THE DESIRE OF NATIONS
In the works of a great Sufi teacher we find the words, ‘In order to
know God, know yourself.’ If follows that in order to
know the desire of nations or of people, we should first know our own
desire. Until we know ourselves, we cannot know
about others. As long as we are ignorant of our life’s needs and wants
and of the secret of our own nature, we can never
understand the needs and wants and the secret of another person’s nature.
In reality, we ourselves are a nation within ourselves. More than that,
we are a whole universe within ourselves. Therefore, if
we study the self, we shall find we can study not only a nation, but
this whole world and even all other worlds. To study our
self means also the study of life in all its forms.
We must also learn about the inclination of life in all forms. What
is this inclination? There is a verse in the Bible, which explains
it, indirectly giving a hint of its secret, ‘For in Him we live and
move and have our being.’ We live to move, and we move to
make our being in God. Without moving we are not living. Without making
our being we do not move, nor do we live.
Therefore, it is the condition of life that if we live we should move
and progress, and attain that state of being for which we are
destined.
We can see this inclination in every being. A little plant, a tree,
if we suppress its growth, if we erect a fence round it, if we
cover it with grass, it will not flourish, it will not produce flowers.
In time, it will die. Why is this? It is because its life cannot
express itself when it is covered, it cannot express itself when there
is a fence round it. It is not enough for it to be alive,
because life does not want only to live. To realize itself life must
be able to make progress, and progress is only made when
there is free movement.
We find the same inclination even in worms and insects. An ant has the
same desire. We try to touch it, but it does not want us
to touch it. We attempt to keep it in a certain place, but it does
not want to stay there. However much we may say we will
take great care of the parrots and the sparrows and the beautiful birds
we keep in cages, saying we love them so much, it is no
pleasure to them. Of course they will eat in their captivity if they
are hungry. They will drink water when they are thirsty. But
this is no sign that they enjoy themselves or that they are happy.
Why should they be happy when it is not their life’s inclination to
be restricted? Life did not give a bird wings in order to stay in
a cage. Wings were given as the means to enjoy life, to make a nest
where the birds can live, to make the acquaintance of
other birds, to enjoy the life in the jungle, and to find water and
food for the comfort and ease of their family. It is in this way
that they make their being. It is the same with animals and birds as
it is with plants. For them also life means to have a being, to
move it. It is what life demands.
When we come to human life, do we not find it the same too? However
much we love our child and say, ‘Sit here, I would so
much like you to be here,’ it will only stay there for a moment, and
then it will say, ‘No, let me play.’ We say to it, ‘You should
be sitting here,’ but it answers, ‘No, I don’t like sitting here.’
Then we give the child a beautiful toy, and say again, ‘Sit here.’
Yes, for the sake of the toy, it will sit for a moment. But the next
moment it will take the toy and go away. ‘Let me have my
freedom,’ it says. Does this not show that the purpose of life is freedom?
As long as man is ignorant of this he is ignorant of the
secret of his own nature and the secret of any other. Neither he nor
anyone else can be happy, however much wealth or
property, grandeur of position or palaces he may possess.
Interdependence is the law of nature. We make our life by sharing the
joys and pleasures and sorrows of another, but it takes
us a very long time to understand this one thing. Our observation and
study of man’s nature show that his life demands
freedom. And yet, on the other hand, we find that selfishness develops
naturally in man, more than in any other creature. The
demands of his life are so much greater, and he becomes so absorbed
in satisfying these demands, and possessing and
enjoying them when he has them, that he really forgets the secret of
nature. He forgets the secret of his own happiness as well
as that of others.
Not only does individual man seek freedom, but also the nations and
races and peoples throughout the whole world have been
absorbed in the pursuit of freedom. Whenever wars have occurred, whenever
there has been bloodshed in the world,
whenever there have been revolutions and upheavals in life, all the
various disasters that have taken place are due to these
same causes: on the one side man’s selfishness, and on the other his
lack of understanding of the law of nature and the law of
happiness.
Ignorance of this law exists in the human soul from childhood. When
a child sees anything that is attractive and beautiful, it at
once wants to have it, never thinking whose it might be. ‘No one shall
touch it. That shall belong to me,’ it says. ‘I shall only be
happy when I have what that other child has.’ Even if it already has
a beautiful toy, it still wants to have what the other one has.
