<1>< href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/jan/11/salman-rushdie-satanic-verses”>How one book ignited a culture war<><1>
< class=”third-party-tool no-comments “>By < href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/andrewanthony” name=”&lid={contentTypeByline}{Andrew Anthony}&lpos={contentTypeByline}{1}”><>< color=#005689>Andrew Anthony<><><> <>
< class=”third-party-tool no-comments “>< href=”http://observer.guardian.co.uk/” name=”&lid={contentTypeByline}{The Observer}&lpos={contentTypeByline}{2}”>< color=#005689>The Observer<><>, Sunday 11 January 2009 <>
< id=stand-first class=stand-first-alone>It’s 20 years since Iran’s religious leader Ayatollah Khomeini pronounced a death sentence on Salman Rushdie for ‘insulting’ Islam with his novel The Satanic Verses. The repercussions were profound – and are still being felt. Andrew Anthony traces the course of the affair, from book-burnings and firebombings to the dramatic impact it had on freedom of expression in a multicultural society<>
< id=article-wrapper sizset=”5″ sizcache=”0″>
< class=image>< color=#005689>< alt=”Salman Rushdie wins the 1988 Whitbread Award” src=”http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2009/1/10/1231605317267/Salman-Rushdie-wins-the-1-001.jpg” width=460 height=276><>
< class=caption>Salman Rushdie wins the 1988 Whitbread Award. Photograph: Graham Turner/Guardian<><>
<>The phrase “literary London” is usually employed to nebulous effect but it accurately describes the gathering that took place at the Greek Orthodox church in Bayswater on 14 February, a clear blue St Valentine’s Day, in 1989. The occasion was Bruce Chatwin’s memorial service, and it was attended by a large contingent of what was and remains an exceptional generation of British or British-based writers. Among them were Martin Amis, Paul Theroux and < href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/salmanrushdie”>< color=#005689>Salman Rushdie<><>.<>
<>According to Theroux, Chatwin’s funeral “was the high watermark of that decade’s creative activity”. For Amis, Chatwin, a recent convert to Greek Orthodoxy, had played a last joke on his friends by subjecting them to “a religion that no one he knew could understand or respond to”. If so, it was a joke destined to be overshadowed by a very different kind of theological offering that was far more of a challenge to understand or respond to. That same morning Rushdie had been informed of the fatwa issued by the Iranian leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, calling for his execution for the crime of writing a novel, The Satanic Verses.<>
<>Word of the death sentence had spread among the mourners. Thinking the fatwa was little more than the empty threat of a faraway tyrant, Theroux called out to Rushdie: “Next week we’ll be back here for you!” But Khomeini’s pronouncements in such matters were seldom without consequence. As far back as 1947, when merely a cleric, he had ordered the death of an Iranian education minister who within days was shot dead. And thereafter countless other political and intellectual opponents were to lose their lives on Khomeini’s command. Chatwin’s memorial service was to be Rushdie’s last public appearance for some time.<>
<>He spent the remainder of that day searching for his son, Zafar, then he went into hiding. The headline of the London evening paper read: EXECUTE RUSHDIE, ORDERS THE AYATOLLAH. “Salman had disappeared into the world of block caps,” wrote Amis. “He had vanished into the front page.” In fact he had moved with a Special Branch protection team to the Lygon Arms hotel in the Cotswolds. Apparently a tabloid reporter happened to be in the next room, conducting an adulterous affair, and missed the biggest story of the year. That same evening Channel 4 broadcast a pre-recorded interview with Rushdie on The Bandung File. “It’s very simple in this country,” said the author, when asked about the demands that his book be withdrawn from shops. “If you don’t want to read a book, you don’t have to read it. It’s very hard to be offended by The Satanic Verses – it requires a long period of intense reading. It’s a quarter of a million words.” <>
<>Four days after Rushdie received his “unfunny Valentine”, he issued an apology: “I profoundly regret the distress that publication has occasioned to sincere followers of Islam.” At first the apology was rejected then accepted in Iran, before Khomeini stated that even if Rushdie repented and “became the most pious man of all time” it was still incumbent on every Muslim to “employ everything he has got” to kill him. So much for the spirit of forgiveness.<>
<>What the mixed responses pointed to was that, right from the start, The Satanic Verses affair was less a theological dispute than an opportunity to exert political leverage. The background to the controversy was the struggle between Saudi Arabia and Iran to be the standard bearer of global Islam. The Saudis had spent a great deal of money exporting the fundamentalist or Salafi version of Sunni Islam, while Shiite Iran, still smarting from a calamitous war and humiliating armistice with Iraq, was keen to reassert its credentials as the vanguard of the Islamic revolution. Both the Saudis and Iranians saw a new constituency, ripe for exploitation, in the small British protest groups that initially responded to The Satanic Verses with book-burning demonstrations. But in fact the protesters who took to the streets in Bradford and other mill towns were themselves the offspring of other far-off theocratic politics in the subcontinent. <>
<>The Satanic Verses was published on 26 September 1988 and, after pressure from the Janata party, banned in India by Rajiv Gandhi’s government nine days later. Flushed with this success, Indians working for the Saudi-financed Islamic Foundation of Leicester suggested trying to get the book banned in Britain. According to Malise Ruthven, author of A Satanic Affair, the campaign was then orchestrated by Jamaat-i-Islami, the party founded in Pakistan by Sayyid Abul A’la Maududi. A journalist-cum-theologian, Maududi preached that “for the entire human race, there is only one way of life which is Right in the eyes of God and that is al-Islam”.<>
<>Nevertheless it was the Saudis who funded the United Kingdom Action Committee on Islamic Affairs, the protest body set up to maximise pressure on The Satanic Verses. It featured Islamists like Iqbal Sacranie, the future head of the Muslim Council of Britain. (Sacranie famously opined that “death, perhaps, is a bit too easy” for Rushdie. He was later knighted for services to community relations.) And it was the Saudi clerics who were planning a trial of Rushdie in absentia. <>
<>In keeping with most Muslim countries, Iran did not ban The Satanic Verses. It was even reviewed in an Iranian newspaper. But noticing the protests in India and Britain, a delegation of mullahs from the holy city of Qum read a section of the book to Khomeini, including the part featuring a mad imam in exile, which was an obvious caricature of Khomeini. As one British diplomat in Iran said: “It was designed to send the old boy incandescent.” So it was that the Iranians delivered the fatwa, thus winning the competition to be the greatest haters of Rushdie, and therefore the West, and all that entailed.<>
<>As Khomeini put it in a speech nine days after the fatwa, The Satanic Verses was very important to what he called the “world devourers” because they had mobilised the “entire Zionism and arrogance behind it”. The book, he went on, was a “calculated” attack by “colonialism” on the greatness and honour of the clergy. It’s worth noting here that the book, written by an arch anti-colonialist, was indeed in part an attack, or at least satire, on the role of the clergy, the caste of priests that has no Qur’anic authority. In this newspaper, just before the fatwa, Rushdie had written: “A powerful tribe of clerics has taken over Islam. These are the contemporary Thought Police.”<>
<>The next decade was a dangerous and isolating time for Rushdie. He was shadowed round-the-clock by bodyguards, and moved each time the security services became aware of one of the series of plots to kill him. Because there were British hostages held by Islamic extremists in Lebanon, Rushdie was advised by the authorities not to say or do anything that might antagonise their captors. Politicians remained at a safe public distance from him. Travel, once the driver of his imagination, had become a logistical and administrative nightmare. The subcontinent was ruled out. British Airways told him not to fly with them because it might endanger their staff. And when he did manage to go abroad, staying with friends was a cramped affair. As Christopher Hitchens, an old friend and staunch advocate, recently recalled of a Rushdie visit to Washington DC: “When he was staying at my house back at Thanksgiving of 1993, so were about a dozen heavily armed members of the United States’s finest anti-terrorist forces.” In contemplating these sorts of details, it’s hard to keep in mind that the person at the centre of them was just a writer. “I said somewhere,” he told me last year, “that it was like a bad Salman Rushdie novel.”<>
<>The years following the fatwa were also a damaging and sometimes lethal period for many of those associated with The Satanic Verses, few of whom had any protection. In April 1989 Collets, the left-wing bookshop, and Dillons were firebombed for stocking the Rushdie novel. A month later there were explosions in High Wycombe and London’s King’s Road. There was a bomb in the Liberty department store which housed a Penguin Bookshop (Penguin was the publisher of The Satanic Verses) and at the York Penguin bookshop. Unexploded devices were also discovered at the Nottingham, Guildford and Peterborough branches of the store. <>
<>In August the same year Mustafa Mahmoud Mazeh accidentally blew himself up in a Paddington hotel room while priming a bomb intended to kill Rushdie. Meanwhile Rushdie’s marriage to the American author Marianne Wiggins did not long survive the pressures of life in hiding. Rushdie was at a low ebb and writing very little. Amis wrote: “I often tell him that if the Rushdie Affair were, for instance, the Amis Affair, then I would, by now, be a tearful and tranquillised 300-pounder, with no eyelashes or nostril hairs, and covered in blotches and burns from various misadventures with the syringe and the crackpipe.” <>
<>Rushdie sought another way out. On Christmas Eve 1990 he issued a statement bearing witness that “there is no God but Allah, and Muhammad is his last prophet”. Claiming to have renewed his faith in Islam, he said he did not agree with any character in The Satanic Verses who “casts aspersions… upon the authenticity of the holy Qur’an, or who rejects the divinity of Allah”. He also said he would not release a paperback of the book. That evening he was so disgusted with himself that he was physically sick. The playwright Arnold Wesker, a Rushdie supporter, said: “The religious terrorists have won.” Hitchens recalls: “I told Salman that it didn’t make any difference to my support for him but that I didn’t think it would ‘work’ and that I didn’t think it was dignified. I think he felt much better after he re-apostasised: it was a sort of Gethsemane – if you will forgive the expression – after which he was determined to see the whole thing through.” Years later Rushdie would publicly say it was the biggest mistake of his life, a “deranged” moment when he had hit rock bottom. In the event, it made no difference. Though Khomeini was now dead, the Iranian clergy confirmed that Rushdie still had to be killed. The following year Hitoshi Igarashi, Rushdie’s Japanese translator, was stabbed to death and Ettore Capriolo, the Italian translator, seriously injured in another knife attack. In 1993 William Nygaard, the publisher in Norway, was shot and injured, and Aziz Nesin, the Turkish translator, was the target of the Silvas massacre in Turkey that left 37 dead in an arson attack on a hotel.<>
