Sunday, May 11, 2014
[Quotes] - Who will find Truth? - Swami Vivekananda
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
[Quotes] - CHARACTER - Swami Vivekananda
Neither Money pays, nor name, nor fame, nor learning.
it is CHARACTER
that can cleave through adamantine walls of difficulties.
- Swami Vivekananda.
Friday, February 3, 2012
[Poem] - சுவாமி விவேகனந்தர் எழுதிய கவிதை (மொழியாக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளது)
Swami Vivekananda Poem Translated in Tamil
அனைத்தும் ஆகி அன்பாகி
அமைபவன் அவனே அவன்தாளில்
உனதுளம் ஆன்மா உடல் எல்லாம்
உடனே தருக என் நண்பா
இவைகள் யாவும் உன்முன்னே
இருக்கும் அவனின் வடிவங்கள்
இவைகளை விடுத்து வேறெங்கே
இறைவனைத் தேடுகின்றாய் நீ
\மனத்தில் வேற்றுமை இல்லாமல்
மண்ணுல கதனில் இருக்கின்ற
அனைத்தையும் நேசித் திடும் ஒருவன்
ஆண்டவனை அவனைத் தொழுபவனாம்
--விவேகானந்தர்
Monday, January 2, 2012
[Swami Vivekananda] - Build up Your Character & Manifest your Real Nature
If I teach you, therefore, that your nature is evil, that you should go home and sit in sackcloth and ashes and weep your lives out because you took certain false steps, it will not help you, but will weaken you all the more, and I shall be showing you the road to more evil than good. If this room is full of darkness for thousands of years and you come in and begin to weep and wail, "Oh the darkness", will the darkness vanish? Strike a match and light comes in a moment. What good will it do you to think all your lives, "Oh, I have done evil, I have made many mistakes"? It requires no ghost to tell us that. Bring in the light and the evil goes in a moment. Build up your character, and manifest your real nature, the Effulgent, the Resplendent, the Ever-Pure, and call It up in everyone that you see.
- Swami Vivekananda
The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda/Volume 2/Practical Vedanta and other lectures/Practical Vedanta: Part IV
Thanks to Inspiring Stories Group of Facebook
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
[Swami Vivekananda] [Inspiring Messages] - I AM FEAR OF FEAR, THE TERROR OF TERROR
" All blessings on you. You come of the blood of a Kshatriya. Our yellow garb is the robe of death on the field of battle. Death for the cause is our goal, not success. Shri wah Guru! . . .
Black and thick are the folds of sinister fate. But I am the master. I raise my hand, and lo, they vanish! All this is nonsense. And fear? I am the Fear of fear, the Terror of terror, I am the fearless secondless One, I am the Rule of destiny, the Wiper-out of fact. Shri wah Guru! Steady, child, don't be bought by gold or anything else, and we win! "
- Swami Vivekananda
26th May, 1900.
* Above content received from Facebook Inspirational Stories & Speeches, Thanks
Thursday, September 9, 2010
[Messages] - Power of Thought (Swami Vivekananda)
Blame none for your own faults, stand upon your own feet, and take the whole responsibility upon yourselves. Say, “This misery that I am suffering is of my own doing, and that very thing proves that it will have to be undone by me alone.” That which I created, I can demolish; that which is created by someone else I shall never be able to destroy.
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
[Poem] - Very Inspired Swami Vivekananda Poem
All love is expansion, all selfishness is contraction.
Love is therefore the only law of life.
He who loves lives, he who is selfish is dying.
Therefore love for love's sake,
because it is law of life, just as you breathe to live.
- Swami Vivekananda
Friday, June 18, 2010
[Messages] - நம்மை நாமே செதுக்கிக் கொள்ளல் - சுவாமி விவேகானந்தர்

சுவாமி விவேகானந்தர் கூறியவைகளை, உன் எதிர்காலம் உன் கையில் என்ற புத்தகமாகத் தொகுத்து ஸ்ரீராமகிருஷ்ண மடம் வெளியிட்டுள்ளது.
அந்த புத்தகத்தில் இடம்பெற்றிருப்பவற்றை தமிழ்.வெப்துனியா.காம் வாசகர்களுக்காக அளிக்கின்றோம்.
