Sannyasa
Is it
necessary to be a sannyasin to achieve something?
The meaning
of sannyasa is not what most people make it out to be. Sannyasa is not turning
into an old man with a long beard. All those who leave their native homes and
go abroad also take sannyasa in a way. They have let go of their attachments.
The meaning of sannyasa is sacrificing oneself for the sake of something.
Sannyasa means dedication; it does not mean renunciation. In the dictionary,
the meaning of sannyasa is not tyaga, renunciation; it means samarpan,
surrender. It means trust. Nyasa means to place yourself in a trust. If you
allocate a certain amount of your money to help the poor, you have placed it in
trust; it has been dedicated. That is what sannyasa means.
The
question should not arise whether or not sannyasa is necessary. One who has
faith in sannyasa should take sannyasa and one who desires a householder life
should live that. It is not as if you cannot attain God in householder life or
that only sannyasins attain God.
One does
not take sannyasa for the sake of attaining God. The aim of sannyasa is not
moksha. The only aim of sannyasa is seva, selfless service. This is the aim of
sannyasa because a sannyasin is not limited by circumstances. No condition can
create pressure on a sannyasin. If someone asks me for a bribe today, I can ask
him to go to hell, but a householder cannot do this because his work will come
to a standstill. Sannyasa is such a life in which one cannot be a slave to
circumstances. A sannyasin is the master of his own life. Today I can leave
this place and go anywhere, for the circumstances do not come in my way. In the
path of seva, one must make sure that circumstances do not become obstacles.
Therefore, sannyasa must be considered the path of seva.
The life of
sannyasa is the life of growth. If Narendra had not taken sannyasa, he could
not have become Swami Vivekananda. There were many circumstances in his life
that were obstacles on his path. The moment he took sannyasa, he removed the
barriers that stood before him. Barriers are subjective; they are in your mind.
A householder is bound by them, but not a sannyasin.
As far as devotion
to God is concerned, or worship, prayer, pilgrimage, satsang and self-study, a
householder can practise them and so can a sannyasin. So, to ask whether or not
sannyasa is required is unnecessary. Sannyasa is a path adopted by people in
different ages to work for the welfare of humanity. There are many sannyasins
working in the cities today who are able to guide people on the path of growth.
There are many negative influences in the cities and people can easily go down
the wrong lane there. The sannyasins guide and take you from the inauspicious
path to the auspicious path.
It is said
that the path of sannyasa is like the razor’s edge.
Those who
consider the path of sannyasa a razor’s edge should leave sannyasa. They are
not worthy of it. Sannyasa is an easy path. If we know how to drive a car, it
is very easy for us. If someone does not know how to drive, he’d better not
even touch a car. There are people in whom the desires are mellow and there are
people who have intense desires. The second category of people should not take
sannyasa. However, for some rare people this may not be the case, such as
Tulsidas or Surdas.
There is no
difficulty in sannyasa. Sannyasa is ananda, bliss. That is why sannyasins have
the suffix ‘ananda’ in their names. I have even lived the life of a beggar
blissfully. In Varanasi, I would spread a cloth, place an aluminium bowl on it
and people would drop alms in it. At night I would go off to sleep on the
verandah of a temple. There was such bliss in that. From many people’s
perspective, that would seem like suffering. In my eyes, it was completely
blissful. In sannyasa life, whatever condition you live in, you should remain
contented.
Every
individual has a different standard. When children go to study in a school,
they all go to the same school but they belong to different standards. And even
within the same standard, every child has a different category of intellect.
Similarly, we have all evolved through eighty-four hundred thousand life forms
and we are all at different stages of evolution. Every person has his own
experiences, his own speciality. Someone is tamasic, ignorant and dull, someone
is sattwic, pure and luminous, and someone is rajasic, restless and active.
