17.
Everybody imagines:
"I am the noblest born; my wealth
is great.
Where is my equal?"
Who am I? I belong to the line of the
Bharadvaja. I can trace without a break my lineage from the great rishi.
People in the West feel the same way. They say. "Noble Norman
blood runs through my veins." Don't we in our country trace a guru-shishya
line? It begins with Shiva, the adiguru, the first teacher.
And then, Brahman or somebody
else; then Narada and Vyasa; then some other rishi; then in
between ten or fifteen other names; and after them, my guru and
then, finally myself. Through this pedigree we try to prove our own
greatness and that of our culture. My dear fellow, if indeed your
culture is great, let your conduct reveal it. Let its splendor
pervade your life. But this doesn't happen.
The desire to spread throughout the
world the culture that we do not practice in our own life, in our
own home - this way of thinking is asurik.
18. "My culture is the
noblest," we say. It is just like this to think, "I am the
only person fit to hold all the wealth of the world. I want all the
world's wealth, and I will make it mine." And why should I make
it mine? To divide it equally among all. In order to do this, I
first bury myself in this wealth. Akbar too said in the same way,
"Why don't these Rajputs join my empire? If there is one big
empire, peace would be established." Akbar sincerely believed
this. The asuras of our day too think that they should
collect all the wealth of the world. What for? To distribute it
again to everybody. |