மனிதனின் வெளிப்பொறிகள் அமைந்துள்ள இந்த உடல் தூலவுடல் எனப்படுகிறது. சமஸ்கிருதத்தில் இதை ஸ்தூல சரீரம் என்பர். இதற்குப் பின்னால்தான் புலன், மனம், புத்தி, நான் - உணர்வு என்ற தொடர் அமைகிறது. இவையும், உயிர்ச் சக்திகளும் இணைந்த ஒன்றே நுண்ணுடல் அல்லது சூட்சும சரீரம். இந்தச் சச்திகள் மிக நுட்பமான அணுக்களால் ஆனவை. எத்தகைய தீங்கு ஏற்பட்டாலும் இந்த உடம்பு அழியாத அளவுக்கு அவை நுட்பமானவை. எந்த விதமான கேடும் அதிர்ச்சியும் சூட்சும உடலைப் பாதிப்பதில்லை.
நம் கண்ணுக்குப் புலனாவதான தூலவுடல் பருப்பொருளால் ஆனது. எனவே அது தொடர்ந்து புதுப்பிக்கப்படுகிறது. மாறுபடுகிறது. உட்கருவிகளான மனம், புத்தி, நான் - உணர்வு என்பவை மிக மிக நுட்பமான பொருளால் ஆனவை. எனவே பல யுகங்களானாலும் அவை அழியாமல் இருக்கும். வேறு எதுவுமே தடை சய்ய முடியாத அளவிற்கு நுட்பமானவை இவை. இவை எந்தத் தடைகளையும் கடந்துவிடும். இந்தத் தூலவுடல் அறிவற்றது, நுண்ணுடலும் அதுபோன்றது தான். ஆனால் இது சற்று நுட்பமான ஜடப்பொருளால் ஆக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.
webdunia photo WD
இந்த நுண்ணுடலின் ஒரு பகுதி மனம், ஒரு பகுதி புத்தி, ஒரு பகுதி நான் - உணர்வு. ஆனாலும் இவற்றில் எந்த ஒன்றும் `அறிபவன்' ஆக முடியாது. இவற்றுள் எதுவும் பார்ப்பவனாக, சாட்சியாக, யாருக்காக அறிவுச் செயல் நடக்கிறதோ அவனாக, நடக்கும் செயலைப் பார்ப்பவனாக ஆக முடியாது. மனத்திலும் புத்தியிலும் நான் - உணர்விலும் ஏறப்டும் இயக்கங்கள் எல்லாம் இவை அல்லாத வேறு யாருக்காகவோதான் இருக்க வேண்டும். இவை நுட்பமான ஜடப்பொருள் அணுக்களால் ஆனவை. ஆதலால் தன்னொளி உடையவையாக இருக்க முடியாது. இவற்றின் ஒளி இவற்றிற்குச் சொந்தமானதாக இருக்க முடியாது. எடுத்துக்காட்டாக இந்த மேஜையை எந்த ஜடப் பொருளும் உருவாக்கியிருக்க முடியாது. எனவே இவற்றிற்கெல்லாம் பின்னால் யாரோ ஒருவர் இருக்க வேண்டும், இவரே எல்லா தோற்றங்களுக்கும் உண்மைக் காரணமானவர். உண்மையாகவே எல்லாவற்றையும் அனுபவிப்பவர். இவரையே வடமொழியில் ஆத்மன் என்கிறார்கள். இவரே மனிதனின் உண்மை ஆன்மா.
உடல் ஒவ்வொரு நிமிடமும் அழிந்து கொண்டே இருக்கிறது. மனமோ தொடர்ந்து மாறியபடி இருக்கிறது. உடல் பலவற்றின் சேர்க்கை, மனமும் அத்தகையதே, எனவே இவை எல்லா மாறுதல்களுக்கும் அப்பாற்பட்ட நிலையை அடைய முடியாது. ஆனால் தூலப் பொருளான இந்த மெல்லிய உறையையும், இதற்கு அப்பாலுள்ள மனம் என்ற நுட்பமான உறையையும் தாண்டி இருக்கிறது ஆன்மா. இதுவே மனிதனது உண்மைத் தத்துவம். இது நிலையானது. என்றுமே பந்தப்படாதது. இதன் அழியாமை, சுதந்திரம் ஆகிய தன்மைகளே எண்ணம், ஜடப் பொருள் போன்ற போர்வைகளை ஊடுருவி, பெயர் உருவம் என்ற நிறங்களைக் கடந்து, சுதந்திரம் அழியாமை என்ற தன்மைகளை வற்புறுத்தி நிற்கிறது.
