The Spiritual divinity of Indian life

Nonfiction, History, Asian, India, Religion & Spirituality, Philosophy
Cover of the book The Spiritual divinity of Indian life by Avinash Patra, Oxford University Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Avinash Patra ISBN: 9781537673851
Publisher: Oxford University Press Publication: September 15, 2016
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Avinash Patra
ISBN: 9781537673851
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication: September 15, 2016
Imprint:
Language: English

I believe we the INDIANS, like all other peoples of the world, are naturally susceptible to flattery. But unfortunately they have been deprived of their share of it, even in wholesome measure, both by the Fates presiding at the making of their history as well as by the guests partaking of their salt. We have been declared inefficient in practical matters by our governors, foreign missionaries have created a vast literature proclaiming our moral obliquity, while casual visitors have expressed their opinion that we are particularly uninteresting to the intellectual mind of the West. Other peoples' estimate of our work is a great part of our world, and the most important other peoples in the present age being the Europeans, it has become tragic in its effect for us to be unable to evoke their appreciation. There was a time when India could touch the most sensitive part of Europe's mind by storming her imagination with a gorgeous vision of wealth. But cruel time has done its work and the golden illusion has vanished, leaving the ragged poverty of India open to public inspection, charitable or otherwise. Therefore epithets of a disparaging nature from the West find an easy target in India, bespattering her skin and piercing her vital parts. Epithets once given circulation die hard, for they have their breeding-places in our mental laziness and in our natural readiness to believe that whatever is different from ourselvesmust be offensive. Men can live through and die happy in spite of disparagement, if it comes from critics with whom they have no dealings. But unfortunately our critics not only have the power to give us a bad name, but also to hang us. They play the part of providence over three hundred millions of aliens whose language they hardly know, and with whom their acquaintance is of the surface. Therefore the vast accumulation of calumny against India, continually growing and spreading over the earth, secretly and surely obstructs the element of heart from finding an entrance into our government.One can never do justice from a mere sense of duty to those for whom one lacks respect. And human beings, as we are, justice is not the chief thing that we claim from our rulers. We need sympathy as well, in order to feel that we have human relationship with them and thus retain as much of our self-respect as may be possible.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

I believe we the INDIANS, like all other peoples of the world, are naturally susceptible to flattery. But unfortunately they have been deprived of their share of it, even in wholesome measure, both by the Fates presiding at the making of their history as well as by the guests partaking of their salt. We have been declared inefficient in practical matters by our governors, foreign missionaries have created a vast literature proclaiming our moral obliquity, while casual visitors have expressed their opinion that we are particularly uninteresting to the intellectual mind of the West. Other peoples' estimate of our work is a great part of our world, and the most important other peoples in the present age being the Europeans, it has become tragic in its effect for us to be unable to evoke their appreciation. There was a time when India could touch the most sensitive part of Europe's mind by storming her imagination with a gorgeous vision of wealth. But cruel time has done its work and the golden illusion has vanished, leaving the ragged poverty of India open to public inspection, charitable or otherwise. Therefore epithets of a disparaging nature from the West find an easy target in India, bespattering her skin and piercing her vital parts. Epithets once given circulation die hard, for they have their breeding-places in our mental laziness and in our natural readiness to believe that whatever is different from ourselvesmust be offensive. Men can live through and die happy in spite of disparagement, if it comes from critics with whom they have no dealings. But unfortunately our critics not only have the power to give us a bad name, but also to hang us. They play the part of providence over three hundred millions of aliens whose language they hardly know, and with whom their acquaintance is of the surface. Therefore the vast accumulation of calumny against India, continually growing and spreading over the earth, secretly and surely obstructs the element of heart from finding an entrance into our government.One can never do justice from a mere sense of duty to those for whom one lacks respect. And human beings, as we are, justice is not the chief thing that we claim from our rulers. We need sympathy as well, in order to feel that we have human relationship with them and thus retain as much of our self-respect as may be possible.

More books from Oxford University Press

Cover of the book The U.S. Supreme Court: A Very Short Introduction by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book Rabbinic Tales of Destruction by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book Working Memory and Human Cognition by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book The Synthesizer by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book Normative Subjects by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book Bilateral Investment Treaties by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book Nausea by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book How Doctors Think by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book Aging in Canada by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book In the Shadow of Korematsu by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book Empire of Extinction by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book Bracing for Armageddon by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book Mythology: Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guide by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book Digital Feminist Activism by Avinash Patra
Cover of the book Jews and Judaism: Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guide by Avinash Patra
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy