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Part V : Osho's interaction with Gandhians and Politicians
After Indian Independence in 1947, the National Congress Party
was Gandhi's movement, so all politicians and most of the country
were Gandhians. When Gandhi died in 1948, his ashram at Wardha
was continued by his son Ramdas.
Because I was born into a certain Jaina religious group, they
were the first people to surround me. When people started looking
at me, asking me questions, feeling that something has happened
in me, the first ones were bound to be Jainas because they were
my relatives, they were my neighbors. It was obvious that they
would be the first. Naturally their questions were concerned with
Jainism, with Mahavira....
When I was surrounded with Jainas I had to talk with these people
about things which have no importance, nothing. But those were
the people and these were their questions. Slowly, slowly others
started moving towards me, Jainas became a minority. Out of that
minority a few are still here - very few, their percentage has
fallen to one percent at the most.
The second group that followed, which was certainly the closest
group to the Jainas...Mahatma Gandhi had adopted a Jaina doctrine
of nonviolence, so all the Jainas became Gandhians, and all the
Gandhians came close to the Jainas. At least on one point they
were in agreement. So when Jainas were becoming alert that I am
a dangerous man, Gandhians followed. Their great leaders - Vinoba
Bhave wanted to meet me; Shankarrao Deo attended a meditation
camp; Dada Dharmadhikari attended many meditation camps; Acharya
Bhagwat attended many meditation camps. And because these were
the thinkers of Gandhism, all over India Gandhians started becoming
interested in me.
Again I was surrounded by a certain group with a fixed ideology.
The day I criticized Mahatma Gandhi...I was simply stating the
facts, not even criticizing him. Somebody had asked, "What
do you think about Mahatma Gandhi and his philosophy of nonviolence?"...
I said that Mahatma Gandhi was simply a cunning politician.
By adopting nonviolence he was managing many things. All the Jainas
became his followers. They found a certain man who was in tune
with them; although he was not a Jaina, he was at least nine percent
Jaina. I have the percentages about Gandhi: he was born a Hindu,
but he was only one percent Hindu. He was born in Gujarat, an
area very dominated by Jaina philosophy; nine percent he was a
Jaina. And ninety percent he was a Christian. Thrice in his life
he was just on the verge of being converted to Christianity.
I said to them that by nonviolence he managed the Jainas; he
also managed the upper-class Hindus who are nonviolent people;
he also managed to influence Christian missionaries, Christians,
because Jesus Christ's message is of love, and nonviolence is
another name of love. And these were not all the benefits of accepting
nonviolence. The most important thing is, India has been for two
thousand years a slave country. It has forgotten what it means
to be independent. It is not yet independent, its mind has become
that of a slave....
Indians are very much afraid of fighting. They have never fought.
A small group could manage to keep this vast continent in slavery.
The ownership changed from one group to another, but India remained
in slavery.
Secondly, Gandhi was intelligent enough to see that on the one
hand Indians are not people who will fight, and on the other hand,
they don't have any weapons to fight with.
Thirdly, the British empire of that day was the greatest power
in the world. It was impossible to fight violently with the British
empire: you don't have weapons, you don't have trained people
to fight, you don't know anything about fighting.
Nonviolence was a political policy. It served many purposes, and
served well....
So I said that Gandhi's nonviolence was not a spiritual philosophy,
but a political policy. And it is proved by the facts. He had
promised before independence that the moment India became free,
all armies would be dissolved, all arms would be thrown into the
ocean. When asked, "If you do this and somebody attacks,
what are you going to do?" he said, "We will receive
them as our guest and we will say to them, `We stay here; you
also can stay.'"
After independence everything was forgotten. Neither the armies
were dissolved, nor the arms were thrown into the ocean; on the
contrary, Gandhi himself blessed the first attack on Pakistan.
Three Indian Air Force planes came to receive his blessings and
he came out of his house and blessed the planes. All nonviolence
and all that bullshit talk that he was doing his whole life was
forgotten.
The moment I criticized Gandhi...And this was only on one point.
I am a man who loves to go deep into everything. If I don't go,
I don't go at all. Once I started, I had to condemn Mahatma Gandhi
on a thousand and one grounds, and on each point Gandhians disappeared;
now I don't think even one percent of those present are Gandhians
- not here, even in India, because they cannot be Gandhians if
I am right. I have condemned him point by point.
I have not changed, just the people around me went on changing.
When Gandhians disappeared then the people who were communists,
socialists, who were against Gandhism thought, "This is a
great chance. If he can support us..." But I had not condemned
Gandhi to support communism. I had never thought about it, that
this would become an opportunity for socialists and communists.
And then I had to condemn them. There is no other way to get rid
of such people.
So all those political talks were a necessity, to find out exactly
who my people are: who are without any prejudice; who have come
to me; who have not come to me to hear about Christ, or to hear
about Buddha, or to hear about Gandhi, or to hear about Mahavira;
who have come directly to listen to me. I have my own message,
I have my own manifesto to the world....
I have never been a serious person. But I was surrounded by serious
people for many years, and amongst those serious people it is
very difficult not to be serious. It is almost like being in a
hospital. You have at least to pretend that you are serious. For
years I was surrounded by sick people and I had at least to pretend
that I was serious.
I am not serious at all because existence is not serious. It is
so playful, so full of song and so full of music and so full of
subtle laughter. It has no purpose; it is not business-like. It
is pure joy, sheer dance, out of overflowing energy. hari18
Gandhi's songs of the unity of Hinduism and Mohammedanism, his
discourses that both are the same, that there is no difference,
are proved all bogus, because his own son, eldest son, Haridas,
who was a rebel from his very birth - and I love that man,
he was far superior in every way than his father....
He wanted to go to school and Gandhi will not allow because he
thought that all education poisons people. So no education for
children. He will teach them enough so they can read religious
scriptures. But Haridas was insistent that he wants to learn everything
the way other boys are learning. Gandhi threatened him that, "If
you go to school, then never enter in my house again."
Do you think this is the attitude of a non-violent man? And that
too against a small child, and whose demand is not in any way
for any crime. He is not saying that he wants to go to a prostitute.
He is simply asking to go to school to study just like everybody
else. And his argument is perfect. He said, "You have been
educated and you are not poisoned, so why you are so worried?
I am your son. If you can be educated, if you can attain to the
degree of bar at law, then why can't I? Why you are so suspicious?"
But Gandhi said, "I have given you the ultimatum. Either
you live in this house with me, then no school, or you go to school,
then this house is no more for you."
And I love that boy. He left the house - with grace. He touched
his father's feet, asked for his blessings, which Mahatma Gandhi
could not give.
I cannot see non-violence and love. In these small acts you can
find the real person, not in speeches, public performances.
The boy left. He lived with one of his uncles, studied, many times
wanted just to come and see his mother but was refused. He graduated,
and just to see how much Gandhi means that Hinduism and Mohammedanism
are all one he became a Mohammedan. He was really a colorful man.
He became Mohammedan, he changed his name - meaning still
the same. Haridas means servant of God. So he asked the Mohammedan
priest to give him a name which means Haridas in Arabic. Abdullah
means exactly the same. Abd means God, Abdullah means servant
of God. So he became Abdullah Gandhi.
When Gandhi heard about it, he was so much shocked. He was so
angry. His wife said, "But why you should be so angry? Every
morning, every evening, you say both are the same. That's why
he must be trying, that, "If both are same.... Hinduism
I have lived for all these years, now let us see what is Mohammedanism."
And Gandhi was angry that, "This is not a matter to laugh.
He is disinherited from my property. He is no more my son, and
I don't want him to see again." And in India when somebody
dies and his funeral pyre is lit with fire, the eldest son puts
the fire. So Gandhi made it his will that "Haridas is not
my son and I emphasize the fact that after my death he should
not put the fire into my funeral."
What anger! What violence!
I have known this man, Haridas Gandhi. He was really a lovely
man. And he said, "I simply became a Mohammedan just to see
how my father reacts. And he exactly reacted the way I thought,
so all that unity of religions, Hindu and Mohammedan, Christian
and Buddhism, is all nonsense. It is all politics. That's what
I wanted to prove and I have proved it."
