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The
renaissance thus determining itself, but not yet finally determined, if
it is to be what the name implies, a rebirth of the soul of India into
a new body of energy, a new form of its innate and ancient spirit, prajńā
purānī, must insist much more finally and integrally than it has as yet
done on its spiritual turn, on the greater and greater action of the spiritual
motive in every sphere of our living. But here we are still liable to
be met by the remnants of a misunderstanding or a refusal to understand,
- it is something of both, - which was perhaps to a little extent justified
by certain ascetic or religionist exaggerations, a distrust which is accentuated
by a recoil from the excessive other-worldliness that has marked certain
developments of the Indian mind and life, but yet is not justified, because
it misses the true point at issue. Thus we are sometimes asked what on
earth we mean by spirituality in art and poetry or in political and social
life, - a confession of ignorance strange enough in any Indian mouth at
this stage of our national history, - or how art and poetry will be any
the better when they have got into them what I have recently seen described
as the “twang of spirituality”, and how the practical problems
either of society or of politics are going at all to profit by this element.
We have here really an echo of the European idea, now of sufficiently
long standing, that religion and spirituality on the one side and intellectual
activity and practical life on the other are two entirely different things
and have each to be pursued on its own entirely separate lines and in
obedience to its own entirely separate principles. Again we may be met
also by the suspicion that in holding up this ideal rule before India
we are pointing her to the metaphysical and away from the dynamic and
pragmatic or inculcating some obscurantist reactionary principle of mystical
or irrational religiosity and diverting her from the paths of reason and
modernity which she must follow if she is to be an efficient and a well-organised
nation able to survive in the shocks of the modern world. We must therefore
try to make clear what it is we mean by a renaissance governed by the
principle of spirituality.
But first let us say what we do not mean by this ideal. Clearly it does
not signify that we shall regard earthly life as a temporal vanity, try
to become all of us as soon as possible monastic ascetics, frame our social
life into a preparation for the monastery or cavern or mountain-top or
make of it a static life without any great progressive ideals but only
some aim which has nothing to do with earth or the collective advance
of the human race. That may have been for some time a tendency of the
Indian mind, but it was never the whole tendency. Nor does spirituality
mean the moulding of the whole type of the national being to suit the
limited dogmas, forms, tenets of a particular religion, as was often enough
attempted by the old societies, an idea which still persists in many minds
by the power of old mental habit and association; clearly such an attempt
would be impossible, even if it were desirable, in a country full of the
most diverse religious opinions and harbouring too three such distinct
general forms as Hinduism, Islam and Christianity, to say nothing of the
numerous special forms to which each of these has given birth. Spirituality
is much wider than any particular religion, and in the larger ideas of
it that are now coming on us even the greatest religion becomes no more
than a broad sect or branch of the one universal religion, by which we
shall understand in the future man's seeking for the eternal, the divine,
the greater self, the source of unity and his attempt to arrive at some
equation, some increasing approximation of the values of human life with
the eternal and the divine values.
Nor do we mean the exclusion of anything whatsoever from our scope, of
any of the great aims of human life, any of the great problems of our
modern world, any form of human activity, any general or inherent impulse
or characteristic means of the desire of the soul of man for development,
expansion, increasing vigour and joy, light, power, perfection. Spirit
without mind, spirit without body is not the type of man, therefore a
human spirituality must not belittle the mind, life or body or hold them
of small account: it will rather hold them of high account, of immense
importance, precisely because they are the conditions and instruments
of the life of the spirit in man. The ancient Indian culture attached
quite as much value to the soundness, growth and strength of the mind,
life and body as the old Hellenic or the modern scientific thought, although
for a different end and a greater motive. Therefore to everything that
serves and belongs to the healthy fullness of these things, it gave free
play, to the activity of the reason, to science and philosophy, to the
satisfaction of the aesthetic being and to all the many arts great or
small, to the health and strength of the body, to the physical and economical
well-being, ease, opulence of the race, - there was never a national ideal
of poverty in India as some would have us believe, nor was bareness or
squalor the essential setting of her spirituality, - and to its general
military, political and social strength and efficiency. Their aim was
high, but firm and wide too was the base they sought to establish and
great the care bestowed on these first instruments.
Necessarily the new India will seek the same end in new ways under the
vivid impulse of fresh and large ideas and by an instrumentality suited
to more complex conditions; but the scope of her effort and action and
the suppleness and variety of her mind will not be less, but greater than
of old. Spirituality is not necessarily exclusive; it can be and in its
fullness must be all-inclusive.
