Pondicherry
SRI Aurobindo came to
Pondicherry¹ and took shelter here. We might say of course from another point
of view that it was he who gave shelter to The
place was so quiet that we can hardly imagine now what it was really like. It
was not quiet, it was actually dead; they used to call it a dead city. There
was hardly any traffic, particularly in the area where we lived, and after dusk
there was not a soul stirring. It is no wonder they should say, "Sri
Aurobindo has fixed upon a cemetery for his sadhana." It
was a cemetery indeed. Whilst the Indian nationalist movement had been flooding
the whole country, nothing of that regenerating flood could find an entry here,
except for one or two individuals who had felt a touch. It was like a backwater
of the sea, a stagnant pool by the shore. There was here no such thing as a
public life or a youth movement or any kind of collective effort or an experiment
in educational reform – there was no sign whatsoever of an awakening to life. A cemetery it was no doubt, but one with its
full complement of ghosts and ghouls. In the first rank of these ghouls were the ruffian bands.
¹ In 1910.
Page –
400 Such creatures can appear
only in a highly tamasic environment. For, the greater the depth of inertia
the more is the need for keen rajasic excitement followed immediately by the
silence of sleep. The
ruffian bands – known locally as bandes in French – were a peculiar
institution now almost broken up. The French regime in These ruffian bands – these
ghouls I was going to say – turned against us too on more than one occasion.
Let me explain in a little more detail. Soon
after Sri Aurobindo came, he realised that a firm seat must be established
here, an unshakable foundation for his sadhana and siddhi, for
the path and the goal. He was to build up on the ever-shifting sands of the
shore a firm and strong edifice, a
Page – 401 Puranas and other
scriptures that whenever and wherever a sage or a Rishi sat down to his
meditation and sadhana, there rushed' upon him at once a host of evil spirits
to break up his work? They seemed to have a special liking for Rishi's flesh. Those
who tried most to stop Sri Aurobindo from settling down and were ever on the
alert to move him from his seat were the British authorities. The British
Government in At one time, they made up their minds that Sri Aurobindo
should be kidnapped in a car with the help of one of the chiefs of the local
"bandes". We had to patrol all night the house in which Sri Aurobindo
lived, lest there should be a sudden attack. I gather the ringleader behind
this move showed repentance later and said that to act against a holy man and
yogi was a great sin and that a curse might fall on the evil-doer himself. Nevertheless,
force having failed they now tried fraud. An attempt was made to frame a
trumped-up charge at law. Some of the local "ghouls" were made to
help forge the documents – some photographs and maps and charts along with a
few letters – which were to prove that we had been engaged in a conspiracy for
dacoity and murder. The papers were left in a well in the compound of one of
our men, then
Page – 402 they were
"discovered" after a search by the police. The French police had even
entered Sri Aurobindo's residence for a search. But when their Chief found
there were Latin and Greek books lying about on his desk, he was so taken aback
that he could only blurt out, . "Il sait du latin, it sait du grec /" –
"He knows Latin, he knows Greek!" – and then he left with all his
men. How could a man who knew Latin and Greek ever commit any mischief? In
fact, the French Government had not been against us, indeed they helped us as
far as they could. We were looked upon as their guests and as political
refugees, it was a matter of honour for them to give us their protection. And
where it is a question of honour, the French as a race are willing to risk
anything: they still fight duels-in In
addition to force and fraud, the British Government did not hesitate to make
use of temptation as well. They sent word to Sri Aurobindo which they followed
up by messenger, to say that if he were to return to Afterwards
came a more serious attack, perhaps the one most fraught with danger. The First
World War was on.
Page – 403 they must
do something drastic about their political refugees. Either they should hand
them over to the British, or else let them be deported out of I
can recall very well that scene. Sri Aurobindo was seated in his room in what
was later called "Guest House", Rue Francois Martin. We too had come.
Two or three of the Tamil nationalist leaders who had sought refuge in The
story of Danton comes to mind – Danton the leader of the French Revolution. For
a long time he had been on the crest of the wave of revolution, a leader
revered of all. The wheel of his fortune was now on the downward turn and
another party, the extremists, had reached the crest. Orders were out for his
arrest, which meant the guillotine. His friends rushed to him to give advice.
