LIFE OF SHRIMAD RAJCHANDRA
(From: http://www.cs.colostate.edu/~malaiya/rajchandra.html)
STRI NITI BODHAKA AND OTHER ETHICAL
WRITINGS
AVADHANA OR POWERS OF ATTENTION AND
RECOLLECTION
OTHER ARTICLES WRITTEN BY HIM UPTO
THE AGE OF TWENTY
SHRIMAD RAJCHANDRA AS A HOUSEHOLDER
GANDHIJI'S PEN‑PICTURE OF
SHRIMAD RAJCHANDRA
THE NATURE OF RELIGION AS DESCRIBED
BY SHRIMADJI
SOME ANECDOTES OF SHRIMADJI'S LIFE
HIS PERCEPTION OF SELF‑KNOWLEDGE
LETTER OF SIX FUNDAMENTAL TRUTHS
ATMASIDDHI SHASTRA ‑ ITS
COMPOSITION
A SHORT SUMMARY OF ATMASIDDHI
SHASTRA
His full name was Shri
Raichandbhai Ravjibhai Mehta. He was
born in 1867 A.D. at Vavania in Saurashtra.
His family belonged to a well‑known merchant community. His father's name was Ravjibhai and mother's
name was Devabai. His mother was
brought up in Jain religious traditions.
His grand father was a staunch devotee of Lord Krishna.
In Samucchaya Vayacharya
Shrimadji writes: "I was born on Sunday, Kartik Sud Purnima (15th day of
Kartik), Vikram Samvat 1924. Therefore
today, I have completed 22 years. In
this apparently short span of life, I have experienced much about the soul, the
nature and mutations of mind, the integrity of speech, the physical body, the
wealth, various impressions of the variegated or multicolored wonderful world
formations of various orders, many worldly ups and downs and the causes of
interminable misery and unhappiness.
All these have been experienced by me in many ways.
In my short life I have
entertained all the thought‑forms which were thought over by all the
powerful saints and philosophers and by the formidable skeptics. I have thought of the universe of desires
and aspirations which were discussed by the great rulers. I have also thought of the disinterestedness
par excellence, an attitude of serene indifference. I have much meditated on the acquisition of immortality and of
minute temporariness or transitoriness.
Many similar great thoughts I have traversed in very few years of my
life.
I look at all of them as a
seer, and I realize the unfathomable gap between my present state of knowledge
and experience and the state of my being when I cherished or entertained these
great and multifarious thought‑systems.
All these minute and big
differences and gradual development of my Self have been only recorded in my
memory. I have never made any effort to
publicize these thoughts. I felt that
giving these thoughts to a wider public or sharing my experiences with them
might bring good spiritual dividends but my memory refused to do so and I was helpless. By cooperative understanding if my memory
could be persuaded to open its treasures to the world by putting them in
writing, I shall surely do it in future.
I give below a very brief recollection of my early years:
For the first seven years I
played alone. I still remember to have
cherished a wonderful imagination in my mind.
Even in play I had strong desire to be victorious and to be the lord of
everything. I aspired to be a great man
of a resigned nature. I had no
attachment to wearing clean clothes, selection of good food, good bed,
etc. Still my heart was extremely
soft. I still recollect that side of my
nature at an early age. Had I had, at
that time, the discriminative knowledge which I now possess, I would not have
cared more for liberation. It was a
life of such spotless innocence that I love to recollect it very often.
For four years, from seven
to eleven, I devoted myself to study.
At that time I remembered all what I once saw or read. My recollection was faultless, as my mind
was sinless. As a child, I had no idea
of fame, hence the bugbear of publicity never bothered me. I had unique retentive memory which I find
very few men even today possess.
Still, I was indifferent to
my studies. I was given much to
talking, play and merrymaking. Because
of good memory, my teacher was pleased with me as I used to recite all what I
once read in front of the teacher. At
that time I was full of affection and natural sympathy towards all around
me. I learnt that a spirit of
affectionate brotherhood was the key to family and social happiness. If I found a separatist feeling or behavior in anybody, it used to pain me
very much and my heart used to cry. In
my eighth year I composed poems which at at later age I found to be very well
done.
I studied so well that I
could explain the book to my teacher who started teaching it to me. I cultivated very wide reading.
I had much faith in man kind
and I loved the natural world order.
My great grand father was a
Vaishnava, a staunch devotee of Lord Krishna.
I heard from him many devotional songs about Radha and Krishna, also the
mysterious stories of the wonder‑works of Lord Krishna and other
incarnations of God.
I took religious initiation
at the hand of a Sadhu named Ramadasji.
I daily went for the Darshana of Lord Krishna and attended lectures and
devotional congregations. I believed
the incarnation of God as real God and I cherished a strong desire to see His
residence. I dreamt to be a great
spiritual follower of Lord Krishna and a powerful preacher of His faith. I considered it to be the pride of my life
if I could become a great Sanyasi performing Hari Kirtana in the public and
leading an upright ascetic life.
I was so much saturated with
such thoughts that I hated the Jains who did not accept God as the creator of
the world. I believed that nothing
could be created without a creator that the world was a masterful creation and
such a uniquely supreme creation could only be the work of God and none else.
The Jain Banias in my native
place praised me as the most intelligent student of the village. But they ridiculed my initiation in
Vaishnavism and they argued with me to dislodge me from my faith. I did not succumb but I gradually read the
Jain sacred books such as Pratikramana Sutra.
The fundamental idea of the Jain works was the advocacy of non‑violence
and love to all high and low in the world.
I liked this idea of universal love and non‑violence very much.
Occasionally I visited the
residence of the ruler of Kutch as a writer since my hand‑writings were
praised as best.
After the age of thirteen, I
started attending to my father's shop.
While sitting in the shop I have composed many poems on the heroic and
spiritual life of Rama and Krishna. But
in my dealings with the customers of the shop I have never weighed less or
more."
Shrimad Rajchandra possessed
the knowledge of his previous births.
It is called Jati Smarana Gnan.
In reply to a question from
Padamshibhai, his friend in Bombay as to, whether Shrimadji possessed the
mysterious knowledge of his past lives, he replied: "Yes" and then he
explained as to when and how he obtained it.
It is a picturesque description.
Shrimadji said:
"When I was seven years
old, an elderly man named Amichand, well‑built, stout and sturdy, a
neighbor in my village, suddenly expired of a serpent bite.
I did not know what was
death. I asked my grandfather as to
what was the meaning of death. He tried
to evade the reply and advised me to finish my meals. I insisted on a reply. At
last he said: "To die means the separation of the soul from the body. A dead body has no movement, it contaminates
and decays. Such a dead body will be
burnt to ashes near a river‑bank as it has ceased to function."
Thereupon I went stealthily
to the cremation ground and climbing a Babul tree I saw the whole process of
burning of the dead man's body and I felt that those who burnt him were cruel.
A train of thoughts started
on the nature of the death and as a result I could recollect my previous
lives."
Such knowledge of one's
previous lives is called Jati Smarana Gnan.
It is but natural that death
and disease are the great humanizing forces in individual and social life of
thinking men. It is by being conscious
of them that we develop modesty and humility in our behavior and we reduce our
attachment to worldly life.
By meditation on death we
realize the supreme and sole importance of knowing and experiencing the
Atma. Therefore Jati Smarana Gnan is
very helpful in developing detachment from the world, and a spiritual affection
for eternal imperishable ever‑living soul.
Shrimadji obtained this
exceptional knowledge of his previous lives at very young age of seven, a rare
phenomenon. In 1897 A.D. at the age of
30 years, he wrote his famous poem in which he thanked the day when he realized
unique peace. He has described in the
poem the order of his spiritual development as under:
"In 1874 A.D. I
obtained the Jati Smarana Gnan. In 1875
A.D. I began to advance on the spiritual path from the point I had already
reached in my previous life. In 1886
A.D. I developed a spirit of complete resignation and detachment to the mortal
body and the rest of the world."
In 1889 A.D. at the age of
22 years, he wrote in a poem that the only friend of unqualified happiness is
lonely indifference which in turn is the mother of spirituality.
He also says therein:
"In my very young age I knew the nature of the final reality and this
suggested to me that henceforth I had no future birth nor will I have to fall
back from what I had already gained in spiritual life. I easily reached the state of the soul which
would require long study and spiritual practice for others."
