On Swami Vivekananda and Caste Prejudice: Ethical Implications of the Experience of Non-Duality
Abstract
:1. Swami Vivekananda: His Importance and Position within Hindu Traditions
I agree with you that in point of vices the Hindus are not worse than the generality of Christians in Europe and America; but I regret to say that the present system of religion adhered to by the Hindus is not well calculated to promote their political interest. The distinction of castes, introducing innumerable divisions and sub-divisions among them, has entirely deprived them of patriotic feeling, and the multitude of religious rites and ceremonies and the laws of purification have totally disqualified them from undertaking any difficult enterprise…It is, I think, necessary that some changes should take place in their religion, at least for the sake of their political advantage and social comfort.
Then I went out and sat underneath an ashvattha tree and according to the teaching of the saints began meditating on the Spirit of God dwelling in my soul. My mind was flooded with emotion, my eyes were filled with tears. All at once I saw the shining vision of Brahma in the lotus core of my heart. A thrill passed through my whole body, I felt a joy beyond all measure. But the next moment I could see Him no more. On losing sight of that beatific vision which destroys all sorrow, I suddenly rose from the ground. A great sadness came over my spirit. Then I tried to see Him again by force of contemplation, and found Him not. I became as one stricken with disease, and would not be comforted. Meanwhile I suddenly heard a voice in the air, ‘In this life thou shalt see Me no more. Those whose hearts have not been purified, who have not attained the highest Yoga, cannot see Me. It was only to stimulate thy love that I once appeared before thee’.
It is the harmony of all scriptures and prophets and dispensations. It is not an isolated creed, but the science which binds and explains and harmonizes all religions. It gives history a meaning, to the action of Providence a consistency, to quarrelling churches a common bond, and to successive dispensations a continuity. It shows marvelous synthesis how the different rainbow colours are one in the light of heaven. The New Dispensation is the sweet music of diverse instruments. It is the precious necklace in which are strung together the rubies and pearls of all ages and climes. It is the celestial court where around enthroned Divinity shine the lights of all heavenly saints and prophets. It is the wonderful solvent, which fuses all dispensations into a new chemical compound. It is the mighty absorbent, which absorbs all that is true and good and beautiful in the objective world. Before the flag of the New Dispensation bow ye nations, and proclaim the Brotherhood of God and the Brotherhood of man.
The ultimate goal of all mankind, the aim and end of all religions, is but one—re-union with God, or, what amounts to the same, with the divinity which is every man’s true nature. But while the aim is one, the method of attaining may vary with the different temperaments of men.
Both the goal and the methods employed for reaching it are called Yoga, a word derived from the same Sanskrit root as the English “yoke”, meaning “to join”, to join us to our reality, God. There are various such Yogas, or methods of union—but the chief ones are—Karma-Yoga, Bhakti-Yoga, Rāja-Yoga, and Jñāna-Yoga.
- (1)
- Karma-Yoga—The manner in which a man realizes his own divinity through works and duty;
- (2)
- Bhakti-Yoga—The realization of the divinity through devotion to, and love of, a Personal God;
- (3)
- Rāja-Yoga—The realization of the divinity through the control of [the] mind;
- (4)
- Jñāna-Yoga—The realization of a man’s own divinity through knowledge (Vivekananda 1979, vol. 5, p. 292).
2. Defining Our Terms: Mysticism and Non-Duality
… Contrary to what some scholars have claimed, Vivekananda did not subscribe to the ‘common core’ or ‘perennialist’ thesis that all mystical experiences are phenomenologically identical. Indeed, he frequently distinguishes three fundamental types of mystical experience: the realization of one’s own individual soul, the theistic experience of a personal God, and the non-theistic realization of the impersonal nondual Brahman/Ātman.
3. Further Defining Our Terms: Caste and Casteism
4. Swami Vivekananda’s Ethics of Non-Duality
... [E]ach individual soul is a part and parcel of that Universal Soul, which is infinite. Therefore in injuring his neighbour, the individual actually injures himself. This is the basic metaphysical truth underlying all ethical codes.
Love, sympathy, and empathy are the affirmation of this truth; they are a reflexive response because they mirror the reality of the universe. When we feel love and sympathy we are verifying–albeit unconsciously–the oneness that already exists. When we feel hatred, anger, and jealousy we separate ourselves from others and deny our real nature which is infinite and free from limitations.
