Bhawani Mandir
Bhawani Mandir was written by Sri Aurobindo but it was more Barin's idea than his. It was not meant to train people for assassination but for revolutionary preparation of the country. The idea was soon dropped as far as Sri Aurobindo was concerned, but something of the kind was attempted by Barin in the Manicktala Garden... From notes and letters 0f Sri Aurobindo
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Bhawani Mandir
A TEMPLE is to be erected and consecrated to Bhawani, the
Mother, among the hills. To all the children of the Mother the call is sent
forth to help in the sacred work. Who is Bhawani, the Mother, and why should we erect a temple to her?
Page-61 figures of energy, terrible sweeping columns of
force. All is growing large and strong. The Shakti of war, the Shakti of
wealth, the Shakti of Science are tenfold more mighty
and colossal, a hundredfold more fierce, rapid and busy in their activity, a
thousandfold more prolific in resources, weapons
and instruments than ever before in recorded history. Everywhere the Mother is
at work; from Her mighty and shaping hands enormous
forms of Rakshasas, Asuras,
Devas are leaping forth into the arena of the world.
We have seen the slow but mighty rise of great empires in the West, we have seen the swift, irresistible and impetuous bounding into life of Japan. Some are Mlechchha Shaktis clouded in their strength, black or blood-crimson
with Tamas or Rajas, others are Arya
Shaktis, bathed in a pure flame of renunciation and utter
self-sacrifice: but all are the Mother in Her new phase, remoulding,
creating. She is pouring Her spirit into the old; She
is whirling into life the new.
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a great industrial movement which is to enrich and regenerate an impoverished
land. Untaught by experience, we do not perceive that this movement must go the
way of all the others, unless we first seek the one essential thing, unless we
acquire strength.
Page-63 it. Bhakti is the leaping flame, Shakti is the fuel. If the fuel is scanty how long can the fire endure?
When the strong nature, enlightened by knowledge, disciplined and given a giant's strength by Karma, lifts
itself up in love and adoration to God, that is the Bhakti
which endures and keeps the soul for ever united with the Divine. But the weak nature is too feeble to bear the impetus of so
mighty a thing as perfect Bhakti; he is lifted up for
a moment, then the flame soars up to Heaven, leaving him behind exhausted and
even weaker than before. Every movement of any kind of which enthusiasm and
adoration are the life must fail and soon burn itself out so long as the human
material from which it proceeds is frail and light in substance.
Page-64 ledge, with ability to feel and desire, but paralysed by senile sluggishness, senile timidity, senile feebleness. If India is to survive, she must be made young again. Rushing and billowing streams of energy must be poured into her; her soul must become, as it was in the old times, like the surges, vast, puissant, calm or tur- bulent at will, an ocean of action or of force.
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sought to shake the world? It is this, that in everyone of these three hundred
millions of men, from the Raja on his throne to the coolie at his labour, from the Brahmin absorbed in his Sandhya to the Pariah walking shunned of men, GOD LIVETH. We
are all gods and creators, because the energy of God is
within us and all life is creation; not only the making of new forms is
creation, but preservation is creation, destruction itself is creation. It
rests with us what we shall create; for we are not, unless we choose, puppets
dominated by Fate and Maya; we are facets and manifestations of Almighty Power.
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arise to institute Her worship and make it universal.
II. India's need of drawing from the fountains of religion Page-67 is far greater than was ever
Japan's; for the Japanese had only to revitalise
and perfect a strength that already existed. We have to create strength where
it did not exist before; we have to change our natures, and become new men with
new hearts, to be born again. There is no scientific process, no machinery for
that. Strength can only be created by drawing it from the internal and
inexhaustible reservoirs of the Spirit, from that Adya-Shakti
of the Eternal which is the fountain of all new existence. To be born again
means nothing but to revive the Brahma within us, and that is a spiritual
process -- no effort of the body or the intellect can compass it.
Religion, the Path Natural to the National Mind
III. All great awakenings in India,
all her periods of mightiest and most varied vigour have
drawn their vitality from the fountain-heads of some deep religious awakening.
Wherever the religious awakening has been complete and grand, the national energy it has created
has been gigantic and puissant; wherever the
religious movement has been narrow or incomplete, the national movement has
been broken, imperfect or temporary. The persistence of this phenomenon is
proof that it is ingrained in the temperament of the race. If you try other and
foreign methods we shall either gain our end with tedious slowness, painfully
and imperfectly, or we shall not attain it at all. Why abandon the plain way
which God and the Mother have marked out for you, to choose faint and devious
paths of your own treading?
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but they soon run dry. Why not then go deep instead of scratching the surface? The result will repay the labour.
Page-69 we can return to the ocean of spiritual force
within us.
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will be helping to create a nation, to consolidate an age, to Aryanise a world. And that nation is your own, that age is
the age of yourselves and your children, that world is
no fragment of land bounded by seas and hills, but the whole earth with her
teeming millions."
Page-71 Appendix
THE work and rules of the new Order of Sannyasis will be somewhat as follows:
I. General Rules
1. All who undertake the life of Brahmacharya for the Mother will have to vow themselves to Her service for four years, after which they will be free to continue to work or return to family life. 2. All money received by them in the Mother's name will go to the Mother's service. For themselves they will be allowed to receive shelter and their meals, when necessary, and nothing more. 3. Whatever they may earn for themselves, e.g., by the publication of books, etc., they must give at least half of it to the service of the Mother. 4. They will observe entire obedience to the Head of the Order and his one or two assistants in all things connected with the work or with their religious life. 5. They will observe strictly the discipline and rules of Achar and purity, bodily and mental, prescribed by the Heads of the Order. 6. They will be given periods for rest or for religious improvement during which they will stop at the Math, but the greater part of the year they will spend in work outside. This rule will apply to all except the few necessary for the service of the Temple and those required for the central direction of the work. 7. There will be no gradations of rank among the workers, and none must seek for distinction or mere personal fame but practise strength and self-effacement.
II. Work for the People
8. Their chief work will be that of mass instruction and
Page-72 help to the poor and ignorant. 9. This they will strive to effect in various ways: 1. Lectures and demonstrations suited to an uneducated intelligence. 2. Classes and nightly schools. 3. Religious teachings. 4. Nursing the sick. 5. Conducting works of charity. 6. Whatever other good work their hands may find to do and the Order approves.
III. Works for the Middle Class
10. They will undertake, according as they may be directed, various works of public utility in the big towns and elsewhere connected especially with the education and religious life and instruction of the middle classes, as well as with other public needs.
IV. Work with the Wealthy Classes
11. They will approach the zamindars, landholders and rich men generally, and endeavour — 1. To promote sympathy between the zamindars and the peasants and heal all discords. 2. To create the link of a single and living religious spirit and a common passion for one great ideal between all classes. 3. To turn the minds of rich men to works of public beneficence and charity to those in their neighbourhood independent of the hope of reward and official distinction.
V. General Work for the Country
12. As soon as funds permit, some will be sent to foreign countries to study lucrative arts and manufactures. 13. They will be as Sannyasis during their period of study, never losing hold of their habits of purity and self-abnegation.
Page-73 14. On their return they will estabilish with the aid of the Order, factories and workshops, still living the life of Sannyasis and devoting all their profits to the sending of more and more such students to foreign countries. 15. Others will be sent to travel through various countries on foot, inspiring by their lives, behaviour and conversation, sympathy and love for the Indian people in the European nations and preparing the way for their acceptance of Aryan ideals. After the erection and consecration of the Temple, the development of the work of the Order will be pushed on as rapidly as possible or as the support and sympathy of the public allows. With the blessing of the Mother this will not fail us.
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