Vivekananda VIVEKANANDA is the
embodiment of the newly awakened, heroic and eternal soul of nations. Or he is, as it
were, the Indra of the Vedas. Panis had, removed the Sun and concealed him in a
cave. Indra cleaved through the rocks and rescued him from the robbers and
raised him from the darkness to the heavens above. So runs the mythological
story. In the same way, Vivekananda brought Many
had preceded him with the message of the awakening of
Page – 230 vision. The seer-vision of
Vivekananda cast aside all veils and non-essentials and penetrated straight
into the soul of Hosts
of seers and saints had invoked the awakening dawn, but no sooner did Vivekananda
utter, "Awake, Mother, awake," than It was all due to
Vivekananda that on the life-plane of Vivekananda's
was the creation that was instinct with the impulsion of life and it flowed in
currents of power. It was not his mission to give an actual form to the
creation of a well-built and lovely external image. Vivekananda diffused his
inspiration and illumination over the firmament and set the country's
heart-strings vibrating. That is why we do not find anything static in his
creation. He has sketched many forms and has pointed out many a line of
multiple beauty. But these were merely constructive hints and suggestions. If
we adhere to anyone of them in toto
we shall be cramping
Page – 231 and limiting the real
Vivekananda. Even the philosophical truths and the conclusions he arrived at
and the spiritual secrets he revealed should not be regarded as something final
and irrefutable, for Vivekananda's advent was not meant for formulating a new
scripture. He did not take upon himself the burden of constructing the body,
the outer shape. The first vibrant throb of the descent of the soul into life
which is the source of all external creation, the awakening of the individual
soul to its real nature which is divine – this constitutes the real Vivekananda.
The first requisite is to be awakened in one's own self, to be able to feel an
altogether new flow-tide in life-power. The thing next to be done, the power
that will organise and regulate this awakened life and its activities, is a
matter for the future. All problems will have their infallible solutions as the
inevitable result of the powerful awakening of the soul when achieved. These
problems can be solved in various ways and Vivekananda has given countless
instances of them. He did not consider it at all necessary for his work to
evaluate, harmonise and organise his solutions. In the midst of various
contradictory and disorganised conclusions Vivekananda had only one word to
say: "This self is not to be attained by the weakling." Vivekananda
was not a householder, yet he was not a sannyasin. He was a seeker after
spirituality; nevertheless his patriotism had no parallel. Vivekananda told the
youths of He
was a votary of the Upanishads, not because the
Page – 232 Upanishads embody the deep
and subtle mysteries of the spiritual realm, but because of the fire of
strength they emit, the lightning that strikes and awakens in man the presence
of the Brahman, and because the Upanishads alone have the hardihood to declare,
"Thou art That." In
his philosophical views, Vivekananda subscribed to the doctrine of Maya, but in
practice Karmayoga was the motto of his life. According to him, the true
Mayavada is freedom from the bondage of limitation, the backward pull of
attachment – a sense of infinity which sunders the knots of the heart and
before which the entire world appears to be quite insignificant, a mere toy in
one's palm to play with. Therefore Vivekananda's conception of the Brahman is
totally different from the static, immobile and the infinite Void of Shankara.
He looked upon the Brahman as absolute Power. The Brahman signifies the full
glory and magnificence of the soul of man. He has viewed the static Brahman too
with an eye of appreciation, because its immobility comprises perfected power
self-absorbed. He aspired for the Infinite Void as well. For the individual
soul feels a unique and powerful urge to identify itself with the Infinite
Void. Vivekananda has sung the glory of renunciation as a source of strength.
But as a matter of fact, his nature was that of a man poised in meditation and
yet not averse to action. He wanted action founded on the Brahman, what he
called practical Vedanta. Vivekananda sought to establish The
eternal power of the Brahman residing in the soul of It
is thus that Vivekananda has placed
Page – 233 of the Brahman. He has
laid stress on the Brahman even in
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