In a letter he says: "I
realized that when in infinite stretch of time in the series of my past lives I
felt that I could not live without my dearest and nearest; but I could live
without them in those lives too. This
proves that my affections and attachments were based on ignorance."
He pithily declares that
without the right insight, the scriptures are of no help; that without the true
spiritual contact, even meditation degenerates into wild imagination; without
the active guidance of a Self‑realized Guru, the final truth cannot be
realized; that by following the normal path of the worldly people, one cannot
be their leader and savior; that without resigning the world and its myopic
calculations, a life of extreme non‑attachment is very difficult to be
obtained.
He salutes the great
Tirthankara who realized his soul and described it for the benefit of the world. It is only by the teachings of the
Tirthankaras that one can easily know his soul.
The knowledge of past lives
proves the height of spirituality he had already reached in his previous
lives. He was apparently young in his
present life but form the point of view of his achievements of previous lives,
he cannot but be regarded as a highly advanced Soul.
From his early childhood
modesty, perfection in speech and conversation, exceptional reasoning power and
a sharp spirit of non‑attachment or disinterestedness and such other
qualities made him a pet student of his school as well as of his village. He possessed a sharp and unfailing memory,
unusually powerful retentiveness and faculty of recollection. He grasped all that he read or heard only
once.
He entered the school at his
age of seven and a half years. In about
a month after his joining the school he completely mastered the preliminaries
in calculation and within two years he finished the study of seven standards.
The monitor of his class,
who had initiated him in the study of the first standard book, had to take his
help in completing the book. On account
of his exceptional performance in study he became the favorite of his teachers
and normally he conducted the classes while his teachers used to witness with
admiration the work of this gifted Soul.
All his colleagues loved him.
Once his teacher scolded him
and the next day he did not go to the school.
Thereupon all other boys of the class followed him to a field where they
ate berries. His teacher was surprised
at the absence of all his students, inquired about it and went to the field
where Shrimadji was sitting with his friends.
Upon knowing the reason of absence of the students in his class, the
teacher assured Shrimadji that he would never scold him again and brought them
back to the class.
He started composing poems
at the age of eight and he supposed to have written five thousand stanzas in
the first year. In his ninth year he
composed Ramayana and Mahabharata in verse and at ten he was mature in his
thinking and reasoning. At this age he
had unique curiosity to know new things, a passion to hear new facts, to think
new thoughts and to perform fine orations.
While he was eleven he
started contributing articles to the newspapers and he won many prizes for
writing competitive essays. One of his
essays was on the need for women‑education. At the age of twelve he composed three hundred stanzas on `a
watch'. At thirteen he went to Rajkot
to study English but about his English education very little is known.
Before his age of fifteen he
studied and mastered many subjects. He
became famous as a young poet of astounding memory and with brilliant
prospects.
Once Shrimadji, at the age
of ten, accompanied Shri Dharshibhai, a judge of Morbi state, from Morbi to
Rajkot. During the journey Dharshibhai
was much impressed by the unusual talents of Raichand, a boy of ten, and by way
of admiration Dharshibhai suggested that Raichand should stay with him in
Rajkot. But Shrimadji preferred staying
at his maternal uncles' house but he promised to meet Dharshibhai often during
his stay in Rajkot.
His maternal uncles came to
know from him about the arrival of Dharshibhai in Rajkot; and while Shrimadji
was taking lunch there they were loudly planning to kill Dharshibhai. Shrimadji heard this and lost no time to
warn Dharshibhai about the criminal intentions of his maternal uncles. This is how this boy of ten, returned the
obligation to Dharshibhai.
Shrimadji by his mystic
powers of clairvoyance and telepathy, mind reading, etc. learnt that two
persons from Kutch were on their way to Rajkot to meet him. So he requested Dharshibhai to allow these
two guests to stay with him and Dharshibhai readily agreed to do so.
Thereupon Shrimadji went to
receive the two guests and welcomed them by their names. When the guests asked him as to how he knew
their names and about their coming to meet him, he replied that all this was
possible by the infinite powers of the soul.
These two guests, named
Hemrajbhai and Malsibhai, having heard of the exceptional talents of
Raichandbhai, had come to persuade the latter to go to Kashi for higher
education but when they came to know of the wonderful spiritual powers
possessed by Raichandbhai, they dropped their idea. Dharshibhai was much impressed by this incident and gradually he
began to respect Shrimadji.
For his return journey to
Vavania he had no money, so he sold the sweets he was given by his maternal
uncles and with the proceeds thereof he returned to Vavania. This shows his firm determination not to beg
of anyone for his personal benefit.
In his book Stri Niti
Bodhaka Part 1 on `The nature of ideal moral life for women', he has advocated
the cause of women's education as essential to national freedom. He advised his brethren to spread education
in women, to remove internal quarrels and crippling social customs and thereby
expedite the recovery of national independence.
This book was the first of
his writings before he was sixteen and it was published in Vikram Samvat 1940
or 1884 A.D.
In this book of 50 pages he
has analyzed the causes of backwardness in women, such as child‑marriage,
forced marriage of the unequals in health, age and intelligence and lastly,
endless superstitions and ignorance.
The matter of the book is divided into four sections:
The first section deals with
prayer to God, devotion, transitoriness of the living body, advice given by a
mother to her daughter, avoidance of waste of time, diligence in work and the
excellent results obtained by diligence.
The second section deals
with learning, advantages of education, select reading of good books and
acceptance of good and useful lessons.
The third section deals with
self‑improvement, adoption of virtues, spread of moral and healthy
atmosphere, nature of truth and avoidance of profligacy and debauchery.
The fourth and the last
section deals with the description of the wise and virtuous people and it
includes a composition of hundred verses on words of wisdom for all.
Shrimadji, from his
childhood had a fine command of language and diction, so his style is simple,
natural and elegant. In his writings,
words follow the sense.
In the Sad‑bodh‑shatak
he has discussed subjects like unity, morality, patience, courage,
truthfulness, innocence, devotion, patriotism, social reforms, diligence,
avoidance of bad company, learning, avoidance of pride, devotion to own
husband, avoidance of skepticism or nihilism, sympathy, love of religion,
writing good books, thriftiness, reduction of the household expenditure,
forgiveness, merit, humility, modesty, keeping good and virtuous company,
avoidance of the company of foolish women, avoidance of betting etc., thinking
of death, search for the path of knowledge, doing charity to the deserving
persons, love for doing good to others, increased reading etc.
Anticipating the question
why should Shrimadji have written on ethical topics, he writes: "Persons
desirous of Self‑realization, living in worldly life, should try to find
the root of all ethical life in their soul and they should be just and honest
in earning their living and collection of wealth. This is good moral life for them and it should be observed by
them at all cost.
In its strict observance,
renunciation and non‑attachment and such other qualities develop in them
and by that they begin to appreciate the effectiveness of the teachings of the
same by the Gurus and of the obedience to the same. They rightly interpret their teachings and they easily follow the
path to Self‑realization."
Shrimadji wrote a rosary of
108 golden advice for the benefit of the seekers of Self‑realization in
Vikram Samvat 1940 or 1884 A.D.
There he advises the people
to think of the Self, not to repent for the life already led but to make the
best of the life yet to come. A man
should repent for his immoral acts and should determine to be thoroughly moral
in his future dealings.
A person should allot his
time of the day in the following manner: 3 hours to devotion, 3 hours to doing
religious rites, 3 hours to food and bodily nourishment, 3 hours to education
and learning, 6 hours to sleep and 6 hours to take care of his family and
social life, if he is a householder.
One who has renounced the world should be absorbed in thoughts of Self‑realization
and should control his mind from passions and prejudices.
The only path to Self‑realization
or soul's liberation consists in realizing the Self as completely different
from the body and the worldly attachments.
The soul is free and pure, enlightened and immortal.
Man should keep his eye on
death and utilize every moment of life in realizing his goal of
liberation. One may be a prince or a
pauper, but all should know for certain that they are guests of death.
The adoption of the path of
non‑violence in thought, word and deed; the intense desire for Self‑liberation
and for acquisition of right knowledge and experience for the same; the
searching out of an enlightened Guru and the undaunted obedience to his advice;
Self‑control in food, talk and other behavior; keeping clear of all sins;
purity all around; observing honesty and justice in worldly life; curtailment
of worldly activities in order to lead a really happy and Self‑meditative
life; keeping in mind the principles of health, purity, magnanimity and duty;
keeping company of the good and wise as a powerful method of maintaining purity
of mind and body ‑ are some of the invaluable advice given by Shrimad
Rajchandra to men, women, and children in all walks of life, the advice which
all should think over before their daily round of duties.
