Volume 03
Volume 03
Volume 03
Ambedkar
(14th April 1891 - 6th December 1956)
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DR. BABASAHEB AMBEDKAR
WRITINGS AND SPEECHES
VOL. 3
First Edition
Compiled
by
VASANT MOON
Second Edition
by
Prof. Hari Narake
Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar : Writings and Speeches
Vol. 3
Secretary
Education Department
Government of Maharashtra
Publisher:
Dr. Ambedkar Foundation
Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment, Govt. of India
15, Janpath, New Delhi - 110 001
Phone : 011-23357625, 23320571, 23320589
Fax : 011-23320582
Website : www.ambedkarfoundation.nic.in
Printer
M/s. Tan Prints India Pvt. Ltd., N. H. 10, Village-Rohad, Distt. Jhajjar, Haryana
Minister for Social Justice and Empowerment
& Chairperson, Dr. Ambedkar Foundation
Kumari Selja
MESSAGE
Babasaheb Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, the Chief Architect of Indian Constitution was
a scholar par excellence, a philosopher, a visionary, an emancipator and a true
nationalist. He led a number of social movements to secure human rights to the
oppressed and depressed sections of the society. He stands as a symbol of struggle
for social justice.
The Government of Maharashtra has done a highly commendable work of
publication of volumes of unpublished works of Dr. Ambedkar, which have brought
out his ideology and philosophy before the Nation and the world.
In pursuance of the recommendations of the Centenary Celebrations Committee
of Dr. Ambedkar, constituted under the chairmanship of the then Prime Minister
of India, the Dr. Ambedkar Foundation (DAF) was set up for implementation of
different schemes, projects and activities for furthering the ideology and message
of Dr. Ambedkar among the masses in India as well as abroad.
The DAF took up the work of translation and publication of the Collected Works
of Babasaheb Dr. B.R. Ambedkar published by the Government of Maharashtra
in English and Marathi into Hindi and other regional languages. I am extremely
thankful to the Government of Maharashtras consent for bringing out the works
of Dr. Ambedkar in English also by the Dr. Ambedkar Foundation.
Dr. Ambedkars writings are as relevant today as were at the time when these
were penned. He firmly believed that our political democracy must stand on the
base of social democracy which means a way of life which recognizes liberty,
equality and fraternity as the principles of life. He emphasized on measuring the
progress of a community by the degree of progress which women have achieved.
According to him if we want to maintain democracy not merely in form, but also
in fact, we must hold fast to constitutional methods of achieving our social and
economic objectives. He advocated that in our political, social and economic life,
we must have the principle of one man, one vote, one value.
There is a great deal that we can learn from Dr. Ambedkars ideology and
philosophy which would be beneficial to our Nation building endeavor. I am glad
that the DAF is taking steps to spread Dr. Ambedkars ideology and philosophy
to an even wider readership.
I would be grateful for any suggestions on publication of works of Babasaheb
Dr. Ambedkar.
(Kumari Selja)
Collected Works of Babasaheb Dr. Ambedkar (CWBA)
Editorial Board
Kumari Selja
Minister for Social Justice & Empowerment, Govt. of India
and
Chairperson, Dr. Ambedkar Foundation
(S. B. CHAVAN)
Chief Minister of Maharashtra
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PREFACE
I consider it a great honour to have been asked to write a preface
to these volumes which consist of hitherto unpublished writings of
Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar.
Secretary
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INTRODUCTION
The members of Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Source Material Publication
Committee are pleased to present this volume of Dr. Babasaheb
Ambedkars unpublished writings to readers on behalf of the Government
of Maharashtra. This volume is significant and unique in several respects.
Firstly, the contents of this volume were hitherto unknown. These are
the unpublished writings of Dr. Ambedkar which were in the custody of
the Administrator General and the custodian of Dr. Ambedkars property.
The students of Dr. Ambedkars writings and his devoted followers were
anxious to read these writings. Some of the followers of Dr. Ambedkar
had even gone to the court to secure permission for the printing of these
writings although the manuscripts were not in their possession. Thus,
these writings had assumed such significance that it was even feared
that they had been destroyed or lost.
There is a second reason why this volume is significant. Dr. Ambedkar
is known for his versatile genius, but his interpretation of the philosophy
of and his historical analysis of the Hindu religion as expressed in these
pages may throw new light on his thought.
The third important point is that Dr. Ambedkars analysis of Hindu
Philosophy is intended not as an intellectual exercise but as a definite
approach to the strengthening of the Hindu society on the basis of the
human values of equality, liberty and fraternity. The analysis ultimately
points towards uplifting the down-trodden and absorbing the masses in
the national mainstream.
It would not be out of place to note down a few words about the
transfer of these papers to the Committee for publication. During his
life time, Dr. Ambedkar published many books, but also planned many
others. He had also expressed his intention to write his autobiography,
the life of Mahatma Phule and the History of the Indian Army, but left
no record of any research on these subjects.
After his death, in 1956, all the papers including his unpublished
writings were taken into custody by the custodian of the High Court of
Delhi. Later, these papers were transferred to the Administrator General
of the Government of Maharashtra. Since then, the boxes containing the
unpublished manuscripts of Dr. Ambedkar and several other papers were
in the custody of the Administrator General.
It was learned that Shri J. B. Bansod, an Advocate from Nagpur, had
filed a suit against the Government in the High Court Bench at Nagpur,
xii INTRODUCTION
This task was not merely strenuous at the intellectual level but also
at the physical one due to the condition of the papers themselves. These
had been stored in the closed boxes for more than 30 years. They were
fumigated with insecticides, with the result that a most poisonous foul
odour emitted from these papers. Shri Moon and his staff had to suffer
infection of the skin and eyes and required medical treatment.
After two years of strenuous work, Shri Moon had submitted a detailed
report to the Editorial Board on 17-9-83 containing recommendations as
to the proper arrangement and presentation of the papers as they were
to appear in a published form. The present volume is substantially in
accordance with these recommendations.
In the execution of this laborious work, invaluable assistance was
rendered by the Stenographers Shri Anil Kavale and Shri L. R. Meher,
and Shri S. A. Mungekar as a clerk.
After the proposed arrangements had been approved by the
Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Source Material Publication Editorial Committee
in its meeting Dt. 23-9-86, Shri Moon and his staff took on the tasks
associated with publication, i.e. proof reading and indexing.
In the papers that the Editorial Board scrutinised, we have come
across 51 titles of unpublished writings (including 26 of Riddles in
Hinduism). In addition to these, we have received 14 unpublished essays
of Dr. Ambedkar from Shri S. S. Rege, the Ex-Librarian of the Siddharth
College, Bombay. The essays received from Shri Rege are shown by
asterisk in the list mentioned below. Not all these essays are complete.
All the essays have been divided into three volumes as under :
VOLUME 3:
1. Philosophy of Hinduism
2. The Hindu Social Order : Its Essential Principles
3. The Hindu Social Order : Its Unique Features
4. Symbols of Hinduism
5. Ancient India on Exhumation
6. The Ancient RegimeThe State of the Aryan Society
7. A Sunken Priesthood
8. Reformers and Their Fate
*9. The Decline and Fall of Buddhism
10. The Literature of Brahminism
*11. The Triumph of Brahrnanism
12. The Morals of the HouseManusmriti or the Gospel of
Counter-Revolution
13. The Philosophic Defence of Counter-Revolution: Krishna and
His Gita
14. Analytical notes of Virat Parva and Uddyog Parva
xiv INTRODUCTION
VOLUME 4:
Riddles in Hinduism (27 Chapters including 1 from Shri S. S. Rege)
VOLUME 5 :
1. Untouchables or Children of Indias Ghetto
*2. The House the Hindus have Built
*3. The Rock on which it is Built
*4. Why Lawlessness is Lawful ?
*5. Touchables Vs Untouchables
*6. Hinduism and the Legacy of Brahminism
*7. Parallel Cases
8. Civilization or Felony
9. The Origin of Untouchability
10. The Curse of Caste
*11. From Millions to Fractions
12. The Revolt of Untouchables
13. Held at Bay
14. Away from the Hindus
15. A Warning to the Untouchables
16. Caste and Conversion
*17. Christianizing the Untouchables
*18. The Condition of the Convert
*19. Under the Providence of Mr. Gandhi
*20. Gandhi and His Fast
final manuscript of this volume has not been found. The Committee has
accepted the title Riddles in Hinduism, given by Dr. Ambedkar in his
Introduction to the Book.
The Buddha and Karl Marx was also said to have been completed
by Dr. Ambedkar, but we have not come across such a book among the
manuscripts. There is, however, a typed copy of a book entitled Gautam
the Buddha and Karl Marx (A Critique and Comparative Study of their
Systems of Philosophy) by LEUKEVijaya Publishing House, Colombo)
(year of publication not mentioned). One short essay of 34 pages by
Dr. Ambedkar entitled Buddha or Karl Marx was however found
and being included in the third volume. A third book, viz., Revolution
and Counter-Revolution, was also believed to have been completed by
Dr. Ambedkar, A printed scheme for this treatise has been found in the
papers received by the Committee. It appears that Dr. Ambedkar had
started working on various chapters simultaneously. Scattered pages
have been found in the boxes and are gathered together.
We are tempted here to present the process of writing of Dr. Ambedkar
which will give an idea of the colossal efforts he used to make in the
writing of a book. He had had his own discipline. He used to make a
blue-print of the book before starting the text. The Editorial Board found
many such blue-prints designed by him, viz., India and Communism,
Riddles in Hinduism, Can I be a Hindu?, Revolution and Counter-
Revolution, What Brahmins have done to the Untouchables, Essays
on Bhagvat Gita, Buddha and Karl Marx, etc. But some of these were
not even begun and those which were begun were left incomplete.
It will be interesting to present an illustration. Dr. Ambedkar had
prepared a blue-print for a book entitled India and Communism.
The contents are as follows :
PartI The Pre-requisites of Communism
Chapter 1The Birth-place of Communism
Chapter 2Communism & Democracy
Chapter 3Communism & Social Order
PartII India and the Pre-requisites of Communism
Chapter 4The Hindu Social Order
Chapter 5The Basis of the Hindu Social Order
Chapter 6Impediments to Communism arising from the Social Order.
PartIII What then shall we do?
Chapter 1Marx and the European Social Order
Chapter 2Manu and the Hindu Social Order.
xvi INTRODUCTION
Dr. Ambedkar could complete only Chapters 4 and 5 of the scheme viz., The
Hindu Social Order and The Basis of the Hindu Social Order. It appears
that when it struck to him that he should deal with two more topics in Part III
he added those two topics in his own handwriting on the typed page. In the
same well-bound file of typed material, there appears a page entitled Can I be
a Hindu ? which bears his signature in pencil and a table of contents on the
next page as follows :
Introduction.
Symbols of Hinduism
Part-ICaste
Part-IICultsWorship of Deities
Part-IllSuperman.
The third page bears sub-titles of the chapters as follows:
1. Symbols represent the soul of a thing
2. Symbols of Christianity
3. Symbols of Islam
4. Symbols of Jainism
5. Symbols of Buddhism
6. Symbols of Hinduism
7. What are the Symbols of Hinduism ?
Three
1. Caste.
2. Cults
(1) Rama
(2) Krishna
(3) Shiva
(4) Vishnu
3. Service of Superman.
The plan as designed above remains incomplete except for the chapter on,
Symbols of Hinduism.
The Editorial Committee has found a chapter on Riddles of Rama and Krishna
which might have been intended for the volume Riddles in Hinduism. The
24 riddles as proposed in his original plan were changed often in blue-prints.
The seriatim of the contents and chapters and the arrangement of the file do
not synchronize. The chapter on Rama and Krishna did not find a place in the
listing of the contents of the book. However, we are including it in the volume
on Riddles.
At the end we are confident that our time and our pains will not go unrewarded
when Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkars hitherto unpublished works will be brought
in a proper form before the general public as well as interested scholars.
INTRODUCTION xvii
PART IV
PART V
PART I
Philosophy of
Hinduism
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CHAPTER 1
Philosophy of
Hinduism
1
See Article on Philosophy in Munros Encyclopaedia of Education.
2
The Philosophy of Religion. Oxf. pages 1-2.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 5
Calendar and the ritual apropriate to them. I am not using the word
theology in either of these two senses of that word. I mean by theology
natural theology which is the doctrine of God and the divine, as an
integral part of the theory of nature. As traditionally understood there
are three thesis which natural theology propounds. (1) That God exists
and is the author of what we call nature or universe (2) That God controls
all the events which make nature and (3) God exercises a government
over mankind in accordance with his sovereign moral law.
I am aware there is another class of theology known as Revealed
Theologyspontaneous self disclosure of divine realitywhich may be
distinguished from Natural theology. But this distinction does not really
matter. For as has been pointed out2 that a revelation may either leave
the results won by Natural theology standing without modifications, merely
supplementing them by further knowledge not attainable by unassisted
human effort or it may transform Natural theology in such a way
that all the truths of natural theology would acquire richer and deeper
meaning when seen in the light of a true revelation. But the view that
a genuine natural theology and a genuine revelational theology might
stand in real contradiction may be safely excluded as not being possible.
Taking the three thesis of Theology namely (1) the existence of God,
(2) Gods providential government of the universe and (3) Gods moral
government of mankind, I take Religion to mean the propounding of
an ideal scheme of divine governance the aim and object of which is to
make the social order in which men live a moral order. This is what I
understand by Religion and this is the sense in which I shall be using
the term Religion in this discussion.
The second dimension is to know the ideal scheme for which a Religion
stands. To define what is the fixed, permanent and dominant part in
the religion of any society and to separate its essential characteristics
from those which are unessential is often very difficult. The reason for
this difficulty in all probability lies in the difficulty pointed out by Prof.
Robertson Smith3 when he says:
The traditional usages of religion had grown up gradually in
the course of many centuries, and reflected habits of thought,
characteristic of very diverse stages of mans intellectual and
moral development. No conception of the nature of the gods could
possibly afford the clue to all parts of that motley complex of
rites and ceremonies which the later paganism had received by
1
Natural Theology as a distinct department of study owes its origin to Plato-see Laws.
2
A. E. Taylor. The Faith of a Moralist p. 19.
3
The Religion of the Semites (1927)
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 7
inheritance, from a series of ancestors in every state of culture from
pure savagery upwards. The record of the religious thought of mankind,
as it is embodied in religious institutions, resembles the geological
record of the history of the earths crust; the new and the old are
preserved side by side, or rather layer upon layer.
The same thing has happened in India. Speaking about the growth
of Religion in India, says Prof. Max Muller :
We have seen a religion growing up from stage to stage, from the
simplest childish prayers to the highest metaphysical abstractions. In
the majority of the hymns of the Veda we might recognise the childhood;
in the Brahmanas and their sacrificial, domestic and moral ordinances
the busy manhood; in the Upanishads the old age of the Vedic religion.
We could have well understood if, with the historical progress of the
Indian mind, they had discarded the purely childish prayers as soon
as they had arrived at the maturity of the Brahamans; and if, when
the vanity of sacrifices and the real character of the old gods had
once been recognised, they would have been superseded by the more
exalted religion of the Upanishads. But it was not so. Every religious
thought that had once found expression in India, that had once been
handed down as a sacred heirloom, was preserved, and the thoughts of
the three historical periods, the childhood, the manhood, and the old
age of the Indian nation, were made to do permanent service in the
three stages of the life of every individual. Thus alone can we explain
how the same sacred code, the Veda, contains not only the records of
different phases of religious thought, but of doctrines which we may
call almost diametrically opposed to each other.
the Hindus in minute detail and which must be regarded as the Bible
of the Hindus and containing the philosophy of Hinduism.
The third dimension in the philosophy of religion is the criterion1 to be
adopted for judging the value of the ideal scheme of divine governance
for which a given Religion stands. Religion must be put on its trial. By
what criterion shall it be judged? That leads to the definition of the
norm. Of the three dimensions this third one is the most difficult one
to be ascertained and defined.
Unfortunately the question does not appear to have been tackled
although much has been written on the philosophy of Religion and
certainly no method has been found for satisfactorily dealing with the
problem. One is left to ones own method for determining the issue.
As for myself I think it is safe to proceed on the view that to know
the philosophy of any movement or any institution one must study
the revolutions which the movement or the institution has undergone.
Revolution is the mother of philosophy and if it is not the mother of
philosophy it is a lamp which illuminates philosophy. Religion is no
exception to this rule. To me therefore it seems quite evident that the
best method to ascertain the criterion by which to judge the philosophy
of Religion is to study the Revolutions which religion has undergone.
That is the method which I propose to adopt.
Students of History are familiar with one Religious Revolution. That
Revolution was concerned with the sphere of Religion and the extent of its
authority. There was a time when Religion had covered the whole field of
human knowledge and claimed infallibility for what it taught. It covered
astronomy and taught a theory of the universe according to which the earth
is at rest in the centre of the universe, while the sun, moon, planets and
system of fixed stars revolve round it each in its own sphere. It included
biology and geology and propounded the view that the growth of life on
the earth had been created all at once and had contained from the time
of creation onwards, all the heavenly bodies that it now contains and all
kinds of animals of plants. It claimed medicine to be its province and
taught that disease was either a divine visitation as punishment for sin or
it was the work of demons and that it could be cured by the intervention
of saints, either in person or through their holy relics; or by prayers or
1
Some students of the Philosophy of Religion seem to regard the study of the first two
dimensions as all that the field of Philosophy of religion need include. They do not seem
to recognize that a consideration of the third dimension is necessary part of the study
of the Philosophy of Religion. As an illustration of this see the Article on Theology by
Mr. D. S. Adamas in Hastings Encyclopedea of Religion and Ethics Volume XII page 393.
I dissent from this view. The difference is probably due to the fact that I regard Philosophy
of Religion as a normative study and as a discriptive study. I do not think that there can be
such a thing as a general Philosophy of Religion. I believe each Religion has its particular
philosophy. To me there is no Philosophy of Religion. There is a philosophy of a Religion.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 9
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 11
That the idea of God has evolved from both these directions is well illustrated by Hinduism.
Compare the idea of Indra as God and the idea of Bramha as God.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 13
religion, that is, the part of conduct which was determined by his
relation to the gods, was simply one side of the general scheme of
conduct prescribed for him by his position as a member of society. There
was no separation between the spheres of religion and of ordinary life.
Every social act had a reference to the gods as well as to men, for
the social body was not made up of men only, but of gods and men.
The God of the antique society was an exclusive God. God was
owned by and bound to one singly community. This is largely to
be accounted for by
the share taken by the Gods in the feuds and wars of their
worshippers. The enemies of the God and the enemies of his people
are identical; even in the Old Testament the enemies of Jehovah
are originally nothing else than the enemies of Israel. In battle each
God fights for his own people, and to his aid success is ascribed;
Chemosh gives victory to Moab, and Asshyr to Assyria; and often
the divine image or symbol accompanies the host to battle. When
the ark was brought into the camp of Israel, the Philistines said,
Gods are come into the camp; who can deliver us from their own
practice, for when David defeated them at Baalperazim, part of the
booty consisted in their idols which had been carried into the field.
When the Carthaginians, in their treaty with Phillip of Macedon,
speak of the Gods that take part in the campaign, they doubtless
refer to the inmates of the sacred tent which was pitched in time of
war beside the tent of the general, and before which prisoners were
sacrificed after a victory. Similarly an Arabic poet says, Yaguth went
forth with us against Morad ; that is, the image of the God Yaguth
was carried into the fray
Smith Ibid
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 15
This fact had produced a solidarity between God and the community.
Hence, on the principle of solidarity between Gods and their
worshippers, the particularism characteristic of political society could
not but reappear in the sphere of religion. In the same measure as
the God of a clan or town had indisputable claim to the reverance and
service of the community to which he belonged, he was necessarily an
enemy to their enemies and a stranger to those to whom they were
strangers.1
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 17
It was impossible for an individual to change his religion without
changing his nationality, and a whole community could hardly change
its religion at all without being absorbed into another stock or nation.
Religions like political ties were transmitted from father to son; for a
man could not choose a new God at will; the Gods of his fathers were
the only deities on whom he could count as friendly and ready to accept
his homage, unless he forswore his own kindred and was received into
a new circle of civil as well as religious life.
piety, for no amount of discussion can carry a man beyond the plain
rule, to fear God and keep His Commandments. This counsel
the author puts into the mouth of Solomon, and so represents it,
not unjustly, as summing up the old view of religion, which in
more modern days had unfortunately begun to be undermined.
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 19
he was not bound to understand and was not at liberty to criticise
or to neglect. Religious non-conformity was an offence against the
state; for if sacred tradition was tampered with the bases of society
were undermined, and the favour of the Gods was forfeited. But
so long as the prescribed forms were duly observed, a man was
recognised as truly pious, and no one asked how his religion was
rooted in his heart or affected his reason. Like political duty, of
which indeed it was a part, religion was entirely comprehended in
the observance of certain fixed rules of outward conduct.
possible, needs and desires for which religion could and would do
nothing.
On the contrary the antique world looked upon the misery of a man
as proof.
That the sufferer was an evil-doer, justly hateful to the Gods. Such
a man was out of place among the happy and the prosperous crowd that
assembled on feast days before the alter.
It is in accordance with this view that the leper and the mourner were
shut out from the exercise of religion as well as from the privileges of
social life and their food was not brought into the house of God.
As for conflict between individual and individual and between society
and the individual God had no concern. In the antique world:
It was not expected that (God) should always be busy righting human
affairs. In ordinary matters it was mens business to help themselves
and their own kins folk, though the sense that the God was always
near, and could be called upon at need, was a moral force continually
working in some degree for the maintenance of social righteousness and
order. The strength of this moral force was indeed very uncertain, for it
was always possible for the evil-doer to flatter himself that his offence
would be overlooked.
In the antique world man did not ask God to be righteous to him.
Whether in civil or in profane matters, the habit of the old world
was to think much of the community and little of the individual life,
and no one felt this to be unjust even though it bore hardly on himself.
The God was the God of the nationl or of the tribe, and he knew and
cared for the individual only as a member of the community.
That was the attitude that man in the antique world took of his own
private misfortune. Man came to rejoice before his God and
in rejoicing before his God man rejoiced with and for the welfare
of his kindred, his neighbours and his country, and, in renewing by
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 21
a solemn act of worship the bond that united him to God, he also renewed
the bonds of family, social and national obligation.
Man in the antique world did not call upon his maker to be righteous
to him.
Such is this other Revolution in Religion.
There have thus been two Religious Revolutions. One was an external
Revolution. The other was an internal Revolution. The External Revolution
was concerned with the field within which the authority of Religion
was to prevail. The Internal Revolution had to do with the changes
in Religion as a scheme of divine Governance for human society. The
External Revolution was not really a Religious Revolution at all. It was
a revolt of science against the extra territorial jurisdiction assumed by
Religion over a field which did not belong. The Internal Revolution was
a real Revolution or may be compared to any other political Revolution,
such as the French Revolution or the Russian Revolution. It involved a
constitutional change. By this Revolution the Scheme of divine governance
came to be altered, amended and reconstituted.
How profound have been the changes which this internal Revolution,
has made in the antique scheme of divine governance can be easily seen.
By this Revolution God has ceased to be a member of a community.
Thereby he has become impartial. God has ceased to be the Father of
Man in the physical sense of the word. He has become the creator of
the Universe. The breaking of this blood bond has made it possible to
hold that God is good. By this Revolution man has ceased to be a blind
worshipper of God doing nothing but obeying his commands. Thereby
man has become a responsible person required to justify his belief in
Gods commandments by his conviction. By this Revolution God has
ceased to be merely the protector of Society and social interests in gross
have ceased to be the centre of the divine Order. Society and man have
changed places as centres of this divine order. It is man who has become
the centre of it.
All this analysis of the Revolution in the Ruling concepts of
Religion as a scheme of divine governance had one purpose namely
to discover the norm for evaluating the philosophy of a Religion. The
impatient reader may not ask where are these norms and what are
they? The reader may not have found the norms specified by their
names in the foregoing discussion. But he could not have failed to
notice that the whole of this Religious Revolution was raging around
the norms for judging what is right and what is wrong. If he has
not, let me make explicit what has been implicit in the whole of this
discussion. We began with the distinction between antique society and
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modern society as has been pointed out they differed in the type of
divine governance they accepted as their Religious ideals. At one end of
the Revolution was the antique society with its Religious ideal in which
the end was Society. At the other end of the Revolution is the modern
Society with its Religious ideal in which the end is the & individual. To
put the same fact in terms of the norm it can be said that the norm or
the criterion, for judging right and wrong in the Antique Society was
utility while the norm or the criterion for judging right and wrong in
the modern Society is justice. The Religious Revolution was not thus a
revolution in the religious organization of Society resulting in the shifting
of the centrefrom society to the individualit was a revolution in the
norms.
Some may demur to the norms I have suggested. It may be that it
is a new way of reaching them. But to my mind there is no doubt that
they are the real norms by which to judge the philosophy of religion.
In the first place the norm must enable people to judge what is right
and wrong in the conduct of men. In the second place the norm must
be appropriate to current notion of what constitutes the moral good.
From both these points of view they appear to be the true norms. They
enable us to judge what is right and wrong. They are appropriate to
the society which adopted them. Utility as a criterion was appropriate
to the antique world in which society being the end, the moral good
was held to be something which had social utility. Justice as a criterion
became appropriate to the Modern World in which individual being the
end, the moral good was held to be something which does justice to the
individual. There may be controversy as to which of the two norms is
morally superior. But I do not think there can be any serious controversy
that these are not the norms. If it is said that these norms are not
transcendental enough; my reply is that if a norm whereby one is to
judge the philosophy of religion must be Godly, it must also be earthly.
At any rate these are the norms I propose to adopt in examining the
philosophy of Hinduism.
II
This is a long detour. But it was a necessary preliminary to any
inquiry into the main question. However, when one begins the inquiry
one meets with an initial difficulty. The Hindu is not prepared to face
the inquiry. He either argues that religion is of no importance or he
takes shelter behind the viewfostered by the study of comparative
Religionthat all religions are good. There is no doubt that both these
views are mistaken and untenable.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 23
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 25
Hinduism. First I will apply the test of justice. Before doing so I want to
explain what I mean by the principle of justice. No one has expounded
it better than Professor Bergbon1. As interpreted by him the principle
of justice is a compedious one and includes most of the other principles
which have become the foundation of a moral order Justice has always
evoked ideas of equality, of proportion of compensation. Equity signifies
equality. Rules and regulations, right and righteousness are concerned
with equality in value. If all men are equal, all men are of the same
essence and the common essence entitled them to the same fundamental
rights and to equal liberty.
In short justice is simply another name for liberty equality and
fraternity. It is in this sense I shall be using2 justice as a criterion to
judge Hinduism.
Which of these tenets does Hinduism recognize? Let us take the
question one by one.
I. Does Hinduism recognise Equality?
The question instantaneously brings to ones mind the caste system.
One striking feature of the caste system is that the different castes do
not stand as an horizontal series all on the same plane. It is a system
in which the different castes are placed in a vertical series one above
the other. Manu may not be responsible for the creation of caste. Manu
preached the sanctity of the Varna and as I have shown Varna is the
parent of caste. In that sense Manu can be charged with being the
progenitor if not the author of the Caste System. Whatever be the case
as to the guilt of Manu regarding the Caste System there can be no
question that Manu is responsible for upholding the principle of gradation
and rank.
In the scheme of Manu the Brahmin is placed at the first in rank. Below
him is the Kshatriya. Below Kshatriya is the Vaishya. Below Vaishya is
the Shudra and Below Shudra is the Ati-Shudra (the Untouchables). This
system of rank and gradation is, simply another way of enunciating the
principle of inequality so that it may be truly said that Hinduism does not
recognise equality. This inequality in status is not merely the inequality
that one sees in the warrant of precedence prescribed for a ceremonial
gathering at a Kings Court. It is a permanent social relationship among
the classes to be observed to be enforcedat all times in all places and
for all purposes. It will take too long to show how in every phase of life
Manu has introduced and made inequality the vital force of life. But I will
1
Two Moralities page.
2
For another interpretation of justice see J. S. MillUtilitarianism.
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Recognition of slavery was bad enough. But if the rule of slavery had
been left free to take its own course it would have had at least one
beneficial effect. It would have been a levelling force. The foundation of
caste would have been destroyed. For under it a Brahmin might have
become the slave of the Untouchable and the Untouchable would have
become the master of the Brahmin. But it was seen that unfettered
slavery was an equalitarian principle and an attempt was made to
nullify it. Manu and his successors therefore while recognizing slavery
ordain that it shall not be recognized in its inverse order to the Varna
System. That means that a Brahmin may become the slave of another
Brahmin. But he shall not be the slave of a person of another Varna i.e.
of the Kshatriya, Vaishya, Shudra, or Ati-Shudra. On the other hand a
Brahmin may hold as his slave any one belonging to the four Varnas. A
Kshatriya can have a Kshatriya, Vaisha, Shudra and Ati-Shudra as his
slaves but not one who is a Brahmin. A Vaishya can have a Vaishya,
Shudra and Ati-Shudra as his slaves but not one who is a Brahmin
or a Kshatriya. A Shudra can hold a Shudra and Ati-shudra can hold
an Ati-Shudra as his slave but not one who is a Brahmin, Kshatriya,
Vaishya or Shudra.
Consider Manu on marriage. Here are his rules governing intermarriage
among the different classes.
Manu says:
III. 12. For the first marriage of the twice born classes, a woman
of the same class is recommended but for such as are impelled by
inclination to marry again, women in the direct order of the classes
are to be preferred.
1
Manu recognizes seven kinds of slaves (VIII-415). Narada recognizes fifteen kinds of
slaves (V-25)
2
The same rule is laid down by Yajnavalkya (II-183) whose authority is equal to that of
Manu.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 27
III. 13. A Shudra woman only must be the wife of Shudra: she
and a Vaisya, of a Vaisya; they two and a Kshatriya, of a Kshatriya;
those two and a Brahmani of a Brahman.
VIII. 113. Let the judge cause a priest to swear by his veracity; a
soldier, by his horse, or elephant, and his weapons; a merchant, by
his kine, grain, and gold; a mechanic or servile man, by imprecating
on his own head, if he speak falsely, all possible crimes;
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Manu also deals with cases of witnesses giving false evidence. According
to Manu giving false evidence is a crime, says Manu:
VIII. 122. Learned men have specified these punishments, which
were ordained by sage legislators for perjured witnesses, with a view
to prevent a failure of justice and to restrain iniquity.
VIII. 123. Let a just prince banish men of the three lower classes,
if they give false evidence, having first levied the fine; but a Brahman
let him only banish.
VIII. 270. A once born man, who insults the twice-born with gross
invectives, ought to have his tongue slit; for he sprang from the lowest
part of Brahma.
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 29
classes, except the slitting of the tongue; this is a fixed rule of
punishment.
VIII. 280. He who raises his hand or a staff against another, shall
have his hand cut; and he, who kicks another in wrath, shall have an
incision made in his foot.
VIII. 282. Should he spit on him through price, the king shall order
both his lips to be gashed; should he urine on him, his penis: should
he break wing against him, his anus.
VIII. 359. A man of the servile class, who commits actual adultery
with the wife of a priest, ought to suffer death; the wives, indeed, of
all the four classes must ever be most especially guarded.
VIII. 366. A low man, who makes love to a damsel of high birth,
ought to be punished corporally; but he who addresses a maid of equal
rank, shall give the nuptial present and marry her, if her father please.
VIII. 377. Both of them, however, if they commit that offence with
a priestess not only guarded but eminent for good qualities, shall be
punished like men of the servile class, or be burned in a fire of dry
grass or reeds.
VIII. 383. But a Brahman, who shall commit adultery with a guarded
woman of those two classes, must be fined a thousand panas; and for
the life offence with a guarded woman of the servile class, the fine of
a soldier or a merchant shall be also one thousand.
VIII. 385. A priest shall pay five hundred panas if he connect himself
criminally with an unguarded woman of the military, commercial, or
servile class, and a thousand, for such a connexion with a woman of
a vile mixed breed.
VIII. 380. Never shall the king slay a Brahman, though convicted
of all possible crimes; let him banish the offender from his realm, but
with all his property secure, and his body unhurt.
XI. 129. Or he may perform for three years the penance for slaying
a Brahmen, mortifying his organs of sensation and action, letting his
hair grow long, and living remote from the town, with the root of a
tree for his mansion.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 31
XI. 130. If he kill without malice a Vaisya, who had a good moral
character, he may perform the same penance for one year, or give the
priests a hundred cows and a bull.
XI. 131. For six months must he perform this whole penance, if
without intention he kill a Sudra; or he may give ten white cows and
a bull to the priests.
VIII. 126. Let the king having considered and ascertained the frequency
of a similar offence, the place and time, the ability of the criminal to
pay or suffer and the crime itself, cause punishment to fall on those
alone, who deserves it.
VIII. 124. Manu, son of the Self-existent, has named ten places of
punishment, which are appropriated to the three lower classes, but a
Brahman must depart from the realm unhurt in any one of them.
VIII. 125. The part of generation, the belly, the tongue, the two hands,
and, fifthly, the two feet, the eye, the nose, both ears, the property, and,
in a capital case, the whole body.
II. 37. Should a Brahman, or his father for him, be desirous of, his
advancement in sacred knowledge; a Kshatriya, of extending his power;
or a Vaisya of engaging in mercantile business; the investitute may be
made in the fifth, sixth, or eighth years respectively.
II. 38. The ceremony of investitute hallowed by the Gayatri must not
be delayed, in the case of a priest, beyond the sixteenth year; nor in
that of a soldier, beyond the twenty second; nor in that of a merchant,
beyond the twenty fourth.
II. 39. After that, all youths of these three classes, who have not
been invested at the proper time, become vratyas, or outcasts, degraded
from the Gayatri, and condemned by the virtuous.
II. 147. Let a. man consider that as a mere human birth, which his
parents gave him for their mutual gratification, and which he receives
after lying in the womb.
II. 148. But that birth which his principal acharya, who knows the
whole Veda, procures for him by his divine mother the Gayatri, is a
true birth; that birth is exempt from age and from death.
1
The following are the sixteen sacraments:
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 33
II. 169. The first birth is from a natural mother; the second, from the
ligation of the zone; the third from the due performance of the sacrifice;
such are the births of him who is usually called twice born, according
to a text of the Veda.
II. 170. Among them his divine birth is that, which is distinguished
by the ligation of the zone, and sacrificial cord; and in that birth the
Gayatri is his mother, and the Acharya, his father.
II. 77, From the three Vedas, also the Lord of creatures,
incomprehensibly exalted, successively milked out the three measures
of that ineffable text, be ginning with the word tad, and entitled Savitri
or Gayatri.
II. 78. A priest who shall know the Veda, and shall pronounce to
himself, both morning and evening, that syllable and that holy text
preceded by the three words, shall attain the sanctity which the Veda
confers.
II. 79. And a twice born man, who shall a thousand times repeat
those three (or om, the vyahritis, and the gayatri,) apart from the
multitude, shall be released in a month even from a great offence, as
a snake from his slough.
II. 80. The priest, the soldier, and the merchant, who shall neglect
this mysterious text, and fail to perform in due season his peculiar acts
of piety, shall meet with contempt among the virtuous.
II. 81. The great immutable words, preceded by the triliteral syllable,
and followed by the Gayatri which consists of three measures, must be
considered as the mouth, or principal part of the Veda.
II. 82. Whoever shall repeat, day by day, for three years, without
negligence, that sacred text, shall hereafter approach the divine essence,
move as freely as air, and assume an ethereal form.
11. 84. All rights ordained in the Veda, oblations to fire, and
solemn sacrifices pass away; but that which passes not away, is
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II. 85. The act of repeating his Holy Name is ten times better than
the appointed sacrifice; an hundred times better when it is heard
by no man; and a thousand times better when it is purely mental.
II. 86. The four domestic sacraments which are accompanied with
the appointed sacrifice, are not equal, though all be united, to a
sixteenth part of the sacrifice performed by a repetition of the gayatri.
III. 71. Whoever omits not those five great sacrifices, if he has
ability to perform them, is untainted by the sons of the five slaughtering
places, even though he constantly resides at home.
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 35
Why does Manu prohibit the Shudras from the benefit of the
Sacraments ? His interdict against the Shudras becoming a Sannyasi is a
puzzle. Sannyas means and involves renunciation, abandonment of wordly
object. In legal language Sannyas is interpreted as being equivalent to
civil death. So that when a man becomes a Sannyasi he is treated as
being dead from that moment and his heir succeeds immediately. This
would be the only consequence which would follow if a. Shudra become
a Sannyasi. Such a consequence could hurt nobody except the Shudra
himself. Why then this interdict ? The issue is important and I will quote
Manu to explain the significance and importance of the Sacraments and
Sannyas. Let us all ponder over the following relevant texts of Manu:
II. 26. With holy rites, prescribed by the Veda, must the
ceremony on conception and other sacraments be performed for
So also are the women.
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twice-born men, which sanctify the body and purify (from sin) in
this (life) and after death.
II. 28. By the study of the Veda, by vows, by burnt oblations, by
(the recitation of) sacred texts, by the (acquisition of the) three
sacred Vedas, by offering (to the gods Rishis and Manes), by (the
procreation of) sons, by the Great Sacrifices, and by (Srauta) rites
this (human) body is made fit for (union with) Bramha.
This is the aim and object of the Samscaras. Manu also explains the
aim and object of Sannyas.
VI. 81. He (the Sannyasi) who has in this manner gradually given
up all attachments and is freed from all the pairs (of opposites),
reposes in Brahman alone.
VI. 85. A twice born man who becomes an ascetic, after the
successive performance of the above mentioned acts, shakes off sin
here below and reaches the highest Brahman.
From these texts it is clear that according to Manu himself the object
of the sacraments is to sanctify the body and purify it from sin in this
life and hereafter and to make it fit for union with God. According to
Manu the object of Sannyas to reach and repose in God. Yet Manu
says that the sacraments and Sannyas are the privileges of the higher
classes. They are not open to-the Shudra. Why? Does not a Shudra need
sanctification of his body, purification of his soul? Does not a Shudra
need to have an aspiration to reach God? Manu probably would have
answered these questions in the affirmative. Why did he then make such
rules. The answer is that he was a staunch believer in social inequality
and he knew the danger of admitting religious Equality. If I am equal
before God why am I not equal on earth? Manu was probably terrified
by this question. Rather than admit and allow religious equality to affect
social inequality he preferred to deny religious equality.
Thus in Hinduism you will find both social inequality and religious
inequality imbedded in its philosophy.
To prevent man from purifying himself from sin!! To prevent man from
getting near to God!! To any rational person such rules must appear
to be abominal and an indication of a perverse mind. It is a glaring
instance of how Hinduism is a denial not only of equality but how it is
denial of the sacred character of human personality.
This is not all. For Manu does not stop with the non-recognition of
human personality. He advocates a deliberate debasement of human
personality. I will take only two instances to illustrate this feature of
the philosophy of Hinduism.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 37
All those who study the Caste System are naturally led to inquire
into the origin of it. Manu being the progenitor of Caste had to give
an explanation of the origin of the various castes. What is the origin
which Manu gives? His explanation is simple. He says that leaving
aside the four original castes the rest are simply baseborn!! He says
they are the progeny of fornication and adultery between men and
women of the four original castes. The immorality and looseness of
character among men and women of the four original castes must
have been limitless to account for the rise of innumerable castes
consisting of innumerable souls!! Manu makes the wild allegation
without stopping to consider what aspersions he is casting upon men
and women of the four original castes. For if the chandalsthe old
name for the Untouchablesare the progeny of a Brahman female
and a Shudra male then it is obvious that to account for such a large
number of Chandals it must be assumed that every Brahman woman
was slut and a whore and every Shudra lived an adulterous life with
complete abandon. Manu in his mad just for debasing the different
castes by ascribing to them an ignoble origin seems deliberately to
pervert historical facts. I will give only two illustrations. Take Manus
origin of Magadha and Vaidehik and compare it with the origin of the
same castes as given by Panini the great Grammarian. Manu says that
Magadha is a caste which is born from sexual intercourse between
Vaishya male and Kshatriya female. Manu says that Vaidehik is a
caste which is born from sexual intercourse between a Vaishya male
and a Brahmin female. Now turn to Panini. Panini says that Magadha
means a person who is resident of the country known as Magadha. As
to Vaidehik Panini says that Vaidehik means a person who is resident
of the country known as Videha. What a contrast!! How cruel it is.
Panini lived not later than 300 B.C. Manu lived about 200 A.D. How
is it that people who bore no stigma in the time of Panini became so
stained in the hands of Manu? The answer is that Manu was bent on
debasing them. Why Manu was bent on deliberately debasing people is
a task which is still awaiting exploration. In the meantime we have
the strange contrast that while Religion everywhere else is engaged
in the task of raising and ennobling mankind Hinduism is busy in
debasing and degrading it.
The other instance I want to use for illustrating the spirit of
debasement which is inherent in Hinduism pertains to rules regarding
the naming of a Hindu child.
1
See my Essay Manu on CasteA puzzle (This Essay has not been found in the papers
received.Editors.)
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The names among Hindus fall into four classes. They are either
connected with (i) family deity (ii) the month in which the child is born (iii)
with the planets under which a child is born or (iv) are purely temporal
i.e. connected with business. According to Manu the temporal name of
a Hindu should consist of two parts and Manu gives directions as to
what the first and the second part should denote. The second part of a
Brahmins name shall be a word implying happiness; of a Kshatriyas a
word implying protection; of a Vaishyas a term expressive of prosperity
and of a Shudras an expression denoting service. Accordingly the
Brahmins have Shatma (happiness) or Deva (God), the Kshatriyas have
Raja (authority) or Verma (armour), the Vaishyas have Gupta (gifts) or
Datta (Giver) and the Shudras have Das (service) for the second part of
their names. As to the first part of their names Manu says that in the
case of a Brahmin it should denote something auspicious, in the case of
a Kshatriya something connected with power, in the case of a Vaishya
something connected with wealth. But in the case of a Shudra Manu
says the first part of his name should denote something contemptible!!
Those who think that such a philosophy is incredible would like to know
the exact reference. For their satisfaction I am reproducing the following
texts from Manu. Regarding the naming ceremony Manu says:
II. 30. Let (the father perform or) cause to be performed the
namadheya (the rite of naming the child), on the tenth or twelfth
(day after birth), or on a lucky lunar day, in a lucky muhurta, under
an auspicious constellation.
II. 31. Let (the first part of) a Brahmans name (denote)
something auspicious, a Kshatriyas name be connected with power,
and a Vaishyas with wealth, but a Shudras (express something)
contemptible.
II. 32. (The second part of) a Brahmans (name) shall be (a word)
implying happiness, of a Kshatriyas (a word) implying protection,
of a Vaishyas (a term) expressive of thriving, and of a Shudras
(an expression) denoting service.
Manu will not tolerate the Shudra to have the comfort of a high
sounding name. He must be contemptible both in fact and in name.
Enough has been said to show how Hinduism is a denial of equality
both social as well as religious and how it is also a degradation of
human personality.
Does Hinduism recognize liberty?
Liberty to be real must be accompanied by certain social conditions.1
1
See LaskiLiberty in the Modern State.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 39
In the first place there should be social equality. Privilege tilts the
balance of social action in favour of its possessors. The more equal
are the social rights of citizens, the more able they are to utilize their
freedomIf liberty is to move to its appointed end it is important that
there should be equality.
In the second place there must be economic security. A man may
be free to enter any vocation he may choose.Yet if he is deprived
of security in employment he becomes a prey of mental and physical
servitude incompatible with the very essence of liberty The perpetual
fear of the morrow, its haunting sense of impending disaster, its fitful
search for happiness and beauty which perpetually eludes, shows that
without economic security, liberty is not worth having. Men may well
be free and yet remain unable to realize the purposes of freedom.
In the third place there must be knowledge made available to all. In
the complex world man lives at his peril and he must find his way in
it without losing his freedom.
There can, under these conditions, be no freedom that is worthwhile
unless the mind is trained to use its freedom. (Given this fact) the right
of man to education becomes fundamental to his freedom. Deprive a man
of knowledge and you will make him inevitably the slave of those more
fortunate than himself deprivation of knowledge is a denial of the
power to use liberty for great ends. An ignorant man may be free.... (But)
he cannot employ his freedom so as to give him assurance of happiness.
Manu does not leave the matter of acting upto the ideal to the Shudra.
He goes a step further and provides that the Shudra does not escape or
avoid his destined task. For one of the duties enjoined by Manu upon
the King is to see that all castes including the Shudra to discharge
their appointed tasks.
VIII. 410. The king should order each man of the mercantile class
to practice trade, or money lending, or agriculture and attendance on
cattle; and each man of the servile class to act in the service of the
twice born.
VIII. 418. With vigilant care should the king exert himself in
compelling merchants and mechanics to perform their respective duties;
for, when such men swerve from their duty, they throw this world into
confusion.
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 41
Shudra when employed by the three higher classes are very instructive
on this point. Dealing with the question of wages to the Shudras, Manu
says:
X. 124. They must allot to him (Shudra) out of their own family
property a suitable maintenance, after considering his ability, his industry,
and the number of those whom he is bound to support.
X. 125. The remnants of their food must be given to him, as well
as their old clothes, the refuse of their grain, and their old household
furniture.
Vedas. That was only natural. For the Hindus believed that there was
no I knowledge outside the Vedas. That being so formal education was
confined to the study of the Vedas. Another consequence was that the
Hindu recognized that its only duty was to study in the schools established
for the study of the Vedas. These schools benefitted only the Brahmins.
The State did not hold itself responsible for opening establishments for
the study of arts and sciences which concerned the life of the merchant
and the artisan. Neglected by the state they had to shift for themselves.
Each class managed to transmit to its members the ways of doing things
it was traditionally engaged in doing. The duties of the Vaishya class
required that a young Vaishya should know the rudiments of commercial
geography, arithmetic,, some languages as well as the practical details
of trade. This he learned from his father in the course of the business.
The Artisans class or the Craftsman who sprang out of the Shudra
class also taught the arts and crafts to their children in the same way.
Education was domestic. Education was practical. It only increased the
skill to do a particular thing. It did not lead to new perceptions. It did
not widen horizon, with the result that the practical education taught
him only an isolated and uniform way of acting so that in a changing
environment the skill turned out to be gross ineptitude. Illiteracy became
an inherent part of Hinduism by a process which is indirect but integral
to Hinduism. To understand this process it is necessary to draw attention
to rules framed by Manu in regard to the right to teach and study the
Vedas. They are dealt with in the following Rules.
I. 88. To the Brahmanas he (the creator) assigned teaching and
studying the Veda.
I. 89. The Kshatriya he (the creator) commanded to study the Veda.
I. 90. The Vaishya he (the creator) commanded to study the
Veda.
II. 116. He who shall acquire knowledge of the Veda without the
assent of his preceptor, incurs the guilt of stealing the scripture,
.and shall sink to the region of torment.
IV. 99. He (the twice born) must never read (the Veda).. in the
presence of the Shudras.
IX. 18. Women have no business with the text of the Veda.
XI. 199. A twice born man who has.. (improperly) divulged
the Veda (i.e. to Shudras and women) (commits sin), atones for his
offence, if he subsists a year on barley.
In these texts there are embodied three distinct propositions. The
Brahmin, Kshatriya and Vaishya can study the Vedas. Of these the
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 43
Brahmins alone have the right to teach the Vedas. But in the case
of the Shudra he has not only not to study the Vedas but he should
not be allowed to hear it read.
The successors of Manu made the disability of the Shudra in the
matter of the study of the Veda into an offence involving dire penalties.
For instance Gautama says:
XII. 4. If the Shudra intentionally listens for committing to
memory the Veda, then his ears should be filled with (molten)
lead and lac; if he utters the Veda, then his tongue should be cut
off; if he has mastered the Veda his body should be cut to pieces.
To the same effect is Katyayana.
The ancient world may be said to have been guilty for failing to take
the responsibility for the education of the masses. But never has any
society been guilty of closing to the generality of its people the study
of the books of its religion. Never has society been guilty of prohibiting
the mass of its people from acquiring knowledge. Never has society
made any attempt to declare that any attempt made by the common
man to acquire knowledge shall be punishable as a crime. Manu is the
only devine law giver who has denied the common man the right to
knowledge.
But I cannot wait to dilate upon this. I am more immediately
concerned in showing how the prohibition against the study of the Vedas
to the mass of the people came to give rise to illeteracy and ignorance
in secular life. The answer is easy. It must be realized that reading
and writing have an integral connection with the teaching and study
of the Vedas. Reading and writing were arts necessary for those who
were free and privileged to study the Vedas. They were not necessary
to those who were not free to do so. In this way reading and writing
became incidental to the study of the Vedas. The result was that the
theory of Manu regarding the rights and prohibitions in the matter of
the teaching and the study of Vedas came to be extended to the arts of
reading and writing. Those who had the right to study the Vedas were
accorded the right to read and write. Those who had no right to study
the Vedas were deprived of the right to read and write. So that it can
be rightly said according to the law of Manu reading and writing has
become the right of the high class few and illeteracy has become the
destiny of the low class many.
Only a step in the process of this analysis will show how Manu by
prohibiting literacy was responsible for the general ignorance in which
the masses came to be enveloped.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 45
an absolute monarch, has equals, every one is obliged to live on these
terms with some body; and in every age some advance is made towards
a state in which it will be impossible to live permanently on other
terms with any body. In this way people grow up unable to conceive as
possible to them a state of total disregard of other peoples interests.
Does this sentiment of fellow feeling find a place among the Hindus?
The following facts throw a flood of light on this question.
The first fact that strikes one is the number of castes. No body
has made an exact computation of their number. But it is estimated
that total is not less than 2000. It might be 3000. This is not the
only distressing aspect of this fact. There are others. Castes are
divided into sub-castes. Their number is legion. The total population
of the Brahmin Caste is about a crore and a half. But there are 1886
sub-castes of the Brahmin Caste. In the Punjab alone the Saraswat
Brahmins of the Province of Punjab are divided into 469 sub-castes.
The Kayasthas of Punjab are divided into 590 sub-castes. One could
go on giving figures to show this infinite process of splitting social life
into small fragments.
The third aspect of this splitting process is the infinitely small
fragments into which the Castes are split. Some of the Baniya sub-
castes can count no more than 100 families. They are so inter related
they find extremely dificult to marry within their castes without
transgressing the rules of consanguinity.
It is noteworthy what small excuses suffice to bring about this
splitting.
Equally noteworthy is the hierarchical character of the Caste System.
Castes form an hierarchy in which one caste is at the top and is the
highest, another at the bottom and it is the lowest and in between there
are castes every one of which is at once above some castes and below
some castes. The caste system is a system of gradation in which every
caste except the highest and the lowest has a priority and precedence
over some other castes.
How is this precedence or this superiority determined ? This order
of superiority and inferiority or this insubordination is determined by
Rules (1) which are connected with religious rites and (2) which are
connected with commensuality.
Religion as a basis of Rules of precedence manifests itself in
three ways. Firstly through religious ceremonies, secondly through
incantations that accompany the religious ceremonies and thirdly
through the position of the priest.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 47
These are some of the factors which determine the place and status
of a caste in this Hindu hierachical system of castes.
This hierarchial organization of the caste system is responsible for
producing a social psychology which is noteworthy. In the first place it
produces a spirit of rivalry among the different castes for dignity. Secondly
it produces an ascending scale of hatred and descending scale of contempt.
This social psychology of mutual hatred and contempt is well illustrated
by the innumerable proverbs that are flying about in India. As examples
I record a few of them.
This spirit of hatred and contempt has not only found its place in
proverbs but it has found its place in Hindu literature also. I refer to a
Scripture known as the Sahyadrikhand. It is one of the Puranas which
form a part of the Hindu Sacred literature. But its subject matter is
totally foreign to the subject matter of other Puranas. It deals with the
origin of the different castes. In doing so it assigns noble origin to other
castes while it assigns to the Brahmin caste the filthiest origin. It was
a revenge on Manu. It was worst lampoon on the Brahmins as a caste.
The Peshwas very naturally ordered its destruction. Some survived the
general destruction.
I will just record one more fact before I put the question.
Present day Hindus are probably the strongest opponents of Marxism.
They are horrified at its doctrine of class-struggle. But they forget that
India has been not merely the land of class struggle but she has been
the land of class wars.
The bitterest class war took place between the Brahmins and the
Kshatriyas. The classical literature of the Hindus abounds in reference
to class wars between these two Varnas.
The first recorded conflict was between the Brahmins and KingVena.
Vena was the son of King Anga, of the race of Atri and was born of
Sunitha, the daughter of Mrityu (Death). This son of the daughter of
Kala (death), owing to the taint derived from his maternal grandfather,
threw his duties behind his back, and lived in covetousness under the
influence of desire. This king established an irreligious system of conduct;
transgressing the ordinances of the Veda, he was devoted to lawlessness.
In his reign men lived without study of the sacred books and the gods had
no soma-libations to drink at sacrifices. I he declared, am the object, and
the performer of sacrifice, and the sacrifice itself; it is to me that sacrifice
should be presented, and oblation offered This transgressor of the rules of
duty, who arrogated to himself what was not his due, was then addressed
by all the great rishis, headed by Marichi. We are about to consecrate
* The proverbs are not mentioned in the MS Editors.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 49
ourselves for a ceremony which shall last for many years, practice
not unrightousness, O Vena: this is not the eternal rule of duty.
Thou art in every deed a Prajapati of Atris race, and thou hast
engaged to protect thy subjects. The foolish Vena, ignorant of
what was right, laughingly answered those great rishis who had so
addressed him; Who but myself is the ordainer of duty or whom
ought I to obey? Who on earth equals me in sacred knowledge,
in prowess, in austere fervour, in truth? Ye who are deluded and
senseless know not that I am the source of all beings and duties.
Hesitate not to believe that I, if I willed, could burn up the earth,
or deluge it with water, or close up heaven and earth. When wing
to his delusion and arrogance Vena could not be governed then the
mighty rishis becoming incensed, seized the vigorous and struggling
king, and nibbed his left thigh. From this thigh, so rubbed, was
produced a black man, very short in stature, who, being alarmed,
stood with joined hands. Seeing that he was agitated, Atri said to
him Sit down (Nishada). He became the founder of the race of
the Nishadas, and also progenitor of the hivaras (fishermen), who
sprang from the corruption of Vena. So two were produced from
him the other inhabitants of the Vindhya range, the Tukharas and
Tumburas, who are prone to lawlessness. Then the mighty sages,
excited and incensed, again rubbed the right hand of Vena, as men
do the Arani wood, and from it arose Pritha, respondent in body,
glowing like the manifested Agni.
The son of Vena (Pritha) then, with joined hands, addressed the
great Rishis: A very slender understanding for perceiving the principles
of duty has been given to me by nature; tell me truly how I must
employ it. Doubt not that I shall perform whatever thy shall declare
to me as my duty, and its object. Then those gods and great rishis
said to him: Whatever duty is enjoined perform it without hesitation,
disregarding what though mayest like or dislike, looking on all creatures
with an equal eye, putting far from thee lust, anger, cupidity and pride.
Restrain by the strength of thine arm all those men who swerve from
righteousness, having a constant regard to duty. And in thought, act,
and word take upon thyself, and continually renew, the engagement to
protect the terrestrial Brahman (Veda or Brahmins?) And promise
that thou wilt exempt the Brahmans from punishment, and preserve
society from the confusion of Castes. The son of Vena then replied
to the gods, headed by the rishis: The great Brahmans, the chief of
men, shall be reverenced by me. So be it, rejoined those declares
of the Veda. Sukra, the depository of divine knowledge, became his
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 51
give her up. At his recommendation, however, she solicited
Nahusha for some delay, till she should ascertain what had
become of her husband. This request was granted. The Gods
next applied to Vishnu on behalf of Indra; and Vishnu promised
that if Indra would sacrifice to him, he should be purged from
his guilt, and recover his dominion, while Nahusha would be
destroyed. Indra sacrificed accordingly; and the result is thus told;
Having divided the guilt of Brahmanicide among trees, rivers,
mountains, the earth, women and the elements, Vasava (Indra),
lord of the Gods, became freed from suffering and sin, and self
governed. Nahusha was by this means, shaken from his place.
But he must have speedily regained his position, as we are told
that Indra was again ruined, and became invisible. Indrani now
went in search of her husband; and by the help of Upasriti (the
Goddess of night and revealer of secrets) discovered him existing
in a very subtle form in the stem of a lotus growing in a lake
situated in a continent within an ocean north of the Himalaya.
She made known to him the wicked intention of Nahusha, and
entreated him to exert his power, rescue her from danger, and
resume his dominion. Indra declined any immediate interposition
on the plea of Nahushas superior strength; but suggested to
his wife a device by which the usurper might be hurled from
his position. She was recommended to say to Nahusha that if
he would visit her on a celestial vehicle borne by rishis, she
would with pleasure submit hereself to him. The question
of the Gods accordingly went to Nahusha, by whom she was
graciously received, and made this proposal: I desire for thee,
king of the Gods, a vehicle hitherto unknown, such as neither
Vishnu, nor Rudra, nor the asuras, nor the rakshases employ.
