Batasur
The Bhaktivedanta Memorial Library
is happy to present, for the assembled devotees, three articles
by the His Divine Grace Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura
Prabhupada, our beloved grand spiritual master. These three
articles all appeared in sequence in January, February and March
of l932. We gratefully acknowledge the source of these articles.
They were retyped from the Vrajraj Press translation work of
Bhumipati Das and Editing and publishing effort of Pundarika
Vidyanidhi Das of the appendixes to Sri Krsna-samhita, of Srila
Bhaktivinoda Thakura, copyright Vrajraj Press 1998.
The
following essay was printed in the February l932 edition of The
Harmonist, or Sree Sajjantoshani
Batasur is one of the
demons slain by the Boy-Krishna. He represents evils that are
peculiar to boyhood. The neophyte is extremely susceptible to
such evils. They cannot be got rid of except by the Mercy of
Krishna. If one engages in the service of Krishna the juvenile
vices are completely eradicated at an early stage.
There
is an English proverb that sowing of wild oats is inevitable at a
young age. The term Puritanism' was originally coined to express
the protest of boys and young men against any undue curtailment
of the scope of enjoyment that should be regarded as permissible
to them. Boys and young men claim the right to be merry and
frolicsome. There is nothing objectionable and much that is of
positive value in the display of these juvenile qualities. If the
attempt be made to stifle this innocent play of the boyish nature
under the impression that is an exhibition of sensuousness and
for that reason, as being as harmful as similar conduct on the
part of grown up persons, the result is not assurance but
discouragement, of juvenile innocence. There are, indeed, black
sheep and these should not be allowed to taint the whole flock,
for this purpose caretakers with full sense of their delicate
responsibility are required to keep watch over them for ensuring
the innocence of boyhood and youth without killing their joys.
But with every precaution it has been found impossible to attain
this double purpose.
The Scripture say that it is not in
the power of man to ensure the immunity of boys and girls from
the blight of precocious sensuousness except by means of the
service of Krishna. This is declared to be the only effective and
natural method. Let the boys be exposed to the attraction of the
CowBoy of Braja. They will soon learn to pick up His Company.
They will easily realize that the Boy-Krishna can alone save them
form every form of danger to which they are exposed by the
right' of their juvenile nature.
Why should this be so?
There is a very simple reason. Krishna does not limit His service
only to the middle-aged and old people. The Puritanic ideal of
Godhead is a conception which owes its origin to persons whoa re
elderly although honestly enough anxious to establish the
Kingdom of God' on this earth. But if you scratch the think
coating on the surface of their sage and sober scheme as
befitting their age you only detect the rotten arrangement for
securing the maximum of sensuous enjoyment even for those very
children who are brought up in this virtuous' way. If the child
is allowed to spoil his health in boyhood, think these righteous
people, he will not be in a position later on to enjoy the
legitimate pleasures of the grown up man. Unless the young man
husbands his resources of sense-capacity he will also be a victim
to premature old age. It is a policy of expediency of postponing
a small present enjoyment for reaping much larger measure of it
through the long tracts of the years to come.
The
spurious Brahmacharya ideal as misconceived by its worldly
supporters embodies this Puritanic outlook. The Scriptures,
indeed, enjoin that every one should serve Godhead from the womb.
This is the real meaning of Brahmacharya. The ascetic practices
that have come to attach themselves to the conception were
interpolated into the Scriptures in order to ensure worldly
values by this form of the empiric method. The scheme requires
that the laws of the growth of the physical and mental bodies
should be observed and followed. Nature is regarded as the kind
mother who favors only those of her children who cultivate the
filial habit of prying into her secrets. Nature is supposed to be
unable to avoid divulging her secrets to her inquisitive children
although she is well aware that her children will exploit this
knowledge for troubling herself by harnessing her to their
service. In other words it is also assumed to be the duty of the
kind mother to consent to put herself in chains in order to
minister to the sensuous appetites of her worthier children.
Nature is assumed to be able to do good to her children only by
submitting to be the victim of their lust.
