by Swami Nikhilananda
Ramakrishna-Vivekananda Center, New York Β· 1953
By Swami Nikhilananda
Swami Vivekananda's inspiring personality was well
known both in India and in America during the last decade of
the nineteenth century and the first decade of the
twentieth. The unknown monk of India suddenly leapt into fame
at the Parliament of Religions held in Chicago in 1893,
at which he represented Hinduism. His vast knowledge
of Eastern and Western culture as well as his deep
spiritual insight, fervid eloquence, brilliant conversation,
broad human sympathy, colourful personality, and
handsome figure made an irresistible appeal to the many types
of Americans who came in contact with him. People who
saw or heard Vivekananda even once still cherish his
memory after a lapse of more than half a century.
In America Vivekananda's mission was the
interpretation of India's spiritual culture, especially in
its Vedantic setting. He also tried to enrich the
religious consciousness of the Americans through the rational
and humanistic teachings of the Vedanta philosophy. In
America he became India's spiritual ambassador and
pleaded eloquently for better understanding between India and
the New World in order to create a healthy synthesis of
East and West, of religion and science.
In his own motherland Vivekananda is regarded
as the patriot saint of modern India and an inspirer of
her dormant national consciousness. To the Hindus he
preached the ideal of a strength-giving and
man-making religion. Service to man as the visible manifestation of
the Godhead was the special form of worship he
advocated for the Indians, devoted as they were to the rituals
and myths of their ancient faith. Many political leaders of
India have publicly acknowledged their indebtedness to
Swami Vivekananda.
The Swami's mission was both national and
international. A lover of mankind, he strove to promote
peace and human brotherhood on the spiritual foundation of
the Vedantic Oneness of existence. A mystic of the highest
order, Vivekananda had a direct and intuitive experience
of Reality. He derived his ideas from that unfailing source
of wisdom and often presented them in the
soul-stirring language of poetry.
The natural tendency of Vivekananda's mind, like
that of his Master, Ramakrishna, was to soar above the
world and forget itself in contemplation of the Absolute.
But another part of his personality bled at the sight of
human suffering in East and West alike. It might appear that
his mind seldom found a point of rest in its oscillation
between contemplation of God and service to man. Be that as it
may, he chose, in obedience to a higher call, service to man
as his mission on earth; and this choice has endeared him
to people in the West, Americans in particular.
In the course of a short life of thirty-nine years
(1863-1902), of which only ten were devoted to public
activities β and those, too, in the midst of acute physical
suffering β he left for posterity his four classics:
Jnana-Yoga, Bhakti-Yoga,
Karma-Yoga, and Raja-Yoga, all
of which are
outstanding treatises on Hindu philosophy. In addition, he delivered
innumerable lectures, wrote inspired letters in his own
hand to his many friends and disciples, composed
numerous poems, and acted as spiritual guide
to the many seekers who came to him for instruction. He also organized
the Ramakrishna Order of monks, which is the most
outstanding religious organization of modern India. It
is devoted to the propagation of the Hindu spiritual
culture not only in the Swami's native land, but also in
America and in other parts of the world.
Swami Vivekananda once spoke of himself as
a 'condensed India.' His life and teachings are of
inestimable value to the West for an understanding of the mind of
Asia. William James, the Harvard philosopher, called the
Swami the 'paragon of Vedantists.' Max MΓΌller and Paul
Deussen, the famous Orientalists of the nineteenth century, held
him in genuine respect and affection. 'His words,'
writes Romain Rolland, 'are great music, phrases in the style
of Beethoven, stirring rhythms like the march of
Handel choruses. I cannot touch these sayings of his, scattered
as they are through the pages of books, at thirty
years' distance, without receiving a thrill through my body
like an electric shock. And what shocks, what transports,
must have been produced when in burning words they
issued from the lips of the hero!'
Swami Vivekananda, the great soul loved and
revered in East and West alike as the rejuvenator of Hinduism
in India and the preacher of its eternal truths abroad,
was born at 6:33, a few minutes before sunrise, on
Monday, January 12, 1863. It was the day of the great Hindu
festival Makarasamkranti, when special worship is offered to
the Ganga by millions of devotees. Thus the future
Vivekananda first drew breath when the air above the
sacred river not far from the house was reverberating with
the prayers, worship, and religious music of thousands
of Hindu men and women.
Before Vivekananda was born, his mother, like
many other pious Hindu mothers, had observed religious
vows, fasted, and prayed so that she might be blessed with a
son who would do honour to the family. She requested
a relative who was living in Varanasi to offer special
worship to the Vireswara Siva of that holy place and seek
His blessings; for Siva, the great god of renunciation,
dominated her thought. One night she dreamt that this
supreme Deity aroused Himself from His meditation and agreed
to be born as her son. When she woke she was filled with joy.
The mother, Bhuvaneswari Devi, accepted the child
as a boon from Vireswara Siva and named him Vireswara.
The family, however, gave him the name of Narendranath
Datta, calling him, for short, Narendra, or more endearingly, Naren.
The Datta family of Calcutta, into which
Narendranath had been born, was well known for its
affluence, philanthropy, scholarship, and independent spirit.
The grand father, Durgacharan, after the birth of his first
son, had renounced the world in search of God. The
father, Viswanath, an attorney-at-law of the High Court
of Calcutta, was versed in English and Persian literature
and often entertained himself and his friends by reciting
from the Bible and the poetry of Hafiz, both of which,
he believed, contained truths unmatched by human
thinking elsewhere. He was particularly attracted to the
Islamic culture, with which he was familiar because of his
close contact with the educated Moslems of North-western
India. Moreover, he derived a large income from his law
practice and, unlike his father, thoroughly enjoyed the worldly
life. An expert in cookery, he prepared rare dishes and liked
to share them with his friends. Travel was another of
his hobbies. Though agnostic in religion and a mocker of
social conventions, he possessed a large heart and often went
out of his way to support idle relatives, some of whom
were given to drunkenness. Once, when Narendra
protested against his lack of judgement, his father said: 'How
can you understand the great misery of human life? When
you realize the depths of men's suffering, you will
sympathize with these unfortunate creatures who try to forget
their sorrows, even though only for a short while, in the
oblivion created by intoxicants.' Naren's father, however, kept
a sharp eye on his children and would not tolerate
the slightest deviation from good manners.
Bhuvaneswari Devi, the mother, was cast in a
different mould. Regal in appearance and gracious in conduct, she
belonged to the old tradition of Hindu womanhood.
As mistress of a large household, she devoted her spare
time to sewing and singing, being particularly fond of the
great Indian epics, the Ramayana and the
Mahabharata, large portions of which she had
memorized. She became
the special refuge of the poor, and commanded
universal respect because of her calm resignation to God, her
inner tranquillity, and her dignified detachment in the midst
of her many arduous duties. Two sons were born to
her besides Narendranath, and four daughters, two of
whom died at an early age.
Narendra grew up to be a sweet, sunny-tempered,
but very restless boy. Two nurses were necessary to keep
his exuberant energy under control, and he was a great
tease to his sisters. In order to quiet him, the mother often
put his head under the cold-water tap, repeating Siva's
name, which always produced the desired effect. Naren felt
a child's love for birds and animals, and this
characteristic reappeared during the last days of his life. Among his
boyhood pets were a family cow, a monkey, a goat, a
peacock, and several pigeons and guinea-pigs. The coachman of
the family, with his turban, whip, and bright-coloured
livery, was his boyhood ideal of a magnificent person, and he
often expressed the ambition to be like him when he grew up.
Narendra bore a striking resemblance to the
grand-father who had renounced the world to lead a
monastic life, and many thought that the latter had been reborn
in him. The youngster developed a special fancy
for wandering monks, whose very sight would greatly
excite him. One day when such a monk appeared at the door
and asked for alms, Narendra gave him his only possession,
the tiny piece of new cloth that was wrapped round
his waist. Thereafter, whenever a monk was seen in
the neighbourhood, Narendra would be locked in a room.
But even then he would throw out of the window whatever
he found near at hand as an offering to the holy man. In
the meantime, he was receiving his early education from
his mother, who taught him the Bengali alphabet and his
first English words, as well as stories from the
Ramayana and the Mahabharata.
During his childhood Narendra, like many
other Hindu children of his age, developed a love for the
Hindu deities, of whom he had learnt from his mother.
Particularly attracted by the heroic story of Rama and his
faithful consort Sita, he procured their images, bedecked them
with flowers, and worshipped them in his boyish fashion.
But disillusionment came when he heard someone
denounce marriage vehemently as a terrible bondage. When he
had thought this over he discarded Rama and Sita as
unworthy of worship. In their place he installed the image of
Siva, the god of renunciation, who was the ideal of the
yogis. Nevertheless he retained a fondness for the
Ramayana.
At this time he daily experienced a strange
vision when he was about to fall asleep. Closing his eyes, he
would see between his eyebrows a ball of light of changing
colours, which would slowly expand and at last burst, bathing
his whole body in a white radiance. Watching this light
he would gradually fall asleep. Since it was a daily
occurrence, he regarded the phenomenon as common to all people,
and was surprised when a friend denied ever having seen
such a thing. Years later, however, Narendra's spiritual
teacher, Sri Ramakrishna, said to him, 'Naren, my boy, do you see
a light when you go to sleep?' Ramakrishna knew that
such a vision indicated a great spiritual past and an inborn
habit of meditation. The vision of light remained with
Narendra until the end of his life, though later it lost its
regularity and intensity.
While still a child Narendra practised meditation
with a friend before the image of Siva. He had heard that
the holy men of ancient India would become so absorbed
in contemplation of God that their hair would grow
and gradually enter into the earth, like the roots of the
banyan tree. While meditating, therefore, he would open his
eyes, now and then, to see if his own hair had entered into
the earth. Even so, during meditation, he often
became unconscious of the world. On one occasion he saw in
a vision a luminous person of serene countenance who
was carrying the staff and water-bowl of a monk. The
apparition was about to say something when Naren became
frightened and left the room. He thought later that perhaps this
had been a vision of Buddha.
At the age of six he was sent to a primary school.
One day, however, he repeated at home some of the
vulgar words that he had learnt from his classmates,
whereupon his disgusted parents took him out of the school
and appointed a private tutor, who conducted classes for
him and some other children of the neighbourhood in
the worship hall of the house. Naren soon showed a
precocious mind and developed a keen memory. Very easily he
learnt by heart the whole of a Sanskrit grammar and
long passages from the Ramayana and the
Mahabharata. Some of the friendships he made at this
age lasted his whole
lifetime. At school he was the undisputed leader. When playing his
favourite game of 'King and the Court,' he would
assume the role of the monarch and assign to his friends the
parts of the ministers, commander-in-chief, and other
state officials. He was marked from birth to be a leader of
men, as his name Narendra (lord of men) signified.
Even at that early age he questioned why one
human being should be considered superior to another. In
his father's office separate tobacco pipes were provided
for clients belonging to the different castes, as orthodox
Hindu custom required, and the pipe from which the
Moslems smoked was set quite apart. Narendra once smoked
tobacco from all the pipes, including the one marked for
the Moslems, and when reprimanded, remarked, 'I cannot
see what difference it makes.'
During these early years, Narendra's future
personality was influenced by his gifted father and his
saintly mother, both of whom kept a chastening eye upon
him. The father had his own manner of discipline. For
example, when, in the course of an argument with his mother,
the impetuous boy once uttered a few rude words and
the report came to the father, Viswanath did not directly
scold his son, but wrote with charcoal on the door of his
room: 'Narendra today said to his mother β ' and added the
words that had been used. He wanted Narendra's friends to
know how rudely he had treated his mother.
Another time Narendra bluntly asked his father,
'What have you done for me?'
Instead of being annoyed, Viswanath said, 'Go
and look at yourself in the mirror, and then you will know.'
Still another day, Narendra said to his father,
'How shall I conduct myself in the world?'
'Never show surprise at anything,' his father replied.
This priceless advice enabled Narendranath, in
his future chequered life, to preserve his serenity of
mind whether dwelling with princes in their palaces or
sharing the straw huts of beggars.
The mother, Bhuvaneswari, played her part
in bringing out Narendranath's innate virtues. When he
told her, one day, of having been unjustly treated in school,
she said to him, in consolation: 'My child, what does it
matter, if you are in the right? Always follow the truth
without caring about the result. Very often you may have to
suffer injustice or unpleasant consequences for holding to
the truth; but you must not, under any circumstances,
abandon it.' Many years later Narendranath proudly said to
an audience, 'I am indebted to my mother for
whatever knowledge I have acquired.'
One day, when he was fighting with his
play-fellows, Narendra accidentally fell from the porch and struck
his forehead against a stone. The wound bled profusely
and left a permanent scar over his right eye. Years later,
when Ramakrishna heard of this accident, he remarked: 'In a
way it was a good thing. If he had not thus lost some of
his blood, he would have created havoc in the world with
his excessive energy.'
In 1871, at the age of eight, Narendra entered
high school. His exceptional intelligence was soon
recognized by his teachers and classmates. Though at first reluctant
to study English because of its foreign origin, he soon took
it up with avidity. But the curriculum consumed very
little of his time. He used most of his inexhaustible energy
in outside activities. Games of various kinds, many of which
he invented or improvised kept him occupied. He
made an imitation gas-works and a factory for aerating
water, these two novelties having just been introduced in
Calcutta. He organized an amateur theatrical company and a
gymnasium, and took lessons in fencing, wrestling, rowing,
and other manly sports. He also tried his hand at the art
of cooking. Intensely restless, he would soon tire of
one pastime and seek a new one. With his friends he
visited the museum and the zoological garden. He arbitrated
the disputes of his play-fellows and was a favourite with
the people of the neighbourhood. Everybody admired
his courage, straight-forwardness, and simplicity.
From an early age this remarkable youth had
no patience with fear or superstition. One of his boyish
pranks had been to climb a flowering tree belonging to a
neighbour, pluck the flowers, and do other mischief. The owner of
the tree, finding his remonstrances unheeded, once
solemnly told Naren's friends that the tree was guarded by a
white-robed ghost who would certainly wring their necks if
they disturbed his peace. The boys were frightened and
kept away. But Narendra persuaded them to follow him
back, and he climbed the tree, enjoying his usual measure of
fun, and broke some branches by way of further
mischief. Turning to his friends, he then said: 'What asses you
all are! See, my neck is still there. The old man's story is
simply not true. Don't believe what others say unless you
your-selves know it to be true.'
These simple but bold words were an indication
of his future message to the world. Addressing
large audiences in the later years, he would often say: 'Do
not believe in a thing because you have read about it in a book.
Do not believe in a thing because another man has said
it was true. Do not believe in words because they
are hallowed by tradition. Find out the truth for
yourself. Reason it out. That is realization.'
The following incident illustrates his courage
and presence of mind. He one day wished to set up a
heavy trapeze in the gymnasium, and so asked the help of
some people who were there. Among them was an English
sailor. The trapeze fell and knocked the sailor unconscious,
and the crowd, thinking him dead, ran away for fear of
the police. But Naren tore a piece from his cloth, bandaged
the sailor's wound, washed his face with water, and
gradually revived him. Then he moved the wounded man to
a neighbouring schoolhouse where he nursed him for a
week. When the sailor had recovered, Naren sent him away
with a little purse collected from his friends.
All through this period of boyish play
Narendra retained his admiration for the life of the wandering
monk. Pointing to a certain line on the palm of his hand, he
would say to his friends: 'I shall certainly become a sannyasin.
A palmist has predicted it.'
As Narendra grew into adolescence, his
temperament showed a marked change. He became keen
about intellectual matters, read serious books on history
and literature, devoured newspapers, and attended
public meetings. Music was his favourite pastime. He insisted
that it should express a lofty idea and arouse the feelings of
the musician.
At the age of fifteen he experienced his first
spiritual ecstasy. The family was journeying to Raipur in the
Central Provinces, and part of the trip had to be made in a bullock
cart. On that particular day the air was crisp and clear;
the trees and creepers were covered with green leaves
and many-coloured blossoms; birds of brilliant
plumage warbled in the woods. The cart was moving along a
narrow pass where the lofty peaks rising on the two sides
almost touched each other. Narendra's eyes spied a large
bee-hive in the cleft of a giant cliff, and suddenly his mind was
filled with awe and reverence for the Divine Providence. He
lost outer consciousness and lay thus in the cart for a long
time. Even after returning to the sense-perceived world
he radiated joy.
Another interesting mental phenomenon may
be mentioned here; for it was one often experienced
by Narendranath. From boyhood, on first beholding
certain people or places, he would feel that he had known
them before; but how long before he could never remember.
One day he and some of his companions were in a room in
a friend's house, where they were discussing various
topics. Something was mentioned, and Narendra felt at once
that he had on a previous occasion talked about the same
subject with the selfsame friends in that very house. He
even correctly described every nook and corner of the
building, which he had not seen before. He tried at first to
explain this singular phenomenon by the doctrine of
reincarnation, thinking that perhaps he had lived in that house in
a previous life. But he dismissed the idea as
improbable. Later he concluded that before his birth he must have
had previsions of the people, places, and events that he was
to experience in his present incarnation; that was why,
he thought, he could recognize them as soon as they
presented themselves to him.
At Raipur Narendra was encouraged by his father
to meet notable scholars and discuss with them
various intellectual topics usually considered too abstruse for
boys of his age. On such occasions he exhibited great
mental power. From his father, Narendra had learnt the art
of grasping the essentials of things, seeing truth from
the widest and most comprehensive standpoints, and
holding to the real issue under discussion.
In 1879 the family returned to Calcutta, and
Narendra within a short time graduated from high school in the
first division. In the meantime he had read a great
many standard books of English and Bengali literature.
History was his favourite subject. He also acquired at this time
an unusual method of reading a book and acquiring
the knowledge of its subject-matter. To quote his own
words: 'I could understand an author without reading every
line of his book. I would read the first and last lines of
a paragraph and grasp its meaning. Later I found that I
could understand the subject-matter by reading only the first
and last lines of a page. Afterwards I could follow the
whole trend of a writer's argument by merely reading a few
lines, though the author himself tried to explain the subject
in five or more pages.'
Soon the excitement of his boyhood days was
over, and in 1879 Narendranath entered the Presidency
College of Calcutta for higher studies. After a year he joined
the General Assembly's Institution, founded by the
Scottish General Missionary Board and later known as the
Scottish Church College. It was from Hastie, the principal of
the college and the professor of English literature, that he
first heard the name Sri Ramakrishna.
In college Narendra, now a handsome
youth, muscular and agile, though slightly inclined to
stoutness, enjoyed serious studies. During the first two years he
studied Western logic. Thereafter he specialized in
Western philosophy and the ancient and modern history of
the different European nations. His memory was
prodigious. It took him only three days to assimilate Green's
History of the English People. Often, on the eve of
an examination,
he would read the whole night, keeping awake by
drinking strong tea or coffee.
About this time he came in contact with Sri
Ramakrishna; this event, as we shall presently see, was to
become the major turning-point of his life. As a result of
his association with Sri Ramakrishna, his innate
spiritual yearning was stirred up, and he began to feel
the transitoriness of the world and the futility of
academic education. The day before his B.A. examination,
he suddenly felt an all-consuming love for God and,
standing before the room of a college-mate, was heard to
sing with great feeling:
Sing ye, O mountains, O clouds, O great winds!
Sing ye, sing ye, sing His glory!
Sing with joy, all ye suns and moons and stars!
Sing ye, sing ye, His glory!
The friends, surprised, reminded him of the next
day's examination, but Narendra was unconcerned; the
shadow of the approaching monastic life was fast falling on
him. He appeared for the examination, however, and
easily passed.
About Narendra's scholarship, Professor Hastie
once remarked: 'Narendra is a real genius. I have travelled
far and wide, but have not yet come across a lad of his
talents and possibilities even among the philosophical
students in the German universities. He is bound to make his
mark in life.'
Narendra's many-sided genius found its
expression in music, as well. He studied both instrumental and
vocal music under expert teachers. He could play on
many instruments, but excelled in singing. From a
Moslem teacher he learnt Hindi, Urdu, and Persian songs, most
of them of devotional nature.
He also became associated with the Brahmo
Samaj, an important religious movement of the time,
which influenced him during this formative period of his life.
The introduction of English education in
India following the British conquest of the country
brought Hindu society in contact with the intellectual
and aggressive European culture. The Hindu youths who
came under the spell of the new, dynamic way of life
realized the many shortcomings of their own society. Under
the Moslem rule, even before the coming of the British,
the dynamic aspect of the Hindu culture had been
suppressed and the caste-system stratified. The priests controlled
the religious life of the people for their own selfish
interest. Meaningless dogmas and lifeless ceremonies
supplanted the invigorating philosophical teachings of the
Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita. The masses were
exploited, moreover, by the landlords, and the lot of women
was especially pitiable. Following the break-down of
the Moslem rule, chaos reigned in every field of Indian life,
social, political, religious, and economic. The
newly introduced English education brought into sharp focus
the many drawbacks of society, and various reform
movements, both liberal and orthodox, were initiated to
make the national life flow once more through healthy channels.
The Brahmo Samaj, one of these liberal
movements, captured the imagination of the educated youths of
Bengal. Raja Rammohan Roy (1774-1833), the founder of
this religious organization, broke away from the rituals,
image worship, and priestcraft of orthodox Hinduism
and exhorted his followers to dedicate themselves to
the 'worship and adoration of the Eternal, the
Unsearchable, the Immutable Being, who is the Author and the
Preserver of the universe.' The Raja, endowed with a
gigantic intellect, studied the Hindu, Moslem, Christian,
and Buddhist scriptures and was the first Indian to realize
the importance of the Western rational method for solving
the diverse problems of Hindu society. He took a
prominent part in the introduction of English education in
India, which, though it at first produced a deleterious effect
on the newly awakened Hindu consciousness, ultimately
revealed to a few Indians the glorious heritage of their
own indigenous civilization.
Among the prominent leaders of the Brahmo
Samaj who succeeded Rammohan Roy were Devendranath Tagore (1817-1905),
a
great devotee of the Upanishads,
and Keshab Chandra Sen (1838-1884), who was inclined to
the rituals and doctrines of Christianity. The Brahmo
Samaj, under their leadership, discarded many of the
conventions of Hinduism such as rituals and the worship of
God through images. Primarily a reformist movement, it
directed its main energy to the emancipation of
women, the remarriage of Hindu widows, the abolition of
early marriage, and the spread of mass education.
Influenced by Western culture, the Brahmo Samaj upheld
the supremacy of reason, preached against the
uncritical acceptance of scriptural authority, and strongly
supported the slogans of the French Revolution. The whole
movement was intellectual and eclectic in character, born of
the necessity of the times; unlike traditional Hinduism, it
had no root in the spiritual experiences of saints and
seers. Narendra, like many other contemporary young men,
felt the appeal of its progressive ideas and became one of
its members. But, as will be presently seen, the Brahmo
Samaj could not satisfy the deep spiritual yearning of his soul.
About this time Narendra was urged by his father
to marry, and an opportunity soon presented itself. A
wealthy man, whose daughter Narendra was asked to accept as
his bride, offered to defray his expenses for higher studies
in England so that he might qualify himself for the
much coveted Indian Civil Service. Narendra refused.
Other proposals of similar nature produced no different
result. Apparently it was not his destiny to lead a
householder's life.
From boyhood Narendra had shown a passion
for purity. Whenever his warm and youthful nature
tempted him to walk into a questionable adventure, he was
held back by an unseen hand. His mother had taught him
the value of chastity and had made him observe it as a
matter of honour, in loyalty to herself and the family
tradition. But purity to Narendra was not a negative virtue, a
mere abstention from carnal pleasures. To be pure, he felt, was
to conserve an intense spiritual force that would
later manifest itself in all the noble aspirations of life.
He regarded himself as a brahmacharin, a celibate student
of the Hindu tradition, who worked hard, prized
ascetic disciplines, held holy things in reverence, and enjoyed
clean words, thoughts, and acts. For according to the
Hindu scriptures, a man, by means of purity, which is the
greatest of all virtues, can experience the subtlest
spiritual perceptions. In Naren it accounts for the great power
of concentration, memory, and insight, and for his
indomitable mental energy and physical stamina.
In his youth Narendra used to see every night
two visions, utterly dissimilar in nature, before falling
asleep. One was that of a worldly man with an accomplished
wife and children, enjoying wealth, luxuries, fame, and
social position; the other, that of a sannyasin, a wandering
monk, bereft of earthly security and devoted to the
contemplation of God. Narendra felt that he had the power to realize
either of these ideals; but when his mind reflected on
their respective virtues, he was inevitably drawn to the life
of renunciation. The glamour of the world would fade and
disappear. His deeper self instinctively chose the austere path.
For a time the congregational prayers and
the devotional songs of the Brahmo Samaj
exhilarated Narendra's mind, but soon he found that they did not
give him any real spiritual experience. He wanted to realize
God, the goal of religion, and so felt the imperative need of
being instructed by a man who had seen God.
In his eagerness he went to Devendranath,
the venerable leader of the Brahmo Samaj, and asked him,
even before the latter had uttered a word, 'Sir, have you seen
God?'
Devendranath was embarrassed and replied: 'My
boy, you have the eyes of a yogi. You should practise
meditation.'
The youth was disappointed and felt that this
teacher was not the man to help him in his spiritual struggle. But
he received no better answer from the leaders of other
religious sects. Then he remembered having heard the name
of Ramakrishna Paramahamsa from Professor Hastie,
who while lecturing his class on Wordsworth's poem
The Excursion, had spoken of trances, remarking that
such religious ecstasies were the result of purity and
concentration. He had said, further, that an exalted experience of
this kind was a rare phenomenon, especially in modern times.
'I have known,' he had said, 'only one person who has
realized that blessed state, and he is Ramakrishna of
Dakshineswar. You will understand trances if you visit the saint.'
Narendra had also heard about Sri Ramakrishna
from a relative, Ramchandra Datta, who was one of the
foremost householder disciples of the Master. Learning
of Narendra's unwillingness to marry and ascribing it to
his desire to lead a spiritual life, Ramchandra had said to
him, 'If you really want to cultivate spirituality, then
visit Ramakrishna at Dakshineswar.'
Narendra met Ramakrishna for the first time
in November 1881 at the house of the Master's
devotee Surendranath Mitra, the young man having been
invited there to entertain the visitors with his melodious
music. The Paramahamsa was much impressed by his
sincerity and devotion, and after a few inquiries asked him to
visit him at Dakshineswar. Narendra accepted. He wished
to learn if Ramakrishna was the man to help him in
his spiritual quest.
Ramakrishna, the God-man of modern times,
was born on February 18, 1836, in the little village
of Kamarpukur, in the district of Hooghly in Bengal.
How different were his upbringing and the environment of
his boyhood from those of Narendranath, who was to
become, later, the bearer and interpreter of his message!
Ramakrishna's parents, belonging to the brahmin caste,
were poor, pious, and devoted to the traditions of their
ancient religion. Full of fun and innocent joys, the fair child,
with flowing hair and a sweet, musical voice, grew up in a
simple countryside of rice-fields, cows, and banyan and
mango trees. He was apathetic about his studies and
remained practically illiterate all his life, but his innate
spiritual tendencies found expression through devotional songs
and the company of wandering monks, who fired his
boyish imagination by the stories of their spiritual adventures.
At the age of six he experienced a spiritual ecstasy
while watching a flight of snow-white cranes against a black
sky overcast with rain-clouds. He began to go into trances
as he meditated on gods and goddesses. His father's
death, which left the family in straitened circumstances,
deepened his spiritual mood. And so, though at the age of sixteen
he joined his brother in Calcutta, he refused to go on
there with his studies; for, as he remarked, he was simply
not interested in an education whose sole purpose was to earn
mere bread and butter. He felt a deep longing for
the realization of God.
The floodgate of Ramakrishna's emotion burst
all bounds when he took up the duties of a priest in the
Kali temple of Dakshineswar, where the Deity was
worshipped as the Divine Mother. Ignorant of the scriptures and of
the intricacies of ritual, Ramakrishna poured his whole
soul into prayer, which often took the form of devotional
songs. Food, sleep, and other physical needs were
completely forgotten in an all-consuming passion for the vision of
God. His nights were spent in contemplation in the
neighbouring woods. Doubt sometimes alternated with hope; but
an inner certainty and the testimony of the illumined
saints sustained him in his darkest hours of despair.
Formal worship or the mere sight of the image did not satisfy
his inquiring mind; for he felt that a figure of stone could
not be the bestower of peace and immortality. Behind the
image there must be the real Spirit, which he was determined
to behold. This was not an easy task. For a long time the
Spirit played with him a teasing game of hide-and-seek, but
at last it yielded to the demand of love on the part of the
young devotee. When he felt the direct presence of the
Divine Mother, Ramakrishna dropped unconscious to the
floor, experiencing within himself a constant flow of bliss.
This foretaste of what was to follow made him
God-intoxicated, and whetted his appetite for further
experience. He wished to see God uninterruptedly, with eyes
open as well as closed. He therefore abandoned
himself recklessly to the practice of various extreme
spiritual disciplines. To remove from his mind the least trace of
the arrogance of his high brahmin caste, he used to clean
stealthily the latrine at a pariah's house. Through a
stern process of discrimination he effaced all sense of
distinction between gold and clay. Purity became the very
breath of his nostrils, and he could not regard a woman, even in
a dream, in any other way except as his own mother or
the Mother of the universe. For years his eyelids did not
touch each other in sleep. And he was finally thought to be insane.
Indeed, the stress of his spiritual practice soon
told upon Ramakrishna's delicate body and he returned
to Kamarpukur to recover his health. His relatives and
old friends saw a marked change in his nature; for the gay
boy had been transformed into a contemplative young
man whose vision was directed to something on a
distant horizon. His mother proposed marriage, and finding in
this the will of the Divine Mother, Ramakrishna consented.
He even indicated where the girl was to be found, namely,
in the village of Jayrambati, only three miles away. Here
lived the little Saradamani, a girl of five, who was in
many respects very different from the other girls of her age.
The child would pray to God to make her character as
fragrant as the tuberose. Later, at Dakshineswar, she prayed to
God to make her purer than the full moon, which, pure as
it was, showed a few dark spots. The marriage was
celebrated and Ramakrishna, participating, regarded the whole
affair as fun or a new excitement.
In a short while he came back to Dakshineswar
and plunged again into the stormy life of religious
experimentation. His mother, his newly married wife, and his
relatives were forgotten. Now, however, his spiritual disciplines
took a new course. He wanted to follow the time-honoured
paths of the Hindu religion under the guidance of competent
teachers, and they came to him one by one, nobody
knew from where. One was a woman, under whom he
practised the disciplines of Tantra and of the Vaishnava faith
and achieved the highest result in an incredibly short time.
It was she who diagnosed his physical malady as
the manifestation of deep spiritual emotions and described
his apparent insanity as the result of an agonizing love for
God; he was immediately relieved. It was she, moreover,
who first declared him to be an Incarnation of God, and
she proved her statement before an assembly of
theologians by scriptural evidence. Under another teacher, the
monk Jatadhari, Ramakrishna delved into the mysteries of
Rama worship and experienced Rama's visible presence.
Further, he communed with God through the divine
relationships of Father, Mother, Friend, and Beloved. By an
austere sannyasin named Totapuri, he was initiated into
the monastic life, and in three days he realized his
complete oneness with Brahman, the undifferentiated
Absolute, which is the culmination of man's spiritual
endeavour. Totapuri himself had had to struggle for forty years
to realize this identity.
Ramakrishna turned next to Christianity and
Islam, to practise their respective disciplines, and he attained
the same result that he had attained through Hinduism.
He was thereby convinced that these, too, were ways to
the realization of God-consciousness. Finally, he
worshipped his own wife β who in the meantime had grown into
a young woman of nineteen β as the manifestation of
the Divine Mother of the universe and surrendered at her
feet the fruit of his past spiritual practices. After this he
left behind all his disciplines and struggles. For according to
Hindu tradition, when the normal relationship
between husband and wife, which is the strongest foundation
of the worldly life, has been transcended and a man sees
in his wife the divine presence, he then sees God
everywhere in the universe. This is the culmination of the spiritual
life.
Ramakrishna himself was now convinced of his
divine mission on earth and came to know that through him
the Divine Mother would found a new religious
order comprising those who would accept the doctrine of
the Universal Religion which he had experienced. It
was further revealed to him that anyone who had prayed
to God sincerely, even once, as well as those who were
passing through their final birth on earth, would accept him as
their spiritual ideal and mould their lives according to
his universal teaching.
The people around him were bewildered to see
this transformation of a man whom they had ridiculed only
a short while ago as insane. The young priest had
become God's devotee; the devotee, an ascetic; the ascetic, a
saint; the saint, a man of realization; and the man of
realization, a new Prophet. Like the full-blown blossom attracting
bees, Ramakrishna drew to him men and women of
differing faith, intelligence, and social position. He gave
generously to all from the inexhaustible store house of divine
wisdom, and everyone felt uplifted in his presence. But the
Master himself was not completely satisfied. He longed for
young souls yet untouched by the world, who would
renounce everything for the realization of God and the service
of humanity. He was literally consumed with this
longing. The talk of worldly people was tasteless to him. He
often compared such people to mixture of milk and water with
the latter preponderating, and said that he had
become weary of trying to prepare thick milk from the
mixture. Evenings, when his anguish reached its limit, he
would climb the roof of a building near the temple and cry at
the top of his voice: 'Come, my boys! Oh, where are you all?
I cannot bear to live without you!' A mother could not
feel more intensely for her beloved children, a friend for
his dearest friend, or a lover for her sweetheart.
Shortly thereafter the young men destined to be
his monastic disciples began to arrive. And foremost
among them was Narendranath.
The first meeting at Dakshineswar between the
Master and Narendra was momentous. Sri Ramakrishna
recognized instantaneously his future messenger.
Narendra, careless about his clothes and general appearance, was
so unlike the other young men who had accompanied him
to the temple. His eyes were impressive, partly
indrawn, indicating a meditative mood. He sang a few songs,
and as usual poured into them his whole soul.
His first song was this:
Let us go back once more,
O mind, to our proper home!
Here in this foreign land of earth
Why should we wander aimlessly in stranger's guise?
These living beings round about,
And the five elements,
Are strangers to you, all of them; none are your own.
Why do you so forget yourself,
In love with strangers, foolish mind?
Why do you so forget your own?
Mount the path of truth,
O mind! Unflaggingly climb,
With love as the lamp to light your way.
As your provision on the journey, take with you
The virtues, hidden carefully;
For, like two highwaymen,
Greed and delusion wait to rob you of your wealth.
And keep beside you constantly,
As guards to shelter you from harm,
Calmness of mind and self-control.
Companionship with holy men will be for you
A welcome rest-house by the road;
There rest your weary limbs awhile, asking your way,
If ever you should be in doubt,
Of him who watches there.
If anything along the path should cause you fear,
Then loudly shout the name of God;
For He is ruler of that road,
And even Death must bow to Him.
Ramakrishna loved Narendranath because he saw
him as the embodiment of Narayana, the Divine
Spirit, undefiled by the foul breath of the world. But he
was criticized for his attachment. Once a trouble-maker
of twisted mind named Hazra, who lived with the Master
at Dakshineswar, said to him, 'If you long for Naren and
the other youngsters all the time, when will you think of
God?' The Master was distressed by this thought. But it was
at once revealed to him that though God dwelt in all
beings, He was especially manifest in a pure soul like
Naren. Relieved of his worries, he then said: 'Oh, what a fool
Hazra is! How he unsettled my mind! But why blame the
poor fellow? How could he know?'
Sri Ramakrishna was outspoken in Narendra's
praise. This often embarrassed the young disciple, who
would criticize the Master for what he termed a sort of
infatuation. One day Ramakrishna spoke highly of Keshab Sen and
the saintly Vijay Goswami, the two outstanding leaders of
the Brahmo Samaj. Then he added: 'If Keshab possesses
one virtue which has made him world-famous, Naren
is endowed with eighteen such virtues. I have seen in
Keshab and Vijay the divine light burning like a candle flame,
but in Naren it shines with the radiance of the sun.'
Narendra, instead of feeling flattered by these
compliments, became annoyed and sharply rebuked the Master
for what he regarded as his foolhardiness. 'I cannot help it,'
the Master protested. 'Do you think these are my words?
The Divine Mother showed me certain things about you, which
I repeated. And She reveals to me nothing but the truth.'
But Naren was hardly convinced. He was sure
that these so-called revelations were pure illusions. He carefully
explained to Sri Ramakrishna that, from the viewpoint
of Western science and philosophy, very often a man
was deceived by his mind, and that the chances of
deception were greater when a personal attachment was
involved. He said to the Master, 'Since you love me and wish to
see me great, these fancies naturally come to your mind.'
The Master was perplexed. He prayed to the
Divine Mother for light and was told: 'Why do you care
about what he says? In a short time he will accept your
every word as true.'
On another occasion, when the Master was
similarly reprimanded by the disciple, he was reassured by
the Divine Mother. Thereupon he said to Naren with a
smile: 'You are a rogue. I won't listen to you any more.
Mother says that I love you because I see the Lord in you. The
day I shall not see Him in you, I shall not be able to bear
even the sight of you.'
On account of his preoccupation with his studies,
or for other reasons, Narendra could not come to
Dakshineswar as often as Sri Ramakrishna wished. But the
Master could hardly endure his prolonged absence. If the
disciple had not visited him for a number of days, he would
send someone to Calcutta to fetch him. Sometimes he went
to Calcutta himself. One time, for example,
Narendra remained away from Dakshineswar for several weeks;
even the Master's eager importunities failed to bring him.
Sri Ramakrishna knew that he sang regularly at the
prayer meetings of the Brahmo Samaj, and so one day he
made his way to the Brahmo temple that the disciple
attended. Narendra was singing in the choir as the Master
entered the hall, and when he heard Narendra's voice, Sri
Ramakrishna fell into a deep ecstasy. The eyes of
the congregation turned to him, and soon a commotion
followed. Narendra hurried to his side. One of the
Brahmo leaders, in order to stop the excitement, put out the
lights. The young disciple, realizing that the Master's
sudden appearance was the cause of the disturbance, sharply
took him to task. The latter answered, with tears in his
eyes, that he had simply not been able to keep himself away
from Narendra.
On another occasion, Sri Ramakrishna, unable to
bear Narendra's absence, went to Calcutta to visit the
disciple at his own home. He was told that Naren was studying
in an attic in the second floor that could be reached only by
a steep staircase. His nephew Ramlal, who was a sort
of caretaker of the Master, had accompanied him, and
with his help Sri Ramakrishna climbed a few steps.
Narendra appeared at the head of the stair, and at the very sight
of him Sri Ramakrishna exclaimed, 'Naren, my beloved!'
and went into ecstasy. With considerable difficulty Naren
and Ramlal helped him to finish climbing the steps, and as
he entered the room the Master fell into deep samadhi. A
fellow student who was with Naren at the time and did
not know anything of religious trances, asked Naren
in bewilderment, 'Who is this man?'
'Never mind,' replied Naren. 'You had better go
home now.'
Naren often said that the 'Old Man,'
meaning Ramakrishna, bound the disciple for ever to him by
his love. 'What do worldly men,' he remarked, 'know
about love? They only make a show of it. The Master alone
loves us genuinely.' Naren, in return, bore a deep love for Sri
Ramakrishna, though he seldom expressed it in words.
He took delight in criticizing the Master's spiritual
experiences as evidences of a lack of self-control. He made fun of
his worship of Kali.
'Why do you come here,' Sri Ramakrishna once
asked him, 'if you do not accept Kali, my Mother?'
'Bah! Must I accept Her,' Naren retorted,
'simply because I come to see you? I come to you because I
love you.'
'All right,' said the Master, 'ere long you will not
only accept my blessed Mother, but weep in Her name.'
Turning to his other disciples, he said: 'This boy
has no faith in the forms of God and tells me that my
visions are pure imagination. But he is a fine lad of pure mind.
He does not accept anything without direct evidence. He
has studied much and cultivated great discrimination. He
has fine judgement.'
It is hard to say when Naren actually accepted
Sri Ramakrishna as his guru. As far as the master
was concerned, the spiritual relationship was established at
the first meeting at Dakshineswar, when he had
touched Naren, stirring him to his inner depths. From that
moment he had implicit faith in the disciple and bore him a
great love. But he encouraged Naren in the independence of
his thinking. The love and faith of the Master acted as
a restraint upon the impetuous youth and became his
strong shield against the temptations of the world. By
gradual steps the disciple was then led from doubt to certainty,
and from anguish of mind to the bliss of the Spirit.
This, however, was not an easy attainment.
Sri Ramakrishna, perfect teacher that he was,
never laid down identical disciplines for disciples of
diverse temperaments. He did not insist that Narendra
should follow strict rules about food, nor did he ask him to
believe in the reality of the gods and goddesses of
Hindu mythology. It was not necessary for Narendra's
philosophic mind to pursue the disciplines of concrete worship. But
a strict eye was kept on Naren's practice of
discrimination, detachment, self-control, and regular meditation.
Sri Ramakrishna enjoyed Naren's vehement arguments
with the other devotees regarding the dogmas and creeds
of religion and was delighted to hear him tear to shreds their
unquestioning beliefs. But when, as often happened,
Naren teased the gentle Rakhal for showing reverence to
the Divine Mother Kali, the Master would not tolerate
these attempts to unsettle the brother disciple's faith in the
forms of God.
As a member of the Brahmo Samaj, Narendra
accepted its doctrine of monotheism and the Personal God. He
also believed in the natural depravity of man. Such
doctrines of non-dualistic Vedanta as the divinity of the soul and
the oneness of existence he regarded as blasphemy; the
view that man is one with God appeared to him pure
nonsense. When the master warned him against thus limiting
God's infinitude and asked him to pray to God to reveal to
him His true nature, Narendra smiled. One day he was
making fun of Sri Ramakrishna's non-dualism before a friend
and said, 'What can be more absurd than to say that this jug
is God, this cup is God, and that we too are God?' Both
roared with laughter.
Just then the Master appeared. Coming to learn
the cause of their fun, he gently touched Naren and
plunged into deep samadhi. The touch produced a magic effect,
and Narendra entered a new realm of consciousness. He
saw the whole universe permeated by the Divine Spirit
and returned home in a daze. While eating his meal, he felt
the presence of Brahman in everything β in the food, and
in himself too. While walking in the street, he saw
the carriages, the horses, the crowd, and himself as if made
of the same substance. After a few days the intensity of
the vision lessened to some extent, but still he could see
the world only as a dream. While strolling in a public park
of Calcutta, he struck his head against the iron railing, several
times, to see if they were real or a mere illusion of the
mind. Thus he got a glimpse of non-dualism, the fullest
realization of which was to come only later, at the Cossipore garden.
Sri Ramakrishna was always pleased when
his disciples put to the test his statements or behaviour
before accepting his teachings. He would say: 'Test me as
the money-changers test their coins. You must not believe
me without testing me thoroughly.' The disciples often
heard him say that his nervous system had undergone a
complete change as a result of his spiritual experiences, and that
he could not bear the touch of any metal, such as gold or
silver. One day, during his absence in Calcutta, Narendra hid
a coin under Ramakrishna's bed. After his return when
the Master sat on the bed, he started up in pain as if stung
by an insect. The mattress was examined and the hidden
coin was found.
Naren, on the other hand, was often tested by
the Master. One day, when he entered the Master's room,
he was completely ignored. Not a word of greeting
was uttered. A week later he came back and met with the
same indifference, and during the third and fourth visits saw
no evidence of any thawing of the Master's frigid attitude.
At the end of a month Sri Ramakrishna said to
Naren, 'I have not exchanged a single word with you all this
time, and still you come.'
The disciple replied: 'I come to Dakshineswar
because I love you and want to see you. I do not come here to
hear your words.'
The Master was overjoyed. Embracing the
disciple, he said: 'I was only testing you. I wanted to see if you
would stay away on account of my outward indifference. Only a
man of your inner strength could put up with
such indifference on my part. Anyone else would have left
me long ago.'
On one occasion Sri Ramakrishna proposed to
transfer to Narendranath many of the spiritual powers that he
had acquired as a result of his ascetic disciplines and visions
of God. Naren had no doubt concerning the Master's possessing such
powers. He asked if they would help
him to realize God. Sri Ramakrishna replied in the negative
but added that they might assist him in his future work as
a spiritual teacher. 'Let me realize God first,' said Naren,
'and then I shall perhaps know whether or not I
want supernatural powers. If I accept them now, I may
forget God, make selfish use of them, and thus come to grief.'
Sri Ramakrishna was highly pleased to see his chief
disciple's single-minded devotion.
Several factors were at work to mould the
personality of young Narendranath. Foremost of these were his
inborn spiritual tendencies, which were beginning to
show themselves under the influence of Sri Ramakrishna,
but against which his rational mind put up a strenuous
fight. Second was his habit of thinking highly and acting
nobly, disciplines acquired from a mother steeped in the
spiritual heritage of India. Third were his
broadmindedness and regard for truth wherever found, and his
sceptical attitude towards the religious beliefs and social
conventions of the Hindu society of his time. These he had
learnt from his English-educated father, and he was
strengthened in them through his own contact with Western culture.
With the introduction in India of English
education during the middle of the nineteenth century, as we have
seen, Western science, history, and philosophy were
studied in the Indian colleges and universities. The educated
Hindu youths, allured by the glamour, began to mould
their thought according to this new light, and Narendra
could not escape the influence. He developed a great respect
for the analytical scientific method and subjected many of
the Master's spiritual visions to such scrutiny. The
English poets stirred his feelings, especially Wordsworth
and Shelley, and he took a course in Western medicine
to understand the functioning of the nervous
system, particularly the brain and spinal cord, in order to find
out the secrets of Sri Ramakrishna's trances. But all this
only deepened his inner turmoil.
John Stuart Mill's Three Essays on
Religion upset his boyish theism and the easy optimism
imbibed from
the Brahmo Samaj. The presence of evil in nature and
man haunted him and he could not reconcile it at all with
the goodness of an omnipotent Creator. Hume's scepticism
and Herbert Spencer's doctrine of the Unknowable filled
his mind with a settled philosophical agnosticism. After
the wearing out of his first emotional freshness and
naivete, he was beset with a certain dryness and incapacity for
the old prayers and devotions. He was filled with an
ennui which he concealed, however, under his jovial
nature. Music, at this difficult stage of his life, rendered him
great help; for it moved him as nothing else and gave him
a glimpse of unseen realities that often brought tears to
his eyes.
Narendra did not have much patience with
humdrum reading, nor did he care to absorb knowledge from
books as much as from living communion and personal
experience. He wanted life to be kindled by life,
and thought kindled by thought. He studied Shelley under
a college friend, Brajendranath Seal, who later became
the leading Indian philosopher of his time, and deeply felt
with the poet his pantheism, impersonal love, and vision of
a glorified millennial humanity. The universe, no longer
a mere lifeless, loveless mechanism, was seen to contain
a spiritual principle of unity. Brajendranath, moreover,
tried to present him with a synthesis of the Supreme
Brahman of Vedanta, the Universal Reason of Hegel, and the
gospel of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity of the French
Revolution. By accepting as the principle of morals the
sovereignty of the Universal Reason and the negation of the
individual, Narendra achieved an intellectual victory over
scepticism and materialism, but no peace of mind.
Narendra now had to face a new difficulty. The
'ballet of bloodless categories' of Hegel and his creed of
Universal Reason required of Naren a suppression of the
yearning and susceptibility of his artistic nature and
joyous temperament, the destruction of the cravings of his
keen and acute senses, and the smothering of his free and
merry conviviality. This amounted almost to killing his own
true self. Further, he could not find in such a philosophy
any help in the struggle of a hot-blooded youth against
the cravings of the passions, which appeared to him as
impure, gross, and carnal. Some of his musical associates were
men of loose morals for whom he felt a bitter and
undisguised contempt.
Narendra therefore asked his friend Brajendra if
the latter knew the way of deliverance from the bondage
of the senses, but he was told only to rely upon Pure Reason
and to identify the self with it, and was promised
that through this he would experience an ineffable peace.
The friend was a Platonic transcendentalist and did not
have faith in what he called the artificial prop of grace, or
the mediation of a guru. But the problems and difficulties
of Narendra were very different from those of his
intellectual friend. He found that mere philosophy was
impotent in the hour of temptation and in the struggle for his
soul's deliverance. He felt the need of a hand to save, to
uplift, to protect β shakti or power outside his rational mind
that would transform his impotence into strength and
glory. He wanted a flesh-and-blood reality established in
peace and certainty, in short, a living guru, who, by
embodying perfection in the flesh, would compose the commotion
of his soul.
The leaders of the Brahmo Samaj, as well as those
of the other religious sects, had failed. It was only
Ramakrishna who spoke to him with authority, as none
had spoken before, and by his power brought peace into
the troubled soul and healed the wounds of the spirit. At
first Naren feared that the serenity that possessed him in
the presence of the Master was illusory, but his misgivings
were gradually vanquished by the calm assurance
transmitted to him by Ramakrishna out of his own experience
of Satchidananda Brahman β Existence, Knowledge, and
Bliss Absolute. (This account of the struggle
of Naren's collegiate days
summarizes an article on Swami Vivekananda by Brajendranath Seal,
published in the Life of Swami Vivekananda by the
Advaita Ashrama,
Mayavati, India.)
Narendra could not but recognize the contrast of
the Sturm und Drang of his soul with the serene
bliss in
which Sri Ramakrishna was always bathed. He begged the
Master to teach him meditation, and Sri Ramakrishna's reply
was to him a source of comfort and strength. The Master
said: 'God listens to our sincere prayer. I can swear that you
can see God and talk with Him as intensely as you see me
and talk with me. You can hear His words and feel His
touch.' Further the Master declared: 'You may not believe in
divine forms, but if you believe in an Ultimate Reality who is
the Regulator of the universe, you can pray to Him thus:
"O God, I do not know Thee. Be gracious to reveal to me
Thy real nature." He will certainly listen to you if your
prayer is sincere.'
Narendra, intensifying his meditation under
the Master's guidance, began to lose consciousness of the
body and to feel an inner peace, and this peace would
linger even after the meditation was over. Frequently he felt
the separation of the body from the soul. Strange
perceptions came to him in dreams, producing a sense of
exaltation that persisted after he awoke. The guru was
performing his task in an inscrutable manner, Narendra's
friends observed only his outer struggle; but the real
transformation was known to the teacher alone β or perhaps to
the disciple too.
In 1884, when Narendranath was preparing for
the B.A. examination, his family was struck by a calamity.
His father suddenly died, and the mother and children
were plunged into great grief. For Viswanath, a man of
generous nature, had lived beyond his means, and his
death burdened the family with a heavy debt. Creditors, like
hungry wolves, began to prowl about the door, and to
make matters worse, certain relatives brought a lawsuit for
the partition of the ancestral home. Though they lost
it, Narendra was faced, thereafter, with poverty. As the
eldest male member of the family, he had to find the
wherewithal for the feeding of seven or eight mouths and began to
hunt a job. He also attended the law classes. He went about
clad in coarse clothes, barefoot, and hungry. Often he
refused invitations for dinner from friends, remembering
his starving mother, brothers, and sisters at home. He
would skip family meals on the fictitious plea that he had
already eaten at a friend's house, so that the people at home
might receive a larger share of the scanty food. The Datta
family was proud and would not dream of soliciting help
from outsiders. With his companions Narendra was his
usual gay self. His rich friends no doubt noticed his pale
face, but they did nothing to help. Only one friend
sent occasional anonymous aid, and Narendra
remained grateful to him for life. Meanwhile, all his efforts to
find employment failed. Some friends who earned money in
a dishonest way asked him to join them, and a rich
woman sent him an immoral proposal, promising to put an end
to his financial distress. But Narendra gave to these a
blunt rebuff. Sometimes he would wonder if the world were
not the handiwork of the Devil β for how could one
account for so much suffering in God's creation?
One day, after a futile search for a job, he sat
down, weary and footsore, in the big park of Calcutta in
the shadow of the Ochterlony monument. There some
friends joined him and one of them sang a song, perhaps to
console him, describing God's abundant grace.
Bitterly Naren said: 'Will you please stop that
song? Such fancies are, no doubt, pleasing to those who are
born with silver spoons in their mouths. Yes, there was a
time when I, too, thought like that. But today these ideas
appear to me a mockery.'
The friends were bewildered.
One morning, as usual, Naren left his bed
repeating God's name, and was about to go out in search of
work after seeking divine blessings. His mother heard the
prayer and said bitterly: 'Hush, you fool! You have been
crying yourself hoarse for God since your childhood. Tell me
what has God done for you?' Evidently the crushing poverty
at home was too much for the pious mother.
These words stung Naren to the quick. A doubt
crept into his mind about God's existence and His Providence.
It was not in Naren's nature to hide his feelings.
He argued before his friends and the devotees of
Sri Ramakrishna about God's non-existence and the
futility of prayer even if God existed. His over-zealous
friends thought he had become an atheist and ascribed to
him many unmentionable crimes, which he had
supposedly committed to forget his misery. Some of the devotees
of the Master shared these views. Narendra was angry
and mortified to think that they could believe him to have
sunk so low. He became hardened and justified drinking
and the other dubious pleasures resorted to by miserable
people for a respite from their suffering. He said, further, that
he himself would not hesitate to follow such a course if
he were assured of its efficacy. Openly asserting that
only cowards believed in God for fear of hell-fire, he
argued the possibility of God's non-existence and quoted Western
philosophers in support of his position. And when
the devotees of the Master became convinced that he
was hopelessly lost, he felt a sort of inner satisfaction.
A garbled report of the matter reached Sri
Ramakrishna, and Narendra thought that perhaps the
Master, too, doubted his moral integrity. The very idea
revived his anger. 'Never mind,' he said to himself. 'If good
or bad opinion of a man rests on such flimsy grounds, I
don't care.'
But Narendra was mistaken. For one day
Bhavanath, a devotee of the master and an intimate friend of
Narendra, cast aspersions on the latter's character, and the
Master said angrily: 'Stop, you fool! The Mother has told me
that it is simply not true. I shan't look at your face if you
speak to me again that way.'
The fact was that Narendra could not, in his heart
of hearts, disbelieve in God. He remembered the
spiritual visions of his own boyhood and many others that he
had experienced in the company of the Master. Inwardly
he longed to understand God and His ways. And one day
he gained this understanding. It happened in the
following way:
He had been out since morning in a soaking rain
in search of employment, having had neither food nor
rest for the whole day. That evening he sat down on the
porch of a house by the roadside, exhausted. He was in a
daze. Thoughts began to flit before his mind, which he could
not control. Suddenly he had a strange vision, which
lasted almost the whole night. He felt that veil after veil
was removed from before his soul, and he understood
the reconciliation of God's justice with His mercy. He came to
know β but he never told how β that misery could exist
in the creation of a compassionate God without impairing
His sovereign power or touching man's real self. He
understood the meaning of it all and was at peace. Just before
daybreak, refreshed both in body and in mind, he returned home.
This revelation profoundly impressed
Narendranath. He became indifferent to people's opinion and
was convinced that he was not born to lead an ordinary
worldly life, enjoying the love of a wife and children and
physical luxuries. He recalled how the several proposals of
marriage made by his relatives had come to nothing, and he
ascribed all this to God's will. The peace and freedom of the
monastic life cast a spell upon him. He determined to renounce
the world, and set a date for this act. Then, coming to
learn that Sri Ramakrishna would visit Calcutta that very
day, he was happy to think that he could embrace the life of
a wandering monk with his guru's blessings.
When they met, the Master persuaded his disciple
to accompany him to Dakshineswar. As they arrived in
his room, Sri Ramakrishna went into an ecstatic mood and
sang a song, while tears bathed his eyes. The words of the
song clearly indicated that the Master knew of the
disciple's secret wish. When other devotees asked him about
the cause of his grief, Sri Ramakrishna said, 'Oh, never
mind, it is something between me and Naren, and nobody
else's business.' At night he called Naren to his side and
said with great feeling: 'I know you are born for Mother's
work. I also know that you will be a monk. But stay in the
world as long as I live, for my sake at least.' He wept again.
Soon after, Naren procured a temporary job, which
was sufficient to provide a hand-to-mouth living for the family.
One day Narendra asked himself why, since Kali,
the Divine Mother listened to Sri Ramakrishna prayers,
should not the Master pray to Her to relieve his poverty. When
he told Sri Ramakrishna about this idea, the latter
inquired why he did not pray himself to Kali, adding
that Narendranath suffered because he did not
acknowledge Kali as the Sovereign Mistress of the universe.
'Today,' the Master continued, 'is a Tuesday,
an auspicious day for the Mother's worship. Go to Her
shrine in the evening, prostrate yourself before the image,
and pray to Her for any boon; it will be granted. Mother
Kali is the embodiment of Love and Compassion. She is
the Power of Brahman. She gives birth to the world by
Her mere wish. She fulfils every sincere prayer of Her devotees.'
At nine o'clock in the evening, Narendranath went
to the Kali temple. Passing through the courtyard, he
felt within himself a surge of emotion, and his heart leapt
with joy in anticipation of the vision of the Divine
Mother. Entering the temple, he cast his eyes upon the image
and found the stone figure to be nothing else but the
living Goddess, the Divine Mother Herself, ready to give him
any boon he wanted β either a happy worldly life or the joy
of spiritual freedom. He was in ecstasy. He prayed for
the boon of wisdom, discrimination, renunciation, and
Her uninterrupted vision, but forgot to ask the Deity for
money. He felt great peace within as he returned to the
Master's room, and when asked if he had prayed for money,
was startled. He said that he had forgotten all about it.
The Master told him to go to the temple again and pray to
the Divine Mother to satisfy his immediate needs. Naren
did as he was bidden, but again forgot his mission. The same
thing happened a third time. Then Naren suddenly
realized that Sri Ramakrishna himself had made him forget to
ask the Divine Mother for worldly things; perhaps he
wanted Naren to lead a life of renunciation. So he now asked
Sri Ramakrishna to do something for the family. The
master told the disciple that it was not Naren's destiny to enjoy
a worldly life, but assured him that the family would be
able to eke out a simple existence.
The above incident left a deep impression
upon Naren's mind; it enriched his spiritual life, for he
gained a new understanding of the Godhead and Its ways in
the phenomenal universe. Naren's idea of God had
hitherto been confined either to that of a vague Impersonal
Reality or to that of an extracosmic Creator removed from
the world. He now realized that the Godhead is immanent
in the creation, that after projecting the universe from
within Itself, It has entered into all created entities as life
and consciousness, whether manifest or latent. This
same immanent Spirit, or the World Soul, when regarded as
a person creating, preserving, and destroying the
universe, is called the Personal God, and is worshipped by
different religions through such a relationship as that of
father, mother, king, or beloved. These relationships, he came
to understand, have their appropriate symbols, and Kali
is one of them.
Embodying in Herself creation and destruction,
love and terror, life and death, Kali is the symbol of the
total universe. The eternal cycle of the manifestation and
non-manifestation of the universe is the breathing-out
and breathing-in of this Divine Mother. In one aspect She
is death, without which there cannot be life. She is smeared
with blood, since without blood the picture of
the phenomenal universe is not complete. To the wicked
who have transgressed Her laws, She is the embodiment
of terror, and to the virtuous, the benign Mother.
Before creation She contains within Her womb the seed of
the universe, which is left from the previous cycle. After
the manifestation of the universe She becomes its
preserver and nourisher, and at the end of the cycle She draws
it back within Herself and remains as the
undifferentiated Sakti, the creative power of Brahman. She is
non-different from Brahman. When free from the acts of
creation, preservation, and destruction, the Spirit, in Its
acosmic aspect, is called Brahman; otherwise It is known as
the World Soul or the Divine Mother of the universe. She
is therefore the doorway to the realization of the
Absolute; She is the Absolute. To the daring devotee who wants
to see the transcendental Absolute, She reveals that form
by withdrawing Her phenomenal aspect. Brahman is Her
transcendental aspect. She is the Great Fact of the
universe, the totality of created beings. She is the Ruler and
the Controller.
All this had previously been beyond
Narendra's comprehension. He had accepted the reality of
the phenomenal world and yet denied the reality of Kali.
