Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda - Vol-3
THE WORK BEFORE US
(Delivered at the Triplicane Literary Society,
Madras)
The problem of life is becoming deeper and broader every day as
the world moves on. The watchword and the essence have been
preached in the days of yore when the Vedantic truth was first
discovered, the solidarity of all life. One atom in this universe
cannot move without dragging the whole world along with it. There
cannot be any progress without the whole world following in the
wake, and it is becoming every day dearer that the solution of any
problem can never be attained on racial, or national, or narrow
grounds. Every idea has to become broad till it covers the whole
of this world, every aspiration must go on increasing till it has
engulfed the whole of humanity, nay, the whole of life, within its
scope. This will explain why our country for the last few
centuries has not been what she was in the past. We find that one
of the causes which led to this degeneration was the narrowing of
our views narrowing the scope of our actions.
Two curious nations there have been - sprung of the same race, but
placed in different circumstances and environments, working put
the problems of life each in its own particular way. I mean the
ancient Hindu and the ancient Greek. The Indian Aryan - bounded on
the north by the snow-caps of the Himalayas, with fresh-water
rivers like rolling oceans surrounding him in the plains, with
eternal forests which, to him, seemed to be the end of the world -
turned his vision inward; and given the natural instinct, the
superfine brain of the Aryan, with this sublime scenery
surrounding him, the natural result was that he became
introspective. The analysis of his own mind was the great theme of
the Indo-Aryan. With the Greek, on the other hand, who arrived at
a part of the earth which was more beautiful than sublime, the
beautiful islands of the Grecian Archipelago, nature all around
him generous yet simple - his mind naturally went outside. It
wanted to analyse the external world. And as a result we find that
from India have sprung all the analytical sciences, and from
Greece all the sciences of generalization. The Hindu mind went on
in its own direction and produced the most marvellous results.
Even at the present day, the logical capacity of the Hindus, and
the tremendous power which the Indian brain still possesses, is
beyond compare. We all know that our boys pitched against the boys
of any other country triumph always. At the same time when the
national vigour went, perhaps one or two centuries before the
Mohammedan conquest of India, this national faculty became so much
exaggerated that it degraded itself, and we find some of this
degradation in everything in India, in art, in music, in sciences,
in everything. In art, no more was there a broad conception, no
more the symmetry of form and sublimity of conception, but the
tremendous attempt at the ornate and florid style had arisen. The
originality of the race seemed to have been lost. In music no more
were there the soul-stirring ideas of the ancient Sanskrit music,
no more did each note stand, as it were, on its own feet, and
produce the marvellous harmony, but each note had lost its
individuality. The whole of modern music is a jumble of notes, a
confused mass of curves. That is a sign of degradation in music.
So, if you analyse your idealistic conceptions, you will find the
same attempt at ornate figures, and loss of originality. And even
in religion, your special field, there came the most horrible
degradations. What can you expect of a race which for hundreds of
years has been busy in discussing such momentous problems as
whether we should drink a glass of water with the right hand or
the left? What more degradation can there be than that the
greatest minds of a country have been discussing about the kitchen
for several hundreds of years, discussing whether I may touch you
or you touch me, and what is the penance for this touching! The
themes of the Vedanta, the sublimest and the most glorious
conceptions of God and soul ever preached on earth, were
half-lost, buried in the forests, preserved by a few Sannyâsins,
while the rest of the nation discussed the momentous questions of
touching each other, and dress, and food. The Mohammedan conquest
gave us many good things, no doubt; even the lowest man in the
world can teach something to the highest; at the same time it
could not bring vigour into the race. Then for good or evil, the
English conquest of India took place. Of course every conquest is
bad, for conquest is an evil, foreign government is an evil, no
doubt; but even through evil comes good sometimes, and the great
good of the English conquest is this: England, nay the whole of
Europe, has to thank Greece for its civilization. It is Greece
that speaks through everything in Europe. Every building, every
piece of furniture has the impress of Greece upon it; European
science and art are nothing but Grecian. Today the ancient Greek
is meeting the ancient Hindu on the soil of India. Thus slowly and
silently the leaven has come; the broadening, the life-giving and
the revivalist movement that we see all around us has been worked
out by these forces together. A broader and more generous
conception of life is before us; and although at first we have
been deluded a little and wanted to narrow things down, we are
finding out today that these generous impulses which are at work,
these broader conceptions of life, are the logical interpretation
of what is in our ancient books. They are the carrying out, to the
rigorously logical effect, of the primary conceptions of our own
ancestors. To become broad, to go out, to amalgamate, to
universalist, is the end of our aims. And all the time we have
been making ourselves smaller and smaller, and dissociating
ourselves, contrary to the plans laid down our scriptures.
Several dangers are in the way, and one is that of the extreme
conception that we are the people in the world. With all my love
for India, and with all my patriotism and veneration for the
ancients, I cannot but think that we have to learn many things
from other nations. We must be always ready to sit at the feet of
all, for, mark you, every one can teach us great lessons. Says our
great law-giver, Manu: "Receive some good knowledge even from the
low-born, and even from the man of lowest birth learn by service
the road to heaven." We, therefore, as true children of Manu, must
obey his commands and be ready to learn the lessons of this life
or the life hereafter from any one who can teach us. At the same
time we must not forget that we have also to teach a great lesson
to the world. We cannot do without the world outside India; it was
our foolishness that we thought we could, and we have paid the
penalty by about a thousand years of slavery. That we did not go
out to compare things with other nations, did not mark the
workings that have been all around us, has been the one great
cause of this degradation of the Indian mind. We have paid the
penalty; let us do it no more. All such foolish ideas that Indians
must not go out of India are childish. They must be knocked on the
head; the more you go out and travel among the nations of the
world, the better for you and for your country. If you had done
that for hundreds of years past, you would not be here today at
the feet of every nation that wants to rule India. The first
manifest effect of life is expansion. You must expand if you want
to live. The moment you have ceased to expand, death is upon you,
danger is ahead. I went to America and Europe, to which you so
kindly allude; I have to, because that is the first sign of the
revival of national life, expansion. This reviving national life,
expanding inside, threw me off, and thousands will be thrown off
in that way. Mark my words, it has got to come if this nation
lives at all. This question, therefore, is the greatest of the
signs of the revival of national life, and through this expansion
our quota of offering to the general mass of human knowledge, our
contribution to the general upheaval of the world, is going out to
the external world.
Again, this is not a new thing. Those of you who think that the
Hindus have been always confined within the four walls of their
country through all ages, are entirely mistaken; you have not
studied the old books, you have not studied the history of the
race aright if you think so. Each nation must give in order to
live. When you give life, you will have life; when you receive,
you must pay for it by giving to all others; and that we have been
living for so many thousands of years is a fact that stares us in
the face, and the solution that remains is that we have been
always giving to the outside world, whatever the ignorant may
think. But the gift of India is the gift of religion and
philosophy, and wisdom and spirituality. And religion does not
want cohorts to march before its path and clear its way. Wisdom
and philosophy do not want to be carried on floods of blood.