<>For years the novel was withdrawn from display in shops around the world but it still became a bestseller in several countries, including America, and was published, despite all the demands and threats, in paperback. Moreover, Rushdie has gone on to enjoy a successful career, writing seven more novels and several other books, and he has also attained a measure of normalised liberty since the Iranian government effectively withdrew its backing from the fatwa in 1998. To this extent, Khomeini’s edict and the murderous campaign it engendered failed abysmally. But Rushdie and The Satanic Verses, it should be remembered, was not the only target of the fatwa. In his original statement, broadcast on Iranian radio, Khomeini not only called for the death of all those consciously associated with the book but also said they should be executed “so that no one will dare to insult the Islamic sanctity”. In this respect, and several others, Khomeini’s terror has proved far more effective.<>
<>Who would dare to write a book like The Satanic Verses nowadays? And if some brave or reckless author did dare, who would publish it? The signs in both cases are that no such writer or publisher is likely to appear, and for two reasons. The first and most obvious is fear. The Satanic Verses is a rich and complex literary novel, by turns ironic, fantastical and satirical. Despite what is often said, mostly by those who haven’t read it, the book does not take direct aim at Islam or its prophet. Those sections that have caused the greatest controversy are contained within the dreams or nightmares of a character who is in the grip of psychosis. Which is to say that, even buried in the fevered subconscious of a disturbed character inside a work of fiction – a work of magical realism fiction! – there is no escape from literalist tyranny. Any sentence might turn out to be a death sentence. And few if any of even the boldest and most iconoclastic artists wish to run that risk.<>
<>The recent case of The Jewel of Medina, a work by Sherry Jones which is neither bold nor iconoclastic, exemplifies the problem. In 2007 the American publishers Random House bought the rights to this historical novel about the prophet Muhammad’s wife Aisha. By all accounts the book is something of a cheesy romance. Jones herself believes it is a circumspect fiction which “portrays the prophet Muhammad as a gentle, compassionate, wise leader and man respectful toward women and his wives”. But a professor of Middle Eastern studies named Denise Spellberg advised Random House that it might provoke violence. The publishers duly cancelled the publication. <>
<>”We stand firmly by our responsibility to support our authors and the free discussion of ideas, even those that may be construed as offensive by some,” Random House explained in a statement. “However, a publisher must weigh that responsibility against others that it also bears, and in this instance we decided, after much deliberation, to postpone publication for the safety of the author, employees of Random House, booksellers and anyone who would be involved in distribution and sale of the novel.”<>
<>This has become a familiar conceit in recent years: we defend the right of freedom of expression but prefer not to exercise it in situations that might endanger us. Random House publish Rushdie, and he was angered by what he saw as a capitulation to the threat of Islamic reprisals. “This is censorship by fear, and it sets a very bad precedent indeed,” he said.<>
<>In Britain the book was taken up by the independent publisher, Gibson Square. But on 27 September last year the London home of Martin Rynja, Gibson Square’s publisher, was firebombed. As things stand, the book’s British publication is indefinitely postponed.<>
<>Nor is this self-censorship restricted to literature. Ramin Gray, associate director of the Royal Court Theatre, recently admitted that he would be reluctant to stage a play that was critical of Islam. “You would think twice,” he said. “You’d have to take the play on its merits but given the time we’re in, it’s very hard because you’d worry that if you cause offence then the whole enterprise would become buried in a sea of controversy. It does make you tread carefully.”<>
<>The Royal Court cancelled a new version of Aristophanes’s Lysistrata last year because the play is set in Muslim paradise. The Barbican cut out sections of Tamburlaine the Great for similar reasons, and in 2006 Berlin’s Deutsche Oper dropped a production of Mozart’s Idomeneo because it depicted Muhammad. In 2005 Tate Britain removed God is Great, John Latham’s sculpture featuring copies of a Bible, a Qur’an and a Talmud, because, according to a gallery statement, it was not “appropriate” in the sensitive post-7/7 climate. As Kenan Malik, author of the forthcoming book From Fatwa to Jihad: The Rushdie Affair and Its Legacy, has written: “The fatwa has in effect become internalised”.<>
<>Fear is not the only explanation why a global religion which, rightly or wrongly, is invoked as the inspiration for terror has become a non-subject for critical (or uncritical) works of art. The other reason is sympathy. And here Khomeini has proved prescient. Back in 1989, only the most conspiracy-minded Islamists took seriously Khomeini’s claims that The Satanic Verses was part of a Zionist-imperialist plot to persecute Muslims.<>
<>The world has since changed. Following the events of 11 September 2001, the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq, Guantanamo Bay and the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinians, the idea that the West is engaged in a military and cultural war with Islam is now far more widely entertained. A conflation has taken place in which the war in Iraq and the plight of the Palestinians has become somehow indivisible from the situation of Muslims in Britain. So that to be opposed to the war is to be, if not actively in favour of Islamism at home (the position of much of the far left), then at least not against it. And by extension, open criticism of Islamism, religious censorship and violence is often automatically viewed as an expression of “neocon” or “imperialist” politics.<>
<>Although there were exceptions at the time – among them Germaine Greer, John Berger and John Le Carré – many prominent cultural figures on the left extended Rushdie their support both here and abroad. Even a critic of The Satanic Verses, the Egyptian novelist and Nobel laureate Naguib Mahfouz, who felt the book was insulting to Islam, signed a petition stating that “no blasphemy harms Islam and Muslims so much as the call for murdering a writer”. Five years later Mahfouz was stabbed in the neck by Islamic extremists.<>
<>In the years since the fatwa there have been many more flashpoints in which artists and writers have been threatened, attacked or killed for criticising Islam, and not all have been Muslims. Hitchens thinks this is a development that has been overlooked. “Salman was raised as a Muslim,” he says, “so in theory he’s within the jurisdiction. He can be sentenced as an apostate, and the same can be done to Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Taslima Nasreen [the Bangladeshi novelist under threat of decapitation who has just been offered refuge in Paris]. But what people haven’t noticed sufficiently is that now people who are not Muslims, like the Danish cartoonists, have been threatened with violence for criticising Islam. That’s sort of new, and ought to be more controversial than it is.”<>
<>Yet few of those who have found themselves targeted by Islamic extremists in the wake of the Rushdie fatwa received wholehearted support from the liberal community. Quite the opposite. Theo Van Gogh, slaughtered on a busy street in Amsterdam; his co-filmmaker Ayaan Hirsi Ali, threatened with death and placed under police protection; the Danish cartoonists who responded to Jyllands-Posten’s commission to draw the prophet Muhammad and were forced into hiding: in each of these high-profile cases, the victims of intimidation were castigated and shunned by a wide swathe of progressive opinion.<>
<>”Right wing”, “provocateurs”, “reactionaries” and “racist” are some of the more restrained epithets aimed at the above names by their liberal critics. (Incidentally, surely the defining example of the absurdity of self-censorship is that the Danish cartoon that did not feature an image of the prophet but instead the legend “Jyllands-Posten’s journalists are a bunch of reactionary provocateurs” was also deemed too dangerous to publish by every newspaper in Britain.) <>
<>The word, though, that is most frequently launched at the heirs of Rushdie is Islamophobic. Almost any criticism of Islam or any of its adherents is likely to trigger accusations of Islamophobia. For example, in 2007 the Channel 4 documentary Undercover Mosque exposed various preachers making hateful and violent statements regarding women, Jews, homosexuals and infidels. By any journalistic measure it was a compelling and revelatory documentary. But in the media storm that followed it was not the inflammatory preachers but the programme-makers who found themselves subject to an inquisition. The police tried to prosecute them for broadcasting “material likely to stir up racial hatred”. And when that failed they referred the film to Ofcom for censure. It took nine months before the film-makers were fully vindicated and their professional reputations restored.<>
<>Of course, very few people sympathised with the preachers shown in the documentary but many did want to express their sympathy with Muslims in general, whom they saw, not without reason, as an embattled minority. And to the well-intentioned, the best way of doing this was to condemn anyone who criticised any Muslim, regardless of their extremism. As the playwright David Edgar put it: “Whether they like it or not, the current defectors [his term for those liberals who criticise extremist Islamic leaders] are seeking to provide a vocabulary for the progressive intelligentsia to abandon the poor.”<>
<>Muslims in all their myriad variety and differences have morphed, or been corralled, into a unitary socio-economic-cultural block. To take vocal exception to one aspect of Islam or one particular leader or sect is, almost by definition, to be an opponent of all Muslims. The Satanic Verses affair was the first test case in Britain of Muslimhood – many were to follow – in which the mark of a true Muslim was to be in favour of banning the novel, and the distinction of an even truer Muslim was to be in favour of killing Rushdie. Inayat Bunglawala, spokesperson for the Jamaat-i-Islami-influenced Muslim Council of Britain, probably the most-often cited Islamic organisation in the country, passed both tests with flying colours. He was, in his own words, “elated” when Khomeini delivered the fatwa. “It was a very welcome reminder that British Muslims did not have to regard themselves just as a small, vulnerable minority; they were part of a truly global and powerful movement.” Nowadays he accepts that book-banning is wrong, though he looks back with gratitude on the protests. “It was a seminal moment in British Muslim history,” he told me. “It brought Muslims together. Before that they had been identified as ethnic communities but The Satanic Verses brought them together and helped develop a British Muslim identity, which I’m sure infuriates Salman Rushdie.”<>
<>One reason for Rushdie’s fury could be that an identity forged on terrorising a fiction writer, with its direct associations of violence and censorship, is not a fair one to hang on two million Britons. Kenan Malik suggests that it is a myth that “all Muslims were offended by The Satanic Verses. In fact, most Muslims were little concerned about it.” But as with most political arguments, in this particular identity parade apathy never got a look in. Instead the most outspoken “community leaders” claimed, and were duly assigned, the mantle of authentic representatives of Muslim Britain.<>
