| |
He was one of the "Seven Sages", brought down by
Sri Ramakrishna for the good of the world. What are the implications
of this, for our society today? As I study him I see him as a
mind of the first order, applying itself not only to the traditional
science of the spiritual life, but to all human problems,
as far as he encountered them. We have an important question
here: Should philosophers become kings? i.e., how far into society
as an organism should one go who is vowed to be "out of
society?" Does his detachment make for better wisdom? The
Greeks usually said yes. The Hindus usually no. Swami
Vivekananda, however, was more than a traditional monk: he was
patriot and prophet as well, and in this respect joined in his
own body of thought both Eastern and Western elements.
Swami Vivekananda is one of the very few sannyasins to turn his
mind to more than just "religion," and he has spoken
on many of the issues of his day which remain issues for ours.
Importantly, he looked upon religion itself as "the fulfillment
of the perfection in man." He was a great humanist, who
picked up European social ideas and fleshed them out with philosophic
underpinning and implication. As a prophet he foresaw the twentieth
century as the age "of labor and the sudras and of
women", predicting the rise of Russia and China. He also
said the Indian ideas would go to every country under the sun
and, before long, become a component of their many forces. It
should be obvious by now that the Western world's dream of attaining
happiness or permanent success through materialism has been a
failure. Certainly Vivekananda did say, "Bread first; then
religion," but for those who have too much bread? What about
them? It is fine to have computers and color television, but
do we not see that it is the Orient alone which has understood
the finer dimensions of happiness? It is never in the machine;
it is in the human mind. This was his message.
Today we find ourselves in a world beset with horrendous problems
and dilemmas, and we have not yet evaded the threat of nuclear
war. What does Swamiji have to say to us? It plays out on two
levels: first as he addressed the problem on the level of the
problem; and later, how he made us look behind it.
Let us begin with
Crime and public morality
The facts are that punishment for crime often foments more crime
than it prevents. The enforcers of law are as often corrupt and
unlawful as not. And we could go on and on.
"If it is social opinion that makes us moral, then really
we are little better than animals," he said. "It is
inner strength only that can curb the vicious tendencies."
He told Indian boys, "You will be nearer to God by playing
football than by studying the Gita." "Strength
is the medicine for the world's disease." He encouraged
athletic and bodily development in all who were effete. How sad
he would feel, now, to see the dearth of Indian Olympians at
the Games, and the commercializing of sports!
Swamiji saw crime as the result,
not only of the injustices of society, but more the lack of self-esteem
in the individual, and the impoverishment of higher ideals. He
compared the social fabric of India with that of America, and
felt that the Indian marriage system, in spite of its glaring
injustices, was superior to the promiscuity (already rampant
in his day) of the romantic West. He was getting wind of the
license Freudianism was going to bring. He did not try to be
a Manu, defining particular codes of conduct. Following his Master,
he could prescribe for human nature only turning our base impulses
in a higher direction: there was no other solution. "Consciously
or unconsciously," he said, "that Indian idea of the
divinity within everyone will express itself even in other countries."
Behind the drunkard, behind the abuser, he saw the crushed and
struggling divinity. "Do not seek help from anyone. There
is only one sin: weakness. Be strong, physically, mentally, morally."
Family breakdown
We have known for long that just producing valedictorians and
spelling geniuses in not enough to warranty the continuity of
high culture. Hear Vivekananda: "It is the culture of the
heart, really, not that of the intellect, that will lessen the
misery of the world." "It is culture that withstands
shocks, not learning! And we are finding that our children
face many shocks, more every day. To the Christians he said,
"Make yourselves decent people...Be chaste and pure...There
is no other way. Did Christ find any other way? 'Except ye become
as a little child, ye may not enter the Kingdom of Heaven.'"
He told us how to love a wife or a husband: "It is not our
love that makes us miserable, but the fact that we want
love in return." Always give, do not demand, he said. Swamiji
was not a "reformer" in the sense of pulling down social
systems. He approved the idea of a caste system, but not the
latter-day applications of it; with proper amendments he thought
it good for a society.
As to family coherence, he knew that "those who cannot discipline
themselves cannot control their children and pointed out the
folly of expecting the offspring not to follow their parents'
conduct.
What we would like others to do, we had better do, ourselves.
Health care
Sri Ramakrishna had been eclectic in his resort to methods
of medical practice. He used to say that the Ayur Vedic treatments
were good for the "Satya Yuga", the days of the rishis
when time was abundant. They worked too slowly for modern
times. But when stricken by cancer at the end, he would let all
the schools of medicine try their hand! Swami Vivekananda too,
in his approach to health and treatment, felt that all types
of health management could be tried. He had no high opinion of
what governments could do in the matter; they had to take a role,
of course, but when all the evils of corruption, inefficiency,
waste and callousness which attend bureaucracy were taken into
account, how much could health be improved? Again, that idea
of strength: "No disease can get a hold in you unless you
are weak, and allow it to do so." We do not know for sure,
but can surmise that in today's health controversies he would
encourage prevention over cure, immunity over medicine, natural
alternatives over pills, and spiritual practice to eliminate
mental and physical dependence. There are hints of these, throughout
the Swami's conversations.
Continued
Aum
| About | Calendar
| Articles | Stories
| On-line books
Bulletin board | Books
& tapes | Links | Search
| Contact
|