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SRI RAMAKRISHNA : [1836-1886]
Sri Ramakrishna, who was born in 1836 and passed away in 1886,
represents the very core of the spiritual realizations of the seers
and sages of India. His whole life was literally an uninterrupted
contemplation of God. He reached a depth of God-consciousness that
transcends all time and place and has a universal appeal. Seekers of
God of all religions feel irresistibly drawn to his life and
teachings. Sri Ramakrishna, as a silent force, influences the
spiritual thought currents of our time. He is a figure of recent
history and his life and teachings have not yet been obscured by
loving legends and doubtful myths. Through his God-intoxicated life
Sri Ramakrishna proved that the revelation of God takes place at all
times and that God-realization is not the monopoly of any particular
age, country, or people. In him, deepest spirituality and broadest
catholicity stood side by side. The God-man of nineteenth-century
India did not found any cult, nor did he show a new path to salvation.
His message was his God-consciousness. When God-consciousness falls
short, traditions become dogmatic and oppressive and religious
teachings lose their transforming power. At a time when the very
foundation of religion, faith in God, was crumbling under the
relentless blows of materialism and skepticism, Sri Ramakrishna,
through his burning spiritual realizations, demonstrated beyond doubt
the reality of God and the validity of the time-honored teachings of
all the prophets and saviors of the past, and thus restored the
falling edifice of religion on a secure foundation. Drawn by the
magnetism of Sri Ramakrishna's divine personality, people flocked to
him from far and near -- men and women, young and old, philosophers
and theologians, philanthropists and humanists, atheists and
agnostics, Hindus and Brahmos, Christians and Muslims, seekers of
truth of all races, creeds and castes. His small room in the
Dakshineswar temple garden on the outskirts of the city of Calcutta
became a veritable parliament of religions. Everyone who came to him
felt uplifted by his profound God-consciousness, boundless love, and
universal outlook. Each seeker saw in him the highest manifestation of
his own ideal. By coming near him the impure became pure, the pure
became purer, and the sinner was transformed into a saint. The
greatest contribution of Sri Ramakrishna to the modern world is his
message of the harmony of religions. To Sri Ramakrishna all religions
are the revelation of God in His diverse aspects to satisfy the
manifold demands of human minds. Like different photographs of a
building taken from different angles, different religions give us the
pictures of one truth from different standpoints. They are not
contradictory but complementary. Sri Ramakrishna faithfully practiced
the spiritual disciplines of different religions and came to the
realization that all of them lead to the same goal. Thus he declared,
"As many faiths, so many paths." The paths vary, but the goal remains
the same. Harmony of religions is not uniformity; it is unity in
diversity. It is not a fusion of religions, but a fellowship of
religions based on their common goal -- communion with God. This
harmony is to be realized by deepening our individual
God-consciousness. In the present-day world, threatened by nuclear war
and torn by religious intolerance, Sri Ramakrishna's message of
harmony gives us hope and shows the way. May his life and teachings
ever inspire us.
SRI SARADA DEVI, THE HOLY MOTHER [1853 - 1920]
"When Holy Mother came to Dakshineswar at the age of sixteen, Sri
Ramakrishna asked her whether she had come to pull him down to a
worldly life. Without hesitation she said, "No, I am here to help you
realize your Chosen Ideal." From then on, Holy Mother lived with Sri
Ramakrishna as his spiritual companion, devoted wife, disciple, and
always the nun. She was the embodiment of purity. Her mind was never
sullied by the faintest breath of worldliness, though she lived with
Sri Ramakrishna for the greater part of fourteen years. She never
missed communion with God, whom she described as lying in the palm of
her hand, though she was engaged day and night in various activities.
"Holy Mother was an unusual awakener of souls. With her disciples she
served as teacher, dissolving their doubts, as mother, who through
love and compassion won their hearts, and as the Divinity, who assured
them of liberation. Herself nearly illiterate, through simple words
she taught them the most profound truths. Her affectionate maternal
love tamed their rebellious spirits; but her great power lay in her
solicitude for all. Often she said, "I am the Mother, who will look
after them if not I ?" She encouraged them when they were depressed
because of slow spiritual progress, and she took upon herself their
sins and iniquities, suffering on that account.
"Holy Mother was conscious of her divine nature, but she rarely
expressed this awareness. For many years Sri Ramakrishna practiced
great austerities and formally renounced the world, but Holy Mother
lived as a simple householder, surrounded by quarrelsome and greedy
relatives. As a teacher she taught the realization of God alone is
real, and everything else, impermanent. The human body so treasured by
most people, survives cremations as only three pounds of ashes. Holy
Mother -- humility itself -- claimed that she was in no way different
from other devotees of the Master. Her disciples felt awed and
uplifted when she blessed them by touching their head with the same
hand which had touched the feet of God. She was fully aware of her
disciples' present limitations and their future possibilities. No one
went away from her with a downcast heart.
"The outstanding virtues of Indian womanhood are courage, serenity,
self-control, sweetness, compassion, wisdom, and an intuitive
relationship with God. Holy Mother possessed all these virtues. Since
the acquisition of such gifts is the dream of all women, Holy Mother
may aptly be seen as the symbol of aspiration of women everywhere.
SWAMI VIVEKANANDA, [1863-1902]
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, be 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 soulstirring 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-and those, too, in
the midst of acute physical suffering-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 Muller
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!''
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