He had been conscious of hunger and thirst, pain
and pleasure, and the other characteristics of the world,
and yet he had not accepted Kali, who controlled them
all. That was why he had suffered. But on that
auspicious Tuesday evening the scales dropped from his eyes.
He accepted Kali as the Divine Mother of the universe.
He became Her devotee.
Many years later he wrote to an American lady:
'Kali worship is my special fad.' But he did not
preach Her
in public, because he thought that all that modern
man required was to be found in the Upanishads. Further,
he realized that the Kali symbol would not be understood
by universal humanity.
Narendra enjoyed the company of the Master for
six years, during which time his spiritual life was
moulded. Sri Ramakrishna was a wonderful teacher in every
sense of the word. Without imposing his ideas upon anyone,
he taught more by the silent influence of his inner life than
by words or even by personal example. To live near
him demanded of the disciple purity of thought and
concentration of mind. He often appeared to his future
monastic followers as their friend and playmate. Through fun
and merriment he always kept before them the shining ideal
of God-realization. He would not allow any deviation
from bodily and mental chastity, nor any compromise with
truth and renunciation. Everything else he left to the will of
the Divine Mother.
Narendra was his 'marked' disciple, chosen by
the Lord for a special mission. Sri Ramakrishna kept a
sharp eye on him, though he appeared to give the disciple
every opportunity to release his pent-up physical and
mental energy. Before him, Naren often romped about like a
young lion cub in the presence of a firm but indulgent parent.
His spiritual radiance often startled the Master, who saw
that maya, the Great Enchantress, could not approach
within 'ten feet' of that blazing fire.
Narendra always came to the Master in the hours
of his spiritual difficulties. One time he complained that he
could not meditate in the morning on account of the
shrill note of a whistle from a neighbouring mill, and was
advised by the Master to concentrate on the very sound of
the whistle. In a short time he overcame the
distraction. Another time he found it difficult to forget the body at
the time of meditation. Sri Ramakrishna sharply pressed
the space between Naren's eyebrows and asked him
to concentrate on that sensation. The disciple found
this method effective.
Witnessing the religious ecstasy of several
devotees, Narendra one day said to the Master that he too
wanted to experience it. 'My child,' he was told, 'when a
huge elephant enters a small pond, a great commotion is set
up, but when it plunges into the Ganga, the river shows
very little agitation. These devotees are like small ponds; a
little experience makes their feelings flow over the brim.
But you are a huge river.'
Another day the thought of excessive
spiritual fervour frightened Naren. The Master reassured him
by saying: 'God is like an ocean of sweetness; wouldn't
you dive into it? Suppose there is a bowl filled with
syrup, and you are a fly, hungry for the sweet liquid. How
would you like to drink it?' Narendra said that he would sit
on the edge of the bowl, otherwise he might be drowned
in the syrup and lose his life. 'But,' the Master said,
'you must not forget that I am talking of the Ocean
of Satchidananda, the Ocean of Immortality. Here one
need not be afraid of death. Only fools say that one should
not have too much of divine ecstasy. Can anybody carry
to excess the love of God? You must dive deep in the
Ocean of God.'
On one occasion Narendra and some of his
brother disciples were vehemently arguing about God's
nature β whether He was personal or impersonal, whether
Divine Incarnation was fact or myth, and so forth and so
on. Narendra silenced his opponents by his sharp power
of reasoning and felt jubilant at his triumph. Sri
Ramakrishna enjoyed the discussion and after it was over sang in
an ecstatic mood:
How are you trying, O my mind,
to know the nature of God?
You are groping like a madman
locked in a dark room.
He is grasped through ecstatic love;
how can you fathom Him without it?
Only through affirmation, never negation,
can you know Him;
Neither through Veda nor through Tantra
nor the six darsanas.
All fell silent, and Narendra realized the inability
of the intellect to fathom God's mystery.
In his heart of hearts Naren was a lover of
God. Pointing to his eyes, Ramakrishna said that only a
bhakta possessed such a tender look; the eyes of the jnani
were generally dry. Many a time, in his later years,
Narendra said, comparing his own spiritual attitude with that of
the Master: 'He was a jnani within, but a bhakta without;
but I am a bhakta within, and a jnani without.' He meant
that Ramakrishna's gigantic intellect was hidden under a
thin layer of devotion, and Narendra's devotional nature
was covered by a cloak of knowledge.
We have already referred to the great depth of
Sri Ramakrishna's love for his beloved disciple. He
was worried about the distress of Naren's family and one
day asked a wealthy devotee if he could not help
Naren financially. Naren's pride was wounded and he
mildly scolded the Master. The latter said with tears in his
eyes: 'O my Naren! I can do anything for you, even beg
from door to door.' Narendra was deeply moved but
said nothing. Many days after, he remarked, 'The Master
made me his slave by his love for me.'
This great love of Sri Ramakrishna enabled Naren
to face calmly the hardships of life. Instead of hardening
into a cynic, he developed a mellowness of heart. But, as
will be seen later, Naren to the end of his life was
often misunderstood by his friends. A bold thinker, he was
far ahead of his time. Once he said: 'Why should I expect
to be understood? It is enough that they love me. After
all, who am I? The Mother knows best. She can do Her
own work. Why should I think myself to be indispensable?'
The poverty at home was not an altogether
unmitigated evil. It drew out another side of Naren's
character. He began to feel intensely for the needy and afflicted.
Had he been nurtured in luxury, the Master used to say,
he would perhaps have become a different
person β a statesman, a lawyer, an orator, or a social reformer.
But instead, he dedicated his life to the service of humanity.
Sri Ramakrishna had had the prevision of
Naren's future life of renunciation. Therefore he was quite
alarmed when he came to know of the various plans made
by Naren's relatives for his marriage. Prostrating himself
in the shrine of Kali, he prayed repeatedly: 'O Mother! Do
break up these plans. Do not let him sink in the
quagmire of the world.' He closely watched Naren and warned
him whenever he discovered the trace of an impure thought
in his mind.
Naren's keen mind understood the subtle
implications of Sri Ramakrishna's teachings. One day the Master
said that the three salient disciplines of Vaishnavism were
love of God's name, service to the devotees, and
compassion for all living beings. But he did not like the word
compassion and said to the devotees: 'How foolish to
speak
of compassion! Man is an insignificant worm crawling on
the earth β and he to show compassion to others! This
is absurd. It must not be compassion, but service to
all. Recognize them as God's manifestations and serve them.'
The other devotees heard the words of the
Master but could hardly understand their significance.
Naren, however fathomed the meaning. Taking his young
friends aside, he said that Sri Ramakrishna's remarks had
thrown wonderful light on the philosophy of non-dualism
with its discipline of non-attachment, and on that of
dualism with its discipline of love. The two were not really
in conflict. A non-dualist did not have to make his heart
dry as sand, nor did he have to run away from the world.
As Brahman alone existed in all men, a non-dualist must
love all and serve all. Love, in the true sense of the word,
is not possible unless one sees God in others. Naren
said that the Master's words also reconciled the paths
of knowledge and action. An illumined person did not
have to remain inactive; he could commune with
Brahman through service to other embodied beings, who also
are embodiments of Brahman.
'If it be the will of God,' Naren concluded, 'I shall
one day proclaim this noble truth before the world at large.
I shall make it the common property of all β the wise
and the fool, the rich and the poor, the brahmin and the pariah.'
Years later he expressed these sentiments in a
noble poem which concluded with the following words:
Thy God is here before thee now,
Revealed in all these myriad forms:
Rejecting them, where seekest thou
His presence? He who freely shares
His love with every living thing
Proffers true service unto God.
It was Sri Ramakrishna who re-educated
Narendranath in the essentials of Hinduism. He, the fulfilment
of the spiritual aspirations of the three hundred millions
of Hindus for the past three thousand years, was
the embodiment of the Hindu faith. The beliefs Narendra
had learnt on his mother's lap had been shattered by a
collegiate education, but the young man now came to know
that Hinduism does not consist of dogmas or creeds; it is
an inner experience, deep and inclusive, which respects
all faiths, all thoughts, all efforts and all realizations. Unity
in diversity is its ideal.
Narendra further learnt that religion is a vision
which, at the end, transcends all barriers of caste and race
and breaks down the limitations of time and space. He
learnt from the Master that the Personal God and
worship through symbols ultimately lead the devotee to
the realization of complete oneness with the Deity. The
Master taught him the divinity of the soul, the non-duality of the
Godhead, the unity of existence, and the harmony
of religions. He showed Naren by his own example how
a man in this very life could reach perfection, and the
disciple found that the Master had realized the same
God-consciousness by following the diverse disciplines
of Hinduism, Christianity, and Islam.
One day the Master, in an ecstatic mood, said to
the devotees: 'There are many opinions and many ways. I
have seen them all and do not like them any more. The
devotees of different faiths quarrel among themselves. Let me
tell you something. You are my own people. There are
no strangers around. I clearly see that God is the whole
and I am a part of Him. He is the Lord and I am His
servant. And sometimes I think He is I and I am He.'
Narendra regarded Sri Ramakrishna as the
embodiment of the spirit of religion and did not bother to
know whether he was or not an Incarnation of God. He
was reluctant to cast the Master in any theological mould.
It was enough for Naren if he could see through the vista
of Ramakrishna's spiritual experiences all the aspects of
the Godhead.
How did Narendra impress the other devotees of
the Master, especially the youngsters? He was their idol.
They were awed by his intellect and fascinated by his
personality. In appearance he was a dynamic youth, overflowing
with vigour and vitality, having a physical frame slightly
over middle height and somewhat thickset in the shoulders.
He was graceful without being feminine. He had a strong
jaw, suggesting his staunch will and fixed determination.
The chest was expansive, and the breadth of the head
towards the front signified high mental power and development.
But the most remarkable thing about him was his
eyes, which Sri Ramakrishna compared to lotus petals.
They were prominent but not protruding, and part of the
time their gaze was indrawn, suggesting the habit of
deep meditation; their colour varied according to the feeling
of the moment. Sometimes they would be luminous in profundity, and
sometimes they sparkled in
merriment. Endowed with the native grace of an animal, he was
free in his movements. He walked sometimes with a slow
gait and sometimes with rapidity, always a part of his
mind absorbed in deep thought. And it was a delight to hear
his resonant voice, either in conversation or in music.
But when Naren was serious his face often
frightened his friends. In a heated discussion his eyes glowed.
If immersed in his own thoughts, he created such an air
of aloofness that no one dared to approach him. Subject
to various moods, sometimes he showed utter
impatience with his environment, and sometimes a tenderness
that melted everybody's heart. His smile was bright
and infectious. To some he was a happy dreamer, to some
he lived in a real world rich with love and beauty, but to
all he unfailingly appeared a scion of an aristocratic home.
And how did the Master regard his beloved
disciple? To quote his own words:
'Narendra belongs to a very high plane β the realm
of the Absolute. He has a manly nature. So many
devotees come here, but there is no one like him.
'Every now and then I take stock of the devotees.
I find that some are like lotuses with ten petals, some
like lotuses with a hundred petals. But among lotuses
Narendra is a thousand-petalled one.
'Other devotees may be like pots or pitchers;
but Narendra is a huge water-barrel.
'Others may be like pools or tanks; but Narendra is
a huge reservoir like the Haldarpukur.
'Among fish, Narendra is a huge red-eyed carp;
others are like minnows or smelts or sardines.
'Narendra is a "very big receptacle", one that can
hold many things. He is like a bamboo with a big hollow
space inside.
'Narendra is not under the control of anything. He
is not under the control of attachment or sense pleasures.
He is like a male pigeon. If you hold a male pigeon by its
beak, it breaks away from you; but the female pigeon keeps
still. I feel great strength when Narendra is with me in
a gathering.'
Sometime about the middle of 1885 Sri
Ramakrishna showed the first symptoms of a throat ailment that
later was diagnosed as cancer. Against the advice of
the physicians, he continued to give instruction to
spiritual seekers, and to fall into frequent trances. Both of
these practices aggravated the illness. For the convenience
of the physicians and the devotees, he was at first
removed to a house in the northern section of Calcutta and then
to a garden house at Cossipore, a suburb of the
city. Narendra and the other young disciples took charge
of nursing him. Disregarding the wishes of their
guardians, the boys gave up their studies or neglected their
duties at home, at least temporarily, in order to devote
themselves heart and soul to the service of the Master. His
wife, known among the devotees as the Holy Mother,
looked after the cooking; the older devotees met the expenses.
All regarded this service to the guru as a blessing
and privilege.
Narendra time and again showed his keen insight
and mature judgement during Sri Ramakrishna's illness.
Many of the devotees, who looked upon the Master as
God's Incarnation and therefore refused to see in him any
human frailty, began to give a supernatural interpretation of
his illness. They believed that it had been brought about
by the will of the Divine Mother or the Master himself to
fulfil an inscrutable purpose, and that it would be cured
without any human effort after the purpose was fulfilled.
Narendra said, however, that since Sri Ramakrishna was a
combination of God and man the physical element in him
was subject to such laws of nature as birth, growth, decay,
and destruction. He refused to give the Master's disease,
a natural phenomenon, any supernatural
explanation. Nonetheless, he was willing to shed his last drop of
blood in the service of Sri Ramakrishna.
Emotion plays an important part in the
development of the spiritual life. While intellect removes the
obstacles, it is emotion that gives the urge to the seeker to
move forward. But mere emotionalism without the
disciplines of discrimination and renunciation often leads him
astray. He often uses it as a short cut to trance or ecstasy.
Sri Ramakrishna, no doubt, danced and wept while
singing God's name and experienced frequent trances; but
behind his emotion there was the long practice of austerities
and renunciation. His devotees had not witnessed the
practice of his spiritual disciplines. Some of them,
especially the elderly householders, began to display
ecstasies accompanied by tears and physical contortions, which in
many cases, as later appeared, were the result of
careful rehearsal at home or mere imitation of Sri
Ramakrishna's genuine trances. Some of the devotees, who looked
upon the Master as a Divine Incarnation, thought that he
had assumed their responsibilities, and therefore they
relaxed their own efforts. Others began to speculate about the
part each of them was destined to play in the new
dispensation of Sri Ramakrishna. In short, those who showed
the highest emotionalism posed as the most
spiritually advanced.
Narendra's alert mind soon saw this dangerous
trend in their lives. He began to make fun of the elders
and warned his young brother disciples about the
harmful effect of indulging in such outbursts. Real spirituality,
he told them over and over again, was the eradication
of worldly tendencies and the development of man's
higher nature. He derided their tears and trances as symptoms
of nervous disorder, which should be corrected by the
power of the will, and, if necessary, by nourishing food and
proper medical treatment. Very often, he said, unwary
devotees of God fall victims to mental and physical breakdown.
'Of one hundred persons who take up the spiritual life,'
he grimly warned, 'eighty turn out to be charlatans,
fifteen insane, and only five, maybe, get a glimpse of the real
truth. Therefore, beware.' He appealed to their inner strength
and admonished them to keep away from all
sentimental nonsense. He described to the young disciples
Sri Ramakrishna's uncompromising self-control,
passionate yearning for God, and utter renunciation of attachment
to the world, and he insisted that those who loved the
Master should apply his teachings in their lives.
Sri Ramakrishna, too, coming to realize the
approaching end of his mortal existence, impressed it upon
the devotees that the realization of God depended upon
the giving up of lust and greed. The young disciples
became grateful to Narendranath for thus guiding them during
the formative period of their spiritual career. They spent
their leisure hours together in meditation, study,
devotional music, and healthy spiritual discussions.
The illness of Sri Ramakrishna showed no sign
of abatement; the boys redoubled their efforts to nurse
him, and Narendra was constantly by their side, cheering
them whenever they felt depressed. One day he found
them hesitant about approaching the Master. They had been
told that the illness was infectious. Narendra dragged them
to the Master's room. Lying in a corner was a cup
containing part of the gruel which Sri Ramakrishna could not
swallow. It was mixed with his saliva. Narendra seized the cup
and swallowed its contents. This set at rest the boys' misgivings.
Narendra, understanding the fatal nature of
Sri Ramakrishna's illness and realizing that the
beloved teacher would not live long, intensified his own
spiritual practices. His longing for the vision of God knew no
limit. One day he asked the Master for the boon of
remaining merged in samadhi three or four days at a
stretch, interrupting his meditation now and then for a bite of
food. 'You are a fool,' said the Master. 'There is a state
higher than that. It is you who sing: "O Lord! Thou art all
that exists."' Sri Ramakrishna wanted the disciple to see
God in all beings and to serve them in a spirit of worship.
He often said that to see the world alone, without God,
is ignorance, ajnana; to see God alone, without the world, is
a kind of philosophical knowledge, jnana; but to see
all beings permeated by the spirit of God is supreme
wisdom, vijnana. Only a few blessed souls could see God
dwelling in all. He wanted Naren to attain this supreme wisdom.
So the master said to him, 'Settle your family affairs first,
then you shall know a state even higher than samadhi.'
On another occasion, in response to a similar
request, Sri Ramakrishna said to Naren: 'Shame on you! You
are asking for such an insignificant thing. I thought that
you would be like a big banyan tree, and that thousands
of people would rest in your shade. But now I see that
you are seeking your own liberation.' Thus scolded,
Narendra shed profuse tears. He realized the greatness of
Sri Ramakrishna's heart.
An intense fire was raging within Narendra's
soul. He could hardly touch his college books; he felt it was
a dreadful thing to waste time in that way. One morning
he went home but suddenly experienced an inner fear.
He wept for not having made much spiritual progress,
and hurried to Cossipore almost unconscious of the
outside world. His shoes slipped off somewhere, and as he ran
past a rick of straw some of it stuck to his clothes. Only
after entering the Master's room did he feel some inner peace.
Sri Ramakrishna said to the other disciples
present: 'Look at Naren's state of mind. Previously he did
not believe in the Personal God or divine forms. Now he
is dying for God's vision.' The Master then gave Naren
certain spiritual instructions about meditation.
Naren was being literally consumed by a passion
for God. The world appeared to him to be utterly
distasteful. When the Master reminded him of his college studies, the
disciple said, 'I would feel relieved if I could swallow
a drug and forget all I have learnt' He spent night after
night in meditation under the tress in the Panchavati at
Dakshineswar, where Sri Ramakrishna, during the days of
his spiritual discipline, had contemplated God. He felt
the awakening of the Kundalini (The spiritual
energy, usually dormant in man, but aroused by
the practice of spiritual disciplines. See glossary.) and had other
spiritual visions.
One day at Cossipore Narendra was meditating
under a tree with Girish, another disciple. The place was
infested with mosquitoes. Girish tried in vain to concentrate
his mind. Casting his eyes on Naren, he saw him absorbed
in meditation, though his body appeared to be covered by
a blanket of the insects.
A few days later Narendra's longing seemed to
have reached the breaking-point. He spent an entire
night walking around the garden house at Cossipore
and repeating Rama's name in a heart-rending manner. In
the early hours of the morning Sri Ramakrishna heard
his voice, called him to his side, and said affectionately:
'Listen, my child, why are you acting that way? What will
you achieve by such impatience?' He stopped for a minute
and then continued: 'See, Naren. What you have been
doing now, I did for twelve long years. A storm raged in my
head during that period. What will you realize in one night?'
But the master was pleased with Naren's
spiritual struggle and made no secret of his wish to make him
his spiritual heir. He wanted Naren to look after the
young disciples. 'I leave them in your care,' he said to him. 'Love
them intensely and see that they practise
spiritual disciplines even after my death, and that they do not
return home.' He asked the young disciples to regard Naren
as their leader. It was an easy task for them. Then, one
day, Sri Ramakrishna initiated several of the young
disciples into the monastic life, and thus himself laid the
foundation of the future Ramakrishna Order of monks.
Attendance on the Master during his sickness
revealed to Narendra the true import of Sri Ramakrishna's
spiritual experiences. He was amazed to find that the Master
could dissociate himself from all consciousness of the body by
a mere wish, at which time he was not aware of the
least pain from his ailment. Constantly he enjoyed an inner
bliss, in spite of the suffering of the body, and he could
transmit that bliss to the disciples by a mere touch or look.
To Narendra, Sri Ramakrishna was the vivid
demonstration of the reality of the Spirit and the unsubstantiality of
matter.
One day the Master was told by a scholar that he
could instantly cure himself of his illness by concentrating
his mind on his throat. This Sri Ramakrishna refused to
do since he could never withdraw his mind from God. But
at Naren's repeated request, the Master agreed to speak
to the Divine Mother about his illness. A little later he said
to the disciple in a sad voice: 'Yes, I told Her that I could
not swallow any food on account of the sore in my throat,
and asked Her to do something about it. But the Mother
said, pointing to you all, "Why, are you not eating
enough through all these mouths?" I felt so humiliated that I
could not utter another word.' Narendra realized how
Sri Ramakrishna applied in life the Vedantic idea of
the oneness of existence and also came to know that only
through such realization could one rise above the pain
and suffering of the individual life.
To live with Sri Ramakrishna during his illness
was in itself a spiritual experience. It was wonderful to
witness how he bore with his pain. In one mood he would see
that the Divine Mother alone was the dispenser of pleasure
and pain and that his own will was one with the Mother's
will, and in another mood he would clearly behold, the
utter absence of diversity, God alone becoming men,
animals, gardens, houses, roads, 'the executioner, the victim,
and the slaughter-post,' to use the Master's own words.
Narendra saw in the Master the living explanation
of the scriptures regarding the divine nature of the soul
and the illusoriness of the body. Further, he came to know
that Sri Ramakrishna had attained to that state by the
total renunciation of 'woman' and 'gold,' which, indeed,
was the gist of his teaching. Another idea was creeping
into Naren's mind. He began to see how the
transcendental Reality, the Godhead, could embody Itself as the
Personal God, and the Absolute become a Divine Incarnation.
He was having a glimpse of the greatest of all divine
mysteries: the incarnation of the Father as the Son for the
redemption of the world. He began to believe that God becomes
man so that man may become God. Sri Ramakrishna
thus appeared to him in a new light.
Under the intellectual leadership of Narendranath,
the Cossipore garden house became a miniature
university. During the few moments' leisure snatched from
nursing and meditation, Narendra would discuss with his
brother disciples religions and philosophies, both Eastern
and Western. Along with the teachings of Sankara, Krishna, and
Chaitanya, those of Buddha and Christ were
searchingly examined.
Narendra had a special affection for Buddha, and
one day suddenly felt a strong desire to visit Bodh-Gaya,
where the great Prophet had attained enlightenment. With
Kali and Tarak, two of the brother disciples, he left,
unknown to the others, for that sacred place and meditated for
long hours under the sacred Bo-tree. Once while thus
absorbed he was overwhelmed with emotion and,
weeping profusely, embraced Tarak. Explaining the incident, he
said afterwards that during the meditation he keenly felt
the presence of Buddha and saw vividly how the history
of India had been changed by his noble teachings;
pondering all this he could not control his emotion.
Back in Cossipore, Narendra described
enthusiastically to the Master and the brother disciples of
Buddha's life, experiences, and teachings. Sri Ramakrishna in
turn related some of his own experiences. Narendra had
to admit that the Master, after the attainment of the
highest spiritual realization, had of his own will kept his mind
on the phenomenal plane.
He further understood that a coin, however
valuable, which belonged to an older period of history, could not
be used as currency at a later date. God assumes
different forms in different ages to serve the special needs of
the time.
Narendra practised spiritual disciplines with
unabating intensity. Sometimes he felt an awakening of
a spiritual power that he could transmit to others. One
night in March 1886, he asked his brother disciple Kali to
touch his right knee, and then entered into deep meditation. Kali's
hand began to tremble; he felt a kind of electric
shock. Afterwards Narendra was rebuked by the Master
for frittering away spiritual powers before accumulating
them in sufficient measure. He was further told that he
had injured Kali's spiritual growth, which had been
following the path of dualistic devotion, by forcing upon the
latter some of his own non-dualistic ideas. The Master
added, however, that the damage was not serious.
Narendra had had enough of visions and
manifestations of spiritual powers, and he now wearied of
them. His mind longed for the highest experience of
non-dualistic Vedanta, the nirvikalpa samadhi, in which the
names and forms of the phenomenal world disappear and
the aspirant realizes total non-difference between
the individual soul, the universe, and Brahman, or
the Absolute. He told Sri Ramakrishna about it, but the
master remained silent. And yet one evening the experience
came to him quite unexpectedly.
He was absorbed in his usual meditation when
he suddenly felt as if a lamp were burning at the back of
his head. The light glowed more and more intensely and
finally burst. Narendra was overwhelmed by that light and
fell unconscious. After some time, as he began to regain
his normal mood, he could feel only his head and not the
rest of his body.
In an agitated voice he said to Gopal, a brother
disciple who was meditating in the same room, 'Where is my body?'
Gopal answered: 'Why, Naren, it is there. Don't
you feel it?'
Gopal was afraid that Narendra was dying, and
ran to Sri Ramakrishna's room. He found the Master in a calm
but serious mood, evidently aware of what had
happened in the room downstairs. After listening to Gopal the
Master said, 'Let him stay in that state for a while; he has
teased me long enough for it.'
For some time Narendra remained unconscious.
When he regained his normal state of mind he was bathed in
an ineffable peace. As he entered Sri Ramakrishna's room
the latter said: 'Now the Mother has shown you
everything. But this realization, like the jewel locked in a box, will
be hidden away from you and kept in my custody. I will
keep the key with me. Only after you have fulfilled your
mission on this earth will the box be unlocked, and you will
know everything as you have known now'.
The experience of this kind of samadhi usually has
a most devastating effect upon the body; Incarnations
and special messengers of God alone can survive its
impact. By way of advice, Sri Ramakrishna asked Naren to
use great discrimination about his food and companions,
only accepting the purest.
Later the master said to the other disciples:
'Narendra will give up his body of his own will. When he realizes
his true nature, he will refuse to stay on this earth. Very
soon he will shake the world by his intellectual and
spiritual powers. I have prayed to the Divine Mother to keep
away from him the Knowledge of the Absolute and cover
his eyes with a veil of maya. There is much work to be
done by him. But the veil, I see, is so thin that it may be rent
at any time.'
Sri Ramakrishna, the Avatar of the modern age,
was too gentle and tender to labour himself, for
humanity's welfare. He needed some sturdy souls to carry on his work.
Narendra was foremost among those around him;
therefore Sri Ramakrishna did not want him to remain immersed
in nirvikalpa samadhi before his task in this world
was finished.
The disciples sadly watched the gradual wasting
away of Sri Ramakrishna's physical frame. His body became
a mere skeleton covered with skin; the suffering was
intense. But he devoted his remaining energies to the training
of the disciples, especially Narendra. He had been
relieved of his worries about Narendra; for the disciple
now admitted the divinity of Kali, whose will controls all
things in the universe. Naren said later on: 'From the time he
gave me over to the Divine Mother, he retained the vigour
of his body only for six months. The rest of the
time β and that was two long years β he suffered.'
One day the Master, unable to speak even in a
whisper, wrote on a piece of paper: 'Narendra will teach
others.' The disciple demurred. Sri Ramakrishna replied: 'But
you must. Your very bones will do it.' He further said that
all the supernatural powers he had acquired would
work through his beloved disciple.
A short while before the
curtain finally fell on
Sri Ramakrishna's earthly life, the Master one day called
Naren to his bedside. Gazing intently upon him, he passed
into deep meditation. Naren felt that a subtle force,
resembling an electric current, was entering his body. He
gradually lost outer consciousness. After some time he
regained knowledge of the physical world and found the
Master weeping. Sri Ramakrishna said to him: 'O Naren, today
I have given you everything I possess β now I am no
more than a fakir, a penniless beggar. By the powers I have
transmitted to you, you will accomplish great things in
the world, and not until then will you return to the
source whence you have come.'
Narendra from that day became the channel of
Sri Ramakrishna's powers and the spokesman of his message.
Two days before the dissolution of the Master's
body, Narendra was standing by the latter's bedside when
a strange thought flashed into his mind: Was the Master
truly an Incarnation of God? He said to himself that he
would accept Sri Ramakrishna's divinity if the Master, on
the threshold of death, declared himself to be an
Incarnation. But this was only a passing thought. He stood
looking intently at the Master face. Slowly Sri Ramakrishna's
lips parted and he said in a clear voice: 'O my Naren, are
you still not convinced? He who in the past was born as
Rama and Krishna is now living in this very body as
Ramakrishna β but not from the standpoint of your
Vedanta.' Thus Sri Ramakrishna, in answer to Narendra's
mental query, put himself in the category of Rama and
Krishna, who are recognized by orthodox Hindus as two of
the Avatars, or Incarnations of God.
A few words may be said here about the meaning
of the Incarnation in the Hindu religious tradition. One of
the main doctrines of Vedanta is the divinity of the soul:
every soul, in reality, is Brahman. Thus it may be presumed
that there is no difference between an Incarnation and
an ordinary man. To be sure, from the standpoint of
the Absolute, or Brahman, no such difference exists. But
from the relative standpoint, where multiplicity is perceived,
a difference must be admitted. Embodied human
beings reflect godliness in varying measure. In an Incarnation this
godliness is fully manifest. Therefore an Incarnation is
unlike an ordinary mortal or even an illumined saint. To give
an illustration: There is no difference between a clay lion
and a clay mouse, from the standpoint of the clay. Both
become the same substance when dissolved into clay. But the
difference between the lion and the mouse, from the
standpoint of form, is clearly seen. Likewise, as Brahman, an
ordinary man is identical with an Incarnation. Both become the
same Brahman when they attain final illumination. But in the
relative state of name and form, which is admitted by
Vedanta, the difference between them is accepted. According to
the Bhagavad Gita (IV. 6-8), Brahman in times of spiritual
crisis assumes a human body through Its own inscrutable
power, called maya. Though birthless, immutable, and the Lord
of all beings, yet in every age Brahman appears to be
incarnated in a human body for the protection of the good
and the destruction of the wicked.
As noted above, the Incarnation is quite different
from an ordinary man, even from a saint. Among the many
vital differences may be mentioned the fact that the birth of
an ordinary mortal is governed by the law of karma,
whereas that of an Incarnation is a voluntary act undertaken
for the spiritual redemption of the world. Further,
though maya is the cause of the embodiment of both an
ordinary mortal and an Incarnation, yet the former is fully
under maya's control, whereas the latter always remains
its master. A man, though potentially Brahman, is
not conscious of his divinity; but an Incarnation is fully
aware of the true nature of His birth and mission. The
spiritual disciplines practised by an Incarnation are not for His
own liberation, but for the welfare of humanity; as far as He is
concerned, such terms as bondage and liberation have
no meaning, He being ever free, ever pure, and ever
illumined. Lastly, an Incarnation can bestow upon others the boon
of liberation, whereas even an illumined saint is devoid
of such power.
Thus the Master, on his death-bed, proclaimed
himself through his own words as the Incarnation or God-man
of modern times.
On August 15, 1886, the Master's suffering
became almost unbearable. After midnight he felt better for a
few minutes. He summoned Naren to his beside and gave
him the last instructions, almost in a whisper. The
disciples stood around him. At two minutes past one in the
early morning of August 16, Sri Ramakrishna uttered three
times in a ringing voice the name of his beloved Kali and
entered into the final samadhi, from which his mind never
again returned to the physical world.
The body was given to the fire in the
neighbouring cremation ground on the bank of the Ganga. But to
the Holy Mother, as she was putting on the signs of a
Hindu widow, there came these words of faith and
reassurance: 'I am not dead. I have just gone from one room to another.'
As the disciples returned from the cremation
ground to the garden house, they felt great desolation. Sri
Ramakrishna had been more than their earthly father. His
teachings and companionship still inspired them. They felt
his presence in his room. His words rang in their ears.
But they could no longer see his physical body or enjoy
his seraphic smile. They all yearned to commune with him.
Within a week of the Master's passing away,
Narendra one night was strolling in the garden with a brother
disciple, when he saw in front of him a luminous
figure. There was no mistaking: it was Sri Ramakrishna
himself. Narendra remained silent, regarding the phenomenon
as an illusion. But his brother disciple exclaimed in
wonder, 'See, Naren! See!' There was no room for further
doubt. Narendra was convinced that it was Sri Ramakrishna
who had appeared in a luminous body. As he called to the
other brother disciples to behold the Master, the figure
disappeared.
Among the Master's disciples, Tarak, Latu, and
the elder Gopal had already cut off their relationship
with their families. The young disciples whom Sri
Ramakrishna had destined for the monastic life were in need of a
shelter. The Master had asked Naren to see to it that they
should not become householders. Naren vividly remembered
the Master's dying words: 'Naren, take care of the boys.'
The householder devotees, moreover, wanted to meet,
from time to time, at a place where they could talk about
the Master. They longed for the company of the
young disciples who had totally dedicated their lives to
the realization of God. But who would bear the expenses of
a house where the young disciples could live? How
would they be provided with food and the basic necessaries
of life?
All these problems were solved by the generosity
of Surendranath Mitra, the beloved householder disciple
of Sri Ramakrishna. He came forward to pay the expenses
of new quarters for the Master's homeless disciples. A
house was rented at Baranagore, midway between Calcutta
and Dakshineswar. Dreary and dilapidated, it was a
building that had the reputation of being haunted by evil
spirits. The young disciples were happy to take refuge in it
from the turmoil of Calcutta. This Baranagore Math, as the
new monastery was called, became the first headquarters of the
monks of the Ramakrishna Order.1
Its centre was the shrine room, where the copper vessel containing the
sacred
ashes of the Master was daily worshipped as his visible
presence.2
Narendranath devoted himself heart and soul to
the training of the young brother disciples. He spent the
day-time at home, supervising a lawsuit that was pending
in the court and looking after certain other family affairs;
but during the evenings and nights he was always with
his brothers at the monastery, exhorting them to
practise spiritual disciplines. His presence was a source of
unfailing delight and inspiration to all.
The future career of the youths began to take
shape during these early days at Baranagore. The
following incident hastened the process. At the invitation of
the mother of Baburam, one of the disciples, they all went
to the village of Antpur to spend a few days away from
the austerities of Baranagore. Here they realized,
more intensely than ever before, a common goal of life, a
sense of brotherhood and unity integrating their minds
and hearts. Their consecrated souls were like pearls in a
necklace held together by the thread of
Ramakrishna's teachings. They saw in one another a reservoir of
spiritual power, and the vision intensified their mutual love
and respect. Narendra, describing to them the glories of
the monastic life, asked them to give up the glamour
of academic studies and the physical world, and all felt
in their hearts the ground swell of the spirit of
renunciation. This reached its height one night when they were
sitting for meditation around a fire, in the fashion of Hindu
monks. The stars sparkled overhead and the stillness was
unbroken except for the crackling of the firewood. Suddenly
Naren opened his eyes and began, with an apostolic fervour,
to narrate to the brother disciples the life of Christ.
He exhorted them to live like Christ, who had had no place
'to lay his head.' Inflamed by a new passion, the
youths, making God and the sacred fire their witness, vowed
to become monks.3
When they had returned to their rooms
in a happy mood, someone found out that it was
Christmas Eve, and all felt doubly blest. It is no wonder that the
monks of the Ramakrishna Order have always cherished a
high veneration for Jesus of Nazareth.
The young disciples, after their return to
Baranagore, finally renounced home and became permanent inmates
of the monastery. And what a life of austerity they
lived there! They forgot their food when absorbed in
meditation, worship, study, or devotional music. At such times
Sashi, who had constituted himself their caretaker,
literally dragged them to the dining-room. The privations
they suffered during this period form a wonderful saga
of spiritual discipline. Often there would be no food at
all, and on such occasions they spent day and night in
prayer and meditation. Sometimes there would be only rice,
with no salt for flavouring; but nobody cared. They lived
for months on boiled rice, salt, and bitter herbs. Not
even demons could have stood such hardship. Each had
two pieces of loin-cloth, and there were some regular
clothes that were worn, by turns, when anyone had to go out.
They slept on straw mats spread on the hard floor. A few pictures
of saints, gods, and goddesses hung on the walls, and
some musical instruments lay here and there. The
library contained about a hundred books.
But Narendra did not want the brother disciples to
be pain-hugging, cross-grained ascetics. They should
broaden their outlook by assimilating the thought-currents of
the world. He examined with them the histories of
different countries and various philosophical systems. Aristotle
and Plato, Kant and Hegel, together with Sankaracharya
and Buddha, Ramanuja and Madhva, Chaitanya and Nimbarka, were
thoroughly discussed. The Hindu
philosophical systems of Jnana, Bhakti, Yoga, and Karma,
each received a due share of attention, and their
apparent contradictions were reconciled in the light of Sri
Ramakrishna's teachings and experiences. The dryness
of discussion was relieved by devotional music. There
were many moments, too, when the inmates indulged in
light-hearted and witty talk, and Narendra's bons
mots on such occasions always convulsed them with laughter.
But
he would never let them forget the goal of the monastic
life: the complete control of the lower nature, and the
realization of God.
'During those days,' one of the inmates of
the monastery said, 'he worked like a madman. Early in
the morning, while it was still dark, he would rise from
bed and wake up the others, singing, "Awake, arise, all
who would drink of the Divine Nectar!" And long after
midnight he and his brother disciples would still be sitting on
the roof of the monastery building, absorbed in religious
songs. The neighbours protested, but to no avail. Pandits
came and argued. He was never for one moment idle, never dull.'
Yet the brother complained that they could not realize
even a fraction of what Ramakrishna had taught.
Some of the householder devotees of the
Master, however, did not approve of the austerities of the
young men, and one of them teasingly inquired if they had
realized God by giving up the world. 'What do you
mean?' Narendra said furiously. 'Suppose we have not
realized God; must we then return to the life of the senses
and deprave our higher nature?'
Soon the youth of the Baranagore monastery
became restless for the life of the wandering monk with no
other possessions except staff and begging-bowl. Thus
they would learn self-surrender to God, detachment, and
inner serenity. They remembered the Hindu proverb that
the monk who constantly moves on, remains pure, like
water that flows. They wanted to visit the holy places and
thus give an impetus to their spiritual life.
Narendra, too, wished to enjoy the peace of
solitude. He wanted to test his own inner strength as well as
teach others not to depend upon him always. Some of the
brother disciples had already gone away from the monastery
when he began his wanderings. The first were in the nature
of temporary excursions; he had to return to Baranagore
in response to the appeal of the inmates of the
monastery. But finally in 1890, when he struck out again β without
a name and with only a staff and begging-bowl β he
was swallowed in the immensity of India and the dust of
the vast subcontinent completely engulfed him. When
rediscovered by his brother monks he was no longer
the unknown Naren, but the Swami Vivekananda who
had made history in Chicago in 1893.
In order to satisfy his wanderlust, Narendra went
to Varanasi, considered the holiest place in India β a
city sanctified from time out of mind by the association
of monks and devotees. Here have come prophets
like Buddha, Sankaracharya, and Chaitanya, to receive, as
it were, the commandment of God to preach their
messages. The Ganga charges the atmosphere with a rare
holiness. Narendra felt uplifted by the spirit of renunciation
and devotion that pervades this sacred place. He visited
the temples and paid his respects to such holy men as
Trailanga Swami, who lived on the bank of the Ganga
constantly absorbed in meditation, and Swami Bhaskarananda,
who annoyed Naren by expressing doubt as to the
possibility of a man's total conquest of the temptation of 'woman'
and 'gold.'4
With his own eyes Naren had seen the life of
Sri Ramakrishna, who had completely subdued his
lower nature.
In Varanasi, one day, hotly pursued by a troop
of monkeys, he was running away when a monk called
to him: 'Face the brutes.' He stopped and looked defiantly
at the ugly beasts. They quickly disappeared. Later, as
a preacher, he sometimes used this experience to exhort
people to face the dangers and vicissitudes of life and
not run away from them.
After a few days Naren returned to Baranagore
and plunged into meditation, study, and religious
discourses. From this time he began to feel a vague premonition of
his future mission. He often asked himself if such truths of
the Vedanta philosophy as the divinity of the soul and the
unity of existence should remain imprisoned in the
worm-eaten pages of the scriptures to furnish a pastime for
erudite scholars or to be enjoyed only by solitary monks in
caves and the depths of the wilderness; did they not have
any significance for the average man struggling with
life's problems? Must the common man, because of his
ignorance of the scriptures, be shut out from the light of Vedanta?
Narendra spoke to his brother disciples about
the necessity of preaching the strength-giving message of
the Vedanta philosophy to one and all, and especially to
the downtrodden masses. But these monks were eager for
their own salvation, and protested. Naren said to them
angrily: 'All are preaching. What they do unconsciously, I will
do consciously. Ay, even if you, my brother monks, stand
in my way, I will go to the pariahs and preach in the
lowest slums.'
After remaining at Baranagore a short while,
Naren set out again for Varanasi, where he met the Sanskrit
scholar Pramadadas Mitra. These two felt for each other a
mutual respect and affection, and they discussed, both orally
and through letters, the social customs of the Hindus
and abstruse passages of the scriptures. Next he
visited Ayodhya, the ancient capital of Rama, the hero of
the Ramayana. Lucknow, a city of gardens and
palaces created
by the Moslem Nawabs, filled his mind with the
glorious memories of Islamic rule, and the sight of the Taj Mahal
in Agra brought tears to his eyes. In Vrindavan he
recalled the many incidents of Krishna's life and was deeply moved.
While on his way to Vrindavan, trudging barefoot
and penniless, Naren saw a man seated by the
roadside enjoying a smoke. He asked the stranger to give him a
puff from his tobacco bowl, but the man was an
untouchable and shrank from such an act; for it was
considered sacrilegious by Hindu society. Naren continued on his
way, but said to himself suddenly: 'What a shame! The whole
of my life I have contemplated the non-duality of the
soul, and now I am thrown into the whirlpool of the
caste-system. How difficult it is to get over innate tendencies!'
He returned to the untouchable, begged him to lend him
his smoking-pipe, and in spite of the remonstrances of the
low-caste man, enjoyed a hearty smoke and went on
to Vrindavan.
Next we find Naren at the railroad station of
Hathras, on his way to the sacred pilgrimage centre of Hardwar
in the foothills of the Himalayas. The station-master,
Sarat Chandra Gupta, was fascinated at the very first sight
of him. 'I followed the two diabolical eyes,' he
said
later. Narendra accepted Sarat as a disciple and called him
'the child of my spirit', At Hathras he discussed with
visitors the doctrines of Hinduism and entertained them
with music, and then one day confided to Sarat that he
must move on. 'My son,' he said, 'I have a great mission to
fulfil and I am in despair at the smallness of my power. My
guru asked me to dedicate my life to the regeneration of
my motherland. Spirituality has fallen to a low ebb and
starvation stalks the land. India must become
dynamic again and earn the respect of the world through
her spiritual power.'
Sarat immediately renounced the world and
accompanied Narendra from Hathras to Hardwar. The two
then went on to Hrishikesh, on the bank of the Ganga
several miles north of Hardwar, where they found
themselves among monks of various sects, who were
practising meditation and austerities. Presently Sarat fell ill and
his companion took him back to Hathras for treatment.
But Naren, too, had been attacked with malaria fever
at Hrishikesh. He now made his way to the
Baranagore monastery.
Naren had now seen northern India, the
Aryavarta, the sacred land of the Aryans, where the spiritual
culture of India had originated and developed. The main
stream of this ancient Indian culture, issuing from the Vedas
and the Upanishads and branching off into the Puranas
and the Tantras, was subsequently enriched by
contributions from such foreign peoples as the Saks, the Huns, the
Greeks, the Pathans, and the Moguls. Thus India developed
a unique civilization based upon the ideal of unity
in diversity. Some of the foreign elements were
entirely absorbed into the traditional Hindu consciousness;
others, though flavoured by the ancient thought of the
land, retained their individuality. Realizing the spiritual
unity of India and Asia, Narendra discovered the
distinctive characteristics of Oriental civilization: renunciation of
the finite and communion with the Infinite.
But the stagnant life of the Indian masses, for which
he chiefly blamed the priests and the landlords, saddened his
heart. Naren found that his country's downfall had not
been caused by religion. On the contrary, as long as India
had clung to her religious ideals, the country had over
flowed with material prosperity. But the enjoyment of power for
a long time had corrupted the priests. The people at large
were debarred from true knowledge of religion, and the
Vedas, the source of the Hindu culture, were completely
forgotten, especially in Bengal. Moreover, the caste-system, which
had originally been devised to emphasize the organic unity
of Hindu society, was now petrified. Its real purpose had
been to protect the weak from the ruthless competition of
the strong and to vindicate the supremacy of spiritual
knowledge over the power of military weapons, wealth,
and organized labour; but now it was sapping the vitality of
the masses. Narendra wanted to throw open the
man-making wisdom of the Vedas to all, and thus bring about the
regeneration of his motherland. He therefore encouraged
his brothers at the Barangaore monastery to study the
grammar of Panini, without which one could not acquire
first-hand knowledge of the Vedas.
The spirit of democracy and equality in
Islam appealed to Naren's mind and he wanted to create a
new India with Vedantic brain and Moslem body. Further,
the idea began to dawn in his mind that the material
conditions of the masses could not be improved without
the knowledge of science and technology as developed in
the West. He was already dreaming of building a bridge
to join the East and the West. But the true leadership of
India would have to spring from the soil of the country.
Again and again he recalled that Sri Ramakrishna had been
a genuine product of the Indian soil, and he realized that
India would regain her unity and solidarity through
the understanding of the Master's spiritual experiences.
Naren again became restless to 'do something',
but what, he did not know. He wanted to run away from
his relatives since he could not bear the sight of their
poverty. He was eager to forget the world through
meditation. During the last part of December 1889, therefore, he
again struck out from the Baranagore monastery and turned
his face towards Varanasi. 'My idea,' he wrote to a friend,
'is to live in Varanasi for some time and to watch
how Viswanath and Annapurna deal out my lot. I have
resolved either to realize my ideal or to lay down my life in
the effort β so help me Lord of Varanasi!'
On his way to Varanasi he heard that Swami
Yogananda, one of his brother disciples, was lying ill
in Allahabad and decided to proceed there immediately.
In Allahabad he met a Moslem saint, 'every line and curve
of whose face showed that he was a paramahamsa.' Next
he went to Ghazipur and there he came to know the
saint Pavhari Baba, the 'air-eating holy man.'
Pavhari Baba was born near Varanasi of
brahmin parents. In his youth he had mastered many branches
of Hindu philosophy. Later he renounced the world, led
an austere life, practised the disciplines of Yoga and
Vedanta, and travelled over the whole of India. At last he settled
in Ghazipur, where he built an underground hermitage
on the bank of the Ganga and spent most of his time
in meditation. He lived on practically nothing and so
was given by the people the sobriquet of the 'air-eating
holy man'; all were impressed by his humility and spirit
of service. Once he was bitten by a cobra and said while
suffering terrible pain, 'Oh, he was a messenger from
my Beloved!' Another day, a dog ran off with his bread and
he followed, praying humbly, 'Please wait, my Lord; let
me butter the bread for you.' Often he would give away
his meagre food to beggars or wandering monks, and
starve. Pavhari Baba had heard of Sri Ramakrishna, held him
in high respect as a Divine Incarnation, and kept in his
room a photograph of the Master. People from far and
near visited the Baba, and when not engaged in meditation
he would talk to them from behind a wall. For several
days before his death he remained indoors. Then, one day,
people noticed smoke issuing from his underground cell with
the smell of burning flesh. It was discovered that the
saint, having come to realize the approaching end of his
earthly life, had offered his body as the last oblation to the Lord,
in an act of supreme sacrifice.
Narendra, at the time of his meeting Pavhari
Baba, was suffering from the sever pain of lumbago, and this
had made it almost impossible for him either to move about
or to sit in meditation. Further, he was mentally
distressed, for he had heard of the illness of Abhedananda, another
of his brother disciples, who was living at Hrishikesh.
'You know not, sir,' he wrote to a friend, 'that I am a very
soft-natured man in spite of the stern Vedantic views I
hold. And this proves to be my undoing. For however I may
try to think only of my own good, I begin, in spite of
myself, to think of other people's interests.' Narendra wished
to forget the world and his own body through the practice
of Yoga, and went for instruction to Pavhari Baba,
intending to make the saint his guru. But the Baba, with
characteristic humility, put him off from day to day.
One night when Naren was lying in bed thinking
of Pavhari Baba, Sri Ramakrishna appeared to him and
stood silently near the door, looking intently into his eyes.
The vision was repeated for twenty-one days.
Narendra understood. He reproached himself bitterly for his lack
of complete faith in Sri Ramakrishna. Now, at last, he
was convinced, he wrote to a friend: 'Ramakrishna has no
peer. Nowhere else in the world exists such
unprecedented perfection, such wonderful kindness to all, such
intense sympathy for men in bondage.' Tearfully he recalled
how Sri Ramakrishna had never left unfulfilled a single
prayer of his, how he had forgiven his offences by the million
and removed his afflictions.
But as long as Naren lived he cherished
sincere affection and reverence for Pavhari Baba, and
he remembered particularly two of his instructions. One
of these was: 'Live in the house of your teacher like a
cow,' which emphasizes the spirit of service and humility in
the relationship between the teacher and the disciple.
The second instruction of the Baba was: 'Regard spiritual
discipline in the same way as you regard the
goal,'which means that an aspirant should not differentiate
between cause and effect.
Narendranath again breathed peace and plunged
into meditation. After a few days he went to Varanasi,
where he learnt of the serious illness of Balaram Bose, one of
the foremost lay disciples of Sri Ramakrishna. At Ghazipur
he had heard that Surendranath Mitra, another lay
disciple of the Master, was dying. He was overwhelmed with
grief, and to Pramadadas, who expressed his surprise at the
sight of a sannyasin indulging in a human emotion, he said:
'Please do not talk that way. We are not dry monks. Do
you think that because a man has renounced the world he
is devoid of all feeling?'
He came to Calcutta to be at the bedside of
Balaram, who passed away on May 13. Surendra Mitra died on
May 25. But Naren steadied his nerves, and in addition to
the practice of his own prayer and meditation, devoted
himself again to the guidance of his brother disciples. Some
time during this period he conceived the idea of building
a permanent temple to preserve the relics of Sri Ramakrishna.
From his letters and conversations one can gain
some idea of the great storm that was raging in Naren's
soul during this period. He clearly saw to what an extent
the educated Hindus had come under the spell of
the materialistic ideas of the West. He despised
sterile imitation. But he was also aware of the great ideas
that formed the basis of European civilization. He told
his friends that in India the salvation of the individual
was the accepted goal, whereas in the West it was the uplift
of the people, without distinction of caste or creed.
Whatever was achieved there was shared by the common
man; freedom of spirit manifested itself in the common
good and in the advancement of all men by the united efforts
of all. He wanted to introduce this healthy factor into
the Indian consciousness.
Yet he was consumed by his own soul's hunger
to remain absorbed in samadhi. He felt at this time a
spiritual unrest like that which he had experienced at the
Cossipore garden house during the last days of Sri
Ramakrishna's earthly existence. The outside world had no attraction
for him. But another factor, perhaps unknown to him, was
working within him. Perfect from his birth, he did not
need spiritual disciplines for his own liberation.
Whatever disciplines he practised were for the purpose of
removing the veil that concealed, for the time being, his true
divine nature and mission in the world. Even before his birth,
the Lord had chosen him as His instrument to help Him in
the spiritual redemption of humanity.
Now Naren began to be aware that his life was to
be quite different from that of a religious recluse: he was
to work for the good of the people. Every time he wanted
to taste for himself the bliss of samadhi, he would hear
the piteous moans of the teeming millions of India, victims
of poverty and ignorance. Must they, Naren asked
himself, for ever grovel in the dust and live like brutes? Who
would be their saviour?
He began, also, to feel the inner agony of the
outwardly happy people of the West, whose spiritual vitality
was being undermined by the mechanistic and
materialistic conception of life encouraged by the sudden
development of the physical sciences. Europe, he saw, was sitting on
the crater of a smouldering volcano, and any moment
Western culture might be shattered by its fiery eruption.
The suffering of man, whether in the East or in the West,
hurt his tender soul. The message of Vedanta, which
proclaimed the divinity of the soul and the oneness of existence,
he began to realize, could alone bind up and heal the
wounds of India and the world. But what could he, a lad of
twenty-five, do? The task was gigantic. He talked about it with
his brother disciples, but received scant encouragement.
He was determined to work alone if no other help
was forthcoming.
Narendra felt cramped in the monastery at
Baranagore and lost interest in its petty responsibilities. The
whole world now beckoned him to work. Hence, one day in
1890, he left the monastery again with the same old
determination never to return. He would go to the Himalayas
and bury himself in the depths of his own thought. To a
brother disciple he declared, 'I shall not return until I gain
such realization that my very touch will transform a man.'
He prayed to the Holy Mother that he might not return
before attaining the highest Knowledge, and she blessed him
in the name of Sri Ramakrishna. Then she asked whether
he would not like to take leave of his earthly mother.
'Mother,' Naren replied, 'you are my only mother.'
Accompanied by Swami Akhandananda, Naren
left Calcutta and set out for Northern India. The two
followed the course of the Ganga, their first halting-place
being Bhagalpur. To one of the people who came to visit him
there Naren said that whatever of the ancient Aryan
knowledge, intellect, and genius remained, could be found mostly
in those parts of the country that lay near the banks of
the Ganga. The farther one departed from the river, the
less one saw of that culture. This fact, he believed,
explained the greatness of the Ganga as sung in the Hindu
scriptures. He further observed: 'The epithet "mild Hindu"
instead of being a word of reproach, ought really to point to
our glory, as expressing greatness of character. For see
how much moral and spiritual advancement and how
much development of the qualities of love and compassion
have to be acquired before one can get rid of the brutish force
of one's nature, which impels a man to slaughter his
brother men for self-aggrandizement!'
He spent a few days in Varanasi and left the city
with the prophetic words: 'When I return here the next time,
I shall burst upon society like a bomb-shell, and it will
follow me like a dog.'
After visiting one or two places, Naren and
Akhandananda arrived at Nainital, their destination being
the sacred Badrikashrama, in the heart of the Himalayas.
They decided to travel the whole way on foot, and also not
to touch money. Near Almora under an old peepul tree
by the side of a stream, they spent many hours in
meditation. Naren had a deep spiritual experience, which he thus
jotted down in his note-book:
In the beginning was the Word, etc.
The microcosm and the macrocosm are built
on the same plan. Just as the individual soul is
encased in a living body, so is the Universal Soul, in the
living prakriti (nature), the objective universe. Kali
is embracing Siva. This is not a fancy. This covering
of the one (Soul) by the other (nature) is analogous
to the relation between an idea and the word
expressing it. They are one and the same, and it is only by a
mental abstraction that one can distinguish them. Thought
is impossible without words. Therefore in the
beginning was the Word, etc.
This dual aspect of the Universal Soul is
eternal. So what we perceive or feel is the combination of
the Eternally Formed and the Eternally Formless.
Thus Naren realized, in the depths of meditation,
the oneness of the universe and man, who is a universe
in miniature. He realized that, all that exists in the universe
also exists in the body, and further, that the whole
universe exists in the atom.
Several other brother disciples joined Naren. But
they could not go to Badrikashrama since the road was
closed by Government order on account of famine. They
visited different holy places, lived on alms, studied the
scriptures, and meditated. At this time, the sad news arrived of
the suicide of one of Naren's sisters under tragic
conditions, and reflecting on the plight of Hindu women in the
cruel present-day society, he thought that he would be a
criminal if he remained an indifferent spectator of such
social injustice.
Naren proceeded to Hrishikesh, a beautiful valley
at the foot of the Himalayas, which is surrounded by
hills and almost encircled by the Ganga. From an
immemorial past this sacred spot has been frequented by monks
and ascetics. After a few days, however, Naren fell seriously
ill and his friends despaired of his life. When he
was convalescent he was removed to Meerut. There he met
a number of his brother disciples and together they
pursued the study of the scriptures, practised prayer and
meditation, and sang devotional songs, creating in Meerut a
miniature Baranagore monastery.
After a stay of five months Naren became
restless, hankering again for his wandering life; but he desired
to be alone this time and break the chain of attachment
to his brother disciples. He wanted to reflect deeply
about his future course of action, of which now and then he
was getting glimpses. From his wanderings in the
Himalayas he had become convinced that the Divine Spirit
would not allow him to seal himself within the four walls of a
cave. Every time he had thought to do so, he had
been thrown out, as it were, by a powerful force. The
degradation of the Indian masses and the spiritual sickness
of people everywhere were summoning him to a new
line of action, whose outer shape was not yet quite clear
to him.
In the later part of January 1891, Naren bade
farewell to his brother disciples and set out for Delhi, assuming
the name of Swami Vividishananda. He wished to
travel without being recognized. He wanted the dust of India
to cover up his footprints. It was his desire to remain
an unknown sannyasin, among the thousands of others
seen in the country's thoroughfares, market-places,
deserts, forests, and caves. But the fires of the Spirit that burnt
in his eyes, and his aristocratic bearing, marked him as
a prince among men despite all his disguises.
In Delhi, Naren visited the palaces, mosques,
and tombs. All around the modern city he saw a vast ruin
of extinct empires dating from the prehistoric days of
the Mahabharata, revealing the transitoriness of
material achievements. But gay and lively Delhi also revealed
to him the deathless nature of the Hindu spirit.
Some of his brother disciples from Meerut came
to the city and accidentally discovered their beloved
leader. Naren was angry. He said to them: 'Brethren I told
you that I desired to be left alone. I asked you not to follow
me. This I repeat once more. I must not be followed. I
shall presently leave Delhi. No one must try to know
my whereabouts. I shall sever all old associations.
Wherever the Spirit leads, there I shall wander. It matters not
whether I wander about in a forest or in a desert, on a lonely
mountain or in a populous city. I am off. Let everyone
strive to realize his goal according to his lights.'
Narendra proceeded towards historic
Rajputana, repeating the words of the Sutta-nipata:
Go forward without a path,
Fearing nothing, caring for nothing,
Wandering alone, like the rhinoceros!
Even as a lion, not trembling at noises,
Even as the wind, not caught in a net,
Even as the lotus leaf, untainted by water,
Do thou wander alone, like the rhinoceros!
Several factors have been pointed out as
influencing Naren's life and giving shape to his future message:
the holy association of Sri Ramakrishna, his own
knowledge of Eastern and Western cultures, and his
spiritual experiences. To these another must be added:
the understanding of India gained through his
wanderings. This new understanding constituted a unique
education for Naren. Here, the great book of life taught him
more than the printed words of the libraries.
He mixed with all β today sleeping with pariahs
in their huts and tomorrow conversing on equal terms
with Maharajas, Prime Ministers, orthodox pandits, and
liberal college professors. Thus he was brought into contact
with their joys and sorrows, hopes and frustrations.
He witnessed the tragedy of present-day India and
also reflected on its remedy. The cry of the people of India,
the God struggling in humanity, and the anxiety of
men everywhere to grasp a hand for aid, moved him deeply.
In the course of his travels Naren came to know how he could
make himself a channel of the Divine Spirit in the
service of mankind.
During these wandering days he both learnt
and taught. The Hindus he asked to go back to the eternal
truths of their religion, hearken to the message of the
Upanishads, respect temples and religious symbols, and take pride
in their birth in the holy land of India. He wanted them
to avoid both the outmoded orthodoxy still advocated
by fanatical leaders, and the misguided rationalism of
the Westernized reformers. He was struck by the
essential cultural unity of India in spite of the endless diversity
of form. And the people who came to know him saw in
him the conscience of India, her unity, and her destiny.
As already noted, Narendranath while travelling
in India often changed his name to avoid recognition. It
will not be improper to call him, from this point of his life,
by the monastic title of 'Swami,' or the more affectionate
and respectful appellation of 'Swamiji.'
In Alwar, where Swamiji arrived one morning in
the beginning of February 1891, he was cordially received
by Hindus and Moslems alike. To a Moslem scholar he
said: 'There is one thing very remarkable about the Koran.
Even to this day it exists as it was recorded eleven hundred
years ago. The book has retained its original purity and is
free from interpolation.'
