Birth and early life
Narendranath Dutta was born in Shimla Pally, Kolkata, West Bengal,
India on January 12, 1863 as the son of Viswanath Dutta and Bhuvaneswari
Devi. Even as he was young, he showed a precocious mind and keen
memory. He practiced meditation from a very early age. While at school,
he was good at studies, as well as games of various kinds. He organized
an amateur theatrical company and a gymnasium and took lessons in
fencing, wrestling, rowing and other sports. He also studied
instrumental and vocal music. He was a leader among his group of
friends. Even when he was young, he questioned the validity of
superstitious customs and discrimination based on caste and religion.
In 1879, Narendra entered the Presidency College, Calcutta for
higher studies. After one year, he joined the Scottish Church College,
Calcutta and studied philosophy. During the course, he studied western
logic, western philosophy and history of European nations.
Questions started to arise in young Narendra's mind about God and
the presence of God. This made him associate with the Brahmo Samaj, an
important religious movement of the time, led by Keshub Chunder Sen. And
along with his classmate and friend Brajendra Nath Seal, he regularly
attended meetings of the breakaway Sadharan Brahmo Samaj. Later they
would part ways with Dutta aligning himself with Keshub Chunder Sen's
Nava Vidhan and Seal staying on as an initiated member. During this time
spent together, both Dutta and Seal sought to understand the
intricacies of faith, progress and spiritual insight into the works of
John Stuart Mill, Auguste Comte, Herbert Spencer and G.W.F. Hegel.
But the Samaj's congregational prayers and devotional songs could
not satisfy Narendra's zeal to realize God. He would ask leaders of
Brahmo Samaj whether they have seen God. Their answers did not satisfy
his quest for knowledge. It was during this time that Reverend William
Hastie, the Principal of the Scottish Church College told him about Sri
Ramakrishna of Dakshineswar.
With Ramakrishna
Narendra met Ramakrishna for the first time in November 1881. He
asked Ramakrishna the same old question, whether he had seen God. The
instantaneous answer from Ramakrishna was, "Yes, I see God, just as I
see you here, only in a much intenser sense." Narendra was astounded and
puzzled. He could feel the man's words were honest and uttered from
depths of experience. He started visiting Ramakrishna frequently. At
first he did not believe that such a plain man could've seen god but
gradually he started having faith in what Ramkrishna said.
Though Narendra could not accept Ramakrishna and his visions, he
could not neglect him. It had always been in Narendra's nature to test
something thoroughly before he could accept it. He tested Ramakrishna to
the maximum, but the master was patient, forgiving, humorous, and full
of love. He never asked Narendra to abandon reason, and he faced all of
Narendra's arguments and examinations with infinite patience. In time,
Narendra accepted Ramakrishna, and when he accepted, his acceptance was
whole-hearted. While Ramakrishna predominantly taught duality and Bhakti
to his other disciples, he taught Narendra the Advaita Vedanta, the
philosophy of non-dualism.
During the course of five years of his training under
Ramakrishna, Narendra was transformed from a restless, puzzled,
impatient youth to a mature man who was ready to renounce everything for
the sake of God-realization. Soon, Ramakrishna's end came in the form
of throat cancer in August 1886. After this Narendra and a core group of
Ramakrishna's disciples took vows to become monks and renounce
everything, and started living in a supposedly haunted house in
Baranagore. They took alms to satisfy their hunger and their other needs
were taken care of by Ramakrishna's richer householder disciples.
Wanderings in India
Soon, the young monk of Baranagore wanted to live the life of a
wandering monk with rags and a begging bowl and no other possessions. On
July 1890, Vivekananda set out for a long journey, without knowing
where the journey would take him. The journey that followed took him to
the length and breadth of the Indian subcontinent. During these days,
Vivekananda assumed various names like Vividishananda (in Sanskrit,
Vividisha means "the desire to know" and Ananda means "bliss"),
Satchidananda, etc., It is said that he was given the name Vivekananda
by Maharaja of Khetri for his discernment of things, Real and unreal -
the hallmark of a knower of Brahman.
