by Prof. P. Krishna
Rector, Rajghat Education Centre, Krishnamurti Foundation India,
Varanasi 221001, India
( Talk delivered at the Gandhian Institute
of Studies in Varanasi on 8.1.1996. )
Krishnamurti
and Gandhi were two eminent outstanding personalities of this century, both
born in India, educated in the west, whose teachings and philosophies have had
a global impact and become the subject of much investigation all over the
world. Both persons were crusaders in the quest for truth. Outwardly, in their
life, they may appear to be very different but we have to go beyond the outer
appearances to understand deeply the significance of each one of them. I do not
intend to compare Krishnamurti with Gandhi or try to evaluate who was greater
or superior. It would be impertinent to assume that we have the capacity to
judge or measure either of them. Moreover, such an endeavour is trivial because
it does not lead to any deeper understanding in ourselves to try and compare
two great men and try to place them in an hierarchy. To me, it seems more
worthwhile to dwell on what we can learn from their teachings and their lives.
The objectives which Krishnaji and Gandhiji had set before themselves in their
lives were similar and yet significantly different. Both were dissenters from
the social norm that was prevalent around them and both were concerned with a
deep inner transformation in man. To come upon a religious mind was their
mission. Krishnamurti having explored into this question very deeply in his
youth, set himself the mission of setting man free - free from his shackles,
his particular conditioning, his illusions - which was in a sense similar to
the objective which the Buddha had set before himself. Having realized the
truth, he wanted to help fellow human beings to come upon it and see it for
themselves. Gandhiji also was interested in this religious quest, but he had
also set before himself very definite social objectives. He wanted to work for
the political independence of India, for the eradication of poverty and
superstition, for social reform in the status of women and of harijans, for the
eradication of casteism and so on.
Krishnamurti did not take up any such local issues, in any
particular country of the world. His concern remained global. It is not that he
was not interested in social reforms but he said that real change in society
can only come about through a change in the consciousness of the individual. It
is not merely a question of adopting a particular religion, a particular
philosophy or choosing to follow someone in one's life. Nor does it come
through following certain commandments or taking a vow and struggling to keep
that vow - to him all this was not reform at all. He often said, " You are
the world and the world is you", which means it is only in reforming
ourselves that the world reforms in actuality. This connection between the
individual and society, he explained in great detail. It was his view that so
long as human beings are aggressive, violent, hateful, egoistic, no social
reform, no regulation, no government, no political system can create a society,
which is peaceful, harmonious or non-violent. Society is composed of
individuals, and if we have a society comprising of millions of individuals
each one of whom is self-centred, ambitious, greedy, violent, you may organise
it on Gandhian lines, or on communist principles or in capitalist manner, the
violence that is there within the individual is going to find expression in
society. You man contain it in certain directions, it will express itself in
other directions. So we see that in communist society there is tremendous
violence and in capitalist, so-called free, society also there is tremendous
violence, though it may be of a different kind. He did not think that mere
control could result in any fundamental change. He demanded a total inner
revolution in the psyche of man and that was the objective he set before
himself. The consciousness of man must fundamentally change from within and unless
that takes place, we are merely playing with outer symptoms and making
patch-work changes in the name of social reform. The very manner in which that
social reform is performed itself contains elements of division, aggression,
ambition, which has its own consequences. So, though it may appear that the
social reform has produced some order in society, that is an illusion, because
that order will inevitably break and you will require a new reform to overcome
the new disorder and this is an endless process. There have been great
reformers, there have been revolutions and yet man has again established a new
tyranny and then had to revolt against the new tyranny. Temporarily it may
appear that one has broken the old tyranny but so long as the human beings are
tyrannical they will establish a new tyranny and therefore he felt that any
fundamental reform in society can only come through an inner change, it cannot
come merely through an outer change that one tries to bring about in society.