He had a sharp exchange of words with the
Maharaja, who was Westernized in his outlook. To the latter's
question as to why the Swami, an able-bodied young man
and evidently a scholar, was leading a vagabond's life,
the Swami retorted, 'Tell me why you constantly spend
your time in the company of Westerners and go out on shooting
excursions, neglecting your royal duties.' The
Maharaja said, 'I cannot say why, but, no doubt, because I like
to.' 'Well,' the Swami exclaimed, 'for that very reason I
wander about as a monk.'
Next, the Maharaja ridiculed the worship of
images, which to him were nothing but figures of stone, clay,
or metal. The Swami tried in vain to explain to him
that Hindus worshipped God alone, using the images
as symbols. The Prince was not convinced. Thereupon
the Swami asked the Prime Minister to take down a picture
of the Maharaja, hanging on the wall, and spit on it.
Everyone present was horror-struck at this effrontery. The
Swami turned to the Prince and said that though the picture
was not the Maharaja himself, in flesh and blood, yet
it reminded everyone of his person and thus was held in
high respect; likewise the image brought to the devotee's
mind the presence of the Deity and was therefore helpful
for concentration, especially at the beginning of his
spiritual life. The Maharaja apologized to Swamiji for his rudeness.
The Swami exhorted the people of Alwar to study
the eternal truths of Hinduism, especially to cultivate
the knowledge of Sanskrit, side by side with Western
science. He also encouraged them to read Indian history, which
he remarked should be written by Indians following
the scientific method of the West. European historians
dwelt mainly on the decadent period of Indian culture.
In Jaipur the Swami devoted himself to the study
of Sanskrit grammar, and in Ajmer he recalled the
magnificence of the Hindu and Moslem rules. At Mount Abu
he gazed in wonder at the Jain temple of Dilwara, which it
has been said, was begun by titans and finished by jewellers.
There he accepted the hospitality of a Moslem official.
To his scandalized Hindu friends the Swami said that he
was, as a sannyasin belonging to the highest order
of paramahamsas, above all rules of caste. His conduct in dining
with Moslems, he further said, was not in conflict with
the teachings of the scriptures, though it might be frowned
upon by the narrow-minded leaders of Hindu society.
At Mount Abu the Swami met the Maharaja of
Khetri, who later became one of his devoted disciples. The
latter asked the Swami for the boon of a male heir and
obtained his blessing.
Next we see the Swami travelling in Gujarat
and Kathiawar in Western India. In Ahmedabad he
refreshed his knowledge of Jainism. Kathiawar, containing a
large number of places sacred both to the Hindus and the to
Jains, was mostly ruled by Hindu Maharaja, who received
the Swami with respect. To Babu Haridas Viharidas, the
Prime Minister of the Moslem state of Junagad, he
emphasized the need of preaching the message of Hinduism
throughout the world. He spent eleven months in Porbandar
and especially enjoyed the company of the Prime
Minister, Pandit Sankar Pandurang, a great Sanskrit scholar who
was engaged in the translation of the Vedas. Impressed by
the Swami's intellectuality and originality, the pandit
said: 'Swamiji, I am afraid you cannot do much in this
country. Few will appreciate you here. You ought to go to the
West, where people will understand you and your work.
Surely you can give to the Western people your
enlightening interpretation of Hinduism.'
The Swami was pleased to hear these words,
which coincided with something he had been feeling within. The
Prime Minister encouraged the Swami to continue his
study of the French language since it might be useful to him
in his future work.
During this period the Swami was extremely
restless. He felt within him a boundless energy seeking
channels for expression. The regeneration of India was
uppermost in his mind. A reawakened India could, in her turn,
help the world at large. The sight of the pettiness,
jealousy, disunion, ignorance, and poverty among the Hindus
filled his mind with great anguish. But he had no patience
with the Westernized reformers, who had lost their contact
with the soul of the country. He thoroughly disapproved
of their method of social, religious, and political
reform through imitation of the West. He wanted the Hindus
to cultivate self-confidence. Appreciation of India's
spiritual culture by the prosperous and powerful West, he
thought, might give the Hindus confidence in their own
heritage. He prayed to the Lord for guidance. He became
friendly with the Hindu Maharajas who ruled over one-fifth
of the country and whose influence was great over
millions of people. Through them he wanted to introduce
social reforms, improved methods of education, and
other measures for the physical and cultural benefit of
the people. The Swami felt that in this way his dream
of India's regeneration would be realized with
comparative ease.
After spending a few days in Baroda, the Swami
came to Khandwa in Central India. Here he dropped the
first hint of his willingness to participate in the Parliament
of Religions to be held shortly in Chicago. He had heard
of this Parliament either in Junagad or Porbandar.
After visiting Bombay, Poona, and Kolhapur,
the Swami arrived at Belgaum. In Bombay he had
accidentally met Swami Abhedananda and in the course of a
talk had said to him, 'Brother, such a great power has
grown within me that sometimes I feel that my whole body
will burst.'
All through this wandering life he exchanged
ideas with people in all stations and stages of life and
impressed everyone with his earnestness, eloquence, gentleness,
and vast knowledge of India and Western culture. Many of
the ideas he expressed at this time were later repeated in
his public lectures in America and India. But the
thought nearest to his heart concerned the poor and
ignorant villagers, victims of social injustice: how to improve
the sanitary condition of the villages, introduce
scientific methods of agriculture, and procure pure water for
daily drinking; how to free the peasants from their illiteracy
and ignorance, how to give back to them their lost
confidence. Problems like these tormented him day and night.
He remembered vividly the words of Sri Ramakrishna
that religion was not meant for 'empty stomachs.'
To his hypochondriac disciple Haripada he gave
the following sound advice: 'What is the use of thinking
always of disease? Keep cheerful, lead a religious life,
cherish elevating thoughts, be merry, but never indulge in
pleasures which tax the body or for which you will feel
remorse afterwards; then all will be well. And as regards death,
what does it matter if people like you and me die? That will
not make the earth deviate from its axis! We should not
consider ourselves so important as to think that the world
cannot move on without us.'
When he mentioned to Haripada his desire to
proceed to America, the disciple was delighted and wanted to
raise money for the purpose, but the Swami said to him that
he would not think about it until after making his
pilgrimage to Rameswaram and worshipping the Deity there.
From Belgaum the Swami went to Bangalore in
the State of Mysore, which was ruled by a Hindu
Maharaja. The Maharaja's Prime Minister described the young
monk as 'a majestic personality and a divine force destined
to leave his mark on the history of his country.' The
Maharaja, too, was impressed by his 'brilliance of thought, charm
of character, wide learning, and penetrating religious
insight.' He kept the Swami as his guest in the palace.
One day, in front of his high officials, the
Maharaja asked the Swami, 'Swamiji, what do you think of
my courtiers?'
'Well,' came the bold reply, 'I think Your Highness
has a very good heart, but you are unfortunately
surrounded by courtiers who are generally flatterers. Courtiers are
the same everywhere.'
'But,' the Maharaja protested, 'my Prime Minster
is not such. He is intelligent and trustworthy.'
'But, Your Highness, Prime Minister is "one who
robs the Maharaja and pays the Political Agent."'
The Prince changed the subject and
afterwards warned the Swami to be more discreet in expressing
his opinion of the officials in a Native State; otherwise
those unscrupulous people might even poison him. But
the Swami burst out: 'What! Do you think an honest
sannyasin is afraid of speaking the truth, even though it may
cost him his very life? Suppose your own son asks me about
my opinion of yourself; do you think I shall attribute
to you all sorts of virtues which I am quite sure you do
not possess? I can never tell a lie.'
The Swami addressed a meeting of Sanskrit
scholars and gained their applause for his knowledge of
Vedanta. He surprised an Austrian musician at the Prince's
court with his knowledge of Western music. He discussed
with the Maharaja his plan of going to America, but when
the latter came forward with an offer to pay his expenses
for the trip, he declined to make a final decision before
visiting Rameswaram. Perhaps he was not yet quite sure of
God's will in the matter. When pressed by the Maharaja and
the Prime Minister to accept some gifts, the costlier the
better, the Swami took a tobacco pipe from the one and a
cigar from the other.
Now the Swami turned his steps towards
picturesque Malabar. At Trivandrum, the capital of Travancore,
he moved in the company of college professors, state
officials, and in general among the educated people of the city.
They found him equally at ease whether discussing Spencer
or Sankaracharya, Shakespeare or Kalidasa, Darwin
or Patanjali, Jewish history or Aryan civilization. He
pointed out to them the limitations of the physical sciences and
the failure of Western psychology to understand the
superconscious aspect of human nature.
Orthodox brahmins regarded with abhorrence
the habit of eating animal food. The Swami courageously
told them about the eating of beef by the brahmins in
Vedic times. One day, asked about what he considered the
most glorious period of Indian history, the Swami
mentioned the Vedic period, when 'five brahmins used to polish off
one cow.' He advocated animal food for the Hindus if
they were to cope at all with the rest of the world in the
present reign of power and find a place among the other
great nations, whether within or outside the British Empire.
An educated person of Travancore said about
him: 'Sublimity and simplicity were written boldly on
his features. A clean heart, a pure and austere life, an
open mind, a liberal spirit, wide outlook, and broad
sympathy were the outstanding characteristics of the Swami.'
From Trivandrum the Swami went to
Kanyakumari (Cape Comorin), which is the southernmost tip of
India and from there he moved up to Rameswaram. At Rameswaram the Swami
met Bhaskara Setupati, the
Raja of Ramnad, who later became one of his ardent
disciples. He discussed with the Prince many of his ideas
regarding the education of the Indian masses and the
improvement of their agricultural conditions. The Raja urged the
Swami to represent India at the Parliament of Religions in
Chicago and promised to help him in his venture.
At Cape Comorin the Swami became as excited as
a child. He rushed to the temple to worship the
Divine Mother. He prostrated himself before the Virgin
Goddess.1
As he came out and looked at the sea his eyes fell on
a rock. Swimming to the islet through shark-infested
waters, he sat on a stone. His heart thumped with emotion.
His great journey from the snow-capped Himalayas to
the 'Land's End' was completed. He had travelled the
whole length of the Indian subcontinent, his beloved
motherland, which, together with his earthly mother, was 'superior
to heaven itself.'
Sitting on the stone, he recalled what he had seen
with his own eyes: the pitiable condition of the Indian
masses, victims of the unscrupulous whims of their
rulers, landlords, and priests. The tyranny of caste had
sapped their last drop of blood. In most of the so-called
leaders who shouted from the housetops for the liberation of
the people, he had seen selfishness personified. And now
he asked himself what his duty was in this situation.
Should he regard the world as a dream and go into solitude
to commune with God? He had tried this several times,
but without success. He remembered that, as a sannyasin, he
had taken the vow to dedicate himself to the service
of God; but this God, he was convinced, was revealed
through humanity. And his own service to this God must
begin, therefore, with the humanity of India. 'May I be born
again and again,' he exclaimed, 'and suffer a thousand
miseries, if only I may worship the only God in whom I believe,
the sum total of all souls, and above all, my God the
wicked, my God the afflicted, my God the poor of all races!'
Through austerity and self-control the Swami
had conserved great spiritual power. His mind had been
filled with the wisdom of the East and the West. He had
received in abundance Sri Ramakrishna's blessings. He also had
had many spiritual experiences of his own. He must use all
of these assets, he concluded, for the service of God in man.
But what was to be the way?
The clear-eyed prophet saw that religion was
the backbone of the Indian nation. India would rise through
a renewal and restoration of that highest spiritual
consciousness which had made her, at all times, the cradle of
nations and the cradle of faith. He totally disagreed with
foreign critics and their Indian disciples who held that religion
was the cause of India's downfall. The Swami blamed,
rather, the falsehood, superstition, and hypocrisy that were
practised in the name of religion. He himself had
discovered that the knowledge of God's presence in man was
the source of man's strength and wisdom. He was
determined to awaken this sleeping divinity. He knew that the
Indian culture had been created and sustained by the twin
ideals of renunciation and service, which formed the core
of Hinduism. And he believed that if the national life
could be intensified through these channels, everything else
would take care of itself. The workers for
India's regeneration must renounce selfishness, jealousy,
greed, and lust for power, and they must dedicate themselves
to the service of the poor, the illiterate, the hungry, and
the sick, seeing in them the tangible manifestations of
the Godhead. People required education, food, health, and
the knowledge of science and technology to raise their
standard of living. The attempt to teach metaphysics to
empty stomachs was sheer madness. The masses everywhere
were leading the life of animals on account of ignorance
and poverty; therefore these conditions should be removed.
But where would the Swami find the fellow
workers to help him in this gigantic task?
He wanted whole-time servants of God;
workers without worldly ties or vested interests. And he
wanted them by thousands. His eyes fell upon the numerous
monks who had renounced the world in search of God. But
alas, in present-day India most of these led unproductive
lives. He would have to infuse a new spirit into them, and
they in their turn would have to dedicate themselves to
the service of the people. He hit upon a plan, which he
revealed later in a letter to a friend. 'Suppose,' the Swami
wrote, 'some disinterested sannyasins, bent on doing good
to others, went from village to village,
disseminating education and seeking in various ways to better
the condition of all, down to the untouchable, through
oral teaching and by means of maps, magic lanterns,
globes, and other accessories β would that not bring forth good
in time? All these plans I cannot write out in this brief
letter. The long and short of it is that if the mountain does
not come to Mahomet, Mahomet must go to the mountain. The
poor are too poor to go to schools; they will gain
nothing by reading poetry and all that sort of thing. We, as a
nation, have lost our individuality. We have to give back to
the nation its lost individuality and raise the masses.'
Verily, the Swami, at Kanyakumari, was the
patriot and prophet in one. There he became, as he declared
later to a Western disciple, 'a condensed India.'
But where were the resources to come from, to
help him realize his great vision?
He himself was a sannyasin, a penniless beggar.
The rich of the country talked big and did nothing. His
admirers were poor. Suddenly a heroic thought entered his
mind: he must approach the outside world and appeal to
its conscience. But he was too proud to act like a beggar.
He wanted to tell the West that the health of India and
the sickness of India were the concern of the whole world.
If India sank, the whole world would sink with her. For
the outside world, in turn, needed India, her knowledge of
the Soul and of God, her spiritual heritage, her ideal of
genuine freedom through detachment and renunciation; it
needed these in order to extricate itself from the sharp claws of
the monster of materialism.
Then to the Swami, brooding alone and in silence
on that point of rock off the tip of India, the vision came;
there flashed before his mind the new continent of America,
a land of optimism, great wealth, and unstinted
generosity. He saw America as a country of unlimited
opportunities, where people's minds were free from the encumbrance
of castes or classes. He would give the receptive
Americans the ancient wisdom of India and bring back to
his motherland, in exchange, the knowledge of science and
technology. If he succeeded in his mission to America,
he would not only enhance India's prestige in the
Occident, but create a new confidence among his own people.
He recalled the earnest requests of his friends to represent
India in the forthcoming Parliament of Religions in Chicago.
And in particular, he remembered the words of the friends
in Kathiawar who had been the first to encourage him to
go to the West: 'Go and take it by storm, and then return!'
He swam back to the continent of India and
started northwards again, by the eastern coast.
It may be mentioned here that during the Swami's
trip across the country, just described, there had taken
place may incidents that strengthened his faith in God,
intensified his sympathy for the so-called lower classes, and
broadened his general outlook on life and social conventions.
Several times, when he had had nothing to eat,
food had come to him unsought, from unexpected quarters.
The benefactors had told him that they were directed by
God. Then, one day, it had occurred to the Swami that he had
no right to lead the life of a wandering monk, begging his
food from door to door, and thus depriving the poor of a
few morsels which they could otherwise share with
their families. Forthwith he entered a deep forest and
walked the whole day without eating a grain of food. At
nightfall he sat down under a tree, footsore and hungry, and
waited to see what would happen next. Presently he saw a
tiger approaching. 'Oh,' he said, 'this is right; both of us
are hungry. As this body of mine could not be of any service
to my fellow men, let it at least give some satisfaction to
this hungry animal.' He sat there calmly, but the tiger for
some reason or other changed its mind and went off in another
direction. The Swami spent the whole night in the
forest, meditating on God's inscrutable ways. In the morning
he felt a new surge of power.
During his wanderings in the Himalayas, he was
once the guest of a Tibetan family and was scandalized to
see that polyandry was practised by its members; six
brothers sharing a common wife. To the Swami's protest, the
eldest brother replied that a Tibetan would consider it
selfishness to enjoy a good thing all by himself and not share it
with his brothers. After deep thought the Swami realized
the relativity of ethics. He saw that many so-called good
and evil practices had their roots in the traditions of
society. One might argue for or against almost anything.
The conventions of a particular society should be judged by
its own standards. After that experience, the Swami
was reluctant to condemn hastily the traditions of any
social group.
One day Swamiji was sharing a railway
compartment with two Englishmen, who took him for an illiterate
beggar and began to crack jokes in English at his expense. At
the next station they were astonished to hear him talking
with the station-master in perfect English. Embarrassed,
they asked him why he had not protested against their
rude words. With a smile, the Swami replied, 'Friends, this
is not the first time that I have seen fools.' The
Englishmen became angry and wanted a fight. But looking at
the Swami's strong body, they thought that discretion was
the better part of valour, and apologized.
In a certain place in Rajputana, the Swami was
busy for three days and nights by people seeking
religious instruction. Nobody cared about his food or rest. After they
left, a poor man belonging to a low caste offered him,
with great hesitation, some uncooked food, since he, being
an untouchable, was afraid to give him a prepared meal.
The Swami, however, persuaded the kind-hearted man
to prepare the meal for him and ate it with relish.
Shedding tears of gratitude, the Swami said to himself,
'Thousands of such good people live in huts, and we despise them
as untouchables!'
In Central India he had to pass many hard
days without food or shelter, and it was during this time that
he lived with a family of outcaste sweepers and
discovered the many priceless spiritual virtues of those people,
who cowered at the feet of society. Their misery choked
him and he sobbed: 'Oh, my country! Oh, my country!'
To resume the story of Swamiji's wandering life:
From Cape Comorin he walked most of the way to
Madras, stopping at Ramnad and Pondicherry. His fame
had already spread to the premier city of South India, and
he was greeted by a group of enthusiastic young men.
In Madras he publicly announced his intention of going
to America. His devotees here collected funds for the
trip, and it was through them that he later started his
Indian work in an organized form.
Here, in Madras, he poured his whole soul into
the discussion of religion, philosophy, science, literature,
and history. He would blaze up at people who, for lack of
time or zeal, did not practise meditation. 'What!' he
thundered at a listener. 'Those giants of old, the ancient rishis,
who never walked but strode, standing by whose side
you would shrivel into a moth β they, sir, had time
for meditation and devotions, and you have none!'
To a scoffer he said: 'How dare you criticize
your venerable forefathers in such a fashion? A little
learning has muddled your brain. Have you tested the wisdom
of the rishis? Have you even as much as read the Vedas?
There is a challenge thrown by the rishis. If you dare oppose
them, take it up.'
At Hyderabad, the capital of the Nizam's State,
he gave his first public lecture, the subject being 'My
Mission to the West.' The audience was impressed and the
Swami was pleased to see that he could hold his own in this
new field of activity.
When the devotees in Madras brought him the
money for his voyage to America, he refused to accept it and
asked them to distribute it among the poor. How was he to
know that the Lord wanted him to go to America? Perhaps
he was being carried away by his own ambition. He began
to pray intensely for divine guidance. Again money
was offered to him by some of his wealthy friends, and
again he refused. He said to his disciples: 'If it is the
Mother's wish that I should go to the West, then let us collect
money from the people. It is for them that I am going to the
West β for the people and the poor!'
The Swami one day had a symbolic dream, in
which he saw Sri Ramakrishna walking into the water of
the ocean and beckoning him to follow. He also heard
the authoritative word 'Go!' In response to a letter
that he had written to Sarada Devi, the Holy Mother, she
gave him her blessings for the fulfilment of his desire,
knowing that it was Ramakrishna's wish that he should
undertake the journey to America. And now, at last, he felt sure
of his call.
When everything was arranged for the
departure, there suddenly arrived in Madras the private secretary
of Swamiji's disciple the Raja of Khetri, bearing the
happy news of the birth of a royal son. The Swami was
earnestly desired to bless the heir apparent. He consented, and
the Raja was overjoyed to see him.
At Khetri an incident occurred that the Swami
remembered all his life. He was invited by the Maharaja to
a musical entertainment in which a nautch-girl was to
sing, and he refused to come, since he was a monk and not
permitted to enjoy secular pleasures. The singer was hurt
and sang in a strain of lamentation. Her words reached
the Swami's ears:
Look not, O Lord, upon my sins!
Is not Same-sightedness Thy name?
One piece of iron is used
Inside the holy shrine,
Another for the knife
Held in the butcher's hand;
Yet both of these are turned to gold
When touched by the philosophers' stone.
Sacred the Jamuna's water,
Foul the water in the ditch;
Yet both alike are sanctified
Once they have joined the Ganga's stream.
So, Lord, look not upon my sins!
Is not Same-sightedness Thy name?
The Swami was deeply moved. This girl,
whom society condemned as impure, had taught him a
great lesson: Brahman, the Ever Pure, Ever Free, and Ever
Illumined, is the essence of all beings. Before God there
is no distinction of good and evil, pure and impure.
Such pairs of opposites become manifest only when the
light of Brahman is obscured by maya. A sannyasin ought
to look at all things from the standpoint of Brahman.
He should not condemn anything, even a so-called
impure person.
The Swami then joined the party and with tears in
his eyes said to the girl: 'Mother, I am guilty. I was about
to show you disrespect by refusing to come to this room.
But your song awakened my consciousness.'
The Swami assumed at the Raja's request the name
of Vivekananda, and the Raja accompanied him as far
as Jaipur when he departed for Bombay. On his way
to Bombay the Swami stopped at the Abu Road station
and met Brahmananda and Turiyananda. He told them
about his going to America. The two brother disciples
were greatly excited. He explained to them the reason for
his going: it was India's suffering. 'I travelled,' he said,
'all over India. But alas, it was agony to me, my brothers,
to see with my own eyes the terrible poverty of the
masses, and I could not restrain my tears! It is now my firm
conviction that to preach religion amongst them, without
first trying to remove their poverty and suffering, is futile.
It is for this reason β to find means for the salvation of
the poor of India β that I am going to America.'
Addressing Turiyananda, he said, 'Brother, I
cannot understand your so-called religion.' His face was red
with his rising blood. Shaking with emotion, he placed his
hand on his heart, and said: 'But my heart has grown much,
much larger, and I have learnt to feel. Believe me, I feel it very
sadly.' He was choked, and then fell silent. Tears
rolled down his cheeks.
Many years later Turiyananda said, while
describing the incident: 'You can imagine what went through my
mind when I heard these pathetic words and saw the
majestic sadness of Swamiji. "Were not these," I thought, "the
very words and feelings of Buddha?"' And he remembered
that long ago Naren had visited Bodh-Gaya and in
deep meditation had felt the presence of Buddha.
Another scene of the same nature, though it
occurred much later, may be recounted here. Swami
Turiyananda called on his illustrious brother disciple, after the
latter's triumphant return from America, at the Calcutta home
of Balaram Bose, and found him pacing the veranda
alone. Deep in thought, he did not notice Turiyananda's
presence. He began to hum under his breath a celebrated song
of Mirabai, and tears welled up in his eyes. He stopped
and leaned against the balustrade, and hid his face in his
palms. He sang in an anguished voice, repeating several
times: 'Oh, nobody understands my sorrow!' And again:
'Only he who suffers knows the depth of my sorrow!' The
whole atmosphere became heavy with sadness. The voice
pierced Swami Turiyananda's heart like an arrow; but he could
not understand the cause of Vivekananda's suffering. Then
he suddenly realized that it was a tremendous
universal sympathy with the suffering and oppressed
everywhere that often made him shed tears of burning blood; and
of these the world would never know.
The Swami arrived in Bombay accompanied by
the private secretary to the Raja of Khetri, the Prince
having provided him with a robe of orange silk, an ochre turban,
a handsome purse, and a first-class ticket on the
S.S. 'Peninsular' of the Peninsular and Orient Company,
which would be sailing on May 31, 1893. The Raja had
also bestowed on him the name by which he was to
become famous and which was destined to raise India in
the estimation of the world.
The ship steamed out of the harbour on the
appointed day, and one can visualize the Swami standing on its
deck, leaning against the rail and gazing at the fast
fading landscape of his beloved motherland. What a multitude
of pictures must have raced, at that time, through his
mind: the image of Sri Ramakrishna, the Holy Mother, and
the brother disciples, either living at the Baranagore
monastery or wandering through the plains and hills of India! What
a burden of memories this lad of twenty-nine was
carrying! The legacy of his noble parents, the blessings of his
Master, the wisdom learnt from the Hindu scriptures,
the knowledge of the West, his own spiritual
experiences, India's past greatness, her present sorrow, and the
dream of her future glory, the hopes and aspirations of the
millions of India's brown men toiling in their brown fields
under the scorching tropical sun, the devotional stories of
the Puranas, the dizzy heights of Buddhist philosophy,
the transcendental truths of Vedanta, the subtleties of
the Indian philosophical systems, the soul-stirring songs of
the Indian poets and mystics, the stone-carvings and
the frescoes of the Ellora and Ajanta caves, the heroic tales
of the Rajput and Mahratta fighters, the hymns of the
South Indian Alwars, the snow peaks of the towering
Himalayas, the murmuring music of the Ganga β all these and
many such thoughts fused together to create in the Swami's mind
the image of Mother India, a universe in miniature,
whose history and society were the vivid demonstration of
her philosophical doctrine of unity in diversity. And could
India have sent a son worthier than Vivekananda to
represent her in the Parliament of Religions β a son who had
learnt his spiritual lessons at the feet of a man whose very
life was a Parliament of Religions β a son whose heart was
big enough to embrace the whole of humanity and to feel
for all in its universal compassion?
Soon the Swami adjusted himself to the new life
on board the ship β a life completely different from that of
a wandering monk. He found it a great nuisance to look
after his suitcases, trunk, valise, and wardrobe. His orange
robe aroused the curiosity of many fellow passengers,
who, however, were soon impressed by his serious nature
and deep scholarship. The vessel ploughed through the
blue sea, pausing at various ports on the way, and the
Swami enjoyed the voyage with the happy excitement of a
child, devouring eagerly all he saw.
In Colombo he visited the monasteries of
the Hinayana Buddhists. On the way to Singapore he
was shown the favourite haunts of the Malay pirates,
whose descendants now, as the Swami wrote to an Indian
friend, under the 'leviathan guns of modern turreted
battleships, have been forced to look about for more
peaceful pursuits.' He had his first glimpse of China in the
busy port of Hongkong, where hundreds of junks and
dinghies moved about, each with the wife of its boatman at
the helm, for a whole family lived in each floating craft.
The traveller was amused to notice the Chinese babies,
most of whom were tied to the backs of their mothers, while
the latter were busy either pushing heavy loads
or jumping with agility from one craft to another. And
there was a rush of boats and steam launches coming in
and going out.
'Baby John,' the Swami wrote humorously to the
same friend, 'is every moment in danger of having his little
head pulverized, pigtail and all, but he does not care a fig.
The busy life seems to have no charm for him, and he is
quite content to learn the anatomy of a bit of rice-cake given
to him by the madly busy mother. The Chinese child is
quite a little philosopher and calmly goes to work at the age
when your Indian boy can hardly crawl on all fours. He has
learnt the philosophy of necessity too well, from his
extreme poverty.'
At Canton, in a Buddhist monastery, the Swami
was received with respect as a great yogi from India. He saw
in China, and later in Japan, many temples with
manuscripts written in the ancient Bengali script. This made him
realize the extent of the influence of India outside her own
borders and strengthened his conviction about the spiritual
unity of Asia.
Next the boat reached Japan, and the Swami
visited Yokohama, Osaka, Kyoto, and Tokyo. The broad
streets, the cage-like little houses, the pine-covered hills, and
the gardens with shrubs, grass-plots, artificial pools, and
small bridges impressed him with the innate artistic nature
of the Japanese people. On the other hand, the
thoroughly organized Japanese army equipped with guns made
in Japan, the expanding navy, the merchant marine, and
the industrial factories revealed to him the scientific skill of
a newly awakened Asiatic nation. But he was told that the
Japanese regarded India as the 'dreamland of
everything noble and great.'
His thoughts always returned to India and her
people. He wrote to a disciple in Madras: 'Come out and be
men! India wants the sacrifice of at least a thousand of her
young men β men, mind you, and not brutes. How many
men β unselfish and thorough-going men β is Madras ready
to supply, who will struggle unto death to bring about a
new state of things β sympathy for the poor, bread for
hungry mouths, enlightenment for the people at large, who
have been brought to the level of beasts by the tyranny of
your forefathers?'
From Yokohama he crossed the Pacific Ocean
and arrived in Vancouver, British Columbia. Next he
travelled by train to Chicago, the destination of his journey and
the meeting-place of the Parliament of Religions.
The first sight of Chicago, the third largest city of
the New Continent, the great civic queen of the Middle
West, enthroned on the shore of Lake Michigan, with its
teeming population and strange way of life β a mixture of
the refinement of the Eastern coast and the crudities of
the backwoods β must have bewildered, excited, and
terrified the young visitor from India. Swami Vivekananda
walked through the spacious grounds of the World's Fair and
was speechless with amazement. He marvelled at what
the Americans had achieved through hard work, friendly
co-operation with one another, and the application of
scientific knowledge. Not too many years before, Chicago
had consisted of only a few fishermen's huts, and now at
the magic touch of human ingenuity, it was turned into
a fairyland. Never before had the Swami seen such an
accumulation of wealth, power, and inventive genius in
a nation. In the fair-grounds he attracted people's
notice. Lads ran after him, fascinated by his orange robe
and turban. Shopkeepers and porters regarded him as
a Maharaja from India and tried to impose upon him.
On the Swami's part, his first feeling was one of
unbounded admiration. But a bitter disillusionment was to come.
Soon after his arrival in Chicago, he went one day
to the information bureau of the Exposition to ask about
the forthcoming Parliament of Religions. He was told that
it had been put off until the first week of September (it
was then only the end of July) and that no one
without credentials from a bona fide organization would
be accepted as a delegate. He was told also that it was
then too late for him to be registered as a delegate. All this
had been unexpected by the Swami; for not one of his
friends in India β the enthusiastic devotees of Madras, the Raja
of Khetri, the Raja of Ramnad, and the Maharaja of
Mysore, the Ministers of the native states, and the disciples
who had arranged his trip to America β had taken the
trouble to make any inquiries concerning the details of
the Parliament. No one had known what were to be the
dates of the meetings or the conditions of admission. Nor
had the Swami brought with him any letter of authority from
a religious organization. All had felt that the young
monk would need no letter of authorization, his personality
being testimonial enough.
'The Swami himself,' as his Irish disciple,
Sister Nivedita, wrote some years later, 'was as simple in the
ways of the world as his disciples, and when he was once
sure that he was divinely called to make this attempt, he could
see no difficulties in the way. Nothing could have been
more typical of the lack of organizedness of Hinduism itself
than this going forth of its representative unannounced,
and without formal credentials, to enter the strongly
guarded door of the world's wealth and power.'
In the meantime, the purse that the Swami had
carried from India was dwindling; for things were much
more expensive in America than he or his friends had
thought. He did not have enough to maintain him in Chicago
until September. In a frantic mood he asked help from
the Theosophical Society, which professed warm friendship
for India. He was told that he would have to subscribe to
the creed of the Society; but this he refused to do because
he did not believe in most of the Theosophical
doctrines. Thereupon the leader declined to give him any help.
The Swami became desperate and cabled to his friends
in Madras for money.
Finally, however, someone advised him to go
to Boston, where the cost of living was cheaper, and in
the train his picturesque dress, no less than his
regal appearance, attracted a wealthy lady who resided in
the suburbs of the city. She cordially invited him to be her
guest, and he accepted, to save his dwindling purse. He
was lodged at 'Breezy Meadows,' in Metcalf,
Massachusetts, and his hostess, Miss Kate Sanborn, was delighted
to display to her inquisitive friends this strange curiosity
from the Far East. The Swami met a number of people, most
of whom annoyed him by asking queer questions
regarding Hinduism and the social customs of India, about
which they had read in the tracts of Christian missionaries
and sensational writers. However, there came to him a few
serious-minded people, and among these were
Mrs. Johnson, the lady superintendent of a women's prison,
and J.H. Wright, a professor of Greek at Harvard
University. On the invitation of the superintendent, he visited
the prison and was impressed by the humanitarian attitude
of its workers towards the inmates. At once there came to
his mind the sad plight of the masses of India and he wrote
to a friend on August 20, 1893:
How benevolently the inmates are treated,
how they are reformed and sent back as useful
members of society β how grand, how beautiful, you must
see to believe! And oh, how my heart ached to think
of what we think of poor, the low, in India. They have
no chance, no escape, no way to climb up. They sink
lower and lower every day, they feel the blows
showered upon them by a cruel society, and they do not
know whence the blows come. They have forgotten that
they too are men. And the result is slavery. β¦ Ah,
tyrants! You do not know that the obverse is tyranny and
the reverse, slavery.
Swami Vivekananda had no friends in this
foreign land, yet he did not lose faith. For had not a kind
Providence looked after him during the uncertain days of
his wandering life? He wrote in the same letter: 'I am
here amongst the children of the Son of Mary, and the Lord
Jesus will help me.'
The Swami was encouraged by Professor Wright
to represent Hinduism in the Parliament of Religions,
since that was the only way he could be introduced to the
nation at large. When he announced, however, that he had no
credentials, the professor replied, 'To ask you, Swami,
for your credentials is like asking the sun about its right
to shine.' He wrote about the Swami to a number of
important people connected with the Parliament, especially to
the chairman of the committee on selection of delegates,
who was one of his friends, and said, 'Here is a man
more learned than all our learned professors put
together.' Professor Wright bought the Swami railroad ticket
for Chicago.
The train bearing Vivekananda to Chicago arrived
late in the evening, and he had mislaid, unfortunately,
the address of the committee in charge of the delegates.
He did not know where to turn for help, and no one
bothered to give information to this foreigner of strange
appearance. Moreover the station was located in a part of the
city inhabited mostly by Germans, who could hardly
under stand his language. He knew he was stranded there,
and looking around saw a huge empty wagon in the
railroad freight-yard. In this he spent the night without food or
a bed.
In the morning he woke up 'smelling fresh water,'
to quote his own words, and he walked along the
fashionable Lake Shore Drive, which was lined with the mansions
of the wealthy, asking people the way to the
Parliament grounds. But he was met with indifference. Hungry
and weary, he knocked at several doors for food and was
rudely treated by the servants. His soiled clothes and
unshaven face gave him the appearance of a tramp. Besides, he
had forgotten that he was in a land that knew thousands
of ways of earning the 'almighty dollar,' but was
unfamiliar with Franciscan poverty or the ways of religious
vagabonds. He sat down exhausted on the sidewalk and
was noticed from an opposite window. The mistress of the
house sent for him and asked the Swami if he was a delegate
to the Parliament of Religions. He told her of his
difficulties. The lady, Mrs. George W. Hale, a society woman of
Chicago, gave him breakfast and looked after his needs. When
he had rested, she accompanied him to the offices of
the Parliament and presented him to Dr. J.H. Barrows, the
President of the Parliament, who was one of her personal
friends. The Swami was thereupon cordially accepted as a
representative of Hinduism and lodged in the house of Mr.
and Mrs. John B. Lyons. Mr. and Mrs. Hale and their
children as well as the Lyons, became his lifelong friends. Once
again the Swami had been strengthened in his conviction
that the Lord was guiding his footsteps, and he prayed
incessantly to be a worthy instrument of His will.
On Monday, September 11, 1893 the Parliament
of Religions opened its deliberations with due solemnity.
This great meeting was an adjunct of the World's
Columbian Exposition, which had been organized to celebrate the
four hundredth anniversary of the discovery of America
by Christopher Columbus. One of the main goals of
the Exposition was to disseminate knowledge of the
progress and enlightenment brought about in the world by
Western savants and especially through physical science
and technology; but as religion forms a vital factor in
human culture, it had been decided to organize a Parliament
of Religions in conjunction with the Exposition.
Dr. Barrows, in his History of the Parliament
of Religions, writes:
Since faith in a Divine Power to whom men believe they owe service and worship, has been like the sun, a life-giving and fructifying potency in man's intellectual and moral development; since Religion lies at the back of Hindu literature with its marvellous and mystic developments; of the European Art, whether in the form of Grecian statues or Gothic cathedrals; and of American liberty and the recent uprisings of men on behalf of a juster social condition; and since it is as clear as the light, that the Religion of Christ has led to many of the chief and noblest developments of our modern civilization, it did not appear that Religion any more than Education, Art, or Electricity, should be excluded from the Columbian Exposition.
It is not altogether improbable that some of the
more enthusiastic Christian theologians, among the
promoters of the Parliament, thought that the Parliament would
give them an opportunity to prove the superiority of
Christianity, professed by the vast majority of the people of
the progressive West, over the other faiths of the world.
Much later Swami Vivekananda said, in one of his jocular
moods, that the Divine Mother Herself willed the Parliament
in order to give him an opportunity to present the
Eternal Religion of the Hindus before the world at large, and
that the stage was set for him to play his important
role, everything else being incidental. The appropriateness
of this remark can be appreciated now, six decades after
the great event, from the fact that whereas all else that
was said and discussed at the Parliament has been
forgotten, what Vivekananda preached is still cherished in
America, and the movement inaugurated by him has endeared
itself to American hearts.
'One of the chief advantages,' to quote the words
of the Hon. Mr. Merwin-Marie Snell, president of the
Scientific Section of the Parliament, 'has been in the great
lessons which it has taught the Christian world, especially
the people of the United States, namely, that there are
other religions more venerable than Christianity, which
surpass it in philosophical depths, in spiritual intensity,
in independent vigour of thought, and in breadth and
sincerity of human sympathy, while not yielding to it
a single hair's breadth in ethical beauty and efficiency.'
At 10 a.m. the Parliament opened. In it every form
of organized religious belief, as professed among
twelve hundred millions of people, was represented. Among
the non-Christian groups could be counted Hinduism,
Jainism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Shintoism,
Mohammedanism, and Mazdaism.
The spacious hall and the huge gallery of the art
Palace were packed with seven thousand people β men
and women representing the culture of the United States.
The official delegates marched in a grand procession to
the platform, and in the centre, in his scarlet robe, sat
Cardinal Gibbons, the highest prelate of the Roman Catholic
Church in the Western hemisphere. He occupied a chair of
state and opened the meeting with a prayer. On his left and
right were grouped the Oriental delegates: Pratap
Chandra Mazoomdar of the Calcutta Brahmo Samaj, and
Nagarkar of Bombay; Dharmapala, representing the
Ceylon Buddhists; Gandhi, representing the Jains; Chakravarti
and Annie Besant of the Theosophical Society. With them
sat Swami Vivekananda, who represented no particular
sect, but the Universal Religion of the Vedas, and who spoke,
as will presently be seen, for the religious aspiration of
all humanity. His gorgeous robe, large yellow turban,
bronze complexion, and fine features stood out prominently
on the platform and drew everybody's notice. In
numerical order the Swami's position was number thirty-one.
The delegates arose, one by one, and read
prepared speeches, but the Hindu sannyasin was totally
unprepared. He had never before addressed such an assembly. When
he was asked to give his message he was seized with
stage-fright, and requested the chairman to call on him a
little later. Several times he postponed the summons. As
he admitted later: 'Of course my heart was fluttering and
my tongue nearly dried up. I was so nervous that I could
not venture to speak in the morning session.'
At last he came to the rostrum and Dr.
Barrows introduced him. Bowing to Sarasvati, the Goddess
of Wisdom, he addressed the audience as 'Sisters and
Brothers of America.' Instantly, thousands arose in their seats
and gave him loud applause. They were deeply moved to
see, at last, a man who discarded formal words and spoke
to them with the natural and candid warmth of a brother.
It took a full two minutes before the tumult
subsided, and the Swami began his speech by thanking the
youngest of the nations in the name of the most ancient
monastic order in the world, the Vedic order of sannyasins.
The keynote of his address was universal toleration
and acceptance. He told the audience how India, even in
olden times, had given shelter to the religious refugees of
other lands β for instance, the Israelites and the
Zoroastrians β and he quoted from the scriptures the following
two passages revealing the Hindu spirit of toleration:
'As different streams, having their sources in
different places, all mingle their water in the sea, so, O Lord,
the different paths which men take through
different tendencies, various though they appear, crooked
or straight, all lead to Thee.'
'Whosoever comes to Me, through whatsoever
form, I reach him. All men are struggling through many
paths which in the end lead to Me.'
In conclusion he pleaded for the quick termination
of sectarianism, bigotry, and fanaticism.
The response was deafening applause. It appeared
that the whole audience had been patiently awaiting this
message of religious harmony. A Jewish intellectual remarked to
the present writer, years later, that after hearing
Vivekananda he realized for the first time that his own religion,
Judaism, was true, and that the Swami had addressed his words
on behalf of not only his religion, but all religions of the
world. Whereas every one of the other delegates had spoken
for his own ideal or his own sect, the Swami had spoken
about God, who, as the ultimate goal of all faiths, is their
inmost essence. And he had learnt that truth at the feet of
Sri Ramakrishna, who had taught incessantly, from his
direct experience, that all religions are but so many paths to
reach the same goal. The Swami gave utterance to the yearning
of the modern world to break down the barriers of caste,
colour, and creed and to fuse all people into one humanity.
Not a word of condemnation for any faith,
however crude or irrational, fell from his lips. He did not
believe that this religion or that religion was true in this or
that respect; to him all religions were equally effective paths
to lead their respective devotees, with diverse tastes
and temperaments, to the same goal of perfection. Years
before, young Narendra had condemned before his Master, in
his neophyte zeal, a questionable sect that indulged in
immoral practices in the name of religion, and Ramakrishna
had mildly rebuked him, saying: 'Why should you
criticize those people? Their way, too, ultimately leads to God.
There are many doors to enter a mansion. The scavenger
comes in by the back door. You need not use it.'
How prophetic were the master's
words that
his Naren would one day shake the world! Mrs. S.K.
Blodgett, who later became the Swami's hostess in Los Angeles,
said about her impressions of the Parliament: 'I was at
the Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893. When
that young man got up and said, "Sisters and Brothers
of America," seven thousand people rose to their feet as
a tribute to something they knew not what. When it was
over I saw scores of women walking over the benches to
get near him, and I said to my self, "Well, my lad, if you
can resist that onslaught you are indeed a God!"'
Swami Vivekananda addressed the Parliament
about a dozen times. His outstanding address was a paper
on Hinduism in which he discussed Hindu
metaphysics, psychology, and theology. The divinity of the soul,
the oneness of existence, the non-duality of the Godhead,
and the harmony of religions were the recurring themes of
his message. He taught that the final goal of man is to
become divine by realizing the Divine and that human beings
are the children of 'Immortal Bliss'.
In the final session of the Parliament,
Swami Vivekananda said in the conclusion of his speech:
'The Christian is not to become a Hindu or a Buddhist, nor is 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 any thing 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".'
The Parliament of Religions offered Swami
Vivekananda the long desired opportunity to present before
the Western world the eternal and universal truths of his
Aryan ancestors. And he rose to the occasion. As he stood on
the platform to give his message, he formed, as it were,
the confluence of two great streams of thought, the two
ideals that had moulded human culture. The vast audience
before him represented exclusively the Occidental
mind β young, alert, restless, inquisitive, tremendously honest,
well disciplined, and at ease with the physical universe,
but sceptical about the profundities of the supersensuous
world and unwilling to accept spiritual truths without
rational proof. And behind him lay the ancient world of India,
with its diverse religious and philosophical discoveries, with
its saints and prophets who investigated Reality through
self-control and contemplation, unruffled by the passing
events of the transitory life and absorbed in contemplation of
the Eternal Verities. Vivekananda's education,
upbringing, personal experiences, and contact with the God-man
of modern India had pre-eminently fitted him to
represent both ideals and to remove their apparent conflict.
To Vivekananda the religion of the Hindus,
based upon the teachings of the Vedas, appeared adequate
to create the necessary synthesis. By the Vedas he did not
mean any particular book containing the words of
a prophet or deriving sanction from a supernatural
authority, but the accumulated treasure of spiritual laws
discovered by various Indian seers in different times. Just as the
law of gravitation existed before its discovery, and
would continue to exist even if all humanity forgot it, so do
the laws that govern the spiritual world exist
independently of our knowledge of them. The moral, ethical, and
spiritual relations between soul and soul, and between
individual spirits and the Father of all spirits, were in existence
before their discovery, and will remain even if we forget
them. Regarding the universal character of the Hindu faith
the Swami said: 'From the high spiritual flights of the
Vedanta philosophy, of which the latest discoveries of science
seem like echoes, to the low ideas of idolatry with its
multifarious mythology, the agnosticism of the Buddhists, and
the atheism of the Jains, each and all have a place in
Hindu religion.'
The young, unknown monk of India was
transformed overnight into an outstanding figure of the religious
world. From obscurity he leapt to fame. His life-size portraits
were posted in the streets of Chicago, with words 'The
Monk Vivekananda' written beneath them and many
passers-by would stop to do reverence with bowed heads.
Dr. J.H. Barrows, Chairman of the General
Committee of the Parliament of Religions, said: 'Swami
Vivekananda exercised a wonderful influence over his auditors,' and
Mr. Merwin-Marie Snell stated, more enthusiastically: 'By
far the most important and typical representative of
Hinduism was Swami Vivekananda, who, in fact, was
beyond question the most popular and influential man in the
Parliament....He was received with greater
enthusiasm than any other speaker, Christian or pagan. The
people thronged about him wherever he went and hung
with eagerness on his every word. The most rigid of
orthodox Christians say of him, "He is indeed a prince among men!"'
Newspapers published his speeches and they
were read with warm interest all over the country. The
New York Herald said: 'He is undoubtedly the
greatest figure in
the Parliament of Religions. After hearing him we feel
how foolish it is to send missionaries to this learned
nation.' The Boston Evening Post said: 'He is a
great favourite at
the Parliament from the grandeur of his sentiments and
his appearance as well. If he merely crosses the platform he
is applauded; and this marked approval of thousands
he accepts in a childlike spirit of gratification without a
trace of conceit....At the Parliament of Religions they used
to keep Vivekananda until the end of the programme to
make people stay till the end of the session....The four
thousand fanning people in the Hall of Columbus would sit
smiling and expectant, waiting for an hour or two to listen
to Vivekananda for fifteen minutes. The chairman knew
the old rule of keeping the best until the last.'
It is one of the outstanding traits of Americans to
draw out the latent greatness of other people. America
discovered Vivekananda and made a gift of him to India and the world.
The reports of the Parliament of Religions
were published in the Indian magazines and newspapers.
The Swami's vindication of the Hindu faith filled with
pride the hearts of his countrymen from Colombo to Almora,
from Calcutta to Bombay. The brother monks at the
Baranagore monastery were not, at first, clear about the identity of
Vivekananda. A letter from the Swami, six months after
the Parliament, removed all doubts, however, and how
proud they felt at the achievement of their beloved Naren!
But how did Vivekananda himself react to
this triumph, which had been the fulfilment of his
long cherished desire? He knew that his solitary life as a
monk in constant communion with God was at an end; he
could no longer live in obscurity with his dreams and
visions. Instead of dwelling in peace and serenity, he was
thrown into the vortex of a public career with its ceaseless
turmoil and demands. When he returned to his hotel the night
after the first meeting of the Parliament, he wept like a child.
After he had delivered his message in the
Parliament, the Swami suffered no longer from material wants.
The doors of the wealthy were thrown open. Their
lavish hospitality made him sick at heart when he
remembered the crushing poverty of his own people. His
anguish became so intense one night that he rolled on the
floor, groaning: 'O Mother, what do I care for name and
fame when my motherland remains sunk in utmost poverty?
To what a sad pass have we poor Indians come when
millions of us die for want of a handful of rice, and here they
spend millions of rupees upon their personal comfort! Who
will raise the masses of India? Who will give them bread?
Show me, O Mother, how I can help them.' While addressing
one session of the Parliament, the Swami had said that
what India needed was not religion, but bread. Now he
began to study American life in its various aspects, especially
the secret of the country's high standard of living and
he communicated to his disciples in India his views on
the promotion of her material welfare.
Swami Vivekananda was invited by a lecture
bureau to tour the United States, and he accepted the offer.
He wanted money in order to free himself from obligation
to his wealthy friends and also to help his various
philanthropic and religious projects in India. Further, he thought
that through a lecture bureau he could effectively broadcast
his ideas all over the American continent and thus remove
from people's minds erroneous notions regarding Hindu
religion and society. Soon he was engaged in a whirlwind
tour covering the larger cities of the East and the Middle
West. People called him the 'cyclonic Hindu'. He visited,
among other places, Iowa City, Des Moines, Memphis,
Indianapolis, Minneapolis, Detroit, Buffalo, Hartford, Boston,
Cambridge, New York, Baltimore, and Washington. Cherishing a
deep affection for the members of the Hale family, he made
his headquarters with George W. Hale in Chicago.
But his path was not always strewn with rose
petals. Vivekananda was an outspoken man. Whenever he
found in American society signs of brutality,
inhumanity, pettiness, arrogance, and ignorance concerning
cultures other than its own, he mercilessly criticized them.
Often small-minded people asked him irritating questions
about India, based upon malicious and erroneous reports,
and the Swami fell upon them like a thunderbolt. 'But woe
to the man,' wrote the Iowa State Register, 'who
undertook
to combat the monk on his own ground, and that was
where they all tried it who tried it at all. His replies came
like flashes of lightning and the venturesome questioner
was sure to be impaled on the Indian's shining
intellectual lance....Vivekananda and his cause found a place in
the hearts of all true Christians.'
Many Christian ministers became his warm
friends and invited him to speak in their churches.
Swami Vivekananda was especially bitter about
false Christianity and the religious hypocrisy of many
Christian leaders. In a lecture given in Detroit he came out in one
of his angriest moods, and declared in the course of his speech:
You train and educate and clothe and pay men to do what? β to come over to my country and curse and abuse all my forefathers, my religion, my everything. They walk near a temple and say, 'You idolaters, you will go to hell.' But the Hindu is mild; he smiles and passes on, saying, 'Let the fools talk.' And then you who train men to abuse and criticize, if I just touch you with the least bit of criticism, but with the kindest purpose, you shrink and cry: 'Do not touch us! We are Americans; we criticize, curse, and abuse all the heathens of the world, but do not touch us, we are sensitive plants.' And whenever you missionaries criticize us, let them remember this: If all India stands up and takes all the mud that lies at the bottom of the Indian Ocean and throws it up against the Western countries, it will not be doing an infinitesimal part of what you are doing to us.
Continuing, the Swami said that the military conquests of the Western nations and the activities of the Christian missionaries, strangely enough, often proceeded side by side. Most people were converted for worldly reasons. But the Swami warned:
Such things tumble down; they are built
upon sand; they cannot remain long. Everything that has
selfishness for its basis, competition for its right
hand, and enjoyment as its goal, must die sooner or later.
If you want to live, go back to Christ. You are
not Christians. No, as a nation you are not. Go back
to Christ. Go back to him who had nowhere to lay
his head. Yours is a religion preached in the name
of luxury. What an irony of fate! Reverse this if you
want to live; reverse this. You cannot serve God
and Mammon at the same time. All this
prosperity β all this from Christ? Christ would have denied all
such heresies. If you can join these two, this
wonderful prosperity with the ideal of Christ, it is well; but
if you cannot, better go back to him and give up
these vain pursuits. Better be ready to live in rags with
Christ than to live in palaces without him.
On one occasion the Swami was asked to speak
in Boston on Ramakrishna, a subject dear to his heart.
When he looked at the audience β the artificial and worldly
crowd of people β and contrasted it with his Master's purity
and renunciation, he practically dropped the subject
and mercilessly inveighed against the materialistic culture
of the West. The audience was resentful and many left
the meeting in an angry mood. But Vivekananda, too, had
his lesson. On returning home he recalled what he had
said, and wept. His Master had never uttered a word of
condemnation against anybody, even the most wicked
person; yet he, while talking about Ramakrishna, had
criticized these good-hearted people who were eager to learn
about the Master. He felt that he was too unworthy of Sri
Ramakrishna to discuss him or even to write about him.
Swami Vivekananda's outspoken words aroused
the bitter enmity of a large section of the Christian
missionaries and their American patrons, and also of Christian
fanatics. Filled with rancour and hatred, these began to vilify
him both openly and in private. They tried to injure
his reputation by writing false stories traducing his
character. Some of the Indian delegates to the Parliament, jealous
of the Swami's popularity and fame, joined in the
vilification. Missionaries working in India and some of the
Hindu organizations started an infamous campaign against
the Swami's work. The Theosophists were
particularly vindictive. They declared that the Swami was violating
the laws of monastic life in America by eating forbidden
food and breaking caste laws.
His friends and disciples in India were frightened
and sent him cuttings from Indian papers containing
these malicious reports. One article stated that one of the
Swami's American hostesses had had to dismiss a servant girl
on account of the Swami's presence in the house. But the
lady published a vehement denial and said that the Swami
was an honoured guest in her home and would always
be treated with affection and respect. The Swami wrote to
his timorous devotees in India concerning a
particular American paper that had criticized him, telling them
that it was generally known in America as the
'blue-nosed Presbyterian paper', that no educated American took
it seriously, and that, following the well-known Yankee
trick, it had tried to gain notoriety by attracting a man
lionized by society. He assured them that the American people as
a whole, and many enlightened Christian clergymen,
were among his admiring friends, and he asked them not to send
him any more of such newspaper trash with articles
from his vilifiers. He told them, furthermore, that he had
never deviated from the two basic vows of the monastic
life, namely, chastity and poverty, and that as regards
other things, he was trying to adjust himself to the customs
of the people among whom he lived.
To the accusation from some orthodox Hindus
that the Swami was eating forbidden food at the table of
infidels, he retorted:
Do you mean to say I am born to live and die as one of those caste-ridden, superstitious, merciless, hypocritical, atheistic cowards that you only find among the educated Hindus? I hate cowardice. I will have nothing to do with cowards. I belong to the world as much as to India, no humbug about that. What country has a special claim on me? Am I a nation's slave? ...I see a greater power than man or God or Devil at my back. I require nobody's help. I have been all my life helping others.
To another Indian devotee he wrote in similar vein:
I am surprised that you take the missionaries' nonsense so seriously....If the people of India want me to keep strictly to my Hindu diet, please tell them to send me a cook and money enough to keep him....On the other hand, if the missionaries tell you that I have ever broken the two great vows of the sannyasin β chastity and poverty β tell them that they are big liars. As for me, mind you, I stand at nobody's dictation, and no chauvinism about me....I hate cowardice; I will have nothing to do with cowards or political nonsense. I do not believe in any politics. God and truth are the only politics in the world; everything else is trash.
Swami Vivekananda remained unperturbed
by opposition. His lectures, intensely religious and
philosophical, were attended everywhere by eminent people.
Many came to him for private instruction. His aim was to
preach the eternal truths of religion and to help sincere people
in moulding their spiritual life. Very soon his dauntless
spirit, innate purity, lofty idealism, spiritual personality,
and spotless character attracted to him a band of sincere
and loyal American disciples, whom he began to train as
future Vedanta workers in America.
It must be said to the credit of America that she
was not altogether unprepared to receive the message
of Vivekananda. Certain spiritual ideas, which were
congenial for the reception of the Vedantic ideals presented by
the Swami, had already begun to ferment underneath
the robust, picturesque, gay, and dynamic surface of
American life. Freedom, equality, and justice had always
been the cherished treasures of American hearts. To
these principles, which the Americans applied in politics
and society for the material and ethical welfare of men,
Swami Vivekananda gave a spiritual basis and interpretation.
Religion had played an important part from the
very beginning of American Colonial history. The pilgrims
who crossed the Atlantic in the 'Mayflower' and landed on
the barren cost of Cape Cod in November 1620, were
English people who had first left England and gone to Holland for
freedom of worship. Later they were joined by
other dissenters who could not submit to the restrictions
placed upon their religious beliefs by the English rulers of the
time. These were the forbears of the sturdy,
religious-minded New Englanders who, two centuries later, became
the leaders of the intellectual and spiritual culture of
America. Swami Vivekananda found among their descendants
many of his loyal and enthusiastic followers.
Both the Holy Bible and the philosophy of
Locke influenced the Bill of Rights and the American
Constitution. Leaders imbued with the Christian ideal of the
Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of men, penned the
second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence,
which clearly set forth its political philosophy, namely, the
equality of men before God, the state, and society. Thomas
Paine, one of the high priests of the American Revolution, was
an uncompromising foe of tyranny, and an upholder of
human freedom. The same passion for equality, freedom,
justice, enduring peace, and righteousness was later to
permeate the utterances of the great Lincoln.
The political structure of America shows the
sagacity and lofty idealism of her statesmen, who built up
the country after the War of Independence. The
original thirteen colonies, which had wrested freedom
from England, gradually became the United States of
America. The architects of the American Government might
have created, following the imperialistic pattern of England,
an American Empire, with the original thirteen states as a
sort of mother country and the rest as her colonies. But
instead, the newly acquired territories received complete
equality of status. It may also be mentioned that, with the exception
of the Mexican War of 1845, America has never started
a war.
Within a hundred years of her gaining
independence, America showed unprecedented material prosperity.
The country's vast hidden wealth was tapped by
European immigrants, who brought with them not only the
flavour of an older civilization, but technical skill,
indomitable courage, and the spirit of adventure. Scientists
and technologists flooded the country with new
inventions. Steamboats, a network of railroads, and various
mechanical appliances aided in the creation of new wealth. Towns
grew into cities. As big business concerns expanded,
workmen and mechanics formed protective organizations.
Ambition stirred everywhere, and men's very manners changed
with the new haste and energy that swept them on.
Material prosperity was accompanied by a
new awakening of men's minds and consciousness. Jails
were converted into penitentiary systems, based upon
humanitarian principles, and anti-slavery societies were
inaugurated. During the five years between 1850 and 1855
were published some of the greatest books in American
literature, hardly surpassed in imaginative vitality. Democracy was
in full swing and it was the people's day everywhere. The
crude frontier days were fast disappearing.
The Transcendentalist Movement, of which
Emerson was the leader, with Thoreau and Alcott as his
associates, brought spiritual India into the swift current of
American life. The old and new continents had not been
altogether strangers. Columbus had set out to find the short route
to India, known far and wide for her fabulous wealth,
and had stumbled upon America instead. The chests of tea of
the Boston Tea Party, which set off the War of
Independence, had come from India. Moreover, the victory of the
English over the French in the eighteenth-century colonial wars
in India contributed to the success of the American
colonists in their struggle for freedom begun in 1775. And
finally, Commodore Perry in 1853 made it possible for
American merchant ships to trade with the Far East and thus
visit Indian coastal towns on their long journeys.
The development of Emerson's innate idealism
had been aided by the philosophy of Greece, the ethics of
China, the poetry of the Sufis, and the mysticism of India.
Emerson, a keen student of the Bhagavad Gita, was familiar with
the Upanishadic doctrines and published translations of
religious and philosophical tracts from the Oriental
languages. His beautiful poem 'Brahma' and his essay 'The
Over-Soul' show clearly his indebtedness to Hindu spiritual
thought. But Emerson's spirit, pre-eminently ethical and
intellectual, could not grasp the highest flights of Hindu mysticism;
it accepted only what was in harmony with a
somewhat shallow optimism. Emerson's writings later influenced
the New Thought movement and Mary Baker Eddy's
Christian Science.
Thoreau, Emerson's neighbour for twenty-five
years, read and discussed with him in great detail the
Hindu religious classics. Thoreau wrote: 'I bathe my intellect
in the stupendous and cosmogonal philosophy of the Upanishads and the
Bhagavad Gita, in comparison
with which our modern world and literature seem puny
and trivial.' He wanted to write a joint Bible, gathering
material from the Asiatic scriptures, and took for his motto
Ex Oriente Lux.