<>Yet again Khomeini was onto something. The expressed intention of his fatwa was to defend and strengthen the clergy, and one of its effects in Britain has been to create a kind of pseudo-clergy, a class of Islamist intellectuals and militants who presume to speak not just for their co-religionists in Britain but 1.5 billion Muslims worldwide. At the same time, in the late 80s and early 90s, another clergy of fundamentalist preachers, often refugees from despotic Middle Eastern regimes, began to attract a disaffected constituency that had been radicalised by The Satanic Verses protests. As Hirsi Ali put it to me: “The paradox in the UK with regard to freedom of expression is that most of the radical literature and most of the radical mosques moved from Syria, Egypt and Saudi Arabia and established themselves in the liberal West, where there is freedom of religion and expression, with the bizarre purpose of destroying those freedoms.” <>
<>In the 20 years since the fatwa, the parameters of cultural debate in Britain and elsewhere have undoubtedly narrowed. If the Islam of Khomeini and other fundamentalists has played a key role in redefining what is and is not acceptable, then it is not the only factor. Other religions have also got in on the censorship act. In 2004 the play Behzti (Dishonour) was cancelled at the Birmingham Rep after a riot by Sikh protesters on the opening night. Christian groups too have taken to organising more intimidating protests – though with less success – against shows and productions they deem offensive.<>
<>Taken together they are all part of a multicultural accommodation that has come to determine the terms of public discourse. In hindsight, The Satanic Verses was published at a turning point in progressive politics. Throughout much of the 20th century a battle had been waged against discriminating on the basis of race (The Satanic Verses itself was avowedly anti-racist) and class. In other words, those aspects of humanity that are biologically inherited or socially imposed. For a variety of reasons, including the fall of the Berlin Wall later on in 1989 and the emergence of minority group activism, a new identity politics emerged. Class and race were replaced or trumped by culture.<>
<>The emphasis moved to combating cultural discrimination. All cultures were deemed equal, and therefore all components of culture – religion, tradition, beliefs – had to be protected from critical appraisal. Obviously culture is socially inherited, but in a free society it is also a matter of freedom of choice. The liberty to change your beliefs, reject your traditions and question your religion is what distinguishes individuals from members of an enforced collective. Such liberty necessitates the discussion and expression of ideas that may be unpalatable to others. Increasingly, therefore, this has become a process that is actively discouraged.<>
<>Respecting culture has come to mean restricting debate. Malik quotes the sociologist Tariq Modood on this issue: “If people are to occupy the same political space without conflict, they mutually have to limit the extent to which they subject each other’s fundamental beliefs to criticism.”<>
<>To some extent this sensitivity has been achieved by coercion – the fatwa model. But there has also been a more voluntary adoption of multicultural manners, chief among which is the duty not to offend. And where that has failed, the government has shown itself all too willing to step in with proscriptive legislation. Three years ago we came within a single parliamentary vote of being saddled with a law (the Religious Hatred Act) that meant you or I could be imprisoned for seven years for using insulting language, even if the insult was unintentional and referred to an established truth.<>
<>Furthermore, under draconian anti-terror laws, it is now illegal to be in possession of a whole range of reading material. This is one of the terrible ironies of the conflict with reactionary Islam, previewed in the attempt to censor (and kill) Rushdie. In 1989 the British government defended freedom of expression against Islamic extremists. By 2009 Islamic extremists could accuse the British government of withdrawing freedom of expression. That the extremists dream of a far more extensive (and violent) censorship is no comfort or excuse. <>
<>Rushdie has now moved on, figuratively and geographically, from the fatwa years. Back from the front pages, he has once again relocated, having lived in Mumbai and London, to New York (he is not alone in noting that all three cities have suffered Islamic terror attacks). But The Satanic Verses remains a book about the struggles of migration and the frictions of cultural exchange. It pokes fun at all manner of targets, not least America and Britain. Above all, perhaps, it dramatises the conviction that there is nothing more sacred than the freedom to question what is sacred. Twenty years on, it’s a principle that urgently needs to be remembered.<>
<2>What they said at the time<2>
<><>Harold Pinter<> playwright<>”A very distinguished writer has used his imagination to write a book and has criticised the religion into which he was born and he has been sentenced to death as well as his publishers. It is an intolerable and barbaric state of affairs.” <>
<><>John Berger<> author and critic<>”I suspect that Salman Rushdie, if he is not caught in a chain of events of which he has completely lost control, might, by now, be ready to consider asking his world publishers to stop producing more or new editions of The Satanic Verses. Not because of the threat to his own life, but because of the threat to the lives of those who are innocent of either writing or reading the book.”<>
<><>Germaine Greer<> writer and academic<>”I refuse to sign petitions for that book of his, which was about his own troubles.”<>
<><>Jimmy Carter<> US president, 1977-81<>”Rushdie’s book is a direct insult to those millions of Moslems whose sacred beliefs have been violated … The death sentence proclaimed by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, however, was an abhorrent response. It is our duty to condemn the threat of murder [but] we should be sensitive to the concern and anger that prevails even among the more moderate Muslims.”<>
<><>John Le Carre<> author<>”Again and again, it has been within his [Rushdie's] power to save the faces of his publishers and, with dignity, withdraw his book until a calmer time has come … It seems to me he has nothing more to prove except his own insensitivity.”<>
<><>Roald Dahl<> author<>”[Rushdie] knew exactly what he was doing and cannot plead otherwise.This kind of sensationalism does indeed get an indifferent book on to the top of the bestseller list – but to my mind it is a cheap way of doing it.<>
<><>Sir Geoffrey Howe<> foreign secretary, 1983-89<>The British government, the British people, do not have any affection for the book … It compares Britain with Hitler’s Germany. We do not like that any more than the people of the Muslim faith like the attacks on their faith contained in the book. So we are not sponsoring the book. What we are sponsoring is the right of people to speak freely, to publish freely.”<>
<2><>< href=”http://www.sciy.org/blog/_archives/2009/6/7/4214250.html”><><2><>
Category Archives: Praxis
A Matter of Mind by J. Kepler
<>< size=5 face=""><><>< src="http://www.sciy.org/ArtdepMindmap.jpg"><><><><>
<>< size=5 face=""><><>A Matter of Mind<><><><>
<><>< size=4>J. Kepler<><><>
<>< face="">At the core of much of the recent discussion and controversy in the < id=lw_1245814978_1 class=yshortcuts>Integral Yoga<> (IY) online community seems to lay the role of the mind and mental reasoning. Many statements from < style="BORDER-BOTTOM: #0066cc 1px dashed; CURSOR: hand" id=lw_1245814978_2 class=yshortcuts>Sri Aurobindo<> and Mother could be quoted both praising the essential, enabling contributions of the mind, as well as criticizing the mind’s obstinate, obstructing features and liabilities. This dual nature of their commentary itself may point us in the right direction. It’s the particular use made of the mental faculty in a particular context that determines its helpful or harmful status.<>
<>< face="">Few should deny that reason at its best – dispassionate, critical, balanced, is a light in human life that helps expel dubious truth claims and offers a comparatively refined and accurate lens of inquiry thru which to view ourselves and the world. It’s an invaluable tool against obscurantism, superstition, credulity, provincialism, ethnocentrism, inflexibility, and other ills of human cognition that stand in the way of real knowledge.<>
<>< face="">Left to itself however, reason tends to end in an agnostic and self-referential inability to determine anything in a definitive manner. Those with a sufficiently developed faculty of rational argumentation will tend toward the positions to which they are temperamentally inclined, and mount in favor of those positions an endless debate that can never be definitively resolved. Sri Aurobindo explains this situation as a result of the evolutionary status of reason as a cognitive power; its action is by nature a difficult struggle from ignorance toward knowledge. Reason only understands by analyzing things into parts which it cannot fully make whole again, ever unable to firmly or finally arrive at integral knowledge because of its inherent limitations, method of operation, and roots in the mud of the Inconscient. According to Sri Aurobindo, the mind must be illumined by inner and higher ranges of consciousness that inherently possess some fundamental aspect of truth and proceed from that self-possessed status of knowledge toward its expression and manifestation. It’s ultimately in this expression and manifestation of knowledge, rather than in the discovery and construction of knowledge, that the mind assumes its proper role.<>
<>< face="">Access to these ranges of consciousness that surpass reason is a matter of spiritual experience and realization. That Sri Aurobindo and Mother consider this a matter of concrete experience should be indisputable if one reads their words. They of course expressed their experience and knowledge in mental language so that others could develop some conception of the experiential path to be followed. This framework of expression evolved over time. When the <>Life Divine<> and the <>Synthesis of < id=lw_1245814978_3 class=yshortcuts>Yoga<><> were written in the <>< id=lw_1245814978_4 class=yshortcuts>Arya<><>, < style="BORDER-BOTTOM: medium none; BACKGROUND: none transparent scroll repeat 0% 0%; CURSOR: hand" id=lw_1245814978_5 class=yshortcuts>Sri Aurobindo<> had not yet articulated ideas that became central later: the psychic being and the overmind. In later years after Sri Aurobindo's passing Mother articulated new ideas like the superman consciousness, and the mind of the cells. Looking at the attitude they themselves adopted toward the evolving mental expression of their own spiritual experiences should shed light on the ideal all those turned to them will want to emulate.<>
<>< face="">Many quotes could be furnished where Sri Aurobindo and Mother state definitively that their teaching is a living spiritual path and not a set of fixed doctrines or dogmas to be religiously recited and referenced. But especially in documents that pertain to their own practice, in Sri Aurobindo’s case his <>< style="BORDER-BOTTOM: #0066cc 1px dashed; CURSOR: hand" id=lw_1245814978_6 class=yshortcuts>Record of Yoga<><>, in Mother’s case <>l'Agenda de Mère<>, and in other miscellaneous talks and letters by both of them, they exhibit a characteristic attitude and approach to mental formulation. <><>
