♂️ Want to meet Acharya Prashant?
Be a part of the Live Sessions: https://acharyaprashant.org/hi/enquir...
⚡ Want Acharya Prashant’s regular updates?
Join WhatsApp Channel: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va6Z...
Want to read Acharya Prashant's Books?
Get Free Delivery: https://acharyaprashant.org/en/books?...
Want to accelerate Acharya Prashant’s work?
Contribute: https://acharyaprashant.org/en/contri...
Want to work with Acharya Prashant?
Apply to the Foundation here: https://acharyaprashant.org/en/hiring...
~~~~~
Video Information: 22.02.23, SPA College (Online), Greater Noida
Context:
~ What's special about Indian culture?
~ How old is Indian culture?
~ How much of our culture is brought by invaders?
~ Do we really have a rich culture?
~ What deserves to be worshipped?
~ How sacred is Indian tradition?
Music Credits: Milind Date
~~~~~
Be a part of the Live Sessions: https://acharyaprashant.org/hi/enquir...
⚡ Want Acharya Prashant’s regular updates?
Join WhatsApp Channel: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va6Z...
Want to read Acharya Prashant's Books?
Get Free Delivery: https://acharyaprashant.org/en/books?...
Want to accelerate Acharya Prashant’s work?
Contribute: https://acharyaprashant.org/en/contri...
Want to work with Acharya Prashant?
Apply to the Foundation here: https://acharyaprashant.org/en/hiring...
~~~~~
Video Information: 22.02.23, SPA College (Online), Greater Noida
Context:
~ What's special about Indian culture?
~ How old is Indian culture?
~ How much of our culture is brought by invaders?
~ Do we really have a rich culture?
~ What deserves to be worshipped?
~ How sacred is Indian tradition?
Music Credits: Milind Date
~~~~~
Category
📚
LearningTranscript
00:00Good evening, sir. I am Devyansh and my question is about India's culture. We are proud of
00:08India as a country of rich cultural heritage, but in the last thousand years, there were
00:13several invasions by the Persians, the Arabs, the Mughals, the British, etc. Still our culture
00:19is relevant and we are known worldwide for it. I wish to know what kept Indian culture
00:25alive despite so many invasions? Maybe I need to upend the question a little. Maybe we lost
00:41out to so many invaders just because of the culture? Maybe. See, what is culture? Kindly
00:57define. The way we live our lives? Which is the way your beliefs are organized in your head,
01:11right? The way you talk to each other, common beliefs, way of communication, way of celebration,
01:26way of eating, way of dressing up, even your architecture, all that comes in culture. Your
01:35language, right? Mostly beliefs is what constitutes culture. Shared beliefs. Now,
01:48what is more important, truth or belief?
02:03Truth is important, but it's not completely black and white. If a person is not able to
02:11have something to believe into, the truth is just objective. It's not a motive.
02:23We have a purpose because we have a belief. So that's what keeps us going.
02:30So if that belief is not rooted in the truth, then you will have a purpose,
02:35but that purpose will have nothing to do with the truth.
02:38What's the point of having such a purpose? If your purpose is coming from your beliefs
02:49and not the truth, what good is the purpose? Just because you are following certain practices
03:05since long, do those practices become equivalent to the truth or a substitute for the truth?
03:17Also what you call as your culture varies from city to city.
03:21I am not even talking of north and south. I am saying it varies city to city.
03:28Also what you call as your current culture is simply the culture you have been following
03:33since last 1500 years. Before that the culture was very different.
03:44And if you go 5 centuries back, the culture was entirely different.
03:49So what do you mean by your culture? You mean the culture of the 19th and 20th century, right?
03:54Believe me, you don't follow the culture of the 17th and 18th century.
04:03Why don't you follow that culture? If value lies in everything that is in the past,
04:09why don't you go further back in the past? Why go back only 1 century? Why not 10 centuries?
04:15Now clothing for example is a part of culture. Look at the stuff you are wearing.
04:25Where did it come from? It is not in your culture. Why are you wearing this?
04:30The language we are talking in is not a part of your culture.
04:35Why are you communicating to me in this alien language?
04:41In fact, even the pose you are sitting in is not coming from your culture.
04:45It is very western. Why are you sitting in that pose?
04:54Chips, where have they come from? Pizza?
04:59Okay, chips and pizza we anyway scoff at because of their western origins.
