"You are the first Westerner, Dick, ever to enter
that shrine. Many others have tried in vain."
At my words Mr. Wright looked startled, then pleased. We had just
left the beautiful Chamundi Temple in the hills overlooking Mysore
in southern India. There we had bowed before the gold and silver
altars of the Goddess Chamundi, patron deity of the family of the
reigning maharaja.
"As a souvenir of the unique honor," Mr. Wright said, carefully
stowing away a few blessed rose petals, "I will always preserve this
flower, sprinkled by the priest with rose water."
My companion and I1
were spending the month of November, 1935, as guests of the State of
Mysore. The Maharaja, H.H. Sri Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV, is a model prince
with intelligent devotion to his people. A pious Hindu, the Maharaja has
empowered a Mohammedan, the able Mirza Ismail, as his Dewan or Premier.
Popular representation is given to the seven million inhabitants of
Mysore in both an Assembly and a Legislative Council.
The heir to
the Maharaja, H.H. the Yuvaraja, Sir Sri Krishna Narasingharaj Wadiyar,
had invited my secretary and me to visit his enlightened and progressive
realm. During the past fortnight I had addressed thousands of Mysore
citizens and students, at the Town Hall, the Maharajah's College, the
University Medical School; and three mass meetings in Bangalore, at the
National High School, the Intermediate College, and the Chetty Town Hall
where over three thousand persons had assembled. Whether the eager
listeners had been able to credit the glowing picture I drew of America,
I know not; but the applause had always been loudest when I spoke of the
mutual benefits that could flow from exchange of the best features in
East and West.
Mr. Wright and I were now relaxing in the tropical peace. His travel
diary gives the following account of his impressions of Mysore:
"Brilliantly green rice fields, varied by tasseled sugar cane
patches, nestle at the protective foot of rocky hillshills dotting the
emerald panorama like excrescences of black stoneand the play of colors
is enhanced by the sudden and dramatic disappearance of the sun as it
seeks rest behind the solemn hills.
"Many rapturous moments have been spent in gazing, almost
absent-mindedly, at the ever-changing canvas of God stretched across the
firmament, for His touch alone is able to produce colors that vibrate
with the freshness of life. That youth of colors is lost when man tries
to imitate with mere pigments, for the Lord resorts to a more simple and
effective mediumoils that are neither oils nor pigments, but mere rays
of light. He tosses a splash of light here, and it reflects red; He
waves the brush again and it blends gradually into orange and gold; then
with a piercing thrust He stabs the clouds with a streak of purple that
leaves a ringlet or fringe of red oozing out of the wound in the clouds;
and so, on and on, He plays, night and morning alike, ever-changing,
ever-new, ever-fresh; no patterns, no duplicates, no colors just the
same. The beauty of the Indian change in day to night is beyond compare
elsewhere; often the sky looks as if God had taken all the colors in His
kit and given them one mighty kaleidoscopic toss into the heavens.
"I must relate the splendor of a twilight visit to the
huge Krishnaraja Sagar Dam,2
constructed twelve miles outside of Mysore. Yoganandaji and I boarded a
small bus and, with a small boy as official cranker or battery
substitute, started off over a smooth dirt road, just as the sun was
setting on the horizon and squashing like an overripe tomato.
"Our journey led past the omnipresent square rice fields, through a
line of comforting banyan trees, in between a grove of towering coconut
palms, with vegetation nearly as thick as in a jungle, and finally,
approaching the crest of a hill, we came face-to-face with an immense
artificial lake, reflecting the stars and fringe of palms and other
trees, surrounded by lovely terraced gardens and a row of electric
lights on the brink of the damand below it our eyes met a dazzling
spectacle of colored beams playing on geyserlike fountains, like so many
streams of brilliant ink pouring forthgorgeously blue waterfalls,
arresting red cataracts, green and yellow sprays, elephants spouting
water, a miniature of the Chicago World's Fair, and yet modernly
outstanding in this ancient land of paddy fields and simple people, who
have given us such a loving welcome that I fear it will take more than
my strength to bring Yoganandaji back to America.
