Paper Name: Indian writing in English
Name: Baraiya Bhavna P.
Semester: 1
Topic: Shree Aurobindo's view on spirituality
Date: 01/10/2012
Submitted To: Heenaba Zala
Department of English,
Bhavnagar University. Shree Aurobindo’s view
on
‘Spiritualism’
Shree Aurobindo was an Indian nationalist, freedom fighter,
philosopher, yogi, guru, and poet. He joined the Indian
movement for freedom from British
rule and for a duration became
one of its most important leaders, before
developing his own vision of human progress and evolution. He was also one of the
famous Radical leaders of India during the Indian National Movement.
The central theme of Aurobindo's vision was the evolution of human
life into life divine. He wrote: "Man is a
transitional being. He is not final. The step from man to superman is the next
approaching achievement in the earth evolution. It is inevitable because it is
at once the intention of the inner spirit and the logic of nature's
process."
Aurobindo's conversion from political action to
spirituality occurred gradually. Aurobindo had been influenced by Bankim's Aandmath. In this novel, the story follows a monk who fights the soldiers
of the British East India Company. When in Baroda, Aurobindo and Barin had considered the plan of a national
uprising of nationalist sannyasis against the empire. Later when Aurobindo
got involved with Congress and Bande Mataram, Barin had continued
to meet patriotic youngsters for recruitment for such a plan. In 1907, Barin
introduced Aurobindo to Vishnu Bhaskar Lele, a Maharastian yogy.
Aurobindo had been engaged in yogic discipline for years, but disturbances to his progress following the recent events surrounding the Congress had put him in the need of consulting a yogi. After attending the Surat session of the Congress in 1907, Aurobindo met Lele in Baroda. This meeting led him to retire for three days in seclusion where, following Lele's instruction, Aurobindo had his first major experience, called nirvana - a state of complete mental silence free of any thought or mental activity. Later, while awaiting trial as a prisoner in Alipore Central Jail in Calcutta Aurobindo had a number of mystical experiences. In his letters, Sri Aurobindo mentions that while in jail as under-trial, spirit of Swami Vivekananda visited him for two weeks and spoke about the higher planes of consciousness leading to supermind. Sri Aurobindo later said that while imprisoned he saw the convicts, jailers, policemen, the prison bars, the trees, the judge, the lawyers as different forms of one godhead, Krishna .
Aurobindo had been engaged in yogic discipline for years, but disturbances to his progress following the recent events surrounding the Congress had put him in the need of consulting a yogi. After attending the Surat session of the Congress in 1907, Aurobindo met Lele in Baroda. This meeting led him to retire for three days in seclusion where, following Lele's instruction, Aurobindo had his first major experience, called nirvana - a state of complete mental silence free of any thought or mental activity. Later, while awaiting trial as a prisoner in Alipore Central Jail in Calcutta Aurobindo had a number of mystical experiences. In his letters, Sri Aurobindo mentions that while in jail as under-trial, spirit of Swami Vivekananda visited him for two weeks and spoke about the higher planes of consciousness leading to supermind. Sri Aurobindo later said that while imprisoned he saw the convicts, jailers, policemen, the prison bars, the trees, the judge, the lawyers as different forms of one godhead, Krishna .
Pondicherry
In Pondicherry, Sri Aurobindo completely dedicated himself to
his spiritual and philosophical pursuits. In 1914, after four years of
concentrated yoga, Sri Aurobindo was proposed to express his vision in
intellectual terms. This resulted in the launch of Arya, a 64 page monthly review. For the next six and
a half years this became the vehicle for most of his most important writings,
which appeared in serialised form. These included ‘The Life Devine’, ‘The Synthesis of yoga’, Essays on The Gita, The Secret of The Veda, Hymns to the Mystic Fire, The Upanishads,The Renaissance in India, War
and Self-determination, The Human Cycle, The Ideal of
Human Unity, and The Future Poetry. Many years later, Sri
Aurobindo revised some of these works before they were published in book form.
It was about his prose writing of this period that Times Literary Supplement,
London wrote on 8 July 1944,
"Sri Aurobindo is the most significant
and perhaps the most interesting.... He is a new type of thinker, one who
combines in his vision the alacrity of the West with the illumination of the
East. He is a yogi who writes as though he were standing among the stars, with
the constellations for his companions. Pondicherry is prayerpalace of Aurobindo
Ghosh."
For some time afterwards, Sri Aurobindo's main
literary output was his voluminous correspondence with his disciples. His
letters, most of which were written in the 1930s, numbered in the several
thousands. Many were brief comments made in the margins of his disciple's
notebooks in answer to their questions and reports of their spiritual
practice—others extended to several pages of carefully composed explanations of
practical aspects of his teachings. These were later collected and published in
book form in three volumes of Letters on yoga. In the late 1930s, Sri Aurobindo resumed work on
a poem he had started earlier—he continued to expand and revise this poem for
the rest of his life. It became perhaps his greatest literary achievement, Savitri, an epic spiritual poem in blank verse of
approximately 24,000 lines. During World War II, he supported the allies, even
donating money to the British Government, describing Hitler as a dark and
oppressive force.
