Assighnment on Sri Aurobind's Renaissance in India:An Approach
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Name:Aarti H. Vadher
Course: M.A (English)
Topic:Sri Aurobindo’s Renaissance in India: An
Approach
Semester:1
Unit:2
Roll.no:9
Paper no.:4
Email Id:artivadher10@gmail.com
Submitted to :Dr. Dilip Barad,
Smt: S.B.Gardi
Unit:2
Sri Aurobindo’s Renaissance in India: An Approach
Renaissance in India is a little book of
prophecy. It is a prose equivalent of a bard’s vision. That is perhaps why it
is so brief, compact and organic unlike the other elaborate. Sprawling books
that Sri Aurobindo wrote such as The
Future Poetry or The Foundation of
Indian Culture, two books which incidentally are relevant for a study of
the work we deal with here. We may look at ( ) the thematic structure of The Renaissance and ( ) follow it up
with a close study of its “rhetoric”, its organization by a scrutiny of its
vocabulary, imagery, tone, etc.
The Mother of Sri
Aurobindo Ashram pithily declares: “Sri Aurobindo’s work is a unique earth
transformation.
She goes on to explain:
“Above the mind there are
several levels of conscious being, among which the really divine world is what
Sri Aurobindo has called the Supermind, the
world of the Truth. But in between is what he has distinguished as the Overmind, that has up to the present
governed our world of Cosmic Gods. Now it is this Overmind that has up to the
present governed our world. It is the highest that man has been able to attain
in illumined consciousness. It has been taken for the Supreme Divine and all
those who have reached it have never for a moment doubted that they have
touched the true spirit. For its splendours are so great to the ordinary human
consciousness that it is absolutely dazzled into believing that here at last is
the crowning reality. And yet the fact is that the Overmind is far below thw
true Divine. It is not the authentic home of Truth. It is only the domain of
the formateurs (French word for form
makers), all those creative powers and deities to whom men have bowed down
since the beginning of history. And the reason why the true Divine has not
manifested and transformed the earth-nature is precisely that the Overmind has
been mistaken for the Supermind…. It is the direct descent of the Supernatural
Consciousness and Power that alone can utterly recreate life in terms of the
Spirit.”
This commentary of the Mother should provide us with an appropriate
perspective to look at Sri Aurobindo’s writings be it philosophical, mystical,
poetry or history. What is it that gives unity to his works, thinking and his Sadhana? The kernel of his unifying
vision? This could be termed as “Spiritualization of matter.”
Indian philosophy, Indian thought, Indian spirituality have been
expounded time and again by eminent historians of thought, particularly those
who have had the advantage of sharp, systematic, objective, Western critical
training. But history or philosophy ceases to be a mere intellectual
formulation or conceptual system-when it is presented by a Yogi – a fully
realized being. It is neither a series of dead facts or abstract discursive
system, much less an effusive, personal, sentimental exaltation of pet ideas.
The discipline in the hands of a Yogin is the product of an immediate vision,
Darsana, a realization of the truth, an intuitive apprehension of the whole
panorama. While it is the experience of one exalted individual, it has none of
the disquieting narrowness and disabling subjectivity of an ordinary mind which
becomes rigid and outdated. Also for all its being an intuitive apprehension,
it does not dispense with the strength of the intellect. It is integral in its
approach. It becomes thought, art and vision – all fused in one.
It is no exaggeration to say
that it is this unique quality-what one might call “Aurobindinian” – what one
might call that distinguishes all this writings. And The Renaissance in Indian is no exception. It would be useful to
place this little work in prose in the general context of Sri Aurobindo’s
thoughts, experiences and convictions.
Sri Aurobindo believes in the evolution of the
human spirit from its crudest manifestations to the subtlest and the
completest. It is because life is part of a greater life, it cannot get ossified
at some point but must inevitably and inexorably progress. But its greatest
fascination is that the progress is never linear or in simple logical terms. It
is a perpetual exploration of possibilities and their realization. Again this
evolution is not negative nd exclusive but it is symphonic and inclusive. The
heterogeneous ideas are blended into one organic pattern of complex music.
The Renaissance in
India first appeared serially in “Arya”
between August and November 1918.
The starting point of the
book is the observations of a contemporary critic Mr.James H. Cousins. (Future
Poetry again was the product of a similar beginning.) Mr.cousins saw a new
flowering in Indian ethos, a fresh efflorescence in various fields.Sri
Aurobindo, while acknowledging the presence of the phenomenon, insists on a re
definition of the term “Renaissance” especially in the Indian context. He
points that this Indian Renaissance is not like momentous turning point of
European culture in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries – “ A seizure of
Christianized, Teutonized, Feudalized Europe by the old Graeco-Latin spirit”.