"Another rare privilegemy first elephant ride. Yesterday
the Yuvaraja invited us to his summer palace to enjoy a ride on one of
his elephants, an enormous beast. I mounted a ladder provided to climb
aloft to the howdah or saddle, which is silk-cushioned and
boxlike; and then for a rolling, tossing, swaying, and heaving down into
a gully, too much thrilled to worry or exclaim, but hanging on for dear
life!"
Southern India, rich with historical and archaeological remains, is a
land of definite and yet indefinable charm. To the north of Mysore is
the largest native state in India, Hyderabad, a picturesque plateau cut
by the mighty Godavari River. Broad fertile plains, the lovely Nilgiris
or "Blue Mountains," other regions with barren hills of limestone or
granite. Hyderabad history is a long, colorful story, starting three
thousand years ago under the Andhra kings, and continuing under Hindu
dynasties until A.D. 1294, when it passed to a line of Moslem rulers who
reign to this day.
The most breath-taking display of architecture, sculpture, and
painting in all India is found at Hyderabad in the ancient
rock-sculptured caves of Ellora and Ajanta. The Kailasa at Ellora, a
huge monolithic temple, possesses carved figures of gods, men, and
beasts in the stupendous proportions of a Michelangelo. Ajanta is the
site of five cathedrals and twenty-five monasteries, all rock
excavations maintained by tremendous frescoed pillars on which artists
and sculptors have immortalized their genius.
Hyderabad City is graced by the Osmania University and by the
imposing Mecca Masjid Mosque, where ten thousand Mohammedans may
assemble for prayer.
Mysore State too is a scenic wonderland, three thousand feet above
sea level, abounding in dense tropical forests, the home of wild
elephants, bison, bears, panthers, and tigers. Its two chief cities,
Bangalore and Mysore, are clean, attractive, with many parks and public
gardens.
Hindu architecture and sculpture achieved their highest perfection in
Mysore under the patronage of Hindu kings from the eleventh to the
fifteenth centuries. The temple at Belur, an eleventh-century
masterpiece completed during the reign of King Vishnuvardhana, is
unsurpassed in the world for its delicacy of detail and exuberant
imagery.
The rock pillars found in northern Mysore date from the third century
B.C., illuminating the memory of King Asoka. He succeeded to the throne
of the Maurya dynasty then prevailing; his empire included nearly all of
modern India, Afghanistan, and Baluchistan. This illustrious emperor,
considered even by Western historians to have been an incomparable
ruler, has left the following wisdom on a rock memorial:
This religious inscription has been engraved in order that our sons
and grandsons may not think a new conquest is necessary; that they may
not think conquest by the sword deserves the name of conquest; that they
may see in it nothing but destruction and violence; that they may
consider nothing as true conquest save the conquest of religion. Such
conquests have value in this world and in the next.
Asoka was a grandson of the formidable Chandragupta Maurya (known to
the Greeks as Sandrocottus), who in his youth had met Alexander the
Great. Later Chandragupta destroyed the Macedonian garrisons left in
India, defeated the invading Greek army of Seleucus in the Punjab, and
then received at his Patna court the Hellenic ambassador Megasthenes.
Intensely interesting stories have been minutely
recorded by Greek historians and others who accompanied or followed
after Alexander in his expedition to India. The narratives of Arrian,
Diodoros, Plutarch, and Strabo the geographer have been translated by
Dr. J. W. M'Crindle3
to throw a shaft of light on ancient India. The most admirable feature
of Alexander's unsuccessful invasion was the deep interest he displayed
in Hindu philosophy and in the yogis and holy men whom he encountered
from time to time and whose society he eagerly sought. Shortly after the
Greek warrior had arrived in Taxila in northern India, he sent a
messenger, Onesikritos, a disciple of the Hellenic school of Diogenes,
to fetch an Indian teacher, Dandamis, a great sannyasi of Taxila.
"Hail to
thee, O teacher of Brahmins!" Onesikritos said after seeking out
Dandamis in his forest retreat. "The son of the mighty God Zeus, being
Alexander who is the Sovereign Lord of all men, asks you to go to him,
and if you comply, he will reward you with great gifts, but if you
refuse, he will cut off your head!"
The yogi received this fairly compulsive invitation calmly, and "did
not so much as lift up his head from his couch of leaves."
