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The history of India that we read and memorise for
our examinations is really a nightmarish account of India. Some people
arrive from somewhere and the pandemonium is let loose. And then it is a
free-for-all: assault and counter-assault, blows and bloodletting.
Father and son, brother and brother vie with each other for the throne.
If one group condescends to leave, another group
appears as if out of the blue; the Pathans and the Mughals, the
Portuguese and the French and the English together have made this
nightmare ever more complex.
But if Bharatavarsha is viewed with these passing
frames of dreamlike scenes, smeared in red, overlaid on it, the real
Bharatavarsha cannot be glimpsed. These histories do not answer the
question, where were the people of India? As if the people of India did
not exist, only those who maimed and killed alone existed.
It is not that this bloodletting and this carnage
were the most important things in Bharatavarsha even in those miserable
days. Despite its roar, the storm cannot be regarded as the most
important event in a stormy day. In that day too, with sky overcast with
dust, the most important thing for man was the flow of life and death
and of happiness and sorrow that moves on in the countless
village-homes, even though beclouded. But to an alien passer-by the
storm is the most important thing; the cloud of dust devours everything
else from his view. For he is not inside the home; he is outside. That´s
why in the history narrated by the foreigners we get the accounts of the
dust, of the storms, but we do not get even a word about the homes.
Those histories make you feel that at that time Bharatavarsha did not
exist at all; as though only the howling whirlwind of the Pathans and
the Mughals holding aloft the banner of dry leaves had been moving round
and round across the country, from north to south and east to west.
However, while the lands of the aliens existed, there
also existed the indigenous country. Otherwise, in the midst of all the
turbulence, who gave birth to the likes of Kabir, Nanak, Chaitanya, and
Tukaram? It was not that only Delhi and Agra existed then, there were
also Kasi and Navadvipa. The current of life that was flowing then in
the real Bharatavarsha, the ripples of efforts rising there and the
social changes that were taking place—none of these find an account in
our history textbooks.
But our real ties are with the Bharatavarsha that
lies outside our textbooks. If the history of this time for a
substantially long period gets lost, our soul loses its anchorage. After
all, we are no weeds or parasitical plants in India. Over many hundreds
of years, it is our roots, hundreds and thousands of them, that have
occupied the very heart of Bharatavarsha. But, unfortunately, we are
obliged to learn a brand of history that makes our children forget this
very fact. It appears as if we are nobody in India; as if those who came
from outside alone matter.
From which quarter can we derive our life-sustenance
when we learn that our tie with our own country is so insignificant? In
such a situation we feel no hitch whatsoever in installing others´
countries in place of our own. We become incapable of feeling a
mortifying sense of shame at the indignity of Bharatavarsha. We
effortlessly keep on saying that we did not have anything worth the name
in the past and thus for everything, from food and clothing to conduct
and behaviour, we now have to beg from foreigners.
Fortunate countries find the everlasting image of
their land in their own history. It is history that serves as the
introduction to one´s own country during one´s childhood itself. In
our case it is just the opposite thing that happens: it is the history
of our country that has kept our own land obscured to us. From the
invasion of Mahmud to the arrogant imperial declaration of Lord Curzon,
all the historical annals till yesterday are only a mass of strange mist
for Bharatavarsha. These accounts do not give clarity to our vision of
our motherland. In fact, these only serve to cloud it.
Our real ties are with the
Bharatavarsha that lies outside our textbooks. If the history of this
time for a substantially long period gets lost, our soul loses its
anchorage. After all, we are no weeds or parasitical plants in India.
Over many hundreds of years, it is our roots, hundreds and thousands of
them, that have occupied the very heart of Bharatavarsha.
These accounts throw a beam of artificial light on
such a spot that in our own eyes the very profile of our country is made
dark. And in that darkness the illumination of the pleasure chamber of
the Nawab makes the dancing girl´s diamond ornaments gleam and the
purple froth of the wineglass of the Badshah appears as the bloodshot
sleepless eyes of excess and dissipation. In that darkness our ancient
temples cover their heads and the peaks of the tombs of Sultans´
sweethearts fashioned in white marble and embellished with gorgeous
craftsmanship haughtily bid to kiss the world of stars.
