 |
A SPEECH DELIVERED
ON 25 NOVEMBER 2004 DURING THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY CONVENTION
OF THE AKHIL BHARATIYA DARSHAN PARISHAD HELD AT THE SHRI SWAMINARAYAN
MANDIR, SHAHIBAUG, AMDAVAD. MORE THAN 200 PHILOSOPHERS FROM
ALL PARTS OF INDIA
HAD ATTENDED THE CONVENTION.
|
Introduction
To think is great, to live is greater and to inspire is the greatest
part of philosophy, for: the life of philosophy is philosophy in
life.
Philosophy in theory, in its pure form, is amazing and analytical,
like a diagnosis of a disease, but cannot cure the illness. While
philosophy in practice, in its applied form, is as tough as a treatment,
long and complex, it cures and transforms.
But who can take philosophy and give it life? Transmit it to the
masses, into the lives of millions who do not have any philosophical
outlook or acumen? Someone who is not only enlightened, but one
who can also enlighten.
There is a difference between: the enlightened and the enlightener
– one who can enlighten; the purified and the purifier –
one who can purify.
Emphasising these exclusive transforming and purifying powers of
the Satpurush or the enlightened Guru, Bhagwan Swaminarayan gives
a beautiful simile in Vachanamrut
Vartal-3: There are four types of spiritual people. One is like
a lamp flame, the second is like a blazing torch, the third is like
lightning, and the fourth is like the vadvanal fire (volcanic ocean
vents). He who is like a lamp flame is extinguished by the breeze
of worldly pleasures. He who is like a blazing torch is extinguished
by stronger gales of worldly pleasures. He who is like lightning
is not extinguished even by heavy rains in the form of maya. While,
the vadvanal fire, on the other hand, exists in the ocean without
being extinguished by the ocean water; it takes in the sea water
and returns it in the form of sweet water; which the clouds carry
and shower upon the world. Similarly, the great Purush, like the
vadvanal fire, transforms even the ‘salty’ lives who
are like the sea water, into ‘sweet’ lives… He
who is like the vadvanal fire is known as God’s Param Ekantik
Sant, who is perfectly God-realised.”
This scriptural truth is echoed in the experience of Dr. Subramaniam
of New York, the world renowned cardiac surgeon who had successfully
operated on Pramukh Swami Maharaj in 1998. Himself an agnostic who
worshipped work and karma alone, he shared his personal experience
of Pramukh Swami Maharaj’s enlightening powers with a fellow
professional, Dr. Atul Chokshi.
Dr. Subramaniam said, “You read the Gita daily, but today
I’ll show you someone who lives the Gita daily, and can help
you live it.”
The enlightened Guru ‘can help you live’ the scriptures,
primarily because he lives them and philosophically understands
their meanings. He is the living link, the live connection between
the metaphysical and the material world.
The Kathopanishad (I.3.2) describes such a Guru, who is Akshar,
as the bridge to Parabrahma – the Supreme Reality.
Yah seturijãnãnãm aksharam brahma yat param
That Akshar (Guru) is the bridge for those who worship Brahma (i.e.
Parabrahma).”
Hence, the enlightened Guru is the bridge between man and God, between
earth and heaven, between our inner and outer world, between the
spiritual and material world.
Pramukh Swami Maharaj, the Satpurush is the pure, living philosopher,
who is free from worldly desires, free from pain and suffering,
and is sthitpragna – forever fulfilled, balanced and blissful.
And he inspires and instills these inner values, which provide peace,
happiness and stability into the lives of all who associate with
him. This fully serves and fulfills the purpose of philosophy, which
is
Sukhdukhprãptiparihãrãrtham
For the attainment of bliss and liberation from suffering.
In his book Modern Man in Search of a Soul, psychologist and psychiatrist
Dr. Carl G. Jung concludes that a ‘spiritual outlook’
and a ‘real live guru’ are the necessities of our time
for inner stability and peace.
Citing his personal experience in his autobiography, Memories, Dreams,
Reflections, Dr. Jung, who himself had guided and treated thousands,
admits: “In my darkness (of mind) I could have wished for
nothing better than a real, live guru, someone possessing superior
knowledge and ability, who would have disentangled for me the involuntary
creations of my imagination.”
With depression predicted to become the second-most common disease
by 2020 and looming as one of the biggest threats to civilised society,
we may not have long to wait before ‘spiritual outlook’
or a ‘guru’ becomes a biological need for human survival.
Statistics are impossible to hide. A recent survey released in Geneva
by WHO shockingly revealed: “Suicide is a tragic global public
health problem. Worldwide more people die from suicide than from
all homicides and wars combined.”