"I also am a son of Zeus, if Alexander be such," he commented. "I
want nothing that is Alexander's, for I am content with what I have,
while I see that he wanders with his men over sea and land for no
advantage, and is never coming to an end of his wanderings.
"Go and tell Alexander that God the Supreme King is never the Author
of insolent wrong, but is the Creator of light, of peace, of life, of
water, of the body of man and of souls; He receives all men when death
sets them free, being in no way subject to evil disease. He alone is the
God of my homage, who abhors slaughter and instigates no wars.
"Alexander is no god, since he must taste of death," continued the
sage in quiet scorn. "How can such as he be the world's master, when he
has not yet seated himself on a throne of inner universal dominion?
Neither as yet has he entered living into Hades, nor does he know the
course of the sun through the central regions of the earth, while the
nations on its boundaries have not so much as heard his name!"
After this chastisement, surely the most caustic ever
sent to assault the ears of the "Lord of the World," the sage added
ironically, "If Alexander's present dominions be not capacious enough
for his desires, let him cross the Ganges River; there he will find a
region able to sustain all his men, if the country on this side be too
narrow to hold him.4
"Know this, however, that what Alexander offers and the gifts he
promises are things to me utterly useless; the things I prize and find
of real use and worth are these leaves which are my house, these
blooming plants which supply me with daily food, and the water which is
my drink; while all other possessions which are amassed with anxious
care are wont to prove ruinous to those who gather them, and cause only
sorrow and vexation, with which every poor mortal is fully fraught. As
for me, I lie upon the forest leaves, and having nothing which requires
guarding, close my eyes in tranquil slumber; whereas had I anything to
guard, that would banish sleep. The earth supplies me with everything,
even as a mother her child with milk. I go wherever I please, and there
are no cares with which I am forced to cumber myself.
"Should Alexander cut off my head, he cannot also destroy my soul. My
head alone, then silent, will remain, leaving the body like a torn
garment upon the earth, whence also it was taken. I then, becoming
Spirit, shall ascend to my God, who enclosed us all in flesh and left us
upon earth to prove whether, when here below, we shall live obedient to
His ordinances and who also will require of us all, when we depart hence
to His presence, an account of our life, since He is Judge of all proud
wrongdoing; for the groans of the oppressed become the punishment of the
oppressor.
"Let Alexander then terrify with these threats those who wish for
wealth and who dread death, for against us these weapons are both alike
powerless; the Brahmins neither love gold nor fear death. Go then and
tell Alexander this: Dandamis has no need of aught that is yours, and
therefore will not go to you, and if you want anything from Dandamis,
come you to him."
With close attention Alexander received through Onesikritos the
message from the yogi, and "felt a stronger desire than ever to see
Dandamis who, though old and naked, was the only antagonist in whom he,
the conqueror of many nations, had met more than his match."
Alexander invited to Taxila a number of Brahmin ascetics noted for
their skill in answering philosophical questions with pithy wisdom. An
account of the verbal skirmish is given by Plutarch; Alexander himself
framed all the questions.
"Which be the more numerous, the living or the dead?"
"The living, for the dead are not."
"Which breeds the larger animals, the sea or the land?"
"The land, for the sea is only a part of land."
"Which is the cleverest of beasts?"
"That one with which man is not yet acquainted." (Man fears the
unknown.)
"Which existed first, the day or the night?"
"The day was first by one day." This reply caused Alexander to betray
surprise; the Brahmin added: "Impossible questions require impossible
answers."
"How best may a man make himself beloved?"
"A man will be beloved if, possessed with great power, he still does
not make himself feared."
"How may a man become a god?"
5
"By doing that which it is impossible for a man to do."
"Which is stronger, life or death?"
"Life, because it bears so many evils."
Alexander succeeded in taking out of India, as his teacher, a true
yogi. This man was Swami Sphines, called "Kalanos" by the Greeks because
the saint, a devotee of God in the form of Kali, greeted everyone by
pronouncing Her auspicious name.
Kalanos accompanied Alexander to Persia. On a stated day, at Susa in
Persia, Kalanos gave up his aged body by entering a funeral pyre in view
of the whole Macedonian army. The historians record the astonishment of
the soldiers who observed that the yogi had no fear of pain or death,
and who never once moved from his position as he was consumed in the
flames. Before leaving for his cremation, Kalanos had embraced all his
close companions, but refrained from bidding farewell to Alexander, to
whom the Hindu sage had merely remarked:
"I shall see you shortly in Babylon."
