(The statue of Swami Vivekananda silhouetted
against setting sun at Unakal lake in Hubli.)
.......Swami Vivekananda redefined the word `atheist’ when he declared that as
per the new religion, an atheist is one who does not believe in
himself, not necessarily the one who does not believe in God.
....On another occasion he said that if he could get one hundred ‘believing’ young men he would revolutionise the entire world.
One of his writings asks the youth to focus on the three `H’s - ‘Heart’
to feel for the poor and the marginalised, ‘Head’ to think and `Hands,’
which would convert thoughts into deeds.
He urged the youth to have a pure purpose, stick to truth, banish fear
and doubt and surge ahead in life with the intensity of a forest fire.
He wants our youths to emulate an oyster. It is believed that an oyster
waits for the rain that falls when the star Swati is on the ascent. When
that happens it comes to the surface, receives a drop of rain and
recedes to the depths to develop a pearl.
Live for others:
‘They alone live, who live for others, the rest are more dead than
alive,’ he observed. “It is better to wear out than rust out,” he said
advising the younger generation to work, work and work till the goal is
reached. Swamiji was one among the early visionaries who saw an
invisible bridge between Indian and Western cultures. He interpreted
Hindu scriptures and philosophy to the Western people in an idiom they
could easily comprehend. Thus they were at ease with science and
technology on the one hand and humanism on the other and there was no
quarrel between the two.
Perhaps the best tribute to the life and mission of Swami Vivekananda in
one line was paid by Rabindranath Tagore. Talking to another Nobel
laureate, Romain Rolland, Tagore said, “If you want to know India, study
Vivekananda.”
(January 12th is observed as National Youth Day)
(SRIDHAR-CHAAMA, The Hindu, 11:01:2013)
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Labels: India, Quotes, Religion/personality, Self development
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