Sunday, 22 May 2016

Dignity in Disagreement , A Hindu Perspective.



                                    Dignity in disagreement , A Hindu Perspective.

Though born in a Hindu family, I never became Hindu for being born such. Though born in a Kshatriya family, I never became a Kshatriya for being born such. I thought of elevating myself to the enlightened state of a Brahmin and the scriptures never hindered my path. Becoming Hindu was a great task because it sought a journey to the depths of the superficially turbulent ocean of fearful waves and my ignorance knew no swimming. But to learn swimming I had to hurl myself into the waves and as I learnt diving deep I realized the need to understand all that stood in the way and why they stood there and for what purpose .The waves took me to different faiths that drew from the same source. All faiths welcomed me with open arms with some undercurrents seeking to disturb the balance. The light that led me to the Grace of all was one and illuminated the beauty of such expanse. And as I arrived at gates enlightenment ,I had lost my caste and my Varna , I saw one truth, the truth of permanence which served as the foundation of all fading in time , interpreted variously but not differently .
As I came to the surface I found the followers of the same faiths seeking propagation of such through indulgence in indignity, I saw strange expressions of love for the mother land. I remembered Rama the epitome of dignity who gave up his heritance of the kingdom in deference to the wishes of his father’s second wife who wanted kingship for her son Bharata. Convention had it that the king should make his eldest son his successor and the old king adhering to that, his love for his eldest son and in recognition of his superior attributes wanted him to succeed his kingdom. Ram showed no disrespect for the king’s second wife and despite his father’s deep agony accepted exile.
As Rama wandered in the wilderness he came across a woman called Shabri who offered him jungle berries and each time she did so she bit a small part of the berry to ensure that none that Rama ate was sour. Rama was overcome by passion of this old mother; he never found time to go either into her faith or her caste. That was the divinity, dignity and grace of heir apparent to Ayodhya , who in Hinduism came to be revered as the ideal human ,” Maryada Purshottam Rama “. The only questionable contradiction in this personality was his yielding to the opinion of a washer man which resulted in his separation with his wife.   There was no formal system of jurisprudence as we know of now to go into the legality of the cause that resulted in such.
If Ram was the ideal man, Sita was an embodiment of virtues who stood defiantly against Ravana the Demon King despite his pressure on her to yield. She never did and in time during the course of her captivity even the demon women came to revere her. Ravana had kidnapped her by deceit coming to her as a Brahmin mendicant seeking alms and through such pretence prevailed upon her to come out of the circle of protection drawn around her by her husband’s younger brother Lakshman. The Kshatriya lady crossed the line in reverence to the Brahmin which was just an overt appearance of the demon. Taking advantage of this opportunity Ravana abducted her. And now a great battle was fought. Ravana’s kingdom, Lanka was reduced to ashes and he and his men perished to Rama’s might.
Fourteen years having been passed in wilderness Rama was now forced by Bharat and the citizens of Ayodhya to return. Fourteen years of exile had been the demand of the of the king’s wife who had sought such of the king who perished in agony on account of such separation from his son. Bharat , the younger brother  did not assume kingship and had approached his elder brother to return from exile but  Rama would not let his demised father down and asserted that he would not return unless the pledge his father had made to Kaikeyi his second wife had been redeemed . Having failed in his prayers to seek Rama’s return, Bharata begged for his sandals and as he returned to Ayodhya placed the same on the throne as a symbol of Ram’s presence and guidance to Ayodhya.
When the period of exile was over Bharata took back his elder brothers and Sita back to Ayodhya to a rousing welcome of the citizens. Rama was crowned king of  Ayodhya .  As Rama went about the business of his kingdom a washer man questioned the chastity of Mother Sita . Despite great personal agony and of the people, Rama yielded to the opinion of the last man in his kingdom, though the washer man’s opinion did not constitute the opinion of the majority. Sita was now decreed to give “Agni Pareeksha “, sit on a pyre of fire to prove her chastity. This act of Rama became the questionable contradiction which could be justified on the crucible of emotion and traditions but perhaps not on the crucible of reason that became the edifice of later day jurisprudence.
Kingships demised, kings were gone, in time India became a democracy where jurisprudence was not to be guided by emotions based on here say, which sources public opinion. It took more than twenty years for the Bofors scam to be established, it never was. Law of the land found it otherwise. Urgency for building a temple to Ram ebbs each time  the advocates of such, garner ballots in his name. The media sites and the news channels are littered with folktales about scams, yet to be established. If the ultimate recourse is law then what purpose does any propagandist trial of any individual outside its domain, serve? Faiths fight and the Lord wonders at the irreligious division of His grace, the source of life in all inert , uninvolved and undiminished. The inhuman dwell in indignity dirtying each other’s linen in a manner which undermines the values that make human a human, a conduct which runs contrary to the traits of the ideal man “ Maryada Purushottam Rama “ with no setting of values for guidance of posterity.




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