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Parmacharya Sri Chandrashekhar Saraswati - God in human formBy Dr Subramaniam swamy
I
have bowed before only one sanyasi in my life, and that is Sri Chandrasekhar
Saraswathi, known to the world as the Parmacharya. It is not that I am
arrogant or that I have no respect for sanyasis and sadhus. In fact I respect
many sadhus in this country for their learning and social services. But my
upbringing, first in an English convent school, and then ten years in USA had
created a distance between me and traditional Hindu culture of bowing and
prostrating before any elder, or anyone in saffron clothes. Therefore, I was
the "modern" Indian, believer in science, and with little concern
for spiritual diversions.
In
fact till the age of 30, I had not even heard of a god like human being
called Sri Chandrasekhar Saraswathi. It was a chance meeting with an Indian
student at Harvard in his room in the university hostel, that I saw a picture
of Parmacharya on top of this student's TV set. I asked him: "Who is he?
And why are you keeping his picture?" The student just avoided the
question. I also forgot about it, except that Parmacharya shining smiling
face in that photograph got etched in my memory. Six years later, as my Pan
American Airways plane was about to land at Delhi airport during the
Emergency, I saw that smiling Parmacharya's face reappear before me for a
brief second for no reason at that time. I was coming to Delhi
surreptitiously to make my now famous appearance in Parliament and subsequent
disappearance, while a MISA warrant was pending for my arrest in the
Emergency. At that moment, as the plane landed, I resolved that whenever the
Emergency gets over, I shall search for Parmacharya and meet him.
In
1977, after the Emergency was over, and the Janata Party in Power I went to
Kanchipuram to see the Parmacharya. It was in sheer curiosity that I went.
Some friends arranged for me to come before him. It was a hot June evening,
and Parmacharya was sitting in a cottage, a few kilometers outside
Kanchipuram. As soon as he saw me, he abruptly got up, and turned his back on
me, and went inside the cottage. My friends who took me there were greatly
embarrassed, and I was puzzled. Since no body including the other sadhus at
that ashram had any idea what went wrong, I told my friends that we should
leave, since Parmacharya was not interested in giving me "darshan".
From
the cottage, we walked a few hundred yards to where my car, by which I had
come to the ashram, had been parked. Just as I was getting into the car, a
priest came running to me. He said "Parmacharya wants to see you, so
please come back". Again puzzled, I walked back to the cottage.
Back
at the cottage, a smiling Parmacharya was waiting for me. He first asked me
in Tamil: "Do you understand Tamil?" I nodded. In those days, I
hardly knew much Tamil, but I hoped the Parmacharya would speak in the
simplest Tamil to make it easy to understand.
He
then asked me another question: "Who gave you permission to leave my
cottage?" The Tamil word he used for "permission" was of
Sanskrit origin, which I immediately understood. So in my broken Tamil with a
mixture of English words, I replied: "Since you turned your back on me
and went inside the cottage, I thought you did not want to see me." This
reply greatly irritated the priest standing in attendance on the Parmacharya.
He
said "You cannot talk like this to the Parmacharya". But
Parmacharya asked him to be silent, and then said that when he saw me, he was
reminded of a press cutting he had been keeping in store inside the cottage
and he had gone inside to fetch it.
"Here
it is" he said. "Open it and read it. I opened the folded press
cutting, and with some difficulty, I read the Tamil question answer piece
printed in Dinamani Kadir, a magazine of Indian Express group. The press
cutting had a photograph of me and below it the question asked by a reader:
"Is the hero of the Emergency struggle, Dr.Subramanian Swamy a
Tamilian?" And the answer given was, "Yes he is a native of
Cholavandhan of Madurai District."
Parmacharya
asked me, "Is this your photograph, and is the answer given to the
question correct?" I nodded. Then Parmacharya said: "Now you may
go. But in the future when you come, you cannot leave till I give you
permission to leave." Everyone around me was naturally very impressed,
that Parmacharya had given so much special attention especially since in
those days, he often went on manuvvat (silence vow). As I left a sense of
elation at the meeting with Parmacharya. I wanted to come back again. I could
not understand why a "modern" person like me should want to see a
sanyasi, but I felt the urge strongly.
A
month later, the Tamilnadu Assembly elections were on, and I was passing
Kanchipuram in the campaign rail. So I told the Janata Party workers to spare
me some time to pay a visit to the Parmacharya.