The practices
of asceticism are really conceived in the epicurian spirit. The
ascetic dreams of obtaining the mastery over Nature by the method
of controlling his senses. If the senses grow callout to the
temptations of the world the ascetic thinks that he will have
less chance of falling into the power of Nature. He has an idea
that when he will have perfected these defensive arrangements he
will have become the real master of the situation. The
brahmachari, according to the ascetic point of view, is to pass
through a period of training in sever abstinence with his guru in
order to be fitted to discharge the duties of citizenship, which
will make a great demand on his nerves and muscles with greater
thoroughness. There is no reference to the service of Godhead or
to any spiritual issue.
We have had many occasions to
explain that the spiritual is transcendental. No mundane
consideration can form any part of spiritual training or conduct.
It is not a spiritual affair to be even able to control one's
carnal desires. Such self-control itself is, indeed,
automatically produced by the awakening of the soul. But
self-control itself is not therefore a function of the soul. The
souls has nothing to do with the senses. The soul desires neither
sensual nor sexual purity. The soul is not a mere moral being. If
Brahmacharya means a method of gaining moral power it is wholly a
mundane affair and is as such not one of no concern to the soul
but is positively obstructive of spiritual well being.
This is bound to be so because the point of view of the soul is
all embracing. The soul rejects nothing. He regards nothing as
redundant or useless. The souls has a use for everything. But the
souls sees everything as it is really related to himself and to
other entities. There is, therefore, no room for the temporary
type of morality in his relationships with the other entities.
Everything is absolutely good on the plane of the soul. The
scriptural Brahmacharya institution accordingly means service of
the Brahman i.e. the Reality Who is always the Great and always
the Help. The servant of the Absolute is free from all
delusion.
Morality is a valued commodity only on the
plane of delusion. But it has no locus standi on the plane where
the conditions of existence are perfect.
Till the
service of Godhead is realized it is impossible to be really
moral in the sense of being needlessly and perfectly virtuous. If
a person is causelessly virtuous in the worldly sense he or she
will be a subject of easy exploitation for all the cunning
rascals of this world. This is so because morality as conceived
by the empiricist, has reference to the physical body and the
changeable mind and is, therefore, liable to change so long as
the conditions are not radically altered.
The empiric
contriver of juvenile welfare strives to produce conditions that
will favor the growth and continuance of the empiric moral
aptitude. These artificial conditions are confidently enough
expected to be likely to prove of permanent benefit to those
young persons who are brought up under those improvised
conditions. But the brand of morality that has to be produced by
the artificial manipulation of the natural environment is likely
to prove of little value when the props are withdrawn. The
analogy of needed protection for the growth of delicate plants
does not apply, as such plants are always exoterics. Hot-house
morality is thus a misnomer and a delusion in relation to the
soul.
Brahmacharya fully embodies the substantive ideal
of spiritual purity distortedly reflected in the empiric ethical
conception. Brahmacharya means service of the Absolute. Juvenile
innocence is not he monopoly of young persons, any more than
juvenile naughtiness. They are the animal entities corresponding
to analogous spiritual qualities The spiritual activities are
perfectly wholesome. They include all value and harmonize all
disruptive conflict both of which are so utterly wanting in their
mundane pervert reflections to be found in this world.
It is not to be supposed that everything is done by Krishna and
there is nothing to be done by ourselves in any matter. As a
mater of fact there is a division of parts to be played in
functions that relate even to ourselves, as between us and
Krishna. Certain duties are allotted to us. Certain other
functions are reserved to Krishna. Batasur cannot be killed by
us. He is too strong for us. This is in keeping with the
experience of most educationists. Juvenile innocence is a
necessity for both young and old. One cannot acquire it by any
artificial process. No person can also ordinarily retain it after
boyhood and youth. This is a real tragedy of human life.
Juvenile innocence is desired on account of its enjoyability. But
it should properly be desired only for the service of Krishna.