He objected to people calling themselves Gandhians or
Krishnamurti-ites or even Christians, Buddhists and so on. He said "What
does it mean ?" What does it really mean when I say, I am a Christian or I
am a Gandhian ? We must examine that question deeply, because we often accept a
very superficial definition of words which is prevalent in society. What
exactly does it mean to be a Gandhian ? Does it mean wearing Khadi ? Does it
mean believing in non-violence as a political means ? Does it mean coming upon
a deep understanding within oneself of the love and compassion which Gandhi had
? Does the proclamation of an intention make me Gandhian ? What does it really
mean to be a Gandhian ? Can one really practice non-violence or decide to
practice non-violence so long as one is violent within, inwardly ? To
Krishnamurti violence went far beyond its external manifestation, he did not
accept the definition of non-violence as not hitting anybody else physically.
To him anger, aggression, greed, possessiveness were all forms of violence and
he said so long as these are there within, what does our decision to be
non-violent mean ? One of his famous statements is that virtue cannot be
practiced. It is a state of mind, either one has come upon that state of mind
or one has not come upon it. If the mind is self-centred, aggressive, then
non-violence is merely a decision and decisions are unimportant things, they
are hypocritical things in the field of consciousness. Because if you do not
feel love for your neighbour, what does it mean to decide to love him ? Does it
mean that when he comes you will be warm to him, you will smile at him and you
will express that you love him ? Inwardly you do not really love him, you
dislike him, you are irritated with him, you are envious of him, but outwardly
you show love, because you have decided to love him and this creates hypocrisy.
One is projecting oneself outwardly, differently from what one is inwardly and
hypocrisy is certainly not a virtue. Similarly, one can decide to become a
vegetarian, not to hit anybody, to help old people across the road, to care for
someone who is hurt, one can do these actions because one has decided to do
them and yet inwardly one may be very violent and cruel. The violence will
express itself in other ways. One may be dominating over other human beings, in
the management, in the office. One may hurt psychologically, though one does
not hurt physically and one may be sadistic, one may enjoy another person's
discomfiture. We see this process going on in the name of non-violence in our
society today, when people gherao an individual, do not permit him to go to the
toilet, do not permit him to eat his food and consider that they are
non-violent merely because they are not attacking him ! So, this kind of
triviality enters when one decides to practice a virtue and defines the virtue
in terms of a few actions which have been specified and then performed. Those
actions in themselves do not constitute the virtue.
To be religious is not merely a question of going to the temple,
performing some ritual, lighting a lamp or bathing in the Ganga. These things
are easy to do, anybody can do them and after doing it, one can feel that one
is religious without being religious. Krishnamurti pointed out this danger of
conveniently feeling that one is virtuous without actually coming upon virtue.
You cannot come upon virtue except through self-knowledge, through a deep
understanding of the working of your own consciousness, of your own mind, which
is the quest for truth. To him religion was such a quest for truth. It was so
for Gandhiji too, because he called his life itself an experiment with truth.
So, in a deep sense, both Krishnamurti and Gandhi regarded religion as the
quest for truth. A truly religious mind is a mind that is in quest of truth. The
differences that one sees between them are more in the mission which they took
up as the objectives of their life and work. In my view people often
misunderstand and consider that there is some dichotomy or fundamental
difference between Gandhi's approach and Krishnamurti's approach. To me, they
appear to be complementary. The difference is in the outer manifestation but at
the deeper levels the need for an inner transformation, the need to come upon a
religious mind, not to posit the religious mind as a Hindu mind or Christian
mind or a Buddhist mind, to come upon virtue through self-knowledge -- all this
was deeply the mission of both Gandhi and Krishnamurti. I do not think
Gandhiji's reforms and his public life could have been what they were if he did
not have this inner strength. That is, if Gandhiji did not really love the
British, if he was not really non-violent from within, if he had not freed his
consciousness of hatred of any human being irrespective of his attributes, if
he had not freed himself of fear, I do not think merely the outer
manifestations of his actions would have succeeded. In other words, it is not
merely a question of the social reform which one undertakes, but the inner
motives which propel that social reform are fundamentally important. If it
comes about as a natural manifestation of an inner state, it is a totally
different thing from a calculated plan thought out by a clever and cunning
mind.