Let the eminent rishis, all united, bear thee, lord, in a car; this
idea pleases me. Nahusha receives favourably this appeal to his
vanity, and in the course of his reply thus gives utterance to
his self congratulation: He is a personage of no mean prowess
who makes the Munis his bearers. I am a fervid devotee of great
might, lord of the past, the future and the present. If I were
angry the world would no longer stand; on me everything depends
Wherefore, O Goddess I shall, without doubt, carry out
what you propose. The seven rishis, and all the Brahman rishis.
shall carry me. Behold beautiful Goddess, my majesty and my
prosperity. The narrative goes on: Accordingly this wicked
being, irreligious, violent, intoxicated by the force of conceit,
and arbitrary in his conduct, attached to his car the rishis, who
submitted to his commands, and compelled them to bear him.
Indrani then again resorts to Vrihaspati, who assures her that
vengeance will soon overtake Nahusha for his presumption; and
promises that he will himself perform a sacrifice with a view to the
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Next there is a reference to the conflict between King Nimi and the
Brahmins. The Vishnu Puran relates the story as follows:
Nimi had requested the Brahman-rishi Vasishtha to officiate
at a sacrifice, which was to last a thousand years, Vasishtha in
reply pleaded a pre-engagement to Indra for five hundred years,
but promised to return at the end of that period. The king made no
remark, and Vasishtha went away, supposing that he had assented
to this arrangement. On his return, however, the priest discovered
that Nimi had retained Gautama (who was equal with Vasishtha
a Brahman-rishi) and others to perform the sacrifices; and being
incensed at the neglect to give him notice of what was intended, he
cursed the king, who was then asleep, to lose his corporeal form.
When Nimi awoke and learnt that he had been cursed without
any previous warning, he retorted, by uttering a similar curse on
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 53
Vasishtha, and then died. In consequence of this curse the vigour
of Vasistha, however, received from them another body when their
seed had fallen from them at the sight of Urvasi. Nimis body was
emblamed. At the close of the sacrifice which he had begun, the
Gods were willing, on the intercession of the priests, to restore him
to life, but he declined the offer, and was placed by the deities,
according to his desire, in the eyes of all living creatures. It is in
consequence of this fact that they are always opening the shutting,
(nimishas means the twinkling of the eye).
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 55
alternative now remains, to the humiliated monarch, but either
to acquiesce in this helpless inferiority, or to work out his own
elevation to the Brahmanical order. He embraces the latter
alternative: Having pondered well this defeat, I shall be take
myself, with composed senses and mind, to strenous austere
fervour, which shall exalt me to the rank of a Brahman. Intensely
vexed and mortified, groaning and full of hatred against his
enemy, he travelled with his queen to the south, and carried his
resolution into effect; and we are first of all told that three sons
Havishyanda, Madhusyanda, and Dridhanetra were born to him.
At the end of a thousand years Brahma appeared, and announced
that he had conquered the heaven of royal sages (Rajarshis);
and, in consequence of his austere fervour, he was recognised as
having attained that rank. Vishvamitra, however, was ashamed,
grieved, and incensed at the offer of so very inadequate a reward,
and exclaimed: I have practised intense austerity, and the Gods
and Rishis regard me only as a Rajarshi and not as a Brahman.
There is conflict recorded between the same persons or different
persons of the same name though on a somewhat different issue.
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 57
his spiritual patron. Vishvamitra, greatly incensed, called out
to him to stop: Then by the power of his divine knowledge and
austere fervour created, like another Prajapati, other Seven Rishis
(a constellation so called) in the southern part of the sky. Having
proceeded to this quarter of the heavens, the renowned sage, in
the midst of the Rishis, formed another garland of stars, being
overcome with fury. Exclaiming, I will create another Indra, or
the world shall have no Indra at all, he began, in his rage, to call
Gods also into being. The Rishis, Gods, (Suras), and Asuras now
became seriously alarmed and said to Vishvamitra, in a concilliatory
tone, that Trisanku, as he had been cursed by his preceptors,
should not be admitted bodily into heaven, until he had undergone
some lustration. The sage replied that he had given a promise
to Trisanku, and appealed to the Gods to permit his proteage to
remain bodily in heaven, and the newly created stars to retain their
places in perpetuity. The Gods agreed that these numerous stars
should remain, but beyond the Suns path, and that Trisanku, like
an immortal, with his head downwards should shine among them,
and be followed by them, adding that his object would be thus
attained, and his renown secured, and he would be like a dweller
in heaven. Thus was this great dispute adjusted by a compromise,
which Vishvamitra accepted.1
When all the Gods and rishis had departed at the conclusion of
the sacrifice, Vishvamitra said to his attendant devotees; This has
been a great interruption (to our austerities) which has occurred
in the southern region: we must proceed in another direction
to continue our penances. He accordingly went to a forest in
the west, and began his austerities anew. Here the narrative
is again interrupted by the introduction of another story, that
of king Ambarisha, king of Ayodhya, who was, according to the
Ramayana, the twenty eighth in descent from Ikshvaku, and
the twenty second from Trisanku. Vishvamitra is nevertheless
represented as flourishing contemporaneously with both of
these princes. The story relates that Ambarisha was engaged in
performing a sacrifice, when Indra carried away the victim. The
priest said that this ill-omened event had occurred owing to the
kings bad administration; and would call for a great expiation,
unless a human victim could be produced. After a long search the
royal rishi (Ambarisha) came upon the Brahmin-rishi Richika, a
descendant of Bhrigu, and asked him to sell one of his sons for a
victim, at the price of a hundred thousand cows. Richika answered
that he would not sell his eldest son; and his wife added that
1
This is the story of Trisanku. It will have been observed, it differs materially from the
one quoted above from Harivansa; but brings out more distinctly the character of the
conflict between Vashishtha and Vishvamitra.
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she would not sell the youngest: Eldest sons, she observed,
being generally the favourites of their fathers, and youngest sons
of their mothers. The second son, Sunassepa then said that in
that case he regarded himself as the one who was to be sold, and
desired the king to remove him. The hundred thousand cows, with
ten millions of gold pieces and heaps of jewels, were paid down,
and Sunassepa was carried away. As they were passing through
Puskara, Sunassepa beheld his maternal uncle Vishvamitra who
was engaged in austerities there with other rishis, threw himself
into his arms, and implored his assitance, urging his orphan,
friendless, and helpless state, as claims on the sages benevolence.
Vishvamitra soothed him; and pressed his own sons to offer
themselves as victims in the room of Sunassepa. This proposition
met with no favour from Madhushanda and the other sons of
the royal hermit, who answered with haughtiness and derison:
How is it that thou sacrificest thine own sons, and seekest to
rescue those of others ? We look upon this as wrong, and like the
eating of ones own flesh. The sage was exceedingly wrath at this
disregard of his injunction, and doomed his sons to be born in the
most degraded classes, like Vashishthas sons, and to eat dogs
flesh, for a thousand years. He then said to Sunassepa: When
thou art bound with hallowed cords, decked with a red garland,
and anointed with unguents, and fastened to the sacrificial post
of Vishnu, then address thyself to Agni, and sing these two divine
verses (gathas), at the sacrifice of Ambarisha; then shall thou
attain the fulfilment of thy desire. Being furnished with the two
gathas, Sunassepa proposed at once to King Ambarisha that they
should set out for their destination. Then bound at the stake to
be immolated, dressed in a red garment, he celebrated the two
Gods, Indra and his younger brother (Vishnu), with the excellent
verses. The thousand-eyed (Indra) was pleased with the sacred
hymn, and bestowed long life on Sunassepa. King Ambarisha also
received great benefits from this sacrifice. Vishvamitra meanwhile
proceeded with his austerities, which he prolonged for a thousand
years, At the end of this time the Gods came to allot his reward;
and Brahma announced that he had attained the rank of a rishi,
thus apparently advancing an additional step. Dissatisfied, as it
would seem, with this, the sage commenced his task of penance
anew. After a length of time he beheld the nymph (Apsara) Menka,
who had come to bathe in the lake of Pushkara. She flashed on his
view, unequalled in her radiant beauty, like lightning in a cloud.
He was smitten by her charms, invited her to be his companion in
his hermitage, and for ten years remained a slave to her witchery,
to the great prejudice of his austerities. At length he became
ashamed of this ignoble subjection, and full of indignation at
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 59
what he believed to be a device of the Gods to disturb his devotion;
and, dismissing the nymph with gentle accents, he departed for
the northern mountains, where he practised severe austerities
for a thousand years on the banks of the Kausiki river. The Gods
became alarmed at the progress he was making, and decided
that he should be dignified with the appellation of great rishi
(Maharshi); and Brahma, giving effect to the general opinion of
the deities, announced that he had conferred that rank upon him.
Joining his hands and bowing his head, Vishvamitra replied that
he should consider himself to have indeed completely subdued his
senses, if the incomparable title of Brahmin-rishi were conferred
upon him. Brahma informed him in answer, that he had not yet
acquired the power of perfectly controling his senses; but should
make further efforts with that view. The sage then began to put
himself through a yet more rigourous course of austerities, standing
with his arms erect, without support, feeding on air, in summer
exposed to five fires (i.e. one on each of four sides, and the sun
overhead), in the rainy season remaining unsheltered from the
wet, and in winter lying on a watery couch night and day. This
he continued for a thousand years. At last Indra and the other
deities became greatly distressed at the idea of the merit he
was storing up, and the power which he was thereby acquiring;
and the chief of the celestials desired the nymph Rambha to
go and bewitch him by her blandishments. She expressed great
reluctance to expose herself to the wrath of the formidable muni,
but obeyed the repeated injunction of Indra, who promised that
he and Kandarpa (the God of love) should stand by her, and
assumed her most attractive aspect with the view of overcoming
the sages impassibility. He, however, suspected this design, and
becoming greatly incensed, he doomed the numph by a curse to
be turned into stone and to continue in that state for a thousand
years. The curse took effect, and Kandarpa and Indra sunk away.
In this way, though he resisted the allurements of sensual love,
he lost the whole fruit of his austerities by yielding to anger;
and had to begin his work over again. He resolved to check his
irresistibility, to remain silent, not even to breathe for hundreds
of years; to dry up his body; and to fast and stop his breath till
he had obtained the coveted character of a Brahmin. He then left
the Himalaya and travelled to the east, where he underwent a
dreadful exercise, unequalled in the whole history of austerities,
maintaining silence, according to a vow, for a thousand years. At
the end of this time he had attained to perfection, and although
thwarted by many obstacles, he remained unmoved by anger. On
the expiration of this course of austerity, he prepared some food
to eat; which Indra, coming in the form of a Brahmin, begged
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that he would give him. Vishvamitra did so, and though he had
done left for himself, and was obliged to remain fasting, he said
nothing to the Brahmin, on account of his vow of silence. As he
continued to suspend his breath, smoke issued from his head, to
the great consternation and distress of the three worlds. The Gods,
rishis, etc., then addressed Brahma. The great muni Vishvamitra
has been allured and provoked in various ways, but still advances
in his sanctity. If his wish is not conceded, he will destroy the three
worlds by the force of his austerity. All the regions of the universe
are confounded, no light anywhere shines; all the oceans are tossed,
and the mountains crumble, the earth quakes, and the wind blows
confusedly. We cannot, O Brahma, guarantee that mankind shall
not become atheistic ............ Before the great and glorious sage of
fiery form resolves to destroy (everything) let him be propitiated.
The Gods, headed by Brahma, then addressed Vishvamitra : Hail,
Brahman rishi, we are gratified by the austerity ; O Kausika,
thou hast, through their intensity, attained to Brahmahood. I, O
Brahman, associated with the Maruts, confers on thee long life.
May every blessing attend thee; depart whereever thou wilt. The
sage, delighted, made his obeisance to the Gods, and said : If
I have obtained Brahmahood, and long life, then let the mystic
monosyllable (omkara) and the sacrificial formula (vashatkara)
and the Vedas recognise me in that capacity. And let Vashishtha,
the son of Brahmin, the most eminent of those who are skilled in
the Kshatra-Veda, and the Brahma-Veda (the knowledge of the
Kshatriya and the Brahmnical disciplines), address me similarly
........... Accordingly Vashishtha, being propitiated by the Gods,
became reconciled to Vishvamitra, and recognised his claim fo all
the prerogatives of a Brahman rishi ............ Vishvamitra, too having
attained the Brahmanical rank, paid all honour to Vashishtha.
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 61
slew in consequence all the Bhrigus, who they regarded with
contempt, down to the children, in the womb. The widows, however,
fled to the Himalaya mountains. One of them concealed her unborn
child in her thigh. The Kshatriya, hearing of its existence from
a Brahmani informant, sought to kill it; but it issued forth from
its mothers thigh with lustre, and blinded the persecutors. After
wandering about bewildered among the mountains for a time, they
humbly supplicated the mother of the child for the restoration of
their sight; but she referred them to her wonderful infant Aurva
into whom the whole Veda, with its six Vedangas, had entered as
the person who (in retaliation of the slaughter of his relatives)
had robbed them of their eyesight, and who alone could restore
it. They accordingly had recourse to him, and their eyesight was
restored. Aurva, however, meditated the destruction of all living
creatures, in revenge for the slaughter of the Bhrigus, and entered
on a course of austerities which alarmed both Gods, Asuras, and
men; but his progenitors (Pitris) themselves appeared, and sought
to turn him from his purpose by saying that they had no desire
to be revenged on the Kshatriyas: It was not from weakness that
the devout Bhrigus overlooked the massacre prepetrated by the
murderous Kshatriyas. When we became distressed by old age,
we ourselves desired to be slaughtered by them. The money which
was buried by someone in a Bhrigus house was placed there for
the purpose of exciting hatred, by those who wished to provoke
the Kshatriyas. For what had we, who were desiring heaven, to do
with money? They added that they hit upon this device because
they did not wish to be guilty of suicide, and concluded by calling
upon Aurva to restrain his wrath; and abstain from the sin he was
meditating, Destroy not the Kshatriyas. Oh, son, nor the seven
worlds. Suppress thy kindled anger which nullifies the power of
austere fervour. Aurva, however, replies that he cannot allow
his threat to remain unexecuted. His anger, unless wreaked upon
some other object, will, he says, consume himself. And he argues
on grounds of justice, expediency, and duty, against the clemency
which his progenitors recommend. He is, however, persuaded by
the Pitris to throw the fire of his anger into the sea, where they
say it will find exercise in assailing the watery element, and in
this way his threat will be fulfilled.
The third event has reference to the slaughter of the Kshatriyas by
the Brahmins. This story is told in several places in the Mahabharat.
The magnificent and mighty Kartavirya, possessing a thousand
arms, was lord of this whole world, living in Mahishmati. This
Haihaya of unquestioned valour ruled over the whole sea-girt earth,
with its oceans and continents. He obtained boons from the Muni
Dattatreya, a thousand arms whenver he should go into battle, power
to make the conquest of the whole earth, a disposition to rule it with
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This king came into conflict with Parsuram the son of a Brahman
sage Jamadagni. The history of this conflict is as follows:
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 63
kills his mother (who, by the indulgence of impure desire, had
fallen from her previous sanctity), after the four elder sons had
refused this matricidal offence, and had in consequence been
deprived of reason by their fathers curse. At Parasurams desire,
however, his mother is restored by his father to life, and his
brothers to reason; and he himself is absolved from all the guilt
of murder; and obtains the boon of invincibility and long life from
his father. His history now begins to be connected with that of
king Arjuna (or Kartavirya). The latter had come to Jamadagnis
hermitage, and had been respectfully received by his wife; but
he had requited this honour by carrying away by force the calf
of the sages sacrificial cow, and breaking down his lofty trees.
On being informed of this violence, Parasurama was filled with
indignation, attacked Arjuna, cut off his thousand arms, and slew
him. Arjunas sons, in return slew the peaceful sage Jamadagni,
in the absence of Parasuram.
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 65
act of eating and drinking with a man was a symbol and a
confirmation of fellowship and mutual social obligations. The one
thing directly expressed in the sacrficial meal is that the God and
his worshippers are commensals but every other point in their
mutual relations is included in what this involves. Those who sit
at meal together are united for all social effects; those who do not
eat together are aliens to one another, without fellowship in religion
and without reciprocal social duties.
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 67
The ideal of caste was not mere ideal. The ideal was put into
practice; was therefore something real. So that, in the matter of the
Chaturvarna the Hindus have very faithfully followed the German
Philosopher Nietszche who said Realize the ideal and idealize the real,
The value of the ideal must be tested by its results. If experience
therefore must be the criterion then the ideal of Chaturvarna stands
thrice condemned. Purely as a form of social orgaization it stands
condemned. As a producers organization it stands discredited. As an
ideal scheme of distribution it has miserably failed. If it is an ideal
form of organization how is it that the Hinduism has been unable to
form a common front. If it is an ideal form of production, how is it that
its technique never advanced beyond that of the primitive man. If it is
an ideal form of distribution, how is it that it has produced appalling
inequality of wealth, immense wealth side by side extreme poverty.
But I do not wish to dismiss the subject so summarily, for I know
many Hindus who claim great social utility to the institution of caste
and praise Manu for having been so wise and so thoughtful not only
in devising it but in giving it a divine sanction.
This view of the caste is due to taking the separate aspects of caste
separately. One must take them in conjunction. The resultant social
utility or disutility of caste can be ascertained only by putting together
the separate aspects of caste and judge them in their combination.
Following this line of attacking the problem, the following conclusions
follow :
(1) Caste divides Labourers (2) Caste disassociates work from
interest (3) Caste disconnects intelligence from manual labour (4) Caste
devitalises by denying to him the right to cultivate vital interest and
(5) Caste prevents mobilization. Caste System is not merely division
of labour. IT IS ALSO A DIVISION OF LABOURERS. Civlized
society undoubtedly needs division of labour. But in no civilized
society is division of labour accompanied by this unnatural division
of labourers into water-tight compartments. Caste System is not
merely a division of labourerswhich is quite different from division
of labourit is an hierarchy in which the divisions of labourers are
graded one above the other. In no other country is the division of
labour accompanied by this gradation of labourers. There is also a
third point of criticism against this view of the Caste System. This
division of labour is not spontaneous, it is not based on natural
aptitudes. Social and individual efficiency requires us to develop the
capacity of an individual to the point of competency to chose and to
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make his own career. This principle is violated in the Caste System in so
far as it involves an attempt to appoint tasks to individuals in advance,
selected not on the basis of trained original capacities, but on that of
the social status of the parents. Looked at from another point of view
this stratification of occupations which is the result of the Caste System
is positively pernicious. Industry is never static. It undergoes rapid and
abrupt changes. With such changes an individual must be free to change
his occupations. Without such freedom to adjust himself to changing
circumstances it would be impossible for him to gain his livelihood. Now
the Caste System will not allow Hindus to take occupations where they
are wanted if they do not belong to them by heredity. If a Hindu is
seen to starve rather than take to new occupations not assigned to his
Caste, the reason is to be found in the Caste System. By not permitting
readjustment of occupations, caste becomes a direct cause of much of the
unemployment we see in the country. As a form of division of labour
the Caste System suffers from another serious defect. The division of
labour brought about by the Caste System is not a division based on
choice. Individual sentiment, individual preference has no place in it. It is
based on the dogma of predestination. Considerations of social efficiency
would compel us to recognize that the greatest evil in the industrial
system is not so much poverty and the suffering that it involves, as
the fact that so many persons have callings which make no appeal to
those who are engaged in them. Such callings constantly provoke one to
aversion, ill will and the desire to evade. There are many occupations in
India which on account of the fact that they are regarded as degraded
by the Hindus provoke those who are engaged in it to aversion. There
is a constant desire to evade and escape from such occupations which
arises solely because of the blighting effect which they produce upon
those who follow them owing to the slight and stigma cast upon them
by the Hindu religion.
The second mischief it dose is to dissociate intelligence from work and
create contempt for labour. The theory of the Caste is that a Brahmin
who is permitted to cultivate his intellect is not permitted to labour,
indeed is taught to look down upon labour. While the Shudra who is
required to labour is not permitted to cultivate his intelligence. The
disastrous consequences of this have been well protrayed by Mr. R. C.
Dutt.* .......
Caste devitalizes a man. It is a process of sterilization. Education,
wealth, labour are all necessary for every individual if he is to reach
a free and full manhood. Mere education without wealth and labour is
* Quotation not given in the MS.Editors
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 69
the relation was that of master and servant. The three classes,
Brahmins, Kshatriyas and Vaishyas although not very happy in their
mutual relationship managed to work by compromise. The Brahmin
flattered the Kshatriya and both let the Vaishya live in order to be
able to live upon him. But the three agreed to beat down the Shudra.
He was not allowed to acquire wealth lest he should be independent
of the three Varnas. He was prohibited from acquiring knowledge
lest he should keep a steady vigil regading his interests. He was
prohibited from bearing arms lest he should have the means to rebel
against their authority. That this is how the Shudras were treated
by the Trayavarnikas is evidenced by the Laws of Manu. There is no
code of laws more infamous regarding social rights than the Laws of
Manu. Any instance from anywhere of social injustice must pale before
it. Why have the mass of people tolerated the social evils to which
they have been subjected? There have been social revolutions in other
countries of the world. Why have there not been social revolutions
in India is a question which has incessantly troubled me. There is
only one answer which I can give and it is that the lower classes of
Hindus have been completely disabled for direct action on account of
this wretched system of Chaturvarnya. They could not bear arms and
without arms they could not rebel. They were all ploughmen or rather
condemned to be ploughmen and they were allowed to convert their
ploghshares into swords. They had no bayonets and therefore everyone
who chose ploughs did sit upon them. On account of the Chaturvarnya
they could receive no education. They could not think out or know
the way to their salvation. They were condemned to be lowly and not
knowing the way of escape and not having the means of escape, they
became reconciled to eternal servitudes which they accepted as their
inescapable fate. It is true that even in Europe the strong has not
shrunk from the exploitation, nay the spoliation of the weak but in
Europe, the strong have never contrived to make the weak helpless
against exploitation so shamelessly as was the case in India among
the Hindus. Social war has been raging between the strong and the
weak far more violently in Europe than it has ever been in India. Yet
the weak in Europe has had in him freedom of military service his
physical weapon, in suffrage his political weapon and in education his
moral weapon. Three weapons for emancipation were never withheld by
the strong from the weak in Europe. All these weapons were however
denied to the masses in India by Chaturvarnya. There cannot be a
more degrading system of social organization than Chaturvarnya. It
is the system which deadens, paralyses and cripples the people from
helpful activity. This is no exaggeration. History bears ample evidence.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 71
my analysis I say that they find my analysis odd because they do not
have a correct notion what is central in the philosophy of Hinduism. If
they do they will feel no surprise at my conclusions.
This matter is so important that I must stop to explain it. It may be
recalled that the foregoing analysis of the religious revolution showed
that religious ideals as forms of divine governance for human Society
fall into two classes, one in which Society is the centre and the other
in which the Individual is the centre. The same analysis showed that
for the former the appropriate test of what is good and what is right
i.e. the test of the moral order is utility while for the latter the test is
justice. Now the reason why the philosophy of Hinduism does not answer
the test either of utility or of justice is because the religious ideal of
Hinduism for divine governance of human society is an ideal which falls
into a separate class by itself. It is an ideal in which the individual is
not the centre. The centre of the ideal is neither individual nor society.
It is a classthe class of Supermen called Brahmins, Those who will
bear the dominant and devastating fact in mind will understand why
the philosophy of Hinduism is not founded on individual justice or social
utility. The philosophy of Hinduism is founded on a totally different
principle. To the question what is right and what is good the answer
which the philosophy of Hinduism gives is remarkable. It holds that to be
right and good the act must serve the interest of this class of supermen,
namely, the Brahmins. Oscar Wilde said that to be intelligible is to
be found out. Manu is neither afraid nor ashamed of being found out.
Indeed Manu does not leave it to be found out. He expresses his view
in resonent and majestic notes as who are the Supermen and anything
which serves the interest of the Supermen is alone entitled to be called
right and good. Let me quote Manu.
X. 3. On account of his pre-eminence, on account of the superiority
of his origin, on account of his observance of (particular) restrictive
rules, and on account of his particular sanctification the Brahman is
the Lord of (all) Varnas.
I. 94. For the self existent (Svayambhu i.e. God), having performed
austerities, produced him first from his own mouth, in order that offerings
might be conveyed to the Gods and Manes and that this universe might
be preserved.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 73
I. 95. What created being can surpass him, through whose mouth
the gods continually consume the sacrificial viands and the manes the
offerings to the dead?
I. 96. Of created beings the most excellent are said to be those which
are animated; of the animated, those who subsist by intelligence; of the
intelligent, mankind; and of the men, the Brahmanas.
Besides the reason given by Manu the Brahmin is first in rank because
he was produced by God from his mouth, in order that the offerings
might be conveyed to the Gods and manes. Manu gives another reason
for the supremacy of the Brahmins. He says:
I. 98. The very birth of a Brahmana is an eternal incarnation of the
sacred Law (Veda); for he is born to (fulfil) the sacred law, and becomes
one with Brahman (God).
I. 99. A Brahamana, coming into existence, is born as the highest on
earth, the lord of all created beings, for the protection of the treasury
of the Law.
Manu directs:
VII. 36. Let the King, after rising early in the morning, worship
Brahmans who are well versed in the three-fold sacred science and
learned (in polity), and follow their advice.
VII. 38. Let him daily worship aged Brahmans who know the Veda
and are pure .......
VII. 37. Let the king, having risen at early dawn, respectfully attend
to Brahman, learned in the three Vedas and in the science of ethics,
and by their decision let him abide.
VII. 38. Constantly must he show respect to Brahmans, who have
grown old, both in years and in piety, who know the scriptures, who in
body and mind are pure; for he, who honours the aged, will perpetually
be honoured even by cruel demons.
IX. 313. Let him not, although in the greatest distress for money,
provoke Brahmans to anger by taking their propery; for they, once
enraged, could immediately by sacrifices and imprecations destroy him
with his troops, elephants, horses and cars.
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The above texts from Manu disclose the core and the heart of the
philosophy of Hinduism. Hinduism is the gospel of the superman and
it teaches that what is right for the superman is the only thing which
is called morally right and morally good.
Is there any parallel to this philosophy ? I hate to suggest it. But it is
so obvious. The parallel to this philosophy of Hinduism is to be found in
Nietzsche. The Hindus will be angry at this suggestion. It is quite natural.
For the philosophy of Nietzsche stands in great odium. It never took roots,
In his own words he was sometimes deified as the philosopher of the
aristrocracy and squirearchy, sometimes hooted at, sometimes pitied and
sometimes boycotted as an inhuman being. Nietzsches philosophy had
become identified with will to power, violence, denial of spiritual values,
superman and the sacrifice, servility and debasement of the common man.
His philosophy with these high spots had created a certain loathsomeness
and horror in the minds of the people of his own generation. He was
utterly neglected if not shunned and Nietzsche himself took comfort by
placing himself among the posthumous men. He foresaw for himself a
remote public, centuries after his own time to appreciate him. Here too
Nietzsche was destined to be disappointed. Instead of there being any
appreciation of his philosophy, the lapse of time has only augmented the
horror and loathing which people of his generation felt for Nietzsche.
This is principally due to the revelation that the philosophy of Nietzsche
is capable of producing Nazism. His friends have vehemently protested
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 75
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 77
Manu adds :
IX. 317. A Brahmana, be he ignorant or learned, is a great
divinity, just as the fire, whether carried forth (for the performance
of a burnt oblation ) or not carried forth, is a great divinity.
IX. 323. Thus, though the Brahmans employ themselves in all
(sorts) of mean occupation, they must be honoured in every way
(for each of) them is a very great diety.
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 79
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 81
(3) The educated should not unsettle the faith of the uneducated who
have become attached to their occupation. He himself should perform
the occupation of his Varna and make others perform theirs accordingly.
An educated man may not become attached to his occupation. But the
uneducated and dull-minded people who have become attached to their
occupation should not be spoiled by the educated by putting them on
a wrong path by abandoning their own occupationGeeta III. 26, 29.
(4) Oh, Arjun! Whenever this religion of duties and occupations (i.e.
this religion of Chaturvarna) declines, then I myself will come to birth
to punish those who are responsible for its downfall and to restore
itGeeta IV, 7-8.
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 83
individual recognizes the right or chooses the good, and freely devotes himself
heartily to its fulfilment. He does not merely accept what is inevitable or
follow what is approved by society. He values and chooses the end and
becomes personally responsible. His is reflective morality.
On what level does Hindu morality stand ? Obviously it is not on the
third level. This means that a Hindu is social but not moral in the strict
sense of the term. A Hindu takes no responsibility for the ends he serves.
He is a willing tool in the hands of his society, content to follow. He is not
a free agent not afraid to differ. His notions of sin give remarkable proof
of his unmoral character. Institutes of Vishnu gives a list of sins which are
divided into nine classes:
1. Deadly sinsatipataka. These are certain forms of incest, to be atoned
for only by burning.
2. Great sinsmahapataka. These are killing a Brahman, drinking
spirituous liquor, stealing the gold of a Brahman, connexion with a Gurus
wife; also social intercourse with those guilty of such sins.
3. Minor sins of a similar characteranupataka. These include the killing
of certain other classes of persons, giving false evidence and killing a friend,
stealing lands or deposits of a Brahman, certain forms of incest and adultery.
4. Minor sinsupapataka. Sins of false statement, neglect of certain
religious duties, adultery, unlawful occupation, offences connected with
marrying before an elder brother &c, not paying ones debts to the Gods,
and manes, atheism & c.
5. Sins effecting loss of castejatibramsakara. Causing bodily pain to
a Brahman, smelling things which should not be smelt, dishonest dealing,
certain unnatural crimes.
6. Sins which degrade to a mixed castesamkarikarana. Killing domestic
or wild animals.
7. Sins which render one unworthy to receive almsapatrikarana. Receiving
presents and alms from despicable persons, trade, money lending, lying,
serving a Shudra.
8. Sins causing defilmentmalavaha. Killing birds, amphibious animals,
and aquatic animals, worms and insects; eating nutmegs or other plants
similar in their effects to intoxicating liquors.
9. Miscellaneous sinsprakirnaka. Those not already mentioned.
This list of sins is not exhaustive but it, is long enough and
illustrative enough to give us the idea which underlies the Hindu
notion of Sin. In the first place it connotes the fall of man from a
prescribed form of conduct. In the second place it means to be defiled,
to become unclean. This is the root meaning of the term Patak. It
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 85
1
Evolution and Ethics, p. 63.
2
Evolution and Ethics p. 64
3
Modern Review. July. 1912.
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via the Six Darshanas! What a false move in the quest for wisdom!
It is as if a caravan should travel across the desert to the shores of
the Dead Sea in search of fresh water! Young men of India, look not
for wisdom in the musty parchments of your metaphysical treatises.
There is nothing but an endless round of verbal jugglary there. Read
Rousseau and Voltaire, Plato and Aristotle, Haeckel and Spencer, Marx
and Tolstoi, Ruskin and Comte, and other European thinkers, if you
wish to understand life and its problems.
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 87
the truth only to hate it. Tennyson said We must love the highest
when we see it. It does not follow. Seen in pure objectivity the highest
repels by its difference and distance; what we fear it, and what we fear
we come to hate ......
PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 89
Stopping here for the moment let us ask in what state of civilization
arc the Primitive Tribes.
The name Primitive Tribes1 is expressive of the present state of
people who are called by that name. They live in small scattered
huts in forests. They live on wild fruits, nuts and roots. Fishing and
hunting are also resorted to for the purpose of securing food. Agriculture
plays a very small part in their social economy. Food supplies being
extremely precarious, they lead a life of semi-starvation from which
there is no escape. As to clothes they economize them to a vanishing
point. They move almost in a state of complete nakedness. There is a
tribe which is known as Bonda Porajas which means Naked Porajas.
Of these people it is said that the women wear a very narrow strip
which serves as a petticoat almost identical with what is worn by the
Momjak Nagas in Assam, the ends hardly meeting at the top on the
left thigh. These petticoats are woven at home out of the fibre of a
forest tree. Girls wear a fillet of beads and of palmyra leaf and an
enormous quantity of beads and neck ornaments extremely like those
worn by many Komjak women. Otherwise the women wear nothing.
The women shave their heads entirely ......... Of these Chenchus, a tribe
residing near Farhabad in the Nizams Dominions it is said that their
houses are conical, rather slight in structure made of bamboos sloping
to the central point and covered with a thinnish layer of thatch .........
They have very little, indeed, in the way of material effects, the scanty
clothes they wear, consisting of a langoti and a cloth in the case of
men, and a short bodice and a petticoat in the case of women, being
practically all, besides a few cooking pots and a basket or two which
perhaps sometimes contains grain. They keep cattle and goats and
in this particular village do a little cultivation, elsewhere subsisting
on honey and forest produce which they sell. Regarding the Morias,
another Primitive tribe, it is stated the men generally wear a single
cloth round the waist with a slap coming down in the front. They also
have a necklace of beads and when they dance put on cocks plumes and
peacocks feathers in their turbans. Many girls are profusely tattooed,
especially on their faces, and some of them on their legs as well. The
type of tattooing is said to be according to the taste of the individual
and it is done with thorns and needles. In their hair many of them
stick the feathers of jungle cocks and their heads are also adorned with
combs of wood and tin and brass.
These Primitive Tribes have no hesitation about eating anyting, even
worms and insects, and, in fact, there is very little meat that they will
1
This and other information is taken from Census of India 1931 Vol. I part
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not eat, whether the animal has died a natural death or has been killed
four days or more before by a tiger.
The next group of the people he will come accross are the Criminal
Tribes.
The Criminal Tribes live not in Forests as the Primitive Tribes do but
in the plains in close proximity to, and often in the midst of civilized life.
Hollius in his Criminal Tribes of the United Provinces gives an account
of their activities. They live entirely by crime. A few may be ostensibly
engaged in agriculture, but this is only to cover up their real activities.
Their nefarious practices find largest scope in dacoity or robbery by
violence, but being a community organized for crime, nothing comes amiss
to them. On deciding to commit a dacoity in any particular locality spies
are sent out to select a suitable victim, study the general habits of the
villagers, and the distance from any effective aid, and ennumerate the
number of men and firearms. The raid usually takes place at midnight.
Acting on the information given by the spies, men are posted at various
points in the village and by firing off their guns attract attention from
the main gang which attacks the particular house or houses previously
appointed. The gang usually consists of 30 to 40 men.
It is essential to emphasize the great part played by crime in the general
life of these peoples. A boy is initiated into crime as soon as he is able
to walk and talk. No doubt the motive is practical, to a great extent, in
so far as it is always better to risk a child in petty theft, who, if he is
caught, would probably be cuffed, while an adult would immediately be
arrested. An important part is also played by women, who, although they
do not participate in the actual raids, have many heavy responsibilities.
Besides being clever in disposing off stolen property the women of the
Criminal Tribes are experts in shop lifting.
At one time the Criminal Tribes included such well organized
Confederacies of Professional Criminals as the Pindharies and the Thugs.
The Pindharies were a predatory body of armed gangsters. Their
organization was an open military organization of freebooters who
could muster 20000 fine horse and even more. They were under
the command of brigand chiefs. Chitu one of the most powerful
commanders had under his single command 10000 horse, including
5000 good cavalry, besides infantry and guns. The Pindharies had
no military projects for employing their loose bands of irregular
soldiery, which developed into bodies of professional plunderers. The
Pindharies aimed at no conquests. Their object was to secure booty
and cash for themselves. General loot and rapine was their occupation.
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PHILOSOPHY OF HINDUISM 91
1
Encyclopedia Britannica. 11th Ed. Vol. XXVI p. 896.
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PART II
India and
The Pre-requisites
of Communism
Blank
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CHAPTER 2
The Hindu Social Order:
Its Essential Principles
I
What is the character of the Hindu Social Order? Is it a free social
order? To answer this question, some idea of what constitutes a free social
order is necessary. Fortunately, the matter is not one of controversy.
Since the days of the French Revolution there is no difference as to
the essentials of a free social order. There may be more but two are
fundamental. Generally speaking, they are two. The first is that the
individual is an end in himself and that the aim and object of society
is the growth of the individual and the development of his personality.
Society is not above the individual and if the individual has to subordinate
himself to society, it is because such subordination is for his betterment
and only to the extent necessary.
The second essential is that the terms of associated life between
members of society must be regarded by consideration founded on liberty,
equality and fraternity.
Why are these two essentials fundamental to a free social order?
Why must the individual be the end and not the means of all social
purposes? For an answer to this question, it is necessary to realise what
we precisely mean when we speak of the human person. Why should
we sacrifice our most precious possessions and our lives to defend the
rights of the human person? No better answer to this question can be
found than what is given by Prof. Jacques Maritain. As Prof. Maritain
in his essay on The Conquest of Freedom1 says:
What do we mean precisely when we speak of the human person?
When we say that a man is a person, we do not mean merely that
he is an individual, in the sense that an atom, a blade of grass,
a fly, or an elephant is an individual. Man is an individual who
holds himself in hand by his intelligence and his will; he exists
not merely in a physical fashion. He has spiritual super-existence
through knowledge and love, so that he is, in a way, a universe in
1
FreedomIts Meaning by Ruth Nanda Kishen. p. 214.
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1
Freedom Its Meaningpp. 11-13.
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II. 41. Let students according to the order (of their castes), wear (as
upper dressed) the skins of black antelope, spotted deer, and he-goats
and (lower garments) made of hemp, flex or wool.
On reading this one may well ask the reasons for such distinctions.
The above rules refer to students or what are called Bramhacharia
ready to enter upon the study of the Vedas. Why should there be
these distinctions ? Why should the ages of Upanayana of the Brahmin
boy differ from that of the Kshatriya or Vaishya? Why should their
garments be of different kind ? Why should their materials of girdle
cords be different? Why should the material of strings be different?
Why should their staves be of different trees ? Why should their staves
differ in length? Why in uttering the formula for asking alms they
should place the word Bhavathi in different places? These differences
are not necesary nor advantageous. The only answer is that they are
the result of the Hindu instinct to be different from his fellow which
has resulted from the belief of people being innately different owing
to their being created from different parts of the divine body.
It is also the Hindu instinct due to the same belief never to overlook
a difference if it does exist but to emphasize it, recognize it and to
blazen it forth. If there is caste its existence must be signalized by a
distinguishing head-dress and by a distinguishing name. If there is a
sect it must have its headmark. There are 92 sects in India. Each has
a separate mark of itself. To invent 92 marks each one different from
the other is a colossal business. The very impossibility of it would have
made the most ingenious person to give up the task. Yet, the Hindus
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generations and which was fought so hard and with such virulence
that it turned but to be a war of extermination.
It must not be supposed that the fratricidal spirit has given place to
a spirit of fraternity. The same spirit of separation marks the Hindu
social order today as may be seen from what follows:
Each class claims a separate origin. Some claim origin from a Rishi
or from a hero. But in each case it is a different Rishi or a different
hero having nothing to do with the Rishis and heroes claimed by
other castes as their progenitors. Each caste is engaged in nothing but
establishing for itself a status superior to that of another caste. This is
best illustrated by rules of hypercommensality and rules of hypergamy.
As pointed out by Mr. Blunt1:
It is essential to realize that in respect of the cooking taboo, the
criterion is the caste of the person who cooks the food, not the caste
of the person who offers it. It follows, therefore, that a high caste
Hindu can eat the food of a man of any caste, however low, if his host
possesses a cook of suitable caste. And that is why so many cooks
are Brahmins. The Hindu draws a distinction between kachcha food,
which is cooked in water and pucca food which is cooked with ghee
(clarified butter). This distinction depends on the principle that ghee,
like all the products of the sacred cow, protects from impurity, and
since such protection is the object of all food taboos, this convenient
fiction enables the Hindu to be less particular in the case of pucca
food than of kachcha food, and to relax his restrictions accordingly:
This spirit has exhibited itself in the proverbs coined by one caste
with the object of lampooning another caste. It has given rise even to
literature by authors of low castes suggesting filthy origin of the so-
called high caste. The Sahyadrikhand is the best illustration of it. It
is one of the Puranas which form part of the Hindu sacred literature.
It is a Purana of a style quite different from the traditional puranas.
It deals with the origin of the different castes. In doing so, it assigns
noble origin to other castes while it assigns to the Brahmin caste the
filthiest origin.
Does the Hindu social order recognise equality ? The answer must
be in the negative. That men are born equal is a doctrine which is
repugnant to the Hindu social order. In the spiritual sense it treats
the doctrine as false. According to the Hindu social order though it is
true that men are the children of Prajapati the Creator of the Universe,
they are not equal on that account. For, they were created from the
different parts of the body of Prajapati. The Brahmins were created
from the mouth, the Kshatriyas from the arms, the Vaishyas from his
thighs and Shudras from his feet. The limbs from which they were
created being of unequal value the men thus created are as unequal. In
the biological sense, the Hindu social order does not bother to examine
whether the doctrine is founded in a fact. If it was not a fact, i.e., men
were not equal in their character and natural endowments of character
and intelligence so much the better. On the other hand, if it was a fact,
i.e., men were equal in character and natural endowments, so much
the worse for the doctrine. The Hindu social order is indifferent to the
doctrine as a fact. It is equally indifferent to it as an ethical principle.
It refuses to recognise that men no matter how profoundly they differ
as individuals in capacity and character, are equally entitled as human
beings to consideration and respect and that the well-being of a society
is likely to be increased if it so plans its organization that, whether
their powers are great or small, all its members may be equally enabled
to make the best of such powers as they possess. It will not allow
equality of circumstances, institutions and manner of life. It is against
equalitarian temper.
III
If the Hindu social order is not based on equality and fraternity, what
are the principles on which it is based ? There is only one answer to
this question. Though few will be able to realize what they are, there
is no doubt as to their nature and effect on Hindu society. The Hindu
social order is reared on three principles. Among these the first and
foremost is the principle of graded inequality.
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III. 13. A Shudra woman only must be the wife of a Shudra; she
and a Vaishya, of a Vaishya; they two and a Kshatriya of a Kshatriya;
those three and a Brahmani of a Brahmin.
VIII. 377. But even these two however, it they commit that offence
with a Brahmani not only guarded but the wife of an eminent man,
shall be punished like a Shudra or be burned in a fire of dry grass
or reeds.
the offending organ was sentiment having a will for its own and had not
been merely a survitor of human being. Second feature of Manus Penal
Code is the inhuman character of the punishment which has no proportion
to the gravity of the offence. But the most striking feature of Manus
Penal Code which stands out in all its nakedness is the inequality of
punishment for the same offence. Inequality designed not merely to punish
the offender but to protect also the dignity and to maintain the baseness
of the parties coming to a Court of Law to seek justice; in other words
to maintain the social inequality on which his whole scheme is founded.
The principle of graded inequality has been carried into the economic
field. From each according to his ability; to each according to his need
is not the principle of Hindu social order. The principle of the Hindu
social order is: From each according to his need. To each according to his
nobility. 1Supposing an officer was distributing dole to a famine striken
people. He would be bound to give greater dole to a person of high birth
than he would to a person of low birth. Supposing an officer was levying
taxation. He would be bound to assess a person of high birth at a lower
rate than he would to a person of low birth. The Hindu social order does
not recognise equal need, equal work or equal ability as the basis of
reward for labour. Its motto is that in regard to the distribution of the
good things of life those who are reckoned as the highest must get the
most and the best and those who are classed as the lowest must accept
the least and the worst.
Nothing more seems to be necessary to prove that the Hindu social
order is based on the principle of graded inequality. It pervades all
departments of social life. Every side of social life is protected against
the danger of equality.
The second principle on which the Hindu social order is founded is that
of fixity of occupations for each class and continuance thereof by heredity.
This is what Manu says about occupations of the four classes.
I. 87. But in order to protect this universe, He, the most resplendent
one, assigned separate (duties and) occupations, to those who sprang from
his mouth, arms, thighs and feet.
I. 88. To Brahmanas he assigned teaching and studying (the Veda)
sacrificing for their own benefit and for others, giving and accepting (of
alms).
I. 89. The Kshatriya he commanded to protect the people, to bestow
gifts to offer sacrifices to study (the Veda) and to abstain from attaching
himself to sensual pleasures.
1
The illustrations given above are not merely drawn from imagination. They are facts of
history. The differentiation between high and low was recognised by law in the time of the
Peshwas. The differentiation about dole exists even now in the Bombay Presidency and
was defended by a Congress Minister. These Remarks are not applicable todayEditors.
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I. 91. One occupation only the Lord prescribed to the Shudra, to serve
meekly even these (other) three castes.
X. 75. Reading the Vedas, the teaching others to read them, sacrificing,
and assisting others to sacrifice, giving to the poor if themselves have
enough, and accepting gifts from the virtuous if themselves are poor,
are the six prescribed acts of the firstborn class.
X. 76. But, among those six acts of a Brahman three are his means
of subsistence; assisting to sacrifice, teaching the Vedas and receiving
gifts from a purehanded giver.
X. 77. Three acts of duty cease with the Brahman and belong not to
the Kshatriya, teaching the Vedas, officiating at a sacrifice and thirdly
receiving presents.
X. 78. Those three are also (by the fixed rule of law) forbidden to the
Vaishya since Manu, the Lord of all men, prescribed not those acts to
the two classes, military and commercial.
Every member must follow the trade assigned to the class to which he
belongs. It leaves no scope for individual choice, individual inclination.
An individual under the Hindu social order is bound to the profession
of his ancestor. It is an inexorable law from which he cannot escape.
The principle does not stop with fixity of occupation. It grades the
several occupations in terms of respectability. This is what Manu says:
X. 80. Among the several occupations for gaining a livelihood the
most commendable respectively for the Brahmans, Kshatriyas and the
Vaishyas are the teaching of the Vedas, defending the people and trade.
IV. 244. He, who seeks to preserve an exalted rank, must constantly
form connections with the highest and best families, but avoid the worst
and the meanest.
IV. 245. Since a priest, who connects himself with the best and the
highest of men, avoiding the lowest and worst, attains eminence; but
sinks by an opposite conduct, to the class of the servile.
IV. 79. Not let him tarry even under the shade of the same tree with
outcaste for the great crimes, nor with Chandalas, nor with Puccasas,
nor with idiots, nor with man proud of wealth, nor with washermen
and other vile persons, nor with Antyevasins.
The Hindu social order is opposed to fraternity. It does not admit the
principle of equality. Far from recognising equality it makes inequality
its official doctrine. What about liberty? So far as choice of occupation
goes, there is none. Everyone has his occupation determined for him.
Only thing left to do is to carry it on. As to freedom of speech it exists.
But it exists only for those who are in favour of the social order. The
freedom is not the freedom of liberalism which was expressed by Voltaire
when he said I wholly disapprove of what you say and will defend to
the death your right to say it. This is clear from what Manu has to
say about Logic and dialectics.
IV. 29-30. No guest must stay in his house without being honoured
according to his ability, with a seat, food, a couch, water, or roots and
fruits.
Let him not honour even by a greeting heretics, men who follow
forbidden occupations, men who live like cats, rogues, logicians (arguing
against the Veda) and those who live like herons.
II. 10. But by Sruti (Revelation) is meant the Vedas and by Smriti
(tradition) the Institutes of the sacred law; those two must not be
called into question in any matter, since from those two the sacred
law shone forth.
II. 6. The whole Veda is the (first) source of the sacred law, next
the tradition and the virtuous conduct of those who know the (Veda
further) also the customs of holy men, and (finally) self-satisfaction :
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CHAPTER 3
The Hindu Social Order:
Its Unique Features
I. 96. Of created beings the most excellent are said to be those which
are animated, of the animated those who subsist by intelligence; of the
intelligent mankind, and of the men the Brahmans.
Besides the reason given by Manu the Brahman is first in rank because
he was produced by God from his mouth, in order that the offerings
might be conveyed to the Gods and manes, Manu gives another reason
for the supremacy of the Brahman. He says:
I. 98. The very birth of a Brahmana is an eternal incarnation of the
sacred law (Veda) for he is born to (fulfil) the sacred law, and becomes
one with Brahman (God.)
I. 99. A Brahmana coming into existence, is born as the highest on
earth, the Lord of all created beings, for the protection of the treasury
of the law. Manu concludes by saying that:
I. 101. The Brahmana eats but his own food, wears but his own
apparel, bestows but his own in alms; other mortals subsist through the
benevolence of the Brahmana. Because according to Manu:
I. 100. Whatever exists in the world is the property of the Brahmana;
on account of the excellence of his origin the Brahmana is, indeed,
entitled to it all. Being a deity the Brahman is above law and above
the king. Manu directs:
VII. 37. Let the king, rising early in the morning, worship Brahmanas
who are well-versed in the threefold sacred science and learned (in polity)
and follow their advice.
VII. 38. Let him daily worship aged Brahmans who know the Veda
and are pure..
The Brahmin or the Superman of the Hindu social order was entitled
to certain privileges. In the first place, he could not be hanged even
though he might be guilty of murder.1 Manu says:
1
This immunity was continued by the British Government up to 1837. It was in 1837
the Penal Law was amended whereby the Brahman for the first time became liable to
capital punishment for murder. The immunity still exists in Indian States. In Travancore
the Dewan who is a Brahmin adopted an ingenious method of meeting public criticism of
this continuance of this privilege, instead of hanging the Brahmins he abolished capital
punishment altogether.
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1
Manu XI. 31This privilege has been abolished.
2
Manu XI. 32.This privilege no longer exists.
3
Manu VIII. 37.
4
Manu VIII. 38.
5
Manu IX. 323.
6
Manu VII. 133.
7
Manu VII. 134.
8
Manu IX. 189
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And why ? Manu does not hesitate to give the reason. He says :
X. 129. No superfluous collection of wealth must be made by a Shudra,
even though he has power to make it, since a servile man, who has
amassed riches, becomes proud, and, by his insolence or neglect, gives
pain even to Brahmanas.
II. 116. He who shall acquire knowledge of the Veda without the
assent of his preceptor incurs the guilt of stealing the scriputre, and
shall sink to the region of torment.
IV. 99. He (the twice-born) must never read the Vedain the presence
of the Shudras.
IX. 18. Women have no business with the text of the Veda.
IX. 199. A twice-born man who has.. (improperly) divulged the
Veda (ie., to Shudras and women) commits sin, atones for his offence,
if he subsists a year on barley.
The Superman will not tolerate the Shudra to have the comfort of a
high-sounding name. He must be contemptible both in fact and in name.
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Manu adds:
IX. 317. A Brahmin, be he ignorant or learned, is a great divinity,
just as the fire, whether carried forth (for the performance of a burnt
oblation) or not carried forth, is a great divinity.
IX. 319. Thus, though the Brahmins employ themselves in all (sorts)
of mean occupation, they must be honoured in every way; (for each of)
them is a very great deity.
Manu does not stop with the mete enunciation of the duty of the
King in this behalf. He wants to ensure that the King shall at all
times perform his duty to maintain and preserve the established order.
Manu therefore makes two further provisions. One provision is to make
the failure of the King to maintain the established order an offence
for which the King became liable for prosecution and punishment like
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a common felon. This would be clear from the following citations from
Manu:
VIII. 335. Neither a father, nor a preceptor, nor a friend, nor a mother,
nor a wife, nor a son, nor a domestic priest must be left unpunished by
the King if they adhere not with firmness to their duty.
VIII. 336. Where another man of lower birth would be fined one
pana, the King shall be fined a thousand, and he shall give the fine to
the priests, or cast it into the river, this is a sacred rule.
The Right of rebellion is given to the three higher classes and not
to the Shudra. This is very natural. Because it is only the three upper
classes who would benefit by the maintenance of this system. But
supposing the Kshatriyas joined the king in destroying the system what
is to be done? Manu gives the authority to the Brahmins to punish all
and particularly the Kshatriyas.
XI. 31. A priest, who well knows the laws, need not complain to
the king of any grievous injury; since, even by his own power, he may
chastise those, who injure him.
XI. 32. His own power, which depends on himself alone, is mightier
than the royal power, which depends on other men; by his own might,
therefore, may a Brahmin coerce his foes.
XI. 33. He may use, without hesitation, the powerful charms revealed
to Atharvan, and by him to Angiras; for speech is the weapon of a
Brahmin; with that he may destroy his oppressors.
IX. 320. Of a military man, who raises his arm violently on all occasions
against the priestly class, the priest himself shall be the chastiser; since
the soldier originally proceeded from the Brahmin.
How can the Brahmins punish the Kshatriyas unless they can take
arms? Manu knows this and therefore allows the Brahmins to arm
themselves to punish the Kshatriyas.
XII. 100. Command of armies, royal authority, power of inflicting
punishment, and sovereign dominion over all nations, he only well
deserves, who perfectly understands the Veda Sastra i.e., who is a
Brahmin.
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When the Hindu social order breaks down, Krishna does not want
the people to undertake the work of reform. He asks them to leave the
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and Muslims. All these have sacred codes. They consecrate beliefs and
rites and make them sacred. But they do not prescribe, nor do they
consecrate a particular form of social structurethe relationship between
man and man in a concrete formand make it sacred inviolate. The
Hindus are singular in this respect. This is what has given the Hindu
social order its abiding strength to defy the ravages of time and the
onslaught of time.
The orthodox Hindu will accept this as an accurate description of the
Hindu social order. It is only the reformer who is likely to demur. He
would say that since the advent of the British, this is all a description
of a dead past. One need not be perturbed by this view. For it contains
a fallacy. It omits to take note of the fact that institutions which have
died as creeds sometimes continue, nevertheless survive as habits. No
one can deny that the Hindu social order has become the habit of the
Hindus and as such is in full force.
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CHAPTER 4
Symbols of
Hinduism
There are 37 pages under this title. The chapter seems incomplete.
However this relates to the topic No. 7 of the original plan.
All these pages are tagged along with the pages of India and
Communism into One register. We are reproducing the text of
this typed copy along with the table of contents written by Dr.
Ambedkar.
A photo copy of the plan of a proposed book Can I be
a Hindu ? is also reproduced from the original (moth-
eaten).Editors
The fifth class consists of fighting men, who when not engaged
in active service, pass their time in idleness and drinking. They
are maintained at the kings expense, and hence they are always
ready, when occasion calls, to take the field, for they carry nothing
of their own with them but their own bodies.
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Alberuni did not merely content himself with recording what struck
him as peculiar in the Hindu social organization. He went on to say:
Among the Hindus institutions of this kind abound. We
Muslims, of course, stand entirely on the other side of the question,
considering all men as equal, except in piety; and this is the
greatest obstacle which prevents any approach or understanding
between Hindus and Muslims.
These all speak the same tongue, nor can any be a Brahmene
except he be the son of a Brahmene. When they are seven years
of age they put over their shoulder a strip of two fingers in
breadth of untanned skin with the hair on it of a certain wild
beast which they call Cryvamergam, which resembles a wild
ass. Then for seven years he must not eat betel for which time
he continues to wear this strap. When he is fourteen years old
they make him a Brahmene, and taking off their leather strip
they invest him with the cord of three strands which he wears
for the rest of his life as a token that he is a Brahmene. And
this they do with great ceremonial and rejoicings, as we do here
for a cleric when he sings his first mass. Thereafter he may eat
betel, but no flesh or fish. They have great honour among the
Indians, and as I have already said, they suffer death for no cause
whatsoever, their own headman gives them a mild chastisement.
They marry once only in our manner, and only the eldest son
marries, he is treated like the head of an entailed estate. The
other brothers remain single all their lives. These Brahmenes
keep their wives well guarded, and greatly honoured, so that no
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There is another lower caste than these which they call Caletis,
who are weavers who have no other way of earning save by weaving
of cotton and silk clothes, but they are low caste folk and have
but little money, so that they clothe the lower races. They are
apart by themselves and have their own idolatry.
There is another caste still lower than these whom they call
Manen (Mancu in the printed text) who neither associate with
others nor touch them, nor do the other touch them. They are
washermen for the common people, and makers of sleeping mats
from which occupations all but they are barred; their sons must
perforce follow the same trade; they have their own separate
idolatry.
There is another caste in this land still lower whom they call
Canaquas. Their trade is making buckles and umbrellas. They
learn letters for purposes of astronomy, they are great astrologers,
and foretell with great truth things that are to come; there are
some lords who maintain them for this cause.
State when it moves from one place to another, but there are very
few of them in this land; they are a separate caste; they have no
marriage law; the most of them gain their living on the sea, they
are sailors, and some of them fishers; they have no Idols. They
are as well slaves of the Nayars:
Yet another caste there is even lower and baser called Parens,
who dwell in the most desert places away from all other castes.
They have no intercourse with any person nor anyone with them;
they are held to be worse than devils, and to be damned. Even to
see them is to be unclean and outcaste. They eat yams and other
roots of wild plants. They cover their middles with leaves, they
also eat the flesh of wild beasts.
These foreigners were not able to give a full and detailed picture of
caste. This is understandable. For to every foreigner the private life of
the Hindu is veiled and it is not possible for him to penetrate it. The
social organism of India, the play of its motive forces, is moreover,
regulated infinitely more by custom, carrying according to locality and
baffling in its complexity, than by any legal formula which can be
picked out of a legal text book. But there is no doubt that caste did
appear to the foreigner as the most singular and therefore the most
distinguishing feature of Hindu society. Otherwise they would not have
noted its existence in the record they made of what they observed when
they came to India.