மிகவும் தடித்த அஞ்ஞானம் என்ற போர்வைகளையும் ஊடுருவி இந்த ஆன்மாவின் அழிவின்மையும், ஆனந்தமும், அமைதியும், தெய்வீகமும் பிரகாசித்து, நாம் இவற்றை உணரும்படிச் செய்கின்றன. ஆன்மாதான் உண்மை மனிதன். அவன் பயமும் அழிவும் பந்தமும் அற்றவன்.
வெளிச்சக்தி எதுவும் பாதிக்க முடியாத போது, எந்த மாறுதல்களையும் உண்டாக்க இயலாதபோதுதான் சுதந்திரம் என்பது இருக்க முடியும். எல்லா நியதிகளுக்கும், எல்லா எல்லைகளுக்கும், எல்லா விதிகளுக்கும், காரண காரியம் எல்லாவற்றிற்கும் அப்பால்தான் சுதந்திரம் என்பது இருக்க முடியும்.
எனவே எந்த வகை மாறுதலுக்கும் உட்படாததுதான் சுதந்திரமாகவும் அழிவற்றதாகவும் இருக்க முடியும். இருக்கின்ற இதுதான் அதாவது மனிதனது உண்மைத் தத்துவம்தான் ஆன்மா. இது மாறுதல் இல்லாதது, கட்டுப்பாடுகளுக்கு உட்படாதது. எனவே இதற்குப் பிறப்பும் இல்லை, இறப்பும் இல்லை.
ஒவ்வொரு மனித ஆளுமையையும் ஒரு கண்ணாடிக் கோளத்திற்கு ஒப்பிடலாம். ஒவ்வொன்றின் நடுவிலும் இறைவனிடமிருந்து வெளிப்படும் தூய வெள்ளொளி இருக்கிறது. ஆனால் கண்ணாடிகள் பல நிறங்களிலும், பல கனங்களிலும் இருப்பதால் வெளிவரும் கதிர்கள் பல்வேறு தோற்றங்களைப் பெறுகின்றன. எல்லா நடு ஒளிகளும் ஒரே மாதிரியானவை, ஒரே அழகைக் கொண்டவை, வித்தியாசமாகத் தோன்றுவதற்குக் காரணம் அது வெளிப்படுகின்ற புறக் கருவிகளில் உள்ள குறைபாடுகளே. நாம் மேலே உயர உயர, அந்தக் கருவி மேலும் தெளிவாக ஒளி வீசும் தன்மையை அடைகிறது.
நன்றி : ஸ்ரீராமகிருஷ்ண மடம், மயிலாப்பூர், சென்னை - 4.
சுவாமி விவேகானந்தரின் பொன்மொழிகள்
Friday, March 26, 2010
[Messages] - From Complete works of Swami Vivekananda (RAJA YOGA LESSONS)

Three things are necessary to the student who wishes to succeed in attaining god.
First. Give up all ideas of enjoyment in this world and the next, care only for God and Truth. We are here to know truth, not for enjoyment. Leave that to brutes who enjoy as we never can. Man is a thinking being and must struggle on until he conquers death, until he sees the light. He must not spend himself in vain talking that bears no fruit. Worship of society and popular opinion is idolatry. The soul has no sex, no country, no place, no time.
Second. Intense desire to know Truth and God. Be eager for them, long for them, as a drowning man longs for breath. Want only God, take nothing else, let not "seeming" cheat you any longer. Turn from all and seek only God.
Third. The six trainings: First — Restraining the mind from going outward. Second — Restraining the senses. Third — Turning the mind inward. Fourth — Suffering everything without murmuring. Fifth — Fastening the mind to one idea. Take the subject before you and think it out; never leave it. Do not count time. Sixth — Think constantly of your real nature. Get rid of superstition. Do not hypnotise yourself into a belief in your own inferiority. Day and night tell yourself what you really are, until you realise (actually realise) your oneness with God.
Without these disciplines, no results can be gained.
We can be conscious of the Absolute, but we can never express It. The moment we try to express It, we limit It and It ceases to be Absolute.
We have to go beyond sense limit and transcend even reason, and we have the power to do this.
Source: http://www.
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
[Messages] - Swami Vivekananda Concluding remarks in Parliament of Religion

The seed is put in the ground, and earth and air and water are placed around it. Does the seed become the earth; or the air, or the water? No. It becomes a plant, it develops after the law of its own growth, assimilates the air, the earth, and the water, converts them into plant substance, and grows into a plant.
Similar is the case with religion. The Christian is not to become a Hindu or a Buddhist, nor a Hindu or a Buddhist to become a Christian. But each must assimilate the spirit of the others and yet preserve his individuality and grow according to his own law of growth.