The place where I lived, just eighty miles away from there, just
a coincidence that Haridas.... It was a junction station.
He was coming from one train and Gandhi was passing into another
train, so he came close to the compartment of Gandhi just to see
his father, and the mother will be there. Gandhi, seeing him coming
towards the compartment, closed all the windows and told his wife
that, "If you open the window and talk with him, then my
connections with you are finished. Then you can go with him."
Kasturbhai, Gandhi's wife, was crying, weeping, but could not
open the window. Haridas was knocking on the window. Gandhi was
standing there. And this man is thought to be the greatest non-violent
saint of the contemporary world. I don't agree.
And this is just one instance. I have gone through his life in
very detail and I have found thousands of instances where his
real personality surfaces. His public performance is a different
thing. last404
Babasaheb Ambedkar was a sudra, but caught the eye of a very
rich man who, seeing he was so intelligent, sent him to study
in England. He became one of the greatest experts of law in the
world and he helped make the constitution of India. He was continuously
fighting for the sudras to whom he belonged, and that is one-fourth
of the Hindu society. He wanted a separate vote for the sudras - and
he was absolutely right.
I don't see why they should belong to the Hindu fold which has
tortured them for ten thousand years, forced them to do every
sort of ugly work and paid them almost nothing. They are not even
allowed to live in the cities, they have to live outside the city.
Just before freedom, they were not allowed to move in many streets
of the town. In many places they were forced to announce loudly,
"I am a sudra and I am passing through here. Those who can
hear me, please move out of the way..." because even
their shadows falling on you, defile you.
But finding no way, because Mahatma Gandhi was insistent that
sudras should not leave the Hindu fold.... That was also a
political strategy, because if one-fourth of the Hindus leave
the fold, then Hindus will become a minority in their own country.
There are Mohammedans, there are Christians, there are Jainas;
now if a new big chunk would go out of the Hindu fold, the country
of the Hindus would become almost the country of other religions.
And if they all got together, Hindus would never be in power.
I don't consider Mahatma Gandhi a religious man either; he belonged
to the same category as Doctor Ambedkar. Gandhi went on a fast
to death so that Ambedkar had to take back his stand. He had to
withdraw the idea that sudras should be given a separate vote.
And Gandhi was clever...he started calling sudras harijans.
Cunning people always play with words. Words don't make any difference - whether
you call them sudras, untouchables, or harijans...harijans
means, "children of God."
I had a long discussion with Mahatma Gandhi's son, Ramdas. I said,
"Don't you see the cunningness? The children of God have
been suffering for ten thousand years and those who are not children
of God are exploiting them, torturing them, oppressing them, raping
their women, completely burning their towns with all living people
inside. If these are the children of God, it is better not to
be a child of God. That is dangerous."
Gandhi changed the name just to give it a beautiful meaning, but
everything inside remained the same. And he went on a fast unto
death unless Ambedkar takes his statement back.
If I had been in the place of Ambedkar, I would have told Mahatma
Gandhi, "It is your business to live or to die. It is your
business if you want to fast - you are free to. Fast unto
death or even beyond!"
But Ambedkar was pressurized from all over the country, because
if Gandhi died the whole blame would come on Ambedkar. And I would
have told Gandhi, "This is a very violent method, and you
have been talking about nonviolence. Is this nonviolence?"...
After Gandhi had been fasting for twenty-one days, and his health
had started to fall fast, the doctor said, "Do something;
otherwise the old man will be gone." Ambedkar was much pressurized
by all the Indian national leaders who said to him, "Go to
Mahatma Gandhi. Ask for his forgiveness, offer him a glass of
orange juice to break his fast...and renounce your movement;
otherwise you will be remembered always as the one who killed
the greatest man of this country, the great religious man."
And Ambedkar had to do it, although unwillingly.
I would not have done it! I would have accepted the blame, I would
have accepted history's condemnation. Who cares when you are dead
what is written in history about you? At least you don't know
what is written, and you don't read. Let them write anything....
But I would have insisted that this was not a nonviolent method.
It was absolutely violent but in a very subtle way. I threaten
to kill you - this is violence. And I threaten to kill myself
if you don't accept me - is this logical? The standpoint that
Gandhi was taking was absolutely illogical, but he supported it
by threatening. It is blackmail to say, "I will kill myself."
Ambedkar managed another way. He started converting the sudras
to Buddhism. That's why now there are a few lakhs of Buddhists,
but they are not in any way religious. It was just a political
manoeuver. bodhi19
In this context it is necessary to ask if Ambedkar used the right
means, or Gandhi? Of the two, who is really non-violent? In my
view Gandhi's way was utterly violent, and Ambedkar proved to
he nonviolent. Gandhi was determined till the last moment to pressure
Ambedkar with his threat to kill himself.
It makes no difference whether I threaten to kill you or to kill
myself to make you accept my view. In either case, I am using
pressure and violence. krishn10
People ask me what non-violence is every day. My answer is that
non-violence is knowledge of the self. If you come to know yourself
you will know the essence of man. This awareness gives birth to
love, and it is impossible for love to inflict pain. This is non-violence.
long06
Mahatma Gandhi's son Ramdas was very much interested in me for
the simple reason that, as he said, "You are the only man
who has criticized my father - everybody worshiped him. I
could see many times that he was going too far in illogical, superstitious
things, but he was a man of great weight. It was better to remain
silent - because what happened with my eldest brother, Haridas?
He was thrown out of the home, and my mother was told, `If you
allow him any entry in the house, remember - you will be the
next to be thrown out.'"...
Ramdas was very interested in me because I had been criticizing
Gandhi point by point, and no Gandhian had dared to answer me
on anything - they could not answer. So when Gandhi died,
Ramdas became the head of his ashram, and he used to invite me
once in a while. mess204
In Mahatma Gandhi's ashram you could not use a mosquito net.
His son, Ramdas, was very friendly with me. He had invited me
to the ashram, but I said to him, "I cannot stay here with
all these mosquitoes. Any intelligent person can understand that
a mosquito net is not a luxury, it is not something unspiritual."
And what had Mahatma Gandhi substituted? He had substituted kerosene
oil. You put kerosene oil on your face, on your hands, on whatever
parts are exposed, put kerosene oil.
Naturally, the mosquitoes are more intelligent than you - they
don't come near you, because it stinks! But how can you sleep?
You have to choose between mosquitoes or kerosene oil.
I said, "I am not going to choose, I am simply leaving. This
seems to be some insane asylum - it is not an ashram."
Gandhi had adopted five basic principles of life from Jainism.
The first is: aswad, no-taste - you have to eat, but if you
taste, you are a materialist.
I am just trying to show you how they are making it difficult
and impossible and unnatural. If you eat, you are bound to taste
because you have taste buds in your tongue. Those taste buds don't
know anything about your spirituality and the other world, they
will simply function. sword09
The most difficult time was the mealtime, because Gandhi used
to give everybody - and he was very particular about it - a
chutney made of neem leaves, which are the bitterest in the world.
They are very medicinal. They are good, they purify the blood.
But one is not eating in order to purify the blood. And every
day, purifying the blood - too much purified!...
And I asked - Gandhi had died - when I visited his ashram;
his son was in charge. I asked him, "Do you think...is
it not pure hypocrisy? Because tastelessness does not mean that
you have to make your food bitter - to experience bitterness
is also taste, just as to experience sweet. It is such a simple
thing, but you never objected to your father."
He said, "Nobody ever thought about it...that bitterness
is also a taste."
I said, "It is so simple. Whatever you do, it will be hypocrisy.
Taste will be there." yaahoo24
I will give you the example of Mahatma Gandhi. In India railway
trains have four classes - the air-conditioned, the first
class, the second class and the third class. And the country is
so poor that even to afford a third class ticket is difficult
for almost half of the people of the land. Gandhi started traveling
in third class.
I used to have discussions with his son, Ramdas, and I told him,
"This is simply crowding the third class, it is already too
crowded. This is not helping the poor." And you will be surprised;
because Gandhi was traveling in the third class, the whole compartment
was booked for him. In a sixty-foot compartment - where at
least eighty to ninety persons would have traveled - he alone
is traveling. And his biographers will write, "He was so
kind to the poor."