Caste therefore is something special in the Hindu social organization
and marks off the Hindus from other peoples. Caste has been a growing
institution. It has never been the same at all times. The shape and form
of Caste as it existed when Megashthenes wrote his account was very
different from what the shape and form it had taken when Alberuni
came and the appearance it gave to the Portuguese was different from
what it was in the time of Alberuni, But to understand caste one must
have more exact idea of its nature than these foreigners are able to give.
To follow the discussion of the subject of caste it is necessary to
familiarize the reader with some basic conceptions which underlie
the Hindu Social Organization. The basic conception of social
organization which prevails among the Hindus starts with the rise of
four classes or Varnas into which Hindu society is believed to have
become divided. These four classes were named (1) Brahmins, the
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priestly and the educated class (2) Kshatriyas the military class (3)
The Vaishyas the trading class and (4) The Shudras the servant class.
For a time these were merely classes. After a time what were only
classes (Varnas) became Castes (Jatis) and the four castes became
four thousand. In this way the modern caste system was only the
evolution of the ancient Varna system.
No doubt the caste system is an evolution of the Varna system.
But one can get no diea of the caste system by a study of the Varna
system. Caste must be studied apart from Varna.
II
An old agnostic is said to have summed up his philosophy in the
following words:
The only thing I know is that I know nothing; and I am not quite
sure that I know that
The surest clue to find out what are the fundamental rules of caste and
what caste consists it is furnished by the rules regarding prayaschitas.
Those for the infringement of which there is no prayaschita constitute
the very soul of caste and those for the infringement of which the
prayaschita is of the severest kind make up the body of caste. It may
therefore be said without any hesitation that there are four fundamental
rules of caste. A caste may be defined as a social group having (a) belief
in Hindu Religion and bound by certain regulations as to (b) marriage
(c) food and (d) occupation. To this one more characteristic may be added
namely a social group having a common name by which it is recognized.
In the matter of marriage the regulation lays down that the caste
must be endogamous. There can be no intermarriage between members
of different castes. This is the first and the most fundamental idea on
which the whole fabric of the caste is built up.
In the matter of food the rule, is that a person cannot take food from
and dine with any person who does not belong to his caste. This means
that only those who can intermarry can also interdine. Those who cannot
intermarry cannot interdine. In other words, caste is an endogamous
unit and also a communal unit.
In the matter of occupation the regulation is that a person must follow
the occupation which is the traditional occupation of his caste and if the
caste has no occupation then he should follow the occupation of his father.
In the matter of status of a person it is fixed and is hereditary. It is
fixed because a persons status is determined by the status of the caste
to which he belongs. It is hereditary because a Hindu is stamped with
the caste to which his parents belonged, a Hindu cannot change his
status because he cannot change his caste. A Hindu is bom in a caste
and he dies a member of the caste in which he is born. A Hindu may
lose his status if he loses caste. But he cannot acquire a new or a better
or different status.
What is the significance of a common name for a caste? The significance
of this will be clear if we ask two questions which are very relevant and a
correct answer to each is necessary for a complete idea of this institution
of caste. Social groups are either organized or unorganized. When the
membership of the group and the process of joining and leaving the groups,
are the subject of definite social regulations and involve certain duties and
privileges in relation to other members of the group then the group is an
organized group. A group is a voluntary group in which members enter with
a full knowledge of what they are doing and the aims which the association
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system from the Varna system. Indeed the Class-caste system follows
closely the class clevages of the Varna system.
Looking at the caste system from this point of view one comes across
several lives of class clevage which run through this pyramid of castes
dividing the pyramid into blocks of castes. The first line of clevage
follows the line of division noticeable in the ancient Chaturvarna
system. The old system of Chaturvarna made a distinction between
the first three Varnas, the Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Vaishyas and the
fourth Varna namely the Shudra. The three former were classes as the
Regenerate classes. The Shudra was held as the Unregenerate class.
This distinction was based upon the fact that the former were entitled to
wear the sacred thread and study the Vedas. The Shudra was entitled
to neither and that is why he was regarded as the unregenerate class.
This line of clevage is still in existence and forms the basis of the
present day class division separating the castes which have grown out
of the vast class of Shudras from those which have grown out of the
three classes of Brahmins, the Kshatriyas and Vaishyas. This line of
class clevage is the one which is expressed by the terms High Castes
and Low Castes and which are short forms for the High Class Castes
and Low Class Castes.
Next after this line of clevage there runs through the pyramid a
second line of class clevage. It runs just below the Low Class Castes.
It sets above all the castes born out of the four Varnas i.e., the High
Castes as well as the low castes above the remaining castes which 1 will
merely describe as the rest. This line of class clevage is again a real
one and follows the well-defined distinction which was a fundamental
principle of the Chaturvarna system. The Chaturvarna system as is
pointed out made a distinction between the four Varnas putting the
three Varnas above the fourth. But it also made an equally clear
distinction between those within the Chaturvarna and those outside
the Chaturvarna. It had a terminology to express this distinction.
Those within the Chaturvarnahigh or low, Brahmin or Shudra were
called Savarna i.e., those with the stamp of the Varna. Those outside
the Chaturvarna were called Avarna i.e., those without the stamp of
Varna. All the castes which have evolved out of the four varnas are
called Savarna Hinduswhich is rendered English by the term Caste
HindusThe rest are the A varnas who in present parlance spoken
of by Europeans as Non-caste Hindus i.e., those who are outside the
four original castes or varnas.
Much that is written about the caste system has reference mostly
to the caste-system among the Savarna Hindus. Very little is known
about the Avarna Hindus. Who are these Avarna Hindus, what is their
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position in Hindu Society, how are they related to the Savarna Hindus
are questions to which no attention has so far been paid. I am sure that
without considering these questions no one can get a true picture of the
social structure the Hindus have built. To leave out the Class clevage
between the Savarna Hindus and the Avarna Hindus is to relate Grimms
Fairy Tale which leaves out the witches, the goblins and the orges.
The Avarna Hindus comprise three
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Part III
Revolution and
Counter-Revolution
in Ancient India
3. A Sunken Priesthood
7. Triumph of Brahminism
CHAPTER 5
Ancient India On Exhumation
There are two typed copies of this Chapter. Both of them contain
additions and corrections in the handwriting of Dr. Babasaheb
Ambedkar. After consideration, we decided that the latter
version should be included here. This essay, consisting of three
pages only, seems to be an introduction to a larger subject Dr.
Ambedkar probably had in his mind.Editors,
Along with the word Deva occur the names of Yaksha, Gana,
Gandharva, Kinnars. Who were they? The imperession one gets on
reading the Mahabharat and Ramayan is that they are imaginary
beings who filled the horizon but did not exist.
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CHAPTER 6
The Ancient Regime:
The State of the Aryan Society
rites which were called Vamdevya vrata. These rites used to be performed
on the Yadnya bhumi. If any woman came there and expressed a desire
for sexual intercourse and asked the sage to satisfy her, the sage used
to cohabit with her then and there in the open on the Yadnya bhumi.
Instances of this may be mentioned. The case of the sage Parashara had
sexual intercourse with Satyavati and also of Dirghatapa. That such a
custom was common is shown by the existence of the word Ayoni. The
word Ayoni is understood to mean of immaculate conception. That is
not however the original meaning of the word. The original meaning
of the word Yoni is house. Ayoni means conceived out of the house
i.e. in the open. That there was nothing deemed to be wrong in this
is clear from the fact that both Sita and Draupadi were Ayonija. That
this was very common is clear from the fact that religious injunctions
had to be issued against such a practice.1
There was prevalent among the Aryans the practice of renting out
their women to others for a time. As an illustration may be mentioned
the story of Madhavi.2 The king Yayati gave his daughter Madhavi
as an offering to his Guru Galav. Galav rented out the girl Madhavi
to three kings, each a period. Thereafter he gave her in marriage to
Vishwamitra. She remained with him until a son was born to her.
Thereafter Galav took away the girl and gave her back to her father
Yayati.
Besides the practice of letting out women to others temporarily at a
rent there was prevalent among the Aryans another practice namely
allowing procreation by the best amongst them. Raising a family was
treated by them as though it was a breeding or stock raising. Among
the Aryas there was a class of persons called Devas who were Aryans
but of a superior status and prowess. The Aryans allowed their women
to have sexual intercourse with any one of the class of Devas in the
interest of good breeding. This practice prevailed so extensively that
the Devas came to regard prelibation in respect of the Aryan Women
as their prescriptive right. No Aryan woman could be married unless
this right of prelibation had been redeemed and the woman released
from the control of the Devas by offering what was technically called
Avadan. The Laja Hoame which is performed in every Hindu marriage
and the details of which are given in the Ashwalayan Grahya Sutra is
a relic of this act of the redemption of the Aryan woman from the right
of prelibation of the Devas. The Avadan in the Laja Hoama is nothing
but the price for the existinguishment of the right of the Devas over
1
Mahabharat, Adi ParvaAdh. 193.
2
Ibid. Udyoga ParvaAdh. 106-123.
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the bride. The Saptapadi performed in all Hindu marriages and which
is regarded as the most essential ceremony without which there is no
lawful marriage has an integral connection with this right of prelibation
of the Devas. Saptapadi means walking by the bridegroom seven steps
with the bride. Why is this essential ? The answer is that the Devas,
ii they were dissatisfied with the compensation, could claim the woman
before the seventh step was taken. After the seventh step was taken,
the right of the Devas was extinguished and the bridegroom could take
away the bride and live as husband and wife without being obstructed
or molested by the Devas.
There was no rule of chastity for maidens. A girl could have sexual
intercourse with and also progeny from anybody without contracting
marriage. This is evident from the root meaning of the word Kanya which
means a girl. Kanya comes from the root Kam which means a girl free
to offer herself to any man. That they did offer themselves to any man
and had children without contracting regular marriage is illustrated by
the case of Kunti and Malsyagandha. Kunti had children from different
men before she was married to Pandu and Matsyagandha had sexual
intercourse with the sage Parashara before she married to Shantanu
the father of Bhishma.
Beastiality was also prevalent among the Aryans. The story of the
sage Dam having sexual intercourse with a female dear, is well known.
Another instance is that of Surya cohabiting with a mare. But the most
hideous instance is that of the woman having sexual intercourse with
the horse in the Ashvamedha Yadna.
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CHAPTER 7
A Sunken Priesthood
The Brahmins, while living on food provided by the faithful, earn their
living by wrong means of livelihood, by low arts, such as:
(1) Arranging a lucky day for marriages in which the bride or
bridegroom is brought home.
(2) Arranging a lucky day for marriages in which the bride or
bridegroom is sent forth.
(3) Fixing a lucky time for the conclusion of treaties of peace (or
using charms to procure harmony).
(4) Fixing a lucky time for the outbreak of hostilities (or using charms
to make discord).
(5) Fixing a lucky time for the calling in of debts (or charms for
success in throwing dice).
(6) Fixing a lucky time for the expenditure of money (or charms to
bring ill luck to an opponent throwing dice).
(7) Using charms to make people lucky.
(8) Using charms to make people unlucky.
(9) Using charms to procure abortion.
(10) Incantations to keep a mans jaws fixed.
(11) Incantations to bring on dumbness.
(12) Incantations to make a man throw up his hands.
(13) Incantations to bring on deafness.
(14) Obtaining oracular answers by means of the magic mirror.
(15) Obtaining oracular answers through a girl possessed.
(16) Obtaining oracular answers from a god.
(17) The worship of the Sun.
(18) The worship of the Great One.
(19) Bringing forth flames from ones mouth.
(20) Invoking Siri, the goddess of Luck.
The Brahmins earned their living by wrong means of livelihood, by
low arts, such as these:
(1) Vowing gifts to a god if a certain benefit be granted.
(2) Paying such vows.
(3) Repeating charms while lodging in an earth house.
(4) Causing virility.
(5) Making a man impotent.
(6) Fixing on lucky sites for dwellings.
(7) Consecrating sites.
(8) Ceremonial rinsings of the mouth.
(9) Ceremonial bathings.
(10) Offering sacrifices.
(11-14) Administering emetics and purgatives.
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CHAPTER 8
Reformers and Their Fate
But what appealed most to the India of his time, and has appealed
most to India through the ages, is expressed by the Brahmin in these
words:
The monk Gotama has gone forth into the religious life, giving
up the great clan of his relatives, giving up much money and
gold, treasure both buried and above ground. Truly while he
was still a young man, without a gray hair on his head, in the
beauty of his early manhood he went forth from the household
life into the homeless state.
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* Dr. Donald A. Mackenzie. Buddhism in Pre-Christian Britain. Blackie & Son. London.
1928.Editors
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1
MahabharatVanparva.
2
Ibid-Sabhaparva
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his brothers and also his and their wife Draupadi. Gambling was a matter
of honour with the Aryans and any invitation to gamble was regraded
as an injury to ones honour and dignity. Dharma gambled with such
disastrous consequences although he was warned beforehand. His excuse
was that he was invited to gamble and that as a man of honour he could
not decline such an invitation.
This vice of gambling was not confined to kings. It had infected even
the common folk. Rig-Veda contains lamentations of a poor Aryan ruined
by gambling. The habit of gambling had become so common in Kautilyas
time that there were gambling houses licensed by the king from which
the king derived considerable revenue.
Drinking was another evil which was rampant among the Aryans.
Liquors were of two sorts Soma and Sura. Soma was a sacrificial wine. The
drinking of the Soma was in the beginning permitted only to Brahmins,
Kshatriyas and Vaishyas. Subsequently it was permitted only to Brahmins
and Kshatriyas. The Vaishyas were excluded from it and the Shudras
were never permitted to taste it. Its manufacture was a secret known
only to the Brahmins. Sura was open to all and was drunk by all. The
Brahmins also drank Sura. Shukracharya1 the priest to the Asuras drank
so heavily that in his drunken state he gave the life-giving Mantras
known to him only and with which he used to revive the Asuras killed
by the Devasto Katch the son of Brahaspati who was the priest of the
Devas. The Mahabharat mentions an occasion when both Krishna and
Arjuna were dead drunk. That shows that the best among the Aryan
Society were not only not free from the drink habit but that they drank
heavily. The most shameful part of it was that even the Aryan women
were addicted to drink. For instance Sudeshna2 the wife of king Virat
tells her maid Sairandhri to go to Kichakas palace and bring Sura as
she was dying to have a drink. It is not to be supposed that only queens
indulged in drinking. The habit of drinking was common among women
of all classes and even Brahmin women were not free from it.3 That
liquor and dancing was indulged in by the Aryan women is clear from
the Kausitaki Grihya Sutra I. 11-12, which says, Four or eight women
who are not widowed after having been regaled with wine and food are
to dance for four times on the night previous to the wedding ceremony.
1
Mahabharat.
2
Ibid. Viratparva Ad. XV. 10.
3
That the drinking of intoxicating liquor was indulged in by Brahmin women, not to speak of
women of the lower Varnas, as late as the seventh and eighth centuries A.D. in the Central
region of Aryavarta, is clear from Kumarita Bhattas Tantra-Vartika I (iii). 4, which states.
Among the people of modern days we find the Brahmin women of the countries of Ahicchatra
and Mathura to be addicted to drinking. Kumarila condemned the practice in the case of
Brahmins only, but not of Kshatriyas and Vaishyas men and women if the liquor was distilled
from fruits or flowers (Madhavi), and Molasses (Gaudi) and not from grains (Sura).
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Turning to the Aryan Society it was marked by class war and class
degradation. The Aryan Society recognized four classes, the Brahmins,
Kshatriyas, Vaishyas and Shudras. These divisions were not merely
horizontal divisions, all on a par with each other in the matter of social
relationship. These divisions, had become vertical, one above the other.
Being placed above or below there was both jealousy and rivalry among
the four classes. This jealousy and rivalry had given rise even to enmity.
This enmity was particularly noticeable between the two highest classes,
namely, the Brahmins and the Kshatriyas and there was a regular class
war between the two, so intense that it would delight the heart of any
Marxian to read the descriptions thereof. Unfortunately there is no detailed
history of this class war between the Brahmins and the Kshatriyas. Only
a few instances have been recorded. Vena, Pururavas, Nahusha, Sudas,
Sumukh and Nimi were some of the Kshatriya kings who came into the
conflict with the Brahmins. The issues in these conflicts were different.
The issue between Vena and the Brahmins was whether a King could
command and require the Brahmins to worship him and offer sacrifice
to him instead of the Gods. The issue between Pururavas and the
Brahmins was whether a Kshatriya King could confiscate the property
of the Brahmin. The issue between Nahusha and the Brahmins was
whether a Kshatriya king could order a Brahmin to do a servile job. The
issue between Nimi and the Brahmins was whether the king was bound
to employ only his family priest at the sacrificial ceremony. The issue
between Sudas and the Brahmins was whether the king was bound to
employ only a Brahmin as a priest.
This shows how big were the issues between the two classes. No wonder
that the struggle between them was also the bitterest. The wars between
them were not merely occasional riots. They were wars of extermination.
It is stated that Parashuram a Brahmin fought against the Kshatriyas
twenty-one times and killed every Kshatriya.
While the two classes were fighting among themselves for supremacy,
they both combined to keep down the Vaishyas and the Shudras. The
Vaishya was a milch cow. He lived only to pay taxes. The Shudra was a
general beast of burden. These two classes existed for the sole purpose
of making the life of the Brahmins and Kshatriyas glorious and happy.
They had no right to live for themselves. They lived to make the life of
their betters possible.
Below these two classes there were others. They were the Chandalas
and Shwappakas. They were not untouchables but they were degraded.
They were outside the pale of society and outside the pale of law. They
had no rights and no opportunities. They were the rejects of the Aryan
Society.
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The sexual immorality of the Aryan Society must shock their present
day descendants. The Aryans of pre-Buddhist days had no such rule of
prohibited degrees as we have today to govern their sexual or matrimonial
relationship.
According to the Aryan Mythology, Brahma is the creator. Brahma
had three sons and a daughter. His one son Daksha married his sister.
The daughters born of this marriage between brother and sister were
married some to Kashyapa the son of Marichi the son of Brahma and
some to Dharma the third son of Brahma.1
In the Rig-Veda there is an episode related of Yama and Yami brother
and sister. According to this episode Yami the sister invites her brother
Yama to cohabit with her and becomes angry when he refuses to do so.2
A father could marry his daughter. Vashishta married his own daughter
Shatrupa when she came of age.3 Manu married his daughter Ila4 Janhu
married his daughter Janhavi.5 Surya married his daughter Usha.6
There was polyandri not of the ordinary type. The polyandri prevalent
among the Aryans was a polyandri when Kinsmen cohabited with one
woman. Dhahaprachetani and his son Soma cohabited with Marisha the
daughter of Soma.7
Instances of grandfather marrying his grand-daughter are not wanting.
Daksha gave his daughter in marriage to his father Brahma8 and from
that marriage was born the famous Narada. Dauhitra gave his 27
daughters to his father Soma for cohabitation and procreation.9
The Aryans did not mind cohabiting with women in the open and
within sight of people. The Rishis used to perform certain religious
rites which were called Vamdevya vrata. These rites used to be
performed on the Yadnya Bhumi. If any woman came there and
expressed a desire for sexual intercourse and asked the sage to satisfy
her, the sage used to cohabit with her then and there in the open on
the Yadnya Bhumi. Instances of this may be mentioned; the case of
the sage Parashara who had sexual intercourse with Satyavati and
also of Dirghatapa. That such a custom was common is shown by the
existence of the word Ayoni. The word Ayoni is understood to mean
of immaculate conception. That is not however the original meaning
of the word. The original meaning of the word Yoni is house. Ayoni
1
Mahabharata Adiparva. Adh. 66.
2
Rig Veda.
3
Harivansha Adh. II..
4
Ibid Adh. X.
5
Ibid Adh. XXVII.
6
Yask Nirukta Adh. V. Khanda VI.
7
Harivansha Adh. II.
8
Harivansha Adh. III.
9
Ibid,
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means conceived out of the house i.e. in the open. That there was nothing
deemed to be wrong in this is clear from the fact that both Sita and
Draupadi were Ayonija. That this was very common is clear from the
fact that religious injunctions had to be issued against such a practice.1
There was prevalent among the Aryans the practice of renting out
their women to others for a time. As art illustration may be mentioned
the story of Madhavi2 The king Yayati gave his daughter Madhavi as an
offering to his guru Galav. Galav rented out the girl Madhavi to three
kings each a period. Thereafter he gave her in marriage to Vishwamitra.
She remained with him until a son was born to her. Thereafter Galav
took away the girl and gave her back to her father Yayati.
Besides the practice of letting out women to others temporarily at a
rent, there was prevalent among the Aryans another practice namely,
allowing procreation by the best amongst them. Raising a family was
treated by them as though it was a breeding or stock raising. Among
the Aryas there was a class of persons called Devas who were Aryans
but of a superior status and prowess. The Aryans allowed their women
to have sexual intercourse with any one of the class of Devas in the
inerest of good breeding. This practice prevailed so extensively that
the Devas came to regard prelibation in respect of the Aryan women
as their prescriptive right. No Aryan woman could be married unless
this right of prelibation had been redeemed and the woman released
from the control of the Devas by offering what was technically called
Avadan. The Laja Hoame which is performed in every Hindu marriage
and the details of which are given in the Ashwalayan Grahya Sutra
is a relic of this act of the redemption of the Aryan woman from the
right of prelibation of the Devas. The Avadan in the Laja Hoame is
nothing but the price for the extinguishment of the right of the Devas
over the bride. The Saptapadi performed in all Hindu marriages and
which is regarded as the most essential ceremony without which there
is no lawful marriage has an integral connection with this right of
prelibation of the Devas. Saptapadi means walking by the bridegroom
seven steps with the bride. Why is this essential ? The answer is that
the Devas if they were dissatisfied with the compensation could claim
the woman before the seventh step was taken. After the seventh step
was taken, the right of the Devas was extinguished and the bridegroom
could take away the bride and live as husband and wife without being
obstructed or molested by the Devas.
1
Mahabharat Adi ParvaAdd. 193.
2
Mahabharat Udyoga parva. Adh. 106-123.
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There was no rule of chastity for maidens. A girl could have sexual
intercourse with and also progeny from anybody without contracting
marriage. This is evident from the root meaning of the word Kanya which
means a girl. Kanya comes from the root Kam which means a girl free
to offer herself to any man. That they did offer themselves to any man
and had children without contracting regular marriage is illustrated by
the case of Kunti and Matsyagandha. Kunti had children from different
men before she was married to Pandu and Matsyagandha had sexual
intercourse with the sage Parashara before she was married to Shantanu
the father of Bhishma.
Beastiality was also prevalent among the Aryans. The story of the
sage Dam having sexual intercourse with a female deer1 is well known.
Another instance is that of Surya cohabiting with a mare2. But the most
hideous instance is that of the woman having sexual intercourse with
the horse in the Ashvamedha Yadna.
The religion of the Aryan consisted of the Yadna or sacrifice. The
sacrifice was a means to enter into the godhead of the gods, and even
to control the gods. The traditional sacrifices were twenty one in number
divided into three classes of seven each. The first were sacrifices of
butter, milk, corn, etc. The second class covered Soma sacrifices and
third animal sacrifices. The sacrifice may be of short duration or long
duration lasting for a year or more. The latter was called a Sattra. The
argument in favour of the sacrifice is that eternal holiness is won by
him that offers the sacrifice. Not only a mans self but also his Manes
stood to benefit by means of sacrifice. He gives the Manes pleasure with
his offering, but he also raises their estate, and sends them up to live
in a higher world.3
The sacrifice was by no means meant as an aid to the acquirement of
heavenly bliss alone. Many of the great sacrifices were for the gaining
of good things on earth. That one should sacrifice without the ulterior
motive of gain is unknown. Brahmanic India knew no thank offering.
Ordinarily the gain is represented as a compensating gift from the
divinity, whom they sacrifice. The sacrifice began with the recitation: He
offers the sacrifice to the god with this text: Do thou give to me (and) I
(will) give to thee; do thou bestow on me (and) I (will) bestow on thee.
The ceremony of the sacrifice was awe-inspiring. Every word was
pregnant with consequences and even the pronunciation of the word
or accent was fateful. There are indications, however, that the priest
themselves understood that, much in the ceremonial was pure hocus-
pocus, and not of much importance as it was made out to be.
1
Mahabharat Adhyaya 1-118.
2
Ibid. Adhyaya 66.
3
This is taken from HopkinsThe Religions of India.
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Every sacrifice meant fee to the priest. As to fee, the rules were
precise and their propounders were unblushing. The priest performed
the sacrifice for the fee alone, and it must consist of valuable garments,
kine, horses or goldwhen each was to be given was carefully stated.
The priests had built up a great complex of forms, where at every turn
fees were demanded. The whole expense, falling on one individual for
whose benefit the sacrifice was performed, must have been enormous.
How costly the whole thing became can be seen from the fact that in
one place the fee for the sacrifice is mentioned as one thousand cows.
For this greed, which went so far that he proclaimed that he who gives
a thousand cows obtains all things of heaven. The priest had a good
precedent to cite, for, the gods of heaven, in all tales told of them, ever
demand a reward from each other when they help their neighbour gods.
If the Gods seek rewards, the priest has a right to do the same.
The principal sacrifice was the animal sacrifice. It was both costly and
barbaric. In the Aryan religion there are five sacrificial animals mentioned.
In this list of sacrificial animals man came first. The sacrifice of a man
was the costliest. The rules of sacrifice required that the individual to be
slaughtered must be neither a priest nor a slave. He must be a Kshatriya
or Vaishya. According to the ordinary valuation of those times the cost
of buying a man to be sacrificed was one thousand cows. Besides being
costly and barbaric, it must have been revolting because the sacrificers
had not only to kill the man but to eat him. Next to man came the
horse. That also was a costly sacrifice because the horse was a rare and
a necessary animal for the Aryans in their conquest of India. The Aryans
could hardly afford such a potent instrument of military domination
to be offered as sacrifice. The sacrifice must have been revolting in as
much as one of the rituals in the horse-sacrifice was the copulation of
the horse before it was slaughtered with the wife of the sacrificer.
The animals most commonly offered for sacrifice were of course the
cattle which were used by the people for their agricultural purposes.
They were mostly cows and bullocks.
The Yadnas were costly and they would have died out of sheer
considerations of expense involved. But they did not. The reason is
that the stoppage of Yadna involved the question of the loss of the
Brahmins fees. There could be no fees if the Yadna ceased to be
performed and the Brahmin would starve. The Brahmin therefore
found a substitute for the costly sacrificial animals. For a human
sacrifice the Brahmin allowed as a substitute for a live man, a man
of straw or metal or earth. But they did not altogether give up human
sacrifice for fear that this Yadna might be stopped and they should
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lose their fees. When human sacrifice became rare, animal sacrifice came
in as a substitute. Animal sacrifice was also a question of expense to the
laity. Here again rather than allow the sacrifice to go out of vogue, the
Brahmins came forward with smaller animals for cattle just as cattle
had been allowed to take the place of the man and the horse. All this
was for the purpose of maintaining the Yadna so that the Brahmin did
not lose his fees which was his maintenance. So set were the Brahmins
on the continuance of the Yadna that they were satisfied with merely
rice as an offering.
It must not however be supposed that the institution of substitutes of
the Yadnas of the Aryans had become less horrid. The introduction of
substitutes did not work as a complete replacement of the more expensive
and more ghastly sacrifice by the less expensive and the more innocent.
All that it meant was that the offering may be according to the capacity
of the sacrificer. If he was poor his offering may be rice. If he was well
to do it might be a goat. If he was rich it might be a man, horse, cow
or a bull. The effect of the subsitutes was that the Yadna was brought
within the capacity of all so that the Brahmin reaped a larger harvest of
feast on the total. It did not have the effect of stopping animal sacrifice.
Indeed animals continued to be sacrificed by the thousands.
The Yadna often became a regular carnage of cattle at which the
Brahmins did the work of butchers. One gets some idea of the extent of
this carnage of innocent animals from references to the Yadnas which
one comes across in Buddhist literature. In the Suttanipat a description
is given of the Yadna that was arranged to be performed by Pasenadi,
king of Kosala. It is stated that there were tied to the poles for slaughter
at the Yadna five hundred oxen, five hundred bulls, five hundred cows,
five hundred goats and five hundred lambs and that the servents of the
king who were detailed to do the jobs according to the orders given to
them by the officiating Brahmin priests were doing their duties with
tears in their eyes.
The Yadna besides involving a terrible carnage was really a kind of
carnival. Besides roast meet there was drink. The Brahmins had Soma
as well as Sura. The others had Sura in abundance. Almost every Yadna
was followed by gambling and what is most extraordinary is that, side
by side there went on also sexual intercourse in the open. Yadna had
become debauchery and there was no religion left in it.
The Aryan religion was just a series of observances. Behind these
observances there was no yearning for a good and a virtuous life.
There was no hunger or thirst for rightousness. Their religion was
without any spiritual content. The hymns of the Rig Veda furnish very
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good evidence of the absence of any spiritual basis for the Aryan religion.
The hymns are prayers addressed by the Aryans to their gods. What
do they ask for in these prayers ? Do they ask to be kept away from
temptation ? Do they ask for deliverance from evil ? Do they ask for
forgiveness of sins? Most of the hymns are in praise of Indra. They
praise him for having brought destruction to the enemies of the Aryans.
They praise him because he killed all the pregnant wives of Krishna,
an Asura. They praise him because he destroyed hundreds of villages
of the Asuras. They praise him because he killed lakhs of Dasyus. The
Aryans pray to Indra to carry on greater destruction among the Anaryas
in the hope that they may secure to themselves the food supplies of the
Anaryas and the wealth of the Anaryas. Far from being spiritual and
elevating, the hymns of the Rig-Veda are saturated with wicked thoughts
and wicked purposes. The Aryan religion never concerned itself with
what is called a righteous life.
II
Such was the state of the Aryan Society when Buddha was born.
There are two pertinent questions regarding Buddha as a reformer who
laboured to reform the Aryan Society. What were the chief planks in
his reform ? To what extent did he succeed in his reform movement ?
To take up the first question.
Buddha felt that for the inculcation of a good and a pure life, example
was better than precept. The most important thing he did was to lead
a good and a pure life so that it might serve as a model to all. How
unblemished a life he led can be gathered from the Brahma-Jala Sutta.
It is reproduced below because it not only gives an idea of the pure
life that Buddha led but it also gives an idea of how impure a life the
Brahmins, the best among the Aryans led.
Brahma Jala Sutta
1. Thus have I heard. The Blessed One was once going along the
high road between Rajagaha and Nalanda with a great company of the
brethren with about five hundred brethren. And Suppiya the mendicant
too was going along the high road between Rajagaha and Nalanda with
his disciple the young Brahmadatta. Now just then Suppiya the mendicant
was speaking in many ways in dispraise of the Buddha, in dispraise of
the Doctrine, in dispraise of the Order. But young Brahmadatta, his
pupil, gave utterance, in many ways, to praise of the Buddha, to praise
of the Doctrine, to praise of the Order. Thus they two, teacher and pupil,
holding opinions in direct contradiction of one to the other, were following,
step by step, after the Bleased one and the company of the brethren.
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10. Or he might say: Gotama the recluse holds himself aloof from causing
injury to seeds or plants.
He takes but one meal a day, not eating at night, refraining from food after
hours (after midday).
He refrains from being a spectator at shows at fairs with nautch dances,
singing, and music.
He abstains from wearing, adorning, or ornamenting himself with garlands,
scents, and unguents.
He abstains from the use of the large and lofty beds.
He abstains from accepting silver or gold.
He abstains from accepting uncooked grain.
He abstains from accepting raw meat.
He abstains from accepting women or girls.
He abstains from accepting bondmen or bond-women.
He abstains from accepting sheep or goats.
He abstains from accepting fowls or swine.
He abstains from accepting elephants, cattle, horses and mare.
He abstains from accepting cultivated fields or waste.
He abstains from the acting as a go-between or messenger.
He abstains from buying and selling.
He abstains from cheating with scales or bronzes or measures.
He abstains from the crooked ways of bribery, cheating, and fraud.
He abstains from maiming, murder, putting in bonds, highway robbery,
dacoity, and violence.
Such are the things, brethren, which an unconverted man, when speaking
in praise of the Tathagata might say.
.
Here ends the Kula Sila (the Short Paragraphs on Conduct).
..
11. Or he might say: Whereas some recluses and Brahmans, while living on
food provided by the faithful, continue addicted to the injury of seedlings and
growing plants whether propagated from roots or cuttings or joints or buddings
or seedsGotama the recluse holds aloof from such injury to seedlings and
growing plants.
12. Or he might say: Whereas some recluses and Brahmans, while living on
food provided by the faithful, continue addicted to the use of the things stored
up; stores, to wit, of foods, drinks, clothing, equipages, bedding, perfumes, and
curry-stuffsGotama the recluse holds aloof from such use of things stored up.
13. Or he might say: Whereas some recluses and Brahmans, while living on
food provided by the faithful, continue addicted to visiting shows; that is to say,
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15. Or he might say: Whereas some recluses and Brahmans, while living
on food provided by the faithful, continue addicted to the use of high and
large couches; that is to say,
(1) Moveable settees, high, and six feet long (Asandi).
(2) Divans with animal figures carved on the supports (Pallanko).
(3) Goats hair coverings with very long fleece (Ganako).
(4) Patchwork counterpanes of many colours (Kittaka).
(5) White blankets (Patika).
(6) Woollen coverlets embroidered with flowers (Patalika).
(7) Quilts stuffed with cotton wood (Tulika).
(8) Coverlets embroidered with figures of lions, tigers, &c, (Vikatika).
(9) Rugs with fur on both sides (Uddalomi).
(10) Rugs with fur on one side (Ekantalomi).
(11) Coverlets embroidered with gems (Katthissam).
(12) Silk coverlets (Koseyyam).
(13) Carpets large enough for sixteen dancers (Kuttakam).
(14-16) Elephant, horse, and chariot rugs.
(17) Rugs of antelope skins sewn together (Aginapaveni).
(18) Rugs of skins of the plantain antelope.
(19) Carpets with awnings above them (Sauttarakkhadam).
(20) Sofas with red pillows for the head and feet.
16. Or he might say: Whereas some recluses and Brahmans, while living
on food provided by the faithful, continue addicted to the use of means for
adorning and beautifying themselves: that is to say:
Rubbing in scented powders on ones body, shampooing it, and bathing
it. Patting the limbs with clubs after the manner of wrestlers. The use of
mirrors, eye-ointments, garlands, rouge, cosmetics, bracelets, necklaces,
walking-sticks, reed cases for drugs, rapiers, sunshades, embroidered slippers,
turbans, diadems, whisks of the yaks tail, and long-fringed white robes.
Gotama the recluse holds aloof from such means of adorning and beautifying
the person.
17. Or he might say: Whereas some recluses and Brahmans while living
on food provided by the faithful, continue addicted to such low conversation
as these:
Tales of kings, of robbers, of ministers of state: tales of war, of
terrors, of battles; talk about foods and drinks, clothes, beds, garlands,
perfumes; talks about relationships, equipages, villages, towns, cities,
and countries; tales about women, and about heroes; gossip at street
corners, or places whence water is fetched; ghost stories; desultory
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wrong means of livelihood by low arts, such as soothsaying to the effect that:
The chiefs will march out.
The home chiefs will attack, and the enemies retreat.
The enemies chiefs will attack, and ours will retreat.
The home chiefs will gain the victory, and ours will suffer defeat.
The foreign chiefs will gain the victory on this side, and ours will suffer
defeat.
Thus will there be victory on this side, defeat on that. Gotama the recluse
holds aloof from such low arts.
24. Or he might say: Whereas some recluses and Brahmans, while
living on food provided by the faithful, earn their living by wrong means
of livelihood, by such low arts as foretelling:
(1) There will be an eclipse of the Moon.
(2) There wilt be an eclipse of the Sun.
(3) There will be an eclipse of a Star (Nakshatra).
(4) There will be aberration of the Sun or the Moon.
(5) The Sun or the Moon will return to its usual path.
(6) There will be aberrations of the Stars.
(7) The Stars will return to their usual course.
(8) There will be a fall of meteors.
(9) There will be a jungle fire.
(10) There will be an earthquake.
(11) The God will thunder.
(12-15) There will be rising and setting, clearness and dimness of the Sun
or the Moon or the stars, or foretelling of each of these fifteen phenomena
that they will betoken such and such a result. Gotama the recluse holds
aloof from such low arts.
25. Or he might say: Whereas some recluses and Brahmans, while living
on food provided by the faithful, earn their living by wrong means of the
livelihood, by low arts, such as these:
Foretelling an abundant rainfall.
Foretelling a deficient rainfall.
Foretelling a good harvest.
Foretelling scarcity of food.
Foretelling tranquility.
Foretelling disturbances.
Foretelling a pestilence.
Foretelling a healthy season.
Counting on the fingers.
Counting without using the fingers.
Summing up large totals.
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These Silas or precepts formed the moral code which it was intended
should regulate the thoughts and actions of men and women.
Of these the most important one was the precept not to kill.
Buddha took care to make it clear that the precept did not merely
mean abstension from taking life. He insisted that the precept must
be understood to mean positive sympathy, good will, and love for
everything that breathes
He gave the same positives and extended content to other precepts.
One of the Buddhas lay followers once reported to him the teaching
of a non-Buddhist ascetic, to the effect that the highest ideal consisted
in the absence of evil deeds, evil words, evil thoughts, and evil life.
The Buddhas conment upon this is significant. If, said he, this were
true, then every suckling child would have attained the ideal of life..
life is knowledge of good and evil; and after that the exchange of evil
deeds, words, thoughts, and life, for good ones. This is to be brought
about only by a long and determined effort of the will.
Buddhas teachings were not merely negative. They are positive
and constructive. Buddha was not satisfied with a man following
his precepts. He insisted upon encouraging others to follow them.
For example in the Auguttara Nikaya the Buddha is quoted as
distinguishing between a good man and a very good man by saying
that one who abstains from killing, stealing, unchastity, lying and
drunkenness may be called good; but only he deserves to be called very
good who abstains from these evil things himself and also instigates
others to do the like
As has been well said the two cardinal virtues of Buddhism are
love and wisdom.
How deeply he inculcated the practice of love as a virtue is clear
from his own words. As a mother at the risk of her life watches
over her own child, her only child, so also let every one cultivate a
boundless loving mind towards all beings. And let him cultivate good
will towards, all the world, a boundless (loving) mind above and below
and across, unobstructed, without hatred, without enmity. This way
of living is the best in the world. So taught Buddha1.
Universal pity, sympathy for all suffering beings, good will to
every form of sentient life, these things characterized the Tathagath
(Buddha) as they have few others of the sons of men; and he succeeded
in a most surprizing degree in handing on his point of view to his
followers.2
1
Sutta Nipata.
2
PrattBuddhism, p. 49.
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Now it once happened that, though protected by his arm, his realm, both
in consequence of the faulty actions of its inhabitants and inadvertance
on the part of the angels charged with the care of rain, was afflicted
in several districts by drought and the troublesome effects of such a
disaster. Upon this the king, fully convinced that his plague had been
brought about by the violation of righteousness by himself or his subjects,
and taking much to heart the distress of his people, whose welfare was
the constant object of his thoughts and cares, took the advice of men
of acknowledged competence, who were reputed for their knowledge
in matters of religion. So keeping counsel with the elders among the
Brahmans, headed by his family priest (purohita) and his ministers, he
asked them for some means of putting an end to that calamity. Now
they believing a solemn sacrifice as is enjoined by the Veda to be a
cause of abundant rain, explained to him that he must perform such a
sacrifice of a frightful character, inasmuchas it requires the massacre of
many hundreds of living beings. But after being informed of everything
concerning such a slaughter as is prescribed for the sacrifice, his innate
compassionateness forbade him to approve of their advice in his heart;
yet out of civility, unwilling to offend them by harsh words of refusal,
he slipped over this point, turning the conversation upon other topics.
They, on the other hand, no sooner caught the opportunity of conversing
with the king on matters of religion, than they once more admonished
him to accomplish the sacrifice, for they did not understand his deeply
hidden mind.
4. You constantly take care not to neglect the proper time of performing
your different royal duties, established for the sake of obtaining the
possession of land and ruling it. The due order of these actions of yours
is in agreement with the precepts of Righteousness (dharma).
5. How then is this that you who (in all other respects) are so clever
in the observance of the triad (of dharma, artha, and kama), bearing
your bow to defend the good of your people, are so careless and almost
sluggish as to that bridge to the world of the Devas, the name of which
is sacrifice?
6. Like servants, the kings (your vassel) revere your commands,
thinking them to be the surest gage of success. Now the time is come, O
destroyer of your foes, to gather by means of sacrifice superior blessings,
which are to procure for you a shining glory.
7, 8. Certainly, that holiness which is the requisite for a dikshita is
already yours, by reason of your habitual practice of charity and your
strictness in observing the restraint (of good conduct). Nevertheless, it
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would be fit for you to discharge your debt to the Devas by such sacrifices
as are the subject matter of the Veda. The deities being satisfied by
duly and faultlessly performed sacrifice, honour the creatures in return
by (sending) rain. Thus considering, take to mind the welfare of your
subjects and your own, and consent to the performance of a regular
sacrifice which will enhance your glory.
Thereupon he entered upon this thought; Very badly guarded is
my poor person indeed, being given in trust to such leaders. While
faithfully believing and loving the law, I should uproot my virtue of
tenderheartedness by reliance upon the words of others. For, truly.
9. Those who are reputed among men to be the best refuge are the
very persons who intend to do harm, borrowing their arguments from the
Law. Alas! such a man who follows the wrong path shown by them, will
soon find himself driven to straits, for he will be surrounded by evils.
10. What connections may there be, forsooth, between righteousness
and injuring animals? How my residence in the world of the Devas or
propitiation of the deities have anything to do with the murder of victims?
11, 12. The animal slaughtered according to the rites with the prescribed
prayers, as if those sacred formulas were so many darts to wound it,
goes to heaven, they say, and with this object it is killed. In this way
that action is interpreted to be done according to the Law. Yet it is a
lie. For how is it possible that in the next world one should reap the
fruits of what has been done by others ? And by what reason will the
sacrificial animal mount to heaven, though he has not abstained from
wicked actions, though he has not devoted himself to the practice of
good ones, simply because he has been killed in sacrifice, and not on
the ground of his own actions?
13. And should the victim killed in sacrifice really go to heaven,
should we not expect the Brahmans to offer themselves to be immolated
in sacrifice? A similar practice, however, is nowhere seen among them.
Who, then, may take to heart the advice proffered by these counsellors?
14. As to the Celestials, should we believe that they who are wont
to enjoy the fair ambrosia of incomparable scent, flavour, magnificence,
and effective power, served to them by the beautiful Apsaras, would
abandon it to delight in the slaughter of a pitiable victim, that they
might feast on the omentum and such other parts of his body as are
offered to them in sacrifice?
Therefore, it is the proper time to act so and so. Having thus made
up his mind, the king feigned to be eager to undertake the sacrifice;
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appearance to the people, with the charge of laying hold of the evil doers,
and everywhere he ordered proclamations to be made by beat of drum
day after day, of this kind:
17. The King, a granter of security as he is, warrants safety to every
one who constantly cultivates honesty and good conduct, in short, to the
virtuous, yet, intending to perform a human sacrifice for the benefit of
his subjects, he wants human victims by thousands to be taken out of
those who delight in misconduct.
18. Therefore, whosoever henceforward, licentiously indulging in
misbehaviour, shall disregard the command of our monarch, which is
even observed by the kings, his vassels, shall be brought to the state
as a sacrificial victim by the very force of his own actions, and people
shall witness his miserable suffering, when he shall pine with pain, his
body being fastened to the sacrificial post.
When the inhabitants of that realms became aware of their kings
careful search after evil-doers with the aim of destining them to be victims
at his sacrificefor they heard the most frightful royal proclamation
day after day and saw the kings servants, who were appointed to look
out for wicked people and to seize them, appearing every now and then
everywherethey abandoned their attachment to bad conduct, and grew
intend on strictly observing the moral precepts and self-control. They
avoided every occasion of hatred and enmity, and settling their quarrels
and differences, cherished mutual love and mutual esteem. Obedience
to the words of parents and teachers, a general spirit of liberality and
sharing with others, hospitality, good manners, modesty, prevailed among
them. In short, they lived as it were in the Krita Yuga.
19. The fear of death had awakened in them thoughts of the next
world; the risk of tarnishing the honour of their families had stirred
their care of guarding their reputation; the great purity of their hearts
had strengthened their sense of shame. These factors being at work,
people were soon distinguished by their spotless behaviour.
20. Even though every one became more than ever intend on keeping
a righteous conduct, still the kings servants did not diminish their
watchfulness in the pursuit of the evil-doers. This also contributed to
prevent people from falling short of righteousness.
21. The king, learning from his emissaries this state of things in
his realm, felt extremely rejoiced. He bestowed rich presents on those
messengers as a reward for the good news they told him, and enjoined
his ministers, speaking something like this:
22-24. The protection of my subjects is my highest desire, you
know. Now, they have become worthy to be recipients of sacrificial
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gifts, and it is for the purpose of my sacrifice that I have provided this
wealth. Well, I intend to accomplish my sacrifice in the manner which
I have considered to be the proper once. Let every one who wishes for
money, that it may be fuel for his happiness, come and accept it from
my hand to his hearts content. In this way the distress and poverty,
which is vexing our country, may be soon driven out. Indeed, whenever
I consider my own strong determination to protect my subjects and the
great assistance I derive from you, my excellent companions in that task,
it often seems to me as though those sufferings of my people, by exciting
my anger, were burning in my mind like a blazing fire.
The ministers accepted the royal command and anon went to execute
it. They ordered alms-halls to be established in all villages, towns, and
markets, likewise at all stations on the roads. This being done, they
caused all who begged in order to satisfy their wants, to be provided
day after day with a gift of those objects, just as had been ordered by
the king.
25. So poverty disappeared, and the people, having received wealth
from the part of the king, dressed and adorned with manifold and fine
garments and ornaments, exhibited the splendour of festival days.
26. The glory of the king, magnified by the eulogies of the rejoiced
recipients of his gifts, spread about in all directions in the same way,
as the flowerdust of the lotuses carried forth by the small waves of a
lake, extends. itself over a larger and larger surface.
27. And after the whole people, in consequence of the wise measures
taken by their ruler, had become intent on virtuous behaviour, the
plagues and calamities, overpowered by the growth of all such qualities
as conduce to prosperity, faded away, having lost their hold.
28. The seasons succeeded each other in due course, rejoicing everybody
by their regularity, and like kings newly established, complying with the
lawful order of things. Consequently the earth produced the various kinds
of corn in abundance, and there was fulness of pure and blue water and
lotuses in all waterbasins.
29. No epidemics afflicted mankind; the medicinal herbs possessed
their efficacious virtues more than ever; monsoons blew in due time and
regularly; the planets moved along in auspicious paths.
30. Nowhere there existed any danger to be feared, either from abroad,
or from within, or such as might be caused by dangerous derangements
of the elements. Continuing in righteousness and self-control, cultivating
good behaviour and modesty, the people of that country enjoyed as it
were the prerogatives of the Krita Yuga.
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By the power, then, of the king performing his sacrifice in this manner
in accordance with (the precepts of) the Law, the. sufferings of the indigent
were put to an end together^ with the plagues and calamities, and the
country abounded in a prosperous and thriving population offering the
pleasing aspect of felicity. Accordingly people never wearied of repeating
benedictions on their king and extending his renown in all directions.
One day, one of the highest royal officials, whose heart had been
inclined to the (True) Belief, spoke thus to the king: This is a true
saying, in truth.
31. Monarchs, because they always deal with all kinds of business,
the highest, the lowest, and the intermediate, by far surpass in their
wisdom any wise men.
For, Your Majesty, you have obtained the happiness of your subjects
both in this world and in the next, as the effect of your sacrifice being
performed in righteousness, free from the blameable sin of animal-
slaughter. The hard times are all over and the sufferings of poverty have
ceased, since men have been established in the precepts of good conduct.
Why use many words? Your subjects are happy.
32. The black antelopes skin which covers your limbs has the
resemblane of the spot on the bright Moons surface, nor can the natural
loveliness of your demeanour be hindered by the restraint imposed on
you by your being a dikshita. Your head, adorned with such hair-dress
as is in compliance with the rites of the diksha, possesses no less lustre
than when it was embellished with the splendour of the royal umbrella.
And, last not least, by your largesses you have surpassed the renown
and abated the pride of the famous performer of a hundred sacrifices.
33. As a rule, Oh, you wise ruler, the sacrifice of those who long for
the attainment of some good, is a vile act, accompanied as it is by injury
done to living beings. Your sacrifice, on the contrary, this monument of
your glory, is in complete accordance with your lovely behaviour and
your aversion to vices.
34. Oh! Happy are the subjects who have their protector in you ! It
is certain that no father could be a better guardian to his children.
Another said:
35. If the wealthy practise charity, they are commonly impelled
to do so by the hopes they put in the cultivation of that virtue; good
conduct too, may be accounted for by the wish to obtain high regard
among men or the desire of reaching heaven after death. But such
a practice of both, as is seen in your skill in securing the benefit of
others, cannot be found but in those who are accomplished both in
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3. And just then Kutandanta the Brahman had gone apart to the
upper terrace of his house for his siesta; and seeing the people thus to
go by, he asked his door-keeper the reason. And the doorkeeper told him.
4. Then Kutandanta thought: I have heard that the Samana Gotama
understands about the successful performance of a sacrifice with its
threefold method and its sixteen accessory instruments. Now I dont
know all this, and yet I want to carry out a sacrifice. It would be well
for me to go to the Samana Gotama, and ask him about it.
So he sent his doorkeeper to the Brahmans and householders of
Khanumata, to ask them to wait till he could go with them to call upon
the Blessed One.
5. But there were at that time a number of Brahmans staying at
Khanumata to take part in the great sacrifice. And when they heard this
they went to Kutadanta, and persuaded him on the same grounds as the
Brahmans had laid before Sonadanda, not to go. But he answered them
in the same terms as Sonadanda had used to those Brahmans. Then
they were satisfied, and went with him to call upon the Blessed One.
9. And when he was seated there Kutadanta the Brahman told the
Blessed One what he had heard, and requested him to tell him about
success in performing a sacrifice in its three modes and with its accessory
articles of furniture of sixteen kinds.
Well then, O Brahman, give ear and listen attentively and I will speak.
Very well, Sir, said Kutadanta in reply; and the Blessed One spoke
as follows:
10. Long ago, O Brahman, there was a king by name Wide-realm(Maha
Vigha), mighty, with great wealth and large property; with stores
of silver and gold, of aids to enjoyment, of goods and corn; with his
treasure-houses and his garners full. Now when King Wide-realm was
once sitting alone in meditation, he became anxious at the thought: I
have in abundance all the good things a mortal can enjoy. The whole
wide circle of the earth is mine by conquest to possess. Twere well if I
were to offer a great sacrifice that should ensure me weal and welfare
for many days.
And he had the Brahman, his chaplain, called; and telling him all
that he had thought, he said: Be I would fain, O Brahman, offer a
great sacrifice-let the venerable one instruct me how-for my weal and
my welfare for many days.
11. Thereupon the Brahman who was chaplain said to the king:
The kings country. Sirs, is harrassed and harried. There are decoits
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abroad who pillage the villages and townships, and who make the roads
unsafe. Were the king, so long as that is so, to levy a fresh tax, verily
his majesty would be acting wrongly. But perchance his majesty might
think: Ill soon put a stop to these scoundrels game by degradation and
banishment, and fines and bonds and death! But their license cannot
be satisfactorily put a stop to. The remnant left unpunished would still
go on harassing the realm. Now there is one method to adopt to put a
thorough end to this disorder. Whosoever there be in the kings realm
who devote themselves to keeping cattle and the farm, to them let his
majesty the king give food and seed-corn. Whosoever there be in the
kings realm who devote themselves to trade, to them let his majesty
the king give capital. Whosoever there be in the kings realm who devote
themselves to government service, to them let his majesty the king give
wages and food. Then those men following each his own business, will no
longer harass the realm; the kings revenue will go up; the country will
be quiet and at peace; and the populace, pleased one with another and
happy; dancing their children in their arms, will dwell with open doors.
Then King Wide-realm, O Brahman, accepted the word of his chaplain,
and did as he had said. And those men, following each his business,
harassed the realm no more. And the Kings revenue went up. And the
country became quiet and at peace. And the populace pleased one with
another and happy, dancing their children in their arms, dwelt with
open doors.
12. So King Wide-realm had his chaplain called, and said: The
disorder is at an end. The country is at peace. I want to offer that great
sacrificelet the venerable one instruct me howfor my weal and my
welfare for many days.
Then let his majesty the king send invitations to whomsoever there
may be in his realm who are Kshatriyas, vassals of his, either in the
country or the towns; or who are ministers and officials of his, either
in the country or the towns; or who are Brahmans of position, either in
the country or the towns; or who are householders of substance, either
in the country or the towns, saying: I intend to offer a great sacrifice.
Let the venerable ones give their sanction to what will be to me for weal
and welfare for many days.
Then King Wide-realm, O Brahman, accepted the word of his chaplain,
and did as he had said. And they eachKshatriyas and ministers and
Brahmans and householdersmade alike reply: Let his majesty the
king celebrate the sacrifice. The time is suitable O King!
Thus did these four, as colleagues by consent, become wherewithal
to furnish forth that sacrifice,
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Should his majesty the King, before starting on the great sacrifice,
feel any such regret as : Great, alas, will be the portion of my wealth
used up herein, let not the king harbour such regret. Should his majesty
the King, whilst he is offering the great sacrifice, feel any such regret
as: Great, alas, will be the portion of my wealth used up herein let
not the king harbour such regret. Should his majesty the King, when
the great sacrifice has been offered, feel any such regret as Great,
alas, will be the portion of my wealth used up herein, let not the king
harbour such regret.
Thus did the chaplain, O Brahman, before the sacrifice, had begun,
explained to King Wide-realm the three modes.
16. And further, O Brahman, the chaplain, before the sacrifice had
begun, in order to prevent any compunction that might afterwards in
ten ways, arise as regards those who had taken part therein, said: Now
there will come to your sacrifice, Sire, men who destroy the life of living
things, and men who refrain therefrom, men who take what has not been
given, and men who refrain therefrom, men who speak lies, and men
who do notmen who slander and men who do notmen who speak
rudely and men who do notmen who chatter vain things and men
who refrain therefrommen who covet and men who covet notmen
who harbour illwill and men who harbour it notmen whose views are
wrong and men whose views are right. Of each of these let them, who
do evil, alone with their evil. For them who do well let your majesty
offer, for them, Sire, arrange the rites, for them let the king gratify, in
them shall our heart within find peace.
17. And further, O Brahman, the chaplain, whilst the king was carrying
out the sacrifice, instructed and aroused and incited and gladdened his
heart in sixteen ways: Should there be people who should say of the king,
as he is offering the sacrifice: King Wide-realm is celebrating sacrifice
without having invited the four classes of his subjects, without himself
having the eight personal gifts, without the assistance of a Brahman
who has the four personal gifts. Then would they speak not acording
to the fact. For the consent of the four classes has been obtained, the
king had the eight, and his Brahman has the four, personal gifts. With
regard to each and every one of these sixteen conditions the king may
rest assured that it has been fulfilled. He can sacrifice, and be glad, and
possess his heart in peace.
18. And further, O Brahman, at that sacrifice neither were any oxen
slain, neither goats, nor fowls, nor fatted pigs, nor were any kinds of
living creatures put to death. No trees were cut down to be used as
posts, no Dabha grasses mown to strew around the sacrificial spot.
And the slaves and messengers and workmen there employed were
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driven neither by rods nor fear, nor carried on their work weeping with
tears upon their faces. Whoso chose to help, he worked; whoso chose not
to help, worked not. What each chose to do he did; what they chose not
to do, that was left undone, With ghee and oil, and butter and milk,
and honey and sugar only was that sacrifice accomplished.
19. And further, O Brahman, the Kshatriya vassels, and the ministers
and officials, and the Brahmans of position, and the householders of
substance, whether of the country or of the towns, went to King, Wide-
realm, taking with them much wealth, and said, This abundant wealth,
Sire, have we brought hither for the kings use. Let his majesty accept
it at our hands!
Sufficient wealth have I, my friends, laid up, the produce of taxation
that is just. Do you keep yours, and take away more with you!
When they had thus been refused by the king, they went aside, and
considered thus one with the other: It would not beseem us now, were
we to take this wealth away again to our own homes. King Wide-realm
is offering a great sacrifice. Let us too make an after-sacrifice!
20. So the Kshatriyas established a continual largesses to the east
of the kings sacrificial pit, and the officials to the south thereof, and
the Brahmans to the west thereof, and the householders to the north
thereof. And the things given, and the manner of their gift, was in all
respects like unto the great sacrifice of King Wide-realm himself.
Thus, O Brahman, there was a fourfold co-operation, and King Wide-
realm was gifted with eight personal gifts, and his officiating Brahman
with four. And there were three modes of the giving of that sacrifice.
This, O Brahman, is what is called the due celebration of a sacrifice in
its threefold mode and with its furniture of sixteen kinds.
21. And when he had thus spoken, those Brahmans lifted up their
voices in tumult, and said: How glorious the sacrifice, how pure its
accomplishment! But Kutadanta the Brahman sat there in silence.
