Foreword by Aidan Rankin
Foreword
By Aidan Rankin,
Ph.D.
I first became aware of David Frawley�s work earlier this year when I
was at the University bookshop in Bloomsbury, near to my London home.� It used to be called Dillon�s and owned by a
long-established and worthy firm.� Now
it is Waterstone�s, a thrusting �success story� of modern
entrepreneurship.� No longer a
traditionally British bookshop, staffed by friendly amateurs, Waterstone�s has
all the characteristics of a giant American emporium: glossy, squeaky-clean and
staffed by indifferent, overworked students.�
Like its American counterparts, it is replete with self-help guides for
stressed male executives and bitter, miserable career women, both products of a
disturbed society.� In the basement, a
bar serves caffe latte, chocolate muffins and a bewildering variety of fruit
juice.� Waterstone�s, in other words, is
a microcosm of the global monoculture, that spiritual and economic malaise
which Frawley so incisively explores.�
Yet beneath all the gloss, there persist many of the qualities of a fine
English bookshop, where rich gems of scholarship of scholarship and wisdom come
to unexpected light, just as rich traditions of spiritual insight still
withstand the modern Fetich of the market.
Exploring the �Eastern Religions� section, I came upon a book by David
Frawley, or Pandit Vamadeva Shastri, to give him his true name.� It was entitled From the River of Heaven:
Hindu and Vedic Knowledge for the Modern Age. ��Whilst glancing at it, I got talking to a silver-haired Indian, a
distinguished-looking fellow in an impeccable pinstriped suit.� He told me that he was an engineer, and an atheist,
but that Vamadeva Shastri was a religious teacher he respected and who told the
truth.� He was a true Vedacharya, or
teacher of ancient Vedic knowledge, and not a Western dilettante jumping on
fashionable Orientalist bandwagons.� His
words confirmed me in my decision to buy the book.� Since then - and it was only earlier this year - David Frawley
has become for me a source of knowledge and wisdom, a teacher and valued
friend.� His exploration of the Vedas is
intellectually rigorous but accessible, humane but making no compromises with
the crocodile-tear compassion and phoney �political correctness� of Western
liberals.�
Frawley�s embrace of Hinduism - and the Vedic teachings at its core - is
wholehearted and at the same time non-dogmatic, as� dogmatism is quite alien to the Hindu dharma.� Vamadeva�s teachings have confirmed a
suspicion that I have long held, although I am a political scientist by
training: that the root of our problems, as a society, is not political as
such, but spiritual.� This means that
much of modern political activity, especially single issue campaigns for
minority �rights�, gay �rights�, women�s �rights�, etc., is superficial and
deeply unsatisfying.� It is just another
form of consumerism, by which politicians confer group �rights� as advertisers
dream up �niche� markets.� True
political activity requires an awareness of the sacred, of the connection
between humanity and the rest of nature.�
True empowerment requires a surrender of power, or rather the acceptance
of a holistic world-view, which understands that all life forms are
interconnected.� Many indigenous
religions possess (or possessed) this insight, including Native American
spirituality and the pagan religions of old Europe.� The latest insights of modern physics and biology also reject the
�modern� ideas of mechanistic progress and humanity as the centre of the
universe.� Yet the eternal dharma of
Hinduism, whose rishis or seers the Greeks admired from afar, provides
the strongest, most consistent critique of materialism.� It is the philosophical tradition best
adapted to our post-modern age.
In Hinduism and the Clash of Civilizations, Vamadeva calls for
the Indian culture he loves to reassert itself against the failed ideologies of
the West: state socialism and global capitalism.� He lambastes the official intelligentsia of post-independence
India for eschewing their own culture and turning to Western, mechanistic
dogmas, from Marxism to neo-liberalism.�
Whether they worship the State or the Market, such intellectuals
dishonour their country�s noblest traditions.�
They are as craven as those American and British academics who place
politically correct considerations before the pursuit of truth and intellectual
freedom.� In the best of Indian popular
culture, however, Frawley finds an integrity, a latitudinarian tolerance and a
connectedness to nature lacking in intellectual circles - and lacking in
�Western civilisation� today.�
Crucially, Vamadeva also sees a connection between the universalist
assumptions of Western monotheism, which underlay the colonial adventure, and
the actions of Westerners today.� For
whether they are Christian evangelists or secular �developmentalists�, today�s
Western missionaries adopt the language of human rights and equality.� What they really mean are Western (i.e.
consumerist) ideas of rights and a process of cultural levelling down.� In �liberal� capitalism and state socialism,
there is no respect for either biodiversity or cultural diversity.� Traditions of scholarship and craftsmanship
are vilified, local environments polluted, local economies disrupted and local
choice eliminated - all in the name of standardisation and �progress�.� These simplistic ideologies of progress are
based on commercial expediency and the bureaucrat�s love of power.� However their roots are to be found in the
missionary impulse, the doctrinaire certainty that is the Christian tradition�s
negative aspect.
Hinduism, by contrast, offers true universalism, that is to say
unity-in-diversity.� In the Hindu
dharma, the individual can approach the divine in his or her own way.� The eternal truth is the same truth, but can
be pursued by different means, according to personal or cultural
preference.� Hindu economics is based on
local production for local need, a principle to which the green movement now
looks.� Mahatma Gandhi�s concept of swadeshi
restores economics to its original meaning of �good housekeeping�.� Swadeshi is based on the village
economy, pride in local craftsmanship and self-sufficiency.� Rooted in Hindu philosophy, it offers a
humane alternative to the failed socialist planning of Nehru - and the
ascendant Coca Cola capitalism, the iniquities of which become more apparent
every day.� Similarly, the ethical
teachings of the Vedas provide for a healthy balance between masculine and
feminine principles, to the advantage of both and the detriment of
neither.� Above superficial �rights� for
individuals or groups, Vedic teaching exalts our responsibilities -� for each other, as human beings, and to our
fellow creatures who have souls as we do.�
Hinduism gives spiritual underpinnings to the new wisdom of Deep Ecology
and the revelations of modern science.
Vamadeva�s new book is angry in places, and rightly so.� He decries the great injustice done to
Hinduism, by Islamic and Western invaders, by missionaries old and new and by
an Indian elite who have made a new religion of secularism.� He is angered and saddened also by the
corruption of Hindu social customs, such as the caste system, which was originally
a fluid rather than a rigid hierarchy and was about division of labour and not
disparity of wealth.� That anger,
however, yileds quickly� to a spirit of
boundless, inspiring optimism.� Hinduism
has survived its historical tribulations and is finding a new voice in world
affairs.� The twenty-first century BCE
could well be the Hindu Moment, in which a revived sanatana dharma gives
coherence to the ecology movement and satisfies the New Age seekers of the
West.� India, land of the Divine Mother,
will once again be a beacon for the world.
�East is East and West is West and ne�er the twain shall meet.� So,
famously, wrote Rudyard Kipling.� But
David Frawley/Vamadeva Shastri has proved him wrong.� His writing straddles that artificial divide to open our minds
and hearts to Vedic truths.� Like Sri
Ramakrishna, Aurobindo or Ramana Maharshi, Vamadeva Shastri is a modern
seer.� It is therefore a great honour to
commend his book.
Aidan Rankin
The
Ecologist magazine
London
11
September 2001
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