Billions of dollars are spent in defense, security and police, not
just in one country but in all the nations on this earth. And yet
what kills us more, is our own mind, our thoughts, our instability,
inability to cope with the pressures of our environment. Spirituality
and philosophy not only can help, but have helped.
In the Bhagvad Gita it was Bhagwan Krishna’s personality and
applied philosophy that rescued Arjun from depression and death,
saving society from evil forces.
Similarly, Pramukh Swami Maharaj, as a real live guru who specialises
in inspiring and instilling spirituality, has become a limitless
source of peace and tranquility to over a million people. The lives
of his followers – satsangis – are the living proof
of the transmission of philosophy. Nothing could be more authentic
than examining the real-life incidents of these satsangis, of how
philosophy and spirituality have transformed and elevated their
lives and benefited the society they live in.
Their stories are true testimonies to the far-reaching spiritual
powers of the Guru in providing emotional stability, moral purity,
social responsibility and spiritual continuity.
Emotional Stability
Swamishri’s philosophical ideal: Paramatma is the all-doer
and provider of inner strength to cope with all controllable or
uncontrollable, individual or collective crises of life. Whether
it be a depressed student or a runaway child, a collapsed businessman
or a frustrated wife, a broken marriage or a loss of a job or a
death of a loved one, people overcome their emotional trials through
Swamishri’s care and counselling.
One historic account is the Ugandan exodus in 1972, when thousands
of wealthy, well-settled Indians were slaughtered, uprooted and
driven out, penniless with nowhere to run. Sir Charles Cunningham
describes in the foreword to Life and Philosophy of Shree Swaminarayan:
“We have seen recently, in a very striking way, how this ability
to draw strength from cultural and religious continuity can help
in facing the unpredictable trials of modern life. When nearly thirty
thousand people were suddenly expelled from Uganda and had to come,
often penniless, to start a new life in Great Britain their calmness
and dignity, their readiness to accept hardship, the uncomplaining
way in which so many of them who had known success and prosperity
began again at the bottom of the ladder, impressed us greatly. It
was evident that they had been sustained by a deep religious faith
which had enabled them to accept adversity and to rise above it.”
Many of these were Swaminarayan devotees. Not only did they survive
as refugees, but soon restored their wealth and status, overcame
this emotional nightmare, and in 1995 built Shri Swaminarayan Mandir
in Neasden, London, hailed as the first and the largest traditional
Hindu mandir in the West by the Guinness World Records. Though architecturally,
this mandir is considered a wonder of the modern world, it is a
greater wonder of unflagging spiritual faith; a timeless symbol
of the love, devotion and dedication of simple devotees towards
their God and Guru, and their miraculous story of resilience and
resurgence.
Moral Purity
Swamishri’s philosophical ideal: Paramatma is the all-knower
generates a conscience of uprightness, honesty and unshakeable integrity.
The hallmark of a BAPS Swaminarayan devotee, whether a child, youth
or adult, is his or her moral strength.
Incidents abound: A poor boy, Manish Gohil, of Mumbai on his regular
round of collecting waste newspapers for BAPS paper re-cycling project
discovered a thick bundle of money mistakenly discarded in the heap
of newspapers. Without touching a note, not even to count it, he
knocked on the owner’s door to return the money. Even the
owner couldn’t believe the honesty of the boy who declined
to accept any award or recognition. The amount was Rs. 40,000!
From Narsinh Solanki of Ahmedabad, working as a simple electricity
meter reader who refused to accept bribe to a devotee girl in Nadiad
taking her final secondary exams who declined to cheat and copy
despite the fact that the rest of the class was freely copying;
one wonders how teenagers like Vipul Patel, studying at Harvard,
and students like Amar, Yogen and Sanjay at Oxford, Cambridge and
IIT willingly stop watching films and television for life! And how
officers like Prakash Mehta in the US Army and many more in multi-national
corporations continue to avoid meat and alcohol despite being posted
in remote outposts. Or for that matter, why educated young men,
of varying backgrounds, intellects and talents are inspired to embrace
the most sublime levels of morality in the form of renunciation.
The answer they all give – Swamishri’s life!
Social Responsibility
Swamishri’s philosophical ideal: Paramatma is in everyone
and everything.
Focusing on this, Swamishri has groomed his devotees to respect
and serve others. To accept and appreciate others. To rise above
the differences of personal beliefs and backgrounds, social castes
and communities and serve society with dignity and responsibility.
Swamishri has created a committed volunteer force of 55,000 selfless
volunteers who serve with devotion, dedication and almost zero administrative
cost. Through a worldwide network of 9,000 centres and a million
members, BAPS performs over 160 humanitarian services in areas as
diverse as environmental, educational, medical, tribal, social,
cultural and spiritual. It is one of the select few NGOs of India
that are affiliated to the United Nations for its international
services.
