Friday, January 11, 2013

Thus spoke Vivekananda …

I am not so ignorant of Vivekananda’s teachings that I needed a primer. But, if one were to fall onto my laps I would not ignore it. I would perhaps re-prime myself. The Hindu of 12 January 2013 carries an interview (in a Q & A format) that the paper claims Vivekananda gave “during a train journey from Chingleput to Madras” [1]. I do not vouch for the paper’s claims and also for what is given in the article.

I am just going to copy-paste a few statements from the article, with no comments or commentary. I am doing this as a service to those who are deep into spirituality and I have no ulterior motives. It is of course possible that my choice from among a host of ideas Vivekananda had discussed in this interview is selective and that may reinforce or undermine the reader’s positions about him and his teachings. But, I plead not guilty.
Ø  The world has never seen such a patriotic and artistic race as the Japanese … while in Europe and elsewhere Art generally goes with dirt. Japanese Art is Art plus absolute cleanliness
Ø  Each nation has a theme: everything else is secondary. India’s theme is religion, Social reform and everything else are secondary
Ø  We are not like the Japanese, we are Hindus
Ø  It is only from spiritual work that we can get rest in India. If your work is material here, you die of diabetes
Ø  Chicago Parliament … helped on the tide of Vedanta, which is flooding the world
Ø  Before many years elapse, a vast majority of the English people will be Vedantins
Ø  Even Christians cannot understand their New Testament, without understanding the Vedanta
Ø  The Vedanta is the rationale of all religions. Without the Vedanta every religion is superstition, with it everything becomes religion
Ø  Our masses are very good because poverty here is not a crime
Ø  Impart even secular knowledge through religion … if there are enough self-sacrificing young fellows, who, I hope, will work with me, it can be done tomorrow
Ø  Karma is the eternal assertion of human freedom
Ø  If we can bring ourselves down by our Karma, surely it is in our power to raise ourselves by it
Ø  The masses, besides, have not brought themselves down altogether by their own Karma
Ø  I do not propose any levelling of castes. Caste is a very good thing. Caste is the plan we want to follow. What caste really is, not one in a million understands
Ø  In India, from caste we reach to the point where there is no caste. Caste is based throughout on that principle. The plan in India is to make everybody Brahmana …
Ø  … the Brahmana being the ideal of humanity
Ø  … this has mostly to be done by the Brahmanas themselves
Ø  It is in the Vedas that we have to study our religion
Ø  With the exception of the Vedas, every book must change. The authority of the Vedas is for all time to come; the authority of every one of our other books is for the time being
Ø  Caste should not go, but should only be readjusted occasionally … It is sheer nonsense to desire the abolition of caste
Ø  … learn from the Englishman the idea of prompt obedience to leaders, the absence of jealousy, the indomitable perseverance and undying faith in himself
Ø  Rituals … are absolutely necessary for the world as it is now; only we shall have to give people newer and fresh rituals
Ø  One sect wanted to destroy [the Hindu race?], and they were thrown out of India; they were the Buddhists
Ø  ... The progress of the Hindu race has been towards the realisation of the Vedantic ideals … through good or bad fortune
Ø  Whenever there was any reforming sect or religion which rejected the Vedantic ideal, it was smashed into nothing

Raghuram Ekambaram

References

2 comments:

Tomichan Matheikal said...

I didn't bother to read the Hindu article when I began to feel that it wasn't doing justice to Vivekananda. Or if it was indeed doing it, then Vivekananda didn't deserve my further attention.

mandakolathur said...

But either way, Matheikal, you have to finish the task so you will know on which side of the fence you could jump off, or even if you want to continue to sit on the fence!

Said in jest, of course.

RE