When
I again reached the same cottage, a priest was waiting for me. He said:
"Parmacharya is expecting you." I asked: "How is this
possible, when I decided at that last minute to come, without
appointment?" The priest replied. "That is a silly thing to ask.
Parmacharya is divine. He knows every thing".
Sure
enough a radiant smiling Parmacharya received me. I thought that this time
too, our meeting would last a few minutes, and after a few pleasantries, I
can continue on my election campaign. But not so. Parmacharya spoke to me for
1-1 1/2 hours on all important subjects. He gave me guidelines on how to
conduct myself in politics and what was necessary to protect the national
interest of the country.
He
told me that in politics, I should never bother about money or position,
because both would follow me whenever an occasion demanded. But I should not
be afraid to stand alone. He told me that all great persons of India were
those who changed the thinking of the people from a particular set way of
thought to a new way of thinking. "That is the permanent achievement for
a politician, not merely becoming Minister or Prime Minister. Great persons,
starting with Adi Shankara, to Mahatma Gandhi dared to stand alone and change
the trend of people's thought. But did either hold a government position?"
he asked me. He said "If you dare to think out fresh solutions for
current problems, without bothering about your popularity, and without caring
for whether a government position comes to you or not, you will have my
blessings." When he said that I felt a strange sensation of happiness. I
suddenly felt very strong.
During
the period since my first meeting with the Parmacharya, I had thought a lot
about him, heard his praise from so many people. From what I learnt and what
I saw of him, I began to feel his divinity. There was no other human like
him. If nothing else, he was one sadhu who did not bless Indira Gandhi during
the Emergency when in the height of her power and at the height if the
nation's sycophancy, she came and prostrated before him. And yet when Indira
Gandhi was down during the Janata rule, he received her and gave his
blessings to her after she repented for the Emergency.
It
is this thought, every time (that if I do something sincerely, and for what
is for the good of the people) that Parmacharya's blessings will be with me
and see me through the interim period of public and media criticism and
unpopularity, that has given me this courage that today even my enemies do
not deny that I possess. In such endeavours, even though in the beginning
when most thought that I was doomed, I came out it successful in the end
because of his blessing.
In
the next few instalments I shall, without drawing the Parmacharya's
name into the controversy, reveal many such initiatives that I took with his
blessings. From 1977 to his day of Samadhi, I met the Parmacharya so many
times and received his oral benediction and advice. But I never gave it
publicity or got myself photographed. During his life time, I did not boast
of my proximity to him either, although whenever I came to the Kanchi Mutt,
always without appointment, he would see me. If he was asleep, he was
awakened by his close helpers to whom he had obviously given instructions
about me. There may not be another god in human form for another 100 years,
but it was my honour to have known him and received his blessings. He may not
be here today in human form, but because of what he had instructed me, I know
and feel his is around.
Parmacharya
- Part II
Subramanian Swamy
After
wonderful discourse from Maha Periyawal Sri Chandrashekhara Saraswathi in
1977, I went to have Parmacharya's darshan numerous times. Whenever I had a
difficult question that I could not answer, I would go and ask him for
guidance. He gave me audience also in abundance. I got to see him whenever I
came to Kanchipuram, or at Belgam in Karnataka or at Satara in Maharashtra or
wherever else he was. But I did not publicize these darshan sessions in the
newspapers as some others were doing. This was greatly appreciated by the
Mutt officials and pujaris.
When
Indira Gandhi returned to power in 1980, defeating the Janata Party, I was
upset, and wondered if Emergency would be declared again. So I went with a
group of Janata workers to the Karnataka - Maharashtra border, where Sri
Parmacharya was camping on his walking tour. When I reached him, he was sitting
in a hut almost as if he was waiting for me. As soon as he saw me, he got up
and started briskly walking to a nearby temple. I just stood there watching
him. Soon he stopped walking and sent someone to ask me to come to him alone.
When
I reached where he was standing, he said to me anticipating my question;
"It is a good thing that Indira Gandhi has got an absolute majority. At
this juncture, the country needs a stable government, and only Indira Gandhi
is in a position to give that stability." "But what if she declares
another Emergency and tries to put us all in jail?" I asked.
