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The Ideal of the Karmayogin
A NATION
is building in India today before the eyes of the world so swiftly, so
palpably that all can watch the process and those who have sympathy and
intuition distinguish the forces at work, the materials in use, the lines of
the divine architecture. This nation is not a new race raw from the workshop
of Nature or created by modern circumstances. One of the oldest races and
greatest civilisations on this earth, the most indomitable in vitality, the
most fecund in greatness, the deepest in life, the most wonderful in
potentiality, after taking into itself numerous sources of strength from
foreign strains of blood and other types of human civilisation, is now seeking
to lift itself for good into an organised national unity. Formerly a congeries
of kindred nations with a single life and a single culture, always by the law
of this essential oneness tending to unity, always by its excess of fecundity
engendering fresh diversities and divisions, it has never yet been able to
overcome permanently the almost insuperable
obstacles to the organisation of a continent. The time has now come when those
obstacles can be overcome. The attempt which our race has been making
throughout its long history, it will now make under entirely new
circumstances. A keen observer would predict its success because the only
important obstacles have been or are in the process of being removed. But we go
farther and believe
that it is sure to succeed because the freedom, unity and greatness of India
have now become necessary to the world. This is the faith in which the Karmayogin
puts its hand to the work and will persist in it, refusing to be discouraged
by difficulties however immense and apparently insuperable. We believe that
God is with us and in that faith we shall conquer. We believe that humanity
needs us and it is the love and service of humanity, of our country, of the
race, of our religion that will purify our heart and inspire our action in the
struggle.
The
task we set before ourselves is not mechanical but moral and spiritual. We aim
not at the alteration of a form of govern-
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ment but at the
building up of a nation. Of that task politics is a part,
but only a part. We shall devote ourselves not to politics alone, nor to social
questions alone, nor to theology or philosophy or literature or science by
themselves, but we include all these in one entity which we believe to be
all-important, the dharma, the
national religion which we also believe to be universal. There is a mighty law
of life, a great principle of human evolution, a body of spiritual knowledge
and experience of which India has always been destined to be guardian, exemplar
and missionary. This is the sanātana dharma, the eternal religion. Under the
stress of alien impacts she has largely lost hold not of the structure of that
dharma,
but of its living reality. For the religion of India is nothing if it is not
lived. It has to be applied not only to life, but to the whole of life; its spirit has to enter into and mould our
society, our politics, our literature, our science, our individual character,
affections and aspirations. To understand the heart of this dharma, to
experience it as a truth, to feel the high emotions to which it rises and to
express and execute it in life is what we understand by Karmayoga. We believe that it is to make the
yoga the
ideal of human life that India rises today; by
the yoga she will get the strength to realise her freedom, unity and
greatness, by the yoga she will keep the strength to preserve it. It is
a spiritual revolution we foresee and the material is only its shadow and
reflex.
The European sets great store by machinery. He seeks
to renovate humanity by schemes of society and systems of government; he hopes
to bring about the millennium by an act of Parliament. Machinery is of great
importance, but only as a working means for the spirit within, the force
behind. The nineteenth century in India aspired to political emancipation,
social renovation, religious vision and rebirth, but it failed because it adopted
Western motives and methods, ignored the spirit, history and destiny of our
race and thought that by taking over European education, European machinery,
European organisation and equipment we should reproduce in ourselves European
prosperity, energy and progress. We of the twentieth century reject the aims,
ideals and methods of the anglicised nineteenth, precisely because we accept
its experience. We refuse to make an idol
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of
the present; we look before and after, backward to the mighty history of our
race, forward to the grandiose history for which that destiny has prepared it.
We do not believe that our political salvation can be attained by
enlargement of Councils, introduction of the elective principle, colonial
self-government or any other formula of European politics. We do not deny the
use of some of these things as instruments, as weapons in a political struggle,
but we deny their sufficiency whether as instruments or ideals and look beyond
to an end which they do not serve except in a trifling degree. They might be
sufficient if it were our ultimate destiny to be an outlying province of the
British Empire or a dependent adjunct of European civilisation. That is a
future which we do not think it worth making any sacrifice to accomplish. We believe,
on the other hand, that India is destined to work out her own independent life
and civilisation, to stand in the forefront of the world and solve the
political, social, economic and moral problems which Europe has failed to
solve, yet the pursuit of which and the feverish passage in that pursuit from
experiment to experiment, from failure to failure she calls her progress. Our
means must be as great as our ends and the strength to discover and use the
means so as to attain the end can only be found by seeking the eternal source
of strength in ourselves.
