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purpose of education is to make harmonious existence
possible. A good position, a good income…all these are
means to achieve this one end. Position and income gives
you the power to do what you want. To want the right
things is the key to harmonious existence.
Harmony
results from the ability to find a path for oneself and
the ability to function well. Finding a path is asserting
oneself with proper authority. Functioning well is the
graceful submission to authority – whether the authority
belongs to you or to others – to work to fulfill the
identified wants. In an authoritarian society, which
stresses exploitation, the first part is generally
underplayed. Here harmony is supposed to come from
absolute submission to the boss who sits on the throne. It
works all right as long as the boss is a hale and hearty
fellow. But this model is not adequate for free societies.
In a free society it is necessary to ensure that the
sources of authority are widely distributed and more
reliable. The ideal of such societies ought to be a state
where each member is a legitimate source of authority
tasting the nectar of absolute freedom.
Dharma
is the path. We are always being forced to make the basic
choice…do I work according to my svadharma, an
internalized path…or follow paradharma, the path imposed
on me by others. For a little child there is no hesitation
in making the decision. He spontaneously follows the
voices coming from within him. And as he is intent on
listening to this inner voice he rebels against any
attempt to impose the will of others on him. A child is an
uncorrupted but undeveloped self. We educate the child to
make him fit for social living. Now, while educating him,
should we encourage him to seek his svadharma to follow it
as a free agent, to be an entrepreneur…or should we
break his thirst for freedom to make him submissive to
follow paradharma? In a country that respects freedom the
choice should be obvious.
A
dream is a glimpse of dharma. It is a truly internalized
ideal appearing as an aspiration. It tells us where we
should dedicate our actions to find happiness. We are not
talking about the dreams that visit us during sleep. The
reference here is to the aspirations that arise in us when
we are awake. We can pursue svadharma only when we are
able to dream well. When freedom is the theme, education
should be the training to dream well while remaining awake
to the realities of the world.
Freedom,
to be total, should be the freedom from everything in the
domain bounded by space and time.
It
should cover both immortality as well as infinite
resourcefulness. This freedom, this ideal, is the ultimate
destination conceived by the ancient sages when they sang,
‘avidyaya mrutyum tirtva vidyaya amrutam ashnute’.
According to them, the mastery of the ‘Science of Life’
through the practice of paravidya and the marshalling of
infinite resourcefulness through the practice of
aparavidya should go together for achieving harmonious
existence.
The
dreams when translated to reality cause movements. The
resulting dynamism is the sign of life. So life is made up
of dreams.
To
experience freedom while living it is essential to dream
in the right manner. Enlightened persons are those who
have experienced freedom. With their visions of freedom
they can drive the society towards excellence. The dreams
of enlightened persons, who value freedom, provide the
driving force in a free society.
The
‘Science of Life’ deals with ‘that’ which
constitutes life in any given situation. It deals with the
dreams…the transcendental… the spirit of excellence.
Essentially the theme of spirituality is also the same.
Spirituality
deals with the ‘Science of Life’. It deals with the
true perception of oneself and the universe around, the
generation of the dreams taking full account of our
perceptions and the dynamics of harmonious relationships
to attain real happiness.
In
the Modern World, ‘Management Science approximates to
the ‘Science of Life’. As Management Science develops,
it tends to converge to spiritual principles more and
more. The basic theme, of dynamic balance, and controlled
flights to fulfill aspirations that lead to real
satisfaction, is the same in spirituality as well as in
management science. One can clearly see three branches in
modern management science. The first branch concentrates
on entrepreneurship. The second branch percolates the
concept of enterprise to all levels of organization for
effective resource management. The third branch
concentrates on the quality of systems and products and
tuning the operations for harmony with the environment.
All these pursued together leads to excellence. These are
the very themes of spirituality irrespective of the
religion that is used for transmitting it.
Physical
sciences and technology open up the frontiers and
challenge the orderliness of an established world. In an
evolving world, this rush to disorderliness is to be
counterbalanced by the development of ‘Management
Science’, if the agitation is to be transformed to
meaningful development.
This
theme of dealing with unrest, to convert it as a step
forward, should percolate to the field of education as
well. In our ancient culture great importance was given to
the study and practice of the ‘Science of Life’. At
the time of initiating a Brahmin boy to the world of
knowledge he is given the Gayatri mantra. Gayatri gives a
very concise and precise model of a brilliant world along
with the attitudes to be maintained for living creatively
in that world. During the rest of his life the Brahmin boy
keeps discovering the many meanings and nuances of this
mantra.
What
we should note here is that the theme, ‘Management of
Life’, was given a much higher niche compared to the
know-how and know-why studies of worldly things, whenever
the aim of education was to generate freedom and all round
happiness. To be a Brahmin is the birthright of everybody
in a free society.
The
drift to ‘Global Village’ in modern times has created
new challenges. We had been experiencing the traumas
associated with the opening up of frontiers for quite some
time. It started accelerating with the development of
transcontinental navigation a few centuries back. Then the
opening up of frontiers created opportunities to many, but
it also led to the loss of freedom for many. The memories
of slave trading and colonization have not yet faded.
Fundamentally, the nature of man has not changed. So we
should expect similar things to happen again, maybe in a
different plane, when the globalization wave keeps
diffusing and puncturing the political, economic and
cultural boundaries.
Everyone
acknowledges that the increases in opportunities brought
in by globalization will be accompanied by an increase in
competition as well. The wave of globalization, however,
cannot be stopped. The explosive developments in
communication field and the technological developments
that starve for more and more extensive fields for
application will keep pushing it against all attempts to
resist it. We should face this reality and concentrate on
the ways and means not only for coping with it but also to
make it evolutionary. We should learn to transform
ourselves to live happily and purposefully in the new
environment.