He used to drink goat's milk because that is the cheapest, and
the poorest of people can afford it. Naturally, everybody who
is conditioned with the idea immediately appreciates what a great
man he is. But you don't know about his goat! I am a little crazy,
because I don't care about Mahatma Gandhi much, but I care certainly
about the goat.
I inquired everything about the goat, and I found that his goat
was being bathed every day with Lux toilet soap. The food of the
goat cost in those days, ten rupees - ten rupees was the salary
of a school teacher for one month. But nobody will look into these
matters. Only one woman, a very intelligent woman in Mahatma Gandhi's
circle, Sarojini Naidu - later on she became the governor
of North India - joked once that to keep Mahatma Gandhi poor,
we have to destroy treasures. His poverty is very costly.
But it worked. As a politician he became the greatest politician,
because the poor people thought "This is the man who is our
real representative, because he lives like a poor man in a cottage,
he drinks goats' milk, he travels in third class." But they
don't know the background - that to maintain his poverty was
very costly....
I once said to Ramdas, Mahatma Gandhi's son, that if it is sympathy
and kindness and compassion to live like a poor man amongst the
poor, then what about other things? If there are a few blind people,
should I live with a blindfold? Or if there are unintelligent
people - and there are, the whole world is full of the unintelligent - should
I also live like the retarded, the stupid, just out of sympathy?
No, this cannot be the criterion of being good, of being virtuous,
of being religious. If somebody is sick, that does not mean that
the doctor should come and lie down on another bed, so as to help
the sick. Everybody can see the nonsense in it. The doctor has
to remain healthy so that he can help those who are sick. If he
himself becomes sick out of sympathy, then who is going to help?
The same is true in the inner growth of man. mess211
For twenty years I have criticized Mahatma Gandhi and his philosophy.
No Gandhian has answered. Many Gandhians have come to me and they
say, "Whatsoever you say is right, but we cannot say it in
public, because if we say that whatsoever you say about Mahatma
Gandhi is right, we will lose." The public believes in Mahatma
Gandhi. so utter nonsense has to be supported because Gandhi was
anti-technological. Now this country will remain poor if this
country remains anti-technological; this country will never be
in a state of wellbeing. And there is no need for technology always
to be anti-ecology; there is no need. A technology can be developed
which can be in tune with ecology A technology can be developed
which can help people and will not destroy nature - but Gandhi
was against technology.
He was against the railway, he was against the post office, he
was against electricity, he was against machines of all kinds.
They know this is stupid, because if this continues... But
they go on saying so, and they go on paying homage to Mahatma
Gandhi because they have to get the votes from the people. And
the people worship the Mahatma because the Mahatma fits with their
ideas of how a mahatma should be.
Mahatma Gandhi fits with the Indian mob; the Indian mob worships
him. The politician has to follow the mob. Remember always: in
politics the leader follows the followers. He has to! He only
pretends that he is leading; deep down he has to follow the followers.
Once the followers leave him, he is nowhere. He cannot stand on
his own, he has no ground of his own.
Gandhi worshipped poverty. Now if you worship poverty you will
remain poor. Poverty has to be hated.
I hate poverty! I cannot say to worship it; that would be a crime.
And I don't see any religious quality in just being poor. But
Gandhi talked much about poverty and its beauty - it helps
the poor man's ego, it buttresses his ego; he feels good. It is
a consolation that he is religious, simple - he is poor. He
may not have riches but he has some spiritual richness. Poverty
in itself is not a spiritual richness; no, not at all. Poverty
is ugly and poverty has to be destroyed. And to destroy poverty,
technology has to be brought in.
Mahatma Gandhi was against birth control. Now if you are against
birth control this country will become poorer and poorer every
day. Then there is no possibility. sos204
One of the Congress presidents in India, U.N. Dhebar, was attending
my camps and there should have been no difficulty, but one day
he told me, "Osho, you are the real inheritor of Mahatma
Gandhi's ideology, although you have never been with Mahatma Gandhi.
You have never been associated with Gandhism, but if you start
teaching Gandhism, then it can be saved from dying."
I said, "It would have been better if you had not said this,
because I hate to be anybody's successor and I hate to propagate
anyone else's philosophy."
And that day I criticized Mahatma Gandhi on many points. I would
never have bothered because there are millions of people in the
world; I am not going to criticize everybody, there is not time
for that. But U.N. Dhebar just pointed me towards Mahatma Gandhi,
so he was responsible, he was present.
After the meeting I asked him, "If you have anything to say
you can say it to me now or you can say in the next meeting before
everybody. I am willing to have an open discussion about it because
I think that Gandhism should die if India has to live. If Gandhism
continues then India will have to die. And if I have to choose
between the two I would choose that India live - Gandhi is
already dead. It does not matter if Gandhism also dies. Who cares?"
He said, "No I cannot discuss it publicly. I understand what
you say is right, but you should be more discriminating."
I said, "You are a politician, I am not a politician. A politician
has to be discriminatory, but why should I be?"
He said, "I am simply telling you that you have such a great
following in the Gandhians that if you say things against Gandhi
all these people will leave. They will not leave Gandhism, they
will leave you. That's why I am saying you should be more discriminating.
When you make any statement you should wait and see whether it
is going in favor of you or against you." And he was giving
friendly advice. But what he actually meant by discrimination
was diplomacy.
I am not a diplomat.
I said, "I will say whatever feels to me to be the right
thing, whatever the consequences."
I have lost many followers in these thirty years in the same way.
last601
Certainly many people have come to me and have had to drop me
for small reasons, because those small reasons, to them, were
very fundamental.
I had many followers of Mahatma Gandhi around me at a certain
time. Even the president of the Congress, the ruling party, U.N.
Dhebar, was coming to my camps...Shankar Rao Dev, one-time
secretary general of the ruling party, and many imminent Gandhians.
I used to wear hand-spun clothes, and that is something very spiritual
to the Gandhians. It was perfectly good in India's freedom struggle
as a token of protest against Britain, that we would not use clothes
manufactured in Manchester, in Lancashire. And it had a certain
logic behind it: before the British rulers came to India, India
had such craftsmen that even today there is no technology to create
such thin material as was spun and woven by the Indian craftsmen - particularly
living in Dacca and around Dacca in Bangladesh. Their clothes
were so beautiful that Britain was at a loss as to how to compete
with them in the market.
And what was done was so ugly: the hands of those craftsmen were
cut; thousands of people lost their hands so that the beautiful
clothes coming from Dacca should disappear. This is not human.
It was good as a protest, that "We will not use clothes woven
by your machinery. You have destroyed our people, for whom it
was not only a living but an art, an art that they have inherited
for thousands of years, generation to generation."
But now that the country is independent, that protest no longer
has any meaning. After the country became independent, it was
idiotic to make hand-spun clothes and the spinning wheel something
spiritual. To protest against this, I had to drop those hand-spun
clothes. Because now India needs more machinery, more technology;
otherwise, the people are going to be hungry, naked, without any
roof over their heads.
The moment I started using clothes made by machinery, I was no
longer spiritual. All the Gandhians disappeared. U.N. Dhebar,
the president of the Congress, told me, "You are unnecessarily
losing thousands of followers. Be a little more diplomatic."
I said, "You are telling me to be a diplomat, to be cunning,
to be an exploiter, to cheat people? Just to keep them following
me I should fulfill their expectations? I am the last one to do
that."
And this went on happening in small things, small matters. upan31
I know lots of political leaders who always sit with their spinning
wheels at hand. They never spin or anything. Just if someone should
come visiting, quickly they begin spinning the wheel.
I was a guest at the house of a politician. I was much surprised;
now how long can he deceive me! I was there at the house. But
his spinning wheel never turned. And whenever anyone arrived,
he immediately began preparing his wheel; began drawing out thread.
I asked him, "What is this set up? How long will it take
you to spin thread this way? When that man comes in, you stop
again because the man has arrived. As the man comes inside the
door, you put up the thread. How will you ever spin any thread?"
He replied, "Who is spinning thread? No, this is just a show
I have to put on for these idiots. And what do I know about spinning
thread? It breaks again and again."
But clever politicians have very small spinning wheels made. They
carry them on airplanes too. Those spinning wheels don't work.