In the West I have often been asked the question whether Gandhiji's
strategy of non-violence was not part of tactics, because the British were
infinitely more powerful and violence could not have, by any means, succeeded
against a powerful adversary like the British empire. So did he choose
non-violence because violence could not have succeeded ? They do not know
whether Gandhi took this decision out of seeing the situation and then deciding
what will succeed or it was a religious decision for him, irrespective of
whether it succeeds or not. For a religious mind, if that is intrinsically the
right thing to do, then that is the only way to go, there is no choice and it
does not matter if it succeeds or not. The end does not justify the means.
So did it come out of an inner strength within him because of the
religious mind and heart which he had or did it come as a strategy to be
followed ? Many of our politicians today, including our student leaders and so
on, adopt it as a tactics and it does not serve the same purpose. Christ said,
in the Sermon on the Mount that if somebody hits you on one cheek show him the
other also. Is it just the action that matters ? If you just show the other
cheek also, but are inwardly feeling hateful and angry it will have no effect.
What brings about the transformation in the other human being is not the act of
showing the other cheek also, but the inner love and compassion from which this
must follow as a spontaneous consequence. Then you do not retaliate, do not
meet violence with violence nor hatred with hatred. We have another instance of
this when the Buddha meets the murderer Angulimal. It is the inner state of the
Buddha that is important. It was not a fearful Buddha using non-violence as a
tactics in order to overcome Angulimal. It is not the tactics which works, it
is the religious quality which acts. So, was Gandhi's non-violence an outcome
of his inner religious perception or was it merely a policy ? When we call
ourselves Gandhians are we wanting to come upon that inner consciousness or are
we accepting only the tactics ? If we are accepting the tactics, it is
superficial, it is only the outer manifestation. If it is born out of an inner
perception then you are sharing in the consciousness of Gandhi.
In the same way one can ask who is a true Christian ? What does it
mean to be a true Christian ? After all Christ came upon love and compassion
and he spoke out of that truth, that inner state, and he wanted to express
that. But the followers did not come upon his love and compassion, they merely
picked up the outer details and converted them into rituals. Then came the
differences in opinion about how these should be performed, how which
commandment should be followed and to what extent. So they divided themselves
as Catholics and Protestants, both of whom claim to be Christians and yet for
the last 50 years they have been fighting and killing each other in Ireland !
Can a man who is killing other human beings in the name of religion be a
Christian ? Therefore, being religious has nothing to do with these outer
manifestations and so long as we give to the outer forms a tremendous
importance, we do not come upon a religious mind. The strength of both Gandhi
and Krishnamurti, lay not so much in the course of action which they adopted
but in the consciousness from which they acted.
I once came in close contact with some people who claimed to be
Gandhians. They stood for certain ideals which they thought were Gandhiji's
ideals. They wore khadi and lived simply and all that. They wanted to do social
reform of villages which Gandhiji had also done. But they came into conflict
with other people working with them and they were extremely contemptuous of
those people. They came to discuss their problems with me as they were
idealistic, sincere persons. I asked them what they had picked to emulate in
Gandhi -- the khadi, the Charkha, the ideals of social reform ? What about the
fact that Gandhiji worked with Nehru and Patel, who were extremely different
from him and yet there was a tremendous bond of affection and co-operation
between them ? I asked them, "Have you learned to work like that with your
colleagues ?" Is not that a requirement to be a Gandhian or are only the
outer things and the intellectual pursuits required to be a Gandhian ? So we
must ask ourselves what definition we give to being a Gandhian ? When you deeply
inquire into that you will find that to be a true Gandhian is the same as being
a true Christian, is the same as being a true Buddhist, is the same as being a
true Hindu, is the same as coming upon a religious mind. These divisions which
we see and which we have created by calling ourselves Krishnamurti-ites,
Gandhians, Hindus and Muslims are all an outcome of a superficial understanding
of religion. The problem is not whether one is a Gandhian or a Krishnamurti-ite
or whether one is a Christian or a Muslim, --the real problem is
superficiality. Both Gandhi and Krishnamurti fought against superficiality and
fought against accepting tradition blindly.