(The parent can have no higher duty that to employ his boy in the
service of Krishna by putting him under the proper teacher viz.,
the pure devotee of Krishna. No parent is entitled to undertake
the charge of the spiritual training of his own boy. He is
unfitted for the task by his mundane relationship. Once such
relationship is grasped to be an obstacle in the way of juvenile
training the necessity of sending the boy at the earliest
opportunity to the proper teacher becomes self-evident. If the
parent continues to retain his paternal interest in the boy after
he has been put to school for the above purpose he will be only
standing in the way of his boy's progress. The training is not
for the boy only but it is a training for his parents as
well.)
Boyish naughtiness is apt to be overlooked, nay
encouraged, under the impression that it is his nature to be
naughty. This opinion overlooks the all-important factor that the
training is intended for the welfare of the soul of the boy and
not for the juvenile body or mind. The soul does not require to
be treated with indulgence. He is neither young nor old in the
worldly sense. The body and mind of the boy have to be employed
in the interest of the soul. Boyish naughtiness and boyish virtue
are alike unnecessary for the soul. It is necessary for the soul
to be freed from either from of worldliness. The mundane nature
of the boy is not less a clog to the wheel of spiritual progress
than the adult nature of the grown-up-worldling. The process of
training is identical in the two cases as the soul is neither
young nor old.
Much irrational pity is wasted on boys
who are employed form early infancy in the whole time service of
Krishna, on exactly the same terms as grown-up-persons. Persons
who affect much kindness of disposition towards juvenile
frailties profess to be unable to understand why juvenile
offenses are taken as seriously in spiritual training as those of
adult persons.
But the teacher in charge of the
spiritual training of boys can perform his duty by them only as
the special agent of Krishna. If such a teacher chooses to
confide in his own devices he is bound to be undeceived at every
step. What he has really to do is to use the boy constantly in
the service of Krishna. For this purpose it is necessary for the
teacher himself to be a whole time servant of Krishna. It is only
by abstaining to do anything that is not distinctively commanded
by Krishna or His real agent viz., the Sat-Guru that the
spiritual teacher of boys can hope to be of any help to his
pupils. The so-called science of pedagogies requires to be
thoroughly overhauled in order to afford a free hand to the
bonafide devotee of Krishna in managing young persons. The
present arrangements based on the experience of this world and on
the hypotheses of an absolute causal relationship connecting each
phenomenon with the rest, by leaving out the reference to
Krishna, can only realize the tragic part of a quack lightly
administering all thew wrong drugs to a patient smitten with a
mortal illness.
The King of atheists Kansa is always
setting the demon Batasura to corrupt and destroy the boys. The
teacher of the young employed by the atheistical society is
verily the agent of King Kansa. The atheist is afraid lest the
boys are employed in the service of Krishna. He is naturally
anxious to prevent any acquaintance of the boys with Krishna. But
if a boy has really found Krishna the nefarious attempts of the
empiric teacher are powerless to destroy his innocence. If such a
teacher perseveres in the fruitless attempt he will thereby
quickly bring about his own utter moral degradation and his sorry
trick will also be fully exposed. Because in this case it is
Krishna Himself Who opposes his wicked activities on behalf of
His protégé.
As a matter of fact the concern of empiric
educationists for ensuring immunity of boys from the blighting
effects of precocity is altogether hypocritical. The empiric
pendant only ants the boy to grow a body and mind that will
ensure greater and longer scope for their worldly use. He does
not want that the worldly use of his body and mind should be
curtailed in any way. In other words he is on principle opposed
to the employment of the healthy body and sound mind for any
spiritual purpose. But why does he want a healthy body for his
nasty purpose? Is in only in order to be able to have the
pleasure of a more prolonged wastage and the take's progress in
downright earnest? A sickly boy is not really harmful to a person
who has no higher object in view than undiluted
self-gratification.
(10) Kaliyadamana (Subduing Kaliya
serpent)- Removal of vanity, maliciousness, doing wrong to
others, crookedness and un-kindness.
(Sri Caitanya
Shikshamritam, p.243)
Srila Bhaktisiddhanta
Saraswati Thakura Page