This is perhaps more like the Celtic Movement in Ireland.(He refers to the
Irish Movemene in letters which W. B. Yeats, J. M.Synge and others ushered in.)
Because it is not so much a new birth as a “reawakened national spirit to find
a new impulse of self-expression”. But even this is not a close parallel for
Sri Aurobindo.He calls for a thorough reappraisal or revaluation of the
situation.This takes him on to a twin-pointed labour : on the one hand of
rejecting the misconceptions about the nature of the Indian mind among Europeans
and on the other, of providing a proper perspective. A comparison with Japan
illuminates the point. Japan adopted and assimilated the “Western motives and
their forms” wholesale because of its temperamental adaptability. Unfortunately
or fortunately Indian mind is not a void – nor an empty barn or reservoir – to
seize and fill itself with the deposits of a massive Western wave.It has had a
great past with stupendous achievements in spiritual, religious, intellectual,
cultural and aesthetic fields. As he puts it : “India lives centrally in the
spirit, with less buoyancy and vivacity and therefore with less ready
adaptiveness of creation, but a greater, intenser, more brooding depth: her
processes are apt to be deliberate, uncertain and long because she has to take
things into that depth from its profoundest inwardness to modify or remould the
more outward parts of her life.” Eleswhere in The Foundations of Indian Culture
Sri Aurobindo says that “ india alone with whatever fall or decline of light
and vigour has remained faithful to the heart of the spiritual motive……it has
refused and is refusing to give up her worshipped godhead or how her knee to
the strong reigning idols of rationalism and commercialism. Affected she has
been, but not overcome”.
Thus the theme of Sri
Aurobindo in this little book is the momentous encounter of the two powerful
opposite civilizations and its tremendous impact on the future of the
country. One is reminded of the work of the philosopher-historian Arnold
Toynbee. The World and the West, particularly the section where he deals with
the “psychology of encounters.” Here is a profounder analysis of the intricate,
complex situation by a visionary and a prophet who brings the weight of all his
realizations, his Sadhana to the exposition. One also recalls the Irish poet
Yeats’s visionary apprehension of the encounter between the antithetical
GrecoRomancivilization and the primary Christianity in his two songs from the
play Resurrection. Sri Aurobindo, besides being a creative artist, is a
visionary too. For all its being in prose, the tone of the work becomes
“bardic”.
Sri Aurobindo projects for
us spatially the image of the great rich past of India in all its contours
which gathered a huge momentum, conquering all known fields of knowledge and
exhausted itself just before the eighteenth century. The movement has always
been in the form of a descending spiral with the spirit at the centre or
apex.We start with the Age of the. Spirit, the age of intuitive apprehension of
reality; then there is the assimilation of the spirit by the lower parts of the
being and its truths brought down to the level of the physical and the vital.
Sri Aurobindo describes
brilliantly the nature of Indian Spirituality which has been woefully
misconsructed for long. He calls it “the sense of the Infinite”, which he says
is native to the Indian mind. But this spirituality far from shrinking from
life, manifests itself in “stupendous vitality, her almost unimaginably prolific
creativenes”. (Sri Arobindo has put the idea beautifully in a similar context
in Future poetry when he says: “We have no longer any ascetic quarrel with our
Mother Earth”. Affirmation of life is an idea central to Sri Aurobindo’s
vision.Thus he emphasizes the vitality of the ancient culture.
Besides this vitality,
there was the strong intellectual and ethical facet to the spirituality. But
what is more splendid is that it was innately aesthetic. As he beautifully puts
it, “both the rule of the intellect and the rhythm of beauty are hostile to the
spirit of chaos.” Now this accounts for the sense of fullness, the sense of
harmony and transcendence in the great past of India. Sri Aurobindo , therefore,
affirms that a renaissance could only be a return of this tide, though the
forms it takes may differ: “ Its real keynote is the tendency of spiritual
realization, not cast at all into any white monotone, but many-faceted,
many-coloured, as supple in its adaptability as is intense in its highest
pitches”.
The period of decline
that followed this great surge of life was something inevitable. It is marked by
the “sinking of that superabundant vital energy”, the diminution of the
spiritual light into sporadic feeble fire.
Let us briefly see how
the rhetoric of Renaissance in India accomplishes the task for its author.
The first thing that we
notice about the book is its spirit of unity. It is a work wrought in the heat
of a predominant passion. We may in this respect. usefully contrast it with
another work with a seemingly similar subject like Radhakrishnan’s Religion in
a Changing World. In the latter we note its looseness of thought and structure,
its randomness, its lack of a unifying vision for all its recounting of ideas.