05:06How about the dress that you wear in your festivals? Where is kurta pajama coming from?
05:16Where is kurta pajama coming from? It was not there 10 centuries back. It is coming from the same invaders.
05:26Oh, so bad.
05:29Aloo, potato and tomato. They were not there in the Vedic times.
05:38Invaders brought them very recently, both tomato and potato.
05:42But do you enjoy aloo like anything?
05:48Aloo was not a part of our culture. No sir, no aloo.
05:52For all those who keep talking only of Sanskriti, keep aloo away first thing.
05:56Aloo is a foreign thing. The invaders brought it actually.
06:00What do you mean exactly by rich culture? What is this richness in culture?
06:14To me only satya is rich, only truth is rich, all else is nothing.
06:20The fireworks that you celebrate so much in Diwali, do you think you are having fireworks 3 centuries back?
06:24Again that is something that has a foreign imprint on that.
06:30But today you say it is an inalienable part of my culture.
06:34What do you mean by your culture?
06:36What you call as your culture is largely the culture of those who invaded you.
06:40But today you worship that as your own culture.
06:44And the thing that deserves to be worshipped, satya, truth, you have totally forgotten that.
06:50When a woman wears saree and covers her head, you say look, lajja, this shyness, this modesty is Indian culture.
07:10Were Indian women covering their heads in pre-Islamic times?
07:18Figure that out. How is it your culture now?
07:22It is the culture of the invaders, the same invaders that you hate so much.
07:26And you use your culture to hate them. The fact is even your culture is coming from the invaders.
07:32Pulao, where is pulao coming from?
07:38Most of the food items on your plate today, you will not like it when you hear where they are coming from.
07:50And many food items that you do not like today, they were originally a part of your culture.
07:58For example, somras. Today you say, all the sanskritis will say alcohol is so bad, alcohol is so bad.
08:08The thing is, if you go to the Vedas, continuously even the rishis are praising som.
08:16Indra is especially fond of som.
08:20It was Islamic morality in which alcohol was banned.
08:30It is Islam that detests alcohol a lot. Alcohol is bad, alcohol is bad.
08:36So do you know where your aversion to alcohol is coming from? It is coming from the invaders.
08:42In your culture alcohol was great. Not that everybody was a drunkard.
08:50But nobody was taking the issue of alcohol very seriously.
08:56It is alright, let there be some soma. And it used to be a part even of religious offerings.
09:04So rishis have gathered and there you have somras.
09:10What is your culture?
09:16The real man, the man of truth is devoted to mukti and satya, not to sanskriti.
09:26In some sense entire Bhagavad Gita is a struggle of mukti against sanskriti.
09:34Arjun is quoting all the things related to sanskriti.
09:38Culture, he is saying you know, if we fight then all the kshatriyas will die.
09:47So all the kshatriya women will then marry people from the lower castes, lower varnas.
09:52And varnasankar, babies will be born. This is sanskriti.
10:02And if those are born then the homage that they will offer to the dead ancestors will not be accepted.
10:12And the souls of the dead ancestors will remain thirsty and restless.
10:18And Krishna says keep all this trash aside. To hell with your culture.
10:23I will tell you that the only thing that matters is mukti, liberation.
10:28And liberation is what I stand for. So be devoted to me and do as I say.
10:33Keep all your misogyny and superstition aside.
10:39And do you see all these things in what Arjun is saying?
10:45He is saying women you know they should not marry lower castes.
10:49Men were allowed to marry lower caste women. But women they should not marry non-kshatriyas.
10:54And superstition, a lot of superstition in what Arjun is saying. All that is in chapter 1 of Bhagavad Gita.
11:02So what you call as your culture has a lot of superstition as well. Why do you want to venerate that?
11:09Culture is man-made and it should keep getting refined episodically, timely, continuously rather.
11:22Not even episodically. Culture is something that pertains to a particular place at a particular moment in time.
11:34Culture is time bound and must change with time.
11:40And it is already changing with time.
11:45100 years back you would have said caste system, untouchability, not even untouchability, unseeability.
11:52There are certain people you are saying they cannot even be seen.
11:56These are great parts of our culture. Didn't you change that?
12:01Weren't there social reformers? Today we worship those social reformers.
12:04In their time those social reformers, you threw mud at them and you abused them.
12:13And you even wanted to kill them. And you said these people are destroying our culture.
12:18Because they are talking of abolishing child marriage and they are talking of widow remarriage.