Wisdom and philosophy do not march upon bleeding human bodies, do
not march with violence but come on the wings of peace and love,
and that has always been so. Therefore we had to give. I was asked
by a young lady in London, "What have you Hindus done? You have
never even conquered a single nation." That is true from the point
of view of the Englishman, the brave, the heroic, the Kshatriya -
conquest is the greatest glory that one man can have over another.
That is true from his point of view, but from ours it is quite the
opposite. If I ask myself what has been the cause of India's
greatness, I answer, because we have never conquered. That is our
glory. You are hearing every day, and sometimes, I am sorry to
say, from men who ought to know better, denunciations of our
religion, because it is not at all a conquering religion. To my
mind that is the argument why our religion is truer than any other
religion, because it never conquered, because it never shed blood,
because its mouth always shed on all, words of blessing, of peace,
words of love and sympathy. It is here and here alone that the
ideals of toleration were first preached. And it is here and here
alone that toleration and sympathy have become practical it is
theoretical in every other country, it is here and here alone,
that the Hindu builds mosques for the Mohammedans and churches for
the Christians.
So, you see, our message has gone out to the world many a time,
but slowly, silently, unperceived. It is on a par with everything
in India. The one characteristic of Indian thought is its silence,
its calmness. At the same time the tremendous power that is behind
it is never expressed by violence. It is always the silent
mesmerism of Indian thought. If a foreigner takes up our
literature to study, at first it is disgusting to him; there is
not the same stir, perhaps, the same amount of go that rouses him
instantly. Compare the tragedies of Europe with our tragedies. The
one is full of action, that rouses you for the moment, but when it
is over there comes the reaction, and everything is gone, washed
off as it were from your brains. Indian tragedies are like the
mesmerist's power, quiet, silent, but as you go on studying them
they fascinate you; you cannot move; you are bound; and whoever
has dared to touch our literature has felt the bondage, and is
there bound for ever. Like the gentle dew that falls unseen and
unheard, and yet brings into blossom the fairest of roses, has
been the contribution of India to the thought of the world.
Silent, unperceived, yet omnipotent in its effect, it has
revolutionised the thought of the world, yet nobody knows when it
did so. It was once remarked to me, "How difficult it is to
ascertain the name of any writer in India", to which I replied,
"That is the Indian idea." Indian writers are not like modern
writers who steal ninety percent of their ideas from other
authors, while only ten per cent is their own, and they take care
to write a preface in which they say, "For these ideas I am
responsible". Those great master minds producing momentous results
in the hearts of mankind were content to write their books without
even putting their names, and to die quietly, leaving the books to
posterity. Who knows the writers of our philosophy, who knows the
writers of our Purânas? They all pass under the generic name of
Vyâsa, and Kapila, and so on. They have been true children of Shri
Krishna. They have been true followers of the Gita; they
practically carried out the great mandate, "To work you have the
right, but not to the fruits thereof."
Thus India is working upon the world, but one condition is
necessary. Thoughts like merchandise can only run through channels
made by somebody. Roads have to be made before even thought can
travel from one place to another, and whenever in the history of
the world a great conquering nation has arisen, linking the
different parts of the world together, then has poured through
these channels the thought of India and thus entered into the
veins of every race. Before even the Buddhists were born, there
are evidences accumulating every day that Indian thought
penetrated the world. Before Buddhism, Vedanta had penetrated into
China, into Persia, and the Islands of the Eastern Archipelago.
Again when the mighty mind of the Greek had linked the different
parts of the Eastern world together there came Indian thought; and
Christianity with all its boasted civilisation is but a collection
of little bits of Indian thought. Ours is the religion of which
Buddhism with all its greatness is a rebel child, and of which
Christianity is a very patchy imitation. One of these cycles has
again arrived. There is the tremendous power of England which has
linked the different parts of the world together. English roads no
more are content like Roman roads to run over lands, but they have
also ploughed the deep in all directions. From ocean to ocean run
the roads of England. Every part of the world has been linked to
every other part, and electricity plays a most marvellous part as
the new messenger. Under all these circumstances we find again
India reviving and ready to give her own quota to the progress and
civilisation of the world. And that I have been forced, as it
were, by nature, to go over and preach to America and England is
the result. Every one of us ought to have seen that the time had
arrived. Everything looks propitious, and Indian thought,
philosophical and spiritual, roast once more go over and conquer
the world. The problem before us, therefore, is assuming larger
proportions every day. It is not only that we must revive our own
country - that is a small matter; I am an imaginative man - and my
idea is the conquest of the whole world by the Hindu race.
There have been great conquering races in the world. We also have
been great conquerors. The story of our conquest has been
described by that noble Emperor of India, Asoka, as the conquest
of religion and of spirituality. Once more the world must be
conquered by India. This is the dream of my life, and I wish that
each one of you who hear me today will have the same dream in your
minds, and stop not till you have realised the dream. They will
tell you every day that we had better look to our own homes first
and then go to work outside. But I will tell you in plain language
that you work best when you work for others. The best work that
you ever did for yourselves was when you worked for others, trying
to disseminate your ideas in foreign languages beyond the seas,
and this very meeting is proof how the attempt to enlighten other
countries with your thoughts is helping your own country.
One-fourth of the effect that has been produced in this country by
my going to England and America would not have been brought about,
had I confined my ideas only to India. This is the great ideal
before us, and every one must be ready for it - the Conquest of
the whole world by India - nothing less than that, and we must all
get ready for it, strain every nerve for it. Let foreigners come
and flood the land with their armies, never mind. Up, India, and
conquer the world with your spirituality! Ay, as has been declared
on this soil first, love must conquer hatred, hatred cannot
conquer itself. Materialism and all its miseries can never be
conquered by materialism. Armies when they attempt to conquer
armies only multiply and make brutes of humanity. Spirituality
must conquer the West. Slowly they are finding out that what they
want is spirituality to preserve them as nations. They are waiting
for it, they are eager for it. Where is the supply to come from?
Where are the men ready to go out to every country in the world
with the messages of the great sages of India? Where are the men
who are ready to sacrifice everything, so that this message shall
reach every corner of the world? Such heroic spurs are wanted to
help the spread of truth. Such heroic workers are wanted to go
abroad and help to disseminate the great truths of the Vedanta.
The world wants it; without it the world will be destroyed. The
whole of the Western world is on a volcano which may burst
tomorrow, go to pieces tomorrow. They have searched every corner
of the world and have found no respite. They have drunk deep of
the cup of pleasure and found it vanity. Now is the time to work
so that India's spiritual ideas may penetrate deep into the West.
Therefore young men of Madras, I specially ask you to remember
this. We must go out, we must conquer the world through our
spirituality and philosophy. There is no other alternative, we
must do it or die. The only condition of national life, of
awakened and vigorous national life, is the conquest of the world
by Indian thought.
