ॐ
वीरेश्वराय विद्महे
विवेकानन्दाय धीमहि । तन्नो
वीर: प्रचोदयात् ।
“Shivaji was the greatest Hindu king that
India had produced within the last thousand years; one who was
the very incarnation of lord Siva, about whom prophecies were
given out long before he was born; and his advent was eagerly
expected by all the great souls and saints of Maharashtra as
the deliverer of the Hindus from the hands of the Mlecchas,
and as one who succeeded in the reestablishment of Dharma
which had been trampled underfoot by the depredations of the
devastating hordes of the Moghals. ”
“ Shivaji was one of the greatest national saviors who emancipated our society and our Dharma when they were faced with the threat of total destruction. He was a peerless hero, a pious and God-fearing king and verily a manifestation of all the virtues of a born leader of men described in our ancient scriptures. He also embodied the deathless spirit of our land and stood as the light of hope for our future.”
“ Shivaji was one of the greatest national saviors who emancipated our society and our Dharma when they were faced with the threat of total destruction. He was a peerless hero, a pious and God-fearing king and verily a manifestation of all the virtues of a born leader of men described in our ancient scriptures. He also embodied the deathless spirit of our land and stood as the light of hope for our future.”
- Swami Vivekananda in
an Evening-talk on Shivaji
It was a beautiful moonlit night and Swamiji was sitting in the
verandah of the bungalow of the late Mr. Bhattacharjee on the
South Beach of Madras (already referred to), conversing in Hindi
with Mr. Munshi Jagamohanlal, the private secretary of the
Maharajah of Khetri. This gentleman had been sent by the Maharajah
to trace out the whereabouts of the Swamiji and to fetch him back
to Khetri to bless the newly born son and heir to the State. When
Swamiji was at Khetri about a year previously, the Maharajah of
Khetri had begged of him to confer the boon of a son and Swamiji
while he was in one of his higher moods had actually blessed him
saying that God had granted his prayer. So the Maharajah wanted
Swamiji back in his palace at any cost and could not remain
contented until he saw him. When I went over there after my office
work I prostrated before Swamiji and took my seat; and suddenly
Swamiji began to sing a Hindi song in praise of Sivaji in his own
masterly way, the last two lines of which were:—
दावा द्रुमदंड पर
चित्ता मृग झुंड पर, भूषण बितंड पर जैसे मृगराज हैं ।
तॆज तम अंशपर काह्न जिम कंसपर, त्यॊंमिलेच्छवंसपर शर शिवराज हैं ॥
तॆज तम अंशपर काह्न जिम कंसपर, त्यॊंमिलेच्छवंसपर शर शिवराज हैं ॥
(As forest-fire is to the forest trees, a
leopard to the deer-herds and a lion to the stately elephants;
as the sun is to the darkness of the night, as Krishna was to
Kansa, so was king Sivaji, a lion, towards the hordes of
Mlechchas.)
It was a long song as I learnt it afterwards; but I who had learnt
in my school days that Shivaji was a cunning unprincipled
freebooter, ‘an upstart robber,’ a marauder and a treacherous
murderer, suddenly interrupted Swamiji and asked him how that
praise and those lines were justified in the case of Shivaji. Was
he not a mere child of fortune, a marauder who collected similar
men like himself and succeeded in establishing a kingdom by sheer
cunning and treachery? Swamiji immediately gave up his singing and
saw me full in the face, his face being lit up with the fire of
indignation and said, “Shame on you, Doctor. You are a Mahratta
and still that is all you know of the greatest king that India had
produced within the last three hundred years; one who was the very
incarnation of Siva, about whom prophecies were given out long
before he was born; and his advent was eagerly expected by all the
great souls and saints of Maharashtra as the deliverer of the
Hindus from the hands of the Mlechchas and one who succeeded in
the establishment of the Dharma which had been trampled under foot
by the depredations of the devastating hordes of the Moghals. This
is what comes of your reading Indian History written by foreigners
who could have no sympathy with you, nor could they have any
respect for your culture, traditions, manners and customs which
they could not understand. Is there a greater hero, a greater
saint, a greater bhakta and a greater king than Shivaji? Shivaji
was the very embodiment of a born ruler of men as typified in your
great Epics. He was the type of the real son of India representing
the true consciousness of the nation. It was he who showed what
the future of India is going to be sooner or later, a group of
independent units under one umbrella as it were, i.e., under one
supreme imperial suzerainty.” I was simply thunderstruck and
seemed to myself so small, so foolish and so ignorant; still the
spirit of enquiry in me could not be put down even by those
eloquent and fiery words of indigna-tion which Swamiji gave
expression to, for I thought whatever might be said of Shivaji
there could be no explanation for his treacherous conduct towards
Afzul Khan, the great Pathan commander sent from the court of
Bijapur, whom he is said to have killed under circumstances which
any one who has a spark of morality in him could not but abhor.
Still with some amount of hesitation but with a mischievous
curiosity to find out how Swamiji could condone this treacherous
deed of Shivaji, I begged of him to tell us something about the
real life-history of Shivaji and what he thought of his one act
which had been considered the greatest blot in his life and on
account of which his character had been painted so black.
Then Swamiji began to give a brief account of the life of Shivaji, with great feeling and enthusiasm and we listened to the same with great eagerness and rapt attention; for so engrossing and interesting it was to listen to those soul-stirring words of Swamiji who spoke at the time with so great an earnestness and yet with so much pity and kindness. It was a pity there was no one to take down all that he spoke that evening in shorthand, nor did I make any notes at the time either, for my mind was so absorbed in following his narrative that the idea of taking down any notes never entered my brain. Yet the indelible impressions he made on even our callous hearts that memorable evening do still persist though somewhat dimmed, and the following is but an imperfect reproduction of those impressions.
