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December: Dharma and Society, Family, Youth, & Women Examining Hindu society today and yesterday. Our responsibilities to our parents,
siblings, and children and our responsibilities to the younger generation, to
teach and lead them. Also, what
constitutes our family? Summary
Society and Family
A word originates in a language when the need arises for
the society to coin it. Different societies during the course of history have
perceived God in different forms. Due to socio-economic differences between
different societies at different points of time, words in one language do not
have an exact translation into another. One of the most misinterpreted words
around is Dharma. Dharma, which is a Sanskrit word, is sometimes interpreted
as religion in English. This is not entirely true. Religion is only a part of
Dharma. Religion defines the relationship between our Creator and us. Apart
from this relation there also exists relationship between the man and the
society, the society and the nature and the nature and its Creator.
Collectively all the rules and regulations that causes harmony in these
relationships are called Dharma. How does the Dharma fit in between the man and the
society? The smallest unit of a society is the family. A standard family
consists of three generations - the parents, the children, and the
grandparents. A family is the best example of "selfless service".
Analyzing each of the components individually, the role of the parents’
generation is to provide and nourish the family, the role of the children’s
generation is to come up to the expectations of the family, grow, and
flourish, and the role of the grandparents’ generation is to provide guidance
from it’s experience. Practically these roles sometimes overlap and sometimes
substitute each other. The roles of these generations are cyclic and a
generation may take up different responsibilities at a different point of
time in life. When the child is born, it is the parents' dharma to see that
the child evolves into a good human being. It is the child's dharma to
respect the elders in the family and carry on the traditions. A family has a
limb-body relationship, each individual being a sense organ of a body called
"family". The limbs of a body always work in coordination with each
other. Duties towards the body are more significant than their individual
rights. The body in turn takes care of the requirements of each organ. Are there any rules that guide the behavior of an
individual within a family? What if the father decides not to work for the
family? What if the mother decided not to care for the baby? What if the
children decide not to obey their parents? What if the grandmother decides to
teach the children to lie and steal? What does a home lose then - peace,
harmony, and smiles - why? Where do these guidelines, which ensure a smooth
coexistence, come from? Are they
empirical, writ from heaven, mathematically derived, divine, or eternal? What
is the feeling that keeps everyone bound in a family - love, possession,
sympathy or responsibility? Why do marriages break in our society? What is a
husband's dharma and what is the wife's? It is said that there are only two relations that have
the purest form, first is the love of a mother towards her offspring and
second is love of a brother towards his sister. The reason of this purity is
the lack of expectations from each other. The verse from The Gita -
"Karmanye vadhikaraste ma faleshu kadachan" holds true at every
level of society and nature. There are not laws that ensure a just return
from son to a mother but that does not bother her performing of duties. The
duties of a mother, a father, a son, a daughter, a husband, a wife etc. are
nowhere written or defined. But, there are still obvious and natural. They
are true and have been true since eternity. This is Dharma. Dharma of and for the Youth
The foundation of a society is built on the character of
its youth, of which the development is based on the level of service it
receives from the society in which it exists. In order for a society to prosper and grow, people in a
society must realize that one aspect of their Dharma to the society is to
nurture and provide support for its youth. The youth must be given the support structure by not only
their parents, but also all elders, for them to grow and eventually
understand and follow their Dharma in life. Only then can a society achieve harmony and progress. During the first third of a person’s life, it is their
duty or responsibility to concentrate on acquiring knowledge (education),
gaining moral values, and maintaining and protecting physical strength by
cultivating good habits including celibacy and not falling to bad and immoral
habits which destroy both physical, moral, and intellectual strength. In sum, this is the period for
acquiring and storing intellectual, moral and physical energy required for
leading a purposeful life. It
becomes the duty of the society surrounding the youth to support the youth in
achieving this purpose. Women are the Divine Treasures in every Family: Dharma towards Women
Respect for women is one of the most cherished values of
our culture. Not only is one’s
own mother to be regarded as equal to God (Matru Devo Bhava), every
girl/woman is regarded as the incarnation of motherhood. This value was evolved as the most
powerful antidote against baser instincts in males to make sexual onslaught
on a woman, which would ruin her life.