Shrimad Rajchandra had
composed Mokshamala at the age of sixteen years and five months and it was
completed within three days in Vikram Samvat 1943 or 1887 A.D.
He wrote this book in an
easy style understandable to young boys and girls with a view to turn their
minds from trash readings to reading of good books by which they can obtain the
invaluable results of Self‑liberation.
In the opening lesson he
requests the reader to read the book with due care and consideration which it
deserves as its goal is very high.
While other books deal with worldly life, this book deals with Self‑liberation. All religious readers have agreed in
liberation as the goal of life and discrimination of the different natures of
the soul and the body as the means to its realization. Hence, as a sound educationist interested in
the lasting benefit of young minds he has offered this book to his
readers.
He suggests his reader to
think of the inequalities of life and thereby to reflect all the good and bad
deeds as causes of these inequalities.
Human birth is the only
stage opportune for a soul to think of and work for its salvation. If it is misused in doing other things, a
golden opportunity is lost. Hence, with
the intense desire to work for the spiritual salvation of all living beings,
this book and such others are written by Shrimad Rajchandra. Those who write such books are called men of
unqualified sympathy and compassion and they live for the benefit of other
souls.
The soul gets human birth as
a result of many good deeds done in previous births and therefore it is very
precious.
If a man controls his mind
he can attain Godhood.
Shrimadji says, every word
of Mokshamala has been properly considered and after much thought it has been
composed.
He holds that his readers
should not be guided by his writings simply because they flow from his
pen. Every reader should weigh the
thoughts expressed and should develop the habit of discriminative thinking. The writer should stimulate the reader's
thinking but not substitute it.
These expressions indicate
the high maturity and balanced views on education on the part of Shrimad
Rajchandra and that too at a very early age.
Though Mokshamala was
composed in three days Shrimad Rajchandra found that it would take a long time
to publish it. So, he composed a small
book of 50 pages called Bhavana Bodh or the instructions to cultivate twelve
sentients necessary for leading the life of non‑attachment to the world;
and gave this book to his readers in anticipation of the delay in publication
of Mokshamala.
The twelve sentiments to be
cultivated are briefly as follows:
1. Everything in the world except the soul is transitory and subject
to destruction. The soul alone, is, in
its nature, eternal.
2. In the world none can protect a living being from death. Therefore the only shelter one should seek
in life is true religion. Religion
alone can be man's savior.
3. The soul has been passing through a chain of births and deaths
and it is high time for it to think of its freedom from Sansara ‑ a cycle
of births and deaths. One should
consciously realize that the soul's nature is freedom and so it is but natural
to think of its salvation from Sansara.
4. This my soul, has always been and, is alone. It will suffer the fruits of its deeds and
it is the lone pilgrim.
5. All souls are independent and none is really related to the
other.
6. This body is unholy, it gives out and absorbs many unholy and
impure substances. I, as a soul, am
quite independent of my body which is subject to disease and death.
7. Attachment, avarice, ignorance, sense of futility, etc. are
binding the soul.
8. One should devote his time to acquiring knowledge and meditation
and thereby save oneself from the bondage of fresh actions.
9. To act with full knowledge of the nature of the Self is the way
to cut the knot of binding actions.
10. To think of the fourteen
worlds in which the soul wanders in bondage.
11. To determine that a man
cannot attain the right knowledge of the nature of the Self while living the
worldly life. Even if such knowledge
may be had, conscious abidance in the true nature of the Self will become
difficult. Hence, one should feel
intense obligation of the enlightened Guru who explains the true nature of the
Self.
12. Therefore one should
appreciate the rare possibility of obtaining the right preceptor of religion
and one should lose no time in following his advice, should he be available.
Shrimadji writes about the
Mokshamala that a reader, on deep thinking and reflection on the subjects
discussed in it, will find his way to salvation.
The book is an impartial
composition on philosophy and ethics.
Its aim is to retrace young minds from acquiring wrong information of
truth and reality and to put them on the path of right knowledge and action
leading to liberation.
Shrimadji himself stated
that his spirit of non‑attachment, at the time he composed Mokshamala,
could only be compared with the spirit of non‑attachment that was found
in Shri Ramchandraji as described in Yoga Vashishta. He said that he studied all Jain scriptures in fifteen months and
during the study the index of his non‑attachment was extremely high to
such an extent that he would not be aware whether he ate or not.
In Mokshamala Shrimadji
explains:
* The nature of true God, true preceptor and true religion. He protests against the description of
Jainism as a skeptical religion. To him
Jainism is the true appreciation of God, man and the world. It does not deny Godhood, it only denies God
as the creator of the world.
* That the man's true greatness lies in the practice of truth‑telling,
universal sympathy towards all living beings, celibacy, benevolence and
equanimity of mind. Vanity and self‑pride
block man's progress. Man can be great
by removing these elements from his nature.
Keeping to truth is essential to the maintenance of the world. Hence truth‑telling is the first of
the great religious observances.
* Company of the good and the great is the source of all happiness. It purifies man. It brings him nearer to the knowledge of the Self and the final
liberation.
* Reading and reflecting on the teachings of the religious
scriptures also serves the same purpose namely soul's salvation.
* Solitude does not necessarily mean keeping aloof from all
company. Keeping company of persons of
similar aims (liberation) and practice is also known as solitude. Company of the Saints is a powerful
purifying force. As you can't swim on
earth, you cannot sink in good company.
Hence, it is the sure medicine for the ailing soul.
* Covetousness and greed, oppressive acquisitiveness, result in the
performance of sinful deeds.
* The Shastras should be read, understood and practiced. Parrotlike cramming of scriptural texts
leads one nowhere.
* In the lesson on Kapilmuni, Shrimadji shows the desire as the
root cause of endless miseries. Desire
grows on what it feeds. There is no end
to the mind's desires. The world‑tree
grows on the seed of desire. Desire is
ever young. True happiness springs from
the abandonment of all desires. Real
peace lies in contentment. By
contentment the soul obtains equanimity, discrimination and lasting joy.
* The soul has lost much by infatuation and sloth due to ignorance
of its true nature. It is advised to
wake up from killing slumber and lose no time in expediting its salvation. Wisemen do not wait for future
opportunities, they strive for liberation in the present by all possible
religious ways and leave the future to its own future. Their sense of the value of time is
admirable.
* Discrimination is the light to recognize the soul in
darkness. By discrimination religion is
sustained and maintained. Religion without
discrimination is meaningless. To
understand truth and untruth as they are, is known as discrimination.
* Non‑attachment is the only guide to the soul to its lasting
happiness. To aspire for lasting
happiness in the pursuit of the pleasures of the world is to live in a fool's
paradise.
* In the lessons on differences of opinion and beliefs of different
religions of the world, Shrimadji argues that while all other religions are
incomplete or imperfect paths to Self‑realization, Jain religion is
complete and perfect as it has elaborately described the nature of reality and
the sure method of soul's salvation.
The founders of Jain religion where omniscient. Their description of sympathy, celibacy,
chastity, discrimination and non‑attachment is unique. Besides, it contains minute descriptions of
pure knowledge of the Self, its hierarchical gradations and the mutations of
the soul's states in Sansara.
* In the lesson on celibacy he states nine prohibitions conductive
to the observance of celibacy.
* The lessons on Jain philosophical doctrines are lucid and simple
expositions useful for every student of Jain philosophy and religion.
* He has also enumerated the eighteen obstacles to the control of
mental modifications which a seeker of the Self‑realization should remove
from his life.
* He has also described fourteen mental states which make gradual
development of the highest virtues.
In about Vikram Samvat 1940
or 1884 A.D. Shrimadji came from Vavania to Morbi. In Morbi, Shastri Shankarlal M. Bhatt was performing the feat of
attending to eight objects or eight activities at a time. At the same time in Bombay, Gattulalji
Maharaj was performing similar feats.
These were the only two well‑known persons for their exceptional
memory and attention feats. Shrimadji
saw the performance of these feats in Morbi and quickly picked them up.