This is human nature, which goes on developing regardless of the secret
happiness, which can only be disclosed when the veil
of ignorance has fallen from man’s eyes.
He never understands what justice is, even though he may speak of it.
Real justice cannot be perceived until the veil of
selfishness has been removed from his eyes. The least spark of selfishness
will prevent man from being just. He will continue to
have a partial interest, because he will be looking after his own interest.
Whatever furthers his own interests, he will call his right
and his justice.
The prophets and the holy ones have all recognized the justice of God
as the only real justice. What is the nature of the justice
of God? It cannot be learned from the self within after selfishness
has been removed. Our limited self is like a wall separating us
from the Self of God. God is as far away from us as that wall is thick.
The wisdom and justice of God are within us, and yet
they are far away under the covering of the veil of the limited self.
Whoever has arrived at that realization of the nature of
God’s justice is able to see things in a different way from others.
His whole outlook on life becomes different.
From the most ancient times teachers have come as messengers, one after
the other, in order to instruct man in this law of
God’s justice, the law of cooperation, the law of love amongst men.
That which Christ taught, they taught. For that has always
been their work. But it is the way in which education and new reforms
have worked out in modern civilization that has covered
the real spirit of religion. The nations gradually unlearned what true
religion was, and became more and more depraved. Christ
came to re-awaken the ancient truth. And then Mohammad formed not only
a nation with his spiritual message, but also a
school in which love, co-operation, equality, and democracy could be
learned: the truth that on the dependence of men on one
another the happiness of humanity depends. Hence, it is written, ‘Every
Muslim is a brother of another Muslim.’ If a king and a
Prime Minister are offering a prayer, a poor man can stand beside them
and offer his prayers with them.
How was the original spirit changed? For at first Islam taught the world
both directly and indirectly. Directly to the followers of
Islam, indirectly to humanity at large. Before the spirit changed the
religion was given by the Prophet, but afterwards the
religion was used as the instrument for forming a nation. Instead of
a nation being the protector of religion, the religion became
the protector of a nation. The desire to attain a God-ideal was degraded
into a desire to attain a national ideal, in order to
satisfy a selfish motive. No sooner did that spirit enter Islam than
the whole building tumbled down.
In the history of the world this lesson has been taught not once, but
a thousand times. As long as a nation works for the interest
of God and humanity it will always be prosperous, but as soon as it
uses religion in order to exalt the national ideal, then it falls
down like a house of cards. We can see this in the history of Hinduism,
in the history of Islam, in the history of European
religious sects. If there is the wish to rise, the ideal must be high.
If there is the desire to fall, let the ideal be low. It is the love of
the earth that will attract man to the earth. But it is the love of
heaven that will attract him to heaven. It is as the Bible says,
‘Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.’ When the whole
of man’s ideal in life is his degree of education, his
success in trade, all towards exalting the self, the individuality,
then he is descending and not ascending. He is selfish as an
individual, he becomes selfish as a nation, then as a race, and at
last there is warfare. The racial ideal expresses its selfishness in
great wars. Even people of the same nation will fight against one another.
The same thing develops further when it appears between classes and
parties, between labor and capital, the higher against the
lower. All of them have a wrong ideal. Selfishness may begin with the
thought, ‘As long as my country is benefited, that
benefits me;’ and then it will narrow down to, ‘If my family is benefited,
if we become wealthy and have desirable things, that is
sufficient for the present!’ And then it narrows down again, ‘For my
father, or mother, or wife or children,’ until it ends in,
‘Nothing matters as long as I am happy myself.’ Man has now become
cold, ignorant, and blind to the law that life depends on
the happiness of those with whom we live. The whole of life is one.
In all these different names and manifestations life is one.
The true thought is, ‘If my wife is not happy, how can I ever be happy?’
An insult given to someone will one day return.
How simple it is. Yet, how difficult for man to understand! It is simple
to him, who observes life keenly. It is difficult to him
who is absorbed in himself. Life is nothing but this. Life is not a
particular philosophy, not a particular faith, not a particular
religion, not a particular code of morals. Life is that dependence
upon our surroundings, upon the life of our neighbors, upon
the life of the nation, upon the life of the whole world. That is what
keen observation and wide outlook on life teaches man.