I am reminded of the instance when Gandhiji not only stood up
against the British but he stood up against the Congress Government also when
he felt that what they were doing was wrong. It was when India was divided into
India and Pakistan and a certain amount of money was to be paid to Pakistan but
the Indian Government was putting conditions on giving that money saying it
will be given only if you they first do this and do that. He felt the
Government of India was trying to politically arm-twist, which was an
irreligious thing to do, so he opposed it. He said political freedom was not
the main aim of the Congress, it was only a first step towards the liberation
of our villages from poverty, superstition and ignorance. He wanted India to be
the first country in the world to have no army. He wanted the Congress people
all to go and work in the villages and leave the Government to the
administrators but very few were willing. What happened to all the followers
who were with him in the Congress ? They had not come upon the consciousness
which Gandhi had come upon, they were only following his edicts and following
the outer edicts is a trivial thing, it does not work as we have already seen.
The spirit in the Congress degenerated as soon as Gandhi was gone. The process
had begun even in his own lifetime and he was miserable in the last six months
of his life. I believe he is on record, having said that these last six months
of his life were the worst period of his life, because all his hopes had been
shattered.
So, to really follow somebody is not so easy as to just pick up the
outer actions. Indeed we cannot truly live like someone else because we do not
have that consciousness ; and this is what Krishnamurti pointed out. He said do
not follow anybody, be yourself, watch yourself, understand yourself, and in
understanding yourself you will change inwardly and that would be a natural
change. But when you try to live like another human being you cannot, because
you do not have that consciousness. I cannot live like Gandhi, because I do not
have Gandhi's understanding within me and when I try to live like Gandhi I
cease to be even Krishna, I become a pseudo which is worse than being oneself.
Because when you are yourself, there is a possibility that you will understand
what you are, which is the actuality and thereby come upon the truth. When you
come upon the truth deeply, for yourself, there is an inner transformation and
you are naturally wiser, not merely imitating somebody. Imitation is a lie and
therefore Krishnamurti did not believe in following anybody and he refused to
accept disciples for himself. He said I cannot give you the truth, so what does
it mean to be a disciple ? You must discover and find out for yourselves like I
have found out for myself and each person has to be a light unto himself which
is what the Buddha had said too.
>From my readings of Gandhi, which are very limited, I feel that
Gandhiji understood the truth of this. The same message is there in the Gita.
It says that the rightness or wrongness of an action is not dependent on the
result, it is dependent on the motives with which that action is performed.
Gita also asks us to find out if we can work like an ambitious man without
being ambitious. In it, Lord Krishna explains to Arjuna, that the enlightened
man will outwardly appear to live and work exactly like an ordinary human being
but it is not the same thing because he does not do it for the same reason.
Inwardly they are different. So the true transformation lies within the
consciousness of man and Krishnamurti considered that only when that inner
transformation takes place there is a natural reform in society. When the
change is born out of a motivated action, an ambitious action, a calculated
action, then there is no true transformation in society.
Someone asked Krishnamurti at the end of one of his talks, "I
want to do social work. How should I start ?", and he answered saying * *
____________________________________________________________ ** from "This
Matter of Culture" by J. Krishnamurti chapter 27, p ** 212-213,
Gollancz,London 1974.
"I think it is very important to find out not how to start, but
why you want to do social work at all. Why do you want to do social work ? Is
it because you see misery in the world--starvation, disease, exploitation, the
brutal indifference of great wealth side by side with appalling poverty, the
enmity between man and man ? Is that the reason ?Do you want to do social work
because in your heart there is love and therefore you are not concerned with
your own fulfillment ? Or is social work a means of escape from yourself ? Do
you understand ? You see, for example, all the ugliness involved in orthodox
marriage, so you say, "I shall never get married," and you throw
yourself into social work instead; or perhaps your parents have urged you into
it, or you have an ideal. If it is a means of escape, or if you are merely
pursuing an ideal established by society , by a leader or a priest, or by
yourself, then any social work you may do will only create further misery. But
if you have love in your heart, if you are seeking truth and are therefore a
truly religious person, if you are no longer ambitious, no longer pursuing
success, and your virtue is not leading to respectability--then your very life
will help to bring about a total transformation of society.