Within two days after he saw
the memory feats, he started performing similar feats before his friends and
then for the open public. He was
already known as a learned man but when he performed a memory feat of attending
to twelve activities at a time before a public of 2,000 persons he became
famous as a prodigy with exceptional powers.
Some admirers used to address him as the precious diamond of India.
In an exhibition at Wadhwan
he performed his memory feat of attending to sixteen activities at a time
before an audience of rulers and highly educated public, and all were extremely
pleased. The dailies published articles
in his praise.
In Botad, before his
millionaire friend Sheth Harilal Shaivalal, he performed the memory feat of
attending to 52 activities at a time.
They included:
* Playing Chopat with three
other players;
* Playing cards with three
others and at the end to call out all thirteen cards he had;
* At the same time playing
chess and at the end of the memory feat to declare all the pieces which were
removed from the chess board;
* To count grains which were
dropped on his back while he was engaged in the memory feat;
* To perform addition,
subtraction, multiplication, division, and to keep the results in mind and to
declare them at the end of the memory feat;
* To tell as to how many
beads, a man sitting opposite him, had turned from a garland till the time he
stopped turning them;
* To hear words of 16
sentences in 16 different languages in a random fashion and later on to speak
out all the 16 sentences in the 16 languages;
* To supply individual
letters in a random way in a chart to be completed and at the end to compose a
verse;
* To prepare problem poems;
* To compose complete verses
on being supplied only with one line or half lines,
* To compose 16 poems in 16
different poetical forms starting with one line of each of the recollected complete
poems at the end.
Later on Shrimadji easily
performed memory feats of attending to 100 things and activities at a
time. Even than he used to say that his
powers were merely a drop in the ocean, that the powers of the Self were infinite.
Shri Chatrabhujbhai, the
brother‑in‑law of Shrimadji, said that Shrimadji used to tell
whether a person uses his right hand or left hand to fix a Paghadi (a head
dress ‑ turban) just by looking at the shape of the Paghadi on the
wearer's head.
In Vikram Samvat 1943 or
1887 A.D. Shrimadji went to Bombay and there, in Faramji Kavasji Institute and
at other places he performed various memory feats and all the newspapers in
Bombay gave wide publicity and praise to these performances. He was awarded gold medals by the public and
institutions, for his excellent, unheard of and amazing memory feats.
In one of the memory feats
he was shown twelve books of different sizes and told their names too. Then he was blind‑folded and he used
to touch a book he had seen before and immediately call out its name. Dr. Peterson who presided over the
performance had nothing but admiration and praise for this outstanding feat.
On another occasion he was
shown different food dishes and just by looking at them he told in which there
was less salt, without touching the dishes or tasting the food in them.
Some of his admirers
suggested Shrimadji to tour the foreign countries and show his ability and
powers to the outside world. But he
refused the suggestion on the ground that he could not observe religious
discipline in foreign countries.
Shrimadji thought the wide
publicity of his exceptional powers may hinder his march towards the Self‑realization
and so before he reached twenty he gradually discouraged it and after twenty we
hear next to nothing about his performances of memory feats.
Shri Vinaychand Popatlal
Daftari, a friend of Shrimadji, declares in a booklet `Sakshat Saraswati'
published in 1887 A.D., as follows:
"In accordance with the
rules of epic poetry, Shrimadji composed `Namiraja' a work of five thousand
verses wherein he has explained the nature of the four Purusharthas ‑
Dharma, Artha, Kama and Moksha. This
book was composed by him in six days.
His spotless divinity and a very high order of thoughts are evident
throughout the book.
One religious head requested
Shrimadji to prepare a book in verse, of the fundamental tenets of his religion
and offered to pay Rupees One Thousand to him for such composition. But Shrimadji turned down the offer.
Shrimadji also edited a
newspaper named Vairagya Vilas or the enjoyment of non‑attachment."
To our grief nothing of the
above is available.
In some of the advisory compositions
prepared by him at the age of eighteen years he enunciates a doctrine and then
illustrates it.
He says: "The gift of
all scriptures can be summed up in two words ‑ devotion to God and
adoption of a life of benevolence in the world."
In 1885 A.D. his composition
on `Shurvir Smarana' (in memory of the brave) he has given in verse a
picturesque description of the brave warriors of the past, who victoriously
fought the battles in India; and he compares those glorious moments with the
present times when he does not find any one of that caliber to free India from
foreign domination. The poem gives us
sharp contrasts between the brave of the past and the cowards that inherit them
in his days.
Had Shrimadji lived a long
life, his aspirations of Indian freedom would have been amply rewarded. He would have been happy to see his friend
Mohandas Gandhi, the harbinger of Indian freedom and of the betterment of the
peoples of the world, liberating India from British yoke by the Jain method of
truth and non‑violence.
In all forms of literature
Shrimadji has made his mark and had he turned all his energy to literature, he
would have given us a vast literature which would have been a milestone in
Gujarati literature.
But literature to him was a
means of expression and not a method of liberation. He was interested in teaching the people the art of Self‑liberation,
the foundation and the climax of all arts.
Shrimadji used to say that
telling truth about one's own Self is neither Self‑praise nor Self‑abuse;
telling otherwise than truth is a vice.
"One who possesses
wider intelligence and outlook, equaminity of mind, straightforwardness and
complete sense‑control is a properly qualified person for truth‑realization. From ages immemorial attachment, avarice and
infatuation have clouded the soul's strength and so it has not been able to
think of itself. Human birth and that
too in Arya Desha or India, and in a noble family and a sound healthy body are
the proper means for the soul to think of itself and of its liberation.
If all this is there, then
one has only to grow a strong desire in his mind to liberate oneself. If these qualifications are fulfilled one
would automatically follow the path of the wise and liberated souls. No doubt will distract him.
As compared with other
systems of philosophy and religion, Jain religion is preached by the most pure
and holy, by those who have been completely free from all attachments, avarice
and infatuations, hence, it is unqualifiedly a path of personal purification and
Self‑realization by Self‑improvement. Therefore, all what the liberated have said and advised is
thoroughly believable and should be easily acceptable.
The eternal path preached by
the liberated souls is mixed with many undesirable offshoots and developments
in course of time. One should
distinguish between the path of the liberated and the path of the initiate and
erring."
Shrimadji has been very
strong in his criticism of these various creeds that have developed in the name
of the religion of the liberated Jinas.
He has shown in his Atmasiddhi Shastra that the founders of the various
creeds have measured their own level and substituted their imperfect beliefs
for the true religion.
The wrangling of the Jain
religious heads in support of their self‑chosen paths of liberation and
ethical discipline flows from ignorance and leads to the sharpening of
prejudices. Sometimes the highly
advanced religious souls are misguided by the rise of infatuating (Mohaniya) Karmas
in them and in such circumstances they offer sham religion for the real one, to
their followers.
It also happens that finding
the difficulty of attaining to the path of the liberated souls, one decides for
himself and his followers that the path is not worth following and that what he
has achieved for himself is the last limit of achievement for all. Besides, one may not have enough
intelligence and discrimination to grasp the reasonableness of the path of the
liberated Jinas.
Unfavorable times, selection
of wrong persons as the religious teachers, general ignorance of the Shastras
and the reluctance to study them for oneself are also some of the causes why
various religious castes and sub‑creeds develop in the body of the old
established religions.
Shrimadji says that the present
times are such that the educated are bankrupt in the fund of faith needed for
religious discipline. Very few have
faith in religion. Those who have faith
do not study the religion for themselves nor do they seek proper Guru who can
explain them the truths of religion. In
case a few try to understand religion there are many who will obstruct their
path rather than help them. This is the
plight of the educated people of the time and they keep away from religion.
The uneducated in the
present times, on the other hand, are so inert and orthodox that they fear to
go a step beyond the beliefs of their forefathers and they go the easy way of
following blindly the religion of their ancestors. Hence, they believe that the religious teachers, accepted by the
elders in age, know everything and that they should be followed
wholeheartedly. Neither worshipped nor
the uneducated worshiper cares to obtain knowledge and both are rocked in the
cradle of a few accepted slogans and pet forms of prayer.
One can rarely find in the
present religious folds of Jain religion, one who has intense desire for
knowing and following the eternal path of the liberated Jinas.
Normally the Jain Sadhus are
initiated by force of adverse circumstances or by an accidental rise of the
spirit of intense non‑attachment by distressing events.
