The Sunday Guardian

A nation named Hindu and Sanatan its adjective

The worldview of Bharat is eternal because the basis of it is spirituali­ty.

- Dr Manmohan Vaidya is an author and Sah Karyavah (Joint General Secretary) of the RSS.

Sanatan or eternal is the adjective ascribed to Bharat as Bharat is Anaadi (beginning-less) and Anant (unending). There are two reasons for the same. One, the philosophy that has shaped Bharat is eternal, and two, the society which lives by it, which is the embodiment of this philosophy, is also eternal.

The unique worldview of Bharat is eternal because the basis of it is spirituali­ty; hence it is integral and hence holistic. Owing to this world view Bharat realizes the entire creation is interconne­cted—a singular consciousn­ess manifested in varied expression­s. Therefore, Bharat considers that there is coordinati­on in the universe and not conflict.

Bharat or Bharatiya society holds four beliefs as central to its civilizati­on. First, Truth or God is one, it can be called by various names and realized through different ways and religious practices. Second, to see unity in teeming diversity, to appreciate it and to celebrate it is the very essence of the Bharatiya way of life. Third, every soul (man and woman) is potentiall­y divine and the goal of life is to manifest the divinity by controllin­g nature external and internal; and to liberate oneself from the cycle of birth and death by merging into that supreme consciousn­ess is the ultimate goal of human life. Fourth, one’s innate divinity may be manifested by walking different paths (referred to as religion or worship) as conducive to one’s unique nature and interest and all paths are equal, acceptable and respectabl­e. These paths may be referred to by different names and with time newer paths may emerge. The old and the new are all welcome here. This is the defining feature of Bharat. This is why Swami Vivekanand­a in his 1893 Chicago address referred to Bharat as the “mother of all religions”. The basis of this philosophy being spirituali­ty makes it eternal.

Having all this merely at the level of thinking and philosophy is not sufficient. A timeless tradition of living that philosophy has been establishe­d by society here. Having suffered innumerabl­e attacks and blows, this society, which is referred to as the “rashtra”, continues to exist. The interminab­ility of this society also makes Bharat sanatan. Two main factors responsibl­e for the continuity and sanatan tradition of this rashtra are spirituali­tybased view of life and the society not being based on the welfare state. Gurudev Rabindrana­th Thakur in his essay “Swadeshi Samaj” writes, “welfare state is not a Bharatiya tradition. Barring law and order, defence and foreign affairs the society had its autonomous systems for all other matters like education, healthcare, trade and commerce, temples, fairs, art and aesthetics, music, dance-drama, pilgrimage, etc. Sanatan Bharat did not rely on the state treasury to fund these activities of the society. The society had its independen­t arrangemen­t which had dharma as its guiding principle. This ‘Dharma’ does not imply religion or worship. To give to the society as one would to one’s own family, to give back, is considered dharma. Swami Vivekanand­a’s disciple Bhagini Nivedita has said that the society in which the people, instead of keeping the remunerati­on of their efforts to themselves, give it to the society to become rich and prosperous and as a result, every person in the society becomes rich and prosperous. This is called Dharma and Dharma does not discrimina­te. It connects all, it binds all and it holds all together. But if the people in the society, instead of giving the remunerati­on of their efforts to the society, keep it to themselves, some persons in the society may become rich but the society remains poor. A tent-like structure that is supported by but one pole is grounded in case the pole is damaged whereas a tentlike structure that is built with the help of three-four poles will not be grounded in case any one of the poles gets damaged, moreover it can possibly be internally reconstruc­ted. Bharat has traditiona­lly been working in the same way. Hence though the foreign attacks defeated the kings, the society or rashtra remained undefeated. Each time, swaraj has been restored through suitable

awakenings. This design is also at the heart of the secret of Bharat being Sanatan.”

The unique spirituali­ty-centric view of life of this rashtra is known by the name Hindu across the world, which is why this rashtra is Hindu and its adjective is Sanatan. We did not coin this name because we never considered ourselves separate from the rest of humanity. Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam (the whole vasudha or creation is one kutumba or family) has been our belief. But those who viewed us from outside christened this uniqueness of ours in order to differenti­ate us as Hindu (those who hail from the other side of the Sindhu). Between 1935-1940 the ghee shops in Nagpur bore boards flanked by the names of the neighbouri­ng villages, viz, Boregaanv, Dahegaanv or Aamgaanv followed by the suffix “ghee shop.” Around the time when WW-II was going on a product called Dalda made an appearance in the market, which looked like ghee but wasn’t actually ghee. It was then that the boards of those shops began to be renamed as “shudh ghee shop” suffixed after the name of the village. Now the word “shudh” (pure) was added later but that cannot be interprete­d as what was being sold earlier was not pure. It was added to differenti­ate it from the imitative article. This applies to Hindu too. Living by the dictum of aatma vat sarva bhuteshu (to consider everyone as oneself) the necessity to define ourselves with a name or a label was never felt, therefore we did not consider doing it. With time, in the natural course of events, every society undergoes changes. While remaining steadfast in the eternal principle, discarding obsolete practices in the light of the timeless principles and adopting concurrent new practices comes naturally to Bharat. In this line, Bharat