They buy khadi cloth - Pure khadi...etc. JyunThaTyun
I used to stay with one of the presidents of the ruling congress
party, U.N. Dhebar. He was very much interested in me. He used
to attend my camps, even though all his political friends tried
to prevent him, telling him, "Don't go to this man."
But he was not a politician, not cunning, a very simple and very
authentic man.
It was just by chance, accidentally, that he had become the president.
It happens in most cases. He was chosen as the president because
he was the most polite - a nice man who would never say no.
And Pandit Jawaharlal needed a yes-man. He was the prime minister
and he wanted the organization of congress to be ruled either
by himself - which would look dictatorial - or by a yes-man.
And U.N. Dhebar was such a simple man that he would say yes to
whatever Jawaharlal wanted. So it was Jawaharlal who was dictating
almost everything.
I was staying once in his house in New Delhi, and he was talking
to me and gossiping about all the political leaders, what kind
of people we have got; all kinds of idiots he was telling me about....
And then suddenly came a phone call. U.N. Dhebar took the phone
and said, "I am very busy and I cannot give you any appointment
for at least seven days," and put the phone down.
I said, "You are not busy, you are just gossiping with me."
He said, "This is the trouble in politics. You have to pretend
that you are very busy, that you don't have any time - and
you have all the time. But you have to show the people that you
are a very busy man, not approachable so easily. So I have told
him after seven days he should phone again. If I have time, then
I will see him. Although I am completely free...because you
are here I have canceled all my programs. While you are here in
my house, I don't want to waste my time with anybody else. I want
to be with you. This is a rare chance, because in the camps I
cannot have much time with you. This is a great opportunity. And
I have told everybody - the guards - `Don't allow anybody...'"
I said, "This is strange. That man may have some important
work."
He said, "Who cares? Nobody cares about anybody." Such
a nice person, very cultured, educated, but who cares? gdead05
I don't like to waste people's time; I am not a political leader.
A political leader is supposed to come late. Again, the same power - you
have to wait....
I am not a politician. I am neither a big shot nor a small fry.
I am just a human being, neither anything more nor anything less.
I have been particular about arriving in time. dark03
I have known intimately many presidents of the ruling party,
and I don't think any one of them had any high qualities of intelligence.
mess121
The Gandhians now stay in palaces. But there also they apply
novel techniques. I went to see Rashtrapati Bhavan when Rajendrababu
was the president. The gate-keeper told me that the president
had spread a mat over the viceroy's seat. What is the sense in
spreading mats and wearing loin clothes in a palace which is tended
by about a thousand servants? These are the symptoms of madness,
result of our extremist philosophy. Stay in a hut if you like,
or in a palace if you like, but what is the consolation behind
faking the look of a hut in a palace? The two things do not harmonise.
And that is because of the internal strife. gandhi01
The house of the president of India has one hundred rooms with
attached bathrooms, one hundred acres of garden. This used to
be the viceroy's house and still they have separate guesthouses.
What are these hundred rooms doing there? One wonders....
I have once been there because one of the presidents, Zakir Hussain,
was interested in me. He was a vice-chancellor of Aligarh University
and when he was the vice-chancellor, I spoke there. He was presiding,
and he loved what I had said. When he became president and he
came to know that I was in Delhi, he invited me to come and he
took me around. I asked him, "What purpose are these one
hundred rooms serving?"
He said, "They are just useless. In fact to maintain them,
one hundred servants are needed. For the maintenance of this big
garden of one hundred acres, one hundred rooms - and in front
you see two big buildings. They are guesthouses and each guesthouse
must have at least twenty-five rooms, not less than that."
I said, "This is absolute wastage. In how many rooms do you
sleep?"
He said, "In how many rooms? I sleep in my bed. I'm not a
monster that I will spread myself into many rooms...head in
one room, and the body in another and the legs in another."
"But then," I said, "these hundred rooms which
are simply empty, fully furnished with everything available that
a man needs, should be put to some use."
But this is the situation around the world. The emperors have
big palaces and still there is no space. They are always making
new palaces, new guesthouses. bodhi18
One of the prime ministers of India, Lalbahadur Shastri*, was
a very good man, as good as a politician can be. I have known
so many politicians that I can say perhaps he was the best out
of all those criminals. He said, "If you are a little less
sincere and a little more diplomatic, you can become the greatest
mahatma in the country. But you go on saying the naked truth without
bothering that this is going to create more enemies for you. Can't
you be a little diplomatic?"
I said, "You are asking me to be diplomatic? That means being
a hypocrite; knowing something but saying something else, doing
something else. I am going to remain the same. I can drop being
religious if it is needed, but I cannot drop being rebellious
because to me that is the very soul of religion. I can drop every
other thing which is thought to be religious, but I cannot drop
rebellion; that is the very soul."... dark21
*Note: Lalbahadur Shastri was prime minister of India in 1964,
after Nehru
Lalbahadur Shastri, was immensely interested in me. He died with
one of my books on his chest. He was reading it and must have
fallen asleep, had a heart attack, and died.....
He was very available to me, but even he was not courageous enough
to come to see me. He managed a lunch, in a political way, in
the house of one of his cabinet ministers.
This man, Karan Singh, was interested in me - he was the king
of Kashmir, and because Kashmir became dissolved into India, he
was immediately taken into the cabinet. Naturally he had to be
given something; he was the first to join India and give his whole
country to the union. He was very much interested in me, so Lalbahadur
said, "This would be good. You call him and me for lunch,
so just casually we meet and discuss. My going to him will be
dangerous to my career." And he confessed it to me that this
is how diplomacy works. Nobody knows - just a casual, accidental
meeting. And before lunch, after lunch, for almost three hours
he was listening to me about every problem that he was facing.
But I told him it would be good if he came to my place and lived
a few days with me. Everything could be cleared. He said, "That
is impossible. If people come to know that I have gone to you
for advice, I am finished. You have so many enemies in the country,
in my party, in my cabinet, that I cannot take that risk. And
I am simply a weak man - I have been chosen for my weakness."
But he was sincere. last109
Lalbahadur Shastri was interested in me very much, and promised
that although his party and colleagues did not agree with it,
he would try his best to implement my ideas. But he died of a
heart attack in the U.S.S.R. His secretary reported to me that
all the way on the journey he was reading my book, Seeds of Revolutionary
Thought*. And the night he had the heart attack, another of my
books, The Perfect Way, was in his hands. unconc27
*Note: reprinted under title: Seeds of Wisdom
Indira Gandhi came to power because she was living with her father.
She was a born politician...
All these years she was a watcher of all the politicians, and
she was collecting information about each politician: his weakness,
his crimes against the society, his exploitation of others, his
corruption...and yet on the outside he would go on keeping
a pure white Gandhian face.
She was collecting a file - she showed me the file - against
every leader, and that was her power. When Jawaharlal died all
these politicians were afraid of Indira because she had the key.
She could expose anybody before the public, before the court.
She had all the evidence, she had all the letters. They were afraid
of her for the simple reason that only she could save them; otherwise
they would be exposed. That file was her power.
I have looked into the file. All these people have been exploiting
that poor country. They all have bank balances in foreign countries,
in Switzerland, in America. They all have connections outside
India, from where they get bribes and money and everything, for
giving secrets. They are all connected to one country or other;
they are agents. They have one face before the masses, the poor
masses, and their reality is something totally different. And
they were also afraid because Indira was absolutely incorruptible.
That was one thing she had learned from Jawaharlal. He was incorruptible
because he was not a politician; he was more a poet. ignor03
I was talking to Indira Gandhi, and I told her, "India is
so poor, you cannot hope to become a world power; there is no
possibility. You cannot compete with Russia or America. It will
take you at least three hundred years to come to where America
is now. But in these three hundred years America is not going
to just sit and wait for you to pick up speed.
"In three hundred years America will be nine hundred years
ahead of you. Can't you see this simple thing?"
She said, "I can see it."
I said, "If you can see it, then drop all your projects for
an atomic energy commission, and atomic energy plants and nuclear
weapons. What nonsense are you doing? You cannot compete with
the nuclear powers. If there was any hope I would have said, okay,
go ahead; let people starve - they have been starving for
millions of years, they can starve a few hundred years more. And
anyway, starving or not starving, everybody is going to die; let
them die, forget about them. You go ahead and compete.
