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The
child is the supreme questioner, he is always asking, "What
is this? What is that? How is it made? What makes this thing
move? What makes the lightning flash? Why are there tides?
Where does gold come from? And coal? And iron? How is a
book printed?.." And many more questions besides.
Both
children and men ask questions. They also reply. When we
know something, we can answer questions. We can teach, we
can spread knowledge.
What
shall we learn? What shall we teach? Shall we try to learn
everything that has happened throughout the ages? Shall
we attempt to learn every word that man can pronounce?
In
the poem of the Mahabharata, the following words are used
to describe the various kinds of arrows shot by the Pandava
brothers and other warriors: sara, ishu, sayaka, patri,
kanda, vishikha, naracha, vishatha, prushatka, bhalla, tomara,
ishika, silimukha, anjalika. We certainly do not need to
learn all these names for arrows. And there are many other
names of things that we do not need to learn.
We
speak of the news: we think of shipwrecks, murders, robberies,
quarrels, lawsuits, wars, fires, concerts, weddings, funerals
and thousands of other things that we read of in a few minutes
and forget about immediately afterwards.
We
open the Koran and at the head of the chapters of this sacred
book we read the word "News" and immediately we think of
shipwrecks, murders. but wait!
The
Prophet Mohammed was neither a frivolous person who took
pleasure in news of evil deeds nor a gossip who taught nothing
noble. Let us read the beginning of the chapter on "News":
In the name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful.
Of
what are they speaking together?
Of
the great news.
Are
they disputing about it?
No,
but they wish to know.
Surely,
they will know.
"Have
we not made the earth as a bed?
And
the mountains as tent-pegs?
Were
you not created in pairs?
And
have we not made you sleep for your rest?
And
made the night for a mantle?
And
the day to earn your bread?
And
built above you the seven firmaments?
And
set there a burning light?
And
made showers of water fall from the brimming clouds
To
bring forth grain and herb everywhere
And
gardens thick with trees?"
Thus
the Prophet kindled hope in the hearts and minds of men
and made them think of greater things, things that have
a lasting beauty, things that teach man how noble is the
world of life.
So
we agree that there are words and things and certain kinds
of news that are not worth hearing and repeating. But other
things, on the contrary, are worth hearing and repeating,
even though it may cost us much time, trouble and effort
to find them out.
Man's
power lies within his thought. The limbs, the hands that
are so skilful, are the slaves of his thought which decides
and directs.
And
since the human race first dwelt on earth, how great have
been man's conquests over Nature!
We
can see this power pictured in the tale of Rama's crossing
over the sea.
When
he reached the shores of India, and learned that his dear
wife Sita was a captive in the island of Ceylon, he prepared
to cross the waters. Vast was his army, but it was made
up of monkeys and bears. How could they cross the turbulent
waters?
Rama's
intelligence was profound, his sagacity keen and his heart
full of courage.
First
he spoke gently to the old Ocean and said:
"Great
Sea, I beseech you, let my army pass." But after he had
waited three days, there was still no reply from the waves.
Then
Rama called his brother:
"Lakshman,
bring me my bow and arrows. I have wasted my words on this
sea, just as a man wastes good seeds by sowing them in sand."
Rama,
the divine hero, shot an arrow into the deep waters and
the shaft gave a fiery pain to the ocean, and all the fish
were full of fear. Then the spirit of the ocean took the
form of a Brahmin who knelt before the Lord with a golden
dish full of jewels as an offering.
The
Ocean clasped the lotus-feet of Rama and said:
"Great
Lord, forgive my sin. I am like my kin of the air, the earth
and the fire. They are heavy and slow and so accustomed
to power that they do not answer the call of a Lord like
you. No hero before you has ever made me obey his will.
In you I see my master. Do what seems good to you."
Lord
Rama smiled:
"Tell
me," he said, "how my army may cross over your realm of
waves and storms."
"My
waters," said the sea, "will bear on their breast the rocks
which your soldiers will throw on them and in that way a
bridge will be built between India and Lanka."
Rama
turned to his army:
"Let
the bridge be built," he said.
"Glory
to Rama," shouted all the warriors.
They
uprooted trees and rocks and even great cliffs, and brought
them to the two master-builders, Nala and Nila. And Nala
and Nila fastened the wood and stone together so that everything
floated firmly on the surface of the sea. Then the army
marched across it.
Rama
sat on a mountain of India and watched the countless troops
moving across the bridge.
Just
as Rama forced the spirit of the ocean to obey him, so does
man's thought, the glory of humanity, conquer the sea, and
many other things besides. Man masters the wind, since he
makes it blow his sailing ships and turn his windmills.
He conquers the ice and the snow, for explorers have travelled
to the frozen lands of the North Pole and the South Pole
and have climbed the highest mountains. He conquers the
beasts, for all over the world he slays the animals that
are a danger to him and his family: lions, tigers, wolves,
snakes and even sharks. Although he has less power over
the great ocean, he has made his strength felt on land.
And while he has rid himself of the animals that are harmful
to him, he has kept and bred the animals that are useful
to him: the ox, the horse, the sheep, the . elephant, etc.
But
all this is the conquest of things by his hands and by his
tools and weapons. And hands and tools and weapons are the
servants of his thought.
Man
conquers by knowledge. And he conquers knowledge: he asks
and asks again and again, and perseveres until he really
knows.
Some
men of whom history tells are known as conquerors: Alexander
the Great who conquered Western Asia and Egypt, Julius Caesar
who conquered France and England, the emperor Baber who
conquered the North of India, Napoleon who became for a
time the master of Europe.
But
there are other ways of being a conqueror.
You
also can be a conqueror. There are things in the world which
need to be known and learnt. Ask, seek, learn and conquer.
Then you can call yourself a conqueror.
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