Swami Vivekananda
The child is taken to school, and the first thing he learns is that his
father is a fool, the second thing that his grandfather is a lunatic, the third
thing that all his teachers are hypocrites, the fourth, that all the sacred
books are lies! By the time he is sixteen he is a mass of negation, lifeless
and boneless. And the result is that fifty years of such education has not
produced one original man in the three presidencies.... We have learnt only
weakness.
Out of the past is built the future. Look back, therefore as far as you
can drink deep of the eternal fountains that are behind and after that look
forward, march forward and make India brighter, greater, much higher than she
ever was. Our ancestors were great. We must first recall that. We must learn
the elements of our being, the blood, that courses in our veins; we must build
an India yet greater than what she has been.
Nowadays everybody blames those who constantly look back to their past.
It is said that so much looking back to the past is the cause of all India's
woes. To me, on the contrary, it seems that the opposite is true. So long as
they forgot the past, the Hindu nation remained in a state of stupor and as
soon as they have begun to look into their past, there is on every side a fresh
manifestation of life. It is out of this past that the future has to be
moulded, this past will become the future.
The more, therefore, the Hindus study the past, the more glorious will
be their future and whoever tries to bring the past to the door of everyone, is
a great benefactor to his nation. The degeneration of India came not because of
the laws and customs of the ancients were bad but because they were not allowed
to be carried to their legitimate conclusions.
Study Sanskrit, but along with it study
Western sciences as well. Learn accuracy, my boys, study and labour so that the
time will come when you can put our history on a scientific basis… The
histories of our country written by English writers cannot but be weakening to
our minds, for they talk only of our downfall. How can foreigners, who
understand very little of our manners and customs, or our religion and
philosophy, write faithful and unbiased histories of India? Naturally many
false notions and wrong inferences have found their way into them. Nevertheless
they have shown us how to proceed making researches into our ancient history.
Now it is for us to strike out an independent path of historical research for
ourselves, to study the Vedas and Puranas and the ancient annals (Itihasas)
of India, and from them make it your sadhana to write accurate,
sympathetic and
soul-inspiring history of India. It is for Indians to write Indian history.
soul-inspiring history of India. It is for Indians to write Indian history.
We must compile some books in Bengali as
well as in English with short stories from the Ramayana, the Mahabharata, and
the Upanishads etc., in very easy and simple language, and these are to be
given to our little boys to read.
… You never cease to labour until you have revived the glorious past of
India in the consciousness of the people. That will be the true national
education, and with its advancement, a true national spirit will be awakened.
Sri Aurobindo
We in India have become so barbarous that we send our children to school
with the grossest utilitarian motive unmixed with any disinterested desire for
knowledge; but the education we receive is itself responsible for this.... The
easy assumption of our educationists that we have only to supply the mind with
a smattering of facts in each department of knowledge and the mind can be
trusted to develop itself and take its own suitable road is contrary to
science, contrary to human experience.... Much as we have lost as a nation, we
have always preserved our intellectual alertness, quickness and originality;
but even this last gift is threatened by our University system, and if it goes,
it will be the beginning of irretrievable degradation and final extinction. The
very first step in reform must therefore be to revolutionise the whole aim and
method of our education.
When confronted with the truths of Hinduism, the experience of deep
thinkers and the choice spirits of the race through thousands of years, [the
rationalist] shouts “Mysticism, mysticism!” and thinks he has conquered. To him
there is order, development, progress, evolution, enlightenment in the history
of Europe, but the past of India is an unsightly mass of superstition and
ignorance best torn out of the book of human life. These thousands of years of
our thought and aspiration are a period of the least importance to us and the
true history of our progress only begins with the advent of European education!
In India ... we have been cut off by a mercenary and soulless education
from all our ancient roots of culture and tradition.... The value attached by
ancients to music, art and poetry has become almost unintelligible to an age
bent on depriving life of its meaning by turning earth into a sort of glorified
ant-heap or beehive.
National education cannot be defined briefly in one or two sentences,
but we may describe it tentatively as the education which starting with the
past and making full use of the present builds up a great nation. Whoever
wishes to cut off the nation from its past is no friend of our national growth.
Whoever fails to take advantage of the present is losing us the battle of life.