But still there is a great difference between the spiritual and the purely
material and mental view of existence. The spiritual view holds that the
mind, life, body are man's means and not his aims and even that they are
not his last and highest means; it sees them as his outer instrumental
self and not his whole being. It sees the infinite behind all things finite
and it adjudges the value of the finite by higher infinite values of which
they are the imperfect translation and towards which, to a truer expression
of them, they are always trying to arrive. It sees a greater reality than
the apparent not only behind man and the world, but within man and the
world, and this soul, self, divine thing in man it holds to be that in
him which is of the highest importance, that which everything else in
him must try in whatever way to bring out and express, and this soul,
self, divine presence in the world it holds to be that which man has ever
to try to see and recognise through all appearances, to unite his thought
and life with it and in it to find his unity with his fellows. This alters
necessarily our whole normal view of things; even in preserving all the
aims of human life, it will give them a different sense and direction.
We aim at the health and vigour of the body; but with what object? For
its own sake, will be the ordinary reply, because it is worth having;
or else that we may have long life and a sound basis for our intellectual,
vital, emotional satisfactions.
Yes, for its own sake, in a way, but in this sense that the physical too
is an expression of the spirit and its perfection is worth having, is
part of the dharma of the complete human living; but still more as a basis
for all that higher activity which ends in the discovery and expression
of the divine self in man. Sharīram khalu dharma-sādhanam, runs the old
Sanskrit saying, the body too is our means for fulfilling the dharma,
the Godward law of our being. The mental, the emotional, the aesthetic
parts of us have to be developed, is the ordinary view, so that they may
have a greater satisfaction, or because that is man's finer nature, because
so he feels himself more alive and fulfilled. This, but not this only;
rather because these things too are the expressions of the spirit, things
which are seeking in him for their divine values and by their growth,
subtlety, flexibility, power, intensity he is able to come nearer to the
divine Reality in the world, to lay hold on it variously, to tune eventually
his whole life into unity and conformity with it. Morality is in the ordinary
view a well-regulated individual and social conduct which keeps society
going and leads towards a better, a more rational, temperate, sympathetic,
self-restrained dealing with our fellows. But ethics in the spiritual
point of view is much more, it is a means of developing in our action
and still more essentially in the character of our being the diviner self
in us, a step of our growing into the nature of the Godhead.
So with all our aims and activities; spirituality takes them all and gives
them a greater, diviner, more intimate sense.
Philosophy is in the Western way of dealing with it a dispassionate enquiry
by the light of the reason into the first truths of existence, which we
shall get at either by observing the facts science places at our disposal
or by a careful dialectical scrutiny of the concepts of the reason or
a mixture of the two methods. But from the spiritual view-point truth
of existence is to be found by intuition and inner experience and not
only by the reason and by scientific observation; the work of philosophy
is to arrange the data given by the various means of knowledge, excluding
none, and put them into their synthetic relation to the one Truth, the
one supreme and universal reality. Eventually, its real value is to prepare
a basis for spiritual realisation and the growing of the human being into
his divine self and divine nature. Science itself becomes only a knowledge
of the world which throws an added light on the spirit of the universe
and his way in things. Nor will it confine itself to a physical knowledge
and its practical fruits or to the knowledge of life and man and mind
based upon the idea of matter or material energy as our starting-point;
a spiritualised culture will make room for new fields of research, for
new and old psychical sciences and results which start from spirit as
the first truth and from the power of mind and of what is greater than
mind to act upon life and matter. The primitive aim of art and poetry
is to create images of man and Nature which shall satisfy the sense of
beauty and embody artistically the ideas of the intelligence about life
and the responses of the imagination to it; but in a spiritual culture
they become too in their aim a revelation of greater things concealed
in man and Nature and of the deepest spiritual and universal beauty. Politics,
society, economy are in the first form of human life simply an arrangement
by which men collectively can live, produce, satisfy their desires, enjoy,
progress in bodily, vital and mental efficiency; but the spiritual aim
makes them much more than this, first, a framework of life within which
man can seek for and grow into his real self and divinity, secondly, an
increasing embodiment of the divine law of being in life, thirdly, a collective
advance towards the light, power, peace, unity, harmony of the diviner
nature of humanity which the race is trying to evolve. This and nothing
more but nothing less, this in all its potentialities, is what we mean
by a spiritual culture and the application of spirituality to life.
Those who distrust this ideal or who cannot understand it, are still under
the sway of the European conception of life which for a time threatened
to swamp entirely the Indian spirit. But let us remember that Europe itself
is labouring to outgrow the limitations of its own conceptions and precisely
by a rapid infusion of the ideas of the East, - naturally, essential ideas
and not the mere forms, - which have been first infiltrating and are now
more freely streaming into Western thought, poetry, art, ideas of life,
not to overturn its culture, but to transform, enlighten and aggrandise
its best values and to add new elements which have too long been ignored
or forgotten. It will be singular if while Europe is thus intelligently
enlarging herself in the new light she has been able to seize and admitting
the truths of the spirit and the aim at a divine change in man and his
life, we in India are to take up the cast-off clothes of European thought
and life and to straggle along in the old rut of her wheels, always taking
up today what she had cast off yesterday. We should not allow our cultural
independence to be paralysed by the accident that at the moment Europe
came in upon us, we were in a state of ebb and weakness, such as comes
some day upon all civilisations. That no more proves that our spirituality,
our culture, our leading ideas were entirely mistaken and the best we
can do is vigorously to Europeanise, rationalise, materialise ourselves
in the practical parts of life, - keeping perhaps some spirituality, religion,
Indianism as a graceful decoration in the background, - than the great
catastrophe of the war proves that Europe's science, her democracy, her
progress were all wrong and she should return to the Middle Ages or imitate
the culture of China or Turkey or Tibet. Such generalisations are the
facile falsehoods of a hasty and unreflecting ignorance.