<>< face="">This attitude is marked by a highly flexible and, one could even say, experimental approach to mental formulation of the vast spiritual experiences they passed through. In the <>Record of Yoga<>, Sri Aurobindo routinely considers the truth of the intimations he receives from higher sources to be provisional and tentative pending additional confirming experiences. He seems always open to new formulations and his method suggests a recognizably scientific approach to mastering the phenomena and powers of the < id=lw_1245814978_7 class=yshortcuts>higher consciousness<>. In <>l'Agenda de Mère<>, the extreme adaptability and flexibility of Mother’s language and conceptual structures when describing her sadhana of the body consciousness is impossible to miss. She seems ready to adopt new terminology and ways of looking at the phenomena and experiences (and leave old ones behind), on practically a daily basis as new experiences arrive and are assimilated.<>
<>< face="">Now one might counter that we are not Mother or Sri Aurobindo. No doubt few among us nowadays can claim possession of any of the fundamental realizations called for in IY, let alone blaze new trails at the farthest edges of human consciousness. But we do all possess reason and should be able to at least avoid any rigid dogmatizing of IY into a fixed set of doctrinal beliefs that can neither advance nor evolve. It’s natural that many turn toward Sri Aurobindo and Mother as the Divine and receive their spiritual help and protection in a straightforward way. Some of these are devotees who may not feel the need of a subtle and flexible understanding of their teaching. But any hardening of IY into doctrines that enforce conformity, or encourage harshness and cruelty toward others, obviously leads far away from the Light and Truth they have established and beckon us toward.<>
<>< color=#000000>< face="">< color=#000000>Considered in this light, the current Heehs controversy is perhaps best seen not as simply a flawed biography by a flawed ashramite who upset many devotees with his academic approach to evaluating Sri Aurobindo’s life. The controversy might also represent a stark and revealing light being cast upon the mental formations and constructions that have hardened among many associated with IY. All should be able to agree that the Mother’s approach is never a static one and she always seeks to propel us toward the future, breaking our comfortable habits of thinking and feeling as need be whenever our advance requires it. “her feet are rapid on the upward way.” – (<>< color=#000000><>< style="BORDER-BOTTOM: #0066cc 1px dashed; CURSOR: hand" id=lw_1245814978_8 class=yshortcuts>The Mother<> <><>< color=#000000>< style="FONT-STYLE: normal">by Sri Aurobindo<><>< color=#000000><>)<><><><>
<>< color=#888888>< face="">Kepler<><><>
Living Laboratories of the Life Divine by Debashish Banerji

Living Laboratories of the Life Divine
Debashish Banerji
The topic I will attend to today is “Living Laboratories of the Divine Life.” By ‘living laboratories’, I am referring, of course, to Sri Aurobindo’s justly famous phrase taken from ‘The Life Divine’, where he designates the human being as a ‘living laboratory’ for the experiment leading to what he has termed ‘the Superman’. But before turning our attention to that phrase, I would like to back up a little in time and consider the idea of the Superman as it makes its modern appearance in the utterance of Frederick Nietzsche.
In many ways Nietzsche, as a philosopher, can be said to inaugurate the modern age . Modern philosophy, where it has been fruitful, has been largely an engagement with Nietzsche’s thought. Nietzsche is a controversial figure, a very complex figure. Complex because he received intuitions from above and uttered them in a new kind of way which challenged the metaphysical tradition. Moreover, his ideas were often not well-formed and were sometimes apparently inconsistent. So to denigrate him or to adulate him is, in either case, a dangerous thing. Rahter we must see what he has to say and probe the complexity of his thought. Nietzsche introduces the idea of the Superman in his work Thus Spake Zarathustra. I will read a passage from this work. In recent translations of this work, the German term Ubermensch has been rendered as ‘Overman’ instead of ‘Superman’. Some of us are familiar with a similar kind of replacement proposed by Georges von Vreckhem who has translated the Mother’s Surhomme as ‘Overman’ rather than ‘Superman’. I do not wish to enter into technical controversies or debates over these terms, but bring to your notice that there is a degree of fluidity about these things that lend themselves to varieties of interpretation.
I read you Walter Kaufman’s translation of Nietzsche’s passage:
I teach you the Overman. Man is something that shall be overcome. What have you done to overcome him?
All beings so far have created something beyond themselves. And do you want to be the ebb of this great flood and even go back to the beasts rather than overcome man? What is the ape to man? A laughing stock or a painful embarrassment. And man shall be just that for the Overman. A laughing stock or a painful embarrassment. You have made your way from the worm to man and much in you is still worm. Once you were apes, and even now, too, man is more ape than any ape.
Whoever is the wisest among you is also a mere conflict and cross between plant and ghost. But do I bid you to become ghosts or plants?
Behold, I teach you the Overman. The Overman is the meaning of the earth. Let your will say: the Overman shall be the meaning of the earth! I beseech you, my brothers, remain faithful to the earth and do not believe those who speak to you of other-worldly hopes! Poison-mixers are they, whether they know it or not. Despisers of life are they, decaying and poisoned themselves, of whom the earth is weary: so let them go…
Verily, a polluted stream is man. One must be a sea to be able to receive a polluted stream without becoming unclean. Behold, I teach you the Overman: he is this sea; in him, your great contempt can go under.
What is the greatest experience you can have? It is the hour of the great contempt. The hour in which your happiness, too, arouses your disgust, and even your reason and your virtue. ….
Man is a rope, tied between beast and Overman – a rope over an abyss. A dangerous across, a dangerous on-the-way, a dangerous looking-back, a dangerous shuddering and stopping.
What is great in man is that he is a bridge and not an end: what can be loved in man is that he is an overture and a going under.
I love those who do not know how to live, except by going under, for they are those who cross over.
I love the great despisers because they are the great reverers and arrows of longing for the other shore.
I love those who do not first seek behind the stars for a reason to go under and be a sacrifice, but who sacrifice themselves for the earth, that the earth may someday become the Overman’s….
I love him who does not hold back one drop of spirit for himself but wants to be entirely the spirit of his virtue: thus he strides over the bridge as spirit.
It’s a very interesting passage, a profound passage, a passage that I wanted to read out because many who have read Sri Aurobindo have never read Nietzsche and acquire some preconceptions of what the Nietzschean Superman is all about. I’d encourage them to divest themselves of these ideas. Nietzsche inaugurates the future destiny of the human race in the modern age; at a crisis point in western civilization, he holds out the goal of the self-exceeding of man in the Super/Over-man. We don’t need to assume that Nietzsche himself knew with clarity what he meant by the term ‘superman’ or ‘overman’ as the case may be, but it’s best to receive the complexity of his thought and see its vastness and its greatness, see it side by side with the Superman as envisaged by Sri Aurobindo and the Mother, how their Superman relates, if at all, to Nietzsche’s idea.
I read first from the Mother a familiar passage. It is from a talk to the children of the Ashram:
There is an ascending evolution in Nature which goes from stone to the plant, from the plant to the animal, from animal to man. Because man is for the moment the last rung on the summit of the ascending evolution, he considers himself as the final stage in this ascension and believes there is nothing on earth superior to him in that he is still in his physical nature he is yet almost wholly an animal, a thinking and speaking animal but still an animal in his material habits and instincts. Undoubtedly Nature cannot be satisfied with such an imperfect result. She endeavors to bring out a being that will be to man what man is to the animal, a being that will remain a man in its external form and yet whose consciousness will rise far above the mind and its slavery to ignorance. Sri Aurobindo came upon earth to teach this truth to man. He told them that man is only a transitional being living in a mental consciousness but with the possibility of acquiring a new consciousness , the truth consciousness and capable of living a life perfectly harmonious, happy and fully conscious . During the whole of his life upon earth, Sri Aurobindo gave all his time to establish himself in this consciousness, which he called Supramental and to help those gathered around him to realize it.
There is much in this that bears resemblance with Nietzsche’s description of the Overman. Both texts are explicit about the transitional character of the human species. The Mother’s statement actually contains within it Sri Aurobindo’s famous assertion “Man is a transitional being” and for Nietzsche, “Man is a rope tied between beast and overman” and again, “Man is a bridge and not an end…” Secondly, both texts emphasize an earthly destiny. And finally, note the not so noble appraisal of the human being. Man is no longer the “measure of all things” extolled in the European Renaissance, the source of western civilizational hubris. While the human being in the Mother’s formulation may not be the contemptible worm of Nietzsche, it isn’t too far from that either. The Mother quickly disabuses humanity of its exalted notion of itself.
I now read Sri Aurobindo’s passage from ‘The Life Divine’ where he likens us to ‘living laboratories’:
The animal is a living laboratory in which nature has, it is said, worked out man. Man himself may be a thinking and living laboratory in whom and with whose conscious cooperation she wills to work out the Superman, the God . Or shall we not say, rather, to manifest God. For if evolution is the progressive manifestation by nature of that which slept or worked in her involved it is also the overt realization of that which he secretly is.
Let us ponder these three texts. In all three, there is the notion of the self-exceeding of man. The human being has to exceed himself, because from the viewpoint of the imperfection of nature, humanity is as faulted as the animal, the worm is to the human being and it is to set our sights on that kind of goal that Nietzsche is calling us through the voice of Zarathustra. But Nietzsche’s call is going out to the will of man. It is not a simple call to the ego – it is not a call to titanism as has been popularly supposed, it is a call to sacrifice, to vastness, it is a call to the formation of the gods within us. The overman according to Nietzsche is like the gods of the Greek classical heritage. It is Nietzsche’s allergy towards the Christian tradition that makes him deny god, but it is in the becoming of god or of the gods in human guise that his message lies. But it ends here. What apart from the human will is there to lead us to this goal? If we are hardly more evolved than the worm or the animal in most of our nature, what hope do we have except for willing something which is faulted into existence in our drive upwards?