We must therefore save for India all that she has stored up of knowledge, character
and noble thought in her immemorial past. We must acquire for her the best
knowledge that Europe can give her and assimilate it to her own peculiar type
of national temperament. We must introduce the best methods of teaching
humanity has developed, whether modern or ancient. And all these we must
harmonise into a system which will be impregnated with the spirit of
self-reliance so as to build up men and not machines.
The greatest knowledge and the greatest riches man can possess are
[India's] by inheritance; she has that for which all mankind is waiting.... But
the full soul rich with the inheritance of the past, the widening gains of the
present, and the large potentiality of the future, can come only by a system of
National Education. It cannot come by any extension or imitation of the system
of the existing universities with its radically false principles, its vicious
and mechanical methods, its dead-alive routine tradition and its narrow and
sightless spirit. Only a new spirit and a new body born from the heart of the
Nation and full of the light and hope of its resurgence can create it.... The
new education will open careers which will be at once ways of honourable
sufficiency, dignity and affluence to the individual, and paths of service to
the country. For the men who come out equipped in every way from its
institutions will be those who will give that impetus to the economic life and
effort of the country without which it cannot survive in the press of the
world, much less attain its high legitimate position. Individual interest and
National interest are the same and call in the same direction.
A language, Sanskrit or another, should be acquired by whatever method
is most natural, efficient and stimulating to the mind and we need not cling
there to any past or present manner of teaching: but the vital question is how
we are to learn and make use of Sanskrit and the indigenous languages so as to
get to the heart and intimate sense of our own culture and establish a vivid
continuity between the still living power of our past and the yet uncreated
power of our future, and how we are to learn and use English or any other
foreign tongue so as to know helpfully the life, ideas and culture of other
countries and establish our right relations with the world around us. This is
the aim and principle of a true national education, not, certainly, to ignore
modern truth and knowledge, but to take our foundation on our own being, our
own mind, our own spirit.
The living spirit of the demand for national education no more requires
a return to the astronomy and mathematics of Bhaskara or the forms of the
system of Nalanda than the living spirit of Swadeshi a return from railway and
motor traction to the ancient chariot and the bullock-cart.... It is the
spirit, the living and vital issue that we have to do with, and there the
question is not between modernism and antiquity, but between an imported
civilisation and the greater possibilities of the Indian mind and nature, not
between the present and the past, but between the present and the future. It is
not a return to the fifth century but an initiation of the centuries to come,
not a reversion but a break forward away from a present artificial falsity to
her own greater innate potentialities that is demanded by the soul, by the
Shakti of India.
Rabindranath Tagore
All over India, there is a vague feeling of discontent in the air about
our prevalent system of education.
The mind of our educated community has been brought up within the enclosure
of the modern Indian educational system. It has grown as familiar to us as our
own physical body, unconsciously giving rise in our mind to the belief that it
can never be changed. Our imagination dare not soar beyond its limits; we are
unable to see it and judge it from outside. We neither have the courage nor the
heart to say that it has to be replaced by something else....
They [Indian students] never have intellectual courage, because they
never see the process and the environment of those thoughts which they are
compelled to learn ¾ and thus they lose the historical sense
of all ideas, never knowing the perspective of their growth.... They not only
borrow a foreign culture, but also a foreign standard of judgement; and thus,
not only is the money not theirs, but not even the pocket. Their education is a
chariot that does not carry them in it, but drags them behind it. The sight is
pitiful and very often comic.
The education which we receive from our universities takes it for
granted that it is for cultivating a hopeless desert, and that not only the
mental outlook and the knowledge, but also the whole language must bodily be
imported from across the sea. And this makes our education so nebulously
distant and unreal, so detached from all our associations of life, so terribly
costly to us in time, health and means, and yet so meagre of results.
We must know that this concentration of intellectual forces of the
country is the most important mission of a University, for it is like the
nucleus of a living cell, the centre of creative life of the national mind.
The same thing happens in the case of our Indian culture. Because of the
want of opportunity in our course of study, we take it for granted that India
had no culture, or next to none. Then, when we hear from foreign pundits some
echo of the praises of India’s culture, we can contain ourselves no longer and
rend the sky with the shout that all other cultures are merely human, but ours
is divine¾a special creation of Brahma! And this leads us to
that moral dipsomania, which is the hankering after the continual stimulation
of self-flattery.
