Wednesday, December 11, 2013

THINK AND QUESTION.


IT IS ALL TRANSITORY
We all have grown up with a lot of beliefs ingrained in us. Most of us blindly follow what our parents tell us. There are a lot of good teachings but there are also a lot of teachings which make us follow certain rituals without understanding how that ritual can help us. We nevertheless follow them.
In India we are taught to be obedient and not to question parents, as parents know best. What the parents know is also what they have simply been told to obey without question. This indoctrination of thought and belief keeps getting propagated from one generation to the next without thought and reasoning. 
One such ritual is connected with the ceremonies that are performed after the death of a person. It is believed that this world is a mithya. It is illusionary. We therefore live a life devoted to have a better life in the next birth. We do not live this life, but only plan for the next life. In this process we are neither here nor there.
Life and time passes us by and in the illusionary hope of a life which we do not know anything about we perform rituals, prayers and sacrifices for the future which will be ours after death.
No wonder death itself is considered a passing away. Passing away to where?
Isn't death a finale? Don't we finish our journey on this planet earth and die just like every other living being?
We have intelligence, we can think, question, understand and evolve into better human beings. Do we? No, we blindly believe in theories given to us by our fore fathers. Were they really so wise? Even if they were, can there be no further improvement on a thought? Can we not try to refine our thinking? 
It is believed that a son is required to take forward the name of the family. To propagate the name of the dynasty. 
Accordingly, when a man dies his son performs the cremation tasks. He also performs tasks connected with Shradh. The son donates a cow, he donates clothes, feeds Brahmins, and performs a lot of Puja at the ghats of the river. The food and clothes given as dakshina or donation to the Brahmin is supposed to  go straight to heaven to help the departed father. The cow that is donated helps the father cross the river Vaitarni. The father catches the tail of the cow and crosses the river. 
During his lifetime also the father would have performed enough Pujas and rituals to ensure a good life after death. Is it necessary to perform so many rituals after his death once again to ensure this?
Why can we not question these rituals? Is it because they are connected with death? When a family member dies people are at their worst time emotionally. They are upset, sad and distressed. This is the easiest time to exploit their emotions. In the name of ensuring the happiness of the dear departed, some unscrupulous class of people make easy money. The gullible, distraught family members simply follow ritual after ritual, never once stopping to question the need for those rituals.
It is believed that every person has a rebirth. People even try to find out where his father has been reborn and in which form. Now if the person has already been reborn then who are we donating the clothes,and food for?
If he is not reborn and is finally dead then who is going to eat and clothe himself, because his body has been consigned to the flames?
Every year again an annual Shradh is performed, where donations are given, Brahmins are fed, clothes are donated. Why? For whom?
At least for once please think and question these rituals.
Who is exploiting and hitting gullible sad people when they are distraught with sorrow?
FALGU RIVER AT GAYA-SHRADH PERFORMERS

6 comments:

  1. Man Singh Madam, you have noticed hollowness and weaknesses of ritualism.Gautam Buddha and Mahavir also raised their voice against Karmkand(ritualism) and brought sea change in religious thoughts.After independence, lot of people converted to Buddhism and initially resolved to do away with ritualism.But slowly majority of them emulated the rituals.Lot of Indian Saints -both from north and south India made sincere efforts against ritualism but after some change the situation again became the same.Even Socialogists accepted the situation and termed the Vedic ritualism as Great Tradition and others as lesser Tradition.With Modernisation process in society, some rituals are automatically losing their influence.

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  2. Kohli Amarjit All SOCIAL REFORMERS have done it from time to time ..... and will keep on doing just that ... !!!

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  3. Man Singh ji, just want a person to question the rituals that we blindly follow. I am hopeful that some thinking people will refuse to follow hollow rituals, and a silent social revolution will come about.

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  4. With the changing social scenario and the thinking youth of today I am sure we don't need one social reformer, I am hopeful that each person will be able to make a difference in his/her own home.

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  5. Sonali Roy Bhattacharya this is very true... varsha di....we r still ignorant... sometimes out of fear we believe such things ...or for the fear of society..... but it is time to change...

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  6. Varsha, when a person comes to that state of awareness of the reality of his final end, he realises the futility of rituals, superstitions and reincarnation etc. The questions you have raised in this post are very relevant but like it is stated in one of the comments 'All social reformers have done it from time to time' and will continue doing so. This is because the old rituals will give place to new ones and so reformation is a continuous process. Thank you for the motivation, for I intend to post my perspective in this regard in my blog.

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