At the same time we must not forget that what I mean by the
conquest of the world by spiritual thought is the sending out of
the life-giving principles, not the hundreds of superstitions that
we have been hugging to our breasts for centuries. These have to
be weeded out even on this soil, and thrown aside, so that they
may die for ever. These are the causes of the degradation of the
race and will lead to softening of the brain. That brain which
cannot think high and noble thoughts, which has lost all power of
originality, which has lost all vigour, that brain which is always
poisoning itself with all sorts of little superstitions passing
under the name of religion, we must beware of. In our sight, here
in India, there are several dangers. Of these, the two, Scylla and
Charybdis, rank materialism and its opposite arrant superstition,
must be avoided. There is the man today who after drinking the cup
of Western wisdom, thinks that he knows everything. He laughs at
the ancient sages. All Hindu thought to him is arrant trash -
philosophy mere child's prattle, and religion the superstition of
fools. On the other hand, there is the man educated, but a sort of
monomaniac, who runs to the other extreme and wants to explain the
omen of this and that. He has philosophical and metaphysical, and
Lord knows what other puerile explanations for every superstition
that belongs to his peculiar race, or his peculiar gods, or his
peculiar village. Every little village superstition is to him a
mandate of the Vedas, and upon the carrying out of it, according
to him, depends the national life. You must beware of this. I
would rather see every one of you rank atheists than superstitious
fools, for the atheist is alive and you can make something out of
him. But if superstition enters, the brain is gone, the brain is
softening, degradation has seized upon the life. Avoid these two.
Brave, bold men, these are what we want. What we want is vigour in
the blood, strength in the nerves, iron muscles and nerves of
steel, not softening namby-pamby ideas. Avoid all these. Avoid all
mystery. There is no mystery in religion. Is there any mystery in
the Vedanta, or in the Vedas, or in the Samhitâs, or in the
Puranas? What secret societies did the sages of yore establish to
preach their religion? What sleight-of-hand tricks are there
recorded as used by them to bring their grand truths to humanity?
Mystery mongering and superstition are always signs of weakness.
These are always signs of degradation and of death. Therefore
beware of them; be strong, and stand on your own feet. Great
things are there, most marvellous things. We may call them
supernatural things so far as our ideas of nature go, but not one
of these things is a mystery. It was never preached on this soil
that the truths of religion were mysteries or that they were the
property of secret societies sitting on the snow-caps of the
Himalayas. I have been in the Himalayas. You have not been there;
it is several hundreds of miles from your homes. I am a Sannyâsin,
and I have been for the last fourteen years on my feet. These
mysterious societies do not exist anywhere. Do not run after these
superstitions. Better for you and for the race that you become
rank atheists, because you would have strength, but these are
degradation and death. Shame on humanity that strong men should
spend their time on these superstitions, spend all their time in
inventing allegories to explain the most rotten superstitions of
the world. Be bold; do not try to explain everything that way. The
fact is that we have many superstitions, many bad spots and sores
on our body - these have to be excised, cut off, and destroyed -
but these do not destroy our religion, our national life, our
spirituality. Every principle of religion is safe, and the sooner
these black spots are purged away, the better the principles will
shine, the more gloriously. Stick to them.
You hear claims made by every religion as being the universal
religion of the world. Let me tell you in the first place that
perhaps there never will be such a thing, but if there is a
religion which can lay claim to be that, it is only our religion
and no other, because every other religion depends on some person
or persons. All the other religions have been built round the life
of what they think a historical man; and what they think the
strength of religion is really the weakness, for disprove the
historicity of the man and the whole fabric tumbles to ground.
Half the lives of these great founders of religions have been
broken into pieces, and the other half doubted very seriously. As
such, every truth that had its sanction only in their words
vanishes into air. But the truths of our religion, although we
have persons by the score, do not depend upon them. The glory of
Krishna is not that he was Krishna, but that he was the great
teacher of Vedanta. If he had not been so, his name would have
died out of India in the same way as the name of Buddha has done.
Thus our allegiance is to the principles always, and not to the
persons. Persons are but the embodiments, the illustrations of the
principles. If the principles are there, the persons will come by
the thousands and millions. If the principle is safe, persons like
Buddha will be born by the hundreds and thousands. But if the
principle is lost and forgotten and the whole of national life
tries to cling round a so-called historical person, woe unto that
religion, danger unto that religion! Ours is the only religion
that does not depend on a person or persons; it is based upon
principles. At the same time there is room for millions of
persons. There is ample ground for introducing persons, but each
one of them must be an illustration of the principles. We must not
forget that. These principles of our religion are all safe, and it
should be the life-work of everyone of us to keep then safe, and
to keep them free from the accumulating dirt and dust of ages. It
is strange that in spite of the degradation that seized upon the
race again and again, these principles of the Vedanta were never
tarnished. No one, however wicked, ever dared to throw dirt upon
them. Our scriptures are the best preserved scriptures in the
world. Compared to other books there have been no interpolations,
no text-torturing, no destroying of the essence of the thought in
them. It is there just as it was first, directing the human mind
towards the ideal, the goal.
You find that these texts have been commented upon by different
commentators, preached by great teachers, and sects founded upon
them; and you find that in these books of the Vedas there are
various apparently contradictory ideas. There are certain texts
which are entirely dualistic, others are entirely monistic. The
dualistic commentator, knowing no better, wishes to knock the
monistic texts on the head. Preachers and priests want to explain
them in the dualistic meaning. The monistic commentator serves the
dualistic texts in a similar fashion. Now this is not the fault of
the Vedas. It is foolish to attempt to prove that the whole of the
Vedas is dualistic. It is equally foolish to attempt to prove that
the whole of the Vedas is nondualistic. They are dualistic and
non-dualistic both. We understand them better today in the light
of newer ideas. These are but different conceptions leading to the
final conclusion that both dualistic and monistic conceptions are
necessary for the evolution of the mind, and therefore the Vedas
preach them. In mercy to the human race the Vedas show the various
steps to the higher goal. Not that they are contradictory, vain
words used by the Vedas to delude children; they are necessary not
only for children, but for many a grown-up man. So long as we have
a body and so long as we are deluded by the idea of our identity
with the body, so long as we have five senses and see the external
world, we must have a Personal God. For if we have all these
ideas, we must take as the great Râmânuja has proved, all the
ideas about God and nature and the individualized soul; when you
take the one you have to take the whole triangle - we cannot avoid
it. Therefore as long as you see the external world to avoid a
Personal God and a personal soul is arrant lunacy. But there may
be times in the lives of sages when the human mind transcends as
it were its own limitations, man goes even beyond nature, to the
realm of which the Shruti declares, "whence words fall back with
the mind without reaching it"; "There the eyes cannot reach nor
speech nor mind"; "We cannot say that we know it, we cannot say
that we do not know it". There the human soul transcends all
limitations, and then and then alone flashes into the human soul
the conception of monism: I and the whole universe are one; I and
Brahman are one. And this conclusion you will find has not only
been reached through knowledge and philosophy, but parts of it
through the power of love. You read in the Bhâgavata, when Krishna
disappeared and the Gopis bewailed his disappearance, that at last
the thought of Krishna became so prominent in their minds that
each one forgot her own body and thought she was Krishna, and
began to decorate herself and to play as he did. We understand,
therefore, that this identity comes even through love. There was
an ancient Persian Sufi poet, and one of his poems says, "I came
to the Beloved and beheld the door was closed; I knocked at the
door and from inside a voice came, 'Who is there?' I replied, 'I
am'. The door did not open. A second time I came and knocked at
the door and the same voice asked, 'Who is there?' 'I am
so-and-so.' The door did not open. A third time I came and the
same voice asked, 'Who is there?' 'I am Thyself, my Love', and the
door opened."