If the Parliament of Religions has shown anything to the world it is this: It has proved to the world that holiness, purity and charity are not the exclusive possessions of any church in the world, and that every system has produced men and women of the most exalted character. In the face of this evidence, if anybody dreams of the exclusive survival of his own religion and the destruction of the others, I pity him from the bottom of my heart, and point out to him that upon the banner of every religion will soon be written, in spite of resistance: "Help and not Fight," "Assimilation and not Destruction," "Harmony and Peace and not Dissension."
- Swami Vivekanada
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
[Quotes] - How to attain Freedom - Swami Vivekananda.
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
[Special] - National Youth Day

My ideal, indeed, can be put into a few words, and that is: to preach unto mankind their divinity, and how to make it manifest in every movement of life.
Education is the manifestation of the perfection already in man.
We want that education by which character is formed, strength of mind is increased, the intellect is expanded, and by which one can stand on one's own feet.
So long as the millions live in hunger and ignorance, I hold every man a traitor who, having been educated at their expense, pays not the least heed to them.
Whatever you think, that you will be. If you think yourselves weak, weak you will be; if you think yourselves strong, strong you will be.
If you have faith in all the three hundred and thirty millions of your mythological gods, … and still have no faith in yourselves, there is no salvation for you. Have faith in yourselves, and stand up on that faith and be strong; that is what we need.
Strength, strength it is that we want so much in this life, for what we call sin and sorrow have all one cause, and that is our weakness. With weakness comes ignorance, and with ignorance comes misery.
The older I grow, the more everything seems to me to lie in manliness. This is my new Gospel.
Purity, patience, and perseverance are the three essentials to success, and above all, love.
Religion is realization; not talk, not doctrine, nor theories, however beautiful they may be. It is being and becoming, not hearing or acknowledging; it is the whole soul becoming changed into what it believes.
Religion is the manifestation of the Divinity already in man.
Teach yourselves, teach everyone his real nature, call uon the sleeping soul and see how it awakes. Power will come, glory will come, goodness will come, purity will come, and everything that is excellent will come when this sleeping soul is roused to self-conscious activity.
They alone live who live for others, the rest are more dead than alive.
This is the gist of all worship – to be pure and to do good to others.
It is love and love alone that I preach, and I base my teaching on the great Vedantic truth of the sameness and omnipresence of the Soul of the Universe
* Selected Sayings from http://www.belurmath.org/national_youth_day.htm
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Swami Vivekanandha on Hinduism
Conversion
The Hindus, like the Jews, do not convert others; still gradually, other races are coming within Hinduism and adopting the manners and customs of the Hindus and falling into line with them. Hinduism is God centered. Other religions might prophet centered.
Toleration?
Defining the Idea of God
Pythagoras and Kapila
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
[Messages] - Swami Vivekananda and his methods of work
Still, Vivekananda’s ideas were not entirely accepted by all. His main opposition came from some of his own brother disciples. After the first meeting, on 1 May 1897, when the devotees had left, Swami Yogananda openly questioned Vivekananda’s methods of work. The following conversation took place: Yoganada: “You are doing these things by Western methods. Would you say that Sri Ramakrishna left us any such instructions?”
Vivekananda: “How do you know that these methods are not in keeping with his ideas? Sri Ramakrishna was the embodiment of infinite ideas: Do you want to shut him up in your own limits? I shall break those limits and scatter his ideas broadcast all over the world.
He never instructed me to introduce worship of him, and so forth. The methods of spiritual practice, concentration and meditation, and the other higher ideals of religion that he taught –those we must realize and teach to all men. Infinite are the ideas and infinite are the paths that lead to the goal. I was not born to create a new sect in this world, too full of sects already. Blessed are we that we have found refuge at the feet of our Master. It is our duty to give the ideas entrusted to us freely to the whole world.
“Time and again I have received in this life marks of his grace. He himself is at my back and is making me do all these things in these ways. When I used to lie under a tree, exhausted, smitten with hunger; when I had not a strip of cloth even to tie my kaupin with; when I had resolved to travel round the world penniless—even then, through his grace, I received help in every way. Then again, when people in crowds jostled with one another in the streets of Chicago to have sight of this Vivekananda, I was able, through his blessings, to digest without difficulty all that honour, a hundredth part of which would have turned the head of any other man. By the will of the Lord, victory has been mine everywhere. Now I intend to do something for this country. Do you all give up doubts and misgivings and help me in my work; and you will see how, by his grace, wonders will be accomplished.”