How the peace of the world has suffered during the past few years! Do
not think that the effect of this suffering has not been
felt by all the other nations, even though they were not actually engaged
in the war. The effect has spread both directly and
indirectly throughout the world. The whole of humanity has gone through
this pain. Even the fishes of the sea have suffered with
man in the catastrophe. The invisible beings have also suffered. It
is all one life. How could it be otherwise? If a wound in the
foot has an effect on the arm, even though the arm is not wounded,
if the pain has its effect upon the whole body, how can it be
otherwise between nation and nation?
We can see the operation of this law even in our own circle. When there
is someone among our own acquaintances who is
poor, someone among the servants or relatives depending on us, who
is helpless or in distress, suppose we cause him trouble
or do him some injury, even though we may not know of it at the time,
some day later on we shall discover it. It will return to
us. It may return through some other channel. We may be too blind to
see that it has originally come from that source. We may
not see if we are in Africa that the harm has come from someone in
China. But, life is nevertheless all one.
Similarly when we bring joy and pleasure and happiness, it is never
lost any more than is anything harmful or injurious, or of a
troublesome nature. Good deeds, kindness, forgiveness, tolerance, acts
of love, none of these are ever lost, and some day they
will return to us. Even if the recipient appears ungrateful or heedless,
it is all the same. There is no need to be disappointed
even if he proves to be unworthy of our kindness and our love. When
we realize that all life is one life, we discover that it is to
that life that we give our love and kindness and mercy. Then it is
bound to return to us, if not today, perhaps next week. If not
next week, perhaps next year. If not here, then somewhere where we
never expected it could possibly come. ‘Thou shalt find
it after many days.’
Though there may still be time to awaken to a true understanding of
these things, it is often too late by the time that sufferings,
troubles, and misery have come to the individual or to the multitude.
If someone has so far failed to understand them before
they actually came, perhaps he will never understand. When there is
some little pain or he feels bad in himself, he may think he
has some illness. But if he does not think about it, if he takes no
notice of it, something worse may come. And so it has been
with the world. The worst evil that has ever been should show man that
it is now time to awaken and understand that it is not a
study of national or social problems, not a study of religious questions
that will bring an everlasting peace. But it is the insight
into life, which is the real religion and which alone can help man
to understand life.
What is that religion? It is nature’s religion of freedom, the religion
that will liberate man. When man sees that the ideal of every
soul is freedom, and that he cannot enjoy his own freedom unless he
has shared his freedom with others, then and only then
can troubles and happiness cease.
A Hindustani poet says, ‘It is for sympathy that we have created man,
not that he should worship God.’ There are so many
angels in heaven, who constantly worship God. Therefore, man, being
the final manifestation, is supposed to do something
different from the angelic world. God says, ‘We have made man to sympathize
with his fellow man, to be serviceable to others,
to give joy and peace to others.’ Until he does that he is not really
man.
The animals are selfish. They all seek their own life’s demands, and
the satisfaction of their passions in life. Their understanding
of happiness is that it is just this gratification. Birds make their
nests. Animals have their holes. Therefore, if the only ideal
necessary for man were that he should attain comfort and wealth and
position, he would be no different from the lower
creation. The great difference is that man has the power of sympathizing.
He it is who can say, ‘My mother has taken care of
me. Now she is old. I must listen to her. I must tolerate her hard
words. Perhaps she has only misunderstood. I was very
disagreeable at one time, and yet my mother was always patient and
kind and attentive through it all.’ If one’s father has
become old, if our friends are in difficulty, in every case we must
have sympathy. Not like the animals who bite their aged ones,
and forget their mothers and fathers when their own needs are satisfied,
but like him who thinks gratefully of his aged mother
and of the wife to whom he is united to share in sorrows and joys,
and to find in what way they are able to serve one another.
He is a man who thinks, ‘Though in business I have to make money and
profit, yet, by proving ourselves sincere and true in
heart, by proving ourselves honest and earnest, the business will increase
still more and remain secure.’ He is a man who in
national, social, and racial ideals, in the ideals of the whole of
humanity, looks at nature with wide open eyes, and can perceive
that the whole of life is one, that all individuals are one embodiment
of life.
He who perceives this, realizes, ‘What I have taken from another, I
have lost. What I have given to another, I have gained.
Whatever good I have done to another is my gain, and whatever good
another has done to me is my loss.’ The kindness, the
service, the love and sympathy that another has given are all lost
when the giver is gone. It could only be there so long as he
was there. But deeds of goodness, of kindness, of consideration done
to another, will remain with him who does them both
here and hereafter.