"Flee, Danton, flee," they said, "there is yet time, flee."
Danton was unmoved and he replied in a calm and quiet manner. "That cannot
be," he said. "On n'emporte pas Ie pays à la semelle de ses souliers"
– "You cannot carry the country on the heels of your shoes." The
Ashram has of course been subjected to fresh attacks
Page – 404 later, and to some of
these many of you have been witness. But by then the Ashram had its foundations
well laid and the edifice had risen high. But in the days of which I have been
speaking there was no such thing as a foundation yet. Today the Ashram stands
like a banyan tree with head erect and branches spread all over; its body is
solid and immovable, the roots go deep and strong and firm. An attack may
dislodge or even break a few leaves and branches, but, nothing more serious
can happen. But in those days there was a possibility that the whole tree might
get uprooted and such attempts too were there. The whole endeavour then was to
find a standing-room. Sri Aurobindo wanted, as the Vedic Rishis before him had
done, to find a footing where there was none, apade pada-dhatave. In those
days there was in the College de France in According
to ancient tradition, the Rishi Agastya came to the South to spread the Vedic
lore and the Aryan discipline. His seems to have been the first project for
the infusion of Aryan culture into the Dravidian civilisation. Many of you may
here recall the lines of Hemchandra the Bengali poet:
Page – 405 Arise, O Mountain, arise, Agastya has returned; A new sign has been
floated, There's a racing flood of
Light; And lo, the sky holds a new splendour of the Sun... Hold this light, O
Mountain, That it spread a new Dawn
over the land; May it hold the new
Knowledge, May it acquire a new life; Maya new Dream come to us
all. Raise, O Mountain, your
blue dragon-mass. The
legend goes that as Agastya journeyed South, the Vindhya mountains bent low to
give him passage, and that they have remained low ever since and would continue
in that posture until the Rishi came back. In connection with this story about
the Vedic Rishi Agastya, one is almost automatically reminded of the endeavour
of Sri Aurobindo. Like Agastya he journeyed South and set up a permanent seat
here to emanate a new Light – he was even known in these parts as Uttara Yogi,
the Yogi of the North. In his lines of work and sadhana too we find a strange
affinity with Agastya's effort, at least in one respect. Agastya had been for
years driving deep into the earth, in the abyss of the subconscient, for he
nourished both .the worlds, earth and heaven; he along with his companion
Lopamudra had been striving for victory here upon earth itself, In their battle
and the sacrifice with its hundred fiery tongues, jayavedatra satanithamajim,
yat samyañca mithunababhyajava; for the effort that had the
protection of the gods could never, fail, na mrsa srantam
yadavanti devah. To carry the effort of the Vedic Rishis to a greater
fulfilment, to make the victory complete in a hundred, nay, in a thousand ways,
satanitham, sahasranitham, – this precisely was Sri
Aurobindo's aim.
Page – 406 Sri
Aurobindo was in The
site once chosen and. the seat established, Sri Aurobindo had now to prepare
the ground. There were, as I have said, shifting sands all around symbolising a
changing world where all is in a state of flux, yat kiñca jagatyam
jagat. All that had to be cleared and firm ground reached. He spent many
long years, even as Agastya had done, in this spade-work. For he was to erect a
huge edifice, a That
needed a solid, firm and immovable foundation. For this .he had to dig into the
farthest abyss, to fix, one might say, the "five supporting pillars".
All this he did single-handed during the first four years, from 1910 to 1914.
Then the Mother came. And although that was for a short time, it was then that
the plans were clearly laid for the thing that was to be and the shape it was
to take,
Page – 407 – this New Creation of
theirs. The
work of building the foundation took him till 1920. From 1920 to 1926 he worked
with the Mother in giving it strength, testing it and making it fit and
adequate for carrying the future load. In
1926 there began the construction of the superstructure, and along
with that proceeded the work of installing the presiding Deity. This work of
installation took twelve years to complete and the next twelve were given to
making it permanent. His task done, Sri Aurobindo stepped aside, for a new
task, for taking up another line of work. But to this foundation he lent the
entire strength of his bare back, that his work and new creation should stand
immortal and with its head erect. All
that Sri Aurobindo had wanted to do with his body was to instal permanently in
an earthly form the Mother Divine. This
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