Yogananda: “Whatever you will, shall come about. We are always ready to follow your leading. I clearly see that the Master is working through you. Still, I confess, doubts do sometimes arise in the mind,for, as we saw it, his method of doing things was so different; and so I am led to ask myself whether we are not straying from Sri Ramakrishna’s teachings.”
Vivekananda: “The thing is this: Sri Ramakrishna is far greater than his disciples understand him to be. He is the embodiment of infinite spiritual ideas capable of development in infinite ways. Even if one can find a limit to the knowledge of Brahman, one cannot measure the unfathomable depths of our Master’s mind! One gracious glance of his eyes can create a hundred thousand Vivekananda at this instant! But if this time he chooses, instead, to work through me, making me his instrument, I can only bow to his will.”
His Eastern and Western Admirers, Reminiscences of Swami Vivekananda [Advaita Ashram: 1981], 2:249-50.
Friday, October 23, 2009
The Drop of Water Who Wept - Small Story
The Drop of Water Who Wept
Swami Vivekananda said :
One day a drop of water fell into the vast ocean. When it found itself there, it began to weep and complain.
The great ocean laughed at the drop of water. 'Why do you weep?' it asked. `I do not understand. When you join me, you join all your brothers and sisters, the other drops of water of which I am made. You become the ocean itself. If you wish to leave me, you have only to rise up on a sunbeam into the clouds. From there you can descend again, little drop of water, a blessing and a benediction to the thirsty earth.'
[As told to the opera singer, Emma Calve who was repulsed at the thought of the loss of her ego/individuality.(from her autobiography, My Life), 1922, Appleton]
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Interview With Swami Vivekananda -THE ABROAD AND THE PROBLEMS AT HOME
[Our representative met the Swami Vivekananda in the train at the Chingleput Station and travelled with him to Madras. The following is the report of the interview]
Q.- "What made you go to America, Swamiji?"
Swami Vivekananda- "Rather a serious question to answer in brief. I can only answer it partly now. Because I travelled all over India, I wanted to go over to other countries. I went to America by the Far East."
Q.- "What did you see in Japan, and is there any chance of India following in the progressive steps of Japan?"
Swami Vivekananda- "None whatever, until all the three hundred millions of India combine together as a whole nation. The world has never seen such a patriotic and artistic race as the Japanese, and one special feature about them is this that while in Europe and elsewhere Art generally goes with dirt, Japanese Art is Art plus absolute cleanliness. I would wish that every one of our young men could visit Japan once at least in his lifetime. It is very easy to go there. The Japanese think that everything Hindu is great and believe that India is a holy land. Japanese Buddhism is entirely different from what you see in Ceylon. It is the same as Vedanta. It is positive and theistic Buddhism, not the negative atheistic Buddhism of Ceylon.
Q.- "What is the key to Japan's sudden greatness?"
Swami Vivekananda- "The faith of the Japanese in themselves, and their love for their country. When you have men who are ready to sacrifice their everything for their country, sincere to the backbone ” when such men arise, India will become great in every respect. It is the men that make the country! What is there in the country? If you catch the social morality and the political morality of the Japanese, you will be as great as they are. The Japanese are ready to sacrifice everything for their country, and they have become a great people. But you are not; you cannot be, you sacrifice everything only for your own families and possessions."
Q.- "Is it your wish that India should become like Japan?"
Swami Vivekananda- "Decidedly not. India should continue to be what she is. How could India ever become like Japan, or any nation for the matter of that? In each nation, as in music, there is a main note, a central theme, upon which all others turn. Each nation has a theme: everything else is secondary. India's theme is religion. Social reform and everything else are secondary. Therefore India cannot be like Japan. It is said that when 'the heart breaks', then the flow of thought comes. India's heart must break, and the flow of spirituality will come out. India is India. We are not like the Japanese, we are Hindus. India's very atmosphere is soothing. I have been working incessantly here, and amidst this work I am getting rest. It is only from spiritual work that we can get rest in India. If your work is material here, you die of ” diabetes!"
Q.- "So much for Japan. What was your first experience of America, Swamiji?"
Swami Vivekananda- "From first to last it was very good. With the exception of the missionaries and 'Church-women' the Americans are most hospitable, kind-hearted, generous, and good-natured."
Q.- "Who are these 'Church-women' that you speak of, Swamiji?"