I think it is very important to understand this. When we are young,
as most of you are, we want to do something, and social work is in the air;
books tell about it, the newspapers do propaganda for it, there are schools to
train social workers, and so on. But you see, without self-knowledge, without
understanding yourself and your relationships, any social work you do will turn
to ashes in your mouth.
It is the happy man, not the idealist or the miserable escapee, who
is revolutionary; and the happy man is not he who has many possessions. The
happy man is the truly religious man, and his very living is social work. But
if you become merely one of the innumerable social workers, your heart will be
empty. You may give away your money, or persuade other people to contribute
theirs, and you may bring about marvellous reforms; but as long as your heart
is empty and your mind full of theories, your life will be dull, weary, without
joy. So, first understand yourself, and out of that self-knowledge will come
action of the right kind".
So it is wrong to think that Krishnamurti was against social reform.
What he was pointing out was that the reform itself must be done with a heart
of love. You may engage yourself in social reform, but if you do it
ambitiously, if you do it egoistically, if you do it in order to become the top
social worker and get the Nobel Prize, then in that very reform the seeds of
corruption are there and therefore that reform will turn into ashes in your
mouth. We have indeed seen again and again that you cannot just reform
outwardly. True reformation comes from within. Even Gandhiji's attempt to
create a certain political group met with frustration because the followers had
not been reformed from within. They were merely accepting him as their leader.
He was feeling these things from within--he was fearless and used his own
intelligence. He was willing to face the wrath of the Hindu society when he
gave an injection to the calf of a cow to enable it to die without much
suffering. He was living the truth with understanding, not seeking popularity.
But if we do social reform in order to become successful then there is no
difference between us and the businessman. The businessman is also craving for
success and the so-called religious man and the social worker are also craving
for success, only they have adopted different means. If the social reform is
merely a means to an end, then it has very little significance because in that
ambitious process itself there are the seeds of division. You will find that
within the movement of reform itself division will come and aggression will be
there and people will start fighting with each other. Temporarily, under the
influence of a great man like Gandhi, those divisions may subside but that is
really not an ending of division and therefore there is really no reform in
that. That reform will vanish as soon as that great mind or great influence is
not there. Therefore, virtue cannot be acquired through influence. Each one of
us has to come upon virtue for oneself. Then, that state of understanding, your
own understanding, will tell you what is right action for you.
After all who guided Gandhi to do what he wanted to do ? He did not
have a guide in front of him. Who guided the Buddha ? Who guided Christ ? But
we all want to be led, to be guided in our life by another and it is important
to see that that makes us in to second hand human beings. If we come upon a
deep understanding for ourselves and out of that understanding there is a
manifestation in the form of action, only then it is first hand, it is genuine.
If really one feels that love and out of that love one wants to do social
reform, then the motives are right and when the motives are right only then the
action is right.
So to me there does not appear to be any contradiction between what
Gandhiji was trying to do, and what Krishnamurti was trying to do. I think
there is great truth in what Krishnamurti is pointing out but that is not a
call for inaction. It is only demanding that that action must come from a heart
full of love and compassion and not an ambitious, petty, self-centered heart
and mind. That is what he is demanding and I do not think Gandhiji would have
disagreed with this because for him also the action came from a heart which was
filled with love, compassion and brotherhood. He really felt intense affection
for the British people, he felt the British are our friends, that they are like
any other human beings, but he said their government should not be here because
that is unjust, it is unfair. He was protesting against the injustice and not
against the Englishman per se. It is a unique case in the history of the world
where a foreign rule has been overthrown without much hatred or bloodshed and
you can see certain consequences of that. The relationship between India and
Britain continues to be friendly. India has continued to be part of the
Commonwealth as a consequence of that policy and that policy came out of a deep
inner religious understanding of one man. That deep religious understanding of
one man is more important than a million followers blindly following. So long
as we do not come upon that inner quality which Gandhiji came upon and we try
to do only the outer actions which he advocated it will never work. The reasons
why Gandhiji's non-cooperation movement, civil- disobedience movement, his
economic policies had effect is not because they were cleverly thought out
plans but because they emanated from a religious mind and that religious mind
is what Krishnamurti is asking us to come upon.
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