If we look at Sri Aurobindo and the Mother’s texts, we see there one critical element which is missed out by Nietzsche. They are not talking about the human will attaining to the superman. They are talking about the human being as the site where the superman is formed by agents other than the human. In both cases they use the term ‘Nature’ to indicate this extra-human agency. What is it that they mean by “Nature”? Evidently, if there is something which ties these uses of the word to some common ground, we have to think of “Nature” as the evolutionary force in a conscious form, the evolutionary will.
Sri Aurobindo’s texts needs to be read in a cross-cultural context. They have contexts which are equally eastern and western. “Nature”, in Sri Aurobindo’s usage, is backgrounded by the entire metaphysical romantic tradition, the European tradition of Nature as a cosmic presence and power. With the metaphysical “death of God” and the birth of the Modern Age at the turn of the 18th/19th c. in Europe, German Romanticism found Nature as replacement for God – Nature as a power with an intelligence instinct in it, as a cosmic container, a Mother-Force. It is in this sense that the English Romantic poets also extol Nature. Sri Aurobindo draws partly on this tradition in his usage. But Nature is equally and perhaps even more for him all that that term means in the Indian tradition when you translate it as Prakriti.
Prakriti – and Sri Aurobindo has written extensively about this term, the various things it means and has meant. The term comes to us from Sankhya as that mukhya, that Chief of the manifest world which is the primary manifesting force manifesting. It is that which runs us, drives us, drives everything, Matter, Life and Mind. It gives us the sense of agency through the creation of an Ego, ahamkara, but actually is the complete authority through the operation of its three gunas – sattwa, rajas and tamas – of all that happens in us – conditionings, all is conditioning. But Prakriti also, from an even earlier tradition, lost and then revived in the Gita – Prakriti that has two faces to it, returning to us through another guise in the Tantra, two colors – dark and golden. Prakriti which occupies two hemispheres in two different modalities – Para and Apara. Apara Prakriti of the lower hemisphere, of Avidya, Ignorance, wearing the dark guise of Unconscious Nature, the automatisms of Sankhya, the laws that are coded into Matter, Life and Mind, that run everything within which we are given the illusion of Consciousness – and Para Prakriti, the unveiled Force, Nature-Force of the Supreme Divine, the calling forth into Becoming of Being, of the One Being, the only Being there is. And this dichotomy, this two-fold nature, is something that is contained, encapsulated in that simple word “Nature” that Sri Aurobindo and the Mother are using in their texts. Because, indeed, the way to the Superman as far as Sri Aruobindo is concerned, is in these two hands of Nature, this twin-aspected Nature.
The lower Nature, ignorant, is still instinct with the force of divinity. It has moved matter into the domain of Life. It has moved Life into the domain of Mind. It will move Mind into the domain of Supermind. But the question is when? Nature has eternity in her hands, as the Mother has said. Nature doesn’t care for our time schemes. Nature experiments, plays with forms, plays with possibilities, with ideas and creates this plethora of manifest reality that we find so delightful in this world. We build our botanical gardens and our zoos so that we can travel to these parks and delight in these multitudinous and wonderful creations of Nature. Nature has thrown up our human diversity too, our diversity of types, our diversity of thinking, our diversity of cultures. It’s all the doing of Nature, and She is here to play an infinite number of games because She is the creative spirit, and progress takes place at her own slow pace through all this.
But the human being, as Aswapathy, in Sri Aurobindo’s Savitri, expresses in his appeal to the Supreme Mother, is a hapless unfinished experiment of Nature, a product of its half-grown march toward super-humanity, caught between the worm and the God. From life to life we suffer the pains and discords of a half-baked consciousness that yearns to exceed itself, that is replete with complex problems which it can never solve because of fundamental incapacity, that feels trapped and imprisoned and cries out for moksha, liberation, ultimate escape out of this prison-house of the round of suffering and insoluble complexity, finding no other goal.
This is where Sri Aurobindo intervenes to indicate that Nature has another poise – the poise of Nature in the Knowledge, in the Vidya, the golden Mahakali behind the black Kali, the body of light, of knowledge, of gnosis, the Gnostic Mother. And it is this Gnostic Mother, if she descends now, becomes active as the unveiled Power controlling the lower Nature, that can change everything within the Avidya, that can change the conditions of the Avidya. For then, it will be no longer a play of trial and error, a slow and painful growth through eternity of the ascending powers of consciousness, but of the future bringing the present into itself, a precipitation of the goal that begins working within the present transforming it to its own conditions. This is the one reason why Sri Aurobindo chose to spend all his time and all of his superhuman yogic power to focus on the bringing down of the Supermind. He could very easily have sat in his room in Pondicherry and accomplished what he has said some yogis have done in the Himalayas – brought about revolutions in the world. Why ‘could’, he did – a number of them. But he wasn’t satisfied with this because it didn’t solve mankind’s problems. The problems of humanity cannot be solved by a change of the external conditions, or even a temporary change in the inner consciousness of individuals or peoples that causes them to do exalted things beyond their habitual or normal capacity.
For an hour God resides in a nation or in a time. We experience an Hour of God. Human beings are empowered temporarily to do deeds they never could have done; but then, as in the first canto of Savitri, the Symbol Dawn, inevitably the Power recedes and we are left to “the common light of earthly day”, we are back to business as usual, the sordid poverty of human life. There is only one way that this can change and that is not through our unaided effort. It is through the bringing down of a force which, in spite of us, can change conditions here. But the “in spite of us” has to be understood in its right dimensions. This change of conditions is not an external or a temporary change, it is first and foremost a radical change of consciousness – and this cannot change without our conscious cooperation. That is why in the statement I have quoted from The Life Divine, Sri Aurobindo puts it, as always in his wonderful global sentences, with every aspect of the question included. As he says there, “Man himself may well be a thinking and living laboratory in whom and with whose conscious cooperation she wills to work out the Superman, the God.”
Let us make no mistakes about the priorities of this process. It is the Para-Prakriti, Supreme or Higher Nature, who is the Scientist of this laboratory. It is we who serve her purpose through our adherence. We are the conscious cooperators. Sri Aurobindo and the Mother’s primary yogic work has been to change the agency of this process from the Lower to the Higher Nature, or rather, to establish the Higher within the Lower. And what is called the Supermental descent and manifestation is exactly this collapse of the division between the Vidya and the Avidya. It is the implosion of the Power, the Knowledge, the Vijnana-Shakti into earth and that entry has initiated a New Age.
A New Age does not start by astrological factors. It isn’t because it is written in the calendar that a New Age suddenly begins. A New Age is an act of consciousness. It is a powerful act of consciousness, willed by the human cooperators and assented to by the Divine. And this is the New Age that Sri Aurobindo and the Mother have inaugurated. It is an Age, first and foremost, of world yoga. It is a New Age of Yoga and of World Yoga – Yoga, the accelerated process towards conscious evolution. Prakriti, Nature, has always been doing yoga. This is why in The Synthesis of Yoga, Sri Aurobindo can say, “All life is yoga.” But the yoga of Nature is a slow, semi-conscious process. The yoga of human beings who wake up from within by the pointing finger of light that comes as a beacon showing the way is a conscious yoga, a conscious yoga that accelerates, quickens the process, that condenses into a lifetime or a few years what would otherwise would have taken many lifetimes, that brings the future into the present. And this is exactly what Mother and Sri Aurobindo have done on a cosmic or terrestrial level. They have initiated the earth into a new yoga. The ear of the earth has been privy to the mantra of a new yoga and has accepted it. That yoga has begun.
Now we heard yesterday about the conditions of the earth and about the earth as the Ashram, the Ashram of the world. Someone spoke of the entire world as the home of the Lord and the circumstances that come to us in the world as provided by the Lord for our yoga. Indeed it is the Ashram of the world that all humanity can be said to inhabit today and in a profounder sense than of providing materials for the growth of consciousness in those who have chosen to grow in consciousness. It is the ashram of the world because the world itself has been moved into a world yoga. This is the meaning of the New Age.
I would like to draw your attention at this point to an ancient story, a story from the Puranas, a story which talks about an occult event that happened in eternal time, an eternal event. It is a story about the churning of the ocean – there is a great churning of the cosmic ocean and the purpose, the objective, is for the pot of Amrita, the ambrosia of Immortality that is at the bottom of the ocean, to be brought to the surface, churned up from the bottom. And it is the gods and the demons who together undertake this churning. And it is the great world mountain Mount Meru, which is also represented individually in each of us – meru-danda, the spine – this world axis, Axis Mundi, the pillar of the world, that is used as the rod for doing the churning. And it is the great serpent, base and bed of the evolutionary fountain of avatarhood, Vishnu, the serpent Ananta, the coiled infinite potential of Time, Eternity on one side and Perpetuity on the other, eternally changing, never changing, that becomes the churning rope. And Vishnu himself, as the Tortoise avatar, becomes the base on which the churning rod, Meru is stationed.
The first thing that happens with the churning is the rise of the poisons of the ocean. The poisons of the ocean are so dense, so acrid, so corrosive, that even the demons can’t continue. Both the gods and the demons are completely stalled. The sky turns black with poison. What we today call pollution is as nothing compared to that condition. Man cannot even envisage that condition of poisonous darkness. Neither the gods nor the demons can cope with it. And it is at this point that the great Lord Shiva himself comes to the rescue by drinking the poison and holding it, by his yoga-power, in his throat, which is therefore stained blue and which is why Shiva has as one of his names, Nilakanta, the blue-throated.