One who really wants to
follow the eternal path of the Jinas gets suffocated in the clumsy practices of
the Jain creeds and he runs out of these clutches to a wider atmosphere and
freedom wherein he can make real progress.
Shrimadji says that there
are very few souls interested in spiritual religious research. Those, who would heartily desire to be free
and would actively work for it, are still few.
Even for such souls the proper guides by way of an enlightened Guru,
proper religious contacts and the supply of adequate religious scriptures are
difficult to obtain.
Every one who is given a
hearing by them, blows his own trumpet and never inquires whether what he says
is true, half‑true or untrue.
Besides, even these few souls starving for Self‑liberation are
compelled to waste their precious time in many worldly activities that they
find it difficult to maintain the continuity of their spiritual progress.
Shrimadji admits that there
are a few souls following the eternal religion propagated by Lord Mahavir but
the rest of the Jain religious public present a sorry debacle.
"What pains me,"
he says, "is not that the Jains lose anything but that only a few are
ready to take the advantage of the magnanimous achievements of the great
realized souls to the credit of the Jain philosophy and religion. Any well thinking mind will appreciate the
truth of what I say."
Two fundamental divisions of
Jainism are on the importance of the idols of the great Tirthankaras in the
practice of Jain religion.
One side believes that these
idols of the Jinas and their worship are authorized by the Jain religious
scriptures and they are direct means for Self‑realization. The other side believes that the idols need
not be worshipped at all.
Shrimadji holds to the first
view and declares that the worship of the idols of the Jinas is necessary,
desirable, and always helpful in the path of spiritual progress.
By an improper use of
reasoning all the tenets of Jainism may be shown contradictory but that is not
what a man of spiritual experience does.
None will benefit by the way of logical wranglings. Truth which is tested by the touchstone of
religious experience is the religious truth and no amount of denying it, can
serve any useful purpose.
"I did once believe
that idol worship is unmeaning, but now I am convinced of the need and
authenticity of it by my own spiritual experience and so I endorse the religion
which accepts the worship of the idols of the great Tirthankaras."
In these fearless
statements, Shrimadji advises all seekers of truth to keep truth alone and part
with prejudices wherever they are found.
Shrimadji says that the Jain
religion would have been easy of approach and benefit to seekers of Self‑liberation,
had it not divided itself into two powerful sects on the ground of idol‑worship.
A truly religious man does
not pamper this or that opinion, he is ready to accept truth and sacrifice
everything on the alter of truth and the experience of the Tirthankaras or the
great liberated souls.
Shrimadji declares his
complete faith in the sayings and experiences of Lord Mahavir. He says: "The author of Jain scriptures
does not mean to say that all those who accept the Jain religion will obtain
liberation. One has to work for what he
believes. One, whose soul will practice
religion, will gain by it. Worship of
the idols of the Tirthankaras whose obligation on us is unreturnable is a great
purificatory agent and an effective means to Self‑liberation. It is meant for us to realize the objective
for which worship of the idols is enjoined by the scriptures."
In a letter to his friend in
his twentieth year he writes: "Having no intrinsic love of money and yet
to use it for the benefit of the distressed and the needy, I tried to earn some
money for the future. On other side,
wealth, even if acquired for benevolent works, may breed in the person
possessing it, blindness, deafness and dumbness. Hence, I do not care for wealth at all."
Shrimadji married Zabakben,
daughter of Popatlalbhai, the elder brother of Jagjivandas Mehta on the 12th
day of the bright half of the month of Maha in Vikram Samvat 1944. He was twenty at that time.
One year after his marriage,
he writes to a friend, under the caption `My thoughts on woman', that
unqualified and unrestricted happiness lies in pure knowledge of the Self and
never in the worldly enjoyments of married life. Bodily happiness is only a shadow of the real happiness. Besides enjoyments of the body are only
short‑lived and the sources of consequent misery, disease and death. It is painfully surprising to find the human
mind enjoying in worldly and physical pleasures. One should pray for the complete freedom from all desires concerning
the bodily and sense‑pleasures.
Regarding one's wife,
Shrimadji writes: "My desire is for liberation but forced by the fruits of
my previous actions, I lead a married life.
But here too I normally maintain equanimity, neither attachment nor non‑attachment. I feel pained to find sometimes my behavior
contrary to my intense desire for liberation."
To a friend, he writes in
Vikram Samvat 1946 or 1890 A.D.: "I have married earlier than you by a
little over two years. Within these two
years I have come to know my wife's mind and I can say that none of us is
dissatisfied with the other. Nor can I
say that it is absolutely satisfactory.
Our relations are common and normal.
And this is more due to my indifference. While thinking of high metaphysical thoughts I get strong
suggestions for renouncing the householder's order. I had similar thoughts even before my marriage but I had to
pacify them as I found that following them would make the very continuance of
my life impossible."
In Mokshamala, in lesson No.
12 `Best Householder', lesson No. 45 `Common Aspiration', lesson No. 55 `Rules
of daily observance by the Householder' and in six lessons Nos. 61 to 66 under
the title `Thoughts on Happiness' he gives his views on the ideal householder's
life.
He writes: "Though I am
happy as householder as compared with others, but the worldly happiness is to
be suffered and not to be enjoyed. It
is not true happiness. Normally people
in the world are unhappy and so the people who are happy in worldly life are called
fortunate and favored souls. I have
decided to utilize my life in the practice of religion. I normally read and think of the revealed
scriptures, keep contacts with the enlightened souls, observe prohibitions and
injunctions, observe celibacy for twelve days in a month, give in charity
without declaring my name.
I have renounced much of my
burden of worldly life. I want to be a
forest recluse after entrusting the care of my family to my sons no sooner they
come of age. At present I have
deliberately chosen to remain as a householder in order that I can guide the
householders in the path of religious practice better than the Sanyasis or
Yatis can do. The householder's order
requires much improvement and I want to expedite it. A householder can easily advise another householder and guide his
behavior by his example and practice."
Shrimadji declares that as a
principle complete renunciation from the householder's order is necessary for
lasting happiness.
Shrimad Rajchandra was also
an accomplished businessman in jewelry and pearls. Of all the jewelry merchants he was known as one of the most
reliable and honest.
Once a younger brother of a
pearls merchant sold his pearls to Shrimadji at a certain price. When his elder brother came to know this he
scolded the younger brother for selling the pearls at a much lower price then
expected. Thereon the younger brother
returned to Shrimadji and narrated to him what his brother thought about the
transaction. Shrimadji immediately
returned the pearls and canceled the deal as it was a mistake by the younger
brother. This shows his honesty and
sympathy.
Shri Maneklal Ghelabhai,
while appreciating Shrimadji's business acumen, writes that even foreign
customers used to praise the excellent business organization and exactness of
Shrimadji.
Shrimadji wrote in his diary
certain rules of discipline which he decided to observe after he joined a
partnership business in Bombay in Vikram Samvat 1946 or 1890 A.D. These rules are in brief as under:
1. Do not see anybody's fault.
Believe that whatever difficulties come your way, are due to your own
shortcomings.
2. Never indulge in self‑praise as in self‑praise one
only lowers himself.
3. Behave in such a way as it may win affection of others. It may not be so easy to start with but
gradually by strong self‑determination and resolute effort, you will be
able to mold your behavior.
4. Declare your line of thought and action to one with whom you wish
to join in business or in any worldly matter.
Also win his confidence by
your word and deed and assure him that you shall never think or do anything to
harm his interests. Should any of your
thought or deed prove harmful to your partner or colleague, repent for it and
tell him that it will never recur.
Tell him that you shall do
the work entrusted to you with care and diligence but without pride or egotism.
Tell your partner that on no
account you are prepared to sacrifice your discipline for Self‑realization,
that he should not use you as a means to secure his unethical motives, that
when assured of a possible conflict on the above conditions, you will clear out
of the joint partnership with no harm to your partner.
In case your partner doubts
your bonafides, request him to declare them freely and explain to him that
there is no ground for such doubt.
Should he not accept your explanation, respectfully terminate
partnership.
Gandhiji regarded Shrimadji
as his friend, philosopher and guide.
He acknowledges the debt he owes to Shrimadji in his recollections of
his friendship with Shrimadji. From
1891 to 1901 A.D. for a period of ten years they were best friends.