"But you have no power to compete. Then will it not be a
wise course that India declares itself an international country?
that we drop the boundaries, we drop the whole idea that you have
to come with a permit into the country, that you need a passport?
No, we just open the whole country for the whole world. Whoever
wants to come is welcome. We are so poor that we cannot be more
poor.
"But this will be a precedent and this will be a historical
moment: one country declaring that it is no longer a nation, that
it belongs to the whole world.
"Anyway you cannot win against China, you cannot win against
Russia or America. When you cannot win why not take some other
course? Declare, 'We are defenseless, we dissolve our defense
forces, we send our soldiers to the fields, to the factories.
We are no longer in the game of war; we drop out of it."'
She said, "But then anybody can attack."
I said, "Anybody can attack now - what difference does
it make? In fact, then to attack India will become difficult because
there will be a worldwide condemnation. A country who declares
itself defenseless, drops its arms and goes to the fields and
the factories, welcomes everybody who wants to come, to invest,
to bring industries, to do anything.... It will be almost
impossible for anybody to attack India because the whole world
will be against that attacker.
"You will have so much sympathy and so many friends that
nobody will dare. Right now anybody can attack you. And you have
been attacked by China already; China already occupies thousands
of miles of land and India has not even the guts to raise the
question, 'Please return that land."'
Indira's father, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, said, "That land
is useless, not even grass grows there." I wrote him a letter,
saying, "If not even grass grows there and it is useless,
why did you go to war in the first place? You should have told
the Chinese, 'You can occupy as much as you can. Not even grass
grows. If you can manage to grow something, good, because for
us it is useless anyway. We give it to you as a gift.'
"That would have been more gentlemanly - to give it to
them as a gift, rather than to be defeated. Why did you go to
war? Did you come to know it later on - that no grass grows
there, that it is wasteland?
"You can be attacked," I told Indira. "You have
been attacked, so your arms and your armies don't help. Even the
biggest powers have been attacked. We have seen even a powerful
nation like Germany defeated, a powerful nation like Japan defeated.
We know that for five years Germany went on defeating all big
nations, so you don't count.
"If you accept my suggestion you come out on top; you prove
really wise in the true sense of the word. And you prove that
it is not only a saying that India is a country of wisdom; you
will prove by this act that you are certainly wise. Where you
cannot win, the best way is to drop the whole idea of any fight."...
I told Indira, "India is in such a condition, you can make
it a historical moment, an unprecedented thing, that no country
has ever dared.... And you are not going to lose anything
because what have you got to lose? You are not going to be attacked
by those who want to attack; they can attack right now.
"And once you do this, invite the U.N.O.; say that the U.N.O.
can only be in India, nowhere else, because this is the only neutral
country, the only country which has dropped all its claims of
nationality, of being a different nation. This is the only country
which belongs to the whole humanity. Let the U.N.O. be here. Surrender
all your arms and all your forces to the U.N.O. and tell them
to use them for world peace, world friendship."
She said, "I understand you - you are always right, I
am always wrong - but what to do? This is too much - I
don't have that much courage to do it. Only a man like you can
do such a thing, but a man like you is not interested in politics
at all.
"My father was telling you, 'Come into politics.' I have
been telling you, 'Come into politics,' and you say that you don't
want to get into this dirty game. But without getting into this
dirty game you cannot be in this position where I am. And to be
in this position I have to consider a thousand and one things,
because if I say such a thing, there are people just behind me
who will not miss the opportunity, who will simply throw me out
of office, saying, 'This woman has gone mad!'
"And this will look like madness because nobody has done
it before. They will immediately capture power; they will immediately
capture power by saying, 'This woman has to be medically treated,'
and nobody will listen to me."
She wanted to come to me. So many times she made a time, and then
at the last moment she would inform me, "It is difficult,
because the people around me don't allow me even to come to you,
because they say, 'Even going to this man will affect your political
position in the country.
"'Nobody will bother what transpired between you, what you
talked about - nobody will bother about it - just your
going to this man is enough to affect your position; even your
prime-ministership will be gone.' They are all against you - and
I cannot go against them."...
In fact if I was in her place I would have taken the risk even
of being called mad. It is worth taking. I would have taken the
risk even to be thrown out of office. At least it would have been
on record that one person had tried his best to bring some sense
to humanity. misery27
The first prime minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru, had a clash
with another disciple of Gandhi's, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. The
clash was such that if voting was allowed then Vallabhbhai Patel
would have won. He was a real politician....
To avoid this voting, because this was going to be a party decision,
Gandhi said, "It will be good to create one post of deputy
prime minister, so Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel will be happy that
he is, if not the first, at least the second man."...
Jawaharlal was innocent in that way. He was not a politician at
all. So without any constitutional basis for it, immediately an
amendment was made that there would be a post of deputy prime
minister It was created for Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel.
Once Nehru and Patel both died the post was dissolved, because
it was unconstitutional, but it was again revived with Indira
and Morarji Desai. The same conflict: Indira was Jawaharlal's
daughter, and Morarji Desai is almost a politically adopted son
of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. He was his disciple in politics,
the chief disciple.
Morarji became aware later on, that it was my suggestion to Indira
to throw him out. And I had suggested it just by the way. I was
talking for almost an hour to her. She listened, and in the end
said only, "Whatever you are saying is right and should be
done, but you don't know my situation: my cabinet is not mine,
my deputy prime minister is not mine. There is so much conflict
and continual fighting in the cabinet; he is trying to throw me
out by hook or by crook, any way, and to become the prime minister.
"If I say the things - that you are saying, everybody
will be with him, nobody is going to be with me - because
the things that you are suggesting are so much against the Indian
mind, the Indian tradition, the Indian way of thinking, that nobody
is going to support me. If you want, I can propose it before the
cabinet, but the next day you will hear that Indira is no more
prime minister."
Then just by the way I said, "Then why don't you throw out
Morarji Desai first, because he is the man who will manipulate
all others. All those others are pygmies. They don't have any
national character, they are all provincial people. In certain
states, in Bengal or in Andhra or in Maharashtra they are important,
but a provincial person cannot fight with you, he has no grounds.
"Only one man can manipulate all those pygmies, and that
is Morarji Desai; so first finish him. And they all will be with
you if you finish him; because of him nobody out of them can become
the second man. So create the situation that this man is blocking
the way of everybody, throw him out, and nobody is going to support
him."
And exactly that happened: within eight days Morarji Desai was
thrown out, and nobody supported him. They were all happy because
now they were all equal; nobody was of national importance except
Indira. So once Indira was gone, died, or something happened,
then those pygmies were bound to have the power; otherwise they
could not have it. So Morarji's removal was almost half the journey
finished; now Indira was the only problem.
Morarji was not aware of it, but later on he became aware. Indira's
secretary, who was listening from the other room, told him. But
before the secretary told him, Morarji Desai had asked me to help
him. He said that he had been thrown out and it was unfair, unjust;
without being given any reason, any cause, he had been just told
to resign.
And he said, "The strangest thing is that just eight days
before there was no question of any change, there was no conflict
between me and her. And another strange thing is I had always
thought that the other people would support me against Indira.
When I was thrown out, not a single cabinet minister was against
it. They rejoiced! They had a party, a celebration!" He said
to me, "I need help."
I said, "You have asked the wrong person. I would be the
last person in the world to help you. If you were drowning in
a river, and I was going along the side, and you shouted 'Help!
Help! I am drowning!' I would say, 'Do it quietly. Don't disturb
my morning walk.'"
He said, "What! Are you joking?"
I said, "I am not. With politicians I never joke; I am very
serious."
Later on he found out that it was my suggestion basically that
got stuck in Indira's mind; it was clear mathematics that if she
threw this man out then there was nothing to be worried about:
all those others were provincial people. Then she could do whatever
she wanted to do and nobody could oppose her, because nobody represented
India as such. And India is such a big country - thirty states - that
if you represent one state, what does it matter? So it stuck in
her mind. And Morarji became even more inimical. ignor15
Morarji Desai was sometimes chief minister of Bombay, sometimes
chief minister of Gujarat, sometimes deputy prime minister of
India, and finally he became the prime minister of India. nomind12
Once, when I started criticizing Mahatma Gandhi, Morarji Desai
wanted that my entry into his province, Gujarat, should be prevented - even
my entry - but he could not do a thing about it. secret10
I wanted to have a residence and a commune in Kashmir, because
it is one of the most beautiful places in the world. But Indira
Gandhi, who was immensely interested in me, suggested, "It
is not right, you should not go to Kashmir. You will be killed.