Alcott was genuine friend of Indian culture. He
was instrumental in bringing out the American edition of
Sir Edwin Arnold's The Light of Asia, and this made
the
life and teachings of Buddha accessible, for the first time,
to American readers.
The Transcendental Club, founded in Concord,
near Boston, reached its height by 1840. The American
Oriental Society was formed in 1842, with aims similar to those
of the European Oriental societies.
Walt Whitman (1819-1892), a contemporary of
the Concord philosophers, seems to have come very near
to Vedantic idealism. There is no reliable evidence to
show that Whitman was directly influenced by Hindu
thought. He is reputed to have denied it himself. A great
religious individualist, he was free from all church
conventions and creeds. To him, religion consisted entirely of
inner illumination, 'the secret silent ecstasy.' It is not known
if he practised any definite religious disciplines;
most probably he did not. Yet Swami Vivekananda once
called Whitman 'the sannyasin of America.' Leaves of
Grass, which Swami Vivekananda read, breathes the spirit
of identity with all forms of life, and Whitman's 'Song
of the Open Road' is full of the sentiments that were
nearest to the heart of Vivekananda. Here, for example,
are three stanzas:
I inhale great draughts of space;
The east and the west are mine;
Β Β Β Β and the north and the south are
mine.
I am larger, better than I thought;
I did not know I held so much goodness.
Allons! We must not stop here!
However sweet these laid-up stores β
Β Β Β Β however convenient this
dwelling,
Β Β Β Β we cannot remain here;
However shelter'd this port,
Β Β Β Β and however calm these waters,
Β Β Β Β we must not anchor here;
However welcome the hospitality
Β Β Β Β that surrounds us, we are
permitted
Β Β Β Β to receive it but a little
while.
Allons! Be not detain'd!
Let the paper remain on the desk unwritten,
Β Β Β Β and the book on the shelf
unopen'd!
Let the tools remain in the workshop!
Β Β Β Β let the money remain unearn'd!
Let the school stand!
Β Β Β Β mind not the cry of the teacher!
Let the preacher preach in the pulpit!
Β Β Β Β let the lawyer plead in the
court,
Β Β Β Β and the judge expound the law.
There are several reasons why the marriage of East and West dreamt of by Emerson and Thoreau did not take place. The Gold Rush of 1849, to California, had turned people's attention in other directions. Then had come the Civil War, in which brother had fought brother and men's worst passions had been let loose. Lastly, the development of science and technology had brought about a great change in people's outlook, intensifying their desire for material prosperity.
The publication of Darwin's Origin of
Species in 1859 changed the
Weltanschauung of the Western world, and its
repercussions were felt more in the New World than
in Europe. Within a decade, intellectual people gave up
their belief in the Biblical story of creation and did not
hesitate to trace man's origin back to an apelike ancestor,
and beyond that to a primordial protoplasmic atomic
globule. The implications of evolution were incorporated into
every field of thought β law, history, economics,
sociology, philosophy, religion, and art; transcendentalism
was replaced by empiricism, instrumentalism, and
pragmatism. The American life-current thus was turned into a
new channel. When America had been comparatively poor
she had cherished her spiritual heritage. In the midst of
her struggle for existence she had preserved her
spiritual sensitivity. But in the wake of the Civil War the desire
to posses 'bigger and better things' cast its spell
everywhere. Big utilities and corporations came into existence;
the spiritual and romantic glow of the frontier days
degenerated into the sordidness of competitive materialistic
life, while the unceasing flow of crude immigrants from
Europe made difficult the stabilization of American culture.
Emerson was disillusioned by the aftermath of the
Civil War. He had hoped 'that in the peace after such a war,
a great expansion would follow in the mind of the
country, grand views in every direction β true freedom in politics,
in religion, in social science, in thought. But the energy of
the nation seems to have expended itself in the war.'
Walt Whitman was even more caustic. He
wrote bitterly:
Society in the States is cramped, crude, superstitious, and rotten.... Never was there, perhaps, more hollowness of heart than at present, and here in the United States. Genuine belief seems to have left us....; The great cities reek with respectable, as much as non-respectable, robbery and scoundrelism. In fashionable life, flippancy, tepid amours, weak infidelism, small aims, or no aims at all, only to kill time.... I say that our New World Democracy, however great a success in uplifting the masses out of their sloughs in materialistic development, and in a certain highly deceptive superficial popular intellectuality, is so far an almost complete failure in its social aspects. In vain do we march with unprecedented strides to empire so colossal, outvying the antique, beyond Alexander's, beyond the proudest sway of Rome. In vain we annexed Texas, California, Alaska, and reach north for Canada or south for Cuba. It is as if we were somehow being endowed with a vast and thoroughly appointed body, and left with little or no soul.
But the material prosperity or the triumph of science could not destroy the innate idealism of the American mind. It remained hidden like embers under ashes. Thoughtful Americans longed for a philosophy which, without going counter to the scientific method, would show the way to a larger vision of life, harmonizing the diverse claims of science, the humanities, and mystical experience. Now the time was ripe for the fulfilment of Thoreau's dream of the marriage of East and West, a real synthesis of science and religion. And to bring this about, no worthier person could have been found than Swami Vivekananda of India. This accounts for the spontaneous welcome received by this representative of Hinduism, who brought to America an ancient and yet dynamic philosophy of life.
After the meetings of the Parliament of Religions
were concluded, Swami Vivekananda, as already noted,
under took a series of apostolic campaigns in order to sow
the seed of the Vedantic truths in the ready soil of
America. Soon he discovered that the lecture bureau was
exploiting him. Further, he did not like its method of
advertisement. He was treated as if he were the chief attraction of a
circus. The prospectus included his portrait, with the
inscription, proclaiming his cardinal virtues: 'An Orator by
Divine Right; a Model Representative of his Race; a Perfect
master of the English Language; the Sensation of the World's
Fair Parliament.' It also described his physical bearing,
his height, the colour of his skin, and his clothing. The
Swami felt disgusted at being treated like a patent medicine or
an elephant in a show. So he severed his relationship with
the bureau and arranged his own lectures himself. He
accepted invitation from churches, clubs, and private gatherings,
and travelled extensively through the Eastern and
Midwestern states of America, delivering twelve to fourteen or
more lectures a week.
People came in hundreds and in thousands. And
what an assorted audience he had to face! There came to
his meetings professors from universities, ladies of
fine breeding, seekers of truth, and devotees of God
with childlike faith. But mixed with these were charlatans,
curiosity-seekers, idlers, and vagabonds. It is not true
that he met everywhere with favourable conditions.
Leon Landsberg, one of the Swami's American disciples,
thus described Vivekananda's tribulations of those days:
The Americans are a receptive nation. That is why the country is a hotbed of all kinds of religious and irreligious monstrosities. There is no theory so absurd, no doctrine so irrational, no claim so extravagant, no fraud so transparent, but can find their numerous believers and a ready market. To satisfy this craving, to feed the credulity of the people, hundreds of societies and sects are born for the salvation of the world, and to enable the prophets to pocket $25 to $100 initiation fees. Hobgoblins, spooks, mahatmas, and new prophets were rising every day. In this bedlam of religious cranks, the Swami appeared to teach the lofty religion of the Vedas, the profound philosophy of Vedanta, the sublime wisdom of the ancient rishis. The most unfavourable environment for such a task!
The Swami met with all kinds of obstacles.
The opposition of fanatical Christian missionaries was,
of course, one of these. They promised him help if he
only would preach their brand of Christianity. When the
Swami refused, they circulated all sorts of filthy stories about
him, and even succeeded in persuading some of the
Americans who had previously invited him to be their guest, to
cancel the invitations. But Vivekananda continued to preach
the religion of love, renunciation, and truth as taught by
Christ, and so show him the highest veneration as a Saviour of
mankind. How significant were his words: 'It is well to
be born in a church, but it is terrible to die there!' Needless
to say, he meant by the word church all organized
religious institutions. How like a thunderbolt the words fell
upon the ears of his audience when one day he exclaimed:
'Christ, Buddha, and Krishna are but waves in the Ocean of
Infinite Consciousness that I am!'
Then there were the leaders of the cranky, selfish,
and fraudulent organizations, who tried to induce the
Swami to embrace their cause, first by promises of support,
and then by threats of injuring him if he refused to ally
himself with them. But he could be neither bought nor
frightened β 'the sickle had hit on a stone,' as the Polish proverb
says. To all these propositions his only answer was: 'I stand
for Truth. Truth will never ally itself with falsehood. Even
if all the world should be against me, Truth must prevail
in the end.'
But the more powerful enemies he had to face
were among the so-called free-thinkers, embracing the
atheists, materialists, agnostics, rationalists, and others of
similar breed who opposed anything associated with God
or religion. Thinking that they would easily crush his
ancient faith by arguments drawn from Western philosophy
and science, they organized a meeting in New York and
invited the Swami to present his views.
'I shall never forget that memorable evening'
wrote an American disciple, 'when the Swami appeared
single-handed to face the forces of materialism, arrayed in
the heaviest armour of law, and reason, and logic,
and common sense, of matter, and force, and heredity, and
all the stock phrases calculated to awe and terrify the
ignorant. Imagine their surprise when they found that
far from being intimidated by these big words, he
proved himself a master in wielding their own weapons, and
as familiar with the arguments of materialism as with
those of Advaita philosophy. He showed them that their
much vaunted Western science could not answer the most
vital questions of life and being, that their immutable laws,
so much talked of, had no outside existence apart from
the human mind, that the very idea of matter was a
metaphysical conception, and that it was much
despised metaphysics upon which ultimately rested the very
basis of their materialism. With an irresistible logic he
demonstrated that their knowledge proved itself incorrect,
not by comparison with that which was true, but by the
very laws upon which it depended for its basis; that
pure reason could not help admitting its own limitations
and pointed to something beyond reason; and that
rationalism, when carried to its last consequences, must
ultimately land us at something which is above matter, above
force, above sense, above thought, and even consciousness,
and of which all these are but manifestations.'
As a result of his explaining the limitations of
science, a number of people from the group of
free-thinkers attended the Swami's meeting the next day and listened
to his uplifting utterances on God and religion.
What an uphill work it was for Swami
Vivekananda to remove the ignorance, superstition, and perverted
ideas about religion in general and Hinduism in particular!
No wonder he sometimes felt depressed. In one of these
moods he wrote from Detroit, on March 15, 1894, to the Hale
sisters in Chicago:
But I do not know β I have become very sad in my heart since I am here. I do not know why. I am wearied of lecturing and all that nonsense. This mixing with hundreds of human animals, male and female, has disturbed me. I will tell you what is to my taste. I cannot write β cannot speak β but I can think deep, and when I am heated can speak fire. But it should be to a select few β a very select few. And let them carry and sow my ideas broadcast if they will β not I. It is only a just division of labour. The same man never succeeded in thinking and in casting his thoughts all around. Such thoughts are not worth a penny. ... I am really not 'cyclonic' at all β far from it. What I want is not here β nor can I longer bear this cyclonic atmosphere. Calm, cool, nice, deep, penetrating, independent, searching thought β a few noble pure mirrors which will reflect it back, catch it until all of them sound in unison. Let others throw it to the outside world if they will. This is the way to perfection β to be prefect, to make perfect a few men and women. My idea of doing good is this β to evolve a few giants, and not to strew pearls to the swine and lose time, breath, and energy. ... Well, I do not care for lecturing any more. It is too disgusting to bring me to suit anybody's or any audience's fad.
Swami Vivekananda became sick of what he
termed 'the nonsense of public life and newspaper blazoning.'
The Swami had sincere admirers and devotees
among the Americans, who looked after his comforts, gave
him money when he lacked it, and followed his instructions.
He was particularly grateful to American women,
and wrote many letters to his friends in India paying high
praise to their virtues.
In one letter he wrote:
'Nowhere in the world are women like those of this country. How pure, independent, self-relying, and kind-hearted! It is the women who are the life and soul of this country. All learning and culture are centred in them.'
In another letter:
'[Americans] look with veneration upon women, who play a most prominent part in their lives. Here this form of worship has attained its perfection β this is the long and short of it. I am almost at my wit's end to see the women of this country. They are Lakshmi, the Goddess of Fortune, in beauty, and Sarasvati, the Goddess of Learning, in virtues β they are the Divine Mother incarnate. If I can raise a thousand such Madonnas β incarnations of the Divine Mother β in our country before I die, I shall die in peace. Then only will our countrymen become worthy of their name.'
Perhaps his admiration reached its highest pitch in a letter to the Maharaja of Khetri, which he wrote in 1894:
American women! A hundred lives would not
be sufficient to pay my deep debt of gratitude to
you! Last year I came to this country in summer, a wandering
preacher of a far distant country,
without name, fame, wealth, or learning to recommend
me β friendless, helpless, almost in a state of
destitution; and American women befriended me, gave me
shelter and food, took me to their homes, and treated me
as their own son, their own brother. They stood as my
friends even when their own priests were trying
to persuade them to give up the 'dangerous
heathen' β even when, day after day, their best friends had
told them not to stand by this 'unknown foreigner,
maybe of dangerous character.' But they are better judges
of character and soul β for it is the pure mirror
that catches the reflection.
And how many beautiful homes I have seen,
how many mothers whose purity of character, whose unselfish
love for their children, are beyond
expression, how many daughters and pure maidens,
'pure as the icicle on Diana's temple' β and withal
much culture, education, and spirituality in the
highest sense! Is America, then, only full of wingless
angels in the shape of women? There are good and
bad everywhere, true β but a nation is not to be judged
by its weaklings, called the wicked, for they are only
the weeds which lag behind, but by the good, the
noble and the pure, who indicate the national life-current
to be flowing clear and vigorous.
And how bitter the Swami felt when he
remembered the sad plight of the women of India! He
particularly recalled the tragic circumstances under which one of
his own sisters had committed suicide. He often thought
that the misery of India was largely due to the ill-treatment
the Hindus meted out to their womenfolk. Part of the
money earned by his lectures was sent to a foundation for
Hindu widows at Baranagore. He also conceived the idea
of sending to India women teachers from the West for
the intellectual regeneration of Hindu women.
Swami Vivekananda showed great respect for
the fundamentals of American culture. He studied
the country's economic policy, industrial organizations,
public instruction, and its museums and art galleries, and
wrote to India enthusiastically about them. He praised highly
the progress of science, hygiene, institutions, and social
welfare work. He realized that such noble concepts as the
divinity of the soul and the brotherhood of men were mere
academic theories in present-day India, whereas America
showed how to apply them in life. He felt indignant when
he compared the generosity and liberality of the wealthy
men of America in the cause of social service, with the
apathy of the Indians as far as their own people were concerned.
'No religion on earth,' he wrote angrily, 'preaches
the dignity of humanity in such a lofty strain as
Hinduism, and no religion on earth treads upon the necks of the
poor and the low in such a fashion as Hinduism. Religion is
not at fault, but it is the Pharisees and Sadducees.'
How poignant must have been his feelings when
he remembered the iniquities of the caste-system!
'India's doom was sealed,' he wrote, 'the very day they
invented the word mlechcha1
and stopped from communion
with others.' When he saw in New York a millionaire
woman sitting side by side in a tram-car with a negress with a
wash-basket on her lap, he was impressed with the
democratic spirit of the Americans. He wanted in India 'an
organization that will teach the Hindus mutual help and
appreciation' after the pattern of Western democracies.
Incessantly he wrote to his Indian devotees about
the regeneration of the masses. In a letter dated 1894 he said:
Let each one of us pray, day and night, for the downtrodden millions in India, who are held fast by poverty, priestcraft, and tyranny β pray day and night for them. I care more to preach religion to them than to the high and the rich. I am no metaphysician, no philosopher, nay, no saint. But I am poor, I love the poor.... Who feels in India for the three hundred millions of men and women sunken for ever in poverty and ignorance? Where is the way out? Who feels for them? Let these people be your God β think of them, work for them, pray for them incessantly β the Lord will show you the way. Him I call a mahatma, a noble soul, whose heart bleeds for the poor; otherwise he is a duratma, a wicked soul.... 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.... We are poor, my brothers we are nobodies, but such have always been the instruments of the Most High.
Never did he forget, in the midst of the comforts and luxuries of America, even when he was borne on the wings of triumph from one city to another, the cause of the Indian masses, whose miseries he had witnessed while wandering as an unknown monk from the Himalayas to Cape Comorin. The prosperity of the new continent only stirred up in his soul deeper commiseration for his own people. He saw with his own eyes what human efforts, intelligence, and earnestness could accomplish to banish from society poverty, superstition, squalor, disease, and other handicaps of human well-being. On August 20, 1893, he wrote to instil courage into the depressed hearts of his devotees in India:
Gird up your loins, my boys! I am called by the Lord for this.... The hope lies in you β in the meek, the lowly, but the faithful. Feel for the miserable and look up for help β it shall come. I have travelled twelve years with this load in my heart and this idea in my head. I have gone from door to door of the so-called 'rich and great.' With a bleeding heart I have crossed half the world to this strange land, seeking help. The Lord is great. I know He will help me. I may perish of cold and hunger in this land, but I bequeath to you young men this sympathy, this struggle for the poor, the ignorant, the oppressed.... Go down on your faces before Him and make a great sacrifice, the sacrifice of the whole life for them, for whom He comes from time to time, whom He loves above all β the poor, the lowly, the oppressed. Vow, then, to devote your whole lives to the cause of these three hundred millions, going down and down every day. Glory unto the Lord! We will succeed. Hundreds will fall in the struggle β hundreds will be ready to take it up. Faith β sympathy, fiery faith and fiery sympathy! Life is nothing, death is nothing β hunger nothing, cold nothing. Glory unto the Lord! March on, the Lord is our General. Do not look back to see who falls β forward β onward!
Swami Vivekananda was thoroughly convinced by
his intimate knowledge of the Indian people that the
life-current of the nation, far from being extinct, was
only submerged under the dead weight of ignorance
and poverty. India still produced great saints whose
message of the Spirit was sorely needed by the Western world.
But the precious jewels of spirituality discovered by them
were hidden, in the absence of a jewel-box, in a heap of
filth. The West had created the jewel-box, in the form of a
healthy society, but it did not have the jewels. Further, it took
him no long time to understand that a materialistic
culture contained within it the seeds of its own destruction.
Again and again he warned the West of its impending
danger. The bright glow on the Western horizon might not be
the harbinger of a new dawn; it might very well be the
red flames of a huge funeral pyre. The Western world
was caught in the maze of its incessant
activity β interminable movement without any goal. The hankering for
material comforts, without a higher spiritual goal and a feeling
of universal sympathy, might flare up among the nations
of the West into jealousy and hatred, which in the end
would bring about their own destruction.
Swami Vivekananda was a lover of humanity. Man
is the highest manifestation of God, and this God was
being crucified in different ways in the East and the West.
Thus he had a double mission to perform in America. He
wanted to obtain from the Americans money, scientific
knowledge, and technical help for the regeneration of the Indian
masses, and, in turn, to give to the Americans the knowledge
of the Eternal Spirit to endow their material progress
with significance. No false pride could prevent him
from learning from America the many features of her
social superiority; he also exhorted the Americans not to allow
racial arrogance to prevent them from accepting the gift
of spirituality from India. Through this policy of
acceptance and mutual respect he dreamt of creating a healthy
human society for the ultimate welfare of man's body and soul.
The year following the Parliament of Religions
the Swami devoted to addressing meetings in the vast
area spreading from the Mississippi to the Atlantic. In
Detroit he spent six weeks, first as a guest of Mrs. John
Bagley, widow of the former Governor of Michigan, and then
of Thomas W. Palmer, President of the World's Fair
Commission, formerly a United States Senator and
American Minister to Spain. Mrs. Bagley spoke of the
Swami's presence at her house as a 'continual benediction.' It
was in Detroit that Miss Greenstidel first heard him speak.
She later became, under the name of Sister Christine, one
of the most devoted disciples of the Swami and a
collaborator of Sister Nivedita in her work in Calcutta for
the educational advancement of Indian women.
After Detroit, he divided his time between
Chicago, New York, and Boston, and during the summer of
1894 addressed, by invitation, several meetings of the
'Humane Conference' held at Greenacre, Massachusetts.
Christian Scientists, spiritualists, faith-healers, and groups
representing similar views participated in the Conference.
The Swami in the course of a letter to the Hale
sisters of Chicago, wrote on July 31, 1894, with his usual
humour about the people who attended the meetings:
They have a lively time and sometimes all of
them wear what you call your scientific dress the whole
day. They have lectures almost every day. One Mr. Colville
from Boston is here. He speaks every day, it is
said, under spirit control. The editor of the Universal
Truth from the top floor of Jimmy Mills has settled
herself down here. She is conducting religious services
and holding classes to heal all manner of diseases, and
very soon I expect them to be giving eyes to the blind,
etc., etc. After all, it is a queer gathering. They do not
care much about social laws and are quite free and happy....
There is a Mr. Wood of Boston here, who is one
of the great lights of your sect. But he objects to
belonging to the sect of Mrs. Whirlpool.2
So he calls himself a mental healer of metaphysical,
chemico, physical-religioso, what-not, etc.
Yesterday there was a tremendous cyclone
which gave a good 'treatment' to the tents. The big tent
under which they held the lectures developed so
much spirituality under the treatment that it
entirely disappeared from mortal gaze, and about
two hundred chairs were dancing about the grounds
under spiritual ecstasy. Mrs. Figs of Mills Company gives
a class every morning, and Mrs. Mills is jumping
all about the place. They are all in high spirits. I
am especially glad for Cora, for she suffered a good
deal last winter and a little hilarity would do her
good. You would be astounded with the liberty they
enjoy in the camps, but they are very good and
pure people β a little erratic, that is all.
Regarding his own work at Greenacre, the Swami wrote in the same letter:
The other night the camp people all went to
sleep under a pine tree under which I sit every morning
a la India and talk to them. Of course I went with
them and we had a nice night under the stars, sleeping
on the lap of Mother Earth, and I enjoyed every bit of
it. I cannot describe to you that night's glories β after
the year of brutal life that I have led, to sleep on
the ground, to mediate under the tree in the forest!
The inn people are more or less well-to-do, and the
camp people are healthy, young, sincere, and holy men
and women. I teach them all Sivoham,
Sivohamβ'I am Siva, I am Siva' β and they all repeat
it, innocent and
pure as they are, and brave beyond all bounds, and I am
so happy and glorified.
Thank God for making me poor! Thank God
for making these children in the tents poor! The
dudes and dudines are in the hotel, but iron-bound
nerves, souls of triple steel, and spirits of fire are in the
camp. If you had seen them yesterday, when the rain
was falling in torrents and the cyclone was
overturning everything β hanging on to their tent-strings to
keep them from being blown off, and standing on
the majesty of their souls, these brave ones β it would
have done your hearts good. I would go a hundred
miles to see the like of them. Lord bless them!...
Never be anxious for me for a moment. I
will be taken care of, and if not, I shall know my
time
has come β and pass out.... Now good dreams, good
thoughts for you. You are good and noble. Instead
of materializing the spirit, i.e. dragging the spiritual
to the material plane as these fellers do, convert
matter into spirit β catch a glimpse at least, every day, of
that world of infinite beauty and peace and purity,
the spiritual, and try to live in it day and night. Seek
not, touch not with your toes, anything which is
uncanny. Let your souls ascend day and night like an
unbroken string unto the feet of the Beloved, whose throne is
in your own heart, and let the rest take care of
themselves, i.e. the body and everything else. Life is
an evanescent, floating dream; youth and beauty
fade. Say day and night: 'Thou art my father, my
mother, my husband, my love, my Lord, my God β I
want nothing but Thee, nothing but Thee, nothing but
Thee. Thou in me, I in Thee β I am Thee, Thou art me.'
Wealth goes, beauty vanishes, life flies, powers fly β but
the Lord abideth for ever, love abideth for ever. If there
is glory in keeping the machine in good trim, it is
more glorious to withhold the soul from suffering with
the body. That is the only demonstration of your
being 'not matter' β by letting matter alone.
Stick to God. Who cares what comes, in the
body or anywhere? Through the terrors of evil, say,
'My God, my Love!' Through the pangs of death, say,
'My God, my Love!' Through all the evils under the
sun, say: 'My God, my Love! Thou art here, I see Thee.
Thou art with me, I feel Thee. I am Thine, take me. I am
not the world's but Thine β leave Thou not me.' Do
not go for glass beads, leaving the mine of diamonds.
This life is a great chance. What! Seekest thou the pleasures
of this world? He is the fountain of all bliss. Seek
the highest, aim for the highest, and you
shall reach the highest.
At Greenacre the Swami became a friend of Dr.
Lewis G. Janes, Director of the School of Comparative
Religions organized by the Greenacre Conference, and President
of the Brooklyn Ethical Association. The following
autumn he lectured in Baltimore and Washington.
During the Swami's visit in New York he was the
guest of friends, mostly rich ladies of the metropolitan city.
He had not yet started any serious work there. Soon he
began to feel a sort of restraint put upon his movements.
Very few of his wealthy friends understood the true import
of his message; they were interested in him as a novelty
from India. Also to them he was the man of the hour.
They wanted him to mix with only the exclusive society of
'the right people.' He chafed under their domination and
one day cried: 'Siva! Siva! Has it ever come to pass that a
great work has been grown by the rich? It is brain and heart
that create, and not purse.' He wanted to break away from
their power and devote himself to the training of some
serious students in the spiritual life. He was fed up with
public lectures; now he became eager to mould silently
the characters of individuals. He could no longer bear the
yoke of money and all the botheration that came in its train.
He would live simply and give freely, like the holy men
of India. Soon an opportunity presented itself.
Dr. Lewis Janes invited the Swami to give a series
of lectures on the Hindu religion before the Brooklyn
Ethical Association. On the evening of December 31, 1894, he gave
his first lecture, and according to the report of the
Brooklyn Standard, the enthusiastic audience,
consisting of
doctors and lawyers and judges and teachers, remained
spellbound by his eloquent defence of the religion of India. They
all acknowledged that Vivekananda was even greater than
his fame. At the end of the meeting they made an
insistent demand for regular classes in Brooklyn, to which the
Swami agreed. A series of class meetings was held and
several public lectures were given at the Pouch Mansion,
where the Ethical Association held its meetings. These
lectures constituted the beginning of the permanent work
in America which the Swami secretly desired.
Soon after, several poor but earnest students
rented for the Swami some unfurnished rooms in a poor
section of New York City. He lived in one of them. An
ordinary room on the second floor of the lodging-house was
used for the lectures and classes. The Swami when
conducting the meetings sat on the floor, while the ever more
numerous auditors seated themselves as best they could, utilizing
the marble-topped dresser, the arms of the sofa, and even
the corner wash-stand. The door was left open and
the overflow filled the hall and sat on the stairs. The
Swami, like a typical religious teacher in India, felt himself in
his own element. The students, forgetting all the
inconveniences, hung upon every word uttered from the
teacher's deep personal experiences or his wide range of knowledge.
The lectures, given every morning and
several evenings a week, were free. The rent was paid by
the voluntary subscriptions of the students, and the deficit
was met by the Swami himself, through the money he
earned by giving secular lectures on India. Soon the meeting-place
had to be removed downstairs to occupy an entire
parlour floor.
He began to instruct several chosen disciples in
jnana-yoga in order to clarify their intellects regarding the
subtle truths of Vedanta, and also in raja-yoga to teach them
the science of self-control, concentration, and meditation.
He was immensely happy with the result of his
concentrated work. He enjoined upon these students to follow
strict disciplines regarding food, choosing only the simplest.
The necessity of chastity was emphasized, and they
were warned against psychic and occult power. At the same
time he broadened their intellectual horizon through
the teachings of Vedantic universality. Daily he meditated
with the serious students. Often he would lose all
bodily consciousness and, like Sri Ramakrishna, had to be
brought back to the knowledge of the world through the
repetition of certain holy words that he had taught his disciples.
It was sometime about June 1895 when
Swami Vivekananda finished writing his famous book
Raja-Yoga, which attracted the attention of the
Harvard
philosopher William James and was later to rouse the enthusiasm
of Tolstoy. The book is a translation of Patanjali's
Yoga aphorisms, the Swami adding his own explanations;
the introductory chapters written by him are
especially illuminating. Patanjali expounded, through these
aphorisms, the philosophy of Yoga, the main purpose of
which is to show the way of the soul's attaining freedom from
the bondage of matter. Various methods of concentrations
are discussed. The book well served two purposes. First,
the Swami demonstrated that religious experiences could
stand on the same footing as scientific truths, being based on
experimentation, observation, and verification.
Therefore genuine spiritual experiences must not be
dogmatically discarded as lacking rational evidence. Secondly, the
Swami explained lucidly various disciplines of concentration,
with the warning, however, that they should not be
pursued without the help of a qualified teacher.
Miss S. Ellen Waldo of Brooklyn, a disciple of
the Swami, was his amanuensis. She thus described the
manner in which he dictated the book:
'In delivering his commentaries on the aphorisms, he would leave me waiting while he entered into deep states of meditation or self-contemplation, to emerge therefrom with some luminous interpretation. I had always to keep the pen dipped in the ink. He might be absorbed for long periods of time, and then suddenly his silence would be broken by some eager expression or some long, deliberate teaching.'
By the middle of the year 1895 the Swami
was completely exhausted. The numerous classes and
lectures, the private instruction, the increasing correspondence,
and the writing of Raja-Yoga had tired him both
physically
and mentally. It was a herculean task to spread the message
of Hinduism in an alien land and at the same time to
mould the lives of individuals according to the highest ideal
of renunciation. Besides, there were annoyances from
zealous but well-meaning friends, especially women.
Some suggested that he should take elocution lessons,
some urged him to dress fashionably in order to influence
society people, other admonished him against mixing with all
sorts of people. At time he would be indignant and say:
'Why should I be bound down with all this nonsense? I am a
monk who has realized the vanity of all earthly
nonsense! I have no time to give my manners a finish. I cannot
find time enough to give my message. I will give it after
my own fashion. Shall I be dragged down into the narrow
limits of your conventional life? Never!' Again, he wrote to
a devotee: 'I long, oh, I long for my rags, my shaven
head, my sleep under the trees, and my food from begging.'
The Swami needed rest from his strenuous work,
and accepted the invitation of his devoted friend Francis
H. Leggett to come to his summer camp at Percy,
New Hampshire, and rest in the silence of the pine woods.
In the meantime Miss Elizabeth Dutcher, one of his
students in New York, cordially asked the Swami to take a
vacation in her summer cottage at Thousand Island Park on the
St. Lawrence River. The Swami gratefully accepted
both invitations.
About his life at the camp, he wrote to a friend
on June 7, 1895: 'It gives me a new lease of life to be here. I
go into the forest alone and read my Gita and am quite
happy.' After a short visit at Percy, he arrived in June at
Thousand Island Park, where he spent seven weeks. This proved
to be a momentous period in his life in the Western world.
When the students who had been attending
Swami Vivekananda's classes in New York heard of Miss
Dutcher's proposal, they were immensely pleased, because they
did not want any interruption of their lessons. The Swami,
too, after two years' extensive work in America, had
become eager to mould the spiritual life of individual students
and to train a group that would carry on his work in
America in the future. He wrote to one of his friends that he
intended to manufacture 'a few yogis' from the materials of the
classes. He wanted only those to follow him to
Thousand Island Park who were completely earnest in their
practice of spiritual disciplines, and he said that he would
gladly recognize these as his disciples.
By a singular coincidence just twelve disciples
were taught by him at the summer retreat, though all were
not there the full seven weeks; ten was the largest
number present at any one time. Two, Mme. Marie Louise and
Mr. Leon Landsberg, were initiated at Thousand Island
Park into the monastic life. The former, French by birth but
a naturalized American, a materialist and socialist, a
fearless, progressive woman worker known to the press
and platform, was given the name Abhayananda. The latter,
a Russian Jew and member of the staff of a prominent
New York newspaper, became known as Kripananda. Both
took the vows of poverty and chastity.
In many respects the sojourn in Miss Dutcher's
cottage was ideal for the Swami's purpose. Here, to this
intimate group, he revealed brilliant flashes of illumination,
lofty flights of eloquence, and outpourings of the most
profound wisdom. The whole experience was reminiscent of
the Dakshineswar days when the Swami, as the young Narendra, had
been initiated into the mysteries of
the spiritual life at the feet of his Master Ramakrishna.
Thousand Island Park, near the western tip
of Wellesley Island, the second largest of the
seventeen hundred islands in the St. Lawrence River, has for its
setting one of the scenic show-places of America. A
prosperous village during the last part of the nineteenth century, it
was, at the time of the Swami's visit, a stronghold of
orthodox Methodist Christianity. The local tabernacle, where
celebrated preachers were invited to conduct the
divine service on Sunday mornings, attracted people from
the neighbouring islands. Since secular activities were
not allowed on the Sabbath, the visitors would arrive
at Thousand Island Park the previous day and spend the
night camping out. No such profanities as public
drinking, gambling, or dancing were allowed in the summer
resort β a rule that is still enforced half a century later. Only
people of serious mind went there for their vacation.
Miss Dutcher's cottage3
was ideally located on a hill, which on the north and west sloped down
towards
the river. It commanded a grand view of many distant
islands, the town of Clayton on the American mainland and
the Canadian shores to the north. At night the houses and
hotels were brightly illuminated by Chinese lanterns.
Miss Dutcher, an artist, had built her cottage
literally 'on a rock,' with huge boulders lying all around. It
was surrounded by rock-gardens with bright-coloured
flowers. At that time the tress at the base of the hill had not
grown high; people from the village often visited the
upstairs porch to survey the magnificent sweep of the river.
After inviting the Swami, Miss Dutcher, added a
new wing to the cottage for his accommodation. This wing,
three storeys high, stood on a steep slope of rock, like a
great lantern-tower with windows on three sides. The room at
the top was set apart exclusively for the Swami's use;
the lowest room was occupied by a student; the room
between, with large windows, and several doors opening on the
main part of the house, was used as the Swami's classroom.
Miss Dutcher thoughtfully added an outside stairway to
the Swami's room so that he might go in and out without
being noticed by the others.
On the roofed-in porch upstairs, extending along
the west side of the cottage, the students met the Swami
for his evening talks. There, at one end, close to the door of
his room, he would take his seat and commune with his
pupils both in silence and through the spoken word. In the
evening the cottage was bathed in perfect stillness except for
the murmur of insects and the whisper of the wind
through the leaves. The house being situated, as it were, among
the tree-tops, a breeze always relieved the summer heat.
The centre of the village was only a five minutes' walk
from the cottage, and yet, on account of the woods around
it, not a single house could be seen. Many of the islands
that dotted the river were visible in the distance and,
especially in the evening, appeared like a picture. The glow of
the sunset on the St. Lawrence was breathtaking in its
beauty, and the moon at night was mirrored in the shining
waters beneath.
In this ideal retreat, 'the world forgetting, by the
world forgot,' the devoted students spent seven weeks with
their beloved teacher, listening to his words of wisdom
and receiving his silent benediction. Immediately after
the evening meal they would assemble on the upstairs
porch. Soon the Swami would come from his room and take
his seat. Two hours and often much longer would be spent
together. One night, when the moon was almost full,
he talked to them until it set below the western horizon,
both the teacher and the students being unaware of the
passage of time. During these seven weeks the Swami's whole
heart was in his work and he taught like one inspired.
Miss Dutcher, his hostess, was a conscientious
little woman and a staunch Methodist. When the Swami
arrived at the house, he saw on the walls of his living
quarters scrolls bearing the words 'Welcome to
Vivekananda' painted in bold letters. But as the teaching began,
Miss Dutcher often felt distressed by the Swami's
revolutionary ideas. All her ideals, her values of life, her concepts
of religion, were, it seemed to her, being destroyed.
Sometimes she did not appear for two or three days. 'Don't you
see?' the Swami said. 'This is not an ordinary illness. It is
the reaction of the body against the chaos that is going on
in her mind. She cannot bear it.'
The most violent attack came one day after a
timid protest on her part against something he had told them
in the class. 'The idea of duty is the midday sun of
misery, scorching the very soul,' he had said. 'Is it not our
duty β ' she had begun, but got no farther. For once the great
free soul broke all bounds in his rebellion against the idea
that anyone should dare bind with fetters the soul of man.
Miss Dutcher was not seen for some days.
Referring to the students who had gathered
around the Swami, a village shopkeeper said to a new arrival
who inquired for the cottage, 'Yes, there are some queer
people living up on the hill; among them there is a
foreign-looking gentleman.' A young girl of sixteen, living with her
family at the foot of the hill, one day expressed the desire to talk
to the Swami. 'Don't go near him,' her mother said
sternly. 'He is a heathen.' Mr. Tom Mitchell, a carpenter who
helped to restore the cottage for the
Ramakrishna-Vivekananda Centre in 1948, and had originally built the
Swami's quarters in 1895, told the present writer that he had
read the Swami's lectures in Chicago from the newspapers
long before his arrival at the island.
The students wanted, at first, to live as a
community without servants, each doing a share of the work.
Nearly all of them, however, were unaccustomed to
housework and found it uncongenial. The result was amusing; as
time went on it threatened to become disastrous. When
the tension became too great, the Swami would say with
utmost sweetness, 'Today, I shall cook for you.' At this
Landsberg would ejaculate, in an aside, 'Heaven save us!' By way
of explanation he declared that in New York, whenever
the Swami cooked, he, Landsberg, would tear his hair,
because it meant that afterwards every dish in the house
required washing. After a few days an outsider was engaged to
help with the housework.
Swami Vivekananda started his class at
Thousand Island Park on Wednesday, June 19. Not all the
students had arrived. But his heart was set on his work; so
he commenced at once with the three or four who were
with him. After a short meditation, he opened with the
Gospel according to Saint John, from the Bible, saying that
since the students were all Christians, it was proper that
he should begin with the Christian scriptures. As the
classes went on, he taught from the Bhagavad Gita, the
Upanishads, the Vedanta Sutras, the Bhakti
Sutras of Narada, and other Hindu scriptures. He discussed
Vedanta in its
three aspects: the non-dualism of Sankara, the
qualified non-dualism of Ramanuja, and the dualism of
Madhva. Since the subtleties of Sankara appeared difficult to
the students, Ramanuja remained the favourite among
them. The Swami also spoke at length about Sri Ramakrishna,
of his own daily life with the Master, and of his struggles
with the tendency to unbelief and agnosticism. He told
stories from the inexhaustible storehouse of Hindu mythology
to illustrate his abstruse thoughts.
The ever recurring theme of his teaching was
God-realization. He would always come back to the
one, fundamental, vital point: 'Find God. Nothing else
matters.' He emphasized morality as the basis of the spiritual
life. Without truth, non-injury, continence,
non-stealing, cleanliness, and austerity, he repeated, there could be
no spirituality. The subject of continence always stirred
him deeply. Walking up and down the room, getting more
and more excited, he would stop before someone as if
there were no one else present. 'Don't you see,' he would
say eagerly, 'there is a reason why chastity is insisted on in
all monastic orders? Spiritual giants are produced only
where the vow of chastity is observed. Don't you see there
must be a reason? There is a connexion between chastity
and spirituality. The explanation is that through prayer
and meditation the saints have transmuted the most vital
force in the body into spiritual energy. In India this is
well understood and yogis do it consciously. The force
so transmuted is called ojas, and it is stored up in the brain.
It has been lifted from the lowest centre to the highest.
"And I, if I be lifted up, will draw all men unto me."' He
would plead with the students as if to beg them to act upon this
teaching as something most precious. Further, they
could not be the disciples he required if they were not
established in chastity. He demanded a conscious transmutation.
'The man who has no temper has nothing to control,' he said.
'I want a few, five or six, who are in the flower of their youth.'
He would frequently exhort the students to
attain freedom. As the words came in torrents from the depths
of his soul, the atmosphere would be charged with
the yearning to break free from the bondage of the body,
a degrading humiliation. As he touched upon 'this
indecent clinging to life,' the students would feel as if the
curtain that hid the region beyond life and death were lifted
for them, and they would long for that glorious
freedom. 'Azad! Azad! the Free! the Free!' he would cry, pacing
back and forth like a caged lion; but for him the bars of the
cage were not of iron, but of bamboo. 'Let us not be caught
this time,' would be his refrain on other occasions.
Some of these precious talks were noted down by
his disciple Miss S. Ellen Waldo and later published as
Inspired Talks. Students of Swami Vivekananda will
for ever
remain indebted to her for faithfully preserving his
immortal words, and the title of this book was well chosen, for
they were indeed inspired. One day Miss Waldo was
reading her notes to some tardy arrivals in the cottage while
the Swami strode up and down the floor, apparently
unconscious of what was going on. After the travellers had
left the room, the Swami turned to Miss Waldo and said:
'How could you have caught my thought and words so
perfectly? It was as if I heard myself speaking.'
During these seven weeks of teaching the Swami
was most gentle and lovable. He taught his disciples as Sri
Ramakrishna had taught him at Dakshineswar:
the teaching was the outpouring of his own spirit in
communion with himself. The Swami said later that he was at
his best at Thousand Island Park. The ideas he cherished
and expressed there grew, during the years that followed,
into institutions, both in India and abroad.
The Swami's one consuming passion, during this
time, was to show his students the way to freedom. 'Ah,' he
said one day, with touching pathos, 'if I could only set you
free with a touch!' Two students, Mrs. Funke and
Miss Greenstidel, arrived at the Park one dark and rainy
night. One of them said, 'We have come to you as we would go
to Jesus if he were still on the earth and ask him to teach
us.' The Swami looked at them kindly and gently said, 'If I
only possessed the power of the Christ to set you free!' No
wonder that Miss Waldo one day exclaimed, 'What have we
ever done to deserve all this?' And so felt the others also.
One cannot but be amazed at the manifestation
of Swami Vivekananda's spiritual power at Thousand
Island Park. Outwardly he was a young man of thirty-two.
All his disciples at the cottage, except one, were older
than himself. Yet everyone looked upon him as a father
or mother. He had attained an unbelievable maturity.
Some marvelled at his purity, some at his power, some at
his intellectuality, some at his serenity, which was like
the depths of the ocean, unperturbed by the waves of
applause or contumely. When had he acquired all these virtues
which had made him at thirty, a teacher of men? From the
foregoing pages the reader will have formed an idea of him as
a stormy person, struggling, in early youth, against
poverty and spiritual unbelief. Afterwards he is seen wandering
from the Himalayas to Cape Comorin, raging against
the grievances and sufferings of the Indian masses. During
his first two years in America he had had to fight tooth
and nail against malicious critics in order to establish his
reputation as a religious teacher. When had he, then,
tapped the secret spring of inner calmness and assurance
without which a teacher cannot transmit spirituality to his disciples?
One must not forget that Vivekananda, as
Ramakrishna has said, was not an ordinary man, but
a nityasiddha, perfect even before birth, an Isvarakoti,
or special messenger of God born on earth to fulfil a
divine mission. The silent but powerful influence of the
guru always guided his feet. The outer world saw only
the struggles and restlessness of his wandering days, but
not the inner transformation brought about through
the practice of purity, detachment, self-control, and
meditation. The veil of maya, without which no physical
embodiment is possible, and which in him was very thin, was
rent through the spiritual struggle of a few years. People
were astonished to see his blossoming forth at Thousand
Island Park.
At Dakshineswar, though Sri Ramakrishna had
offered young Naren various supernatural powers of Yoga as
a help for his future work, the disciple had refused to
accept them, as being possible impediments to spiritual
progress. But later these powers began to manifest themselves as
the natural fruit of his spiritual realizations. Thus one sees
him at Thousand Island Park reading the inmost soul of
his followers before giving them initiation, and foretelling
their future careers. He prophesied for Sister Christine
extensive travels in Oriental countries and work in India. He
explained that his method of foresight was simple, at
least in the telling. He first thought of space β vast, blue,
and extending everywhere. As he meditated on that
space intently, pictures appeared, and he then gave
interpretations of them which would indicate the future life of
the person concerned.
Even before his arrival at Thousand Island Park
the Swami had had other manifestations of such Yoga
powers. For instance, while busy with his lecture tour,
sometimes giving twelve or fourteen speeches a week, he would
feel great physical and mental strain and often wonder
what he would speak of the next day. Then he would hear,
at dead of night, a voice shouting at him the very
thoughts he was to present. Sometimes it would come from a
long distance and then draw nearer and nearer, or again,
it would be like someone delivering a lecture beside him
as he lay listening in bed. At other times two voices
would argue before him, discussing at great length ideas, some
of which he had never before consciously heard or
thought of, which he would find himself repeating the
following day from the pulpit or the platform.
Sometimes people sleeping in the adjoining
rooms would ask him in the morning: 'Swami, with whom
were you talking last night? We heard you talking loudly
and enthusiastically and we were wondering.' The Swami
often explained these manifestations as the powers
and potentialities of the soul generally called inspiration.
He denied that they were miracles.
At that time he experienced the power of changing
a person's life by a touch, or clearly seeing things
happening at a great distance. But he seldom used these and the other
powers he had acquired through Yoga. One day, much
later, Swami Turiyananda entered Swami Vivekananda's
room while the Swami was lying on his bed, and beheld, in
place of his physical body, a mass of radiance. It is no
wonder that today in America, half a century later, one meets
men and women who saw or heard Swami Vivekananda perhaps once, and
still remember him vividly.
But it must not be thought that the Swami did
not show his lighter mood at Thousand Island Park.
He unfailingly discovered the little idiosyncrasies of
the students and raised gales of laughter at the
dinner-table, with some quip or jest β but never in sarcasm or
malice. Dr. Wright of Cambridge, a very cultured man, was one
of the inmates of the Dutcher Cottage. He became so
absorbed in the class talks that at the end of every discourse the
tense professor would invariably ask the teacher: 'Well,
Swami, it all amounts to this in the end, doesn't it? β I
am Brahman, I am the Absolute.'
The Swami would
smile indulgently and answer gently, 'Yes, Dockie, you
are Brahman, you are the Absolute, in the real essence of
your being.' Later, when the learned doctor came to the table
a trifle late, the Swami, with the utmost gravity but with
a merry twinkle in his eyes, would say, 'Here
comes Brahman' or 'Here is the Absolute.'
Sometimes he would say, 'Now I am going to cook
for you, "brethren".' The food he cooked would be
delicious, but too hot for Western tastes. The students, however,
made up their minds to eat it even if it strangled them. After
the meal was cooked, the Swami would stand in the door
with a white napkin draped over his arm, in the fashion of
the negro waiters in a dining-car, and intone in perfect imitation
their call for dinner: 'Last call fo' the dining cah.
Dinner served.' And the students would rock with laughter.
One day he was telling the disciples the story of
Sita and of the pure womanhood of India. The question
flashed in the mind of one of the women as to how some of
the beautiful society queens would appear to him,
especially those versed in the art of allurement. Even before the
thought was expressed, the Swami said gravely, 'If the most
beautiful woman in the world were to look at me in an immodest
or unwomanly way, she would immediately turn into a
hideous green frog, and one does not, of course, admire frogs.'
At last the day of the Swami's departure
from Thousand Island Park arrived. It was Wednesday,
August 7, 1895. In the morning he, Mrs. Funke, and Sister
Christine went for a walk. They strolled about half a mile up the
hill, where all was forest and solitude, and sat under a
low-branched tree. The Swami suddenly said to them:
'Now we shall meditate. We shall be like Buddha under the
Bo-tree.' He became still as a bronze statue. A
thunderstorm came up and it poured; but the Swami did not
notice anything. Mrs. Funke raised her umbrella and
protected him as much as possible. When it was time to return,
the Swami opened his eyes and said, 'I feel once more I am
in Calcutta in the rains.' It is reported that one day,
at Thousand Island Park he experienced nirvikalpa samadhi.
At nine o'clock in the evening the Swami boarded
the steamer for Clayton, where he was to catch the train
for New York. While taking leave of the Island he said, 'I
bless these Thousand Islands.' As the steamer moved away,
he boyishly and joyously waved his hat to the disciples
still standing at the pier.
Some of his devotees thought that the Swami
had planned at Thousand Island Park to start an
organization. But they were mistaken. He wrote to a disciple:
We have no organization, nor want to build any. Each one is quite independent to teach, quite free to teach, whatever he or she likes. If you have the spirit within, you will never fail to attract others.... Individuality is my motto. I have no ambition beyond training individuals. I know very little; that little I teach without reserve; where I am ignorant I confess it.... I am a sannyasin. As such I hold myself as a servant, not as a master, in this world.
Vivekananda, the awakener of souls, was indeed
too great to be crammed within the confines of a
narrow organization. He had had a unique experience of
inner freedom at Thousand Island Park, which he
expressed eloquently in his poem 'The Song of the Sannyasin.'
He wrote from there to a friend: 'I am free, my bonds are
cut, what do I care whether this body goes or does not go?
I have a truth to teach β I, the child of God. And He
that gave me the truth will send me fellow workers from
earth's bravest and best.'
A month after his return from Thousand Island
Park, Swami Vivekananda sailed for Europe. Before we take
up that important chapter of his life, however, it will be
well to describe some of his interesting experiences in
America, especially his meeting with noted personalities.
Robert Ingersoll, the famous orator and agnostic,
and Swami Vivekananda had several conversations on
religion and philosophy. Ingersoll, with a fatherly solicitude, asked
the young enthusiast not to be too bold in the
expression of his views, on account of people's intolerance of all
alien religious ideas. 'Forty years ago,' he said, 'you would
have been hanged if you had come to preach in this country,
or you would have been burnt alive. You would have
been stoned out of the villages if you had come even much
later.' The Swami was surprised. But Ingersoll did not realize
that the Indian monk, unlike him, respected all religions
and prophets, and that he wanted to broaden the views of
the Christians about Christ's teachings.
One day, in the course of a discussion, Ingersoll
said to the Swami, 'I believe in making the most of this
world, in squeezing the orange dry, because this world is all
we are sure of.' He would have nothing to do with God,
soul, or hereafter, which he considered as meaningless jargon.
'I know a better way to squeeze the orange of this world
than you do,' the Swami replied, 'and I get more out of it. I
know I cannot die, so I am not in a hurry. I know that there is
no fear, so I enjoy the squeezing. I have no duty, no
bondage of wife and children and property, so I can love all
men and women. Everyone is God to me. Think of the joy
of loving man as God! Squeeze your orange my way, and
you will get every single drop!' Ingersoll, it is reported,
asked the Swami not to be impatient with his views, adding
that his own unrelenting fight against traditional religions
had shaken men's faith in theological dogmas and creeds,
and thus helped to pave the way for the Swami's success
in America.
Nikola Tesla, the great scientist who specialized in
the field of electricity, was much impressed to hear from
the Swami his explanation of the Samkhya cosmogony and the
theory of cycles given by the Hindus. He was
particularly struck by the resemblance between the Samkhya theory
of matter and energy and that of modern physics. The
Swami also met Sir William Thomson (afterwards Lord
Kelvin) and Professor Helmholtz, two leading representatives
of Western science. Sarah Bernhardt, the famous
French actress, had an interview with the Swami and
greatly admired his teachings.
Madame Emma Calve, the well-known prima
donna, described the Swami as one who 'truly walked with
God.' She came to see him in a state of physical and
mental depression. The Swami, who did not at that time
know even her name, talked to her about her worries and
various personal problems. It was clear that he was familiar
with them, even though she had never revealed them to him
or to anyone else. When Madame Calve expressed
surprise, the Swami assured her that no one had talked to him
about her. 'Do you think that is necessary?' he asked. 'I read
you as I would an open book.' He gave her this parting
advice: 'You must forget. Be gay and happy again. Do not dwell
in silence upon your sorrows. Transmute your emotions
into some form of eternal expression. Your spiritual
health requires it. Your art demands it.'
Madame Calve later said: 'I left him, deeply
impressed by his words and his personality. He seemed to
have emptied my brain of all its feverish complexities and
placed there instead his clean and calming thoughts. I became
once again vivacious and cheerful, thanks to the effect of
his powerful will. He used no hypnosis, no
mesmerism β nothing of that sort at all. It was the strength of his
character, the purity and intensity of his purpose, that carried
conviction. It seemed to me, when I came to know
him better, that he lulled one's chaotic thoughts into a state
of peaceful acquiesences, so that one could give complete
and undivided attention to his words.'
Like many people, Madame Calve could not
accept the Vedantic doctrine of the individual soul's
total absorption in the Godhead at the time of final liberation.
'I cannot bear the idea,' she said. 'I cling to my
individuality β unimportant though it may be. I don't want to be
absorbed into an eternal unity.' To this the Swami answered:
'One day a drop of water fell into the vast ocean. Finding
itself there, it began to weep and complain, just as you are
doing. The giant 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."'
Did not the Swami thus explain his own
individuality? Before his present embodiment, he had remained
absorbed in communion with the Absolute. Then he accepted
the form of an individual to help humanity in its
spiritual struggle. A giant soul like his is not content to
remain eternally absorbed in the Absolute. Such also was
the thought of Buddha.
In the company of great men and women, the
Swami revealed his intellectual and spiritual power. But one
sees his human side especially in his contact with
humble people. In America he was often taken to be a negro. One
day, as he alighted from a train in a town where he was
to deliver a lecture, he was given a welcome by the
reception committee. The most prominent townspeople were
all there. A negro porter came up to him and said that he
had heard how one of his own people had become great
and asked the privilege of shaking hands with him.
Warmly the Swami shook his hand, saying 'Thank you! Thank
you, brother!' He never resented being mistaken for a negro.
It happened many times, especially in the South, that he
was refused admittance to a hotel, a barber shop, or a
restaurant, because of his dark skin. When the Swami related
these incidents to a Western disciple, he was promptly asked
why he did not tell people that he was not a negro but a
Hindu. 'What!' the Swami replied indignantly. 'Rise at the
expense of another? I did not come to earth for that.'
Swami Vivekananda was proud of his race and
his dark complexion. 'He was scornful,' wrote Sister
Nivedita, 'in his repudiation of the pseudo-ethnology of
privileged races. "If I am grateful to my white-skinned
Aryan ancestors," he said, "I am far more so to my
yellow-skinned Mongolian ancestors, and most of all to the
black-skinned negroids." He was immensely proud of his
physiognomy, especially of what he called his "Mongolian jaw,"
regarding it as a sign of "bulldog tenacity of purpose." Referring
to this particular racial characteristic, which is believed to
be behind every Aryan people, he one day exclaimed:
"Don't you see? The Tartar is the wine of the race! He gives
energy and power to every blood."'
The Swami had a strange experience in a
small American town, where he was confronted by a number
of college boys who had been living there on a ranch as
cowboys. They heard him describe the power of
concentration, through which a man could become
completely oblivious of the outside world. So they decided to put
him to test and invited him to lecture to them. A wooden
tub was placed, with bottom up, to serve as a platform.
The Swami commenced his address and soon appeared to
be lost in his subject. Suddenly shots were fired in his
direction, and bullets went whizzing past his ears. But the
Swami continued his lecture as though nothing was
happening. When he had finished, the young men flocked about
him and congratulated him as a good fellow.
In his lectures and conversations the Swami
showed a wonderful sense of humour. It was a saving feature
in his strenuous life, and without it he might have
broken down under the pressure of his intense thinking. Once,
in one of his classes in Minneapolis, the Swami was asked
by a student if Hindu mothers threw their children to
the crocodiles in the river. Immediately came the reply:
'Yes, Madam! They threw me in, but like your fabled Jonah,
I got out again!' Another time, a lady became rather
romantic about the Swami and said to him, 'Swami! You are
my Romeo and I am your Desdemona!' The Swami said quickly, 'Madam,
you'd better brush up your Shakespeare.'
As already stated, Swami Vivekananda was
particularly friendly with Mr. and Mrs. Hale, of Chicago, and
their two young daughters and two nieces. The daughters
were named Mary and Harriet, and the nieces, Isabel and
Harriet McKindley. He affectionately called Mr. Hale 'Father
Pope' and Mrs. Hale 'Mother Church.' The girls he addressed
as 'sisters' or 'babies.' A very sweet and warm
relationship grew up between them and the Swami. His relationship
with Mary was especially close. He wrote to her many
light-hearted letters. In a letter to the sisters, dated July 26,
1894, the Swami said:
Now, don't let my letters stray beyond the
circle, please β I had a beautiful letter from Sister
Mary β See how I am getting the dash β Sister Jeany
teaches me all that β She can jump and run and play and
swear like a devil and talk slang at the rate of five hundred
a minute β only she does not much care for
religion β only a little....Darn it, I forget everything β I
had duckings in the sea like a fish β I am enjoying
every bit of it β What nonsense was the song Harriet
taught me, 'Dans la Plaine' β the deuce take it! β I told it to
a French scholar and he laughed and laughed till
the fellow was wellnigh burst at my wonderful
translation β That is the way you would have taught
me French β You are a pack of fools and heathens, I
tell you β How you are gasping for breath like huge
fish stranded β I am glad that you are
sizzling
(Referring to the summer heat of Chicago.)
β Oh! how nice and cool it is here β and it
is increased a hundredfold when I think about the gasping,
sizzling, boiling, frying four old maids β and how cool and
nice I am here β Whoooooo!!!...
Well β dear old maids β you sometimes have
a glimpse of the lake and on very hot noons think
of going down to the bottom of the lake β down β down β down
β until it is cool and nice, and then
to lie down on the bottom, with just that coolness above
and around β and lie there still β silent β and
just doze β not sleep, but a dreamy, dozing, half
unconscious sort of bliss β very much like that which
opium brings β That is delicious β and drinking lots of
iced water β Lord bless my soul! β I had such
cramps several times as would have killed an elephant β So
I hope to keep myself away from the cold water β
May you all be happy, dear fin de
siecle young ladies, is the constant prayer of
Vivekananda.
One realizes how deeply Swami Vivekananda
had entered into the American spirit, when one sees how
facile he was in his use of American slang. Surely this letter is
an example. As we have stated before, the Swami also
needed diversions of this kind in order to obtain relief from
his intensely serious life and thinking in America. One
recalls that Sri Ramakrishna, too, would often indulge in light
talk in order to keep his mind on the level of
ordinary consciousness.
Shortly after his success at the Parliament of
Religions, the Swami began, as we have seen, to write to his
devotees in India, giving them his plans for India's
regeneration. He urged them to take up work that would lead to
better systems of education and hygiene throughout India.
He wanted a magazine to be started for disseminating
among his fellow-countrymen the broad truths of Vedanta,
which would create confidence in their minds regarding
their power and potentialities, and give them back their
lost individuality. He exhorted his devotees to work
especially for the uplift of women and the masses, without
whose help India would never be able to raise herself from her
present state of stagnation. He sent them money,
earned through his lectures, for religious, educational, and
other philanthropic activities. His enthusiastic letters
inspired them. But they wanted him to return and take up
the leadership. They were also distressed to see the
malicious propaganda against him by the Christian missionaries
in India. The Swami, however, repeatedly urged them
to depend upon themselves. 'Stand on your own feet!'
he wrote to them. 'If you are really my children, you will
fear nothing, stop at nothing. You will be like lions. You
must rouse India and the whole world.'
About the criticism from the Christian
missionaries, he wrote: 'The Christianity that is preached in India is
quite different from what one sees here. You will be
astonished to hear that I have friends in this country amongst the
clergy of the Episcopal and Presbyterian Churches, who are
as broad-minded, as liberal, and as sincere as you are in
your own religion. The real spiritual
man β everywhere β is broad-minded. His love forces him
to be so. They to
whom religion is a trade are forced to become
narrow-minded and mischievous by their very introduction into
religion of the competitive, fighting, selfish methods of the
world.' He requested the Indian devotees not to pay any heed
to what the missionaries were saying either for or against
him. 'I shall work incessantly,' he wrote, 'until I die, and
even after death I shall work for the good of the world. Truth
is infinitely more weighty than untruth.... It is the force
of character, of purity, and of truth β of personality. So
long as I have these things, you can feel easy; no one will
be able to injure a hair of my head. If they try, they will
fail, saith the Lord.'
For some time Swami Vivekananda had been
planning a visit to London. He wished to sow the seed of Vedanta
in the capital of the mighty British Empire. Miss
Henrietta MΓΌller had extended to him a cordial invitation to come
to London, and Mr. E.T. Sturdy had requested him to stay
at his home there. Mr. Leggett, too, had invited the Swami
to come to Paris as his guest.