We then realize that Renaissance in India is poetry and has an organic form in
the Coleridgean sense of the term, while the other book is marked by eclecticism. There
is all the difference between a philosopher who is a scholar and a philosopher
who is a Yogin.
The central image in
the work is significantly personalized. It is not just “the mind of Europe” as
the impersonal T.S. Eliot would say but the “Shakti”. It is again not the
sentimental Mother India but an immense cosmic reservoir of sublime
creativity. she is the subject, her creating supernature, her holocaust, her
decline and her renaissance is the subject of the book. she is also called the
Titaness. She is seen in the present as a giant, imprisoned for long but slowly
rising from torpor to a state of wakefulness. In the past, Sri Aurobindo
visualizes her as a great dynamic force, as a great creating supernature
manifesting herself in astonishing variety…
Now let us examine the vocabulary to find out
what words are used which cluster round this titanic image of the Shakti and
help us realize her many facets………..
Sri Aurobindo draws our
attention to three aspects which are organic to the Indian spirit or Psyche:
Spirituality, Intellectuality and Aesthetic sense. He uses one rich image
cluster in that long sustained passage which spatially projects for us the
great past of India. Spirituality is its major key. But curiously enough this
spirituality is felt and realized in acutely vital terms. Let us mark the terms
which go to make what I could call a massive series of Life-images:
Her stupendous vitality.
Her inexhaustible power of life and joy of life.
Her almost prolific creativeness.
Another group is more radically phrased:
The teeming of a
superabundant energy of life.
And the master phrase is a paradox:
The teeming of the Infinite
within her.
Surely these terms affirm spirit in the name of
life.
Her intellectuality is
described as “ all embracing and opulent.” Her period of decline is seen as the
recession of the vital spirit, the dwindling of the fire of life. It is
A petrifaction of the mind and life in the relics of forms.
Her revival is presented in terms of
rejuvenation:
Novel potentialities of creation and evolution.
The shaping (for herself) a new body.
Her
end is described as the progress towards the perfect spiritualization of the
mind and life.
Her
goal or Renaissance is an integral self-finding.
Bengal is seen as
The chief testing crucible of the first worship of the Shakti of India.
Thus the much misunderstood spirituality of India, far from being
ascetical, has been the teeming of the Infinite, it is
A human spirituality.
Sri
Aurobindo declares that
Spirit without mind, spirit without body is not
the type of man , therefore a human
spirituality must not belittle the mind, life or body or hold them of
small account; it will rather hold them of high account, they are the
conditions and instruments of the life of the Spirit in man.
The thought is summed up in a much more
sententious utterance:
There was never a national ideal of poverty in
India as some would have us belive, nor was barrenness or the squalor, the
essential setting of her spirituality.
We
now understand the import of the powerful declaration already quoted from
Future Poetry:
We have no longer any ascetic quarrel with our Mother Earth.
Another group of terms that cluster round the Shakti relates to the
ideas of harmony, order, organization. Here are some of the attributes of
Indian intellectuality and aesthetic sense:
A spirit of organization and scrupulous order, the desire of the mind to
tread through life with a harmonized knowledge and in the right rhythm and
measure, the harmony of the ancient Indian culture.
The Shastras and the Dharmas, the inner laws of our being work toward this
harmony. All these phrases culminate in the following observation:
The rule of the intellect and the rhythm of
beuty are hostile to the spirit of chaos.
The emerging harmony is a
Coleridgean reconciliation of opposites, the resolution of discordant things
into concord:
Its real keynote is the tendency of spiritual
realization, not cast at all into any white monotone, but many-faceted,
many-coloured, as supple in its adaptability as it is intense in its highest
pitches.
The key epithets which describe this order are “synthetical”, and “
inclusive fullness.” Since the great past has been such a one, the revival will
also be not something entirely new nor will it be mere repetition. The spirit
will find new forms to express itself. The recurring words are
Restatement, remoulding, reconstruction, a
complex breaking , reshaping and new building.
May we end up then by emphasizing the musical
terms in which Sri Aurobindo throughout the book visualizes the future? He
talks of harmony, rhythm, measure, unity, synthesis, symphony and so on. There
are according to Sri Aurobindo two principles of growth: one is the principle
of growth by struggle and this is distinctly European. The second is the
principle of concert and the Indian culture proceeds on this principle. An
Indian Renaissance will strive to find its base in a unity and reach out
towards some greater Oneness.
The whole thought is thus in keeping with Sri Aurobindo’s call for
spiritualization of matter and perfection of human instruments in the light of
the spirit.
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