Sometimes a person may appear to be rajasic and tamasic on the surface; he may
appear to be very wicked and passionate, but somewhere within him the light of
sattwa wants to manifest. It is not able to manifest because the lid of tamo
and rajo gunas keep it covered. So when he goes to a sadguru, reads an
inspiring book or a certain event takes place in his life, that lid flips open.
For some this happens through a catastrophe such as the death of a dear one or
loss of wealth, and there are those whose lid opens when they visit a sage or
saint.
No one
becomes a sannyasin; it is an internal feeling. It manifests from within. In
the forties when I was in Rishikesh, there were very few sannyasins living in
the ashram. All kinds of people would arrive with the idea of sannyasa, but run
away within days. They realized that here no one would ask them whether or not
they had eaten or taken a bath. Out of a thousand, maybe one stayed back.
The main
task of sannyasins is to take people to the path of dharma without any
coercion. A sannyasin speaks of wisdom, atman, God – he speaks of all that is
positive and uplifting. Who other than a sannyasin will speak of these things?
Until the minds of individuals in society do not go towards these subjects,
crimes will not be curbed. Your mind is constantly under stress; it is thinking
about money twenty-four hours long, you get angry, you go through social
struggles, but when you hear the words of a sannyasin, your mind finds a bit of
rest and ease. The sannyasin brings balance to society. This is necessary. A
sannyasin has nothing to do with politics or sects, he is engrossed in
contemplation and is concerned with only one thing: what is appropriate and
what is inappropriate under the prevalent circumstances.
Sannyasins
are the barometers of an age. They travel everywhere, so they are able to
perform this role naturally. Therefore, do not think that one takes sannyasa
for moksha or God-realization; sannyasa is taken only for serving society and
requires immense dedication.
A solitary
path
The most
important quality in sannyasa is alakh niranjan, “I am a solitary traveller.” A
sannyasin does not think that someone will feed him, nurse him when he is sick,
look after him in old age or be with him all his life. If someone thinks of
these things, he should not take sannyasa. Sannyasa means strength.
Sannyasa is
a very powerful tradition. It does not just mean geru clothes. It means: “I am
a solitary traveller, I came alone and I go alone. No one can move me from my
path.” That is the vision that a sannyasin comes with. He knows the script that
he has to follow and follows it. He does not care if he has to die tomorrow. He
knows that whatever has to happen must happen.
Beyond
religion
It is not
appropriate to attach any religion with sannyasins, for they do not have any
religion. They may have been born into a religion, but they do not have any
religion. They are always non-sectarian. Therefore, we must read the teachings
of every saint and learn about them. The biggest definition of saints is that
they do not belong to any one individual, but to all. They do not consider any
one person as their own, but all as their own. Notions such as ‘This is my nephew;
that is my mother’ does not apply to saints. For them, all are their own
whether you call them disciples, devotees or followers.
Paropkara,
helping others, is the basis of the life of all saints. They are not born to
help their own souls, but to help others. If you have a family, you will work
for your wife, children and parents because you have to, for you are the
support for their survival. However, when you become a sannyasin and work as
doctor, lawyer, writer, painter, engineer, teacher or speaker, who are you
working for? After all, Mother Teresa belonged to a religion, but people did
not associate her with a religion. Saints are not recognized by their religion,
but by their genius. If a piece of diamond drops from someone’s pocket, you
will not identify with a religion or sect. If you do not identify differences
in diamonds or even currency notes, then why do you see differences in the
virtues of saints? No, we should not differentiate between saints.
Shankaracharya
Shankaracharya
was initiated in the Shaiva tradition and used to worship Shiva. After he
established the Sringeri matha, he argued for the philosophy of advaita,
non-duality; he did not speak of the Shaiva philosophy. He fell seriously ill
when those who opposed him cast an abhichara mantra on him, a mantra intended
to kill someone. That was when he went to the banks of the Narmada and began
the worship of Devi, Shakti. He prayed to Devi from the bottom of his heart and
created the 103 verses of Saundarya Lahari. So, even though Shankaracharya was
a propagator of the advaita view and was initiated into the Shaiva tradition,
at the end of his life he sought the shelter of Shakti.
