By Aditi Banerjee, June 2013 [banerjeea@gmail.com]
Dharmakshetra
Back to the last verse of the Gita. The first word of this verse is
“Yatra,” which means “where” or “the place where.” What is this place
where this moment between Krishna and Arjuna takes place? The place is,
as proclaimed by the first words of the first verse of the Gita,
Dharmakshetra / Kurukshetra. Kurkshetra is the geographical
appellation. Dharmakshetra has a deeper meaning. Dharmakshetra means
the kshetra of Dharma or the field of Dharma. What does this mean?
The field of dharma here means the battlefield of life or living. In
other words, the battlefield is the site of where Dharma will be
practiced at this moment. Too often nowadays, Hinduism is mistakenly
reduced to something that sadhus or yogis practice, or to what takes
place in a temple or in the puja room. But the real name for Hinduism
is Sanatana Dharma—the dharma that is without beginning or end, the
dharma that belongs to and for all times. This encompasses
everything—all worlds, all facets of the world. Nowadays, the gems of
Hinduism—yoga, meditation, ecstatic forms of kirtan—are being
enthusiastically embraced by many, especially as part of the New Age
movement. This is a good thing, but if such practices are divorced from
Dharma, the practices will become distorted and corrupted, and the
effects will diminish in effectiveness over time. To be authentic to
Hinduism, we have to combine sadhana and dharma.
Dharma is a multifaceted thing. It cannot simply be translated as
duty. It encompasses a wide variety of roles that we as individuals
play, in our individual life, in our family life and social life; it is
tailored to what would be appropriate to our age and stage in life, to
the times and place in which we live, our socioeconomic role in
society. Dharma is both inward looking and outward looking. It ensures
harmony at all levels of society and provides a proper balance and
order to the cosmos.
Nowadays, our tendency is to pick and choose that which makes us feel
good in the moment and pursue that. But that by itself will not lead us
towards spiritual enlightenment. Spirituality cannot be a mere form of
escapism, a guise under which we can hide from the world. In the first
part of the Gita, when Arjuna is lamenting and coming up with all these
seemingly pious reasons to not fight the battle, Krishna immediately
pierces through this posturing, telling Arjuna that these are flimsy
excuses not worthy of him.
This wallowing in tamas and fatalism masquerading as spiritualism that
Arjuna briefly displays has become endemic in Hindu society. In my own
case, my guru made sure that I learned what my dharma is. For many
years, when I would ask him what sadhana I should do, he would promptly
say that my very first priority, beyond anything else, was to excel in
my job as a tax lawyer at a Wall Street law firm.
This answer was anathema to me. In my ignorance, I saw my job as a
hindrance to true spirituality. I wanted something more idealistic,
more sattvic, more suitable for a yogic lifestyle. How could working
until midnight, engaging in hard and sometimes confrontational
negotiations, representing wealthy investment banks, making rich people
and rich corporations richer, how could that be conducive to my
spiritual progress? I did not appreciate that this was my dharma
kshetra. I read the words of the Gita but did not apply them to my own
life.
Left to my own devices, I would have done the bare minimum to get by in
my work. But my guru wanted something more—he wanted me to truly do my
best and not just go through the motions. It was very hard for me to
do that, not simply out of laziness, but because the type of job I had
required me to step out of my comfort zone and do things that did not
rest comfortably with my psyche. I had to learn how to be assertive and
sometimes confrontational in order to be effective. I had to learn how
to not just do legal research and analysis but come up with solutions
to problems and then implement them and figure out how to get other
people to go along with me. I never became great at this and I probably
never got to where my guru wanted me to reach, but I became better.
This was important for me, because similar to Arjuna, I needed to snap
out of tamas into rajas. I needed to develop more of a kshatriya
mindset, even though that wasn’t naturally part of my psyche.
Learning these skills was as integral a part of my spiritual practice,
if not more so, than whatever other puja or japa or bhajans or chanting I
did in my puja room. My time at this law firm was as important to my
spiritual progress as pilgrimages I made to the Himalayas and other
famous temples in India.
The point of this is not to say that you should take up a job on Wall
Street. That was right for me at that time because of my karma and my
psyche. My point is that Hinduism has a holistic and integrated
approach to what is spiritual life and spiritual practice, which
inextricably links our sadhana with our dharma. And that is what makes
it Sanatana Dharma. When people say Hinduism is a way of life, what it
means is that we are not defined by going to church on Sunday. Every
moment in life is an opportunity for the practice of yoga, for
performing karma yoga or bhakti yoga or jnana yoga or raja yoga; every
activity of the day is sacred if we approach it the right way. And,
through the Gita, Sri Krishna teaches us to never forget that we are
always in one kind of a dharma kshetra or another and that we must
always uphold our dharma in every setting and in every moment of our
lives.
Active surrender
There is one last thing I would like to say about Sri Krishna and
Arjuna on the battlefield. At heart, I am a devotee, and there is one
more way that I look upon Sri Krishna and Arjuna on the battlefield
which is purely devotional. To me, that moment, when Arjuna says near
the end of the Gita that he will pick up his bow and fight is the
epitome of “active surrender” or saranagathi. True saranagathi or
surrender cannot be born out of weakness, out of fear or despair—it
comes from a place of strength, from an active choice to surrender. A
great Buddhist master, Shifu Sheng-Yen, once said that with his
disciples, he first had to make their ego (or small self) bigger before
he could ask them to transcend and surrender their ego. Someone with
low self-esteem is not in a position to surrender their ego.
So, the beautiful thing to me about that moment is that Arjuna is the
most powerful warrior in the world. His prowess with the bow is
unchallenged and unparalleled. When someone that powerful and strong
surrenders to Sri Krishna, that is meaningful and beautiful.
To me, true saranagathi is standing with a bow raised to my shoulder,
and when Sri Krishna whispers into my ears to release the arrows, I do
so without hesitation, without doubt, secure in the conviction that I am
following my dharma.
Again, this is not about taking up arms but about an attitude towards life.
The reward for that surrender, for saranagathi, is the most beautiful,
most glorious, most sublime promise that is made by Sri Krishna in the
Bhagavad Gita:
“sarva-dharmān parityajya mām ekaḿ śaraṇaḿ vraja
ahaḿ tvāḿ sarva-pāpebhyo mokṣayiṣyāmi mā śucaḥ”
ahaḿ tvāḿ sarva-pāpebhyo mokṣayiṣyāmi mā śucaḥ”
(Relinquishing all other dharmas, surrender to Me alone; I shall
deliver you from all sinful reactions; do not despair) (BG 18:66).
The author received a B.A. in International Relations, magna cum
laude, from Tufts University, and a J.D. from Yale Law School. She is a
practicing attorney in the greater New York area. She is a co-editor of
Invading the Sacred: An Analysis of Hinduism Studies in America andhas
published several essays in Outlook India. Her other publications
include: “Hindu-Americans: An Emerging Identity in an Increasingly
Hyphenated World”, which is included in The Columbia Documentary History
of Religion in America since 1945; “The Hyphenated Hindus”, in Outlook
India; “Hindu-American: Both Sides of the Hyphen”, in Silicon India; and
“Hindu Pride”, in Buddhists, Hindus, and Sikhs in America (Jon Butler`et al. eds., Oxford University Press). She is interested in the
preservation and revival of the spiritual practices and traditions
associated with Sanatana Dharma. Her blog is http://sadhanareflections.blogspot.in/2013/03/reflections-on-maha-shivaratri.htmlSource: http://www.esamskriti.com/essay-chapters/The-Need-for-a-Kshatriya-Mindset-4.aspx
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