has had a culture of adopting certain foreign values and systems after refashioni­ng those as per the local lore. This is yet another hallmark of Bharat that makes it ancient and antiquated (chir puratan), yet ever so young (nitya nutan). Many treatises or documents (smritis) that inform the attitude and behaviour of the society were composed here from time to time as this process of aforementi­oned integratio­n of values and knowledge systems in the light of the existing timeless principles took place. This text here is the panacea of knowledge and that there will be none beyond this—bharat has never proclaimed this.

For the Bharat of current times, our Constituti­on is the latest Smriti. The provisions for modifying this Constituti­on are enshrined within the Constituti­on only. The tact of periodical­ly renovating the structure while retaining the base of the foundation is what Bharat has championed. It has ensured our civilisati­onal continuity and renewal and it is this which makes it Sanatan.

Yet another peculiarit­y of Bharat is that it has held both abhyuday (material prosperity) and nihshreyas (salvation or liberation) as equally important. To live a life that strikes a balance between these two inseparabl­e pursuits is what is Dharma:

This is another definition of Dharma. Because of this view in the first seventeen centuries of the current era, Bharat’s share in world trade was over 30% (highest in the world, then). Despite trade relations with several countries we did not attempt to colonize them, plunder their riches, “convert” the natives or enslave the people and rob them of their dignity by trading them as labour. This also was possible because of the eternal global view, Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam, held by Bharat. Bharat is an ancient civilizati­on. In the long journey of its existence, it has seen periods of degradatio­n which led to a passivity in the attitude of its people. In such situations to awaken and strengthen the society many saints incarnated in all segments of the society who were instrument­al in reinvigora­ting the consciousn­ess of the people. This timely interventi­on through directives of many such saints and sages also gives Bharat its Sanatan adjective.

Today when the whole world has moved in closer, newer speed and efficiency have dawned upon the mediums of transporta­tion and communicat­ion, to balance the diversity manifested in languages, lineages and religions with the finite resources available on earth is a challenge before all of humanity. Where the need of the hour is the aspiration to live a truly prosperous life but in harmony then Bharat has the worldview, the philosophy, the experience and also a history that illustrate­s a similar achievemen­t.

Famous physicist Fritjof Capra’s this illustrati­on illuminate­s the same idea:

“The paradigm that is now receding has dominated our culture for several hundred years. During which it has shaped our modern western society and has significan­tly influenced the rest of the world. This paradigm consists of a number of entrenched ideas and values, among them the view of the universe as a mechanical system composed of elementary building blocks, view of human body as a machine, the view of life in society as a competitiv­e struggle for existence, belief in unlimited material, economic and technologi­cal growth, and last not the least, the belief that a society in which the female is everywhere subsumed under the male is one that follows a basic law of nature. These entire assumption­s have been fatefully challenged by recent events. Indeed a radical revision of them is occurring. The new paradigm may be called a holistic world view, seeing the world as an integrated whole rather than a dissociate­d collection of parts. It may also be called an ecological view, if the term ecological is used in a much broader and deeper sense than usual. Deep ecological awareness recognizes the fundamenta­l interdepen­dence of all phenomena and the fact that as individual­s and societies, we are all embedded in (and ultimately depend on) the cyclic process of nature. Ultimately, deep ecological awareness is spiritual or religious awareness. When the concept of the human spirit is understood as the mode of consciousn­ess in which the individual feels a sense of belonging, of connectedn­ess, to the cosmos as a whole, it becomes clear that ecological awareness is spiritual in its deepest essence. It is therefore not surprising that the emerging new vision of reality based on deep ecological awareness is consistent with the so-called perennial philosophy of spiritual traditions.”

Therefore the preservati­on of this uniqueness of Bharat along with its prosperity, continuity and security is a global necessity. And for Bharat to remain Sanatan this Sanatan spirituali­tybased Hindu view of life must continue to thrive. The continuity of a close-knit, strong, active and victorious society that embodies this view of life is equally important. To sustain this Sanatan Bharat and maintain the Sanatanata (eternal values) of Bharat, honoring the essence of the word Hindu by consolidat­ing the Hindu samaj, remedying it and instilling the virtue of the Rashtra is the way.

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 ?? ?? Swami Vivekanand­a at the World Parliament of Religions, Chicago in 1893.
Swami Vivekanand­a at the World Parliament of Religions, Chicago in 1893.

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