There are, therefore, many stages, and we need not quarrel about
them even if there have been quarrels among the ancient
commentators, whom all of us ought to revere; for there is no
limitation to knowledge, there is no omniscience exclusively the
property of any one in ancient or modern times. If there have been
sages and Rishis in the past, be sure that there will be many now.
If there have been Vyâsas and Vâlmikis and Shankarâchâryas in
ancient times, why may not each one of you become a
Shankaracharya? This is another point of our religion that you
must always remember, that in all other scriptures inspiration is
quoted as their authority, but this inspiration is limited to a
very few persons, and through them the truth came to the masses,
and we have all to obey them. Truth came to Jesus of Nazareth, and
we must all obey him. But the truth came to the Rishis of India -
the Mantra-drashtâs, the seers of thought - and will come to all
Rishis in the future, not to talkers, not to book-swallowers, not
to scholars, not to philologists, but to seers of thought. The
Self is not to be reached by too much talking, not even by the
highest intellects, not even by the study of the scriptures. The
scriptures themselves say so. Do you find in any other scripture
such a bold assertion as that - not even by the study of the Vedas
will you reach the Atman? You must open your heart. Religion is
not going to church, or putting marks on the forehead, or dressing
in a peculiar fashion; you may paint yourselves in all the colours
of the rainbow, but if the heart has not been opened, if you have
not realised God, it is all vain. If one has the colour of the
heart, he does not want any external colour. That is the true
religious realisation. We must not forget that colours and all
these things are good so far as they help; so far they are all
welcome. But they are apt to degenerate and instead of helping
they retard, and a man identifies religion with externalities.
Going to the temple becomes tantamount to spiritual life. Giving
something to a priest becomes tantamount to religious life. These
are dangerous and pernicious, and should be at once checked. Our
scriptures declare again and again that even the knowledge of the
external senses is not religion. That is religion which makes us
realise the Unchangeable One, and that is the religion for every
one. He who realises transcendental truth, he who realises the
Atman in his own nature, he who comes face to face with God, sees
God alone in everything, has become a Rishi. And there is no
religious life for you until you have become a Rishi. Then alone
religion begins for you, now is only the preparation. Then
religion dawns upon you, now you are only undergoing intellectual
gymnastics and physical tortures.
We must, therefore, remember that our religion lays down
distinctly and clearly that every one who wants salvation must
pass through the stage of Rishihood - must become a
Mantra-drashta, must see God. That is salvation; that is the law
laid down by our scriptures. Then it becomes easy to look into the
scripture with our own eyes, understand the meaning for ourselves,
to analyse just what we want, and to understand the truth for
ourselves. This is what has to be done. At the same time we must
pay all reverence to the ancient sages for their work. They were
great, these ancients, but we want to be greater. They did great
work in the past, but we must do greater work than they. They had
hundreds of Rishis in ancient India. We will have millions - we
are going to have, and the sooner every one of you believes in
this, the better for India and the better for the world. Whatever
you believe, that you will be. If you believe yourselves to be
sages, sages you will be tomorrow. There is nothing to obstruct
you. For if there is one common doctrine that runs through all our
apparently fighting and contradictory sects, it is that all glory,
power, and purity are within the soul already; only according to
Ramanuja, the soul contracts and expands at times, and according
to Shankara, it comes under a delusion. Never mind these
differences. All admit the truth that the power is there -
potential or manifest it is there - and the sooner you believe
that, the better for you. All power is within you; you can do
anything and everything. Believe in that, do not believe that you
are weak; do not believe that you are half-crazy lunatics, as most
of us do nowadays. You can do anything and everything without even
the guidance of any one. All power is there. Stand up and express
the divinity within you.
THE FUTURE OF INDIA
This is the ancient land where wisdom made its home before it went
into any other country, the same India whose influx of
spirituality is represented, as it were, on the material plane, by
rolling rivers like oceans, where the eternal Himalayas, rising
tier above tier with their snowcaps, look as it were into the very
mysteries of heaven. Here is the same India whose soil has been
trodden by the feet of the greatest sages that ever lived. Here
first sprang up inquiries into the nature of man and into the
internal world. Here first arose the doctrines of the immortality
of the soul, the existence of a supervising God, an immanent God
in nature and in man, and here the highest ideals of religion and
philosophy have attained their culminating points. This is the
land from whence, like the tidal waves, spirituality and
philosophy have again and again rushed out and deluged the world,
and this is the land from whence once more such tides must proceed
in order to bring life and vigour into the decaying races of
mankind. It is the same India which has withstood the shocks of
centuries, of hundreds of foreign invasions of hundreds of
upheavals of manners and customs. It is the same land which stands
firmer than any rock in the world, with its undying vigour,
indestructible life. Its life is of the same nature as the soul,
without beginning and without end, immortal; and we are the
children of such a country.
Children of India, I am here to speak to you today about some
practical things, and my object in reminding you about the glories
of the past is simply this. Many times have I been told that
looking into the past only degenerates and leads to nothing, and
that we should look to the future. That is true. But out of the
past is built the future. Look back, therefore, as far as you can,
drink deep of the eternal fountains that are behind, and after
that, look forward, march forward and make India brighter,
greater, much higher than she ever was. Our ancestors were great.
We must first recall that. We must learn the elements of our
being, the blood that courses in our veins; we must have faith in
that blood and what it did in the past; and out of that faith and
consciousness of past greatness, we must build an India yet
greater than what she has been. There have been periods of decay
and degradation. I do not attach much importance to them; we all
know that. Such periods have been necessary. A mighty tree
produces a beautiful ripe fruit. That fruit falls on the ground,
it decays and rots, and out of that decay springs the root and the
future tree, perhaps mightier than the first one. This period of
decay through which we have passed was all the more necessary. Out
of this decay is coming the India of the future; it is sprouting,
its first leaves are already out; and a mighty, gigantic tree, the
Urdhvamula, is here, already beginning to appear; and it is about
that that I am going to speak to you.
The problems in India are more complicated, more momentous, than
the problems in any other country. Race, religion, language,
government - all these together make a nation The elements which
compose the nations of the world are indeed very few, taking race
after race, compared to this country. Here have been the Aryan,
the Dravidian, the Tartar, the Turk, the Mogul, the European - all
the nations of the world, as it were, pouring their blood into
this land. Of languages the most wonderful conglomeration is here;
of manners and customs there is more difference between two Indian
races than between the European and the Eastern races.
The one common ground that we have is our sacred tradition, our
religion. That is the only common ground, and upon that we shall
have to build. In Europe, political ideas form the national unity.