To
this question, Parmacharya only smiled and put his hand up in his known style
of bestowing his blessings. I did not realize at that time, that Indira
Gandhi had before elections, gone to Hubli in Karnataka where he was
camping and prostrated before the Parmacharya. On her own, she had
vowed to him and had said that if she came back to power, she will not repeat
the mistakes of the past of declaring an Emergency. Then she asked for his
blessings, which the Parmacharya had given by raising his hand and showing
his palm.
As
I was leaving, Parmacharya asked me if I could work to unite the opposition
and include the communists in it. "Communists!" I asked in utter
incredulity. I added: "The Soviet Union has just invaded Afghanistan
(December 27, 1979), and are preparing to capture Pakistan, and then soon
they will swallow India. How can we believe the Communists?"
"Not
like that at all" said Parmacharya to me. He clearly gave me a hint that
Communists will never be a danger to India. In fact he gave me a clear
indication that in some years to come the Soviet Union will not be there at
all. I just could not believe what I heard. But eleven years later, that is
exactly what happened. The Soviet Union broke up in 1991 into 16 countries, a
development no human being foresaw. Parmacharya was above human, a divine
soul. He could see it. To this day I regret that I did not act on his advice
because I spent nearly a decade (ten years 1980 -90) opposing Communism,
little realizing that it was going to collapse of its own weight. I earned
the Communists enmity for nothing. That is the only advice of Parmacharya I
did not act on. On other occasions, I blindly followed whatever he told
me. Of course, the golden rule with Parmacharya was that he would not on his
own offer any advice, but when I asked him, he showed me the way. When my
mind was made up on anything, I did not ask him what I should do. Of course
if I did not have his blessings, I rarely succeeded.
In
1987 for example, I tried to land with some fisherman in the island of
Katchathivu to assert the rights of fisherman under the Indo-Sri Lanka
accord. MGR was Chief Minister then. He had me arrested in Madurai and put me
up in Tamilnadu Hotel instead of Madurai jail. The then DGP, told me clearly
that unless I give up the Katchathivu trip and agreed to return to Chennai,
they would keep me under arrest. Those days I knew little criminal Law, so I
agreed to return to Chennai not knowing my rights. After arriving in the city
I drove to Kanchipuram and saw the Parmacharya. I told him of my humiliation
and my inability to go to Katchathivu. Parmacharya smiled at me as if I was a
child. He told me: "You go to Delhi and file a case in the Supreme Court
against the arrest, and ask the court to direct the Tamilnadu government to
make arrangements for you to go Katchathivu".
So
I flew that evening to Delhi. My wife is an advocate in the Supreme Court, so
I asked her to draft my writ petition. She was shocked by my request,
"The Supreme Court will laugh at you if you come directly on a question
of arrest. You must first go before Magistrate in Madurai, then Sessions
Court, the High Court, and then only to Supreme Court" she said.
I
insisted that she draft the petition. So finally she said "As an
advocate, I don't want to look foolish in the Court. So I will draft your
petition but the rest you do. I won't associate with it." But my blind
faith in Parmacharya kept me going. With the petition filed, I appeared in
the Court of the Chief Justice Venkataramiah. I arrived in the Court a few
minutes before the Chief Justice took his seat. Many lawyers who recognized
me met me to ask why I had come, they all laughed. All of them said:
"Your Petition will not only be dismissed, but also the Chief Justice
will pass remarks against your stupidity, and for wasting the time of
the Supreme Court."
When
my Petition came up for hearing, a miracle happened. Chief Justice
Venkataramaiah asked the Tamilnadu Counsel (then Kuldip Singh, who became a
famous Judge himself later) why the Government had arrested me. Taken by
surprise at the Petition not being dismissed, Kuldip Singh stammered.
"Kuldip Singh went on to explain that a pro-LTTE mob was against
me going to Katchathivu, and the LTTE had also issued a threat to
finish me. Chief Justice Venkataramaiah then burst out at Kuldip Singh. He
thundered "Are you fit to call yourself a democratic government? If mob
wants to stop Dr.Swamy, you arrest the mob not Dr.Swamy."
The
Chief Justice then passed an order that the Government should make all the
necessary arrangements for me to go to Katchathivu. No one in court could
believe it. Some asked me: "Are you related to Venkataramaiah?" I
am not only not related, but those days I did not even know him. But I had
the blessings of Parmacharya, and I was doing as he asked me to.