A number of mystics had experiences around 5th December 1950, at the time when Sri Aurobindo left his body and several of them saw a vision of the great Shiva drinking the cup of poison. Indeed, the departure of Sri Aurobindo can be understood in this light. The myth of the churning of the Ocean is an image of the world yoga initiated by Sri Aurobindo and the Mother. Sri Aurobindo has prepared the process, he has initiated it and he has sacrificed himself that our unprepared nature may be able to bear the intense difficulties of the beginning. It is the first stage of this world yoga that he has made possible by drinking the acrid poison that rose up from the depths. He has held the Supramental light in his body and he has broken the backbone of earthly karma, which would have otherwise made it impossible for us to move into this New Age. This is why the Mother has addressed Sri Aurobindo’s “material envelope” and said “….Before Thee who has willed all, attempted all, prepared, achieved all for us, before Thee we bow down and implore that we may never forget, even for a moment, all we owe to Thee.”
All that we see today, experience today are the physical repercussions of occult events of this kind. The pollution that we see is inevitable. It is the result of our collective consciousness. It is the poison-fruit of our world karma facing us as we take our first steps in the New Age. It is necessary. It will pass. It has already been dealt with by the Lord himself.
But this world yoga, though much quicker than the processes of Prakriti, is still a process of collective preparation which is impersonal and relatively slow, because it is a process of bringing consciousness to the unconsciousness. It is awakening it, but awakening it over time, slowly. People receive ideas. There are many today who are doing the work of the Mother without knowing that they are the Mother’s instruments. Yet the purpose has not yet become conscious in them, the fullness of divine intent has not dawned on them. They are serving the world yoga. But the work of the Supermind, the work of the supramental consciousness is not merely at the universal level of the world yoga. It is at the individual level, it is at the cosmic level and it is at the level of several other possible experiments that are being conducted all simultaneously and in an interrelated fashion too complex for the human mind to comprehend. As Sri Aurobindo says in the book ‘The Mother’, the Mother’s steps are too complex, “one and yet so many-sided that to follow her movement is impossible even for the quickest mind and for the freest and most vast intelligence” - which is why the surrender is demanded of us. It is only through this surrender that we can progressively become more enlightened instruments of her workings and in the process find ourselves more and more a part of Her. By this means, we are to rise to a consciousness one with her consciousness, a state from which our present condition will seem indeed very embarrassing. In this progression of the world yoga, we have to be open to the vast, complex, global and minute working of Her supramental Shakti, that reality which is here among us. And this is why for this experiment, the living laboratory is not just the individual, nor is it merely the work to ameliorate world conditions, it is these and a variety of other experiments that are going on at the same time.
When Sri Aurobindo and the Mother were in Pondicherry, the Mother has said that there was a question whether they would do the yoga with just a handful of disciples, intensely try to accelerate the process of the descent of the supermind, bring it down and then radiate it. She said the other option was to go slower, but to gather around them representative specimens of humanity that would be able to bring a much wider possibility of the manifestation of supramental consciousness on earth. She says the decision was not made mentally. The Lord made the decision. It happened by itself – and it is the second course that was followed. This was how the ashram developed, the Sri Aurobindo ashram. You and I and all of us here who have been touched by the message of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother have taken maybe a few faltering steps in the direction of the life that they have shown, the goal that they have shown, have inevitably felt at some point how privileged we are, how fortunate we are, what a Grace we have received. Let us not be fooled that it is due to any credit of ours that we have been chosen for this Grace. It is a process which has selected us, and to which all are equal, and again the phrase ‘living laboratories’ is very relevant here. We `are ‘cultures’ both in the sense of social expressions as well as in the biological sense. We are cultures on petri dishes that are being experimented on. We have been chosen because we are representative of something, something which goes far beyond our own understanding. We are here to serve a purpose that will be revealed to us not today, but only when the work is done. Today or tomorrow, all the earth, every individual, will receive this blessing, this Grace, because this is the condition of the world yoga. The world yoga progresses through smaller collectives, not only as the entire body of the earth, but much quicker, much more consciously, through the conscious intention of people who awake to the reality of what the supramental force is bringing. As with the ashram – the growth of the ashram was around Sri Aurobindo and the Mother’s ascension, it was around their attempt to reach the supermind and bring it down for humanity, so the roots had to extend far into the possibilities of terrestrial manifestation. Diverse specimens of humanity gathered around Mother and Sri Aurobindo at the ashram, as we all know – a tremendous variety, tremendous diversity. And yet, each individual carried a personality that was molded into its highest possibilities of individuality by Sri Aurobindo, by the Mother – as possibilities of manifesting the yoga force.
The Mother did not stop with this process. They had been physically present at the center of the ashram community as a laboratory of the supramental experiment. But in 1968, She spawned another such community, a community with an even wider, more global, planetary basis that would not have them physically at its center, that would have to open to them internally, that would have to be the conscious collaborators in the inner sense, no longer externally guided in the material details of their existence, no longer capable of dragging them down, of pulling at the hem of their robes and soiling them, but who would have to receive the problems of humanity and open to them from within and receive the Grace of the transformation through collaboration with the Para-prakriti, with the supreme Mother Force. This is Auroville. Auroville today is continuing in this work. It is also a sphere of churning. These are other spheres of the churning of the waters, but these are more conscious spheres – these are spheres, cradles, crucibles, birthplaces of the superman, of the overman.
And yet, this is not all. In a conversation of December 1938, Sri Aurobindo said that a few hundred people in the ashram will not be sufficient to make the supramental effective for mankind. Thousands of people doing the yoga sadhana in many walks of life across the world will be needed for that. Individually, and collectively, across America, across Europe, across Asia, across the world, we are all invited to be participants in the purpose of the supramental manifestation. The supermind is interested in us. We’re not here merely to make conscious efforts, to make titanic wills, to fling ourselves from this orbit to the higher orbit. We can be heartened by the fact, but we should also be extremely attentive to the fact that the supermind is interested in us. It is a Force that is seeking us out. It is an agency, an active power. And in seeking us out, it is seeking us not merely as individuals because its purpose is a divine life on earth. A ‘divine life on earth’ is not manifested by one person. A divine life is a social context, a divine life is an opening up of a world of phenomena that make for a rich collective existence in all its forms. And if we cannot provide it with the conditions for this, its work is to that extent hampered or thwarted of the cooperation that it seeks. We need to be conscious of this, because it is only to the extent that we are conscious of this that we can be its collaborators. We need to gravitate together; we need to unite our wills; we need to form collective individualities. We need to form collective flames of aspiration – integral collective flames of aspiration that will be able to invoke that higher Consciousness and call down that Light, that Power to work among us, to form itself in us, to radiate through us in our acts, in our bodies.
That, indeed, is what it seeks. The power of the Supramental Shakti, here on earth, seeks unity, seeks integration and seeks perfection. It seeks these in an integral way. We are first called in consciousness to these experiences of integrality. This is the pressure. Can we be integral within? Can we integrate ourselves? Intergate our mind, life and body around the psychic being? Can we feel whole, become one? This is the pressure and the help that’s coming. But again, it’s not merely at the individual level. Can we experience the unity of collective consciousness? In an earlier talk, we were very fortunate to receive a message which I’ve heard for the first time – very refreshing – the fact that the signs of the supramental manifestation are not to be sought primarily in the breakdown of the Berlin Wall or the Fall of Soviet Communism, but within us, in the change in the modality of consciousness that is going on. Are we aware of this? Let us become aware of it. Today, we live in God. Are we aware of this? It is the consciousness that has to turn within and see what is being done by the supramental shakti inside first, not outside. This means an awareness of the process of integration of the being and it also results, as Aster was saying, in the recognition of the fact that unity manifests when you least expect it, it manifests in and through us. We experience it and we don ‘t know it.
There is a form of experience which the Supermind is calling us to have, to feel, which is new – a new form of spiritual experience. Individually, great yogis have experienced the divine, have experienced the Oneness, the One Being there is, and yet when they’ve come out of it, they’ve seen that every individual has remained in the Ignorance that they always were in. Why? Even when they had the oneness experience, it was only they who had it. When the Mother experienced the descent of the Supermental force into the earth at the ashram Playground, it was such a powerful experience, she felt that when she would open her eyes she would see that everybody was flat on the ground. But nobody except for a handful, a very few, even knew what had happened. The Ignorance encases us so densely that we are unaware of what is going on within. But the experience, the new spiritual experience to which we are called by the Supermind, first in symbolic form, in collectives , and finally as a world phenomenon, is that of Collective Oneness.
Collective oneness seems at the outset to be a trivial phrase, one of those catch-alls of the New Age. But it isn’t that. Collective oneness is arriving at a poise of consciousness above the mind, not individually, but collectively, where a number of people can experience at once that they are the One Being . They know themselves simultaneously as one and yet irreducibly different – a difference because this One Being is not a finite being, it is the Infinite One. The Infinite One wonders at its own infinity. It is one and yet infinite. It has no limits. Its own potentialities come to it from its own infinity, and it wonders, it is wonderful. This is the content of the experience of collective oneness that the Supermind is calling us towards as a possibility of being.
But the possibility of being is not the only aspect of the Supramental invitation. It is also the possibility of becoming, integral becoming, becoming integral, an integral perfection in becoming. And for this we need collectively not merely to aspire to the Supermind to be manifest through us, not merely for those few rare experiences where we rise above ourselves and become privy to a consciousness beyond ourselves moving us as a collective but where we participate collectively in an expressive field, an integral field, a field of knowledge, a field of work , a field of love and of the emotional life, a field of physical labor and activity. We offer it an integral field collectively. But the whole consciousness of this offering is that we are doing this work, not to create an edifice that others will marvel at as some kind of institutional radiation of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother or a new religion, however universal, but to allow the Supermind the conditions that it seeks for our cooperation. In the works of knowledge, in education, in the works of will, in business, in politics, in the works of culture, of the emotional life, of the refinement of the sensations, in works of the body, of labor, of service, dasya, let us give all our parts of being fully and collectively because that is what the Supramental force is interested in. I call upon all of us to meditate on this invitation, if we are to be conscious collaborators.
We are called upon to be conscious collaborators, but even more importantly we are the living laboratories of the divine life. We are living laboratories individually, collectively, and in more ways than one. To be conscious of this, to hold these possibilities in our being, to be always receptive, this is the call. To have a will is good. To surrender the will is better. But to be receptive to the messages of the scientist who is using us as the site of Her experiment, as the living laboratory, is perhaps the best. Thank you.