On August 15, 1947, on his 75th birthday, when
India achieved political independence, a message was asked from Sri Aurobindo.
In his message, which was read out on the All India Radio, Sri Aurobindo dwelt
briefly on the five dreams he has cherished all his life and which, he noted,
were on the way to being fulfilled. Sri Aurobindo died on December 5, 1950,
after a short illness.
(1) Psychic Transformation
The
first of the three stages is a movement within, away from the surface of life,
to the depths, culminating in the discovery of his psychic being (the evolving
soul). From that experience, he sees the oneness and unity of creation, and the
harmony of all opposites experienced in life.
(2) Spiritual Transformation
As a result of making the
psychic change, his mind expands and he experiences knowledge not through the
hard churning of thought, but through light, intuition, and revelation of
knowledge, culminating in supramental perception. Light enters from the heights
and begins to transmute various parts of his being.
(3) Supramental transformation
After
making the psychic and spiritual change, he makes the supramental and most
radical change. It is basically a complete transformation of the mind, the
heart, the emotions, and the physical body.
Supramental existence
Sri Aurobindo's vision of the future includes the appearance of
what may be called a new species, the supramental being, a divine being which would be as different and superior to
present humanity as humanity is to the animal. It would have a consciousness
different in kind than the mind of the human, a different status and quality
and functioning. Even the physical form of this being would be different, more
luminous and flexible and adaptable, entirely conscious and harmonious. Between
this supramental being and humanity, there would be transitional beings, who
would be human in birth and form, but whose consciousness would approach that
of the supramental being. These transitional beings would appear prior to that
of the full supramental being, and would constitute an intermediate stage in the
Earth's evolution, through which the soul would pass in its growth towards its
divine manifestation as the supramental being in the earth nature.
Interpretation of
the Vedas
One of the most significant contributions of Sri Aurobindo was his
setting forth an esoteric meaning of the Vedas. The Vedas were considered
by some to be composed by a barbaric culture worshiping violent gods. Sri
Aurobindo felt that this was due to a failure by both Eastern and Western
scholars to understand Vedic symbolism.
Sri Aurobindo believed there was a hidden spiritual meaning in the
Vedas. He viewed the Rig Veda as a spiritual text written in a symbolic language in which the
outer meaning was concerned with ritualistic sacrifices to the gods, and the
inner meaning, which was revealed only to initiates, was concerned with an
inner spiritual knowledge and practice, the aim of which was to unite in consciousness
with the Divine.
In this conception, Indra is the god of mind lording over the Indriyas, that is, the senses. Vayu represents air, but in its esoteric sense means prana, or the life force. So
when the Rig Veda says "Call Indra and Vayu to
drink Soma Rasa" the inner meaning is to use mind through the senses and
life force to receive divine bliss. Agni, the god of the sacrificial fire in the outer sense, is the flame
of the spiritual will to overcome the obstacles to unite with the Divine. So
the sacrifice of the Vedas could mean sacrificing one's ego to the internal
Agni, the spiritual fire.
Sri Aurobindo's theory of the inner spiritual significance of the
Vedas originally appeared serially in the journal Arya between 1914 and 1921, but was later
published in book form as The
Secret of the Veda. Another book, Hymns
to the Mystic Fire, is Sri Aurobindo's translation of the spiritual sense
of many of the verses of the Rig
Veda.
Sri Aurobindo not only expressed his spiritual thought and vision
in intricate metaphysical reasoning and in phenomenological terms, but also in
poetry. He started writing poetry as a young student, and continued until late
in his life. The theme of his poetry changed with the projects that he
undertook. It ranged from revolutionary homages to mystic philosophy. Sri
Aurobindo wrote in classical style.
Savitri
Savitri: A Legend and a
Symbo is Sri Aurobindo's
epic poem in 12 books, 24,000 lines about an individual who overcomes the
ignorance, suffering, and death in the world through Her spiritual quest,
setting the stage for the emergence of a new, Divine life on earth. It is
loosely based on the ancient Indian tale of 'Savitri and Satyavan' from the Mahabharata.
The
Future Poetry
In Sri Aurobindo's theory of poetry, written
under the title The Future Poetry, he writes about the significance
that art and culture have for the spiritual evolution of mankind. He believed
that a new, deep, and intuitive poetry could be a powerful aid to the change of
consciousness and the life required to achieve the spiritual destiny of mankind
which he envisioned. Unlike philosophy or psychology, poetry could make the
reality of the Spirit living to the imagination and reveal its beauty and
delight and captivate the deeper soul of humanity to its acceptance. It is
perhaps in Sri Aurobindo's own poetry, particularly in his epic poem Savitri,
that we find the fullest and most powerful statement of his spiritual thought
and vision.
Hello Bhavna. you have tried good but still inplace of Pondicherry, you could give more content about his relativity to Spirituality to be faithful to your topic. good try. Thank you
ReplyDeleteyour skill of writing is good.you try your best to give Justice to your topic.
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