Then those Brahmans said to Kutadanta: Why do you not approve
the good words of the Samana Gotama as well-said?
I do not fail to approve; for he who approves not as well-said
that which has been -well spoken by the Samana Gotama, verily his
head would split in twain. But I was considering that the Samana
Gotama does not say: Thus have 1 heard, nor Thus behoves it to
be, but says only, Thus it was then, or It was like that then. So
I thought; For a certainty the Samana Gotama himself must at that
time have been King Wide-realm, or the Brahman who officiated for
him at that sacrifice. Does the Venerable Gotama admit that he who
celebrates such a sacrifice, or causes it to be celebrated, is reborn at the
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dissolution of the body, after death, into some state of happiness in heaven ?
Yes, O Brahman, that I admit. And at that time I was the Brahman who,
as chaplain, had that sacrifice performed.
22. Is there, O Gotama, any other sacrifice less difficult and less
troublesome, with more fruit and more advantage still than this?
Yes, O Brahman, there is.
And what, O Gotama, may that be?
The perpetual gifts kept up in a family where they are given specifically
to virtuous recluses.
23. But what is the reason, O Gotama, and what the cause, why such
perpetual giving specifically to virtuous recluses, and kept up in a family,
are less difficult and troublesome of greater fruit and greater advantage than
that other sacrifice with its three modes and its accessories of sixteen kinds?
To the latter sort of sacrifice, O Brahman, neither will the Arhata go,
nor such as have entered on the Arhat way. And why not ? Because in it
beating with sticks takes place, and seizing by the throat. But they will go
to the former, where such things are not. And therefore are such perpetual
gifts above the other sort of sacrifice.
24. And is there, O Gotama, any other sacrifice less difficult and less
troublesome, of greater fruit and of greater advantage than either of these.
Yes, O Brahman, there is.
And what, O Gotama, may that be ?
The putting up of a dwelling place (Vihara) on behalf of the Order in all
the four directions.
25. And is there, O Gotama, any other sacrifice less difficult and less
troublesome, of greater fruit and of greater advantage than each and all of
these three?
Yes, O Brahman, there is.
And what, O Gotama, may that be?
He who with trusting heart takes a Buddha as his guide, and the Truth,
and the Orderthat is a sacrifice better than open largeses, better than
perpetual alms, better than the gift of a dwelling place.
26. And is there, O Gotama, any other sacrifice less difficult and less
troublesome, of greater fruit and of greater advantage than all these four?
When a man with trusting heart takes upon himself the precepts-
abstinence from destroying life; absitence from taking what has not
been given; abstinence from evil conduct in respect of lusts; abstinence
from lying words; abstinence from strong, intoxicating, maddening
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drinks, the root of carelessness, that is a sacrifice better than open largesses,
better than perpetual alms, better than the gift of dwelling places, better
than accepting guidance.
27. And is there, O Gotama; any other sacrifice less difficult and less
troublesome, of greater fruit and of greater advantage than all these five?
Yes, O Brahman, there is.
And what, O Gotama, may that be-?
(The answer is the long passage from the Samana-phale Sutta 40, p. 62
(of the text,) down to 75 (p. 74) on the First Ghana, as follows:
1. The Introductory paragraphs on the appearance of a Buddha, his
preaching, the conversion of a hearer, and his renunciation of the world.
2. The Silas (minor morality).
3. The paragraph on Confidence.
4. The paragraph on Guarded is the door of his senses.
5. The paragraph on Mindful and self possessed.
6. The paragraph on Content.
7. The paragraph on Solitude.
8. The paragraph on the Five Hindrances.
9. The description of the First Ghana.)
This, O Brahman, is a sacrifice less difficult and less troublesome, of
greater fruit and greater advantage than the previous sacrifices,
(The same is then said the Second, Third, and Fourth Ghanas, in
succession (as in the Samannao-phalo Sutas 77-82) and of the Insight
arising from knowledge (ibid 83, 84), and further (omitting direct mention
either way of 85-96 inclusive) of the knowledge of the destruction of the
Asavas, the deadly intoxications or floods (ibid. 97-98).
And there is no sacrifice man can celebrate, O Brahman, higher and
sweeter than this.
28. And when he had thus spoken, Kutadanta the Brahman said to the
Blessed One:
Most excellent, O Gotama, are the words of thy mouth, most excellent!
Just as if a man were to set up what has been thrown down, or were to reveal
that which has been hidden away, or were to point out the right road to him
who has gone astray, or were to bring a light into the darkness so that those
who had eyes could see external formsjust even so has the truth been made
known to me in many a figure by the Venerable Gotama. I, even I, betake
myself to the Venerable Gotama as my guide, to the Doctrine and the Order.
May the Venerable One accept me as a disciple, as one who, from this day
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forth, as long as life endures has taken him as his guide. And I myself,
O Gotama, will have the seven hundred bulls, and the seven hundred
steers, and the seven hundred heifers, and the seven hundred goats,
and the seven hundred rams set free. To them I grant their life. Let
them eat green grass and drink fresh water, and may cool breezes waft
around them.
29. Then the Blessed One discoursed to Kutadanta the Brahman in
due order; that is to say, he spake to him of generosity, of right conduct,
of heaven, of the danger, the vanity, and the defilement of lusts, of the
advantages of rununciation. And when the Blessed One became aware that
Kutadanta the Brahman had become prepared, softened, unprejudiced,
upraised, and believing in heart then did he proclaim the doctrine the
Buddhas alone have won; that is to say, the doctrine of sorrow, of its
origin, of its cessation and of the Path. And just as a clean cloth, with
all stains in it washed away, will readily take the dye, just even so did
Kutadanta the Brahman, even while seated there, obtain the pure and
spotless Eye for the Truth. And he knew whatsoever has a beginning,
in that is inherent also the necesity of dissolution.
30. And then the Brahman Kutadanta, as one who had seen the Truth,
had mastered it, understood it, dived deep down into it. Who had passed
beyond doubt, and put away perplexity and gained full confidence, who
had become depedent on no other for his knowledge of the teaching of
the Master, addressed the Blessed One and said:
May the venerable Gotama grant me the favour of taking his tomorrow
meal with me, and also the members of the Order with him.
And the Blessed One signified, by silence, his consent. Then the
Brahman Kutadanta, seeing that the Blessed One had accepted, rose
from his seat, and keeping his right towards him as he passed, he
departed thence. And at daybreak he had sweet food, both hard and
soft, made ready at the pit prepared for his sacrifice and had the time
announced to the Blessed One: It is time, O Gotama and the meal is
ready. And the Blessed One, who had dressed early in the morning,
put on his outer robe, and taking his bowl with him, went with the
brethren to Kutadantas sacrificial pit, and sat down there on the seat
prepared for him. And Kutadanta the Brahman satisfied the brethren
with the Buddha at their head, with his own hand, with sweet food,
both hard and soft, till they refused any more. And when the Blessed
One had finished his meal, and cleansed the bowl and his hands,
Kutadanta the Brahman took a low seat and seated himself beside him.
And when he was thus seated, the Blessed One instructed and aroused
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he makes his knowldge known to others. The truth, lovely in its origin,
lovely in its progress, lovely in its consummation, doth he proclaim, both
in the spirit and in the letter, the higher life doth he make known, in
all its fullness and in all its purity.
And good is it to pay visits to Arahats like that.
13. But in what then, Ambattha, have the Sakyas given you offence ?
Once, Gotama, I had to go to Kapilvastu on some business or other
of Pokkharasadis, and went into the Sakyas Congress Hall. Now at
that time there were a number of Sakyas, old and young, seated in the
hall on grand seats, making merry and joking together, nudging one
another with their fingers; and for a truth, methinks, it was I myself
that was the subject of their jokes; and not one of them even offered
me a seat. That, Gotama, is neither fitting, nor is it seemly, that the
Sakyas, menials, as they are, mere menials, should neither venerate,
nor value, nor esteem, nor give gifts to, nor pay honour to Brahmans.
Thus did the young Brahman Ambattha for the second time charge
the Sakyas with being menials.
14. Why a quail Ambattha, little hen bird tough she be, can say what
she likes in her own nest. And there the Sakyas are at their own home, in
Kapilvastu. It is not fitting for you to take offence at so trifling a thing.
15. There are these four grades, Gotama,the nobles, the Brahmans,
the tradesfolk, and the work-people. And of these four, threethe nobles,
the tradesfolk, and work-peopleare, verily, but attendants on the
Brahmans. So, Gotama, that is neither fitting nor is it seemly, that the
Sakyas, menials as they are, mere menials should neither venerate, nor
value, nor esteem, nor give gifts to, nor pay honour to the Brahmans.
*Thus did the young Brahman Ambattha for the third time charged
1
Now Okkaka the king asked the ministers at his court: Where, Sirs,
are the children now?
There is a spot, Sire, on the slopes of the Himalaya, on the borders
of a lake, where there grows a mighty oak (sako). There do they dwell.
And lest they should injure the purity of their line they have married
their own (sakahi) sisters.
Then did Okkaka the king burst forth in admiration: Hearts of oak
(sakya) are those young fellows! Right well they hold their own (parama
sakya)!
That is the reason, Ambattha, why they are known as Sakyas. Now
Okkaka had slave girl called Disa. She gave birth to a black baby.
And no sooner was it born than the little black thing said, Wash me,
mother. Bathe me, mother. Set me free, mother of this dirt. So shall I
be of use to you,
Now, just as now, Ambattha, people call devils, devils, so then they
called devils, black fellows (kanhe). And they said, This fellow spoke
as soon as he was born. Tis a black thing (Kanha) that is born, a devil
has been born! And that is the origin, Ambattha, of the Kanhayanas.
He was the ancestor of the Kanhayanas. And thus is it, Ambattha, that
if one were to follow up your ancient name and lineae, on the fathers
and on the mothers side, it would appear that the Sakyas were once
your masters, and that you are the offspring of one of their slave girls.
17. When he had thus spoken the young Brahmans said to the Blessed
One: Let not the Venerable Gotama, humble Ambattha too sternly with
this reproach of being descended from a slave girl. He is well born,
Gotama, and of good family; he is versed in the sacred hymns, an able
reciter, a learned man. And he is able to give answer to the Venerable
Gotama in these matters.
18. Then the Blessed One said to them: Quite so. If you thought
otherwise, then it would be for you to carry on our discussion further.
But as you think so, let Ambattha himself speak.
19. We do not think so; and we will hold our peace. Ambattha is able
to give answer to the venerable Gotama in these matters.
20. Then the Blessed One said to Ambattha the Brahman: Then this
further question arises, Ambattha, a very reasonable one which even
though unwillingly, you should answer. If you do not give a clear reply,
or go off upon another issue, or remain silent, or go away, then your head
will split in pieces on the spot. What have you heard, when Brahmans
old and well stricken in years, teachers of yours or their teachers, were
talking together, as to whence the Kanhayanas draw their origin, and
who the ancestor was to whom they trace themselves back?
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And when he had thus spoken Ambattha remained silent. And the
Blessed One asked the same question again. And still Ambattha remained
silent. Then the Blessed One said to him: You had better answer, now,
Ambattha. This is no time for you to hold your peace. For whosoever,
Ambattha, does not, even up to the third time of asking, answer a
reasonable question put by a Tathagata (by one who has won the truth),
his head splits into pieces on the spot.
21. Now at that time the spirit who bears the thunderbolt stood over
above Ambattha in the sky with a mighty mass of iron, all fiery, dazzling,
and aglow, with the intention, if he did not answer, there and then to
split his head in pieces. And the Blessed One perceived the spirit bearing
the thunderbolt, and so did Ambattha the Brahman. And Ambattha on
becoming aware of it, terrified, startled, and agitated, seeking safety and
protection and help from the Blessed One, crouched down besides him in
awe, and said: What was it the Blessed One said ? Say it once again!
What do you think, Ambattha? What have you heard, when Brahmans
old and well stricken in years, teachers of yours or their teachers, were
talking together, as to whence the Kanhayanas draw their origin, and
who the ancestor was to whom they trace themselves back?
Just so, Gotama, did I hear, even as the Venerable Gotama hath said.
That is the origin of the Kanhayana. and that the ancestor to whom
they trace themselves back.
22. And when he had thus spoken the young Brahmans fell into tumult,
and uproar, and turmoil; and said: Low born, they say, is Ambattha the
Brahman; his family, they say, is not of good standing; they say he is
descended from a slave girl; and the Sakyas were his masters. We did
not suppose that the Samana Gotama. whose words are righteousness
itself, was not a man to be trusted!
23. And the Blessed One thought: They go too far. these Brahmans in
their depreciation of Ambattha as the offspring of a slave girl. Let me set
him free from their reproach. And he said to them: Be not too severe
in disparaging Ambattha the Brahman on the ground of his descent.
That Kanha became a mighty seer. He went into the Dekkan, there he
learnt mystic verses, and returning to Okkaka the king, he demanded
his daughter Madda-rupi in marriage. To him the king in answer said:
Who forsooth is this fellow, who son of my slave girl as he isasks
for my daughter in marriage: and. angry and displeased, he fitted an
arrow to his bow. But neither could he let the arrow fly. nor could he
take it off the string again.
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Then the ministers and courtiers went to Kanha the seer, and said: Let the
king go safe. Sir, let the king go safe.
The king shall suffer no harm. But should he shoot the arrow downwards,
then would the earth dry up as far as his realm extends.
Let the king, Sir, go safe, and the country too.
The king shall suffer no harm, nor his land. But should he shoot the arrow
upwards, the god would not rain for seven years as far as his realm extends.
Let the king. Sir. go safe, and the country too.
The king shall suffer no harm, nor his land. But should he shoot the arrow
upwards, the god would not rain for seven years as far as his realm extends.
Let the king. Sir, go safe, and the country too; and let the god rain.
The king shall suffer no harm, nor the land either, and the god shall rain.
But let the king aim the arrow at his eldest son. The prince shall suffer no harm,
not a hair of him shall be touched.
Then, O Brahmans, the ministers told this to Okkaka, and said: Let the
king aim at his eldest son. He win suffer neither harm nor terror. And the king
did so, and no harm was done. But the king, terrified at the lesson given him,
gave the man his daughter Madda-rupi as wife. You should not, O Brahmans,
be too severe to disparage Ambattha in the matter of his slave-girl ancestry.
That Kanha was a mighty seer,
24. Then the Blessed One said to Ambattha; What think you, Ambattha ?
Suppose a young Kshatriya should have connection with a Brahman maiden,
and from their intercourse a son should be born. Now would the son thus come
to the Brahman maiden through the Kshatriya youth receive a seat and water
(as token of respect) from the Brahmans?
Yes, he would. Gotama.
But would the Brahmans allow him to partake of the feast offered to the
dead, or of the food boiled in milk, or of the offerings to the gods, or of food sent
as a present?
Yes, they would Gotama.
But would the Brahmans teach him their verses or not?
They would, Gotama.
But would he be shut off, or not, from their women?
He would not be shut off.
But would the Kshatriyas allow him to receive the consecration ceremony
of a Kshatriya?
Certainly not. Gotama.
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He would, Gotama.
And would the Brahmans teach him their verses?
They would, Gotama?
And would he be shut off, or not, from their women?
He would not, Gotama.
But thereby, Ambattha, the Kshatriya would have fallen into the deepest
degradation, shaven as to his head, cut dead with the ash-basket, banished
from land and townships. So that, even when a Kshatriya has fallen into
the deepest degradation, still it holds good that the Kshatriyas are higher,
and the Brahmans inferior.
28. Moreover it was one of the Brahma gods, Sanam-kumara, who uttered
this stanza.
The Kshatriya is the best of those among this folk who put their trust in
lineage.
But he who is perfect in wisdom and righteousness, he is the best among
gods and men.
Now this stanza, Ambattha, was well sung and not ill sung by the Brahma
Sanam-kumara. well said and not ill said, full of meaning and not void
thereof. And 1 too approve it,
I also Ambattha says:
The Kshatriya is the best of those among this folk who put their trust in
lineage.
But he who is perfect in wisdom and righteousness, he is the best among
gods and men.
HERE ENDS THE FIRST PORTION FOR RECITATION
..
1. But what. Gotama, is the righteousness and what the wisdom spoken
of in that verse?
In the supreme perfection in wisdom and righteousness. Ambattha, there
is no reference to the question either of birth, or of lineage, or of the pride
which says: You are held as worthy as I, or You are not held as worthy as
I. It is where the talk is of marrying, or giving in marriage, that reference
is made to such things as that. For whosoever. Ambattha. are in bondage
to the notions of birth or of lineage, or to the pride of social position, or of
connection by marrige. they are far from the best wisdom and righteousness.
It is only by having got rid of all such bondage that one can realise for
himself that supreme perfection in wisdom and in conduct.
2. But what, Gotama. is that conduct, and what that wisdom?
[Here follow, under Morality (Sila)]
The introductory paragraphs (40 42 of the Samanaphala pp. 62,
63 of the text) on the appearance of a Buddha, his preaching the
conversion of a hearer, and his renunciation of the world: then come.
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1. The Silas above pp. 4-12 (8-27) of the text. Only the refrain differs.
It runs here, at the end of each clause, through the whole of this repeated
passage: This is reckoned in him as morality.
Then under Conduct (Karuna).
2. The paragraph on Confidence, above, p. 69 of the text 63. The refrain
from here onwards is: This is reckoned to him as conduct.
3. The paragraph on Guarded is the door of the senses above, p. 70 of
the text, 64.
4. The paragraph on Mindful and self-possessed, above, p. 70 of the text 65.
5. The paragraph on Content, above, p. 71 of the text, 66.
6. The paragraph on Solitude, above, p, 71 of the text, 67.
7. The paragraphs on the Five Hindrances, above pp, 71-2 of the text,
68-74.
8. The paragraphs on the Four Rapt Contemplations above, 73-76, pp.
75-82. The refrain at the end of each of them (higher and better than the
last) is here of course, to be read not as higher fruit of the life of a recluse,
but as higher conduct.
UNDER WISDOM (VIGGA)
9. The Paragraphs on Insight arising from Knowledge (Nana- dassanam),
above, p. 76 of the text, 83, 84. The refrain from here onwards is: This is
reckoned in him as wisdom, and it is higher and sweeter than the last.
10. The paragraphs on the Mental Image, above, p. 77 of the text 85, 86.
11. The paragraphs on Mystic Gifts (Iddhi), above, p. 77 of the text, 87, 88.
12. The paragrphs on the Heavenly Ear (Dibbasota), above p. 79 of the
text, 89, 90.
13. The paragraphs on Knowledge of the hearts of others (Kato-pariya-
nanam) above p. 79 of the text 91, 92.
14. The paragraphs on Memory of ones own previous births (Pubbe-
nivasa-anussati-nama) above, p. 81 of the text, 93, 94.
15. The paragraph on the Divine Eye (Dibbakakkhu), above, p. 82 of the
text, 95, 96.
16. The paragraphs on the Destruction of the Deadly Floods (Asavanam
Khaya-nanam), above, p. 83 of the text. 97, 98.
Such a man, Ambattha, is said to be perfect in wisdom, perfect in conduct,
perfect in wisdom and conduct. And there is no other perfection in wisdom
and conduct higher and sweeter than this.
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Not that, Gotama. How little is it that I can profess to have learnt!
How supreme this perfection of wisdom and conduct! Far is it from me
to have been trained therein?
Then what think you, Ambattha? Although you have not thoroughly
attained unto this supreme perfection of wisdom and goodness, have you
been trained to take the yoke upon your shoulders, and plunge into the
depths of the forest as one who would fain observe the vow of living
only on fruits fallen of themselves?
Not even that, Gotama.
Then what think you Ambattha? Althougn you have not attained unto
this supreme perfection of wisdom and goodness, nor have attained to
living on fruits fallen of themselves, have you been trained to take hoe
and basket, and plunge into the depths of the forest as one who would
fain observe the vow of living only on bulbs and roots and fruits?
Not even that, Gotama
Then what think you, Ambattha? Althougn you have not attained
unto this supreme perfection of wisdom and goodness, and have not
attained to living on fruits fallen of themselves, and have not attained
to living on bulbs and roots and fruits, have you been taught to build
yourself a fire-shrine on the borders of some village or some town, and
dwell there as one who would fain serve the fire-god?
Not even that, Gotama.
Then what think you, Ambattha ? Although you have not attained
unto this supreme perfection of wisdom and goodness, and have not
attained to living on fruits fallen of themselves, and have not attained to
living on bulbs and roots and fruits, and have not attained to serving the
firegod, have you been taught to build yourself a four-doored almshouse
at a spot where four high roads cross, and dwell there as one who would
fain observe the vow to entertain whosoever might pass that way, from
any of the four directions, according to your ability and according to
your power?
Not even that. Gotama.
5. So then you, Ambattha, as a pupil, have fallen short of due
training, not only in the supreme wisdom and conduct, but even in any
one of the Four Leakages by which the complete attainment thereof
is debarred. And your teacher too. the Brahman Pokkharasadi, has
told you this saying : Who are these shavelings, sham friars, menial
black fellows, the offscouring of our kinsmans heels, that they should
claim converse with Brahmans versed in the threefold Vedic Lore!
he himself not having even fulfilled any one even of these lesser
duties (which lead men to neglect the higher ones). See, Ambattha,
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how deeply your teacher the Brahman Pokkharasadi has herein done
you wrong.
6. And the Brhman Pokkharasadi Ambattha. is in the enjoyment of
a grant from Pasenadi, the king of Kosala. But the king does not allow
him to come into his presence. When he consults with him he speaks
to him only from behind a curtain. How is it, Ambattha, that the very
King, from whom he accepts this pure and lawful maintenance, King
Pasendadi of Kosala, does not admit him to his presence? See, Ambattha,
how deeply your teacher the Brahman Pokkharasadi, has herein done
you wrong.
7. Now what think you, Ambattha ? Suppose a king, either seated
on the neck of his elephant or on the back of his horse, or standing on
the footrug of his chariot, should discuss some resolution of state with
his chiefs or princes, and suppose as he left the spot and stepped on
one side, a workman (Sudra) or the slave of a workman should come
up and. standing there, should discuss the matter, saying : Thus and
thus said Pasendadi the King. Although he should speak as the king
might have spoken, or discuss as the king might have done, would he
thereby be the king, or even as one of his officers?
Certainly not, Gotama.
8. But just so, Ambattha, those ancient poets (Rishis) of the Brahmans,
the authors of the verses, the utterers of the verses whose ancient form
of words so chanted, uttered, or composed the Brahmans of to-day chant
over again and rehearse, intoning or reciting exactly as has been intoned
or recitedto wit, Atthaka, Vamaka, Vamadeva, Yamataggi, Angirasa,
Bharadvaja, Vasettha, Vessamitta, Kassapa, and Bhaguthough you
can say: I as a pupil know by heart their verses that you should on
that account by a Rishi, or have attained to the state of a Rishisuch
a condition of things has no existence!
9. Now what think you, Ambattha ? What have you heard when
Brahmans, old and well stricken in years, teachers of yours of their
teachers, were talking togetherdid those ancient Rishis, whose verses
you so chant over and repeat, parade about well groomed, perfumed,
trimmed as to their hair and beard adorned with garlands and gems,
clad in white garments, in the full possession and enjoyment of the five
pleasures of sense, as you. and your teacher too, do now?
Not that, Gotama.
Or did they live, as their food, on boiled rice of the best sorts, from
which all the black specks had been sought out and removed, and
flavoured with sauces and curries of various kind as you, and your
teacher too. do now?
Not that. Gotama.
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Or were they waited upon by women with fringes and furbelows round
their loins, as you, and your teacher too, do now?
Or did they go about driving chariots, drawn by mares with plaited
manes and tails, using long wands and goads the while, as you, and your
teacher too, do now?
Not that Gotama.
Or did they have themselves guarded in fortified towns, with moats
dug out round them and Crossbars let down before the gates, by men girt
with long swords, as you, and your teacher too, do now?
Not that Gotama.
10. So then, Ambattha, neither are. you a Rishi, nor your teacher,
nor do you live under the conditions under which the Rishis lived. But
whatsoever it may be, Ambattha, concerning which you are in doubt or
perplexity about me, ask me as to that, I will make it clear by explanation.
11. Then the Blessed One went forth from his chamber, and began to
walk up and down that Ambattha did the same. And as he thus walked
up and down, following the Blessed One, he took stock of the thirty-two
signs of a great man, whether they appeared on the body of the Blessed
One or not. And he perceived them all save only two. With respect to those
twothe concealed member and the extent of tonguehe was in doubt
and perplexity, not satisfied not sure.
12. And the Blessed One knew that he was so in doubt. And he so
arranged matters by his Wondrous Gift that Ambattha the Brahman saw
how that part of the Blessed One that ought to be hidden by clothes was
enclosed in a sheath. And the Blessed One so bent round his tongue that
he touched and stroked both his ears, touched and stroked both his nostrils,
and the whole circumstance of his forehead he covered with his tongue.
And Ambattha, the young Brahman, thought: The Samana Gotama is
endowed with the thirty-two signs of a great man, with them all, not only
with some of them.1 And he said to the Blessed One: And now, Gotama,
we would fain depart. We are busy and have much to do.
Do Ambattha, what seemed to you fit.
And Ambattha mounted his chariot drawn by mares, and departed thence.
13. Now at that time the Brahman Pokkharasadi had gone forth
from Ukkattha with a great retinue of Brahmans, and was seated in
his own pleasance waiting there for Ambattha. And Ambattha came on
to the pleasance. And when he had come in his chariot as far as the
path was practicable for chariots, he descended from it, and came on
foot to where Pokkharasadi was, and saluted him, and took his seat
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And on what wise was the talk that you had with him?
18. Then the Blessed One told the Brahman Pokkharasadi all the talk
that had taken place. And when he had thus spoken Pokkharasadi said
to the Blessed One:
He is young and foolish, Gotama, that young Brahman Ambattha.
Forgive him, Gotama.
Let him be quite happy. Brahman, that young Brahman Ambattha
19. And the Brahman Pokkharasadi took stock, on the body of the
Blessed One, of the thirty two marks of a Great Being. And he saw
them all plainly, save only two. As to two of them the sheath concealed
member and the extensive tonguehe was still in doubt and undecided.
But the Blessed One showed them to Pokkharasadi, even as he had
shown them to Ambattha. And Pokkharasadi perceived that the Blessed
One was endowed with the thirty two marks of a Great Being, with all
of them, not only with some. And he said to the Blessed One: May the
venerable Gotama grant me the favour of taking his tomorrows meal
with me, and also the members of the Order with him And the Blessed
One accepted, by silence, his request.
20. Then the Brahman Pokkharasadi, seeing that the Blessed One had
accepted, had (on the morrow) the time announced to him : It is time.
Oh Gotama, the meal is ready. And the Blessed One. who had dressed
in the early morning, put on his outer robe, and taking his bowl with
him, went, with the brethren to Pokkharasadis house, and sat down on
the seat prepared for him. And Pokkharasadi the Brahman, satisfied
the Blessed One, with his own hand, with sweet food, both hard and
soft, until he refused any more, and the young Brahmans the members
of the Order. And when the Blessed One had finished his meal, and
cleansed the bowl and his hands, Pokkharasadi took a low seat, and
sat down beside him.
21. Then to him thus seated the Blessed One discoursed in due order;
that is to say, he spoke to him of generosity, of right conduct, of heaven,
of the danger, the vanity, and the defilement of lusts, of the advantages
of renunciation. And when the Blessed One saw that Pokkharasadi
the Brahman, had become prepared, softened, unprejudiced, upraised,
and believing in heart, then he proclaimed the doctrine the Buddhas
alone have won; that is to say, the doctrine of sorrow, of its origin, of
its cessation, and of the Path. And just as a clean cloth from which all
stain has been washed away will readily take the dye, just even so did
Pokkharasadi the Brahman, obtain, even while sitting there, the pure and
spotless Eye for the Truth, and he knew: Whatsoever has a beginning
in that is inherent also the necessity of dissolution.
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22. And then the Brahman Pokkarasadi as one who had seen the
Truth, had mastered it, understood it, dived deep down into it, who had
passed beyond doubt and put away perplexity and gained full confidence,
who had become dependent on no other man for his knowledge of the
teaching of the Master, addressed the Blessed One and said:
Most excellent Oh Gotama (are the words of thy mouth), most
excellent! Just as if a man were to set up that which has been thrown
down, or were to reveal that which has been hidden away, or were to
point out the right road to him who has gone astray, or were to bring
a light into the darkness so that those who had eyes could see external
forms,just even so. Lord, has the truth been made known to me, in
many a figure, by the venerable Gotama. And I, Oh Gotama, with my
sons, and my wife, and my people, and my companions, betake myself
to the venerable Gotama as my guide, to the truth, and to the Order.
May the venerable Gotama accept me as a disciple, as one who, from
this day forth, as long as life endures, has taken him as his guide. And
just as the venerable Gotama visits the families of others, his disciples,
at Ukkatha, so let him visit mine. Whosoever there may be there, of
Brahmans or their wives, who shall pay reverence to the venerable
Gotama. or stand up in his presence, or offer him a seat or water, or
take delight in him, to him that will be for long, a cause of weal and
bliss.
It is well. Brahman, what you say.
Here ends the Ambattha Sutta.
VI
In the matter of his opposition to Caste, Buddha practised what he
preached. He did what the Aryan Society refused to do. In the Aryan
Society the Shudra or low caste man could never become a Brahman.
But Buddha not only preached against caste but admitted the Shudra
and the low caste to the rank of a Bhikku who held the same rank in
Buddhism as the Brahman did in Brahmanism. As Rhys Davis points
out: (Quotation not given)
In the first place, as regards his own Order, over which alone he had
complete control, he ignores completely and absolutely all advantages
or disadvantages arising from birth, occupation, and social status, and
sweeping away all barriers and disabilities arising from the arbitrary
rules of mere ceremonial or social impurity.
One of the most distinguished members of his Order, the very one of
them who was referred to as the chief authority after Gotama himself.
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on the rules of the Order, was Upali, who had formerly been a barber,
one of the despised occupations. So Sunita, one of the brethren whose
verses are chosen for insertion in the Thera Gatha, was a Pukkusa,
one of the low tribes. Sati, the propounder of a deadly heresy, was of
the sons of the fisherfolk, afterwards a low caste, and even then an
occupation, on account of its cruelty, particularly abhorred. Nanda was a
cowherd. The two Panthakas were born out of wedlock, to a girl of good
family through intercoure with a slave (so that by the rule laid down
in Manu 31, they were actually outcasts). Kapa was the daughter of a
deer-stalker, Punna and Punnika had been slave girls. Sumangalamata
was daughter and wife to workers in rushes, and Subha was the daughter
of a smith. More instances could doubtless be quoted and others will
become known when more texts are published.
It does not show much historical insight to sneer at the numbers
as small, and to suggest that the supposed enlightenment or liberality
was mere pretence. The facts speak for themselves; and the percentage
of low-born members of the Order was probably in fair proportion to
the percentage of persons belonging to the despised jatis and sippas as
compared with the rest of the population. Thus of the Theris mentioned
in the Theri Gatha we know the social position of sixty, of whom five
are mentioned above that is, 81/2 per cent of the whole number were
base-born. It is most likely that this is just about the proportion which
persons in similar social rank bore to the rest of the population.
Just as Buddha levelled up the position of the Shudras and the
low caste men by admitting them to the highest rank namely that
of Bhikkus, he also levelled up the position of women. In the Aryan
Society women were placed on the same position as the Shudras and
in all Aryan literature women and Shudras are spoken of together as
persons belonging to the same status. Both of them were denied the
right to take Sanyas, as Sanyas was the only way open to salvation.
Women and Shudras were beyond salvation. Buddha broke this Aryan
rule in the case of women as he did in the case of the Shudras. Just
as a Shudra could become a Bhikku so a woman could become a nun.
This was taking her to the highest status then conceivable in the eyes
of the Aryan Society.
Another issue on which Buddha fought against the leaders of the
Aryan Society was the issue of the Ethics of teachers and teaching.
The leaders of the Aryan Society held the view that learning and
education was the privilege of the Brahmins. Kshatriyas and Vaishyas.
The Shudras were not entitled to education. They insisted that it
would be danger to social order if they taught women or any males not
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and in the letter. The higher life doth he make known in all its fullness,
and in all its purity. And good is it to pay visists to Arhats like that.
4. Then Lohikka the Brahman said to Bhesika the barber, Come now,
good Bhesika, go where the Samana Gotama is staying, and on your
arrival, ask in my name as to whether his sickness and indisposition
as abated, as to his health and vigour and condition of ease; and speak
thus: May the venerable Gotama, and with him the brethren of the
order, accept the tomorrows meal from Lohikka the Brahman.
5. Very well. Sir. said Bhesika the barber, acquiescing in the word
of Lohikka the Brahman, and did so even as he had been enjoined. And
the Exalted One consented, by silence, to his request.
6. And when Bhesika the barber perceived that the Exalted One had
consented, he rose from his seat, and passing the Exalted One with
his right hand towards him, went to Lohikka the Brahman, and on his
arrival spake to him thus :
We addressed that Exalted One, Sir, in your name, even as you
commanded. And the Exalted One hath consented to come.
7. Then Lohikka the Brahman, when the night had passed made
ready at his own dwelling place sweet food, both hard and soft, and
said to Bhesika the barber: Come now, good Bhesika, go where the
Samana Gotama is staying, and on your arrival, announce the time to
him, saying: It is time, O Gotama. and the meal is ready.
Very well. Sir, said Bhesika the barber in assent to the words of
Lohikka the Brahman; and did so even as he had been enjoined.
And the Exalted One, who had robed himself early in the morning,
went robed, and carrying his bowl with him, with the brethren of the
Order, towards Salavatika,
8. Now, as he went, Bhesika the barber walked step by step, behind
the Exalted One. And he said to him:
The following wicked opinion has occured to Lohikka the Brahman;
Suppose that a Samana or a Brahmana have reached up to some good
state (of mind), then he should tell no one else about it. For what can
one man do for another? To tell others would be like the man who,
having broken through an old bond, should entangle himself in a new
one. Like that, I say, is this (desire to declare to others); it is a form
of lust, Twere well. Sir, if the Exalted One would disabuse his mind
thereof. For what can one man do for another? That may well be,
Bhesika, that may well be.
9. And the Exalted One went on to the dwelling-place of Lohikka the
Brahman, and sat down on the seat prepared for him. And Lohikka
the Brahman satisfied the Order, with the Buddha at its head.
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with his own hand, with sweet food both hard and soft, until they refused any
more. And when the Exalted One had finished his meal, and had cleansed
the bowl and his hands, Lohikka the Brahman brought a low seat and sat
down beside him. And to him, thus seated the Exalted One spake as follows:
Is it true what they say, Lohikka, that the following wicked opinion has
arisen in your mind; (and he set forth the opinion as above set forth)?
That is so Gotama.
10. Now what think you, Lohikka? Are you not etablished at Salavatika?
Yes, that is so, Gotama.
Then suppose, Lohikka, one were to speak thus: Lohikka the Brahman
has domain at Salavatika. Let him alone enjoy all the revenue, and all the
produce of Salavatika. allowing nothing to anybody else! Would the utterer
of that speech be danger-maker as touching the men who live in dependance
upon you, or not?
He would be danger-maker, Gotama
And making that danger, would he be a person who sympathised with
their welfare, or not?
He would not be considering their welfare, Gotama.
And not considering their welfare, would his heart stand fast in love
towards them, or in enmity?
In enmity. Gotama.
But when ones heart stands fast in enmity, is that unsound doctrine,
or sound?
It is unsound doctrine, Gotama.
Now if a man hold unsound doctrine, Lohikka, I declare that one of two
future births will be his lot, either purgatory or rebirth as an animal.
11. Now what think you Lohikka? Is not King Pasenadi of Kosala in
possession of Kasi and Kosala?
Yes, that is so. Gotama.
Then suppose, Lohikka. one were to speak thus: King Pasenadi of Kosala
is in possession of Kasi and Kosala. Let him enjoy all the revenue and all
the produce of Kasi and Kosala, allowing nothing to anybody else. Would the
utterer of that speech be a danger-maker as touching the men who live in
dependence on King Pasenadi of Kosalaboth you yourself and others or not?
He would be danger-maker Gotama.
And making that danger, would he be a person who sympathised with
their welfare, or not?
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16. There are these three sorts of teachers in the world, Lohikka,
who are worthy of blame; And whosoever should blame such a one, his
rebuke would be justified, in accord with the facts and the truth, not
improper. What are the three?
In the first place, Lohikka, there is a sort of teacher who has not
himself attained to that aim of Samanaship for the sake of which he
left his home and adopted the homeless life. Without having himself
attained to it he teaches a doctrine (Dhamma) to his hearers, saying:
This is good for you, this will make you happy. Then those hearers of
his neither listen to him, nor give ear to his words, nor become steadfast
in heart through their knowledge thereof; they go their own way, apart
from the teaching of the master. Such a teacher may be rebuked, setting
out these facts, and adding: You are like one who should make advances
to her who keeps repulsing him, or should embrace her who turns her
face away from him. Like that, do I say, is this lust of yours (to go on
posing as a teacher of men, no one heeding, since, they trust you not).
For what, then, can one man do for another ?
This, Lohikka, is the first sort of teacher in the world worthy of blame.
And whosoever should blame such a one, his rebuke would be justified,
in accord with the facts and the truth, not improper.
17. In the second place, Lohikka, there is a sort of teacher who has not
himself attained to that aim of Samanship for the sake of which he left
his home and adopted the homeless life. Without having himself attained
to it he teaches a doctrine to his hearers, saying: This is good for you;
that will make you happy. And to him his disciples listen; they give
ears to his words; they become steadfast in heart by their understanding
what is said; and they go not their own way, apart from the teaching
of the master. Such a teacher may be rebuked, setting out these facts
and adding: You are like a man who, neglecting his own field, should
take thought to weed out his neighbours field. Like that, do I say, is
this lust of yours (to go on teaching others when you have not taught
yourself). For what, then, can one man do for another?
This, Lohikka. is the second sort of teacher in the world worthy of
blame. And whosoever should blame such a one, his rebuke would be
justified, in accord with the facts and the truth not improper.
18. And again, Lohikka, in the third place, there is a sort of teacher
who has himself attained to that aim of Samanaship for the sake
of which he left his home and adopted the homeless life. Having
himself attained it, he teaches the doctrine to his hearers, saying:
This is good for you, that will make you happy. But those hearers of
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his neither listen to him, nor give ear to his words, nor become steadfast in
heart through understanding thereof; they go their own way, apart from the
teaching of the master. Such a teacher may be rebuked, setting out these
facts, and adding; You are like a man who, having broken through an old
bond, should entangle himself in a new one. Like that, do I say, is this lust
of yours (to go on teaching when you have not trained yourself to teach).
For what, then, can one man do for another?
This, Lohikka, is the third sort of teacher in the world worthy of blame.
And whosoever should blame such a one, his rebuke would be justified, in
accord with the facts and the truth, not improper. And these, Lohikka, are
the three sorts of teachers of which I spoke.
19. And when he had thus spoken, Lohikka, the Brahman spake thus to
the Exalted One:
But is there, Gotama, any sort of teacher not worthy of blame in the world?
Yes, Lohikka, there is a teacher not worthy, in the world of blame.
And What sort of a teacher, Gotama, is so?
(The answer is in the words of the exposition set out above in the Samanna-
phala, as follows:
1. The appearance of a Tathagata (one who won the truth), his preaching,
the conversion of a hearer, his adoption of the homeless state.
2. The minor details of mere morality that he practises.
3. The Confidence of heart he gains from this practice.
4. The paragraph on Guarded is the door of his Senses.
5. The paragraph on Mindful and Self-possessed.
6. The paragraph on Simplicity of Life, being content with little.
7. The paragraphs on Emancipation, ill-temper, laziness, worry and
perplexity.
8. The paragraph on the Joy and Peace that, as a result of this
emancipation, fills his whole being.
9. The paragraphs on the Four Raptures (Ghanas).
10. The paragraphs on the Insight arising from Knowledge (the knowledge
of the First Path).
11. The paragraphs on the Realisation of the Four Noble Truths the
destruction of the Intoxicationslust, delusions, be comings, and
ignoranceand the attainment of Arhatship.)
The refrain through and the closing paragraph is:
And whosoever the teacher be, Lohikka, under whom the disciple
attains to distinction so excellent as that, that, Lohikka is a teacher
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not open to blame in the world. And whosoever should blame such a one,
his rebuke would be unjustifiable, not in accord either with the facts or
with the truth, without good ground.
78. And when he had thus spoken, Lohikka the Brahman said to the
Exalted One:
Just, Gotama, as if a man had caught hold of a man, falling over the
precipitous edge of purgatory, by the hair of his head and lifted him up
safe back on the firm landjust so have I, on the point of falling into
purgatory, been lifted back on to the land by the Venerable Gotama.
Most excellent, O Gotama, are the words of thy mouth, most excellent?
Just as if a man were to set up what has been thrown down, or were to
reveal what has been hidden away, or were to point out the right road
to him who has gone astray, or were to bring a light into the darkness
so that those who had eyes could see external formsjust even so has
the truth been made known to me, in many a figure, by the Venerable
Gotama. And I, even I, betake myself to the Venerable Gotama as my
guide, to the Doctrine and to the Order. May the Venerable Gotama
accept me as a disciple; as one who, from this day forth as long as life
endures, has taken him as his guide!
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CHAPTER 9
The Decline and Fall of
Buddhism.
Not all will be satisfied with this explanation. It does seem inadequate.
Islam attacked both, Bramhanism and Buddhism. It will be asked why
should one survive and the other perish. The argument is plausible but
not destructive of the validity of the thesis. To admit that Bramhanism
survived, it does not mean that the fall of Buddhism was not due to
the sword of Islam. All that it means is that, there were circumstances
which made it possible for Bramhanism and impossible for Buddhism
to survive the onslaught of Islam. Fortunately for Bramhanism and
unfortunately for Buddhism that was the fact.
Those who will pursue the matter will find that there were three special
circumstances which made it possible for Bramhanism and impossible
for Buddhism to survive the calamity of Muslim invasions. In the first
place Bramhanism at the time of the Muslim invasions had the support
of the State. Buddhism had no such support. What is however more
important is the fact that this State support to Bramhanism lasted till
Islam had become a quiet religion and the flames of its original fury as a
mission against idolatory had died out. Secondly the Buddhist priesthood
perished by the sword of Islam and could not be resusciated. On the
other hand it was not possible for Islam to annihilate the Bramhanic
priesthood. In the third place the Buddhist laity was persecuted by the
Bramhanic rulers of India and to escape this tyranny the mass of the
Buddhist population of India embraced Islam and renounced Buddhism.
Of these circumstances there is not one which is not supported by
history.
Among the Provinces of India which came Under Muslim domination,
Sind was the first. It was ruled by a Shudra king. But the throne
was usurped by a Brahmin who established his own dynasty
1
Modern researches go to show that Buddhism had spread over Europe and that the Cells
in Britain were BuddhistSec Buddhism in pre-Christian Britain by Donald A. Mackenzie.
2
Early History of India (1924) pages.
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Kingdom in Konkan on the West Coast and (4) The Ganga Kingdom of
Trikalinga on the East Coast. These Kingdoms flourished during 1000-
1200 A.D. which is the period of the Muslim invasions. There were
under them, certain feudatory Kingdons which rose to power in the 12th
Century A.D. and which became independent and powerful in the 13
the Century. They are (1) Devagiri ruled by the Yadavas, (2) Warangal
ruled by Kakatiyas (3) Halebid ruled by Hoyasalas (4) Madura ruled by
the Pandyas and (5) Travancore ruled by the Cheras.
All these ruling dynasties were followers of orthodox Brahmanism.
The Muslim invasions of India commenced in the year 1001 A.D.
The last wave of these invasions reached Southern India in 1296
A.D. when Allauddin Khilji subjugated the Kingdom of Devagiri. The
Muslim conquest of India was really not completed by 1296. The wars of
subjugation went on between the Muslim conquerors and the local rulers
who though defeated were not reduced. But the point which requires to
bear in mind is that during this period of 300 years of Muslim Wars
of conquests, India was governed all over by princes who professed the
orthodox faith of Bramhanism. Bramhanism beaten and battered by the
Muslim Invaders could look to the rulers for support and sustenance
and did get it. Buddhism beaten and battered by the Muslim invaders
had no such hope. It was an uneared for orphan and it withered in the
cold blast of the native rulers and was consumed in the fire lit up by
the conquerors.
The Musalman invaders sacked the Buddhist Universities of Nalanda,
Vikramasila, Jagaddala, Odantapuri to name only a few. They raised to
the ground Buddhist monasteries with which the country was studded.
The Monks fled away in thousands to Napal, Tibet and other places
outside India. A very large number were killed outright by the Muslim
commanders. How the Buddhist priesthood perished by the sword of the
Muslim invaders has been recorded by the Muslim historians themselves.
Summarizing the evidence relating to the slaughter of the Budhist Monks
perpetrated by the Musalman General in the course of his invasion of
Bihar in 1197 A.D. Mr. Vincent Smith says1 :
The Musalman General, who had already made his name a terror
by repeated plundering expeditions in Bihar, seized the capital
by a daring stroke. The almost contemporary historian met one
of the survivors of the attacking party in A.D. 1243, and learned
from him that the Fort of Bihar was seized by a party of only two
hundred horsemen, who boldly rushed the postern gate and gained
possession of the place. Great quantities of plunder were obtained,
1
Early History of India (1924) pp. 419-420.
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1
Indian Antiquary 1874. p. 132 quoted by Max Muller. Hibbert Lectures (1878) pp. 162-164.
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their Veda, which is mostly the Black Yagush, with Apastamba for their
Sutra. Hardly a week passes here in Bombay in which no Tailangana
Brahman comes to me to ask for dakshina. On each occasion I get the
men to repeat what they have learned, and compare it with the printed
texts in my possession.
With reference to their occupation, Brahmans of each Veda are
generally divided into two daises, Grihasthas and Bhikshukas. The
former devote themselves to a worldly avocation, while the latter spend
their time in the study of their sacred books and the practice of their
religious rites.
Both these classes have to repeat daily the Sandhya-vandana or
twilight-prayers, the forms of which are somewhat different for the
different Vedas. But the repetition of the Gayatri-mantra Tat Savitur
Vareynam etc., five, then twenty eight, or a hundred and eight times,
which forms the principal portion of the ceremony, is common to all.
Besides this, a great many perform daily what is called Brahmayagna,
which on certain occasions is incumbent on all. This for the Rig-Veda
consists of the first hymn of the first mandal, and the opening sentences
of the-Aitareya Brahmana, the five parts of the Aitereya Aranyaka, the
Yagus-samhita, the Sama-samhita, the Atharva-samhita, Asvalayana
Kalpa Sutra, Nirukta, Khandas, Nighantu, Jyotisha, Siksha, Panini,
Yagnavalkya Smriti, Mahabharata, and the Sutras of Kanada, Jaimini,
and Badarayan.
when the need be. There is nothing to stop the rakes life and progress.
This is not possible in Buddhism. A person must be ordained in accordance
with established rites by priests already ordained, before he can act as
a priest. After the massacre of the Buddhist priests, ordination became
impossible so that the priesthood almost ceased to exist. Some attempt
was made to fill the depleted ranks of the Buddhist priests. New recruits
for the priesthood had to be drawn from all available sources. They
certainly were not the best. According to Haraprasad Shastri,1
The paucity of Bhiksus brought about a great change in the composition
of the Buddhist priesthood. It was the married clergy with families,
who were called Aryas, that took the place of the Bhiksus proper,
and began to cater to the religious needs of the Buddhists generally.
They commenced attaining the normal status of Bhiksus through the
performance of some sacraments. (Intro.pp. 19.7, quoting Tatakara
Guptas Adikarmaracana : 149, pp. 1207-1208). They officiated at the
religious ceremonies but at the same time, in addition to their prolusion
of priesthood, earned their livelihood through such avocations as those
of a mason, painter, sculptor, goldsmith, and carpenter. These artisan
priests who were in later times larger in numbers than the Bhiksus
proper became the religious guides of the people. Their avocations left
them little time and desire for the acquisition of learning, for deep
thinking, or for devotion to Dhyana and other spiritual exercises. They
could not be expected to raise the declining Buddhism to a higher position
through their endeavours nor could they check its course towards its
ruin through the introduction of salutary reforms.
What are these other reasons ? Prof. Sen then proceeds to lay
bare these reasons which are found in Muslim Chronicles. He takes
the case of Sind for which there is direct testimony and says :2
According to the Chachnama, the Buddhists of Sind suffered all
sorts of indignities and humiliations under their Brahman rulers,
and when the Arabs invaded their country, the Buddhists lent their
whole hearted suport to them. Later on, when Dahir was slain and
a Muslim Government was firmly established in his country, the
Buddhists found to their dismay that, so far as their rights and
privileges were concerned, the Arabs were prepared to restore status
quo ante bellum and even under the new order the Hindus received
a preferential treatment. The only way out of this difficulty was to
accept Islam because the converts were entitled to all the privileges
reserved for the ruling classes. So the Buddhists of Sind joined the
Muslim fold in large numbers.
CHAPTER 10
Literature of Brahminism
1
See his Introduction to the Bhagvatgeeta English Translation by Prof. Utgikar
2
Geeta Adhya XIII. Shloka 4.
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name occurs even in the third edition both in the beginning as well
as in the end. The original edition of the book known as Jaya
was composed by one Vyas. In its second edition it was known as
Bharat. The Editor of this second edition was one Vaishampayana.
Vaishampayans edition was not the only second edition of the
Bharata. Vyas had many pupils besides Vaishampayana; Sumantu,
Jaimini, Paila and Shuka were his other four pupils. They all had
learned at the feet of Vyas. Each one of them produced his own.
Thus there were four other editions of Bharata. Vaishampayana
recast the whole and brought out his own version. The third editor is
Sauti. He recast Vaishampayanas version of Bharata. Sautis version
ultimately came to have the name of Mahabharata. The book has
grown both in size and in the subject matter as well. The Jaya of
Vyas was amall work having not more than 8800 Shlokas. In the
hands of Vaishampayana it grew into 24000 verses. Sauti expanded
it to contain 96836 Shlokas. As to subject matter the original as
composed by Vyas was only a story of the war between the Kauravas
and the Pandavas. In the hands of Vaishyampayana the subject
became two-fold. To the original story there was added the sermon.
From a purely historical work, it became a diadactic work aiming
to teach a right code of social, moral and religious duties. Sauti the
last Editor made it an all-embracing repository of legendary lore.
All the smaller floating legends and historical stories which existed
independently of the Bharata were brought together by Sauti so that
they might not be lost or that they may be found togeher. Sauti had
another ambition, that was to make the Bharata a storehouse of
learning and knowledge. This is the reason why he added sections
on all branches of knowledge, such as politics, geography, archary
etc. Taking into account Sautis habit of repetition, it is no wonder
that the Bharata in his hand became Mahabharata.
Now as to the date of its composition. There is no doubt that the
war between the Kauravas and the Pandavas is a very ancient
event. But that does not mean that the composition of Vyas is as
old as the event or contemporaneous with the event. It is difficult to
assign specific dates to the different editions. Taking it as a whole
Prof. Hopkins says:1
The time of the whole Mahabharata generally speaking may then be
from 200-400 A.D. This, however, takes into account neither subsequent
additions, such as we know to have been made in later times, nor the
various recasting in verbal form, which may safely be assumed to have
occurred at the hands of successive copyists.
1
Prof Hopkins, The Great Epic of India, p. 389.
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But there are other circumstances which definitely point to a later date.
The Mahabharat contains a reference to the Huns. It was Skandagupta
who fought the Huns and defeated them in or about the year 455 A.D.
Notwithstanding this the invasions of the Huns continued till 528 A.D.
It is obvious that the Mahabharat was being written about his time or
therefter.
There are other indications which suggest a much later date. The
Mahabharat refers to the Mlenchhas or the Muslims. In the 190th Adhyaya
of the Vana Parva of the Mahabharat there is a verse 29 wherein the
author says that the whole world will be Islamic. All Yadnas, rites
and ceremonies and religious celebrations will cease. This is a direct
reference to the Muslims and although the verse speaks of what is to
happen in the future, the Mahabharat being a Purana must as in the
case of the Purana be taken to speak of the event that has happened.
This verse so interpreted show that the Mahabharat was being written
after the date of the Muslim invasions of India.
There are other references which point to the same conclusion.
In the same Adhyaya verse 59, it is said that Oppressed by the
Vrashalas, the Brahmins struck with fear and finding no one to protect
them, will roam all over the world groaning and crying in agony.
The Vrashalas referred to in this verse cannot be the Buddhists. There
is no particle of evidence that the Brahmins were ever oppressed. On
the contrary the evidence is that the Brahmins, during the Buddhists
regime, were treated with the same liberality as the Buddhist Bhikshus.
The reference to the Vrashalas means the uncultured must be to the
Islamic invaders.
There occur other verses in the same Adhyaya of the Vanaparva. They
are 65, 66 and 67. In these verses it is said that, Society will become
disarranged. People will worship Yedukas. They will boycott Gods. The
Shudras will not serve the twice-born. The whole world will be covered
with Yedukas. The Yug will come to an end.
What is the meaning of the term Yedukas? By some it has been
taken to mean a Buddhist Chaitya. But according to Mr. Kausambi1
this is wrong. Nowhere either in the Buddhist literature or in the
Vedic literature is the word Yeduka used in the sense of Chaitya.
On the contrary according to the Amarkosh as commented upon by
Maheshwar Bhatt the word Yeduka means a wall which contains
a wooden structure to give it strength. So understood Kausambi
contends that the word Yeduka must mean Idgaha of the Musalmans
before which they say their prayers. If this is a correct interpretation
1
Hindi Sanskriti Ani Ahimsa. p. 156.
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born in 788 A.D. and who died in 820 A.D. wrote his commentary on
the Bhagwat Gita, it was an unknown composition. It was certainly
not mentioned in the Tatvasangraha by Shantarakshit who wrote
his treatise only 50 years before the advent of Sankaracharya. His
second reason is this. Vasubandhu was the originator of a school
of thought known as Vijnan Vad. The Brahma-Sutra-Bhashya
contains a criticism of the Vijnan Vad of Vasubandhu. The Gita
contains a reference1 to the Brahma-Sutra-Bhashya. The Gita must
therefore be after Vasubandhu and after the Brahma-Sutra-Bhashya.
Vasubandhu was the preceptor of the Gupta King Baladitya. That
being so the Bhagwat Gita must have been composed or at any
rate portions of Gita must have been added to the original edition
during or after the reign of Baladitya i.e. about 467 A.D.
While there is a difference of opinion regarding the date of the
composition of the Bhagwat Gita, there is no difference of opinion
that the Bhagwat Gita has gone through many editions. All share
the conviction that the Bhagwat Gita has not reached us in its
original form but has undergone essential transformations at the
hands of different editors who have added to it from time to time.
It is equally clear that the editors through whose hands it has gone
were not of equal calibre. As Prof. Garbe points out2
The Gita is certainly no artistic work which the all comprehending
vision of a genious has created. The play of inspiration is indeed often
times perceptible; not seldom, however, there are merely high-sounding,
empty words with which an idea that has been already quite often
explained, is repeated; and occasionally the literary expression is
exceedingly faulty. Verses are bodily taken over from the Upanishad
literature, and this is certainly what a poet filled with inspiration
would never have done. The workings of Sattva, Rajas and Tamas
are systematized with a truly Indian pedantry, and much indeed
besides this could be brought forward to prove that the Gita is not
the product of a genuinely poetic creative impulse...
1
At a matter of fact the systematization of the Karmakand portion of the Vedic literature
gave rise to two kinds of works (1) Kalpa Sutras and (2) Purva Mimansa Sutras. The
former give only a ahort and concise description of the rituals enjoined in the Brahamanas;
while the latter enunciate and support the general principle which the author of the Kalpa
Sutra must follow, if he wishes to render his rules strictly conformable to the teaching
of the Vadas.
2
They are also called Purva Mimansa or Karma Mimansa.
3
They also go by various other names such as Uttara Mimansa Sutras, Brahma Sutras
or Saririka Sutras or Saririka Mimansa Sutras.
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1
See Belvalkar, Basu Mallick Lectures on Vedanta Lecture IV.
2
See RadhakrishnanIndian Philosophy Vol. II p. 430 where the relevant evidence is
collected together.
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original name occurs even in the third edition, both in the beginning
as well as in the end. The original edition of the book known as Jaya
was composed by one Vyas. In its second edition it was known as
Bharat. The editor of this second edition was one Vaishampayana.
Vaishampayanas Edition was not the only second edition of the
Bharata. Vyas had many pupils besides Vaishampayana; Sumantu,
Jaimini, Paila and Shuka were his other four pupils. They all had
learned at the feet of Vyas. Each one of them produced his own edition.