“Doctor,” began Swamiji, “it is a pity that in our schools, History of India written by foreigners alone is taught to our boys. The foreign writers of the Mahratta History can never shake off their bias nor understand the real character and greatness and the inner motive of the actions of Sivaji. We cannot blame them for their beliefs which more or less depended on the writings of the Mussalman chroniclers who out of spite and hatred, denounced Sivaji as a falim or freebooter. On the other hand there are many Mahratta bakhars or chroniclers who have written about him but who, true to their ancient puranic ideal, looked upon Sivaji as an incarnation of God born to relieve His devotees from the oppressions of Mahomedan fanaticism and to re-establish the Dharma. Naturally the foreign writers leaned on the side of the Mussalman chroniclers and considered the account given by the Mahrattas as mere superstition. But fortunately there are many independent Persian manuscripts dealing with the history of Aurangzeeb, Shivaji and the Bijapur kings. They corroborate the account of the Mahratta chroniclers so far as facts are concerned, though they do not share in their belief of the superhuman nature of the exploits of Shivaji. And if young men who have any patriotic feeling towards the history of their motherland were to make researches in finding out and translating these manuscripts much truer light may be thrown on the greatness of the doings of Sivaji and of many others who helped in the formation of the great Mahratta Confederacy and it will be a valuable addition to our knowledge of the real His-tory of India.” (Vedanta Kesari : November 1914, p. 218-219)
Then Swamiji began to give a brief account of the life of Shivaji, with great feeling and enthusiasm and we listened to the same with great eagerness and rapt attention; for so engrossing and interesting it was to listen to those soul-stirring words of Swamiji who spoke at the time with so great an earnestness and yet with so much pity and kindness. It was a pity there was no one to take down all that he spoke that evening in shorthand, nor did I make any notes at the time either, for my mind was so absorbed in following his narrative that the idea of taking down any notes never entered my brain. Yet the indelible impressions he made on even our callous hearts that memorable evening do still persist though somewhat dimmed, and the following is but an imperfect reproduction of those impressions.
“Doctor,” began Swamiji, “it is a pity that in our schools, History of India written by foreigners alone is taught to our boys. The foreign writers of the Mahratta History can never shake off their bias nor understand the real character and greatness and the inner motive of the actions of Sivaji. We cannot blame them for their beliefs which more or less depended on the writings of the Mussalman chroniclers who out of spite and hatred, denounced Sivaji as a falim or freebooter. On the other hand there are many Mahratta bakhars or chroniclers who have written about him but who, true to their ancient puranic ideal, looked upon Sivaji as an incarnation of God born to relieve His devotees from the oppressions of Mahomedan fanaticism and to re-establish the Dharma. Naturally the foreign writers leaned on the side of the Mussalman chroniclers and considered the account given by the Mahrattas as mere superstition. But fortunately there are many independent Persian manuscripts dealing with the history of Aurangzeeb, Shivaji and the Bijapur kings. They corroborate the account of the Mahratta chroniclers so far as facts are concerned, though they do not share in their belief of the superhuman nature of the exploits of Shivaji. And if young men who have any patriotic feeling towards the history of their motherland were to make researches in finding out and translating these manuscripts much truer light may be thrown on the greatness of the doings of Sivaji and of many others who helped in the formation of the great Mahratta Confederacy and it will be a valuable addition to our knowledge of the real His-tory of India.” (Vedanta Kesari : November 1914, p. 218-219)
Todays-Special
21-June in Swami Vivekananda Life
21 Jun 1896 : Lecture: "The
real and apparent man" at Royal Institute of
Painters In Water Colours, 191 Picadilly, London. Transcribed
by Goodwin and brought out in pamphlet form by Mr. Sturdy.
Subsequently, included in the book, Jnana Yoga.
In this the task that Swami Vivekananda gives to us is :
If one millionth part of the men and women who live in this world simply sit down and for a few minutes say, "You are all God, O ye men and O ye animals and living beings, you are all the manifestations of the one living Deity!" the whole world will be changed in half an hour. Instead of throwing tremendous bomb-shells of hatred into every corner, instead of projecting currents of jealousy and evil thought, in every country people will think that it is all He. He is all that you see and feel. How can you see evil until there is evil in you? How can you see the thief, unless he is there, sitting in the heart of your heart? How can you see the murderer until you are yourself the murderer? Be good, and evil will vanish for you. The whole universe will thus be changed.
Think : Can I be in that one millionth part of d men n women which Swamiji wanted?
In this the task that Swami Vivekananda gives to us is :
If one millionth part of the men and women who live in this world simply sit down and for a few minutes say, "You are all God, O ye men and O ye animals and living beings, you are all the manifestations of the one living Deity!" the whole world will be changed in half an hour. Instead of throwing tremendous bomb-shells of hatred into every corner, instead of projecting currents of jealousy and evil thought, in every country people will think that it is all He. He is all that you see and feel. How can you see evil until there is evil in you? How can you see the thief, unless he is there, sitting in the heart of your heart? How can you see the murderer until you are yourself the murderer? Be good, and evil will vanish for you. The whole universe will thus be changed.
Think : Can I be in that one millionth part of d men n women which Swamiji wanted?
Law of
Karma
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