We have both made mistakes, faltered in the true application of our ideals,
been misled into unhealthy exaggerations.
Europe has understood the lesson, she is striving to correct herself;
but she does not for this reason forswear science, democracy, progress,
but purposes to complete and perfect them, to use them better, to give
them a sounder direction. She is admitting the light of the East, but
on the basis of her own way of thinking and living, opening herself to
truth of the spirit, but not abandoning her own truth of life and science
and social ideals. We should be as faithful, as free in our dealings with
the Indian spirit and modern influences; correct what went wrong with
us; apply our spirituality on broader and freer lines, be if possible
not less but more spiritual than were our forefathers; admit Western science,
reason, progressiveness, the essential modern ideas, but on the basis
of our own way of life and assimilated to our spiritual aim and ideal;
open ourselves to the throb of life, the pragmatic activity, the great
modern endeavour, but not therefore abandon our fundamental view of God
and man and Nature. There is no real quarrel between them; for rather
these two things need each other to fill themselves in, to discover all
their own implications, to awaken to their own richest and completest
significances.
India can best develop herself and serve humanity by being herself and
following the law of her own nature. This does not mean, as some narrowly
and blindly suppose, the rejection of everything new that comes to us
in the stream of Time or happens to have been first developed or powerfully
expressed by the West. Such an attitude would be intellectually absurd,
physically impossible, and above all unspiritual; true spirituality rejects
no new light, no added means or materials of our human self-development.
It means simply to keep our centre, our essential way of being, our inborn
nature and assimilate to it all we receive, and evolve out of it all we
do and create. Religion has been a central preoccupation of the Indian
mind; some have told us that too much religion ruined India, precisely
because we made the whole of life religion or religion the whole of life,
we have failed in life and gone under. I will not answer, adopting the
language used by the poet in a slightly different connection, that our
fall does not matter and that the dust in which India lies is sacred.
The fall, the failure does matter, and to lie in the dust is no sound
position for man or nation. But the reason assigned is not the true one.
If the majority of Indians had indeed made the whole of their lives religion
in the true sense of the word, we should not be where we are now; it was
because their public life became most irreligious, egoistic, self-seeking,
materialistic that they fell. It is possible, that on one side we deviated
too much into an excessive religiosity, that is to say, an excessive externalism
of ceremony, rule, routine, mechanical worship, on the other into a too
world-shunning asceticism which drew away the best minds who were thus
lost to society instead of standing like the ancient Rishis as its spiritual
support and its illuminating life-givers. But the root of the matter was
the dwindling of the spiritual impulse in its generality and broadness,
the decline of intellectual activity and freedom, the waning of great
ideals, the loss of the gust of life.
Perhaps there was too much of religion in one sense; the word is English,
smacks too much of things external such as creeds, rites, an external
piety; there is no one Indian equivalent. But if we give rather to religion
the sense of the following of the spiritual impulse in its fullness and
define spirituality as the attempt to know and live in the highest self,
the divine, the all-embracing unity and to raise life in all its parts
to the divinest possible values, then it is evident that there was not
too much of religion, but rather too little of it - and in what there
was, a too one-sided and therefore an insufficiently ample tendency. The
right remedy is, not to belittle still farther the agelong ideal of India,
but to return to its old amplitude and give it a still wider scope, to
make in very truth all the life of the nation a religion in this high
spiritual sense. This is the direction in which the philosophy, poetry,
art of the West is, still more or less obscurely, but with an increasing
light, beginning to turn, and even some faint glints of the truth are
beginning now to fall across political and sociological ideals. India
has the key to the knowledge and conscious application of the ideal; what
was dark to her before in its application, she can now, with a new light,
illumine; what was wrong and wry in her old methods she can now rectify;
the fences which she created to protect the outer growth of the spiritual
ideal and which afterwards became barriers to its expansion and farther
application, she can now break down and give her spirit a freer field
and an ampler flight: she can, if she will, give a new and decisive turn
to the problems over which all mankind is labouring and stumbling, for
the clue to their solutions is there in her ancient knowledge. Whether
she will rise or not to the height of her opportunity in the renaissance
which is coming upon her, is the question of her destiny.
Sri
Aurobindo
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