Thus there were four other editions of Bharata. Vaishampayana
recast the whole and brought out his own version. The third Editor is
Sauti. He recast Vaishampayanas version of Bharata. Sautis version
ultimately came to have the name of Mahabharata. The book has
grown both in size and in the subject matter as well. The Jaya of
Vyas was a small work having not more than 8,800 Shlokas. In the
hands of Vaishampayana it grew into 24,000 verses. Sauti expanded
it to contain 96,836 Shlokas. As to subject matter, the original as
composed by Vyas was only a story of the war between the Kauravas
and the Pandavas. In the hands of Vaishampayana the subject became
two-fold. To the original story there was added the sermon. From a
purely historical work it became a diadactic work aiming to teach a
right code of social, moral and religious duties. Sauti the last Editor
made it an all embracing repository of legendary lore. All the smaller
floating legends and historical stories which existed independently
of the Bharata were brought together by Sauti so that they might
not be lost or that they may be found together. Sauti had another
ambition, that was to make the Bharata a storehouse of learning and
knowledge. This is the reason why he added sections on all branches
of knowledge, such as politics, geography, archary etc. Taking into
account Sautis habit of repetition it is no wonder that the Bharata
in his hand became Mahabharata.
Now as to the date of its composition. There is no doubt that the
war between the Kauravas and the Pandavas is a very ancient event.
But that does not mean that the composition of Vyas is as old as
the event or contempraneous with the event. It is difficult to assign
specific dates to the different editions. Taking it as a whole Prof.
Hopkins says:1
The time of the whole Mahabharata generally speaking may
then be from 200-400 A.D. This, however, takes into account neither
subsequent additions, such as we know, to have been made in later
times, nor the various recasting in verbal form, which may safely be
assumed to have occurred at the hands of successive copyists.
1
Prof. Hopkins, The Great Epic of India, p. 389.
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But there are other circumstances which definitely point to a later date.
The Mahabharata contains a reference to the Huns. It was Skandagupta
who fought the Huns and defeated them in or about the year 455.
Notwithstanding this, the invasions of the Huns continued till 528 A.D.
It is obvious that the Mahabharata was being written about this time
or thereafter.
There are other indications pointed out by Mr. Kausambi which suggest
a much later date. The Mahabharata refers to the Mlenchhas or the
Muslims. In the 190th Adhyaya of the Vana Parva of the Mahabharata,
there is a verse 29 wherein the author says that the whole world will
be Islamic. All Aryan rites and ceremonies and religious celebrations will
cease. This is a direct reference to the Muslims and although the verse
speaks of what is to happen in the future, the Mahabharata being a
Purana must as in the case of the Purana be taken to speak of the event
has happened. This verse so interpreted show that the Mahabharata was
being written after the date of the Muslim invasions of India.
There are other references which point to the same conclusion.
In the same Adhyaya verse 59 it is said that Oppressed by the
Vrashalas, the Brahmins struck with fear, and finding no one to protect
them will roam all over the world-groaning and crying in agony.
The Vrashalas referred to in this verse cannot be the Buddhists. There
is no particle of evidence that the Brahmins were ever oppressed. On
the contrary the evidence is that the Brahmins during the Buddhist
regimes were treated with the same liberality as the Buddhist Bhikshus.
The reference to the Vrashalas which means the uncultured must be to
the Islamic invaders. If that is so, then part of the Mahabharata was
certainly composed after the Muslim invasions of India began.
There occur other verses in the same Adhyaya of the Vanaparva which
points to the same conclusion. They are 65, 66 and 67. In these verses
it is said that Society will become disarranged. People will worship
Yedukas. They will boycott Gods. The Shudras will not serve the twice
born. The whole world will be covered with Yedukas. The Yug will come
to an end.
Great significance attaches to the term Yedukas. By some it has
been taken to mean a Buddhist Chaitya, on the ground that Yeduka
means bone and particularly the bones of Buddha and subsequently
Chaitya because a Chaitya contains the bones of the Buddha. But
according to Mr. Kausambi2 this is wrong. Nowhere either in the
1
Hindi Sanskriti Ani Ahimsa (Marathi).
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assumed the form of a third edition, it was again, like the Mahabharata,
made a repository of legends, knowledge, learning, philosophy and other
arts and sciences.
With regard to the date of the composition of the Ramayana, one
proposition is well established namely that the episode of Rama is older
than the episode of the Pandus. But that the composition of the Ramayana
has gone on peripassu along with the composition of the Mahabharata.
Portions of Ramayana may be earlier than the Mahabharata. But there
can be no doubt that a great part of the Ramayana was composed after
a great part of the Mahabharata had already been composed.1
PURANAS
The Puranas2 today number 18. This is however not the original
number. According to traditions, there is no reason to doubt, there was
only one Purana to start with. Tradition alleges that this Purana was
older than the Vedas. The Atharva Veda refers to this Purana and the
Bramhanda Puran says that it is more ancient than the Vedas. It was a
lore which the King was expected to know for the Satapada. Bramhana
says the Adhvaryu was required to recite the Purana to the King on
the 10th day of the Yajna.
The origin of the 18 Puranas is attributed to Vyas who it is said
recast the original single Purana and by additions and substractions
made 18 out of one. The making of the 18 Puranas is thus the second
stage in the evolution of the Puranas. The edition of each of these 18
Puranas as published or uttered by Vyas is called the Adi3 Purana i.e.
the original edition as brought out by Vyas. After Vyas composed these
18 Puranas, he taught them to his disciple Romaharsana. Romaharsana
prepared his own edition of the Puranas and taught it to his six disciples.
Romaharsanas edition of the Puranas thus becamethe third edition
of the Puranas. Of the six disciples of Romaharsana, three: Kasyapa,
Savarni and Vaisampayana, made three separate editions which may be
called the fourth edition of the Puranas which we call by their names.
According to the Bhavishya Purana, the Puranas came to be revised
sometime during the reign of King Vikramaditya.4
1
See the Appendix A to Hopkins The Great Epic of India for Parallel phrases in the
two epics.
2
For the account of the Puranas which follows I have drawn upon Kales Purananirikshana
(Marathi) and Partigars Ancient Indian Historical Tradition.
3
Adi Purana does not mean a separate Purana of that name. It means the first edition
of each of the 18 Puranas.
4
Who is Vikramaditya ? No one can say.
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As to the subject matter of the Puranas. The Purana from the oldest time
is a recognised department of knowledge. For instance it was distinguished
from Itihas or history. By Itihas what was understood was past occurances
connected with a ruling king. By Akhyana was meant the recital of an event
the occurance of which one had witnessed. By Upakhyana was meant the
recital of something one has heard. Gathas meant songs about dead ancestors
and about nature and universe.
Kalpashudhi1 are ancient ways of acting regarding Shraddha and Kalpa.2
The Purana was distinguished from all these branches of knowledge.
The Purana was concerned with five subjects. (1) Sarga (2) Prati Sarga
(3) Vamsha (4) Manvantar and (5) Vamshacharitra. Sarga means creation of
the universe, Pratisarga means the dissolution of the Universe. Vamsha means
Geneology, Manvantar means the Ages of the different Manus, particularly
the fourteen successive Manus who were the progenitors or sovereigns of the
Earth. Vamshacharitra means the account of royal dynasties.
There has been a considerable addition made in the scope and subject
matter of the Puranas. For the Puranas which we have are no longer
confined to these subjects. In addition to these subjects they contain other
subjects which fall entirely outside their prescribed scope. Indeed there has
been such a change in the fundamental notion I regarding the scope of the
Puranas so that some of them do not contain any treatment of the regular
subjects but deal wholly with the new or extra subjects. The extra subjects
include the following main topics:
(I) Smriti Dharma which include discussion of:
(1) Varnashrama-dharma, (2) Achara, (3) Ahnika, (4) Bhashyabhasya,
(5) Vivaha, (6) Asaucha, (7) Shradha (8) Dravya-Suddhi (9) Pataka,
(10) Prayaschitta, (11) Naraka, (12) Karma Vipaka and (13) Yuga
Dharma.
(II) Vrata DharmaObservance of holy vows and holy days
(III) Kshetra DharmaPilgrimages to holy places and
(IV) Dana DharmaGifts to holy persons.
In addition to this, there are two other topics the new subject matter with
which one finds the Puranas to be deeply concerned.
The first of these two topics relates to sectarian worship. The
Puranas are votaries of a particular deity and advocate the cause of
1
Mr. Hazara speaks of Kalpajokti (instead of Kalpashudhi) which means lore that has
come down through agessee chronology of Puranas p. 4.
2
The word Kalpa is used in various senses. (1) Practicable. (2) Proper (3) Able, Competent.
The word Kalpa is else used in various senses (1) A Sacred rule (2) A prescribed alternative
(3) Made of performing religious rites (4) End of the world, Universal destruction. (5) A day
of the Brahma Yuga (6) Medical treatment of the sick and (7) One of the six Vedangas:
that which lays down the ritual and prescribes rules for ceremonies and sacrificial acts.
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a particular deity and the sect devoted to his worship. Five1 Puranas
advocate worship of Vishnu, Eight2 worship of Shiva, One3 worship of
Brahma, One4 worship of Surya, Two worship of Devi and One worship
of Genesh.
The second topic which the Puranas have made a part of their subject
matter is the history of the Avatars of the God. The Puranas make a
distinction between identification of two Gods and the incarnation of a God.
In the case of identification, the theory is that the God is one although
he has two names. In the case of an incarnation, God becomes another
being of the man or brute and does something miraculous. In reading this
history of incarnations the fruitful source is Vishnu. For it is only Vishnu
who has taken Avatars from time to time and done miraculous deeds and
we find in the Puranas this new topic discussed in all its elaborate details.
It is no wonder if by the addition of these new subjects, the Puranas
have been transformed out of recognition.
There is one other matter regarding the authorship of the Puranas which
is noteworthy. It relates to the change in the authorship of the Puranas.
Among the ancient Hindus, there were two separate sections among the
literary class. One section consisted of the Brahmins and another section
called Sutas who were non-Bramhins. Each was in charge of a separate
department of literature. The Sutas had the monopoly of the Puranas.
The Brahmins had nothing to do with the composition or the reciting of
the Puranas. It was exclusively reserved for the Sutas and the Brahmins
had nothing to do with it. Though the Sutas had specialized themselves in
the making and the reciting of the Puranas, although they had acquired
a hereditary and a prescriptive right to compose and recite the Puranas,
there came a time when the Sutas were ousted from this profession by
Brahmins who took it into their own hands and made a monopoly of it
in their own favour. Thus there was a change in the authorship of the
Puranas. Instead of the Sutas, it is the Brahmins who became their authors.5
It is probably when the Puranas fell into the hands of the Brahmins
that the Puranas have been finally edited and recast to make room for
the new subjects. The editing and recasting has been of a very daring
character. For in doing so they have added fresh chapters, substituted
new chapters for old chapters and written new chapters with old
names. So that by this process some Puranas retained their earlier
1
(1) Vishnu (2) Bhagwat (3) Narada (4) Vaman and (5) Garuda.
2
(1) Shiva (2) Brahma (3) Linga (4) Varaha (5) Skanda (6) Matsya (7) Kurma (8) Bramhanda
3
Padma.
4
Agni.
5
Partiger.
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materials, some lost their early materials, some gained new materials
and some became totally new works.
The determination of the date of the composition of the Puranas is
a problem which has hardly been tackled.All history written by the
Brahmins is history without dates and the Puranas are no exception. The
date of the Puranas has to be determined by circumstantial evidence co-
related with events the dates of which are well settled. The dates of the
composition of the different Puranas have not been examined as closely
as those of the other parts of the Brahminic literature. Indeed scholars
have paid no attention to the Puranas at all certainly nothing like what
they have done in the matter of the Vedic literature. Mr, Hazaras is
the only work I know of in which an attempt is made in the matter of
determining the date of the composition of the Puranas. I give below
the dates of the Puranas as found by him.
will go to heaven, where he will enjoy the results of his sacrifices. The
Text dealing with Self-knowledge serve merely to enlighten the agent
and so are subordinate to sacrificial acts. The fruits, however, which the
Vedanta texts declare with regard to Self-knowledge, are merely praise,
even as texts declare such results by way of praise, with respect to other
matters. In short, Jaimini holds that by the knowledge that his Self will
outlive the body, the agent becomes qualified for sacrificial actions, even
as other things become fit in sacrifices through purificatory ceremonies.
6. Because (the scriptures) enjoin (work) for such (as know the purport
of the Vedas).
The scriptures enjoin work only for those who have a knowledge of
the Vedas, which includes the knowledge of the Self. Hence knowledge
does not independently produce any result.
The Vedanta texts do not teach the limited self, which is the agent,
but the Supreme Self, which is different from the agent. Thus the
knowledge of the Self which the Vedanta texts declare is different from
that knowledge of the self which an agent possesses. The knowledge
of such a Self, which is free from all limiting adjuncts, not only does
not help, but puts an end to all actions. That the Vedanta texts teach
the Supreme Self is clear from such texts as the following; He who
perceives all and knows all (Mu. 1.1.9.); Under the mighty rule of
this immutable, O Gargi etc. (Brih. 3.8.9.).
9. But the declarations of the Shruti equally support both views.
This Sutra refutes the view expressed in Sutra 3. There it was shown
that Janaka and others even after attaining Knowledge were engaged
in work. This Sutra says the scriptural authority equally supports the
view that for one who attained Knowledge there is no work. Knowing
this very Self the Brahmanas renounce the desire for sons, for wealth,
and for the worlds, and lead a mendicant life (Brih. 3.5.1.). We also
see from the scriptures that knowers of the Self like Yajnavalkya gave
up work. This much indeed is (the means of) immortality, my dear.
Saying this Yajnavalkya left home (Brih. 4.5.15). The work of Janaka
and others was characterized by non-attachment, and as such it was
practically no work; so the Mimamsa argument is weak.
1
Swami Vireswaranand, Brahma Sutras, 411-416.
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12. (The scriptures enjoin work) only on those who have read the
Vedas.
This Sutra refutes Sutra 6. Those who have read the Vedas and
known about the sacrifices are entitled to perform work. No work is
prescribed for those who have knowledge of the Self from the Upanishads.
Such a knowledge is incompatible with work.
15. And some according to their choice (have refrained from all
work).
In Sutra 3 it was said that Janaka and others were engaged in
work even after Knowledge. This Sutra says that some have of their
own accord given up all work. The point is that after Knowledge some
may choose to work to set an example to others, while others may
give up all work. There is no binding on the knowers of the Self as
regards work.
16. And (the scriptures say that the) destruction (of all qualifications
for work results from Knowledge).
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Knowledge destroys all ignorance and its products like agent, act,
and result. But when to the knower of Brahman everything has
become the Self, then what should one see and through what etc.,
(Brih. 4.5.15). The knowledge of the Self is antagonistic to all work
and so cannot possibly be subsidiary to work.
BHAGWAT GITA
to any creed. Yet this is just what the Gita has come to be. Although the
occasion was to decide to fight or not to fight, the Gita is said to contain
what his religious doctrine Krishna is said to have preached to Arjuna.
The first question that crops up is who is this Krishna. To this one gets
quite surprizingly a variety of answers from the Gita itself. At the start
Krishna appears as a mere man with a completely human personality. He
is a warrior by profession. He is a great warrior though he had chosen1
the humble duty of driving the chariot of Arjuna. From man he grows into
superman directing and controlling the war and its frotunes. From superman
he grows into a demigod and dictator. When all his arguments fail to move
Arjuna to fight, he simply orders him to fight and the frightened Arjuna
gets up and does his biddings. From demigod he rises to the position of God
and is spoken of as Ishwara.
This shows the growth of the personality of Krishna. But what is important
is that in the very same Gita, Krishna stands out as a representative of
other forms of God. Four such representative characters in which Krishna
appears are clear to any one who happens to read the Gita even casually.
Krishna is Vasudeo :
Bhagwat Gita:
Ch.X.37. Of the Vrishnis I am Vasudeva; of the Pandavas, Dhananjaya;
and also for the Munis, I am Vyasa; of the sages, Ushanas the sage.
Krishna as Bhagwan :
Ch.X.12. The Supreme Brahman, the Supreme Abode, the Supreme
Purifier, art Thou.
Krishna is an Avtar of Vishnu :
Ch.X.21. Of the Adityas, I am Vishnu; of luminaries, the radiant Sun;
of the winds, I am Marichi; of the asterisms, the Moon.
Ch.XI.24. On seeing Thee touching the sky, shining in many a colour,
with mouths wide open, with large fiery eyes, I am terrified at heart,
and find no courage nor peace, O Vishnu.
XI.30. Swallowing all the worlds on every side with Thy flaming
mouths. Thou art licking Thy lips. Thy fierce rays, filling the whole
world with radiance, are burning, O Vishnu.
Krishna is also an Avtar of Shankara ;
X.23. And of the Rudras I am Shankara; of the Yakshas and Rakshasas
the Lord of wealth (Kuvera); of the Vasus I am Pavaka; and of mountains,
Meru am I.
1
This is the result or an arrangement between him and Duryodhan leader of the Kauravas.
Before the war actually started Duryodhan approached Krishna to fight on the side of the
kauravas. Krishna gave him a choice, have him or have his men the Yadavas. Duryodhan
chose the Army of Yadavas. That is why Krishna and the Yadavas fought on opposite sides.
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Krishna is Bramhan :
XV. 15. I am centered in the hearts of all; memory and perception as
well as their loss come from Me. I am verily that which has to be known
by all the Vedas, I indeed am the Author of the Vedanta, and the Knower
of the Veda am I.
XV. 16. There are two Purushas in the world,The Perishable and the
Imperishable. All beings are the Perishable, and the Kutastha is called
Imperishable.
XV. 17. But (there is) another, the Supreme Purusha, called the Highest
Self, the immutable Lord, who pervading the three worlds, sustains them.
XV. 18. As I transcend the Perishable and am above even the Imperishable,
therefore am I in the world and in the Veda celebrated as the Purushottama,
(the Highest Purusha).
XV. 19. He who free from delusion thus knows Me, the Highest Spirit,
he knowing all, worships Me with all his heart, O descendant of Bharata.
Ask the next question, What is the doctrine that Krishna preaches to Arjuna ?
The doctrine preached by Krishna to Arjuna is said to be the doctrine of
salvation for the human soul. While the question dealt with by Krishna
is one relating to Salvation, Krishna teaches three different doctrines of
Salvation.
Salvation is possible by Dnyanmarg as propounded by Samkhya Yog.
II.39. The wisdom of Self-realisation has been declared unto thee. Hearken
thou now to the wisdom of Yoga, endued with which, O son of Pritha, thou
shah break through the bonds of Karma.
IX. 14. Glorifying Me always and striving with firm resolve, bowing
down to Me in devotion, always steadfast, they worship Me.
IX. 15. Others, too, sacrificing by the Yajna of knowledge (i.e. seeing the
Self in all), worship Me the All Formed, as one, as distnct, as manifold.
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There are two other features of the Bhagwat Gita which arrests ones
attention.
(i) There is a sentiment of depreciation of the Vedas and Vedic rituals
and sacrifices.
II.42-44. O Partha, no set determination is formed in the minds
of those that are deeply attached to pleasure and power, and whose
disctimination is stolen away by the flowery words of the unwise, who
are full of desires and look upon heaven as their highest goal and who,
taking pleasure in the panegyric words of the Vedas, declare that there
is nothing else. Their (flowery) words are exuberant with various specific
rites as the means to pleasure and power and are the causes of (new)
births as the result of their works (performed with desire).
II.45 The Vedas deal with the three Gunas, Be thou free, O Arjun, from
the triad of the Gunas, free from the apirs of opposites, ever balanced,
free from (the thought of) getting and keeping, and established in the Self.
II.46. To the Brahmana who has known the Self, all the Vedas are
of so much use, as a reservoir is, when there is a flood everywhere.
IX.21. Having enjoyed the vast Swarga-world, they enter the mortal
world, on the exhaustion of their merit; Thus, abiding by the injunctions
of the three (Vedas), desiring desires, they (constantly) come and go.
INCOMPLETE
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CHAPTER 11
The Triumph of Brahmanism:
Regicide or the birth of
Counter-Revolution
of religions in more than one sense. It has produced out of its own
resources, a number of distinctive systems and sects..
In another sense India is a land of religions. Nowhere else is the
texture of life so much impregnated with religious convictions and
practices... 1
These observations contain profound truth. He would have given
utterance to truth far more profound and arresting if he had said that
India is a land of warring religions. For indeed there is no country in
which Religion has played so great a part in its history as it has in
the history of India. The history of India is nothing but a history of
a mortal conflict between Buddhism and Brahmanism. So neglected
is this truth that no one will be found to give it his ready acceptance.
Indeed there may not be wanting persons who would repudiate any
such suggestion.
Let me therefore briefly recount the salient facts of Indian history. For
it is important that everyone who was able to understand the history
of India must know that it is nothing but the history of the struggle
for supremacy between Brahmanism and Buddhism.
The history of India is said to begin with the Aryans who invaded
India, made it their home and established their culture. Whatever may
be the virtues of the Aryans, their culture, their religion and their
social system, we know very little about their political history. Indeed
notwithstanding the superiority that is claimed for the Aryans as
against the Non-Aryans, the Aryans have left very little their political
achievements for history to speak of. The political history of India
begins with the rise of a non-Aryan people called Nagas, who were a
powerful people, whom the Aryans were unable to conquer, with whom
the Aryans had to make peace, and whom the Aryans were compelled
to recognize as their equals. Whatever fame and glory India achieved
in ancient times in the political field, the credit for it goes entirely to
the Non-Aryan Nagas. It is they who made India great and glorious in
the annals of the world.
The first land mark in Indias political history is the emergence of
the Kingdom of Magadha in Bihar in the year 642 B.C. The founder
of this kingdom of Magadha is known by the name of Sisunag2 and
belonged to the non-Aryan race of Nagas.
From the small beginning made by Sisunag, this Kingdom of
Magadha grew in its extent under the capable rulers of this Sisunag
dynasty. Under Bimbisara the fifth ruler of this dynasty the kingdom
1
The Religion of the Veda p. 1.
2
His name is also spelt as Sisunak.
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II
If the Revolution of Pushyamitra was a purely political revolution
there was no need for him to have launched a compaign of persecution
1
Burnouf LIntroduction a LHistorie on Buddhisme Indien (2nd.Ed.) p. 388.
2
Buddhistic Studies (Ed. by Law) Chapter XXXIV p. 820.
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1
On this point see Jaiswals Volume on Manu & Yajnavalkya.
2
Commentary on Manu 1.1.
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When did this Sumati Bhargava compose this Code? It is not possible
to give any precise date for its composition. But quite a precise period
during which it was composed can be given. According to scholars whose
authority cannot be questioned Sumati Bhargava must have composed
the Code which he deliberately called Munu Smriti between 170 B.C.
and 150 B.C. Now if one bears in mind the fact that the Brahmanic
Revolution by Pushyamitra took place in 185 B.C. there remains no doubt
that the code known as Manu Smriti was promulgated by Pushyamitra as
embodying the principles of Brahmanic Revolution against the Buddhist
state of the Mauryas. That the Manu Smriti forms the Institutes of
Brahmanism and are a proof that Pushyamitra Revolution was not a
purely personal adventure will be clear to any one who cares to note
the following peculiarities relating to the Manu Smriti.
IX. 226. These robbers in disguise, living in the kings realm constantly
injure the worthy subject by the performance of their misdeeds.
V. 89. Libations of water shall not be offered to (the souls of) those
who (neglect the prescribed rites and may be said to) have been born in
vain, to those born in consequence of an illegal mixture of the castes,
to those who are ascetics (of heretical sects) and to those who have
committed suicide.
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V. 90. (Libations of water shall not be offered to the souls of) women
who have joined a heretical sect.
IV. 30. Let him (the householder) not honour, even by a greeting
heretics. logicians, (arguing against the Veda).
XII. 95. All those traditions and all those despicable systems of
Philosophy, which are not based on the Veda produce no reward after
death, for they are declared to be founded on Darkness.
XII. 96. All those (doctrines), differing from the (Veda), which spring
up and (soon) perish, are worthless and false, because of modern date.
Who are the heretics to whom Manu refers and whom he wants the
new king to banish from his realm and the Householder not to honour in
life as well as after death? What is this worthless philosophy of modern
date, differing from the Vedas, based on darkness and bound to perish?
There can be no doubt that the heretic of Manu is the Buddhist and
the worthless philosophy of modern date differing from the Vedas is
Buddhism. Kalluck Bhutt another commentator on Manu Smriti expressly
states that the references to heretics in these Shlokas in Manu are to
the Buddhists and Buddhism.
The third circumstance is the position assigned to the Brahmins in
the Manu Smriti. Note the following provisions in Manu :
I. 93. As the Brahmana sprang from (Bramhas) mouth, as he was
the first born, and as he possesses the Veda, he is by right the lord of
this whole creation.
I. 96. Of created beings the most excellent are said to be those which
are animated; of the animated, those which subsist by intelligence; of
the intelligent, mankind; and of men, the Brahmans.
I. 101. The Brahmana eats but his own food, wears but his own
apparel, bestows but his own in alms; other mortals subsist through
the benevolence of the Brahmana.
XI. 35. The Bramhana is declared to be the creator of the world, the
punisher, the teacher, and hence a benefactor of all created beings; to
him let no man say anything unpropitious, nor use any harsh words.
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This deification of the Brahmins, placing them even above the King
would have been impossible unless the King himself was a Brahmin
and in sympathy with the view expressed by Manu. Pushyamitra and
his successors could not have tolerated these exaggerated claims of
the Brahmins unless they themselves were Brahmins interested in the
establishment of Bramhanism. Indeed it is quite possible that the Manu
Smriti was composed at the command of Pushyamitra himself and forms
the book of the philosophy of Bramhanism.
Taking all these facts into considerations there can remain no doubt;
the one and only object of Pushyamitras revolution was to destroy
Buddhism and re-establish Bramhanism.
The foregoing summary of the political history of India would have
been quite unnecessary for the immediate purpose of this chapter if
I was satisfied with the way in which the history of India is written.
But frankly I am not satisfied. For too much emphasis is laid on the
Muslim conquest of India. Reels and reels have been written to show
how wave after wave of Muslim invasions came down like avalanche
and enveloped the people and overthrew their rulers. The whole history
of India is made to appear as though the only important thing in it is
a catalogue of Muslim invasions. But even from this narrow point of
view it is clear that the Muslim invasions are not the only invasions
worth study. There have been other invasions equally if not of greater
importance. If Hindu India was invaded by the Muslim invaders so
was Buddhist India invaded by Bramhanic invaders. The Muslim
invasions of Hindu India and the Bramhanic invasions of Buddhist
India have many similarities. The Musalman invaders of Hindu India
fought among themselves for their dynastic ambitions. The Arabs,
Turks, Mongols and Afghans fought for supremacy among themselves.
But they had one thing in commonnamely the mission to destroy
idolatory. Similarly the Bramhanic invadars of Buddhist India fought
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among themselves for their dynastic ambitions. The Sungas, Kanvas and
the Andhras fought for supremacy among themselves. But they, like the
Muslim invaders of Hindu India, had one object in common that was to
destroy Buddhism and the Buddhist Empire of the Mauryas. Surely if
Muslim invasions of Hindu India are worthy of study at the hands of
the historians, the invasions of Buddhist India by Bramhanic invaders
are equally deserving of study. The ways and methods employed by
the Bramhanic invaders of Buddhist India to suppress Buddhism were
not less violent and less virulent than the ways and means adopted
by Muslim invaders to suppress Hinduism. From the point of view
of the permanent effect on the social and spiritual life of the people,
the Bramhanic invasions of Buddhist India have been so profound in
their effect that compared to them, the effect of Muslim invasions on
Hindu India have been really superficial and ephemeral. The Muslim
invaders destroyed only the outward symbols of Hindu religion such as
temples and Maths etc. They did not extirpate Hinduism nor did they
cause any subversion of the principles or doctrines which governed the
spiritual life of the people. The effects of the Bramhanic invasions were
a thorough-going change in the principles which Buddhism had preached
for a century as true and eternal principles of spiritual life and which
had been accepted and followed by the masses as the way of life. To
alter the metaphor the Muslim invaders only stirred the waters in the
bath and that too only for a while. Thereafter they got tired of stirring
and left the waters with the sediments to settle. They never threw the
babyif one can speak of the principles of Hinduism as a babyout
of the bath. Bramhanism in its conflict with Buddhism made a clean
sweep. It emptied the bath with the Buddhist Baby in it and filled the
bath with its own waters and placed in it its own baby. Bramhanism
did not care to stop how filthy and dirty was its water as compared
with the clean and fragrant water which flowed from the noble source
of Buddhism. Bramhanism did not care to stop how hideous and ugly
was its own baby as compared with the Buddhist baby. Bramhanism
acquired by its invasions political power to annihilate Buddhism and
it did annihilate Buddhism. Islam did not supplant Hinduism. Islam
never made a thorough job of its mission. Bramhanism did. It drove out
Buddhism as a religion and occupied its place.
These facts show that Brahmanic invasions of Buddhist India have
a far greater significance to the Historian of India than the Muslim
invasions of Hindu India can be said to have produced. Yet very little
space is devoted by historians to the vissicitudes which befell Buddhist
India built up by the Mauryas and even where that is done they have
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not cared to deal in a pointed manner with questions that quite naturally
arise: questions such as, who were the Sungas, Kanavas and Andhras;
why did they destroy the Buddhist India which was built up by the
Mauryas, nor has any attempt been made to study the changes that
Brahmanism after its triumph over Buddhism brought about in the
political and social structure.
Failure to appreciate this aspect of Indias history is due to the
prevalence of some very wrong notions. It has been commonly supposed
that the culture of India has been one and the same all throughout history;
that Brahmanism, Buddhism, Jainism are simply different phases and
that there has never been any fundamental antagonism between them.
Secondly it has been assumed that whatever conflicts have taken place
in Indian politics were purely political and dynastic and that they had
no social and spiritual significance. It is because of these wrong notions
that Indian history has become a purely mechanical thing, a record of
one dynasty succeeding another and one ruler succeeding another ruler.
A corrective to such an attitude and to such a method of writing history
lies in recognition of two facts which are indisputable.
In the first place it must be recognized that there has never been
such as a common Indian culture, that historically there have been
three Indias, Brahmanic India, Buddhist India and Hindu India, each
with its own culture. Secondly it must be recognized that the history
of India before the Muslim invasions is the history of a mortal conflict
between Bramhanism and Buddhism. Any one who does not recognize
these two facts will never be able to write a true history of India, a
history which will disclose the meaning and purpose running through
it. It is a corrective to Indian history written as it is and to disclose
the meaning and purposes running through it that I was obliged to re-
cast the history of the Brahmanic invasions of Buddhist India and the
political triumph of Brahmanism over Buddhism.
We must therefore begin with the recognition of the fact: Pushyamitras
revolution was a political revolution engineered by the Brahmins to
overthrow Buddhism.
The curious will naturally ask what did this triumphant Brahmanism
do? It is to this question that I will now turn. The deeds or misdeeds
of this triumphant Brahmanism may be catalogued under seven heads.
(1) It established the right of the Brahmin to rule and commit regicide.
(2) It made the Bramhins a class of privileged persons. (3) It converted
the Varna into caste. (4) It brought about a conflict and anti-social
feeling between the different castes. (5) It degraded the Shudras and
the women (6) It forged the system of graded inequality and (7) It made
legal and rigid the social system which was conventional and flexible.
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Here we have one change in the law. This new law declares that the
Brahmin has a right to become Senapati (Commander of forces), to conquer
a kingdom, and to be the ruler and the Emperor of it.
XI. 31. A Brahmin, who well knows the laws, need not complain to the
king of any grievous injury; since, even by his own power, he may chastise
those, who injure him.
XI. 32. His (Brahmins) own power, which depends on himself alone is
mightier than the royal power, which depends on other men; by his own
might, therefore may a Brahmin coerce his foes.
1
Harsha Charita, quoted by Smith (1924) p. 208.
2
The rule was so strict that according to the Apastamba Dharmasutra A Brahman shall
not take up a weapon in his hand though he be only desirous of examining it. It may be
matter of some surprize how Pushyamitra who was a Brahmans could have done a deed
which could under the circumstances be expected only from a member of the martial race.
This difficulty is well explained by Harprasad Shastri. According to him the Sungas though
Brahmins were a martial race. Among the fighting Brahmans, two were distinguished
among the rest, the Vishwamitras and the Bharadvajas. The wife of Vishvamitra Brahmin
proving barren, a Bharadvaj was requested by the ancient custom of Niyoga to beget a
son on Vishvamitras. The issue was Sung. He was the progenitor of a Gotra and that
Gotra took up the Samveda for their study. The Sungas were called a Dvayamushyam
gotra i.e. a gotra issuing from the two gotras, Vishvamitra and Bharadvaj both of which
had taken to military occupationSee Buddhistic Studies (Ed. by Law) Ch. XXXIV, p. 820.
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This is the third legal change. It recognized the right to rebellion and
the right to regicide. The new law is very delicately framed. It gives
the right of rebellion to three higher classes. But it is also given to the
Brahmins singly by way of providing for a situation when the Kshatriyas
and the Vaishyas may not be prepared to join the Brahmin in bringing
about a rebellion. The right of rebellion is well circumscribed. It can
be exercised only when the king is guilty of upsetting the occupations
assigned by Manu to the different Varnas.
These legal changes were as necessary as they were revolutionary. Their
object was to legalize and regularize the position created by Pushyamitra
by killing the last Maurya King. By virtue of these legal changes, a
Brahmin could lawfully become a king, could lawfully take arms, could
lawfully depose or murder a king who was opposed to Chaturvarna and
could lawfully kill any subject that opposed the authority of the Brahmin.
Manu gave the Brahmins a right to commit Barthalomeu if it became
necessary to safeguard their interests.
In this way Brahmanism established the right of Brahmana to rule
and set at rest whatever doubt and dispute there was regarding the
same. But that could hardly be enough for the Brahmins as a whole.
It may be a matter of pride but not of any advantage. There can be no
special virtue in Brahmin rule if the Brahmin was treated as common
man along with the Non-Brahmins having the same rights and same
duties. Brahmin rule if it is to justify itself, it must do so by conferring
special privileges and immunities on the Brahmins as a class. Indeed
Pushyamitras Revolution would have been an ill wind blowing no
good if it had not recognized the superior position of the Brahmins
and conferred upon them special advantages. Manu was alive to this
and accordingly proceeds to create monopolies for Brahmins and grant
them certain immunities and privileges as may be seen from the Code.
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First as to monopolies:
I. 88. To Brahmanas he assigned teaching and studying (the Veda)
sacrificing for their own benefit and for others, giving and accepting
(of alms).
X. 1. Let the three twice-born castes (Varna), discharging their
(prescribed) duties, study (the Veda); but among them the Brahmana
(alone) shall teach it, not the other two; that is an established rule.
X. 2. The Brahmana must know the means of subsistence (prescribed)
by law for all, instruct others, and himself live according to (the law).
X. 3. On account of his pre-eminence, on account of the superiority of
his origin, on account of his observance of (particular) restrictive rules,
and on account of his particular sanctification, the Brahmana is the
lord of (all) castes (varna).
X. 74. Brahmanas who are intent on the means (of gaining union
with) Brahman and firm in (discharging) their duties, shall live by
duly performing the following six acts, (which are enumerated) in their
(proper) order.
X. 75. Teaching, studying, sacrificing for himself, sacrificing for
others, making gifts and receiving them are the six acts (prescribed)
for a Brahamana.
X. 76. But among the six acts (ordained) for him three are his means
of subsistence, (viz.) sacrificing for others, teaching, and accepting gifts
from pure mdn.
X. 77. (Passing) from the Brahmana to the Kshatriya, three acts
(incumbent) (on the former) are forbidden, (viz.) teaching, sacrificing
for others, and, thirdly, the acceptance of gifts.
X. 78. The same are likewise forbidden to a Vaisya, that is a settled
rule; for Manu, the lord of creatures (Prajapati), has not prescribed them
for (men of) those two (castes).
X. 79. To carry arms for striking and for throwing (is prescribed)
for Kshatriyas as a means of subsistence; to trade, (to rear) cattle, and
agriculture for Vaisyas; but their duties are liberality, the study of the
Veda, and the performance of sacrifices.
Here are three things which Manu made the monopoly of the Brahmin:
teaching Vedas, performing Sacrifices and receiving gifts.
The following are the immunities that were granted to the Brahmins.
They fall into two classes; freedom from taxation and exemption from
certain forms of punishment for crimes.
VII. 133. Though dying (with want), a king must not levy a tax on
Srotriyas, and no Srotriya residing in his kingdom, must perish from
hunger.
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Thus Manu places the Brahmin above the ordinary penal law for
felony. He is to be allowed to leave the country withdraw a wound on
him and with all property in proved offences of capital punishment. He
is not to suffer forfeiture of fine nor capital punishment. He suffered
only banishment which in the words of Hobbes was only a Change of
air after having committed the most heinous crimes.
Manu gave him also certain privileges.
A Judge must be a Brahmin.
VIII. 9. But if the king does not personally investigate the suits, then
let him appoint a learned Brahmana to try them.
VIII. 10. That (man) shall enter that most excellent court, accompanied
by three assessors, and fully consider (all) causes (brought) before the
(king), either sitting down or standing. The other privileges were financial.
VIII. 37. When a learned Brahmana has found treasure. deposited
in former (times), he may take even the whole (of it); for he is master
of everything.
VIII. 38. When the king finds treasure of old concealed in the ground,
let him give one half to Brahmanas and place the (other)half in his
treasury.
IX. 323. But (a king who feels his end drawing nigh) shall bestow
all his wealth, accumulated from fines, on Brahmanas, make over his
kingdom to his son, and then seek death in battle.
IX. 187. Always to that (relative within three degrees) who is nearest
to the (deceased) Sapinda the estate shall belong; afterwards a Sakulya
shall be (the heir, then) the spiritual teacher or the pupil.
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IX. 188. But on failure of all (heirs) Brahmanas (shall) share the
estate, (who are) versed in the three Vedas, pure and self-controlled ;
thus the law is not violated.
IX. 189. The property of a Brahmana must never be taken by the
King, that is a settled rule; but (the property of men) of other castes
the king may take on failure of all (heirs).
XI. 39. Let him who has faith and controls his senses, perform other
meritorious acts, but let him on no acount offer sacrifices at which he
gives smaller fees (than those prescribed).
XI. 40. The organs (of sense and action), honour, (bliss in) heaven,
longevity, fame, offspring, and cattle are destroyed by a sacrifice at
which (too) small sacrificial fees are given; hence a man of small means
should not offer a (Srauta) sacrifice.
VII. 82. Let him honour those Brahmanas who have returned from
their teachers house (after studying the Veda); for that (money which
is given) to Brahmanas is declared to be an imperishable treasure
for kings.
VII. 83. Neither thieves nor foes can take it, nor can it be lost; hence
an imperishable store must be deposited by kings with Brahmanas.
XI. 4. But a king shall bestow, as is proper, jewels of all sorts, and
presents for the sake of sacrifices on Brahmanas learned in the Vedas.
XI. 3. To these most excellent among the twice-born, food and presents
(of money) must be given; it is declared that food must be given to others
outside the sacrificial enclosure.
The third method adopted by Manu to make the rule of Dana become
a source of secure and steady income is beyond question the most
ingenuous one. Manu linked up dana with penance. In the Scheme of
Manu, an improper act may be a sin although not an offence or it may
be both a sin as well as an offence. As a sin its punishment is a matter
for canonical law. As an offence its punishment is a matter of secular
law. As sin, the improper act is called Pataka and the punishment for
it is called Penance. In the Scheme of Manu every Pataka must be
expunged by the performance of a penance.
XI. 44. A man who omits a prescribed act, or performs a blameable
act, or cleaves to sensual enjoyments, must perform a penance.
XL. 54. Penances, therefore, must always be performed for the sake
of purification, because those whose sins have not been expiated, are
born (again) with disgraceful marks.
The penances prescribed by Manu are many and the curious may
refer to the Manu Smriti itself for a knowledge of what they are. What
is worthy of note is these penances are calculated to materially benefit
the Brahmin. Some penances take the form of a simple dana to the
Brahmin. Others prescribe the performance of some religious rites. But
as religious rites cannot be performed by anybody except by a Brahmin
and that the performance of religious rite requires the payment of fees
the Brahmin alone can be the beneficiary of the dana system.
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1
One can now see why Sumati Bhargava called his code as the Code of Manu. He wanted
to invest it with the dignity and authority of the ancient law-giver Manu.
2
This is the only theory which can explain how some of the Mantras of the Vedas are
admitted to have been made by Shudras, a question which in view of the statement of
Manu that the Shudras must not recite the Vedas, nor hear them recited becomes a very
puzzling question.
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true feature of the old method namely that the Varna should be determined
by a disinterested and independent body. But it added a new feature
namely training as a pre-requisite for assignment of Varna. On the
ground that training alone developes individual in the make up of a
person and the only safe way to determine the Varna of a person is to
know his individuality, the addition of this new feature was undoubtedly
a great improvement.
With the introduction of the Acharya Gurukul system, the duration
of the Varna came to be altered. Varna instead of being Varna for a
period became Varna for life. But it was not hereditary.
Evidently Brahmanism was dissatisfied with this system. The reason
for dissatisfaction was quite obvious. Under the system as prevalent
there was every chance of the Acharya declaring the child of a Brahmin
as fit only to be a Shudra. Brahmanism was naturally most anxious to
avoid this result. It wanted the Varna to be hereditary. Only by making
the Varna hereditary could it save the children of the Brahmins from
being declared Shudra. To achieve this Brahmanism proceeded in the
most audacious manner one can think of.
III
Brahmanism made three most radical changes in the system of
determing the Varna of the child. In the first place the system of
Gurukul as the place where training to the child was given and its
Varna was determined by the Guru at the end of the period of training
was abolished. Manu is quite aware of the Gurukul and refers to
Guruvas1 i.e. training and residence in the Gurukul under the Guru.
But does not refer to it at all in connection with the Upanayan. He
abolishes the Guru as an authority competent to perform Upanayan
by omitting to make even the remotest reference to him in connection
with Upanayan. In place of the Guru Manu allows the Upanayan of
the child to be performed by its father athome.2 Secondly Upanayan
was made into a Sanskara i.e. a sacrament. In olden times Upanayan
was like a convocation ceremony3 held by the Guru to confer degrees
obtained by students in his Gurukul in which certificates of proficiency
in the duties of a particular Varna were granted. In Manus law that
Upanayan was a complete change in the meaning and purpose of this
most important institution. Thirdly the relation of training to Upanayan
was totally reversed. In the olden system training came before Upanayan.
1
Manu II. 67 Where Manu.
2
Manu II, 36-37.
3
On this point see Pradnaneshwar Yatis booklet on Upnayan.
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Such a warning was unnecessary if the object was to ennoble the whole
Brahmin class. Here is a case where vice refuses to pay to virtue even
the homage of hypocracy. Can there be greater moral degeneracy than
what is shown by Manu in insisting upon the worship of the Brahmin
even if he is mean and ignorant?
So much for the object of change from Varna to caste. What have
been the consequences of this change?
From the spiritual point of view the consequences have been too
harmful to be contemplated with equanimity. The harm done may
perhaps be better realized by comparing the position of the Brahmin
as a priest resulting from the law of Manu with that of the law of the
clergy under the Church of England. There the clergy is subject to the
criminal law as every citizen is. But in addition to that he is always
subject to Church Descipline Act. Under the Criminal Law he would
be punished if he officiated as a clergy without being qualified for it.
Under the Church Discipline Act he would be liable to be disqualified
as a clergy for conduct which would be deemed to be morally wrong
although it did not amount to a crime. This double check on the clergy
is held justifiable because learning and morality are deemed to be quite
essential for the profession of the clergy who are supposed to administer
to the spiritual needs of the people. Under Brahmanism the Brahmin
who alone can be the clergy need not possess learning or morality. Yet
he is in sole charge of the spiritual affairs of the people!! On the value
of a creed which permits this, comment is unnecessary.
From the secular point of view, the consequences of this transformation
of Varna into Caste has to introduce a most pernicious mentality among
the Hindus. It is to disregard merit and have regard only to birth. If one
is descended from the high he has respect although he may be utterly
devoid of merit or worth. One who is of high birth will be superior to
the one who is of low birth although the latter may be superior to the
former in point of worth. Under Brahmanism it is birth that always
wins, whether it is against birth or against worth. Merit by itself can win
no meads. This is entirely due to the dissociation of merits from status
which is the work of Brahmanism. Nothing could be better calculated to
produce an unprogressive society which sacrifices the rights of intelligence
on the altar of aristocratic privilege.
Now the third deed in the catalogue of deeds done by Brahmanism
after its triumph over Buddhism. It was to separate the Brahmins from
the result of the Non-Brahmin population and to sever the different
social strata of the Non-Brahmin population.
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Parashara = Matsyagandha
= Vyas
III. 13. It is declared that a Sudra woman alone can be the wife of
a Shudra.
III. 14. A Shudra woman is not mentioned even in any (ancient) story
as the (first) wife of a Brahmana or of a Kshatriya, though they lived
in the (greatest) distress.
III. 15. Twice-born men who, in their folly, wed wives of the low
(Sudra) caste, soon degrade their families and their children to the
state of Sudras.
III. 16. According to Atri and to (Gautama) the son of Utathya, he
who weds a Sudra woman becomes an outcast, according to Saunakaon
the birth of a son, and according to Bhrigu he who has (male)offspring
from a (Sudra female, alone).
III. 17. A Brahmana who takes a Sudra wife to his bed, will (after
death) sink into hell; if he begets a child by her, he will lose the rank
of a Brahmana.
III. 18. The manes and the gods will not eat the (offerings) of that
man who performs the rites in honour of the gods, of the manes, and
of guests chiefly with a (Sudra wifes) assistance, and such (a man) will
not go to heaven.
III. 19. For him who drinks the moisture of a Sudras lips, who is
tainted by her breath, and who begets a son on her, no expiation is
prescribed.
Mark the disguest Manu shows with regard to the Shudra woman.
Mark what Manu says about the food of the Shudra. He says it is
as impure as semen or urine.
These two laws have produced the caste system. Prohibition of
intermarriage and prohibition against interdining are two pillars on
which it rests. The caste system and the rules relating to intermarriage
and interdining are related to each other as ends to means. Indeed by
no other means could the end be realized.
The forging of these means shows that the creation of the caste system
was end and aim of Brahmanism. Brahmanism enacted the prohibitions
against intemarriage and interdining. But Brahmanism introduced
other changes in the social system and if the purposes underlying these
changes are those which I suggest them to be, then it must be admitted
that Brahmanism was so keen in sustaining the caste system that it
did not mind whether ways and means employed were fair or unfair,
moral or immoral. I refer to the laws contained in the Code of Manu
regarding marriage of girls and the life of widows.
See the law that Manu promulgates regarding the marriage of females.
IX. 4. Reprehensible is the father who gives not (his daughter) in
marriage at the proper time.
By this rule Manu enjoins that a girl should be married even though
she may not have reached the age of puberty i.e. even when she is a
child.
Now with regard to widows Manu promulgates the following rule.
V. 157. At her pleasure let her (i.e. widow) emaciate her body, by
living voluntarily on pure flowers, roots and fruits; but let her not,
when her lord is deceased, even pronounce the name of another man.
V. 161. But a widow, who from a wish to bear children, slights her
deceased husband by marrying again, brings disgrace on herself here
below, and shall be excluded from the seat of her lord (in heaven).
From this one can very easily and clearly see how the rule of Sati came
to be forged. Manus rule was that a widow was not to remarry. But it
appears from the statement by Vijnaneshwar that from the time of the
Vishnu Smriti a different interpretation began to put on the ordinance
of Manu. According to this new interpretation Manus rule was explained
to be offering to the widow a choice between two alternatives: (1) Either
burn yourself on your husbands funeral pyre or (2) If you dont, remain
unmarried. This of course is totally false interpretation quite unwarranted
by the clear words of Manu. Somehow it came to be accepted. The date
of the Vishnu Smriti is somewhere about the 3rd or 4th Century. It can
therefore be said that rule of Sati dates from this period.
One thing is certain, these were new rules. The rule of Manu that
girl should be married before she has reached puberty is a new rule.
In Pre-Buddhistic Brahmanism4 marriages were performed not only
after puberty but they were performed when girls had reached an age
when they could be called grown up. Of this there is ample evidence.
Similarly the rule that a woman once she had lost her husband
must not remarry is a new rule. In the Pre-Buddhist Brahmanism
there was no prohibition on widow remarriage. The fact that the
Sanskrit language contains words such as Punarbhu (woman who has
1
The date of the Yajnavalkya Smriti is betwen 150-200 A.D.
2
Vishnu Smriti Ch. XXV 14.
3
He wrote his Mitakshara between 1070 and 1100 A.D.
4
See kaneHistory of Dharmashastra I. Part I. page.
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The question is not why girl marriage was introduced. The question is
why Manu allowed so much discrepancy in the ages of the bride and the
bridegroom.
Mr. Kane4 has attempted an explanation of Sati. His explanation is
that there is nothing new in it. It existed in India in ancient times as it
did in other parts of the world. This again does not satisfy the world. If it
existed outside India, it has not been practised on so enormous a scale as in
India. Secondly if traces of it are found in Ancient India in the Kshatriyas,
why was it revived, why was it not universalized? There is no satisfactory
explanation. Mr. Kanes explanation that the prevalence of Sati by reference
to laws of inheritance does not appear to me very convincing. It may be
that because under the Hindu Law of inheritance as it prevailed in Bengal,
women got a share in property. The relations of the husband of the widow
pressed her to be a Sati in order to get rid of a share may explain why
Sati was practised on so large a scale in Bengal. But it does not explain
how it arose nor how it came to be practised in other parts of India.
Again with regard to the prohibition of widow remarriage, there
is no explanation whatsoever. Why was the widow, contrary to
1
See KaneHistory of Dharmashastra, Vol. II, Part II Chapt.
2
The available evidence on Sati has been collected by Kane in his History of Dharmashastra
Vol. II Part I pp. 617-636.
3
History of India Vol. II.
4
History or Dharmashastra.
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First : burn her on the funeral pyre of her deceased husband and
get rid of her. This, however, is rather an impracticable way of solving
the problem of sex disparity. In some cases it may work, in others it
may not. Consequently every surplus woman cannot thus be disposed
of, because it is an easy solution but a hard realization. However, the
surplus woman (widow) if not disposed of, remains in the group: but
in her very existence lies a double danger. She may marry outside the
Caste and violate to endogamy or she may marry within the Caste
and through competition encroach upon the chances of marriage that
must be reserved for the potential brides in the Caste. She therefore
is a menace in any case and something must be done to her if she
cannot be burned along with her deceased husband.
figure in every group and of the two sexes has greater prestige. With
this traditional superiority of man over woman his wishes have always
been consulted. Woman on the other hand has been an easy prey to
all kinds of iniquitous injunctions, religious, social or economic. But
man as a maker of injunctions is most often above them all. Such
being the case you cannot accord the same kind of treatment to a
surplus man as you can to a surplus woman in a Caste.
It will now be seen that the four means by which numerical disparity
between the two sexes is conveniently maintained are : (1) Burning
the widow with her deceased husband; (2) Compulsory widowhooda
milder form of burning; (3) Imposing celibacy on the widower;
(4) Wedding him to a girl not yet marriageable. Though as I said above,
burning the widow and imposing celibacy on the widower are of doubtful
service to the group in its endeavour to preserve its endogamy, all of
them operate as means. But means as forces, when liberated or set in
motion create an end. What then is the end that these means create?
They create and perpetuate endogamy, while caste and endogamy,
according to our analysis of the various definitions of caste, are one
and the same thing. Thus the existence of these means means caste
and caste involves these means.
(i) Sati or the burning of the widow on the funeral pyre of her
deceased husband.
(ii) Enforced widowhood by which a widow is not allowed to
remarry.
(iii) Girl marriage.
In addition to these, one also notes a great hankering after Sannyasa
(renunciation) on the part of the widower, but it may in some cases be
due purely to psychic disposition.
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1
The outcast is quite different from un Untouchable as will be shown later.
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XI. 188. But he shall throw that pot into water, enter his house and
perform, as before, all the duties incumbent on a relative.
XI. 189. Let him follow the same rule in the case of female outcasts; but
clothes, food, and drink shall be given to them, and they shall live close
to the (family) house.
But if the outcast was recalcitrant and impenitent Manu provides for
his punishment.
Manu will not allow the outcast to live in the family house. Manu
enjoins that
XI. 189Clothes, food, and drink shall be given to them (i.e. the
outcast members of the family), and they shall live close to the (family)
house.
III. 92. Let him (i.e. the householder) gently place on the ground (some
food) for dogs, outcasts, chandals, those aflicted with diseases that are
punishments of former sins, crows and insects.
Then there are penalties against an outcast who defies his caste and
choses to remain an outcast. Manu tells him what will be his penalty
in the next world.
XII. 60. He who has associated with outcasts (will) become Brahmarakshas
(i.e. an evil spirit).
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Manu however was not prepared to leave the outcast with this. He
proceeds to enact penalty the severity of which cannot be doubted. The
following are the penal sections of Manu Smriti against an outcast.
III. 150Those Brahmins who are .....outcasts .
Athesists are unworthy (to partake) of oblations to the gods and manes.
IX. 201. .....Outcast receive(s) no share (in inheritance).
XI. 185. But thenceforward (i.e. after the obsequies of the outcast
have been performed) it shall be forbidden to converse with him, to
sit with him, to give him a share of the inheritance, and to hold with
him such intercourse as is usual among men;
XI. 186. And (if the outcast be the eldest) his right of primogeniture
shall be withheld and the additional share, due to the eldest son; and
in his stead a younger brother, excelling in virtue (i.e. who observes
the rule of caste) shall obtain the share of the eldest.
In spite of what others say the Hindu will not admit that there is any
thing evil in the Caste system, and from one point of view he is right.
There is love, unity and mutual aid among members of a family. There
is honour among thieves. A band of robbers have common interests as
respects to its members. Gangs are marked by fraternal feelings and
intense loyalty to their own ends however opposed they may be to the
other gangs. Following this up one can say that a Caste has got all the
praiseworthy characteristics which a society is supposed to have.
It has got the virtues of a family inasmuch as there is love unity and
mutual aid. It has got the honour known to prevail among thieves. It has
got the loyalty and fraternal feeling we meet with in gangs and it also
possesses that sense of common interests which is found among robbers.
A Hindu may take satisfaction in these praiseworthy characteristics of
the Caste and deny that there is anything evil in it. But he forgets that
his thesis that Caste is an ideal form of social organization is supportable
on the supposition that each caste is entitled to regard himself as an
independent society, as an end in itself as nations do. But the theory
breaks down when the consideration pertains to Hindu Society and to
the Caste-System which goes with it.
Even in such a consideration of the subject the Hindu will not admit
that the Caste system is an evil. Charge Hinduism with the responsibility
for the evils of the Caste-system and the Hindu will at once retort, What
about the Class System in Europe? Upto a point the retort is good if it
means that there exists nowhere that ideal society of the philosophers
marked by organic unity, accompanied by praiseworthy community of
purpose, mutuality of sympathy, loyalty to public ends and concern for
general welfare. Nobody can have much quarrel if the Hindu by way of
analogy were to say that in every Society there are families and classes
marked by exclusiveness, suspicion, and jealousy as to those without;
bands of robbers, gangs. narrow cliques, trade unions. Employees
Associations, Kartels, Chambers of Commerce and political parties. Some
of these are held together by the interest and plunder and others while
aspiring to serve the public do not hesitate to prey upon it.
It may be conceded that everywhere de facto society whether in the
past or in the present is not a single whole but a collection of small
groups devoted to diverse purposes as their immediate and particular
objectives. But the Hindu cannot take shelter under this analogy
between the Hindu caste system and the Non-Hindu Class system and
rest there as though there is nothing more to be said about the subject.
The fact is there is a far bigger question which the Hindu has still to
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face. He must take note of the fact that although every society consists of
groups there are societies in which the groups are only non-social while
there are societies in which the groups are anti-social. The difference
between a society with the class system and a society with the caste
system lies just in this namely the class system is merely non-social but
the caste system is positively anti-soicial.
It may be important to realize why in some societies the group system
produces only non-social feeling and in some societies the group system
produces anti-social feeling. No better explanation of this difference can
be given than the one given by professor John Dewey. According to him
every thing depends upon whether the groups are isolated or associated,
whether there is reciprocity of interest between them or whether there
is lack of reciprocity of interest. If the groups are associated, if there
is a reciprocity of interest between them the feeling between them will
be only non-social. If the groups are isolated, if there is no reciprocity
between them the feeling between them will be anti-social. To quote
Professor Dewey1:
The isolation and exclusiveness of a gang or clique brings its anti-social
spirit into relief. But this same spirit is found wherever one group has
interests of its own which shut it out from full interaction with other
groups, so that its prevailing purpose is the protection of what it has got,
instead of reorganization and progress through wider relationships. It
marks nations in their isolation from one another; families which seclude
their domestic concerns as if they had no connection with a larger life;
schools when separated from the interest of home and community; the
divisions of rich and poor; learned and unlearned. The essential point
is that isolation makes for rigidity and formal institutionalizing of life,
for static and selfish ideals within the group.
and interdining that was prevalent among the four Varnas in olden times.
This has already been discussed in an earlier section of this chapter. There is
however one part of the story that remains to be told. I have said the Varna
system had nothing to do with marriage. That males and females belonging to
the different Varnas could marry and did marry. Law did not come in the way
of inter-varna marriage. Social morality was not opposed to such marriages.