Future Bodies: Evolution and Progress
This is the abstract for a longer article, the first part of which Good Bye to All That has already been posted to SCIY.
Future Bodies: Evolution & Progress
(occult
slippages and cultural considerations)
RC.

(courtesy Google Images)
This
paper seeks a long overdue critical exploration of Sri Aurobindo’s
evolutionary vision and how it might inform contemporary discourse on
globalization and those regimes of techno-science whose productions
propel its advance. That such a critical inquiry is overdue is
regrettable because we live at a time in which we are undergoing what
is perhaps our most rapid period of change in human history. We live
in an era in which the dislocation of our physical, life and mental
worlds seems to result from the pull of three strange attractors
accelerating at different speeds.
Gazing
out from the edge of digital culture in North America to do a
critically inquiry into the future is problematic because our
perspectives are already conjoined to the gaze of a culture entrained
in exponential change. But what would constitute a future view? An
epistemology of the Other? A discourse on the never quite? The future
is that distant coordinate which is only know[n] through its proximity
to our present. So what does the present teach?
In
America we are traveling so rapidly that from here we do not hear the
voices of indentured knowledge workers standing in lines of up to
mile, amidst the smoke and decay of south India, to compete with the
multitudes of Heidegger’s “standing reserve” for their conditions
of economic bondages; of eight to twelve partitioned hours a day
spent facilitating the global flow of virtual capital. Although the
gaze from here may sense the desiring nature of the machine it lacks
an epistemology for coping with its assemblages and a methodology for
resisting its discipline.
If
as Foucault says, our bodies are disciplined by the panoptic gaze of
society, made to conform to the power relations of specific
historical eras, then our bodies today are increasingly disciplined
by the compression of global markets even as our social spaces are
redrawn to conform to the economic requirements of the networked
society with its shrinking time demands. In the future our bodies may
come to favor certain genetic mutations which facilitate their ease
of insertion into virtual environments, just as today our fingers
must develop the necessary dexterity for navigating key boards and
our bodies adapt to half slumped postures needed to peer into video
monitors. Our bodies will be passed on to future generations as
technological progress outstrips our ethical imperatives, our biology
following patterns of culture which specify the parameters of the
spatial dimensions we inhabit and provide metaphors for our
orientation in language.
We
surround our bodies in dromospheric environments of a culture
organized around the instantaneous transfer of information/capital
which allows little time to consider adaptations or world views other
than those which conform to its networked demands for rapid mental
processing of telematic images. These images are fed back to us in
the eternal reconsumption of the same 24/7 by electronic mass media.
As our physical and lifeworlds accelerate blind spots fissures,
discontinuities open up in fixed reference frames. Anyone who has
spun too rapidly on a roundabout knows this feeling of the resultant
vertigo.
When
this vertigo becomes our culture reference to maintain balance we may
want to collectively consider whether we will be able to evolve
perspectives which allow us to revision physical, vital, and mental
ways of orienting ourselves in the world through a way of knowing
which integrates head, heart, and hands.
What
Sri Aurobindo envisions in his integral yoga can be called a
“authenticity of coalenscences” in which different ontological
sheaths or structures of Being, physical (cellular/matter), vital
(will/heart), mental (graduations) supramental (gnosis) are
integrated in a “progressive” movement of the evolution of
consciousness. Although Sri Aurobindo speaks of a progressive
evolution of humanity it is a bit more complex than a linear time
sequence would imply. In fact, he conceptualize progress as
paradoxically intertwined with an eternal return in a repetition of
yugas and karma. He sometimes even speaks of circular progress in
which Origin remains equidistant to a general advance of human
consciousness from infra to supra-rational (his terms), in which
civilization follows the cognitive path laid down by individuals or
those visionary truth/seers who first apprehend those radically new
epistemologies which will become our future cultural metanoias.
Perhaps using a familiar trope we can call this an advance in which
phenotype eventually recapitulates the mutations of a graced
genotype. From this perspective the progression of human civilization
follows on pioneering individuals who first explore those rarified
topologies of mind through a praxis which will yet reveal vast new
cognitive experiences and with this knowledge also a power and a
methodology for their excavation and scaling.
In short Sri Aurobindo['s] aim is no less than the reconciliation of the great philosophical questions, being and becoming, unity and multiplicity, difference and repetition through an evolutionary movement which reveals a commitment to the authenticity of our future embodiment.
The coalescence of being/becoming he envisions reorients our move toward the future and suggests a way forward and out from our current disassociation. While this is certainly a philosophical move in a grand style it does contrast precisely the view of ourselves as assemblages of spinning parts which we perceive in our vertigo. An integrative whole would remain obscure to one whose senses are spun in an sparking whirl of frictional parts. If an integrative whole were to presence itself through a sensation of balancing ourselves at the edge of a chaotic networked society then our first perceptions of it would be of alterity.
The alterity I refer to here is the gaze of Sri Aurobindo, whose radically expansive epistemology contextualizes this inquiry streaming along gradient toward two attractors; synthesis and hybridity. Here, synthesis refers to the practice of integral yoga which derives from a synthesis of karma, bhakti and jnana yogas, while hybridity refers to the orientation of the spiritual practices of India (yoga) within the progressive evolution heralded by Modernist European scholars at the beginning of the 20th century.
While a synthesis is an atemporal fusing of sheaths or horizons of being (koshas) a hybridity is a fissionable production of history.
In
my use of synthesis or integral, I refer to a psychological process
akin to what Whitehead refers to a ” pre-hension”. It is
very difficult to describe this phenomena with words but one may come
close by referring to it as an intuitive grasp of the pre-existent
unity of seemingly discontinuous elements comprising a whole which is
always greater than the sum of its parts. Although the parts of such
a whole may subsequently be revealed analytically as individual
events or structures, they are implicitly continuous with the horizon
of the whole, and do not act independently of it.
A
whole formed from a hybridity by contrast is a
grafting of differing elements together in which the parts may be
mutable but their autonomy remains discernible. Wholes instancing
such hybrids can be found in societies, linguistic communities,
ethnicities. Bakhtin provides a good definition of hybritity: “It
is a mixture of two social languages within the limits of a single
utterance, an encounter, within the arena of an utterance, between
two different linguistic consciousnesses, separated from one another
by an epoch, by social differentiation, or by some other factor”.
(Bakhtin 358)
In this paper I begin
by interrogating Sri Aurobindo’s ideas of progressive evolution and
the future body he envisages emerging from it. In doing this I
contrast his evolutionary perspective with those of the Catholic
philosophers Teilhard de Cardin and Marshall McLuhan, who believed
that the formation of a new consciousness would result from its
collectivization through a planetary thinking layer and/or the
deployment of global communications technologies.
I
also explore post-modern critiques of technology and culture whose
arguments strongly contest views of the future in terms of
progressive evolution. Through these arguments an attempt is made to
understand our future bodies in terms of how these are subject to
discipline, control, and the panoptic gaze of the socio-economic and
technological structures in which they are embedded.
Additionally,
I examine the occult mechanism which Sri Aurobindo argues to be the
main driver behind the evolution of consciousness and the body. I
suggest that what we now know indicates that the primary impetus
behind the evolution of human consciousness is culture. I also argue
that by virtue of the paradigm of complexity found in science today,
especially in its framing of autocatalytic processes and cybernetic
principles may now provide satisfactory explanations of what was
previous thought of as occult. My interests lie in examining the
process by which nature (Prakriti) can be simulated and demystified
through algorithm and computation, and I believe this is a view which
would be accepted by Sri Aurobindo and most Eastern spiritual
traditions.
The
question then arises just how much of our experience of the world is
given to us as natural entities through the billions of years we have
been programmed by nature. To what extent can we separate ourselves
as autonomous human agents from our conditioning as merely the
automata of nature? Just how much of human nature is machinic in
nature? How much freedom do we actually have? These questions prove
themselves to be difficult to answer.
- I
will attempt to answer these questions without exploring the weird
world of quantum physics which paints a picture of sub-atomic reality
as strange as any occult explanation of reality found in the world’s
mystical traditions. Illustrations from this science could also
demonstrate one of my central premises which is that the advance of
science is a solvent for dissolving what was previously thought
occult. However, as I wish to elevate this conversation above merely
empirical and scientific observations of the world to explore
phenomenological themes, for the most part I will avoid using these
descriptions. –
Finally,
I argue that by re-visioning Sri Aurobindo’s evolutionary perspective
to account for the cultural transformations of the past half century
suggests the possibility of a way of knowing from which an ethos
emerges which privileges caring for the physical and life worlds
rather than a view of the body and experience that can be discarded
as just so many bytes of information. I argue that this ethos may
provide a guiding light for the future sciences as they intervene in
nature to create the future body through the grafting of information
science on to flesh and bone.
5/3/08
• Review of Sri Aurobindo and his Contemporary Thinkers
Following the publication of “Understanding Thoughts of Sri Aurobindo,” Indrani Sanyal and Krishna Roy of the Centre for Sri Aurobindo Studies, Calcutta have complied a set of eighteen scholarly essays on Sri Aurobindo and his contemporaries in the ideational context of what has been called the Bengal Renaissance. Sri Aurobindo’s physical involvement in the politics and culture of early Bengal nationalism was of relatively short duration (1905-1910), albeit an intense and all-sided participation which internalized the entire regional history of the movement and left a powerful creative impress in the milieu of its time and space. Moreover, the discursive background of this involvement continued to develop organically and find voice throughout his life in his subjective articulation just as his own situated contribution continued to resonate in later Indian nationalism. Thus this collection of considered interpretive contemplation fills an important need in our historical understanding. But more importantly, it is the post-colonial legacy of these engagements which draws us today by their fertile and future-gazing content, inviting reflection not merely for India’s but the world’s re-generation at a time of global ferment.