Mr. Francis H. Leggett, whose hospitality the
Swami had already enjoyed at Percy, was a wealthy business
man of New York. He and two ladies of his acquaintance,
Mrs. William Sturges and Miss Josephine MacLeod (who
were sisters), had attended the Swami's lectures in New
York during the previous winter. They were all impressed
by the Swami's personality and his message, and Mr.
Leggett remarked, one day, that the teacher was a man of
'great common sense.' An intimate relationship
gradually developed between the Swami, the two sisters, and
Mr. Leggett. Mrs. Sturges, who was a widow, and Mr.
Leggett became engaged and announced their engagement at
the summer camp at Percy. They decided to be married in
Paris, and Mr. Leggett invited the Swami to be a witness at
the ceremony.
This invitation, coming at the same time as
Miss MΓΌller's and Mr. Sturdy's seemed to the Swami, as
he described it in a letter, a 'divine call.' The Swami's New
York friends thought that a sea voyage would be
most beneficial for his weary body and mind. At this time
the Swami began to feel a premonition of his approaching
end. One day he even said, 'My day is done.' But the
awareness of his unfulfilled mission made him forget his body.
The Swami and Mr. Leggett sailed from New
York about the middle of August 1895, reaching Paris by
the end of the month. The French metropolis with its
museums, churches, cathedrals, palaces, and art galleries
impressed him as the centre of European culture, and he
was introduced to a number of enlightened French people.
When Swami Vivekananda arrived in London he
was enthusiastically greeted by Miss MΓΌller, who had
already met him in America, and Mr. Sturdy, who had
studied Sanskrit and had to a certain degree practised
asceticism in the Himalayas. The Swami's mind, one can imagine,
was filled with tumultuous thoughts as he arrived in the
great city. He was eager to test his ability as an interpreter of
the spiritual culture of India in the very citadel of the
English-speaking nations. He also knew that he belonged to
a subject race, which had been under the
imperialistic domination of England for almost one hundred and
forty years. He attributed India's suffering, at least in part,
to this alien rule. He was not unaware of the arrogance of
the British ruling class in India, to whom India was a
benighted country steeped in superstition. Would the Britishers
give a patient hearing to the religion and philosophy of
his ancestors, of which he was so proud? Would they not
rather think that nothing good could ever come 'out of
Nazareth'? He did not, as we learn from his own confession, set
foot on English soil with the friendliest of feelings. But how he
felt when he left England after his short visit will
be presently described.
After a few days' rest the Swami quietly began
his work. Through friends he was gradually introduced
to people who were likely to be interested in his thoughts;
he also devoted part of his time to visiting places of
historical interest. Within three weeks of his arrival he was
already engaged in strenuous activity. A class was started and
soon the hall was found inadequate to accommodate
the students. Newspapers interviewed him and called him
the 'Hindu yogi.' Lady Isabel Margesson and several
other members of the nobility became attracted to the
Swami's teachings. His first public lecture was attended by
many educated and thoughtful people; some of the
leading newspapers were enthusiastic about it. The
Standard compared his moral stature with that of
Rammohan
Roy and Keshab Chandra Sen. The London Daily
Chronicle wrote that he reminded people of Buddha. Even the
heads
of churches showed their warm appreciation.
But the Swami's greatest acquisition in London
was Miss Margaret E. Noble, who later became his
disciple, consecrating her life to women's education in India.
She also espoused the cause of India's political freedom
and inspired many of its leaders with her written and
spoken words.
Miss Noble, the fourth child of Samuel Noble,
was born in Northern Ireland in 1867. Both her grandfather
and her father were Protestant ministers in the Wesleyan
church and took active part in the political agitation for the
freedom of Ireland. Her grandmother and her father gave her
instruction in the Bible. Her father, who died at the age of
thirty-four, had
a premonition of his daughter's future calling. One of
the last things he whispered to his wife was about
Margaret. 'When God calls her,' he said, 'let her go. She will
spread her wings. She will do great things.'
After finishing her college education, Margaret
took the position of a teacher at Keswick, in the English
Lake District, where contact with the High Church stirred
her religious emotions. Next she taught in an orphanage
in Rugby, where she shared the manual labour of the
pupils. At twenty-one, Miss Noble was appointed as mistress
at the secondary school in Wrexham, a large mining
centre, and participated in the welfare activities of the
town, visiting slum households and looking for waifs and
strays. Next she went to Chester and taught a class of
eighteen-year-old girls. Here she delved into the educational
systems of Pestalozzi and Froebel. And finally she came to
London, where, in the autumn of 1895, she opened her own
school, the Ruskin School, in Wimbledon.
The metropolis of the British Empire offered
Miss Noble unlimited opportunities for the realization of
her many latent desires β political, literary, and
educational. Here she joined the 'Free Ireland' group, working
for Ireland's home rule. She was also cordially received at
Lady Ripon's exclusive salon, where art and literature
were regularly discussed. This salon later developed into
the Sesame Club, with rooms in Dover Street, where
Bernard Shaw, T.H. Huxley, and other men of literature and
science discussed highly intellectual subjects. Margaret
Noble became the secretary of the club, and lectured on
'The Psychology of the Child' and 'The Rights of Women.' Thus
even before she met Swami Vivekananda she
was unconsciously preparing the ground for her future
activities in India.
At this time Margaret suffered a cruel blow. She
was deeply in love with a man and had even set the
wedding date. But another woman suddenly snatched him away.
A few years before, another young man, to whom she
was about to be engaged, had died of tuberculosis.
These experiences shocked her profoundly, and she began to
take a more serious interest in religion. She was very fond of
a simple prayer by Thomas Γ Kempis: 'Be what thou
prayest to be made.'
One day her art teacher, Ebenezer Cook, said
to Margaret: 'Lady Isabel Margesson is inviting a few
friends to her house to hear a Hindu Swami speak. Will you
come?' Swami Vivekananda had already been a topic of
discussion among certain members of the Sesame Club. Mr. E.T.
Sturdy and Miss Henrietta MΓΌller had told of his
extraordinary success in America as a preacher and orator.
Miss Noble first met Swami Vivekananda on a
Sunday evening in the drawing-room of Lady Isabel
Margesson, situated in the fashionable West End of London. He was
to address a group of people on Hindu thought. Miss
Noble was one of the last to arrive. Fifteen people sat in the
room in absolute silence. She nervously felt as if all eyes
were turned on her, and as she took the first vacant chair,
she gathered her skirt to sit down without making any
noise. The Swami sat facing her. A coal fire burnt on the
hearth behind him. She noticed that he was tall and well
built and possessed an air of deep serenity. The effect of his
long practice of meditation was visible in the gentleness and
loftiness of his look, which, as she was to write
later, 'Raphael has perhaps painted for us on the brow of
the Sistine Child.'
The Swami looked at Lady Isabel with a sweet
smile, as she said: 'Swamiji, all our friends are here.' He
chanted some Sanskrit verses. Miss Noble was impressed by
his melodious voice. She heard the Swami say, among
other things: 'All our struggle is for freedom. We seek
neither misery nor happiness, but freedom, freedom alone.'
It was at first difficult for Miss Noble to accept
Swami Vivekananda's views. But before he left London she
had begun to address him as 'Master.'
Recalling those first meetings in London, and
their decisive influence on her life, Nivedita wrote in 1904 to
a friend: 'Suppose he had not come to London that time!
Life would have been like a headless dream, for I always
knew that I was waiting for something. I always said that a
call would come. And it did. But if I had known more of life,
I doubt whether, when the time came, I should certainly
have recognized it. Fortunately, I knew little and was spared
that torture....Always I had this burning voice within,
but nothing to utter. How often and often I sat down, pen
in hand, to speak, and there was no speech! And now there
is no end to it! As surely I am fitted to my world, so surely
is my world in need of me, waiting β ready. The arrow
has found its place in the bow. But if he had not come! If
he had meditated, on the Himalayan peaks!...I, for one,
had never been here.'
Swami Vivekananda and Mr. Sturdy soon began
an English translation of the Bhakti aphorisms of Narada.
At this time the idea came to the Swami's mind that a religion
could not have permanent hold upon people
without organization and rituals. A mere loose system of
philosophy, he realized, soon lost its appeal. He saw the
need, therefore, of formulating rituals, on the basis of
the Upanishadic truths, which would serve a person from
birth to death β rituals that would prepare for the
ultimate realization of the supramental Absolute.
His stay in England was very short, but his
insight enabled him to appraise the English character
with considerable accuracy. He wrote to a devotee on
November 18, 1895: 'In England my work is really splendid. I
am astonished myself at it. The English do not talk much
in the newspapers, but they work silently. I am sure of
having done more work in England than in America.' And
in another letter, written on November 13, to a brother
disciple in India: 'Every enterprise in this country takes some
time to get started. But once John Bull sets his hand to a
thing, he will never let it go. The Americans are quick, but
they are somewhat like straw on fire, ready to be extinguished.'
The Swami had been receiving letters from
American devotees asking him to come back; a rich lady from
Boston promised to support his work in New York throughout
the winter. Before leaving England, however, he arranged
that Mr. Sturdy should conduct the classes in London till
the arrival of a new Swami from India, about the need of
whom he was writing constantly to his brother disciples at
the Baranagore monastery.
On December 6, 1895, Swami Vivekananda
returned to New York, after his two months' stay in England,
in excellent health and spirits. During his absence
abroad, regular classes had been carried on by his American
disciples Kripananda, Abhayananda, and Miss Waldo,
who taught raja-yoga in both its practical and its
theoretical aspects.
Together with Kripananda he took up new
quarters, consisting of two spacious rooms, which could
accommodate one hundred and fifty persons. The Swami at
once plunged into activity and gave a series of talks on work
as a spiritual discipline. These talks were
subsequently published as Karma-Yoga, which is
considered one of
his best books. In the meantime the devotees of the
Swami had been feeling the need of a stenographer to take
down his talks in the classes and on public platforms. Many
of his precious speeches had already been lost because
there had been no reporter to record them. Fortunately
there appeared on the scene an Englishman, J.J. Goodwin,
who was at first employed as a professional stenographer; in
a few days, however, he was so impressed by the
Swami's life and message that he became his disciple and
offered his services free, with the remark that if the teacher
could give his whole life to help mankind, he, the disciple,
could at least give his services as an offering of love.
Goodwin followed the Swami like a shadow in America, Europe,
and India; he recorded many of the public utterances
of Vivekananda, now preserved in published books,
and thereby earned the everlasting gratitude of countless
men and women.
The Swami spent Christmas of 1895 with Mr. and
Mrs. Leggett at their country home, Ridgely Manor, which
he frequently visited in order to enjoy a respite from his
hard work in New York. But even there he would give
exalted spiritual discourses, as will be evident from the following
excerpt from a letter written by Mr. Leggett on January
10, 1896, to Miss MacLeod:
One night at Ridgely we were all spellbound by his eloquence. Such thought I have never heard expressed by mortal man β such as he uttered for two and a half hours. We were all deeply affected. And I would give a hundred dollars for a typewritten verbatim report of it. Swami was inspired to a degree that I have never seen before or since. He leaves us soon and perhaps we shall never see him again, but he will leave an ineffaceable impress on our hearts that will comfort us to the end of our earthly careers.
After a short visit to Boston as the guest of Mrs.
Ole Bull, the Swami commenced a series of public lectures
in New York at Hardeman Hall, the People's Church, and
later at Madison Square Garden, which had a seating
capacity of fifteen hundred people. In the last mentioned place
he gave his famous lectures on love as a spiritual
discipline, which were subsequently published as
Bhakti-Yoga. Both the lectures of the Swami and his
personality
received favourable comment from the newspapers. He
initiated into monastic life Dr. Street, who assumed the name
of Yogananda.
Mrs. Ella Wheeler Wilcox, one of the founders of
the New Thought movement in America, spoke highly of
the Swami's teachings. She and her husband first went to
hear him out of curiosity, and what happened afterwards
may be told in her own words:
Before we had been ten minutes in the audience, we felt ourselves lifted up into an atmosphere so rarefied, so vital, so wonderful, that we sat spellbound and almost breathless to the end of that lecture. When it was over we went out with new courage, new hope, new strength, new faith, to meet life's daily vicissitudes.... It was that terrible winter of financial disasters, when banks failed and stocks went down like broken balloons, and business men walked through the dark valleys of despair, and the whole world seemed topsy-turvy. Sometimes after sleepless nights of worry and anxiety, my husband would go with me to hear the Swami lecture, and then he would come out into the winter gloom and walk down the street smiling and say: 'It is all right. There is nothing to worry over.' And I would go back to my own duties and pleasures with the same uplifted sense of soul and enlarged vision.... 'I do not come to convert you to a new belief,' he said. 'I want you to keep your own belief; I want to make the Methodist a better Methodist, the Presbyterian a better Presbyterian, the Unitarian a better Unitarian. I want to teach you to live the truth, to reveal the light within your own soul.' He gave the message that strengthened the man of business, that caused the frivolous society woman to pause and think; that gave the artist new aspirations; that imbued the wife and mother, the husband and father, with a larger and a holier comprehension of duty.
Having finished his work in New York, the
Swami, accompanied by Goodwin, left for Detroit. The main
theme of his lectures and class talks there was bhakti, or love of
God. At that time he was all love. A kind of divine
madness seemed to have taken possession of him, as if his
heart would burst with longing for the beloved Mother. He
gave his last public lecture at Temple Beth-El, of which
Rabbi Louis Grossman, an ardent admirer of the Swami, was
the leader. The Swami cast a spell, as it were, over the
whole audience. 'Never,' wrote Mrs. Funke, 'had I seen the
Master look as he looked that night. There was something in
his beauty not of earth. It was as if the spirit had almost
burst the bonds of flesh, and it was then that I saw a
foreshadowing of the end. He was much exhausted from the
years of overwork, and it was even then to be seen that he
was not long for this world. I tried to close my eyes to it, but
in my heart I knew the truth. He had needed rest but felt
that he must go on.'
The idea that his years were numbered came to
Swami Vivekananda again and again. He would often say at
this time, 'Oh, the body is a terrible bondage!' or 'How I
wish that I could hide myself for ever!' The note-book that
he had carried during his wanderings in India contained
these significant words: 'Now to seek a corner and lay
myself down to die!' In a letter to a friend, he quoted these
words and said: 'Yet all this karma remained. I hope I have
now worked it out. It appears like a hallucination that I was
in these childish dreams of doing this and doing that. I
am getting out of them.... Perhaps these mad desires were
necessary to bring me over to this country. And I thank
the Lord for the experience.'
On March 25, 1896, he delivered his famous
lecture on 'The Philosophy of Vedanta' before the
graduate students of the philosophy department of Harvard
University. It produced such an impression that he
was offered the Chair of Eastern Philosophy in the
university. Later a similar offer came from Columbia University.
But he declined both on the ground that he was a sannyasin.
In 1894 Swami Vivekananda had established
the Vedanta Society of New York as a non-sectarian
organization with the aim of preaching the universal principles
of Vedanta. It became better organized in 1896. Tolerance
and religious universalism formed its motto, and its
members generally came to be known as 'Vedantins.'
In the meantime the Swami's great works Raja-Yoga, Bhakti-Yoga, and Karma-Yoga were receiving marked attention from many thoughtful people of the country. The Swami was serious about organizing Hinduism on a sound, universal, ethical, and rational basis so that it would appeal to earnest thinkers in all parts of the world. He wanted to reinterpret, in keeping with the methods of modern science, the Hindu view of the soul, the Godhead, the relationship between matter and energy, and cosmology. Further, he wanted to classify the apparently contradictory passages of the Upanishads bearing on the doctrines of dualism, qualified non-dualism, and absolute non-dualism, and show their ultimate reconciliation. In order to achieve this end, he asked his devotees in India to send him the Upanishads and the Vedanta Sutras with their commentaries by the leading acharyas, and also the Brahmana portions of the Vedas, and the Puranas. He himself wanted to write this Maximum Testamentum, this Universal Gospel, in order to translate Hindu thought into Western language. He expressed his objective in a letter written to one of his disciples on February 17, 1896:
To put the Hindu ideas into English and then make out of dry philosophy and intricate mythology and queer, startling psychology, a religion which shall be easy, simple, popular, and at the same time meet the requirements of the highest minds, is a task which only those can understand who have attempted it. The abstract Advaita must become living β poetic β in everyday life; and out of bewildering yogism must come the most scientific and practical psychology β and all this must be put into such a form that a child may grasp it. That is my life's work. The Lord only knows how far I shall succeed. To work we have the right, not to the fruits thereof.
The Swami always wanted a healthy interchange
of ideas between East and West; this was one of the aims
of the Vedanta Society of New York. He felt the need of
centres of vital and continual communication between the
two worlds to make 'open doors, as it were, through which
the East and the West could pass freely back and forth,
without a feeling of strangeness, as from one home to another.'
Already he had thought of bringing to America some of
his brother disciples as preachers of Vedanta. He also
wanted to send some of his American and English disciples to
India to teach science, industry, technology, economics,
applied sociology, and other practical things which the
Indians needed in order to improve their social conditions
and raise their standard of living. He often told his
American disciples of his vision that the time would come when
the lines of demarcation between East and West would be
obliterated. From England he had already written to
Swami Saradananda to prepare to come to the West.
In the spring of 1896 letters began to pour in
from England beseeching Swami Vivekananda to return
there and continue his activities. The Swami felt the need of
concentrating on the work in both London and New York,
the two great metropolises of the Western world. Therefore
he made arrangements with Miss Waldo and other
qualified disciples to continue his program in America during
his absence. Mr. Francis Leggett was made the president
of the Vedanta Society.
The Swami had also been receiving letters from
his friends in India begging for his return. He said he
would come as soon as possible, but he encouraged them
to organize the work, warning them against the formation
of any new cult around the person of Sri Ramakrishna,
who, to the Swami, was the demonstration of the eternal
principles of Hinduism. On April 14, 1896, he wrote to India:
'That Ramakrishna Paramahamsa was God β and all that sort of thing β has no go in countries like this. Mβ_ has a tendency to put that stuff down everybody's throat; but that will make our movement a little sect. You keep separate from such attempts; at the same time, if people worship him as God, no harm. Neither encourage nor discourage. The masses will always have the person; the higher ones, the principle. We want both. But principles are universal, not persons. Therefore stick to the principles he taught, and let people think whatever they like of his person.'
The Swami now made definite arrangements to
leave for London on April 15, and, after carrying out his
plans there, to sail for his motherland.
It should be apparent to readers of Swami
Vivekananda's life that he worked under great pressure, from a
fraction of which a lesser person would have collapsed
in no time. Naturally he spent his few spare moments in
fun and joking. He would read a copy of
Punch or some other comic paper, and laugh till
tears rolled down his
cheeks. He loved to tell the story of a Christian missionary
who was sent to preach to the cannibals. The new
arrival proceeded to the chief of the tribe and asked him,
'Well, how did you like my predecessor?' The cannibal
replied, smacking his lips, 'Simply de-li-cious!'
Another was the story of a 'darky' clergyman
who, while explaining the creation, shouted to his
congregation: 'You see, God was a-makin' Adam, and He was
a-makin' him out o' mud. And when He got him made, He
stuck him up agin a fence to dry. And denβ' 'Hold on,
dar, preacher!' suddenly cried out a learned listener.
'What's dat about dis 'ere fence? Who's made dis fence?'
The preacher replied sharply: 'Now you listen 'ere, Sam
Jones. Don't you be askin' sich questions. You'll be a-smashin'
up all theology!'
By way of relaxation he would often cook an
Indian meal at a friend's house. On such occasions he brought
out from his pockets tiny packets of finely ground spices.
He would make hot dishes which his Western disciples
could hardly eat without burning their tongues. They were,
no doubt, soothing to his high-strung temperament.
But the Swami's brain was seething with new
ideas all the time. He very much wanted to build a
'Temple Universal' where people of all faiths would gather
to worship the Godhead through the symbol
Om, representing the undifferentiated Absolute. At
another time, in
the beginning of the year 1895, he wrote to Mrs. Bull about
buying one hundred and eight acres of land in the
Catskill Mountains where his students would build camps
and practise meditation and other disciplines during
the summer holidays.
A touching incident, which occurred in 1894, may
be told here; it shows the high respect in which some of
the ladies of Cambridge, Massachusetts, held the Swami
and his mother. The Swami one day spoke to them about
'the Ideals of Indian Women,' particularly stressing the
ideal of Indian motherhood. They were greatly moved.
The following Christmas they sent the Swami's mother in
India a letter together with a beautiful picture of the Child
Jesus on the lap of the Virgin Mary. They wrote in the letter:
'At this Christmastide, when the gift of Mary's son to the
world is celebrated and rejoiced over with us, it would seem
the time of remembrance. We, who have your son in our
midst, send you greetings. His generous service to men,
women, and children in our midst was laid at your feet by him,
in an address he gave us the other day on the Ideals
of Motherhood in India. The worship of his mother will be
to all who heard him an inspiration and an uplift.'
The Swami often spoke to his disciples about
his mother's wonderful self-control, and how on one
occasion she had gone without food for fourteen days.
He acknowledged that her character was a constant
inspiration to his life and work.
The love and adoration in which the Swami was
held by his Western disciples can hardly be
over-emphasized. Some described him as the 'lordly monk,' and some as
a 'grand seigneur.' Mrs. Leggett said that in all her
experience she had met only two celebrated personages who could
make one feel perfectly at ease without for an instant
losing their own dignity, and one of them was
Swami Vivekananda. Sister Nivedita described him aptly as a
Plato in thought and a modern Savonarola in his fearless
outspokenness. William James of Harvard addressed him
as 'Master' and referred to him in Varieties of Religious
Experience as the 'paragon of Vedantists.'
A pleasant surprise awaited Swami Vivekananda
on his arrival in London. Swami Saradananda had
already come and was staying as the guest of Mr. Sturdy. The
two Swamis had not seen each other in a very long time.
Swami Vivekananda was told all the news of his spiritual
brothers at the Alambazar monastery and their activities in India.
It was a most happy occasion.
Swami Vivekananda soon plunged into a
whirlwind of activity. From the beginning of May he conducted
five classes a week and a Friday session for open discussion.
He gave a series of three Sunday lectures in one of the
galleries of the Royal Institute of Painters in Water-Colours,
in Piccadilly, and also lectured at Princes' Hall and the
Lodge of Annie Besant, in addition to speaking at many clubs,
and in educational institutions and drawing-rooms. His
audiences consisted mostly of intellectual and
serious-minded people. His speeches on jnana-yoga, containing the
essence of the Vedanta philosophy, were mostly given in
England. Canon Wilberforce held a reception in the Swami's
honour, to which he invited many distinguished people.
At one of the meetings, at the close of his address,
a white-haired and well-known philosopher said to
the Swami: 'You have spoken splendidly, sir, but you have
told us nothing new.' Quick came the Swami's reply: 'Sir, I have
told you the Truth. That, the Truth is as old as
the immemorial hills, as old as humanity, as old as creation,
as old as the Great God. If I have told you in such words
as will make you think, make you live up to your
thinking, do I not do well in telling it?' Loud applause greeted
him at the end of these remarks.
The Swami was quick in repartee. During the
question period a man who happened to be a native of
Scotland, asked, 'What is the difference between a
baboo and a baboon?1
'Oh, not much,' was the instantaneous reply
of the Swami. 'It is like the difference between a sot and
a Scot β just the difference of a letter.'
In one of his public lectures in England he paid
the most touching tribute to his master, Sri Ramakrishna.
He said that he had not one little word of his own to utter,
not one infinitesimal thought of his own to unfold;
everything, every single thing, all that he was himself, all that he
could be to others, all that he might do for the world, came
from that single source, from that pure soul, from that
illimitable inspiration, from him who, seated 'there in my
beloved India, had solved the tremendous secret, and bestowed
the solution on all, ungrudgingly and with divine
prodigality.' The Swami's own self was utterly forgotten,
altogether ignored. 'I am what I am, and what I am is always due
to him; whatever in me or in my words is good and true
and eternal came to me from his mouth, his heart, his soul. Sri
Ramakrishna is the spring of this phase of the
earth's religious life, of its impulses and activities. If I can
show the world one glimpse of my Master, I shall not have
lived in vain.'
It was Ramakrishna who brought him in contact
with Max MΓΌller, the great German Sanskritist and
Indologist, who had been impressed by the eloquence of
Keshab Chandra Sen and his religious fervour, and had also
come to know of the influence that Sri Ramakrishna had
exerted in the development of Keshab's life. From the
information that he had been able to gather from India, Max
MΓΌller had already published an article on Ramakrishna in
the Nineteenth Century, entitled 'A Real Mahatman.'
Now
he was eager to meet a direct disciple of the Master,
and invited Swami Vivekananda to lunch with him in
Oxford on May 28, 1896.
The Swami was delighted to meet the savant.
When the name of Ramakrishna was mentioned, the Swami
said, 'He is worshipped by thousands today, Professor.'
'To whom else shall worship be accorded, if not
to such?' was Max MΓΌller's reply.
Regarding Max MΓΌller and his wife, the Swami later wrote:
The visit was really a revelation to me. That little white house, its setting in a beautiful garden, the silver-haired sage, with a face calm and benign, and forehead smooth as a child's in spite of seventy winters, and every line in that face speaking of a deep-seated mine of spirituality somewhere behind; that noble wife, the helpmate of his life through his long and arduous task of exciting interest, overriding opposition and contempt, and at last creating a respect for the thoughts of the sages of ancient India β the trees, the flowers, the calmness, and the clear sky β all these sent me back in imagination to the glorious days of ancient India, the days of our brahmarshis2 and rajarshis,3 the days of the great vanaprasthas,4 the days of Arundhatis and Vasishthas.5 It was neither the philologist nor the scholar that I saw, but a soul that is every day realizing its oneness with the universe.
The Swami was deeply affected to see Max
MΓΌller's love for India. 'I wish,' he wrote enthusiastically, 'I had
a hundredth part of that love for my motherland.
Endowed with an extraordinary, and at the same time an
intensely active mind, he has lived and moved in the world of
Indian thought for fifty years or more, and watched the
sharp interchange of light and shade in the interminable
forest of Sanskrit literature with deep interest and heartfelt
love, till they have sunk into his very soul and coloured his
whole being.'
The Swami asked Max MΓΌller: 'When are you
coming to India? All men there would welcome one who has
done so much to place the thoughts of their ancestors in a
true light.'
The face of the aged sage brightened up; there
was almost a tear in his eye, a gentle nodding of the head,
and slowly the words came out: 'I would not return then;
you would have to cremate me there.'
Further questions on the Swami's part seemed
an unwarranted intrusion into realms wherein were stored
the holy secrets of a man's heart.
Max MΓΌller asked the Swami, 'What are you doing
to make Sri Ramakrishna known to the world?' He
himself was eager to write a fuller biography of the Master if
he could only procure the necessary materials. At the
Swami's request, Swami Saradananda wrote down the sayings
of Sri Ramakrishna and the facts of his life. Later Max
MΓΌller embodied these in his book The Life and Sayings of
Sri Ramakrishna.
One day Saradananda asked the Swami why
he himself had not written about the Master's life for
Max MΓΌller. He answered: 'I have such deep feeling for
the Master that it is impossible for me to write about him
for the public. If I had written the article Max MΓΌller
wanted, then I would have proved, quoting from philosophies,
the scriptures and even the holy books of the Christians,
that Ramakrishna was the greatest of all prophets born in
this world. That would have been too much for the old
man. You have not thought so deeply about the Master as I
have; hence you could write in a way that would satisfy
Max MΓΌller. Therefore I asked you to write.'
Max MΓΌller showed the Swami several colleges
in Oxford and the Bodleian Library, and at last
accompanied him to the railroad station. To the Swami's protest that
the professor should not take such trouble, the latter said, 'It is
not every day that one meets with a disciple of
Ramakrishna Paramahamsa.'
Besides doing intensive public work in England,
the Swami made there some important personal contacts.
The names of Goodwin, Henrietta MΓΌller, Margaret
Noble, and Sturdy have already been mentioned. These
knew him intimately during his second visit and had
become his disciples. Now came the turn of Captain and
Mrs. Sevier. The captain was a retired officer of the
English army, forty-nine years old, and had served for many
years in India. Both were earnest students of religion and
had sought the highest truth in various sects and creeds,
but had not found it anywhere. When they heard
Swami Vivekananda, they intuitively realized that his
teachings were what they had so long sought. They were
deeply impressed by the non-dualistic philosophy of India
and the Swami's personality.
Coming out of one of the Swami's lectures,
Captain Sevier asked Miss MacLeod, who had already known
the Swami in America: 'You know this young man? Is he
what he seems?'
'Yes.'
'In that case one must follow him and with him
find God.'
The Captain went to his wife and said, 'Will you
let me become the Swami's disciple?'
'Yes,' she replied.
She asked him, 'Will you let me become the Swami's
disciple?'
He replied with affectionate humour, 'I am not so sure!'
The very first time the Swami met Mrs. Sevier
in private he addressed her as 'Mother' and asked her if
she would not like to come to India, adding, 'I will give
you my best realizations.'
A very affectionate relationship sprang up
between the Swami and the Seviers, and the latter regarded him
as their son. They became his intimate companions
and offered him all their savings. But the Swami, anxious
about their future worldly security, persuaded them to keep
the greater portion of their fortune. Captain and Mrs.
Sevier, together with Miss Noble and Goodwin, were the
choicest among the followers that Swami Vivekananda gathered
in England and all of them remained faithful to him and
his work till the last days of their lives.
Through the generosity of the Seviers, the Swami,
as will be seen, established the Advaita Ashrama at
Mayavati, an almost inaccessible place in the Himalayas, for
the training of the disciples, both Eastern and Western, in
the contemplation of the Impersonal Godhead. After
Captain Sevier's death at Mayavati Mrs. Sevier lived there
for fifteen years busying herself with the education of
the children of the neighbouring hills. Once Miss
MacLeod asked her, 'Do you not get bored?' 'I think of him,'
she replied, referring to Swami Vivekananda.
Though preoccupied with various activities
in England, the Swami never for one moment forgot his
work in India. After all, it was his intense desire to find means
to ameliorate the condition of his countrymen that
had brought him to the West. That hope he always cherished
in a corner of his mind, both in Europe and in America.
He had to train his brother disciples as future workers in India.
And so he is seen writing to them in detail regarding
the organization of the monastery at Alambazar, where
they had been living for some time.
On April 27, 1896, he sent instructions about the
daily life of the monks, their food and clothing, their
intercourse with the public, and about the provision of a spacious
library at the monastery, a smaller room for interviews, a big
hall for religious discussions with the devotees, a small
room for an office, another for smoking and so forth and so
on. He advised them to furnish the rooms in the simplest
manner and to keep an eye on the water for drinking and
cooking. The monastery, he suggested, should be under the
management of a President and a Secretary to be elected by turns
by vote. Study, preaching, and religious practices should
be important items among the duties of the inmates. He
also desired to establish a math for women directly under
the control of the Holy Mother. The monks were not to visit
the women's quarters. In conclusion, he recommended
Swami Brahmananda as the first President of the math, and
said: 'He who is the servant of all is their true master. He
never becomes a leader in whose love there is a consideration
of high or low. He whose love knows no end and never
stops to consider high or low has the whole world lying at
his feet.' For his workers the Swami wanted men with
'muscles of iron and nerves of steel, inside which dwells a mind
of the same material as that of which the thunderbolt is made.'
To quote the Swami's words again: 'I want
strength, manhood, kshatravirya, or the virility of a warrior,
and brahma-teja, or the radiance of a brahmin.... These
men will stand aside from the world, give their lives, and
be ready to fight the battle of Truth, marching on from country
to country. One blow struck outside of India is equal
to a hundred thousand struck within. Well, all will come
if the Lord wills it.'
The Swami was exhausted by his strenuous work
in England. Three of his intimate disciples, the Seviers
and Henrietta MΓΌller, proposed a holiday tour on the
continent. He was 'as delighted as a child' at the prospect. 'Oh! I
long to see the snows and wander on the mountain paths,'
he said. He recalled his travels in the Himalayas. On July
31, 1896, the Swami, in the company of his friends, left for
Switzerland. They visited Geneva, Mer-de-Glace,
Montreux, Chillon, Chamounix, the St. Bernard, Lucerne, the
Rigi, Zermatt, and Schaffhausen. The Swami felt exhilarated
by his walks in the Alps. He wanted to climb Mont Blanc,
but gave up the idea when told of the difficulty of the
ascent. He found that Swiss peasant life and its manners
and customs resembled those of the people who dwelt in
the Himalayas.
In a little village at the foot of the Alps between
Mont Blanc and the Little St. Bernard, he conceived the idea
of founding a monastery in the Himalayas. He said to
his companions: 'Oh, I long for a monastery in the
Himalayas, where I can retire from the labours of my life and
spend the rest of my days in meditation. It will be a centre
for work and meditation, where my Indian and
Western disciples can live together, and I shall train them as
workers. The former will go out as preachers of Vedanta to the
West, and the latter will devote their lives to the good of
India.' Mr. Sevier speaking for himself and his wife, said:
'How nice it would be, Swami, if this could be done. We
must have such a monastery.'
The dream was fulfilled through the Advaita
Ashrama at Mayavati, which commands a magnificent view of
the eternal snows of the Himalayas.
In the Alps the Swami enjoyed some of the most
lucid and radiant moments of his spiritual life. Sometimes
he would walk alone, absorbed in thought, the
disciples keeping themselves at a discreet distance. One of
the disciples said: 'There seemed to be a great light about
him, and a great stillness and peace. Never have I seen
the Swami to such advantage. He seemed to
communicate spirituality by a look or with a touch. One could
almost read his thoughts which were of the highest, so
transfigured had his personality become.'
While still wandering in the Alps, the Swami
received a letter from the famous orientalist, Paul Deussen,
Professor of Philosophy at the University of Kiel. The
professor urgently invited the Swami to visit him. The
Swami accepted the invitation and changed his itinerary.
He arrived at Kiel after visiting Heidelberg, Coblenz,
Cologne, and Berlin. He was impressed by the material power
and the great culture of Germany.
Professor Deussen was well versed in Sanskrit,
and was perhaps the only scholar in Europe who could
speak that language fluently. A disciple of Schopenhauer and
follower of Kant, Deussen could easily appreciate the
high flights of Sankaracharya's philosophy. He believed that
the system of Vedanta, as founded on the Upanishads and
the Vedanta Sutras, is one of the 'most majestic
structures
and valuable products of the genius of man in his search
for Truth, and that the highest and purest morality is
the immediate consequence of Vedanta.'
The Swami and the Seviers were cordially
received by the German scholar. In the course of the
conversation Deussen said that a movement was being made
back towards the fountainhead of spirituality, a movement
that would in the future probably make India the
spiritual leader of the nations, the highest and the greatest
spiritual influence on earth. He also found in the Swami a
vivid demonstration of concentration and control of the
mind. On one occasion he saw his guest turning over the
pages of a poetical work and did not receive any response to
a query. Afterwards the Swami apologized, saying that
he had been so absorbed in the book that he did not hear
the professor. Then he repeated the verses from the book.
The conversation soon turned to the power of concentration
as developed in the Yoga philosophy. One of the purpose
of Deussen's meeting the Swami, it is said was his desire
to learn from the latter the secrets of the Yoga powers.
Deussen showed the Swami the city of Kiel.
Thereafter the Swami wished to leave immediately for
England, though the professor insisted that he should stay at Kiel
a few days more. As that was not possible, Deussen
joined the party in Hamburg and they travelled together
in Holland. After spending three days in Amsterdam
all arrived in London, and for two weeks Deussen met
with the Swami daily. The Swami also visited Max MΓΌller
again at Oxford.
Swami Vivekananda spent another two months
in England, giving lectures and seeing important men of
their day, such as Edward Carpenter, Frederick Myers,
Canon Wilberforce, and Moncure D. Conway. The most
notable lectures he gave at this time were those on maya, about
which he spoke on three occasions, dealing with its
various aspects. It is said that some members of the British
royal family attended these lectures incognito. He created
such an intense atmosphere during these talks that the
whole audience was transported into a realm of
ecstatic consciousness, and some burst into tears. The lectures
were the most learned and eloquent among his speeches on
non-dualistic Vedanta.
Swami Abhedananda arrived from India,
and Vivekananda was immensely pleased to have his
brother disciple assist him in his foreign work. The maiden
speech of Abhedananda at a club in Bloomsbury Square on
October 27, was highly appreciated by all, and the Swami said
about his spiritual brother, 'Even if I perish on this plane,
my message will be sounded through these dear lips, and
the world will hear it.' The report of the continued
popularity of Swami Saradananda, who had in the meantime gone
to New York, likewise gratified him.
Despite the rush of his European work
Swami Vivekananda maintained his contact with America. He
took a personal interest in the spiritual development of
his students. The affectionate relationship of the Swami
with the Hale family of Chicago has been mentioned
before, especially with the four unmarried girls. Hearing of
the proposed marriage of Harriet, he wrote to her on
September 17, 1896, 'Marriage is the truest goal for ninety-nine
per cent of the human race, and they will live the happiest life
as soon as they have learnt and are ready to abide by
the eternal lesson β that we are bound to bear and forbear
and that to everyone life must be a compromise.' He sent
the young lady his blessings in these terms: 'May you always
enjoy the undivided love of your husband, helping him
in attaining all that is desirable in this life, and when you
have seen your children's children, and the drama of life
is nearing its end, may you help each other in reaching
that infinite ocean of Existence, Knowledge, and Bliss, at
the touch of whose waters all distinctions melt away and
we all become One.'
But Mary Hale could not make a decision
between marriage and lifelong celibacy. She was full of idealism
and the spirit of independence; but she was warm in
her affection. Swami Vivekananda was particularly fond
of Mary. On the day he wrote to Harriet he also wrote to
Mary, congratulating Harriet for her discrimination,
and prophesying for her a life of joy and sweetness, since
she was 'not so imaginative and sentimental as to make a
fool of herself and has enough of common sense and
gentleness to soften the hard points of life which must come
to everyone.' But he wanted to tell Mary 'the truth, and
my language is plain.' He wrote:
My dear Mary, I will tell you a great lesson I
have learnt in this life. It is this: 'The higher your ideal
is, the more miserable you are,' for such a thing as
an ideal cannot be attained in the world β or in
this
life, even. He who wants perfection in the world is
a madman β for it cannot be. How can you find
the infinite in the finite?
You, Mary, are like a mettlesome
Arab β grand, splendid. You would make a splendid
queen β physically, mentally β you would shine alongside
of a dashing, bold, adventurous, heroic husband. But,
my dear sister, you will make one of the worst
wives. You will take the life out of our easy-going,
practical, plodding husbands of the everyday world. Mind,
my sister, although it is true that there is much
more romance in actual life than in any novel, yet it is
few and far between. Therefore my advice to you is
that until you bring down your ideals to a more
practical level, you ought not to marry. If you do, the
result will be misery for both of you. In a few months
you will lose all regard for a commonplace, good,
nice young man, and then life will become insipid....
There are two sorts of persons in the
world β the one strong-nerved, quiet, yielding to nature, not
given to much imagination, yet good, kind, sweet, etc.
For such is this world β they alone are born to be
happy. There are others, again, with high-strung
nerves, tremendously imaginative, with intense
feeling β always going high, and coming down the
next moment. For them there is no happiness. The first
class will have almost an even tenor of happiness.
The second will have to run between ecstasy and
misery. But of these alone what we call geniuses are
made. There is some truth in a recent theory that genius is
'a sort of madness.'
Now persons of this class, if they want to be
great, must fight to be so β clear the deck for battle.
No encumbrance β no marriage β no children, no
undue attachment to anything except the one
idea, and live and die for that. I am a person of
this sort. I have
taken up the one idea of 'Vedanta,' and I have 'cleared
the deck for action.' You and Isabel are made of this
metal β but let me tell you, though it is hard,
you are spoiling your lives in vain. Either take up
one
idea, clear the deck, and to it dedicate the life,
or be
contented and practical, lower the ideal, marry, and have a
happy life. Either 'bhoga' or 'yoga' β either enjoy
this life
or give up and be a yogi. None can have both in
one. Now or never β select quick. 'He who is very particular
gets nothing,' says the proverb. Now sincerely and
really and for ever determine to 'clear the deck for the
fight,' take up anything β philosophy or science or
religion or literature β and let that be your God for the rest
of your life. Achieve happiness or achieve greatness.
I have no sympathy with you and Isabel β you
are neither for this nor for that. I wish to see you
happy, as Harriet is, or great. Eating, drinking, dressing,
and society nonsense are not things to throw away a
life upon β especially for you, Mary. You are rusting
away a splendid brain and abilities for which there is
not the least excuse. You must have ambition to be
great. I know you will take these rather harsh remarks
from me in the right spirit, knowing I like you really as
much as or more than what I call you, my sister. I had
long had a mind to tell you this and as experience
is gathering I feel like telling you. The joyful news
from Harriet urged me to tell you this. I will be
overjoyed to hear that you are married also, and happy so far
as happiness can be had here, or would like to hear
of your doing great deeds.
Mary Hale later married a gentleman from
Florence, and became known as Mme. Matteini.
For some time the Swami had been feeling an
inner urge to return to India. From Switzerland he wrote
to friends in India: 'Do not be afraid. Great things are
going to be done, my children. Take heart....In the winter I
am going back to India and will try to set things on their
feet there. Work on, brave hearts fail not β no saying nay;
work on β the Lord is behind the work. Mahasakti, the
Great Power, is with you.'
On November 29, 1896, he wrote to a disciple in
India about his proposed Himalayan monastery. He further
said that his present plan was to start two centres, one in
Madras and the other in Calcutta, and later others in Bombay
and Allahabad. He was pleased to see that the
magazine Brahmavadin, published in English in
Madras,
was disseminating his ideas; he was planning to start
similar magazines in the vernaculars also. He also intended to
start a paper, under the management of writers from all
nations, in order to spread his ideas to every corner of the
globe. 'You must not forget,' he wrote, 'that my interests
are international and not Indian alone.'
Swami Vivekananda could no longer resist the
voice of India calling him back. Sometime during the middle
of November, after a class lecture, he called Mrs. Sevier
aside and quietly asked her to purchase four tickets for
India. He planned to take with him the Seviers and Mr.
Goodwin. Reservations were accordingly made on the 'Prinz
Regent Luitpold,' of the North German Llyod Steamship
Line, sailing from Naples for Ceylon on December 16, 1896.
The Seviers wanted to lead a retired life in India,
practising spiritual disciplines and helping the Swami in carrying
out the idea of building a monastery in the Himalayas. Faithful
Goodwin, who had already taken the vows of a
brahmacharin, would work as the Swami's stenographer. It
was also planned that Miss MΓΌller and Miss Noble
would follow the party some time after, the latter to devote
her life to the cause of women's education in India.
The Swami was given a magnificent farewell by
his English friends, devotees, and admirers on December
13 at the Royal Society of Painters in Water-Colours,
in Piccadilly. There were about five hundred people
present. Many were silent, tongue-tied and sad at heart. Tears
were very near in some eyes. But the Swami, after his
farewell address, walked among the assembled friends and
repeated over and over again, 'Yes, yes we shall meet again, we
shall.' It was decided that Swami Abhedananda would
continue the work after the Swami's departure.
Of the impressions left by the Swami's teachings
in England, Margaret Noble writes:
To not a few of us the words of Swami Vivekananda came as living water to men perishing of thirst. Many of us have been conscious for years past of that growing uncertainty and despair, with regard to religion, which has beset the intellectual life of Europe for half a century. Belief in the dogmas of Christianity has become impossible for us, and we had no tool, such as now we hold, by which to cut away the doctrinal shell from the kernel of Reality, in our faith. To these, the Vedanta has given intellectual confirmation and philosophical expression of their own mistrusted intuitions. 'The people that walked in darkness have seen a great light.'... It was the Swami's I am God that came as something always known, only never said before.... Yet again, it was the Unity of Man that was the touch needed to rationalize all previous experiences and give logical sanction to the thirst for absolute service, never boldly avowed in the past. Some by one gate, and some by another, we have all entered into a great heritage, and we know it.
The practical Englishman saw in the Swami's life
the demonstration of fearlessness which was the
necessary corollary of his teaching regarding the divinity of the
soul. It was revealed in many incidents.
One in particular illustrates this. He was one
day walking with Miss MΓΌller and an English friend
across some fields when a mad bull came tearing towards
them. The Englishman frankly ran, and reached the other side
of the hill in safety. Miss MΓΌller ran as far as she could,
and then sank to the ground, incapable of further effort.
Seeing this and unable to aid her, the Swami β thinking, 'So this
is the end, after all' β took up his stand in front of her,
with folded arms.
He told afterwards how his mind was occupied
with a mathematical calculation as to how far the bull would
be able to throw him. But the animal suddenly stopped a
few paces off, and then, raising its head, retreated sullenly.
The Englishman felt ashamed of his cowardly retreat and
of having left the Swami alone to face the bull. Miss
MΓΌller asked the Swami how he could muster courage in such
a dangerous situation. He said that in the face of danger
and death he felt β and he took two pebbles in his hands and
struck the one against the other β as strong as flint, for
'I have touched the feet of God.' He had shown a like
courage in his early boyhood, when he quickly stepped up to
drag away a child who was about to be trampled under a
horse's feet in a street of Calcutta.
Regarding his experience and work in England, he
told the Hale sisters, in a letter, that it was a roaring success.
To another American friend he wrote that he believed in
the power of the English to assimilate great ideas, and
that though the process of assimilation might be slow, it
would be all the more sure and abiding. He believed that the
time would come when distinguished ecclesiastics of the
Church of England, imbued with the idealism of Vedanta,
would form a liberal community within the Anglican Church
itself, supporting the universality of religion both in vision
and in practice.
But what he admired most in England was
the character of the English people β their
steadiness, thoroughness, loyalty, devotion to the ideal, and
perseverance to finish any work that they undertook.
His preconceived idea about the English was
thoroughly changed when he came to know them intimately. 'No
one,' he said later, addressing the Hindus of Calcutta,
'ever landed on English soil feeling more hatred in his heart
for a race than I did for the English. [The iniquities of
the colonial rule in India were deeply impressed in
his mind.]...There is none among you who loves the
English people more than I do.'
He wrote to the Hale sisters on November 28,
1896: 'The English are not so bright as the Americans, but
once you touch their heart it is yours for ever....I now
understand why the Lord has blessed them above all
other races β steady, sincere to the backbone, with great
depths of feeling, only with a crust of stoicism on the surface.
If that is broken you have your man.' In another letter:
'You know, of course, the steadiness of the English; they are,
of all nations,least jealous of each other and that is why
they dominate the world. They have solved the secret
of obedience without slavish cringing β great freedom
with law-abidingness.' On still another occasion he called
the English 'a nation of heroes, the true kshatriyas....Their
education is to hide their feelings and never to show them.
If you know how to reach the English heart, he is your
friend for ever. If he has once an idea put into his brain, it
never comes out; and the immense practicality and energy of
the race makes it sprout up and immediately bear fruit.'
The Swami felt that the finger of God had
brought about the contact between India and England. The
impact created by the aggressive British rule, on the one
hand, awakened the Hindu race from its slumber of ages, and
on the other hand, offered India opportunities to spread
her spiritual message throughout the Western world.
He wrote to Mr. Leggett on July 6, 1896:
The British Empire with all its evils is the greatest machine that ever existed for the dissemination of ideas. I mean to put my ideas in the centre of this machine, and it will spread them all over the world. Of course, all great work is slow and the difficulties are too many, especially as we Hindus are a conquered race. Yet that is the very reason why it is bound to work, for spiritual ideals have always come from the downtrodden. The downtrodden Jews overwhelmed the Roman Empire with their spiritual ideals. You will be pleased to learn that I am also learning my lesson every day in patience and above all in sympathy. I think I am beginning to see the Divine even inside the bullying Anglo-Indians. I think I am slowly approaching to that state when I would be able to love the very 'Devil' himself, if there were any.
Though Swami Vivekananda himself spoke highly of the effect of his teachings in England, he did not start any organized work there as he did in the United States of America. From his letters and conversations one learns that he was growing weary of the world. Though he was at the peak of his success as far as public activity was concerned, he began to feel a longing for the peace that comes from total absorption in the Supreme Spirit. He sensed that his earthly mission was over. On August 23, 1896, he wrote to a friend, from Lucerne:
'I have begun the work, let others work it out. So you see, to set the work going I had to defile myself by touching money and property for a time.6 Now I am sure my part of the work has been done, and I have no more interest in Vedanta or any philosophy in the world or in the work itself. I am getting ready to depart, to return no more to this hell, this world.... Even its religious utility is beginning to pall on me.... These works and doing good, and so forth, are just a little exercise to cleanse the mind. I have had enough of it.'7 He was losing interest even in the American programme, which he himself had organized.
In the letter quoted above, the Swami wrote: 'If
New York or Boston or any other place in the U.S. needs
Vedanta teachers, they must receive them, keep them, and
provide for them. As for me, I am as good as retired. I have
played my part in the world.' To Swami Abhedananda he
confided one day, about this time, that he was going to live for
five or six years at the most. The brother disciple said in
protest that he was a young man and that he should not
think of death. 'But,' Vivekananda said, 'you are a fool; you
do not understand. My soul is getting bigger and bigger
every day; the body can hardly contain it. Any day it
may burst this cage of flesh and bone!'
The world was leaving him. The string of the kite
by which it was fastened to earth was breaking.
The reader may recall that Sri Ramakrishna spoke
of Vivekananda as a free soul whom he had dragged
down from the realm of the Absolute to help him in his
mission on earth. A temporary veil, necessary for
physical embodiment and work, was put on this soul so that it
might dwell in the world to help men in their search for
spiritual freedom. But now, as the veil was becoming thinner,
the Swami began to get a glimpse of the real freedom.
He realized that the world was the lila, the play, of the
Divine Mother, and it would continue as long as She wanted
it. On August 8, 1896, he wrote from Switzerland to Goodwin:
I am much refreshed now. I look out of the window and see the huge glaciers just before me β and feel that I am in the Himalayas. I am quite calm. My nerves have regained their accustomed strength, and little vexations like those you write of do not touch me at all. How shall I be disturbed by this child's play? The whole world is mere child's play β preaching, teaching, and all included. 'Know him to be a sannyasin who neither hates nor desires.' What is to be desired in this little mud-puddle of a world, with its ever recurring misery, disease, and death? 'He who has given up all desires, he alone is happy.' This rest β eternal, peaceful rest β I am catching a glimpse of it now in this beautiful spot. 'If a man knows the Atman as "I am this," then desiring what and for whose sake will he suffer in the wake of the body?'
I feel as if I have had my share of experience
in what they call 'work.' I am finished. I am longing
to get out now.
With this growing detachment from the world,
the idea of good and evil, without the consciousness of
which no work is possible, began to drop away. The Swami
was realizing an intense love for God. In that mood a
great exaltation would come over him, and the whole
universe would seem to him an eternal garden where an
Eternal Child plays an eternal game. In that mood of delirious
joy he had written on July 6, 1896, to Francis Leggett, his
friend and disciple:
At twenty I was a most unsympathetic,
uncompromising fanatic. I would not walk on the footpath
on the theatre side of the street in Calcutta. At
thirty-three I can live in the same house with prostitutes
and never would think of saying a word of reproach
to them. Is it degeneration? Or is it that I am
broadening out into that universal love which is the
Lord Himself?...Some days I get into a sort of ecstasy. I
feel that I must bless everyone, every being, love
and embrace every being, and I literally see that evil is
a delusion.... I bless the day I was born. I have had
so much of kindness and love here, and that Love
Infinite who brought me into being has guided every one
of my actions, good or bad (don't be frightened); for
what am I, what was I ever, but a tool in His
hands β for whose service I have given up
everything β my Beloved, my Joy, my Life, my Soul? He is my
playful darling. I am His playfellow. There is neither
rhyme nor reason in the universe. What reason binds
Him? He, the Playful One, is playing β these tears
and laughter are all parts of the play. Great fun, great
fun! as Joe8
says.
It is a funny world, and the funniest chap
you ever saw is He, the Beloved. Infinite fun, is it
not? Brotherhood or playmatehood? A shoal of
romping children let out to play in this playground of the
world, isn't it? Whom to praise, whom to blame? It is all
His play. They want an explanation, but how can
you explain Him? He is brainless, nor has He any
reason. He is fooling us with little brains and reasons, but this
time He won't find me napping β 'you bet.' I
have learnt a thing or two. Beyond, beyond reason
and learning and talking is the feeling, the 'Love,'
the 'Beloved.' Ay, 'Sake' (Friend)
fill the cup and we will be
mad. β Yours ever in madness, Vivekananda.
In a philosophical mood he spoke about the
illusion of progress. He did not believe in the possibility
of transforming this earth into a heaven where misery
would be totally eliminated and happiness alone would reign
in its place. True freedom and bliss could be attained only
by the individual and not by the masses as a whole. He
wrote to Goodwin on August 8, 1896: '"A good world," "a
happy world," "social progress" are equally intelligible as
"hot ice," "dark light," etc. If it were good it would not be
the world. The soul foolishly thinks of manifesting the
Infinite in finite matter β the intelligence through gross
particles β and at last finds out its error and tries to
escape. This going back is the beginning of
religion, and its method,
destruction of self, that is, love. Not love for wife or child or
anybody else, but love for everything else except this little
self. Never be deluded by the tall talk, of which you will hear
a lot in America, about "human progress" and such
stuff. There is no progress without regression.'
On November 1, 1896, in the course of a letter to
Mary Hale, Swami Vivekananda wrote from London:
'An objective heaven or millennium therefore has existence only in the fancy, but a subjective one is already in existence. The musk-deer, after vain search for the cause of the scent of the musk, at last will have to find it in himself.'
But Swami Vivekananda's mission to the world
was not yet finished. An arduous task was awaiting him in
his beloved motherland. The Indian work had to be
organized before he could bid farewell to this earth. He left
England on December 16, 1896, and travelled overland for the
port of departure at Naples.
The party headed directly for Milan, passing
through Dover, Calais, and Mont Cenis. The Swami enjoyed
the railroad journey and entertained his companions,
the Seviers, with his stimulating conversation. But a part
of his mind was drawn to India. He said to the Seviers:
'Now I have but one thought, and that is India. I am looking
forward to India.' On the eve of his departure from
London, an English friend had asked him, 'Swami, how will
you like your motherland after three years' experience in
the luxurious and powerful West?' His significant reply
was: 'India I loved before I came away. Now the very dust
of India has become holy to me, the very air is now holy
to me; it is the holy land, the place of pilgrimage.' Often
the Swami said that the West was the karma-bhumi, the
land of action, where through selfless work a man purified
his heart; and India was the punya-bhumi, the land of
holiness, where the pure in heart communed with God.
In Milan the Swami was much impressed by the
great cathedral and by Leonardo's 'Last Supper.' Pisa, with
the leaning tower, and Florence, with its
magnificent achievements in art, immensely delighted him. But the
peak of his happiness was reserved for Rome, where he
spent Christmas week. Many things there reminded him of India:
the tonsure of the priests, the incense, the music, the
various ceremonies of the Catholic Church, and the Holy
Sacrament β the last of these recalling to his mind the
prasada of the Hindu temples, the food partaken of by
devotees after it has been offered to God.
When asked by a lady companion about the
church ritual, the Swami said, 'If you love the Personal God,
then give Him your best β incense, flowers, fruit, and silk.'
But he was a little bewildered by the imposing High Mass
at St. Peter's on Christmas Day, and whispered to the
Seviers: 'Why all this pageantry and ostentatious show? Can it
be possible that the Church which loves such a display
of pomp and ceremonies is the true follower of the
humble Jesus, who had nowhere to lay his head?' He could
never forget that Christ was a sannyasin, a
world-renouncing monk, and that the essence of his teachings was
renunciation and detachment.
He enjoyed his visit to the catacombs, associated
with the memories of early Christian martyrs and saints.
The Christmas festival at Santa-Maria d'Ara Coeli, with the
stalls where sweets, toys, and cheap pictures of the Bambino
were sold, reminded him of similar religious fairs in India.
Christmas in Rome filled his heart with a warm devotion for
Jesus Christ, who was an Asiatic and whom Asia had offered
to the West as a gift to awaken its spiritual consciousness.
The Swami spent a few days in Naples,
visiting Vesuvius, Pompeii, and other places of interest. Then
the ship at last arrived from Southampton with Mr.
Goodwin as one of her passengers. The Swami and his friends
sailed from Naples on December 30, 1896, expecting to arrive
in Colombo on January 15, 1897.
On board the ship the Swami had a significant
vision. One night, somewhere between Naples and Port Said,
he saw in a vivid dream a venerable, bearded old man,
like a rishi of India, who said: 'Observe carefully this place.
You are now in the Island of Crete. This is the land
where Christianity began. I am one of the Therapeutae who
used to live here.' The apparition uttered another word,
which the Swami could not remember. It might have been
'Essene,' a sect to which John the Baptist belonged.
Both the Therapeutae and the Essenes had
practised renunciation and cherished a liberal religious
outlook. According to some scholars, the word
Therapeutae may be derived from the Buddhist word
Sthaviraputtra or theraputta,
meaning the sons or disciples
of the Theras,
or Elders, the superiors among the Buddhist monks. The
word Essene may have some relation with
Isiyana, meaning the Path of the Lord, a well-known
sect of Buddhist monks.
It is now admitted that the Buddhists at an early time
had monasteries in Asia Minor, Egypt, and generally along
the eastern part of the Mediterranean.
The old man in the dream concluded his statement
by saying: 'The truths and ideas preached by us
were presented as the teachings of Jesus. But Jesus the
person was never born. Various proofs attesting this fact will
be brought to light when this place is dug up.' At
that moment β it was midnight β the Swami awoke and
asked a sailor where the ship was; he was told that it was
fifty miles off Crete.
The Swami was startled at this singular
coincidence. The idea flashed in his mind that the Acts of the
Apostles might have been an older record than the Gospels, and that
Buddhist thought, coming through the Therapeutae
and the Essenes, might have helped in the formulation
of Christianity. The person of Christ might be a later
addition. He knew that Alexandria had been a meeting-place
of Indian and Egyptian thought. Later, when the old sites
in Crete were excavated, evidence was found connecting
early Christianity with foreign sources.
But Swami Vivekananda never refused to accept
the historical Christ. Like Krishna, Christ, too, has
been revealed in the spiritual experiences of many saints.
That, for Vivekananda, conferred upon him a reality which
was more real than historical realities. While travelling
in Switzerland, the Swami one day plucked some
wild flowers and asked Mrs. Sevier to offer them at the feet
of the Virgin in a little chapel in the mountains, with
the remark, 'She too is the Mother.' One of his disciples,
another day, gave him a picture of the Sistine Madonna to
bless. But he refused in all humility, and piously touching
the feet of the child said, 'I would have washed his feet,
not with my tears, but with my heart's blood.' It may be
remembered that the monastic Order of Ramakrishna
was started on Christmas Eve.
During the two weeks' voyage, Swami
Vivekananda had ample time to reflect on the experiences of his
three years in the Western world. His mind was filled
with memories of sweet friendship, unflinching devotion,
and warm appreciation from both sides of the Atlantic.
Three years before, he had come to America, unknown
and penniless, and was regarded somewhat as a curiosity
from the glamorous and inscrutable East. Now he was
returning to his native land, a hero and prophet worshipped by
hundreds and admired by thousands. Guided by the
finger of God he had gone to Chicago. In the New World he
had seen life at its best and its worst. He found there a
society based on the ideals of equality, justice, and freedom,
where a man β in sad contrast with India β was given
every opportunity to develop his potentialities. There
the common people had reached a high standard of living
and enjoyed their well-earned prosperity in a way
unimaginable in any other part of the world. The American
mind was alert, inquisitive, daring, receptive, and endowed
with a rare ethical sensitivity. He saw in America, in her
men and women of letters, wealth, and position, sparks
of spirituality which kindled at the touch of his magic
words. He was impressed to see the generous confidence
and richness of heart manifested through the pure and
candid souls who gave themselves to him once they
had recognized him as a trustworthy spiritual guide.
