The Holy Task
=Pt.ShriRam Sharma Acharya
Fundamental Principles During the thirty years from 1921 to 1951, except
for the unavoidable trips to prison, I spent my whole time in educational and
constructive work, and I also thought a great deal about the principles on
which it should be based. I was teaching, studying, reflecting and so on, but I
took little or no part in the political movement as such, except in the Flag
Satyagraha, Individual Satyagraha and the ’1942 Movement’, which were matters
of inescapable duty. Apart from that, the whole thirty-year period was spent in
one place. I kept in touch with events in the outside world, but my own time
was given to an effort to discover how far my work could be carried on in the
spirit of the Gita, of ’non-action in action’. I entered on this task with such
single-mindedness that it was something peculiarly my own. But I knew that
’single-minded’ must not mean ’narrow-minded’, that one must keep the whole in
view.
So while I was working in
the Ashram, attending to village service and teaching students, I also kept
myself informed about the various movements going on in the world. I studied
them from the outside, but I took no part in them. I was in fact in the
position of the onlooker who, it is said, sees most of the game. If any leader
or thinker visited Bapu at Sevagram he would direct him to me; it was not my
habit to impose my ideas on others, but there were useful exchanges of thought,
and in this way, even though I remained in one place, I had good opportunities
to get to know what was going on and to reflect on it.
These thirty years of my life were shaped by faith in
the power of meditation. I never left the place, I stuck like a calm to
Paramdham Asharam and the river Dham. After the painful events in Maharashtra
which followed Gandhiji’s demise, Sane Guruji[1] was much perturbed and
undertook a twenty-one day fast. He sent me a letter. ’Vinoba,’ he wrote,
’won’t you come to Maharashtra? You are badly needed.’ I wrote back: ’I have
wheels in my feet, and from time to time I have a urge to travel, but not now.
When the time comes, no one in the world will be able to stop me. (It’s
possible of course that God might stop me, He might take away my power to walk,
but that is a different matter.) And until my time comes, no one in the world
can make me get up and move.’ That reply shows the stubborn and obstinate
spirit in which I stuck to my own work.
Thanks GOD, Thanks
Sadguru,
Shiv Sharma
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