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REVIEW – ‘Do Not Take This World Seriously’
By
Kishore R. Kulkarni
Spirituality is
serious stuff and that is what this whole book is about. In the author’s own
words he says “I have presented my understanding of spirituality from an
ordinary seeker’s perspective. It is not a scholarly treatise. It simply
presents the “musings” of a spiritual seeker based on the classical Indian
spiritual thinking as epitomised in Shrimad Bhagawad Geeta.” Yes, it is the
author’s own understanding and interpretation of The Bhagavad Gita and other
scriptures that is spread over twenty chapters, seeking to convey to the reader
the essence of Hindu Philosophy through a process of dialogue and
introspection. In the prologue itself the author sets the pattern when he says
“my idea is not to convince any reader by means of this book to take up
spirituality. It is simply a sharing that may have a role to play in some
people’s lives, if the divine scheme has it that way.”
Some time back I read
Richard Dawkins book ‘The God delusion’ where the entire book is based on the
author’s contention that a supernatural creator almost certainly does not exist
and that belief in a personal god qualifies as a delusion, which he defines as
a persistent false belief held in the face of strong contradictory evidence. Kulkarni
asserts that “I strongly believe that there is a divine plan behind this creation,
and certainly behind someone getting on to the spiritual path.”
Born into a
conservative Brahmin family, it was but natural that Kulkarni imbibed the
theistic values of his surroundings grew up as God fearing individual up to his
early youth. There were two transformation moments in his life – one in the
author’s own words “I may concede that by virtue of my education and
profession, I must have changed significantly from a god fearing child and
teenager to a “rational intellectual adult”, such as they come in the modern
times! So, I never thought I would ever become a serious spiritual seeker” and
the second was when he met his spiritual guru when on a trip to Singapore,
again in his own words “Those couple of hours somehow left a deep impression on
me. Not that she revealed any great fundamental truths or put forth any
“convincing” arguments in favour of spiritual pursuit. But something happened
to me all the same through that session. Since then, I engaged myself in a
little bit of meditation and gradually got more and more interested in
spiritual pursuit.” Though he says that he is an ordinary seeker, it is evident
that he has engaged himself in a serious study of the Hindu scriptures.
The interesting part
however is that the book will indeed appeal to the ordinary seeker as it is for
most part in the form of a conversation, a question and answer session between
the author and the reader with the author’s own narration and interpretations
thrown in to amplify the concept with examples from our own lives thrown in. The
twenty chapters cover the entire gamut of questions from the creation of the
world, the Creator to the question of ‘Who am I’, of desires and detachment,
freewill, destiny and action – the meaning of Vairaagya and the outcome of
actions or Karma Yoga, love, forgiveness, faith and non-violence. In the end there
is chapter on the significance of the scriptures.
The glossary of
Sanskrit terms at the end of the book is a must and the author has compiled it an
easy to refer tabular form. Without this the book would have proved
unintelligible to the ordinary reader and the others who would see it as an
introduction to Hindu spiritual thought.
This is a vast
subject and the author Kishore Kulkarni has acknowledged – “The book is
organised into two volumes. Language has very serious limitations and when it
comes to spiritual terms, two persons may understand them quite differently. That
is the reason I have presented up front in Volume 1, my understanding of the
various important spiritual terms and concepts, so that the reader can
appreciate my philosophy better. Volume 2 presents my ideas about the real
spiritual goal and the practice for achieving that goal – what exactly a spiritual
seeker should be doing – both in the inner mental realm as also in the external
world of action.”
I however felt that
the title could have been different for spirituality is a serious matter. All
in all a commendable effort for as the author says “After all, it is my strong
belief that spirituality is all about transformation of mind through constant
contemplation on the matters beyond the physical creation.”
2 comments:
Thanks a lot, Subbu, for a great review. By the way, my middle initial is "A" and I spell my first name without the "e" in the end! :)
- Kishor Kulkarni
As regards the title of the book, my idea was to say that the physical world need not be taken seriously as it is said to be illusory. The way to attain that goal is through spirituality and is indeed a very serious matter.
- Kishor Kulkarni
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