Swami
Vivekananda
“’...why not sometimes dance like Shiva, and sometimes
remain immersed in superconsciousness?’”*
Swami Vivekananda
(1863-1902) was the founder of the Ramakrishna Order
and the first native Hindu practitioner of yoga to address an American
audience. He introduced the philosophy and practice of Yoga and Vedanta
to the West. Before Vivekananda, this tradition had been an object of
“scientific” anthropological study rather than of first-person
knowledge. Because yoga’s paradigm of objectivity and conception of the
self are so radically at odds with those of the West, the resources and
profound insights of Yoga and Vedanta had been inaccessible before
Vivekananda’s galvanizing address at the World Parliament of Religions
in 1893 in Chicago. During the next ten years, he founded Vedanta
Societies throughout the United States and lectured extensively there
and in Europe, delivering “The Philosophy of Vedanta” to my alma mater
graduate philosophy department on March 25, 1896, and later declining
Harvard’s professorial Chair in Eastern Philosophy. Nikhilananda’s
excellent biography narrates how “[Vivekananda] never resented being
mistaken for a negro [in the U.S.]. … When the Swami related these
incidents to a Western disciple, he was promptly asked why he did not
tell people that he was not a negro but a Hindu. ‘What!’ the Swami
replied indignantly. ‘Rise at the expense of another? I did not come to
earth for that.’ … He was scornful in his repudiation of the
pseudo-ethnology of privileged races.” Vivekananda was a pioneer, a
warrior, a cross-cultural ambassador, a widely read intellectual and
rationalist, as well as an unconventional and visionary thinker and
poet, an illuminated yoga master, and a profoundly spiritual
personality. I admire his brilliance, fearlessness and depth. His
transcribed talks all follow the same format: After warming you up with
a few familiar platitudes, he eloquently gains your trust, and then
punches you out with the deep doctrines, no holds barred. You emerge
boggled but grateful. His complete works are available at
www.vedanta.com. Learn more about him in *Swami
Nikhilananda,
Vivekananda: A Biography(New York: Ramakrishna-Vivekananda Center,
1953) and at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/vivekananda.