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By Manoj Das On
the occasion of the 125th birth anniversary of Sri Aurobindo, we are reminded
of his belief that to reach the last rung of the evolutionary ladder,
humanity will have to transcend its ordinary consciousness
After 14 years in England, Sri Aurobindo voyaged back to India. As
his ship touched Apollo Bunder in Bombay "a vast calm descended on him".
Bombay was 'a much quieter town then, crisscrossed by dykes and dotted
with hamlets. The Gateway of India was still 15 years away. The year was
1893, and Aurobindo, all of 20 years old, was set for a stint at Gaekwad's
secretariat in Baroda, later to take over as Professor of English and
French with the Maharaja's College. He was soon plunged into a whirl of
political and spiritual work.
He wrote: "Since I set foot on the Indian soil on the Apollo Bunder in
Bombay, I began to have spiritual experiences, but these were not divorced
from this world but had an inner and infinite bearing on it, such as a
feeling of the Infinite pervading material space and the Immanent inhabiting
material objects and bodies, At the same time I found myself entering
supra-physical worlds and planes with influences and an effect from them
upon the material plane, so that I could make no sharp divorce or irreconcilable
opposition between what I have called the two ends of existence and all
that lies between them."
Aurobindo never thought of spirituality as a solitary personal ascent
to some celestial height. He saw no dichotomy between the spiritual and
the worldly. Almost immediately after his arrival in India, he began taking
a keen interest in the Indian political situation and wrote a series of
articles under a pseudonym in the Indu Prakash of Bombay.
They were marked by a sterling candidness unknown to the political journalism
of the time: "I say of the Congress,
then, thisthat its aims are mistaken, that the spirit in which it
proceeds towards their accomplishment is not a spirit of sincerity and
whole-heartedness, and that the methods it has chosen are not the right
methods, and the leaders in whom its trusts are not the right sort of
men to be leaders; in brief, that we are at present the blind led, if
not by the blind, at any rate by the one-eyed."
The different streams of Sri Aurobindo's life at Barodahis learning
Sanskrit and some other Indian languages and mastering the Vedic lore
with a vengeance, taking up yoga, guiding secret societies in different
parts of the country pledged to the ideal of overthrowing the British
ruleare by now as well-known as his life at Calcutta as the principal
of the National College and editor of Vande Mataram.
His role, along with Bal
Gangadhar Tilak, in giving a radical turn to the ideology of the Congress
at its Surat Session (1907), his incarceration in Alipore Jail (1908)
and C.R. Das hailing him as "the prophet of Indian nationalism", his Integral
yoga, and authoring the by now famous works like Life Divine, The
Synthesis of Yoga,
Foundations of Indian Culture, The Human Cycle, The Ideal
of Human Unity and the epic Savitri.
Even so, for him what truly mattered was the inner life. "No one can write
about my life because it has not been on the surface for men to see,"
he once told a scholar proposing to write his biography. But he certainly
held out before us the possibility of the outer life changing in the light
of the inner, the vision of a transformed
humanity.
Much of what he says has important relevance for our times.
The century that is coming to an end has been a tumultuous one. Never before in
history has time been so crowded with events. Empires, colonies and feudalism
have folded up. If the spirit of the time imposed democracy and socialism on some
people, some others imbibed them spontaneously and the rest willy-nilly.
We also saw in the recent past the collapse of the Soviet communismthat
area of socialism, which had stood in the way of man's inner growth. Aurobindo
had said, decades before anyone could have imagined the aforesaid collapse:
"If communism ever re-establishes itself successfully upon earth, it must
be on a foundation of soul's brotherhood and the death of egoism. A forced
association and a mechanical comradeship would end in a worldwide fiasco."
Such radical changes have brought man closer to liberation from every
kind of bondage. If man is to progress in the development of his consciousness,
he must have freedom. But true progresswe may call it an evolution
consciousnessdoes not proceed in a straight line. While we are poised
for such a growth in consciousness today, strangely enough instead of
being helped we are limited by the nature of the mind.
The human mind seems to have reached the last point in a blind alley and
exhausted its capacity to be creative in a qualitative sense. But it refuses
to admit it. All the marvels it has createdtechnology, political
and social systems et aldo not make the modern man basically
different from his ancestors.
The two world wars and the brutal conduct of those involved in them and
numerous other events of our time testify to this. Every instrument and
institution that man has made in his quest for perfectionreligion,
for exampleproves a scourge, for the mind that uses it is often
a mere servitor of the ego, and of an even more formidable menace, the
collective ego.
The ego, once a helper, is now impeding man's progress and it cannot be
tackled by anything short of a new power of consciousness which Aurobindo
calls the supermind: "Mind itself is too limited. If, then, man is incapable
of exceeding mentality, he must be surpassed and supermind and superman
must manifest and take the lead of the creation. But if his mind is capable
of opening to what exceeds it, then there is no reason why man himself
should not arrive at supermind and supermanhood or at least lend his mentality,
life and body to an evolution of that greater term of the Spirit manifesting
in Nature." (Life Divine)
It may not be easy to decipher the working of a mystic truth, of the unfolding
of a spiritual future for mankind in the bizarre developments of our time.
No wonder Aurobindo says that at present mankind is passing through an
evolutionary crisis in which is hidden the choice of its destiny. The
events of the 20th century clearly show that none of the stock panaceathe
institutionalized religion or ideological tribalism or the magic of technologycan
help man step into a sublime tomorrow.
What is indispensable is a readiness to shake off the puerile tricks of
egoa collective aspiration for transcendence into a meaningful existence.
Aurobindo's optimism, based on a clear analysis of the adventure of human
consciousness through the ages of ignorancegroping for "God, Light,
Freedom, Bliss and Immortality"and
his vision of a new humanity, enrich our travails and struggles with a
certain justification that nothing else seems to provide.