Gandhiji says that most of
his lessons for self‑improvement and on truth and non‑violence, he
has learnt from Shri Raichandbhai.
Raichandbhai is one of the three personalities that have much impressed
his mind, the other two being the writings of Tolstoy and Ruskin's `Unto this
last'.
To love the murderer is one
of the maxims of non‑violence and
Gandhiji had well learnt it from
Shrimadji, who was full of sympathy, forgiveness and piety for all living
beings.
Gandhiji says: "I have
drunk to my heart's content the nectar of religion that was offered to me by
Shri Raichandbhai. Raichandbhai hated
the spread of irreligion in the name of religion and he condemned lies,
hypocrisy and such other vices which were getting a free hand in his time. He considered the whole world as his
relative and his sympathy extended to all living beings of all ages.
Shrimadji was an embodiment
of non‑attachment and renunciation.
He has written only that which he has experienced. He has never allowed his poetic imagination
to get ahead of truth and experience.
There is therefore no artificiality in his writings. They come from the heart and appeal to the
very heart of the reader. He used to
keep diary and a pen with him in all his daily routine and he immediately wrote
down important thoughts that occurred to him.
I never remember any occasion when Shri Raichandbhai got lost or
infatuated in any worldly matter."
"His living was
simple. He was satisfied with whatever
food was offered to him. He put on
simple but clean clothes. He used to wear
Dhoti, Peharan, Khesa and a turban. He
used to sit on a Gadi on the floor in his shop or at home.
He was slow in his walk and
he used to think while walking. There
was a spark in his eyes, they were full of luster and steadiness. They declared the single‑mindedness of
his purpose. His face was round, his
lips thin, nose not pointed nor flat, body single, height average, color
darkish white and general appearance that of an idol in peace.
His tone was so sweet that
one would love to hear him more and more.
His face was smiling and in full bloom and joy. It clearly declared the internal joy and
peace.
His language was so effective and measured that he was never found
to be searching for words. Language was
his maidservant. He was described by
some as an incarnation of the Goddess of Learning, Saraswati. He never changed a word while writing a
letter. He expressed his thoughts and
meditations in fine and appropriate language.
This description befits only
a self‑controlled person. By
renunciation the external forms one cannot be self‑controlled. The real self‑control is not an
imposition, it is an inspiration and an internal illumination.
Complete non‑attachment
and renunciation is the gift of the soul.
It should be spontaneous and from within and not sporadic or externally
imposed. Very rare souls by virtue of
their high spiritual attainments in their previous births possess these
qualities in them. Only those , who
actively try to keep away from all attachments from them, know how difficult it
is to attain. Such a difficult
achievement was easily found in Shri Raichandbhai. The first step to Self‑realization is a cultivation of a
spirit of complete non‑attachment and it was natural in Raichandbhai.
People normally believe that
truth‑telling and successful business never go together. Shri Raichandbhai on the other hand firmly
believed and advised that truth and honesty were not only useful but essential
to all good business. Morality is not
packed within a prayer book, it is to be practiced and lived in all stations of
life. Religion and morality sustain
both good life and good business.
Though Raichandbhai never played tricks with others, he used to find
them out quite easily when they were played by others. And he used to snub the persons using the
tricks and force them to leave them.
While we are worldly souls,
Shrimadji was quite other worldly or liberated from the worldly life. While we may have to take many further
births, for Raichandbhai his present life may be the last. While we perhaps are running away from
liberation, Raichandbhai was heading towards liberation with a tremendous
speed. This speaks volume of
Raichandbhai's self‑effort.
Whoever will read his
teachings and follow them may speed up his march to Self‑liberation. From this is evident that Raichandbhai has
written for the advanced and the initiate in religion and not for all and
sundry.
While many Christian
Missionary friends considered their religious duty to convert me to
Christianity on the ground of its wonderful vows of charity, chastity, faith
and hope, I made up my mind that I should first find out whether the religion
of my birth namely Hinduism, gave me the message that I needed.
And I asked a few
fundamental questions on Hinduism to Shri Raichandbhai by post and his replies
were so logical, so appealing and convincing that I regained my faith in
Hinduism and I was saved from conversion of religion. From that moment onwards, my respect and admiration for
Raichandbhai increased with leaps and
bounds and I considered him to be my religious guide till he lived."
"Religion does not mean
religious differences and set beliefs.
Religion does not mean cramming or reading of all religious texts or believing
all what is said in them as gospel truth.
Religion is the spiritual
quality of the soul. It is embedded in
human nature in visible or invisible form.
By religion we are able to know the duty of man, by it we are able to
know our relations (or kinship) with other living beings. But all this requires the capacity to know
one's self. If we do not know ourselves
we cannot know others rightly. By
religion one can know himself. Such a
religion can be selected from wherever it is found. All students of comparative religion will testify to what is said
about religion here. No religious
scripture advises people to tell a lie or to practice falsehood. Nor does any religion advise violence.
Shankaracharya expressed the
quintessence of all scriptures in the formula "Brahma Satyam Jagat
Mithya" that Brahma is the only reality, all else called the world and its
differences are unreal or mixtures of truth and falsehood.
Koran Sharif declared that
God is only one and He is the only real, and there is nothing else.
In Bible, Christ said:
"I and my father are one. All the
rest are only manifestations of the one God."
In the expression of the
same perennial truth that Reality is only one without a second, many religious
and philosophical brains have offered their perspectives and unfortunately
their verbal differences have been the cause of much doubt, disbelief and
despair for the laymen.
Those who are in earnest
about their salvation should leave these differences and follow advice of the
experienced Guru rather than be lost in the interpretations of the various
religious texts.
We, as stepped in the world
by consciousness, are already imperfect and we are trying to take the help of
the imperfect scriptures thinking that they are less imperfect than ourselves. We are led by them to a certain limit but
beyond it they leave us in the lurch and there we are to rely on spiritual
experience alone and none else.
Our spiritual experience
becomes our guide, illuminates our future path, assures our march and pushes us
to the goal."
Shrimadji says in one of his
poems i.e. Apurva Avasara, "The stage of experience which the All‑seeing
Mahavir saw in spiritual knowledge, He could not himself describe in full. I meditated on that very stage of spiritual
experience but I found that I was also
incompetent to describe it. I have a
desire to describe it in full but for the present it has remained only as my
cherished desire."
It is clear from the above
that Atma or Self alone is to liberate itself.
This truth is repeatedly declared by Shrimadji in many of his writings.
He had studied many
religious books. He followed Sanskrit
and Magadhi languages very well. He
studied Vedanta, Bhagavata and Gita. He
read the Jain scriptures as many as he could obtain. He had a fine style of reading and a method of quick
grasping. He read Koran and Zand Avesta
in translations.
But he used to tell me that
he had a soft corner for Jain philosophy and religion, for he strongly believed
that soul‑saving knowledge had reached its highest possible watermark in
Jain philosophy and religion.
Nonetheless, Shri
Raichandbhai was never disrespectful to any other religion. He had also a partiality for Vedanta. To a Vedanti he might appear a thorough
going Vedanti.
In his talks with me he
never said that I should follow a particular religion for my salvation. He always advised me to purify my thoughts
and behavior.
Looking to my habit and
training of my childhood he encouraged me in my reading of the Bhagavata Gita,
and he advised me to read among other books Panchikaran, Mani‑ratna‑mala,
non‑attachment chapter of Yoga Vashistha, first part of Kavya Dohana and
his own composition of Mokshamala.
He repeatedly told me that
the various religions are prisons in which men are prisoners. Whoever wants liberation should jump out of
them and should not bear any religious mark on his body.
His simple advice is `live
easily and in such a way that you can attain the Lord.' Akha Bhagat gave the same advice. Shri Raichandbhai never bothered with
religious differences. They used to
choke him."
1. Once he had gone out with a friend for a walk in Bombay and on
his way he came near a cemetery. He
asked his friend as to what was the place they came by. His friend replied:
"Cemetery". Shrimadji said
that he viewed the whole Bombay city as a cemetery.
2. Once Shrimadji's neighbor knowing his superhuman powers told him
that he must be knowing the market rates of all commodities and such knowledge
could be used to his financial benefit in his dealings in shares. To this Shrimadji replied that he was not a
fool to use his spiritual powers for such petty selfish benefits.
3. Once Padamshibhai, a resident of Kutch, sought from him the
remedy for removing his fear of death.
