The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda/Volume 4/Writings: Prose/Reply to the Calcutta Address
I am in receipt of the resolutions that were passed at the recent Town Hall
meeting in Calcutta and the kind words my fellow-citizens sent over to me.
Accept, sir, my most heartfelt gratitude for your appreciation of my
insignificant services.
I am thoroughly convinced that no individual or nation can live by holding
itself apart from the community of others, and whenever such an attempt has
been made under false ideas of greatness, policy, or holiness — the result
has always been disastrous to the secluding one.
To my mind, the one great cause of the downfall and the degeneration of
India was the building of a wall of custom — whose foundation was hatred of
others — round the nation, and the real aim of which in ancient times was to
prevent the Hindus from coming in contact with the surrounding Buddhistic
nations.
Whatever cloak ancient or modern sophistry may try to throw over it, the
inevitable result — the vindication of the moral law, that none can hate
others without degenerating himself — is that the race that was foremost
amongst the ancient races is now a byword, and a scorn among nations. We are
object-lessons of the violation of that law which our ancestors were the
first to discover and disseminate.
Give and take is the law; and if India wants to raise herself once more, it
is absolutely necessary that she brings out her treasures and throws them
broadcast among the nations of the earth, and in return be ready to receive
what others have to give her. Expansion is life, contraction is death. Love
is life, and hatred is death. We commenced to die the day we began to hate
other races; and nothing can prevent our death unless we come back to
expansion, which is life.
We must mix, therefore, with all the races of the earth. And every Hindu
that goes out to travel in foreign parts renders more benefit to his country
than hundreds of men who are bundles of superstitions and selfishness, and
whose one aim in life seems to be like that of the dog in the manger. The
wonderful structures of national life which the Western nations have raised,
are supported by the strong pillars of character, and until we can produce
members of such, it is useless to fret and fume against this or that power.
Do any deserve liberty who are not ready to give it to others? Let us calmly
and in a manly fashion go to work, instead of dissipating our energy in
unnecessary frettings and fumings. I, for one, thoroughly believe that no
power in the universe can withhold from anyone anything he really deserves.
The past was great no doubt, but I sincerely believe that the future will be
more glorious still.
May Shankara keep us steady in purity, patience, and perseverance!
- Notes
- ↑ Written from New York on Nov. 18, 1894, to Raja Pyari Mohan Mukherji, President of the public meeting held on Sept. 5, 1894 at the Calcutta Town Hall in appreciation of Swami Vivekananda's work in the West.