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At first glance Ramana Maharshi would appear to be the quentissential
stock figure of Indian mythos - a saint who realized his
vocation early, achieved enlightment soon after and passed
quietly away after living a peaceful and gentle life that
transformed a bunch of devoted followers. What this potrait
misses is the iron will that drove him, a tenacity
of purpose that paid huge rewards when it was turned inwards
to the unfoldment of the spirit.Ramana Maharshi had no
patience with self-delusion, and he had an extremely gentle
manner of putting it across that was far more devastating
than excitable scenes.
Not
that he did not have his share of melodrama in his early
life at Madurai in Tamil Nadu! Ramana wanted to go one
way; his family had other, more conventional ideas.
Theresultant conflict is piously passed over by biographers
who feel that strife does not become a saint's family.
Religious feeling and the urge to be a renunciate is
not the easy business it seems to be in India. It is
a deadly struggle in family politics and the norms of
convention fight hard and dirty to hold on to the potential
renouncer. The Sannyasi is officially respected - so
long as he is somebody else's son!
By 1896, when he was sixteen, the young Venkata Ramana was
determined to proceed to Arunachala, the holy mountain in
Tiruvennamalai, regarded as an abode of the mountain loving
Shiva. On August 16 of that year he finally made his break.
After paying his railway fare the lad threw away the rest
of the money his kind brother had sneaked to him. From now
on he was going to rely only on God, and the chips could fall
as they pleased. (Years later, when he had achieved a fame
of sorts his family sought to reclaim him and bask in reflected
glory, but Ramana did not hesitate in puncturing these delusions,
even when it was his mother who was holding them!)
This dramatic break was reinforced by a vision he had at the
temple of Arayaninattur. Light emerged from the murthi, and
engulfed the entire Holy Mountain. So deeply imprinting was
this experience that he felt anything else after that would
be a poor substitute and he never budged from Arunachala mountain
after that!
There is a popular belief that Arunachala is always host to
a Realized Being, though sometimes this worthy is invisible.
Ramana however was very visible indeed and does much to credit
the theory that out of such Realized souls emnates a peculiar
attractive power, for Arunachala was to become world famous
by the time he died. He is also regarded as one of the Ten,
great spirtual souls that came in to existence in the 19th
century to provide some succour for an India that was exhausted
and rapidly losing its soul.
Ramana's system is used all over the world today - and without
any acknowledgemnt too. It is simplicity itself and that is
what makes it so difficult. His core belief was that if you
knew your self, then you will know everything worth knowing
and will not need to know any more. He was telling people
to go for enlightenment, not the accretion of knowledge; to
choose wisdom, not the availabilty of mountains of data. And
the means to achieve this was even more simpler.......
Two words.
NJYAN AARU?
Which
means "Who am I"? (See our glossary for a detailed viewpoint
on this) Ramana was in a sense advocating the interrogation
of the inner self, not of your normal bodily consciouness.
By keeping this insistent question always with you, the Atman
stands revealed, independent of names and forms and attached
attributes. The questioner reaches the place from where thoughts
emerge, where the artificial divisions between you and the
universe melts away. As such therefore , your formal religion
did not matter very much, anybody could follow this path.
Ramana's
ideas on God were more in line with the conventional panantheism
of the Hindu outlook. God is not a person up in the sky, or
even in Arunachala, but God is. God is everything and vice
versa.
The Maharshi's teaching became extremely popular, and as I
said it is used all over the world even today. Paul Brunton,
of the many Searches in Secret Places, came, saw and made
the Maharshi known to the world. Others wrote haigiographic
accounts of his life and teaching too, so that by the time
of his death in 1948, he was one of the spiritual beacons
of the land.
His death was painful, as cancer took hold of his left elbow
and reappeared after an attempt to excise it had failed. The
attendent doctors were suprised by his total indifference
to pain, he simply did not acknowledge its existence. He was
firm in the answer he had received when he had asked himself,"Who
am I?' and pain was just a ripple on that vast surface. For
weepy and sentimental followers was reserved one last flash
of steel, in a sentence reminiscent of Buddha's rebuke of
his followers too. "When the meal is over, the leaf plate
is thrown away". To the end, the saint never wavered in his
fierce committment to the truth at all costs.
(
Click here to read more about Ramana Maharshi's Asharam.
)
- Rohit Arya
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