This value is still acting as the greatest safeguard against offences
against women, despite the adverse impact of Western civilization which
regards women as the mere physical pleasure of males. There must be a rejection of such
animal instincts and protect and preserve one of the most human and divine
eternal values. There is much criticism surrounding a verse in the
Manusmriti in which it is said that a woman requires protection throughout
her life. Most of the criticism
is centered around the idea that this verse is intended to rob the freedom of
women. In response to this
criticism, Kerry Brown, a woman British author, has expounded its real
meaning: “In Hinduism a woman is looked after not
because she is inferior or incapable but, on the contrary, because she is
treasured. She is the pride and
power of the society. Just as
the crown jewels should not be left unguarded, neither should a woman be left
unprotected. No extra burden of
earning a living should be placed on women who already bear huge
responsibilities in society: childbirth, childcare, domestic well-being and
spiritual growth. She is the
transmitter of culture to her children.”
The Hand that Rocks the Cradle Rules the World: Dharma of Women
It is undisputable that the
child’s first guru is the mother.
Therefore, the mother possesses the power to change the course of
history by properly molding the mind and character of her children. Satguru Sivyaya Subramaniyaswami
writes: “It is a proven fact that most of the people in
prison were neglected or beaten as children. It is also a proven fact that nearly all parents who
mistreat their children were themselves mistreated by their parents. Unless mothers care and love their
children, society will inherit an entire generation of frustrated adults who
were once frustrated children.
These will later be the people who rule the World.”
Background Articles
Dharma and Community
First and foremost, we owe a debt to the community in
which we were raised. Our family fed us and clothed us when we could do
nothing for ourselves. Our teachers taught us when we knew nothing. For what they did, we are indebted.
So we must strive to repay all the kindness given to us. Through examples from
the Mahabharat and the Ramayan, we should strive to understand the importance
of service to the Hindu community. As youth, our energy and vitality allows
to contribute a great deal to society.
There are three different divisions of society and we have a duty to
each one. The first division of society is composed of our elders. This
includes our parents, grandparents, and teachers. Our duty to this group is
to be always kind, respectful, and obedient.. The second division is composed of our peers, which
includes friends and classmates. To this group we owe respect, kindness, and
acceptance. The last division is composed of those younger than us. Our duty
to this group is very important. Since younger children look up to us, we
should strive to be good role models for them. We should teach them and make
sure they don’t make the same mistakes we made. The
Hindu View of Society: Dharma and Its Global Relevance By David Frawley
(Vamadeva Shastri) Hindu Dharma contains a wealth of thought on social
issues and a long tradition of social sciences. These begin with an extensive
ancient literature of Dharma Shastras and Dharma Sutras, of which the
well-known Manu Smriti is not the only one (or the last word for that
matter). Even epics like the Mahabharata have many passages on the social
order. Many modern Indian gurus, like Sri Aurobindo, have written on social
issues. Of course, the role of Mahatma Gandhi in this respect is well known.
Many modern Indian spiritual movements aim at social upliftment, like the recent
Swadhyaya movement of Pandurang Shastri Athavale. In fact, the term Dharma in
Hindu parlance first refers to the social dharma. According to Hindu Dharma, Self-knowledge and the yogic
approaches to achieve it are eternal and remain largely the same, differing
in externalities of name, form and approach from age to age. However, the
social dharma is less fixed and subject more to variations of time, place and
culture. Therefore, Hindu Dharma (unlike, for example, Islam and its Sharia
law code) does not have a single social dharma or social law for all time or
for all cultures. It recognizes the need of different societies to define
their social and political orders and is open to any number of possible
social systems. The main issue for Hindu Dharma is that a social order
encourages spiritual development and grants religious freedom and freedom of
inquiry in all areas of life. Strangely, these traditional social sciences are not
well known to Hindus, much less to those who write about Hinduism. Few people
understand that Hinduism projects both a spiritual and social order aimed at
spiritual freedom and Self-realization. Hindu social thought is not the rigid
authoritarian social order that people usually consider Hinduism to project
through the caste system. It is also very different from Islamic or Christian
views of the world divided between the believers and the non-believers. Hindu
thought does not divide the world on the basis of religion into those who are
saved and those who are not. Most people look at Hindu social thought in the
stereotyped form of the caste system, not realizing that this does not
represent the real tradition at all. Caste by birth is a distortion of an
originally more fluid system of social division and derives mainly from the medieval
period as a defensive reaction against foreign invasions. The foundation of classical Hindu
society is a recognition of individual needs and capacities, defined in
spiritual as well as material terms. Hinduism calls itself Sanatana Dharma, a universal or
eternal tradition of dharma or natural law. It seeks both an individual and a
collective order of Dharma harmonizing the human being within the greater
universe of consciousness. The highest Dharma in Hinduism is Moksha, which
means freedom or liberation of consciousness, not simply of the body. This
implies the full development of individual potentials in order to expand
one’s consciousness from the egoic level to a divine and cosmic realization.