The sound of galloping horses, the trumpet of
elephants, the clang of weapons, the wavy grey of the vast array of army
camps, the velvet covers flashing golden rays, the foamy bubble-shaped
domes of masjids, the eerie hush of that abode of mystery—the inner
apartments of the royal palaces with eunuch guards keeping vigil over
them—the ensemble of all these strange sounds and colours and
sentiments produce an enormous magical world in that darkness. What is
the point in calling this the history of Bharatavarsha? All these have
kept the Indian ancient text of eternal and beatific value (punyamantra)
covered within the jacket of an Arabian-nights romance. Nobody any
longer opens that book; and our children commit to memory every line of
the Arabian-nights romance. And later, on the eve of its dissolution, as
the Mughal Empire lay dying, it signalled the beginning of a spate of
deception, treachery and murder, as though among a group of vultures
coming from afar and descending on the crematorium. Is an account of
this too the real history of Bharatavarsha?
And then began the English rule with its five-yearly
divisions like the crisscross houses on the chessboard. Bharatavarsha is
even smaller there. In fact, the only difference it has with the
chess-board is that here houses are not evenly distributed between black
and white; here ninety per cent are only white. For the sake of just a
morsel of food we are now buying everything, from good governance to
good legal system to good education, from a huge ´Whiteway Ledle Store´.
All other shops are now closed. It may be that from courts to commerce,
everything relating to this concern is ´good´, but in a corner of its
clerical office the space assigned to Bharatavarsha is awfully small.
The superstition that history has to be similar in
all countries must be abandoned. The person who has become hardboiled
after going through the biography of Rothschilde, while dealing with the
life of Christ is likely to call for his account books and office diary.
And if he fails to find them then he will form a very poor opinion of
Christ and would say: ´A fellow who was not worth even a nickel, how
come he can have a biography?´ Similarly, those who give up all hope of
Indian history because they fail to find the royal genealogies and
accounts of the conquests and defeats in the ´Indian official record
room´ and say, ´How can there be any history when there is no
politics?´ are like people who look for aubergine in paddy fields. And
when they do not find it there, in their frustration they refuse to
count paddy as a variety of grains at all. All fields do not yield the
same crop. One who knows this and thus looks for the proper crop in the
proper field is a truly wise person.
An examination of Christ´s account books may lead
one to a poor opinion of him, but when one inquires into other aspects
of his life, the account books become utterly irrelevant. Similarly, if
we view from a special perspective, with the full knowledge that in
matters of politics Bharatavarsha has been deficient, this deficiency
cannot be dismissed as of no consequence. By not viewing Bharatavarsha
from Bharatavarsha´s own perspective, since our very childhood we learn
to demean her and in consequence we get demeaned ourselves. An English
boy knows that his ancestors won many wars, conquered many lands and did
extensive trade and commerce; he too wants to be an heir to the glory of
war, of wealth, of success in commerce. We learn that our ancestors did
not conquer other countries and did not extend trade and commerce; to
make just this fact known is the very purpose of the history of India.
What our ancestors did we did not know; therefore, we also do not know
what we ought to aim for. Therefore we have to imitate others. Whom
should we blame for this? The way we get our education since our very
childhood, with every passing day we get increasingly alienated from our
own country till a sense of rebellion against the land of our birth
overtakes our mind.
Even the educated people in our country are often
dismayed and are found asking every now and then, “What do you mean by
our country? What distinctive attitude marks it out? Where is that
located now? Where was it located before?” We cannot have answers to
these merely by raising questions. Because the issue is so subtle and so
vast it cannot be comprehended through mere arguments. Neither the
English nor the French, or for that matter, the natives of any country
can answer in one word the question; what is the distinctive attitude of
one´s own country or where is the real location of its spirit? Like the
life inside the body, this spirit is a directly perceptible reality. And
like life, it is extremely difficult to fathom it through logical
definitions. Since the very childhood it enters our being through
diverse avenues in diverse forms; and it finds passage into our
knowledge, our love, our imagination. With its wonderful powers it
unobtrusively fashions us; it does not allow the growth of a barrier
separating our past from the present. It is by the grace of it that we
are not delimited, we are not atomised. How can we give expression in a
few words of logical precision to this primordial and hidden spirit
endowed with a wonderful vigour, in order to satisfy the sceptic
inquirer?
