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Ourselves
THE Karmayogin comes
into the field to
fulfil a function which an increasing tendency in the country
demands. The life of the nation which once flowed in a broad
and single stream has long been severed into a number of
separate meagre and shallow channels. The two main floods
have followed the paths of religion and politics, but they have
flowed separately. Our political activity has crept in a channel
cut for it by European or Europeanised minds; it tended always
to a superficial wideness, but was deficient in depth and volume.
The national genius, originality, individuality poured itself into
religion, while our politics were imitative and unreal. Yet
without a living political activity national life cannot, under
modern circumstances, survive. So also there has been a stream
of social life, more and more muddied and disturbed, seeking
to get clearness, depth, largeness, freedom, but always failing
and increasing in weakness or distraction. There was a stream
too of industrial life, faint and thin, the poor survival of the
old vigorous Indian artistic and industrial capacity murdered
by unjust laws and an unscrupulous trade policy. All these ran
in disconnected channels, sluggish, scattered and ineffectual.
The tendency is now for these streams to unite again into one
mighty invincible and grandiose flood. To assist that tendency,
to give voice and definiteness to the deeper aspirations now
forming obscurely within the national consciousness is the
chosen work of the Karmayogin.
There is no national life perfect or
sound without the cāturvarnya. The life of the nation must contain within itself
the life of the Brahmin, — spirituality, knowledge, learning,
high and pure ethical aspiration and endeavour; the life of the
Kshatriya, — manhood and strength moral and physical, the
love of battle, the thirst for glory, the sense of honour, chivalry,
self-devotion, generosity, grandeur of soul; the life of the Vaishya, — trade, industry, thrift, prosperity, benevolence,
phi-
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lanthropy; the life of the Shudra, —
honesty, simplicity, labour,
religious and quiet service to the nation even in the humblest
position and the most insignificant kind of work. The cause of
India's decline was the practical disappearance of the Kshatriya
and the dwindling of the Vaishya. The whole political history of
India since the tyranny of the Nandas has been an attempt to
resuscitate or replace the Kshatriya. But the attempt was only
partially successful. The Vaishya held his own for a long time, indeed, until the British advent by which he has almost been
extinguished. When the cāturvarnya disappears, there comes varnasankara, utter confusion of the great types which keep a
nation vigorous and sound. The Kshatriya dwindled, the
Vaishya dwindled, the Brahmin and Shudra were left. The inevitable tendency was for the Brahmin type to disappear and the
first sign of his disappearance was utter degeneracy, the tendency to lose himself and while keeping some outward signs of
the Brahmin to gravitate towards Shudrahood. In the kaliyuga
the Shudra is powerful and attracts into himself the less vigorous
Brahmin, as the earth attracts purer but smaller bodies, and the brahmateja, the spiritual force of the latter, already diminished,
dwindles to nothingness. For the satyayuga to return, we must
get back the brahmateja and make it general. For the brahmateja
is the basis of all the rest and in the satyayuga all men have it
more or less and by it the nation lives and is great.
All this is, let us say, a parable. It
is more than a parable,
it is a great truth. But our educated class have become so unfamiliar with the deeper knowledge of their forefathers that it has
to be translated into modern European terms before they can
understand it. For it is the European ideas alone that are real
to them and the great truths of Indian thought seem to them
mere metaphors, allegories and mystic parables. So well has
British education done its fatal denationalising work in India.
The Brahmin stands for religion,
science, scholarship and the
higher morality; the Kshatriya for war, politics and administration; the Vaishya for the trades, professions and industries, the
Shudra for labour and service. It is only when these four great
departments of human activity are all in a robust and flourishing
condition that the nation is sound and great. When any of these
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disappear or suffer, it is bad for the
body politic. And the two highest are the least easy to be spared. If they
survive in full strength, they can provide themselves with the two others, but
if either the Kshatriya or the Brahmin go, if either the political force or the
spiritual force of a nation is lost, that nation is doomed unless it can revive
or replace the missing strength. And of the two the Brahmin is the more
important. He can always create the Kshatriya; spiritual force can always raise
up material force to defend it. But if the Brahmin becomes the Shudra,
then the lower instinct of the serf and the labourer becomes all in
all, the instinct to serve and seek a living as one supreme object
of life, the instinct to accept safety as a compensation for lost
greatness and inglorious ease and dependence in place of the
ardours of high aspiration for the nation and the individual.