To this end all other human pursuits of earning a livelihood, raising a
family, career achievement, and creative and cultural advancement have their
value, but are not in themselves the ultimate. Without such a transcendent
goal to turn these into liberating factors they lead to bondage and become
factors of disintegration. After all, these factors deal with the transient
and outer aspect of our nature. Only Self-realization has an eternal value. There are four pillars of the Hindu view of society. 1) Family – Jati 2) Class – Varna 3) Individual Dharma –
Svadharma 4) Differing Capacities –
Adhikara Bheda The Role of the Family and Tribe Much is said in the western world today about the family
and its decline in modern society. All current western politicians speak
of ‘family values’ often without
making clear what exactly they mean either by the family or by values.
Increasing divorce rates in particular are cited as a problem, with broken
homes and single parents. The old family model of a two-parent family and a
housewife taking care of the children at home has become the exception rather
than the rule in the developed world. Yet it is not surprising that the nuclear family is
threatened in the West because the extended family disappeared decades ago.
Mobile life-styles and urban living cut people off from their extended
families and turned the nuclear family into an isolated unit. Without the
support of an extended family of grandparents, aunts and uncles, the nuclear
family cannot sustain itself. It is exposed to social vicissitudes like a
person without the shelter of a house. In Hinduism the concept of family includes not just the
nuclear family, but also the extended family and community linked by ties of
blood, neighborhood, culture and history. Such greater families are often
referred to as ‘tribes’ in traditional societies. Such larger
family/communities care for their own and it is only in their absence that
require modern socialized and government run care for the sick and the
elderly (which, however, can never provide the same intimacy). Family ties from the nuclear and extended family give
strength to society. The nuclear and extended families nourish and support
one another. In classical India, different families promoted certain forms of
behavior and culture and preserved various traditions. Family traditions
included forms of art, music science and religion. In this way they enriched
not only the society, but also aided in the growth of the individuals who
could be born into and are nurtured by diverse traditions. In the West—and as is the trend of modern society
everywhere—people are defined primarily as individuals. Each individual must
have his or her own rights, job and money, which means that each person is on
his or her own and in competition with all other individuals. This is
isolating and frightening and breeds stress and loneliness. The result is
that in the West today people are mainly living alone and looking at life in
terms of their own separate identity. Though there is material affluence and
unprecedented personal rights, there is also tremendous emotional
unhappiness, personal alienation, and little by way of real culture. Most of
the available culture is an entertainment field for individuals, like the
movies, in which there is little real personal interaction. However, new efforts to create family and community are
arising to fill the void in human identity created by the breakdown of the
family system and resultant social and psychological problems. Even the
tribalism and gangs prevalent among the urban youth are an attempt,
unconscious and confused though it may be, to give meaning to life through a
family or clan identity. Family ties, however important, of course do have their
dangers. One can have a strong family or community of thieves, as in case of
the Mafia. Family loyalty can turn into a means of exploiting other
individuals or other families. The family good can override that of society
and breed social division and chaos. India today still suffers from this negative side of family,
which is responsible for much of the so-called caste problem in the country.
People seek the advancement of their own family or tribe at the expense of
the society as a whole. Once a politician is elected his concern is not with
the social good but with getting money or resources to his own family, tribe
or caste, which is usually defined in terms of blood relations. He robs the
state or society to further the vested interest of his family or community.