During these wandering days, Vivekananda stayed on king's
palaces, as well as the huts of the poor. He came in close contact with
the culture of different regions of India and various classes of people
in India. Vivekananda observed the imbalance in society and tyranny in
the name of caste. He realised the need for a national rejuvenation if
India was to survive at all. He reached Kanyakumari, the southernmost
tip of the Indian subcontinent on 24 December 1892. There, he swam
across the sea and started meditating on a lone rock. He thus meditated
for three days and said later that he meditated about the past, present
and future of India. The rock went on to become the Vivekananda memorial
at Kanyakumari.
Vivekananda went to Madras and spoke about his plans for India
and Hinduism to the young men of Madras. They were impressed by the monk
and urged him to go to the United States and represent Hinduism in the
World Parliament of Religions. The Raja of Ramnad, who was originally
invited for the conference, promoted Vivekananda as the right person to
represent the views of Hinduism in the Parliament. Thus, helped by his
friends at Chennai, Bhaskara Sethupathi, Raja of Ramnad and Maharajas of
Mysore and Khetri, Vivekananda set out on his journey to the USA.
In the West
Vivekananda was received well at the 1893 World Parliament of
Religions in Chicago, where he delivered a series of lectures. He also
earned wild applause for beginning his address with the famous words,
"Sisters and brothers of America." A newspaper account described him as
"an orator by divine right and undoubtedly the greatest figure at the
Parliament." Vivekananda's arrival in the USA has been identified by
many to mark the beginning of western interest in Hinduism not as merely
an exotic eastern oddity, but as a vital religious and philosophical
tradition that might actually have something important to teach the
West.
Vivekananda successfully introduced yoga and Vedanta to the West
and lectured around America introducing the topics (1894-6). He taught
hundreds of students privately in free classes held in his own room
beginning in New York in 1895. Later, he started Vedantic centers in New
York City and London, lectured at major universities and generally
kindled western interest in Hinduism. His success was not without
controversy, much of it from Christian missionaries of whom he was
fiercely critical. After four years of constant touring, lecturing and
retreats in the West, he came back to India in the year 1897.
Back in India
Admirers and devotees of Vivekananda gave him an enthusiastic
reception on his return to India. In India, he delivered a series of
lectures, and this set of lectures known as "Lectures from Colombo to
Almora" is considered to have uplifted the morale of the then
downtrodden Indian society. He founded one of the world's largest
charitable relief missions, the Ramakrishna Mission and reorganized the
ancient Swami order by founding one of the most significant and largest
monastic orders in India, the Ramakrishna Math.
However, he had to bear great criticism from other orthodox
Hindus for having traveled in the West. In his day there was hardly a
Hindu in America and he received criticism for crossing the ocean, at
that time a cause for "outcasting." Vivekananda scoffed at these
critiques from the orthodox saying "I cannot be outcast - As a monk, I
am beyond caste." His contemporaries also questioned his motives,
wondering whether the fame and glory of his Hindu evangelism compromised
his original monastic vows. His enthusiasm for America and Britain, and
his spiritual devotion to his motherland, caused significant tension in
his last years.
He once again toured the west from January 1899 to December 1900.
He inculcated a spirit of respect and good will for exchanges between
the East and the West. He had American disciples whom he brought to
India and initiated as Swamis and brought Indian Swamis to America where
they and their successors have been ever since.
Death
On July 4, 1902 at Belur Math near Calcutta, he taught Vedanta
philosophy to some pupils in the morning. He had a walk with Swami
Premananda, a brother-disciple and gave him instructions concerning the
future of the Ramakrishna Math. Vivekananda went into a samadhi and one
of his disciples found out he had left his body. He had predicted that
he would die before the age of 40, which proved to be true when he died
at the age of 39.
