Tuesday 23 March 2010

Purshottam Agarwal

There is a single person that stands out from my memories of Luniyakheda - Purshottam Agarwal. I did not include him in my previous post, since he belongs to a completely different cadre from the bhakts, gayaks,and rasiks that had gathered there for the Yatra. He is, foremost, a thinker, and brutal commentator of the world as he sees it. Several other words come to mind when I think of Purshottam Agarwal's words - mercilessly independent, razor-sharp honesty, genius for the concise, precise clarity, fiercely critical of social ills and society, including himself, despairing, hopeless, and yet resisting a cynical submission of the faithless; supremely confident in himself, but with grace to sometimes listen to others, unnecessarily - his mind probably poses questions and answers them - faster and more easily than others.

And this man spoke to us on the first day..

He began with a demurring that it was his karma to give bhashans/lectures because of his teaching background. He had decided to join us in Luniyakhedi, as a rasik, in anticipation of quiet, of silence, to participate in a satsang - to listen, like the rest of us, to Kabir songs! Yet, he had been roped into talking to us - which he then went on to do - cuttingly effective, non-ignorable.

He started conversationally with an observation that people get too angry these days - bringing in the incidences of road-rage and associated killings on streets of Delhi. We have become a society where we even practice "tolerance with so much intolerance". He espoused that we learn to "live with differences", with a respecting of the otherness, whether these be due to religion, culture, or anything else. He urged us to focus on ourselves, allow an openness where we did not immediately compartmentalize people, experiences, based on pre-existing notions...

And thus he went on, sitting in a slump, his hand thrown every now and then in a gesture of pointlessness - of why was he there, why he was talking to us, what was really the point..yet, continuing, laying himself - head and heart, open and visible to all of us - all layers peeled - touching me, deeply.

3 comments:

Mita ALL said...

What i really liked is what Shabnam said about his characterisation of the Kabir Project as "Social Mobilisation around the power of Love".... and that is absolutely true isn't it!

That's one thing i wanted to add to my comment but forgot > LOVE will prevail, only LOVE will conquer. Hate and categories of any kind cannot conquer, have no answer. Only LOVE is the answer.

One should be able to listen to one's "enemy" and see oneself inside one's "enemy" coz we are all aspects of the One....

so only LOVE can conquer, can make the connection, can make the difference, can dissolve hardness and hate....

And as Purushottam says, that's what the Kabir Project is all about : Social Mobilisation around the Power of Love!!!!

Arati said...

Absolutely right! Your comment adds the right kind of value that was missing from what I wrote...Thank you, Dear Mita.

appy blogger said...

d read made one's absence frm d event also participatory. v nice insight of purushottamji's talk.