His community becomes his vote bank that supports or elects him to further
its separative interests at the expense of the greater good of the nation. This family rule is most notable in India in the
Congress party that has dominated the country since independence. Congress
has been a dynasty of one family, the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty through Pandit
Nehru and his daughter Indira Gandhi, in which loyalty to the current family
head outweighs any real political ideology or social concerns. Strangely,
such family and community based parties like Congress or the Samajwadi Party
(SP) of Mulayam Singh Yadav boast a rhetoric of anti-castism while they
themselves are promoting what are mainly only family, tribal or personal
advantages! Class – Varna All societies are made up of classes, whether clearly
defined as in traditional societies or loosely as in modern societies. All
societies have their rich and poor, which is the main class division by
wealth. But there are other class divisions as well. The old Hindu idea was of a four-tiered society. First
was an intellectual or spiritual class, the so-called Brahmins, the educators
who guided the culture and provided its values. Second was the ruling,
political or warrior class, the Kshatriyas who protected society from hostile
forces. Third was the merchant or commercial class, which included both
merchants and farmers, the Vaishyas, who created the wealth on which the
society depended. The Vaishyas were the majority class in society (note the
term ‘vish’ from which vaishya derives means ‘the people’). It served to support
society as a whole and create its resources. Fourth was servant or service oriented groups, the
Shudras. They helped the other groups and in turn were cared for by them. Each class had duties as well as rights. The Brahmins
had to practice austerity and poverty, selflessly teaching and guiding the
culture. The Kshatriyas had to be willing to fight and die in battle. The
Vaishyas had to share their wealth with all the classes. Other subclasses
existed like artists, musicians, craftsmen and doctors, which had more
specific roles. The varna system, in fact, reflects an organic order,
like modern ecology. Human society is a single organism like the human body,
but like the body consists of various limbs and organs that have their
special functions necessary for the well-being of the whole. This is the
Hindu image of the Brahmin as the head, the Kshatriya as the arms, the
Vaishya as the legs and the Shudra as the feet. While this organic model was
eventually applied in a rigid manner, overemphasizing one’s birth family, the
importance of family traditions, which no society can entirely ignore, should
not be forgotten either. The varna system originally emphasized guna and
karma (Gita IV.13), the quality and action of a person, not simply the social
position of the birth family. Individual achievement could lift one beyond
ones class. If an individual exhibited qualities of another varna, he could
with some extra effort join that class.
In time, entire families could rise or fall in class status according
to their behavior. While the family one was born into could be a helpful
indication of one’s probable varna, it was not regarded as final. Note that
even in common parlance in India today the son of a Pandit (panditaputra)
means ‘a fool’, showing that we not only are like our parents but can become
the opposite! Social duties were shared in unusual circumstances. For
example, if the Kshatriya or noble class was defeated in war, the other
classes, even the Brahmins, took up arms, assuming the Kshatriya role to compensate.
The varna system was an organic social order devised to support a common
social good. It considered individual capacities as well as family and social
background. In addition, the highest goal of Moksha or liberation of
the individual required going beyond the varna system, which was thought to
be only of a preliminary nature in human development. This created orders of
monks, sadhus, yogis and swamis who devoted themselves to spiritual practices
and were not bound by the duties of any class or caste. They came from any
class but were more commonly from the Brahmins, who were taught to seek
liberation and to renounce personal satisfaction as part of the duties of
their class. Though people like to emphasize the role of caste in
Hinduism, caste is not all there is to the Hindu view of society. The varna
system broke down in India centuries ago. The majority of Brahmins today do
not practice traditional Brahmin priestly occupations (and those who do are
among the poorest of the poor, like temple priests in South India who earn
only as much as a common street sweeper). They don’t live according to the
rigid rules of piety and penance of medieval Brahmins, who were little more
than monks. Similarly, the majority of Kshatriyas do not follow Kshatriya occupations.