Shrimadji advised that till life is fully led according to fixed destiny
there is no death. Why then should we
not live well until death visits us ?
By the fear of death one cannot be free from death. Be fearless, lead a chaste life and embrace
death when it comes.
4. His servant Lallu, a resident of Morbi, who had stayed with his
family for a number of years caught a deadly disease in Bombay. He used daily to nurse him personally till Lallu
breathed his last.
5. Once Shrimadji went to see Tokarshibhai, who had Pneumonia and
whose sickness was growing fatal. In
his presence Tokarshibhai became quiet and experienced peace and joy. After some time Shrimadji receded from him
and said to other relatives of Tokarshibhai that the latter was gradually
sinking. When he was asked as to how
did he know it and as to what did he do by which Tokarshibhai got a relief from
his pain and enjoyed peace, Shrimadji replied that he could see Tokarshibhai's
death and he therefore tried to change his mind and last desires so as to
improve his spiritual prospects for the future birth.
6. Once Shrimadji asked his three years old daughter her name, to
which she replied that her name was Kashi.
Shrimadji lovingly said: "No you are the Self." But Kashiben
refused to agree to it. Shrimadji
laughed at the child's ignorance.
On Kartik Sud 14th, Samvat
1947, Shrimadji writes in a letter as follows: "That my soul has attained
complete knowledge of its nature is an indubitable fact, that my knots of the
heart and head have been removed, is a truth of all times and all Self‑realized
souls will easily recognize and endorse my experience."
At other place he writes:
"O you Self‑knowledge, the source of all heights of joy and bliss,
to you I bow down with all devotion and humility. Innumerable souls without you suffer from ignorance. It is solely by your grace that I could know
you and I could reach the goal of my soul's pilgrimage. As a result, I enjoyed unprecedented
peace. I felt freedom from all worries
and burdens, mental and physical."
"In Vikram Samvat 1947
I could realize the full stature of my spiritual being, and from then onwards I
am enjoying increasing peace and bliss."
"In a wink the
knowledge which drew me to the worldly life, changed its course and has led me
to my proper goal i.e. Self‑realization."
In a couplet he says:
"One gets a spiritual insight by his spiritual eye and without it he
cannot obtain soul‑saving knowledge at all. This is not a matter of physical perception and it is foolish to
try that way. Only by unqualified,
concentrated devotion to a spiritual Guru or guide, one can obtain the soul‑saving
knowledge. Only a Guru can give this
spiritual eye to see the spiritual reality."
In Vikram Samvat 1948, in
the month of Magh, Shrimadji writes: "The system which contains a clear
description of the right positions of bondage and freedom is the only guide to
Self‑liberation and such a system is that of the great Mahavir ‑
the Jain system. If in my humble
opinion, there is any living man available, in whom the heart of the great
Tirthankara is residing, he is no other than the author of these lines. The result of the soul‑saving
knowledge is the experience of complete renunciation from all worldly
considerations and this is what I experience in my own being. Hence, I consider myself to be the perfect
disciple of the great Tirthankara. One
who gains the soul's knowledge in accordance with the enlightened Guru's
opinion, has obtained correct insight and experience, and none else. When the goal and the path are clearly seen
there is no difficulty for a sincere disciple to follow the path and reach the
goal."
In his talks with Muni
Mohanlalji, Shrimadji said: "I do not forget the Self even for a
second."
Once Shrimadji said to Shri
Devkaranji Muni, an associate of Shri Lalluji Maharaj, that he lived in his
body as a separate pulp would be felt in a dried coconut shell."
At Kheda one day Shrimadji
in a soliloquy says: "In Samvat 1948, you the great soul of infinite peace
and calmness visited Ralaj, in these days you visited Vaso and there you were a
great Yogi absorbed in deep meditation and now you are the same Yogindra
enjoying bliss and peace here at Kheda."
This is Shrimadji's description of himself as a disembodied soul.
In a letter Shrimadji
writes: "I think in my mind that I have all qualifications to re‑establish
and propagate the Vedic religion, but in order to settle and propagate the Jain
religion I do require some more qualifications than I actually possess, though
of all the available person I am better qualified for the purpose."
Shri Lalluji Maharaj being
sick in Surat requested Shrimadji for Samadhi Maran. In reply, Shrimadji wrote the famous letter of six fundamental
truths, and inspired Lalluji Maharaj not to fear death.
This letter is the theme, of
which "Atmasiddhi" is the development. Shri Lalluji Maharaj appreciates this letter as follows:
"This letter has helped
us to remove all our stray ideas and wandering thoughts, it has removed our
doubts, confirmed our faith in the fundamentals of Jainism and those of all
religions in general, namely the nature and development of soul.
It has taken us out of our
prejudicial attachments to the Jain sects; it has kept us clear of fixing our
faith in the Vedanta; it has, in brief, re‑established our pursuits in
the nature of the Self and its knowledge.
Thus, this letter is
uniquely wonderful in many ways. If the
disciple is deserving, the constant meditation on this letter, on the truths
contained in it, would put him to the path of Self‑realization."
At Nadiad in Kaira District,
Shrimadji wrote out his famous Atmasiddhi in the form of a poetic dialogue in
142 verses, at the suggestion and request of Shri Sobhagyabhai, in the
gathering darkness of the night when Shri Ambalalbhai stood with a lantern in
his hand while the composition was on.
The prose version by the name "A letter about six fundamental
truths" could not be easily memorized by the aspirants and hence, Shri
Sobhagyabhai requested Shrimadji to put the matter in verse.
This succinct and accurate
composition is a masterpiece in philosophical literature. The author has, in a simple form of question
and answer, explained the gist of Jainism and of all true religion namely the
six fundamental truths, that the soul exists, that it is eternal, that it is
the author of its activities, that therefore is responsible for the results of
its activities, that it aspires for liberation and that this is achieved by
following a right kind of religion.
Shrimadji instructed Shri
Ambalalbhai to make out four copies of the manuscript and give one copy each,
to his close and deserving disciples namely, Shri Sobhagyabhai, Shri
Ambalalbhai himself, Shri Lalluji Maharaj and lastly to Shri Zaveri Maneklal
Ghelabhai. He instructed to Shri
Lalluji to study and reflect upon the Atmasiddhi in solitude and not to make it
a subject of collective reading or public discourse.
In the first 44 verses the
subject is introduced ‑ The truth that without Self‑knowledge, the
worldly pains cannot be completely removed is clearly demonstrated, the
mechanical attachment to the path of sacrificial activities and the theoretical
parrotlike dry as bone repetition of the different natures of the soul and the
body as found in the theoretical academicians of the Vedanta system are
declared as two major obstacles in the path of the aspirant for Self‑realization.
The special characteristics
of the persons who belong to the above two lines of thinking are described and
all this is done to remove these drawbacks from all aspirants for soul‑saving
knowledge and experience.
Then, the way to remove
these defects or to keep them miles away from the spiritual pilgrim, the resort
to the advice of an enlightened Self‑realized Guru is advised and
advocated. All the authentic scriptures
helpful to the spiritual pilgrim should be studied and followed under the
guidance of such a Guru. Then only
truth can be grasped and right experience of reality can obtained.
The importance and impelling
need of a living enlightened Guru is repeatedly emphasized in order to keep
clear of the pride, conceit and ignorance.
Humility is declared as the root of true religion and therefore a
disciple is advised to serve his Master without any reservation. On the other hand, one should not pose to be
a Guru without developing proper qualities in himself. An unmerited Guru degenerates into a bad
type of a worldly person, and he leads his followers to deep darkness and
bondage.
According to Shrimadji, only
a truly enlightened Guru deserves to be a spiritual guide. To follow others is a sheer waste of time.
Later on, the doubts of the
aspirant regarding the six fundamental truths, are posed and considered and
conclusively replied so as to dispel them for ever and to help the disciple to
see the truth in its purity.
Regarding the nature of the
soul it is said that as it is quite different from the body, no bodily sense
organ can perceive the soul. The
unreasonable obduracy to try to see the soul by any or all of the physical sense
organs results from the attachment of the soul to the living body. Philosophically the soul and the body are
two absolutely separate entities like the sword and its scabbard. The soul is neither a body nor its senses,
nor breath.