Swami Vivekananda- "When a woman tries her best to find a husband, she goes to all the fashionable seaside resorts and tries all sorts of tricks to catch a man. When she fails in her attempts, she becomes, what they call in America, an 'old maid', and joins the Church. Some of them become very 'Churchy'. These 'Church-women' are awful fanatics. They are under the thumb of the priests there. Between them and the priests they make hell of earth and make a mess of religion. With the exception of these, the Americans are a very good people. They loved me, and I love them a great deal. I felt as if I was one of them."
Q.- "What is your idea about the results of the Parliament of Religions?"
Swami Vivekananda- "The Parliament of Religions, as it seems to me, was intended for a 'heathen show' before the world: but it turned out that the heathens had the upper hand and made it a Christian show all around. So the Parliament of Religions was a failure from the Christian standpoint, seeing that the Roman Catholics, who were the organisers of that Parliament, are, when there is a talk of another Parliament at Paris, now steadily opposing it. But the Chicago Parliament was a tremendous success for India and Indian thought. It helped on the tide of Vedanta, which is flooding the world. The American people ” of course,minus the fanatical priests and Church-women ” are very glad of the results of the Parliament."
Q.- "What prospects have you, Swamiji, for the spread of your mission in England?"
Swami Vivekananda- "There is every prospect. Before many years elapse a vast majority of the English people will be Vedantins. There is a greater prospect of this in England than there is in America. You see, Americans make a fanfaronade of everything, which is not the case with Englishmen. Even Christians cannot understand their New Testament, without understanding the Vedanta. The Vedanta is the rationale of all religions. Without the Vedanta every religion is superstition; with it everything becomes religion."
Q.-"What is the special trait you noticed in the English character?"
Swami Vivekananda- "The Englishman goes to practical work as soon as he believes in something. He has tremendous energy for practical work. There is in the whole world no human being superior to the English gentleman or lady. That is really the reason of my faith in them. John Bull is rather a thick-headed gentleman to deal with. You must push and push an idea till it reaches his brain, but once there, it does not get out. In England, there was not one missionary or anybody who said anything against me; not one who tried to make a scandal about me. To my astonishment, many of my friends belong to the Church of England. I learn, these missionaries do not come from the higher classes in England. Caste is as rigorous there as it is here, and the English churchmen belong to the class of gentlemen. They may differ in opinion from you, but that is no bar to their being friends with you; therefore, I would give a word of advice to my countrymen, which is, not to take notice of the vituperative missionaries, now that I have known that they are. We have 'sized' them, as the Americans say. Non-recognition is the only attitude to assume towards them."
Q.- "Will you kindly enlighten me, Swamiji, on the Social Reform movements in America and England?"
Swami Vivekananda- "Yes. All the social upheavalists, at least the leaders of them, are trying to find that all their communistic or equalising theories must have a spiritual basis, and that spiritual basis is in the Vedanta only. I have been told by several leaders, who used to attend my lectures, that they required the Vedanta as the basis of the new order of things."
Q.- "What are your views with regard to the Indian masses?"
Swami Vivekananda- "Oh, we are awfully poor, and our masses are very ignorant about secular things. Our masses are very good because poverty here is not a crime. Our masses are not violent. Many times I was near being mobbed in America and England, only on account of my dress. But I never heard of such a thing in India as a man being mobbed because of peculiar dress. In every other respect, our masses are much more civilised than the European masses."
Q.- "What will you propose for the improvement of our masses?"
Swami Vivekananda- "We have to give them secular education. We have to follow the plan laid down by our ancestors, that is, to bring all the ideals slowly down among the masses. Raise them slowly up, raise them to equality. Impart even secular knowledge through religion."
Q.- "But do you think, Swamiji, it is a task that can be easily accomplished?"
Swami Vivekananda- "It will, of course, have gradually to be worked out. But if there are enough self-sacrificing young fellows, who, I hope, will work with me, it can be done tomorrow. It all depends upon the zeal and the self-sacrifice brought to the task."
Q.- "But if the present degraded condition is due to their past Karma, Swamiji, how do you think they could get out of it easily, and how do you propose to help them?"
The Swamiji readily answered "Karma is the eternal assertion of human freedom. If we can bring ourselves down by our Karma, surely it is in our power to raise ourselves by it. The masses, besides, have not brought themselves down altogether by their own Karma. So we should give them better environments to work in. I do not propose any levelling of castes. Caste is a very good thing. Caste is the plan we want to follow. What caste really is, not one in a million understands. There is no country in the world without caste. In India, from caste we reach to the point where there is no caste. Caste is based throughout on that principle. The plan in India is to make everybody a Brahmin, the Brahmin being the ideal of humanity.