They became his noble friends and slaves of love, and did
not shrink from the highest sacrifice to help in the
fulfilment of his mission.
But withal, the Swami saw the vulgarity,
garishness, greed, lust for power, and sensuality among this
vast country's heterogeneous elements. People had been
swept off their feet by the newly acquired prosperity created
with the aid of science, technology, and human ingenuity.
They often appeared to him naive and noisy, and he may
have wondered if this new nation, l'enfant
terrible, the last hope of Western culture and also the
source
of potential fear
for the rest of the world, would measure up to the
expectations of its Founding Fathers and act as the big brother of
the world, sharing with all the material amenities of life.
America had given him the first recognition and
he was aware of it. In America he had started the work
of Vedanta in an organized form, and he hoped
America would be the spiritual bridge between the East and
the West. Though his scholarly and conservative mind
often felt at home among the intellectuals of England
and Germany, yet to America his heart was devoted.
The monuments of Western culture no doubt fascinated
him, but, as he wrote to Mary Hale from London, in May
1896: 'I love the Yankee land β I like to see new things. I do
not care a fig to loaf about old ruins and mope a life out
about old histories and keep sighing about the ancients. I
have too much vigour in my blood for that. In America is
the place, the people, the opportunity for everything new.
I have become horribly radical.'
In that same letter he wrote, too, that he wished
he could infuse some of the American spirit into India,
into 'that awful mass of conservative jelly-fish, and then
throw overboard all old associations and start a new
thing, entirely new β simple, strong, new and fresh as the
first-born baby β throw all of the past overboard and
begin anew.'
Swami Vivekananda bestowed equally high
praise upon the Englishman. He felt that in a sense his work
in England was more satisfactory than his work in
America. There he transformed the life of individuals. Goodwin
and Margaret Noble embraced his cause as their own, and
the Seviers accompanied him to India, deserting Europe
and all their past to follow him.
But what of Swami Vivekananda's early dream
of gathering from America the material treasures to remedy
the sufferings of the Indian masses and raise their
standard of living? He had come to America to obtain, in
exchange for India's spiritual wealth, the needed monetary help
and scientific and technological knowledge to rebuild
the physical health of his own people. Though on his
return he did not take with him American scientists
and technologists, or carry in his pocket gold and silver
from the New World, yet he had left behind a vast storehouse
of goodwill and respect for India. He had been India's
first spiritual ambassador to America, India's herald,
who, remembering the dignity of the royal land whence he
had come, had spoken in her name and delivered her
message with appropriate dignity.
The full effect of this contact will be known only
in years to come; but a beginning can be seen even now.
Half a century after Swami Vivekananda's visit to America,
India gained her freedom from British rule. When she
thus obtained facilities to arrange her national affairs in her
own way, India sent thousands of students to the New World
to acquire advanced knowledge in the physical sciences
and technology. Further, American money is now being
spent to improve the material condition of the Indian
masses. Thus it appears that, after all, Swami Vivekananda
was not a mere visionary, but had insight into the shape of
things to come.
The immediate task before him, the Swami felt,
was to work for India's regeneration from within the
country itself. India could be liberated by her own efforts
alone. But he was carrying from the West a priceless asset to
help him in his herculean task: The West had given him
an authority which, it appears, he did not have before in the
land of his birth. He had been successful in planting
the seeds of India's spiritual ideas in the very heart of
the English-speaking world β in New York and London.
Did he know then that within a half century these ideas
would be broadcast over the Western world, and earn its
respect for his motherland? Though he had come to America as
a giver, he was now, in a sense, going back to India as a
gift from the New World.
Swami Vivekananda enjoyed the sea voyage back
to India, relaxing from his strenuous activities in the
West. But his mind was full of ideas regarding his future plan
of work in his motherland.
There were on the boat, among other passengers,
two Christian missionaries who, in the course of a
heated discussion with the Swami, lost their tempers and
savagely criticized the Hindu religion. The Swami walked to one
of them, seized him by the collar, and said menacingly, 'If
you abuse my religion again, I will throw you overboard.'
'Let me go, sir,' the frightened missionary
apologized; 'I'll never do it again.'
Later, in the course of a conversation with a
disciple in Calcutta, he asked, 'What would you do if
someone insulted your mother?' The disciple answered, 'I
would fall upon him, sir, and teach him a good lesson.'
'Bravo!' said the Swami. 'Now, if you had the
same positive feeling for your religion, your true mother,
you could never see any Hindu brother converted to
Christianity. Yet you see this occurring every day, and you are
quite indifferent. Where is your faith? Where is your
patriotism? Every day Christian missionaries abuse Hinduism to
your face, and yet how many are there amongst you whose
blood boils with righteous indignation and who will stand up
in its defense?'
When the boat stopped at Aden, the party went
ashore and visited the places of interest. The Swami saw from
a distance a Hindusthani betel-leaf seller smoking
his hookah, or hubble-bubble. He had not enjoyed this
Indian way of smoking for the past three years. Going up to
him, the Swami said, 'Brother, do give me your pipe.' Soon
he was puffing at it with great joy and talking to him as to
an intimate friend.
Mr. Sevier later on said to Swamiji teasingly:
'Now we see! It was this pipe that made you run away from
us so abruptly!' Speaking of this incident, the
Swami's companions said later: 'The shopkeeper could not
have resisted him; for he had such an endearing way about
him, when asking for anything, that he was simply
irresistible. We shall never forget that ingenuous look on his face
when he said to the shopkeeper, with childlike
sweetness, "Brother, do give me your pipe."'
In the early morning of January 15, 1897, the coast
of Ceylon with its majestic coco palms and
gold-coloured beach was seen at a distance. The Swami's heart leapt
with joy; and his disciples caught his excitement as the
boat approached the beautiful harbour of Colombo. But no
one in the party had the slightest idea of what they were
to witness while disembarking.
Since the day of his success at the Parliament
of Religions in Chicago, which had filled with joy and
pride the hearts of his countrymen, especially of his disciples
and brother monks at the Baranagore Math, Swami
Vivekananda had been inspiring his faithful followers to lay
down their lives for the uplift of the masses of India, and
in particular to help the hungry and illiterate. In his heart of
hearts he felt that India would not be able to resist
his appeal. Many months before, while discussing with
some of his disciples in Detroit the great difficulties that he
had encountered in presenting Hinduism to bigoted
Christians in America, he had said: 'But India shall listen to me. I
will shake India to her foundations. I will send an electric
thrill through her veins. Wait! You will see how India
receives me. It is India, my own India, that knows truly how
to appreciate what I have given so freely here, and with
my life's blood. India will receive me in triumph.'
When the news of Swami Vivekananda's
departure from Europe reached India, the hearts of the people
were stirred. The spiritual ambassador of their ancient land
was coming back after fulfilling his mission. They must give
a regal welcome to this great crusader. In big
towns committees were formed for his reception. His
brother disciples and friends were impatient. Swami
Shivananda came ahead of time to Madras and Swami
Niranjanananda to Colombo; so also many of his disciples from Bengal
and the Northern Provinces came to Madras to await his
arrival. The newspapers published articles eulogizing
his personality and work.
A gaily decorated steam launch carried the Swami
and his party from the ship to the harbour. When the
monk with his yellow robe and luminous eyes came ashore,
a mighty shout arose from the human throng crowding
the quays. Thousands flung themselves on the ground to
touch his feet. A deputation of the notables of Ceylon
welcomed him, and he was taken in a huge procession through
many triumphal arches. Flags were unfurled, religious
hymns chanted; an Indian band played. Rosewater and the sacred
water of the Ganga were sprinkled before him, and
flowers were strewn in his path. Incense was burnt before
the houses as he passed. Fruit and other offerings were
brought by hundreds of visitors.
Swami Vivekananda accepted all these
honours without losing his poise. He was not the man to flee
from triumph any more than from battle. He regarded
the tributes paid to him, a penniless beggar, as tributes paid
to the spiritual ideal of India. In the course of his reply to
the address of welcome given in Colombo, he said, 'The
spirituality of the Hindus is revealed by the princely
reception which they have given to a beggar sannyasin.' He
pointed out that though he was not a military general, not a
prince nor a wealthy man, yet men great in the transitory
possessions of the world and much respected by society
had nevertheless come to honour him, a homeless monk.
'This,' he exclaimed, 'is one of the highest expressions of
spirituality.' He disclaimed any personal glory in the welcome
he received, insisting that it was but the recognition of
a principle.
Swami Vivekananda's progress from Colombo
to Madras and the welcomes he received at Kandy,
Anuradhapuram, Jaffna, Pamban, Rameswaram, Ramnad,
Paramakkudi, Madurai, Trichinopoly, and Kumbakonam
demonstrated how deeply he had endeared himself to the men
and women of India. At Anuradhapuram a band of
fanatical Buddhists tried to break up the meeting, but did not
succeed. At Rameswaram the Swami exhorted the people to
'worship Siva in the poor, the diseased, and the weak'.
He received a touching welcome there from the
Raja of Ramnad, his disciple, who had encouraged him to go to
America and had helped him materially for that
purpose. At Ramnad the horses were unhitched from the
carriage bearing the Swami, and the people themselves, the
Raja among them, drew it. At Rameswaram the Raja erected,
in the Swami's honour, a victory column forty feet high
with a suitable inscription. He also gave a liberal donation
to the Madras famine-relief fund to commemorate the
home-coming of the Swami.
At a small railroad station near Madras, hundreds
of people gathered for a glimpse of Vivekananda.
The stationmaster did not want to delay the train since no
stop was scheduled. But the crowd of admirers flung
themselves on the track, and the train had to be halted. The
Swami was visibly moved and blessed the multitude.
The enthusiasm of the people reached its peak
in Madras, where extensive preparations had been made
for the Swami's reception. It was Madras that had
first recognized the greatness of Vivekananda and
equipped him for the journey to Chicago. At that time, when he
had first come there, he had been, in effect, only an
obscure individual. He had spent some two months in an
unknown bungalow at San Thome, holding conversations
on Hinduism. Yet even then a few educated young men
of keen foresight had predicted that there was something
in the man, a 'power' that would lift him above all
others and enable him to be a leader of men. These youths,
who had been ridiculed as 'misguided enthusiasts' and
'dreamy revivalists,' now, four years later, had the
supreme satisfaction of seeing 'our Swami,' as they loved to call
him, return to them a famous personage in both Europe
and America.
The streets and thoroughfares of Madras were
profusely decorated; seventeen triumphal arches were erected.
The Swami's name was on everybody's lips. Thousands
jammed the railway station, and as the train steamed in, he
was received with thundering shouts of applause. An
elaborate procession was formed, and he was taken to 'Castle
Kernan,' the palatial home of Billigiri Iyengar, where
arrangements had been made for his stay in the city.
On the third day after his arrival Swami
Vivekananda was honoured in a public meeting on behalf of the
people of Madras. As Victoria Hall, chosen for the purpose,
was too small to hold the large crowd, the people cried for
an open-air gathering. The Swami came out and
addressed them from the top of a coach; it was, as it were, Sri
Krishna, standing in the chariot, exhorting Arjuna to give up
his unmanliness and measure up to his Aryan heritage. In
a brief speech he told the people how India, through her
love of God, had expanded the limited love of the family
into love of country and of humanity. He urged them
to maintain their enthusiasm and to give him all the help
he required to do great things for India.
During his short stay in Madras, Swami
Vivekananda gave four public lectures, his subjects being, 'My Plan
of Campaign,' 'The Sages of India,' 'Vedanta in Its
Application to Indian Life,' and 'The Future of India.' In
these lectures he reminded the Indians of both their
greatness and their weakness, and urged them to be proud of
their past and hopeful for their future.
While speaking on 'My Plan of Campaign,' the
Swami exposed the meanness of some of the Theosophists,
who had tried their utmost to injure his work in America but
later claimed that they had paved the way for his
success in the New World. He told the audience that when,
in desperation, he had cabled to India for money,
the Theosophists had come to know about it and one of
them had written to a member of the Society in India: 'Now
the devil is going to die. God bless us all!' But it must be
said that there were many among the Theosophists,
especially in India, who were his genuine well-wishers.
Swami Vivekananda had hardly a moment's
respite during his nine days in Madras. When asked by a
disciple how he found the strength for such incessant activity,
he answered, 'Spiritual work never tires one in India.' But
he would lose patience if asked about matters that had
no bearing on practical life. One day a pandit asked him
to state clearly whether he was a dualist or a non-dualist.
The Swami said: 'As long as I have this body I am a dualist,
but not otherwise. This incarnation of mine is to help put
an end to useless and mischievous quarrels, which
only distract the mind and make men weary of life, and
even turn them into sceptics and atheists.'
Meanwhile heart-warming letters had been
arriving from America informing the Swami of the progress of
the Vedanta work in the New World under the leadership
of Swami Saradananda, and also in appreciation of his
own achievements. One letter was signed by Lewis G. Janes,
President of the Brooklyn Ethical Association; C. C. Everett,
Dean of the Harvard Divinity School; William James and
Josiah Royce, both professors of philosophy at Harvard
University; Mrs. Sara C. Bull of Boston, and others. It said: 'We
believe that such expositions as have been given by yourself
mere speculative interest and utility β that they are of
great ethical value in cementing the ties of friendship and
brotherhood between distant peoples, and in helping us to
realize that solidarity of human relationship and interests
which has been affirmed by all the great religions of the world.
We earnestly hope that your work in India may be blessed
in further promoting this noble end, and that you may
return to us again with assurances of fraternal regard from
our distant brothers of the great Aryan family, and the
ripe wisdom that comes from reflection and added
experience and further contact with the life and thought of your
people.'
Another letter from Detroit, signed by forty-two
of his friends, said in part: 'We Western Aryans have been
so long separated from our Eastern brothers that we
had almost forgotten our identity of origin, until you came
and with your beautiful presence and matchless
eloquence rekindled within our hearts the knowledge that we
of America and you of India are one.'
Swami Vivekananda, after his strenuous work
in South India, needed rest. On the advice of friends,
he decided to travel to Calcutta by steamer. Monday,
February 15, was the date of his sailing. Several devotees
boarded the steamer to see him off, and one of them,
Professor Sundararama Iyer, asked the Swami if his mission
had achieved lasting good in America and Europe. The
Swami said: 'Not much. I hope that here and there I have sown
a seed which in time may grow and benefit some at least.'
Swami Vivekananda's lectures delivered during
his progress from Colombo to Madras were inspiring
and enthusiastic. He yearned to awaken the masses of
India from the slumber of ages. He had seen the dynamic life of
the West; he now felt more deeply the personality of
India, which only needed his fiery exhortation to assert itself
once more among the nations of the world. Again one
is reminded of Krishna's admonition to Arjuna on
the battlefield of Kurukshetra: 'In this crisis, O Arjuna,
whence comes such lowness of spirit, unbecoming to an
Aryan, dishonourable, and an obstacle to the attaining of
heaven? Do not yield to unmanliness, O Arjuna. It does not
become you. Shake off this base faint-heartedness and arise,
O scorcher of enemies!'
In his famous lecture 'My Plan of
Campaign,' delivered in Madras, he called upon the people to
assert their soul-force:
My India, arise! Where is your vital force? In your Immortal Soul. Each nation, like each individual, has one theme in this life, which is its centre, the principal note round which every other note comes to form the harmony. If any nation attempts to throw off its national vitality, the direction which has become its own through the transmission of centuries, that nation dies....In one nation political power is its vitality, as in England. Artistic life, in another, and so on. In India religious life forms the centre, the keynote of the whole music of the national life. And therefore, if you succeed in the attempt to throw off your religion and take up either politics or society, the result will be that you will become extinct. Social reform and politics have to be preached through the vitality of your religion.... Every man has to make his own choice; so has every nation. We made our choice ages ago. And it is the faith in an Immortal Soul. I challenge anyone to give it up. How can you change your nature?
He asked the Indians to stop complaining. Let
them make use of the power that lay in their hands. That
power was so great that if they only realized it and were
worthy of it, they could revolutionize the world. India was
the Ganga of spirituality. The material conquests of the
Anglo-Saxon races, far from being able to dam its current,
had helped it. England's power had united the nations of
the world; she had opened paths across the seas so that
the waves of the spirit of India might spread until they
had bathed the ends of the earth.
What was this new faith, this word that the world
was awaiting?
The other great idea that the world wants from us today β more perhaps the lower classes than the higher, more the uneducated than the educated, more the weak than the strong β is that eternal, grand idea of the spiritual oneness of the whole universe, the only Infinite Reality, that exists in you and in me and in all, in the self, in the soul. The infinite oneness of the soul β that you and I are not only brothers, but are really one β is the eternal sanction of all morality. Europe wants it today just as much as our downtrodden races do, and this great principle is even now unconsciously forming the basis of all the latest social and political aspirations that are coming up in England, in Germany, in France and in America. (Extracts from the lecture 'The Mission of the Vedanta.')
What Swami Vivekananda preached was the essence of the non-dualistic Vedanta, the deepest and the unique expression of India's spirit.
I heard once the complaint made that I was preaching too much of Advaita, absolute non-dualism, and too little of dualism. Ay, I know what grandeur, what oceans of love, what infinite, ecstatic blessings and joy there are in dualistic religion. I know it all. But this is not the time for us to weep, even in joy; we have had weeping enough; no more is this the time for us to become soft. This softness has been with us till we have become like masses of cotton. What our country now wants is muscles of iron and nerves of steel, gigantic will, which nothing can resist, which will accomplish their purpose in any fashion, even if it means going down to the bottom of the ocean and meeting death face to face. That is what we want, and that can only be created, established, and strengthened by understanding and realizing the ideal of Advaita, that ideal of the oneness of all. Faith, faith, faith in ourselves! β¦ If you have faith in the three hundred and thirty millions of your mythological gods, and in all the gods which foreigners have introduced into your midst, and still have no faith in yourselves, there is no salvation for you. Have faith in yourselves and stand upon that faith. Why is it that we three hundred and thirty millions of people have been ruled for the last thousand years by any and every handful of foreigners? Because they had faith in themselves and we had not. I read in the newspapers how, when one of our poor fellows is murdered or ill-treated by an Englishman, howls go up all over the country; I read and I weep, and the next moment comes to my mind the question of who is responsible for it all. Not the English; it is we who are responsible for all our degradation. Our aristocratic ancestors went on treading the common masses of our country underfoot till they became helpless, till under this torment the poor, poor people nearly forgot that they were human beings. They have been compelled to be merely hewers of wood and drawers of water for centuries, so that they are made to believe that they are born as slaves, born as hewers of wood and drawers of water. (Extracts from 'The Mission of the Vedanta.')
He exhorted the leaders to cultivate the indispensable virtue of feeling for the people:
'Feel, therefore, my
would-be reformers, my would-be patriots! Do you feel? Do
you feel that millions and millions of the descendants of
gods and of sages have become next-door neighbours to
brutes? Do you feel that millions are starving today and
millions have been starving for ages? Do you feel that ignorance
has come over the land as a dark cloud? Does it make you
restless? Does it make you sleepless? Has it made you
almost mad? Are you seized with that one idea of the misery
of ruin, and have you forgotten all about your name, your
fame, your wives, your children, your property, even your
own bodies? If so, that is the first step to becoming a patriot.
For centuries people have been taught theories of
degradation. They have been told that they are nothing. The masses have
been told all over the world that they are not human
beings. They have been so frightened for centuries that they
have nearly become animals. Never were they allowed to hear
of the Atman. Let them hear of the Atman β that even the
lowest of the low have the Atman within, who never dies
and never is born β Him whom the sword cannot pierce, nor
the fire burn, nor the air dry, immortal, without beginning
or end, the all-pure, omnipotent, and omnipresent
Atman. ('Extracts from 'My Plan of Campaign.')
'Ay, let every man and woman and child,
without respect of caste or birth, weakness or strength, hear
and learn that behind the strong and the weak, behind the
high and the low, behind everyone, there is that Infinite
Soul, assuring all the infinite possibility and the infinite
capacity to become great and good. Let us proclaim to every
soul: Arise, arise, awake! Awake from this hypnotism
of weakness. None is really weak; the soul is
infinite, omnipotent, and omniscient. Stand up, assert
yourself, proclaim the God within you, do not deny
Him!' (Extracts from 'The Mission of the Vedanta.')
'It is a man-making religion that we want. It is a
man-making education all round that we want. It is
man-making theories that we want. And here is the test of truth:
Anything that makes you weak physically, intellectually,
and spiritually, reject as poison; there is no life in it, it cannot
be true. Truth is strengthening. Truth is purity, truth is all
knowledge. Truth must be strengthening, must be
enlightening, must be invigorating. Give up these weakening
mysticisms and be strong. The greatest truths are the simplest things
in the world, simple as your own existence.
'Therefore my plan is to start institutions in India
to train our young men as preachers of the truths of
our scriptures in India and outside India. Men, men β these
are wanted : everything else will be ready; but strong,
vigorous, believing young men, sincere to the backbone, are
wanted. A hundred such and the world becomes
revolutionized. The will is stronger than anything else. Everything
must go down before the will, for that comes from God: a
pure and strong will is omnipotent.'
(Extracts from 'My Plan of Campaign.')
'If the brahmin has more aptitude for learning on
the grounds of heredity than the pariah, spend no more
money on the brahmin's education, but spend all on the
pariah. Give to the weak, for there all the gift is needed. If
the brahmin is born clever, he can educate himself
without help. This is justice and reason as I understand
it.' (From 'The Mission of the Vedanta.')
'For the next fifty years let all other vain
Gods disappear from our minds. This is the only God that
is awake: our own race β everywhere His hands,
everywhere His feet, everywhere His ears, He covers everything.
All other Gods are sleeping. Why should we vainly go
after them, when we can worship the God that we see all
around us, the Virat? The first of all worships is the worship of
the Virat, of those all around us. These are all our
Gods β men and animals; and the first Gods we have to worship
are our own countrymen.' (From 'The Future of India.')
These stirring words did not fall on deaf ears.
The spirit of India vibrated to the Swami's call. India became
aware of the power of the soul β of God sleeping in
man and of His illimitable possibilities. Ramakrishna
and Vivekananda were the first awakeners of India's
national consciousness; they were India's first nationalist
leaders in the true sense of the term. Ramakrishna was the
power and Vivekananda the voice. The movement for
India's liberation started from Dakshineswar. The
subsequent political leaders of the country, consciously or
unconsciously, received their inspiration from
Vivekananda's message, and some of them openly acknowledged it.
The Bengal revolutionaries were ardent readers of
Vivekananda's books, some of which were frowned upon by
the British Government. The uplift of the masses, the
chief plank in Gandhi's platforms was Vivekananda's legacy.
Yet the militant Vivekananda was not a politician.
'Let no political significance ever be attached falsely to
my writings or sayings. What nonsense!' β he had said as
early as September 1894. A year later he wrote: 'I will
have nothing to do with political nonsense. I do not believe
in politics. God and Truth are the only politics in the
world. Everything else is trash.'
Swami Vivekananda longed for India's
political freedom; but he thought of a free India in relation to
her service to humanity. A free India would take her
rightful place in the assembly of nations and make a
vital contribution towards bringing peace and goodwill
to mankind. His message was both national and
international.
While Swami Vivekananda was enjoying the
restful boat trip from Madras to Calcutta, a reception
committee was busy preparing for him a fitting welcome in the
metropolis of India, the city of his birth. The steamer
docked at Budge Budge, and the Swami and his party arrived
by train in Calcutta on February 19, 1897. The reception
was magnificent, with an enthusiastic crowd at the
railroad station, triumphal arches, the unharnessed carriage
drawn by students, and a huge procession with music
and religious songs. A princely residence on the bank of
the Ganga was placed at the Swami's disposal.
On February 28, 1897, he was given a public
reception. Raja Benoy Krishna Deb presided, and five
thousand people jammed the meeting. As usual, the Swami
asked the people to go back to the perennial philosophy of
the Upanishads. He also paid a touching tribute to
Ramakrishna, 'my teacher, my master, my hero, my ideal,
my God in life.' 'If there has been anything achieved by
me,' he said with deep feeling, 'by thoughts or words or
deeds, if from my lips has ever fallen one word that has
ever helped anyone in the world, I lay no claim to it; it was
his. But if there have been curses falling from my lips, if
there has been hatred coming out of me, it is all mine, and
not his. All that has been weak has been mine; all that has
been life-giving, strengthening, pure, and holy has been
his inspiration, his words, and he himself. Yes, my friends,
the world has yet to know that man.' A few days after, he
gave another public lecture on 'Vedanta in All Its Phases.'
Shortly after the Swami's arrival in Calcutta
the anniversary of Sri Ramakrishna's birth was celebrated
at Dakshineswar. Accompanied by his brother disciples,
the Swami joined the festival. He walked barefoot in the
holy grounds. Deep emotions were stirred up as he visited
the temples, the Master's room, the Panchavati, and other spots
associated with the memory of Sri Ramakrishna. The
place was a sea of human heads.
The Swami said to Girish, a beloved disciple of
the Master, 'Well, what a difference between those days
and these!'
'I know,' replied Girish, 'but I have the desire to
see more.'
For a little while the Swami spent his days at
the palatial house on the river; nights, however, he spent
with his spiritual brothers at the Alambazar monastery. He
had hardly any rest. People streamed in at all times to pay
him their respects or to hear his exposition of Vedanta, or
just to see him. There were also people who came to argue
with him on scriptural matters and to test his knowledge.
But the Swami's heart was with the
educated, unmarried youths whom he could train for his future
work. He longed to infuse into their hearts some of his
own burning enthusiasm. He wanted them to become
the preachers of his 'man-making religion.' The
Swami deplored the physical weakness of Indian
youths, denounced their early marriage, and reproached them
for their lack of faith in themselves and in their national ideals.
One day a young man complained to the Swami
that he could not make progress in spiritual life. He
had worshipped images, following the advice of one
teacher, and had tried to make his mind void according to
the instruction of another, but all had been fruitless.
'Sir,' the young man said, 'I sit still in
meditation, shutting the door of my room, and keep my eyes closed
as long as I can, but I do not find peace of mind. Can
you show me the way?'
'My boy,' replied the Swami in a voice full of
loving sympathy, 'if you take my word, you will have first of
all to open the door of your room and look around, instead
of closing your eyes. There are hundreds of poor and
helpless people in your neighbourhood; you have to serve them
to the best of your ability. You will have to nurse and
procure food and medicine for the sick. You will have to feed
those who have nothing to eat. You will have to teach
the ignorant. My advice to you is that if you want peace
of mind, you shall have to serve others to the best of
your ability.'
Another day a well-known college professor, who
was a disciple of Sri Ramakrishna, said to the Swami: 'You
are talking of service, charity, and doing good to the
world; these, after all, belong to the domain of maya. Vedanta
says that the goal of man is the attainment of mukti,
liberation, through breaking the chain of maya. What is the use
of preaching about things which keep one's mind on
mundane matters?'
The Swami replied: 'Is not the idea of mukti in
the domain of maya? Does not Vedanta teach that the
Atman is ever free? Why should It, then, strive for mukti?'
He said on another occasion: 'When I used to
roam about all over India, practising spiritual disciplines.
I passed day after day in caves absorbed in meditation.
Many a time I decided to starve myself to death because I
could not attain mukti. Now I have no desire for mukti. I do
not care for it as long as a single individual in the
universe remains in bondage.'
Swami Vivekananda often used to say that
different forms of spiritual discipline were especially efficacious for
different ages. At one period it was the practice
of austerities, at another period, the cultivation of divine
love; and at a third period, it was philosophical
discrimination accompanied by renunciation. But in modern times,
he emphasized, unselfish service of others,
karma-yoga, would quickly bring spiritual results. Therefore he
advocated the discipline of selfless action. He particularly
advocated this discipline for the Indians because they
were under the spell of tamas, inertia. The Swami realized
that only after cultivating rajas would they be able to
acquire sattva and attain liberations. As regards himself, the
Swami had already known mukti through the realization of
oneness with Brahman in nirvikalpa samadhi. But by the
will of God he had brought himself down to consciousness
of the phenomenal world, and lived like a
bodhisattva, devoting himself to the welfare of humanity.
Swami Vivekananda found it most difficult to
convert some of his own brother disciples to his new conception
of religion and its discipline and method. These
brother disciples were individualists, eager for their
personal salvation. They wanted to practise austerities
and penances, enjoy peaceful meditation, and lead a quiet
life of detachment from the world. To them God was first,
and next the world. At least that was the way they
understood Sri Ramakrishna's teachings. These young monks
thought that for one who had taken the monastic vows the
world was maya; therefore all activities, including the
charitable and philanthropic, ultimately entangled one in worldly life.
But Vivekananda's thought flowed through a
different channel. Sri Ramakrishna had once admonished him
to commune with God with eyes open, that is to say, through
the service of the poor, the sick, the hungry, and
the ignorant. During his days of wandering the Swami
had seen with his own eyes the suffering of the people and
had felt the voiceless appeal of India for his help. In
America and Europe he had witnessed the material prosperity
of the people, the dynamic social life, and the general
progress made through science, technology, and organized
action. Time and again he remembered the words of
Ramakrishna: 'Religion is not for empty stomachs.'
To his brother disciples, therefore, he pointed out
that the idea of personal liberation was unworthy of those
who called themselves disciples of Ramakrishna, an
Incarnation of God. The very fact that they had received the grace of
a Saviour should have convinced them of their sure
salvation. Their duty, he emphasized, was to serve others as the
visible manifestations of God. He said that he wanted to create
a new band of monks, who would take not only the traditional vow of
personal salvation, but also a new vow of service to humanity.
The brother disciples, who respected the
superior spirituality of Vivekananda and bore him great love as
the one especially chosen by the Master to carry on his
work, obeyed him without always agreeing with him
wholeheartedly. Thus at his behest Swami
Ramakrishnananda β who had been the keeper of Sri Ramakrishna's
shrine for twelve long years after the passing away of the
Master, regarding his worship as the supreme spiritual
discipline, and had not been absent even for a single day from
the monasteries at Baranagore and Alambazar β left for
Madras to found a centre for the propagation of Vedanta in
South India. Swami Akhandananda went to Murshidabad to
carry on relief work among the famine-stricken
people there. Swamis Abhedananda and Saradananda had
already gone to America.
As for himself, Swami Vivekananda was
constantly talking to people, instructing them in the Upanishads,
and enjoining them to cultivate the inner strength that
comes from the knowledge of God residing in all human
hearts. The strain of work and the heat of the plains soon told
upon his health. At the advice of physicians he went for a
short change to Darjeeling, in the Himalayas, and felt
somewhat refreshed. Returning to Calcutta he again devoted
himself to the work of teaching.
Several young men, inspired by the Swami's
fiery words, joined the Order. Four others, who had
been practising disciplines in the monastery under the
guidance of the older Swamis while Vivekananda was abroad,
were now eager to receive the monastic initiation formally
from their great leader. His brother disciples expressed
hesitation about one of them, because of some incidents of his
past life.
This aroused Swami Vivekananda's emotion.
'What is this?' he said. 'If we shrink from sinners, who else
will save them? Besides, the very fact that someone has
taken refuge at the monastery, in his desire to lead a better
life, shows that his intentions are good, and we must help
him. Suppose a man is bad and perverted; if you cannot
change his character, why then have you put on the ochre robe
of a monk? Why have you assumed the role of teachers?'
All four received their monastic initiation.
On the day previous to this sacred ceremony
the Swami spoke to them only about the glories of renunciation
and service. He said: 'Remember, for the salvation of
his soul and for the good and happiness of many, a
sannyasin is born in the world. To sacrifice his own life for others,
to alleviate the misery of millions rending the air with
their cries, to wipe away tears from the eyes of widows,
to console the hearts of bereaved mothers, to provide
the ignorant and depressed masses with ways and means
for the struggle for existence and make them stand on
their own feet, to broadcast the teachings of the scriptures
to one and all, without distinction, for their spiritual
and material welfare, to rouse the sleeping lion of Brahman
in the hearts of all beings by the knowledge of
Vedanta β a sannyasin is born in the world.' Turning to his
brother disciples the Swami said: 'Remember, it is for
the consummation of this purpose in life that we have
taken birth, and we shall lay down our lives for it. Arise
and awake, arouse and awaken others, fulfil your mission
in life, and you will reach the highest goal.' Then
addressing the aspirants for the monastic life he said: 'You
must renounce everything. You must not seek comfort
or pleasure for yourself. You must look upon gold and
objects of lust as poison, name and fame as the vilest filth,
worldly glory as a terrible hell, pride of birth or of social
position as "sinful as drinking spirituous liquor." In order to
be teachers of your fellow men, and for the good of the
world, you will have to attain freedom through the knowledge
of the Self.'
From the following incident one can learn the
depths of the Swami's compassion. Many inmates of the
Math thought that he was not very discriminating in the choice
of his disciples. Almost anyone could obtain spiritual initiation
from him after a little supplication, and some of them
were found later to indulge in wicked actions. One of his
own monastic disciples, Swami Nirmalananda, spoke to
him about his lack of proper judgement and his inability
to understand human nature. The Swami's face became
red with emotion. He exclaimed: 'What did you say? You
think that I do not understand human nature? About
these unfortunate people I know not only all they have done
in their present lives, but also what they did in their
previous ones. I am fully aware of what they will do in the
future. Then why do I show kindness to them? These hapless
people have knocked at many doors for peace of mind and a
word of encouragement, but everywhere have been repulsed. If
I turn them down they will have no place to go.'
Another incident indicating the tender and
compassionate heart of Swami Vivekananda may be
mentioned here. One day he was engaged in teaching a disciple
the Vedas, with the abstruse commentary of
Sayanacharya, when Girish Chandra Ghosh, the great playwright
of Bengal and an intimate disciple of Sri
Ramakrishna, arrived. By way of teasing him, the Swami said,
addressing him by his familiar name: 'Well, G. C., you have spent
your whole life with Krishna and
Vishnu.1
You are quite innocent of the Vedas and other scriptures.'
Girish Chandra admitted his ignorance of
the scriptures and said, 'Hail Sri Ramakrishna, the
very embodiment of the Vedas!'
An adept in the knowledge of human nature,
Girish was well aware that Swami Vivekananda, in spite of
his preaching the austere philosophy of Vedanta, had a
heart that was tender in the extreme. He wanted to reveal
that side of the Swami's nature before the disciple, and
began to paint, in his usual poetic language, a
heart-rending picture of the afflictions of the Indian
people β the starvation of the masses, the humiliation of Hindu
women, the ill-health and general suffering of the people
everywhere. Suddenly, addressing the Swami, he said,
'Now please tell me, do your Vedas teach us how to remedy
this state of affairs?'
As the Swami listened to his friend's words, he
could hardly suppress his emotion. At last it broke all
bounds and he burst into tears.
Drawing the attention of the Swami's disciple to
the great leader, Girish Chandra said: 'Perhaps you
have always admired your teacher's intellect. Now you see
his great heart.'
On May 1, 1897, Swami Vivekananda called a
meeting of the monastic and lay devotees of Sri Ramakrishna at
the house of the Master's intimate disciple Balaram Bose,
for the purpose of establishing his work on an organized
basis. He told them that by contrasting Hindu society
with American society, he was convinced that lack of
an organizing spirit was one of the great shortcomings of
the Hindu character. Much of the intelligence and energy
of the Hindus was being expended without producing
any fruitful result. He also recalled how Buddhism had
spread both in India and abroad through Buddhist
organizations. Therefore he asked the co-operation of the monastic and
householder disciples of Sri Ramakrishna in order
to organize the educational, philanthropic, and
religious activities which he had already inaugurated, but which
had hitherto been carried out in an unsystematic way.
Further, the Swami declared that in a country like India, in its
then current state of development, it would not be wise to
form an organization on a democratic basis, where each
member had an equal voice and decisions were made according
to the vote of the majority. Democratic principles could
be followed later, when, with the spread of education,
people would learn to sacrifice individual interests and
personal prejudices for the public weal. Therefore, said the
Swami, the organization for the time being should be under
the leadership of a 'dictator,' whose authority everybody
must obey. In the fullness of time, it would come to be guided
by the opinion and consent of others. Moreover, he
himself was only acting in the capacity of a servant of the
common Master, as were they all.2
Swami Vivekananda proposed to the members
present that the Association should 'bear the name of him in
whose name we have become sannyasins, taking whom as
your ideal you are leading the life of householders, and
whose holy name, influence, and teachings have, within
twelve years of his passing away, spread in such an
unthought-of way both in the East and in the West.' All the
members enthusiastically approved of the Swami's proposal, and
the Ramakrishna Mission Association came into existence.
The aim of the Association was to spread the
truths that Ramakrishna, for the good of humanity, had
preached and taught through the example of his own life, and
to help others to put them into practice for their
physical, mental, and spiritual advancement.
The duty of the Association was to direct, in the
right spirit, the activities of the movement inaugurated by
Sri Ramakrishna for the establishment of fellowship
among the followers of different religions, knowing them all to
be so many forms of one undying Eternal Religion.
Its methods of action were to be: (a) to train men so
as to make them competent to teach such knowledge
and sciences as are conducive to the material and
spiritual welfare of the masses; (b) to promote and encourage
arts and industries; (c) to introduce and spread among
the people in general Vedantic and other ideas as
elucidated in the life of Sri Ramakrishna.
The Ramakrishna Mission Association was to
have two departments of action: Indian and foreign. The
former, through retreats and monasteries established in
different parts of India, would train such monks and
householders as might be willing to devote their lives to the teaching
of
others. The latter would send trained members of the
Order to countries outside India to start centres there for
the preaching of Vedanta in order to bring about a
closer relationship and better understanding between India
and foreign countries.
The aims and ideals of the Ramakrishna
Mission Association, being purely spiritual and humanitarian,
were to have no connexion with politics.
Swami Vivekananda must have felt a great
inner satisfaction after the establishment of the Association.
His vision of employing religion, through head, heart,
and hands, for the welfare of man was realized. He found
no essential conflict among science, religion, art, and
industry. All could be used for the worship of God. God could
be served as well through His diverse manifestations
as through the contemplation of His non-dual aspect.
Further, as the great heart of Ramakrishna had embraced all
of mankind with its love, so also the Ramakrishna
Mission was pledged to promote brotherhood among
different faiths, since their harmony constituted the Eternal Religion.
Swami Vivekananda, the General President,
made Brahmananda and Yogananda the President and the
Vice-president of the Calcutta centre. Weekly meetings
were organized at Balaram's house to discuss the
Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita, the Vedanta scriptures, and
religious subjects in general.3
Even now Swami Vivekananda could not
completely convince some of his brother disciples about his new
conception of religion, namely, the worship of God
through the service of man. They had heard Sri Ramakrishna
speak time and again against preaching, excessive study of
the scriptures, and charitable activities, and exhort aspirants
to intensify their love of God through prayer and meditation
in solitude. Therefore they regarded Vivekananda's activities
in the West as out of harmony with the Master's teachings.
One of them said bluntly to the Swami, 'You did not preach
our Master in America; you only preached yourself.' The
Swami retorted with equal bluntness, 'Let people understand me
first; then they will understand Sri Ramakrishna.'
On one occasion Swami Vivekananda felt that
some of these brother disciples wanted to create a narrow sect
in the name of Ramakrishna and turn the Ramakrishna
Math into a cult of the Temple, where the religious
activities would centre around devotional music, worship, and
prayer alone. His words burst upon them like a
bomb-shell. He asked them how they knew that his ideas were not
in keeping with those of Sri Ramakrishna. 'Do you want,'
he said, 'to shut Sri Ramakrishna, the embodiment of
infinite ideas, within your own limits? I shall break these
limits and scatter his ideas broadcast all over the world. He
never enjoined me to introduce his worship and the like.'
Had it not been demonstrated to Vivekananda
time and again that Sri Ramakrishna was behind him in all
his actions? He knew that through the Master's grace
alone he had come out triumphant from all ordeals, whether
in the wilderness of India or in the busy streets of Chicago.
'Sri Ramakrishna,' the Swami continued, 'is far
greater than the disciples understand him to be. He is
the embodiment of infinite spiritual ideas capable of
development in infinite ways....One glance of his gracious
eyes can create a hundred thousand Vivekanandas at
this instant. If he chooses now, instead, to work through
me, making me his instrument, I can only bow to his will.'
Vivekananda took great care lest sentimentalism
and narrowness in one form or another should creep in, for
he detested these from the bottom of his heart.
But things came to a climax one day at
Balaram's house in Calcutta, when Swami Yogananda, a
brother disciple whom Sri Ramakrishna had pointed out
as belonging to his 'inner circle' of devotees, said that
the Master had emphasized bhakti alone for spiritual
seekers and that philanthropic activities, organizations, homes
of service for the public good, and patriotic work were
the Swami's own peculiar ideas, the result of his
Western education and travel in Europe and America.
The Swami at first retorted to his brother with a
sort of rough humour. He said: 'What do you know? You
are an ignorant man....What do you understand of
religion? You are only good at praying with folded hands: "O
Lord! how beautiful is Your nose! How sweet are Your eyes!"
and all such nonsense....And you think your salvation
is secured and Sri Ramakrishna will come at the final
hour and take you by the hand to the highest heaven!
Study, public preaching, and doing humanitarian works
are, according to you, maya, because he said to someone,
"Seek and find God first; doing good to the world is a
presumption!" As if God is such an easy thing to be achieved! As
if He is such a fool as to make Himself a plaything in
the hands of an imbecile!
'You think you have understood Sri
Ramakrishna better than myself! You think jnana is dry knowledge to
be attained by a desert path, killing out the tenderest
faculties of the heart! Your bhakti is sentimental nonsense
which makes one impotent. You want to preach Sri
Ramakrishna as you have understood him, which is mighty little!
Hands off! Who cares for your Ramakrishna? Who cares for
your bhakti and mukti? Who cares what your scriptures say?
I will go into a thousand hells cheerfully if I can rouse
my countrymen, immersed in tamas, to stand on their own
feet and be men inspired with the spirit of
karma-yoga. I
am not a follower of Ramakrishna or anyone, but of him
only who serves and helps others without caring for his
own bhakti and mukti!'
The Swami's voice was choked with emotion, his
body shook, and his eyes flashed fire. Quickly he went to
the next room. A few moments later some of his brother
disciples entered the room and found him absorbed
in meditation, tears flowing from his half-closed eyes.
After nearly an hour the Swami got up, washed his face,
and joined his spiritual brothers in the drawing-room.
His features still showed traces of the violent storm
through which he had just passed; but he had recovered
his calmness. He said to them softly:
'When a man attains bhakti, his heart and
nerves become so soft and delicate that he cannot bear even
the touch of a flower!...I cannot think or talk of Sri
Ramakrishna long without being overwhelmed. So I am
always trying to bind myself with the iron chains of jnana, for
still my work for my motherland is unfinished and my
message to the world not fully delivered. So as soon as I find
that those feelings of bhakti are trying to come up and
sweep me off my feet, I give a hard knock to them and make
myself firm and adamant by bringing up austere jnana. Oh, I
have work to do! I am a slave of Ramakrishna, who left his
work to be done by me and will not give me rest till I
have finished it. And oh, how shall I speak of him? Oh, his
love for me!'
He was again about to enter into an ecstatic
mood, when Swami Yogananda and the others changed
the conversation, took him on the roof for a stroll, and tried
to divert his mind by small talk. They felt that
Vivekananda's inmost soul had been aroused, and they remembered
the Master's saying that the day Naren knew who he was,
he would not live in this body. So from that day the
brother disciples did not again criticize the Swami's
method, knowing fully well that the Master alone was
working through him.
From this incident one sees how Vivekananda, in
his inmost heart, relished bhakti, the love of God. But in
his public utterances he urged the Indians to keep
their emotionalism under control; he emphasized the study
of Vedanta, because he saw in it a sovereign tonic to
revivify them. He further prescribed for his countrymen
both manual and spiritual work, scientific research, and
service to men. Vivekananda's mission was to infuse energy
and faith into a nation of 'dyspeptics' held under the spell
of their own sentimentality. He wished in all fields of
activity to awaken that austere elevation of spirit which
arouses heroism.
As with his Master, the natural tendency of
Vivekananda's mind was to be absorbed in contemplation of
the Absolute. Again, like Sri Ramakrishna, he had to
bring down his mind forcibly to the consciousness of the
world in order to render service to men. Thus he kept a
balance between the burning love of the Absolute and
the irresistible appeal of suffering humanity. And what
makes Swami Vivekananda the patriot saint of modern India
and at the same time endears him so much to the West is that
at the times when he had to make a choice between the
two, it was always the appeal of suffering humanity that
won the day. He cheerfully sacrificed the bliss of samadhi
to the amelioration of the suffering of men. The Swami's
spirit acted like a contagion upon his brother disciples. One
of them, Akhandananda, as stated before, fed and nursed
the sufferers from famine at Murshidabad, in Bengal;
another, Trigunatita, in 1897 opened a famine-relief centre
at Dinajpur. Other centres were established at
Deoghar, Dakshineswar and Calcutta.
Swami Vivekananda was overjoyed to see the
happy beginning of his work in India. To Mary Hale he wrote
on July 9, 1897:
Only one idea was burning in my brain β to
start the machine for elevating the Indian masses, and
that I have succeeded in doing to a certain extent.
It would have made your heart glad to see
how my boys are working in the midst of famine and disease and
misery β nursing by the mat-bed of
the cholera-stricken pariah and feeding the
starving chandala, and the Lord sends help to me, to them,
to all....He is with me, the Beloved, and He was when
I was in America, in England, when I was roaming about unknown from
place to place in India. What
do I care about what they say?4
The babies β they do
not know any better. What? I, who have realized the
Spirit, and the vanity of all earthly nonsense, to be
swerved from my path by babies' prattle? Do I look like
that?...I feel my task is done β at most three or four years
more of life are left....I have lost all wish for my salvation.
I never wanted earthly enjoyments. I must see my machine in strong
working
order, and then,
knowing for sure that I have put in a lever for the good
of humanity, in India at least which no power can
drive back, I will sleep without caring what will be next.
And may I be born again and again, and
suffer thousands of miseries, so that I may worship the only
God that exists, the only God I believe in, the
sum total of all souls. And above all, my God the
wicked, my God the miserable, my God the poor of all
races, of all species, is the especial object of my worship.
From May 1897 to the end of that year, the
Swami travelled and lectured extensively in Northern India.
The physicians had advised him to go as soon as possible
to Almora, where the air was dry and cool, and he had
been invited by prominent people in Northern India to
give discourses on Hinduism. Accompanied by some of
his brother disciples and his own disciples, he left
Calcutta, and he was joined later by the Seviers, Miss MΓΌller,
and Goodwin.
In Lucknow he was given a cordial welcome. The
sight of the Himalayas in Almora brought him inner peace
and filled his mind with the spirit of detachment and
exaltation of which these great mountains are the symbol. But
his peace was disturbed for a moment when he received
letters from American disciples about the malicious
reports against his character spread by Christian
missionaries, including Dr. Barrows of the Parliament of Religions
in Chicago. Evidently they had become jealous of the
Swami's popularity in India. Dr. Barrows told the Americans
that the report of the Swami's reception in India was
greatly exaggerated. He accused the Swami of being a liar
and remarked: "I could never tell whether to take him
seriously or not. He struck me as being a Hindu Mark Twain. He is
a man of genius and has some following, though
only temporary."
The Swami was grieved. At his request the people
of Madras had given Dr. Barrows a big reception, but
the missionary, lacking religious universalism, had not
made much of an impression.
In a mood of weariness the Swami wrote to a
friend on June 3, 1897:
As for myself, I am quite content. I have
roused
a good many of our people, and that was all I
wanted. Let things have their course and karma its sway. I
have no bonds here below. I have seen life, and it is all
self β life is for self, love is for self, honour for self,
everything for self. I look back and scarcely find any action I
have done for self β even my wicked deeds were not
for self. So I am content β not that I feel I have
done anything especially good or great, but the world is
so little, life so mean a thing, existence so, so servile,
that I wonder and smile that human beings, rational
souls, should be running after this self β so mean
and detestable a prize.
This is the truth. We are caught in a trap, and
the sooner one gets out the better for one. I have seen
the truth β let the body float up or down, who cares?...
I was born for the life of a scholar β retired,
quiet, poring over my books. But the Mother
dispensed otherwise. Yet the tendency is there.
In Almora the Swamiji's health improved greatly.
On May 29 he wrote to a friend: 'I began to take a lot of
exercise on horseback, both morning and evening. Since then I
have been very much better indeed....I really began to feel
that it was a pleasure to have a body. Every movement made
me conscious of strength β every movement of the
muscles was pleasurable....You ought to see me, Doctor, when I
sit meditating in front of the beautiful snow-peaks and
repeat from the Upanishads: "He has neither disease, nor
decay, nor death; for verily, he has obtained a body full of the
fire of yoga."'
He was delighted to get the report that his
disciples and spiritual brothers were plunging heart and soul
into various philanthropic and missionary activities.
From Almora he went on a whirlwind tour of
the Punjab and Kashmir, sowing everywhere the seeds
of rejuvenated Hinduism. In Bareilly he encouraged
the students to organize themselves to carry on the work
of practical Vedanta. In Ambala he was happy to see
his beloved disciples Mr. and Mrs. Sevier. After spending
a few days in Amritsar, Dharamsala, and Murree, he
went to Kashmir.
In Jammu the Swami had a long interview with
the Maharaja and discussed with him the possibility
of founding in Kashmir a monastery for giving young
people training in non-dualism. In the course of the
conversation he sadly remarked how the present-day Hindus
had deviated from the ideals of their forefathers, and
how people were clinging to various superstitions in the
name of religion. He said that in olden days people were
not outcasted even when they committed such real sins
as adultery, and the like; whereas nowadays one
became untouchable simply by violating the rules about food.
On the same topic he said a few months later, at
Khetri: 'The people are neither Hindus nor Vedantins β they
are merely "don't touchists"; the kitchen is their temple and
cooking-pots are their objects of worship. This state
of things must go. The sooner it is given up, the better for
our religion. Let the Upanishads shine in their glory, and at
the same time let not quarrels exist among different sects.'
In Lahore the Swami gave a number of lectures,
among which was his famous speech on the Vedanta
philosophy, lasting over two hours. He urged the students of Lahore
to cultivate faith in man as a preparation for faith in God.
He asked them to form an organization, purely
non-sectarian in character, to teach hygiene to the poor, spread
education among them, and nurse the sick. One of his missions in
the Punjab was to establish harmony among people
belonging to different sects, such as the Arya Samajists and
the orthodox Hindus. It was in Lahore that the Swami met
Mr. Tirtha Ram Goswami, then a professor of mathematics,
who eventually gained wide recognition as Swami Ram
Tirtha. The professor became an ardent admirer of
Swami Vivekananda.
Next the Swami travelled to Dehra-Dun, where,
for the first ten days, he lived a rather quiet life. But soon
he organized a daily class on the Hindu scriptures for
his disciples and companions, which he continued to
conduct during the whole trip. At the earnest invitation of
his beloved disciple the Raja of Khetri, he visited his
capital, stopping on the way at Delhi and Alwar, which
were familiar to him from his days of wandering prior to
his going to America. Everywhere he met old friends
and disciples and treated them with marked affection. The
Raja of Khetri lavished great honours upon him and also
gave him a handsome donation for the Belur Math, which
was being built at that time.
Before returning to Calcutta, he visited
Kishengarh, Ajmer, Jodhpur, Indore, and Khandwa and thus
finished his lecture tour in North India. During this tour
he explained to his fellow countrymen the salient
features of Hinduism and told them that they would have
a glorious future if they followed the heritage of their
past. He emphasized that the resurgent nationalism of
India must be based on her spiritual ideals, but that
healthy scientific and technological knowledge from the
West, also, had to be assimilated in the process of growth.
The fundamental problem of India, he pointed out, was
to organize the whole country around religious ideals.
By religion the Swami meant not local customs which
served only a contemporary purpose, but the eternal
principles taught in the Vedas.
Wherever the Swami went he never wearied of
trying to rebuild individual character in India, pointing out
that the strength of the whole nation depended upon
the strength of the individual. Therefore each individual,
he urged, whatever might be his occupation, should try, if
he desired the good of the nation as a whole, to build up
his character and acquire such virtues as courage,
strength, self-respect, love, and service of others. To the young
men, especially, he held out renunciation and service as
the hightest ideal. He preached the necessity of spreading
a real knowledge of Sanskrit, without which a Hindu
would remain an alien to his own rich culture. To promote
unity among the Hindus, he encouraged intermarriage
between castes and sub-castes, and wanted to reorganize the
Indian universities so that they might produce real patriots,
rather than clerks, lawyers, diplomats, and Government officials.
Swami Vivekananda's keen intellect saw the need
of uniting the Hindus and Moslems on the basis of the
Advaita philosophy, which teaches the oneness of all. One June
10, 1898, he wrote to a Moslem gentleman at Nainital:
The Hindus may get the credit for arriving
at Advaitism earlier than other races, they being an
older race than either the Hebrew or the Arab; yet
practical Advaitism, which looks upon and behaves
towards all mankind as one's own soul, is yet to be
developed among the Hindus universally. On the other hand,
our experience is that if ever the followers of any
religion approach to this equality in an appreciable degree
on the plane of practical work-a-day life β it may be
quite unconscious generally of the deeper meaning and
the underlying principle of such conduct, which the
Hindus as a rule so clearly perceive β it is those of
Islam and Islam alone.
Therefore we are firmly persuaded that
without the help of practical Islam, the theories of
Vedantism, however fine and wonderful they may be, are
entierely valuless to the vast mass of mankind. We want to
lead mankind to the place where there is neither the
Vedas nor the Bible nor the Koran; yet this has to be done
by harmonizing the Vedas, the Bible, and the
Koran. Mankind ought to be taught that religions are but
the varied expressions of the Religion which is
Oneness, so that each may choose the path that suits him best.
For our own motherland a junction of the
two great systems, Hinduism and Islam β Vedantic
brain and Islamic body β is the only hope.
I see in my mind's eye the future perfect
India rising out of this chaos and strife, glorious and
invincible, with Vedantic brain and Islamic body.
For the regeneration of India, in the Swami's
view, the help of the West was indispensable. The thought of
India had been uppermost in his mind when he had
journeyed to America. On April 6, 1897, the Swami, in the course of
a letter to the lady editor of an Indian magazine, had
written: 'It has been for the good of India that religious
preaching in the West has been done and will be done. It has
ever been my conviction that we shall not be able to rise
unless the Western countries come to our help. In India no
appreciation of merit can be found, no financial support,
and what is most lamentable of all, there is not a bit of
practicality.'
The year 1898 was chiefly devoted to the training
of Vivekananda's disciples, both Indian and Western, and
to the consolidation of the work already started. During
this period he also made trips to Darjeeling, Almora, and
Kashmir.
In February 1898, the monastery was removed
from Alambazar to Nilambar Mukherjee's garden house in
the village of Belur, on the west bank of the Ganga. The
Swami, while in Calcutta, lived at Balaram Bose's house,
which had been a favourite haunt of Shri Ramakrishna's
during his lifetime. But he had no rest either in the monastery
or in Calcutta, where streams of visitors came to him
daily. Moreover, conducting a heavy correspondence
consumed much of his time and energy; one can not but be amazed
at the hundreds of letters the Swami wrote with his own hand
to friends and disciples. Most of these reveal his
intense thinking, and some his superb wit.
While at the monastery, he paid especial attention
to the training of the sannyasins and the brahmacharins,
who, inspired by his message, had renounced home and
dedicated themselves to the realization of God and the
service of humanity. Besides conducting regular classes on
the Upanishads, the Bhagavad Gita, the physical sciences,
and the history of the nations, he would spend hours with
the students in meditation and devotional singing.
Spiritual practices were intensified on holy days.
In the early part of 1898, the site of the Belur
Math, the present Headquarters of the Ramakrishna Math
and Mission, was purchased with the help of a
generous donation from Miss MΓΌller, the devoted admirer of
the Swami. Mrs. Ole Bull gave another handsome gift
to complete the construction, and the shrine at the Belur
Math was consecrated, as we shall see, on December 9,
1898. Sometime during this period the Swami initiated into
the monastic life Swami Swarupananda, whom he
considered to be a real 'acquisition.' This qualified aspirant was
given initiation after only a few days' stay at the
monastery, contrary to the general rule of the Ramakrishna Order.
Later he became editor of the monthly magazine
Prabuddha Bharata, and first president of the
Advaita Ashrama
at Mayavati, in the Himalayas, founded on March 19, 1899.
Among the Western devotees who lived with
Swami Vivekananda at this time were Mr. and Mrs. Sevier,
Mrs. Ole Bull, Miss Henrietta F. MΓΌller, Miss Josephine
MacLeod, and Miss Margaret E. Noble, all of whom travelled with
him at various times in Northern India. The Seviers identified
themselves completely with the work at the
Mayavati Advaita Ashrama. Mrs. Ole Bull, the wife of the
famous Norwegian violinist, and a lady of social position,
great culture, and large heart, had been an ardent admirer of
the Swami during his American trip. Miss MΓΌller, who
knew the Swami in both England and America and had
helped defray, together with the Seviers and Mr. Sturdy, the
expenses of his work in England, had come to India to organize
an educational institution for Indian women.
Miss MacLeod had attended Swami
Vivekananda's classes in New York, and for months at a time he had
been the guest of her relatives at their country home,
Ridgely Manor. She became his lifelong friend and admirer
and cherished his memory till the last day of her life, but
though she was devoted to him, she never renounced
her independence nor did he demand that she should. By
way of spiritual instruction, the Swami had once asked
Miss MacLeod to meditate on Om for a week and report to
him afterwards. When the teacher inquired how she felt,
she said that 'it was like a glow in the heart.' He
encouraged her and said: 'Good, keep on.' Many years later she
told her friends that the Swami made her realize that she
was in eternity. 'Always remember,' the Swami had
admonished her, 'you are incidentally an American and a woman,
but always a child of God. Tell yourself day and night
who you are. Never forget it.' To her brother-in-law, Francis
H. Leggett, the Swami had written, on July 16, 1896,
in appreciation of Miss MacLeod: 'I simply admire Joe Joe
in her tact and quiet ways. She is a feminine statesman.
She could wield a kingdom. I have seldom seen such
strong yet good common sense in a human being.'
When Miss MacLeod asked the Swami's
permission to come to India, he wrote on a postcard: 'Do come by
all means, only you must remember this: The Europeans
and Indians live as oil and water. Even to speak of living
with the natives is damning, even at the capitals. You will
have to bear with people who wear only a loin-cloth; you
will see me with only a loin-cloth about me. Dirt and
filth everywhere, and brown people. But you will have
plenty of men to talk philosophy to you.' He also wrote to
her that she must not come to India if she expected
anything else, for the Indians could not 'bear one more word
of criticism'.
On one occasion, while travelling in Kashmir with
the Swami and his party, she happened to make a
laughing remark about one of his South Indian disciples with
the caste-mark of the brahmins of his sect on his forehead.
This appeared grotesque to her. The Swami turned upon
her 'like a lion, withered her with a glance, and cried:
"Hands off! Who are you? What have you ever done?"'
Miss MacLeod was crestfallen. But later she learnt
that the same poor brahmin had been one of those who,
by begging, had collected the money that had made it
possible for the Swami to undertake his trip to America.
'How can I best help you,' she asked the Swami
when she arrived in India. 'Love India,' was his reply.
One day Swami Vivekananda told Miss MacLeod
that since his return to India he had had no personal
money. She at once promised to pay him fifty dollars a month
as long as he lived and immediately gave him three
hundred dollars for six months in advance. The Swami
asked jokingly if it would be enough for him.
'Not if you take heavy cream every day!' she said.
The Swami gave the money to Swami Trigunatita
to defray the initial expenses of the newly started
Bengali magazine, the Udbodhan.
But of all Swami Vivekananda's Western disciples,
the most remarkable was Margaret E Noble, who was
truly his spiritual daughter. She had attended the Swami's
classes and lectures in London and resolved to dedicate her life
to his work in India. When she expressed to him her desire
to come to India, the Swami wrote to her, on July 29,
1897:
'Let me tell you frankly that I am now convinced that
you have a great future in the work for India. What was
wanted was not a man but a woman, a real lioness, to work for
the Indians β women especially. India cannot yet produce
great women, she must borrow them from other nations.
