Sunday, August 30, 2015

A TRIBUTE TO THE ANCIENT SEERS

A Tribute To The Ancient Seers
(Published in The Rising Nepal Friday Supplement, September 25, 2015)

                                                                                           Sandhya Regmi
sandhyaregmi2000@gmail.com         

There would not be a matter of greater pride than to know that the greatest French Enlightenment author, critic, essayist, historian and one of the greatest thinkers and philosophers of Modern time Francois Voltaire making proclamation – “Everything has come down to us from the bank of the Ganga.”; “2500 years ago Pythagoras had gone to the Ganga from the Samos Island of Greece to learn geometry.”; “The Veda was the most precious gift for which the West has ever been indebted to the East.” 
           
These prideful statements appreciating Eastern civilization appear in a world-acclaimed book titled ‘Great Minds on India’ written by Shillong-based scholar and researcher Salil Gewali, and edited by Houston based eminent NASA scientist Dr AV Murali.

A freelance writer, journalist and editor since 1980, and a member of International Organization of Journalists, Salil Gewali has already authored 17 books including text books for the schools of Meghalaya. ‘Great Minds on India’ is the author’s unique research work of nearly two and a half decades. Globally acknowledged as one of its kind ever published, the book attempts to showcase how the world-renowned intellectual luminaries have thought about the ancient Eastern civilization and the fathomless classical literature. The book provides how the wisdom of Indian subcontinent inspired ‘the greatest of the great’ scientists, thinkers, writers, poets, such as Albert Einstein, Werner Heisenberg (co-founder of Quantum Physics), T. S. Eliot, Voltaire, Friedrich Hegel, Ralph Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Johann Goethe, HG Wells, Herman Hesse, Mark Twain, Bernard Shaw, Erwin Schrodinger (father of Quantum Mechanics), Heinrich Zimmer (Professor of Sanskrit at Heidelberg University), Sir William Jones (Translator of Sanskrit drama Shakuntala), and many more. The book, which has already been translated into 9 languages including Nepali, has earned worldwide appreciation.

We all know that what made Albert Einstein one of the wisest geniuses the world has ever seen is his ground-breaking ‘Theory of Relativity’. But how many of us are aware that this father of Modern Science had made a serious confession - “We owe a lot to the East, who taught us how to count, without which no worthwhile scientific discovery could have been made.” Salil Gewali’s masterpiece holds out such proud revelations by world’s top intellectual giants and celebrated thinkers.

It was a great astonishment for me personally to know from this landmark book that one of my favorite poets T. S. Eliot was greatly inspired by our ancient Upanishads and Patanjali Sutra and he also learnt Sanskrit. A renowned USA scholar Dick Teresi writes in his masterpiece ‘Lost Discoveries’ -"Twenty-four centuries before Isaac Newton, the Hindu Scripture asserted that gravitation held the universe together. The Sanskrit speaking Aryans subscribed to the idea of a spherical earth in an era when the Greeks believed in a flat one.” The book  also illustrates how the father of Atomic Bomb, Julius Robert Oppenheimer got immersed into the treasure trove of oriental wisdom who had gone to the extent of proclaiming- "What we shall find in  Modern Physics  is an exemplification, an encouragement and  a refinement of old Eastern wisdom."

Salil, a die-hard lover of Eastern virtues, strongly felt then, these western scientists would not have applauded and approved of those ancient wisdom and knowledged of the East, had there not been any scientific validity and significance. He gradually got to know that scientists like Erwin Schrodinger, Neils Bohr, Julius Oppenheimer, David Bohm, Heisenberg, David Josephson, Werner Heisenberg had sufficiently got the ideas relative to Quantum Physics from Upanishads and Vedas. It dawned upon Mr Gewali that the ancient treatises had greatly emboldened those scientists to plunge deeper into the atom, moreover into the inner core of the Quantum Mechanics. All these consequently strengthened his conviction about the infallibility of ancient literary wisdom. While the East has specialized in understanding and transforming the Interior world, the West has excelled at investigating and manipulating the Exterior world.

And I myself being acquainted with S&T over the past 3 decades, little had I realized the wonders of Eastern philosophy and civilization, the immense knowledge and endless wisdom our Scriptures held for the scientific inventions and breakthroughs by ‘the wisest of the wise’ in the West. Reading this amazing book was like bathing in the holy Ganga the wisdom par excellence empowering myself with the supernatural power of the Bhagawata Geeta. I was shaken up emotionally and awakened to recognize my true identity and strength with an overwhelming feeling for eastern treasure of knowledge. As if it were an immense enlightenment in my life - I was entering into a spiritual immortal world of eternal wisdom leaving far far behind the superficial perishable materialistic world.

This fantastic book serves a beacon of great light even to the educated derelicts who seem to have lost faith in the ancient values and virtues. It offers ambrosia of divinity to cleanse our notorious ego. The readers get easily captivated and enchanted by the songs of Hinduism and the Hindu Scriptures sung in the book. Hinduism has been regarded as eternal religion embracing all others. The endearing eleventh President of India and eminent scientist Dr. Abdul Kalam regards Vedas as the oldest classics and the most precious treasures of the East. Great philosopher, poet and artist Rabindranath Tagore was highly inspired by the Upanishads and the works of the greatest Sanskrit poet Kalidas while writing his ‘Geetanjalee’. Mahatma Gandhi, whose works and lifestyles inspired many great scholars, statesmen, scientists and diplomats of the modern age, also admitted the Bhagawata Geeta as a boundless ocean of priceless gems. The renowned Nepali writer and great scholar Madan Mani Dixit has proclaimed in his recently released book ‘Ananta Chaitnaya’ (‘Infinite Consciousness’/‘Eternal Dynamism’) that the first scientists of the world were Maharshi Yagyawalka, Uddhalak Aruni and Shwetaketu, the scholars of ancient eastern civilization. Even VS Naipaul- the renowned author of ‘A Wounded Civilization’ and Carl Sagan- the prolific author of the world famous book ‘Cosmos’ admit Hinduism as the noblest of all.  

Gewali has completed his share of work by presenting us the monumental book. But it has left behind for the society the Herculean task of re-discovering the lost values and reorienting ourselves, without which the great pearl of profound wisdom cannot be woven into a necklace for mankind.

When the West could make breakthroughs from the knowledge derived from our ancient scriptures, then why are such virtues being underestimated in our own soil?

It is great to see the Westerners practicing yoga, and meditation, chanting ohm, and awakened to the higher importance of the Vedic knowledge and spiritualism. But sitting on the epicenter of those ancient heritages, why have we lost faith in our own virtues, and why do we hesitate to stand on its foundation? Why have we been ignoring, underestimating and devaluating the ancient Eastern philosophy and heritage in our own soil? Why do we hesitate to embrace an education system that enlightens our children with the eternal truth of our ancient scriptures? Instead of translating the rich virtues into the field of creation and productivity by ourselves, why do we have to wait for the West to so?

Unless we receive the wakeup now and respond to it, a day might not be that far, when we have to send our children to the Western schools to “learn” the meaning and value of our lost civilization. And that’s surely not the way we wish to pay our highest tribute to the ancient seers.

(Sandhya Regmi is a freelance writer and researcher.) 


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