Shankaracharya
worshipped Shakti because it needs to be done. Even when this ashram was
established, I had to decide on its presiding deity. Wherever I opened an
ashram I had to decide on its presiding deity according to the energy of that
place. So I decided that the shakti of the Rikhia ashram is tulasi. I accepted
Tulasi as the ishta here. What is the difference between Tulasi and Sharada? I
saw her in the form of Tulasi, you may see her in the form of Sharada, Amba,
Radha or Kali. The form is different, but the essence is one.
Shankara
and Shankaracharya are two different personalities. Normally people don’t know
this fact. When we chant the Vedic Shanti Mantras, we say Shankaram
Shankaracharyam Keshavam Badarayanam. Two names are mentioned here. Adi
Shankara was a great personality who won over all of India. He was a very
powerful sannyasin who left his home at the age of eight, left his guru’s abode
at the age of sixteen and died at the age of thirty-two. In such a short time
he was able to re-establish vedic dharma across the country. After Adi Shankara
came Shankaracharya who was a learned teacher and wrote commentaries on various
scriptures. These are non-sectarian and deeply philosophical commentaries, and
are considered classical works all over the world.
Swami
Niranjan
Let me
speak a little about Swami Niranjan also. Everyone sings praises of the guru;
Swami Satyananda likes to sing the praise of the disciple.
Swami
Niranjan came to Munger at the age of four. I told him to go back home to his
mother. How was I to keep a child of four in the ashram! So he again came back
at the age of six and remained there. He was in Munger from the age of six till
ten. And how he would trouble me! He and Swami Gorakhnath would pull apart
everything in the ashram: tape recorders, typewriters, duplicating machines. If
asked “What are you doing?” they would reply, “We are trying to learn what it
is.”
At the age
of ten I took him to Ireland with me and left him there. The conditions there
were very difficult. He used to live in the Catholic community, so the
Protestants would round him up on the streets and tell him that he should not
live there. I asked him to tell them that he would continue to live where he
was, but would go to their school to teach yoga. So now the Catholics said,
“You cannot live here, for you go to the Protestant school.” They would print
graffiti on the walls of his house: ‘Yogi bear lives here.’
Ireland was
a great test for him; it was a very sectarian country. That was his training
ground; he learnt how to live among people of different mentalities there.
Swami
Niranjan has renounced for the well-being of humankind. He is my successor
because he is capable. I chose him at the age of four and trained him without
telling him that he would succeed me. He can communicate more easily with the
people of today. He knows how to talk with them and his personality is suited
for that. He can think the way young people think today and I think the way
people used to think fifty years ago. Now he may also retire because there must
be some end to one’s duties and obligations.
Swami
Satsangi
Sannyasins
should lead the life of Swami Satsangi. They should remain happy while
imparting knowledge and doing their duties. A sannyasin should serve all.
The entire
credit of the creation of Rikhia chapter goes to Swami Satsangi. She is the
actual founder of this institution in every way, monetarily and
administratively. It is her dream. Everything you see here is the maya of Swami
Satsangi. In the first few years she worked very hard building and learning
about rural life. Then Bihar School of Yoga and Sivananda Math came forward to
assist her. When Swami Satsangi first came to Rikhia she was completely
ignorant of rural India and rural life, but since she was living here with me,
naturally she had to attune herself to these surroundings. She has a very
strong personality. She calls a rose a rose and a spade a spade. A person who
shoulders responsibility should be very strong. Of course, after me, she will
carry on the work of Sivananda Math in Rikhia very well.
PARAMAHAMSA SATYANANDA SARASWATI
more: http://delfeios.blogspot.gr/2012/04/karma-sannyasa.html
http://delfeios.blogspot.gr/2013/04/s-m-n-y-s.html
http://delfeios.blogspot.gr/2013/04/s-m-n-y-s.html
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