Vedic "vairAgyam"
From the Bhakti List Archives
• July 30, 1999
Still on last week's "top-of-the-list" topic of "material comfort and spiritual pursuit", I received a number of interesting private mails from a few members. Thank you all for the keen discussions. One common query raised was, of course, if I knew of anyplace in India where an indivdual or a community lived entirely in accordance with the "sAstrA". My answer is: I have heard that in parts of Krishna Districts in Andhra Pradesh many villages still live as per the old Vedic code. There are scores of families in villages who have devoted themselves solely to Vedic pursuit. They rarely venture out of their villages. Their children are also trained to become full-time "ghana-pATin-s". They do not seek the patronage of anybody. They ask for no donations to finance their life-styles. They do not also want to become the cynosure of "religious tourists" from outside both in and outside India. They want to be left alone. In Tamilnadu, I have myself witnessed a Vedic community living more or less as per "sAstrA". Last year I visited Navalpakkam--- a hamlet near Wandiwash. This place is a 3-street village where the main one is an "agrahAram" with a "perumAl-koil". The place has electricity but none of the other trappings of modern living... no drainage, no taps, no metal roads, no commercial establishments like grocery-stores and wayside restaurants. A community of Tatachars still lives in this village. The most venerable, the late Sriman Navalpakkam Devanatha Tatachari lived in this village. He passed away not very long ago. He was a veritable giant amongst Vedic scholars of recent times. He was a "nitya-agnihotri". All his life he was known to have hardly stepped out of Navalpakkam. His farthest trip was to Kanchipuram to attend "brahmOtsavam" of Varadar temple. He spent the rest of his life in Navalpakkam in strict observance of all Vedic precepts and ideals. When it was announced that he was the recipient of the President of India Sansrit Award, he politely asked that if he must receive it at all then it better be handed to him at Navalpakkam itself. For he had no plans to go to the Rashtrapati Bhavan to collect a mere award! The kanchi-Acharya, it is said, had the greatest regard for this Vedic doyen. After Devanatha-tatachari passed away some members of his family and family-tree still live in the village. They are today carrying on the tradition of the hamlet unmindful of secular pressures. When I visited the place last year for the annual "adhyAyana-utsavam", I saw a galaxy of Vedic scholars congregated there. They had all learnt thier Vedic lessons from "ayyasami" (Devanatha-tatachari's pseudonym). Every year they gather at the village to celebrate "adhyayan-utsavam" in a solemn manner bereft of ostentation or fanfare. They do not solicit donations. Valayapatti Sriman.Ramanuja Tatachar and Sriman Yagnyavarahaswami were notable amongst the congregation there. Ramanuja-tatachar continues to live in Navalpakkam devoting himself to Vedic training and propagation. He is training a band of select disciples in "ghanam". I even saw a young Advaitin boy from Uttar-pradesh who they said was undergoing "gurukula-vAsam" under the tatachar for about 3 years. So.... the long and short of it is that .... yes, it is not impossible at all to live according to the Vedic "sAstrA" even in these days of MTV, Coco-Cola and pan-pizza. But one needs a great deal of "vairAgyam" to make such a choice in life.... and "vairAgyam", I have realised, is far easier to talk about on the "bhakti-list" than to put into practice in real life... The Vedic ideal still lives and flourishes here and there in India.... but invariably it prefers, I suppose, low-profile and even lower hype.... adiyEn dAsAnu-dAsan, Sudarshan ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
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