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印度是愚昧的国家吗?

卷4 lecture
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中文

印度是一个蒙昧之国吗?

以下是辨喜在美国密歇根州底特律所作演讲的报道,附有《波士顿晚报》1894年4月5日的编辑评论:

斯瓦米·辨喜近日莅临底特律,在当地留下了深刻印象。各界人士纷纷前往聆听,尤以专业人士对其逻辑思辨与思想严谨性深感折服。唯有歌剧院方能容纳如此众多的听众。他的英语极为流利,其人品性之美更与外表相得益彰。底特律各报均以大量篇幅刊载其演讲报道。《底特律晚报》的一篇社论写道:多数人将倾向于认为,斯瓦米·辨喜昨晚在歌剧院的演讲,较之此前在本市所作的任何一次演讲,都更为出色。这位印度教徒昨晚言论的价值在于其清晰明了。他对基督教与基督教之间划出了一条极为鲜明的分界线,坦率地告诉听众,他自己在某种意义上是基督徒,而在另一种意义上又非基督徒。他同样对印度教与印度教之间划出了泾渭分明的界限,暗示他只愿被归入印度教中较优良的一支。当斯瓦米·辨喜说出"我们需要基督的传教士,让他们成百上千地来到印度,将基督的生命带给我们,使之渗透社会的每一个角落,让他的福音传遍印度的每一个村落与角隅"时,他已超越了一切批评。

一个人若在根本问题上如此笃实,其余所言皆属枝节细末。眼见一位异教祭司向那些自命为格陵兰冰山与印度珊瑚海岸精神守护者的人宣讲德行与人生之道,确令人感到无限羞惭;然而,这种羞惭感正是世间大多数改革的必要前提。辨喜既已赞扬了基督信仰创始人的光辉生命,便有权利以他的方式去训诫那些自称在域外代表那种生命的人。归根结底,这话听来多像拿撒勒人的声音:"不要带金银铜钱在腰袋里,行路也不要带口袋,也不要带两件褂子,也不要带鞋和拐杖,因为工人得饮食是应当的。"那些在辨喜到来之前便已熟知印度宗教文献的人,最能理解东方人对我们西方商业精神——或如辨喜所称之"店铺主精神"——的彻底厌恶,此种精神渗透于我们所做的一切,乃至我们的宗教本身。

这是传教士们不能忽视的一个要点。那些有志于感化东方异教世界的人,必须以对世间王国及其一切荣耀的轻蔑,躬行其所宣讲之道。

辨喜兄认为印度是世界上道德最高尚的国家。尽管身处枷锁之中,其精神性依然长存。以下摘录自他近期在底特律数次演讲的报道:演讲至此,讲者击中了其论述的道德主旨,指出在他的民族中,人们相信一切非我执皆为善,一切我执皆为恶。这一观点贯穿全场,可谓演讲的主旨所在。"建立家园是自私的,印度教徒如是说,故他建造家园是为了礼拜神明、款待宾客。烹饪食物是自私的,故他为穷人而烹,若有饥饿的陌生人前来,他必让客先食,此种精神遍及印度的每一寸土地。任何人皆可求取食物与庇护,任何家庭都将向他敞开。

"种姓制度与宗教毫无关联。一个人的职业是世袭的——木匠生而为木匠,金匠生而为金匠,工匠生而为工匠,祭司生而为祭司。

"两种布施尤受珍视:知识的布施与生命的布施。而知识的布施更为尊贵。救人一命固然高尚,向他人传授知识则更为殊胜。为金钱而授业乃一种罪恶,如此行事将为以黄金交换学问之人带来耻辱,仿佛知识不过是一件商品。政府时常向教师赐予馈赠,其道德效果远胜于某些所谓文明国家中存在的相同条件。"演讲者遍访印度各地,询问"文明"的定义,并曾在多国提出同样的问题。有时得到的回答是:"我们所是的,便是文明。"他对此定义持异议。一个民族或许能够征服海浪,掌控自然要素,似乎将生活中的功利问题发挥至极致,却仍未认识到:在个人层面,文明的最高形态存在于那些学会了征服自我的人身上。这一境界在印度较世界任何其他地方都更为普遍,因为在那里,物质条件服从于精神,个人在一切有生之物中探寻灵魂的显现,研究自然以达此目的。因此,那种以不屈不挠的耐心承受表面上无情命运打击的温和禀性,同时内心深处充满着一种超越任何其他民族所拥有的精神力量与智慧的充分自觉,才得以长存。故而有一个民族与国家,从中流淌出一股永无止息的溪流,吸引着远近思想家前来探寻,以卸下压在肩头的尘世重负。

