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Learn all about
meditation. Here are very very
interesting articles that we have collected, from past issues of
Times of India - 'speaking tree' column that appears on the editorial page.
Lost In A Sea Of Identities
By Acharya Mahapragna
[Times of India - 15 August 2009]
In order to understand society, we must first
understand the individual. “He who knows one, knows all; and he who knows all,
alone knows one,” Mahavira would say.
Complete knowledge of an atom is not possible
without understanding it in the context of other things. That is why, when
analysing an atom, one comes to know the countless laws of the universe.
The individual faces three types of problems:
Physical, social and spiritual. To cater to one’s physical needs, economic power
is required. To regulate these matters – of commerce, trade, money and
distribution – the state is required. Administrative machinery run by the state
becomes necessary when the needs of the people have to be taken care of. Hence
multiple identities evolve out of various functions and responsibilities.
However, the power centres created for solving individual problems have often
themselves turned into problems.
There is a story in the puranas of a mouse that
performed penance to earn the blessings of Lord Shiva and the mouse turned into
a cat. As a cat, the mouse no longer feared other cats. But still the fear of
dogs continued. Through successive courses of penance he kept changing from cat
to dog to leopard to tiger and finally to man. One day Shiva asked him, ‘‘Are
you now free from all fears?’’ He replied, ‘‘Even by becoming man my problems
are not over, for I am suffering from fear of death. I may, therefore, be
favoured and turned into a mouse again.’’ Lord Shiva once again blessed him and
he returned to the original form of a mouse.
Money was invented to enable us to share goods and
services in an equitable manner. Today, however, it poses major problems. There
is the rich-poor divide. From being created as a means to fulfill needs, money
has come to be flaunted as a status symbol. Money, because of its purchasing
power, is a much sought-after commodity. Its scarcity among some gives rise to
theft and corruption. Enforcing law and order is also therefore a duty of the
state.
True religion stands for the experience of unity
and harmony. There are some who say that religion has failed to solve human
problems. But that is because religion is being used to accumulate wealth, cure
disease and win legal suits. More importance is being given to name and form.
Religion is not meant for these things; it is meant to elevate your
consciousness on the spiritual plane.
So-called religious wars were caused not by
religion but by its form and name. The soul of religion is unity. No war can be
fought without destroying the spirit of religion. Vedanta propounds the
principle that all sentient beings originate from the same source. Jain
philosophy also asserts that all sentient beings are alike. Could human beings
have fought each other, if people had practiced the above feeling of unity and
harmony? Could one individual have exploited another individual? Could one man
have hated another?
Feeling unity and harmony with everyone is the
spirit of religion. The greater the identity one feels with others, the more the
religiosity one imbibes. Thinking along these lines convinces me that we have
merely touched the veneer of religion but have never felt its inner core. What
we have seen are the outer garments.
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