If you read the history of India you will find that attempts have always been made to raise the lower classes. Many are the classes that have been raised. Many more will follow till the whole will become Brahmin. That is the plan. We have only to raise them without bringing down anybody. And this has mostly to be done by the Brahmins themselves, because it is the duty of every aristocracy to dig its own grave; and the sooner it does so, the better for all. No time should be lost. Indian caste is better than the caste which prevails in Europe or America. I do not say it is absolutely good. Where would you be if there were no caste? Where would be your learning and other things, if there were no caste? There would be nothing left for the Europeans to study if caste had never existed! The Mohammedans would have smashed everything to pieces. Where do you find the Indian society standing still? It is always on the move. Sometimes, as in the times of foreign invasions, the movement has been slow, at other times quicker. This is what I say to my countrymen. I do not condemn them. I look into their past. I find that under the circumstances no nation could do more glorious work. I tell them that they have done well. I only ask them to do better."
Q.- "What are your views, Swamiji, in regard to the relation of caste to rituals?"
Swami Vivekananda- "Caste is continually changing, rituals are continually changing, so are forms. It is the substance, the principle, that does not change. It is in the Vedas that we have to study our religion. With the exception of the Vedas every book must change. The authority of the Vedas is for all time to come; the authority of every one of our other books is for the time being. For instance; one Smriti is powerful for one age, another for another age. Great prophets are always coming and pointing the way to work. Some prophets worked for the lower classes, others like Madhva gave to women the right to study the Vedas. Caste should not go; but should only be readjusted occasionally. Within the old structure is to be found life enough for the building of two hundred thousand new ones. It is sheer nonsense to desire the abolition of caste. The new method is ” evolution of the old."
Q.- "Do not Hindus stand in need of social reform?"
Swami Vivekananda- "We do stand in need of social reform. At times great men would evolve new ideas of progress, and kings would give them the sanction of law. Thus social improvements had been in the past made in India, and in modern times to effect such progressive reforms, we will have first to build up such an authoritative power. Kings having gone, the power is the people's. We have, therefore, to wait till the people are educated, till they understand their needs and are ready and able to solve their problems. The tyranny of the minority is the worst tyranny in the world. Therefore, instead of frittering away our energies on ideal reforms, which will never become practical, we had better go to the root of the evil and make a legislative body, that is to say, educate our people, so that they may be able to solve their own problems. Until that is done all these ideal reforms will remain ideals only. The new order of things is the salvation of the people by the people, and it takes time to make it workable, especially in India, which has always in the past been governed by kings."
Q.- "Do you think Hindu society can successfully adopt European social laws?"
Swami Vivekananda- "No, not wholly. I would say, the combination of the Greek mind represented by the external European energy added to the Hindu spirituality would be an ideal society for India. For instance, it is absolutely necessary for you, instead of frittering away your energy and often talking of idle nonsense, to learn from the Englishman the idea of prompt obedience to leaders, the absence of jealousy, the indomitable perseverance and the undying faith in himself. As soon as he selects a leader for a work, the Englishman sticks to him through thick and thin and obeys him. Here in India, everybody wants to become a leader, and there is nobody to obey. Everyone should learn to obey before he can command. There is no end to our jealousies; and the more important the Hindu, the more jealous he is. Until this absence of jealousy and obedience to leaders are learnt by the Hindu, there will be no power of organization. We shall have to remain the hopelessly confused mob that we are now, hoping and doing nothing. India has to learn from Europe the conquest of external nature, and Europe has to learn from India the conquest of internal nature. Then there will be neither Hindus nor Europeans — there will be the ideal humanity which has conquered both the natures, the external and the internal. We have developed one phase of humanity, and they another. It is the union of the two that is wanted. The word freedom which is the watchword of our religion really means freedom physically, mentally, and spiritually."
Q.- "What relation, Swamiji, does ritual bear to religion?"
Swami Vivekananda- "Rituals are the kindergarten of religion. They are absolutely necessary for the world as it is now; only we shall have to give people newer and fresher rituals. A party of thinkers must undertake to do this. Old rituals must be rejected and new ones substituted."
Q.- "Then you advocate the abolition of rituals, don't you?"
