VEDANTISM
At Khetri on 20th
December 1897, Swami Vivekananda delivered a lecture on Vedantism in the
hall of the Maharaja's bungalow in which he lodged with his disciples.
The Swami was introduced by the Raja, who was the president of the
meeting; and he spoke for more than an hour and a half. The Swami was at
his best, and it was a matter of regret that no shorthand writer was
present to report this interesting lecture at length. The following is a
summary from notes taken down at the time:
Two
nations of yore, namely the Greek and the Aryan placed in different
environments and circumstances — the former, surrounded by all that
was beautiful, sweet, and tempting in nature, with an invigorating
climate, and the latter, surrounded on every side by all that was
sublime, and born and nurtured in a climate which did not allow of much
physical exercise — developed two peculiar and different ideals of
civilization. The study of the Greeks was the outer infinite, while that
of the Aryans was the inner infinite; one studied the macrocosm, and the
other the microcosm. Each had its distinct part to play in the
civilisation of the world. Not that one was required to borrow from the
other, but if they compared notes both would be the gainers. The Aryans
were by nature an analytical race. In the sciences of mathematics and
grammar wonderful fruits were gained, and by the analysis of mind the
full tree was developed. In Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato, and the
Egyptian neo-Platonists, we can find traces of Indian thought.
The Swami then
traced in detail the influence of Indian thought on Europe and showed
how at different periods Spain, Germany, and other European countries
were greatly influenced by it. The Indian prince, Dârâ-Shuko,
translated the Upanishads into Persian, and a Latin translation of the
same was seen by Schopenhauer, whose philosophy was moulded by these.
Next to him, the philosophy of Kant also shows traces of the teachings
of the Upanishads. In Europe it is the interest in comparative philology
that attracts scholars to the study of Sanskrit, though there are men
like Deussen who take interest in philosophy for its own sake. The Swami
hoped that in future much more interest would be taken in the study of
Sanskrit. He then showed that the word "Hindu" in former times
was full of meaning, as referring to the people living beyond the Sindhu
or the Indus; it is now meaningless, representing neither the nation nor
their religion, for on this side of the Indus, various races professing
different religions live at the present day.
The Swami then
dwelt at length on the Vedas and stated that they were not spoken by any
person, but the ideas were evolving slowly and slowly until they were
embodied in book form, and then that book became the authority. He said
that various religions were embodied in books: the power of books seemed
to be infinite. The Hindus have their Vedas, and will have to hold on to
them for thousands of years more, but their ideas about them are to be
changed and built anew on a solid foundation of rock. The Vedas, he
said, were a huge literature. Ninety-nine per cent of them were missing;
they were in the keeping of certain families, with whose extinction the
books were lost. But still, those that are left now could not be
contained even in a large hall like that. They severe written in
language archaic and simple; their grammar was very crude, so much so
that it was said that some part of the Vedas had no meaning.
He then dilated on
the two portions of the Vedas — the Karma Kânda and the Jnâna Kânda.
The Karma Kanda, he said, were the Samhitâs and the Brâhmanas. The
Brahmanas dealt with sacrifices. The Samhitas were
songs
composed in Chhandas known as Anushtup, Trishtup, Jagati, etc. Generally
they praised deities such as Varuna or Indra; and the question arose who
were these deities; and if any theories were raised about them, they
were smashed up by other theories, and so on it went.
The Swami then
proceeded to explain different ideas of worship. With the ancient
Babylonians, the soul was only a double, having no individuality of its
own and not able to break its connection with the body. This double was
believed to suffer hunger and thirst, feelings and emotions like those
of the old body. Another idea was that if the first body was injured the
double would be injured also; when the first was annihilated, the double
also perished; so the tendency grew to preserve the body, and thus
mummies, tombs, and graves came into existence. The Egyptians, the
Babylonians, and the Jews never got any farther than this idea of the
double; they did not reach to the idea of the Âtman beyond.
