Vivekananda
From: http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/southasia/Religions/gurus/Vivek.html
As Narendra Nath Datta,
Swami Vivekananda was the chief disciple of Sri Ramakrishna. It
was Swami
Vivekananda who was to carry Ramakrishna's teachings to the West,
and who established the Ramakrishna Order, which today extends
over all of India, rendering invaluable service through its numerous
charitable
and cultural institutions. Narendra, or Naren as he was known,
was born on 12 January 1863 in Calcutta into a Kshatriya family.
Like
many other members of the modernizing Bengali middle-class, he
was an easy convert to the then dominant philosophies of utilitarianism
and social evolutionism associated with John Stuart Mill and Herbert
Spencer, respectively, and was, in the fashion of the day, a keen
agnostic. Likewise, he subscribed to the reformist ideals of the
Brahmo Samaj. He was a student at the University of Calcutta and
18 years old when he met Ramakrishna for the first time in 1881.
He visited Ramakrishna at Dakshineswar a few weeks later, and Ramakrishna
is reported to have said, "How is it possible that such a great
spiritual aspirant can live in Calcutta, the home of the worldly-
minded?" Naren says that Ramakrishna took him aside: his eyes
were streaming with tears of joy, and with great affection he spoke
to Naren as though they had always known each other, "You've
come so late! Was that right? Couldn't you have guessed how I've
been waiting for you? My eyes are nearly burned off, listening
to the talk of these worldly people."
Naren's doubt about Ramakrishna would not disappear, and perhaps
he feared that he would be drawn into the orbit of his lofty spiritual
presence. Not until a month had elapsed did he return to Dakshineswar.
Ramakrishna was in a "strange mood", Naren was to relate,
and he was apprehensive that Ramakrishna would once again enact
something crazy. Indeed, no sooner had that thought passed through
his mind than Ramakrishna placed his foot on Naren's body, and
Naren at once had a "wonderful experience." Naren was
to add:
My eyes were wide open, and I saw that everything in the room,
including the walls themselves, was whirling rapidly around and
receding, and at the same time, it seemed to me that my consciousness
of self, together with the entire universe, was about to vanish
into a vast, all-devouring void. This destruction of my consciousness
of self seemed to me to be the same thing as death. I felt that
death was right before me, very close. Unable to control myself,
I cried out loudly, 'Ah, what are you doing to me? Don't you know
I have my parents at home?' When the Master heard this, he gave
a loud laugh. Then, touching my chest with his hand, he said, 'All
right -- let it stop now. It needn't be done all at once. It will
happen in its own good time.' To my amaze- ment, this extraordinary
vision of mine vanished as suddenly as it had come. I returned
to my normal state and saw things inside and outside the room standing
stationary, as before.
Narendra (now Vivekananda) emerged as Ramakrishna's favorite disciple,
the chosen one, and at the master's death he was to lead the Order.
He established the Ramakrishna Mission in 1892 to propagate the
master's teachings, and a year later he decided to take these teachings
to the West. Vivekananda appeared in Chicago as the sole representative
of Hinduism at the World Parliament of Religions in 1893. The handsome "turbaned
monk from India" immediately attracted attention, and he gained
a distinguished following during his stay. While turning down an
offer from Harvard to teach Indian religions and philosophy, Vivekananda
lectured widely on the east coast and in the mid- West, and also
took trips to England and France. He had a triumphal return to
Calcutta in 1897, and he was to supervise the activities of the
Ramakrishna Mission. He presided over the construction of the Mission's
new headquarters at Belur Math. Vivekananda died on 4 July 1902.
Vivekananda is these days routinely described as a 'hero of modern
India'. He is reported to have said, in response to a query about
why India was under colonial rule, that India needed to pay more
attention to the three B's: beef, biceps, and the Bhagavad Gita.
Though Ramakrishna was undoubtedly a bhakta or devotee, Vivekananda
himself appears more as a karma yogi, and he was inclined to interpret
Krishna's teachings to Arjuna as call for Indians to renew their
masculinity and act with energy. In the nineteenth century, 'physical
culture' acquired a new-found prominence in Bengal, and there was
a widespread belief that vigorous exercise, as much as the eating
of meat, would provide a fresh burst of life to what Macaulay had
described as the 'feeble constitution' of the Bengali. It is certainly
arguable that Vivekananda ascribed to the colonial representation
of the Bengali/India as a man given to effeminacy and without the
'manly' characteristics so highly esteemed in Victorian England,
just as he perceived that Indian spirituality had been reduced
to devotionalism. On the other hand, the dichotomy of Western materialism
and Eastern spirituality appears often in his voluminous writings,
and it informed the lectures with which he regaled his audiences
in the West. It is no accident that he is now trumpeted as a figure
consonant with India's aspirations to be a strong nation-state,
and that his devotion to the motherland is summoned as a model
to India's youth. Vivekananda may not have been without a vision
of India's spiritual conquest of the world, and it is perhaps as
a testament to that highly problematic vision, which would embrace
the idea of a 'Greater India', that India recently built the Vivekananda
Rock Memorial just south of Kanyakumari, India's southern most
tip. Among diasporic Hindus, likewise, Vivekananda -- far more
so than his master, Sri Ramakrishna Paramhansa -- remains a favorite
figure, and his pictures and statues adorn Hindu homes and cultural
centers in the U.S., U.K., Canada, Trinidad, Fiji, and elsewhere.
Source:
Christopher Isherwood. Ramakrishna and His Disciples (1950; reprint
ed., New York: Simon and Schuster/Touchstone Books, 1965).
Swami Vivekananda. The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda (Calcutta:
Advaita Ashram), 8 vols.
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