Saturday 27 April 2024

Vivekananda Kendra Calling


People of our country are, by tradition, religion- minded and this country is therefore described as a land of religion and spirituality. Swami Vivekananda used to say that the soul of our country is in religion. The highest and the ultimate goal or Purushartha aspired for by the people of this country is Mutri, so much so that the traditional treatises dealing with even mundane arts and sciences, including those on Ayurveda and even statecraft, strive to tell, in their prefatory remarks, how the ultimate purpose behind them is to facilitate progress of every human being towards the common spiritual goal Moksha. If going to temples, visiting places of pilgrimage, participating in Bhajans, Yajnas and Anushthanas as also listening to philosophical and religious discourses by millions of people or the presence of numerous religious teachers, Gurus and such other men of God all over the country are the manifestations of a growing religiosity, our country, perhaps, is more religious today than it ever was at any time in the past. But, unfortunately, the natural impact of this apparent God-wardness on the general society is little in evidence today. Purposeful living, discipline, character, truthfulness, fellow-feeling, fearlessness, subordination of the self and a zest for works of public good, which are some of the traits that develop in a Godward society and which, we have enough evidence to say, existed in a good measure in our country in the past, are seen fast disappearing from our midst. Ironically enough, with the apparent religious fervour presently on the increase, general corruption, indiscipline and other kinds of moral degradation are also in the ascendant. How is this paradox to be explained? Certainly, it will not be reasonable to ascribe all these evils solely to inefficient governance of the country. Because, after all, the people, especially in modern democracies, get the government they deserve!

So, what is wrong with us and what is the way to save the country from the impending social disintegration that seems to be fast overtaking us? Any discerning mind will be able to see that a distorted conception of religion is the root cause of most of our evils for the last several centuries which persist even today. It is rightly said that religion is the soul of our country. But as that itself is blurred, we have the sorry spectacle of deterioration all round. Religious awakening means experiencing the presence of God in one's self and the world. That makes one conscious of the divine within and urges one to work for its enfoldment and to grow spiritually. Simultaneously it generates in one a sense of oneness with God's creation and, consequently, an intense fellow-feeling for the members of one's own species the human race and prompts one to work with zest for human welfare and progress. If, and as long as, the religious awakening intensifies on these lines, it is dynamic and full of tremendous potentialities for the transformation of humanity into higher and higher planes of existence. But, if it remains limited to rituals, forms of worship and offerings to God, or prayers and praises addressed to Him, it becomes static and has hardly a role to play in human advancement. Swami Vivekananda was the foremost among the modern religious teachers who strove to take out religion from that static condition into which it had degenerated over the centuries, and drew the attention of the people to its real role. He pointed out in no uncertain terms that ceremonies and forms are not the essence of religion, but it is rather the realisation of a higher life.

He said, "We may study all the books that are in the world, yet we may not understand a word of religion or of God. Temples and churches, books and forms are simply the kindergarten of religion, to make the spiritual child strong enough to take the higher steps. Religion is not in doctrines or dogmas, nor in intellectual argumentation. It is realisation in the heart of hearts; it is touching God, it is feeling, realising that I am a spirit in relation with universal spirit and all its great manifestations." To those who lost themselves only in forms and rituals, turning their back on the people and the misery' that had befallen them, he said, " What vain gods shall we go after and yet cannot worship the god that we see all around us, the Virat (Janata Janardan)? When we have worshipped this, we shall be able to worship all other gods. "The remedy for the ills of our country, therefore, lies in launching a mighty movement of right thought flooding the entire country. It has to be a two-pronged move. It is to be aimed, on the one hand, at (1) transforming our people's inherent God-wardness into right spiritual urge rising out of the Vedic teachings, namely, (i) each soul is potentially divine and (ii) faith in God, in turn, means faith in one's self, i.e., in one's potentiality to rise to divine heights. On the other hand, it is (2) to convert the spiritual fervour thus released into works of national reconstruction.

The movement described above has recently been born and the name it bears is Vivekananda Kendra. The seed of this movement was in fact sown as far back as three quarters of a century ago by Swami Vivekananda himself, when he brought into being the Sannyasi Order of the Ramakrishna Mission. This Order has been preparing the ground since then by propagating the twin ideals of renunciation and service, especially among the intellectuals. The time is now ripe and the present conditions also demand that enlightened people of this country yoke themselves to these ideals, and rouse the masses to intense activity towards national reconstruction. The coming into being of the Vivekananda Kendra is only an expression of that deep urge felt in the country.

 - Eknath Ranade (Yuva Bharati, Special Commemorative Volume, 1973 Sept, editorial)


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कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
Read n Get Articles, Magazines, Books @ http://prakashan.vivekanandakendra.org

Let's work on "Swamiji's Vision - Eknathji's Mission"

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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Friday 26 April 2024

The Water Story

Our life in this world is conditioned by several other existences—the most fundamental of which are elements of nature like water, soil, air, and sunlight. Our relationship with these natural forces is always delicately balanced. Today, this balance is being seriously impaired, especially in our relationship with water.

