Friday, February 12, 2010

Is the Geeta a holy book?

I do not think the Gita should be worshipped as a holy book. What can be accomplished by wrapping it up in a piece of red cloth and anointing it with flowers? That would be a meaningless ritual, to escape from reading it. The Gita can have meaning only if the verses on paper, printed and bound, help to keep us away from any deviation from the right path. Otherwise, the Gita would only be a bundle of lifeless pages, without any real relation to our lives. It is nothing to be happy about, if you have the chapters of the Gita at the tip of your tongue. Sometimes, that too is a matter of vanity. In such a case, there is no difference between the croaking of a frog, and reciting the Gita, if it's message does not impress your heart and soul.I wonder, are our young men and women interested in reading and understanding the Gita. I find the answer in Teilhard de Chardin's statement, " The future is in the hands of the people who can give enough reasons to hope and live to the coming generations". The Vedas are our invaluable reference books. The Upanishads are our textbooks. The Gita is our guide.It is a pity that the Gita is considered as a book for the aged. To become old without understanding the Gita, is a loss. After all, what has Krishna got to do with any particular phase of age?

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