THREE
IN
THE
economy of man the mental nature rests upon the moral, and the education of the
intellect divorced from the perfection of the moral and emotional nature is injurious to human progress. Yet, while it is easy to arrange some kind of
curriculum or syllabus which will do well enough for the training of the mind,
it has not yet been found possible to provide under modern conditions a suitable
moral training for the school and college. The attempt to make boys moral and
religious by the teaching of moral and religious text-books is a vanity and a
delusion, precisely because the heart is not the mind and to instruct the mind
does not necessarily improve the heart. It would be an error to say that it has
no effect. It throws certain seeds of thought into the antahkarana and,
if these thoughts become habitual, they influence the conduct. But the danger
of moral text-books is that they make the thinking of high things mechanical and
artificial, and whatever is mechanical and artificial is inoperative for good. Page-209
at school and at home is removed, and to the social hypocrisy which is so large
a feature of European life. Only what the man admires and accepts, becomes part
of himself; the rest is a mask. He conforms to the discipline of society as he
conformed to the moral routine of home and school, but considers himself at
liberty to guide his real life, inner and private, according to his own likings
and passions. On the other hand, to neglect moral and religious education
altogether is to corrupt the race. The notorious moral corruption in our young
men previous to the saving touch of the Swadeshi movement was the direct result
of the purely mental instruction given to them under the English system of
education. The adoption of the English system under an Indian disguise in
institutions like the Central Hindu College is likely to lead to the European
result. That it is better than nothing, is all that can be said for it. Page-210
things of supreme human interest, and, for the elder student, the
great thoughts of great souls, the passages of literature which set fire to the
highest emotions and prompt the highest ideals and aspirations, the records of
history and biography which exemplify the living of those great thoughts, noble
emotions and aspiring ideals. This is a kind of good company, satsanga, which
can seldom fail to have effect so long as sententious sermonising is avoided,
and becomes of the highest effect if the personal life of the teacher is itself
moulded by the great things he places before his pupils. It cannot, however,
have full force unless the young life is given an opportunity, within its
limited sphere, of embodying in action the moral impulses which rise within it.
The thirst of knowledge, the self-devotion, the purity, the renunciation
of the Brahmin,
-
the courage, ardour,
honour, nobility,
chivalry, patriotism of the Kshatriya, – the beneficence, skill, industry,
generous enterprise and large open-handedness of the Vaisya, – the
self-effacement and loving service of the Sudra, – these are the qualities of
the Aryan. They constitute the moral temper we desire in our young men, in the
whole nation. But how can we get them if we do not give opportunities to the
young to train themselves in the Aryan tradition, to form by the practice and
familiarity of childhood and boyhood the stuff of which their adult lives must
be made? Page-211
I have spoken of morality; it is necessary’ to speak a word of religious
teaching. There is a strange idea prevalent that by merely teaching the dogmas
of religion children can be made pious and moral. This is an European error, and
its practice either leads to mechanical acceptance of a creed having no effect
on the inner and little on the outer life, or it creates the fanatic, the
pietist, the ritualist or the unctuous hypocrite. Religion has to be lived,
not learned as a creed. The singular compromise made in the so-called National
Education of Bengal making the teaching of religious beliefs compulsory, but
forbidding the practice of anusthāna or religious exercise, is a sample
of the ignorant confusion which distracts men’s minds on this subject. The
prohibition is a sop to secularism declared or concealed. No religious teaching
is of any value unless it is lived, and the use of various kinds of sādhanā, spiritual
self-training and exercise is the only effective preparation for religious
living. The ritual of prayer, homage, ceremony is craved for by many minds as an
essential preparation and, if not made an end in itself, is a great help to
spiritual progress; if it is withheld, some other form of meditation, devotion
or religious duty must be put in its place. Otherwise, religious teaching is of
little use and would almost be better ungiven. Page-212 |