Your education, sincerity, purity, immense love,
determination, and above all, your Celtic blood, makes you just the
woman wanted.
'Yet the difficulties are many. You cannot form any
idea of the misery, the superstition, and the slavery that are
here. You will be in the midst of a mass of half-naked men
and women with quaint ideas of caste and isolation,
shunning the white-skins through fear or hatred and hated by
them intensely. On the other hand, you will be looked upon
by the white as a crank, and every one of your movements
will be watched with suspicion.
'Then the climate is fearfully hot, our winter in
most places being like your summer, and in the south it is
always blazing. Not one European comfort is to be had in
places out of the cities. If in spite of all this you dare venture
into the work, you are welcome, a hundred times welcome. As
for me, I am nobody here as elsewhere, but what
little influence I have shall be devoted to your service.
'You must think well before you plunge in,
and afterwards if you fail in this or get disgusted, on my part
I promise you I will stand by you unto
death, whether you work for India or not, whether you give up
Vedanta or remain
in it. "The tusks of the elephant come out but never go
back" β so are the words of a man never retracted. I promise
you that.'
He further asked her to stand on her own feet
and never seek help from his other Western women devotees.
Miss Noble came to India on January 28, 1898, to
work with Miss MΓΌller for the education of Indian women.
The Swami warmly introduced her to the public of Calcutta
as a 'gift of England to India,' and in March made her
take the vow of brahmacharya, that is to say, the life of a
religious celibate devoted to the realization of God. He also
gave her the name of Nivedita, the 'Dedicated,' by which
she has ever since been cherished by the Indians with
deep respect and affection. The ceremony was performed in
the chapel of the monastery. He first taught her how to
worship Siva and then made the whole ceremony culminate in
an offering at the feet of Buddha.
'Go thou,' he said, 'and follow him who was born
and gave his life for others five hundred times before he
attained the vision of the Buddha.'
The Swami now engaged himself in the training
of Sister Nivedita along with the other Western disciples.
And certainly it was a most arduous task. They were asked
to associate intimately with the Holy Mother, the widow
of Sri Ramakrishna, who at once adopted them as
her 'children.' Then the Swami would visit them almost daily
to reveal to them the deep secrets of the Indian
world β its history, folklore, customs, and traditions. Mercilessly
he tried to uproot from their minds all preconceived
notions and wrong ideas about India. He wanted them to love
India as she was at the present time, with her poverty,
ignorance, and backwardness, and not the India of yore, when
she had produced great philosophies, epics, dramas,
and religious systems.
It was not always easy for the Western disciples
to understand the religious ideals and forms of worship of
the Hindus. For instance, one day in the great Kali temple
of Calcutta, one Western lady shuddered at the sight of
the blood of the goats sacrificed before the Deity, and
exclaimed, 'Why is there blood before the Goddess?' Quickly the
Swami retorted, 'Why not a little blood to complete the picture?'
The disciples had been brought up in the tradition
of Protestant Christianity, in which the Godhead
was associated only with what was benign and beautiful,
and Satan with the opposite.
With a view to Hinduizing their minds, the
Swami asked his Western disciples to visit Hindu ladies at
their homes and to observe their dress, food, and customs,
which were radically different from their own. Thus he put to
a severe test their love for Vedanta and India. In the
West they had regarded the Swami as a prophet showing
them the path of liberation, and as a teacher of the
universal religion. But in India he appeared before them, in
addition, in the role of a patriot, an indefatigable worker for
the regeneration of his motherland.
The Swami began to teach Nivedita to lose
herself completely in the Indian consciousness. She gradually
adopted the food, clothes, language, and general habits
of the Hindus.
'You have to set yourself,' he said to her, 'to
Hinduize your thoughts, your needs, your conceptions, your
habits. Your life, internal and external, has to become all that
an orthodox brahmin brahmacharini's ought to be.
The method will come to you if you only desire it
sufficiently. But you have to forget your past and cause it to
be forgotten.' He wanted her to address the Hindus 'in
terms of their own orthodoxy.'
Swami Vivekananda would not tolerate in his
Western disciples any trace of chauvinism, any patronizing
attitude or stupid criticism of the Indian way of life. They
could serve India only if they loved India, and they could
love India only if they knew India, her past glories and
her present problems. Thus later he took them on his trip
to Northern India, including Almora and Kashmir, and
told them of the sanctity of Varanasi and the magnificence
of Agra and Delhi; he related to them the history of
the Moghul Emperors and the Rajput heroes, and
also described the peasant's life, the duties of a farm
housewife, and the hospitality of poor villagers to wandering
monks. The teacher and his disciples saw together the sacred
rivers, the dense forests, the lofty mountains, the sun-baked
plains, the hot sands of the desert, and the gravel beds of the
rivers, all of which had played their parts in the creation of
Indian culture. And the Swami told them that in India custom
and culture were one. The visible manifestations of the
culture were the system of caste, the duties determined by
the different stages of life, the respect of parents as
incarnate gods, the appointed hours of religious service, the shrine
used for daily worship, the chanting of the Vedas by
the brahmin children, the eating of food with the right
hand and its use in worship and japa, the austerities of
Hindu widows, the kneeling in prayer of the Moslems
wherever the time of prayer might find them, and the ideal of
equality practised by the followers of Mohammed.
Nivedita possessed an aggressively Occidental
and intensely, English outlook. It was not easy for her
to eradicate instinctive national loyalties and strong
personal likes and dislikes. A clash between the teacher and
the disciple was inevitable. Ruthlessly the Swami crushed
her pride in her English upbringing. Perhaps, at the same
time, he wanted to protect her against the passionate
adoration she had for him. Nivedita suffered bitter anguish.
The whole thing reached its climax while they
were travelling together, some time after, in the Himalayas.
One day Miss MacLeod thought that Nivedita could no
longer bear the strain, and interceded kindly and gravely with
the Swami. 'He listened,' Sister Nivedita wrote later, 'and
went away. At evening, however, he returned, and finding
us together on the veranda, he turned to her (Miss
MacLeod) and said with the simplicity of a child: "You were right.
There must be a change. I am going away to the forests to be
alone, and when I come back I shall bring peace." Then he
turned away and saw that above us the moon was new, and
a sudden exaltation came into his voice as he said: "See,
the Mohammedans think much of the new moon. Let us
also, with the new moon, begin a new life."' As he said
these words, he lifted his hand and blessed his rebellious
disciple, who by this time was kneeling before him. It was
assuredly a moment of wonderful sweetness of reconciliation.
That evening in meditation Nivedita found
herself gazing deep into an Infinite Good, to the recognition
of which no egotistic reasoning had led her. 'And,' she
wrote, 'I understood for the first time that the greatest
teachers may destroy in us a personal relation only in order
to bestow the Impersonal Vision in its place.'
To resume our story, on March 30, 1898, the
Swami left for Darjeeling, for he badly needed a change to the
cool air of the Himalayas. Hardly had he begun to feel
the improvement in his health, when he had to come down
to Calcutta, where an outbreak of plague was striking terror.
Immediately he made plans for relief work with
the help of the members of the monastery and volunteers
from Calcutta.
When a brother disciple asked him where he
would get funds, the Swami replied: 'Why, we shall sell
if necessary the land which has just been purchased for
the monastery. We are sannyasins; we must be ready to
sleep under the trees and live on alms as we did before. Must
we care for the monastery and possessions when by
disposing of them we could relieve thousands of helpless
people suffering before our own eyes?' Fortunately this
extreme step was not necessary; the public gave him money for
the relief work.
The Swami worked hard to assuage the suffering
of the afflicted people. Their love and admiration for
him knew no bounds as they saw this practical application
of Vedanta at a time of human need.
The plague having been brought under control,
the Swami left Calcutta for Nainital on May 11,
accompanied by, among others, his Western disciples. From there the
party went to Almora where they met the Seviers.
During this tour the Swami never ceased instructing his
disciples. For his Western companions it was a rare opportunity
to learn Indian history, religion, and philosophy direct
from one who was an incarnation of the spirit of India. Some
of the talks the Swami gave were recorded by Sister
Nivedita in her charming book Notes of Some Wanderings with
the Swami Vivekananda.
In Almora the Swami received news of the deaths
of Pavhari Baba and Mr. Goodwin. He had been closely
drawn to the former during his days of wandering. Goodwin
died on June 2. Hearing of this irreparable loss, the
Swami exclaimed in bitter grief, 'My right hand is gone!'
To Goodwin's mother he wrote a letter of condolence in
which he said: 'The debt of gratitude I owe him can never
be repaid, and those who think they have been helped by
any thought of mine ought to know that almost every word
of it was published through the untiring and most
unselfish exertions of Mr. Goodwin. In him I have lost a friend
true as steel, a disciple of never-failing devotion, a worker
who knew not what tiring was, and the world is less rich by
the passing away of one of those few who are born, as it
were, to live only for others.'
The Swami also sent her the following poem,
which he had written in memory of Goodwin, bearing witness
to the affection of the teacher for the disciple:
Requiescat In Pace
Speed forth, O soul! upon thy star-strewn path;
Speed, blissful one! where thought is ever free,
Where time and space no longer mist the view;
Eternal peace and blessings be with thee!
Thy service true, complete thy sacrifice;
Thy home the heart of love transcendent find!
Remembrance sweet, that kills all space and time,
Like altar roses, fill thy place behind!
Thy bonds are broke, thy quest in bliss is found,
And one with That which comes as death and life,
Thou helpful one! unselfish e'er on earth,
Ahead, still help with love this world of strife!
Before the Swami left Almora, he arranged to
start again the monthly magazine Prabuddha Bharata,
which had ceased publication with the death of its gifted
editor, B.
R. Rajam Iyer. Swami Swarupananda became its new
editor, and Captain Sevier, the manager. The magazine began
its new career at Almora. Then, on June 11, the Swami, in
the company of his Western disciples, left for Kashmir as
the guest of Mrs. Ole Bull.
The trip to Kashmir was an unforgettable
experience for the Westerners. The natural beauty of the country,
with its snow-capped mountains reflected in the water of
the lakes, its verdant forests, multi-coloured flowers,
and stately poplar and chennar trees, make the valley
of Kashmir a paradise on earth. Throughout the journey
the Swami poured out his heart and soul to his disciples.
At first he was almost obsessed with the ideal of Siva,
whom he had worshipped since boyhood, and for days he
told the disciples legends relating to the great God
of renunciation. The party spent a few days in
house-boats, and in the afternoons the Swami would take his
companions for long walks across the fields. The
conversations were always stimulating. One day he spoke of
Genghis Khan and declared that he was not a vulgar aggressor;
he compared the Mongol Emperor to Napoleon and
Alexander, saying that they all wanted to unify the world
and that it was perhaps the same soul that had incarnated
itself three times in the hope of bringing about human
unity through political conquest. In the same way, he said,
one Soul might have come again and again as Krishna,
Buddha, and Christ, to bring about the unity of mankind
through religion.
In Kashmir the Swami pined for solitude. The
desire for the solitary life of a monk became irresistible; and
he would often break away from the little party to
roam alone. After his return he would make some such
remark as: 'It is a sin to think of the body,' 'It is wrong to
manifest power,' or 'Things do not grow better; they remain as
they are. It is we who grow better, by the changes we make
in ourselves.' Often he seemed to be drifting without
any plan, and the disciples noticed his strange
detachment. 'At no time,' Sister Nivedita wrote, 'would it
have surprised us had someone told us that today or
tomorrow he would be gone for ever, that we were listening to
his voice for the last time.'
This planlessness was observed in him more and
more as his earthly existence drew towards its end. Two
years later, when Sister Nivedita gave him a bit of worldly
advice, the Swami exclaimed in indignation: 'Plans! Plans! That
is why you Western people can never create a religion! If
any of you ever did, it was only a few Catholic saints who
had no plans. Religion was never, never preached by planners!'
About solitude as a spiritual discipline, the Swami
said one day that an Indian could not expect to know
himself till he had been alone for twenty years, whereas from
the Western standpoint a man could not live alone for
twenty years and remain quite sane. On the Fourth of July
the Swami gave a surprise to his American disciples
by arranging for its celebration in an appropriate manner.
An American flag was made with the help of a brahmin
tailor, and the Swami composed the following poem:
To The Fourth Of July
Behold, the dark clouds melt away
That gathered thick at night and hung
So like a gloomy pall above the earth!
Before thy magic touch the world
Awakes. The birds in chorus sing.
The flowers raise their star-like crowns,
Dew-set, and wave thee welcome fair.
The lakes are opening wide, in love
Their hundred thousand lotus-eyes
To welcome thee with all their depth.
All hail to thee, thou lord of light!
A welcome new to thee today,
O sun! Today thou sheddest liberty!
Bethink thee how the world did wait
And search for thee, through time and clime!
Some gave up home and love of friends
And went in quest of thee, self-banished,
Through dreary oceans, through primeval forests,
Each step a struggle for their life or death;
Then came the day when work bore fruit,
And worship, love, and sacrifice,
Fulfilled, accepted, and complete.
Then thou, propitious, rose to shed
The light of freedom on mankind.
Move on, O lord, in thy resistless path,
Till thy high noon o'erspreads the world,
Till every land reflects thy light,
Till men and women, with uplifted head,
Behold their shackles broken and know
In springing joy their life renewed!
As the Swami's mood changed he spoke of
renunciation. He showed scorn for the worldly life and said: 'As
is the difference between a fire-fly and the blazing
sun, between a little pond and the infinite ocean, a mustard
seed and the mountain of Meru, such is the difference
between the householder and the sannyasin.' Had it not been
for the ochre robe, the emblem of monasticism, he pointed
out, luxury and worldliness would have robbed man of
his manliness.
Thus the party spent their time on the river, the
teacher providing a veritable university for the education of
his disciples. The conversation touched upon all
subjects β Vedic rituals, Roman Catholic doctrine, Christ, St. Paul,
the growth of Christianity, Buddha.
Of Buddha, the Swami said that he was the
greatest man that ever lived. 'Above all, he never claimed
worship. Buddha said: "Buddha is not a man, but a state. I
have found the way. Enter all of you!"'
Then the talk would drift to the conception of
sin among the Egyptian, Semitic, and Aryan races. According
to the Vedic conception, the Swami said, the Devil is
the Lord of Anger, and with Buddhists he is Mara, the Lord
of Lust. Whereas in the Bible the creation was under the
dual control of God and Satan, in Hinduism Satan
represented defilement, never duality.
Next the Swami would speak about the
chief characteristics of the different nations. 'You are so
morbid, you Westerners', he said one day. 'You worship
sorrow! All through your country I found that. Social life in
the West is like a peal of laughter, but underneath it is a
wail. The whole thing ends in a sob. The fun and frivolity are
all on the surface; really, it is full of tragic intensity. Here it
is sad and gloomy on the outside, but underneath
are detachment and merriment.'
Once, at Islamabad, as the group sat round him
on the grass in an apple orchard, the Swami repeated what
he had said in England after facing a mad bull. Picking
up two pebbles in his hand, he said: 'Whenever
death approaches me all weakness vanishes. I have neither
fear nor doubt nor thought of the external. I simply busy
myself making ready to die. I am as hard as that' β and the
stones struck each other in his hand β 'for I have touched the
feet of God!'
At Islamabad the Swami announced his desire to
make a pilgrimage to the great image of Siva in the cave
of Amarnath in the glacial valley of the Western
Himalayas. He asked Nivedita to accompany him so that she, a
future worker, might have direct knowledge of the
Hindu pilgrim's life. They became a part of a crowd of
thousands of pilgrims, who formed at each halting-place a whole
town of tents.
A sudden change came over the Swami. He
became one of the pilgrims, scrupulously observing the
most humble practices demanded by custom. He ate one meal
a day, cooked in the orthodox fashion, and sought
solitude as far as possible to tell his beads and practise
meditation. In order to reach the destination, he had to climb up
rocky slopes along dangerous paths, cross several miles of
glacier, and bathe in the icy water of sacred streams.
On August 2 the party arrived at the enormous
cavern, large enough to contain a vast cathedral. At the back of
the cave, in a niche of deepest shadow, stood the image of
Siva, all ice. The Swami, who had fallen behind, entered the
cave, his whole frame shaking with emotion. His naked
body was smeared with ashes, and his face radiant with
devotion. Then he prostrated himself in the darkness of the
cave before that glittering whiteness.
A song of praise from hundreds of throats echoed
in the cavern. The Swami almost fainted. He had a vision
of Siva Himself. The details of the experience he never
told anyone, except that he had been granted the grace
of Amarnath, the Lord of Immortality, not to die until
he himself willed it.
The effect of the experience shattered his nerves.
When he emerged from the grotto, there was a clot of blood in
his left eye; his heart was dilated and never regained its
normal condition. For days he spoke of nothing but Siva. He
said: 'The image was the Lord Himself. It was all worship
there. I have never seen anything so beautiful, so inspiring.'
On August 8 the party arrived at Srinagar, where
they remained until September 30. During this period the
Swami felt an intense desire for meditation and solitude. The
Maharaja of Kashmir treated him with the utmost
respect and wanted him to choose a tract of land for
the establishment of a monastery and a Sanskrit college.
The land was selected and the proposal sent to the
British Resident for approval. But the British Agent refused
to grant the land. The Swami accepted the whole
thing philosophically.
A month later his devotion was directed to Kali,
the Divine Mother, whom Ramakrishna had called
affectionately 'my Mother.'
A unique symbol of the Godhead, Kali represents
the totality of the universe: creation and destruction, life
and death, good and evil, pain and pleasure, and all the
pairs of opposites. She seems to be black when viewed from
a distance, like the water of the ocean; but to the
intimate observer She is without colour, being one with
Brahman, whose creative energy She represents.
In one aspect She appears terrible, with a garland
of human skulls, a girdle of human hands, her
tongue dripping blood, a decapitated human head in one
hand and a shining sword in the other, surrounded by
jackals that haunt the cremation ground β a veritable picture
of terror. The other side is benign and gracious, ready to
confer upon Her devotees the boon of immortality. She reels as
if drunk: who could have created this mad world except in
a fit of drunkenness? Kali stands on the bosom of Her
Divine Consort, Siva, the symbol of Brahman; for Kali, or
Nature, cannot work unless energized by the touch of the
Absolute. And in reality Brahman and Kali, the Absolute and
Its Creative Energy, are identical, like fire and its power
to burn.
The Hindu mind does not make a
sweepingly moralistic distinction between good and evil. Both
are facts of the phenomenal world and are perceived to
exist when maya hides the Absolute, which is beyond
good and evil. Ramakrishna emphasized the benign aspect
of the Divine Mother Kali and propitiated Her to obtain
the vision of the Absolute. Swami Vivekananda suddenly
felt the appeal of Her destructive side. But is there really
any difference between the process of creation and
destruction? Is not the one without the other an illusion of
the mind?
Vivekananda realized that the Divine Mother
is omnipresent. Wherever he turned, he was conscious of
the presence of the Mother, 'as if She were a person in the
room.' He felt that it was She 'whose hands are clasped with
my own and who leads me as though I were a child.' It
was touching to see him worship the four-year-old daughter
of his Mohammedan boatman as the symbol of the
Divine Mother.
His meditation on Kali became intense, and one
day he had a most vivid experience. He centred 'his
whole attention on the dark, the painful, and the
inscrutable' aspect of Reality, with a determination to reach by
this particular path the Non-duality behind phenomena.
His whole frame trembled, as if from an electric shock. He
had a vision of Kali, the mighty Destructress lurking
behind the veil of life, the Terrible One, hidden by the dust of
the living who pass by, and all the appearances raised by
their feet. In a fever, he groped in the dark for pencil and
paper and wrote his famous poem 'Kali the Mother'; then he
fell exhausted:
The stars are blotted out,
The clouds are covering clouds,
It is darkness, vibrant, sonant;
In the roaring, whirling wind
Are the souls of a million lunatics,
Just loose from the prison-house,
Wrenching trees by the roots,
Sweeping all from the path.
The sea has joined the fray
And swirls up mountain-waves
To reach the pitchy sky.
The flash of lurid light
Reveals on every side
A thousand thousand shades
Of death, begrimed and black.
Scattering plagues and sorrows,
Dancing mad with joy,
Come, Mother, come!
For terror is Thy name,
Death is in Thy breath,
And every shaking step
Destroys a world for e'er.
Thou Time, the All-destroyer,
Come, O Mother, come!
Who dares misery love,
And hug the form of death,
Dance in Destruction's dance β
To him the Mother comes.
The Swami now talked to his disciples only about
Kali, the Mother, describing Her as 'time, change, and ceaseless
energy.' He would say with the great Psalmist:
'Though Thou slay me, yet I will trust in Thee.'
'It is a mistake,' the Swami said, 'to hold that with
all men pleasure is the motive. Quite as many are born to
seek pain. There can be bliss in torture, too. Let us worship
terror for its own sake.
'Learn to recognize the Mother as instinctively in
evil, terror, sorrow, and annihilation as in that which makes
for sweetness and joy!
'Only by the worship of the Terrible can the
Terrible itself be overcome, and immortality gained. Meditate
on death! Meditate on death! Worship the Terrible, the
Terrible, the Terrible! And the Mother Herself is Brahman! Even
Her curse is a blessing. The heart must become a
cremation ground β pride, selfishness, and desire all burnt to
ashes. Then, and then alone, will the Mother come.'
The Western disciples, brought up in a Western
faith which taught them to see good, order, comfort, and
beauty alone in the creation of a wise Providence, were shaken
by the typhoon of a Cosmic Reality invoked by the
Hindu visionary. Sister Nivedita writes:
And as he spoke, the underlying egoism of worship that is devoted to the kind God, to Providence, the consoling Deity, without a heart for God in the earthquake or God in the volcano, overwhelmed the listener. One saw that such worship was at bottom, as the Hindu calls it, merely 'shopkeeping,' and one realized the infinitely greater boldness and truth of teaching that God manifests through evil as well as through good. One saw that the true attitude for the mind and will that are not to be baffled by the personal self, was in fact that determination, in the stern words of Swami Vivekananda, 'to seek death, not life, to hurl oneself upon the sword's point, to become one with the Terrible for evermore.'
Heroism, to Vivekananda, was the soul of action.
He wanted to see Ultimate Truth in all its terrible
nakedness, and refused to soften it in any shape or manner. His
love of Truth expected nothing in return; he scorned the
bargain of 'giving to get in return' and all its promise of paradise.
But the gentle Ramakrishna, though aware of
the Godhead in all its aspects, had emphasized Its benign
side. One day several men had been arguing before him
about the attributes of God, attempting to find out, by
reason, their meaning. Sri Ramakrishna stopped them,
saying: 'Enough, enough! What is the use of disputing
whether the divine attributes are reasonable or not?...You say
that God is good: can you convince me of His goodness by
this reasoning? Look at the flood that has just caused the
death of thousands. How can you prove that a benevolent
God ordered it? You will perhaps reply that the same flood
swept away uncleanliness and watered the earth, and so on.
But could not a good God do that without drowning
thousands of innocent men, women, and children?'
Thereupon one of the disputants said, 'Then
ought we to believe that God is cruel?'
'O idiot,' cried Ramakrishna, 'who said that? Fold
your hands and say humbly, "O God, we are too feeble and
too weak to understand Thy nature and Thy deeds. Deign
to enlighten us!" Do not argue. Love!'
God is no doubt Good, True, and Beautiful; but
these attributes are utterly different from their counterparts
in the relative world.
The Swami, during these days, taught his disciples
to worship God like heroes. He would say: 'There must be
no fear, no begging, but demanding β demanding the
Highest. The true devotees of the Mother are as hard, as
adamant and as fearless as lions. They are not in the least upset
if the whole universe suddenly crumbles into dust at
their feet. Make Her listen to you. None of that cringing
to Mother! Remember, She is all-powerful; She can
make heroes out of stones.'
On September 30 Swami Vivekananda retired to
a temple of the Divine Mother, where he stayed alone for
a week. There he worshipped the Deity, known as
Kshirbhavani, following the time-honoured ritual, praying and
meditating like a humble pilgrim. Every morning he also
worshipped a brahmin's little daughter as the symbol of the
Divine Virgin. And he was blessed with deep experiences,
some of which were most remarkable and indicated to him
that his mission on earth was finished.
He had a vision of the Goddess and found Her a
living Deity. But the temple had been destroyed by the
Moslem invaders, and the image placed in a niche surrounded
by ruins. Surveying this desecration, the Swami felt
distressed at heart and said to himself: 'How could the people
have permitted such sacrilege without offering
strenuous resistance? If I had been here then, I would never
have allowed such a thing. I would have laid down my life
to protect the Mother.' Thereupon he heard the voice of
the Goddess saying: 'What if unbelievers should enter My
temple and defile My image? What is that to you? Do
you protect Me, or do I protect you?' Referring to
this
experience after his return, he said to his disciples: 'All my
patriotism is gone. Everything is gone. Now it is only
"Mother! Mother!" I have been very wrong...I am only a little
child.' He wanted to say more, but could not; he declared that
it was not fitting that he should go on. Significantly, he
added that spiritually he was no longer bound to
the world.
Another day, in the course of his worship, the
thought flashed through the Swami's mind that he should try
to build a new temple in the place of the present
dilapidated one, just as he had built a monastery and temple at
Belur to Sri Ramakrishna. He even thought of trying to
raise funds from his wealthy American disciples and
friends. At once the Mother said to him: 'My child! If I so wish
I can have innumerable temples and monastic centres. I
can even this moment raise a seven-storied golden temple
on this very spot.'
'Since I heard that divine voice,' the Swami said to
a disciple in Calcutta much later, 'I have ceased making
any more plans. Let these things be as Mother wills.'
Sri Ramakrishna had said long ago that
Narendranath would live in the physical body to do the Mother's
work and that as soon as this work was finished, he would
cast off his body by his own will. Were the visions at the
temple of Kshirbhavani a premonition of the
approaching dissolution?
When the Swami rejoined his disciples at Srinagar,
he was an altogether different person. He raised his hand
in benediction and then placed some marigolds, which he
had offered to the Deity, on the head of every one of his
disciples. 'No more "Hari Om!"' he said. 'It is all
"Mother" now!' Though he lived with them, the disciples saw
very little of him. For hours he would stroll in the woods
beside the river, absorbed within himself. One day he
appeared before them with shaven head, dressed as the
simplest sannyasin and with a look of unapproachable austerity
on his face. He repeated his own poem 'Kali the Mother'
and said, 'It all came true, every word of it; and I have
proved it, for I have hugged the form of death.'
Sister Nivedita writes: 'The physical ebb of the
great experience through which he had just passed β for
even suffering becomes impossible when a given point
of weariness is reached; and similarly, the body refuses
to harbour a certain intensity of the spiritual life for
an indefinite period β was leaving him, doubtless,
more exhausted than he himself suspected. All this
contributed, one imagines, to a feeling that none of us knew for
how long a time we might now be parting.'
The party left Kashmir on October 11 and came
down to Lahore. The Western disciples went to Agra, Delhi,
and the other principal cities of Northern India for
sightseeing, and the Swami, accompanied by his disciple
Sadananda, arrived at Belur on October 18. His brother disciples
saw that he was very pallid and ill. He suffered from
suffocating attacks of asthma; when he emerged from its painful
fits, his face looked blue, like that of a drowning man. But
in spite of all, he plunged headlong into numerous activities.
On November 13, 1898, the day of the worship of
Kali, the Nivedita Girls' School was opened in Calcutta. At
the end of the inaugural ceremony the Holy Mother,
Sri Ramakrishna's consort, 'prayed that the blessing of the
Great Mother of the universe might be upon the
school and that the girls it should train might be ideal
girls.' Nivedita, who witnessed the ceremony with the
Swamis of the Order, said: 'I cannot imagine a grander omen
than her blessing spoken over the educated Hindu
womanhood of the future.'
The dedication of the school was the beginning
of Nivedita's work in India. The Swami gave her
complete freedom about the way to run it. He told her that she
was free from her collaborators if she so chose; and that
she might, if she wished, give the work a 'definite
religious colour' or even make it sectarian. Then he added, 'You
may wish through a sect to rise beyond all sects.'
On December 9, 1898, the Ramakrishna Monastery
at Belur was formally consecrated by the Swami with
the installation of the Master's image in the chapel. The
plot of land, as already stated, had been purchased in
the beginning of the year and had been consecrated
with proper religious ceremony in March that year. The
Swami himself had performed the worship on that occasion at
the rented house and afterwards had carried on his
shoulder the copper vessel containing the Master's sacred
relics. While bearing it he said to a disciple: 'The Master
once told me, "I will go and live wherever you take me,
carrying me on your shoulder, be it under a tree or in the
humblest cottage." With faith in that gracious promise I myself
am now carrying him to the site of our future Math. Know
for certain, my boy, that so long as his name inspires
his followers with the ideal of purity, holiness, and charity
for all men, even so long shall he, the Master, sanctify this
place with his presence.'
Of the glorious future he saw for the monastery
the Swami said: 'It will be a centre in which will be
recognized and practised a grand harmony of all creeds and faiths
as exemplified in the life of Sri Ramakrishna, and religion
in its universal aspect, alone, will be preached. And from
this centre of universal toleration will go forth the
shining message of goodwill, peace, and harmony to deluge
the whole world.' He warned all of the danger of
sectarianism's creeping in if they became careless.
After the ceremony, he addressed the
assembled monks, brahmacharins, and lay devotees as follows:
'Do you all, my brothers, pray to the Lord with all your
heart and soul that He, the Divine Incarnation of the age,
may bless this place with his hallowed presence for ever
and ever, and make it a unique centre, a holy land, of
harmony of different religions and sects, for the good of the
many, for the happiness of the many.'
Swami Vivekananda was in an ecstatic mood. He
had accomplished the great task of finding a permanent
place on which to build a temple for the Master, with a
monastery for his brother disciples and the monks of the future
that should serve as the headquarters of the Ramakrishna
Order for the propagation of Sri Ramakrishna's teachings. He
felt as if the heavy responsibility that he had carried on
his shoulders for the past twelve years had been lifted.
He wanted the monastery at Belur to be a finished
university where Indian mystical wisdom and Western practical
science would be taught side by side. And he spoke of the
threefold activities of the monastery: annadana, the gift of
food; vidyadana, the gift of intellectual knowledge;
and jnanadana, the gift of spiritual wisdom. These three, properly
balanced, would, in the Swami's opinion, make a
complete man. The inmates of the monastery, through unselfish
service of men, would purify their minds and thus
qualify themselves for the supreme knowledge of Brahman.
Swami Vivekananda in his vivid imagination saw
the different sections of the monastery allotted to
different functions β the free kitchen for the distribution of food
to the hungry, the university for the imparting of
knowledge, the quarters for devotees from Europe and America,
and so forth and so on. The spiritual ideals emanating from
the Belur Math, he once said to Miss MacLeod, would
influence the thought-currents of the world for eleven hundred years.
'All these visions are rising before me' β these
were his very words.
The ceremony over, the sacred vessel was
brought back to the rented house by his disciple Sarat
Chandra Chakravarty, as the Swami did not want to carry back
the Master from the monastery where he had just installed him.
It was a few months before the buildings of the
new monastery were completed and the monastery was
finally removed to its present site. The date of the
momentous occasion was January 2, 1899. The Bengali
monthly magazine, the Udbodhan, was first published
on
January 14 of the same year, and regarding its policy, the
Swami declared that nothing but positive ideas for the
physical, mental, and spiritual improvement of the race should
find a place in it; that instead of criticizing the thoughts
and aspirations of ancient and modern man, as embodied
in literature, philosophy, poetry, and the arts, the
magazine should indicate the way in which those thoughts
and aspirations might be made conducive to progress; and
finally that the magazine should stand for
universal harmony as preached by Sri Ramakrishna, and
disseminate his ideals of love, purity, and renunciation.
The Swami was happy to watch the steady
expansion of the varied activities of the Order. At his request
Swami Saradananda had returned from America to assist in
the organization of the Belur Math. Together with
Swami Turiyananda, he conducted regular classes at the Math
for the study of Sanskrit and of Eastern and
Western philosophy. Somewhat later the two Swamis were sent
on a preaching mission to Gujarat, in Western India, and
for the same purpose two of the Swami's own disciples
were sent to East Bengal. Swami Shivananda was deputed
to Ceylon to preach Vedanta. Reports of the excellent
work done by Swamis Ramakrishnananda and Abhedananda
in Madras and America were received at the Math.
Swami Akhandananda's work for the educational uplift of
the villages and also in establishing a home for the
orphans elicited praise from the Government.
One of the most remarkable institutions founded
by Swami Vivekananda was the Advaita Ashrama at
Mayavati in the Himalayas. Ever since his visit to the Alps
in Switzerland, the Swami had been cherishing the desire
to establish a monastery in the solitude of the
Himalayas where non-dualism would be taught and practised in
its purest form. Captain and Mrs. Sevier took up the idea,
and the Ashrama was established at Mayavati, at an
altitude of 6500 feet. Before it there shone, day and night, the
eternal snow-range of the Himalayas for an extent of some
two hundred miles, with Nanda Devi rising to a height of
more than 25,000 feet. Spiritual seekers, irrespective of creed and
race,
were welcome at the monastery at Mayavati. No
external worship of any kind was permitted within its
boundaries. Even the formal worship of Sri Ramakrishna was
excluded. It was required of the inmates and guests always to
keep before their minds the vision of the nameless and
formless Spirit.
Swami Vivekananda in the following lines laid
down the ideals and principles of this Himalayan
ashrama:
'In Whom is the Universe, Who is in the
Universe, Who is the Universe; in Whom is the Soul, Who is in
the Soul, Who is the Soul of man; to know Him, and
therefore the Universe, as our Self, alone extinguishes all fear,
brings an end to misery, and leads to infinite freedom.
Wherever there has been expansion in love or progress in
well-being of individuals or numbers, it has been through
the perception, realization, and the practicalization of
the Eternal Truth β the Oneness of All
Beings. "Dependence is misery. Independence is happiness."
The Advaita is
the only system which gives unto man complete possession
of himself and takes off all dependence and its
associated superstitions, thus making us brave to suffer, brave to
do, and in the long run to attain to Absolute Freedom.
'Hitherto it has not been possible to preach this
Noble Truth entirely free from the settings of dualistic
weakness; this alone, we are convinced, explains why it has not
been more operative and useful to mankind at large.
'To give this One Truth a freer and fuller scope
in elevating the lives of individuals and leavening the
mass of mankind, we start this Advaita Ashrama on
the Himalayan heights, the land of its first formulation.
'Here it is hoped to keep Advaita free from
all superstitions and weakening contaminations. Here will
be taught and practised nothing but the Doctrine of
Unity, pure and simple; and though in entire sympathy with
all other systems, this Ashrama is dedicated to Advaita
and Advaita alone.'
After the Swami's return from Kashmir his health
had begun to deteriorate visibly. His asthma caused him
great suffering. But his zeal for work increased many times.
'Ever since I went to Amarnath,' he said one day,
'Siva Himself has entered into my brain. He will not go.'
At the earnest request of the brother monks, he
visited Calcutta frequently for treatment; yet even there he had
no respite from work. Visitors thronged about him for
religious instruction from morning till night, and his large heart
could not say no to them. When the brother monks pressed him
to receive people only at appointed hours, he replied:
'They take so much trouble to come, walking all the way from
their homes, and can I, sitting here, not speak a few words
to them, merely because I risk my health a little?'
His words sounded so much like those of
Sri Ramakrishna during the latter's critical illness, no
wonder that Swami Premananda said to him one day, 'We do
not see any difference between Sri Ramakrishna and you.'
But the Swamis greatest concern was the training
of the sannyasins and brahmacharins β the future bearers
of his message β and to this task he addressed himself
with all his soul. He encouraged them in their meditation
and manual work, himself setting the example. Sometimes
he would cook for them, sometimes knead bread, till
the garden, or dig a well. Again, he would train them to be
preachers by asking them to speak before a
gathering without preparation. Constantly he reminded the
monks of their monastic vows, especially chastity and
renunciation, without which deep spiritual perception
was impossible. He attached great importance to
physical exercise and said: 'I want sappers and miners in the
army of religion! So, boys, set yourselves to the task of
training your muscles! For ascetics, mortification is all right.
For workers, well-developed bodies, muscles of iron and
nerves of steel!' He urged them to practise austerities
and meditation in solitude. For the beginners he laid down
strict rules about food. They were to rise early, meditate,
and perform their religious duties scrupulously. Health
must not he neglected and the company of worldly
people should be avoided. But above all, he constantly
admonished them to give up idleness in any shape or form.
Of himself he said: 'No rest for me! I shall die
in harness! I love action! Life is a battle, and one must
always be in action, to use a military phrase. Let me live and die
in action!' He was a living hymn of work.
To a disciple who wanted to remain absorbed in
the Brahman of Vedanta, the Swami thundered: 'Why?
What is the use of remaining always stupefied in samadhi?
Under the inspiration of non-dualism why not sometimes
dance like Siva, and sometimes remain immersed in
superconsciousness? Who enjoys a delicacy more β he who
eats it all by himself, or he who shares it with others?
Granted, by realizing Atman in meditation you attain mukti; but
of what use is that to the world? We have to take the
whole world with us to mukti. We shall set a conflagration in
the domain of great Maya. Then only will you be established
in the Eternal Truth. Oh, what can compare with that
Bliss immeasurable, "infinite as the skies"! In that state you
will be speechless, carried beyond yourself, by seeing your
own Self in every being that breathes, and in every atom of
the universe. When you realize this, you cannot live in
this world without treating everyone with exceeding love
and compassion. This is indeed practical Vedanta.'
He wanted his disciples to perform with accuracy
and diligence the everyday tasks of life. 'He who knows
even how to prepare a smoke properly, knows also how
to meditate. And he who cannot cook well cannot be a
perfect sannyasin. Unless cooking is performed with a pure
mind and concentration, the food is not palatable.'
Work cannot produce real fruit without
detachment on the part of the worker. 'Only a great monk', the
Swami said one day, 'can be a great worker; for he is
without attachmentβ¦.There are no greater workers than
Buddha and Christ. No work is secular. All work is adoration
and worship.'
The first duty of the inmates of the monastery
was renunciation. How the Swami idolized the monastic
life! 'Never forget, service to the world and the realization
of God are the ideals of the monk! Stick to them! The
monastic is the most immediate of the paths. Between the monk
and his God there are no idols! "The sannyasin stands on
the head of the Vedas!" declare the Vedas, for he is free
from churches and sects and religions and prophets
and scriptures. He is the visible God on earth. Remember
this, and go thou thy way, sannyasin bold, carrying the
banner of renunciation β the banner of peace, of freedom,
of blessedness!'
To a disciple who wanted to practise
spiritual discipline to attain his own salvation, the Swami said:
'You will go to hell if you seek your own salvation! Seek
the salvation of others if you want to reach the Highest.
Kill out the desire for personal mukti. This is the
greatest spiritual discipline. Work, my children, work with
your whole heart and soul! That is the thing. Mind not the
fruit of work. What if you go to hell working for others? That
is worth more than to gain heaven by seeking your
own salvation....Sri Ramakrishna came and gave his life for
the world. I will also sacrifice my life. You also, every one
of you, should do the same. All these works and so forth
are only a beginning. Believe me, from the shedding of
our lifeblood will arise gigantic, heroic workers and
warriors of God who will revolutionize the whole world.'
He wanted his disciples to be all-round men. 'You
must try to combine in your life immense idealism with
immense practicality. You must be prepared to go into
deep meditation now, and the next moment you must be
ready to go and cultivate the fields. You must be prepared
to explain the intricacies of the scriptures now, and the
next moment to go and sell the produce of the fields in
the market....The true man is he who is strong as strength
itself and yet possesses a woman's heart.'
He spoke of the power of faith: 'The history of
the world is the history of a few men who had faith
in themselves. That faith calls out the inner divinity. You
can do anything. You fail only when you do not
strive sufficiently to manifest infinite power. As soon as a
man loses faith in himself, death comes. Believe first in
yourself and then in God. A handful of strong men will move the
world. We need a heart to feel, a brain to conceive, and
a strong arm to do the work....One man contains within
him the whole universe. One particle of matter has all the
energy of the universe at its back. In a conflict between the
heart and the brain, follow your heart.'
'His words,' writes Romain Rolland, 'are great
music, phrases in the style of Beethoven, stirring rhythms like
the march of Handel choruses. I cannot touch these sayings
of his, scattered as they are through the pages of books
at thirty years' distance, without receiving a thrill
through my body like an electric shock. And what shock,
what transports must have been produced when in
burning words they issued from the lips of the hero!'
The Swami felt he was dying. But he said: 'Let me
die fighting. Two years of physical suffering have taken
from me twenty years of life. But the soul changes not, does
it? It is there, the same madcap β Atman β mad upon one
idea, intent and intense.'
On December 16, 1898, Swami Vivekananda
announced his plan to go to the West to inspect the work he
had founded and to fan the flame. The devotees and
friends welcomed the idea since they thought the sea
voyage would restore his failing health. He planned to take
with him Sister Nivedita and Swami Turiyananda.
Versed in the scriptures, Turiyananda had spent
most of his life in meditation and was averse to public
work. Failing to persuade him by words to accompany him
to America, Vivekananda put his arms round his
brother disciple's neck and wept like a child, saying: 'Dear
brother, don't you see how I am laying down my life inch by
inch in fulfilling the mission of my Master? Now I have come
to the verge of death! Can you look on without trying
to relieve part of my great burden?'
Swami Turiyananda was deeply moved and
offered to follow the Swami wherever he wanted to go. When
he asked if he should take with him some Vedanta
scriptures, Vivekananda said: 'Oh, they have had enough of
learning and books! The last time they saw a
warrior;1
now I want to show them a brahmin.'
June 20, 1899, was fixed as their date of sailing
from Calcutta. On the night of the 19th a meeting was held
at the Belur Math at which the junior members of
the monastery presented addresses to the two Swamis.
The next day the Holy Mother entertained them and
other monks with a sumptuous feast.
The steamship 'Golconda,' carrying the Swami
and his two companions, touched Madras, but the
passengers were not allowed to land on account of the plague
in Calcutta. This was a great disappointment to
Swami Vivekananda's South Indian friends. The ship
continued to Colombo, Aden, Naples, and Marseilles, finally
arriving in London on July 31.
The voyage in the company of the Swami was
an education for Turiyananda and Nivedita. From
beginning to end a vivid flow of thought and stories went on.
One never knew what moment would bring the flash
of intuition and the ringing utterance of some fresh
truth. That encyclopaedic mind touched all subjects:
Christ, Buddha, Krishna, Ramakrishna, folklore, the history
of India and Europe, the degradation of Hindu society
and the assurance of its coming greatness, different
philosophical and religious systems, and many themes
more. All was later admirably recorded by Sister Nivedita
in The Master as I Saw Him, from which the
following
fragments may be cited.
'Yes,' the Swami said one day, 'the older I grow,
the more everything seems to me to lie in manliness. This
is my new gospel. Do even evil like a man! Be wicked, if
you must, on a grand scale!' Some time before, Nivedita
had complimented India on the infrequency of crime; on that
occasion the Swami said in sorrowful protest: 'Would
to God it were otherwise in my land! For this is verily
the virtuousness of death.' Evidently, according to him,
the vilest crime was not to act, to do nothing at all.
Regarding conservative and liberal ideas he said:
'The conservative's whole ideal is submission. Your ideal
is struggle. Consequently it is we who enjoy life, and
never you! You are always striving to change yours to
something better, and before a millionth part of the change is
carried out, you die. The Western ideal is to be doing; the
Eastern, to be suffering. The perfect life would be a
wonderful harmony between doing and suffering. But that can
never be.'
To him selfishness was the greatest barrier to
spiritual progress:
'It is selfishness that we must seek to eliminate. I
find that whenever I have made a mistake in my life, it
has always been because self entered into the
calculation.
Where self has not been involved, my judgement has gone
straight to the mark.'
'You are quite wrong,' he said again, 'when you
think that fighting is the sign of growth. It is not so at
all. Absorption is the sign. Hinduism is the very genius
of absorption. We have never cared for fighting. Of
course, we struck a blow now and then in defence of our
homes. That was right. But we never cared for fighting for its
own sake. Everyone had to learn that. So let these races of
new-comers whirl on! They all will be taken into Hinduism
in the end.'
In another mood, the theme of his conversation
would be Kali, and the worship of the Terrible. Then he would
say: 'I love terror for its own sake, despair for its own
sake, misery for its own sake. Fight always. Fight and fight
on, though always in defeat. That's the ideal! That's the
ideal!' Again: 'Worship the Terrible! Worship Death! All else
is vain. All struggle is vain. This is the last lesson. Yet this
is not the coward's love of death, not the love of the weak
or the suicide. It is the welcome of the strong man, who
has sounded everything to the depths and knows that there
is no alternative.' And who is Kali, whose will is
irresistible? 'The totality of all souls, not the human alone, is
the Personal God. The will of the totality nothing can resist.
It is what we know as Law. And this is what we mean
by Siva and Kali and so on.'
Concerning true greatness: 'As I grow older I find
that I look more and more for greatness in little things. I
want to know what a great man eats and wears, and how
he speaks to his servants. I want to find a Sir Philip
Sidney greatness. Few men would remember to think of others
in the moment of death.
'But anyone will be great in a great position! Even
the coward will grow brave in the glow of the footlights.
The world looks on. Whose heart will not throb? Whose
pulse will not quicken, till he can do his best? More and more
the true greatness seems to me that of the worm, doing its
duty silently, steadily, from moment to moment and hour
to hour.'
Regarding the points of difference between his
own schemes for the regeneration of India and those
preached by others: 'I disagree with those who are for giving
their superstitions back to my people. Like the
Egyptologist's interest in Egypt, it is easy to feel an interest in
India that
is purely selfish. One may desire to see again the India
of one's books, one's studies, one's dreams.
My hope is to see the strong points of that India,
reinforced by the
strong points of this age, only in a natural way. The new state
of things must be a growth from within. So I preach
only
the Upanishads. If you look you will find that I have
never quoted anything but the Upanishads. And of
the Upanishads, it is only that one idea β strength. The
quintessence of the Vedas and Vedanta and all, lies in that
one word. Buddha's teaching was of non-resistance or
non-injury. But I think ours is a better way of teaching the
same thing. For behind that non-injury lay a dreadful
weakness β the weakness that conceives the idea of
resistance. But I do not think of punishing or escaping from a
drop of sea-spray. It is nothing to me. Yet to the mosquito
it would be serious. Now, I will make all injury like
that. Strength and fearlessness. My own ideal is that giant of
a saint whom they killed in the Sepoy Mutiny, and
who broke his silence, when stabbed to the heart, to
say β "And thou also art He."'
About India and Europe the Swami said: 'I see
that India is a young and living organism. Europe is also
young and living. Neither has arrived at such a stage of
development that we can safely criticize its institutions. They
are two great experiments, neither of which is yet
complete.' They ought to be mutually helpful, he went on, but at
the same time each should respect the free development of
the other. They ought to grow hand in hand.
Thus time passed till the boat arrived at Tilbury
Dock, where the party was met by the Swami's disciples
and friends, among whom were two American ladies who had
come all the way to London to meet their teacher. It
was the off-season for London, and so the two Swamis
sailed for New York on August 16.
The trip was beneficial to the Swami's health; the
sea was smooth and at night the moonlight was
enchanting. One evening as the Swami paced up and down the
deck enjoying the beauty of nature, he suddenly exclaimed,
'And if all this maya is so beautiful, think of the wondrous
beauty of the Reality behind it!' Another evening, when the
moon was full, he pointed to the sea and sky, and said,
'Why recite poetry when there is the very essence of poetry?'
The afternoon that Swami Vivekananda arrived
in New York, he and his brother disciple went with Mr.
and Mrs. Leggett to the latter's country home, Ridgely
Manor, at Stone Ridge in the Catskill Mountains, Swami
Abhedananda being at that time absent from New York on a
lecture tour. A month later Nivedita came to Ridgely, and
on September 21, when she decided to assume the nun's
garb, the Swami wrote for her his beautiful poem 'Peace.'
The rest and good climate were improving his health, and
he was entertaining all with his usual fun and merriment.
One day Miss MacLeod asked him how he liked
their home-grown strawberries, and he answered that he
had not tasted any. Miss MacLeod was surprised and
said, 'Why Swami, we have been serving you strawberries
with cream and sugar every day for the past week.' 'Ah,'
the Swami replied, with a mischievous twinkle in his eyes,
'I am tasting only cream and sugar. Even tacks taste
sweet that way.'
In November the Swami returned to New York
and was greeted by his old friends and disciples. He was
pleased to see how the work had expanded under the
able guidance of Swami Abhedananda. Swami
Vivekananda gave some talks and conducted classes.
At one of the public meetings in New York,
after addressing a tense audience for about fifteen minutes,
the Swami suddenly made a formal bow and retired.
The meeting broke up and the people went away
greatly disappointed. A friend asked him, when he was
returning home, why he had cut short the lecture in that manner,
just when both he and the audience were warming up. Had
he forgotten his points? Had he become nervous? The
Swami answered that at the meeting he had felt that he had
too much power. He had noticed that the members of
the audience were becoming so absorbed in his ideas that
they were losing their own individualities. He had felt that
they had become like soft clay and that he could give them
any shape he wanted. That, however, was contrary to
his philosophy. He wished every man and woman to
grow according to his or her own inner law. He did not wish
to change or destroy anyone's individuality. That was
why he had had to stop.
Swami Turiyananda started work at Montclair,
New Jersey, a short distance from New York, and began to
teach children the stories and folklore of India. He also
lectured regularly at the Vedanta Society of New York: His
paper on Sankaracharya, read before the Cambridge
Conference, was highly praised by the Harvard professors.
One day, while the Swami was staying at
Ridgely Manor, Miss MacLeod had received a telegram
informing her that her only brother was dangerously ill in
Los Angeles. As she was leaving for the West coast, the Swami
uttered a Sanskrit benediction and told her that he
would soon meet her there. She proceeded straight to the home
of Mrs. S. K. Blodgett, where her brother was staying,
and after spending a few minutes with the patient, asked
Mrs. Blodgett whether her brother might be permitted to die
in the room in which he was then lying; for she had found
a large picture of Vivekananda, hanging on the wall at
the foot of the patient's bed. Miss MacLeod told her hostess
of her surprise on seeing the picture, and Mrs. Blodgett
replied that she had heard Vivekananda at the Parliament
of Religions in Chicago and thought that if ever there was
a God on earth, it was that man.
(See)
Miss MacLeod told
her that she had just left the Swami at Ridgely Manor,
and further, that he had expressed the desire to come to
Los Angeles. The brother died within a few days, and
the Swami started for the West Coast on November 22.
He broke his trip in Chicago to visit his old friends, and
upon his arrival in Los Angeles became the guest of
Mrs. Blodgett, whom he described in a letter to Mary Hale
as 'fat, old, extremely witty, and very motherly.'
The impression the Swami left in the mind of this
good woman can be gathered from the following lines of a
letter written by her to Miss MacLeod after Swamiji's
passing away:
I am ever recalling those swift, bright days in that never-to-be-forgotten winter, lived in simple freedom and kindliness. We could not choose but to be happy and good....I knew him personally but a short time, yet in that time I could see in a hundred ways the child side of Swamiji's character, which was a constant appeal to the mother quality in all good women....He would come home from a lecture, where he had been compelled to break away from his audience β so eagerly would they gather around him β and rush into the kitchen like a boy released from school, with 'Now we will cook!' Presently Joe would appear and discover the culprit among the pots and pans, and in his fine dress, who was by thrifty, watchful Joe admonished to change to his home garments....In the homely, old-fashioned kitchen, you and I have seen Swamiji at his best.
Swami Vivekananda gave many lectures before
large audiences in Los Angeles and Pasadena; but alas! there
was no Goodwin to record them, and most of what he said
was consequently lost. Only a little has been preserved in
the fragmentary notes of his disciples.
At the Universalist Church of Pasadena he gave
his famous lecture 'Christ, the Messenger'; and this was
the only time, Miss MacLeod said later, that she saw
him enveloped in a halo. The Swami, after the lecture,
was returning home wrapped in thought, and Miss
MacLeod was following at a little distance, when suddenly she
heard him say, 'I know it, I know it!'
'What do you know?' asked Miss MacLeod.
'How they make it.'
'How they make what?'
'Mulligatawny soup. They put in a dash of bay
leaf for flavour.' And then he burst into a laugh.
The Swami spent about a month at the
headquarters of the 'Home of Truth' in Los Angeles, conducted
regular classes, and gave several public lectures, each of which
was attended by over a thousand people. He spoke many
times on the different aspects of raja-yoga, a subject in
which Californians seemed to be especially interested.
The Swami endeared himself to the members of
the Home of Truth by his simple manner, his great
intellect, and his spiritual wisdom. Unity, the
magazine of
the organization, said of him: 'There is a combination in
the Swami Vivekananda of the learning of a
university president, the dignity of an archbishop, with the
grace and winsomeness of a free and natural child. Getting
upon the platform, without a moment's preparation, he
would soon be in the midst of his subject, sometimes
becoming almost tragic as his mind would wander from
deep metaphysics to the prevailing conditions in
Christian countries of today, whose people go and seek to
reform the Filipinos with the sword in one hand and the Bible
in the other, or in South Africa allow children of the
same Father to cut each other to pieces. In contrast to
this condition of things, he described what took place
during the last great famine in India, where men would die
of starvation beside their cows rather than stretch forth
a hand to kill.'
The members of the Home of Truth were not
permitted to smoke. One evening the Swami was invited for
dinner by a member of the organization along with several
other friends who were all opposed to the use of tobacco.
After dinner the hostess was absent from the room for a
few minutes, when the Swami, perhaps due to his ignorance of
the rule about tobacco, took out his pipe, filled it up,
and began to puff. The guests were aghast, but kept quiet.
When the hostess returned, she flew into a rage and asked
the Swami if God intended men to smoke, adding that in
that case He would have furnished the human head with
a chimney for the smoke to go out.
'But He has given us the brain to invent a pipe,'
the Swami said with a smile.
Everybody laughed, and the Swami was given
freedom to smoke while living as a guest in the Home of Truth.
Swami Vivekananda journeyed to Oakland as
the guest of Dr. Benjamin Fay Mills, the minister of the
First Unitarian Church, and there gave eight lectures
to crowded audiences which often numbered as high as
two thousand. He also gave many public lectures in San
Francisco and Alameda. People had already read his
Raja-Yoga. Impressed by his lectures, they started a
centre in
San Francisco. The Swami was also offered a gift of
land, measuring a hundred and sixty acres, in the southern
part of the San Antone valley; surrounded by forest and
hills, and situated at an altitude of 2500 feet, the property
was only twelve miles from the Lick Observatory on
Mt. Hamilton. He at once thought of Swami Turiyananda,
who could be given charge of the place to train earnest
students in meditation.
During his trip back to New York, across the
American continent, the Swami was very much fatigued. He
stopped in Chicago and Detroit on the way. In Chicago he was
the guest of the Hale family, and many old reminiscences
were exchanged. On the morning of his departure, Mary
came to the Swami's room and found him sad. His bed appeared
to have been untouched, and on being asked the
reason, he confessed that he had spent the whole night
without sleep. 'Oh,' he said, almost in a whisper, 'it is so difficult
to break human bonds!' He knew that this was the last
time he was to visit these devoted friends.
In New York the Swami gave a few lectures at
the Vedanta Society, which by this time had enlisted the
active co-operation of several professors of Harvard
and Columbia University. At the earliest opportunity he
spoke to Turiyananda about the proposed gift of land in
northern California, but the latter hesitated to accept any
responsibility. The Swami said, 'It is the will of the Mother that
you should take charge of the work there.'
Swami Turiyananda was amused and said with
good humour: 'Rather say it is your will. Certainly you have
not heard the Mother communicate Her will to you in that
way. How can you hear the words of the Mother?'
'Yes, brother,' the Swami said with great emotion.
'Yes, the words of the Mother can be heard as clearly as we
hear one another. But one requires a fine nerve to hear
Mother's words.'
Swami Vivekananda made this statement with
such fervour that his brother disciple felt convinced that
the Divine Mother was speaking through him. He
cheerfully agreed, therefore, to take charge of Santi Ashrama,
the Peace Retreat, as the new place was called.
In parting, the Swami said to Turiyananda: 'Go
and establish the Ashrama in California. Hoist the flag
of Vedanta there; from this moment destroy even the
memory of India! Above all, lead the life and Mother will see to
the rest.'
The Swami visited Detroit again for a week and
on July 20 sailed for Paris.
Before continuing the thread of Swami
Vivekananda's life, it will be interesting for the reader to get a
glimpse
of his state of mind. During the past two years, the
Swami wrote to his friends, he had gone through great
mental anguish. His message, to be sure, had begun to reach
an ever-increasing number of people both in India and
in America, and naturally he had been made happy by
this fact; yet he had suffered intensely on account of
'poverty, treachery, and my own foolishness,' as he wrote to
Mary Hale on February 20, 1900. Though his outward
appearance was that of a stern non-dualist, he possessed a tender
heart that was often bruised by the blows of the world.
To Margaret Noble he wrote on December 6, 1899:
'Some people are made that way β to love being miserable. If
I did not break my heart over the people I was born
amongst, I would do it for somebody else. I am sure of that. This
is the way of some β I am coming to see it. We are all
after happiness, true, but some are only happy in
being unhappy β queer, is it not?'
How sensitive he was to the sufferings of men! 'I
went years ago to the Himalayas,' he wrote to an American
friend on December 12, 1899, 'never to come back β and my
sister committed suicide, the news reached me there, and
that weak heart flung me off from the prospect of peace! It is
the weak heart that has driven me out of India to seek
some help for those I love, and here I am! Peace have I sought,
but the heart, that seat of bhakti, would not allow me to find
it. Struggle and torture, torture and struggle! Well, so be it
then, since it is my fate; and the quicker it is over, the better.'
His health had been indifferent even before he
had left for the West. 'This sort of nervous body,' he wrote
on November 15, 1899, 'is just an instrument to play
great music at times, and at times to moan in darkness.'
While in America, he was under the treatment of an
osteopath and a 'magnetic healer,' but received no lasting benefit.
At Los Angeles he got the news of the serious illness of
his brother disciple Niranjan. Mr. Sturdy, his beloved
English disciple, had given up the Swami because he felt that
the teacher was not living in the West the life of an
ascetic. Miss Henrietta MΓΌller, who had helped him financially
to buy the Belur Math, left him on account of his illness;
she could not associate sickness with holiness. One of
the objects of the Swami's visit to California was to raise
money to promote his various activities in India: people came
to his meetings in large numbers, but of money he
received very little. He suffered a bereavement in the passing
away of his devoted friend Mr. George Hale of Chicago.
Reports about the work in New York caused him much
anxiety. Swami Abhedananda was not getting on well with
some of Vivekananda's disciples, and Mr. Leggett severed
his relationship with the Society. All these things, like so
many claws, pierced Vivekananda's heart. Further, perhaps
he now felt that his mission on earth was over. He began
to lose interest in work. The arrow, however, was still
flying, carried, by its original impetus; but it was approaching
the end, when it would fall to the ground.
The Swami longed to return to India. On January
17, 1900, he wrote to Mrs. Ole Bull that he wanted to build
a hut on the bank of the Ganga and spend the rest of his
life there with his mother: 'She has suffered much through me.
I must try to smooth her last days. Do you know, this
was just exactly what the great Sankaracharya himself had
to do. He had to go back to his mother in the last few days
of her life. I accept it. I am resigned.'
In the same letter to Mrs. Ole Bull he wrote: 'I am
but a child; what work have I to do? My powers I passed
over to you. I see it. I cannot any more
tell from the platform. Don't tell it to anyone β
not even
to Joe. I am glad. I
want rest; not that I am tired, but the next phase will be
the miraculous touch and not the tongue β like
Ramakrishna's.
The word has gone to you and the boys, and to Margot.'
(Referring to Sister Nivedita.)
He was fast losing interest in active work. On April
7, 1900, he wrote to a friend:
'My boat is nearing the calm harbour from which it
is never more to be driven out. Glory, glory unto
Mother!