What is the chief significance of Bharatavarsha? If a
precise answer to this question is sought, the answer is available. And
the history of Bharatavarsha upholds that answer. We find that a single
objective has always been motivating Bharatavarsha. This objective has
been to establish unity among diversity, to make various paths move
towards one goal, to experience the One-in-many as the innermost
reality, to pursue with total certitude that supreme principle of inner
unity, which runs through the differences. It has also been her
endeavour to achieve these without destroying the distinctions that
appear in the external world.
The ability to perceive this oneness in diversity and
to strive to extend unity are the native characteristics of
Bharatavarsha. It is this quality that has made her indifferent to
political glory. For, it is the mode of conflict that forms the basis of
political achievements. Those who do not whole-heartedly regard others
as truly outsiders cannot accept the achievement of political glory as
the supreme goal of life. The urge that impels one to establish oneself
against others is the foundation of political achievement. And the
endeavour to form communion with others, and the effort to harmonise
divergences and contradictions within one’s own fold are the basis of
ethical and social advancement. The kind of unity that the European
civilisation has opted for is discord-centred; the kind of unity that
Bharatavarshiya civilisation has opted for is concord-centred. Although
the noose of discord that the political unity of European kind wears
around its neck is able to keep it arrayed in a tight pull against
others, it is unable to provide harmony to its own self. And because of
this, the antagonism and distance between man and man, between rulers
and the ruled, between the rich and the poor are constantly kept alive.
It is not that these various sections carry in
harmony the whole society together with their distinctive roles in their
respective spheres. In fact, they remain mutually antagonistic. The
constant and ever alert effort of each section is to try its utmost to
prevent the increase of power of other groups. Where everybody is thus
engaged in pressing and jostling, equilibrium of power is not possible.
There, numerical strength acquires ascendancy over excellence and
collective accumulation of wealth from commerce overwhelms the
householders’ savings. Thus the social equilibrium is lost. And in an
attempt to keep these mutually antagonistic and repugnant parts somehow
cobbled together, the government keeps on enacting law after law. This
is inevitable; for, when discord is the seed, the harvest too would only
be discord. The well-nourished and luxuriant thing that is seen in
between is only the sprightly and strong tree bearing the fruit of
discord.
Bharatavarsha has endeavoured to knit together in
ties of relationships diverse elements, even if these elements are
disparate. Where there are real differences, it is only by ordering the
differences and assigning the differences to their proper places and by
reining them in that unity can be really achieved. Merely enacting a law
to the effect that henceforth everybody is united does not bring about
unity. The only way to knit together in ties of relationships those who
cannot be unified is to distribute them over different areas of special
preserves. If the incompatibles are artificially forced into a unity,
through force again they split. And the breakup is accompanied by
shattering events. Bharatavarsha knew the secrets of integration. The
French Revolution had the haughtiness to think that it would wipe off
all differences among men with blood. But it has produced the very
opposite results. In Europe, the rulers and the ruled, the wealthy and
the common people, all the repositories of power, are gradually becoming
fiercely antagonistic to each other. The goal of Bharatavarsha too had
been to tie everybody in a bond of unity; but the method she adopted was
different. Bharatavarsha tried to delimit and demarcate each of the
antagonistic and competitive forces of the society and make the
body-social fit for both functional unity as well as diversities of
occupations. She did not allow conflict and disorder to remain ever
active by giving room to constant attempts at overstepping the area of
one’s own rights. She has not made the duties and works, the home and
the hearth and everything else subject to a terrible vortex of sullied
directionlessness by driving all the energy of the society to the single
path of twenty-four-hour fierce competition. To discover the heart of
unity and to achieve integration and to secure the space for attaining
the ultimate fulfillment and liberation in peace and stability were the
quests of Bharatavarsha.
Providence has pulled in diverse people onto the lap
of Bharatavarsha. Since antiquity Bharatavarsha has been provided with
the opportunity to put into practice the special talent her people were
endowed with. Bharatavarsha has forever been engaged in constructing
with varied material the foundation of a unifying civilisation. And a
unified civilisation is the highest goal of all human civilisations. She
has not driven away anybody as alien, she has not expelled anybody as
inferior, she has not scorned anything as odd. Bharatavarsha has adopted
all, accepted everybody. And when so much is accepted, it becomes
necessary to establish one’s own code and fix regulation over the
assorted collections. It is not possible to leave them unrestrained like
animals fighting each other. They have to be appropriately distributed
into separate autonomous divisions while keeping them bound on a
fundamental principle of unity. The component might have come from
outside but the arrangement and the fundamental idea behind it were
Bharatavarsha’s own.
