Guest guest Posted February 10, 2010 Report Share Posted February 10, 2010 2.The philosophy of Kabir Even though Ramananda was generally considered as the guru of Kabir, He never conformed to the traditional beliefs of his guru. Kabir was more of a philosopher than a devotee. He was against all superstitious beliefs of both Islam and Hinduism. Kabir once related a story to show how people are made to believe anything. Once there was a washerman in a village who had a donkey which used to neigh whenever the conch sounded from the nearby temple. The washer man was convinced that the donkey must have been a saint in its previous birth. He named it Shankeshvar , meaning, the Lord of the conch. After some time the donkey died. He went in to deep mourning and told every one who asked the reason that Shankesvarasvami had died. All people in the village started mourning , thinking that Shankesvarasvami was some great saint. The news reached the king and he also went into mourning, shaving his beard and moustache like the others. The queen did not like it and sent the chief minister to find out who Shankesvarasvami was. He came to the village and found out that it was a donkey. Kabir cited this as an example how people are prepared to believe any nonsense but when it comes to finding the truth through spirituality they reject the path not believing that it will lead them to eternal joy. Kabir was an illiterate but the profound truths of his words contained all the teachings of the Vedas and sastras. He was a saint by birth and the knowledge came to him of its own accord. His language is that of a common man and contained frank and even harsh words to turn the attention of common man. His philosophy reflects the idea of Brahman of the Upanishads and also devotion to the Divine Master whom he called Ram but it is not the Hindu god. It is the qualified Brahman, may be equivalent to Naryana of Visishtadvaia becaseu in his poems he mentions the names Govinda , Vishnu and Narayana, all of which mean only the Ultimate reality. Kabir had a great reverence to the role of a guru and he says that if all the land were turned into paper and all the seas in to ink and all the forests into pen even then the glory of a guru will be left unsaid. And further he said that if God and Guru were to appear in front one should only touch the feet of guru first since he alone showed God to us. When he says ` kahatha kabiraa jo mukh raam naheen vo much Dhool bharee,' he does not mean the deity Rama so also in the words bajorebhaiyaa raamgovindahari. These are the names of the one Absolute God. Nama itself is the nami for him. But at the same time mere chanting of the name is not what he meant. He says that if by mere repetition of ramanam the soul can be saved then by the mere utterance of the word sugar the mouth can be sweetened. He sang the ramanama because he was instructed by his guru of the name but the word stands for the Supreme self beyond the comprehension of mind and senses. Thus he was the worshipper of sabdabrahman. To him the sabd or sound is the power of Supreme being and by going deep into it through devotion and contemplation one attains mukthi. He says `hari bolo hari bolo hari bolo bhai' by which one can attain the Supreme is expressed as `kahatha kabira hariguna gaana gaavtha naachatha vaikunta jaanaa.' But this is not the vaikunta northe name Hari denotes a particular form of God but vaikunta is in the real meaning of the term, the place where there is no impediment of any sort for the experience of absolute happiness, the bliss of Brahman. By saying `hari bolo,' and `gaavatha naachatha,' meaning ` say Hari and sing His name and dance has a deeper implication. It means getting aborbed in the name itself and forget oneself ewhich is expressed by singing and dancing. This is the way for salvation as easy as one proceeds on a path singing and dancing being thus unaware of the hardships of travel. Some say Kabir is a vaishnavite and he is one if that signifies the vaishnava described by Narsi Mehtha in his song `vaishnava jan tho thene kahiye,' as one who is endowed with mercy, humility, non violence and all the virtues mentioned as being the best flowers to worship the Lord. Others say he is a mystic and he is one as he believed in the union of the spirit with the Absolute and possessed mystic powers as he was a saint by birth, and his actions or words are not understood by the world. He was a great bhaktha in as much as he advocates love as the means of attaining the Lord. Thus Kabir became a seer adored by all. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.