Principles and philosophy
Vivekananda was a renowned thinker in his own right. One of his most
important contributions was to demonstrate how Advaitin thinking is not
merely philosophically far-reaching, but how it also has social, even
political, consequences. One important lesson he claimed to receive from
Ramakrishna was that "Jiva is Shiva " (each individual is divinity
itself). This became his Mantra, and he coined the concept of daridra
narayana seva - the service of God in and through (poor) human beings.
If there truly is the unity of Brahman underlying all phenomena, then on
what basis do we regard ourselves as better or worse, or even as
better-off or worse-off, than others? - This was the question he posed
to himself. Ultimately, he concluded that these distinctions fade into
nothingness in the light of the oneness that the devotee experiences in
Moksha. What arises then is compassion for those "individuals" who
remain unaware of this oneness and a determination to help them.
Swami Vivekananda belonged to that branch of Vedanta that held
that no one can be truly free until all of us are. Even the desire for
personal salvation has to be given up, and only tireless work for the
salvation of others is the true mark of the enlightened person. He
founded the Sri Ramakrishna Math and Mission on the principle of Atmano
Mokshartham Jagad-hitaya cha (आत्मनॊ मोक्षार्थम् जगद्धिताय च) (for one's
own salvation and for the welfare of the World).
However, Vivekananda also pleaded for a strict separation between
religion and government ("church and state"). Although social customs
had been formed in the past with religious sanction, it was not now the
business of religion to interfere with matters such as marriage,
inheritance and so on. The ideal society would be a mixture of Brahmin
knowledge, Kshatriya culture, Vaisya efficiency and the egalitarian
Shudra ethos. Domination by any one led to different sorts of lopsided
societies. Vivekananda did not feel that religion, nor, any force for
that matter, should be used forcefully to bring about an ideal society,
since this was something that would evolve naturally by individualistic
change when the conditions were right.
Vivekananda made a strict demarcation between the two classes of
Hindu scriptures : the Sruti and the Smritis. The Sruti, by which is
meant the Vedas, consist of eternally and universally valid spiritual
truths. The Smritis on the other hand, are the dos and donts of
religions, applicable to society and subject to revision from time to
time. Vivekananda felt that existing Hindu smritis had to be revised for
modern times. But the Srutis of course are eternal - they may only be
re-interpreted.
Vivekanda advised his followers to be holy, unselfish and have
shraddha (faith). He encouraged the practise of Brahmacharya (Celibacy).
In one of the conversations with his childhood friend Sri Priya Nath
Sinha he attributes his physical and mental strengths, eloquence to the
practice of Brahmacharya.
Vivekananda didn't advocate the emerging area of parapsychology,
astrology (one instance can be found in his speech Man the Maker of his
Destiny, Complete-Works, Volume 8, Notes of Class Talks and Lectures)
saying that this form of curiosity doesn't help in spiritual progress
but actually hinders it.
Influence
Every one of the 20th century Indian leaders of note have
acknowledged his influence, from Gandhi to Subash Bose. The first
governor general of independent India, Chakravarti Rajagopalachari, once
observed that "Vivekananda saved Hinduism." According to Subhas Chandra
Bose, Vivekananda "is the maker of modern India" and for Mohandas
Gandhi, Vivekananda's influence increased his "love for his country a
thousand fold." Gandhi, who also strived for a lot of reform in Hinduism
himself, said: Swami Vivekananda's writings need no introduction from
anybody. They make their own irresistible appeal. Many years after his
death, Rabindranath Tagore (a prominent member of the Brahmo Samaj) had
said: If you want to know India, study Vivekananda. In him everything is
positive and nothing negative.[citation needed] National Youth Day in
India is by way of commemorating him held on his birthday, January 12.
This was a most fitting gesture as much of Swami Vivekananda's writings
concerned the Indian youth and how they should strive to uphold their
ancient values whilst fully participating in the modern world.
