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.
Acharya
Tulsi, the man, his mission and his motives
Some years ago, when work in the Indian parliament came to a screeching
standstill following a boycott by opposition parties protesting against
the official "whitewash" of the Joint parliamentary Committee report on
a stocks scam, Acharya
Tulsi, the most high profile Jain guru of them all, was asked
to mediate. He succeeded in breaking the impasse, which could have brought
the government down, using a singularly unlikely strategy: talking to
the parties concerned about anekantavada, the Jain doctrine of
non-absolutism, which holds that all human judgments and perceptions of
truth are only partially valid, and that one must accommodate points of
view other than one's own.
When asked to elucidate the doctrine, Tulsi responded like a Zen
master. He picked up a table clock, the only valuable in his spartan room,
and asked rhetorically: "Is it good?" Obviously, the correct answer is
that it is superior to many clocks and inferior to many others. The point
he was trying to make is that it is also made of plastic and glass; further,
basically, it is an arrangement of electrons and protons and soon. Therefore,
a story does not have just two sides, it has many, and all of them may
be relatively true or false or both in degrees.
Tulsi was keenly aware of the relevance of Jainism's non-absolutism
(nonviolence at a psychological level) and radical pacifism in today's
busily pluralistic world. He also believed that although the danger
of another world war may have receded, human greed and economic imperialism
continue to unleash their fair share of violence on the world. Consequently,
he was thinking global.
Under his guidance, a campaign
had been launched to impart practical training in ahimsa (nonviolence).
His missionaries carried his message abroad, while he himself continued to meet
many dignitaries and religious heads such as the Dalai Lama, confabulating to
promote peace and harmony in the world.
"Both peace and war originate
in the minds of men," he said in his address to the world conference on peace
and nonviolent action held at Ladnun, in the western Indian state of Rajasthan,
in December 1995. "We have paid little or no attention to the question of transforming
the human psyche."
It is this issue, which cut his life's work out for him. The answers
came in the form of the well-known Anuvrat movement in 1950,
and the later introduction of preksha
meditationand the Science of Livingcourse for
students.
To find out more about the man, his mission and his motives, I traveled
to Ladnun, virtually a one-horse desert town. Here, the headquarters of
the Tulsi establishment is spread over 125 acres. The place is
peppered with billboards carrying homilies from Tulsi and other
Jain gurus of the past. The atmosphere is one of unhurried efficiency.
Although Tulsi was forever undertaking padyatras (walking
trips), this was his first visit since early 1995, after having anointed
Mahaprajna, 76, as the head of the Terapanth
sect in his place, at a public ceremony in New Delhian appointment
that had been widely hailed because Acharya Mahaprajna was highly regarded
as a yogi, philosopher and writer. Tulsi was staying in one of
the rooms in a block reserved for monks of his Terapanth (Shwetamber)
order.
The Acharya, now known as Ganadhipati, was a compact man with limpid
eyes and large ears ("a sign of spiritual advancement," one of his acolytes
whispered to me), who looked remarkably fit and alert for his 83 years.
A Sanskrit and Prakrit scholar, he spoke in chaste Hindi in a measured
tone. Perhaps in keeping with the unremittingly austere nature of his
religion, he avoided the emotional approach or any oratorical flourishes
even in his discourses, except perhaps an occasional anecdote or teaching
story.
He sat cross-legged on a wooden divan as I sat on the uncarpeted but spanking
clean floor. He was patient and solicitous, but filtering clear answers
from his voice, muffled by a surgical mask that covered his mouth, proved
difficult. He took pains to explain the complex Jain principles. The interview
was continuously interrupted by streams of visitors, rich and poor, sweating
city slickers and turbaned Rajasthanis. He blessed all of them, without
exception, with a raised hand, mumbling a mantra.
What inspired a religious
head like him to launch the popular Anuvrat movement, aimed at social reform and
moral regenerations? "Human suffering," he replied. "Religion," he elaborated,
"has two aspects: Modes of worship which vary wildly from religion to religion
and a code of conduct which is more or less universal. I consciously chose to
work on Character and conduct."
Since
ordinary people find the five big vows (nonviolence, nonstealing, celibacy,
non-acquisition and speaking the truth, common to Hinduism,
Buddhism and Jainism)
too intimidating, he developed a "minimum moral code" undated with vows
such as: I will do my best to avoid contributing to pollution; I will
do my best to avoid contributing to pollution; I will observe rectitude
in business and general behavior; I will not resort to unethical practices
in the elections.
The last one so endeared him to the then Indian Chief Election Commissioner.
T.N. Seshan that he wanted Tulsi to stay in New Delhi in April,
believing that his mere presence in the capital would contribute to cleaner
and peaceful elections.
Anuvrat instantly brought Tulsi into the limelight. In the first
flush of India's Independence, the need of the hour was felt to be nation
rebuilding and eradicating social evils. Tulsi's crusade was seen
to dovetail with those aims and the he struck a chord among the towering
statesmen of the times, Gandhians and social reformers including Jawaharlal
Nehru, Dr S. Radhakrishnan, Vinoba Bhave and Jayaprakash (JP) Narayan.
JP went to the extent of saying that Tulsi was carrying on the work started
by Mahatma Gandhi.
Anuvrat became a massive movement in the 1960s and the 70s. Tulsi had
led many nationwide padyatras, logging over 100,000 km, administering
the Anuvrat oath.