Savarna marriage was neither required by law nor demanded by Society. All
marriages between different Varnasirrespective of the question whether
the bride was of a higher Varna than the bride-groom or whether the bride-
groom was of the higher Varna and the bride of the lower Varnawere valid.
Indeed as Prof. Kane says the distinction between Anuloma and Pratiloma
marriage was quite unknown and even the terms Anuloma and Pratiloma
were not in existence. They are the creation of Brahmanism. Brahmanism
put a stop to Pratiloma marriages i.e. marriages between women of a higher
Varna and men of lower Varna. That was a step in the direction of closing
the connection between the Varnas and creating in them an exclusive and
anti-social spirit regarding one another. But while the inter-connecting gate
of the Pratiloma marriage was closed the inter-connecting gate of Anuloma
marriage had remained open. That was not closed. As pointed out in the
section on graded inequality Anuloma marriage i.e. marriage between a
male of the higher Varna and the female of the lower Varna was allowed
by Brahmanism to continue. The gate of Anuloma marriage was not very
respectable and was a one way gate only, still it was an interconnecting gate
by which it was possible to prevent a complete isolation of the Varnas. But
even here Brahmanism played what cannot but be called a dirty trick. To
show how dirty the trick was it is necessary first to state the rules which
prevailed for determining the status of the child. Under the rule existing from
very ancient times the status of the child was determined by the Varna of
the lather. The Varna of the mother was quite unimportant. The following
illustrations will place the point beyond doubt:
By declining days I mean the period since when the Brahmins started disturbing the
1.
religious system were on a par in the matter of status and dignity. The
Shudra could never aspire to be a Brahmin in the Vedic regime but he
could become a Bhikshu and occupy the same status and dignity as did
the Brahmin. For, while the Vedic order of Bramhins was closed to the
Shudra, the Buddhist order of Bhikshus was open to him and many
Shudras who could not become Brahmins under the Vedic Regime had
become their peers by becoming Bhikshus under Buddhism. Similar
change is noticeable in the case of women. Under the Buddhist regime she
became a free person. Marriage did not make her a slave. For marriage
under the Buddhist rule was a contract. Under the Buddhist Regime
she could acquire property, she could acquire learning and what was
unique, she could become a member of the Buddhist order of Nuns and
reach the same status and dignity as a Brahmin. The elevation of the
status of the Shudras and women was so much the result of the gospel
of Buddhism that Buddhism was called by its enemies as the Shudra
religion (i.e. the religion of the low classes).
All this of course must have been very galling to the Brahmins. How
very galling it must have been to them is shown by the vandallic fury
with which Bramhanism after its triumph over Buddhism proceeded
to bring about a complete demolition of the high status to which the
Shudras and women had been elevated by the revolutionary changes
effected by the vivifying gospel of Buddhism.
Starting with this background one shudders at the inhumanity and
cruelty of the laws made by Manu against the Shudras. I quote a few
of them assembling them under certain general heads.
Manu asks the householders of the Brahmana, Kshatriya and Vaishya
Class :
IV. 61. Let him not dwell in a country where the rulers are
Shudra..
All marriage ties with the Shudra were proscribed. A marriage with
a woman belonging to any of the three higher classes was forbidden.
A Shudra was not to have any connection with a woman of the higher
classes and an act of adultery committed by a Shudra with her was
declared by Manu to be an offence involving capital punishment.
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Manu insists that a Shudra shall be servile, unfit for office, without
education, without property and as a contemptible person, his person
and property shall always be liable to be conscripted.
As to office Manu prescribes.
VIII 20. A Bramhana who is only a Brahmana by descent i.e. one has
neither studied nor performed any other act required by the Vedas may.
at the kings pleasure, interpret the law to him i.e. act as the Judge,
but never a Shudra (however learned he may be).
VIII. 21. The Kingdom of that monarch who looks on while a Shudra
settles the law will sink low like a cow in a morass.
VIII. 272. If a Shudra arrogantly presumes to preach religion to
Bramhins the King shall have poured burning oil in his mouth and ears.
In olden times the study of the Vedas stood for education. Manu
declare that the study of the Vedas was not a matter of right but that
it was a matter of privilege. Manu deprived the Shudra of the right to
study Veda. He made it a privilege of the three higher classes. Not only
did he debar the Shudra from the study of the Vedas but he enacted
penalties against those who might help the Shudra to acquire knowledge
of the Veda. To a person who is previleged to study the Vedas, Manu
ordains that :
IV. 99. He must never read the Vedas.. .in the presence of the Shudras.
Guarded means under the protection of relation, Unguarded means living alone.
1.
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The reason for the rule is more revolting than the rule itself. Manu
was of course not sure that the prohibitory injunction will be enough
to prevent the Shudra from acquiring wealth. To leave no room for the
Shudra to give offence to the Bramhins by his accumulation of wealth
Manu added another section to his code whereby he declared that :
VIII. 417. A Bramhana may seize without hesitation if he be in
distress for his subsistence, the goods of his Shudra.
Manus object was to make the Shudra not merely a servile person
but an altogether contemptible person. Manu will not allow a Shudra
the comfort of having a high sounding name. Had Manu not been there
to furnish incontrovertible proof it would be difficult to believe that
Bramanism could have been so relentless and pitiless in its persecution
of the Shudra. Observe Manus law as to the names that the different
classes can give to their children.
II. 31. Let the first part of a Brahmans name denote something
auspicious, a Kshatriyas be connected with power, and a Vaishyas with
wealth, but a Shudras express something contemptible.
II. 32. The second part of a Bramhans name shall be a word implying
happiness, of a Kshatriyas a word implying protection, of a Vaisyas a
term expressive of thriving and of a Shudras an expression denoting
service.
The basis of all these inhuman laws is the theory enunciated by Manu
regarding the Shudra. At the outset of his Code, Manu takes care to
assert it emphatically and without blushing. He says :
I. 91. One occupation only, the Lord prescribed to the Shudra, to
serve meekly these other three castes (namely Bramhin, Kshatriya and
Vaishya).
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Holding that the Shudra was born to be servile, Manu made his laws
accordingly so as to compel him to remain servile. In the Buddhist
regime a Shudra could aspire to be a judge, a priest and even a King,
the highest status that he could ever aspire to. Compare with this the
ideal that Manu places before the Shudra and one can get an idea of
what fate was to be under Brahmanism :
X. 121. If a Shudra, (unable to subsist by serving Brahmanas),
seeks a livelihood, he may serve Kshartiyas, or he may also seek to
maintain himself by attending on a wealthy Vaishya.
X. 122. But let a (Shudra) serve Brahmanas, either for the sake of
heaven, or with a view to both (this life and the next); for he who is
called the servant of a Brahmana thereby gains all his ends.
X. 124. They must allot to him out of their own family (property) a
suitable maintenance, after considering his ability, his industry, and
the number of those whom he is bound to support.
II. 214. For women are able to lead astray in (this) world not only
a fool, but even a learned man, and (to make) him a slave of desire
and anger.
II. 215. One should not sit in a lonely place with ones mother
sister or daughter; for the senses are powerful, and master even a
learned man.
IX. 14. Women do not care for beauty, nor is their attention fixed on
age; (thinking), (It is enough that) he is a man , they give themselves
to the handsome and to the ugly.
IX. 15. Through their passion for men, through their mutable temper,
through their natural heartlessness, they become disloyal towards
their husbands, however carefully they may be guarded in this (world).
IX. 16. Knowing their disposition, which the Lord of creatures laid in
them at the creation, to be such, (every) man should most strenuously
exert himself to guard them.
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The laws of Manu against women are of a piece with this view.
Women are not to be free under any circumstances. In the opinion of
Manu :
IX. 2. Day and night women must be kept in dependence by the
males (of) their (families), and, if they attach themselves to sensual
enjoyments, they must be kept under ones control.
IX. 6. Considering that the highest duty of all castes, even weak
husbands (must) strive to guard their wives.
V. 149. She must not seek to separate herself from her father,
husband, or sons; by leaving them she would make both (her own
and her husbands) families contemptible. Woman is not to have a
right to divorce.
IX. 45. The husband is declared to be one with the wife, which
means that there could be no separation once a woman is married.
Many Hindus stop here as though this is the whole story regarding
Manus law of divorce and keep on idolizing it by comforting their
conscience by holding out the view that Manu regarded marriage as
sacrament and therefore did not allow divorce. This of course is far
from the truth. His law against divorce had a very different motive. It
was not to tie up a man to a woman but it was to tie up the woman
to a man and to leave the man free. For Manu does not prevent a
man for giving up his wife. Indeed he not only allows him to abandon
his wife but he also permits him to sell her. But what he does is to
prevent the wife from becoming free. See what Manu Says :
The meaning is that a wife, sold or repudiated by her husband, can never
become the legitimate wife of another who may have bought or received
her after she was repudiated. If this is not monstrous nothing can be. But
Manu was not worried by considerations of justice or injustice of his laws.
He wanted to deprive women of the freedom she had under the Buddhistic
regime. He knew, by her misuse of her liberty, by her willingness to marry
the Shudra that the system of the gradation of the Varna had been destroyed.
Manu was outraged by her license and in putting a stop to it he deprived
her of her liberty.
A wife was reduced by Manu to the level of a slave in the matter of
property.
IX. 146. A wife, a son, and a slave, these three are declared to have no
property; the wealth which they earn is (acquired) for him to whom they belong.
When she becomes a widow Manu allows her maintenance if her husband
was joint and a widows estate in the property of her husband if he was
separate from his family. But Manu never allows her to have any dominion
over property.
A woman under the laws of Manu is subject to corporal punishment and
Manu allows the husband the right to beat his wife.
VIII. 299. A wife, a son, a slave, a pupil, and a younger brother of the full
blood, who have committed faults, may be beaten with a rope or a split bamboo.
IX. 18. Women have no right to study the Vedas. That is why their Sanskars
are performed without Veda Mantras. Women have no knowledge of religion
because they have no right to know the Vedas. The uttering of the Veda
Mantras is useful for removing sin. As women cannot utter the Veda Mantras
they are as unclean as untruth is.
To disable her from performing such sacrifices Manu prevents her from
getting the aid and services of a Bramhin priest.
IV. 205. A Bramhan must never eat food given at a sacrifice performed by
a woman.
IV. 206. Sacrifices performed by women are inauspicious and not acceptable
to God. They should therefore be avoided.
Woman was not to have any intellectual persuits and nor free will nor
freedom of thought. She was not to join any heretical sect such as Buddhism.
If she continues to adhere to it, till death she is not to be given the libation
of water as is done in the case of all dead.
Finally a word regarding the ideal of life, Manu has sought to place before
a woman. It had better be stated in his own words :
V. 151. Him to whom her father may give her, or her brother with the
fathers permission, she shall obey as long as he lives and when he is dead,
she must not insult his memory.
V. 154. Though destitute of virtue, or seeking pleasure elsewhere, or devoid
of good qualities, yet a husband must be constantly worshipped as a god by a
faithful wife.
V. 155. No sacrifice, no vow, no fast must be performed by women, apart
from their husbands; if a wife obeys her husband, she will for that reason alone
be exalted in heaven.
Then comes the choicest texts which forms the pith and the marrow of
this ideal which Manu prescribes for the women :
V. 153. The husband who wedded her with sacred Mantras, is always a
source of happiness to his wife, both in season and out of season, in this world
and in the next.
V. 150. She must always be cheerful, clever in the management of her
household affairs, careful in cleaning her utensils, and economical in expenditure.
Although its effects have not been clearly noticed there can be no doubt
that because of it the Hindus have been stricken with palsy. f Students of
social organization have been content with noting the difference between
equality and inequality. None have realized that in addition to equality
and inequality there is such a thing as graded inequality. Yet inequality
is not half so dangerous as graded inequality. Inequality carried within
itself the seeds of its own destruction. Inequality does not last long.
Under pure and simple inequality two things happen. It creates general
discontent which forms the seed of revolution. Secondly it makes the
sufferers combine against a common foe and on a common grievance.
But the nature and circumstances of the system of graded inequality
leave no room for either of these two things to happen. The system of
graded inequality prevents the rise of general discontent against inequity,
ft cannot therefore become the storm centre of revolution. Secondly
the sufferers under inequality becoming unequal both in terms of the
benefit and the burden there is no possibility of a general combination
of all classes to overthrow the inequity. To make the thing concrete the
Brahmanic law of marriage is full of inequity. The right of Brahmana
to take a woman from the classes below him but not to give a woman
to them is in inequity. But the Kshatriya, Vaishya and Shudra will not
combine to destroy it. The Kshatriya resents this right of the Brahmana.
But he will not combine with Vaishya or the Shudra and that for two
reasons. Firstly because he is satisfied that if the Brahman has the
right to take the right of three communities, the Kshatriya has the
right to appropriate the women of two communities. He does not suffer
so much as the other two. Secondly if he joins in a general revolution
against this marriageinequity in one way he will rise to the level of
the Bramhins but in another way all will be equal which to him means
that the Vaishyas and the Shudras will rise to his level i.e. they will
claim Kshatriya women-which means he will fall to their level. Take
any other inequity and think of a revolt against it. The same social
psychology will show that a general rebellion against it is impossible.
One of the reasons why there has been no revolution against
Brahmanism and its inequities is due entirely to the principle of graded
inequality. If is a system of permitting a share in the spoils with a view
to enlist them to support the spoils system. It is a system full of low
cunning which man could have invented to perpetuate inequity and to
profit by it. For it is nothing else but inviting people to share in inequity
in order that they may all be supporters of inequity.
There now remains to lift the curtain from the last act of this drama
of Bramhanism.
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The cases of Mussolini and Hitler are a complete disproof of the theory
of the Aryans and of Plato.
This Vedic system of Chaturvarna, far from being an ideal system
was made positively worse by the changes which Bramhanism made and
which have already been described. Every one of them was mischievous
in character is beyond question. The Buddhist order of Bhikshus and the
Vedic order of Brahmins were designed to serve the same purpose. They
formed the elite of their society whose function was to lead and guide
society along the right road. Although designed to discharge the same
function the Budhist Bhikshu was better placed to discharge it than
was the Bramhin. That is because Buddha recognized one thing which
nobody either before him or after him has done. Buddha realized that
lor a person to give a true lead to Society and be its trustworthy guide
he must be intellectually free and further, which is more important,
to be intellectually free he must not have private property. An elite
charged with the care of his private property must fail to discharge
his duty of leading and guiding Society along the right road. Buddha
therefore took care to include in the Code of discipline for the Bhikshus
a rule prohibiting a Bhikshu from holding private property. In the Vedic
order of Bramhins there was no such prohibition. A Bramhin was free
to hold property. This difference produced a profound difference on the
character and outlook of the Buddhist Bhikshu and the Vedic Bramhin.
The Bhikshus formed an intellectual class. The Bramhins formed on the
other hand merely an educated class. There is a great difference between
an intellectual class and an educated class. An intellectual class has no
limitations arising out of any affiliations to any class or to any interest.
An educated Class on the other hand is not an intellectual class although
it has cultivated its intellect. The reason is that its range of vision and
its sympathy to a new ideology is circumscribed by its being identified
with the interest of the class with which it is affiliated.
The Bramhins from the very beginning therefore were inclined to be
a purely educated class, enlightened but selfish. This evil in the Vedic
order of Bramhins was extreme by the changes made in the old Vedic
System. The right of the Brahmins to rule and the grant of special
privileges and immunities made them more selfish, and induced in them
the desire to use their education not for the advancement of learning but
for the use of their community and against the advancement of society.
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All their energy and their education has been spent in maintaining
their own privileges against the good of the public. It has been the boast
of many Hindu authors that the civilization of India is the most ancient
civilization in the world. They will insist that there was no branch of
knowledge in which their ancestors were not the pioneers. Open a book
like The Positive Background of Hindu Sociology by Prof. Benoy Kumar
Sarkar, or a book like The Positive Sciences of the Ancient Hindus by
Dr. Brajendranath Seal one is overwhelmed with data touching upon the
knowledge their ancestors had about various scientific subjects. From
these books it would appear that the ancient Indians knew astronomy,
astrology, biology, chemistry, mathematics, Medicine, minerology. Physics
and in the view of the mass of people even aviation. All this may be very
true. The important question is now how the ancient Indians discovered
these positive sciences. The important question is why did the ancient
Indians cease to make any progress in the sciences in which they were the
pioneers? This sudden arrest in the progress of science in ancient India
is as astounding as it is deplorable. In the scientific world India occupies
a position which even if it be first among the primitive is certainly last
among the civilized nation. How did it happen that a people who began
the work of scientific progress stopped, halted on the way, left in its
incohate and incomplete condition ? This is a question that needs to be
considered and answered, not what the ancient Indians knew.
There is only one answer to the question and it is a very simple
answer. In ancient India the Bramhins were the only educated class. They
were also the Class which was claiming to be above all others. Buddha
disputed their claim for supremacy and declared a war on the Brahmins.
The Brahmins acted as an Educated Classas distinguished from an
intellectual classwould act under the circumstances. It abandoned all
pursuits and engaged itself in defending the claim of supremacy and the
social, economic and political interests of its class. Instead of writing
books on Science, the Brahmins undertook to write Smritis. Here is
an explanation why the progress of science in India became arrested.
Brahmins found it more important and more imperative to write Smritis
to repel the Buddhist doctrine of social equality.
How many Smritis did the Brahmins write ?
Mr. Kane a great authority on the Smriti literature has computed
their number to be 128. And what for ? The Smritis are called
lawbooks which of course hide their nature. They are really treatises
expounding the supremacy of the Brahmins and their rights to special
privileges. The defence of Bramhanism was more important than the
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progress of science. Bramhanism not only defended its previleges but set
about extending them in a manner that would cover every descent man
with shame. The Brahmins started particularly to expand the meaning
of certain privileges granted to them by Manu.
Manu had given the Bramhins the right to dana, gift. The dana
was always intended to be money or chattel. But in course of time the
concept of dana was expanded so as to include the gift of a woman which
a Brahmin could keep as his mistress or who could be released by the
Bramhin on commutation1 of money payment.
Manu designated the Bramhins as Bhu-devas, lords of the Earth. The
Bramhins enlarged the scope of this statement and began to claim the
right to sexual intercourse with women of other classes. Even queens
were not exempt from this claim. Ludovico Di Varthema who came to
India as a traveller in about 1502 A.D. records the following about the
Brahmins of Calicut:
It is a proper, and the same time pleasant thing to know who these
Brahmins are. You must know that they are the chief persons of the
faith, as priests are among us. And when the King takes a wife, he
selects the most worthy and the most honoured of these Brahamins
and makes him sleep the first night with his wife, in order that he
may deflower her. 2.
In the Bombay Presidency the priests of the Vaishnava sect claimed the
right to deflower the women of their sect. This gave rise to the famous
Maharaja Libel case brought by the chief priest of the Sect against one
Karosondas Mulji in the High Court of Bombay in the year 1869 which
shows that the right to claim the benefit of the first night was certainly
effective till then.
When such a right to sexual cohabitation for the first night could be
extended against the generality of the lower classes the Brahmins did
not hesitate to extend it. This they did particularly in Malabar. There,
Manu designated the Brahmins as Bhu-devas, lords of the earth. The
Brahmins enlarged the scope of this statement and began to claim the
I remember reading the report of case in which a Brahmin who had taken a married wife
1.
as Dana refused to release her even though communication was offered by her husband.
2.
The Travels of Ludovico Di Varthema (Pub. Hakyt Society) Page 141. Varthema adds
Do not imagine that the Brahmin goes willingly to perform this operation. The King is
even obliged to pay him four hundred or five hudndred ducats.
New Account of the East Indies (1744) Vol. I. page 310.
3.
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right of promiscuous sexual intercourse with the women folk of the other
Classes. This happened particularly in Malabar. There1
The Brahman castes follow the Makatyam System that is the system
by which the child belongs to its fathers family. They contract, within
their own caste regular marriages, with all the ordinary legal and religious
sanctions and incidents. But the Brahmin men are also in the habit
of entering into Sambandhan-Unions with women of the lower castes.
This is not all. Observe further what the writer has to say:
Neither party to a Sambadhan Unions becomes thereby a member of
the other family; and the offspring of the Union belong to their mothers
tharwad (family) and have no sort of claim, so far as the law goes, to a
share of their fathers property or to maintenance therefrom.
Here there are two offences, General Impersonation (X. 96) and
impersonation by the Shudra (XI 56). Note also the punishments how
severe they are. For the first the punishment is confiscation of property
and banishment. For the second the punishment is the same as the
punishment for causing the death of a Brahmin.
The offence of personation is not unknown in modern jurisprudence
and the Indian Penal Code recognizes it in section 419. But what is the
punishment the Indian Penal Code prescribes for cheating by personation?
Fine, and if imprisonment, then 3 years or both. Manu must be turning
in his grave to find the British Government make so light of his law
of Caste.
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Manu next proceeds to direct the king that he should execute this law.
In the first place he appeals to the King in the name of his pious duty:
VIII. 172. By preventing the confusion of Castes..the power
of the King grows, and he prospers in this world and after death.
Manu perhaps knows that the law relating to the confusion of Varna
may not be quite agreeable to the conscience of the king and he avoids
enforcement. Consequently Manu tells the King how in the matter of
the execution of the laws the King should act:
VIII. 177. Therefore let the King not heeding his own likes and dislikes
behave exactly like Yama.
VIII 418. The King should carefully compel Vaishyas and Sudras to
perform the work (prescribed) for them; for if these two castes swerved
from their duties they would throw this whole world into confusion.
not wanting Kshatriyas who fought against the Kshatriyas1 for the sake
of Brahmins and there were not wanting Brahmins2 who joined hands
with Kshatriyas to put down the Brahmins.
Secondly this old Chaturvarna was conventional. It was the ideal of
the Society but it was not the law of the State. Brahmanism isolated the
Varnas and sowed the seed of antagonism. Brahmanism made legal what
was only conventional. By giving it a legal basis it perpetrated the mischief.
The Vedic Chaturvarna if it was an evil would have died out by force of
time and circumstances. By giving it the force of Law Brahmanism has
made it eternal. This is probably the greatest mischief that Brahmanism
has done to Hindu Society.
In considering this question one cannot fail to notice that the obligation
imposed upon the King for the maintenance of the law of Chaturvarna
which is another name for the system of graded inequality does not require
the King to enforce it against the Brahmins and the Kshatriyas. The
obligation is limited to the enforcement of the law against the Vaishyas
and the Shudras. Having regard to the fact that Brahmanism was so intent
on giving the system the force of law the result has been very awkward
to say the least about it. Notwithstanding this attempt at legalization the
system remained half legal and half conventional, legal as to the Vaishyas
and the Shudras and merely conventional as to Brahmins and Kshatriyas,
This difference needs to be accounted for. Was Brahmanism honest in
its attempt to give the system the force of law? Did it wish that each of
the four Varnas be bound by it? The fact that Brahmanism would not bind
the Brahmins and the Kshatriyas by the law it made, shows that in this
business Brahmainsm was far from honest. If it believed in the system
as ideal it could not have failed to make it an universal binding force.
But there is more than dishonesty in this foul game. One can quite
understand why the Brahmins were left free and untramelled by the
shackles of the law. Manu called them Gods on earth and Gods must be
above the law. But why were the Kshatriyas left free in the same way as
the Brahmins. He knows that the Kshatriyas will not humble themselves
before the Brahmins. He then proceeds to warn them, how the Brahmins
can punish them if the Kshatriyas show arrogance and plan rebellion.
IX. 320 When the Kshatriyas become in any way overbearing
towards the Brahmanas, the Brahmanas themselves shall duly
restrain them; for the Kshatriyas sprang from the Brahmanas.
1.
This is how Interpret the story of Parashurams war against the Kshatriyas.
2.
Buddhism was a revolt against Brahmins and Brhminism. Yet many or the early followers
of Buddha & Buddhism were Brahmins.
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One might think that the reason why Manu does not impose an
obligation upon the King to enforce the law against the Kshatriya was
because the Brahmins felt themselves quite capable of dealing with
Kshatriyas by their own prowess and without the aid of the King and
that they meant to put their sanctions against the Kshatriyas when
the time came and without fear of consequences. All this could not
have been meant by Manu. For after uttering this vows of vengeance,
and threats and imprecations Manu suddenly come down and begins to
plead with the Kshatriyas for cooperation and common front with the
Brahmins. In a verse next after the verse in which he utters the threats
and imprecations against the Kshatriyas Manu pleads:
IX. 323. But (a king who feels his end drawing nigh) shall bestow
all his wealth, accumulated from fines on Brahmanas, make over his
kingdom to his son and then seek death in battle.
1.
All this record has been collected by Prof. Muir in his Original Sanskrit Texts. Vo. I.
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and then we have the record of the whole class of Kshatriyas exterminated
by Parashuram acting on behalf of the Brahmanas. The issues that brought
them in conflict extended over a wide range and show how bitter and
strained must have been the feelings between Brahmins and Kshatriyas.
There were conflicts over the question whether the Kshatriya had a right
to become a Brahmana. There were conflicts over the question, whether
the Brahmins were subject to the authority or not. There were conflicts
on the question who should salute first and who should give way to
whom. The wars were wars1 of authority, status and dignity.
The results of these wars could not but be obvious to the Brahmins.
Notwithstanding their boastful utterances they must have realized
that it was not possible for them to crush the Kshatriyas and that
notwithstanding the wars of extermination the Kshatriyas survived
in sufficient numbers to plague the Brahmins. One need not pay any
attention to the filthy story told by the Brahmins and alluded to by
Manu that the Kshatriyas of the Manus day were not the original
Kshatriyas but a race of new Kshatriyas begotten by the Brahmins upon
the widows of the old Kshatriyas who were massacred by Parashuram.
Blackmailing is one of the means which Brahmanism is never ashamed
of using to advance its own purposes. The fight of Brahmanism against
the Kshatriyas was from the very beginning a fight between a fool
and a bully. Brahmanas were fighting against the Kshatriyas for the
maintenance of the Chaturvarna. Now it is this very Chaturvarna which
allowed bayonets to the Kshatriyas and denied them to the Brahmins.
How under this theory could the Brahmin fight with the Kshatriya with
any hope of success? It could not have taken long for the Brahmins to
realise the truthwhich Tallyrand told Napoleonthat it is easy to give
bayonets but it is very difficult to sit on them and that as Kshatriyas
had bayonets and Brahmins none, war with the Kshatriya was the way
to ruin. These were the direct consequences of these wars between the
Brahmins and the Kshatriyas. But there were others which could not
have escaped the attention of the Brahmins. While the Brahmins and
Kshatriyas were fighting among themselves nobody was left to check
and keep the Vaishyas and the Shudras under control. They were on the
road of social equality almost nearing to the status of the Brahmins and
Kshatriyas. To Brahmanism the possibility of suppressing the Kshatriya
was very remote and the danger of being overtaken by Vaishyas and
Shudras were real and very real. Should the Brahmana continue to fight
the Kshatriya and ignore the danger of the Vaishyas and the Shudras?
Or Should the Brahmana give up the hopeless struggle against the
1.
See Hopkins History of the Ruling Races.
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Kshatriya and befriend him and make with him a common cause and
suppress the growing menace of the Vaishyas and Shudras? Brahmanism
after it was exhausted in the wars with the Kshathyas chose the second
alternative. It sought to befriend their worthwhile enemies the Kshatriyas
to work for a new ideal namely to enslave and exploit the two classes
below them namely the Vaishyas and the Shudras. This new ideal
must have taken shape some time when the Satpatha Brahmana came
to be composed. It is in the Satpatha Brahmana we find the new ideal
expressed it was well established. The language in which it is expressed,
and the subject to which it is applied are so telling that I feel it should
be quoted in its original terms. Says the author of the Satpatha1:
They then make the beast return (to the Ahavaniya2) the he-goat
goes first of them, then the ass, then the horse. Now in going away from
this (Ahavaniya) the horse goes first, then the ass, then the he-goatfor
the horse corresponds to the Kshatra (nobility), the ass to the Vaishya
and Shudra, the he-goat to the Brahman and in-as-much as, in going
from here, the horse goes first, therefore the Kshatriya, going first, is
followed by the three others castes; and in-as-much as, in returning
from here, the he-goat goes first, therefore the Brahman, going first, is
followed by the three other castes. And in-as-much as the ass does not
go first, either in going back from here, or in coming back from there,
therefore the Brahmana and Kshatriya never go behind the Vaishya
and Sudra; hence they walk thus in order to avoid a confusion between
good and bad. And, moreover, he thus encloses those two castes (the
Vaishyas and Sudra) on both sides by the priesthood and the nobility
and makes them submissive.
Avavaniya.
2.
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CHAPTER 12
The Morals of the House
In the first place it is only in modern times that Law has been
separated from Religion. In all ancient Society, Law and Religion were
one. As Prof. Max Muller1 points out that though :
Law seems naturally to be the foundation of society, and the bond that
binds a nation together. Those who look below the surface have quickly
perceived that law itself, at least ancient law, derives its authority,
its force, its very life from religion..The belief that the law giver
enjoyed some closer intimacy with the Deity than ordinary mortals,
pervades the ancient traditions of many nations. According to a well
known passage in Diodorus Siculus, the Egyptians believed their laws
to have been communicated to Menvis by Hermes; the Cretaus held that
Minos received his laws from Zeus, the Lacedaemonians that Lykurgus
received his laws from Apollon. According to the Arians, their law giver
Zarathustras had received his Laws from the Good Spirit; According
to the Stoe, Zamolixis received his laws from the goddess Hestia; and
according to the Jews, Moses received his laws from the God las.
No one has pointed out more forcibly than Sir Henry Mains2 that
in ancient times religion as a divine influence was underlying and
supporting every relation of life and every social institution when he
says of Religion as:
A supernatural presidency (which) is supposed to consecrate and
keep together all the cardinal institutions of those times, the state, the
Race, and the Family .
Unless some motive force comes to its aid morality remains inert.
There can be no doubt that what gives motive force to morality is
Religion. It is a propelling force which creates, to use again the language
of Principal Jacks:
Motives which are strong enough to overcome the enormous
difficulties involved in living the good life, even in its simpler forms,
and adequate to maintain that continuous improvement of the moral
ideal.
Lastly I will quote the defintion given by a Hindu Mr. G. P. Sen who
not merely a Hindu but is a student of Hinduism. In his book called
Introduction to the study of Hinduism Mr. Sen says :
Hinduism is what the Hindus, or a major portion of them in a
Hindu Community do.
It therefore follows that in so far as Manu lays down the creed of the
Caste and in so far as Hinduism at its core is the creed of Caste the
Manu Smriti must be accepted as the Book of Religion.
II
What are the Ethical and Religious norms prescribed by Manu for
Hindus to observe and follow?
To begin with, Manu divides Hindus into four varnas or social orders.
He not only divides Hindus into four orders he also grades them. The
following is his scheme of gradation.
X. 3. On account of his pre-eminence, on account of the superiority of
his origin, on account of his observance of (particular) restrictive rules,
and on account of his particular sanctification the Brahman is the Lord
of (all) Varnas.
Besides the reason given by Manu the Brahmin is first in rank because
he was produced by God from his mouth, in order that the offerings
might be conveyed to the Gods and manes. Manu gives another reason
for the supremacy of the Brahmins.
He says :
I. 98. The very birth of a Brahmana is an eternal incarnation of the
sacred Law (Veda); for he is born to (fulfil) the sacred law, and become
one with Brahman (God).
I. 99. A Brahamana, coming into existence, is born as the highest on
earth, the lord of all created beings, for the protection of the treasury
of the Law.
Manu concludes by saying that :
I. 101. The Brahmana eats but his own food, wears but his own
apparel, bestows but his own alms; other mortals subsist through the
benevolence of the Brahmana.
Being a deity the Brahmin is above law and above the King. Manu
directs :
VII. 37. Let the King, after rising early in the morning, worship
Brahmans who are well versed in the threefold sacred science and learned
(in polity), and follow their advice
VII. 38. Let him daily worship aged Brahmans who know the Veda
and are pure.
In the Code of Manu there are rules regarding the different occupations
which the different orders are required to follow:
I. 88. To Brahmens he (Swayambhu Manu) assigned the duties of reading
the Veda, of teaching it, of sacrificing, of assisting others to sacrifice,
of giving alms, if they the rich, and if indiquent, of receiving of gifts.
I. 89. To defend the people, to give alms, to sacrifice, to read the Veda,
to shun the allurements of sensual gratifiction, are, in a few words, the
duties of a Kshatriya.
I. 90. To keep herds of cattle, to bestow largeness, to sacrifice, to read
the scriptures, to carry on trade, to lend at interest, and to cultivate
land are prescribed or permitted to a Vaishya.
I. 91. One principal duty the supreme Ruler assigns to a Shudra; namely,
to serve the before mentioned classes, without depreciating their worth.
I.74. Let such Brahmans as are intent on the means of attaining the
supreme Godhead, and firm in their own duties, completely perform, in
order, the six following acts:
X. 75. Reading the Vedas, the teaching others to read them, sacrificing,
and assisting others, to sacrifice, giving to the poor if themselves have
enough, and accepting gifts from the virtuous if themselves are poor, are
the six prescribed acts of the first born class;
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X. 86. They must avoid selling liquids of all sorts, dressed grain, seeds
of tila, stones, salt, cattle, and human creatures.
X. 87. All woven cloth dyed red, cloth made of sana, of cshuma-bark,
and of wool, even though not red; fruit, roots, and medicinal plants.
X. 89. All beasts of the forest, as deer and the like, ravenous beasts,
birds, and fish; spirituous liquors, nili, or indigo, and lascha, or lac; and
all beasts with uncloven hoofs.
X. 91. If he apply seeds of tila to any purpose but food, anoiting, and
sacred oblations, he shall be plunged, in the shape of a worm, together
with his parents, into the ordure of dogs.
X. 93. And by selling the other forbidden commodities with his own
free will, he assumes in this world, after seven nights, the nature of a
mere Vaisya.
X. 94. Fluid things may, however, be bartered for other fluids, but
not salt for anything liquid; so may dressed grain for grain undressed,
and tila-seeds for grain in the husk, equal weights or measures being
given and taken.
X. 102. The Brahmen having fallen into distress, may receive gifts
from any person whatever; for by no sacred rule can it be shown, that
absolute purity can be sullied.
Compare with this what Manu has to say with regard, to what the
other Varnas can do in an emergency, Manu says :
X. 96. A man of lowest class, who through covetousncss. lives by the
acts of the highest, let the king strip of all his wealth and instantly
banish.
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X. 126. There is no guilt in a man of the servile class who eats leeks
and other forbidden vegetables; he must not have the sacred investiture;
he has no business with the duty of making oblations to fire and the
like, but there is no prohibition against his offering dressed grain as
a sacrifice, by way of discharging his own duty.
X. 127. Even Sudras, who were anxious to perform their entire duty,
and, knowing what they should perform, imitate the practice of good
men in the household sacraments, but without any holy text, except
those containing praise and salutations, are so far from sinning, that
they acquire just applause.
who has amassed riches, becomes proud, and, by his insolence or neglect,
gives pain even to Brahmens.
He concludes :
X. 130. Such, as have been fully declared, are the several duties of the
four classes in distress for subsistence, and, if they perform them exactly,
they shall attain the highest beatitude.
The privileges to some were not merely social they were also financial,
Says Manu :
VIII. 35. From the man, who shall say with truth, This property, which
has been kept, belongs to me, the king may take a sixth or twelfth part,
for having secured it.
VIII. 36. But he, who shall say so falsely, may be fined either an eighth
part of his own property, or else in some small proportion to the value of
the goods falsely claimed, a just calcultion having been made.
VIII. 38. But of a treasure anciently deposited under ground, which any
other subject or the king has discovered, the king may lay up half in his
treasury having given half to the Brahmens.
IX. 323. Should the king be near his end through some incurable disease,
he must bestow on the priests all his riches, accumulated his kingdom to
his son, let him seek death in battle, or if there be no war, by abstaining
from food.
VII. 127. Having ascertained the rates of purchase and sale, the length
of the way, the expenses of food and of condiments the charges of securing
the goods carried, and the net profits of trade, let the king oblige traders
to pay taxes on their saleable commodities.
VII. 128. After full consideration, let a king so levy those taxes continually
in his dominions, that both he and the merchant may receive a just
compensation for their several acts.
VII. 129. As the leech, the suckling calf, and the bee, take their natural
food by little and little, thus must a king draw from his dominions an
annual revenue.
VII. 130. Of cattle, of gems, of gold and silver, added each year to the
capital stock, a fiftieth part may be taken by the king; of grain, an eighth
part, a sixth, or a twelfth, according to the difference of the soil, and the
labour necessary to cultivate it.
VII. 131. He may also take a sixth part of the clear annual increase
of trees, fleshmeat, honey, clarified butter, perfumes, medical substances,
liquids, flowers, roots, and fruit.
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VII. 132. A king, even though dying with want, must not receive
any tax from a Brahman learned in the Vedas, nor suffer such a
Brahmen, residing in his territories, to be afflicted with hunger.
VII. 137, Let the king order a mere trifle to be paid, in the name of
the annual tax, by the meaner inhabitants of his realm, who subsist
by petty traffic.
VIII. 394. Neither a blind man, nor an idiot, nor a cripple, nor a man
full seventy years old, nor one who confers great benefits on priests
of eminent learning, shall be compelled by any king to pay taxes.
X. 118. A military king, who takes even a fourth part of the crops
of his realm at a time of urgent necessity, as of war or invasion, and
protects his people to the utmost of his power, commits no sin:
IX. 188. On failure of all those, the lawful heirs are such Brahmens,
as have read the three Vedas, as are pure in body and mind, as have
subdued their passions; and they must consequently offer the cake;
thus the rites of obsequies cannot fail.
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The terms on which the different social orders should carry on their
associated life has been defined by Manu in a set of rules which form
a very important part of the morals of the Hindu House.
Manu ordains that:
X. 3. From priority of birth, from superiority of origin, from a more
exact knowledge of scripture, and from a distinction in the sacrificial
thread, the Brahmen is the lord of all classes.
VII. 35. A king was created as the protector of all those classes and
orders, who, from the first to the last, discharge their several duties.
VII. 36. And all, that must be done by him, for the protection of
his people, with the assistance of good ministers, I will declare to
you, as the law directs, in due order.
VII. 37. Let the king, having risen at early dawn, respectfully
attend to Brahmen, learned in the three Vedas, and in the science
of ethics, and by their decision let him abide.
IX. 313. Let him not, although in the greatest distress for money,
provoke Brahmens to anger by taking their prosperty; for they, once
enraged, could immediately by sacrifices and imprecations destroy
him with his troops, elephants, horses and cars.
On social bearing of one class towards another Manu has laid down
some very interesting ordinances. He has an equation for social status:
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II. 135. The student must consider a Brahmen, though but ten years
old, and a Kshatriya, though aged a hundred years, as father and son; as
between those two, the young Brahmen is to be respected as the father.
II. 136. Wealth, kindred, age, moral conduct, and, fifthly divine
knowledge, entitle men to respect; but that which is last mentioned in
order, is the most respectable.
II. 137. Whatever man of the three highest classes possesses the most
of those five, both in number and degree that man is entitled to most
respect; even a Sudra, if he have entered the tenth decade of his age.
II. 138. Way must be made for a man in a wheeled carriage, or above
ninety years old, or afflicted with disease, or carrying a burthen; for a
woman; for a priest just returned from the mansion of his preceptor;
for a prince, and for a bridegroom.
II. 139. Among all those, if they be met at one time, the priest just
returned home and the prince are most to be honoured; and of those
two, the priest just returned, should be treated with more respect than
the prince.
II. 124. In the salutation he should pronounce, after his own name,
the vocative particle bhoh; for the particle bhoh is held by the wise
to have the same property with names fully expressed.
II. 126. That Brahmen, who knows not the form of returning a
salutation, must not be saluted by a man of learning; as a Shudra,
even so is he.
II. 127. Let a learned man ask a priest, when he meets him, if his
devotion prospers, a warrior, if he is unhurt; a merchant, if his wealth
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is secure; and one of the servile classes, if he enjoys good health; using
respectively the words, cusalam, anamayam, ksheman and anarogyam.
The provisions laid down by Manu in relation to Religion and Religious
Sacraments and Sacrifice are worthy of note.
The ordinances of Manu relating to Sacraments and sacrifices are as
follows:
III. 68. A house-keeper has five places of slaughter, or where small
living creatures may be slain; his kitchen-hearth, his grindstone, his
broom, his pastle and mortar, his water-pot; by using which, he become
in bondage to sin.
III. 69. For the sake of expiating offences committed ignorantly in those
places mentioned in order, the five great sacraments were appointed by
eminent sages to be performed each day by such as keep house.
III. 70. Teaching and studying the scriptures is the sacrament of the
Veda; offering cakes and water, the sacrament of the Manes, an oblation
to fire, the sacrament of the Deities; giving rice or other food to living
creatures, the sacraments of spirits; receiving guests with honour, the
sacrament of men.
III. 71. Whoever omits not those five great ceremonies, if he have
ability to perform them, is untainted by the sons of the five slaughtering
places, even though he constantly reside at home.
Manu then proceeds to lay down that all are not entitled to the
benefit of the sacraments and all have not the same right to perform
the sacrifices.
He defines the position of women and Shudras in the matter of
Sacraments and sacrifices. As to women Manu says :
II. 66. The same ceremonies, except that of the sacrificial thread, must
be duly performed for women at the same age and in the same order,
that the body may be made perfect; but without any text from the Veda.
II. 37. Should a Brahman, or his father for him, be desirous of his
advancement in sacred knowledge; a Kshatriya, of extending his power;
or a Vaisya of engaging in mercantile business; the investiture may be
made in the fifth, sixth, or eighth years respectively.
II. 38. The ceremony of investiture hallowed by the Gayatri must not
be delayed, in the case of a priest, beyond the sixteenth year; nor in
that of a soldier, beyond the twenty second; nor in that of a merchant,
beyond the twenty fourth.
II. 39. After that, all youths of these three classes, who have not been
invested at the proper time, become vratyas, or outcasts, degraded from
the Gayatri, and condemned by the virtuous.
II. 77. From the three Vedas, also, the Lord of creatures,
incomprehensibly exalted, successively milked out the three measures
of that ineffable text, beginning with the word tad, and entitled Savitri
or Gayatri.
II. 78. A priest who shall know the Veda, and shall pronounce to
himself, both morning and evening, that syllable, and that holy text
preceded by the three words, shall attain the sanctity which the Veda
confers:
II. 79. And a twice born man, who shall a thousand times repeat those
three (om, the vyahritis, and the gayatri), apart from the multitude,
shall be released in a month even from a great offence, as a snake
from his slough.
II. 80. The priest, the soldier, and the merchant, who shall neglect
this mysterious text, and fail to perform in due season his peculiar acts
of piety, shall meet with contempt among the virtuous.
II. 81. The great immutable words, preceded by the triliteral syllable,
and followed by the gayatri which consists of three measures, must be
considered as the mouth, or principal part of the Veda;
II. 82. Whoever shall repeat, day by day, for three years, without
negligence, that sacred text, shall hereafter approach the divine essence,
move as freely as air, and assume an ethereal form.
II. 84. All rites ordained in the Veda, oblations to fire, and solemn
sacrifices pass away; but that which passes not away, is declared to
be the syllable om, thence called acshara; since it is a symbol of God,
the Lord of created beings.
II. 85. The act of repeating his Holy Name is ten times better than
the appointed sacrifice; an hundred times better when it is heard by
no man; and a thousand times better when it is purely mental.
II. 86. The four domestic sacraments which are accompanied with the
appointed sacrifice, are not equal though all be united, to a sixteenth
part of the sacrifice performed by a repetition of the gayatri.
II. 148. But that birth which his principal acharya, who knows the
whole Veda, procures for him by his divine mother the gayatri, is a
true birth; that birth is exempt from age and from death.
II. 169. The first birth is from a natural mother; the second, from
the ligation of the zone; the third from the due performance of the
sacrifice; such are the births of him who is usually called twice-born,
according to a text of the Veda.
II. 170. Among them his divine birth is that, which is distinguished
by the ligation of the zone, and sacrificial cord ; and in that birth the
Gayatri is his mother, and the Acharya, his father. This sacrament
is not permitted by Manu to Shudras and to women.
II. 103. But he who stands not repeating it in the morning, and
sits not repeating it in the evening, must be precluded, like a Sudra,
from every sacred observance of the twice born class.
II. 116. He who shall acquire knowledge of the Veda without the
assent of his preceptor, incurs the guilt of stealing the scripture and
shall sink to the region of torment.
VIII. 123. Let a just prince banish men of the three lower classes, if they
give false evidence having first levied the fine; but a Brahmen let him only
banish.
VIII. 268. A priest shall be fined fifty, if he slander a soldier; twenty five,
if a merchant; and twelve, if he slander a man of the servile class.
VIII. 271. If he mention their names and classes with contumely as, if
he say, Oh Devadatta, thou refuse of Brahmen, an iron style, ten fingers
long, shall be thrust red into his mouth.
VIII. 272. Should he, through pride, give instruction to priests concerning
their duty, let the king order some hot oil to be dropped into his mouth
and his ear.
VIII. 280. He who raises his hand or a staff against another, shall
have his hand cut; and he, who kicks another in wrath, shall have
an incision made in his foot.
VIII. 282. Should he spit on him through pride, the king shall
order both his lips to be gashed; should he urine on him, his penis;
should he break wind against him, his anus.
VIII. 366. A low man, who makes love to a damsel of high birth,
ought to be punished corporally; but he who addresses a maid of equal
rank, shall give the nuptial present and marry her, if her father please.
XI. 130. If he kill without malice a Vaisya, who had a good moral
character, he may perform the same penance for one year, or give the
priests a hundred cows and a bull.
XI. 131. For six months must he perform this whole penance, if without
intention he kill a Sudra; or he may give ten white cows and a bull to
the priests.
VIII. 381. No greater crime is known on earth than slaying a Brahmen;
and the king, therefore, must not even form in his mind an idea of killing
a priest.
VIII. 126. Let the king having considered and ascertained the frequency
of a similar offence, the place and time, the ability of the criminal to pay
or suffer and the crime itself, cause punishment to fall on those alone,
who deserve it.
VIII. 124. Manu, son of the Self-existent, has named ten places of
punishment, which are appropriate to the three lower classes, but a Brahmen
must depart from the realm unhurt in any one of them.
VIII. 125. The part of generation, the belly, the tongue, the two hands,
and, fifthly, the two feet, the eye, the nose, both ears, the property, and,
in a capital case, the whole body.
On the point of rights and duties relating to religious Sacraments and
Sacrifices the views of Manu are noteworthy:
II. 28. By studying the Veda, by religious observances, by oblations to
fire, by the ceremony of Traividya, by offering to the Gods and Manes, by
the procreation of children, by the five great sacraments, and by solemn
sacrifices, this human body is rendered fit for a divine state.
III. 69. For the sake of expiating offences committed ignorantly in those
places mentioned in order, the five great sacrements were appointed by
eminent sages to be performed each day by such as keep house.
III. 70. Teaching and studying the scripture is the sacrament of the Veda;
offering cakes and water, the sacrament of the Manes; an oblation to fire,
the sacrament of the Deities; giving rice or other food to living creatures, the
sacrament of spirits; receiving guests with honour, the sacrament of men.
III. 71. Whoever omits not those five great ceremonies, if he have ability
to perform them, is untained by the sins of the five slaughtering places,
even though he constantly reside at home.
Such are the ordinances of Manu. Laws are never complete enough to
cover every point. There are always moot questions. Manu was conscious
of this and provides for such contingencies.
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XII. 109. Well instructed Brahmens are they, who can adduce occular
proof from the scripture itself, having studied, as the law ordains, the
Vedas and their extended branches, or Vedangas, Mimansa, Nyaya,
Dharma, Shastra, Puranas.
XII. 113. Even the decision of one priest, if more cannot be assembled,
who perfectly knows the principles of the Vedas, must be considered
as law of the highest authority; not the opinion of myriads, who have
no sacred knowledge.
VIII. 418. With vigilant care should the king exert himself in
compelling merchants and mechanics to perform their respective duties;
for, when such men swerve from their duty, they throw this world into
confusion.
VIII. 336. Where another man of lower birth would be fined one
pana, the king shall be fined a thousand, and he shall give the fine to
the priests, or cast it into the river, this is a sacred rule.
Failure to uphold and maintain the system on the part of the king
involved a forfeiture of his right to rule. For Manu allows a right to
rebel against, such a King.
VIII. 348. The twice-born may take arms, when their duty is obstructed
by force; and when, in some evil time, a disaster has befallen the twice-
born classes.
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The right of rebellion is given to the three higher classes and not to the
Shudra. This is very natural. Because it is only the three upper classes
who would benefit by the maintenance of this system. But supposing
the Kshatriyas joined the King in destroying the system what is to
be done? Manu gives the authority to the Brahmins to punish all and
particularly the Kshatriyas.
XI. 31. A priest, who well knows the laws, need not complain to the
king of any grievious injury; since, even by his own power, he may
chastise those, who injure him.
XI. 32. His own power, which depends on himself alone, is mightier
than the royal power, which depends on other men; by his own might,
therefore, may a Brahman coerce his foes.
XI. 33. He may use, without hesitation, the powerful charms revealed
to Atharvan, and by him to Angiras; for speech is the weapon of a
Brahmen; with that he may destroy his oppressors.
IX. 320. Of a military man, who raises his arm violently on all occasions
against the priestly class, the priest himself shall be the chastiser; since
the soldier originally proceeded from the Brahmen.
How can the Brahmins punish the Kshatriyas unless they can take
arms? Manu knows this and therefore allows the Brahmins to arm
themselves to punish the Kshatriyas.
XII. 100. Command of armies, royal authority, power of inflicting
punishment, and sovereign dominion over all nations, he only well
deserves, who perfectly understands the Veda Shastra.
CHAPTER 13
Essays on the Bhagwat Gita:
Philosophic Defence of Counter-
Revolution:
Krishna and His Gita
In his judgment:
1
Quoted by Garbe in his Introduction to the Bhagvat Gita (Indian Antiquary 1918
Supplement).
2
. Religion of India pp. 390-400.
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Holtzman1 says:
We have before us (in the Bhagvat Gita) a Vishnuite revision
of a pantheistic poem.
Garbe2 observes:
The whole character of the poem in its design and execution is
preponderatingly theistic. A personal God Krishna stands forth in
the form of a human hero, expounds his doctrine, enjoins, above all
things, on his listener, along with the performance of his duties,
loving faith in Him and self-surrender: And by the side of
this God(who is) delineated as personally as possible, and who
dominates the whole poemstands out frequently the impersonal
neutral Brahman, the Absolute, as the highest principle. At one
time Krishna says that He is the sole Highest God who has created
the world and all beings and rules over it all; at another time, he
expounds the Vedantic doctrine of Brahman and mayathe Cosmic
Illusion, and expounds as the highest goal of human being that
he be freed from the World-Illusion and become Brahman. These
two doctrinesthe theistic and the pantheisticare mixed up with
each other, and follow each other, sometimes quite unconnected
and sometimes loosely connected. And it is not the case that the
one is represented as a lower, exoteric, (Text p. 9) and, (p. ) as the
higher esoteric doctrine. It is nowhere taught that the Theism is
a preliminary step to the knowledge of the reality or that it is its
symbol, and that the pantheism of the Vedanta is the (ultimate)
reality itself; but the two beliefs are treated of almost throughout
as though there was indeed no difference between them, either
verbal or real.
a false assumption. The Bhagvat Gita is not a gospel and it can therefore
have no message and it is futile to search for one. The question will no
doubt be asked: What is the Bhagvat Gita if it is not a gospel? My answer
is that the Bhagvat Gita is neither a book of religion nor a treatise on
philosophy. What the Bhagvat Gita does is to defend certain dogmas
of religion on philosphic grounds. If on that account anybody wants to
call it a book of religion or a book of philosophy he may please himself.
But essentially it is neither. It uses philosophy to defend religion. My
opponents will not be satisfied with a bare statement of view. They
would insist on my proving my thesis by reference to specific instances.
It is not at all difficult. Indeed it is the easiest task.
The first instance one comes across in reading the Bhagvat Gita is the
justification of war. Arjuna had declared himself against the war, against
killing people for the sake of property. Krishna offers a philosophic defence
of war and killing in war. This philosophic defence of war will be found
in Chapter II verses 11 to 28. The philosophic defence of war offered
by the Bhagvat Gita proceeds along two lines of argument. One line of
argument is that anyhow the world is perishable and man is mortal.
Things are bound to come to an end. Man is bound to die. Why should
it make any difference to the wise whether man dies a natural death
or whether he is done to death as a result of violence? Life is unreal,
why shed tears because it has ceased to be? Death is inevitable, why
bother how it has resulted ? The second line of argument in justification
of war is that it is a mistake to think that the body and the soul are
one. They are separate. Not only are the two quite distinct but they
differ in-as-much as the body is perishable while the soul is eternal and
imperishable. When death occurs it is the body that dies. The soul never
dies. Not only does it never die but air cannot dry it, fire cannot burn
it, and a weapon cannot cut it. It is therefore wrong to say that when a
man is killed his soul is killed. What happens is that his body dies. His
soul discards the dead body as a person discards his old clotheswears
a new ones and carries on. As the soul is never killed, killing a person
can never be a matter of any movement. War and killing need therefore
give no ground to remorse or to shame, so argues the Bhagvat Gita.
Another dogma to which the Bhagvat Gita comes forward to offer
a philosophic defence is Chaturvarnya. The Bhagvat Gita, no doubt,
mentions that the Chaturvarnya is created by God and therefore
sacrosanct. But it does not make its validity dependent on it. It offers
a philosophic basis to the theory of Chaturvarnya by linking it to the
theory of innate, inborn qualities in men. The fixing of the Varna of
1
And see, too, Chapter VII, stanza 17, where the man of knowledge is declared to be
dear to Krishna.
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man is not an arbitrary act says the Bhagvat Gita. But it is fixed
according to his innate, inborn qualities.1
The third dogma for which the Bhagvat Gita offers a philosphic defence
is the Karma marga. By Karma marga the Bhagvat Gita means the
performance of the observances, such as Yajnas as a way to salvation.
The Bhagvat Gita most stands out for the Karma marga throughout
and is a great upholder of it. The line it takes to defend Karma yoga is
by removing the excrescences which had grown upon it and which had
made it appear quite ugly. The first excrescence was blind faith. The
Gita tries to remove it by introducing the principle of Buddhi yoga2 as a
necessary condition for Karma yoga. Become Stihtaprajna i.e., Befitted
with Buddhi there is nothing wrong in the performance of Karma kanda.
The second excrescence on the Karma kanda was the selfishness which
was the motive behind the performance of the Karmas. The Bhagvat
Gita attempts to remove it by introducing the principle of Anasakti
i.e., performance of karma without any attachment for the fruits of the
Karma.3 Founded in Buddhi yoga and dissociated from selfish attachment
to the fruits of Karma what is wrong with the dogma of Karma kand ?
this is how the Bhagvat Gita defends the Karma marga.4 It would be
quite possible to continue in this strain, to pick up other dogmas and
show how the Gita comes forward to offer a philosophic defence in their
support where none existed before. But this could be done only if one
were to write a treatise on the Bhagvat Gita. it is beyond the scope of a
chapter the main purpose of which is to assign to the Bhagvat Gita its
proper place in the ancient Indian literature. I have therefore selected
the most important dogmas just to illustrate my thesis.
Two other questions are sure to be asked in relation to my thesis.
Whose are the Dogmas for which the Bhagvat Gita offers this philosophical
defence? Why did it become necessary for the Bhagvat Gita to defend
these Dogmas?
To begin with the first question, the dogmas which the Gita defends
are the dogmas of counter-revolution as put forth in the Bible of
counter-revolution namely Jaiminis Purvamimamsa. There ought
to be no difficulty in accepting this proposition. If there is any it is
largely due to wrong meaning attached to the word Karma yoga. Most
writers on the Bhagvat Gita translate the word Karma yoga as action
and the word Janga yoga, as knowledge and proceed to discuss the
Bhagvat Gita as though it was engaged in comparing and contrasting
1
Bhagvat Gita IV. 13.
2
Bhagvat Gita II. 39-53
3
Bhagvat Gita II. 47.
4
This is well summed up in Bhagvat Gita II. 48.
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Buddhism and to Jaiminis Purva Mimansa and that this asumption has
no warrant behind it. I am aware of the fact that my thesis runs counter
to the most cherished view of Indian scholars all of whom, seem to be
more concerned in fixing a very ancient date to the compositon of the
Bhagvat Gita far anterior to Buddhism and to Jaimini than in finding
out what is the message of the Bhagvat Gita and what value it has as
a guide to mans life. This is particularly the case with Mr. Telang and
Mr. Tilak. But as Garbe1 observes To Telang, as to every Hinduhow
much so ever enlightenedit is an article of faith to believe in so high
an antiquity of the Bhagvat Gita and where such necessities are powerful
criticism indeed comes to an end.
In the words of Prof. Garbe:
The task of assigning a date to the Gita has been recognized by every
one who has earnestly tried to solve the problem, as being very difficult;
and the difficulties grow (all the more) if the problem is presented two
fold, viz., to determine as well the age of the original Gita as also of
its revision. I am afraid that generally speaking, we shall succeed in
arriving, not at any certainties, but only at probabilities in this matter.