这次演讲以一段声明开场,讲者表示曾被问及诸多问题。其中若干问题他倾向于私下解答,但有三个他特意选出,将在讲台上公开作答,理由届时自会分明。这三个问题是:"印度人真的将自己的孩子扔进鳄鱼口中吗?""他们真的在贾格纳斯的车轮下自杀吗?""他们真的将寡妇与丈夫一同火化吗?"对于第一个问题,讲者的回应方式,与一位美国人在海外被问及印地安人是否在纽约街头四处奔跑时的回应方式如出一辙——这类神话至今在欧洲大陆上仍被许多人津津乐道。这种说法之荒诞,根本不值一本正经地回应。当某些善意却无知的人问他为何他们只将女婴扔给鳄鱼时,他只能以讽刺的口吻回答说,大概是因为女婴肉质更嫩,更易于那个蒙昧之国的河中居民咀嚼吧。关于贾格纳斯的传说,讲者解释了圣城车祭的古老习俗,并指出,或许有少数香客在急欲抓住绳索参与拉车时失足跌倒,因而罹难。这类偶发不幸被夸大渲染,演变为令他国善良人士闻之色变的扭曲版本。辨喜否认人们焚烧寡妇。然而,确实有寡妇自愿焚身殉夫。在极少数发生此类事件的情况下,圣人们始终劝阻她们,因为圣人历来反对自杀。若虔诚的寡妇坚持己志,声称她们渴望陪伴夫君完成这一转变,她们便须接受火焰的考验——即将双手伸入火中,若她们任由双手被焚尽,则无人再阻拦她们遂其心愿。然而,印度并非唯一一个有女性追随所爱之人步入永恒之境的国家;此类殉情自杀在每个民族中皆曾发生。这在任何国家都是罕见的狂热举动——在印度与其他地方一样不寻常。"不,"讲者重申,"印度的人们并不焚烧妇女;他们从未焚烧过巫师。"

最后这一点,以映射的方式而言,确实极为精辟。此处无需对这位印度教僧侣的哲学进行分析,只需指出其哲学大体建立于灵魂个体趋向无限的努力之上。今年有一位博学的印度教徒开启了洛厄尔学院课程。莫左姆达尔先生所开始的,辨喜兄或可为之善终。这位新来访者无疑拥有最令人着迷的人格,尽管在印度教哲学中,当然不应将人格置于首要位置。在宗教议会上,他们总是将辨喜安排在议程的最后,好让人们留到会议结束。在某个炎热的日子,当一位冗长乏味的演讲者讲得太久,听众开始成百成百地离去时,主席便会起身宣布:斯瓦米·辨喜将在祝福祷文之前作简短讲话。于是,那些已开始离席的几百人便被稳稳地留了下来。哥伦布大厅中那四千名挥扇的听众,将面带微笑、满怀期待地再坐上一两个小时,聆听他人的演讲,只为聆听辨喜的十五分钟演说。主席深谙那条古老的法则:将最精彩的留到最后。

English

IS INDIA A BENIGHTED COUNTRY?

The following is a report of a lecture at Detroit, United States, America, with the editorial comments of the Boston Evening Transcript, 5th April, 1894:

Swami Vivekananda has been in Detroit recently and made a proofed impression there. All classes flocked to hear him, and professional men in particular were greatly interested in his logic and his soundness of thought. The opera-house alone was large enough for his audience. He speaks English extremely well, and he is as handsome as he is good. The Detroit newspapers have devoted much space to the reports of his lectures. An editorial in the Detroit Evening News says: Most people will be inclined to think that Swami Vivekananda did better last night in his opera-house lecture than he did in any of his former lectures in this city. The merit of the Hindu's utterances last night lay in their clearness. He drew a very sharp line of distinction between Christianity and Christianity, and told his audience plainly wherein he himself is a Christian in one sense and not a Christian in another sense. He also drew a sharp line between Hinduism and Hinduism, carrying the implication that he desired to be classed as a Hindu only in its better sense. Swami Vivekananda stands superior to all criticism when he says, "We want missionaries of Christ. Let such come to India by the hundreds and thousands. Bring Christ's life to us and let it permeate the very core of society. Let him be preached in every village and corner of India."

When a man is as sound as that on the main question, all else that he may say must refer to the subordinate details. There is infinite humiliation in this spectacle of a pagan priest reading lessons of conduct and of life to the men who have assumed the spiritual supervision of Greenland's icy mountains and India's coral strand; but the sense of humiliation is the sine qua non of most reforms in this world. Having said what he did of the glorious life of the author of the Christian faith, Vivekananda has the right to lecture the way he has the men who profess to represent that life among the nations abroad. And after all, how like the Nazarene that sounds: "Provide neither gold nor silver, nor brass in your purses, nor scrip for your journey, neither two coats, neither shoes, nor yet staves; for the workman is worthy of his meat." Those who have become at all familiar with the religious, literature of India before the advent of Vivekananda are best prepared to understand the utter abhorrence of the Orientals of our Western commercial spirit — or what Vivekananda calls, "the shopkeeper's spirit" — in all that we do even in our very religion.

Here is a point for the missionaries which they cannot afford to ignore. They who would convert the Eastern world of paganism must live up to what they preach, in contempt for the kingdoms of this world and all the glory of them.