The soul is the source of organic unity of a living being. The soul is the all‑knower, always the
subject and co‑ordinator of the information collected through the
senses. The soul is conscious, knowing
and blissful in nature. The conscious
and unconscious differ in kind and not in degree. Hence the unconscious cannot probe the conscious. But the conscious is a quite powerful light
to understand the unconscious. Hence,
the superiority of the conscious over the unconscious.
Such a soul eternally
exists, it has no beginning and no end.
The body which is composed, has an end but the unique soul is neither
composed nor decomposed.
Though the soul and body are
two different realities both are found to be cooperating in a living
organism. One helps or hinders the
other. All creation and dissolution can
be understood by the conscious soul but the conscious soul can be known only by
itself and by no other physical or visible means. Hence, the talk of the source and decay of the soul is unmeaning.
Shrimadji confirms the
belief in births and rebirths.
An unconscious body cannot
act by itself. If an animal moves, it
can only do so as directed by the conscious soul living in it. Hence, the soul is the author of all
activities. It is not the nature of the
soul always to act, though no activity without it, it can cease to act
also. Metaphysically the soul has no
reason to act and so it is unattached to the body, but in worldly practical
life we see the soul propelling the living body to various activities to suit its
motives formed by its association with and attachment to the body.
Further Shrimadji has
elaborated the Jain doctrine of Karma and its various categories, and has shown
that no principle of God is needed to explain animal and human activities. Activities naturally being the fruits
enjoined with them and no divine force is needed for this arrangement.
He uses a fine logic to show
that, as doing good or bad actions results in enjoying good or bad rewards, not
doing them is the way to be free from their results. The first path leads to bondage, the second to liberation. To say that only a conscious soul can
initiate activity, does not mean that it must always act and as doing something
brings some result, not doing it should bring the opposite result. If activity, good or bad, will lead one to
bondage, keeping away from it should lead one to its opposite namely release.
The great Tirthankaras have
reached the state of non‑attachment to all bodily forms, hence, they are
eternally free. Release is the fruit of
retirement from action. In the Siddha
state, the soul is absolutely separated from all Karmas and so this is the
state of complete release. In this
state the real nature of the soul is experienced for ever.
The soul's long standing
infatuation to bodily forms is removed by the enlightening knowledge and
guidance of the true Guru just like dispelling a long standing enveloping
darkness by a ray of light. By
attachment, avarice and ignorance, the soul binds itself, removing them with
the help of his Guru and the scriptures it obtains release. Wrong perception of truth is removed by
right understanding of the scriptures under the guidance of an enlightened
Guru.
The wrong habits of behavior can be removed by a spirit of non‑attachment
to worldly life. This is the correct
remedy of the soul's ills.
By anger one binds actions
and by forgiveness he loosens the knots of actions and becomes free
himself. Hence, forgiveness is declared
by Shrimad Rajchandra as the gateway to liberation. Forgiveness destroys bondage to actions. Whoever, high or low, follows this path of
liberation will certainly attain the goal.
This path, in brief,
consists in quelling down the excitements of anger, honor or pride, delusion
and greed, in harboring the desire for liberation and none else, in feeling
uneasiness in worldly activities, in developing compassion towards all living
beings and in feeling sympathy for all aspirants for liberation and in praying
and working for their release.
Whoever possesses these
qualities is on the correct path and he will certainly be liberated. By following this path one sharpens his
spiritual insight, purifies his being, loosens his attachment with the body and
burns his actions in the fire of his spiritual consciousness, gains power and
light and in the end releases himself and becomes a guide to others for similar
work. At this stage the released soul
is neither acting nor it is bothered with the fruits of action. This is the essence of every good religion
and this is the only accepted path soul's liberation.
Towards the end, in nine
verses Shrimadji has described the effect of this soul‑saving knowledge
on the disciple and the disciple pays his grateful homage to his Guru for his
help and advice.
In the final fifteen verses,
the whole subject is brought to its natural close. It is shown that this work contains the fundamentals of all six
systems of Indian philosophy too.
Thus Atmasiddhi is the
quintessence of the truths of all scriptures.
* He has written 51 sayings
about the religion of a Sanyasi and a Muni (Samyati Dharma) as described in
"Dasha Vaikalika Siddhanta".
This is a fine exact Gujarati rendering of the original Magadhi text
prepared in Vikram Samvat 1945.
* In Vikram Samvat 1953 he
wrote on "The doctrine of liberation" or Moksha Siddhanta.
* He had started the
Gujarati translation of "Swarodaya" by Shri Chidanandji. His writings are marked by his simple
attractive style.
* He had also started
writing a commentary on the 24 prayers for 24 Tirthankaras written by Shri Anandghanji. His reflections on the first two of these 24
prayers are worthy of deep study and emulation for any one who wants to
complete the commentary. He has brought
out in his reflections all the spiritual associations of Shri Anandghanji, in a
lucid and inimitable style.
* On one of the couplets of
the sixth out of the eight perspectives composed by Shri Yashovijayji,
Shrimadji has commented so beautifully well in his three letters Nos. 393, 394
and 395 printed in "Shrimad Rajchandra".
* He prepared a Gujarati
equivalent translation of the first one hundred verses of
"Atmanushasan".
* Besides, he wrote on the
Anitya and Asharan Bhavana and a little on Sansara Bhavana out of the twelve
Bhavanas or spiritual sentiments from Shri Ratna‑karand Shravaka‑achar.
* Shrimadji is the only
author who has prepared a complete translation of the Panchastikaya, a work of
the celebrated Shri Kundkundacharya. In
appreciation of this great work, the Panchastikaya, Shrimadji writes to Shri
Dharshibhai: "It is rare and subtle to obtain the contact with the
spiritual Self. The aim of the
discourse is to obtain this difficult objective. The study of this work will develop in a person pure meditation
which will lead to absolute knowledge of the absolute reality, the Self, the
Atma. The contact with this Self
results from the reduction and destruction of perceptual delusions, from the
indifference to the sense‑pleasures, from a single minded devotion to the
Self‑realized Guru. As, by these
means, the Self‑control gets ascendant, the Self begins to manifest its
nature in its entirety. A right insight
develops and in result, the Self‑knowledge."
* He had prepared an index
on the Pragnavabodh in Vikram Samvat 1956 which was lately written by the late
Shri Brahmachariji of Shrimad Rajchandra Ashram, Agas.
In Vikram Samvat 1957,
Shrimad Rajchandra with his mother and wife stayed at Agakhan's Bungalow in
Ahmedabad. One day Shri Devkaranji Muni
asked the reason for reduction of his body to which he replied: "I am on a
war with my body as it took unwholesome food during my stay in Dharampur."
One day prior to going to
Wadhwan Camp he called Shri Lalluji and Shri Devkaranji to his residence in
Agakhan's Bungalow at Ahmedabad and advised them to see no difference in him
and in Shri Mahavirswami.
On the day prior to his
death at Rajkot, Shrimadji said to Shri Mansukhbhai, Shri Revashankarbhai, Shri
Narbherambhai and others around him: "Be sure this soul is eternal, it is
reaching increasingly higher stages, it has a very bright future. You remain quiet and behave with calmness
and peace. I may not in future tell you
with my tongue nor there is now the time for it. I only advise you to continue your efforts towards Self‑realization."
At 8:45 a.m. on Chaitra Vad
5th Vikram Samvat 1957 he said to Shri Mansukhbhai: "Mansukh, do not be
afflicted, take care of mother, I retire to my soul's true nature." From 8:45 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. he lay on his
death bed quiet as a machine, in deep meditation, and he left his body for
ever.
Shri Lalluji Maharaj heard
in Kavitha the sad news of his Guru's expiry and he retired to the fields in
solitude and passed his day in dedication to the departed Guru.
According to English calendar
Shrimadji left his body for good on 9th April 1901 at Rajkot after a little
over one year's sickness.
In brief, Shrimadji lived
and died as a Self‑realized soul, though in body, completely independent
of it.
He had in his mind an
aspiration to re‑establish the pure religion of Shri Mahavirswami which
had been distorted in the institutional sectarianism which cut at the very root
of Jainism. To some extent this purpose
has been fulfilled by his great disciples in recent years.
Shrimad Rajchandra was a
universal man practicing the universal religion of Atma, the only reality and
he defined a person as Jain if he followed an enlightened Guru's advice and
practiced the religion of Atma.
Infinite salutations to the
great Shrimad Rajchandra.