(Referring to the Divine Mother of the Universe.)
I have no wish, no ambition now. Blessed be Mother! I
am the servant of Ramakrishna. I am merely a machine. I
know nothing else. Nor do I want to know.'
To another friend he wrote, on April 12, in similar vein:
Work always brings dirt with it. I paid for the accumulated dirt with bad health. I am glad my mind is all the better for it. There is a mellowness and a calmness in life now, which never was before. I am learning now how to be attached as well as detached β and mentally becoming my own master.... Mother is doing Her own work. I do not worry much now. Moths like me die by the thousands every minute. Her work goes on all the same. Glory unto Mother!...For me β alone and drifting about in the will-current of the Mother has been my life. The moment I have tried to break it, that moment I was hurt. Her will be done....I am happy, at peace with myself, and more of the sannyasin than I ever was. The love for my own kith and kin is growing less every day β for Mother, increasing. Memories of long nights of vigil with Sri Ramakrishna, under the Dakshineswar banyan tree, are waking up once more. And work? What is work? Whose work? Whom to work for? I am free. I am Mother's child. She works, She plays. Why should I plan? What shall I plan? Things came and went, just as She liked, without my planning, in spite of my planning. We are Her automata. She is the wire-puller.
With the approaching end of his mission and earthly life, he realized ever more clearly how like a stage this world is. In August 1899 he wrote to Miss Marie Halboister: 'This toy world would not be here, this play could not go on, if we were knowing players. We must play blindfolded. Some of us have taken the part of the rogue of the play; some, of the hero β never mind, it is all play. This is the only consolation. There are demons and lions and tigers and what not on the stage, but they are all muzzled. They snap but cannot bite. The world cannot touch our souls. If you want, even if the body be torn and bleeding, you may enjoy the greatest peace in your mind. And the way to that is to attain hopelessness. Do you know that? Not the imbecile attitude of despair, but the contempt of the conqueror for the things he has attained, for the things he has struggled for and then thrown aside as beneath his worth.'
To Mary Hale, who 'has been always the sweetest note in my jarring and clashing life,' he wrote on March 26,1900:
This is to let you know 'I am very happy.' Not that I am getting into a shadowy optimism, but my power of suffering is increasing. I am being lifted up above the pestilential miasma of this world's joys and sorrows. They are losing their meaning. It is a land of dreams. It does not matter whether one enjoys or weeps β they are but dreams, and as such must break sooner or later....I am attaining peace that passeth understanding β which is neither joy nor sorrow, but something above them both. Tell Mother (Referring to Mrs. Hale) that. My passing through the valley of death β physical, mental β these last two years, has helped me in this. Now I am nearing that Peace, the eternal Silence. Now I mean to see things as they are β everything in that Peace β perfect in its way. 'He whose joy is only in himself, whose desires are only in himself' he has learnt his lessons. This is the great lesson that we are here to learn through myriads of births and heavens and hells: There is nothing to be sought for, asked for, desired, beyond one's self. The greatest thing I can obtain is myself. I am free β therefore I require none else for my happiness. Alone through eternity β ;because I was free, am free, and will remain free for ever. This is Vedantism. I preached the theory so long, but oh, joy! Mary, my dear sister, I am realizing it now every day. Yes, I am. I am free β Alone β Alone. I am, the One without a second.
Vivekananda's eyes were looking at the light of another world, his real abode. And how vividly and touchingly he expressed his nostalgic yearning to return to it, in his letter of April 18, 1900, written from Alameda, California, to Miss MacLeod, his ever loyal Joe:
Just now I received your and Mrs. Bull's
welcome letter. I direct this to London. I am so glad Mrs.
Leggett is on the sure way to recovery.
I am so sorry Mr. Leggett resigned the presidentship.
Well, I keep quiet for fear of making
further trouble. You know my methods are extremely
harsh, and once roused I may rattle Abhedananda too
much for his peace of mind.
I wrote to him only to tell him his notions
about Mrs. Bull are entirely wrong.
Work is always difficult. Pray for me, Joe,
that my work may stop for ever and my whole soul
be absorbed in Mother. Her work She knows.
You must be glad to be in London once
more β the old friends β give them all my love and gratitude.
I am well, very well mentally. I feel the rest of
the soul more than that of the body. The battles are
lost and won. I have bundled my things and am
waiting for the Great Deliverer.
'Siva, O Siva, carry my boat to the other shore!'
After all, Joe, I am only the boy who used to
listen with rapt wonderment to the wonderful words of
Ramakrishna under the banyan at Dakshineswar.
That is my true nature β works and activities, doing
good and so forth, are all superimpositions. Now I
again hear his voice, the same old voice thrilling my
soul. Bonds are breaking β love dying, work
becoming tasteless β the glamour is off life. Now only the
voice of the Master calling. β I come, Lord, I
come.' β 'Let the dead bury the dead. Follow thou Me.' β 'I
come, my beloved Lord, I come.'
Yes, I come, Nirvana is before me. I feel it at
times, the same infinite ocean of peace, without a ripple,
a breath.
I am glad I was born, glad I suffered so, glad
I did make big blunders, glad to enter peace. I
leave none bound, I take no bonds. Whether this body
will fall and release me or I enter into freedom in the
body, the old man is gone, gone for ever, never to come
back again!
The guide, the guru, the leader, the teacher,
has passed away; the boy, the student, the servant, is
left behind.
You understand why I do not want to
meddle with Abhedananda. Who am I to meddle with
any, Joe? I have long given up my place as a leader β I
have no right to raise my voice. Since the beginning of
this year I have not dictated anything in India. You
know that. Many thanks for what you and Mrs. Bull
have been to me in the past. All blessings follow you
ever. The sweetest moments of my life have been when
I was drifting. I am drifting again β with the
bright warm sun ahead and masses of vegetation
around β
and in the heat everything is so still, so calm β and
I am drifting, languidly β in the warm heart of the
river. I dare not make a splash with my hands or
feet β for fear of breaking the wonderful stillness, stillness
that makes you feel sure it is an illusion!
Behind my work was ambition, behind my
love was personality, behind my purity was fear,
behind my guidance the thirst for power. Now they
are vanishing and I drift. I come, Mother, I come, in
Thy warm bosom, floating wheresoever Thou takest
me, in the voiceless, in the strange, in the wonderland,
I come β a spectator, no more an actor.
Oh, it is so calm! My thoughts seem to come
from a great, great distance in the interior of my own
heart. They seem like faint, distant whispers, and peace
is upon everything, sweet, sweet peace β like that
one feels for a few moments just before falling into
sleep, when things are seen and felt like
shadows β without fear, without love, without emotion β peace that
one feels alone, surrounded with statues and
pictures.βI come, Lord, I come.
The world is, but not beautiful nor ugly, but
as sensations without exciting any emotion. Oh, Joe,
the blessedness of it! Everything is good and
beautiful; for things are all losing their relative proportions
to me β my body among the first. Om That Existence!
I hope great things come to you all in
London and Paris. Fresh joy β fresh benefits to mind and body.
But the arrow of Swami Vivekananda's life had
not yet finished its flight. Next he was to be seen in Paris
participating in the Congress of the History of
Religions, held on the occasion of the Universal Exposition.
This Congress, compared with the Parliament of Religions
of Chicago, was a rather tame affair. The discussion
was limited to technical theories regarding the origin of
the rituals of religion; for the Catholic hierarchy, evidently
not wanting a repetition of the triumph of Oriental ideas
in the American Parliament, did not allow any discussion
of religious doctrines. Swami Vivekananda, on account of
his failing health, took part in only two sessions. He
repudiated the theory of the German orientalist Gustav Oppert
that the Siva lingam was a mere phallic symbol. He
described the Vedas as the common basis of both Hinduism
and Buddhism, and held that both Krishna and the
Bhagavad Gita were prior to Buddhism. Further, he rejected the
theory of the Hellenic influence on the drama, art,
literature, astrology, and other sciences developed in India.
In Paris he came to know his distinguished
countryman J. C. Bose, the discoverer of the life and nervous
system in plants, who had been invited to join the scientific
section of the Congress. The Swami referred to the Indian
scientist as 'the pride and glory of Bengal.'
In Paris Swami Vivekananda was the guest of Mr.
and Mrs. Leggett, at whose house he met many
distinguished people. Among these was the young Duke of Richelieu,
a scion of an old and aristocratic family of France. The
title had been created by Louis XIII, and one of the ancestors
of the Duke had been Premier under Louis XVIII. Born
in Paris, educated at a Jesuit school in France, and
later graduated from the University of Aix-en-Provence,
the Duke of Richelieu became greatly attached to the Swami
and visited him frequently. On the eve of
Vivekananda's departure from Paris, the Swami asked the Duke if
he would renounce the world and become his disciple.
The Duke wanted to know what he would gain in return
for such renunciation, and the Swami said, 'I shall give
you the desire for death.' When asked to explain, the
Swami declared that he would give the Duke such a state of
mind that when confronted by death he would laugh at it.
But the Duke preferred to pursue a worldly career, though
he cherished a lifelong devotion to Swami Vivekananda.
During his stay in Paris the Swami met such
prominent people as Professor Patrick Geddes of
Edinburgh University, Pere Hyacinthe, Hiram Maxim, Sarah
Bernhardt, Jules Bois, and Madame Emma Calve. Pere Hyacinthe,
a Carmelite monk who had renounced his vows, had
married an American lady and assumed the name of
Charles Loyson. The Swami, however, always addressed him
by his old monastic name and described him as endowed
with 'a very sweet nature' and the temperament of a lover
of God. Maxim, the inventor of the gun associated with
his name, was a great connoisseur and lover of India
and China. Sarah Bernhardt also bore a great love for
India, which she often described as 'very ancient, very
civilized.' To visit India was the dream of her life.
Madame Calve the Swami had met in America,
and now he came to know her more intimately. She
became one of his devoted followers. 'She was born poor,' he
once wrote of her, 'but by her innate talents, prodigious
labour and diligence, and after wrestling against much
hardship, she is now enormously rich and commands respect
from kings and emperors....The rare combination of beauty,
youth, talents, and "divine" voice has assigned Calve
the highest place among the singers of the West. There
is, indeed, no better teacher than misery and poverty.
That constant fight against the dire poverty, misery, and
hardship of the days of her girlhood, which has led to her
present triumph over them, has brought into her life a
unique sympathy and a depth of thought with a wide outlook.'
After the Swami's passing away, Madame
Calve visited the Belur Math, the headquarters of the
Ramakrishna Mission. In old age she embraced the Catholic
faith and had to give up, officially, her allegiance to
Swami Vivekananda. But one wonders whether she was able
to efface him from her heart.
Jules Bois, with whom the Swami stayed for a
few days in Paris, was a distinguished writer. 'We have,'
the Swami wrote to a disciple, 'many great ideas in
common and feel happy together.'
Most of the Swami's time in Paris was devoted to
the study of French culture and especially the language.
He wrote a few letters in French. About the culture,
his appreciation was tempered with criticism. He spoke
of Paris as the 'home of liberty'; there the ethics and
society of the West had been formed, and its university had
been the model of all others. But in a letter to Swami
Turiyananda, dated September 1, 1900, he also wrote:
'The people of France are mere intellectualists. They run
after worldly things and firmly believe God and souls to be
mere superstitions; they are extremely loath to talk on
such subjects. This is truly a materialistic country.'
After the Congress of the History of Religions
was concluded, the Swami spent a few days at Lannion in
Brittany, as the guest of Mrs. Ole Bull. Sister Nivedita,
who had just returned from America, was also in the
party. There, in his conversations, the Swami dwelt mostly
on Buddha and his teachings. Contrasting Buddhism
with Hinduism, he one day said that the former exhorted
men to 'realize all this as illusion,' while Hinduism asked
them to 'realize that within the illusion is the Real.' Of how
this was to be done, Hinduism never presumed to
enunciate any rigid law. The Buddhist command could only be
carried out through monasticism; the Hindu might be
fulfilled through any state of life. All alike were roads to the
One Real. One of the highest and the greatest expressions
of the Faith is put into the mouth of a butcher, preaching,
by the orders of a married woman, to a
sannyasin.2
Thus Buddhism became the religion of a monastic order,
but Hinduism, in spite of its exaltation of monasticism,
remains ever the religion of faithfulness to daily duty, whatever
it may be, as the path by which man may attain to God.
From Lannion, on St. Michael's Day, he visited
Mont St. Michel. He was struck by the similarity between
the rituals of Hinduism and Roman Catholicism. He
said, 'Christianity is not alien to Hinduism.'
Nivedita took leave of the Swami in Brittany
and departed for England in order to raise funds for her
work on behalf of Indian women. While giving her his
blessings, the Swami said: 'There is a peculiar sect of
Mohammedans who are reported to be so fanatical that they take
each new-born babe and expose it, saying, "If God
made thee, perish! If Ali made thee, live!" Now this which
they say to the child, I say, but in the opposite sense, to
you, tonight β "Go forth into the world, and there, if I
made you, be destroyed. If Mother made you, live!"'
Perhaps the Swami remembered how some of his beloved
Western disciples, unable to understand the profundity of
his life and teachings, had deserted him. He also realized
the difficulties Westerners experienced in identifying
themselves completely with the customs of India. He had
told Nivedita, before they left India, that she must resume,
as if she had never broken them off, all her old habits
and social customs of the West.
On October 24, 1900, Swami Vivekananda left
Paris for the East, by way of Vienna and Constantinople.
Besides the Swami, the party consisted of Monsieur and
Madame Loyson, Jules Bois, Madame Calve, and Miss MacLeod.
The Swami was Calve's guest.
In Vienna the Swami remarked, 'If Turkey is
called "the sick man of Europe," Austria ought to be called
"the sick woman of Europe"!'
The party arrived in Constantinople after
passing through Hungary, Serbia, Romania, and Bulgaria. Next
the Swami and his friends came to Athens. They visited
several islands and a Greek monastery. From Athens
they sailed to Egypt and the Swami was delighted to visit
the museum in Cairo. While in Cairo, he and his
women devotees, one day, in the course of sightseeing,
unknowingly entered the part of the city in which the girls of
ill fame lived, and when the inmates hurled coarse jokes
at the Swami from their porches, the ladies wanted to take
him away; but he refused to go. Some of the
prostitutes came into the street, and the ladies saw from a
distance that they knelt before him and kissed the hem of
his garment. Presently the Swami joined his friends and
drove away.
In Cairo the Swami had a presentiment that
something had happened to Mr. Sevier. He became restless to
return to India, took the first available boat, and sailed for
Bombay alone.
Throughout his European tour the Swami's
friends had noticed that he was becoming more and
more detached from the spectacle of external things, and
buried in meditation. A sort of indifference to the world
was gradually overpowering him. On August 14 he
had written to a friend that he did not expect to live long.
From Paris he wrote to Turiyananda: 'My body and mind
are broken down; I need rest badly. In addition there is not
a single person on whom I can depend; on the other
hand, as long as I live, all will be very selfish, depending
upon me for everything.' In Egypt the Swami had seemed to
be turning the last pages of his life-experience. One of
the party later remarked, 'How tired and world-weary
he seemed!' Nivedita, who had had the opportunity of
observing him closely during his second trip to the
West, writes:
The outstanding impression made by the Swami's bearing during all these months of European and American life, was one of almost complete indifference to his surroundings. Current estimates of value left him entirely unaffected. He was never in any way startled or incredulous under success, being too deeply convinced of the greatness of the Power that worked through him, to be surprised by it. But neither was he unnerved by external failure. Both victory and defeat would come and go. He was their witness....He moved fearless and unhesitant through the luxury of the West. As determinedly as I had seen him in India, dressed in the two garments of simple folk, sitting on the floor and eating with his fingers, so, equally without doubt or shrinking, was his acceptance of the complexity of the means of living in America or France. Monk and king, he said, were the obverse and reverse of a single medal. From the use of the best to the renunciation of all was but one step. India had thrown all her prestige in the past round poverty. Some prestige was in the future to be cast round wealth.
Now, I am free, as I have kept no power
or authority or position for me in the work. I also
have resigned the Presidentship of the Ramakrishna Mission. The Math
etc. belong now to the
immediate disciples of Ramakrishna except myself. The
Presidentship is now Brahmananda's β next it will fall
on Premananda etc., in turn. I am so glad a whole load
is off me. Now I am happy....
I no longer represent anybody, nor am I
responsible to anybody. As to my friends, I had a
morbid sense of obligation. I have thought well and find
I owe nothing to anybody β if anything. I have
given my best energies, unto death almost, and
received only hectoring and mischief-making and
botheration&....
Your letter indicates that I am jealous of
your new friends. You must know once for all I am
born without jealousy, without avarice, without the
desire to rule& #151; whatever other vices I may be
born with. I never directed you before; now, after I
am nobody in the work, I have no direction whatever.
I only know this much: So long as you serve
'Mother' with a whole heart, She will be your guide.
I never had any jealousy about what
friends you made. I never criticized my brethren for
mixing up in anything. Only I do believe the
Western people have the peculiarity of trying to force
upon others whatever seems good to them, forgetting
that what is good for you may not be good for
others. As such I am afraid you would try to force
upon others whatever turn your mind might take in
contact with new friends. That was the only reason
I sometimes tried to stop any particular
influence, and nothing else.
You are free. Have your own choice, your
own work....
Friends or foes, they are all instruments in
Her hands to help us work out our own karma,
through pleasure or pain. As such, 'Mother' bless all.
How did America impress Swami
Vivekananda during his second visit to the West? What impressions
did he carry to India of the state of things in the New
World? During his first visit he had been enthusiastic about
almost everything he saw β the power, the organization,
the material prosperity, the democracy, and the spirit
of freedom and justice. But now he was greatly
disillusioned. In America's enormous combinations and
ferocious struggle for supremacy he discovered the power
of Mammon. He saw that the commercial spirit was composed, for the most
part, of greed, selfishness, and
a struggle for privilege and power. He was disgusted
with the ruthlessness of wealthy business men, swallowing
up the small tradespeople by means of large
combinations. That was indeed tyranny. He could admire an
organization; 'but what beauty is there among a pack of
wolves?' he said to a disciple. He also noticed, in all their
nakedness, the social vices and the arrogance of race,
religion, and colour. America, he confided to Miss MacLeod,
would not be the instrument to harmonize East and West.
During his trip through Eastern Europe, from Paris
to Constantinople, he smelt war. He felt the stench of it
rising on all sides. 'Europe,' he remarked, 'is a vast military camp.'
But the tragedy of the West had not been
altogether unperceived by him even during his first visit. As early
as 1895 he said to Sister Christine: 'Europe is on the edge of
a volcano. If the fire is not extinguished by a flood
of spirituality, it will erupt.'
One cannot but be amazed at the Swami's
prophetic intuition as expressed through the following remarks
made to Christine in 1896: 'The next upheaval will come from
Russia or China. I cannot see clearly which, but it will
be either the one or the other.' He further said: 'The world
is in the third epoch, under the domination of the vaisya.
The fourth epoch will be under that of the
sudra.'3
Swami Vivekananda disembarked in Bombay and
immediately entrained for Calcutta, arriving at the Belur
Math late in the evening of December 9, 1900. The Swami
had not informed anybody of his return. The gate of the
monastery was locked for the night. He heard the dinner
bell, and in his eagerness to join the monks at their meal,
scaled the gate. There was great rejoicing over his homecoming.
At the Math Swami Vivekananda was told about
the passing away of his beloved disciple Mr. Sevier at
Mayavati in the Himalayas. This was the sad news of which he
had had a presentiment in Egypt. He was greatly
distressed, and on December 11 wrote to Miss MacLeod: 'Thus
two great Englishmen (The other was Mr.
Goodwin.) gave up their lives for us β us,
the Hindus. This is martyrdom, if anything is.' Again he
wrote to her on December 26: 'He was cremated on the bank
of the river that flows by his ashrama, a
la Hindu, covered with garlands, the brahmins carrying the
body and the
boys chanting the Vedas. The cause has already two martyrs.
It makes me love dear England and its heroic breed.
The Mother is watering the plant of future India with the
best blood of England. Glory unto Her!'
The Swami stayed at the Math for eighteen days
and left for Mayavati to see Mrs. Sevier. The distance from the
railroad station to the monastery at Mayavati was
sixty-five miles. The Swami did not give the inmates
sufficient time to arrange for his comfortable transportation.
He left the railroad station in a hurry in the
company of Shivananda and Sadananda. The winter of that year
was particularly severe in the Himalayas; there was a
heavy snowfall on the way, and in his present state of health
he could hardly walk. He reached the monastery,
however, on January 3, 1901.
The meeting with Mrs. Sevier stirred his emotions.
He was delighted, however, to see the magnificent view of
the eternal snow and also the progress of the work. Because
of the heavy winter, he was forced to stay indoors most of
the time. It was a glorious occasion for the members of
the ashrama. The Swami's conversation was inspiring.
He spoke of the devotion of his Western disciples to his
cause, and in this connexion particularly mentioned the name
of Mr. Sevier. He also emphasized the necessity of loyalty
to the work undertaken, loyalty to the leader, and loyalty
to the organization. But the leader, the Swami said,
must command respect and obedience by his character.
While at Mayavati, in spite of a suffocating attack of asthma,
he was busy with his huge correspondence and wrote
three articles for the magazine Prabuddha
Bharata. The least physical effort exhausted him. One day he
exclaimed,
'My body is done for!'
The Advaita Ashrama at Mayavati had been
founded, as may be remembered, with a view to enabling
its members to develop their spiritual life through the
practice of the non-dualistic discipline. All forms of ritual
and worship were strictly excluded. But some of the members,
accustomed to rituals, had set apart a room as the
shrine, where a picture of Sri Ramakrishna was installed
and worshipped daily. One morning the Swami chanced
to enter this room while the worship was going on. He
said nothing at that time, but in the evening severely
reprimanded the inmates for violating the rules of
the monastery. As he did not want to hurt their feelings
too much, he did not ask them to discontinue the worship,
but it was stopped by the members themselves.
One of them, however, whose heart was set
on dualistic worship, asked the advice of the Holy
Mother. She wrote: 'Sri Ramakrishna was all Advaita and
preached Advaita. Why should you not follow Advaita? All
his disciples are Advaitins.'
After his return to the Belur Math, the Swami said
in the course of a conversation: 'I thought of having one
centre at least from which the external worship of Sri
Ramakrishna would be excluded. But I found that the Old Man
had already established himself even there. Well! Well!'
The above incident should not indicate any lack
of respect in Swami Vivekananda for Sri Ramakrishna
or dualistic worship. During the last few years of his life
he showed a passionate love for the Master. Following
his return to the Belur Math he arranged, as will be
seen presently, the birthday festival of Sri Ramakrishna and
the worship of the Divine Mother, according to
traditional rituals.
The Swami's real nature was that of a lover of
God, though he appeared outwardly as a philosopher. But in
all his teachings, both in India and abroad, he had
emphasized the non-dualistic philosophy. For Ultimate Reality, in the
Hindu spiritual tradition, is non-dual. Dualism is a
stage on the way to non-dualism. Through non-dualism
alone, in the opinion of the Swami, can the different
dualistic concepts of the Personal God be harmonized. Without
the foundation of the non-dualistic Absolute, dualism
breeds fanaticism, exclusiveness, and dangerous emotionalism.
He saw both in India and abroad a caricature of dualism
in the worship conducted in the temples, churches, and
other places of worship.
In India the Swami found that non-dualism
had degenerated into mere dry intellectual speculation. And
so he wanted to restore non-dualism to its pristine purity.
With that end in view he had established the Advaita Ashrama
at Mayavati, overlooking the gorgeous eternal snow of
the Himalayas, where the mind naturally soars to the
contemplation of the Infinite, and there he had banned all
vestiges of dualistic worship. In the future, the Swami believed,
all religions would receive a new orientation from the
non-dualistic doctrine and spread goodwill among men.
On his way to Mayavati Swami Vivekananda
had heard the melancholy news of the passing away of the
Raja of Khetri, his faithful disciple, who had borne the
financial burden of his first trip to America. The Raja had
undertaken the repairing of a high tower of the Emperor Akbar's
tomb near Agra, and one day, while inspecting the work,
had missed his footing, fallen several feet, and died.
'Thus', wrote the Swami to Mary Hale, 'we sometimes come
to grief on account of our zeal for antiquity. Take care,
Mary, don't be too zealous about your piece of Indian
antiquity.'
(Referring to himself.)
'So you see', the Swami wrote to Mary again, 'things
are gloomy with me just now and my own health is
wretched. Yet I am sure to bob up soon and am waiting for the
next turn.'
The Swami left Mayavati on January 18, and
travelled four days on slippery slopes, partly through snow,
before reaching the railroad station. He arrived at the Belur
Math on January 24.
Swami Vivekananda had been in his monastery
for seven weeks when pressing invitations for a lecture
trip began to pour in from East Bengal. His mother,
furthermore, had expressed an earnest desire to visit the
holy places situated in that part of India. On January 26 he
wrote to Mrs. Ole Bull: 'I am going to take my mother
on pilgrimage....This is the one great wish of a Hindu
widow. I have brought only misery to my people all my life. I
am trying to fulfil this one wish of hers.'
On March 18, in the company of a large party of
his sannyasin disciples, the Swami left for Dacca, the chief
city of East Bengal, and arrived the next day. He was in
poor health, suffering from both asthma and diabetes.
During an asthmatic attack, when the pain was acute, he said
half dreamily: 'What does it matter! I have given them
enough for fifteen hundred years.' But he had hardly any
rest. People besieged him day and night for instruction. In
Dacca he delivered two public lectures and also visited the
house of Nag Mahashay, where he was entertained by the
saint's wife.
Next he proceeded to Chandranath, a holy place
near Chittagong, and to sacred Kamakhya in Assam. While
in Assam he spent several days at Shillong in order to recover
his health, and there met Sir Henry Cotton, the
chief Government official and a friend of the Indians in
their national aspiration. The two exchanged many ideas,
and at Sir Henry's request the Government physician
looked after the Swami's health.
Vivekananda returned to the Belur Monastery in
the second week of May. Concerning the impressions of
his trip, he said that a certain part of Assam was
endowed with incomparable natural beauty. The people of
East Bengal were more sturdy, active, and resolute than
those of West Bengal. But in religious views they were
rather conservative and even fanatical. He had found that
some of the gullible people believed in
pseudo-Incarnations, several of whom were living at that time in Dacca
itself. The Swami had exhorted the people to cultivate
manliness and the faculty of reasoning. To a sentimental young
man of Dacca he had said: 'My boy, take my advice;
develop your muscles and brain by eating good food and by
healthy exercise, and then you will be able to think for
yourself. Without nourishing food your brain seems to
have weakened a little.' On another occasion, in a public
meeting, he had declared, referring to youth who had very
little physical stamina, 'You will be nearer to Heaven
through football than through the study of the Gita.'
The brother disciples and his own disciples were
much concerned about the Swami's health, which was going
from bad to worse. The damp climate of Bengal did not suit
him at all; it aggravated his asthma, and further, he was
very, very tired. He was earnestly requested to lead a quiet
life, and to satisfy his friends the Swami lived in the
monastery for about seven months in comparative retirement. They
tried to entertain him with light talk. But he could not
be dissuaded from giving instruction to his disciples
whenever the occasion arose.
He loved his room on the second storey, in the
southeast corner of the monastery building, to which he
joyfully returned from his trips to the West or other parts of
India. This large room with four windows and three doors
served as both study and bedroom. In the corner to the right
of the entrance door stood a mirror about five feet high,
and near this, a rack with his ochre clothes. In the middle of
the room was an iron bedstead with a spring mattress,
which had been given to him by one of his Western disciples.
But he seldom used it; for he preferred to sleep on a small
couch placed by its side. A writing-table with letters,
manuscripts, pen, ink, paper, and blotting-pad, a call-bell, some
flowers in a metal vase, a photograph of the Master, a
deer-skin which he used at the time of meditation, and a small
table with a tea-set completed the furnishings.
Here he wrote, gave instruction to his disciples
and brother monks, received friends, communed with God
in meditation, and sometimes ate his meals. And it was
in this room that he ultimately entered into the final
ecstasy from which he never returned to ordinary
consciousness. The room has been preserved as it was while the
Swami was in his physical body, everything in it being kept as
on the last day of his life, the calendar on the wall
reading July 4, 1902.
On December 19, 1900, he wrote to an
American disciple: 'Verily I am a bird of passage. Gay and busy
Paris, grim old Constantinople, sparkling little Athens,
and pyramidal Cairo are left behind, and here I am writing in
my room on the Ganga, in the Math. It is so quiet and
still! The broad river is dancing in the bright sunshine, only
now and then an occasional cargo boat breaking the silence
with the splashing of the waves. It is the cold season here,
but the middle of the day is warm and bright every day. It
is like the winter of southern California. Everything is
green and gold, and the grass is like velvet, yet the air is cold
and crisp and delightful.'
After the Swami's return from East Bengal he
lived a relaxed life in the monastery, surrounded by his
pet animals: the dog Bagha, the she-goat Hansi, an
antelope, a stork, several cows and sheep and ducks and geese,
and a kid called Matru who was adorned with a collar of
little bells, and with whom the Swami ran and played like
a child. The animals adored him, Matru, the little kid,
who had been β so he pretended β a relation of his in a
previous existence, slept in his room. When it died he grieved
like a child and said to a disciple: 'How strange!
Whomsoever I love dies early.' Before milking Hansi for his tea,
he always asked her permission. Bagha who took part in
the Hindu ceremonies, went to bathe in the Ganga with
the devotees on sacred occasions, as for instance when
the gongs and conchs announced the end of an eclipse.
He was, in a sense, the leader of the group of animals at
the Math. After his death he was given a burial in the
grounds of the monastery.
Referring to his pet animals he wrote to an
American disciple on September 7, 1901: 'The rains have come
down in right earnest, and it is a deluge β pouring,
pouring, pouring, night and day. The river is rising, flooding
the banks; the ponds and tanks have overflowed. I have just
now returned from lending a hand in cutting a deep
drain to take off the water from the Math grounds. The
rainwater stands at places some feet deep. My huge stork is full
of glee and so are the ducks and geese. My tame
antelope fled from the Math and gave us some days of anxiety
in finding him out. One of my ducks unfortunately
died yesterday. She had been gasping for breath more than
a week. One of my waggish old monks says, "Sir, it is no
use living in the Kaliyuga, when ducks catch cold from
damp and rain, and frogs sneeze!" One of the geese had
her plumes falling off. Knowing no other method of
treatment, I left her some minutes in a tub of water mixed with
mild carbolic, so that it might either kill or heal β and she is
all right now.'
Thus Swami Vivekananda tried to lead a carefree
life at the monastery, sometimes going about the grounds
clad in his loin-cloth, sometimes supervising the
cooking arrangements and himself preparing some delicacies
for the inmates, and sometimes joining his disciples
and brother monks in the singing of devotional music. At
other times he imparted spiritual instruction to the visitors,
or engaged in deep thought whenever his inner spirit
was stirred up, occupied himself with serious study in his
room, or explained to the members of the Math the
intricate passages of the scriptures and unfolded to them his
scheme of future work.
Though his body was wearing away day by day,
his mind was luminous. At times his eyes assumed a
far-away look, showing how tired he was of the world. One day
he said, 'For one thing we may be grateful: this life is
not eternal.'
The illness did not show any sign of abatement,
but that did not dampen his spirit to work. When urged to
rest, he said to a disciple: 'My son, there is no rest for me.
That which Sri Ramakrishna called "Kali" took possession
of my body and soul three or four days before his
passing away. That makes me work and work and never lets
me keep still or look to my personal comfort.' Then he told
the disciple how the Master, before his passing away,
had transmitted his spiritual power to him.
(See)
During the later part of 1901 the Swami observed
all the religious festivals at the Math. The Divine Mother
was worshipped in strict orthodox fashion during the
Durga-puja, Lakshmi-puja and Kali-puja. On the occasion of
the Durga-puja the poor were given a sumptuous feast.
Thus the Swami demonstrated the efficacy of religious rituals
in the development of the spiritual life. In February 1902
the birth anniversary of Sri Ramakrishna was celebrated at
the Belur Math, and over thirty thousand devotees gathered
for the occasion. But the Swami was feverish. He was
confined to his room by the swelling of his legs. From the
windows he watched the dancing and the music of the devotees.
To the disciple who was attending him the Swami
said: 'He who has realized the Atman becomes a storehouse
of great power. From him as the centre a spiritual
force emanates, working within a certain radius; people
who come within this circle become inspired with his ideas
and are overwhelmed by them. Thus without much
religious striving they derive benefit from the spiritual
experience of an illumined person. This is called grace.'
'Blessed are those,' the Swami continued, 'who
have seen Sri Ramakrishna. All of you, too, will get his
vision. When you have come here, you are very near to
him. Nobody has been able to understand him who came
on earth as Sri Ramakrishna. Even his own nearest
devotees have no real clue to it. Only some have a little inkling of
it. All will understand in time.'
It is said that the spot immediately beneath a lamp
is dark. And so it was that the orthodox people of
the neighbouring villages hardly understood the ideas
and ideals of the Belur Math. The monks there did not in
all respects lead the life of orthodox sannyasins. Devotees
from abroad frequented the monastery. In matters of food
and dress the inmates were liberal. Thus they became the
butt of criticism. The villagers invented scandals about
them and the passengers on the boats passing along the
Ganga would point out the monastery with an accusing finger.
When the Swami heard all this he said: 'That is
good. It is a law of nature. That is the way with all founders
of religion. Without persecution superior ideas cannot
penetrate into the heart of society.'
But the criticism of the neighbours in time gave
place to pride in having in their midst so many saintly souls.
Many distinguished Indians used to visit the
Swami at this time. With some of them he discussed the idea
of founding a Vedic Institution for the promotion of
the ancient Aryan culture and the knowledge of Sanskrit.
This was one of the Swami's favourite thoughts, on which
he dwelt even on the last day of his life on earth.
Towards the end of 1901 two learned Buddhists
from Japan came to the Belur Math to induce the Swami to attend
a Congress of Religions that was being contemplated
in Japan at that time. One of them was the famous artist
and art critic Okakura, and the other Oda, the head priest of
a Buddhist temple. The Swami became particularly fond
of Okakura and said, 'We are two brothers who meet
again, having come from the ends of the earth.' Though
pressed by the visitors, he could not accept the invitation to go
to Japan, partly because of his failing health and partly
because he was sceptical that the Japanese would
appreciate the monastic ideal of the Non-dualistic Vedanta. In a
letter to a Western lady written in June 1902, the Swami
made the following interesting observation about the
connexion between the monastic ideal and fidelity in married life:
In my opinion, a race must first cultivate a great respect for motherhood, through the sanctification and inviolability of marriage, before it can attain to the ideal of perfect chastity. The Roman Catholics and the Hindus, holding marriage sacred and inviolate, have produced great chaste men and women of immense power. To the Arab, marriage is a contract or a forceful possession, to be dissolved at will, and we do not find there the development of the idea of the virgin of the brahmacharin. Modern Buddhism β having fallen among races who had not yet come up to the evolution of marriage β has made a travesty of monasticism. So until there is developed in Japan a great and sacred ideal about marriage (apart from mutual attraction and love), I do not see how there can be great monks and nuns. As you have come to see that the glory of life is chastity, so my eyes also have been opened to the necessity of this great sanctification for the vast majority, in order that a few lifelong chaste powers may be produced.
The Swami used to say that absolute loyalty
and devotion between husbands and wives for three
successive generations find their expression in the birth of an
ideal monk.
Okakura earnestly requested the Swami to
accompany him on a visit to Bodh-Gaya, where Buddha had
attained illumination. Taking advantage of several weeks'
respite from his ailment, the Swami accepted the invitation.
He also desired to see Varanasi. The
trip lasted through
January and February 1902, and was a fitting end to all
his wanderings. He arrived at Bodh-Gaya on the morning
of his last birthday and was received with genuine
courtesy and hospitality by the orthodox Hindu monk in charge
of the temple. This and the similar respect and affection
shown by the priests in Varanasi proved the extent of his
influence over men's hearts. It may be remembered that
Bodh-Gaya had been the first of the holy places he had visited
during Sri Ramakrishna's lifetime. And some years later, when
he was still an unknown monk, he had said farewell
to Varanasi with the words: 'Till that day when I fall on
society like a thunderbolt I shall visit this place no more.'
In Varanasi the Swami was offered a sum of money
by a Maharaja to establish a monastery there. He accepted
the offer and, on his return to Calcutta, sent Swami
Shivananda to organize the work. Even before Swami
Vivekananda's visit to Varanasi, several young men, under the
Swami's inspiration, had started a small organization for the
purpose of providing destitute pilgrims with food, shelter, and
medical aid. Delighted with their unselfish spirit, the Swami
said to them: 'You have the true spirit, my boys, and you
will always have my love and blessings! Go on bravely;
never mind your poverty. Money will come. A great thing will
grow out of it, surpassing your fondest hopes.' The Swami
wrote the appeal which was published with the first report of
the 'Ramakrishna Home of Service,' as the institution came
to be called. In later years it became the premier institution
of its kind started by the Ramakrishna Mission.
The Swami returned from Varanasi. But hardly
had he arrived at Belur when his illness showed signs
of aggravation in the damp air of Bengal. During the last
year and a half of his life he was, off and on, under the
strict supervision of his physicians. Diabetes took the form
of dropsy. His feet swelled and certain parts of his
body became hypersensitive. He could hardly close his eyes
in sleep. A native physician made him follow a very
strict regime: he had to avoid water and salt. For
twenty-one days he did not allow a drop of water to pass through
his throat. To a disciple he said: 'The body is only a tool of
the mind. What the mind dictates the body will have to
obey. Now I do not even think of water. I do not miss it at all....
I see I can do anything.'
Though his body was subjected to a
devitalizing illness, his mind retained its usual vigour. During
this period he was seen reading the newly
published Encyclopaedia Britannica. One of his
householder disciples
remarked that it was difficult to master these twenty-five volumes
in one life. But the Swami had already finished ten
volumes and was busy reading the eleventh. He told the disciple to
ask him any question from the ten volumes he had
read, and to the latter's utter amazement the Swami not
only displayed his knowledge of many technical subjects
but even quoted the language of the book here and there.
He explained to the disciple that there was nothing
miraculous about it. A man who observed strict chastity in
thought and action, he declared, could develop the retentive
power of the mind and reproduce exactly what he had heard
or read but once, even years before.
The regeneration of India was the ever recurring
theme of the Swami's thought. Two of the projects dear to his
heart were the establishment of a Vedic College and a
convent for women. The latter was to be started on the bank of
the Ganga under the direction of the Holy Mother and was
to be completely separated from the Belur Monastery.
The teachers trained in the convent were to take charge of
the education of Indian women along national lines.
But the Swami's heart always went out in
sympathy for the poor and neglected masses. During the later part
of 1901 a number of Santhal labourers were engaged
in levelling the grounds about the monastery. They were
poor and outside the pale of society. The Swami felt an
especial joy in talking to them, and listened to the accounts of
their misery with great compassion. One day he arranged a
feast for them and served them with delicacies that they
had never before tasted. Then, when the meal was finished,
the Swami said to them: 'You are Narayanas. Today I
have entertained the Lord Himself by feeding you.'
He said to a disciple: 'I actually saw God in them.
How guileless they are!' Afterwards he said, addressing
the inmates of the Belur Math:
'See how simple-hearted these poor, illiterate people are! Will you be able to relieve their miseries to some extent at least? Otherwise of what use is our wearing the ochre robe of the sannyasin? To be able to sacrifice everything for the good of others is real monasticism. Sometimes I think within myself: "What is the good of building monasteries and so forth? Why not sell them and distribute the money among the poor, indigent Narayanas? What homes should we care for, we who have made the tree our shelter? Alas! How can we have the heart to put a morsel into our mouths, when our countrymen have not enough wherewith to feed or clothe themselves?...Mother, shall there be no redress for them?" One of the purposes of my going out to preach religion to the West, as you know, was to see if I could find any means of providing for the people of my country. Seeing their poverty and distress, I think sometimes: "Let us throw away all the paraphernalia of worship β blowing the conch and ringing the bell and waving the lights before the image....Let us throw away all pride of learning and study of the scriptures and all spiritual disciplines for the attainment of personal liberation. Let us go from village to village, devoting ourselves to the service of the poor. Let us, through the force of our character and spirituality and our austere living, convince the rich about their duties to the masses, and get money and the means wherewith to serve the poor and the distressed....Alas! Nobody in our country thinks for the low, the poor, the miserable! Those who are the backbone of the nation, whose labour produces food, those whose one day's absence from work raises a cry of general distress in the city β where is the man in our country who sympathizes with them, who shares in their joys and sorrows? Look how, for want of sympathy on the part of the Hindus, thousands of pariahs are becoming Christians in the Madras Presidency! Don't think that it is merely the pinch of hunger that drives them to embrace Christianity. It is simply because they do not get your sympathy. You are continually telling them: "Don't touch me." "Don't touch this or that!" Is here any fellow-feeling or sense of dharma left in the country? There is only "Don't-touchism" now! Kick out all such degrading usages! How I wish to abolish the barriers of "Don't-touchism" and go out and bring together one and all, crying: "Come, all ye that are poor and destitute, fallen and downtrodden! We are one in the name of Ramakrishna!" Unless they are elevated, the Great Mother India will never awake! What are we good for if we cannot provide facilities for their food and clothing? Alas, they are ignorant of the ways of the world and hence fail to eke out a living though labouring hard day and night for it. Gather all your forces together to remove the veil from their eyes. What I see clear as daylight is that the same Brahman, the same Sakti, is in them as in me! Only there is a difference in the degree of manifestation β that is all. Have you ever seen a country in the whole history of the world rise unless there was a uniform circulation of the national blood all over the body? Know for certain that not much can be done with that body one limb of which is paralysed, even though the other limbs are healthy.'
One of the lay disciples pointed out the difficulty of establishing unity and harmony among the diverse sects in India. Vivekananda replied with irritation:
'Don't come here any more if you think any task too difficult. Through the grace of the Lord, everything becomes easy of achievement. Your duty is to serve the poor and the distressed without distinction of caste and creed. What business have you to consider the fruits of your action? Your duty is to go on working, and everything will set itself right in time, and work by itself. My method of work is to construct, and not to destroy that which is already existing....You are all intelligent boys and profess to be my disciples β tell me what you have done. Couldn't you give away one life for the sake of others? Let the reading of Vedanta and the practice of meditation and the like be left for the next life! Let this body go in the service of others β and then I shall know you have not come to me in vain!'
A little later he said:
'After so much tapasya, austerity, I have known that the highest truth is this: "He is present in all beings. These are all the manifested forms of Him. There is no other God to seek for! He alone is worshipping God, who serves all beings."'
In this exhortation is found Vivekananda's
message in all its vividness. These words are addressed to India
and the Western world alike. The west, too, has its pariahs.
He who exploits another man, near or distant, offends
God and will pay for it sooner or later. All men are sons of
the same God, all bear within them the same God. He
who wishes to serve must serve man β and in the first
instance, man in the humblest, poorest, most degraded form.
Only by breaking down the barriers between man and man
can one usher in the kingdom of heaven on earth.
There were moments when Vivekananda felt
gloomy. His body was wasting away, and only a few young men
came forward to help him in his work. He wanted more
of them who, fired with indomitable faith in God and
in themselves, would renounce everything for the welfare
of others. He used to say that with a dozen such people
he could divert into a new channel the whole
thought-current of the country. Disregarding his physical suffering,
he constantly inspired his disciples to cultivate this new faith.
Thus we see him, one day, seated on a canvas cot
under the mango tree in the courtyard of the
monastery. Sannyasins and brahmacharins about him were busy
doing their daily duties. One was sweeping the courtyard with
a big broom. Swami Premananda, after his bath, was
climbing the steps to the shrine. Suddenly Swami
Vivekananda's eyes became radiant. Shaking with emotion, he said to
a disciple:
'Where will you go to seek Brahman? He is
immanent in all beings. Here, here is the visible Brahman! Shame
on those who, neglecting the visible Brahman, set their
minds on other things! Here is the visible Brahman before you
as tangible as a fruit in one's hand! Can't you see?
Here β here β is Brahman!'
These words struck those around him with a kind
of electric shock. For a quarter of an hour they remained
glued to the spot, as if petrified. The broom in the hand of
the sweeper stopped. Premananda fell into a trance.
Everyone experienced an indescribable peace. At last the Swami
said to Premananda, 'Now go to worship.'
The brother disciples tried to restrain the
Swami's activities, especially instruction to visitors and seekers.
But he was unyielding. 'Look here!' he said to them one
day. 'What good is this body? Let it go in helping others. Did
not the Master preach until the very end? And shall I
not do the same? I do not care a straw if the body goes.
You cannot imagine how happy I am when I find earnest
seekers after truth to talk to. In the work of waking up Atman
in my fellow men I shall gladly die again and again!'
Till the very end the Swami remained the great
leader of the monastery, guiding with a firm hand the details
of its daily life, in spite of his own suffering. He insisted
upon thorough cleanliness and examined the beds to see
that they were aired and properly taken care of. He drew up
a weekly time-table and saw that it was
scrupulously observed. The classes on the Vedas and the Puranas
were held daily, he himself conducting them when his
health permitted. He discouraged too much ritualism in
the chapel. He warned the monks against
exaggerated sentimentalism and narrow sectarianism.
But the leader kept a stern watch on the practice
of daily meditation on the part of the inmates of
the monastery. The bell sounded at fixed hours for meals,
study, discussion, and meditation. About three months before
his death he made it a rule that at four o'clock in the
morning a hand-bell should be rung from room to room to
awaken the monks. Within half an hour all should be gathered
in the chapel to meditate. But he was always before them.
He got up at three and went to the chapel, where he sat
facing the north, meditating motionless for more than two
hours. No one was allowed to leave his seat before the Swami
set the example. As he got up, he chanted softly, 'Siva!
Siva!' Bowing to the image of Sri Ramakrishna, he would
go downstairs and pace the courtyard, singing a song
about the Divine Mother or Siva. Naturally his presence in the
chapel created an intense spiritual atmosphere.
Swami Brahmananda said: 'Ah! One at once becomes absorbed
if one sits for meditation in company with Naren! I do
not feel this when I sit alone.'
Once, after an absence of several days on account
of illness, he entered the chapel and found only two
monks there. He became annoyed; in order to discipline
the absentees he forbade them to eat their meals at
the monastery. They had to go out and beg their food. He
did not spare anyone, even a beloved brother disciple for
whom he cherished the highest respect and who happened to
be absent from the chapel that morning.
Another day, he found a brother disciple,
Swami Shivananda, in bed at the hour of meditation. He said
to the latter 'Brother! I know you do not need
meditation. You have already realized the highest goal through
the grace of Sri Ramakrishna. But you should daily
meditate with the youngsters in order to set an example to them.'
From that day on, Shivananda, whether ill or
well, always communed with God during the early hours of
the morning. In his old age, when it became
physically impossible for him to go to the chapel, he used to sit on
his bed for meditation.
But the Swami, preoccupied as he was with
the training of his Indian disciples, never forgot his
Western ones. Their welfare, too, was always in his thought
and prayer.
To Miss MacLeod he wrote on June 14, 1901:
Well, Joe, keep health and spirits
up....Gloire et honneur await you β and mukti. The
natural ambition
of woman is, through marriage, to climb up
leaning upon a man; but those days are gone. You shall
be great without the help of any man, just as you
are, plain, dear Joe β our Joe, everlasting Joe....
We have seen enough of this life not to care
for any of its bubbles, have we not, Joe? For months I
have been practising to drive away all sentiments;
therefore I stop here, and good-bye just now. It was
ordained by Mother that we should work together; it has
been already for the good of many; it shall be for the
good of many more. So let it be. It is useless planning
useless high flights; Mother will find her own
way...rest assured.
To Mary Hale, on August 27, 1901 he wrote with his usual wit:
I would that my health were what you
expected β at least to be able to write you a long letter. It is
getting worse, in fact, every day β and so many
complications and botherations without that, I have ceased to
notice it at all.
I wish you all joy in your lovely
Suisse chalet β splendid health, good appetite, and
a light study
of Swiss or other antiquities just to liven things up a
bit. I am so glad that you are breathing the free air of
the mountains, but sorry that Sam is not in the best
of health. Well, there is no anxiety about it; he
has naturally such a fine physique.
'Woman's moods and man's luck β the
gods themselves do not know, not to speak of men.'
My instincts may be very feminine β but what I am
exercised with just this moment is that you get a
little bit of manliness about you. Oh! Mary, your
brain, health, beauty, everything, is going to waste just
for the lack of that one essential β assertion of
individuality. Your haughtiness, spirit, etc. are all
nonsense β only mockery. You are at best a boarding-school
girl β no backbone! no backbone!
Alas! this lifelong leading-string business !
This is very harsh, very brutal β but I can't help it. I
love you, Mary β sincerely, genuinely. I can't cheat you
with namby-pamby sugar candies. Nor do they ever
come to me.
Then again, I am a dying man; I have no time
to fool in. Wake up, girl! I expect now from you letters
of the right slashing order. Give it right straight β I
need a good deal of rousing....
I am in a sense a retired man. I don't keep
much note of what is going on about the Movement.
Then the Movement is getting bigger and it is
impossible for one man to know all about it minutely. I now
do nothing except try to eat and sleep and nurse my
body the rest of the time.
Good-bye, dear Mary. Hope we shall meet
again somewhere in this life β but meeting or no meeting,
I remain ever your loving brother, Vivekananda.
To his beloved disciple Nivedita he wrote on
February 12, 1902: 'May all powers come unto you! May
Mother Herself be your hands and mind! It is immense
power β irresistible β that I pray for you, and, if possible, along
with it infinite peace....
'If there was any truth in Sri Ramakrishna, may
He take you into His leading, even as He did me, nay,
a thousand times more!'
And again, to Miss MacLeod: 'I can't, even
in imagination, pay the immense debt of gratitude I owe
you. Wherever you are you never forget my welfare; and
there, you are the only one that bears all my burdens, all my
brutal outbursts....'
The sun, enveloped in a golden radiance, was fast
descending to the horizon. The last two months of the
Swami's life on earth had been full of events foreshadowing
the approaching end. Yet few had thought the end so near.
Soon after his return from Varanasi the Swami
greatly desired to see his sannyasin disciples and he wrote to
them to come to the Belur Math, even if only for a short
time. 'Many of his disciples from distant parts of the world,'
writes Sister Nivedita, 'gathered round the Swami. Ill as he
looked, there was none probably who suspected how near the
end had come. Yet visits were paid and farewells exchanged
that it had needed voyages half round the world to make.'
More and more the Swami was seen to free
himself from all responsibilities, leaving the work to other
hands. 'How often,' he said, 'does a man ruin his disciples
by remaining always with them ! When men are once
trained, it is essential that their leader leave them, for without
his absence they cannot develop themselves.' 'Plants,' he
had said some time before, 'always remain small under a
big tree.' Yet the near and dear ones thought that he
would certainly live three or four years more.
He refused to express any opinion on the question
of the day. 'I can no more enter into outside affairs,' he said; 'I
am already on the way.' On another occasion he said:
'You may be right; but I cannot enter any more into these
matters. I am going down into death.' News of the world met
with but a far-away rejoinder from him.
On May 15, 1902, he wrote to Miss MacLeod,
perhaps for the last time: 'I am somewhat better, but of course
far from what I expected. A great idea of quiet has come
upon me. I am going to retire for good β no more work for me.
If possible, I will revert to my old days of begging. All
blessings attend you, Joe; you have been a good angel to me.'
But it was difficult for him to give up what had
been dearer to him than his life: the work. On the last
Sunday before the end he said to one of his disciples: 'You
know the work is always my weak point. When I think
that might come to an end, I am all undone.' He
could easily
withdraw from weakness and attachment, but the work still
retained its power to move him.
Sri Ramakrishna and the Divine Mother
preoccupied his mind. He acted as if he were the child of the Mother
or the boy playing at the feet of Sri Ramakrishna at
Dakshineswar. He said, 'A great tapasya and meditation has
come upon me, and I am making ready for death.'
His disciples and spiritual brothers were worried
to see his contemplative mood. They remembered the
words of Sri Ramakrishna that Naren, after his mission
was completed, would merge for ever into samadhi, and
that he would refuse to live in his physical body if he
realized who he was. A brother monk asked him one day,
quite casually, 'Do you know yet who you are?' The
unexpected reply, 'Yes, I now know!' awed into silence
everyone present. No further question was asked. All remembered
the story of the great nirvikalpa samadhi of Naren's
youth, and how, when it was over, Sri Ramakrishna had said:
'Now the Mother has shown you everything. But this
realization, like the jewel locked in a box, will be hidden away
from you and kept in my custody. I will keep the key with
me. Only after you have fulfilled your mission on this
earth will the box be unlocked, and you will know everything
as you have known now.'
They also remembered that in the cave of
Amarnath, in the summer of 1898, he had received the grace of
Siva β not to die till he himself should will to do so. He was
looking death in the face unafraid as it drew near.
Everything about the Swami in these days
was deliberate and significant, yet none could apprehend
its true import. People were deceived by his outer
cheerfulness. From the beginning of June he appeared to
be regaining his health.
One day, about a week before the end, he bade
a disciple bring him the Bengali almanac. He was
seen several times on subsequent days studying the
book intently, as if he was undecided about something he
wanted to know. After the passing away, the brother monks
and disciples realized that he had been debating about the
day when he should throw away the mortal body.
Ramakrishna, too, had consulted the almanac before his death.
Three days before the mahasamadhi,
Vivekananda pointed out to Swami Premananda a particular spot on
the monastery grounds where he wished his body to
be cremated.
On Wednesday the Swami fasted, following
the orthodox rule: it was the eleventh day of the moon. Sister
Nivedita came to the monastery to ask him some
questions about her school; but he was not interested and
referred her to some other Swamis. He insisted, however, on
serving Nivedita the morning meal. To quote the Sister's words:
Each dish, as it was offered β boiled seeds of
the jack-fruit, boiled potatoes, plain rice, and
ice-cold milk β formed the subject of playful chat; and
finally, to end the meal, he himself poured the water over
her hands, and dried them with a towel.
'It is I who should do these things for
you, Swamiji! Not you for me!' was the protest
naturally offered. But his answer was startling in its
solemnity β 'Jesus washed the feet of his disciples!'
Something checked the answer, 'But that was
the last time!' as it rose to the lips, and the words
remained unuttered. This was well. For here also, the time
had come.
There was nothing sad or grave about the
Swami during these days. Efforts were made not to tire
him. Conversations were kept as light as possible, touching
only upon the pet animals that surrounded him, his
garden experiments, books, and absent friends. But all the
while one was conscious of a luminous presence of which
the Swami's bodily form seemed only a shadow or
symbol. The members of the monastery had never felt so
strongly as now, before him, that they stood in the presence of
an infinite light; yet none was prepared to see the end so
soon, least of all on that Friday, July the Fourth, on which
he appeared so much stronger and healthier than he had
been for years.
On the supreme day, Friday, he rose very early.
Going to the chapel, alone, he shut the windows and bolted
the doors, contrary to his habit, and meditated for three
hours. Descending the stairs of the shrine, he sang a beautiful
song about Kali:
Is Kali, my Mother, really black?
The Naked One, though black She seems,
Lights the Lotus of the heart.
Men call Her black, but yet my mind
Will not believe that She is so:
Now She is white, now red, now blue;
Now She appears as yellow, too.
I hardly know who Mother is,
Though I have pondered all my life:
Now Purusha, now Prakriti,
And now the Void, She seems to be.
To meditate on all these things
Confounds poor Kamalakanta's wits.
Then he said, almost in a whisper: 'If there
were another Vivekananda, then he would have
understood what this Vivekananda has done! And yet β how
many Vivekanandas shall be born in time!'
He expressed the desire to worship Mother Kali at
the Math the following day, and asked two of his disciples
to procure all the necessary articles for the ceremony.
Next he asked the disciple Suddhananda to read a passage
from the Yajurveda with the commentary of a
well-known expositor. The Swami said that he did not agree with
the commentator and exhorted the disciple to give a
new interpretation of the Vedic texts.
He partook of the noon meal with great relish,
in company with the members of the Math, though
usually, at that time, he ate alone in his room because of his
illness. Immediately afterwards, full of life and humour, he
gave lessons to the brahmacharins for three hours on
Sanskrit grammar. In the afternoon he took a walk for about
two miles with Swami Premananda and discussed his plan
to start a Vedic College in the monastery.
'What will be the good of studying the
Vedas?' Premananda asked.
'It will kill superstition,' Swami Vivekananda said.
On his return the Swami inquired very
tenderly concerning every member of the monastery. Then he
conversed for a long time with his companions on the rise
and fall of nations. 'India is immortal,' he said, 'if she
persists in her search for God. But if she goes in for politics
and social conflict, she will die.'
At seven o'clock in the evening the bell rang
for worship in the chapel. The Swami went to his room
and told the disciple who attended him that none was to
come to him until called for. He spent an hour in meditation
and telling his beads, then called the disciple and asked him
to open all the windows and fan his head. He lay down
quietly on his bed and the attendant thought that he was
either sleeping or meditating.
At the end of an hour his hands trembled a little
and he breathed once very deeply. There was a silence for
a minute or two, and again he breathed in the same
manner. His eyes became fixed in the centre of his
eyebrows, his face assumed a divine expression, and eternal
silence fell.
'There was,' said a brother disciple of the Swami,
'a little blood in his nostrils, about his mouth, and in his
eyes.' According to the Yoga scriptures, the life-breath of an
illumined yogi passes out through the opening on the top
of the head, causing the blood to flow in the nostrils and
the mouth.
The great ecstasy took place at ten minutes past
nine. Swami Vivekananda passed away at the age of
thirty-nine years, five months, and twenty-four days, thus
fulfilling his own prophecy: 'I shall not live to be forty years old.'
The brother disciples thought that he might have
fallen into samadhi, and chanted the Master's name to bring
back his consciousness. But he remained on his back motionless.
Physicians were sent for and the body was
thoroughly examined. In the doctor's opinion life was only
suspended; artificial respiration was tried. At midnight,
however, Swami Vivekananda was pronounced dead, the
cause, according to medical science, having been apoplexy
or sudden failure of the heart. But the monks were
convinced that their leader had voluntarily cast off his body
in samadhi, as predicted by Sri Ramakrishna.
In the morning people poured in from all
quarters. Nivedita sat by the body and fanned it till it was
brought down at 2 p.m. to the porch leading to the courtyard.
It was covered with ochre robes and decorated with
flowers. Incense was burnt and a religious service was
performed with lights, conch-shells, and bells. The brother monks
and disciples took their final leave and the procession
started, moving slowly through the courtyard and across the
lawn, till it reached the vilva tree near the spot where the
Swami himself had desired his body to be cremated.
The funeral pyre was built and the body
was consigned to the flames kindled with sandalwood.
Across the Ganga, on the other bank, Ramakrishna had
been cremated sixteen years before.
Nivedita began to weep like a child, rolling on
the ground. Suddenly the wind blew into her lap a piece
of the ochre robe from the pyre, and she received it as
a blessing. It was dusk when the flames subsided. The
sacred relics were gathered and the pyre was washed with
the water of the Ganga. The place is now marked by a
temple, the table of the altar standing on the very spot where
the Swami's body rested in the flames.
Gloom and desolation fell upon the monastery.
The monks prayed in the depths of their hearts: 'O Lord!
Thy will be done!' But deep beneath their grief all felt that
this was not the end. The words of the leader, uttered
long before his death, rang in their ears:
'It may be that I shall find it good to get outside
my body β to cast it off like a worn-out garment. But I
shall not cease to work. I shall inspire men everywhere,
until the world shall know that it is one with God.'
And: 'May I be born again and again, and
suffer thousands of miseries, so that I may worship the only
God that exists, the only God I believe in, the sum total of all
souls.'
For centuries to come people everywhere will
be inspired by Swami Vivekananda's message: O man!
first realize that you are one with
Brahman β aham Brahmasmi β and then realize that
the whole
universe is verily the
same Brahman β sarvam khalvidam Brahma.