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culture of a people must continuously serve them, nourishing
their inspirations, guiding their actions and providing consolation
and comfort, balance and equanimity in both their joys and sorrows.
A culture when sustained through its religious practices, if
it has no elasticity, will come to choke the growth of the community
and the people will then outgrow that culture. If an unyielding
iron ring is put around a growing tree, in time, as the tree
grows, the ring will be swallowed up into the very dimension
and growth of the vigorous tree.
Our
Bharatiya culture, as expressed through Hinduism, never died
through all these millenniums, only because our culture had
the required elasticity to embrace all the new dimensions
into which our society grew during the march of time. The
ideas enshrined in the Upanishads, couched as discussions
held by the Rishis and their disciples in the forest vastnesses
along the Ganges banks, the way of life and the eternal values
that were preached therein, gathered in the minds of the people
an association with the mountains, the trees, the silence,
and the spirit of retirement of the jungles. In short, the
Upanishadic philosophy came to carry about itself, for no
fault of its own, the fragrance of the forests, the hum of
the Ganges and the hymn of the eternal snow peaks. In the
history of our cultural growth, thus, a time came when people
felt that to live Hinduism was to live in retreat away from
the rush of the people, the noise of the market-place, the
struggles of the rustic fields and moving into the silence
and quietude of the Himalayas.
Such
a dangerous concept was prevalent not only among the unintelligent
and the uninitiated, but even the educated, and the well informed
men of action themselves shared in this national misconception
of their own life giving culture. Arjuna himself felt the
need for renouncing the world and refusing to fulfil his duties
towards the community in order to retire into the silent arbours
of contemplation and meditation. This is against the very
dynamic spirit of the Hindu culture, against the very national
security of the country, against all the material welfare
of our people. It is at such a time of a crucial cultural
crisis in our country, the genius of Shri Veda Vyasa produced
the Bhagawad Geeta all through keeping his pen faithful to
the fundamental thoughts of the Upanishads, their sane conclusions,
their demonstrated theories and their spectacular achievements.
Here in the Bhagawad Geeta, we find a practical hand - book
of instruction on how best we can reorganise our ways of thinking,
feeling and acting in our everyday life and draw from ourselves
a larger gush of productivity to enrich the life outside and
around us, and to emblazon the subjective life within us.
As we proceed on into our serious study of the Geeta, chapter
by chapter, we shall find how she unfolds a way of life by
living which we can grow to be socially more productive men
and individually more balanced and tranquil, pursuing our
life at peace with ourselves.
Without this inward balance and the readiness to act well
in the world outside, how can an individual ever successfully
face his own problems in life ? And when each individual fails
to face the challenges outside him, since the community is
made up of individuals, the community will not be able to
face its own or the nations problems.
Thus
life is a problem only when we know not how to
meet the lifes challenges rising around us. When that
knowledge is revealed to us, we know the solution,
and then the problem is no more to us threatening or despairing.
Prince Arjuna of the Bhagawad Geeta represents in himself
the confused and the desperate youth the world over. The Pandava
Prince is painted in the Geeta as suffering from the universal
disease of all young hearts the problem - phobia -- to take
things and happenings as problems where there are none and
to feel terribly despaired of them.
In
the Bhagawad Geeta, the man making science of the Uapnishads
is brought out of the forests to serve us where we are suffering
-- in the market place, in the slum huts, in the drawing rooms,
in the commune, and at the barricades ! The outstretched hands
of Mother Geeta, ready and willing always to lift all intelligent
young hearts from their dirt and filth, are today often ignored
in our utter confusion of mind. We are today totally ignorant
of the security which the Geetas motherly embrace can
provide and the divinity of her reviving touch. These are
times when religion must march out of the forests and temples,
churches and mosques, Gurudwaras and Vihars into places where
man is striving in his despair and turning sour in his incorrigible
cynicism and impossible disillusionments.
The
Geeta is a readymade textbook which serves us where we are;
whoever we may be, whatever may be our problem, irrespective
of place and time, caste and creed, the Geeta serves us. This
is the special charm of the scriptural textbook-the Bhagawad
Geeta.
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