Alexander left Persia, and died a year later in Babylon. His Indian
guru's words had been his way of saying he would be present with
Alexander in life and death.
The Greek historians have left us many vivid and
inspiring pictures of Indian society. Hindu law, Arrian tells us,
protects the people and "ordains that no one among them shall, under any
circumstances, be a slave but that, enjoying freedom themselves, they
shall respect the equal right to it which all possess. For those, they
thought, who have learned neither to domineer over nor cringe to others
will attain the life best adapted for all vicissitudes of lot."
6
"The Indians," runs another text, "neither put out money
at usury, nor know how to borrow. It is contrary to established usage
for an Indian either to do or suffer a wrong, and therefore they neither
make contracts nor require securities." Healing, we are told, was by
simple and natural means. "Cures are effected rather by regulating diet
than by the use of medicines. The remedies most esteemed are ointments
and plasters. All others are considered to be in great measure
pernicious." Engagement in war was restricted to the Kshatriyas
or warrior caste. "Nor would an enemy coming upon a husbandman at his
work on his land, do him any harm, for men of this class being regarded
as public benefactors, are protected from all injury. The land thus
remaining unravaged and producing heavy crops, supplies the inhabitants
with the requisites to make life enjoyable."
7
The Emperor Chandragupta who in 305 B.C. had defeated Alexander's
general, Seleucus, decided seven years later to hand over the reins of
India's government to his son. Traveling to South India, Chandragupta
spent the last twelve years of his life as a penniless ascetic, seeking
self-realization in a rocky cave at Sravanabelagola, now honored as a
Mysore shrine. Near-by stands the world's largest statue, carved out of
an immense boulder by the Jains in A.D. 983 to honor the saint
Comateswara.
The ubiquitous religious shrines of Mysore are a constant reminder of
the many great saints of South India. One of these masters,
Thayumanavar, has left us the following challenging poem:
You can control a mad elephant;
You can shut the mouth of the bear and the tiger;
You can ride a lion;
You can play with the cobra;
By alchemy you can eke out your livelihood;
You can wander through the universe incognito;
You can make vassals of the gods;
You can be ever youthful;
You can walk on water and live in fire;
But control of the mind is better and more difficult.
In the beautiful and fertile State of Travancore in the
extreme south of India, where traffic is conveyed over rivers and
canals, the Maharaja assumes every year a hereditary obligation to
expiate the sin incurred by wars and the annexation in the distant past
of several petty states to Travancore. For fifty-six days annually the
Maharaja visits the temple thrice daily to hear Vedic hymns and
recitations; the expiation ceremony ends with the lakshadipam or
illumination of the temple by a hundred thousand lights.
The great Hindu lawgiver Manu
8 has outlined the duties of a king. "He should
shower amenities like Indra (lord of the gods); collect taxes gently and
imperceptibly as the sun obtains vapor from water; enter into the life
of his subjects as the wind goes everywhere; mete out even justice to
all like Yama (god of death); bind transgressors in a noose like Varuna
(Vedic deity of sky and wind); please all like the moon, burn up vicious
enemies like the god of fire; and support all like the earth goddess.
"In war a king should not fight with poisonous or fiery weapons nor
kill weak or unready or weaponless foes or men who are in fear or who
pray for protection or who run away. War should be resorted to only as a
last resort. Results are always doubtful in war."
Madras Presidency on the southeast coast of India contains the flat,
spacious, sea-girt city of Madras, and Conjeeveram, the Golden City,
capital site of the Pallava dynasty whose kings ruled during the early
centuries of the Christian era. In modern Madras Presidency the
nonviolent ideals of Mahatma Gandhi have made great headway; the white
distinguishing "Gandhi caps" are seen everywhere. In the south generally
the Mahatma has effected many important temple reforms for
"untouchables" as well as caste-system reforms.