12:23And no no no, widow remarriage cannot be done. In our culture no widow remarriage.
12:29And in our culture kids should be married at the age of 5.
12:33And in our culture the woman should be burnt on the pyre of the husband.
12:38These things were part of your culture? No.
12:41We are proud that we reformed and refined our culture. Aren't you proud of that?
12:47We are proud that we have a better culture today.
12:50Similarly culture should always keep getting refined with a view towards the truth.
12:57Do not take culture as sacred or holy.
13:01Satya is holy not Sanskriti.
13:04Are you getting it?
13:07Satya is Sanatan. Sanskriti is not Sanatan.
13:10Sanatan means timeless.
13:14Sanskriti is time bound.
13:17Getting it?
13:20So I am not discounting the importance of culture.
13:24What I am saying is, remember the place of culture vis-a-vis the truth.
13:30Culture should be a shadow of the truth.
13:33Culture should be a follower of the truth.
13:36Do not place culture in a position where it becomes absolute.
13:41Only the truth is absolute. Culture is not absolute.
13:45The Upanishads do not sing of Sanskriti. They sing of Satya.
13:50The saint poets didn't sing of Sanskriti. They talked of Satya.
13:54Unfortunately in today's India,
13:57there is a very unfortunate kind of cultural aggression taking shape.
14:09Everybody is talking of culture and nobody is talking of the real thing.
14:13Satya, truth.
14:16They have started equating culture with religion.
14:19But religion is not culture. Religion is something in service of the truth.
14:28Are you getting it?
14:36Have great traditions and always be careful
14:40that your traditions are pointing towards the truth.
14:43Only then the traditions have life.
14:45Otherwise the traditions fall dead.
14:47And there is no point carrying dead load over the centuries.
14:51I am not discounting traditions.
14:54There can be beautiful traditions.
14:56But only when you know the meaning of those traditions,
15:00only when those traditions arise from your heart,
15:03just ritualistically and blindly obeying traditions will take you nowhere.
15:09If traditions have to exist, let there be lively traditions.
15:14In fact, with an eye on the truth,
15:18with a mind devoted to the truth,
15:20you can even begin new traditions.
15:22Because all traditions began at some point in time.
15:26So why can't new traditions begin today?
15:28New, great, sacred traditions can begin today.
15:31And even the traditions that begin today must end at some other point in time.
15:37Because today's traditions will be applicable to today's man,
15:41today's environment, today's society, today's economy.
15:44200 years later those traditions might not be useful.
15:48So then those traditions can be reformed or totally disposed away.
15:53And then new traditions should come up.
15:55Traditions are not sacred.
15:58Traditions can be dropped and new traditions can be started.
16:01And even ancient traditions can be continued
16:04if there is meaning in them.
16:09And that meaning you don't need to superimpose on the tradition
16:12because that's also a trend these days.
16:13Take some random tradition and superimpose meaning on it.
16:17Say, no, no, no, this tradition is not random.
16:19It has this meaning.
16:20The tradition has no meaning at all.
16:22You are needlessly imposing meaning on the tradition.
16:25That kind of pseudo-scientific thing, don't attempt, please.
16:28Let the tradition have real meaning.
16:31And then it can continue for long.
16:33Otherwise drop it.
16:40I wanted to ask one more, like you used the term tradition
16:44and I wanted to know if there is a fundamental difference
16:47between tradition and culture or they are the same thing or...
16:51Culture proceeds on tradition.
16:53The way our culture, it is feasting on tradition.
16:57Culture need not be very strongly tied to tradition
17:02but in our country that is not the case.
17:05In our country, mostly what you call as cultural is also traditional.
17:10Is that not so?
17:11When you say cultural,
17:15it almost immediately and completely means traditional
17:20which is not an equality that's necessary.
17:26Culture need not be definitely equal to tradition.
17:30You can have new culture arising in light of a fresh, devoted, sacred consciousness.
17:39So culture is amenable. Culture can be changed.
17:47That does not mean I am saying everything that is traditional has to be dropped.
17:51But there is a lot in our traditions that deserves to be dropped.
17:55And let's please drop it.
17:57Let's not try to needlessly defend it.
18:07Yes, understood.
18:12Thank you.
18:28Copyright © 2020 Mooji Media Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
18:31No part of this recording may be reproduced
18:34without Mooji Media Ltd.'s express consent.