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The Burden of a Destiny

by
Patrizia Norelli-Bachelet ©
In 1920, Sri Aurobindo
wrote to his brother, Barin, about his concept of a sangh, a community of
individuals spread throughout the country, dedicated to the high ideals he had envisaged
as necessary for transforming the nation so that it could fulfil its destiny. In those
days the primary goal of all was to become free from British rule. But Sri Aurobindo went
beyond that and under-stood that a radical change had to come about in the Indian
character and consciousness for anything lasting and significant to occur.
Sri Aurobindo wrote this letter to his brother from Pondicherry, where
he had settled after a year spent in the Alipur jail. It is interesting to note that a few
years after writing this letter and expressing his ideas the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh
came into being, with structure and goals similar to those Sri Aurobindo wrote of in this
letter. He was almost brutal in his description of the failings of the Indian character
and the reasons why the nation was not able to free itself from British rule. In
particular he emphasised the need to worship power and that having lost that
capacity, India could not fulfil her destiny, much less liberate herself from foreign
subjugation. He was equally very clear that a community of individuals was the call of the
hour and not simply an individual working in isolation from the rest. He further
emphasised the necessity to search for an Indian way or solution, as for example, a
new form of politics to replace what he considered simply an aping of Europe:
We do not want to exclude any of the worlds activities.
Politics, trade, social organisation, poetry, art, literature - all will remain. But all
will be given a new life, a new form.
Why did I leave politics? Because our politics is not the genuine
Indian thing; it is a European import, an imitation of European ways. But it too was
needed. You and I also engaged in politics of the European style. If we had not done so,
the country would not have risen, and we would not have had the experience or obtained a
full development. Even now there is a need for it, not so much in Bengal as in the other
provinces of India. But now the time has come to take hold of the substance instead of
extending the shadow. We have to awaken the true soul of India and to do everything in
accordance with it. For the last ten years I have been silently pouring my influence into
this foreign political vessel, and there has been some result. I can continue to do this
whenever necessary. But if I took up that work again openly, associating with the
political leaders and working with them, it would be supporting an alien law of being and
a false political life.
Sri Aurobindo was therefore very clear that there was an Indian way and
certain laws of the nations being had to be respected for the countrys unique
destiny to manifest. Failing to do this, he warns of the consequences:
I can associate with everyone, but only in order to draw them onto the
true path, while keeping the spirit and form of our ideal intact. If that is not done we
will lose our way and the true work will not be accomplished. If we spread out everywhere
as individuals, something will no doubt be done; if we spread ourselves out everywhere in
the form of a sangha, a hundred times more will be accomplished. But the time has
not yet come for this. If we try to give it form hastily, it will not be the exact thing I
want. The sangha will at first be in a diffused form. Those who have accepted the
ideal, although bound together, will work in different places. Afterwards, bound into a sangha
with a form like a spiritual commune, they will shape all their activities according to
the Self and according to the needs of the age. Not a fixed and rigid form like that of
the old Aryan society, not a stagnant back-water, but a free form that can spread itself
out like the sea with its multitudinous waves - engulfing this, inundating that, absorbing
all - and as this continues a spiritual community will be established. This is my present
idea; it is not yet fully developed. What is being developed is what came to me in my
meditations at Alipur. I shall see what shape it finally takes later. The result is in
Gods hands - let his will be done.
The necessity for a sangha was therefore foremost in his
consciousness. It was clearly the need of the hour. This is the infancy, the
embryonic state, of the new age, just a hint, not yet the be-ginning, he wrote.
And indeed, five years later a sangha was formed when the dawn of that anticipated
new age had arrived.
The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, it has to be noted, began its formal
existence precisely at the start of the new Aquarian Age, 1926. It was a year of immense
importance for the whole Earth. Hints of this importance were in evidence across the
globe. But in India the formation of the RSS was certainly an indication that the time had
come for a major change in the life of the nation. For Sri Aurobindo himself, 1926 marked
the formal beginning of his work based on a spiritual attainment that was the harbinger of
the Supramental Age he had foreseen as the culmination of a long line of development
originating in the distant Vedic Age.
The point to be made is that the need for an organisation such as the
RSS was in tune with the demands of a more cosmic order, shall we say. As such it
is necessary to view its history in a wider context and the role it must play in
contemporary Indian society. In this overview we will also assess what the immediate
future may hold for such an enterprise.
The imperative of contingency plans
Eighty years have elapsed since Sri Aurobindo wrote of the need to
evolve a new politics that would be more in tune with the soul of India. We know that this
did not happen. India and most of the former colonies of Great Britain continue to govern
their people by way of a parliamentary democracy. What are the consequences of this
failing?
The RSS 75th year is an appropriate time to review its
own role in the context of the above. We will discover that the organisation came into
being as a balancing factor, or better, a contingency plan, to counter this
failing. There were other such contingency plans which I have described
elsewhere in my writings. But we are concerned in this essay with the role of this special
sangh over the years, and what its future contribution might be in light of Sri
Aurobindos call.