That
was the divine power of Parmacharya ; when he asked you to do anything, he
also took measures to see that the right thing happened.
After
the Supreme Court verdict, I met Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi in Parliament
House. Kuldip Singh had already informed him of the court verdict. So he told
me: "Why did you not speak to me first? I would have told MGR to allow
you. In any case, when you plan to go to Katchathivu, the navy and air force
will give you cover. But the fishing boat on which you travel has to be
provided by you."
On
May 8, 1988, I landed on Katchathivu and planted the Janata Party's saffron
and green flag, and prayed at the St.Anthony Church there. As I
approached the island, there were navel patrol boats on either side of my
fishing vessel which I had taken on hire. Two air force planes were
flying over me. I felt grand like a king. My salutations went to the
Parmacharya. He made the impossible possible. From being arrested in Madurai
to being royally escorted to Katchathivu, only Parmacharya could arrange.
Parmacharya-
Part III
Subramanian Swamy
In
1981, I became successful in persuading the Chinese government in re-opening
for Hindu pilgrims the route to Kailash and Manasarovar. After 3 years of
persuading the Chinese, in April 1981 the Chinese strongman Deng Xiao Ping
invited me to China to meet him. In that meeting, he told me that as a
"special favour to me and my efforts and in recognition of my steady
advocacy of improved Sino-Indian relations [ he used the term "lao peng
yeou" 'meeting old friend' ] he was asking the officials to meet Indian
counter parts to work out the arrangements for pilgrims to visit Kailash.
Deng had in jest asked me "But you must go first". He had said it
jokingly, but I was keen to see Kailash and Manasarovar. So when I met Mrs.
Gandhi in Delhi to tell her of my meeting with Deng, I told her that I will
lead the first batch of pilgrims and that she should agree. She laughed and
said "of course. I wish I could go too."
The
opening of Kailash and Manasarovar had been considered impossible by our
Foreign Ministry officials. China is a communist country and Kailash and
Manasarovar is in the most sensitive area of Tibet. Therefore how could China
allow Indians, even if as Pilgrims, to walk into Tibet? But the impossible
happened because throughout the three years of talks with the Chinese,
Parmacharya not only gave his blessings to me for this venture but encouraged
me. "We must be friends with China and Israel" he would keep
telling me whenever I came to him for darshan and anugraha (blessings).
When
the Kailash and Manasarovar re-opening was announced, the first batch
consisting of 20 pilgrims was slated to go in the end of August. That meant
in 30 days of walking from the end of August to late September. By the time,
we return, it would be end of September. At those heights in the Himalayas,
September meant snow and ice cold temperatures, and that we would have to
walk! Foreign ministry officials told me that since the route had not been in
use for nearly 25 years, it would be a rough walk. We would have to clear
bushes on the way, and perhaps encounter animals and snakes!
To
make matters worse, Inderjit Gupta, then a CPI Lok Sabha MP, and good friend
of many years, asked my wife to prevent me from going on this trip since I
would not return. "It requires mountaineers to trek this route, not
people like us" he told her. Others told me that I should think of my
family (of two daughters then age 11 and 8) and not venture on such foolishness.
In fact one BJP MP, perhaps more out of jealousy than concern, told me that
it is punya (blessing) to die on the route to Kailash. If that were so, I
wondered, why not a single BJP or RSS leader has ever gone on a pilgrimage to
Kailash? Perhaps because there are no Muslims there, nor a Masjid to
demolish! BJP is anti-Muslim but not pro -Hindu, so Kailash means nothing of
political value to them.
But
the net result of all this was that a scare was created in my family and
social circles. Many urged me to forget going to Kailash. I had done my duty,
they said, in getting the route opened, but it is not necessary to go there.
My daughters reminded me of my promise made the previous year that I would be
with them on my birthday, which fell on September 15th. The previous year I
had to be away to address a meeting in Bihar. If I went to Kailash I would
again not be in Delhi on my birthday. This troubled me.
