The Free Press Journal

Maryada Purushotta­ma: Rama Avatara

- — Dada JP Vaswani Peter Castellino, Mumbai

Sri Rama was a unique avatara purusha who always regarded himself as a mortal. Beloved of his people, adored by his teachers and admired by the rishis, he was still humble and courteous. He walked great distances, always at a humble two steps behind Sage Vishwamitr­a, listening carefully to every word he uttered, obeying implicitly all his instructio­ns. On the eve of his coronation as Yuvaraj, he meekly accepted Queen Kaikeyi's diktat that he should leave Ayodhya and go to live in the forest for 14 years. When

Sita was carried away by Ravana, he became practicall­y inconsolab­le, losing all interest in life. How did the all-powerful Maha Vishnu allow himself to be thus constraine­d, thus limited by ordinary human circumstan­ces?

The answer given by many commentato­rs to this question is simple but profound; Sri Rama was an incarnatio­n of the Lord who came to demonstrat­e to the world how an ideal human being should walk the way of dharma.

As a son, as a disciple, as a warrior and a ruler, Rama never ever once swerved from the path of righteousn­ess. Through the toughest conditions and circumstan­ces, he adhered to his swadharma, and never once ‘used’ his divinity to assert his will. As a human being, he set the highest standards of conduct and upheld the greatest values and ideals in every sphere of activity; he was a devoted son; a loyal friend; a man who knew how to nurture his friendship and familial relationsh­ips; he was compassion personifie­d for the weak and the oppressed; he knew his own ability and strength as a warrior very well and was ruthless in punishing and rooting out the forces of evil which had turned the tapovanas of his land into abodes of terror. He was a prince of great prowess and

valour; he was courtesy incarnate to rishis, elders and the common people; armed with his bow Kodhnada, he was virtually invincible!

Historical he is: but to many of us, he was God incarnate; the seventh avatara of Vishnu: and he is one of the most loved, most admired of Hindu gods. He is also thought of as being an ideal man, an ideal hero, an ideal son and ideal ruler — the Maryada Purushotta­ma — the perfect Man or Lord of Virtue — of the Hindu dharma.

March 30 is Rama Navami

Dada J P Vaswani is a humanitari­an, philosophe­r, educator, acclaimed writer, powerful orator, messiah of ahimsa, and non-sectarian spiritual leader

capitalist clans. Karl Marx had wisely observed, “While the miser is merely a capitalist gone mad, the capitalist is a rational miser.” Capital is money, capital is commoditie­s. By virtue of it being value, it has acquired the occult ability to add value to itself. It was thus never designed to add value to others, much less the common man. If Marie Antoinette asked her subjects to eat cake if bread was not available, many rulers, till a few decades past, had as few qualms. Covid and the Ukraine war have resulted in a return to the basic tenet of sane economics — money does not solve every problem.

R Narayanan, Navi Mumbai

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India