- Swami Vivekanand
is the greatest youth icon produced by India and one that influenced
millions of youth across the world.
- In the 21st
century, when the youth of India are facing new problems, pushing
boundaries and aspiring for a better future, thoughts of Swami Vivekanand
have become more relevant.
- His ideas can be
understood by this fourfold mantra to live a meaningful life - Physical,
Social, and Intellectual and Spiritual quest.
1. Physical Quest
- By physical quest
he meant, taking care of the human body and undertaking activities to
mitigate physical sufferings.
- Vivekananda was
of the view that the youth can lead a successful life only when they are
physically fit.
- Vivekananda
understood that while most youth aspire not all are equipped with the
mental and physical stamina to pursue such a goal.
- Therefore he
asked the youth to overcome fears and become stronger physically and
mentally. He said, “Power is within you; you can do anything and
everything. Believe in that, do not believe that you are weak. Therefore,
arise, awake, and stop not till the goal is reached."
- He said,
"You will be nearer to heaven through football than through the study
of the Gita."
- What Vivekananda
wanted from the youth was 'muscles of iron' and 'nerves of steel'.
2. Social Quest
- Vivekanand wanted
the young to undertake social activities, not merely for the betterment of
society but also for their individual evolution and growth.
- The social quest
involves undertaking activities to mitigate physical sufferings. Running
hospitals, orphanages and old-age homes qualify for this level.
- He advised the
youth to 'Serve God in man'. Vivekanand clubbed spiritualism with social
service.
- He said,
"For the next fifty years this alone shall be our keynote - this, our
great Mother India. Let all other gods disappear for the time from our
minds."
- He taught that
the men and animals around us are our gods deserve our worship and
services. He asserted that "the first gods we have to worship are our
countrymen. These we have to worship, instead of being jealous of each
other and fighting each other."
- The most unique
contribution of Swami Vivekanand towards the creation of a new Bharat was
opening the minds of Indians to their duty to the downtrodden.
3. Intellectual Quest
- He said, "It
is the young, the strong, and healthy, of sharp intellect that will reach
the Lord."
- He advocated
intellectual quest i.e Running schools, colleges and awareness and
empowerment programs.
- Raising one's
intellectual level, gaining knowledge and spreading and sharing it with
society is the objective.
- He suggested that
to rebuild the Indian society, education was the primary means for
empowering the people.
- He emphasised on
education for all.
- He also said,
"Education is not the amount of information that is put into your
brain and runs riot there, undigested, all your life. We must have
life-building, man-making, character-making assimilation of ideas."
4. Spiritual Quest
- He then
prescribes the highest level of spiritual service - one of dhyan and sadhna.
- He suggested that
youth could learn many things from the West but must have faith in our own
spiritual heritage.
- Today, when our
youth find themselves gripped by increasing isolation, purposelessness,
depression and mental fatigue, despite material success, they must go for
a spiritual quest and achieve greater goals.
- He said,
"Life is short, but the soul is immortal and eternal, and one thing
being certain, death, let us therefore take up a great ideal and give up
our whole life to it."
- The transience of
triumph and material wealth were central to this philosophy.
- He challenged the
youth to live for a noble reason, a mighty ideal and a higher state so
that they were able to transcend the impermanence.
5. Nation Building
- Vivekanand
advised these four quests as an ideal and goal for the youth.
- The purpose of
these services was to raise the individual and national consciousness as a
whole.
- That's why he
called upon the youth to focus their collective energies towards nation
building.
- His vision of
India was that of a transformed society inspired by dignity, freedom and
individuality and rooted in strength, love and service.
- He dreamed that
such a Bharat would be an egalitarian society that would have broken out
of the notions of high or low.
- He also talked
about the unity of society, something that finds an echo in today's world
when we witness conflict at various levels.
- Swami Vivekanand
said, "The solution of the caste problem in India is not to degrade
the higher castes but to raise the lower up to the level of the
higher."
Free download : Complete work of Swamiji
Our heartiest tribute to Swami Vivekananda, patriotic saint of India
On
his 158 th Birth anniversary. 12/01/2021
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