So
anguished and confused by all this I flew to Bangalore, and drove down to
where Parmacharya was camping. He was reading a book when I saw him. He put
down his book and glasses, and asked me what brought me to him. "Kailash
and Manasarovar route has been opened with your blessings. I have been asked
by our Government to lead the first batch of pilgrims. But all my colleagues
in Parliament are scaring me with stories of what can go wrong with me on
this hazardous trip". Parmacharya said in a comforting voice
"Nothing will happen. You go and come. The opening of Kailash route is a
great achievement for our country"
"I
have only regret. That I will not be able to be with my daughters in Delhi on
my birthday" I added. "When is your birthday?" He asked.
"September 15th. But the journey back will not be completed before
September 30th." Parmacharya only smiled. He puts his palm in blessing
and merely said: "you go and come". I left on September 1st on my
journey.
My
journey to Manasarovar lake and then for a darshan of Kailash went very
smoothly thanks to Parmacharya's blessings. I returned to the Tibet-India
border on September 13th, and camped that night at Kalapani, a military
cantonment on the Indian side. That night, faraway from Delhi on the
Himalayas, I could not help thinking of my daughters and my promise to them
to be with them on my birthday. It would be another 15 days of walking before
I could reach the plains and then Delhi.
Next
morning at breakfast, the camp commandant came to me with a telex from Delhi.
It said that on Prime Minister's instruction, an air force helicopter would
be coming that morning at 10 AM from Bareilly to pick me up and take me back
to Bareilly, from where I will be taken by car to Delhi. I was thrilled. This
meant that I would be in Delhi on September 14th evening, and be with my
family on the next day for my birthday! What a miracle!
I
was that time just an MP, and that too from the opposition. And yet this
privilege was extended to me. The only reason for this was the blessing of
Parmacharya. With this blessing, any miracle could happen. I was honoured to
witness it. I prayed to Lord Shiva and Durga at the Kalapani temple at 18,000
feet above sea level, with snow all around. I said a special thanks to
Parmacharya. When I returned to Delhi, and thereafter went to see
Parmacharya, I explained all that happened. He merely smiled.
In
1986, I was passing Kanchipuram, so I made a detour and went to the Kanchi
Mutt. Parmacharya was there giving Darshan to hundreds of people. I also
stood in the crowd. But the pujaris saw me and whispered to the Parmacharya
that I had come. So he asked me to come close and sit before him. After the
crowds had left, he looked at me as if to ask me why I had come. The Babri
Masjid issue then was hotting up, and so I said Parmacharya that I was
planning to visit Ayodhya to study the situation. I asked the Mahaswami what
stand should I take.
Parmacharya
looked at me very sternly and said "you are a politician. Why do you
have to take a stand on a religious issue? You stay out of it. You spend your
energies on improving our economy or our relations with China and
Israel." I was taken aback by his stern remarks. But I persisted and
said "At least the Government will have to take a stand". He said:
"Let the government make it possible for the religious leaders of both
religions to come together and work out a compromise. But you stay out of it.
I
then told Parmacharya that my friend, and leading Babri Masjid agitator
Mr.Syed Shahabuddin wanted to see his holiness, and whether I could do bring
him next time. The pujaris around the Parmacharya protested. They said that
Shahabuddin was anti-Hindu, and he should not be allowed inside the Mutt.
The
Parmacharya waved away their objections. He gave me permission to bring him
to the Mutt. Then he said to the Pujaris. "Only Subramanian Swamy knows
the art of befriending Americans, Chinese and Israelis at the same time. He
can also be a friend of Shahabuddin." Then turning to me, he said:
"Keep this quality. Never be afraid of making friends with anyone."
I have followed this advice despite heavy criticism from the media. I have
made friends with Morarji, Chandrasekhar and Indira Gandhi after terrific
quarrels with them. Sometimes one needs to quarrel to come to an
understanding of each other's strength. Generally, I love to oppose those in
authority because for a strong democracy, opposition is necessary. But Indian
society being feudal, those in power underestimate who oppose them. And in my
case, people in power have always underestimated me because they think I am
alone. But they don't realize I have friends everywhere, in all political
parties and in all important countries. That is why I have won all my battles
against Government. Because I have never betrayed anyone, these friendships
remain for a long time. In 1990, I could have betrayed Chandrasekhar and
fallen for temptation offered by Rajiv Gandhi to become PM. But when I
discouraged this idea, Rajv Gandhi's esteem of me and trust in me went sky
high. Because of the trust I develop my friends from all over the world
confide in me. People ask me often "How do you get so much accurate
information". This is the answer. I have secret friends and open
enemies. Most other people have the opposite: secret enemies and open
friends.
