
underpinning and implication. As a prophet he foresaw the
twentieth century as the age “of labor and the sudras and of
women”, predicting the rise of Russia and China. He also said the
Indian ideas would go to every country under the sun and, before
long, become a component of their many forces. It should be
obvious by now that the Western world’s dream of attaining
happiness or permanent success through materialism has been a
failure. Certainly Vivekananda did say, “Bread first; then
religion,” but for those who have too much bread? What about them?
It is fine to have computers and color television, but do we not
see that it is the Orient alone which has understood the finer
dimensions of happiness? It is never in the machine; it is in the
human mind. This was his message.
Today we find ourselves in a world beset with horrendous problems
and dilemmas, and we have not yet evaded the threat of nuclear
war. What does Swamiji have to say to us? It plays out on two
levels: first as he addressed the problem on the level of the
problem; and later, how he made us look behind it.
Let us begin with
Crime and public morality
The facts are that punishment for crime often foments more crime
than it prevents. The enforcers of law are as often corrupt and
unlawful as not. And we could go on and on.
“If it is social opinion that makes us moral, then really we are
little better than animals,” he said. “It is inner strength only
that can curb the vicious tendencies.” He told Indian boys, “You
will be nearer to God by playing football than by studying the
Gita.” “Strength is the medicine for the world’s disease.” He
encouraged athletic and bodily development in all who were effete.
How sad he would feel, now, to see the dearth of Indian Olympians
at the Games, and the commercializing of sports!
Swamiji saw crime as the result, not only of the injustices of
society, but more the lack of self-esteem in the individual, and
the impoverishment of higher ideals. He compared the social fabric
of India with that of America, and felt that the Indian marriage
system, in spite of its glaring injustices, was superior to the
promiscuity (already rampant in his day) of the romantic West. He
was getting wind of the license Freudianism was going to bring. He
did not try to be a Manu, defining particular codes of conduct.
Following his Master, he could prescribe for human nature only
turning our base impulses in a higher direction: there was no
other solution. “Consciously or unconsciously,” he said, “that
Indian idea of the divinity within everyone will express itself
even in other countries.” Behind the drunkard, behind the abuser,
he saw the crushed and struggling divinity. “Do not seek help from
anyone. There is only one sin: weakness. Be strong, physically,
mentally, morally.”
Family breakdown
We have known for long that just producing valedictorians and
spelling geniuses in not enough to warranty the continuity of high
culture. Hear Vivekananda: “It is the culture of the heart,
really, not that of the intellect, that will lessen the misery of
the world.” “It is culture that withstands shocks, not learning!
And we are finding that our children face many shocks, more every
day. To the Christians he said, “Make yourselves decent people…Be
chaste and pure…There is no other way. Did Christ find any other
way? ‘Except ye become as a little child, ye may not enter the
Kingdom of Heaven.’”
He told us how to love a wife or a husband: “It is not our love
that makes us miserable, but the fact that we want love in
return.” Always give, do not demand, he said. Swamiji was not a
“reformer” in the sense of pulling down social systems. He
approved the idea of a caste system, but not the latter-day
applications of it; with proper amendments he thought it good for
a society.
As to family coherence, he knew that “those who cannot discipline
themselves cannot control their children and pointed out the folly
of expecting the offspring not to follow their parents’ conduct.
What we would like others to do, we had better do, ourselves.
Health care
Sri Ramakrishna had been eclectic in his resort to methods of
medical practice. He used to say that the Ayur Vedic treatments
were good for the “Satya Yuga”, the days of the rishis when time
was abundant. They worked too slowly for modern times. But when
stricken by cancer at the end, he would let all the schools of
medicine try their hand! Swami Vivekananda too, in his approach to
health and treatment, felt that all types of health management
could be tried. He had no high opinion of what governments could
do in the matter; they had to take a role, of course, but when all
the evils of corruption, inefficiency, waste and callousness which
attend bureaucracy were taken into account, how much could health
be improved? Again, that idea of strength: “No disease can get a
hold in you unless you are weak, and allow it to do so.” We do not
know for sure, but can surmise that in today’s health
controversies he would encourage prevention over cure, immunity
over medicine, natural alternatives over pills, and spiritual
practice to eliminate mental and physical dependence. There are
hints of these, throughout the Swami’s conversations.
Environmental pollution and denigration
The problem was scarcely recognized at the end of the nineteenth
century, but one can extrapolate from nearly all that Swamiji said
about life styles and conspicuous consumption. He was a realist
and knew very well that we cannot have something for nothing. “The
misery of the world is like chronic rheumatismchase it from one
area, it shows up in another, ” he said. If he were here today to
face the problem in its ripest stage, there is little doubt that
he would be an “environment-alist”, and surely would remind us
that we are going to be the inheritors of our own mess, allowing
the Hindu doctrine of reincarnation. And one may imagine the
almost acid tones with which he would refer to the population
explosion and accent the role of self-control in its solution.