It is ninety percent Mohammedan." And she was a Kashmiri.
She said, "I will not suggest it and I will not help you,
because I know they cannot tolerate you for a single day."
They know only one thing, and that is the sword. They know no
argument, they know no discussion. They have not come to that
human stage where you can discuss problems and come to conclusions
openheartedly - discuss, not to prove anything but to discover
the truth. light33
I tried continuously for twenty years to get into Kashmir. But
Kashmir has a strange law: only Kashmiris can live there, not
even other Indians. That is strange. But I know ninety percent
of Kashmiris are Mohammedan and they are afraid that once Indians
are allowed to live there, then Hindus would soon become the majority,
because it is part of India. So now it is a game of votes just
to prevent the Hindus.
I am not a Hindu, but bureaucrats everywhere are delinquents.
They really need to be in mental hospitals. They would not allow
me to live there. I even met the chief minister of Kashmir, who
was known before as the prime minister of Kashmir.
It was such a great struggle to bring him down from prime ministership
to chief ministership. And naturally, in one country how could
there be two prime ministers? But he was a very reluctant man,
this Sheikh Abdullah. He had to be imprisoned for years. Meanwhile
the whole constitution of Kashmir was changed, but that strange
clause remained in it. Perhaps all the committee members were
Mohammedans and none of them wanted anybody else to enter Kashmir.
I tried hard, but there was no way. You cannot enter into the
thick skulls of politicians.
I said to the sheikh, "Are you mad? I am not a Hindu; you
need not be afraid of me. And my people come from all over the
world - they will not influence your politics in any way,
for or against."
He said, "One has to be cautious."
I said, "Okay, be cautious and lose me and my people."
Poor Kashmir could have gained so much, but politicians are born
deaf. He listened, or at least pretended to, but he did not hear.
I said to him, "You know that I have known you for many years,
and I love Kashmir."
He said, "I know you, that's why I am even more afraid. You
are not a politician; you belong to a totally different category.
We always distrust such people as you." He used this word,
distrust - and I was talking to you about trust.
At this moment I cannot forget Masto. It was he who introduced
me to Sheikh Abdullah, a very long time before. Later on, when
I wanted to enter Kashmir, particularly Pahalgam, I reminded the
sheikh of this introduction.
The sheikh said, "I remember that this man was also dangerous,
and you are even more so. In fact it is because you were introduced
to me by Masta Baba that I cannot allow you to become a permanent
resident in this valley."...
Sheikh Abdullah took so much effort, and yet he said to me, "I
would have even allowed you to live in Kashmir if you had not
been introduced to me by Masta Baba."
I asked the sheikh, "Why?...when you appeared to be such
an admirer."
He said, "We are no one's admirer, we admire only ourselves.
But because he had a following - particularly among rich people
in Kashmir - I had to admire him. I used to receive him at
the airport, and give him a send-off, put all my work aside and
just run after him. But that man was dangerous. And if he introduced
you to me, then you cannot live in Kashmir, at least while I am
in power. Yes, you can come and go, but only as a visitor."
glimps38
Swami Maitreya,* in his past, was a politician, and he had much
promise. He had been a colleague of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, Jaiprakash
Narayan, and Ramdhari Singh Dinkar. For many years he was a Member
of Parliament. Somehow he got hooked with me, and all his dreams
of becoming a great politician, a great political force, disappeared....
Now Maitreya is completely left alone - no money, no power,
no prestige, no political status. Everything gone, he is just
a bhikkhu. I have made a beggar of him; and he was rising high.
He was rising higher and higher. He would have been a Chief Minister
somewhere by now, or he may have been in the Central Cabinet.
He was very promising. All those dreams disappeared....
When he met me he was an MP, but that accident changed his life.
By and by he drifted away, became more and more interested in
me and less and less interested in his political career....
I was a guest at another politician's house and he had invited
Maitreya also. So because an old politician, a senior politician,
had invited him, he must have come by the way, just to see what
the matter was. But once you come in contact with some influence
that can take you out of the world of ambition - and if you
are a little sensitive and understanding - and he is - he
understood the point immediately.... That old politician with
whom I was staying remained with me for many years but never understood
me. Now he is gone and dead, but he died a politician and he died
a member of Parliament. He was one of the longest-standing members
in the whole world. He remained a member of Parliament for fifty
years. But he never could understand me. He liked me very much,
almost to the point of loving me, but understanding was not possible.
He was very dull, a dullard.
Maitreya came to me through him, but he is a very sensitive soul.
And I say to him that he was not only promising in his political
career, he is very promising as a candidate for the ultimate also.
yoga910
*Note: Swami Maitreya, one of Osho's oldest disciples, who became
enlightened, see Part X.
I know one very famous Indian politician, Doctor Govindadas.
Maitreya knows him because they both were in parliament together.
Doctor Govindadas was in the parliament perhaps the longest time
in the whole history of humanity: from 1914 till he died, I think
in 1978, he remained continuously, without a single gap, a member
of parliament. He was the richest man in the whole state of Madhya
Pradesh.
His father was given the title of raja, king; although he was
not a king, he had so much land, and so many properties - one
third of the houses of the whole city of Jabalpur, which is ten
times bigger than Portland*1, belonged to him. He had so much
land that the British government thought it perfectly right to
give him the title. And he was helping the British government,
so he was called Raja Gokuldas, and his house was not called a
house, it was called Gokuldas Palace.
Govindadas was Gokuldas' eldest son - a very mediocre mind.
It hurts me to say so but what can I do? If he was mediocre it
is not my fault. He was very kind and friendly to me and very
respectful too. He was very old but he used to come every day
whenever he was in Jabalpur. Whenever the parliament was not in
session he was in Jabalpur; otherwise he was in New Delhi. Whenever
he was in Jabalpur, in the morning from eight to eleven, his limousine
was standing in front of my door, every day religiously.
Anybody wanting to meet him between eight and eleven need not
go anywhere; he had just to stand outside my gate. What was happening
in those three hours? He used to come there with his secretary,
his steno. He would ask me a question, I would answer, and the
steno would write it in shorthand. Then he published in his own
name everything that I said.
Govindadas has published books, two books; not a single word is
his. Yes, there are a few words from the secretary. I was puzzled
when I saw those books - and he presented them to me. I looked
inside...I knew that this was going to happen, it was happening
every day - in newspapers he was publishing my answers all
over India.
He was president of the Hindi language's most prestigious institution,
Hindi Sahitya Sammelan; he was the president of that. Once Mahatma
Gandhi was president of that, so you can understand the prestige
of the institution.
Govindadas was president for almost twenty years, and he was the
main proponent in the parliament that Hindi should become the
national language. And he made Hindi the national language, at
least in the constitution. It is not functioning - English
still functions as the national language - but he put it in
the constitution.
He was known all over the country. Every newspaper, every news
magazine, was publishing his articles - and they were my answers!
But I was puzzled, because once in a while there would be a quotation
from Tulsidas, Surdas, Kabirdas. I could not believe that he had
even the intelligence to put the quotation in the right place,
in the right context.
So I asked his steno one day when I was staying in Delhi in Govindadas's
house. I asked his steno, "Shrivastava, everything else is
perfectly right; I just wonder about these - Surdas, Tulsidas,
Kabirdas - how Seth Govindadas manages to put them..."
He said, "Seth Govindadas? I put them in."
I said, "Who told you to put them in?"
He said, "He says that at least something should be put from
our side too."
I said, "I am not going to tell anybody, but just to deceive
me, these two lines of Kabirdas in the whole question? You have
been putting them in and you think I will be deceived?"
He said, "I had to work hard, looking into Kabirdas' collection
to find some lines which could fit somewhere in your question."