Many Shudras in India have achieved wealth as in Andhra Pradesh and Tamil
Nadu. In fact, in India as throughout the modern world is dominated by
commercialism and most people are following Vaishya values and ways of life. Class and Caste in
Other Societies Similar social orders existed throughout the ancient and
medieval worlds with priestly orders, the nobility, merchants and the common
people. Europe had its aristocracy, which was its Kshatriya class, until the early
twentieth century and remnants of it still remain. While this aristocracy had
its corruption, it did produce a certain refinement and artistic culture that
the West still emulates today. This ancient class system has survived longer
in India, both for good and for ill, which has preserved an ancient type of
culture longer than other countries. Yet this fourfold class order exists to some extent in
modern cultures as well. All cultures have their educational elite of
professors, scientists, doctors, artists, priests and ministers. They have
their political class of politicians, lawyers, policemen and soldiers. They
have their merchant and farmer classes. They have their servants or service
oriented jobs. Such a division is almost inevitable in society based upon the
division of labor according to social needs and human capacities. Modern society has removed more obvious class divisions
and inequities. Overt slavery has been abolished, but a clear division of
rich and poor remains and in some countries, like America, is increasing
again. It has reemerged as a division between rich and poor nations, in which
third world countries provide cheap labor and raw material for the affluent
nations of the West, just as servants used to provide this for their wealthy
employers. Affluent cultures also import their servant classes from poorer
countries, like the Mexicans in America, the Turks in Germany or Philippine
maids in Singapore. Family of birth remains an important index of one’s
class. Most people still tend to follow the class status of their family,
though exceptions are more common than in older cultures. Various wealthy or
educational elites can be found all over the world. Each class also tends to
create its own social group. We can see this in the political circles of
Washington DC, in army barracks everywhere, in artistic countercultures, or
in rural farm settings. It is natural for people to create communities based
upon common work or vocational interests. It can help enrich society as a
whole by allowing people of common interests to strengthen their particular
talents and resources. Such groups provide a field in which individuals can
grow. For example, an individual of political temperament will do better if raised
or working in a political class environment. However, class like family, though natural and
inevitable, has clear dangers. Class oppression is a well-known theme of
recent centuries all over the world through the socialist and communist
movements. The division of rich and poor is still perhaps the most cruel and
defining aspect of social identity. Though a greater class equality has been
created in modern times, class divisions have not and perhaps cannot be
eliminated, any more than family divisions can. But they can be made to
correspond better with real individual capacities. Society cannot be one homogenous or gelatinous mass or
it cannot stand. Like the human body it must have an organic structure and
differentiation, which requires some class divisions. Even communist
countries could not abolish class but instead created new classes of
bureaucrats, policemen and ideologues, which were just their own modified
forms of Vaishya, Kshatriya and Brahmin orders. At the same time, modern society has no real concept of
freedom that transcends social groups and their mundane goals. Modern society
emphasizes a social dharma of success, affluence and materialism for
everyone. It is a Vaishya dharma, not a Moksha dharma. Modern freedom is
defined mainly in terms of commercial values; freedom to buy or freedom to do
what one wants in the outer world. Modern commercial or Vaishya-dominated
society appears stunted and incomplete, neither understanding, nor providing
for the needs for all the different classes and temperaments of people.
Because of its commercial values the gulf between the rich and the poor must
continue. Individual Dharma In Hindu thought, family and class identities are
secondary to the individual and his or her own spiritual capacities. The individual
is the real bearer of consciousness and only the individual can achieve
Moksha or liberation. The social dharma of mutual duties rests upon the
individual dharma of spiritual practice, which it should support and uphold.
Ultimately, the individual must renounce society in order to achieve
liberation. This is the basis of the many monastic and sadhu orders of
Hinduism that require renunciation of all social status in order to join. The main principle of individual dharma in Hinduism is
Svadharma; one should follow one’s own dharma in life. The Bhagavad Gita
III.35 states: “Better is one’s own dharma though imperfectly done, than the
dharma of another well-performed. Better is death in one’s own dharma. To
pursue the dharma of another carries great fear.” Yet individual and social dharmas are interrelated.
Family and community exist to provide a foundation for individual
development. They create the field in which the individual can grow. For
example, a person may have a good artistic capacity but if he is born into a
family that dislikes art or into a cultural setting where no artistic
training can be found, that capacity cannot develop. The modern West emphasizes the material freedom of the
individual to pursue desire, not the spiritual freedom of the individual to
transcend desire. The western idea is of individual fulfillment and
self-realization but only of our outer capacities, not our inner potentials.