The origin of the caste system, formulated by the great
legislator Manu, was admirable. He saw clearly that men are
distinguished by natural evolution into four great classes: those
capable of offering service to society through their bodily labor (
Sudras); those who serve through mentality, skill, agriculture,
trade, commerce, business life in general (Vaisyas); those whose
talents are administrative, executive, and protectiverulers and warriors
( Kshatriyas); those of contemplative nature, spiritually
inspired and inspiring (Brahmins). "Neither birth nor sacraments
nor study nor ancestry can decide whether a person is twice-born (i.e.,
a Brahmin);" the Mahabharata declares, "character and
conduct only can decide."9
Manu instructed society to show respect to its members insofar as they
possessed wisdom, virtue, age, kinship or, lastly, wealth. Riches in
Vedic India were always despised if they were hoarded or unavailable for
charitable purposes. Ungenerous men of great wealth were assigned a low
rank in society.
Serious evils arose when the caste system became hardened through the
centuries into a hereditary halter. Social reformers like Gandhi and the
members of very numerous societies in India today are making slow but
sure progress in restoring the ancient values of caste, based solely on
natural qualification and not on birth. Every nation on earth has its
own distinctive misery-producing karma to deal with and remove; India,
too, with her versatile and invulnerable spirit, shall prove herself
equal to the task of caste-reformation.
So entrancing is southern India that Mr. Wright and I yearned to
prolong our idyl. But time, in its immemorial rudeness, dealt us no
courteous extensions. I was scheduled soon to address the concluding
session of the Indian Philosophical Congress at Calcutta University. At
the end of the visit to Mysore, I enjoyed a talk with Sir C. V. Raman,
president of the Indian Academy of Sciences. This brilliant Hindu
physicist was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1930 for his important
discovery in the diffusion of lightthe "Raman Effect" now known to every
schoolboy.
Waving a reluctant farewell to a crowd of Madras
students and friends, Mr. Wright and I set out for the north. On the way
we stopped before a little shrine sacred to the memory of Sadasiva
Brahman,10
in whose eighteenth-century life story miracles cluster thickly. A
larger Sadasiva shrine at Nerur, erected by the Raja of Pudukkottai, is
a pilgrimage spot which has witnessed numerous divine healings.
Many quaint
stories of Sadasiva, a lovable and fully-illumined master, are still
current among the South Indian villagers. Immersed one day in samadhi
on the bank of the Kaveri River, Sadasiva was seen to be carried away by
a sudden flood. Weeks later he was found buried deep beneath a mound of
earth. As the villagers' shovels struck his body, the saint rose and
walked briskly away.
Sadasiva never spoke a word or wore a cloth. One morning the nude
yogi unceremoniously entered the tent of a Mohammedan chieftain. His
ladies screamed in alarm; the warrior dealt a savage sword thrust at
Sadasiva, whose arm was severed. The master departed unconcernedly.
Overcome by remorse, the Mohammedan picked up the arm from the floor and
followed Sadasiva. The yogi quietly inserted his arm into the bleeding
stump. When the warrior humbly asked for some spiritual instruction,
Sadasiva wrote with his finger on the sands:
"Do not do what you want, and then you may do what you like."
The Mohammedan was uplifted to an exalted state of mind, and
understood the saint's paradoxical advice to be a guide to soul freedom
through mastery of the ego.
The village children once expressed a desire in Sadasiva's presence
to see the Madura religious festival, 150 miles away. The yogi indicated
to the little ones that they should touch his body. Lo! instantly the
whole group was transported to Madura. The children wandered happily
among the thousands of pilgrims. In a few hours the yogi brought his
small charges home by his simple mode of transportation. The astonished
parents heard the vivid tales of the procession of images, and noted
that several children were carrying bags of Madura sweets.
An incredulous youth derided the saint and the story. The following
morning he approached Sadasiva.
"Master," he said scornfully, "why don't you take me to the festival,
even as you did yesterday for the other children?"
Sadasiva complied; the boy immediately found himself among the
distant city throng. But alas! where was the saint when the youth wanted
to leave? The weary boy reached his home by the ancient and prosaic
method of foot locomotion.
1 Miss Bletch, unable to maintain the active pace set by Mr. Wright
and myself, remained happily with my relatives in Calcutta.