Preksha dhyan was the logical next step. Explained Tulsi:
"I had started noticing that many people were unable to keep their vows,
particularly about shedding addictions. What was needed was a method of
inner purification that could give them the requisite strength." Surprisingly,
the Jain tradition was not known to have handed down any such system.
He entrusted the job to Mahaprajna, his right-hand man and alter ego,
who scoured the Jain scriptures and found enough references by the mid-1970s
to enable him to develop preksha meditation, with inputs from modern
human psychology.
Preksha literally means looking deeply, the technique involves
engaging your mind fully in the perception of the subtle internal and
innate phenomena of consciousness to control your passions and purify
emotion. Jeevan Vigyan (the Science of Living) aims at the all-round-physical,
mental, emotional and moral-development of the student.
To carry on and coordinate all these activities, many institutions had
come up under Tulsi's tutelage. The main one is the Jain Vishva
Bharati in Ladnun. Set up in 1970 and deemed to be a university in
1991, it offers postgraduate courses in Ahimsa and Peace research, Jainology,
and Prakrit (the language of the Jain scriptures, the Agamas). The university
has over 1000 postgraduate and doctoral students on its rolls. Foreign
students can study free here.
One of them, a 24-year-old American, Rence Kinnaman,
stayed here for just two months but was overwhelmed by her experience: "I didn't
become a Jain, but I became aware of life around me. I now have an increased awareness
of all life. We're in this together."
Indeed. Jainism's new appeal is ecological. Pointed out Tulsi:
"Jainism includes air, water, fire, earth and the vegetable kingdom
in its ambit of nonviolence." This pacifism stemmed from the belief that
the world is packed with an infinite number of embodied souls. At the
lower level, the souls inhabit plants and trees, and microorganisms in
the four elements. But higher or lower, a soul is a soul and Lord Mahavir's
stricture is that no being is to be killed or harmed.
Accordingly, Jain monks carry a whisk to sweep aside any insects on the ground.
Thy mask their mouths to avoid killing airborne microorganisms by inhaling them.
Explaining why they insist on traveling on foot, Tulsi said: "It puts the least
pressure on the earth's resources." They do not use electricity either and are
allowed only a couple of mugs of water to sponge their bodies instead of having
a bath. This spartan lifestyle means that although Jainism may by relevant today,
it won't find too many takers. Agreed Tulsi: "It demands strict self-restraint
and renunciation."
What most people will find hard to accept is sallekhanafasting
to death. Dharmanand, who runs Tulsi's Delhi center, says without betting an eyelid
that his mother did sallekhana and that 100-odd devotees opt for this religiously
sanctioned euthanasia every year, usually after their bodies become too enfeebled,
by age or sickness. Jains believe that this is the way to die consciously and
heroically, and thus conquer death.
Another famous Jain-born, Osho, went to the other extreme, towards indulgence,
according to the Tulsi establishment. On his part, Osho missed no opportunity
to castigate Tulsi, for example, for dabbling in politics. It is well-known
that top politicians and administrators sought Tulsi out (the Rajiv Gandhi
government's appeal to him for mediation led to the Rajiv-Longowal accord
in Punjab). Right or wrong, this is what Tulsi had to say on the
matter: "I involve myself in anythingfamilial, social or politicalthat
has any bearing on spirituality."
Today Tulsi has become a synonym of Jainism, even though
his Terapanth, founded in 170, is the smallest and the newest Jain
sect. Mahaprajna attributes it to the fact that "Gurudev (Tulsi) has had
not only a vision, but also inner resources to give if form and movement."
Tulsi hailed from a devout family of Jain traders in Ladnun and
showed early leadership qualities and a spiritual bent of mind. Destiny
knocked when Acharya Kalugani, his family guru, came for a visit, About
their meeting, Tulsi later said: "His divine face fascinated my
heart and I used to gaze at him for hours." He took his monk's vows at
the age of 11, and by the time he was 16, he had already started attracting
acolytes. Kalugani appointed him Terapanth's ninth acharya when he was
just 22.
Tulsi had since shown great organizational ability and the mind
of a progressive man. Among other things, he had instituted a rigorous
training program for the monks and nuns of his order. A mammoth project
to edit and computerize the 32 Agamas went on under his guidance. And
to obviate the injunction against monks using mechanical means of travel,
he created a new order of semi-monks called Samans who routinely
fly to other countries.
"Americans are all ears when they hear that Jainism had influenced
Mahatma Gandhi who in turn influenced Martin-Luther King," says Sthitprajna,
the 30-year-old chief Saman.
Tulsi had also tried to unite the fractious Jain community by opening
lines of communication among the sub-sects of the Digambers and Shwetambers.
Although a champion of inter-faith harmony, Tulsi didn't mind discussing
Jainism's uniqueness. He was quick to refute the uninformed belief that
Jainism was born as reaction to the excessive ritualism in Hinduism.
"Jainism and Buddhism were part of a parallel Negganth or Shraman
(ascetic) culture in India which is perhaps pre-Vedic," he asserted. Further,
Jainism is less fatalistic. "According to the Vedic religion, not
even a leaf stirs without God's will. But Jainism does agree that
God arbitrates in human affairs. This puts the onus for one's destiny
on oneself and on self-effort."
What continued to engage his mind was religion's
impact on society, which he believed was paramount.
The one thing that remained long after I had departed from Tulsi's
calming presence was the sincerity of all his concerns and the utterly
simple core of his teachings, contained in a slogan he had coined: Jain
bano na bano, good man banoit doesn't matter if you become a
Jain, aspire to become a good man, a moral man.