I have written elsewhere of the formula devised by the divine Shakti by
which, from the time of the first war of Independence in 1875, the nation would be granted
a stabilising factor and a method for holding it together during its tumultuous
formative years. This too was a contingency plan in view of the fact that not
only was the nation under foreign domination, but when finally free of that rule it had
opted for a system that was not the Indian way, as Sri Aurobindo had desired.
This labourious plan was completed in 1989 to a large
extent. At that time single-party rule, under the leadership of what has come to be known
as the Dynasty, came to an end. The nation then appeared to enter a period of confusion,
turmoil and uncertainty once that axial for-mation was completed in which the
Dynasty played a central role. But the chaos is only a question of externals and does not
correspond to the deeper levels of destiny; it exists because during the intervening years
from Independence to the present, that Indian Way did not take shape. At least
to all appearances.
The interesting point to bear in mind is that a new way did
indeed arise and come into evidence since 1875, utilising the Dynasty and other factors as
tools for this new mechanism. In other words, with those existing tools the true Indian
way did evolve, unknown to all. The discov-ery of this mechanism and its purpose and
future role could only be unveiled after1971, when certain essential ingredients in the
formula had been incorporated.
I have written extensively on this hidden aspect of Indias
destiny - i.e., the precise formula whereby a new mechanism is seen to have been
operating, albeit in camouflaged form, since 1875. But it has to be borne in mind that
when a process is hidden, or is really one thing while pretending in this external,
material dimension to be another, there is attendant damage, destruction, and at certain
points chaos to be expected. Given the fact that the divine Shakti has to work through
inappropriate forms, there must inevitably be an accompanying loss of power. The concentration
of energy required to carry the movement forward is significantly reduced. This
introduces gaps, as it were, where energy is siphoned off; the result is a diminishing, or
destruction of some sort because the true form, consisting of a certain shape to contain a
determined energy balance, is not en-countered on the material plane where destiny is
played out. An example would be the form of the nation itself. In its higher
destiny it has a certain shape, but on the ground that shape has been carved into and
sections of the body of Bharat Mata have been cut out. The result is that in its spatial
dimensions there is an inappropriate vessel and energy seeps out through these
gaps.
The pulse of destiny
In spite of this insufficiency the initial work has been done and in a
certain sense successfully completed. Various aforementioned contingency plans
have been set in motion at appropriate times to counterbalance the loss due to this
inadequate political, social and even physical form.
The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh is one such plan.
Therefore, it is quite reasonable to observe that the organisation often appears to be at
odds with the political establishment, and even its own offspring, the present government,
since its role has been to serve as a means of keeping the nation on a certain track that
is in harmony with its pulse of destiny. This pulse is only one, not many.
And in this we note another difficulty.
When we repeat the refrain, Unity in Diversity, we must understand what
unity means for this ancient land. We know what its diversity is, but few
are aware of the true nature of unity for this ancient civilisation. It has to do with the
fact that of all the nations on Earth only India can lay claim to an unbroken
civilisational line from the very distant past to the present. This is part and parcel of
the role India is to play in the contemporary global context. I shall elaborate this point
more fully further on.
This being the case, the original pulse of destiny is still
sounding in the civilisations inner dimensions of being and it can still be
heard. All Indians, and I repeat all, can hear that pulse and learn
that they are in tune with it and that it resonates in the hearts of all inhabitants of
this land. It is the upholding foundation of the contemporary nation, just as it was in
ancient times. This is the energy field that permeates the consciousness of Bharat
Mata. To deny its existence, or to claim that this underlying, upholding field of a
given pulsation is non-existent, or else that it has been altered or modified over
the ages, is to demonstrate ignorance of the workings of the Time-Spirit. For had that
thread from the ancient past been broken somewhere along the line of Time, we
could then agree that something else had taken the place of the original
Pulse. This not having been the case, wisdom demands that we must accept this true
position and work with it and not against it, for to do so is simply to prolong the
present confusion and to foster a society that is at odds with its truth of being. When
such is the case, all citizens abiding within the consciousness of Bharat Mata, of
whatever creed, caste and class must necessarily suffer.
Thus, when the present Sarsangchalak encourages all Indians to
join the mainstream, he is in fact putting forth the same call: To find a
harmony with this underlying and inalterable Pulse of Destiny that still today constitutes
the nations upholding energy base.
The new unifying Language
I have demonstrated this cosmologically in all my written
works. The point to be stressed is that cosmology is non-denominational, non-sectarian,
and certainly not communal. The problem is that a new way is required, a new
formulation that, while not denying the old, draws this discourse beyond the confines of
these delimiting factors. When a new Age dawns, as Sri Aurobindo announced and cosmology
confirms, it means that we have entered a transitional period and a new language must
evolve to express more adequately the contemporary condition and demands. We know that the
Vedic and Puranic Gods and Goddesses are expressions of cosmic energies. We must
also realise that the cosmos is impersonal. Everything we know, every crystallisation
of form is that same Energy, however we wish to label it. Indeed, Truth (that
Energy) is one, the wise know it by many names. Therefore, the new cosmology is
simply a tool for drawing aside the veils covering that truth and rediscovering the
original Pulse of the civilisation as the unifying factor of a common destiny.