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2 This dam, a huge hydro-electric installation, lights Mysore City
and gives power to factories for silks, soaps, and sandalwood oil. The
sandalwood souvenirs from Mysore possess a delightful fragrance which
time does not exhaust; a slight pinprick revives the odor. Mysore boasts
some of the largest pioneer industrial undertakings in India, including
the Kolar Gold Mines, the Mysore Sugar Factory, the huge iron and steel
works at Bhadravati, and the cheap and efficient Mysore State Railway
which covers many of the state's 30,000 square miles.
The Maharaja and Yuvaraja who were my hosts in Mysore in 1935 have
both recently died. The son of the Yuvaraja, the present Maharaja, is an
enterprising ruler, and has added to Mysore's industries a large
airplane factory.
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3 Six volumes on Ancient India (Calcutta, 1879).
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4 Neither Alexander nor any of his generals ever crossed the Ganges.
Finding determined resistance in the northwest, the Macedonian army
refused to penetrate farther; Alexander was forced to leave India and
seek his conquests in Persia.
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5 From this question we may surmise that the "Son of Zeus" had an
occasional doubt that he had already attained perfection.
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6 All Greek observers comment on the lack of slavery in India, a
feature at complete variance with the structure of Hellenic society.
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7 Creative India by Prof. Benoy Kumar Sarkar gives a comprehensive
picture of India's ancient and modern achievements and distinctive
values in economics, political science, literature, art, and social
philosophy. (Lahore: Motilal Banarsi Dass, Publishers, 1937, 714 pp.,
$5.00.) Another recommended volume is Indian Culture Through the Ages,
by S. V. Venatesvara (New York: Longmans, Green & Co., $5.00).
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8 Manu is the universal lawgiver; not alone for Hindu society, but
for the world. All systems of wise social regulations and even justice
are patterned after Manu. Nietzsche has paid the following tribute: "I
know of no book in which so many delicate and kindly things are said to
woman as in the Lawbook of Manu; those old graybeards and saints have a
manner of being gallant to women which perhaps cannot be surpassed . . .
an incomparably intellectual and superior work . . . replete with noble
values, it is filled with a feeling of perfection, with a saying of yea
to life, and a triumphant sense of well-being in regard to itself and to
life; the sun shines upon the whole book."
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9 "Inclusion in one of these four castes originally depended not on a
man's birth but on his natural capacities as demonstrated by the goal in
life he elected to achieve," an article in East-West for January, 1935,
tells us. "This goal could be (1) kama, desire, activity of the life of
the senses (Sudra stage), (2) artha, gain, fulfilling but controlling
the desires (Vaisya stage), (3) dharma, self-discipline, the life of
responsibility and right action (Kshatriya stage), (4) moksha,
liberation, the life of spirituality and religious teaching (Brahmin
stage). These four castes render service to humanity by (1) body, (2)
mind, (3) will power, (4) Spirit.
"These four stages have their correspondence in the eternal gunas or
qualities of nature, tamas, rajas, and sattva: obstruction, activity,
and expansion; or, mass, energy, and intelligence. The four natural
castes are marked by the gunas as (1) tamas (ignorance), (2) tamas-rajas
(mixture of ignorance and activity), (3) rajas-sattva (mixture of right
activity and enlightenment), (4) sattva (enlightenment). Thus has nature
marked every man with his caste, by the predominance in himself of one,
or the mixture of two, of the gunas. Of course every human being has all
three gunas in varying proportions. The guru will be able rightly to
determine a man's caste or evolutionary status.
"To a certain extent, all races and nations observe in practice, if not
in theory, the features of caste. Where there is great license or
so-called liberty, particularly in intermarriage between extremes in the
natural castes, the race dwindles away and becomes extinct. The Purana
Samhita compares the offspring of such unions to barren hybrids, like
the mule which is incapable of propagation of its own species.
Artificial species are eventually exterminated. History offers abundant
proof of numerous great races which no longer have any living
representatives. The caste system of India is credited by her most
profound thinkers with being the check or preventive against license
which has preserved the purity of the race and brought it safely through
millenniums of vicissitudes, while other races have vanished in
oblivion."
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10 His full title was Sri Sadasivendra Saraswati Swami. The
illustrious successor in the formal Shankara line, Jagadguru Sri
Shankaracharya of Sringeri Math, wrote an inspiring Ode dedicated to
Sadasiva. East-West for July, 1942, carried an article on Sadasiva's
life.
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