In Asia, religious ideals form the national unity. The unity in
religion, therefore, is absolutely necessary as the first
condition of the future of India. There must be the recognition of
one religion throughout the length and breadth of this land. What
do I mean by one religion? Not in the sense of one religion as
held among the Christians, or the Mohammedans, of the Buddhists.
We know that our religion has certain common grounds, common to
all our sects, however varying their conclusions may be, however
different their claims may be. So there are certain common
grounds; and within their limitation this religion of ours admits
of a marvellous variation, an infinite amount of liberty to think
and live our own lives. We all know that, at least those of us who
have thought; and what we want is to bring out these lifegiving
common principles of our religion, and let every man, woman, and
child, throughout the length and breadth of this country,
understand them, know them, and try to bring them out in their
lives. This is the first step; and, therefore, it has to be taken.
We see how in Asia, and especially in India, race difficulties,
linguistic difficulties, social difficulties, national
difficulties, all melt away before this unifying power of
religion. We know that to the Indian mind there is nothing higher
than religious ideals, that this is the keynote of Indian life,
and we can only work in the line of least resistance. It is not
only true that the ideal of religion is the highest ideal; in the
case of India it is the only possible means of work; work in any
other line, without first strengthening this, would be disastrous.
Therefore the first plank in the making of a future India, the
first step that is to be hewn out of that rock of ages, is this
unification of religion. All of us have to be taught that we
Hindus - dualists, qualified monists, or monists, Shaivas,
Vaishnavas, or Pâshupatas - to whatever denomination we may
belong, have certain common ideas behind us, and that the time has
come when for the well-being of ourselves, for the well-being of
our race, we must give up all our little quarrels and differences.
Be sure, these quarrels are entirely wrong; they are condemned by
our scriptures, forbidden by our forefathers; and those great men
from whom we claim our descent, whose blood is in our veins, look
down with contempt on their children quarrelling about minute
differences.
With the giving up of quarrels all other improvements will come.
When the life-blood is strong and pure, no disease germ can live
in that body. Our life-blood is spirituality. If it flows clear,
if it flows strong and pure and vigorous, everything is right;
political, social, any other material defects, even the poverty of
the land, will all be cured if that blood is pure. For if the
disease germ be thrown out, nothing will be able to enter into the
blood. To take a simile from modern medicine, we know that there
must be two causes to produce a disease, some poison germ outside,
and the state of the body. Until the body is in a state to admit
the germs, until the body is degraded to a lower vitality so that
the germs may enter and thrive and multiply, there is no power in
any germ in the world to produce a disease in the body. In fact,
millions of germs are continually passing through everyone's body;
but so long as it is vigorous, it never is conscious of them. It
is only when the body is weak that these germs take possession of
it and produce disease. Just so with the national life. It is when
the national body is weak that all sorts of disease germs, in the
political state of the race or in its social state, in its
educational or intellectual state, crowd into the system and
produce disease. To remedy it, therefore, we must go to the root
of this disease and cleanse the blood of all impurities. The one
tendency will be to strengthen the man, to make the blood pure,
the body vigorous, so that it will be able to resist and throw off
all external poisons.
We have seen that our vigour, our strength, nay, our national life
is in our religion. I am not going to discuss now whether it is
right or not, whether it is correct or not, whether it is
beneficial or not in the long run, to have this vitality in
religion, but for good or evil it is there; you cannot get out of
it, you have it now and for ever, and you have to stand by it,
even if you have not the same faith that I have in our religion.
You are bound by it, and if you give it up, you are smashed to
pieces. That is the life of our race and that must be
strengthened. You have withstood the shocks of centuries simply
because you took great care of it, you sacrificed everything else
for it. Your forefathers underwent everything boldly, even death
itself, but preserved their religion. Temple alter temple was
broken down by the foreign conqueror, but no sooner had the wave
passed than the spire of the temple rose up again. Some of these
old temples of Southern India and those like Somnâth of Gujarat
will teach you volumes of wisdom, will give you a keener insight
into the history of the race than any amount of books. Mark how
these temples bear the marks of a hundred attacks and a hundred
regenerations, continually destroyed and continually springing up
out of the ruins, rejuvenated and strong as ever! That is the
national mind, that is the national life-current. Follow it and it
leads to glory. Give it up and you die; death will be the only
result, annihilation the only effect, the moment you step beyond
that life-current. I do not mean to say that other things are not
necessary. I do not mean to say that political or social
improvements are not necessary, but what I mean is this, and I
want you to bear it in mind, that they are secondary here and that
religion is primary. The Indian mind is first religious, then
anything else. So this is to be strengthened, and how to do it? I
will lay before you my ideas. They have been in my mind for a long
time, even years before I left the shores of Madras for America,
and that I went to America and England was simply for propagating
those ideas. I did not care at all for the Parliament of Religions
or anything else; it was simply an opportunity; for it was really
those ideas of mine that took me all over the world.
My idea is first of all to bring out the gems of spirituality that
are stored up in our books and in the possession of a few only,
hidden, as it were, in monasteries and in forests - to bring them
out; to bring the knowledge out of them, not only from the hands
where it is hidden, but from the still more inaccessible chest,
the language in which it is preserved, the incrustation of
centuries of Sanskrit words. In one word, I want to make them
popular. I want to bring out these ideas and let them be the
common property of all, of every man in India, whether he knows
the Sanskrit language or not. The great difficulty in the way is
the Sanskrit language - the glorious language of ours; and this
difficulty cannot be removed until - if it is possible - the whole
of our nation are good Sanskrit scholars. You will understand the
difficulty when I tell you that I have been studying this language
all my life, and yet every new book is new to me. How much more
difficult would it then be for people who never had time to study
the language thoroughly! Therefore the ideas must be taught in the
language of the people; at the same time, Sanskrit education must
go on along with it, because the very sound of Sanskrit words
gives a prestige and a power and a strength to the race. The
attempts of the great Ramanuja and of Chaitanya and of Kabir to
raise the lower classes of India show that marvellous results were
attained during the lifetime of those great prophets; yet the
later failures have to be explained, and cause shown why the
effect of their teachings stopped almost within a century of the
passing away of these great Masters. The secret is here. They
raised the lower classes; they had all the wish that these should
come up, but they did not apply their energies to the spreading of
the Sanskrit language among the masses. Even the great Buddha made
one false step when he stopped the Sanskrit language from being
studied by the masses. He wanted rapid and immediate results, and
translated and preached in the language of the day, Pâli. That was
grand; he spoke in the language of the people, and the people
understood him. That was great; it spread the ideas quickly and
made them reach far and wide. But along with that, Sanskrit ought
to have spread. Knowledge came, but the prestige was not there,
culture was not there. It is culture that withstands shocks, not a
simple mass of knowledge. You can put a mass of knowledge into the
world, but that will not do it much good. There must come culture
into the blood. We all know in modern times of nations which have
masses of knowledge, but what of them? They are like tigers, they
are like savages, because culture is not there. Knowledge is only
skin-deep, as civilisation is, and a little scratch brings out the
old savage. Such things happen; this is the danger. Teach the
masses in the vernaculars, give them ideas; they will get
information, but something more is necessary; give them culture.
