Life
Sri Ramakrishna
was born Gadadhar Chatterjee in 1836 at Kamarpukur about sixty miles
from Calcutta. His parents, Khudiram and Chandramani, were poor
and made ends meet with great difficulty.
Gadadhar was
the pet of the whole village. He was handsome and had a natural
gift for the fine arts. He, however, disliked going to school and
when asked why he did not want to go to school, his reply was :
The so-called education is for earning money only ; I don't care
for this kind of education. He loved Nature and spent his time in
fields and fruit gardens outside the village with his friends.
Gadadhar lost
his father at the age of seven. He became more serious from now
on, but he did not change his ways and habits. For instance, he
would not go to school, Instead, he was seen visiting monks who
stopped at his village on their way to Puri. He would serve them
and listen with rapt attention to the arguments they often had among
themselves over religious issues.
Gadadhar had
now attained the age when he should be invested with the sacred
thread. When arrangements were nearly complete for this, Gadadhar
declared that he would have his first alms as a brahmin from a certain
sudra woman of the village. This was something unheard of ! Tradition
required that it should be a brahmin and not a sudra who would give
him the first alms. This was pointed out to him but he was adamant.
He said he had given his word to the lady and if he did not keep
his word, what sort of brahmin would he be then ? No argument, no
appeal, no amount of tears could budge him from his position. Finally,
Ramkumar, his eldest brother and now the head of the family, had
to give in.
Meanwhile, the
family's financial position worsened everyday. Ramkumar ran a Sanskrit
school in Calcutta and also served as priest in some families. What
he earned was pitifully small and he could not send any money home
regularly. He decided to bring Gadadhar to Calcutta. His plan was
to try to make him study Sanskrit. Perhaps he could also do some
priestly work and make some money of his own. Gadadhar arrived,
but he lost no time in making it clear that he was not going to
study. He, however, did not mind doing some priestly work, not for
money but for the pleasure of it.
About this time,
a rich woman of Calcutta, Rani Rashmoni, founded a temple at Dakshineswar.
She approached Ramkumar to serve as priest at the temple of Kali
and Ramkumar agreed. After some persuasion, Gadadhar agreed to decorate
the deity. When Ramkumar retired, Gadadhar took his place as priest.
When Gadadhar
started worshipping the deity, he began to ask himself if he was
worshipping a piece of stone or a living Goddess. If he was worshipping
a living Goddess, why should she not respond to his worship? This
question nagged him day and night. Then, he began to pray to Kali
- "Mother, you've been gracious to many devotees in the past and
have revealed yourself to them. Why would you not reveal yourself
to me, also ? Am I not also your son ?"
He would weep
bitterly and sometimes even cry out loudly while worshipping. At
night, he would go into a near-by jungle and spend the whole night
praying. One day he was so impatient to see Mother Kali that he
decided to end his life. He seized a sword hanging on the wall and
was about to strike himself with it when he saw light issuing from
the deity in waves and he was soon overwhelmed by those waves. He
then fell down unconscious on the floor.
Gadadhar was
not, however, content with this. He prayed to Mother Kali for more
religious experiences. He specially wanted to know what truths other
religious systems taught. Strangely enough, teachers of those systems
attired as and when necessary as if directed by some invisible power,
and what is more surprising, he reached the goals of those experiments
in no time.
Soon word spread
about this remarkable man and people of all denominations and all
stations of life began to come to him. From now on he came to be
known as Ramakrishna Paramahansa, and like a magnet he began to
attract real seekers of God. He taught ceaselessly for fifteen years
or so through parables, metaphors, songs and above all by his own
life the basic truths of religion. He passed away in 1886, leaving
behind a devoted band of young disciples headed by the well-known
scholar and orator, Swami Vivekananda.
What did Sri Ramakrishna
teach?
1. Sri Ramakrishna taught no creed or dogma. His only concern
was man's uplift. According to him, there is infinite moral and
spiritual potential in man. To develop that potential is man's foremost
duty in life. He taught man to strive to develop that potential
without wasting time over sense pleasure or religious quibblings.
2. Religions are like so-many paths leading to the same goal,
i.e., God. Man reaches his religious goal when he attains his highest
moral development.
3. God is both personal and impersonal. It is difficult to
conceive an impersonal God, so to begin with, God has to be thought
of as a person. Can anyone think of the white color without thinking
of a white object? One can look at the morning sun, but not at the
midday sun. Similarly, when God is manifest in a person we know
what God is like, otherwise God is impersonal and beyond thought
and speech.
4. Be in the world but not of it. Perform your duties as
well you can, but do not count too much upon the fruits of your
action. Rather, surrender them to God. try to feel as if you are
only a tool in the hands of God.
5. Religion is an experience. religion makes no sense unless
its truths are experienced. Is your thirst satisfied unless you
drink water when you are thirsty?
6. God is everywhere but He is most manifest in man. So serve
man as God. That is as good as worshipping God.
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