Why? The only answer is that this modification came after Jaimini and
not beforewhich is simply another way of saying that the Bhagvat
Gita was composed after Jaiminis Purva Mimansa.
If the Bhagvat Gita does not mention Purva Mimansa it does mention
by name the Brahma Sutras1 of Badarayana. This reference to Brahma
Sutras is a matter of great significance for it furnishes direct evidence
for the conclusion that the Gita is later than the Brahma Sutras.
Mr. Tilak2 admits that the reference to the Brahma Sutras is a
clear and defniite reference to the treatise of that name which we now
have. It may be pointed out that Mr. Telang3 discusses the subject in a
somewhat cavalier fashion by saying that the treatise Brahma Sutras
referred to in the Bhagvat Gita is different from the present treatise
which goes by that name. He gives no evidence for so extraordinary a
proposition but relies on the Conjectural statement of Mr. Weber4given
in a foot-note of his Treatise in Indian Literature, again without any
evidencethat the mention of Brhma Sutras in the Bhagvat Gita may
be taken as an appellative rather than as a proper name. It would not
be fair to attribute any particular motives to Mr. Telang for the view
he has taken on this point. But there is nothing unfair in saying that
Mr. Telang3 shied at admitting the reference to Brahma Sutra because
he saw that Weber had on the authority of Winternitz assigned 500 A.D.
to the composition of the Brahma Sutras, which would have destroyed
his cherished theory regarding the antiquity of the Bhagvat Gita. There
is thus ample internal evidence to support the conclusion that the Gita
was composed after Jaiminis Purva Mimansa and Badarayanas Brahma
Sutras.
Is the Bhagvat Gita anterior to Buddhism ? the question was raised
by Mr. Telang:
We come now to another point. What is the position of the Gita
in regard to the great reform of Sakya Muni? The question is one
of much interest, having regard particularly to the remarkable
coincidences between Buddhistic doctrines and the doctrines of
the Gita to which we have drawn attention in the footnotes to our
translation. But the materials for deciding the question are unhappily
not forth coming. Professor Wilson, indeed, thought that there was
1
Bhagwat Gita XIII. 4
2
Gita Rahasya II. p. 749.
3
Bhagvat Gita (S.B.E.) Introduction p. 31.
4
History of Indian Literature p. 242 f.n.
5
On the other hand, it may be said that Mr. Tilak readily admitted the reference because it
was his opinion that Brahma Sutras were a very ancient treatisesee Gita Rahasya Vol. II.
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1
Essays on Sanskrit Literature. Vo. Ill p. 150.
2
See our remarks on this point in the Introductory Essay to our Gita in verse p. II seq.
3
Introduction to Gita in English verse p. v. seq,
4
Cr. Max Mullers Hibbert Lectures, p. 137 Webets Indian Literature, pp. 288, 289:
and Rhys Davids excellent little volume on Buddhism, p. 151; and see also p. 83 of
Mr. Davids book.
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spiritual topics, which in its other, and as we may say, less thorough going,
manifestation we see in the Upanishads and the Gita1.
I have quoted this passage in full because it is typical of all Hindu scholars.
Everyone of them is most reluctant to admit that the Bhagvat Gita is anyway
influenced by Buddhism and is ever ready to deny that the Gita has borrowed
anything from Buddhism. It is the attitude of Prof. Radhakrishnan and also
of Tilak. Where there is any similarity in thought between the Bhagvat Gita
and Buddhism too strong and too close to be denied, the argument is that it
is borrowed from the Upanishads. It is typical of the mean mentality of the
counterrevolutionaries not to allow any credit to Buddhism on any account.
The absurdity of these views must shock all those who have made a
comparative study of the Bhagvat Gita and the Buddhist Suttas. For if it is
true to say that Gita is saturated with Sankhya philosophy it is far more
true to say that the Gita is full of Buddhist ideas.2 The similarity between
the two is not merely in ideas but also in language. A few illustrations will
show how true it is.
The Bhagvat Gita discusses Bramha-Nirvana.3 The steps by which
one reaches Bramha. Nirvana are stated by the Bhagvat Gita to be
(1) Shraddha (Faith in oneself); (2) Vyavasaya (Firm determination);
(3) Smriti (Rememberance of the goal); (4) Samadhi (Earnest contemplation)
and (5) Prajna (Insight or True Knowledge). From where has the Gita borrowed
this Nirvana theory? Surely it is not borrowed from the Upanishads. For no
Upanishad even mentions the word Nirvana. The whole idea is peculiarly
Buddhist and is borrowed from Buddhism. Anyone who has any doubt on
the point may compare this Bramha-Nirvana of the Bhagvat Gita with the
Buddhist conception of Nirvana as set out in the Mahapari-nibbana Sutta.
It will be found that they are the same which the Gita has laid down for
Bramha-Nirvana. Is it not a fact that the Bhagvat Gita has borrowed the
entire conception of Brmhma Nirvana instead of Nirvana for no other reason
except to conceal the fact of its having stolen it from Buddhism ?
Take another illustration. In Chapter VII verses 13-20 there is a
discussion as to who is dear to Krishna; one who has knowledge, or one
who performs karma or one who is a devotee. Krishna says that the
Devotees is dear to him but adds that he must have the true marks
1
Cr. Webers History of Indian Literature, p. 285. In Mr. Davids Buddhism, p. 94 we
have a noteworthy extract from a standard Buddhistic work, touching the existence of
the soul. Compare that with the corresponding doctrine in the Gita. It will be found that
the two are at one in rejecting the identity of the soul with the senses &c. The Gita then
goes on to admit a soul separate from these. Buddhism rejects that also, and sees nothing
but the senses.
2
On this point compare Bhagvat Gita by S. D. Budhiraja M.A.. L.L.B.. Chief Judge,
Kashmere. At every point the author has attempted to draw attention to textual similarities
between the Gita and Buddhism.
3
Max Muller Mahapari-Nibbana Sutta p. 63.
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1
See Mahapadana Sutta p.
2
Tevijja Sutta p.
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the Bhagvat Gita and the Mahayan Buddhism and that there similarities
are the result of Mahayana Buddhism borrowing its ideas from the
Bhagvat Gita. Behind these remarks there is no evidence of special
research either on the part of Winternitz, Kern or Mr. Tilak. All of them
seem to be led away by the assumption that the Bhagvat Gita is earlier
than Mahayana Buddhism.
This leads me to examine the question of the date of the Bhagvat
Gita particularly with reference to the theory as put forth by Mr. Tilak.
Mr. Tilak1 is of opinion that the Gita is part of the Mahabharata and
that both have been written by one and the same author named Vyasa
and consequently the date of the Mahabharata must be the date of the
Bhagvat Gita. The Mahabharata, Mr. Tilak argues, must have been
written at least 500 years before the Shaka Era on the groung that
the stories contained in the Mahabharata were known to Megasthenes
who was in India about 300 B.C. as a Greek ambassador to the court of
Chandragupta Maurya. The Shaka Era began in 78 A.D. On this basis
it follows that the Bhagvat Gita must have been composed before 422
B.C. This is his view about the date of the composition of the present
Gita. According to him, the original Gita must have been some centuries
older than Mahabharata If reliance be placed on the tradition referred
to in the Bhagvat Gita that the religion of the Bhagvat Gita was
taught by Nara to Narayan in very ancient times. Mr. Tilaks theory
as to the date of the composition of the Mahabharata is untenable.
In the first place, it assumes that the whole of the Bhagvat Gita and
the whole of Mahabharat have been written at one stretch, at one
time and by one hand. There is no warrant for such an assumption,
either in tradition, or in the internal evidence of these two treatises.
Confining the discussion to the Mahabharata the assumption made by
Mr. Tilak is quite opposed to well-known Indian traditions. This tradition
divides the compostion of the Mahabharata into three stages; (1) Jaya
(2) Bharata and (3) Mahabharata and assigns to each part a different
author. According to this tradition Vyasa was the author of the 1st
edition so to say of the Mahabharata called Jaya. Of the Second Edition
called Bharata tradition assigns the authorship to Vaishampayana
and that of the Third Edition called Mahabharata to Sauti. That this
tradition is well-founded has been confirmed by the researches of Prof.
Hopkins based on the examination of. internal evidence furnished by
the Mahabharata. According to Prof. Hopkins2 there have been several
stages in the composition of the Mahabharata. As has been pointed
1
Gita Rahasya Vol. II p. 791-800.
2
The Great Epic of India p. 398.
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out by Prof. Hopkins1 in the first stage it was just a Pandu Epic consisting
of plays and legends about heroes who took part in the Mahabharata
war without the masses of didactic material. Such a Mahabharata, says
Prof. Hopkins, may have come into existence between 400-200 B.C. The
second stage was the remaking of the epic by the inclusion of didactic
matter and the addition of Puranic material. This was between 200 B.C.
and 200 A.D. The third stage is marked when (1) the last books were
added to the composition as it stood at the end of the second stage with
the introduction of the first book and (2) the swollen Anushasana Parva
was separated from Shanti Parva and recognized as a separate book. This
happened between 200 to 400 A.D. To these three stages Prof. Hopkins
adds a fourth or a final stage of occasional amplification which started
from 400 A.D. onwards. In coming to this conclusion Prof. Hopkins has
anticipated and dealt with all the arguments advanced by Mr. Tilak such
as the mention of Mahabharata in Panini2 and in the Grihyasutras.3
The only new pieces of evidence produced by Mr. Tilak which has not
been considered by Prof. Hopkins are two. One such piece of evidence
consists of the statements which are reported to have been recorded by
Megasthenes,4 the Greek Ambassador to the court of Chandra Gupta
Maurya, and the other is the astronomical evidence5, in the Adi Parva
which refers to the Uttarayana starting with the Shravana constellation.
The facts adduced by Mr. Tilak as coming from Megasthenes may not be
denied and may go to prove that at the time of Megasthenes i.e., about
300 B.C. a cult of Krishna worship had come into existence among the
Sauraseni community. But how can this prove that the Mahabharata
had then come into existence ? It cannot. Nor can it prove that the
legends and stories mentioned by Megasthenes were taken by him from
the Mahabharata. For there is nothing to militate against the view
that these legends and stories were a floating mass of Saga and that it
served as a reservoir both to the writer of the Mahabharata as well as
to Greek Ambassador.
Mr. Tilaks astronomical evidence may be quite sound. He is
right insaying6 that it is stated in the Anugita that Visvamitra
started the enumeration of the constellation with Shravana (Ma.Bha.
Asva.44.2, and Adi.71.34). That has been interpreted by commentators
as showing that the Uttarayana then started with the Shravana
constellation, and no other interpretation is proper. At the date of the
1
The Great Epic of India p. 398.
2
The Great Epic of India p. 395.
3
Ibid p. 390.
4
Gita Rahasya II p. 79.
5
Gita Rahasya II p. 789.
6
Ibid p. 789.
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accept that the Gita is a part of the Mahabharata because the author
of both is Vyasaand this is the argument of Mr. Tilakis to accept a
fiction for a fact. It assumes that Vyasa is the name of some particular
individual capable of being identified. This is evident from the fact that
we have Vyasa as the author of the Mahabharata, Vyasa as the author
of the Puranas, Vyasa as the author of Bhagvat Gita and Vyasa as the
author of the Bramha Sutras. It cannot therefore be accepted as true that
the same Vyasa is the author of all these works separated as they are
by a long span of time extending to several centuries. It is well-known
how orthodox writers wishing to hide their identity get better authority
for their works by the use of a revered name were in the habit of using
Vyasa as a nom-de-plume or pen name. If the author of the Gita is a
Vyasa he must be a different Vyasa. There is another argument which
seems to militate against Mr, Tilaks theory of synchroniety between the
composition of the Bhagvat Gita and the Mahabharata. The Mahabharata
consists of 18 Parvas. There are also 18 Puranas. It is curious to find that
Bhagvat Gita has also 18 Adhyayas. The question is: Why should there be
this parallelism? The answer is that the ancient Indian writers regarded
certain names and certain numbers as invested with great sanctity. The
name Vyasa and the number 18 are illustrations of this fact. But there
is more in the fixation of 18 as the chapters of the Bhagvat Gita than
is apparent on the face of it. Who set 18 as the sacred number, the
Mahabharata or the Gita ? If the Mahabharata, then Gita must have
been written after the Mahabharata. If it is the Bhagvat Gita, then the
Mahabharata must have been written after the Gita. In any case, the
two could not have been written at one and the same time.
These considerations may not be accepted as decisive against
Mr. Tilaks first proposition. But there is one which I think is decisive.
I refer to the relative position of Krishna in the Mahabharata and in
the Bhagvat Gita. In the Mahabharata, Krishna is nowhere represented
as a God accepted by all. The Mahabharata itself shows the people
were not prepared even to give him the first place. When at the time
of the Rajasuya Yajna, Dharma offered to give Krishna priority in
the matter of honouring the guest, Shishupalathe near relation of
Krishnaprotested and abused Krishna. He not only charged him
with low origin, but also with loose morals, an intriguer who violated
rules of war for the sake of victory. So abhorent but so true was this
record of Krishnas foul deeds that when Duryodhan flung them in
the face of Krishna, the Mahabharata itself in the Gada Parva records
that the Gods in heaven came out to listen to the charges made by
Duryodhan against Krishna and after listening showered flowers as
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a token of their view that the charges contained the whole truth and
nothing but the truth. On the other hand, the Bhagvat Gita presented
Krishna as God omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent, pure, loving,
essence of goodness. Two such works containing two quite contradictory
estimates about one and the same personality could not have been written
at one and the same time by one and the same author. It is a pity that
Mr. Tilak in his anxiety to give a pre-Buddhist date to the composition
of the Bhagvat Gita should have completely failed to take note of these
important considerations.
The second proposition of Mr. Tilak is equally unsound. The attempt
to fix a date for the composition of the Bhagvat Gita is nothing but the
pursuit of a mirage. It is doomed to failure. The reason is that the Bhagvat
Gita is not a single book written by a single author. It consists of different
parts written at different times by different authors.
Prof. Garbe is the only scholar who has seen the necessity of following
this line of inquiry. Prof. Garbe hold that there are two parts of the Bhagvat
Gita one original and one added. I am not satisfied with this statement.
My reading of the Bhagvat Gita leads me to the conclusion that there
have been four separate parts of Bhagvat Gita. They are so distinct that
taking even the present treatise as it stands they can be easily marked off.
(i) The original Gita was nothing more than a heroic tale told or a
ballad recited by the bards of how Arjuna was not prepared to fight and
how Krishna forced him to engage in battle, how Arjuna yielded and so
on. It may have been a romantic story but there was nothing religious or
philosophical in it.
This original Gita will be found embedded in Chapter I, Chapter II,
verses. and Chapter XI verses 32-33 in which Krishna is reported to
have ended the argument:
Be my tool, carry out my will, dont worry about sin and evil resulting
from fighting, do as I tell you, dont be impudent.
(iii) The second patch on the original Bhagvat Gita is the part which
introduces the Sankhya and the Vedanta philosophy as a defence to the
doctrines of Purva Mimansa which they did not have before. The Gita
was originally only a historical Saga with the cult of Krishna came to
be interwoven. The Philosophy portion of the Bhagvat Gita was a later
intrusion can be proved quite easily from the nature of the original dialogue
and the sequence of it.
In chapter I verses 20-47 Arjuna mentions those difficulties. In chapter
II Krishna attempts to meet the difficulties mentioned by Arjuna. There
are arguments and counter arguments. Krishnas first argument is
contained in verse 2 and 3 in which Krishna tells Arjuna that his conduct
is infamous, unbecoming an Arya and that he should not play the part of
an effeminate which was unworthy of him. To this, Arjuna gives a reply
which is embodied in verses 4 to 8. In verses 4 to 5 he says, how can I
kill Bhishma and Drona who are entitled to highest reverence: it would
be better to live by begging than kill them. I do not wish to live to enjoy
a kindom won by killing old revered elders. In verses 6 to 8 Arjuna
says: I do not know which of the two is more meritorious, whether we
should vanquish the Kauravas or whether we should be vanquished by
them. Krishnas reply to this is contained in verses 11 to 39 in which
he propounds (i) that grief is unjustified because things are imperishable,
(ii) that it is a false view that a man is killed when the atman is eternal
and (iii) that he must fight because it is the duty of the Kshatriya to fight.
Any one who reads the dialogue will notice the following points:
(1) The questions put by Arjuna are not philosophical questions.
They are natural questions put by a worldly man faced with worldly
problems.
(2) Upto a point Krishna treats them as natural questions and
returns to them quite natural replies.
(3) The dialogue takes a new turn. Arjuna after having informed
Krishna positively and definitely that he will not fight, suddenly
takes a new turn and expresses a doubt whether it is a good to kill
the Kauravas or be killed by them.This is a deliberate departure
designed to give Krishna a philosophical defence of war, uncalled
for by anything said by Arjuna.
(4) Again there is a drop in the tone of Krishna from verses 31 to
38. He treats the question as natural and tells him to fight because
it is the duty of the Kshatriya to fight.
Anyone can see from this that the introduction of the Vedanta
philosophy is quite unnatural and therefore a later intrusion. With
regard to the introduction of the Sankhya philosophy the case is quite
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Mahadeo their family deity. The Brahmins to whom religion has been a
trade, who were never devoted to one God but came forward to worship
the deity of the ruling race thought of pleasing their masters by making
their family deity into a high and mighty Parmeshvar. If this is correct
explanation then this patch on the original Bhagvat Gita must be placed
between 400 and 464 A.D.
All this goes to confirm the view that the attempt to place the Bhagvat
Gita prior in point of time to Buddhism cannot succeed. It is the result
of wishful thinking on the part of those who have inherited a positive
dislike to Buddha and his revolutionary gospel. History does not support
it. History proves quite abnormally that at any rate those portions of the
Bhagvat Gita which have any doctrinal value are considerably later in point
of time to the Buddhist canon and the Sutras of Jaimini and Badarayana.
The discussion of the dates not only proves that the Bhagvat Gita is
later than Hinayana Buddhism but is also later than Mahayana Buddhism.
The impression prevails that Mahayana Buddhism is later in origin. It is
supposed to have come into being after A.D. 100 when Kanishka held the
third Buddhist Council to settle the dissension in the Buddhist Church.
This is absolutely a mistake.1 It is not true that after the Council a new
creed of Buddhism came into existence. What happened is that new
names of abuse came into existence for parties which were very old. As
Mr. Kimura has shown the Mahayanist is simply another name for the
sect of Buddhists known as Mahasanghikas. The sect of Mahasanghikas
had come into being very much earlier than is supposed to be the case. If
tradition be believed the sect had come into being at the time of the First
Buddhist Council held at Pataliputra 236 years after the death of Buddha
i.e., 307 B.C2 for settling the Buddhist canon and is said to have led the
opposition to the Theravad sect of Buddhism which later on came to be
stigmatized as Hinayana (which means those holding to the low path).
There could hardly be any trace of Bhagvat Gita when the Mahasanghikas
later known as Mahayanists came into being.
Apart from this what have the Mahayanists borrowed from the
Bhagvat Gita? Indeed what can they borrow from the Bhagvat Gita?
As Mr. Kimura points out the doctrine of every school of Buddhism is
mainly concerned at least with three doctrines: (1) Those which deal
with cosmic existence; (2) Those which deal with Buddhology; and
(3) Those which deal with conception of human life. Mahayana is no
1
On the whole subject seeA Historical study of the terms Hinayana and Mahayana and
the origin of Mahayana Buddhismby Ryukan Kimura, Cal. University 1927.
2
This is if the date of Buddhas death is taken to be 543 B.C. and would be 217 B.C. if
the date of his death is taken to be 453 B.C.
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CHAPTER 14
Analytical Notes of
Virat Parva & Udyog Parva
VIRAT PARVA
6. Drupada instructs his purohit how to speak in the assembly and deal
with the issue.Ibid Adhya. 6.
7. Arjuna and Duryodhana both go to Dwarka to ask for his aid in the
war. He said I will help you both. I can give my army to one and I can
join one singly. Choose what you want. Duryodhan chose the army. Arjuna
choose Krishna.Ibid Adhya. 7.
8. Coming of Shalya to the Pandavas with a large army. Duryodhan thinks
him lower. Meeting of Shalya and Pandavas. Pandavas request Shalya to
discourage Karna in the war. Agreement of Shalya.Ibid. Adhya. 8.
9. Adhya. 9Irrelevant.
10. Adhya. 10Irrelevant.
11. Adhya. 11Irrelevant.
12. Adhya. 12Irrelevant.
13. Adhya. 13Irrelevant.
14. Adhya. 14Irrelevant.
15. Adhya. 15Irrelevant.
16. Adhya. 16Irrelevant.
17. Adhya. 17Irrelevant.
18. Adhya. 18Irrelevant.
19. AdhyaSatyaki comes to Pandvas with his army and Bhagadatta
went to Duryodhana.
20. Adhya. 20The Purohit of Drupada enters the Kauravas Sabha. The
Purohit said that the Pandvas are prepared to part evil deeds of the Kauravas
and make a compromise with them. He told them that the Pandavas have
a large army yet they wish to compromise.
21. Adhya. 21Bhishma supports the Purohit. Karna objects. Dispute
between Bhishma and Karna. Dhratrarashtra suggests that Sanjaya be sent
for negotiation on their behalf.
22. Adhya. 22Dhratrarashtra sends Sanjaya to go to the Pandvas and
give his blessings and say what you think best for the occasion and which
will not advance enmity between the two.
23. Adhya. 23Sanjayas going to the Pandvas.
24. Adhya. 24Conversation betwen Sanjaya and Yudhistira.
25. Adhya. 25Sanjaya condemns war.
26. Adhya. 26Dharma says I am prepared to compromise if the Kauravas
give us our Kingdom of Indraprastha.
27. Adhya. 27It is Adharma to kill Gurujan and obtain a Kingdom. If
the Kauravas refuse to give you any kingdom without war you had better
live by begging in the Kingdom of Vrishni and Andhakas.
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28. Adhya. 28Says, Dharma Blame us Sanjaya if you think we have acted
or acting against Dharma. Sanjaya says I want Swadharma or Sama.
29. Adhya. 29Krishnas address to Sanjaya why war is legitimate and asks
him to go and tell his views to Dhratarashtra.
30. Adhya. 30Sanjaya returns to Kauravas and tells Duryodhana to war.
Duryodhan either to return Indraprastha to the Pandavas or be ready for war.
31. Adhya. 30Sanjaya tells Duryodhan to live and let live. If he cannot give
Indraprastha let him give us five villages.
32. Adhya. 31Sanjaya reaches Dratrarashtra at night and tells him I will
give you the message of Dharma in the morning.
33. Adhya. 32Dhratarashtra is uneasy and wants to know the message
Sanjaya brought. So he sends for Sanjaya immediately. Sanjaya gives him the
message and says settle the dispute by giving them their share of the Kingdom.
34. Adhya. 34Dhratarashtra calls for Vidura and asks his advice. His advice
is, give the Pandavas their portion of the Kingdom.
35. Adhya. 35Irrelevant.
36. Adhya. 36Irrelevant. Vidur says make the two sides friends.
37. Adhya. 37Irrelevant.
38. Adhya 38Irrelevant.
39. Adhya. 39Dhratarashtra tells Vidura I cannot give up Duryodhan
although he is bad.
40. Adhya. 40Vidura describes Chaturvarna.
41. Adhya. 41Dhratarashtra asks Vidur about Brahma. He says I cant
because I am a Shudra. Then comes Sanat-Sujata.
42. Adhya. 42Conversation between Dhratarashtra & Sanat Sujata on
Brahma Vidya.
43. Adhya. 43Dialogue between Sanat Sujat and Dhratarashtra on the
same subject.
44. Adhya. 44Sanat Sujata on Brahma Vidya.
45. Adhya. 45Sanat Sujata preaches yoga.
46. Adhya. 46Sanat Sujat on Atma.
47. Adhya. 47Kauravas come to the Sabha to hear the message brought
by Sanjaya.
48. Adhya. 48Sanjaya delivers the message. (Particularly that part which
was given by Arjuna?)
49. Adhya. 49Praise of Arjuna & Krishna by Bhishma. Karna gets angry.
Drona supports Bhisma and advices compromise.
50. Adhya. 50Dhratarashtra asks Sanjaya who are the allies of the Pandvas
& their strength. Sanjaya taunts, gets up answers.
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73. Adhya. 73Krishna tells Dharma the secret which has in mind. Dont
use soft speech with the Pandvas tells Krishna to Dharma. There are plenty
of reasons why you should not make any compromise with the Kauravas.
Emphasizes how the Kauravas disgraced Draupadi. Therefore Oh; Dharma
do not hesitate to kill them.
74. Adhya. 74Bhishma tells Krishna to use soft speech with the Kauravas.
75. Adhya. 75Krishna redicules Bhima.
76. Adhya. 76Bhima makes up his mind to fight.
77. Adhya. 77Krishna tells Bhima the difference between Daiva and
Paurush.
78. Adhya. 78Arjuna tells Krishna to adopt Shamafailing war can be
considered.
79. Adhya. 79Krishnas talk to Arjun. I will try to bring about a settlement
by peace. If that is not possible be ready for war. I will not communicate to
Duryodhan Dharmas willingness to accept, five villages.
80. Adhya. 80Nakul tells Krishna to do the best.
81. Adhya. 81Sahadev meets Krishna and tells him to bring about a
war with the Kauravas. Satyaki said that all warriors assembled here agree
with the view of Sahadeo.
82. Adhya. 82Draupadi meets Krishna & tells him that she will not be
satisfied unless Duryodhan is punished. Krishna gives her assurance.
83. Adhya. 83Last meeting between Arjuna and Krishna. Arjuna makes
the best effort for Shama. Yudhishtir tells Krishna to give assurances to
Kunti. Krishna starts on his mission.
84. Adhya. 84Good & Bad omens to Krishna on his way to Hastinapura.
85. Adhya. 85Duryodhana creates Resting places for Krishnas journey
to Hastinapur. Krishna arrives in Hastinapura.
86. Adhya. 86Dhratarashtra tells Vidura what gifts are to be offered
to krishna.
87. Adhya. 87Vidur tells Dhratarashtra that he cannot separate Krishna
from the Pandavas.
88. Adhya. 88Duryodhan says Krishna is worship. But this is not the
time to worship him. Bhishma tells Duryodhan to make a compromise with
Pandavas. Duryodhan desires to look up Krishna. Bhishmas strong opposition
to Duryodhana.
89. Adhya. 89Krishnas entry into Hastinapur. Meeting with Dhratarashtra.
His stay with Vidura.
90. Adhya. 90Meeting between Kunti and KrishnaKuntis
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sorrow. Krishna consoles her. Kunti tells Krishna (1) Tell ray sons to
fight for their kingdom. (2) I am sorry for Draupadi.
91. Adhya. 91Kauravas invite Krishna to dinner. Krishnas refusal.
Krishna goes for meal to Vidur.
92. Adhya. 92Vidur tells Krishna that he does not like his going among
the Kauravas.
93 Adhya. 93Krishna tells Vidura not all the Kauravas can hurt him.
I have come only because Shama is Punnyakarak.
94. Adhya. 94Krishna enters the assembly Hall of the Kauravas.
95. Adhya. 95Krishnas address to the Assembly. He told them pandavas
are ready for both peace as well as war. Give them half their kingdom.
96. Adhya. 96Jamadgni tells a story against arrogance.
97. Adhya. 97-105Matali Akhyan.
98. Adhya. 106Naradas advice to Duryodhana.
99. Adhya. 106-123Galava Akhyan.
100. Adhya. 124Dratarashtra tells Krishna to advise Duryodhana.
101. Adhya. 125Bhishmas advice to Duryodhan. Dronas support.
Viduras condemnation of Duryodhana. Dhratarashtras advice.
102. Adhya. 126Bhishma & Drona advice Duryodhana a second time.
103. Adhya. 127Duryodhana announces not to give anything to the
Pandavas.
104. Adhya. 128Krishna condemns Duryodhana. Duryodhan leaves
the Assembly. Dushyasanas speech. Krishna warns Bhishma.
104. Adhya. 129Dhratarashtra asks Vidur to bring Gandhari to the
Assembly. Duryodhan comes backGandhari asks him to give half the
Kingdom to Pandavas.
104. Adhya. 130Duryodhana leaves the assembly. His intention to kill
Krishna. Satyaki informs Dhratarashtra of this secret plot. Srikrishnas
speech. Dhratarashtra calls back Duryodhana to the assembly, warns him.
Vidurs condemnation.
105. Adhya. 131Bhagwanas Vishwarup Darshan Dhratarashtra gets
Divya Chakshu? Krishna leaves the assembly and goes to Kunti.
106. Adhya. 132Krishna tells Kunti what happened in the assembly.
Kunti tells Krishna war is natural to Kshatriyas. There is no better Dharma
than that.
107. Adhya. 133Kunti tells Krishna the story of Vidula to reinforce
her point.
108. Adhya. 134Vidulas story.
109. Adhya. 135Vidulas story.
110. Adhya. 136Vidulas story.
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CHAPTER 15
Brahmins Versus Kshatriyas
The third and a somewhat serious conflict was that between King
Nahusha and the Brahmins. Nahusha is the grandson of Pururavas. The
story is told in two places in the Mahabharata once in the Vanaparvan
and a second time in the Udyogaparvan. The following account is taken
from the Udyogaparvan of the Mahabharata:
2After his slaughter of the demon Vritta, Indra became alarmed
at the idea of having taken the life of a Brahman (for Vritta was
1
Muir Vol. I, p. 307.
2
Muir Vol. I, p. 310-313.
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The fourth case is of King Nimi. Nimi was one of the sons of Ikshvaku.
The facts of his conflict with the Brahmans are related in the Vishnu
Purrana which says:
1Nimi had requested the Brahman Rishi Vashistha to officiate
at a sacrifice, which was to last a thousand years. Vashistha in
reply pleaed a pre-engagement to Indra for five hundred years, but
promised to return at the end of that period. The king made no
remark, and Vashistha went away, supposing that he had assented
to his arrangement. On his return, however, the priest discovered
that Nimi had retained Gautama (who was, equally with Vashistha,
a Brahmin-rishi) and others to perform the sacrifice; and being
incensed at the neglect to give him notice of what was intended, he
cursed the king, who was then asleep, to lose his corporeal form.
When Nimi awoke and learnt that he had been cursed without
any previous warning, he retorted by uttering a similar curse on
Vashistha, and then died. Nimis body was emblamed. At the close
of the sacrifice which he had begun, the gods, were willing, on the
intercession of the priests, to restore him to life, but he declined
the offer; and was placed by the deities, according to his desire,
in the eyes of all living creatures. It is in consequence of this
that they are always opening and shutting (nimisha means The
twinkling of the eye).
1
Muir Vol. I, pp. 316.
2
Muir Vol. I, pp. 397-400.
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Brahma, Kala (Time), and Varuna, the discuss of Vishnu, and the
trident of Shiva, were hurled by Vishvamitra at his antagonist, but
the son of Brahma swallowed them up in his all-devouring mace.
Finally, to the intense consternation of all the gods, the warrior shot
off the terrific weapon of Brahma; but this was equally ineffectual
against the Brahmanical sage. Vashishtha had now assumed a
direful appearance. Jets of fire mingled with smoke darted from
the pores of his body; the Brahmanical mace blazed in his hand
like a smokeless mundane conflagration, or a second sceptre of
Yama. Being appeased, however, by the munis, who proclaimed
his superiority to his rival, the sage stayed his vengeance; and
Vishvamitra exclaimed with a groan: Shame on a Kshatriyas
strength: the strength of a Brahmans might alone is strength; by
the single Brahmanical mace all my weapons have been destroyed.
The conflict seems to have begun in the reign of King Sudas who
belonged to the line of Ikshavaku. Vashishtha was the hereditary priest
of King Sudas. For some reason which is not very clearly stated Sudas
appointed Vishvamitra as his family priest. This brought about a conflict
between Vishvamitra and Vashishtha. This conflict once started raged
on for a long time.
The conflict between the two took a peculiar turn. If Vishvamitra was
involved in a dispute Vashishtha came into the fray and sided with his
opponent. If Vishvamitra was involved in dispute Vashishtha entered
into fray and sided with Vishvamitra as opponent. It was a case of one
persecuting the other.
The first such episode is that of Satyavrata otherwise called Trishanku.
The story as told in the Harivamsha is as follows:
1Meanwhile Vashishtha, from the relation subsisting between
the King (Satyavratas father) and himself, a disciple and spiritual
1
Muir Vol. I. pp. 177-378.
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1
As stated in another place in the Harivamsa Trisanku had been expelled from his home
by his father for the offence of carrying off the young wife of one of the citizens under the
influence of a criminal passion and Vashishtha did not interfere to prevent his banishment.
It is to this that the text refers.
2
Muir Vol. I. pp. 376-77.
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overflow, the earth itself, thrown off its perpendicular slopes downwards
patala, the lower regions. Many creatures perish by these various
convulsions. Attracted by the dire disorder, Brahma arrives, attended
by all the gods, on the spot, and command the comptants to desist from
their fray. They were too fiercely infuiriated to regard this injunction;
but Brahma put an end to the conflict by restoring them to their
natural forms, and conselling them to be reconciled.
sacrifice, when Indra carried away the victim. The priest said that this
ill-omened event had occurred owing to the kings had administration,
and would call for a great expiation, unless a human victim could be
produced. After a long search the royal rishi (Ambarisha) came upon the
Brahman-rishi Richika, a descendent of Bhrigu, and asked him to sell
one of his sons for a victim, at the price of a hundred thousand cows.
Richika answered that he would not sell his eldest son; and his wife
added that she would not sell the youngest: eldest sons she observed,
being generally the favourites of their fathers, and youngest sons of
their mothers. The second son, Sunassepna, then said that in that
case he regarded himself as the one who was to be sold, and desired
the king to remove him. The hundred thousand cows, with ten millions
of gold pieces and heaps of jewels, were paid down, and Sunassepa
carried away. As they were passing through Pushkara Sunassepa
beheld his maternal uncle Vishvamitra who was engaged in austerities
there with other rishis, threw himself into his arms, and implored his
assistance, urging his orphan friendless, and helpless state, as claims
on the sages benevolence.
Vishvamitra soothed him: and pressed his own sons to offer
themselves as victim in the room of Sunassepa. This proposition
met with no favour from Madhushyanda and the other sons of the
royal hermit, who answered with haughtiness and derision: How
is that thou sacrificest thine own sons, and seekest to rescue those
of others ? We look upon this as wrong, and like the eating of ones
own flesh. The sage was exceedingly wroth at this disregard of his
injunction, and doomed his sons to be born in the most degraded
classes, like Vashishthas sons, and to eat dogs flesh, for a thousand
years. He then said to Sunassepa: When thou art bound with
hallowed cords, decked with a red garland, and annointed with
unguents, and fastened to the sacrificial post of Vishnu, then address
thyself to Agni, and sing these two divine verses (gathas), at the
1
Muir Vol. I. pp. 405-407.
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1
Muir Vol. I, pp. 415-417.
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The second class war and which was also a war of extermination
was declared by the Bhargava Brahmins on the Haihaya Kshatriyas.
In this the leader of Bhargava Brahmins was one Parashuram.
The story of the birth of Parashuram is described in the Vishnu
Purana in the following terms:
1Gadhis daughter Satyavati had been given in marriage to an
old Brahman called Richika, of the family of Bhrigu. In order that
his wife might bear a son with the qualities of a Brahman, Richika
had prepared for her a dish of Charu (rice, barley, and pulse, with
butter and milk) for her to eat; and a similar mess for her mother,
calculated to make her conceive a son with the character of a warrior.
Satyavatis mother, however, persuaded her to exchange messes. She
was blamed by her husband on her return home for what she had
done. I quote the words of the original:
Sinful woman, what improper deed is this that thou has done? I
beheld thy body of a very terrible appearance. Thou hast certainly
eaten the Charu prepared for thy mother. This was wrong. For into
that Chari I had infused all the endowments of heriosm, vigour, and
1
Muir Vol. I. pp. 349-350.
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This second class war took place in the reign of the Haihaya king
Arjuna the son of King Kartavirya. To understand it correctly it is
necessary to divide it into two parts for there are two stages in it.
The trouble began with the Brahmans claiming certain prerogatives
and powers exclusively for themselves and KingArjuna scouting
them in most contemptuous terms. As the Anushasanparvan of the
Mahabharata puts it.
2Then ascending his chariot glorious as the resplendent sun,
he exclaimed in the intoxication of his prowess, Who is like me in
fortitude, courage, fame, heriosm, energy, and vigour? At the end
of this speech a bodiless voice on the sky addressed him: Thou
knowest not, O fool, that a Brahman is better than a Kshatriya. It is
with the help of the Brahman that the Kshatriya rules his subjects.
Arjuna answers If I am pleased, I can create, or, if displeased,
annihilate, living beings; and no Brahman is superior to me in
1
Muir Vol. I, pp. 450.
2
Muir Vol. I, pp. 454.
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1
Muir Vol. I. pp. 454.
2
Muir Vol. I. pp. 473
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how when Indra refused he took away both the earth and heaven from
them and how he created a Demon Mada and put the Devas including
Indra into his mouth and how he compelled Indra to admit the Ashwins
to equal rank and drink Soma with them and how Indra ultimately
surrendered to Chyavana.
Vayu did not merely recount these exploits of the Brahmins. He did
something more. Every time he gave Arjuna an instance of the power
of the Brahmins he ended by asking Arjuna pointed questions such as
Can you tell me of any Kshatriya who was superior to him (i.e. the
Brahmins hero of the story). Declare on your part, any Kshatriya who
has been superior to him, Tell me of any Kshatriya superior to Atri.
This class war between the Brahmins and the Kshatriyas must have
gone on for ages. In the light of this the attitude of Manu towards this
Class War comes as very strange. Consider the following verses from
the Manu Smriti:
IV. 135. Let him who desires prosperity, indeed, never despise a
Kshatriya, a snake, and a learned Brahmana, be they ever so feeble.
IV. 136. Because these three, when treated with disrespect, may
utterly destroy him; hence a wise man must never despite them.
X. 322. Kshatriyas prosper not without Brahmans, Brahmans prosper
not without Kshatriyas; Brahmans and Kshatriyas, being closely united,
prosper in this (world) and in the next.
Here there is a clear attempt on the part of Manu to close the ranks.
Against whom did Manu want the Brahmins and the Kshatriyas to
close their ranks? Was this an attempt to forget and forgive or was the
motive to combine them in a conspiracy to achieve some unholy purpose.
What were the circumstances that forced Manu to advise the Brahmins
to forget their age old enmity with Kshatriyas and seek the helping
hand? The circumstances, must have been very hard and very pressing.
For there was no room left for a reapproachment between the two. The
Brahmins had hurled a terrible insult against the Kshatriyas and had
wounded their price by saying quite openly that the Kshatriyas were
the illegitimate children of Brahmins begotten by them on Kshatriyas
widows. The next offensive thing that the Brahmins had done to wound
the feelings of the Kshatriyas was to extract from the latter a confession
that the Brahmins were superior to the Kshatriyas in military prowess
and had made Bhishma say:
1 The prowess of the Brahmans can destroy even the gods.
Those wise beings behold all these worlds. To them it is indifferent
whether they are perfumed with sandal wood or deformed with mire,
1
Muir Vol. I, pp. 473-474.
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whether they eat or fast, whether they are clad in silk, or in sack cloth
or skins. They can turn what is not divine into what is divine, and the
converse; and can in their anger create other worlds with their guardians.
They are the gods of the gods; and the cause of the cause. The ignorant
Brahman is a god, whilst a learned Brahman is yet more a god, like
the full ocean.
All this makes this sudden climb down by the Brahmins, this stoping
down to win over the Kshatriyas very mysterious. What can be the key
to this mystery?
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CHAPTER 16
Shudras and the Counter Revolution
XI. 24. A Brahmin shall never beg from a Shudra property for
(performing) a sacrifice i.e. for religious purpose. All marriage ties with
the Shudra were proscribed. Marriage with a woman belonging to any
of the three other classes was forbidden. A Shudra was not to have any
connection with a woman of the higher classes and an act of adultery
committed by a Shudra with her was declared by manu to be an offence
involving capital punishment.
If she was unguarded, he loses the offending part. If she was guarded
then he should be put to death and his property confiscated.
As to office Manu prescribes.
1
Guarded means under the protection of some relation. Unguarded means living alone.
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The Shudra can have only one occupation. This is one of the inexhorable
Laws of Manu. Says Manu:
I. 91. One occupation only, the Lord prescribed to the Shudra, to
serve meekly these other three castes (namely Brahmin, Kshatriya and
Vaishyas).
X. 121. If a Shudra, (unable to subsist by serving Brahmans) seeks
a livelihood, he may serve Kshatriyas, or he may also seek to maintain
himself by attending on a wealthy Vaisya.
X. 122. But let (Shudra) serve Brahmans, either for the sake of heaven,
or with a view to both (this life and the next); for he who is called the
servant of a Brahmana thereby gains all his ends.
X. 123. The service of Brahmanas alone is declared (to be) an excellent
occupation for a Shudra for whatever else besides this he may perform
will bear him no fruit.
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Manu is not satisfied with this. He wants this servile status of the
Shudra to be expressed in the names and surnames of persons belonging
to that community. Manu says:
II. 31. Let the first part of a Brahmans name denote something
auspicious, a Kshatriyas be connected with power and a Vaishyas with
wealth, but a Shudras, express something contemptible.
II. 32. The second part of a Brahmans name shall be a word implying
happiness; of a Kshatriyas word implying protection; of a Vaishyas a term
expressive of thriving and of a Shudras an expression denoting services.
What was the position of the Shudra before Manu? Manu treats the
Shudra as though he was an alien Non-Aryan not entitled to the social
and religious privileges of the Aryan. Unfortunately the view that the
Shudra was a Non-Aryan is too readily accepted by the generality of the
people. But there can be no doubt that this view has not the slightest
foundation in the literature of the ancient Aryans.
Reading the Religious literature of the ancient Aryans one comes
across the names of various communities and groups of people. There
were first of all the Aryans with their fourfold divisions of Brahmins,
Kshatriyas, Vaishyas and Shudras. Besides them and apart from them
there were (i) Asuras (ii) Suras or Devas (iii) Yakshas (iv) Gandharvas
(v) Kinnars (vi) Charanas (vii) Ashvins and (viii) Nishadas. The Nishadas
were a jungle people primitive and uncivilized. The Gandharvas,
Yakshas, Kinnars, Charanas and Ashvins were professional classes and
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not communities. The word Asura is generic name given to various tribes
known by their tribal names of Daityas, Danavas, Dasyus, Kalananjas,
Kaleyyas, Kalins, Nagas, Nivata-Kavachas, Paulomas, Pishachas and
Raxasas. We do not know if the Suras and Devas were composed of
various tribes as the Asuras were. We only know the leaders of the
Deva Community. The well known amongst them were Brahma, Vishnu
Rudra, Surya, Indra, Varuna, Soma etc.
Due mostly to the ignorant interpretations of Sayanacharya some very
curious beliefs prevail even among the best informed people about these
communities namely the Aryans, the Asuras and the Devas and their
inter-relation and their consanguinity. It is believed that the Asuras were
not a human species at all. They are held to have been ghosts and goblins
who plagued the Aryans with their nocturnal visitations. The Suras or
Devas are understood to be poetic deifications of natures forces. With
regard to the Aryans the belief is that they were a fair race with sharp
nose and had a great deal of colour prejudice. As to the Dasyus it is
asserted that a Dasyu is only another name for a Shudra. The Shudras
it is said formed the aboriginals of India. They were dark and flat nosed.
The Aryans who invaded India conquered them and made them slaves
and as a badge of slavery gave them the name Dasyu which it is said
comes from the word Das1 which means a slave.
Every one of these beliefs is unfounded. The Asuras and Suras were
communities of human beings as the Aryans were. The Asuras and Suras
were descended from a common father Kashapa. The story is that Daksha
Prajapati had 60 daughters, of them thirteen were given in marriage
to Kashapa. Diti and Aditi were two among the 13 of Kashapas wives.
Those born to Diti were called Asuras and those born to Aditi were
called Suras or Devas. The two faught a long and a bloody battle for
the soverignty of the world. This no doubt is mythology and mythology
though it is history in hyperbole is still history.
The Aryans were not a race. The Aryans were a collection of people.
The cement that held them together was their interest in the maintenance
of a type of culture called Aryan culture. Any one who accepted the
Aryan culture was an Aryan. Not being a race there was no fixed type
of colour and physiognomy which could be called Aryan. There was no
dark and flat nose people for the Aryans to distinguish themselves from2.
The whole of this edifice of colour prejudice as being factors for division
and antagonism between Aryans and the Dasyus is based upon a wrong
meaning given to the two words Varna and Anas which are used with
reference to the Dasyus. The word Varna is taken to mean colour and the
1
According to Nirukta, Das means to destroy.
2
On the whole of this subject see a brilliant discussion by Mr. Satvalekar in Purusharth
Vol. XIII. p.
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word Anas is taken to mean without nose. Both these meanings are
erroneous. Varna means Caste or group and Anas if read as An-As
means uncultivated speech. That statement that the Aryans had a colour
prejudice which determined their social order is arrant nonsense. If there
were any people who were devoid of colour prejudice it is the Aryans and
that is because there was no dominant colour to distinguish themselves.
It is wrong to say that the Dasyus were non-Aryans by race. The
Dasyus were not a pre-Aryan race of aboriginals of India. The Dasyus
were members of the Aryan community who were deprived of the title
of Arya for opposing some belief or cult which was an essential part of
the Aryan Culture. How this belief that the Dasyus were Non-Aryans
by race could have arisen it is difficult to understand. In the Rig Veda
(X. 49) Indra says: I (Indra) have killed with my thuderbolt for the
good of the man, known as Kavi. I have protected Kupa by adopting
means of protection. I took up the thunderbolt for killing Susna. I have
deprived the Dasyus of the appellation of Arya.
Nothing can be more positive and definite than this statement of Indra
that the Dasyus were Aryans. Further and better proof of this fact can
be had in the impeachment of Indra for the various atrocities he had
committed. In the list of atrocities for which Indra was impeached there
was one charge namely the killing of Vratra. Vratra was the leader of
the Dasyus. It is unthinkable that such a charge could be framed against
Indra if the Dasyus were not Aryans.
It is erroneous to believe that the Shudras were conquered by the Aryan
invaders. In the first place the story that the Aryans came from outside
India and invaded the natives has no evidence to support it. There is a
large body of evidence that India is the home of the Aryans. In the second
place there is no evidence anywhere of any warfare having taken place
between Aryans and Dasyus but the Dasyus have nothing to do with the
Shudras. In the third place it is difficult to believe that the Aryans were
a powerful people capable of much military prowess. Any one who reads
the history of the Aryans in India in their relation to the Devas will be
reminded of the relationship that subsisted between the Viellens and their
lords during the feudal times. The Devas were the feudal lords and the
Aryans were the Villens. The innumerable sacrifices which the Aryans
performed have the look of fudal dues paid to the Deva. This servility of
the Aryans to the Devas was due to the fact that without the help and the
protection of the Devas they could not withstand the assualts of the Asuras.
It is too much to presume that so effete a people could have conquered
the Shudras. Lastly there was no necessity to conquer the Shudra.
They were Aryans in the only sense in which the word Aryan is used,
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namely, the upholders of the Aryans Culture. Two things are clear about
the Shudras. Nobody has ever contended that they were dark and flat
nosed. Nobody has contended that they were defeated or enslaved by
the Aryans. It is wrong to treat the Dasyus and Shudras as one and
the same. As a people they may be the same. But culturally they were
quite different. The Dasyus were Non-Aryans in the sense they had
fallen away and rebelled against the Aryan culture. The Shudras on
the other hand were Aryans i.e. they were believers in the Aryan way
of life. The Shudra was accepted as an Aryan and as late as Kautilyas
Artha Shastra was addressed an Arya.
The Shudra was an intergral, natural and valued member of the Aryan
Society is proved by a prayer which is found in the Yajur Veda1and
which is offered by the Sacrificer. It runs as follows:
.. O Gods
Give lustre to our holy priests, set lustre in our ruling chiefs, Lustre
to Vaisyas, Shudras: Give, through lustre; Lustre unto me. It is a
remarkable prayer, remarkable because it shows that the Shudra was a
member of the Aryan Community and was also a respected member of it.
That the Shudras were invited to be present at the coronation of the
King along with Brahmins, Kshatriyas and Vaishyas is proved by the
description given in the Mahabharata of the coronation of Yudhisthira
the eldest brother of the Pandavas. Shudra took part in the consecration
of the King. According to ancient writer called Nilkantha speaking of
the coronation ceremony expressly says: that the four chief Ministers,
Brahmin, Kshatriya, Vaishya and Shudra consecrated the new king. Then
the leaders of each Varna and by the Castes lower still consecrated him
with the holy water. Then followed acclamation by the twice-born. In the
post-vedic period preceding Manu there was group of the representatives
of the people called the Ratnis. The Ratnis played a significant part in
the investiture of the King. The Ratnis were so called because they held
the Ratna (jewel) which was a symbol of sovereignty. The king received
his sovereignty only when the Ratnis handed over to him the jewel of
sovereignty and on receiving his sovereignty the King went to the house
of each of the Ratnis and made an offering to him. It is a significant
fact that the Shudra was one of the Ratnis.
Shudras were members of the two political Assemblies of ancient
times namely the Janapada and Paura and as a member of this he was
entitled to special respect even from a Brahmin.
1
White Yajur Veda p. 200.
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That the Shudra in the Ancient Aryan Society had reached a high
political status is indisputable. They could become ministers of State. The
Mahabharata bears testimony to this. Enumerating the different classes
of ministers within his memory the writer of the Mahabharata mentions
a list1 of 37 Ministers of whom four are Brahmins, eight Kshatriyas,
twenty-one Vaishyas, three Shudras and one Suta.
Shudras did not stop with being ministers of State. They even became
Kings. The story of Shudras which is given in the Rig Veda stands in
cruel contrast with the views expressed by Manu regarding the eligibility
of the Shudra to be a King. The reign of Sudas if referred to at all is
referred only in connection with the terrible contest between Vashishtha
and Vishvamitra as to who should become the purohit or Royal priest
of King Sudas. The issue involved in the contest was as to the right to
officiate as the Purohit or the King. Vashishtha who was a Brahmin and
who was already an officiating priest of Sudas claimed that a Brahmin
alone could become the Purohit of a King while Vishvamitra who was
a Kshatriya contended that a Kshatriya was competent for that office.
Vishvamitra succeeded and in his turn became the Purohit of Sudas.
The contest is indeed memorable because the issue involved in it is
very crucial although the result has not been a permanent deprivation
of the Brahmins. But there can be no doubt the story is probably the
best piece of social history that is to be found in the ancient literature.
Unfortunately nobody has taken serious notice of it. Nobody has even
asked who this King was. Sudas was the son of Paijavana and Paijavana
is the son of Devodas who was the King of Kasi i.e. Benares. What was
the Varna of Sudas? Few would believe if they were told that King Sudas
was a Shudra. But that is a fact and it can be proved by the testimony
of the Mahabharata2 where in the Santipurva a reference is made to this
Paijavana. It is stated that Paijavana was a Shudra. In the light of this
the story of Sudas sheds new light on the status of the Shudra in the
Aryan Society. It shows that a Shudra could be a reigning monarch. It
also shows that both the Brahmins and the Kshatriyas not only saw no
humiliation in serving a Shudra King but they with each other to secure
his patronage and were ready to perform vedic ceremonies at his house.
It cannot be said that there were no Shudra Kings in later times.
On the contrary history shows that the two dynasties which preceded
Manu were dynasties of Shudras Kings. The Nandas who ruled from
B.C.413 to B.C. 322* were Shudras. The mauryas who succeded
1
JaiswalHindu Polity Part II. p. 148.
2
Muir Sanskrit Texts Vol. I. p. 366.
*Figures are incorporated by Editors as they are not in the M.S.Editors.
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the Nandas and who ruled from 322 3.C, to 183 B.C.* were also Shudras.
What more glaring piece of evidence can there be to show the high
dignity enjoyed by the Shudra than to point to the case of Asoka who
was not merely the Emperor of India but a Shudra and his Empire was
the Empire built by the Shudras.
On the question of the right of the Shudra to study the Vedas a
reference may be made to the Chhandogya Upanished (V. 1.2). It
relates the story of one Janasruti to whom Veda Vidya was taught by
the preceptor Raikva. This Janasruti was a Shudra. This story if it is
a genuine story leaves no doubt that there was a time when there was
no bar against the Shudra in the matter of studying the Vedas.
Not only was Shudra free to study the Vedas but there were Shudras
who had reached the status of Rishis and has been composers of the
Hymns of the Vedas. The story of the Rishi Kavasha Aliusha1 is very
illuminating. He was a Rishi and the author of several hymns of the
Tenth Book of the Rig-Veda.2
On the question of the spiritual eligibility of the Shudra to perform
the Vedic ceremonies and sacrifies the following data may be presented.
Jaimini3 the author of the Purva Mimansa mentions an ancient teacher
by name Badariwhose work is lost as an exponent of the view that
even Shudra could perform Vedic sacrifices. The Bharadvaja Srauta
Sutra (v. 28) admits that there exists another school of thought which
holds that a Sudra can consecrate the three sacred fires necessary for
the performance of a Vedic Sacrifice. Similarly the Commentator of the
Katyayana Srauta Sutra (1 & 5) admits that there are certain Vedic texts
which lead to the inference that the Shudra was eligible to perform Vedic
rites. In the Satpath Brahmana (I. 1.4.12) there is enunciated a rule of
etiquette which the priest officiating at the performance of a sacrifice
is required to observe. It relates to the mode in which the priest should
address the Haviskut (the person celebrating the sacrifice) calling upon
him to begin the ceremony. The rule says:
Now there are four different forms of this call, viz. Come hither
(Ehi) in the case of a Brahmana; approach (Agahi) and hasten hither
(Adarva) in the case of a Vaishya and a member of the Military caste
and run hither (Adhava) in that of a Shudra.
(vow to drink milk only) Mastu (whey) is prescribed for the Shudra. In
another place the same Satapatha Brahmana1 says:
There are four classes, the Brahmin, Rajanya, Vaishya and Sudra.
There is no one of these who dislikes Soma. If any one of them however
should do so, let there be an atonment.
This means that the drinking of Soma was not only permissible but
it was compulsory on all including the Shudra. But in the story of the
Ashvins there is definite evidence that the Shudra had a right to the
divine drink of Soma. The Ashvins as the story2 goes once happened to
behold Sukanya when she had just bathed and when her person was bare.
She was young girl married to a Rishi by name Chyavana who at the
time of marriage was so old as to be dying almost any day. The Ashvins
were captivated by the beauty of Sukanya and said accept one of us
for your husband, it behoveth thee not to spend thy youth fruitlessly.
She refused saying I am devoted to my husband. They again spoke
to her and this time proposed a bargainWe two are the celestial
physicians of note. We will make thy husband young and graceful. Do
thou then select one of us as thy husband. She went to her husband
and communicated to him the terms of the bargain. Chyavana said to
Sukanya Do thou so and the bargain was carried out and Chyavana
was made a young man by the Ashwins. Subsequently a question arose
whether the Ashwins were entitled to Soma which was the drink of
the Gods. Indra objected saying that the Ashwins were Shudras and
therefore not entitled to Soma. Chyavana who had received perpetual
youth from the Ashwins set aside the contention and compelled Indra
to give them Soma.
All these provisions can have no meaning unless the Shudra was
in fact performing the Vedic ceremonies to which they relatethere is
evidence to show that a Shudra woman took part in the Vedic sacrifice
known as the Ashwamedha.3
With regard to the Upanayana ceremony and the right to wear the
sacred thread there is nowhere an express prohibition against the Shudra.
On the other hand in the Sansakara Ganapati there is an express
provision declaring the Shudra to be eligible for Upanayan.4
The Shudra though belonging to a lower class was nonetheless a free
citizen in days before Manu cannot be gainsaid. Consider the following
provisions in Kautilyas Artha Shastra:
1
Quoted by Muir Sanskrit Texts I p. 367.
2
V. Fausboil Indian Mythology pp. 128-134.
3
Jaiswal Indian Polity Part II. p. 17.
4
Referred to by Max-Muller in Ancient Sanskrit Literature-(1860)p. 207.
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The offspring of a man who has sold himself off as a slave shall
be an Arya. A slave shall be entitled without prejudice to his masters
work but also the inheritance he has received from his father.
But when the Vratyas were admitted to settled life, they were
admitted as fully equals. The Rsis used to eat food cooked by them,
and they used to eat food cooked by the Rsis. They were taught all
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the three Vidyas, Sama, Rk, and Yajus, and they were allowed to
study the Vedas, and teach them, and to sacrifice for themselves and
for others, that is, they were considered as fully equal. Not only were
they treated as fully equal but they attained the highest proficiency
of a Rsi. Samans were revealed to them, and even Rks. One of the
purified Vratyas, Kausitaki was allowed to collect Brahmans of the
Rig-Veda, which collection still goes under his name.