Until you give them that, there can be no permanence in the raised
condition of the masses. There will be another caste created,
having the advantage of the Sanskrit language, which will quickly
get above the rest and rule them all the same. The only safety, I
tell you men who belong to the lower castes, the only way to raise
your condition is to study Sanskrit, and this fighting and writing
and frothing against the higher castes is in vain, it does no
good, and it creates fight and quarrel, and this race,
unfortunately already divided, is going to be divided more and
more. The only way to bring about the levelling of caste is to
appropriate the culture, the education which is the strength of
the higher castes. That done, you have what you want
In connection with this I want to discuss one question which it
has a particular bearing with regard to Madras. There is a theory
that there was a race of mankind in Southern India called
Dravidians, entirely differing from another race in Northern India
called the Aryans, and that the Southern India Brâhmins are the
only Aryans that came from the North, the other men of Southern
India belong to an entirely different caste and race to those of
Southern India Brahmins. Now I beg your pardon, Mr. Philologist,
this is entirely unfounded. The only proof of it is that there is
a difference of language between the North and the South. I do not
see any other difference. We are so many Northern men here, and I
ask my European friends to pick out the Northern and Southern men
from this assembly. Where is the difference? A little difference
of language. But the Brahmins are a race that came here speaking
the Sanskrit language! Well then, they took up the Dravidian
language and forgot their Sanskrit. Why should not the other
castes have done the same? Why should not all the other castes
have come one after the other from Northern India, taken up the
Dravidian language, and so forgotten their own? That is an
argument working both ways. Do not believe in such silly things.
There may have been a Dravidian people who vanished from here, and
the few who remained lived in forests and other places. It is
quite possible that the language may have been taken up, but all
these are Aryans who came from the North. The whole of India is
Aryan, nothing else.
Then there is the other idea that the Shudra caste are surely the
aborigines. What are they? They are slaves. They say history
repeats itself. The Americans, English, Dutch, and the Portuguese
got hold of the poor Africans and made them work hard while they
lived, and their children of mixed birth were born in slavery and
kept in that condition for a long period. From that wonderful
example, the mind jumps back several thousand years and fancies
that the same thing happened here, and our archaeologist dreams of
India being full of dark-eyed aborigines, and the bright Aryan
came from - the Lord knows where. According to some, they came
from Central Tibet, others will have it that they came from
Central Asia. There are patriotic Englishmen who think that the
Aryans were all red-haired. Others, according to their idea, think
that they were all black-haired. If the writer happens to be a
black-haired man, the Aryans were all black-haired. Of late, there
was an attempt made to prove that the Aryans lived on the Swiss
lakes. I should not be sorry if they had been all drowned there,
theory and all. Some say now that they lived at the North Pole.
Lord bless the Aryans and their habitations! As for the truth of
these theories, there is not one word in our scriptures, not one,
to prove that the Aryan ever came from anywhere outside of India,
and in ancient India was included Afghanistan. There it ends. And
the theory that the Shudra caste were all non-Aryans and they were
a multitude, is equally illogical and equally irrational. It could
not have been possible in those days that a few Aryans settled and
lived there with a hundred thousand slaves at their command. These
slaves would have eaten them up, made "chutney" of them in five
minutes. The only explanation is to be found in the Mahâbhârata,
which says that in the beginning of the Satya Yuga there was one
caste, the Brahmins, and then by difference of occupations they
went on dividing themselves into different castes, and that is the
only true and rational explanation that has been given. And in the
coming Satya Yuga all the other castes will have to go back to the
same condition.
The solution of the caste problem in India, therefore, assumes
this form, not to degrade the higher castes, not to crush out the
Brahmin. The Brahminhood is the ideal of humanity in India, as
wonderfully put forward by Shankaracharya at the beginning of his
commentary on the Gitâ, where he speaks about the reason for
Krishna's coming as a preacher for the preservation of
Brahminhood, of Brahminness. That was the great end. This Brahmin,
the man of God, he who has known Brahman, the ideal man, the
perfect man, must remain; he must not go. And with all the defects
of the caste now, we know that we must all be ready to give to the
Brahmins this credit, that from them have come more men with real
Brahminness in them than from all the other castes. That is true.
That is the credit due to them from all the other castes. We must
be bold enough, must be brave enough to speak of their defects,
but at the same time we must give the credit that is due to them.
Remember the old English proverb, "Give every man his due".
Therefore, my friends, it is no use fighting among the castes.
What good will it do? It will divide us all the more, weaken us
all the more, degrade us all the more. The days of exclusive
privileges and exclusive claims are gone, gone for ever from the
soil of India, and it is one of the great blessings of the British
Rule in India. Even to the Mohammedan Rule we owe that great
blessing, the destruction of exclusive privilege. That Rule was,
after all, not all bad; nothing is all bad, and nothing is all
good. The Mohammedan conquest of India came as a salvation to the
downtrodden, to the poor. That is why one-fifth of our people have
become Mohammedans. It was not the sword that did it all. It would
be the height of madness to think it was all the work of sword and
fire. And one-fifth - one-half - of your Madras people will become
Christians if you do not take care. Was there ever a sillier thing
before in the world than what I saw in Malabar country? The poor
Pariah is not allowed to pass through the same street as the
high-caste man, but if he changes his name to a hodge-podge
English name, it is all right; or to a Mohammedan name, it is all
right. What inference would you draw except that these Malabaris
are all lunatics, their homes so many lunatic asylums, and that
they are to be treated with derision by every race in India until
they mend their manners and know better. Shame upon them that such
wicked and diabolical customs are allowed; their own children are
allowed to die of starvation, but as soon as they take up some
other religion they are well fed. There ought to be no more fight
between the castes.
The solution is not by bringing down the higher, but by raising
the lower up to the level of the higher. And that is the line of
work that is found in all our books, in spite of what you may hear
from some people whose knowledge of their own scriptures and whose
capacity to understand the mighty plans of the ancients are only
zero. They do not understand, but those do that have brains, that
have the intellect to grasp the whole scope of the work. They
stand aside and follow the wonderful procession of national life
through the ages. They can trace it step by step through all the
books, ancient and modern. What is the plan? The ideal at one end
is the Brahmin and the ideal at the other end is the Chandâla, and
the whole work is to raise the Chandala up to the Brahmin. Slowly
and slowly you find more and more privileges granted to them.