Swami Vivekananda- "No, my watchword is construction, not destruction. Out of the existing rituals, new ones will have to be evolved. There is infinite power of development in everything; that is my belief. One atom has the power of the whole universe at its back. All along, in the history of the Hindu race, there never was any attempt at destruction, only construction. One sect wanted to destroy, and they were thrown out of India: They were the Buddhists. We have had a host of reformers — Shankara, Ramanuja, Madhva, and Chaitanya. These were great reformers, who always were constructive and built according to the circumstances of their time. This is our peculiar method of work. All the modern reformers take to European destructive reformation, which will never do good to anyone and never did. Only once was a modern reformer mostly constructive, and that one was Raja Ram Mohan Ray. The progress of the Hindu race has been towards the realisation of the Vedantic ideals. All history of Indian life is the struggle for the realisation of the ideal of the Vedanta through good or bad fortune. Whenever there was any reforming sect or religion which rejected the Vedantic ideal, it was smashed into nothing."
Q.- "What is your programme of work here?"
Swami Vivekananda- "I want to start two institutions, one in Madras and one in Calcutta, to carry out my plan; and that plan briefly is to bring the Vedantic ideals into the everyday practical life of the saint or the sinner, of the sage or the ignoramus, of the Brahmin or the Pariah."
[The Hindu, Madras, February, 1897- Our representative here put to him a few questions relative to Indian politics; but before the Swami could attempt anything like an answer, the train steamed up to the Egmore platform, and the only hurried remark that fell from the Swami was that he was dead against all political entanglements of Indian and European problems. The interview then terminated.]
Thanks to Uttishthata...
Saturday, October 3, 2009
[Messages] - Golden Words of Great Swamiji
He Gave Me Difficult Situations to Face
When I Asked God for Brain & Brown
He Gave Me Puzzles in Life to Solve
When I Asked God for Happiness
He Showed Me Some Unhappy People
When I Asked God for Wealth
He Showed Me How to Work Hard
When I Asked God for Favors
He Showed Me Opportunities to Work Hard
When I Asked God for Peace
He Showed Me How to Help Others
God Gave Me Nothing I Wanted
He Gave Me Everything I Needed
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swami_Vivekananda
- Swami Vivekananda
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
[Messages] - Swami Vivekananda says we need to possess three things if we wish to be a true reformer
The first is to feel. Do you really feel for your brothers? Do you really feel that there is so much misery in the world, so much ignorance and superstition? Do you really feel that all men are your brothers? Does this idea permeate your whole being? Does it run in your blood? Does it tingle in your veins? Does it course through every nerve and filament of your body? Are you full of that idea of sympathy? If you are, that is only the first step.
Next you must ask yourself if you have found any remedy. The old ideas may be all superstition, but in and around these masses of superstition are nuggets of truth. Have you discovered means by which to keep that truth alone, without any of the dross? If you have done that, that is only the second step;
one more thing is necessary. What is your motive? Are you sure that you are not actuated by greed for gold, by thirst for fame or power? Are you really sure that you can stand for your ideals and work on, even if the whole world wants to crush you down?Are you sure that you know what you want and will perform your duty, and that alone, even if your life is at stake? Are you sure that you will persevere so long as life endures, so long as there is one pulsation left in the heart?
Then you are a real reformer, you are a teacher, a master, a blessing to mankind.
But man is so impatient, so shortsighted! He has not the patience to wait, he has not the power to see. He wants to rule, he wants results immediately. Why? He wants to reap the fruits himself and does not really care for others. Duty for duty’s sake is not what he wants. “To work you have the right, but not to the fruits thereof,” says Krishna. Why cling to results? Ours is to do our duties. Let the fruits take care of themselves. But man has no patience; he takes up any scheme that will produce quick results; and the majority of reformers all over the world can be classed under this heading.
Source: http://www.ramakrishna.org/activities/message/weekly_message14.htm
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
[Messages] - Swami Vivekananda about animal desire and Reincarnation
We, living beings get carried away by the inputs we receive from our senses. The display of the vanities of the world, instills a feeling of possession that culminates into desires. With a view to gratify the desire, the living organism resorts to various means and in extreme cases, when they become too infatuated, they even adopt unfair, dishonest ways to gratify desires. These desires are the source point of our bondage. These desires only make us tied to the wheel of birth and death. We pass through several lifetimes, and still do not get the desired freedom. Gratification of desire paves way for another desire and non gratification leads to misery. This vicious circle continues, we oscillate between happiness and misery but can never establish ourselves in a permanent state of perennial happiness where all desires subside, where there is an infinite expanse of tranquility. Swami Vivekananda, therefore, advises us that the only way to attain that state of bliss, the only way to detach ourselves from this cycle of birth and death is to free ourselves from desires. Once, the desires are rooted out, our body mind framework provides the space for divinity to dwell upon and this divinity is the receptacle for infinite peace.