To cite a recent example: in hours after the Gujarat earthquake
on 26 January 2001, Swamishri was amongst the first to send in volunteers
and supplies. Over 6,500 volunteers reached 409 affected villages,
rescuing victims, distributing hundreds of tonnes of relief supplies,
serving 1.8 million hot meals, finally constructing 49 schools for
15,000 students and rehabilitating 15 villages by building and rehabilitating
4,190 houses. Over 91,000 patients were provided free medical treatment
while 2,500 were given employment assistance. It is regarded as
perhaps the largest and most humane social responsibility shouldered
by a socio-spiritual NGO.
Apart from natural disasters, Swamishri’s care has saved society
from man-made disasters, more than many times. When two warring
clans of Odarka and Kukkad, and its surrounding 44 villages could
not make peace for more than two centuries and continued to kill
each other with deep hatred, Swamishri camped in these remote villages
of Bhavnagar District, counselled and explained to the village chiefs
and clans, and finally succeeded in helping them bury their past.
These hundreds of warring villagers made peace on 12 April 1990
and since then, not a single person has been killed due to this
ancestral enmity in the last 14 years!
One of most magnanimous and exemplary act of restraint and responsibility
by Swamishri and his satsangis, was the calm, controlled and peaceful
response to the inhuman terrorist attack on Akshardham on 24 September
2002. It helped dissolve fuming hatred, diffused the haunting threat
of mass riots and violence and restored peace and equilibrium in
Gujarat.
On 2 October 2004, Deepal Trevedie wrote in The Asian Age: “Gujarat
Regained: Akshardham has restored Gujarat’s pride in itself.
The Swaminarayan sect and the various swamis and sadhus associated
with it provided solace in a manner befitting their vocation. Pramukh
Swami is an influential figure and everyone, from President Abdul
Kalam to Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee, spoke to him within
an hour of the attack… He kept stressing on the need for peace.
The Swaminarayan saints stress that philosophy and spiritualism
have to be grounded in social realities. They cannot be dogmatic.
In retrospect, while the attack was unfortunate, Gujarat has been
able to send the right message to the world that it is not vulnerable
to fascist forces and that it wants peace... The Akshardham tragedy
has instilled a fresh sense of confidence that Gujarat need not
burn at every spark that is ignited.”
Speaking of peace and order, Swamishri has placed maximum responsibility
upon the family as the building block of society. To strengthen
the family, he has successfully introduced a unique concept of Ghar
Sabha – Family Assembly – wherein all the members of
the family sit together for half an hour everyday, for prayer, daily
talk and social time. It has dissolved prejudices, bridged minds
and saved marriages. In all, tens of thousands of family assemblies
are in practice.
What is more amazing are the philosophical and spiritual values
which Swamishri has been able to inspire take care of the complete
cycle of life – at all its stages – from children, teenagers
and youths to family men and senior citizens. Swamishri not only
takes care of life, but also takes care of death! The final moment
where only philosophy can penetrate.
Swamishri has created a feeling of spiritual continuity.
Spiritual Continuity
Swamishri’s philosophical ideal: I am atma and Paramatma is
eternally with me
Realising oneself as atma, which is not born and does not die, and
offering devotion to Paramatma creates an exalted spiritual state
that is way beyond the common, momentary experiences of meditation,
visions, and well-being. Through satsang and spiritual endeavours
people rise above worldly desires and fears! Even beyond the fear
of death.
Bhagwanji Mandavia, was a dynamic business administrator in Toronto.
Active in the Indo-Canada Federation, and guiding the Gujarati community,
Bhagwanji was enjoying success at its best. Then in 1985 he was
diagnosed as having blood cancer. Not disclosing it to anyone except
a close friend or two, he continued with his life. All throughout,
his satsang with Swamishri had strengthened him beyond belief. By
1988, he was hospitalised for a bone-marrow transplant. All the
pains and pressures of loneliness, illness, depression and death
were upon him. Still, his smile never lost its lustre nor did his
voice lose its vibrancy. No wonder, while he phoned his friends,
almost dying on his bed, they still thought Bhagwanji was in office!
His inner strength and stability is spelt in the reply he wrote
before his death to his brother in India who had expressed great
grief about his terminal illness!
“Physical pain comes to one and all. So one must never worry
about disease and death. One must never leave the refuge of a saint
like Pramukh Swami Maharaj in whom God resides. Our faith in God
and Swamiji should remain unshakeable.”