There are books where you read such fierce words as these: "If the
Shudra hears the Vedas, fill his ears with molten lead, and if he
remembers a line, cut his tongue out. If he says to the Brahmin,
'You Brahmin', cut his tongue out". This is diabolical old
barbarism no doubt; that goes without saying; but do not blame the
law-givers, who simply record the customs of some section of the
community. Such devils sometimes arose among the ancients. There
have been devils everywhere more or less in all ages. Accordingly,
you will find that later on, this tone is modified a little, as
for instance, "Do not disturb the Shudras, but do not teach them
higher things". Then gradually we find in other Smritis,
especially in those that have full power now, that if the Shudras
imitate the manners and customs of the Brahmins they do well, they
ought to be encouraged. Thus it is going on. I have no time to
place before you all these workings, nor how they can be traced in
detail; but coming to plain facts, we find that all the castes are
to rise slowly and slowly. There are thousands of castes, and some
are even getting admission into Brahminhood, for what prevents any
caste from declaring they are Brahmins? Thus caste, with all its
rigour, has been created in that manner. Let us suppose that there
are castes here with ten thousand people in each. If these put
their heads together and say, we will call ourselves Brahmins,
nothing can stop them; I have seen it in my own life. Some castes
become strong, and as soon as they all agree, who is to say nay?
Because whatever it was, each caste was exclusive of the other. It
did not meddle with others' affairs; even the several divisions of
one caste did not meddle with the other divisions, and those
powerful epoch-makers, Shankaracharya and others, were the great
caste-makers. I cannot tell you all the wonderful things they
fabricated, and some of you may resent what I have to say. But in
my travels and experiences I have traced them out, and have
arrived at most wonderful results. They would sometimes get hordes
of Baluchis and at once make them Kshatriyas, also get hold of
hordes of fishermen and make them Brahmins forthwith. They were
all Rishis and sages, and we have to bow down to their memory. So,
be you all Rishis and sages; that is the secret. More or less we
shall all be Rishis. What is meant by a Rishi? The pure one. Be
pure first, and you will have power. Simply saying, "I am a
Rishi", will not do; but when you are a Rishi you will find that
others obey you instinctively. Something mysterious emanates from
you, which makes them follow you, makes them hear you, makes them
unconsciously, even against their will, carry out your plans. That
is Rishihood.
Now as to the details, they of course have to be worked out
through generations. But this is merely a suggestion in order to
show you that these quarrels should cease. Especially do I regret
that in Moslem times there should be so much dissension between
the castes. This must stop. It is useless on both sides,
especially on the side of the higher caste, the Brahmin, because
the day for these privileges and exclusive claims is gone. The
duty of every aristocracy is to dig its own grave, and the sooner
it does so, the better. The more it delays, the more it will
fester and the worse death it will die. It is the duty of the
Brahmin, therefore, to work for the salvation of the rest of
mankind in India. If he does that, and so long as he does that, he
is a Brahmin, but he is no Brahmin when he goes about making
money. You on the other hand should give help only to the real
Brahmin who deserves it; that leads to heaven. But sometimes a
gift to another person who does not deserve it leads to the other
place, says our scripture. You must be on your guard about that.
He only is the Brahmin who has no secular employment. Secular
employment is not for the Brahmin but for the other castes. To the
Brahmins I appeal, that they must work hard to raise the Indian
people by teaching them what they know, by giving out the culture
that they have accumulated for centuries. It is clearly the duty
of the Brahmins of India to remember what real Brahminhood is. As
Manu says, all these privileges and honours are given to the
Brahmin, because "with him is the treasury of virtue". He must
open that treasury and distribute its valuables to the world. It
is true that he was the earliest preacher to the Indian races, he
was the first to renounce everything in order to attain to the
higher realisation of life before others could reach to the idea.
It was not his fault that he marched ahead of the other caste. Why
did not the other castes so understand and do as he did? Why did
they sit down and be lazy, and let the Brahmins win the race?
But it is one thing to gain an advantage, and another thing to
preserve it for evil use. Whenever power is used for evil, it
becomes diabolical; it must be used for good only. So this
accumulated culture of ages of which the Brahmin has been the
trustee, he must now give to the people at large, and it was
because he did not give it to the people that the Mohammedan
invasion was possible. It was because he did not open this
treasury to the people from the beginning, that for a thousand
years we have been trodden under the heels of every one who chose
to come to India. It was through that we have become degraded, and
the first task must be to break open the cells that hide the
wonderful treasures which our common ancestors accumulated; bring
them out and give them to everybody and the Brahmin must be the
first to do it. There is an old superstition in Bengal that if the
cobra that bites, sucks out his own poison from the patient, the
man must survive. Well then, the Brahmin must suck out his own
poison. To the non-Brahmin castes I say, wait, be not in a hurry.
Do not seize every opportunity of fighting the Brahmin, because,
as I have shown, you are suffering from your own fault. Who told
you to neglect spirituality and Sanskrit learning? What have you
been doing all this time? Why have you been indifferent? Why do
you now fret and fume because somebody else had more brains, more
energy, more pluck and go, than you? Instead of wasting your
energies in vain discussions and quarrels in the newspapers,
instead of fighting and quarrelling in your own homes - which is
sinful - use all your energies in acquiring the culture which the
Brahmin has, and the thing is done. Why do you not become Sanskrit
scholars? Why do you not spend millions to bring Sanskrit
education to all the castes of India? That is the question. The
moment you do these things, you are equal to the Brahmin. That is
the secret of power in India.
Sanskrit and prestige go together in India. As soon as you have
that, none dares say anything against you. That is the one secret;
take that up. The whole universe, to use the ancient Advaitist's
simile, is in a state of self-hypnotism. It is will that is the
power. It is the man of strong will that throws, as it were, a
halo round him and brings all other people to the same state of
vibration as he has in his own mind. Such gigantic men do appear.
And what is the idea? When a powerful individual appears, his
personality infuses his thoughts into us, and many of us come to
have the same thoughts, and thus we become powerful. Why is it
that organizations are so powerful? Do not say organization is
material. Why is it, to take a case in point, that forty millions
of Englishmen rule three hundred millions of people here? What is
the psychological explanation? These forty millions put their
wills together and that means infinite power, and you three
hundred millions have a will each separate from the other.
Therefore to make a great future India, the whole secret lies in
organization, accumulation of power, co-ordination of wills.
Already before my mind rises one of the marvellous verses of the
Rig-Veda Samhitâ which says, "Be thou all of one mind, be thou all
of one thought, for in the days of yore, the gods being of one
mind were enabled to receive oblations." That the gods can be
worshipped by men is because they are of one mind. Being of one
mind is the secret of society. And the more you go on fighting and
quarrelling about all trivialities such as "Dravidian" and
"Aryan", and the question of Brahmins and non-Brahmins and all
that, the further you are off from that accumulation of energy and
power which is going to make the future India. For mark you, the
future India depends entirely upon that. That is the secret -
accumulation of will-power, co-ordination, bringing them all, as
it here, into one focus. Each Chinaman thinks in his own way, and
a handful of Japanese all think in the same way, and you know the
result. That is how it goes throughout the history of the world.
You find in every case, compact little nations always governing
and ruling huge unwieldy nations, and this is natural, because it
is easier for the little compact nations to bring their ideas into
the same focus, and thus they become developed. And the bigger the
nation, the more unwieldy it is. Born, as it were, a disorganised
mob, they cannot combine. All these dissensions must stop.