We do not believe that by changing the machinery so as to make our
society the ape of Europe we shall effect social renovation. Widow-remarriage,
substitution of class for caste,
adult-marriage, intermarriages, interdining
and the other nostrums of the social reformer are mechanical changes which,
whatever their merits or demerits, cannot by themselves save the soul of the
nation alive or stay the course of degradation and decline. It is the spirit
alone that saves, and only by becoming great and free in heart can we become
socially and politically great and free.
We do not believe that by multiplying new sects limited within the
narrower and inferior ideas of religion imported from the West or by creating
organisations for the perpetuation of the mere dress and body of Hinduism we
can recover our spiritual health, energy and greatness. The world moves through
an in-
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dispensable
interregnum of free thought and materialism to a new synthesis of religious
thought and experience, a new religious world-life free from intolerance, yet
full of faith and fervour, accepting all forms of religion because it has an
unshakable faith in the One. The religion which embraces Science and
faith, Theism, Christianity, Mahomedanism
and Buddhism and yet is none of these, is that to which the World-Spirit moves.
In our own, which is the most sceptical and the most believing of all, the most
sceptical because it has questioned and experimented the most, the most
believing because it has the deepest experience and the most varied and
positive spiritual knowledge, — that wider Hinduism which is not a dogma or
combination of dogmas but a law of life, which is not a social framework but
the spirit of a past and future social evolution, which rejects nothing but
insists on testing and experiencing everything and when tested and experienced,
turning it to the soul's uses, in this Hinduism we find the basis of the future
world-religion. This sanātana dharma
has many scriptures, Veda, Vedanta, Gita, Upanishad, Darshana, Purana, Tantra, nor could it reject the Bible or the
Koran; but its real, most authoritative scripture is in the heart in which the
Eternal has His dwelling. It is in our inner spiritual experiences that we
shall find the proof and source of the world's Scriptures, the law of
knowledge, love and conduct, the basis and inspiration of Karmayoga.
Our aim will therefore be to help in building up India for the sake
of humanity — this is the spirit of the Nationalism which we profess and
follow. We say to humanity: "The time has come when you must take the
great step and rise out of a material existence into the higher, deeper and
wider life towards which humanity moves.
The problems which have troubled mankind can only be solved by conquering the
kingdom within, not by harnessing the forces of Nature to the service of
comfort and luxury, but by mastering the forces of the intellect and the
spirit, by vindicating the freedom of man within as well as without and by
conquering from within external Nature. For that work the resurgence of Asia is
necessary, therefore Asia rises. For that work the freedom and greatness of
India are essential, therefore she claims her destined freedom and greatness,
and it is to the
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interest
of all humanity, not excluding England, that she should wholly establish her
claim."
We say to the nation: "It is God's will that we should be
ourselves and not Europe. We have sought to regain life by following the law of
another being than our own. We must return and seek the sources of life and
strength within ourselves. We must know our past and recover it for the
purposes of our future. Our business is to realise ourselves first and to mould
everything to the law of India's eternal life and nature. It will therefore be
the object of the Karmayogin to read the heart of our religion, our
society, our philosophy, politics, literature, art, jurisprudence, science,
thought, everything that was and is ours, so that we may be able to say to
ourselves and our nation, 'This is our dharma'. We shall review European civilisation entirely from the standpoint of Indian thought and knowledge and
seek to throw off from us the dominating stamp of the Occident; what we have to
take from the West we shall take as Indians. And the dharma once discovered, we shall strive our utmost not only
to profess but to live, in our individual actions, in our social life, in our
political endeavours."
We
say to the individual and especially to the young who are now arising to do
India's work, the world's work, God's work: "You
cannot cherish these ideals, still less can you fulfil them if you subject your
minds to European ideas or look at life from the material standpoint.
Materially you are nothing, spiritually you are everything. It is only the
Indian who can believe everything, dare everything, sacrifice everything.
First, therefore, become Indians. Recover the patrimony of your forefathers.
Recover the Aryan thought, the Aryan discipline, the Aryan character, the Aryan
life. Recover the Vedanta, the Gita, the Yoga. Recover them not only in intellect
or sentiment but in your lives. Live them
and you will be great and strong, mighty, invincible and fearless. Neither life
nor death will have any terrors for you. Difficulty and impossibility will
vanish from your vocabularies. For it is in the spirit that strength is eternal
and you must win back the kingdom of yourselves, the inner Swaraj, before you
can win back your outer empire. There the Mother dwells and She waits for
worship that She may give strength.
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Believe
in Her, serve Her, lose your wills in Hers, your egoism in the greater ego of
the country, your separate selfishness in the service of humanity. Recover the
source of all strength in yourselves and all else will be added to you, social
soundness, intellectual pre-eminence, political freedom, the mastery of human
thought, the hegemony of the world."
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