Swami Vivekananda is widely considered to have inspired India's
freedom struggle movement. His writings inspired a whole generation of
freedom fighters including Aurobindo Ghose and Bagha Jatin. Vivekananda
was the brother of the extremist revolutionary, Shri Bhupendranath
Dutta.Subhash Chandra Bose one of the most prominent figures in Indian
independence movement said,
I cannot write about Vivekananda without going into raptures. Few
indeed could comprehend or fathom him even among those who had the
privilege of becoming intimate with him. His personality was rich,
profound and complex... Reckless in his sacrifice, unceasing in his
activity, boundless in his love, profound and versatile in his wisdom,
exuberant in his emotions, merciless in his attacks but yet simple as a
child, he was a rare personality in this world of ours
Aurobindo Ghosh considered Vivekananda as his spiritual mentor. While in
Alipore Jail, Sri Aurobindo used to be visited by Swami Vivekananda in
his meditation and be guided by him in yoga.
Vivekananda was a soul of puissance if ever there was one, a very
lion among men, but the definitive work he has left behind is quite
incommensurate with our impression of his creative might and energy. We
perceive his influence still working gigantically, we know not well how,
we know not well where, in something that is not yet formed, something
leonine, grand, intuitive, upheaving that has entered the soul of India
and we say, "Behold, Vivekananda still lives in the soul of his Mother
and in the souls of her children. --Sri Aurobindo--1915 in Vedic
Magazine.
Vivekananda inspired Jamshedji Tata to set up Indian Institute of
Science, one of India's finest Institutions. Abroad, he had some
interactions with Max Mueller. Nikola Tesla was one of those influenced
by the Vedic philosophy teachings of the Swami Vivekananda.
Above all Swami Vivekanada helped restore a sense of pride
amongst the Hindus, presenting the ancient teachings of India in its
purest form to a Western audience, free from the propoganda spread by
British colonial administators and christian missonaries, of Hinduism
being a caste-ridden, misogynistic idolatrous faith. Indeed his early
foray into the West would set the path for subsequent Indian religious
teachers to make their own marks on the world, as well herald the entry
of Hindus and their religious traditions into the Western world.
Vivekananda and science
In his book Raja Yoga, Vivekananda writes that practice of Raja Yoga
can confer psychic powers such as 'reading another’s thoughts',
'controlling all the forces of nature', become 'almost all-knowing',
'live without breathing', 'control the bodies of others' and levitation.
He also explains about traditional eastern spiritual concepts like
kundalini and spiritual energy centres. These phenomena are
contradictory to the understanding of modern scientific community and
none of these concepts have still been experimentally verified in a
peer-reviewed scientific journal.
However, Vivekananda himself says in the book,
“ It is not the sign of a candid and scientific mind to throw
overboard anything without proper investigation. Surface scientists,
unable to explain the various extraordinary mental phenomena, strive to
ignore their very existence. ”
He further says in the introduction of the book that one should
take up the practice and verify these things for themselves, and that
there should not be blind belief.
“ What little I know I will tell you. So far as I can reason it
out I will do so, but as to what I do not know I will simply tell you
what the books say. It is wrong to believe blindly. You must exercise
your own reason and judgment; you must practise, and see whether these
things happen or not. Just as you would take up any other science,
exactly in the same manner you should take up this science for study.”
Works
Vivekananda left a body of philosophical works (see Vivekananda's
complete works) which Vedic scholar Frank Parlato has called, "the
greatest comprehensive work in philosophy ever published." His books
(compiled from lectures given around the world) on the four Yogas (Raja
Yoga, Karma Yoga, Bhakti Yoga, Jnana Yoga) are very influential and
still seen as fundamental texts for anyone interested in the Hindu
practice of Yoga. His letters are of great literary and spiritual value.
He was also a widely considered a very good singer and a poet[citation
needed]. He had composed many songs including his favorite Kali the
Mother. He used humor for his teachings and was also an excellent cook.
His language is very free flowing. His own Bengali writings stand
testimony to the fact that he believed that words - spoken or written
should be for making things easier to understand rather than show off
the speaker or writer's knowledge.
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