Guest guest Posted November 28, 1999 Report Share Posted November 28, 1999 >I think if everyone was adopting vedic culture and it was working for >everyone, I wouldn't have brought this up. I only brought this up because >this is not happening, not because I think western culture is better. Of >course, I would like to add that perhaps everything we think is vedic, is >not. It may be a neo vedic something or other that we just think is vedic. What is "vedic"? Is everything and everyone we find in India today "vedic"? Doesn't "vedic" become, many times, a metaphor, a wish, a status symbol, a weapon to shut down heretics, and so forth? In an etymologic sense, "vedic" is whatever is related to (spiritual) knowledge, not affected by time or space -- in a fully real sense, not mere wishful thinking. Thus a *culture* would not be "vedic" etymologically, since by definition a culture is affected by time and space and by the people living it. In another, language-and-literature, sense "vedic" is everything and everyone related to the four Vedas and the Upanisads. Everything else -- including the writers, practitioners, readership of, ideas in the MBh, the Bhag., the works of the Gosvamis, etc. -- is not "vedic" but "post-vedic". In other words, "vedic" = sruti, "post-vedic" = smrti. Several Sanskrit scholars have written about this funny thing: Indians love to claim that everything Indian is "vedic" but they actually do not know much about (what to speak of practicing) the four Vedas. Of course there is a reason for that (not perceived by the scholars): the four Vedas are meant for other yugas. There is, however, continuity from one yuga to the next, but there is also a lot of change in the people and their psychology and biology, the natural conditions, etc. from one yuga to the next -- bhedabheda, unity in diversity. Srila Prabhupada is a pure devotee who appeared in this world at a certain point in time and space. Consequently, he was born and raised in a body, a family, and a culture: the Vaisnava and Hindu culture of Bengal and India. Being Krsna's representative, Prabhupada's life and teachings are a manifestation of (etymologically) "vedic" spiritual knowledge and eternal spiritual reality. But that's not all. Prabhupada is not disembodied. He grew up to be a Bengali and Indian, Vaisnava and Hindu gentleman. (In another forum, as I recall, Hridayananda Maharaja once stated that one may distinguish between Prabhupada's "spiritual teachings" and his "cultural recollections".) Here are a couple of examples that come to mind of Prabhupada's following his particular culture (whose exponents are traditionally taught to label themselves as "vedic" because they are "post-vedic" or "neo-vedic"). The "sruti-vedic" (of the Rg Veda) world-view, life-style, gods and humans are all fairly fluid. Thus the four varnas -- as discrete, mutually exclusive, precisely defined categories -- are mentioned in the RV as coming out of the body of Visnu/Narayana. In the body, of course, the head/mouth, arms, abdomen/thighs, feet are distinct parts. Nevertheless, in the RV the (godly or human) incumbents of those precisely defined varnas keep moving from one varna to the other, keep playing different roles, keep changing their modes of operation. In contrast to this "sruti-vedic" fluid situation, in the "post-vedic" smrti Indian culture the varnas are castes (whether hereditary or not) in the sense that one individual is supposed to belong in one and only one varna. And, as I said, people in India, including Prabhupada, are used to label this rigid, schematic varna system as "vedic" (because it is "post-vedic"). In short, "sruti-vedic" culture would appear more fluid whereas "post-vedic" smrti culture would appear more rigid. In the "sruti-vedic" texts there are (at least) two heavens: antariksa (the sky we see from the earth) and a higher sky/heaven. God on one of them have their counterparts on the other: thus Surya and Savitar, Soma Pavamana and Candramas, etc. In the smrti "post-vedic" texts, including the Bhag, these two skies/heavens have been collapsed into one. Thus Prabhupada described the moon as Soma Pavamana's planet (in the higher sky, Soma Pav. being the husband of the naksatras, the constellations in the Milky Way) but pointed at Candra, our moon in the sky we see. In other words, he collapsed both skies into the lower one and called this "vedic" because it is in the Bhag. i.e. it's "post-vedic". In short, "sruti-vedic" culture would appear more multi-dimensional, more multi-layered whereas "post-vedic" smrti culture would appear more flat. Those are some ideas (working hypotheses). your servant, Kunti-Devi dasi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 29, 1999 Report Share Posted November 29, 1999 In a message dated 11/28/99 5:10:38 PM Central Standard Time, Kunti.HDG (AT) bbt (DOT) se writes: << But that's not all. Prabhupada is not disembodied. He grew up to be a Bengali and Indian, Vaisnava and Hindu gentleman. (In another forum, as I recall, Hridayananda Maharaja once stated that one may distinguish between Prabhupada's "spiritual teachings" and his "cultural recollections".) >> HDG says "may." I think it is important to distinguish the two. If not, we can misunderstand some of what Prabhupada was teaching. Ys, Mahatma dasa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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