When spirituality is lost all is lost. This is the fate from which we
have narrowly escaped by the resurgence of the soul of India in
Nationalism.
But that resurgence is not yet
complete. There is the sentiment of Indianism, there is not yet the knowledge. There is a
vague idea, there is no definite conception or deep insight. We
have yet to know ourselves, what we were, are and may be; what
we did in the past and what we are capable of doing in the future;
our history and our mission. This is
the first and most important
work which the Karmayogin sets for itself, to popularise this
knowledge. The Vedanta or Sufism, the temple or the mosque,
Nanak and Kabir and Ramdas, Chaitanya or Guru Govinda,
Brahmin and Kayastha and Namasudra, whatever national
asset we have, indigenous or acclimatised, it will seek to make
known, to put in its right place and appreciate. And the second
thing is how to use these assets so as to swell the sum of national
life and produce the future. It is easy to appraise their relations
to the past; it is more difficult to give them their place in the
future. The third thing is to know the outside world and its relation to us and how to deal with it. That is the problem which we
find at present most difficult and insistent, but its solution depends on the solution of the others.
We have said that brahmateja is
the thing we need most of
all and first of all. In one sense, that means the pre-eminence of
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religion; but after all, what the
Europeans mean by religion is not brahmateja; which is rather spirituality, the force and energy of
thought and action arising from communion with or self-surrender to that within us which rules the world. In that sense we
shall use it. This force and energy can be directed to any purpose
God desires for us; it is sufficient to knowledge, love or service; it is good for the liberation of an
individual soul, the building of
a nation or the turning of a tool. It works from within, it works
in the power of God, it works with superhuman energy. The
reawakening of that force in three hundred millions of men by
the means which our past has placed in our hands, that is our
object.
The European is proud of his success in
divorcing religion
from life. Religion, he says, is all very well in its place, but it has
nothing to do with politics or science or commerce, which it
spoils by its intrusion; it is meant only for Sundays when, if one
is English, one puts on black clothes and tries to feel good, and if
one is continental, one puts the rest of the week away and amuses
oneself. In reality, the European has not succeeded in getting rid
of religion from his life. It is coming back in socialism, in the
Anarchism of Bakunin and Tolstoy, in many other isms; and in
whatever form it comes, it insists on engrossing the whole of life,
moulding the whole of society and politics under the law of
idealistic aspiration. It does not use the word God or grasp the
idea, but it sees God in humanity. What the European understood by religion, had to be got rid of and put out of life, but real
religion, spirituality, idealism, altruism, self-devotion, the hunger
after perfection is the whole destiny of humanity and cannot be
got rid of. After all God does exist and if He exists, you cannot
shove Him into a corner and say, "That is your place and as for
the world and life it belongs to us." He pervades and returns.
Every age of denial is only a preparation for a larger and more
comprehensive affirmation.
The Karmayogin will be more of a
national review than a
weekly newspaper. We shall notice current events only as they
evidence, help, affect or resist the growth of national life and
the development of the soul of the nation. Political and social
problems we shall deal with from this standpoint, seeking first
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their spiritual
roots and inner causes and then proceeding to measures and remedies. In a
similar spirit we shall deal with all sources of national strength in the past
and in the present, seeking to bring them home to all comprehensions and make
them applicable to our life, dynamic and not static, creative and not merely
preservative. For if there is no creation, there must be disintegration; if
there is no advance and victory, there must be recoil and defeat.
Vol. I - June 19, 1909 - No. 1
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