Thus
Shahabuddin trusted me to bring him to the Mutt with honour. In early 1987, I
brought Shahabuddin to see Parmacharya.
Parmacharya
-Part IV
Subramanian Swamy
I
brought the fierce Muslims-rights agitator Mr.Syed Shahabuddin to Kanchipuram
to have a darshan of the Parmacharya. Shahabuddin had told me many a times
that he had a urge to see the Parmacharya. He never explained why. Nor I
asked him why since I assumed everyone would like to see a living God on
earth.
Although
Shahabuddin is a strict Muslim, he accepted two fundamental points defining a
patriotic Indian Muslim. The first point, a patriot would accept that though
he is a Muslim, his ancestors are Hindus since 99.9 percent of Muslims of
India are descendents of converts. Muslims who think that their ancestors are
Persians or Arabs or from Tajikistan, can never be patriotic Indians, because
they live in a myth. They are psychologically uprooted from India. The second
point is that although the present day Indian culture is composite, in which
all communities and religions have contributed, the core of this culture is
Hindu in character and substance. Hence even if one changes one religion, it
need not lead to a change of culture. Religion is personal, culture belongs
to the nation.
Shahabuddin
had accepted the two points and that is why I defended him against the charge
that he was communal. But the RSS [which is not pro-Hindu, but merely
anti-Muslim], saw in Shahabuddin a convenient hate figure, and dubbed him a
"second Jinnah". Naturally bigots of the RSS protested when they
came to know that I was bringing Shahabuddin to meet Parmacharya. When we
arrived at the Kanchi Mutt, the Mutt-Pujaris told me that Parmacharya had
wanted me to bring Shahabuddin right into the inner part of the Mutt where he
was staying. We were made to sit before a shut door, and told Parmacharya
would come soon.
The
door was opened by Parmacharya himself. When Shahabuddin saw him, he started
to weep, with tears rolling down his cheeks. He folded his hands in a
'namaste' and said "Oh my Lord Parmacharya, please save my community and
save the nation". I was taken aback [Much later when we were back on our
way to Chennai, I asked Shahabuddin why he broke down , before the
Parmacharya. He simply said that he could not control himself when he saw the
radiant face of the Parmacharya.]
Parmacharya
asked Shahabuddin what troubled him. He said "The Babri Masjid has been
shut to Muslims by a Court Order and I pray to you to help us open it to
us". [At that time, 1988 there was no talk of its demolition by RSS].
Parmacharya told him that Hindus and Muslims should work out a compromise. He
suggested a number of proposals, such as joint prayers, or Hindu Prayers on
Monday-Wednesday-Friday and Muslims Namaz on other days with Sunday being
denied to both. All these compromise proposals, Shahabuddin said, would be
unacceptable to devout Muslims.
I
added in my proposal. Koran prohibits Namaz in constructions built by
demolishing other religions holy places : therefore if it can be proved that
a temple was demolished by Babar's men to build the mosque in Ayodhya, and
then the Muslims themselves should agree to the Babri Masjid demolition.
Parmacharya
looked at me with a benign smile. He had earlier warned me to stay away from
this issue, instead asked me to concentrate on political and economic issues.
But Shahabuddin quickly agreed that Koran prohibited reading namaz in such
places, but contested that Babri Masjid was built on a temple site. He said
he had construction blue prints to prove his point. Two hours of
discussion had taken place, and therefore the Mutt pujaris were getting
impatient. A big crowd was waiting for the Parmacharya's darshan. So
Parmacharya closed his discussion by asking Shahabuddin to bring his blue
prints and come again. Surprisingly, again Shahabuddin prostrated before him,
and then we both left.
Shahabuddin
never came back again. But two years later, I became the Law Minister. I
confronted the Muslim organizations with a proposal that the Government would
appoint a Supreme Court Judge in a one man Commission of inquiry to determine
whether or not there was a temple before the Babri Masjid was built. And if
the conclusion was that there was a temple, then Muslims must agree to give
up the Masjid. If not, then the Hindus would vacate the masjid.
