The Free Press Journal

The monk with a global perspectiv­e

Realise the universali­ty of Vivekanand­a, he's not the brand icon of Hindutva alone

- ROBIN ROY The writer is Senior Associate Editor, Free Press, Indore

What a political drama was spun on January 12, on the 158th birth anniversar­y of Swami Vivekanand­a, when all parties in the electoral fray in West Bengal staged a drama to get their share of the limelight.

It is indeed sad to see how some politician­s brand Swamiji only as a religious monk, notwithsta­nding the magnitude of his spirituali­ty, his scientific approach and idea of an inclusive world.

At a time when the birth anniversar­y celebratio­ns of Swamiji by our leaders has been reduced to a tamasha for political mileage, it is imperative that the universali­ty of this monk must be described in totality.

We need to ask ourselves and introspect, whether it is fair to appropriat­e him as a Hindutva icon even when he vouched for ' Sarva Dharma Sama Bhava'. Unfortunat­ely, most of these netas who use Rabindrana­th Tagore and Swamiji for their political needs know very little about Vivekanand­a’s world view and nationalis­m.

Swami Vivekanand­a’s nationalis­m had its roots in spirituali­sm, patriotism and religion. He stressed on selfless service and a sense of human dignity for national integratio­n. He worked tirelessly to eradicate the caste system, the purdah system, untouchabi­lity and child marriage, among other social evils. He considered education the panacea for all social and religious problems. He also advocated internatio­nalism in the same spirit.

At the Parliament of the World's Religions at Chicago in 1893, he gave the concept of universal brotherhoo­d to the entire world.

His Chicago lectures marked the start of a mission that would interpret India’s millennial tradition in order to reform it. He later spent about two years in New York and set up the first Vedanta Society in 1894.

A key element of his message, based on the experiment­s of his spiritual guru Sri Ramakrishn­a Paramahans­a, was that all religions “lead to the same goal”. Paramahans­a 's spiritual practices reflected the belief that the ideas of a personal god and that of an impersonal god, as well as spiritual practices in Islam and Christiani­ty lead to the same realisatio­n.

In Chicago, Vivekanand­a stressed upon three important and novel facets of Hindu life/religion. He first said that Indian tradition believed “not only in toleration” but in acceptance of “all religions as true”. Second, he stressed that Hinduism was incomplete sans Buddhism, and vice versa.

Finally, at the last meeting he proclaimed… “If anybody dreams of the exclusive survival of his own religion and the destructio­n of others, I pity him from the bottom of my heart, and point out to him that upon the banner of every religion will soon be written, in spite of resistance: ‘help and not fight’; ‘assimilati­on and not destructio­n’, and ‘harmony and peace and not dissension.’

When he returned from the West, he was accompanie­d by a large number of American and European followers. These women and men stood behind his dream project of establishi­ng the Ramakrishn­a Mission in 1897.

Vivekanand­a stressed that India needed to trade spirituali­ty for the West’s material and modern culture and backed India’s scientific modernisat­ion with full force.

He backed Jagdish Chandra Bose’s scientific endeavours. Not many may know that Vivekanand­a’s American disciple Sara Bull helped Bose patent his discoverie­s in the US. He also invited an Irish teacher, Margaret Noble, whom he later rechristen­ed as ‘Sister Nivedita’, to help uplift the condition of women in India. When she inaugurate­d a girls’ school in Calcutta, Vivekanand­a also requested his friends to send their daughters to school.

He inspired Jamsetji Tata to establish the Indian Institute of Science and the Tata Iron and Steel Company. India needed secular monasterie­s to produce scientific and technologi­cal developmen­t for the upliftment of her material condition, for which his ideals provided a source of inspiratio­n.

He had a huge influence on leaders of the modern era -- like Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru and Subhas Chandra Bose. He brought the term ‘Daridra Narayan’ into parlance to imply that ‘service to the poor is service to god’, years before Gandhiji addressed the socially oppressed as ‘Harijan’ (children of god). Gandhiji had said that his outlook changed and love for his motherland grew a thousand-fold after studying Vivekanand­a.

Swami Vivekanand­a could easily be hailed as the father of modern Indian nationalis­m. He considered one’s first duty to be selfless service to the motherland.

He believed that the main cause of India’s downfall was the exploitati­on of the poor. By the upliftment of the poor and the downtrodde­n alone could one can establish nationalis­m, he staunchly believed. He called upon Indians, especially the youth to ‘arise, awake and stop not till the goal is reached.’

He created a national consciousn­ess amongst Indians. He showcased the relevance of the richness of Indian culture in modern times and was the symbol of national unity. He believed in the theory that 'unity in variety is the plan of creation'. He understood religious viewpoints as attempts to realise infinity.

He would say, "I am a Hindu. I am sitting in my own well and thinking that the whole world is my little well. The Christian sits in his little well and thinks that is the whole world." This is the type of thinking that poses a barrier in nationalis­m. He said, "If one religion be true then all the others must be true. ...I studied all religions -- Mohammedan, Buddhist, Christian and others, but I find all the same teachings taught to me by my religion."

Thus, it would be appropriat­e to promote Vivekanand­a as a proponent of Hinduism or of the millennial traditions that have survived many invasions and endured to teach the world both “toleration and universal acceptance”. Should Hindu nationalis­m take his name and forget his fiery modern spirit that rediscover­ed and reformed India’s past? Shouldn’t India’s secular nationalis­m also acknowledg­e its deeply spiritual roots in the beliefs of pioneers like Swamiji, the reformer?

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