Among the devotees there is also the comfort of continuity which
spirituality alone can provide. Recently, on 31 May 2004, when the
only son of Yogendra Parmar, Shriji Parmar, died in a car accident
in New Jersey, the father telephoned Swamishri, “Swamiji,
my son was yours and God has taken him.” Completely composed,
without grieving, Yogendra asked Swamishri’s permission to
donate his son’s organs. Soon after performing the final rites,
the father returned to serve as a volunteer, saying: “I know
what God has willed has happened and my son’s atma is safe
in Akshardham, and he would want me to continue with serving others.”
Pramukh Swami Maharaj's Tireless Efforts
Behind such large-scale transformation of countless individuals
lies the tireless effort of Pramukh Swami Maharaj. Explaining that
the guru transforms the devotees through spiritual interaction in
three ways, Aksharbrahma Gunatitanand Swami gives a metaphor:
There are three types of birds – those that nurture their
eggs through their thoughts, those that do so through their vision
and those that do it under their wings.
The guru nurses the followers in all these ways. He sometimes inspires
through physical interaction, sometimes through indirect communication
and sometimes through inner consciousness. This explains how the
women devotees who never come into physical contact or direct communication
with Swamishri are inspired to follow a life brimming with devotion
and purity, which in many cases surpasses that of the men. It also
supports the fact that thousands of young and old BAPS followers,
in countries as far as America and Australia, observe strict spiritual
codes and feel close to Swamishri on a day-to-day basis.
Swamishri is 84 years old and to this day, he continues to travel
from home to home, hut to hut, not resting in one place, meeting,
counselling and addressing thousands daily. Also, through schools,
hospitals and hundreds of social projects, Swamishri serves humanity
day and night.
As rightly described in the Bhagvad Gita, (V.25), he is Sarvabhutahite
ratãhãh. "Totally immersed in the good of all
creatures." He lives by the words he often speaks, "In
the good of others lies our own, in the progress of others lies
our own."
He lives for others, not for himself. He lives within this world,
and by his personal example and presence, he elevates those who
associate with him beyond it, into the realms of highest righteousness.
This ability of Pramukh Swami Maharaj to inspire and instill philosophy
into the lives of common people and help transform, elevate and
enlighten the world around him has been realised and experienced
by reputable people, believers and non-believers alike:
In 1980, Bob Kaplan, solicitor-general of Canada, in his letter
to Pramukh Swami Maharaj emphasised his importance in this present
world, “You are good pious people. If the whole world took
you as an example it would be a better place, free of crime, of
war and self-destruction. I believe you have valid answers to life’s
toughest questions.”
On 8 February 2004, the President of India, Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam
in his public address recounted how Pramukh Swami Maharaj had guided
him to include a spiritual component in the five areas of development.
Then he narrated his personal experience of meeting Swamishri: “I
have met (and visited) in India almost all the religious places
and religious leaders. Every religion I visited looked like a beautiful
orchard. But when I came out of the religion, from the orchard,
I found that the orchards are all like islands. Each orchard, each
religion is beautiful but is an island. But, how do we connect the
religions? Compassion and love! A bridge we need. When I met Pramukh
Swami Maharaj... when I was with him for two hours, I got a feeling,
here is a Swamiji, a spiritual soul, who has got compassion and
love and spiritual force he was radiating from himself to others.
When the present day President sees Swamishri as a bridge between
all religions and all philosophies, the ancient words of the Mundakopanishad
(II.2.5) begin to reverberate: Amrutasyaisha setuhu. "He is
the immortal bridge."
The bridge that connects man with the Divine. This connection, this
power of elevation and transmission is the real measure of a true
Guru.
Aksharbrahma Gunatitanand Swami shows a simple, straightforward
way of evaluating a spiritual Guru: To know the worth of a Guru,
study the life of the Guru, the life of the Guru’s Guru and
the lives of the Guru’s disciples. Is he pure? Did he receive
his knowledge from a pure Guru? Can he transmit that purity to his
followers?
This is what makes Pramukh Swami Maharaj the perfect living philosopher
because he is the fifth Guru in the unbroken succession of God-realised
Sadhus established by Bhagwan Swaminarayan. Before him, were four
enlightened Gurus and around him, he has inspired and instilled
that same spirituality. He has taken pure philosophy out of the
scriptures and put it into the lives of millions.
Remember, philosophy is beautiful in the books, meaningful in the
mind, mystical in the heart, but miraculous in life! Philosophy
in its pure form has the energy to inspire, and in its applied form
has the power to transform. The reward of philosophy lies in its
application.
What good are great words, if unheard?
What good are great ideas, if unlived?
The purpose of philosophy is to use it to change our lives.