Surprisingly,
while all the Muslim organisations agreed to my proposal, the fanatic Hindu
organizations refused to agree. Our government did not last long enough for
me to go ahead with the Commission of Inquiry anyway disregarding the
fanatics. Nor could I persuade the successor Narasimha Rao Government to
follow my proposal. It would have amicably resolved the issue. But alas,
Babri Masjid was finally demolished in bitterness.
Perhaps
Parmacharya was telling me not to get involved from the beginning because he
foresaw that it would be demolished as a part of destiny. If Babar's violence
was undone 450 years later, then RSS violence on December 6, 1992 could also
be undone someday, but I hope, by understanding and love. Otherwise the cycle
of violence will continue in the country, with the Hindus and Muslims
not reconciled to each other.
In
April 1990, I received an urgent summons from Parmacharya to come to
Kanchipuram. So I rushed. When I saw him, he merely smiled, put up his palm
in blessing and then waved me on to go away! I was puzzled. Why was I asked
to rush to the Kanchi Mutt from Delhi, merely to be sent away? The Mutt
pujaris told me that on Parmacharya's instructions the Mutt had decided that
I was to share the dais with Rajiv Gandhi on the occasion of Parmacharya's
97th birthday in May that year, to be celebrated in Kanchipuram. It turned
out that no other politician except Rajiv and myself were to share the
platform. It was a great honour, not only that I would be with Rajiv, but
more that it was on Parmacharya's instructions. But why did he so honour me?
That
May meeting turned out to be crucial for me, because it created a rapport
with Rajiv which I did not have before. Rajiv too had great regard for the
Parmacharya and therefore his selection of me to pair with Rajiv, meant for
Rajiv that I could be trusted. From that date onwards, Rajiv trusted me blindly
with no reservations.
Parmacharya
thus not only altered my outlook, but he also ensured from time to time that
I came on the right path. Once for example, in 1992, the two junior swamis,
Jayendra Saraswati and Vijendra Saraswati had asked me to collect some funds
for a Ghatikasthanam library that they wanted to build in honour of the
Parmacharya. They even printed letter heads to make me the "Patron"
of the project, but insisted on a donation.
With
great difficulty, I collected Rs.15 lakhs and gave it to them as Janata
Party's gift. When Parmacharya came to know about it, he sent me a query:
"Why should you donate to the Mutt when you are yourself begging for
funds from the people to run your party? Please do not do it in the
future". Since then I have stopped giving donations to any cause.
Beggars cannot donate.
Naturally,
when Parmacharya attained samadhi in 1994, I felt like an orphan in public
life. HE was always there when I had a dilemma to set things right. But I had
the God's grace to see him, a living divinity, for 17 years. Many of his
opinions and directions I can never reveal, because he said them knowing
fully well that I will keep it to myself. But by guided and listening
to him, I have become so strong mentally as a person, that I feel that
no one can cow me down or demoralize me no matter how bad a situation I am
in.
Parmacharya
taught me that the easiest way to finish an enemy is to make him a friend. He
had urged me not to hate the sinner, but the sin. Of course, sometimes the
easiest way is not available because of ego clash, and so the sinner has to
fought to be made to realize the sin. But one has to keep in mind that there
is a God's scheme, redemption for the sinner what we call as prayaschitam.
The ultimate revenge belongs to the divine. As human beings we have no right
to revenge; only self-defence and righteous struggle. As Hindus, this is easy
to understand because we believe in the law of Karma. People who see me
fighting fiercely with Indira Gandhi, Chandrasekhar and Jayalalitha and then
working with them get confused or even disgusted at what they perceive as my
opportunism. I do not make up with those I quarrel with at height of their
power, but when they cease to be in office. The reason for this flexibility
in making friends out of enemies of yester year is the advice that
Parmacharya once gave me in 1977: "India is plagued by divisions, and
the egos of our rajas had played havoc with our national security, making it
easy for foreigners to conquer us. Therefore, never hesitate to create unity,
without of course compromising on the fundamental concepts of morality. India
has never forgotten those who unite the nation." I have defined three
such fundamental moral principles.
These
three fundamental concepts of morality are
I
shall not speak lie, even if I withhold truth.
I
shall practice what I shall preach.
What
I do will be transparent for all to see. I consider myself therefore free to
plan my political strategy as I see best, without regard to criticism from my
political opponents, but within these three moral limits.
Thank you
|
Monday, April 2, 2012
Parmacharya Sri Chandrashekhar Saraswati - God in human form
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