ROMAIN ROLLAND
SWAMY RANGANATHANANDA
Monsieur Romain
Rolland, one of the greatest thinkers of the modern age, was an artist, and a literary genius and, apart from all this, he
was a humanist. Hailing from France
he did not like the warlike atmosphere of his country and the whole of Europe. He was in search of some spiritual inspiration
from any part of the world which could help to compose the distractions of the
age in which he lived. Just after the First World War, being a pacifist, he had
to go out of his country and stay in Switzerland. That was the time when
he had already written the novel for which he got his Nobel Prize, and another
great book, The Life of Beethoven, the famous German composer. He was in
search of some profound humanistic vision which can help the modern age. It was
at that point of time our country, India, was passing through a
tremendous struggle, a revolutionary struggle of non-co-operation, under the
leadership of Mahatma Gandhi. Gandhiji’s life and his
methods and outlook attracted Romain Rolland and he
started writing a book on Gandhi. That is the first book he wrote concerning
the East, and particularly India.
That book is entitled Mahatma Gandhi, published in 1924. During that
time he was deeply impressed by Gandhiji’s stress on
non-violence and peace and the book is full of praise
for Gandhiji’s approach to the battle for freedom
against the British rule, a battle conducted on highly ethical and humanistic
planes. As he was completing this book our great poet Rabindranath
Tagore visited him in Europe and during the
conversation Tagore was impressed by Romain Rolland’s deep interest in India and India’s great ancient heritage. It
was then he made a famous remark to Romain Rolland – “If you want to understand India, study
Vivekananda. In him everything is positive, nothing negative.” That was a
tremendous statement, and that impressed Romain
Rolland very much. He had not read much of Ramakrishna or Vivekananda
till then. But he knew while writing this book on Mahatma Gandhi that there
were personalities behind Gandhi, and a great renaissance movement that had
prepared tile way for the great work of Mahatma Gandhi. Immediately he started
getting books on Ramakrishna and Vivekananda from various sources. He never
knew English, knew only French and most of the books were in English. But
fortunately his sister knew English and with the help of his sister and other
friends Romain Rolland started a thorough study of
Ramakrishna and Vivekananda literature. By the end of the 1920’s he had
produced a remarkable literature on Ramakrishna and Vivekananda himself–The
Life of Ramakrishna and Vivekananda’s
Life and Gospels. In these books he showed his keen understanding of the
Indian spirit and a profound comprehension of the depth of Ramakrishna
and Vivekananda. In the introduction to The Life of Ramakrishna he
presents these two teachers of modern India
as the “splendid symphony of the universal soul” and especially mentions that
“I have chosen these two people out of the many great galaxies that India has
produced in the modern period because they have won my heart’s regard and
love.”
He presented Ramakrishna in that introduction
as “the consummation of the two thousand years of spiritual life of three,
hundred million people.” Romain Rolland also made a
beautiful observation which I consider to be a thing possible only by a great
artist who can see through the inner eye. He writes that “Ramakrishna’s
external life was set in a very limited frame outside the currents of the
contemporary world. But his inner life embraced the entire multiplicity of men
and gods.” That was Ramakrishna’s infinite dimensions within,
outwardly extremely ordinary, inwardly deep and far-reaching. Also he mentions, that all of us are engaged in studying the book of
life, but even the greatest of us may not have grasped a page or two of the
book. And then he adds, “But what was my wonder when I found this illiterate
priest of Kali, namely Sri Ramakrishna, holding out the book of life towards me
of which he has studied every page! That is an artist’s estimation of Sri
Ramakrishna – a very deep personality.
When he turns over to Swami Vivekananda in
the second volume, Romain Rolland goes into ecstasy
while dealing with the great philosophy of Humanism, that Swamy
Vivekananda expounded, based on the Vedantic teaching
of the ancient philosophy of India,
of the divine spark in every human being. Vivekananda’s
universal outlook, his intense practicality, his intense human passion, these
find expression in Romain Rolland’s delineation of
Swami Vivekananda’s life and message. Particularly
when he deals with India’s
awakening through the great lectures Vivekananda delivered in India from Colombo
in the south to Almorah in the Himalayas
in far north, Romain Rolland goes into ecstasy once
again. Awakening a sleeping nation, a sleeping leviathan, to the realities of
the contemporary world setting it on to the road of modern development,
denouncing its caste, in untouchability, its
suppression of women for centuries, which Swami Vivekananda initiated towards
the end of the last century, Romain Rolland
appreciates tremendously. He also speaks of Swamiji’s
great work in the Western world particularly in America
by presenting India’s
age-old philosophy of man as a spark of the divine and his infinite capacity
for evolution. He considers this central truth as of supreme importance to
modern civilization. Later on he sums up Vivekananda’s
literature and personality. The eight volumes of Vivekananda’s
complete works (during his time it was seven) Romain
Rolland speaks of in these words, “Vivekananda’s
words are great music. They are like Beethoven’s symphonies,
they are like the stirring rhythms of the Handel’s Chnrus. I cannot touch these utterances of Vivekananda
without getting a thrill through my body as of an electric shock. And what
shocks and transports must have been produced when in burning words they are
issued from the lips of the hero!”
That is regarding Vivekananda’s
literature. This remark by a foreigner, it is wrong to call Romain
Rolland a foreigner, because he had entered into the spirit of India, but
physically speaking he was a foreigner, but one who could appreciate the
tremendous message that Swamiji gave through his
writings and through his speeches. But the personality behind those speeches, Romain Rolland appreciates even more. Here is a great
passage where he sums up Vivekananda’s personality, “Equilibrium and synthesis are
the keynotes of Vivekananda’s personality. In him is harmonised all the various energies like faith, and reason,
science and religion, East and West, which are at variance and conflict with
each other everywhere, but in Vivekananda’s personality
they became perfectly harmonised.” And the last
sentence of that paragraph says, “He has the personification of that harmony of
all human energies.” A similar testament of Vivekananda’s
personality is found in the writings of Rabindranath Tagore also especially this beautiful idea of synthesising the East and West not only in his own
personality but his desire that it is to be done with respect to modern India.
This developing nation must take in the great contributions of the ancient
Greeks and Romans, modern Western people, assimilate them to its own culture,
and develop a modern culture neither Eastern nor Western, but just human. This
was Swami Vivekananda’s great work, and for this he
tried to bring about harmony between the East and the West. In the last para of Romain Rolland’s Life
of Vivekananda you find this great idea presented. Addressing his Western readers
he writes in the closing pages of the book – “Vivekananda tried to
build a bridge of understanding between East and West. He is starting His end
of the tunnel, we can hear the sound of the tunnel-making by Vivekananda. I
tell my country men in the West, ‘You start building the tunnel from your side,
so that both the ends of the tunnel can meet together and thus a tremendous
harmony can be created between East and West.’ This is one of the greatest
contributions of Swami Vivekananda.”
In Romain Rolland’s
statements you will find Ramakrishna and Vivekananda presented in this
language. That is why they appear to the readers of Romain
Rolland’s works as outstanding spiritual teachers whose message has a
tremendous contemporary relevance.
–COURTESY All India
Radio, Delhi
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