As I was pondering over what to write on, somewhere from the recesses of my subconscious mind, this topic, true to the title of my blog, struck to me on a whim. It was an English elocution topic given to us in high school. At the time maybe my vocabulary wasn't large enough to understand the words, or maybe even if it was, my childish brain couldn't grasp the sense.
Now, nearly after a decade and a half, with whatever little has added on to my vocabulary, and how much ever meagre my mind has grown over the years, this topic makes such a lot of sense. I am just astonished at the simple yet powerful notion it carries. Not that you wouldn't get it, but just to reiterate the great meaning the title holds, a person's life is measured by the good things he/she does and not for how many years he/she has lived for. Posterity isn't going to remember you by the number of years you spent on the earth but rather by what you've given to the planet.
As I reminisce the topic, the first person that comes to my mind is Swami Vivekananda.
No five words have evoked such awe and no other introductory line of a lecture has received an ovation lasting two full minutes than "Sisters and Brothers of America".
At a time when the west envisaged India as a land of snakes, and stricken with illiteracy and poverty, beginning with this historic speech at the World Parliament of Religions in 1893 and many more subsequent lectures in various parts of the world, he paved the way for dispelling the fallacious notion people had of this great country. Such was the enlightment endowed upon the Americans that a newspaper remarked to its citizens, "Vivekananda is undoubtedly the greatest figure in the Parliament of Religions. After hearing him we feel how foolish it is to send missionaries to this learned nation."
After delivering historic lectures all around America, Europe and parts of Asia, spreading the message of Hinduism and the oneness of God and Religion, upon returning home, he set upon travelling to every corner of the country, with the noble mission of awakening fellow countrymen from the slumber they were for long resigned into, reminding them of the gloriuos past and the rich cultural virtues prevalent in this land; persuading them in pursuing to fulfill its unrealised potential of becoming a prosperous nation.
The irony in the present day is that we find most people, especially in this industry, trying to emulate western practices in every possible way.
I 've always been inspired by the great Indian, but of late, since I began writing this post, I've been reading his lectures and preachings. So profound were his thoughts that to fathom their sense takes a good read or two. To think that I was born in the land as this great man, makes me ever so proud of belonging to this great nation.
And for all that he had done to the world and India, and his deeds which will last for centuries altogether, he had lived for all of 40 years.
These days at 40, if you are a manager in an multinational company, earn a handsome purse, live in a plush apartment, rev up that SUV to the parties you throw to colleagues and so called friends, your life is deemed a success. As for the wandering monk, who abandoning home and renouncing worldly pleasures, travelling to all corners of the country, reminding his comrades of their duties towards their nation, and spreading the rich glory of this noble nation to the rest of the world, would be termed a maniac. It is an unfair, cruel and blasphemous world we live in today.
Returning to the topic after all those digressions I couldn't refrain from, I can think of quite a few other great people whose deeds would outlast the duration of the planet. The revolutionaries, Chandrasekar Azad and Bhagat Singh, lived for barely 24 years, but their tales of valour would remain an indispensable part of India's great Freedom Movement. The great mathematician, Srinivasa Ramanujan, who lived only for 32 years, whose contribution to Maths is celebrated the world over, was such a genius, that even today prominent mathematicians are working their way around his theorems. Alexander the Great, the great Macedonian conqueror, who had the ambition of conquering the world, too lived for only 32 years, but his folklore lasting even after twenty centuries, continues to be an inspiration for many a living being.
There are many other great persons who had lived on this planet whose deeds would last as long as the last of the mountains on this planet will.
Good read... But I was always surprising, are these happened to them by accident or desired to be.
ReplyDeleteIt's very True Sunil, the contribution made by an individual in his life span to the nation is key achievement rather than being alive for decades.
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