The Water Perspective

About 50% - 65 % of an adult human being's body is made up of water. It is the building block of cells, tissues, and organs; it regulates body temperature, aids in digestion, eliminates waste from the body, and performs a host of other vital functions. Again, 70% of our earth is covered with water. Of this, only 3 % is fresh water and again only 0.4% of this fresh water is accessible to us because the remaining 2.6% is locked in polar ice-caps, glaciers, or deep inside the earth.

 Traditional Engagement

The Vedic rishis recognised the central role of water in creating and sustaining life. Water was recognised as divine, and the rivers as personified goddesses with motherly love for mankind. The Vedic literature has a number of prayers reflecting this attitude towards water. Some lines in the Apah Suktam, or the Hymn for Water sing:

O Water, this auspicious sap of yours, please share with us,
Like a mother desiring (to share her best possession with her children).
O Water, may the auspicious divinity which is wished for
be present in you when we drink (water).
May the auspiciousness which supports you, flow to us.
O Water, may the divinity in Water dwell in the farm lands,

O Water, I implore you to give nutrition (to the crops).
O Water, you are abundantly filled with medicinal herbs;
Please protect my body, so that I can see the Sun for long (i.e., live long).
O Water, please wash away whatever wicked tendencies are in me,
And also wash away the treacheries burning me from within,
And any falsehood present in my mind.

Truly, water has this dual power – it nourishes and strengthens the material world outside starting from our own body, and it purifies and transforms the subtle inner dimensions of our personality. In traditional homes, even today, the seven sacred rivers are invoked into the water being used for worship, cooking, and even bathing. Sri Ramakrishna too had a deep devotion to Ganga. He called Her Brahma-vari, i.e., Brahman in the form of water. If anybody talked of worldly things for a long time or mixed with worldly people, he would ask that person to drink a little of Ganga water and purify himself.

In sharp contrast to this traditional filial attitude towards water, is the modern approach which commodifies water and all the other natural resources. It is an attitude born of the understanding that the world is created for man's enjoyment. This mercenary perspective is in a sense at the root of the imbalance in our relationship with Nature.

Mother Earth's Response

What happens when we exploit Nature? An interesting story from Srimad Bhagavata gives the answer.

A number of people reduced to skeletons due to starvation approached their newly crowned king Prithu who, born in the line of Dhruva, was a part of Mahavishnu. They asked him to alleviate their sufferings and provide them sustenance. Prithu found out that by withdrawing into herself all her vegetation, goddess Earth had created this suffering. In great anger when he sought to punish her, goddess Earth took the form of a cow and ran away. But Prithu followed her in all directions. Finally, goddess Earth took refuge with Prithu himself and explained her actions.

She told him, 'O King! I saw how bad men, devoid of self-restraint, ate up all the cereals that Brahma had created for the purpose of Yajna. When the whole world became full of thieves, I took into myself all these cereals in order to conserve them for the Yajna. Because of the long lapse of time, these are lying in me in a decayed condition. Find a suitable calf and a pot for milking, and then milk, in the form of all your wants, can be drawn from me. O King! Also level me in such a way that the water that the rainy season brings, may spread everywhere and be available even after the season is over.'

Accordingly, using Swayambhuva Manu as the calf, Prithu milked out all plants into his own palm. The rishis used Brihaspati as calf and milked the Vedas and other scriptures into the vessel of the senses. Then the devatas, asuras, gandharvas, animals etc., using their best representative milked whatever they wanted from Earth. Exceedingly pleased with Earth for providing all the requirements of his people, Prithu adopted goddess Earth as his daughter and she came to be known as
Prithvi.

Two key points are to be noted here. Lack of self-restraint made men greedy and they ate up more than what they needed and thus disrupted the yajna-chakra or the cycle of sacrifice where each one contributes for the good of the other. The second point is that when approached with the love of a calf, Mother Nature will unlock all her treasures!

The Imbalance

Today, population growth, mismanagement of natural resources, and our selfishness are upsetting our relationship with Nature. We are witnessing heavy rainfalls leading to floods, and deficit or no rainfall creating famine-like conditions. Aggravating this is the pollution of rivers and water bodies by sewage and chemical effluents, excessive groundwater pumping and wasteful use of water. All these are seriously affecting our food security, health, energy generation, and economic growth. Water scarcity is also becoming a point of social tensions and regional conflicts.

The NITI Ayog's Composite Water Management Index released last year has some alarming statistics and predictions regarding water. It states that currently '600 million Indians face high to extreme water stress and about two lakh people die every year due to inadequate access to safe water.' In its assessment for future, it predicts that by 2020 the groundwater in 21 major Indian cities could be depleted, and by 2030 the water demand in our country could be twice the available supply. In the face of this dim prospect, it is disheartening to know that only 8% of the water received from rains in the entire year is harvested in our country. We have to now act on Mother Earth's advice to King Prithu and conserve water!

The Call

Recently, the Prime Minister called upon the nation to start a mass movement, as was done for Swachh Bharat, to create awareness about water conservation, and to share knowledge of traditional and innovative methods of water conservation.