I said, "You are a fool; you should have asked me. When your
master can steal the whole article, you, being his steno, should
at least learn this much politics. You could have said to me,
`Just give me two or three quotations so that I can fit them in.'
In future don't bother yourself."
He was a poor man, and where would he find Kabirdas, and something
very relevant to me? So I used to give quotations to Shrivastava
and say, "These are the lines you fit in so Govindadas remains
happy."
Why did I want him to remain happy? He was helpful to me....
I was continually out of town without any leave from the university.
Govindadas' limousine standing in front of my door was enough.
The vice-chancellor was afraid of me because Govindadas was a
powerful man; the vice-chancellor could be immediately transferred,
removed - just a hint from me was enough. The professors were
afraid. They were really puzzled why every day Govindadas was
hypnotized; he spent three hours with me every day.
And he started bringing other politicians. He introduced me to
every chief minister, every cabinet minister in the central government,
because they all were his guests in Jabalpur. Jawaharlal used
to be his guest in Jabalpur. He introduced me to almost all the
politicians; I think Maitreya must have come to me through Seth
Govindadas. He even arranged for a small group of important members
to meet me in parliament house itself. Maitreya certainly must
have been there.
Govindadas was helpful, so I said, "There is no problem.
And it does not matter whose name goes on the articles. The question
reaches to thousands of people. The answer reaches to thousands
of people. That is important; my name or Govindadas's name, it
does not matter. What matters is the matter."
This man remained continuously in contact with me for almost ten
years, and when I told him, "We are strangers," he said,
"What are you saying? We have known each other for ten years."
I said, "We don't know each other. I know your name, Govindadas;
it has been given by your father. The doctorate you have received
from the university. I know how much I said, "We don't know
each other. I know your name, Govindadas; it has been given by
your father. The doctorate you have received from the university.
I know how much value that doctorate has, and why you have been
given that doctorate - because it was you who proposed the
vice-chancellor. Now the vice-chancellor has to pay you back with
the doctorate. The vice-chancellor is your man, and if he manages
to give you a doctorate there is no wonder in it. Your D.Litt
is absolutely bogus."
First I used to hear.... He had written almost one hundred
dramas. He was in competition with George Bernard Shaw because
George Bernard Shaw was the great drama writer and he had written
one hundred dramas. So Seth Govindadas was also a great drama
writer of Hindi language - a hundred dramas. And he was not
capable of writing a single drama!
He was not capable of even writing a single speech - his speeches
were written by that poor Shrivastava. Govindadas has published
one hundred dramas. By and by I came to know those people who
had written them - for money - poor people, poor teachers,
professors. So I told Govindadas, "I know what your D.Litt
is: one hundred dramas, and none is written by you. Now I can
say it authoritatively, because you go on publishing articles,
and now you have published two books without even telling me,
`I am going to put your answers in these books.' And they are
nothing but my answers - there is nothing else."
So I said to him, "Doctor Govindadas, I also have such a
doctor in my village - Doctor Sunderlal*2. I have given him
the doctorate. He has not written one hundred dramas, neither
have you. Just the way you believe you are a doctor, he believes
he is a doctor. And I don't think there is much difference of
quality in your minds, because Seth is a title..."
Before he became a doctor he was known all over the country as
Seth Govindadas. Seth is a title, it comes from an ancient Sanskrit
word, shreshth. Shreshth means the superior one; from Shreshth
it became Shreshthi and from Shreshthi it became Seth. In Rajasthani
Sethi, sethia - it went on changing. But it is a title.
So when Govindadas became a doctor he started writing "Doctor
Seth Govindadas." It was Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru who told
him, "Govindadas, two titles are never written in front of
a name. Either you write "Seth," then you can write
"D.Litt" behind, but if you write "Doctor"
in front then you cannot write "Seth."
So he asked me what to do. I said, "There is no problem.
You write "Doctor (Seth) Govindadas."
So he said, "Great!" And that's how later on he did
it for the rest of his life: "Doctor (Seth) Govindadas."
He could not leave out that Seth either. And when Jawaharlal saw
those brackets, he said, "Who has suggested these brackets
to you? Can't you leave out that Seth, or put it at the end?"
He said, "I cannot leave it out. It is one of my great friends
who has suggested it to me, and he cannot be wrong. The brackets
are perfectly right."
Jawaharlal said, "To me there is no problem. You write whatsoever
you want, but two titles in front simply make you a laughingstock."
Govindadas again asked me what to do. I said, "You don't
be bothered by Jawaharlal; the brackets are meaningless. The brackets
simply mean "underground": doctor aboveground and Seth
underground - and you are both. Tell Jawaharlal clearly, `I
am both. If people don't write two titles in front, the simple
reason is they don't have them. There is no other reason; they
don't have them. I have got two titles so I have to write them.'"
What is the difference? But so much attachment to names, titles,
professions, religions - and this is all your identity. And
behind all this brown bag is lost your original face. dark06
*1 Note: Portland, capital of the state of Oregon, where this
discourse is given
*2 Note: Dr Sunderlal, see Part III and VIII
I used to know a very famous politician, Seth Govindadas. He
had a very ambitious mind and wanted to become not less than prime
minister of India. He and the man who became the first prime minister
of India were both friends, and very intimate friends. Both had
been together in jails, both had come from very rich families.
In one of his speeches the father of Jawaharlal Nehru, Motilal,
said, "I have two sons. One is Jawaharlal, the other is Govindadas."
Naturally, he was thinking of becoming the prime minister. If
he cannot become the first prime minister, then his must be the
second chance after Jawaharlal. But he could not manage even to
become a cabinet minister. He could not manage to become even
a governor, a chief minister of a state. He had tried everything,
but basically he was not a politician. He was very simple, almost
a simpleton. So the desire was there, burning his heart.
He had two sons, and he tried hard that they should become what
he had missed. And he had all the political connections, so he
helped his first son become a deputy minister. He was hoping that
the son soon would become minister, then move to the cabinet of
the central government and then become prime minister.
If he had not been able to become the prime minister himself,
at least he can claim to be the father of a prime minister, which
is far better. But the son died as a deputy minister in a state
council. He was only thirty-six when he died.
But ambition is such a thing that this old man tried to commit
suicide, because with the death of the son all his ambitions had
failed again. I told him, "You have another son. Give him
a try. You have all the best connections in the country, from
the lowest to the highest. It is just very easy for you."
And suddenly I could see his eyes shine again, as if life returned
to him. He said "Yes, I had never thought about it. I was
thinking simply to die, because what is the point of living? I
missed, my son has died." So he managed that his second son
enter into the same post; he became the deputy minister. But neither
of his sons had the ability to be politicians. They were his sons,
just as stupid as he was, perhaps a little more.
And you will be surprised that the second son also died. The man
was now seventy-five or seventy-eight, and this was too much of
a shock. Again he started talking about suicide. His wife phoned
me and said, "You come. Last time you had done something
and he dropped the idea of suicide. Now you do something because
again he is talking of suicide." I said, "Don't be worried.
People who talk of suicide never commit suicide. People who commit
suicide are those who never talk about it. But I will come."
I went. He was sitting again in the same posture, and I said to
him, "If you want to commit suicide, commit! Why do you harass
the whole family by talking about it?" He said, "Everybody,
the mayor of the city, the chief minister, all have come to console
me. Indira Gandhi's telegram has come." He was sitting with
a pile of telegrams from all the ministers and governors - India
has thirty states and chief ministers - and he was showing
them to everybody who was coming. I told him, "You don't
seem to be interested in the death of the son. You are more interested
in these telegrams."
Just one man had not sent him a telegram, and about that he was
feeling very much hurt. He was one of his old colleagues, but
then later on they became enemies in politics. He joined another
party, and became a chief minister. Only Govindadas had not, so
he was continuously telling everybody, "Only Dwarka Prasad
Mishra...his telegram has not come. And I have made the man."
And it was true, if you think that Dwarka Prasad lived in Govindadas'
house and was financially supported by him. But it was not true
that he had made the man. That man was capable to reach the post,
any post, on his own. He was a very ambitious, very cunning, very
clever man. He used him, he used all his friendships with all
the great politicians.