The same is true of fiscal irresponsibility. Do you remember that
he upheld the value of the caste system as regards its original
ideal and concept? That the caste member who attained to wealth or
status was under the dharmic obligation to help raise the whole
community from which he had risen and which had launched his
struggle? Then how can we provide only for our own offspring? That
would be adopting the nuclear family framework of the West, not
the best to emulate, in his mind. “Freedom is the first condition
of growth;” he forcefully remarked one day, “what you do not make
free can never grow.” This applies to employees and dependents as
well.
The question of male dominance and woman’s status.
This defect the Hindus share with all the world’s peoples, he
acknowledged, as there is scarcely a culture which has not
succumbed to it. He was one of the first of his era in the field
of religion to recognize the indignity and oppression which woman
was subject to, in this world of men. He had seen and studied the
misery of his own sister, a suicide, and it had deeply affected
his thinking. “If woman cannot act, neither can man suffer,” he
said; a fact now well-known in the statistics of psychology. There
were times when Vivekananda’s mind was dwelling in a
transcendental realm, and those times gave rise to expressions
like these: “There is neither man nor woman [in Vedanta], for the
soul is sexless… It is a lie to say that I am a man or a woman, or
I belong to this country or that. All the world is my country,
because I have clothed myself with it as my body.”
Such was his sense of identity at that moment. He never tired of
brushing off the well-meaning concerns of men who would ask him
about “women’s problems”: “Hands off! ” he exclaimed, “women will
solve their own problems.” Men had no business attempting to solve
them for them.
In the United States he made a very interesting comment. He said,
“American men profess to worship woman, but in my opinion they
simply worship youth and beauty. They never fall in love with
wrinkles and grey hair.” By worship of woman, Sri Ramakrishna had
meant, he assured us, that to him every woman’s face was that of
the Blissful Mother and nothing else. At the same time he could
clearly see that in America alone there was now the social freedom
to rise up and take equality with men. Swamiji met many women in
the West, patrons, admirers, helpers, disciples and with all of
them he dealt in his own natural and spontaneous way. They
sometimes expected of him the gallant chivalry of that Victorian
era, but he flatly refused. “You can take care of yourself, ” he
would say; “you are as able as I am, if not more.” Swami
Vivekananda was prophet enough to foresee what the twentieth
century would bring. We can sum up the subject in his broad but
telling generality: “Asia laid the germs of civilization. Europe
developed man. America is developing woman and the masses.”
Lack of religious identity
On this subject Swamiji had much to say. His years of wandering
over his Motherland brought him to summarize what he considered
the “Common Bases of Hinduism.” These were: Belief in God (he once
said with a bit of exasperation, “The Hindus can never give up His
Majesty, the Lord of the Universe!”), belief in the Vedas as
“revealed,” the cyclic nature of time (yugas and kalpas in the
macrocosm, reincarnation in the microcosm), and belief in all
religions as valid paths because of the divinity of the human
soul. Rather a minimal list, when one stops to think about it.
As regards scripture, Swamiji declared: “The proof of religion
depends on the constitution of man, not on any books.” What was
the role of religion for a Hindu? “Religion, to help mankind, must
be ready and able to help him in whatever condition he is.” Then
is there any place there for caste?
Above all, the Hindu is certain that we never go from falsehood to
truth, but only from truth to truth. Be convinced of these and you
are a Hindu.
by Swami Yogeshananda (
http://vedanta-atlanta.org)
Today's-Special
: 14-August in Swami Vivekananda Life
14 Aug 1900 : Letter to John Fox - Kindly write Mohin
(Mahendranath Datta, younger brother of Swamiji.) that he has
my blessings in whatever he does. And what he is doing now is
surely much better than lawyering, etc. I like boldness and
adventure and my race stands in need of that spirit very much.
Only as my health is failing and I do not expect to live long,
Mohin must see his way to take care of mother and family. I
may pass away any moment. I am quite proud of him now.
14 Aug 1900 : Letter to Sister Christine - Well--it
was a dreary, funeral-like time. Just think what it is to a
morbid man like me!
I am going to the Exposition, etc., trying to pass time. Had a
lecture here. Pre Haycinth [Hyacinthe], the celebrated
clergy-man here, seems to like me much. Well, well what?
Nothing. Only, you are so good, and I am a morbid fool--that
is all about it. But "Mother"--She knows best. I have served
Her through weal or woe. Thy will be done. Well, I have news
of my lost brother [Mahendranath Datta]. He is a great
traveller, that is good. So you see, the cloud is lifting
slowly.
There is no other teacher but your
own soul
