WESAK 2008 - New Age Festival of Spiritual Unity and Blessings
Lectures, Teaching & Meditation On 17th,18th May 2008,9:30 am to 5:30 pm
venue: The auditoriam of the Indian Society of International Law, opposite the supreme Court 9, Bhagwan Dass Road, New Delhi.
Moon Light Meditation
19th May 2008, 6:30pm to 9:30pm Venue:97-A Eastern Avenue, Sainik Farm,New Delhi. For Reg:Poonam Sharma: 919313034752,Snigdha Nanda: 919818291375. More Detail>>
When we pursue happiness, it eludes you. However, when you recognise that happiness is the natural state of the soul, all you need is to eliminate all that comes between your happiness and you.
By Suma Varughese
True laughter is true prayer, teaches Sri Sri Ravishankarthe guru
whose Art of Living
courses gives lessons in living, which concentrate on breathwork and self-awareness
"The language of the head is words. The language of the heart is love.
The language of the soul is silence."
Starting his discourse in a Delhi
auditorium with these words, this man with soft eyes, jet black flowing hair and
beard and an artist's relaxed hands disarms his audience by asking: "So, in which
language do you want me to speak?"
It's a rhetorical question. The tongue
he continues to use is in words, of course, but in a language that goes straight
to the heart. The precepts he speaks of run close to the soul.
Another
time, you attend a satsang (communion) the guru has graced in a devotee's
home in north Delhi, India, expecting to sit through one more edifying discourse.
But all you do is wait as he sits on the dais with eyes shut, opening them periodically
but only to indicate to the singers to continue with yet another bhajan
(devotional song). Then, suddenly, he gets up and starts to dance, with the ecstasy
of a Chaitanya Mahaprabhu.
You wait some more for the discourse to begin. He stops dancing, takes an
unhurried look at the expectant faces, smiles almost mirthfully. He's done it
again: not a word is spoken, but much is communicated by the eyes. The satsang
comes to an end.
This is Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, a new age guru with a mystique of
his own. Slipping in a moment from singing and showering rose petals on
his congregation to the deepest meditation, or from bantering with his
devotees to discussing eternal verities, he defies easy slotting. One
of his disciples has to summon three personages to convey what he is all
about: "Guruji has the compassion of Jesus
Christ, the playfulness of Krishna
and the erudition of Adi
Sankara."
But what also attracts a growing number of people in India and other countries
to Ravi Shankar is that he is a thoroughly modern man speaking
ancient truths. In his person, Vedic
precepts become contemporary, eastern mystique sheds its mystery. For
the Indian generation alienated from its roots by relentless westernization,
he represents the acceptable face of tradition. Not surprisingly, his
following is, by and large, from the urban middle class. In Mumbai, western
India, his devotees include many young professionals, IIT students, even
socialites and film stars.
Their first introduction to the guru usually is the 14-hour Art of
Living course, which has so far drawn over half a million participants
the world over. Basic to this course is Sudarshan Kriya that
Ravi Shankar discovered in 1982, after emerging from a 10-day retreat
into silence, an event that marked his ascendance into enlightenment.
Sudarshan
Kriya is a cycle of breathslong, medium and short. Since the
mind oscillates wildly between the past and the future, the breath, which
is by definition necessarily in the present, is used to "rope in the wandering
mind". Like Zen
masters who teach that the present moment is a chink opening into eternity,
Ravi Shankar also hauls his audience back to the here and now with
posers like, "Where are you?"
The Art of Living course combines the kriya with meditation and
teaches how to observe the mind, to live in gratitude and to discard expectations.
The workshop also provides a value-based framework to life and tools with
which to build the superstructure. The benefits of the workshop include
stress reduction, a resurgence of vitality, mental clarity and joy of
living. Those who attend the course routinely report relief in respiratory
and spinal disorders, diabetes and heart problems. The program has been
acclaimed by the World Health Organization. The workshops are organized
under the aegis of the Vyakti Vikas Kendra (VVK), which has over 200 centers
in India. The centers are managed by 70-odd teachers trained by Ravi
Shankar, most working on an honorary basis.
Arun Madhavan quit his job as area manager with Standard Chartered Bank
to join VVK as chairman. The Art of Living workshop, Madhavan says,
brought him greater awareness, a deep sense of joy and virtually obliterated
his medical bills. His mission is to promote it in the corporate world,
where its benefits as a stress-reliever have already led to wide acceptance.
So far in India, the workshop has been attended by over 15,000 professional
managers. One of them is S.B. Ganguly, the chairman and managing director
of Exide Industries. Says he: "I suddenly find myself a friend to everyone;
my attitude towards my family has improved. The rat race has ended and
my mind is at peace."