While this does provide an external freedom that has aided in advancements in
science and technology, it has not liberated the spirit of man or brought the
growth of a higher consciousness in humanity. Without spiritual freedom it
still leaves humanity in the bondage of desire. Individual Qualifications Individual Dharma rests upon the capacities of the
individual. Different people have different capacities and these also grow
and change with time. Svadharma rests upon Adhikara Bheda (different
capacities). We must understand what we are really capable of. Each creature
in the world has its capacities. A squirrel cannot compete with a horse in
running races, for example, but a horse cannot compete with a squirrel in
terms of climbing trees! Yet the main quality or capacity of the human being
is to pursue Self-realization. It is not a mere physical, biological or
intellectual specialty. We must also understand what is the highest good for a
person. Svadharma means what reflects the dharma or spiritual capacity of a
person. It is not Svakama, doing what we like or what affords us the most
pleasure in the outer world. Such personal inclinations are not dharma. The West promotes individual freedom and the ability of
the person to become what they want. This is usually defined in terms of
gaining fame or money in the outer world, which are the prime values of modern
commercial culture. These are not dharma or a universal good but merely a
transient or personal pleasure. They neither fulfill the individual, nor
create a caring social order. In modern society real individual capacity is often lost
sight of. People seek what brings outer achievement and acquisition, not
necessarily what reflects their real capacities or brings inner peace and
happiness. A person becomes a doctor not necessarily out of love of healing
but out of looking for a high paying job. The people who become prominent are
not necessary those who are most capable in their fields but those best able
to manipulate the media and create a good marketing strategy for their image,
which seldom corresponds to who they really are. Packaging has become the
main concern and content continues to decline. Individual Dharma is not a matter of doing what one
likes. Often our likes are mistaken. A person may want to be a great athlete
but that may be a fantasy, not a real possibility. He may be better off in
some other job. And our material capacities and spiritual capacities vary. We
may have a material capacity to make a lot of money but not a spiritual
capacity to achieve a higher state of consciousness. We sometimes have to
choose between one or the other because our time in life is limited. We are
not able to manifest all possibilities for ourselves, just as even a good
musician cannot be good at playing all musical instruments. As individuals we have several capacities and must
understand not only what we want to do but also what represents our highest
good. The difficulty lies in determining the real capacity of a person. It is
much like a student in school. They require some aptitude testing or job
training to determine this. Merely what they want may not be enough to show
their real place in life. Most people don’t know their real capacities and
generally seek something imaginary or inflated for themselves. We must
remember the example of the Gita.
Krishna urged Arjuna to fight in battle rather than to renounce the
world because Arjuna was a Kshatriya, a warrior, not only by caste but by
individual temperament, not a monk or sadhu. The monk role was an escape to
avoid the difficult duties that his dharma required. A Hindu View of Society In the Hindu view a global or enlightened society must
consider these four bases of the social order. Above all a Moksha Dharma or
the seeking of spiritual freedom and self-realization must be present for an
really enlightened social order to emerge. Family is necessary, not only the nuclear family, but
also the extended family and a greater community or tribe. Class differences
are necessary as they fulfill various social needs. However, both family and
class groups should promote greater social unity and a common welfare. They
should encourage rather than stifle the capacities of individuals even if
these deviate from family or class norms. In short, they must remain general,
flexible and adaptable, with an orientation to a higher spiritual dharma. Most important is a society that recognizes individual
dharma and individual capacities as the highest goal. The individual has to
be free to pursue his or her own dharma according to his or her own
capacities. This is to respect the Self, Atman or Divine presence in
everyone. However, in emphasizing the individual, the dharma of
the individual must be stressed. Dharma is the unifying factor. The dharma of
the individual cannot stand apart from the dharma of the society or the
dharma of the universe and implies not only individual capacities but also
personal duties as well. We all have our part to play in the universal order,
which is an order of giving, sharing and sacrifice (Yajna). That is our
Dharma. Our individual dharma is not intended to obstruct the dharma of
others but to aid in the unfoldment of all life. Fulfillment of individual
dharma and social dharma must go hand in hand. It is the pursuit of desire
that is divisive, which is a deviation from the cosmic order of sharing
(Yajna). Modern society is a commercial society. It suppresses
spiritual or dharmic capacities in people and instead promotes desire and ego
based urges that lead to adharma. Communist society emphasized ‘to each
according to his needs and from each according to his abilities’. This
principle reflects a consideration of individual capacity. Unfortunately, it
is defined only in material terms and so could never become a reality. To foster the real individual or the real person (Atman
or Purusha) means to control the desire-based ego. It means to develop the
real capacities of people, not merely to inflate their wants, ambition or
aggression. It means to help people to discover what they really love to do
for its own sake, not to pursue results. Here again the Gita II. 47 teaches
us, saying that our adhikara, our right or capacity is only to do the work,
not to seek its results. If you love doing something you are not counting the
rewards. You will do it even if there are no rewards. This dharmic idea of society preserves individual
freedom at the deepest level while maintaining duty to the world in our outer
behavior. It affords a place for commercial urges without allowing them to
dominate our deeper aspirations. It has a place for family and class but one
that does not serve to stifle the individual or to fragment society. Religion in Human Society Religion, or the seeking to align the human being with
the cosmic being, should play a role in creating a proper social order.
Religion establishes the sacraments for keeping together the family and the
community. Religion defines the priestly class that provides the main
educators and value promoters for society. Therefore religion should be the
main source of dharma. The problem with western religions as they have
developed historically is that they do not have a proper concept of Svadharma
or individual dharma. They have one savior, prophet, book, church or belief
for everyone, as if there were no real individual temperamental differences.
