(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
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 per cent ot 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
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 limi
tations,
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
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.