But how does Ravi Shankar view his mission? "We are trying to bring
back human values," replies the 40-year-old guru, attired in his trademark
off-white silk lungi-kurta, while lounging in the home of one of
his meditation teachers in Mumbai. "The purpose of The Art of Living
course is to retain innocence while increasing intelligence. The innocence
of the ignorant is not as precious as that of those who have gone through
knowledge to arrive at another level of 'I don't know'."
That is a beautiful 'I don't know'." Ravi Shankar's philosophy
is Advaitic,
stressing the essential oneness of the Self and the Absolute. But he has
his own unique way of driving home the eternal truths. Invited to speak
at the United Nations' 50th anniversary celebrations, he surprised those
present by repudiating the possibility of world unity, before adding that
the word implied a duality.
When asked about his idea of God, he says: "You believe what you don't know;
I don't believe in God. God is the very core of your being, it is like peeling
an onion and reaching that central nothingness, which is God. The whole is God."
With a good measure of irony, Ravi Shankar employs the general
belief in God's omnipresence to resolve the free will versus determinism
debate: "When your thought is in alliance with what is happening, you
call it free will; when it is in opposition, you call it destiny. " Non-duality
presupposes non-doing, which is the understanding that life lives itself,
we don't live it; that feelings, thoughts, states of mind happen, we don't
create them. When a disciple asks him how to be detached, he answers:
"Don't try to do it. You are already that." Answering another question
about the value of celibacy, the master replies: "Celibacy is not a practice.
If it's a happening, then it's authentic. Trying to stop yourself from
having sex is unnatural and only makes you think of it even more."
Simplicity, naturalness, effortlessness and spontaneity are spiritual
precepts for him. The ego, which is considered the chief foe of seekers
of enlightenment, simply arises from a short supply of "naturalness",
says Ravi Shankar. It is more difficult to be an atheist than a
believer. "Don't try to develop unconditional love," he advises, "because
you are love."
As for himself, he appears to be running his worldwide organization absolutely
effortlessly. Born in a prosperous business family in Bangalore, southern
India, Ravi Shankar's spiritual destiny manifested itself in his
infancy, when as a child of four, he recited the entire Bhagavad Gita.
The atmosphere at home was deeply religious. His father, a medical astrologer,
divined his son's unusual powers early, and has always supported his decisions.
At eight, in addition to conventional schooling, Ravi Shankar started
studying Vedic literature. By 18, he had earned a degree in science. His
background in science and the Vedas is what brought him to the notice
of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, founder of the
transcendental meditation movement. Ravi Shankar rose in the movement
to become a close associate of Maharishi before deciding to forge out
on his own.
His younger sister Bhanu recalls him as the
perfect brother, "very friendly, very humorous, a guiding spirit. I copied him
in everything". Each of his disciples has his own favorite guru story. Khursheed
Batliwala, a VVK instructor from Mumbai, remembers the time "Guruji" came running
barefoot to him, clutching a wad of notes because he was told that Batliwala didn't
have any money for a journey he was about to undertake.
Nitin Limaye,
from Baroda, western India, relates how a group of them were out walking with
the guru one sunny day. Suddenly, the guru stopped and advised them to run for
cover because it would rain shortly. There was no evidence to support this sudden
bit of meteorology, but they obeyed him and watched the rain cascading down half-an-hour
later from the safety of their ashram.
Accomplished at the veena (an Indian musical instrument) and the
piano, Ravi Shankar's musical inclination filters down to his devotees.
Their satsangs are riotously joyous affairs, bhajans sung
with the gusto of school students at a picnic.
Starting with The Art of Living workshops (which are now available
for children, too), VVK's activities have been expanding. They include
a four-day advance course, taught by the guru himself, usually in his
sprawling Bangalore ashram, and teaching the mantra-based Sahaj Samadhi
Meditation. VVK has also set up the Ved Vignan Mahavidyapeeth, dedicated
to the revival of Vedic wisdom in education. The institute is working
closely with 240 schools in Bangalore. A research body it has set up has
been commissioned by the government to reappraise the siddha and ayurvedic
systems of medicine.
All this is a creditable achievement for somebody who took up the mantle
of a preceptor only 10 years ago, but for Ravi Shankar "it is all
fun. Life is a game, a play. There is nothing worth taking so seriously".
He
has more ambitious plans for the future but there are no regrets, no incompletion:
"If I die today, I will still be happy. I am content."
Clearly, Sri Sri Ravi Shankar embodies the art of living.