The Aryans were not only converting to their way of life the willing
non-Aryans they were also attempting to make converts from among
the unwilling Asuras who were opposed to the Aryans, their cult of
sacrifice, their theory of Chaturvarna and even to their Vedas which
according to the mythology the Asuras stole away from the Aryas.
The story of Vishnu rescuing Pralhad by killing his father the Asura
called Hiranya Kashapu on the ground that Pralhad was willing to be
converted to the Aryan Culture while Hiranya Kashapu was opposed
to it is an illustration in point. Here are instances of Non-Aryans
being naturalized and enfranchized. Why was an opposite attitude
taken against the Shudra? Why was the Shudra fully naturalized and
fully enfranchized, denaturalized and disfranchized?
The treatment given to the Nishadas gives a point to this riddle
which should not be overlooked. The Ancient Sanskrit Literature is
full of reference to the five tribes. They are described under various
appellations1 such as Panch-Krishtayah, Panch-Kshitayah, Panch-
Kshityas Manushyah, Panch-Charshanayah, Panch-Janah, Panchi-
janya viz., Pancha-Bhuma, Panchajata. There is a difference of opinion
as to what these terms denote. Sayanacharya the Commentator of
Rig Veda says that these expressions refer to the four Varnas and
the Nishads. The Vishnu Purana gives the following story about the
Nishads:
7. The Maiden named Sunitha, who was the first born of Mrityu
(Death) was given as wife to Anga; and of her Vena was born.
10. Then all the rishis approaching the king with respectful
salutations, said to him in a gentle and conciliatory tone:
1
Source not quoted. Editors.
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12. We shall worship Hari, the monarch of the Gods, and the lord
of all sacrifices with a Dirghasattra (prolonged sacrifice), from which
the highest benefits will accrue to your kingdom, your person and
your subjects. May blessing rest upon you? You shall have a share
in the ceremony.
15. When religion perishes the whole world is destroyed with it,
When Vena although thus admonished and repeatedly addressed by
the eminent rishis, did not give his permission, then all the munis,
filled with wrath and indignation, cried out to one another, Slay,
slay the sinner.
16. This man of degraded life, who blasphemes the sacrified Male,
the god, the Lord without beginning or end, is not fit to be lord of the
earth. So saying the munis smote with blades of kusa grass consecrated
by texts this king who had been already smitten by his blasphemy of
the divine being and his other offences. The munis afterwards beheld
dust all round, and asked the people who were standing near what
that was.
17. They were informed: In this country which has no king, the
people being distressed, have become robbers, and have begun to seize
the property of others.
rubbed there was produced a man like a charred log, with flat face,
and extremely short.
19. What shall I do, cried the man, in distress, to the Brahmans. They
said to him, Sit down (nishida); and from this he became a Nishada.
20. From his sprang the Nishadas dwelling in the Vindhya mountains,
distinguished by their wicked deeds.
21. By this means the sin of the king departed out of him; and so
were the Nishads produced, the offspring of the wickedness of Vena.
CHAPTER 17
The Woman and the Counter-
Revolution
There is one copy with a title The Woman and the Counter-
Revolution. There is another copy of the same text with a title,
The Riddle of the Woman. The Editorial Board felt that this
essay would be appropriate in this Volume rather than in the
volume of Riddles in Hinduism .Editors.
Manu can hardly be said to be more tender to women than he was
to the Shudra. He starts with a low opinion of women. Manu proclaims:
II. 213. It is the nature of women to seduce men in this (world); for
that reason the wise are never unguarded in (the company of) females.
II. 214. For women are able to lead astray in (this) world not only
a fool, but even a learned man, and (to make) him a slave of desire
and anger.
II. 215. One should not sit in a lonely place with ones mother, sister
or daughter; for the senses are powerful, and master even a learned man.
IX. 14. Women do not care for beauty, nor is their attention fixed on
age; (thinking); (It is enough that) he is a man, they give themselves
to the handsome and to the ugly.
IX. 15. Through their passion for men, through their mutable temper,
through their natural heartlessness, they become disloyal towards their
husbands, however, carefully they may be guarded in this (world).
IX. 16. Knowing their disposition, which the Lord of creatures laid in
them at the creation, to be such, (every) man should most strenuously
exert himself to guard them.
IX. 17. (When creating them) Manu allotted to women (a love of their)
bed, (of their) seat and (of) ornament, impure desires, wrath, dishonesty,
malice, and bad conduct.
The laws of Manu against women are of a piece with this view. Women
are not to be free under any circumstances. In the opinion of Manu:
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IX. 2. Day and night women must be kept in dependence by the males
(of their families), and, if they attach themselves to sexual enjoyments,
they must be kept under ones control.
IX. 3. Her father protects (her) in childhood, her husband protects
(her) in youth, and her sons protect (her) in old age; a woman is never
fit for independence.
IX. 5. Women must particularly be guarded against evil inclinations,
however trifling (they may appear); for, if they are not guarded, they
will bring sorrow on two families.
IX. 6. Considering that the highest duty of all castes, even weak
husbands (must) strive to guard their wives.
IV. 147. By a girl, by a young woman, or even by an aged one, nothing
must be done independently, even in her own house.
V. 148. In childhood a female must be subject to her father, in youth
to her husband, when her lord is dead to her sons; a woman must never
be independent.
V. 149. She must not seek to separate herself from her father,
husband, or sons; by leaving them she would make both (her own and
her husbands) families contemptible.
Many Hindus stop here as though this is the whole story regarding
Manus law of divorce and keep on idolizing it by comforting their
conscience by holding out the view that Manu regarded marriage as
sacrament and therefore, did not allow divorce. This of course is far
from the truth. His law against divorce had a very different motive. It
was not to tie up a man to a woman but it was to tie up the woman to
a man and to leave the man free.
For Manu does not prevent a man from giving up his wife. Indeed
he not only allows him to abandon his wife but he also permits him to
sell her. But what he does is to prevent the wife from becoming free.
See what Manu says:
IX. 46. Neither by sale nor by repudiation is a wife released from
her husband.
gradation of the Varna had been destroyed. Manu was outraged by her license
and in putting a stop to it he deprived her of her liberty.
A wife was reduced by manu to the level of a slave in the matter of property.
IX. 416. A wife, a son, and a slave, these three are declared to have no
property; the wealth which they earn is (acquired) for him to whom they
belong.
When she becomes a widow Manu allows her maintenance, if her husband
was joint, and a widows estate in the property of her husband, if he was
separate from his family. But Manu never allows her to have any dominion
over property.
A woman under the laws of Manu is subject to corporal punishment and
Manu allows the husband the right to beat his wife.
VIII. 299. A wife, a son, a slave, a pupil and a younger brother of full
blood, who have committed faults, may be beaten with a rope or a split
bamboo. In other matters woman was reduced by Manu to the same position
as the Shudra.
To disable her from performing such sacrifices Manu prevents her from
getting the aid and services of a Brahmin priest.
IV. 205. A Brahman must never eat food given at a sacrifice performed
by a woman.
IV. 206. Sacrifices performed by women are inauspicious and not acceptable
to God. They should therefore be avoided.
Woman was not to have any intellectual persuits nor free will, nor
freedom of thought. She was not to join any heretical sect such as
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Then comes the choicest texts which forms the pith and the marrow
of this ideal which Manu prescribes for women:
V. 153. The husband who wedded her with sacred Mantras, is always
a source of happiness to his wife, both in season and out of season, in
this world and in the next.
V. 150. She must always be cheerful, clever in the management of
her household affairs, careful in cleaning her utensils, and economical
in expenditure.
made her an offering1 as he did to the others. Not only the king elect did
homage to the Queen, he worshipped his other wives of lower castes2. In
the same way the King offers salutation after the coronation ceremony
to the, ladies of the chiefs of the shremes (guides3).
In the days of Kautilya women4 were deemed to have attained their
age of majority at 12 and men at 16. The age of majority was in all
probability the age of marriage. That the marriages were post puberty
marriages is clear from Baudhayanas Grihya Sutras5 where an expiatory
ceremony is specially prescribed in the case of a bride passing her menses
on the occasion of her marriage.
In Kautilya there is no law as to age of consent. That is because
marriages were post puberty marriages and Kautilya is more concerned
with cases in which a bride or a bridegroom is married without disclosing
the fact of his or her having had sexual intercouse before marriage with
another person or maiden in menses having had sexual intercouse. In
the former case Kautilya says6:
Any person who has given a girl in marriage without announcing
her guilt of having laid with another shall not only be punished with a
fine but also be made to return the Sulka and Stridhana. Any person
receiving a girl in marriage without announcing the blemishes of the
bridegroom shall not only pay double the above fine, but also forfeit
the Sulka and Stridhana (he paid for the bride). In regard to the latter
case the rule in Kautilya7 is:
It is no offence for a man of equal caste and rank to have connection
with a maiden who has been unmarried three years after her first
menses. Nor is it an offence for a man, even of different caste, to have
connection with a maiden who has spent more than three years after
her first menses and has no jewellery on her person.
Unlike Manu Kautilyas idea is monogamy. Man can marry more than
one wife only under certain conditions. They are given by Kautilya in
the following terms1:
If a woman either brings forth no (live) children, or has no male
issue, or is barren, her husband shall wait for eight years (before
marrying another). If she bears only a dead child, he has to wait for
ten years. If she brings forth only females, he has to wait for twelve
1
Jaiswal: Indian Polity, Part II, p. 16.
2
Ibid, Part II, p. 17.
3
Ibid, p. 82.
4
Sham Shastri, Kautilyas Arthashastra, p. 175.
5
Baudhyayana, I. 7. 22.
6
Sham Shastri, Kautilyas Arthashastra, p. 222.
7
Ibid, p. 259.
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given birth to children, they should wait for their absent husbands
for more than a year. If they are provided with maintenance, they
should wait for twice the period of time just mentioned. If they
are not so provided with, their well-to-do gnatis should maintain
them either for four or eight years. Then the gnatis should leave
them to marry, after taking what had been presented to them on
the occasion of their marriages. If the husband is a Brahman,
studying abroad, his wife who has no issue should wait for him
for ten years; but if she has given birth to children, she should
wait for twelve years. If the husband is a servant of the king,
his wife should wait for him till her death; but even if she bears
children to a savarna husband (i.e. a second husband belonging
to the same gotra as that of the former husband), with a view
to avoid the extinction of her race, she shall not be liable to
contempt thereof (savarnatascha prajata na pavadam labheta). If
the wife of an absent husband lacks maintenance and is deserted
by well-to-do gnatis, she may remarry one whom she likes and
who is in a position to maintian her and relieve her misery.
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PART IV
Buddha or
Karl Marx
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CHAPTER 18
Buddha or Karl Marx
Although these are the words of Pasenadi, the Buddha did not deny
that they formed a true picture of society.
As to the Buddhas own attitude towards class conflict his doctrine of
Ashtanga Marga recognises that class conflict exists and that it is the
class conflict which is the cause of misery.
On the third question I quote from the same dialogue of Buddha with
Potthapada;
Then what is it that the Exalted One has determined?
I have expounded, Potthapada, that sorrow and misery exist!
That language is different but the meaning is the same. If for misery
one reads exploitation Buddha is not away from Marx.
On the question of private property the following extract from a
dialogue between Buddha and Ananda is very illuminating. In reply to
a question by Ananda the Buddha said :
I have said that avarice is because of possession. Now in what way
that is so, Ananda, is to be understood after this manner. Where there
is no possession of any sort or kind whatever by any one or anything,
then there being no possession whatever, would there, owing to this
cessation of possession, be any appearance of avarice?
There would not, Lord.
Wherefore, Ananda, just that is the ground, the basis, the genesis,
the cause of avarice, to wit, possession.
31. I have said that tenacity is the cause possession. Now in what
way that is so, Ananda, is to be understood after this manner. Were
there no tenacity of any sort or kind whatever shown by any one with
respect to any thing, then there being whatever, would there owing to
this cessation of tenacity, be any appearance of possession?
There would not, Lord.
Wherefore, Ananda, just that is the ground, the basis, the genesis,
the cause of possession, to wit tenacity.
1.
2. Three robes or pieces of cloth for daily wear.
3.
4. a girdle for the loins.
5. an alms-bowl.
6. a razor.
7. a needle.
8. a water strainer.
Further a Bhikku was completely forbidden to receive gold or silver
for fear that with gold or silver he might buy some thing beside the
eight things he is permitted to have.
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These rules are far more rigourous than are to be found in communism
in Russia.
V THE MEANS
We must now come to the means. The means of bringing about
Communism which the Buddha propounded were quite definite. The
means can be decided into three parts.
Part I consisted in observing the Pancha Silas.
The Enlightenment gave birth to a new gospel which contains the key
to the solution of the problem which was haunting him.
The foundation of the New Gospel is the fact that the world was full
of misery and unhappiness. It was fact not merely to be noted but to
be regarded as being the first and foremost in any scheme of salvation.
The recongnition of this fact the Buddha made the starting point of his
gospel.
To remove this misery and unhappiness was to him the aim and object
of the gospel if it is to serve any useful purpose.
Asking what could be the causes of this misery the Buddha found
that there could be only two.
A part of the misery and unhappiness of man was the result of his
own misconduct. To remove this cause of misery he preached the practice
of Panch Sila.
The Panch Sila comprised the following observations:
(1) To abstain from destroying or causing destruction of any living
thing; (2) To abstain from stealing i.e. acquiring or keeping by fraud or
violence, the property of another; (3) To Abstain from telling untruth;
(4) To abstain from lust; (5) To abstain from intoxicating drinks.
A part of the misery and unhappiness in the world was according to
the Buddha the result of mans inequity towards man. How was this
inequity to be removed ? For the removal of mans inequity towards man
the Buddha prescribed the Noble Eight-Fold Path. The elements of the
Noble Eight-Fold Path are:
(l) Right views i.e.-freedom from superstition; (2) Right aims, high
and worthy of the intelligent and earnest men; (3) Right speech i.e.
kindly, open, truthful; (4) Right Conduct i.e. peaceful, honest and
pure; (5) Right livelihood i.e. causing hurt or injury to no living being;
(6) Right perseverence in all the other seven; (7) Right mindfulness i.e.
with a watchful and active mind; and (8) Right contemplation i.e. earnest
thought on the deep mysteries of life.
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These virtues one must practice to his utmost capacity. That is why
they are called Paramitas (States of Perfection).
Such is the gospel the Buddha enunciated as a result of his
enlightenment to end the sorrow and misery in the world.
It is clear that the means adopted by the Buddha were to convert a
man by changing his moral disposition to follow the path voluntarily.
The means adopted by the Communists are equally clear, short and
swift. They are (1) Violence and (2) Dictatorship of the Proletariat.
The Communists say that there are the only two means of establishing
communism. The first is violence. Nothing short of it will suffice to
break up the existing system. The other is dictatorship of the proletariat.
Nothing short of it will suffice to continue the new system.
It is now clear what are the similarities and differences between
Buddha and Karl Marx. The differences are about the means. The end
is common to both.
VI EVALUATION OF MEANS
We must now turn to the evaluation of means. We must ask whose
means are superior and lasting in the long run. There are, however,
some misunderstandings on both sides. It is necessary to clear them up.
Take violence. As to violence there are many people who seem to
shiver at the very thought of it. But this is only a sentiment. Violence
cannot be altogether dispensed with. Even in non-communist countries
a murderer is hanged. Does not hanging amount to violence? Non-
Communist countries go to war with non-Communist countries. Millions
of people are killed. Is this no violence ? If a murderer can be killed,
because he has killed a citizen, if a soldier can be killed in war because
he belongs to a hostile nation why cannot a property owner be killed
if his ownership leads to misery for the rest of humanity ? There is no
reason to make an exception in favour of the property owner, why one
should regard private property as sacrosanct.
The Buddha was against violence. But he was also in favour of justice
and where justice required he permitted the use of force. This is well
illustrated in his dialogue with Sinha Senapati the Commander-in-Chief
of Vaishali. Sinha having come to know that the Buddha I preached
Ahimsa went to him and asked:
The Bhagvan preaches Ahimsa. Does the Bhagvan preach an offender
to be given freedom from punishment ? Does the Bhagvan preach that
we should not go to war to save our wives, our children and our wealth ?
Should we suffer at the hands of criminals in the name of Ahimsa.?
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on Vaishali and said to Ananda. This is the last look of Vaishali which
the Tathagata is having. So fond was he of this republic.
He was a thorough equalitarian. Originally the Bhikkus, including the
Buddha himself, wore robes made of rags. This rule was enunciated to
prevent the aristocratic classes from joining the Sangh. Later Jeevaka
the great physician prevailed upon the Buddha to accept a robe which
was made of a whole cloth. The Buddha at once altered the rule and
extended it to all the monks.
Once the Buddhas mother Mahaprajapati Gotami who had joined the
Bhikkuni Sangh heard that the Buddha had got a chill. She at once
started preparing a scarf for him. After having completed it she took
to the Buddha and asked him to wear it. But he refused to accept it
saying that if it is a gift it must be a gift to the whole Sangh and not
to an individual member of the Sangh. She pleaded and pleaded but he
refused to yield.
The Bhikshu Sangh had the most democratic constitution. He was
only one of the Bhikkus. At the most he was like a Prime Minister
among members of the Cabinet. He was never a dictator. Twice before
his death he was asked to appoint some one as the head of the Sangh
to control it. But each time he refused saying that the Dhamma is the
Supreme Commander of the Sangh. He refused to be a dictator and
refused to appoint a dictator.
What about the value of the means? Whose means are superior and
lasting in the long run?
Can the Communists say that in achieving their valuable end they
have not destroyed other valuable ends? They have destroyed private
property. Assuming that this is a valuable end can the Communists
say that they have not destroyed other valuable end in the process of
achieving it? How many people have they killed for achieving their end.
Has human life no value ? Could they not have taken property without
taking the life of the owner?
Take dictatorship. The end of Dictatorship is to make the Revolution
a permanent revolution. This is a valuable end. But can the Communists
say that in achieving this end they have not destroyed other valuable
ends ? Dictatorship is often defined as absence of liberty or absence of
Parliamentary Government. Both interpretations are not quite clear.
There is no liberty even when there is Parliamentary Government.
For law means want of liberty. The difference between Dictatorship
and Parliamentary Govt. lies in this. In Parliamentary Government
every citizen has a right to criticise the restraint on liberty imposed
by the Government. In Parliamentary Government you have
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a duty and a right; the duty to obey the law and right to critise it.
In Dictatorship you have only duty to obey but no right to criticise it.
VII WHOSE MEANS ARE MORE EFFICACIOUS
We must now consider whose means are more lasting. One has
to chose between Government by force and Government by moral
disposition.
As Burke has said force cannot be a lasting means. In his speech
on conciliation with America he uttered this memorable warning :
First, Sir, permit me to observe, that the use of force alone is but
temporary. It may subdue for a moment; but it does not remove the
necessity of subduing again; and a nation is not governed which is
perpetually to be conquered.
A further objection to force is, that you impair the object by your very
endeavours to preserve it. The thing you fought for is the thing which
you recover, but depreciated, sunk, wasted and consumed in the contest.
Now after many many hundred years had slipped down from its
place On seeing this he went to King Strongtyre and said: Know,
sire, for a truth that the Celestial Wheel has sunk, has slipped down
from its place.
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The king Strongtyre, brethren, let the prince his eldest son be sent
for and spake thus:
Behold, dear boy, my Celestial Wheel has sunk a little, has slipped
down from its place. Now it has been told me; If the Celestial Wheel of a
wheel turning King shall sink down, shall slip down from its place, that
king has not much longer to live. I have had my fill of human pleasures;
Its time to seek after divine joys, Come, dear boy, take thou charge over
this earth bounded by the ocean. But I, shaving hair and beard, and
donning yellow robes, will go forth from home into the homeless state.
So brethren, King Strongtyre, having in due form established his
eldest son on the throne, shaved hair and beared, donned yellow robes
and went forth from home into homeless state. But on the seventh day
after the royal hermit had gone forth, the Celestial Wheel disappeared.
(4) Then a certain man went to the King, and told him, saying: Know,
O King, for a truth, that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared !
Then that King, brethren, was grieved thereat and afflicted with
sorrow. And he went to the royal hermit, and told him, saying: Know,
sire, for a truth, that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared.
And the anointed king so saying, the royal hermit made reply. Grieve
thou not, dear son, that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared, nor be
afflicted that the Celestial Wheel has disappeared. For no paternal
heritage of thine, dear son, is the Celestial Wheel. But verily, dear son,
turn thou in the Ariyan turning of the Wheel-turners. (Act up to the
noble ideal of duty set before themselves by the true sovereigns of the
world). Then it may well be that if thou carry out the Ariyan duty of
a Wheel-turning Monarch, and on the feast of the moon thou wilt for,
with bathed head to keep the feast on the chief upper terrace, to the
Celestial Wheel will manifest, itself with its thousand spokes its tyre,
navel and all its part complete.
(5) But what, sire is this Ariya duty of a Wheel-turning Monarch?
This, dear son, that thou, leaning on the Norm (the law of truth and
righteousness) honouring, respecting and revering it, doing homage to
it, hallowing it, being thyself a Norm-banner, a Norm-signal, having
the Norm as thy master, shouldest provide the right watch, ward, and
protection for thine own folk, for the army, for the nobles, for vassals,
for brahmins and house holders, for town and country dwellers, for the
religious world, and for beasts and birds. Throughout thy kingdom let
no wrong doing prevail. And whosoever in thy kingdom is poor, to him
let wealth be given.
And when dear son, in thy kingdom men of religious life,
renouncing the carelessness arising from intoxication of the senses, and
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Then when the Celestial Wheel had gone forth conquering over the
whole earth to its ocean boundry, it returned to the royal city, and
stood, so that one might think it fixed, in front of the judgement hall at
entrance to the inner apartments of the king, the Wheel-turner, lighting
up with its glory the facade of the inner apartments of the king, the
sovereign of the world.
(8) And a second king, brethern, also a Wheel-turning monarch;... and
a third... and a fourth... and a fifth... and a sixth... and a seventh king,
a victorious war-lord, after many years, after many hundred years, after
many thousand years, command a certain man, saying :
If thou shouldest see, sirrah, that the Celestial Wheel has sunk down,
has slid from its place, bring me word.
Even so, sire, replied the man.
So after many years, after many hundred years, after many thousand
years, that man saw that the Celestial Wheel had sunk down, had
become dislodged from its place. And so seeing he went to the king, the
war-lord, and told him.
Then that king did (even as Strongtyre had done). And on the seventh
day after the royal hermit had gone forth the Celestial Wheel disappeared.
Then a certain man went and told the King. Then the King was
grieved at the disappearance of the wheel, and afflicted with grief. But
he did not go to the hermit-king to ask concerning the Ariyan Duty of
sovereign war-lord. But his own ideas, forsooth, he governed his people;
and they so governed differently from what they had been, did not prosper
as they used to do under former kings who had carried out the Arivan
duty of a sovereign king.
Then, brethren, the ministers and courtiers, the finance officials, the
guards and door keepers and they who lived by sacred verses came to
the King and spake thus :
Thy people, O king, whilst thou governest them by thine own ideas,
differently from the way to which they were used when former kings
were carrying out the Arivan Duty prosper not. Now there are in thy
kingdom ministers and courtiers, finance officers, guards and custodians,
and they who live by sacred versesboth all of us and otherswho keep
the knowledge of the Ariyan duty of the sovereign king. Lo ! O king, do
thou ask us concerning it; to thee thus asking will we declare it.
9. Then, brethren, the king, having made the ministers and all the
rest sit down together, asked them about the Ariyan duty of Sovereign
war-lord, And they declared it unto him. And when he had heard
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them, he did provide the due watch and ward protection, but on the
destitute he bestowed no wealth and because this was not done, poverty
became widespread.
When poverty was thus become rife, a certain man took that which
others had not given him, what people call by theft. Him they caught, and
brought before the king, saying: This man, O king has taken that which
was not given to him and that is theft.
Thereupon the king spake thus to the man. Is it true sirrah, that thou
hast taken what no man gave thee, hast committed what men call theft.
It is ture, O king.
But why?.
O king, I have nothing to keep me alive. Then the king bestowed wealth
on that man, saying: With this wealth sir, do thou both keep thyself alive,
maintain thy parents, maintain children and wife, carry on thy business.
Even so, O king, replied the man.
10. Now another man, brethern, took by theft what was not given him.
Him they caught and brought before the king and told him, saying: this
man, O king, hath taken by theft what was not given him.
And the king (spoke and did even as he had spoken and done to the
former man.)
11. Now men heard brethren, that to them who had taken by theft
what was not given them, the King was giving wealth. And hearing they
thought, let us then take by theft what has not been given us.
Now a certain man did so. And him they caught and charged before the
king who (as before) asked him why he had stolen.
Because, O king I cannot maintain myself .
Then the king thought: If I bestow wealth on anyone so ever who has
taken by theft what was not given him, there will be hereby and increase
of this stealing. Let me now put final stop to this and inflict condign
punishment on him, have his head cut off!
So he bade his man saying: Now look ye! bind this mans arms behind
him with a strong rope and tight knot, shave his head bald, lead him around
with a harsh sounding drum, from road to road, from cross ways to cross
ways, take him out by the southern gate and to the south of the town,
put a final stop to this, inflict on him uttermost penalty, cut of his head.
Even so , O king answered the men, and carried out his commands.
12. Now men heard, brethren, that they who took by theft what was
not given them were thus put to death. And hearing they thought:
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Let us also now have sharp swords made ready for themselves, and
them from whom we take what is not given uswhat they call them
let us put a final stop to them, inflict on them uttermost penalty, and
their heads off.
And they got themselves sharp swords, and came forth to sack village
and town and city, and to work highway robbery. And then whom they
robbed they made an end of, cutting off their heads.
13. Thus, brethren, from goods not being bestowed on the destitute
poverty grieve rife; from poverty growing rife stealing increased, from
the spread of stealing violence grew space, from the growth of violence
the destruction of life common, from the frequency of murder both the
span of life in those beings and their comeliness also (diminished).
Now among humans of latter span of life, brethren, a certain took
by theft what was not given him and even as those others was accused
before the king and questioned if it was true that he had stolen.
Nay, O king, he replied, they are delibarately telling lies.
14. Thus from goods not being bestowed on the destitute, poverty grew
rife... stealing... violence... murder... until lying grew common.
Again a certain man reported to the king, saying: such and such
a man, O king! has taken by theft what was not given him thus
speaking evil of him.
15. And so, brethren, from goods not being bestowed on the destitute
poverty grew rife... stealing... violence... murder... lying... evil speaking
grew abundant.
16. From lying there grew adultery.
17. Thus from goods not being bestowed on the destitute, poverty...
stealing... violence... murder... lying... rvil speaking... immorality grew rife.
18. Among (them) brethren, three things grew space incest, wanton
greed and perverted lust.
Then these things grew apace lack of filial piety to mother and father,
lack of religious piety to holy men, lack of regard for the head of the clan.
19. There will come a time, brethren, when the descendants of those
humans will have a life-span of ten years. Among humans of this life-
span, maidens of five years will be of a marriageable age. Among such
humans these kinds of tastes (savours) will disappear; ghee, butter,
oil of tila, sugar, salt. Among such humans kudrusa grain will be
the highest kind of food. Even as to-day rice and curry is the highest
kind of food, so will kudrusa grain will be then. Among such humans
the ten moral courses of conduct will altogether disappear, the ten
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question when the State will wither away. Will it be succeded by Anarchy ?
If so the building up of the Communist State is an useless effort. If it
cannot be sustained except by force and if it results in anarchy when
the force holding it together is withdrawn what good is the Communist
State.
The only thing which could sustain it after force is withdrawn is
Religion. But to the Communists Religion is anathema. Their hatred to
Religion is so deep seated that they will not even discriminate between
religions which are helpful to Communism and religions which are not.
The Communists have carried their hatred of Christianity to Buddhism
without waiting to examine the difference between the two. The charge
against Christianity levelled by the Communists was two-fold. Their
first charge against Christianity was that they made people other
worldliness and made them suffer poverty in this world. As can be seen
from quotations from Buddhism in the earlier part of this tract such a
charge cannot be levelled against Buddhism.
The second charge levelled by the Communists against Christianity
cannot be levelled against Buddhism. This charge is summed up in
the statement that Religion is the opium of the people. This charge
is based upon the Sermon on the Mount which is to be found in the
Bible. The Sermon on the Mount sublimates poverty and weakness. It
promises heaven to the poor and the weak. There is no Sermon on the
Mount to be found in the Buddhas teachings. His teaching is to acquire
wealth. I give below his Sermon on the subject to Anathapindika one
of his disciples.
Once Anathapindika came to where the Exalted One was staying.
Having come he made obeisance to the Exalted One and took a seat
at one side and asked Will the Enlightened One tell what things are
welcome, pleasant, agreeable, to the householder but which are hard
to gain.
The Enlightened One having heard the question put to him said Of
such things the first is to acquire wealth lawfully.
The second is to see that your relations also get their wealth lawfully.
The third is to live long and reach great age.
Of a truth, householder, for the attainment of these four things, which
in the world are welcome, pleasant agreeable but hard to gain, there
are also four conditions precedent. They are the blessing of faith, the
blessing of virtuous conduct, the blessing of liberality and the blessing
of wisdom.
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no attention to spiritual values and does not seem to intend to. Carlyle
called Political Economy a Pig Philosophy. Carlyle was of course wrong.
For man needs material comforts. But the Communist Philosophy seems
to be equally wrong for the aim of their philosophy seems to be fatten
pigs as though men are no better than pigs. Man must grow materially
as well as spiritually. Society has been aiming to lay a new foundation
was summarised by the French Revolution in three words, Freternity,
Liberty and Equality. The French Revolution was welcomed because
of this slogan. It failed to produce equality. We welcome the Russian
Revolution because it aims to produce equality. But it cannot be too much
emphasized that in producing equality society cannot afford to sacrifice
fraternity or liberty. Equality will be of no value without fraternity or
liberty. It seems that the three can coexist only if one follows the way
of the Buddha. Communism can give one but not all.
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PART V
Schemes of
Books
blank
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CHAPTER 19
Schemes of Books
No. I
REVOLUTION AND COUNTER-REVOLUTION
IN ANCIENT INDIA
Table of Contents
BOOKI
BOOKII
BOOKIII
BOOKIV
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
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Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
No. 2
WHAT THE BRAHMINS HAVE DONE TO THE HINDUS
NO. 3
CAN I BE A HINDU?
SYMBOLS OF HINDUISM
NO. 4
INDIA AND COMMUNISM
NO. 5
ESSAYS ON THE BHAGVAT GITA
Table of Contents
472A
Facsimile of a page from the notes on Virat Parva in Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkars
handwriting and the title page of his intended scheme on Bhagvat Gita.
z:\ ambedkar\vol-3\vol3-04.indd MK SJ+YS 28-10-2013>YS>9-12-2013 475
472A
472A
blank
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
The books and journals listed here include the works cited by the
author. The details about the publications have been searched out from
the Bombay University Library. Still details of some of the books could
not be had before the release of this Volume.
Adams, D. S. : Theology (Hastings Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics,
Vol. XII).
Adelphi : The Nemesis of Ineffective Religion (1941).
Altekar, Anant Sadashiv : Sources of Hindu Dharma in its Socio-religious
aspect (Pub. Sholapur Institute of Public Administration). Name of the
article: The Position of Smritis as a Source of DharmaKane Memorial
Volume.
Ambedkar, Dr. B. R.: Annihilation of Castes (New Book Co., Bombay 1936).
Castes in India (Indian Antiquary, Vol. XLVI, 1917, pp. 81-95).
Who were the Shudras? (Thacker & Co., Rampart Row, Bombay 1, 1st
Ed., 1946).
First two of these books are included in Vol. 1 of the present series.
Third one will be out in due course.
Baines, Sir J. A. : Census of India Report (1881).
Boudhayana : Grihya Sutras.
Beard: Freedom in Political Thought (in FreedomIts Meaning, Ed. by
Ruth Nanda Kishan).
Belvalkar, Shripad Krishna : Vedant Philosophy (Basu-Mallik Lectures-
University of Calcutta); (Poona, 1929, 1st part).
Bergson : Two Sources of Morality.
Bhandarkar, Sir Ramkrishna Gopal : Vaishnavism, Saivism and Minor
Religious Systems (Encyclopaedia of Indo-Aryan Research) (Stransburg,
Karl J. Trubner 1913).
Bhattacharya, Jogendra Nath : Hindu Castes and Sects (Calcutta, Thacker
Spink & Co., 1896).
Bloomfield Maurice : The Religion of the Veda : The Ancient Religion of
India (New York. G. P. Putnams Sons, 1908).
Blunt, E. A. H. : The Caste System of Northern India : With Special reference
to the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh (London, Humphrey Nilford:
1931).
Burnouf : LIntroduction a LHistorie on Buddhisme Indien.
z:\ ambedkar\vol-3\vol3-05.indd MK SJ+YS 28-10-2013>YS>9-12-2013 474
474 BIBLIOGRAPHY
BIBLIOGRAPHY 475
476 BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
478 INDEX
Ayodhya :57, 399, 404. Bible : 15, 75, 116, 357, 360.
Ayonija: 156,172. Bihar: 232-33, 267.
Bimbisar, the King : 195, 267.
Babylonian : 16. Bismark :331.
Bactria: 230. Blake, Mr. : 87.
Badarayan : 234, 247-49, 257, 259, 261, 363, Black Yagush : 234.
367, 378-79. Bloomfield, Prof.: 266.
Badari, Rishi: 423. Blunt, Mr.: 102-03, 105.
Baines, J. A. : 335. Bodhisatta: 188.
Baladitya: 240, 244-45. Bodhi Tree : 237.
Balakhilyas : 50. Bohtlingk Mr. : 357.
Balaram: 384, 390. Bolshevism: 128.
Balfour: 77. Bombay : 146, 234, 243, 252, 324.
Ballava: 382. Bonda Porajas : 89.
Balperazim: 14. Borgese Pope : 325.
Barbosa, Duarte : 134, 136. Boudhayana: 79, 356.
Bana, the poet: 276. Brahanaradiya : 256.
Baneas, Merchants (Baniyas): 102, 134, 135 Brahannada : 382.
Barthalomeu : 277. Brahaspati: 51-52, 154, 169, 294-95, 394-95.
Baudhayana : 79, 433. Brahma : 28, 33, 50, 52, 54-55, 58-59, 85-86,
Beard, Prof. : 96. 108, 123, 155, 171, 191, 255, 272, 278, 280,
Bebel: 85. 337, 348, 351, 358, 386, 395-96, 398, 404,
Behar Sheriff: 237. 419, 427.
Belvalkar, Prof.: 257. Brahmacharya : 101, 123, 432.
Benaras : 233, 401, 409, 422. Brahmadatta : 176-77.
Bengal: 231, 237, 243, 252, 295. Brahma Jal Sutta : 176.
Beowulf: 85. Brahmanas (Texts): 246-47, 395-96.
Bergson, Prof.: 25, 321, Brahma-Purana : 256.
Betunes, Merchants : 140. Brahma Nirvana : 369.
Bhagadatta : 385 Brahmanda-Purana : 253, 256.
Bhagvat Gita: 78, 80, 81, 127-28, 150, 239-40, Brahma-Surra Bhashya : 240, 245, 247, 257.
244-46, 257, 261-65, 357-80, 468, 472. Brahma Sutras : 363, 367, 375.
Bhagvat Purana : 248, 256. Brahma Vaivarta Purana : 256.
Bhagvat, Rajaram Shashtri : 246 Brahminism : 150, 154, 220, 230, 232-40, 266-71,
Bbakti Marg : 264, 360, 376, 472. 273-75, 277, 280, 282, 285-95, 301, 304,
Bhandarkar, Sir R. G. : 231, 235. 306-08, 313-17, 320-24, 326-28, 368,431,465.
Bhangis : 103. Brahmins : 7, 25-28, 30-32, 36-43, 45-56, 59-65,
Bharata, King : 128, 264. 68-83, 99-102, 104-10, 112-13 118-24,
Bhargava Rishi: 408-09. 127,132-33, 135-36,13W1, 147, 150, 154-55,
Bhatias: 65. 158-63, 166-69, 173-76 179-85, 189-223,
Bhattacharya, Mr. : 142. 225-28, 231, 233-38, 242, 246, 248, 251,
255-57, 261, 263-64, 266, 268-69, 272-86,
Bhavishya Purana : 253, 256.
289-91, 303-13, 316-20, 322-31, 335-56,
Bhesika, the Barber : 223.
363, 378-79, 381, 392-93, 396-98, 400, 403,
Bhikkuni Sangha : 452. 408-15, 416-18, 421-25, 431, 435, 445, 467-69
Bhikkus : 232-35, 242, 251, 309-10, 322, Addicted to:
446, 452-53
(a) Adorning : 160, 181.
Bhima : 388. (b) Couches : 159, 181.
Bhishma : 157, 173, 307, 377, 381-83, 385-90. (c) Earning by wrong means : 160-64,
Bhishma Parva: 261. 182-86.
Bhu-Devas : 325, 328. (d) Low conversation : 160, 181.
Bhrigu Rishi: 57, 60-61, 63, 216, 270, 292, (e) Recreation : 169, 180.
329. 404, 408-09. (f) Visiting shows : 158, 180.
Biabares: 138. (g) Wrangling phrases : 160, 182.
z:\ ambedkar\vol-3\vol3-05.indd MK SJ+YS 28-10-2013>YS>9-12-2013 479
INDEX 479
Course of Conduct; 281. Chaldeans : 16.
Dakshina to : 282-83. Chalukyas : 231.
Disabilities : 280-81. Chandala : 37, 55-56, 114, 133, 170, 402-03.
Exemption of: Chandragupta Maurya : 130, 268, 372-73.
Punishments : 118-19, 279. Charvakas : 368.
Monopolies : 278. Chaturvarnya : 67, 69-71, 80-81, 277, 291,
Penances: 284. 321-22, 326-28, 356, 361-65, 386, 426, 466.
Privileges : 119, 279. Chauhans : 231.
Rights of: Chawdas : 231.
To Fees : 282-83. Chedi: 231.
Chemosh : 14-15.
To Rebellion: 276-77.
Chenchus (a tribe) : 89.
Tax : 278.
Chhandogya Upanishad : 423.
StatusAbove Law : 118.
China : 229.
Supremacy of: 72, 76-77, 117-18.
Chinese-Turkastan : 229.
Briex (Author): 85.
Chitpavan Brahmin : 65.
Britain : 167.
Chitrasen : 382.
Buddha Lord: 152, 153, 165-68, 176-78, 182-88,
Cholas : 231.
195-96, 200-30 233, 322-23, 325, 328, 363,
Christ, Jesus : 97.
367-68, 371, 379, 441-42, 444-53. 459-61.
Christians : 76, 100, 128, 303-04, 335.
Buddha Gaya : 237.
Christians, Roman Catholics : 32.
Buddhism: 149-50, 153, 167, 186-87, 227-38,
Christianity : 7, 75-76, 116-17, 142, 304,
239, 244, 249, 251, 257, 266-67, 269-75,
335, 357, 460, 470.
290-91, 294-95, 303, 309-10, 315-17, 323,
Church : 136.
335, 363-71, 379, 432, 460-61, 466, 470-72.
Church Discipline Act : 290.
Buddhists : 152, 167,171, 175,187, 230-31,
233-38, 242, 251, 257, 268-75, 291, 309-10, Church of England : 290.
313, 315-16, 322, 336, 368-69, 374, 376, 380. Chyavana Rishi : 413-14, 424.
Buddhist Church (See Sangha). Civil Liberty : 98.
Buddhist Councils : 379. Civil Theology : 5.
Class Conflict: 444.
Buddhist Literature : 248, 252.
Class-System : 305-06.
Buddhist Monasteries : 232.
Class-war : 64.
Buddhist Universities : 232.
Commandments : 18.
Buddhi Yoga: 362.
Communism : 443-44, 447, 450, 460-62, 471.
Buddhology: 379-80.
Communists : 450-52, 459-60.
Bundelkhand : 231.
Comte : 86.
Burke Edmond : 453.
Coomarswami, A. K. : 300.
Burma: 229. Constantine : 303.
Coparnican Revolution : 9.
Calicut: 136. Crawley, Prof. : 11, 24, 82.
Cambridge : 335. Cretaus : 333.
Canaquas : 139. Criminal Tribes : 90, 92.
Carlyie : 462. Cuiavem Caste : 138.
Carthaginians : 14.
Caste : 45-46, 49, 68, 80, 102-06, 141-43, 145-47, Dahir the King : 231, 236.
266, 275, 285-86, 289-90, 295-301, 303-08, Daityas : 413, 419.
318, 326, 334-36, 368, 420-22. Daksha Prajapati : 155, 171, 419.
Caste-System : 25-26, 37-38, 45, 67-68, 102, Dalmu : 103.
147, 204, 220. Dam : 157, 173.
Causation, law of : 442,446. Damayanti : 154, 168.
Celestial wheel: 454-56. Danavas : 413, 419.
Ceylon : 229. Daphtary. K. L. : 286 (Fn).
Chachnama : 236. Darshanas, Six : 86.
Chaitya : 242, 251-52. Daradas (Region) : 63.
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480 INDEX
INDEX 481
Haeckel : 85-86. Ibbetson, Sir Denzil : 142, 335.
Hadi (People) : 133. Ibne Kasim : 231, 243, 252.
Haihaya Kshatriyas : 408-12, Iddhi : 213.
Hamilton : 324. Ikkhanankala wood : 204-05, 218.
Hardayal, Lata : 85. Ikshwaku : 57, 396, 398, 405, 410.
Havishyanda : 55. Ila : 50, 155,171, 393.
Harishchandra : 400-03. India : 7, 70, 85-86, 102, 104-05 (fn.), 145,
Harivamsa : 57,171, 392, 399. 151, 229, 231, 232, 236-38, 266-67, 270,
Harrison, Frederic : 85. 273, 275, 308-09, 323-26, 335, 363, 372,
Harsha : 237. 420.
Hastinapur : 388. Indo-China : 229-30.
Hazara Mr. : 255. Indra: 50-52, 56-59, 63, 176, 393-95, 404-05,
Hebraism : 33.5 413-14, 419-20, 424, 427.
Herbert Spencer : 23. Indraprastha : 385-86.
Hermes : 333. Indrani : 50-51, 394-96.
Hestia Goddess : 333. Inter-dining : 204, 292-93, 301, 304, 307, 327.
Himalayas : 51, 59, 61, 207, 394, 397, 408. Inter-marriage : 204, 292-93, 301, 304, 306,
Himachal Pradesh : 151. 327.
Hinayan Buddhism : 371, 379. Islam : 7, 142, 229-30, 233, 236, 274, 335, 470.
Hindi : 233. Israel : 14, 17.
Hindu Religion : see Hinduism Israelites : 128.
Hindus : 7, 8, 22-24, 31, 32, 37-38, 42, 48,
64-68, 70, 74-75, 78-84, 86, 90, 92, 95, Jacob : 16.
100-107, 110-20, 123-24, 127-30, 132-34, Jacobi, Prof: 378.
141-48,152, 157, 165, 172, 229-30, 236, Jacks, Prof.: 333, 34.
239, 244, 255, 270, 273-74, 285, 299, 305, Jaimini: 234, 241, 247, 250, 257-59, 261, 334,
308, 314, 316, 320-23, 326, 328-29, 332, 362-67, 378-80, 423.
336-37, 357, 366, 369, 392, 430, 469, 471.
Jainism : 238, 275, 335, 451, 470.
Hinduism : 3, 5, 7, 8, 22, 24, 31, 34, 36-38,
Jaiswala : 102-03.
42-44, 39-41, 46, 64-67, 71-72, 74, 77-82,
Jamadagni : 62-63, 389, 410, 412.
84, 86-87, 92, 132, 141-44, 231, 234,
236-38, 242-44, 270, 274, 305, 334-36, Janaka-King : 258-59,432.
357, 468, 470. Janapada : 421.
(a) Equality in : 25-37. Janasruti : 423.
(b) Ethics in : 71-87. Janhavi : 155, 171.
(c) Fraterity in : 44-66. Japan : 229.
(d) Liberty in : 38-44. Jaratkari : 291, 307
(e) Utility of : 66-71. Jaratkaru : 291, 307.
Hiranvati river : 391. Jataka : 132.
Hiranyakashyapu : 426. Jatibhramsakara : 83.
Hitler, Adolf : 75, 322. Jaya : 248 50, 378.
Hobbes : 279. Jayapala: 231.
Hollius : 90. Jehovah : 14, 17, 99.
Holy Trinity : 136. Jeremiah : 15.
Hopkins Prof. : 167, 241, 244-46, 252, 253, Jewish : 75, 116.
331, 357, 372-73. Jews : 97,127, 333.
Holtzman : 358. Judaism : 7.
Hoyasalas : 232.
Huen Tsang : 231. Kadheras : 103.
Huns : 237, 242, 251. Kaharas : 104.
Humboldt : 246. Kakatiyas : 232.
Huxley, Edward : 85. Kalachuris : 231.
z:\ ambedkar\vol-3\vol3-05.indd MK SJ+YS 28-10-2013>YS>9-12-2013 482
482 INDEX
INDEX 483
Mackenzie : 167. (4) Assault: 29,109, 352.
Madhava Rao, Sir T. : 165. (5) Defamation : 28, 108-09, 318,
Madhavi : 155-56, 172. 351.
Maddarupi (Okkakas daughter) : 209, 210. (6) False Evidence : 28, 351.
Madhvacharya : 248-49. (7) Punishments : 30.
Madhusyanda : 55, 58, 404. (h) Privileges re :
Madhyandin Brahmins : 233. (1) Finance : 342.
Madura : 232. (2) Marriages : 339.
Magadha : 37, 195, 267-68,425. (3) Occupation : 111-12,339-42.
Mahabharata : 50, 61, 63, 151, 154, 169, (i) Sacred Thread : 32-33,100-01, 347
173,234,239-44,249-53, 257,261, 372-75, (j) Salutations : 27. 346.
393, 405-06, 408, 410, 421-22, 472. (k) Shudras and Women : 347-50.
Maha Bhashya : 432. (l) Social Intercourse : 344-47.
Mahabharat-Adiparva : 50. (m) Social Status : 114,122, 345-46.
Mahabhiras : 103. (n) Vratyas : 350.
Mahananda : 268. Manu Smriti (Laws of Manu) : 70, 76, 78, 80-81,
Mahapadan Sutta: 370. 87, 107, 239-40, 244, 108-18, 121-26, 150,
Mahapari Nibbana : 451. 270-73, 276-84, 288, 291, 303, 311, 314, 317,
Mahapari Nibbana Sutta : 369. 326, 332-38, 414, 467, 469,471.
Mahapataka : 83. Manu Vaivasvata : 393.
Mahaprajapati Gotami : 452. Manorama (Sister of Uttar) : 382.
Mahasangikas : 379. Manvantara : 254,287.
Mahavir : 451. Mara : 204,222.
Mahayan Buddhism : 371-72,379-80. Maratha Rule : 64, 79.
Maheshwar Bhatt: 242, 252. Marathas : 65, 233.
Marichi Rishi : 48, 393.
Maheshwar, the God : 300.
Marisha (Somas daughter): 155, 171.
Mahishmati : 61.
Maritain Jacques : 95.
Mains, Sir Henry : 333.
Markandeya Puran : 400.
Maitrei : 432.
Marshal : 85.
Maitri : 370.
Maru : 155, 171.
Majhima Nikaya : 370.
Marxian Creed : 444.
Makatyam System : 325.
Marxian Socialism : 443.
Malabar : 138,140-41,187, 324-25.
Marxism : 48.
Malachi: 15.
Mathura : 155.
Malava: 63.
Matru Savarnya : 308.
Malaya : 229.
Matsyagandha : 157, 173, 291, 307.
Manava Artha Shastra : 271.
Matsya Purana : 256.
Manava Dharma Sutra : 271.
Mauryas : 268, 270-71, 274-75, 277, 412.
Manava Dharma Shastra : 332.
Maurya Empire : 71.
Manava Grihya Sutra : 271.
Max Muller, Prof. : 7, 86, 233, 333, 336, 359.
Manikpura: 102-03.
Maya : 358.
Manu : 25-31, 34-43, 48. 53, 67, 70-79, 81, 87,
Mazdaism : 335.
108-18, 121-26, 221, 240, 249, 254, 266,
270-73, 277-95, 301-03, 308-19, 324-32, Medhatithi : 270.
334-45, 347-56, 414, 416, 421-25, 429, 437. Megasthenes : 130, 141, 371, 373,378.
Manu on : Meru : 406.
(a) Gradation : 72-73,113, 337-38. Menaka (Apsara) : 58, 291, 307.
(b) Hospitality : 345. Menvis : 333.
(c) Injunctions : 121-22. Metta : 449.
(d) Marriage : 317. Mevad : 231.
(e) Naming ceremony : 38. Mihirkula : 237.
(f) Occupation : 111, 338. Mills, J. S. : 25, 44, 64, 66, 246-47, 259, 432.
(g) Offences Minos : 333.
(1) Abuse: 28, 109,318,351. Mitakshara : 294.
(2) Adultery : 29,109-10,352. Mlenehhas : 242.
(3) Arrogance : 29,109,352. Moab: 14, 15.
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484 INDEX
INDEX 485
Poleas : 140-41. Russian-Revolution : 21, 462
Portuguese : 134, 141. Ruth : 17.
Potthapada Brahmin : 444-46.
Prahlad : 426, Sabbath : 11.
Prajapati : 49, 53, 57, 71, 106, 152, 392-93, 396. Sabuktagin : 231.
Prajnaneshwar Yati: 286, 289. Sachi (Indrani): 396.
Sadharana Dharmas : 334.
Pratihars : 231.
Sahadeo : 388.
Pratiloma : 307-08.
Sahyadrikhand : 48, 106.
Prayashchitta : 143.
Sairandhri : 154, 169.
Pritha, the king : 264.
Sakya : 165, 204-09, 222, 451
Pringle-Pattison : 3, 5.
Sakyas Congress Hall : 207.
Prithvi Raj : 231.
Salavatika : 222-25.
Proletariat Samana Phala Sutta : 204, 212, 227.
Dictatorship of : 444, 450. Sama Veda : 234, 248, 277, 426.
Pulamas : 242, 244, 251. Samavedi Brahmins : 268.
Punarbhu : 294. Sambandham Unions : 325.
Punarbhava : 295. Sambhar (State) :231.
Punjab : 45, 102, 142, 231, 237. Samorin : 324.
Punna (slave girl): 221. Samudra Gupta, king : 269.
Punnika (slave girl): 221. Sanatkumar : 50, 393,424.
Puranas : 48, 166, 239, 242, 244, 251, 253-57, Sanat Sujata : 386.
355, 373, 375. Sangha : 371,446, 452, 461.
Pururavas : 50,170, 329, 393. Sanjaya : 246-47, 262, 385-87, 390.
Purusha Sukta : 80. Sankhya : 264, 364, 370, 377-78.
Purva Mimansa Sutra : 79, 247, 262, 265, 267, 423. Sankhyayog : 472.
Pushkara : 58. Samskaras : 107, 315.
Pushyamitra-Sunga: 239-40, 244, 257, 268-69, Sanskrit : 346.
271-73, 275-77, 291, 295. Santa Maria : 136.
Sanyas : 107, 123, 221,
Rabbinism : 116. Sanyasashram : 261.
Radhakrishnan Dr. S. : 369. Saptapadi : 157, 172.
Rajputs : 105, 134, 231, 236, 238. Sapta Rishi (Saptasrshi) : 87, 286.
Rajasuya Yajna : 375. Saraswat Brahmin : 45, 50, 65, 102.
Rajawade V. K. : 246. Sarasvati : 406-08.
Rakshasas : 405-8, 419. Sariputta : 449.
Rambha (Apsara) : 59. Sarkar B. K. : 323.
Ramanujacharya : 248. Sasanka, king : 327.
Rama : 383, 468 470 Satadru : 406.
Ramayana : 21, 39, 43-44, 53-54, 57, 396. Satavalekar M. D. : 419.
Ratnis : 421, 432. Sati : 221, 294-95.
Ravana : 243, 252. Satpatha Brahmana : 152, 331, 423.
Renuka : 410. Satyaki : 384-85, 388-89.
Rhys Davids : 220, 222, 369. Satyavati : 62, 156, 171, 409-10.
Richika : 57, 62-63, 404, 409. Satyavrata : 398-400.
Rig Veda : 82, 234, 277, 420, 422-23, 426. Saurasenis : 373.
Robertson : 6. Sauti : 241, 250, 372, 379.
Rohit : 403. Saunaka : 292.
Roma : 128, 243. Saviya (Taramati) : 400-01.
Romaharshana : 253. Sayanacharya : 426.
Roman Conquerors : 97. Seal, Dr. Brajandra Nath : 323.
Rousseau : 86. Seleukos Nickator : 130.
Semites : 15.
Rudra : 51, 263, 394, 419, 427.
Sena Kings : 231.
Rukmi : 390.
Sen G. P. : 336.
Ruskin : 86.
Sen Surendra Nath : 236.
Russia : 444, 447, 461.
Sermon on the Mount : 460.
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486 INDEX
INDEX 487
Therigatha : 221. Vallabhacharya : 248, 259.
Thugs : 90-91. Vamacharitra : 254.
Thurston : 92. Vamadeva Vrata : 156, 171, 216.
Tiele Prof. : 4,24. Vamaka : 216.
Tilak B. G-240, 244, 360, 363, 366-67, 369-76. Vamana Purana : 256.
Tolstoy Leo : 86. Vanaparva : 242,251, 374,410.
Travancore : 232. Vanaprastha : 123.
Trilochanpal : 231. Varaha-Purana : 256.
Trikalinga : 232. Vaina : 26, 48, 69-71, 80-81, 99, 142, 146-47,
Tripitaka :441. 155, 169, 275, 278-79, 285-91, 307-08, 315,
Trisanku, King : 55-57, 399-400. 319, 326-28, 334, 356, 360, 364, 419-22.
Tuias : 139. Varanashram Dharma : 334.
Tulika : 159, 181. Vratyastoma : 425.
Tukhuras : 49 Varshavas : 451.
Tumbhuras : 49. Varuna : 52, 54, 360, 364, 395, 398, 407,
Turks : 273. 419, 427.
Turkey : 236. Vasistha : 52-60, 155, 171, 216, 291, 329, 396-99,
403-07, 413, 422.
Uddyoga Parva : 150, 384-91, 393, 472 Vasubandhu : 240, 245.
Ukkatha : 204, 217-20. Vashatkara : 392.
Uluka : 391. Vayu : 62, 411, 413-14.
Uma : 300. Vayu Purana : 256.
Unapproachables : 92. Vedas : 7, 33-36, 42-43, 46, 48, 60-62, 71-74,
78-81, 85, 111-12, 114-15, 118, 121-22, 125,
Unseeables : 92.
189, 198, 205,218, 233-34, 246, 253, 257-53,
Untouchables : 92, 104, 107. 260, 265, 266, 272, 278, 280-84, 291, 302,
Upakhyavas : 254. 304, 309-11, 315, 318, 321-22, 327, 338-399,
Upali : 221. 343-50, 354, 356, 363-65, 368, 392, 408, 417,
Upanayana : 100-01, 287-89, 424, 432. 423, 426, 431-32, 466-68.
Upanishads : 7, 81, 84-87, 245-47, 260, 269, 369. Vedant : 238, 257-59,261, 264, 358, 377-78,
Upapataka : 83. Vedant Sutras : 244, 247-49, 257.
Upaplowya Nagari : 384, 390. Vedangas : 355, 468.
Upekkha : 370, 449. Vedic Literature : 245-47, 255.
Urvashi Apsara : 50, 53, 291. Vedokta : 46.
Usha : 155, 171. Vena (King) : 48-49, 170, 329, 392-93, 426-27.
Utathya Rishi : 413. Vessamitta (Vishwamitra) : 216.
Utopian Socialists : 443. Viellans : 420.
Uttar : 382-84. Vichitra Virya : 307.
Uttarayana : 373-74. Videha : 37, 63, 258.
Utgikar Mr. : 244. Vidur : 386-90.
Uttarmimansa : 247-48. Vidula : 389.
Vidyadhari : 432.
Vaidya C. V. : 231, 252, 295. Vijnaneshwar : 294, 313.
Vaidikas : 234. Vijnan Vad : 240, 245.
Vaishali : 450-52. Vikramaditya King : 253.
Vaishyas : 99-101, 106-110, 112-13, 119-20, Vikramsila : 232.
122, 125, 127, 132, 142, 147, 154-55, 169- Virat : 153, 168-69, 381-84.
70, 174, 221, 277-82, 286, 310, 317-18, 320, Virat Nagari : 382-84.
326-28, 330-31, 338-41, 348-50, 353-56, Virat Parva : 150, 169.
416-18, 421-24, 435.
Vireshwarananda Swami : 257.
Vaishampayan : 241, 248, 250, 253, 372.
Vishnu : 51, 58, 83, 294, 355, 394, 398, 404-05,
Vaishnava : 324. 419, 427, 468, 470.
Valenfinionas : 303. Vishnu Purana : 52, 255, 256, 263, 396, 400,
Vali : 383. 409, 426.
Valmiki : 243, 252. Vishnu Smriti : 294.
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488 INDEX
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