The term “Bengal Renaissance” was a form of self-inscription devised within this milieu itself, and used to refer to its own historicity, with its beginnings in the late 18th c and extending into the second decade of the 20th c. In this self-identification is carried the sense of a rebirth and a historical reference to the 15th/16th c. European movement of the same name, marked by its all-round creative reconstruction, leading to a “new birth,” what may arguably be thought of as the seeds of modernity. The term is omnipresent in this volume, explicitly referenced in many of its essays and forming the subject of consideration in at least four of its essays – those by D. P. Chattopadhyaya, Rakhal Nath, Dilip Kumar Roy and Dilip Kumar Chatterjee. Of these, Rakhal Chandra Nath traces the historiography of the term in the context of Bengal nationalism, drawing out its many divergent interpretations and valuations. Here we realize that the genealogy of this “renaissance” itself is in question, symptomatic of the variety of trajectories encompassed within it. Is it Rammohun Roy, the Brahmo Samaj and the post-Enlightenment reformist tradition which stands at the head of this body of critique and creation or is it Ramakishna, Vivekananda and Bankim Chandra, the polarity of indigenous spiritual and religious awakening? Again, is there any reality of resemblance with the Italian origins of the term in medieval Europe or is the term an inflated romantic misnomer? This question also comes up in the other essays on this subject. Marxist criticisms of this “renaissance” being a bourgeois hot-house flower with little or no popular involvement due to its cultural investment in the language of the colonial masters, its economic collusion with the same colonial powers and the Hindu communal potential of exclusionary violence it is supposed to carry are traced in some detail. I may say here that more recent left-oriented critiques of this period or its figures have attempted more complex and nuanced approaches, seeing them on the one hand, in Gramscian power terms, as constituting a middle ground of autonomy from colonial culture and elitism over subaltern culture so as to wrest national power from the colonizer and rule the subaltern; and on the other hand, as initiating a critique of modernity with far-reaching post-modern and post-colonial possibilities. Rakhal Nath ends his essay by pointing to the widespread creative critique and rethinking of Indian culture initiated during this period, and the lasting effects of this initiative, much in need of our consideration and continuation today. In this, and in the other essays in this volume, Sri Aurobindo’s views on the term “Renaissance” in the context of Bengal are invoked, where he demonstrates the presence of three successive strands or movements within it – (1) a reception of European thought and life forms and a comparative evaluation and in some cases, rejection of old or effete Indian forms based on these; (2) a movement of assimilation characterized by a reaction of Indian cultural forms stressing both the spirit and letter of tradition and criticizing the foreign culture; and (3) a “new creation” characterized by a full emergence of the Indian spirit adapting the modern forms creatively to its purposes and nature. This scope of the “renaissance” sets the tone which pervades the essays in the volume, exemplifying the powerfully creative spiritual turn given to the forms and structures of a variety of modern disciplines originating in post-renaissance and post-Enlightenment Europe. Among these essays on the Bengal Renaissance, it is particularly refreshing to come across Dilip Kumar Chatterjee’s paper on “Sri Aurobindo and Ireland…” where an alternate genealogy of the term “renaissance” is drawn out, based on Sri Aurobindo’s own proclivities and pronouncements on the contemporaneous Irish resurgence, at the same time, drawing the discussion out of its provincial Bengal reference and relating it to a trans-national context.
Sri Aurobindo’s involvement in the cultural and revolutionary politics of the time touched on the wide gamut of thought and life-activities constituting the ferment of the movement and the remaining essays in the volume touch on all these areas, either through a comparative consideration of his ideas with those of other contemporaries or through a consideration of examples which left their related legacies. The various disciplines in question include philosophy, politics, aesthetics, literature, history, social thought and education. The issue introduced earlier of the reformist and revivalist poles of the discourse, characterized by Rammohun Roy and Vivekananda respectively, are addressed in two essays by Krishna Roy (Rammohun Roy on women’s liberation) and Tirthanath Bandyopadhyay (renaissance aspects of Vivekananda). Here we find how these so-called poles intersect and overlap – the non-sectarian spiritual humanism of Vivekananda and the universalist emancipatory Hinduism of Rammohun. As something of a companion piece to the article on Rammohun Roy and women’s liberation is Madhumita Chattopadhyay’s finely crafted essay on “Outlook Towards Women: Influence of Indian Renaissance.”
“Sri Aurobindo’s contemporaries” in this powerfully creative period interacted together in a participatory culture through life-contacts and episodes, bringing into manifestation the ideas being discussed in this book. Some of these contemporaries include Rabindranath Tagore, who was senior by about ten years to Sri Aurobindo and Satis Chandrs Mukherjee, who was associated with both Sri Aurobindo and Rabindranath in the effort at developing a national education, which would yield the National College, whose first principal was Sri Aurobindo, whose first day of operation was 15th August 1906, Sri Aurobindo’s birthday, and which houses the centre which has published this present volume. Two essays, one by Rama Prasad De (on Satis Chandra) and one by Amal Kumar De, deal with this saga of education in nationalist Bengal and Sri Aurobindo’s part in it. Unfortunately, only a few essays here give us a taste of the lived culture of these contemporaries and their interactions, Rama Parasad De’s paper being exemplary in this account. It is hoped that more writing of this kind emerges through publication, so that a sense of the collective and participatory reality of the Bengal Renaissance becomes more palpable as a form of communitas.
Kireet Joshi’s essay on “Sri Aurobindo’s Philosophy of Nationalism, Internationalism and Contemporary Crisis” opens the volume and, as may be expected from Prof. Joshi, sets the reflective tone for the reader. Nationalism has become a much criticized term in contemporary scholarship and Prof. Joshi’s laying out of Sri Aurobindo’s views on this subject disabuses the reader of any misgivings regarding sectarian and chauvinistic or racial/religious/ethnic forms of nationalism on the one hand, and the administrative artificiality of the nation-state on the other. Nationalism, in Sri Aurobindo’s view, is shown to be a force of creative culture, drawing on a lived and constantly renewed interpretive history, uniting a people. Indian nationalism is seen as having its basis in a protean and integral spirituality adapting itself to an illimitable variety of social forms and inviting us today to embrace it, just as Sri Aurobindo’s generation did in their time and place. At the same time, Sri Aurobindo’s notion of a progressive social history is brought out by the essay, in which nationalism is a fluid form, constituted from below by communitarian individual choices based in spiritual fraternity, in relation with wider trans-national realities, and expanding towards an internationalism, based on an “universal religion of humanity.” However, this is neither a religion with coded forms of sectarian practice nor humanitarianism. It is a rich unity in diversity founded on human identity through the perception and realization of the soul.
Drawing on similar sources, Indrani Sanyal discusses the philosophy of history developed by Sri Aurobindo and by Pramath Nath Mukhopadhyaya. A philosophy of history is a teleological theory and the development of such theories in the Bengal Renaissance is perhaps predictable, given its character of resistance to the teleology of civilizational progress based in the Enlightenment and coded into colonialism. In the philosophies of history of both these figures, Indian spiritual ideas are invoked to provide a universal significance to world temporality. Dr. Sanyal first touches on several examples of philosophy of history developed in the west, including those of Kant, Hegel, Marx and Herbert Spenser. Dr. Sanyal shows how, in The Human Cycle, Sri Aurobindo adapts the teleological ideas another German thinker, Lamprecht, in presenting an interpretation of history as developing through symbolic, typal-conventional, individualist and subjective phases. Sri Aurobindo’s adaptation here is also an original interpretation of the yugas of Puranic theory. Similarly, she discusses the ideas of Pramath Mukhopadhyaya, showing his historicism to rest on a successive passage of the universal soul or atman through the four purusarthas of dharma, artha, kama and moksha. In this, he develops the idea of the philosopher of history, itihasavid, arriving at the subjective and experiential knowledge of history through identification in consciousness with the universal self, Vaishvanara, drawing on the yogic idea of Vaishvanaravidya from the Chandogya Upanishad.
Sri Aurobindo’s own views on creative culture, particularly poetry and its future, in the light of the spiritual remoulding of language is brought out in a lucid essay on the significance of Rabindranath Tagore’s poetry in the Indian Renaissance by Supriyo Bhattacharya. Here Dr. Bhattacharya quotes Sri Aurobindo to show how the rich tradition of Bengali spiritual literature is brought to bear on the lived subjective experiences of modern reality by Rabindranath in his poetry. He also shows how Rabindranath draws subtly from European poetic forms but subjects these to the intonations and meanings of the Indian spirit. In a similar vein, an essay on the little-known philosopher Krishna Chandra Bhattacharya by Tara Chatterjea and one on the famous philosopher of aesthetics, Acharya Brojendranath Seal by Sudhir Kumar Nandi, bring out the intensive hermeneutic engagement between Indian and western philosophy in their works and the brilliant original conclusions they arrive at through this engagement.
A final issue of interest in the volume concerns the political views of Sri Aurobindo vis-à-vis his contemporaries, predecessors and successors. An essay on Rabindranath and Sri Aurobindo by Manjula Bose, two on Gandhi and Sri Aurobindo by Sushmita Bhowmik and Sujata Mukherjee and one on Sri Aurobindo, Tilak and Gokhale by Aparna Banerjee make up this strand. It is well known that both Rabindranath and Gandhi were not too enamored of the espousal of violence by Sri Aurobindo as a legitimate means of political action. What is less well known is the fact that Sri Aurobindo also actively wrote on and promoted the doctrine of passive resistance, boycott and swadeshi, which would become the cornerstones of Gandhian activism. In this, we see once more the unattached flexibility of spiritual transcendence and utilization of opposites being demonstrated by Sri Aurobindo as against the rigidity of mental ethics. Each of these essays open up the tricky issues involved in the arguments between their protagonists and do an admirable job of commentary and interpretation.
All in all, this is a most valuable work of scholarship and a timely intervention to the contemporary Indian and global impasse of thought and culture. The ideas and figures it introduces invite us to further study and a continuation of the creative and hermeneutic exchange which they opened up more than a century ago.