It is perfectly proper for the Sarsangchalak to exhort all his fellow
countrymen and women to accept this common heritage, not necessarily as Ram or Krishna and
all the other cosmic Energies, but as an inherited Pulse of Destiny which,
in an unbroken line of Time, unlike in any other civilisation, continues to uphold and to
influence from its field of unity the contemporary diversity that forms this 21st
century nation. We may ignore this fact; we may deny it; we may even make war against it.
But none of this changes the reality that is Bharat and will ever remain Bharat for all
its inhabitants.
Until 1989, the present Indian political structure was the channel for
a meticulous and mathematical expression of that sacred Pulsation. Since then however,
since the axis of the new India was forged and securely set in place, a period of
turmoil seems to have ensued. It has continued until today and is likely to continue into
the future. Unless, of course, other forms come into being and the Time-Spirit
is provided an adequate vessel for expressing that true Pulsation. The ostensible reason
for this turmoil has been the collapse of single party rule. Coalition politics, after an
initial upheaval attendant upon that collapse, seems now relatively stable. But this is
simply a transitional period. Underlying the present calm is a power working to create new
vessels, a new form of democratic process that will better express the nations unity
in diversity. This is one of the sacred duties of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and
kindred organisations.
The universal harmonies
There are certain rhythms in the universe that the ancients called the music
of the spheres. These can be heard, listened to as one would listen to
music. Carnatic music still bears a direct relation to those harmonies as perceived in
ancient times. It is, in a sense, the celestial harmonies formu-lated in a manner that can
permit a listener, from whatever social class or creed, to appreciate that same divine
Melody. Music of this order is thus a means to extend a Sages vision or perception
to the populace. Along with other cultural expressions, it is a binding element in the
civilisation. For a civilisation to endure, and the Vedic is one of the very few to
survive the passage of time, there has to be this cosmic connection, because in this way
Time is an ally in the evolutionary progression as creator rather than destroyer.
Thus the need is to find a harmonisation with the Power that acts
through channels inherent in the cosmic manifestation. It has various names but perhaps
the best to describe its fullest properties is the Divine Shakti; or else, as in ancient
times, the Divine Maya. This is the key to permanency and the ancients founded this
civilisation on just such a principle.
By means of the same ancient science, renewed for the present, we can
also locate a particular area on the globe that is especially receptive to the workings of
this Power. These spatial configurations, if they are to embody a certain sacred
quality, must also be harmonised with the power of Time. In so doing, that area acquires a
special purpose in evolution, and because of its singular properties we can refer to it as
the embodiment of the Mother, Bharat Mata. Further, due to this special
harmonisation and integration of space as well as time, the land so
described can be termed a centre, in the truest cosmological sense.
As with any circle there is one centre at the midpoint of its diameter;
the circumscribing periphery is held together by the central Point. If we take the
whole of the Earth with all its continents and the nations located on these continents, as
the periphery, we observe that Bharat occupies the perfect centre for the circumscribing
periphery due to these unique harmonising and integrating properties which make of it a
centre. This places a special burden on a civilisation that happens to find itself in
this position, particularly during this 9th Manifestation which began in 234
BC. Such a civilisation may be said to be chosen, but far from being a
privileged circumstance, a very great responsibility lays upon the nation: the future of
the entire evolutionary process hinges on that civilisations enduring wisdom.
Similar to a musical composition, the cosmic harmonies that connect the
civilisation to the greater Harmony are based on a particular scale. In this 9th
Manifestation the scale consists of nine notes; thus, 0 to 9. Each of these nine
are tones, as it were. With certain keys at our disposal we can apply this scale to
many areas of life and to many different activities, as well as the beginning of certain
enterprises, or even the birth of an individual. Thus we apply the scale to the
birth of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, for example, and read its destiny, or rather
hear its destiny, just as one would listen to a raga.
It is pertinent in this 75th anniversary of the Sangh to
listen to the harmony of its particular destiny and hear what it
might foretell. More important, it will be of interest to those who celebrate the occasion
to learn in what way this 75th year might have more meaning than others, if
indeed that is the case, and what that special meaning might be.
It needs to be stated at this point that in this assessment we are not
employing a predictive science such as astrology. It is not a question of seeing the
future, in the ordinary sense. Rather, through this Music of the Spheres one seeks
to find a means of entry into the vast movement of the cosmos by finding the correct note
we are meant to sound within the Harmony, be this individually or collectively, so that a
true harmony emerges by our contribution. In other words, we wish to know the
sacred formula that will enable us to contribute to an emerging cosmos, or
divine Order, in a manner that least distorts that cosmic Theme.

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