... The inner spirit of India is calling to us to establish in this land
great centres, where all her intellectual forces will gather for the purpose of
creation, and all her resources of knowledge and thought, Eastern and Western,
will unite in perfect harmony. She is seeking for herself her modern
Brahmavarta, her Mithila, of Janaka’s time, her Ujjaini, of the time of
Vikramaditya. She is seeking for the glorious opportunity when she will know
her mind, and give her mind to the world, to help it in its progress; when she
will be released from the chaos of scattered powers and the inertness of
borrowed acquisition.
What I object to is the artificial arrangement by which this foreign
education tends to occupy all the space of our national mind and thus kills, or
hampers, the great opportunity for the creation of a new thought power by a new
combination of truths. It is this which makes me urge that all the elements in our
own culture have to be strengthened, not to resist the Western culture, but
truly to accept and assimilate it, and use it for our food and not as our
burden; to get mastery over this culture, and not to live at its outskirts as
the hewers of texts and drawers of book-learning.
My suggestion is that we should generate somewhere a centripetal force,
which will attract and group together from different parts of our land and
different ages all our own materials of learning and thus create a complete and
moving orb of Indian culture.
The main river of Indian culture has flowed in four streams¾the Vedic, the Puranic, the Buddhist, and
the Jain. It had its source in the heights of the Indian consciousness.
... Our mind is not in our studies. In fact, it has been wholly ignored
that we have a mind of our own.
India has proved that it has its own mind, which has deeply thought and
felt and tried to solve according to its light the problems of existence. The
education of India is to enable this mind of India to find out truth, to make
this truth its own wherever found and to give expression to it in such a manner
as only it can do.
Mahatma Gandhi
I find daily proof of the increasing and continuing wrong being done to
the millions by our false de-Indianizing education. These graduates who are my
valued associates themselves flounder when they have to give expression to
their innermost thoughts. They are strangers in their own homes.
Parents only know that it will help the boy to earn money. And this
satisfies them. If this situation lasts long, we might all become foreigners!
What is worse even the Swaraj for which we are struggling may become foreign in
character when we finally get it, with the result that the very burden under
which we are crushed today may continue even after Swaraj. There is only one
way to escape this danger. It is to change and overhaul our system of
education. In the national education to be evolved.
It is my firm opinion that no culture has treasures so rich as ours has.
Ananda Coomaraswamy
One of the most remarkable features of British rule in India has been
the fact that the greatest injuries done to the people of India have taken the
form of blessings. Of this, Education is a striking example; for no more
crushing blows have ever been struck at the roots of Indian National evolution
than those which have been struck, often with other, and the best intentions,
in the name of Education.... The most crushing indictment of this Education is
the fact that it destroys, in the great majority of those upon whom it is
inflicted, all capacity for the appreciation of Indian culture. Speak to the
ordinary graduate of an Indian University, or a student from Ceylon, of the
ideals of the Mahabharata¾he will hasten to display his knowledge of
Shakespeare; talk to him of religious philosophy¾you find that he is an atheist of the
crude type common in Europe a generation ago, and that not only has he no
religion, but he is as lacking in philosophy as the average Englishman; talk to
him of Indian music¾he will produce a gramophone or a
harmonium, and inflict upon you one or both; talk to him of Indian dress and
jewellery¾he will tell you that they are uncivilized and
barbaric; talk to him of Indian art¾it is news to him that such a thing
exists; ask him to translate for you a letter written in his own mother-tongue¾he does not know it. He is indeed a
stranger on his own land.
It is hard to realize how completely the continuity of Indian life has
been severed. A single generation of English education suffices to break the
threads of tradition and to create a nondescript and superficial being deprived
of all roots — a sort of intellectual pariah who does not belong to the East or
the West, the past or the future. The greatest danger for India is the loss of
her spiritual integrity. Of all Indian problems the educational is the most
difficult and most tragic.
The two great Indian epics have been the great medium of Indian
education, the most evident vehicle of the transmission of the national culture
from each generation to the next. The national heroic literature is always and
everywhere the true basis of a real education in the formation of character.
A great and real responsibility rests upon those who control education
in the East, to preserve in their systems the fundamental principles of
memory-training and mental concentration which are the great excellence of the
old culture.http://ifihhome.tripod.com/articles/quotes.html
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