Should anyone seek to follow a different or personal approach to the
spiritual life they are criticized or punished as unorthodox or heretical. Such religions try to impose their one belief on all
human beings, destroying any individual and cultural achievements and
capacities that might get in the way. Their effort to convert the world to a
single belief shows their rigidity and their lack of understanding of the
diversity of life. This is like trying to get everyone to dress the same,
talk the same or walk the same. Certainly we need as much freedom and
creativity in praying, meditating and worshipping as we do in other aspects
of life. Otherwise we are not really human beings but only automatons. On the other hand, Hinduism has many Gods, Goddesses,
teachers, scriptures, and Yoga practices in order to accommodate the
different levels and capacities of individuals. This multiplicity of deities
represents how the higher and universal truth can be approached from the
various angles of the many human types. It reflects not an abstract or exclusive
unity but a creative and flexible unity that moves and changes with life
itself. A dharmic society should rest upon a dharmic approach to
religion. This implies an approach that is pluralistic, non-dogmatic,
creative, adaptable and alive. Hinduism as Sanatana Dharma, shorn of its
unnecessary accretions, can offer such a dharmic vision. Unfortunately, most
Hindus don’t understand their tradition and are unable to use it in their own
lives, much less share it with others. Some of them are putting a rigidity
into Hinduism that ignores this entire foundation of svadharma and
self-realization. Others are failing to see the universality of dharma in
Hinduism and regarding it as something merely cultural or ethnocentric. A New Way of Dharma We are now entering a global, multicultural and
multi-religious age. We are moving from the technological age to the age of
information, to an eventual age of consciousness. Rigid and exclusive forms
can no longer be justified in our social or religious orders. At the same time,
we cannot ignore the organic base of life in nature, family, and community.
The abstract ideological approaches of communism and socialism have failed.
Modern commercialism is reaching its limits in global exploitation and
ecological devastation. The fulfillment of the individual, the society or the
world of nature can no longer be separated from one another. Nor can we
define our fulfillment only in economic terms without causing harm both to
people and to nature. For this coming new world-age (yuga), we need a new
socio-political-economic order. The models of the past are either erroneous
or out of date. The only real solution is a new culture of dharma, in which
individual, social and planetary dharmas have their place and their
interdependence is clearly recognized as well. New political systems have to
evolve that go beyond the limitations of modern democracy without bringing
back old forms of tyranny. A new economic system is required that neither
suppresses economic freedom, as in communism, nor makes it the end all of
life, as in the current multinational capitalism. Naturally this will require
much thinking, planning and new experiments. We must return to the dharmic roots of human
civilization for a new dharmic renaissance. A new society of dharma is
required for a new age of dharma. Dharmic thinking must be reintroduced not
only in religion but also in science and culture. Dharmic action must be
emphasized over any seeking of results or gaining of outer powers. This
dharmic approach is not hostile to any truth and can serve to integrate the
skill and wisdom in all our human endeavors. The dharmic approach loses
nothing that is unique but at the same time does not take away from the
totality. A new dharmic inquiry (Dharma Mimamsa) is necessary, including into
the roots of the social order. In the Hindu tradition, this will require
creating new Smritis and Dharma Shastras. There are lasting solutions to all
the problems of life, but these are dharmic solutions. We must seek such
dharmic solutions to our problems and not be content with mere short term
profit. Four Stages of Life
There are four Asramas or stages of life, Brahmacharya,
or the period of studentship, Grihastha or the stage of the householder,
Vanaprastha or the stage of the forest-dweller or hermit, and Sannyasa or the
life of renunciation or asceticism. Each stage has its own duties. These
stages help the evolution of man. The four Asramas take man to perfection by
successive stages. The practice of the four Asramas regulates the life from
the beginning to the end. The first two Asramas pertain to Pravritti Marga or
the path of work and the two later stages- the life of Vanaprastha and that
of Sannayasa- are the stages of withdrawal from the world. They pertain to
Nivritti Marga or the path of renunciation. A person's duties, in the Hindu tradition, are
determined by the stage of life (Ashrama) to which he belongs. Life, which is
regarded by Hinduism as a journey to the shrine of truth, is marked by four
stages (Ashramas) each of which has its responsibilities and obligations. Possible Activities and Discussion
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