Europe wants to make the society safe by driving away
the strangers, by decimating them. Specimen of this behaviour can be
seen even now in America, in Australia, in New Zealand, in the Cape
Colony. The reason for this is that they lack a proper sense of cohesion
within their own social fabric. They have not been able to give
appropriate places to the various communities of their own and many a
limbs of their own societies have become burdensome to them. In such a
situation where would they find room for outsiders? Where one’s own
relatives are ready to create trouble, there the outsiders would never
be offered hospitality. A society that has order and has a principle of
unity and where everybody has one’s own demarcated place and rights,
only in such a society is it easy to accommodate others as one’s own.
There are two ways of dealing with others: either by thrashing and
killing and driving them away and thus making one’s own society and
civilisation safe or by providing them proper places in one’s own
system and by disciplining them with one’s own customs. While Europe
by adopting the former method has kept alive its antagonism to the whole
world and remaining ever ready to strike, Bharatavarsha by adopting the
latter method has been trying slowly and gradually to make everybody her
own. If Dharma deserves reverence, if Dharma is regarded as the highest
ideal of human civilisation, then the superiority of the method of
Bharatavarsha has to be accepted.
It needs talent to make outsiders one’s own. The
ability to enter others’ beings and the magic power of making the
stranger completely one’s own, these are the qualities native to
genius. That genius we find in Bharatavarsha. Bharatavarsha has
unhesitatingly entered others´ beings, and has effortlessly accepted
things from others. Bharatavarsha was not frightened at the sight of
what is termed by foreigners as idolatry and did not sneer at it.
Bharatavarsha has adopted even grotesque elements from communities like
the Sabara, Pulinda, Vyadha, etc., and has infused her own philosophy
into these elements and has given expression to her spirituality through
them. Bharatavarsha has not discarded anything and has made everyone her
own after accepting him or her.
Not only in social organisation, but also in the area
of faith and belief we notice the same trend of the building of unity
and harmony. The effort to establish harmony between knowledge, action
and devotion that we see in the Gita is a trait that belongs especially
to Bharatavarsha. It is impossible to translate into Indian language the
expression called ‘religion’ that exists in Europe, for within the
domain of faith, Bharatavarsha has resisted the dividing of the mind.
Our intellect, our belief, our conduct, all that we hold dear in this
world and in the next, all of these together constitute our Dharma.
Bharatavarsha has not divided the faith into the pigeonholes of
‘everyday use’ and ‘formal occasions’. For example, the
life-force that courses through various limbs of the body like hands,
feet, head, stomach, etc., is really the same entity and is not
divisible as the life in hand, the life in feet, and so on. Similarly,
Bharatavarsha did not slice the Dharma into various pieces like the
Dharma of belief, the Dharma of conduct, the Dharma of Sunday, the
Dharma of other six days, the Dharma of the Church, the Dharma of the
home, etc. The Dharma of Bharatavarsha is the Dharma of the entire
society. It has its roots struck into the earth while its head soars
into the sky. Bharatavarsha has not looked upon the roots and the top as
disjoined parts. Bharatavarsha has looked upon Dharma as one magnificent
tree stretching from the earth to the heavens and covering the entire
life of man.
Amongst the civilisations of the world Bharatavarsha
stands as an ideal of the endeavour to unify the diverse. Her history
will bear this out. Amidst many travails and obstacles, fortunes and
misfortunes, Bharatavarsha has been seeking to experience the One in the
universe as well as in one’s own soul and to place that One in the
variegated, to discover that One through knowledge, to establish that
One through action, to internalise that One through love, to exemplify
that One through one’s own life. When through the study of her history
we would be able to realise this everlasting spirit of Bharata, then the
rupture of our present with the past will disappear.
The Dharma of Bharatavarsha
is the Dharma of the entire society. It has its roots struck into the
earth while its head soars into the sky. Bharatavarsha has not looked
upon the roots and the top as disjoined parts. Bharatavarsha has looked
upon Dharma as one magnificent tree stretching from the earth to the
heavens and covering the entire life of man.
(Translated from Bengali by Sumita
Bhattacharya and Sibesh Bhattacharya, Indian Institute of Advanced
Study, Shimla.)
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