In
the modern age almost every entity, almost every system,
remains in a multicultural environment. It is as true in a
developed country as it is in a developing country. In a
multicultural environment, an individual is more alone. An
entity is more alone. A system is more alone. The easy
bonhomie that develops within the boundaries of a closed
community will no more be there in an open world. The
tolerance and sympathy one expects from a big family will
not be there in a big world. Now every communication is a
challenge as well as an opportunity.
To
survive in such an environment we need a strong sense of
protocol to communicate meaningfully and a high degree of
local competence. When we have these two things, the
fearsome constraints that earlier appeared to us as
threats will change into glorious opportunities for
growth.
When
the Brahmin boy left the cozy home of his childhood, he
was given the Gayatri mantra. The need of a youth entering
the global village is not much different from that of the
Brahmin boy.
When
formal education forms the bulk of the education one
receives, whatever we want to impart to the younger
generation before they commence their life, to be
effective, will have to be done through the channel of
formal education. Here is a catch that is holding us back.
The pattern of formal education designed by our colonial
masters was obviously something that cultivated the
docility expected of an obedient servant… Naturally the
masters want people who are pliable to accept paradharma
without resistance and rebellion. For a master the freedom
of the slave is not a valid theme.
Everybody
knew about it and there was no hang up about it. So it was
expected that the ‘Science of Life’ is something that
is to be picked up through informal education. And many
people did this because of their rebellious spirit.
Today
the pattern of education has not changed much in
character, but the colonial master has vanished. Now the
expulsion of the ‘Science of Life’ from the curriculum
has been given respectability in the guise of secular
considerations. In the compulsion to remain equidistant
from Gita, Bible and Quran, we tend to disown anything
that reminds us of any of these from the stream of formal
education. And as the colonial master is not present as an
enemy, to provide focus for our rebellious spirit, the
desire to pick up the ‘Science of Life’ through
informal channels has dried up to a great extent. This is
showing in our life today. Even while making progress on
many fronts, the value systems and the quality of our life
in this country are steadily deteriorating. We boast of an
ancient culture that taught us the importance of living in
the present shedding all regrets and anxieties. But here
our regrets are growing. Our anxieties are rising to a
frenzied pitch…All because we stopped recognizing the
‘Science of Life’…spirituality…as an important
ingredient in active life.
A
few stray success stories here and there should not make
us sit back in complacence. We should wake up to the fact
that a substantial part of the young men who comes out of
our colleges are confused and unhappy, and depend on
chance developments and favours from others to get a perch
in life. How can we bring back the ‘Science of Life’
into the stream of formal education so that every young
man graduates to become a happy, productive entrepreneur?
We cannot go back and introduce religious studies in
schools and colleges without disturbing the secular fabric
of our country. Even otherwise to what extent such an
exercise will be productive is very doubtful. The real
need is not for religiosity, but for spirituality. Unless
the formats employed by religions are modified to suit the
pace and nature of the modern age, religious studies are
just going to be another boring subject that has no
relevance in life.
As
mentioned earlier, in the modern world the ‘Science of
Life’ manifests as Management Science.
In
today’s scheme of formal education, this subject is
taught only as a postgraduate specialization… that too
with specific reference to Business Administration. If we
want to effectively introduce the ‘Science of Life’ as
a serious topic it should be introduced right from the
high school level…when the children have picked up the
necessary language skills. Here the stress should be on
personality development and entrepreneurship and not
merely on productivity. And the subject should be
formatted to touch upon all sources of spirituality and
value systems, and stretched to be contiguous with the
modern Management Science. The basic theme here should be
the development of the thirst for freedom and the
rebellious spirit in youth as intense sources of energy.
The
wine of spirituality only gets better with vintage. In the
phase of continuing education that follows formal
education it should be recognized that informal religious
studies play a vital role in spiritual advancement. Formal
education should keep the channels for such informal
education open by inculcating a deep respect for all
religious literature. Unlike the physical sciences, the
‘Science of Life’ does not undergo any change.
It
is Santana. It remains equally applicable in all
situations and in all time periods. So in this case the
more ancient and fundamental the source, the more likely
it is that what we find is nearer to truth…because it
has withstood the test of time.
In
this context let me give a quote of Swami Vivekananda on
education. "We want that education, by which
character is formed, strength of mind is increased, the
intellect is expanded, and by which one can stand on one’s
own feet." We have to heed to this call for inner
strength if we have to convert the threats of
globalization into opportunities. Let us not be complacent
with our apparent successes.
Much
of our economic progress in recent times is owing to the
fact that we are able to offer our manpower cheap to the
more developed countries. As a nation we are living on
paradharma. We are earning a living glorifying our
weaknesses. When the equations of the cost of operations
change, this wave will pass. By that time we should be
ready with our inner strengths to start the next wave
ourselves.
So
let us dream of changing our education system respecting
our preferences, our sensibilities, our cultural heritage,
our aspirations and the spirit of divinity within each of
us that generate our aspirations…And work to make that
dream true. Let us bow to the spirit of the universe and
the breath of life that touches everything.
Let
us see the divinity in all manifested things, in the
knowledge that flowers as awareness, and in the flashes of
insights that light up our mind. Let us, as free spirits,
seek protection for us, and the words spoken by us, from
the infinite, absolute divinity and nothing less than
that. Let us be the agents of peace and harmony. |