Prof Max Müller's
opinion was that not the least trace of ancestral worship could be found
in the Rig-Veda. There we do not meet with the horrid sight of mummies
staring stark and blank at us. There the gods were friendly to man;
communion between the worshipper and the worshipped was healthy. There
was no moroseness, no want of simple joy, no lack of smiles or light in
the eyes. The Swami said that dwelling on the Vedas he even seemed to
hear the laughter of the gods. The Vedic Rishis might not have had
finish in their expression, but they were men of culture and heart, and
we are brutes in comparison to them. Swamiji then recited several
Mantras in confirmation of what he had just said: "Carry him to the
place where the Fathers live, where there is no grief or sorrow"
etc. Thus the idea arose that the sooner the dead body was cremated the
better. By degrees they came to know that there was a finer body that
went to a place where there was all joy and no sorrow. In the Semitic
type
of
religion there was tribulation and fear; it was thought that if a man
saw God, he would die. But according to the Rig-Veda, when a man saw God
face to face then began his real life.
Now the questions
came to be asked: What were these gods? Sometimes Indra came and helped
man; sometimes Indra drank too much Soma. Now and again, adjectives such
as all-powerful, all-pervading, were attributed to him; the same was the
case with Varuna. In this way it went on, and some of these Mantras
depicting the characteristics of these gods were marvellous, and the
language was exceedingly grand. The speaker here repeated the famous Nâsadiya
Sukta which describes the Pralaya state and in which occurs the idea
of "Darkness covering darkness", and asked if the persons that
described these sublime ideas in such poetic thought were uncivilised
and uncultured, then what we should call ourselves. It was not for him,
Swamiji said, to criticise or pass any judgment on those Rishis and
their gods — Indra or Varuna. All this was like a panorama, unfolding
one scene after another, and behind them all as a background stood out
— "That which exists is One; sages call It variously." The
whole thing was most mystical, marvellous, and exquisitely beautiful. It
seemed even yet quite unapproachable — the veil was so thin that it
would rend, as it were, at the least touch and vanish like a mirage.
Continuing, he
said that one thing seemed to him quite clear and possible that the
Aryans too, like the Greeks, went to outside nature for their solution,
that nature tempted them outside, led them step by step to the outward
world, beautiful and good. But here in India anything which was not
sublime counted for nothing. It never occurred to the Greeks to pry into
the secrets after death. But here from the beginning was asked again and
again "What am I? What will become of me after death?" There
the Greek thought — the man died and went to
heaven.
What was meant by going to heaven? It meant going outside of everything;
there was nothing inside, everything was outside; his search was all
directed outside, nay, he himself was, as it were, outside himself. And
when he went to a place which was very much like this world minus all
its sorrows, he thought he had got everything that was desirable and was
satisfied; and there all ideas of religion stopped. But this did not
satisfy the Hindu mind. In its analysis, these heavens were all included
within the material universe. "Whatever comes by combination",
the Hindus said, "dies of annihilation". They asked external
nature, "Do you know what is soul?" and nature answered,
"No". "Is there any God?" Nature answered, "I
do not know". Then they turned away from nature. They understood
that external nature, however great and grand, was limited in space and
time. Then there arose another voice; new sublime thoughts dawned in
their minds. That voice said — "Neti, Neti", "Not this,
not this". All the different gods were now reduced into one; the
suns, moons, and stars — nay, the whole universe — were one, and
upon this new ideal the spiritual basis of religion was built.
"There
the sun doth not shine, neither the moon, nor stars, nor lightning, what
to speak of this fire. He shining, everything doth shine. Through Him
everything shineth." No more is there that limited, crude, personal
idea; no more is there that little idea of God sitting in judgment; no
more is that search outside, but henceforth it is directed inside. Thus
the Upanishads became the Bible of India. It was a vast literature,
these Upanishads, and all the schools holding different opinions in
India came to be established on the foundation of the Upanishads.
The Swami passed
on to the dualistic, qualified monistic, and Advaitic theories, and
reconciled them by