… [T]here is a theological vision at the heart of Advaita that invalidates the assumptions of inequality, impurity, and indignity that are the foundations of caste belief and practice. From the perspective of Advaita, it is clear that the highest value is attributed to brahman. In creation, brahman enters into every created form, and it is the presence of brahman that gives value and significance to the human being. The dignity and worth of the human being is the consequence of the fact that she embodies the infinite. Brahman includes everyone; caste excludes.
5. Swami Vivekananda and Caste Prejudice
The present religion of the Hindus is neither the path of Knowledge or Reason–it is “Don’t-touchism.”–“Don’t touch me.” “Don’t touch me.”–that exhausts its description. “Don’t-touchism” is a form of mental disease. Beware! All expansion is life, all contraction is death. All love is expansion, all selfishness is contraction. Love is therefore the only law of life. See that you do not lose your lives in this dire irreligion of “Don’t-touchism.” Must the teaching (Atma-vat sarvabhuteshu)–“Looking upon all beings as your own self”–be confined to books alone? How will they grant salvation who cannot feed a hungry mouth with a crumb of bread? How will those, who become impure at the mere breath of others, purify others?
Beginning from Buddha down to Ram Mohan Roy, everyone made the mistake of holding caste to be a religious institution and tried to pull down religion and caste together, and failed. But in spite of all the ravings of the priests, caste is simply a crystallised social institution, which after doing its service is now filling the atmosphere of India with its stench, and it can only be removed by giving back to the people their lost social individuality.
The only service to be done for our lower classes is to give them education, to develop their lost individuality. That is the great task between our people and princes. Up to now nothing has been done in that direction. Priest-power and foreign conquest have trodden them down for centuries, and at last the poor of India have forgotten that they are human beings. They are to be given ideas; their eyes are to be opened to what is going on in the world around them; and then they will work out their own salvation. Every nation, every man and every woman must work out their own salvation. Give them ideas—that is the only help they require, and then the rest must follow as the effect.
6. Critical Reflections on Swami Vivekananda’s Views of Caste
You say we are heathens, we are uneducated, uncultivated, but we laugh in our sleeves at your want of refinement in telling us such things. With us, quality and birth make caste, not money. No amount of money can do anything for you in India. In caste the poorest is as good as the richest, and that is one of the most beautiful things about it.
The strongest critique of this perspective on caste—not specifically directed at Swami Vivekananda, but at the general tendency among Hindu reformers to seek to rescue and differentiate a supposed original ideal of caste from the caste prejudice of the modern era—is that of B.R. Ambedkar, who argues that caste as such, due to its intrinsically hierarchical nature is violent and beyond remediation (Ambedkar 2018).Money has made warfare in the world, and caused Christians to trample on each other’s necks. Jealousy, hatred and avariciousness are born of money-getters. Here it is all work, hustle and bustle. Caste saves a man from all this. It makes it possible for a man to live with less money, and it brings work to all. The man of caste has time to think of his soul, and that is what we want in the society of India… Caste has kept us alive as a nation, and while it has many defects, it has many more advantages
7. Conclusions
Funding
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Conflicts of Interest
1 | See, for example, the Puruṣa Sūkta or ‘Hymn of the Cosmic Person’ (Ṛg Veda 10:90) (Doniger O’Flaherty 1981, pp. 29–32). |
2 | See, for example, Ṛg Veda 9:112:3, in which the speaker proclaims that he is a singer by profession, his father is a physician, and his mother grinds corn: all distinct professions within the same family and so not based on birth. There is also the story of Satyakāma Jabāla, from Chandogya Upaniṣad, who is accepted as a Brahmin on the basis of his honest character, although he is of uncertain parentage (Panikkar 1995, p. 257; Olivelle 1996, p. 130). |
3 | ‘Accurate’, meaning ‘based on the customs of particular regions of India at the time’. |
4 | Emphasis in the original. |
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Long, J.D. On Swami Vivekananda and Caste Prejudice: Ethical Implications of the Experience of Non-Duality. Religions 2024, 15, 889. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080889
Long JD. On Swami Vivekananda and Caste Prejudice: Ethical Implications of the Experience of Non-Duality. Religions. 2024; 15(8):889. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080889
Chicago/Turabian StyleLong, Jeffery D. 2024. "On Swami Vivekananda and Caste Prejudice: Ethical Implications of the Experience of Non-Duality" Religions 15, no. 8: 889. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080889
APA StyleLong, J. D. (2024). On Swami Vivekananda and Caste Prejudice: Ethical Implications of the Experience of Non-Duality. Religions, 15(8), 889. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080889