I
am thoroughly convinced that no individual or nation can live by
holding itself apart from the community of others.. .. Give and take
is the law; and if India wants to raise herself once more, it is
absolutely necessary that she brings out her treasures and throws
them broadcast among the nations of the earth, and in return be ready
to receive what others have to give her.
– Swami
Vivekananda
CW:
Vol.4, Writings: Prose, Reply to the Calcutta Address
In
this quotation, Swami Vivekananda outlines, in brief, his fundamental
strategy for national regeneration.
To understand the strategy – outlined in this quote – it is important to gain some context.
There are different approaches that have been suggested for India’s regeneration:
One approach, prevalent at the time of Swami Vivekananda’s life on earth, and holding currency even today is the path of negation. Reject wholly India’s traditions as conservative, ritualistic, lacking in ‘logic and reason’, and accept wholly the Western models as the only path to economic success. This means a wholesale acceptance of modern Western notions that are broadly clubbed as ‘liberal’ and ‘secular’, as more ‘modern’ and enlightened.
A
second approach is the idea of development through aid and help from
others. In order for India to regenerate, we need foreign help,
foreign investments, foreign approval, foreign models of education,
etc. This approach is built on the notion of our poverty, lack of
capacity, and lack of ability to find our own answers which fit our
needs. This approach, dominant for several decades even after
independence, is less credible now, but continues to be an important
path, at a tacit level, in many fields.
A
third approach is the vision of extreme national pride – bordering on jingoism – which states that all the answers that need to be found, have already been found and there is no need for an equal relationship between India and the rest of the world. This vision of civilizational superiority rests on our ideas of vast spiritual wealth and a belief that the rest of the world is bereft of such spirituality.
In contrast, Swami Vivekananda’s is the path of active and creative engagement with the world with both – respect for ourselves and respect for other nations & thought streams.
To
elaborate: Swami Vivekananda does not accept the path of negation,
and in fact affirms strongly, the extraordinary wealth of spiritual
and intellectual ideas and visions lying untapped in various Indian
religious and secular traditions.
At
the same time, Swami Vivekananda does not accept the path of
helplessness that states that we need foreign help to survive.
Rather
he proposes and elaborates, again and again, that we Indians are
creators of our destiny and wants us to set ourselves to the task of
finding answers to our own problems within our own communities and
institutions.
This means that we take responsibility – individually and collectively – to address our challenges, rather than helplessly wait for Western solutions and models as easy go-tos whenever we face roadblocks.
While both of the above are true, it is also true that Swami Vivekananda disliked the idea that we remain an insular nation – insular because of a strange mixture of spiritual and moral superiority combined with a deep feeling of inferiority at the intellectual and economic level.
Swami
Vivekananda favored genuine engagement, on equal terms between India
and the rest of the world. He believed that such genuine engagement
would expose the weakness in our thinking and approaches, while
helping us polish what is already great in our culture.
He
believed that India had much to teach, & much to learn.
In other words, Swami Vivekananda believed that India’s pride in itself ought to be based on a genuine and deep self-esteem – personal, national, civilizational – combined with a profound respect of other civilizations and thought streams across the world.
Let
us now examine the quote in order to appreciate this vision better:
Swami Vivekananda’s first remark “no individual or nation can live by holding itself apart from the community of others” is a call for genuine engagement between India and the rest of the world. A deep engagement built on genuine interchange of ideas – spiritual and intellectual, genuine respect for the other, combined with deep self-esteem and positive pride in our culture and civilization.
His
second remark “give or take is the law”, proposes that we be neither in the position of a taker – taking ideas and resources, particularly from the West, without the necessary internal effort and struggle to find our own answers; nor should we be in the position of a giver – carrying on our shoulders the belief and burden of an inviolable superiority of all that we have, and the belief that others can have nothing really valuable to offer us.
His
third remark, that India must be willing to ‘bring out her treasures and throw them broadcast among the nations of the earth’
provides two important pointers for us.
– One, that we must bring out our treasures which means renewed effort and energy in diving deep into several thousand years of unbroken civilizational continuity.
– Two, we will need to communicate these ideas and civilizational attainments to the rest of the world in a language & form that can help them understand the significance & value of those attainments for world culture.
This
remark is significant in the light of a vast university and research
apparatus that has invested so little time and effort in
re-discovering what we already have, leave alone communicating it and
positively engaging with the rest of the world.
Seen
from a deeper perspective, the only way for India to build genuine
self-esteem based on its culture and civilization, is by
– having the necessary faith in our own heritage,
– making the necessary investments in researching and rediscovering our own civilization and culture,
– and then engaging in genuine two-way dialogue with the rest of the world,
so that what is old, dogmatic, and bereft of value, is thrown away, and what is ever new and valuable acts as a powerful fertilizer for contemporary culture, both in India and in all other countries across the world.
------------
Author:
Srinivas Venkatram is the founder
of Illumine – an “ideas in action” Lab that focuses on translating Swami Vivekananda’s ideas into new social, institutional and educational models. Illumine’s projects and interventions have reached more than 2 million users/ beneficiaries in society.
On this channel, Srinivas offers an interpretation of Vivekananda’s ideas, through the lens of Citizenship and Nation-building. For more, visit the Reflections on The Lion’s Roar.
He
can be reached on ideas@illumine.info