Brother Vivekananda considers India the most moral nation in the world. Though in bondage, its spirituality still endures. Here are extracts from the notices of some of his recent Detroit addresses: At this point the lecturer struck the great moral keynote of his discourse stating that with his people it was the belief that all non-self is good and all self is bad. This point was emphasised throughout the evening and might be termed the text of the address. "To build a home is selfish, argues the Hindu, so he builds it for the worship of God and for the entertainment of guests. To cook food is selfish, so he cooks it for the poor; he will serve himself last if any hungry stranger applies; and this feeling extends throughout the length and breadth of the land. Any man can ask for food and shelter and any house will be opened to him.

"The caste system has nothing to do with religion. A man's occupation is hereditary — a carpenter is born a carpenter: a goldsmith, a goldsmith; a workman, a workman: and a priest, a priest.

"Two gifts are especially appreciated, the gift of learning and the gift of life. But the gift of learning takes precedence. One may save a man's life, and that is excellent; one may impart to another knowledge, and that is better. To instruct for money is an evil, and to do this would bring opprobrium upon the head of the man who barters learning for gold as though it were an article of trade. The Government makes gifts from time to time to the instructors, and the moral effect is better than it would be if the conditions were the same as exist in certain alleged civilised countries." The speaker had asked throughout the length and breadth of the land what was the definition of "civilization", and he had asked the question in many countries. Sometimes the reply has been, "What we are, that is civilization." He begged to differ in the definition of the word. A nation may conquer the waves, control the elements, develop the utilitarian problems of life seemingly to the utmost limits, and yet not realise that in the individual, the highest type of civilization is found in him who has learned to conquer self. This condition is found more in India than in any other country on earth, for there the material conditions are subservient to the spiritual, and the individual looks to the soul manifestations in everything that has life, studying nature to this end. Hence that gentle disposition to endure with indomitable patience the flings of what appears unkind fortune, the while there is a full consciousness of a spiritual strength and knowledge greater than that possessed by any other people. Therefore the existence of a country and people from which flows an unending stream that attracts the attention of thinkers far and near to approach and throw from their shoulders an oppressive earthly burden.

This lecture was prefaced with the statement that the speaker had been asked many questions. A number of these he preferred to answer privately, but three he had selected for reasons, which would appear, to answer from the pulpit. They were: "Do the people of India throw their children into the jaws of the crocodiles?" "Do they kill themselves beneath the wheels of Jagannâtha?" "Do they burn widows with their husbands?" The first question the lecturer treated in the same vein as an American abroad would in answering inquiries about Indians running round in the streets of New York and similar myths which are even today entertained by many persons on the Continent. The statement was too ludicrous to give a serious response to it. When asked by certain well-meaning but ignorant people why they gave only female children to the crocodiles, he could only ironically reply that probably it was because they were softer and more tender and could be more easily masticated by the inhabitants of the river in that benighted country. Regarding the Jagannatha legend, the lecturer explained the old practice of the Car-festival in the sacred city, and remarked that possibly a few pilgrims in their zeal to grasp the rope and participate in the drawing of the Car slipped and fell and were so destroyed. Some such mishaps had been exaggerated into the distorted versions from which the good people of other countries shrank with horror. Vivekananda denied that people burned widows. It was true, however, that widows had burned themselves. In the few cases where this had happened, they had been urged not to do so by holy men, Who were always opposed to suicide. Where the devoted widows insisted, stating that they desired to accompany their husbands in the transformation that had taken place, they were obliged to submit themselves to the fiery tests. That is, they thrust Her hands within the flames, and if they permitted them to be consumed, no further opposition was placed in the way of the fulfilment of their desires. But India is not the only country where women, who have loved, have followed immediately the beloved one to the realms of immortality; suicides in such cases have occurred in every land. It is an uncommon bit of fanaticism in any country — as unusual in India as elsewhere. "No," the speaker repeated, "the people do not burn women in India; nor have they ever burned witches."

This latter touch is decidedly acute by way of reflection. No analysis of the philosophy of the Hindu monk need be attempted here, except to say that it is based in general on the struggle of the soul to individually attain Infinity. One learned Hindu opened the Lowell Institute Course this year. What Mr. Mozoomdar began, might worthily be ended by Brother Vivekananda. This new visitor has by far the most interesting personality, although in the Hindu philosophy, of course, personality is not to be taken into consideration. At the Parliament of Religions they used to keep Vivekananda until the end of the programme to make people stay until the end of the session. On a warm day, when a prosy speaker talked too long and people began going home by hundreds, the Chairman would get up and announce that Swami Vivekananda would make a short address just before the benediction. Then he would have the peaceable hundreds perfectly in tether. The four thousand fanning people in the Hall of Columbus would sit smiling and expectant, waiting for an hour or two of other men's speeches, to listen to Vivekananda for fifteen minutes. The Chairman knew the old rule of keeping the best until the last.


文本来自Wikisource公共领域。原版由阿德瓦伊塔修道院出版。