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Sep 30, 2014, 10:13 IST

Who Is Nonviolent?

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Each year on October 2, we celebrate the birthday of Gandhiji, champion of pacifism, nonviolence and truth. But how many of us are aware of what ahimsa really means? Explore its implication with GURUDEVSHRI RAKESHBHAI

 

Love unconditional is so pure, so fulfilling and established in the wellness of one’s being, that you can think neither of causing harm to any other being, nor to your own Self. You have become love itself! So now, only love can emanate from you. It does not matter if there is another to receive your love, as that no longer is of importance to you.

 

A lamp in the dark will radiate light, even if there is no one to witness it; a flower will emit fragrance everywhere, irrespective of whether anyone inhales its fragrance or not!

 

Ahimsa is a state of active positivism, that is, being proactively positive. Ahimsa means consciously extending love to one and all. The meaning of love is ‘I wish others well, I pray for their wellbeing, I will be instrumental in bringing joy to their lives and will offer flowers on their path.’ If ahimsa was merely negative, then it would read as,‘I will not cause unhappiness to others, nor cause them injury’ and this would be its restrictive or myopic meaning, as it would constitute no positive element.

 

To put no thorns on anyone’s path — that is not all, but going beyond that to decorating their path with flowers is the essential meaning. To restrict oneself to non-violence alone is not the definition of ahimsa, but to make others truly happy is ahimsa. If a person is not full of love and restricts himself to not harming others, thus believing himself to be an ahimsak person, then one may question why he wants to be nonviolent.

 

Let us say that he loves animals, then it is understandable that he does not want to cause them any harm. But if he has no real love for them and still does not want to harm them, then his abstaining from violence is surely due to some other reason. In reality, he does not want to step on them as he may harbour this belief, ‘If I cause them harm, I will accrue sin, and I will go to hell and be miserable. But I do not want to be unhappy, so I don’t want to harm them.’

 

The real intention behind not wanting to harm others actually stems from not wanting to make oneself unhappy. Here, the other is of no importance, as here the ‘i’ is enlarged.‘If I do not harm others, I am being religious and I will go to heaven’ are feelings full of selfishness. How can one be religious with such ulterior motives?

 

Where there is love, selfishness cannot exist, as the ‘i’ has become unimportant. Dissolution of the ‘i’ is true religion and that is only possible with love.This is the true meaning of ahimsa and that is why ahimsa is the ultimate dharma. When the desire to hurt others ceases effortlessly in thoughts and deeds, it is because the conscious self has acquired a state of love.

 

But where the myopic view is highlighted, only the welfare of one’s own self occurs and even religious activities are undertaken with this selfish motive. In contrast to this, where the positive aspect of ahimsa is highlighted, then all activities undertaken, even at the individual level, are with the motive of universal welfare.

 

Dharma teaches love and love includes thought for all others. Due to this selfless, pure state of love, liberation occurs. In love, selfishness and ego dissolve. The individual expands from the consciousness of his personality and body and enters the realm of the soul, and gets established totally in his divine essence. When the individual being expands into the state of loving consciousness, all beings become the object of his love. He becomes incapable of harming any one.

 

Enlightened ones say that to expand in love is the way to be truly nonviolent. When the entire universe becomes the object of your love, then you will no longer try to acquire happiness from them; rather you will make every effort to bring happiness to them.

 

Then you will try and take care to support all forms of life. So ahimsa is the paramount state of unconditional love. Outward observance of rules or vows is only the expression of non-violence. True ahimsa is achieved by acquiring the internal state of absolute unconditional love and it is only through this form of love, that we can dissolve negativity and violence. May all beings be filled with absolute, unconditional love. 

 

Follow GurudevShri Rakeshbhai at speakingtree.in

 

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