And I said, "You are so much interested in telegrams, and
you are not interested in the death of your son. Can you understand
that you have lived your whole life in ambition? You failed, your
first son died, your second son died, but your ambition - it
continues. You are ready to commit suicide but you are not ready
to drop the ambition. As if ambition is far more valuable than
life!" And I said, "If you just want to project your
ambition on somebody, then why not your son-in-law?" He said,
"You are a genius, certainly! I never thought about my son-in-law."
He had only one daughter and two sons. And because he was so rich
the daughter was living with him, and the son-in-law also.
I said, "He lives with you. He is just like a son to you.
Make arrangements, make him deputy minister in the cabinet somewhere
and see whether he dies or not. Then we will think.... Why
did these two sons die? It seems they were not capable of withstanding
the political pressures, challenges, worries. They were both young
and there was no need to die so soon. There was no reason except
that politics proved poisonous to them. Let us try this one."
And he tried. And this time things went well. The man became deputy
minister and Seth Govindadas died!
And the moment he died, his son-in-law was thrown out of the ministry,
because he was just taken in because of Govindadas's pressure,
that he would commit suicide. All the politicians had known him
for his whole life. He had been in the freedom struggle and he
was known as father of the parliament. He was the only man in
the whole world except Winston Churchill who had been a member
of parliament so long, continuously from 1916 to 1978, without
a break, so he was known as the father of Indian parliament. Everybody
knew him and everybody was obliged to him in many ways. But the
moment he died, the son-in-law was thrown out.
I said, "This is far better, because. if you were thrown
out before, he would have tried to commit suicide again."
And he was not capable of committing suicide, either, because
still ambition was there, some hope from some corner. last316
I was very close to a chief minister. His sons had been my colleagues
in the university, and because of them I had become acquainted
with the old man. He was an old freedom fighter and he told me
one day...he was very sick, and there was a danger that he
might die. Doctors were not certain whether he would survive or
not.
But the old man said, "Make sure that whether I am sick or
healthy, that I remain the chief minister. I want to die as chief
minister. It will be too hard for me to die if my chief ministership
is gone."
I said, "What does it matter to a man who is going to die
whether he is chief minister or not?"
He said, "It matters, it matters much. My whole life I have
struggled to reach this post, and I want to die at the highest
peak of my success, with government honors, seven-day holidays,
national flags down everywhere in respect. I don't want to die
just like any ordinary man. I am not afraid of death," that
old man said to me, "but I am afraid that while I am sick,
my colleagues - who deep down are all my enemies - must
be trying to pull my legs; and while I am not able to fight with
them, somebody may try to take over the chief ministership."
His deputy chief minister was also known to me, because when I
was a student he was vice-chancellor of that university. I said,
"Don't be worried. I will go to the deputy chief minister,
who is the real danger to you, and who is trying not to miss the
opportunity while you are sick. He wants to be declared by the
president of the country to be the acting chief minister. That
will be the first step.
"Then the second step will be that because you are too old
and too sick, you are not able to function, you are not in a state
to function...then he will manage to be declared not only
as acting chief minister but really as chief minister. I will
go to him, you don't be worried."
And that's what was going on in the house of the deputy chief
minister. The whole cabinet was there - they were all trying
to manipulate the situation. How to convince the president of
the country that the old chief minister is too old and too sick,
and the deputy chief minister is a far more intelligent politician,
a better organizer, and he should be given the chance immediately.
I told the deputy chief minister, "That old man is almost
on the verge of death, and I want you just to wait at least one
week - not more than that. I have talked to his doctor; he
says, `I cannot say it to them, but I don't think he will survive
more than a week.' And his only desire, his last desire, is to
die as the chief minister. So what? And you have always been a
colleague, a friend, a follower of that old man. He has appointed
you as the deputy chief minister. Just wait for seven days. You
will not lose anything, but his last wish will be fulfilled."
He thought for a moment, and said, "Okay. Then seven days - exactly."
I said, "Do you mean I have to kill him in seven days? I
will try. But you should not be so ugly and so harsh with your
own boss. Just one day more or one day less, but he is going to
die - that much is certain. Now don't force me to kill him
to stay just within the seven days exactly. If he dies in eight
days, just one day of waiting will not disturb anything."
He said, "I have told you seven days means seven days. And
just because you have come, I cannot refuse. I have always loved
you as my student." Fortunately, the old man died on the
fourth day. It was such a relief! Otherwise I would have had to
do something, because his last wish had to be fulfilled....
But how poor these people are! And what is their ultimate achievement?
They have just learned how to climb ladders, and then they are
sitting on the ladders which lead nowhere. And they don't want
to come down because they don't want to be nobodies.
These are the most irreligious people in the world. That's why
I'm so much against politicians. I am against the priests and
the politicians because these two are the most irreligious people
in the world. And they have a deep conspiracy, they support each
other - for centuries they have been supporting each other.
One has political power, the other has the power of numbers. And
both together can manage to keep the whole of mankind in slavery;
they have kept it up to now. The authentic religious man has to
rebel against these two, and their conspiracy against humanity.
rebel28
One man came to me - and I know the person; certainly he
is not a bad man, but that does not mean that he is a good man.
He is simply a coward. He wants everything that bad people have,
but he is cowardly. He wants all the riches, he wants prestige
and power, he wants to become a president or a prime minister,
but he is not ready to go through all the gutters that you have
to pass before you become a president. It is a long, winding way
through gutters and gutters, and it becomes more and more dirty
the deeper you get into it. He does not want to do that. He wants
simply to become a president because he's a good man.
He wants to be the richest man, but he does not know that the
rich man has earned through tedious effort, all kinds of cunningness,
has been doing every type of cheating. All that makes him afraid,
he does not want to go to jail. If you are afraid of jail then
forget about being rich. Richness means a certain boldness, a
daredevil courage, a readiness to fight, to compete without bothering
whether the means are right or wrong. The rich man, the powerful
man, the successful man...for them the end makes every means
right - whether you have to cut throats, kill people, does
not matter. Your goal is absolutely to succeed, and you are ready
to pay everything for it.
Now, this man wanted all these things and also wanted to remain
good, also wanted to remain virtuous, also wanted never to be
cunning, never to be deceiving. You are asking too much....
upan36
One of my friends was contesting an election, a political election,
so he came to me for blessing. I said, "I will not give the
blessing because I am not your enemy, I am a friend. I can only
bless that you may not get elected, because that will be the first
step towards madness." But he wouldn't listen to me. He was
elected, he became a member. Next year he came again for my blessing
and he said, "Now I am trying to be a deputy minister."
I asked him, "You were saying that if you could become a
member of parliament you would be very happy, but I don't see
that you are happy. You are more depressed and more sad than you
ever were before."
He said, "Now this is the only problem: I am worried. There
is much competition. Only if I can become a deputy minister will
everything be okay." He became a deputy minister. When I
was passing through the capital he came to see me again and he
said, "I think you were right, because now the problem is
how to become the minister. And I think this is the goal. I am
not going to change it. Once I become the minister it is finished."
He has become the minister now, and he came to me a few days
ago and he said, "Just one blessing more. I must become chief
minister." And he is getting more and more worried, more
and more puzzled, because more problems have to be faced, more
competition, more ugly politics. And he is a good man, not a bad
man.
I told him, "Unless you become the suprememost God you
are not going to be satisfied." But he cannot look back and
cannot understand the logic of the mind, the logic of the achieving
mind. It can never be satisfied, the way it behaves creates more
and more discontent. The more you have the more discontent you
will feel, because more arenas become open for you in which to
compete, to achieve. A poor man is more satisfied because he cannot
think that he can achieve much. Once he starts achieving something
he thinks more is possible. The more you achieve the more becomes
possible, and it goes on and on forever.
A meditator needs a nonachieving mind, but a nonachieving mind
is possible only if you can be content with purposelessness. Just
try to understand the whole cosmic play and be a part in it. Don't
be serious, because a play can never be serious. And even if the
play needs you to be serious, be playfully serious, don't be really
serious. Then this very moment becomes rich. Then this very moment
you can move into the ultimate.
The ultimate is not in the future, it is the present, hidden
here and now. So don't ask about purpose - there is none,
and I say it is beautiful that there is none. If there was purpose
then your God would be just a managing director or a big business
man, an industrialist, or something like that. vedant11
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