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Resurgent India
Contents
Pre-Content
Preface
Acknowledgements
Part One
I
Ancient Dawns Sustain India's Days
II
Darkness Deepens
III
A Century of World-wide Upsurge
IV
How it Began
V
Forerunner
VI
Standard-Bearer
VII
Recovering National Self
VIII
Voice of Faith
IX
A Far-seeing Pioneer
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sisirkumar Mitra/English/Resurgent India/Ancient Dawns Sustain India^s Days.htm
PART ONE
CHAPTER I
ANCIENT DAWNS SUSTAIN INDIA'S DAYS
Ever-living India
A new age is coming over mankind, a new world order. Cosmic forces are at work preparing man for this immense change in his life and consciousness. Already the higher mind of the race is opening to a broader vision, one evidence of which is the growing quest for the secret of Asia's evolution in history. Far-seeing eyes, here and there, are turning towards India, China and, in fact, the whole of Asia in search of the deeper truth of these civilisations.
India is the hoary guardian of the Asian idea and its profound spiritual secrets, says Sri Aurobindo.
GLOSSARY
Advaita philosophy—the system of Indian Monism usually associated with the great eighth-century philosopher and commentator Sankaracharya.
bhakti—emotional devotion.
brahmacaryāśram—student life, the first of the four stages of life in the ancient view of society.
Brahmaputra—the name of a river which flows through Assam and East Bengal known for its torrential mass and impetuosity.
Caṇḍt—an appendex to the Markandeya Purana in which the Divine Mother is the Supreme Deity.
Dorśan of Sri Aurobindo—the rare occasions, four times in the year, when Sri Aurobindo used to come out of his room to receive the homage of his disciples and admirers.
Dur
RESURGENT INDIA
Resurgent India
SISIRKUMAR MITRA
ALLIED PUBLISHERS PRIVATE LIMITED
BOMBAY
-NEW DELHI - CALCUTTA - MADRAS
LONDON
- NEW YORK
First Published 1963
ALLIED
PUBLISHERS PRIVATE LTD.
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© Allied Publishers Private Ltd. 1963
PRINTED IN
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Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sisirkumar Mitra/English/Resurgent India/^The Time Has Come^.htm
CHAPTER
XX
'THE TIME HAS COME'
SOME TIME AFTER her Declaration of 24 April
1956, the Mother said : 'The greatest thing that can be, the most marvellous thing since the beginning of creation, the miracle has happened.... A new world, yes, a completely new world is born and is here'.
This 'miracle' had taken place on 29 February 1956. On 29 February 1960, the day of its first leap-year celebration, the Mother gave a graphic account of what had happened :
'During the common meditation on
Wednesday the 29th February, 1956'
'This evening the Divine Presence, concrete and material, was there present amongst you. I had a form of living gol
CHAPTER VIII
VOICE OF FAITH
AS ALREADY SEEN, due to the Western impact, the Indian mind in the mid-nineteenth century showed signs of a rationalistic attitude and this was what Nature intended the human mind all over the world to develop as part of its preparation for a higher consciousness, the destined goal of human evolution. The impact also brought in forces that threatened to disrupt life and culture in India through a conflict of ideals between the progressive West and the conservative East. It was this difficult, if not critical, situation with which the Brahmo Samaj movement was confronted in its first two stages. Rammohun, the leader at the first stage, and D
CHAPTER
II
DARKNESS DEEPENS
THE curve of India's destiny has not been throughout an upward one. The pages of her history are not, all of them, bright with her golden achievements. In her early days, as shown before, she was indeed great both in the ways of the spirit and in the affairs of life. In fact, her spirituality growing over her long past sought to embrace the whole of life and govern all its movements. Yet there have been periods when the curve showed a downward trend, when India could not maintain the full strength of her soul and was therefore unable to withstand foreign aggressions. Perhaps she was then much too absorbed in inward contemplations neglecting the secu
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Biographical
1. A Nation in the Making — Surendranath Banerji.
2. Acharya Jagadishchandra Basu (Bengali) — Charuchandra Bhattacharya.
3. Acharya Jagadis Chandra Bose Centenary Volume — Ed. Amal Home.
4. Advaita Ashrama publications on the lives and teachings of Sri Ramakrishna and Swami Vivekananda.
5. Attnajivani (Bengali) — Rajnarayan Basu.
6. Autobiography — Devendranath Tagore.
7. Bal Gangadhar Tilak — D. P. Karmarkar.
8. Bhudev Mukhopadhyaya (in Bengali) — Pramathanath Bisi's article in the
Katha Sahitya, Dol Number, 1364 B.E.
9. Character Sketches — Bipinchandra Pal.
10. Contemporary Indian Painters — G.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author owns his grateful acknowledgements to the writers whose works he has used in preparing the book and has listed in the Bibliography; and to the institutions and their publications: Advaita Ashrama, Calcutta; Bangiya Sahitya Parishad, Calcutta; Nava-Vidhan, Calcutta; Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, Calcutta; Sri Aurobindo Ashram and Sri Aurobindo International Centre of Education, Pondicherry; Udbodhan Office, Calcutta; Visva-Bharati, Calcutta and Santiniketan. To
Amrita Bazar Patrika, Ananda Bazar Patrika
(Bengali),
·The
Modern Review; he
acknowledges his indebtedness for valuable material, particularly from their
special numbers on some of the great
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Sisirkumar Mitra/English/Resurgent India/^Infinite In Finite^.htm
CHAPTER
XVII
'INFINITE IN FINITE'
AS SEEN BEFORE, a true resurgence of India implies her rebirth into the truth and light of her soul. And this in modern times began when her mind sensed its spiritual roots and started coming to its own—a psychological revolution of very great promise, part indeed of the rise and growth of a renascent India. Her mind, so awakened, attempted to express itself in various ways, often reflecting its inherent intuitive bent. A new and powerful prose was born opening up larger possibilities. An inspired poetry pointed to its brilliant future. Even science turned its austere face to the light of the Spirit. It was now the turn of art to seek and re