Achieving water security is the responsibility of every Indian. This Independence Day, let us pledge to educate ourselves first and then create awareness in others about water conservation and water recycling. Let us work out ways to limit our daily water consumption. Indeed, a mind that wastes natural resources will also waste its mental and spiritual energies. Let frugality be our watchword. This is the duty of every awakened Indian. Virtues have to be first practised by awakened citizens. Only then will it grow and become national virtues.

(courtesy : Vedant Kesari 2019 Aug, Editorial)

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कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
Read n Get Articles, Magazines, Books @ http://prakashan.vivekanandakendra.org

Let's work on "Swamiji's Vision - Eknathji's Mission"

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मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26

Thursday 25 April 2024

Worship of the Living God

When swamiji returned from americato India in January 1897, he gave five lectures in Madras. In his last lecture on The Future Of India, he summoned the people of India in these stirring words:

For the next fifty years this alone shall be our keynote, this, our great Mother India. Let all other vain Gods disappear for the time from our minds. This is the only God that is awake, our own race—'everywhere his hands, everywhere his feet, everywhere his ears, he covers everything.' All other gods are sleeping, what vain gods shall we go after and yet cannot worship the god that we see all around us ... the Virat? Worship it. Worship is the exact equivalent of the Sanskrit word, and no other English word will do... These we have to worship...'

He used the word worship here and not the word service. When service is combined with devotion and reverence, it becomes worship. Devotees go to a temple and cut grass around the temple. That they call worship. Why? There is service combined with devotion and reverence. So, Swami Vivekananda exhorted our people that when they deal with other human beings, they should combine service with reverence. That becomes worship. Reverence? Why? Because divinity is present there. There is that divine spark in every individual.

These teachings had been there in our books. Beautiful, clear enunciations are there and our people have been hearing them all these centuries. All over the country Bhagavata saptahas are conducted often. Our people have heard these teachings for seven days again and again and yet they have never understood their importance nor implemented them.

There is this subject of service as worship in the third skandha, chapter 29, of the Srimad Bhagavatam where the sage Kapila, God's incarnation, is giving spiritual advice to his mother Devahuti. I am quoting three verses from that beautiful exposition: (3.29.21)

अहं सर्वेषु भूतेषु भूतात्माऽवस्थित: सदा ।
तमविज्ञाय मां मर्त्यः कुरुतेऽर्चाविडम्बनम् ॥

'I exist in all beings as the Self; but people insult Me there and elaborately worship Me only in an image in the temple.'

The next verse (3.29.24) says:

अहमुच्चावचैर्देव्यैः क्रिययोत्पन्नयानघे ।
नैव तुष्येऽर्चितोऽर्चायां भूतग्रामावमानिनः ॥

I don't accept the worship of those who insult me in every form of living beings and yet worship me in the temple in an image with costly rituals—Naiva tushye—I am not at all pleased. And finally comes a very positive statement (3.29.27):

अथ मां सर्वभूतेषु भूतात्मानं कृतालयम् ।
अर्हयेद्दानमानाभ्यां मैत्र्याभिन्नेन चक्षुषा ॥

'Therefore, worship Me in all beings in whom I exist as their Self and have built a temple fo myself in them, by dàna, removing their felt wants, and màna, by showing due respect to the recipient, and in an attitude of friendliness and non-separateness.'

How to worship god in all beings? How to worship God in man? If to a man going on the street, you say, 'Stop, I shall do your arati,' you will become a nuisance to him. So, the correct way to worship God in human beings is expressed in two words: Danamanabhyam—through dana and mana. If he is sick, give him medical treatment. If he is poor, get for him food to eat or a job. And while doing so, respect him, mana. Don't look down upon him, as if you are superior.

Then come the two more important words: maitrya—with a friendly attitude. You go to a village. People suspect you. They have been exploited all the time. You are another such, they think. Make them realise that you are their friend. And, lastly, the important Vedantic teaching comes: abhinnena chakshusha—with an attitude of non-separateness. We are one; you and I are not separate. The same Atman is present in you and in me. What wonderful words! These words convey to us the practical application of Vedanta.
- SWAMI RANGANATHANANDA (Swami Ranganathananda is the President of the Ramakrishna Mission. This extract has been taken from the concluding talk delivered at the Devotees' Convention at the Belur Math on 8 February 1998)
(courtesy : Vedant Kesari 1998 Dec.)
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कथा : विवेकानन्द केन्द्र { Katha : Vivekananda Kendra }
Vivekananda Rock Memorial & Vivekananda Kendra : http://www.vivekanandakendra.org
Read n Get Articles, Magazines, Books @ http://prakashan.vivekanandakendra.org

Let's work on "Swamiji's Vision - Eknathji's Mission"

Follow Vivekananda Kendra on   blog   twitter   g+   facebook   rss   delicious   youtube   Donate Online

मुक्तसंग्ङोऽनहंवादी धृत्युत्साहसमन्वित:।
सिद्ध‌‌यसिद्धयोर्निर्विकार: कर्ता सात्त्विक उच्यते ॥१८.२६॥

Freed from attachment, non-egoistic, endowed with courage and enthusiasm and unperturbed by success or failure, the worker is known as a pure (Sattvika) one. Four outstanding and essential qualities of a worker. - Bhagwad Gita : XVIII-26