There is yet another defect in us. Ladies, excuse me, but through
centuries of slavery, we have become like a nation of women. You
scarcely can get three women together for five minutes in this
country or any other country, but they quarrel. Women make big
societies in European countries, and make tremendous declarations
of women's power and so on; then they quarrel, and some man comes
and rules them all. All over the world they still require some man
to rule them. We are like them. Women we are. If a woman comes to
lead women, they all begin immediately to criticise her, tear her
to pieces, and make her sit down. If a man comes and gives them a
little harsh treatment, scolds them now and then, it is all right,
they have been used to that sort of mesmerism. The whole world is
full of such mesmerists and hypnotists. In the same way, if one of
our countrymen stands up and tries to become great, we all try to
hold him down, but if a foreigner comes and tries to kick us, it
is all right. We have been used to it, have we not? And slaves
must become great masters! So give up being a slave. For the next
fifty years this alone shall be our keynote - this, our great
Mother India. Let all other vain gods disappear for the time from
our minds. This is the only god that is awake, our own race -
"everywhere his hands, everywhere his feet, everywhere his ears,
he covers everything." All other gods are sleeping. What vain gods
shall we go after and yet cannot worship the god that we see all
round us, the Virât? When we have worshipped this, we shall be
able to worship all other gods. Before we can crawl half a mile,
we want to cross the ocean like Hanumân! It cannot be. Everyone
going to be a Yogi, everyone going to meditate! It cannot be. The
whole day mixing with the world with Karma Kânda, and in the
evening sitting down and blowing through your nose! Is it so easy?
Should Rishis come flying through the air, because you have blown
three times through the nose? Is it a joke? It is all nonsense.
What is needed is Chittashuddhi, purification of the heart. And
how does that come? The first of all worship is the worship of the
Virat - of those all around us. Worship It. Worship is the exact
equivalent of the Sanskrit word, and no other English word will
do. These are all our gods - men and animals; and the first gods
we have to worship are our countrymen. These we have to worship,
instead of being jealous of each other and fighting each other. It
is the most terrible Karma for which we are suffering, and yet it
does not open our eyes!
Well, the subject is so great that I do not know where to stop,
and I must bring my lecture to a close by placing before you in a
few words the plans I want to carry out in Madras. We must have a
hold on the spiritual and secular education of the nation. Do you
understand that? You must dream it, you must talk it, you must
think its and you must work it out. Till then there is no
salvation for the race. The education that you are getting now has
some good points, but it has a tremendous disadvantage which is so
great that the good things are all weighed down. In the first
place it is not a man-making education, it is merely and entirely
a negative education. A negative education or any training that is
based on negation, is worse than death. The child is taken to
school, and the first thing he learns is that his father is a
fool, the second thing that his grandfather is a lunatic, the
third thing that all his teachers are hypocrites, the fourth that
all the sacred books are lies! By the time he is sixteen he is a
mass of negation, lifeless and boneless. And the result is that
fifty years of such education has not produced one original man in
the three Presidencies. Every man of originality that has been
produced has been educated elsewhere, and not in this country, or
they have gone to the old universities once more to cleanse
themselves of superstitions. Education is not the amount of
information that is put into your brain and runs riot there,
undigested, all your life. We must have life-building, man-making,
character-making assimilation of ideas. If you have assimilated
five ideas and made them your life and character, you have more
education than any man who has got by heart a whole library
यथा खरश्चन्दनभारवाही भारस्य वेत्ता न तु चन्दनस्य।
- "The ass carrying its load of sandalwood knows only the weight
and not the value of the sandalwood." If education is identical
with information, the libraries are the greatest sages in the
world, and encyclopaedias are the Rishis. The ideal, therefore, is
that we must have the whole education of our country, spiritual
and secular, in our own hands, and it must be on national lines,
through national methods as far as practical.
Of course this is a very big scheme, a very big plan. I do not
know whether it will ever work out. But we must begin the work.
But how? Take Madras, for instance. We must have a temple, for
with Hindus religion must come first. Then, you may say, all sects
will quarrel about it. But we will make it a non-sectarian temple,
having only "Om" as the symbol, the greatest symbol of any sect.
If there is any sect here which believes that "Om" ought not to be
the symbol, it has no right to call itself Hindu. All will have
the right to interpret Hinduism, each one according to his own
sect ideas, but we must have a common temple. You can have your
own images and symbols in other places, but do not quarrel here
with those who differ from you. Here should be taught the common
grounds of our different sects, and at the same time the different
sects should have perfect liberty to come and teach their
doctrines, with only one restriction, that is, not to quarrel with
other sects. Say what you have to say, the world wants it; but the
world has no time to hear what you think about other people; you
can keep that to yourselves.
Secondly, in connection with this temple there should be an
institution to train teachers who must go about preaching religion
and giving secular education to our people; they must carry both.
As we have been already carrying religion from door to door, let
us along with it carry secular education also. That can be easily
done. Then the work will extend through these bands of teachers
and preachers, and gradually we shall have similar temples in
other places, until we have covered the whole of India. That is my
plan. It may appear gigantic, but it is much needed. You may ask,
where is the money. Money is not needed. Money is nothing. For the
last twelve years of my life, I did not know where the next meal
would come from; but money and everything else I want must come,
because they are my slaves, and not I theirs; money and everything
else must come. Must - that is the word. Where are the men? That
is the question. Young men of Madras, my hope is in you. Will you
respond to the call of your nation? Each one of you has a glorious
future if you dare believe me. Have a tremendous faith in
yourselves, like the faith I had when I was a child, and which I
am working out now. Have that faith, each one of you, in yourself
- that eternal power is lodged in every soul - and you will revive
the whole of India. Ay, we will then go to every country under the
sun, and our ideas will before long be a component of the many
forces that are working to make up every nation in the world. We
must enter into the life of every race in India and abroad; shall
have to work to bring this about. Now for that, I want young men.
"It is the young, the strong, and healthy, of sharp intellect that
will reach the Lord", say the Vedas. This is the time to decide
your future - while you possess the energy of youth, not when you
are worn out and jaded, but in the freshness and vigour of youth.
Work - this is the time; for the freshest, the untouched, and
unsmelled flowers alone are to be laid at the feet of the Lord,
and such He receives. Rouse yourselves, therefore, or life is
short. There are greater works to be done than aspiring to become
lawyers and picking quarrels and such things. A far greater work
is this sacrifice of yourselves for the benefit of your race, for
the welfare of humanity. What is in this life? You are Hindus, and
there is the instinctive belief in you that life is eternal.
Sometimes I have young men come and talk to me about atheism; I do
not believe a Hindu can become an atheist. He may read European
books, and persuade himself he is a materialist, but it is only
for a time. It is not in your blood. You cannot believe what is
not in your constitution; it would be a hopeless task for you. Do
not attempt that sort of thing. I once attempted it when I was a
boy, but it could not be. Life is short, but the soul is immortal
and eternal, and one thing being certain, death, let us therefore
take up a great ideal and give up our whole life to it. Let this
be our determination, and may He, the Lord, who "comes again and
again for the salvation of His own people", to quote from our
scriptures - may the great Krishna bless us and lead us all to the
fulfilment of our aims!