The Hindu PUDUCHERRY, March 30, 2016 S. PRASAD
She returned home soon only to come back in 1920 and settle down
Devotees offer floral tribute to the portrait of Sri Aurobindo and Mother in Puducherry Railway Station on Tuesday. —Photo: S.S. Kumar
The 102nd anniversary of the visit of Mirra Alfassa, or The Mother, to the city was celebrated with a session of meditation and silent prayer on Tuesday.
A special commemoration was held at the Puducherry Railway station by The World Peace Trust of Pondicherry and the Bangavani Trust of Nabadwip Dham West Bengal. The 102nd anniversary of the visit of Mirra Alfassa, or The Mother, to the city was celebrated with a session of meditation and silent prayer on Tuesday.
It was in 1914, at the age of 36, that Mirra, accompanied by her spouse Paul Richard, embarked on two different journeys; one an exacting trip stretching over three weeks by ship, boat and train to this city, the other one of life-changing self-discovery and enlightenment that would follow her momentous meeting with Sri Aurobindo in this city.
“The Mother arrived at Puducherry Railway station on the morning of March 29, 1914. While approaching Puducherry, the Mother had a vision of a huge column of light and the intensity of the light became greater when she arrived in the city. She met Sri Aurobindo at his Ashram and recognised him as her guru or Krishna,” Dibyendu Goswami, convenor of the Bangavani Trust told The Hindu.
Though The Mother returned home after her first arrival in 1914 she came back to settle here permanently in 1920 and took charge of the Ashram, Mr. Goswami said.
While the centenaries of both the events were celebrated on a grand scale in 2010 and 2014, the World Peace Trust here and the Bangavani Trust based in Nabadwip Dham, West Bengal, have been celebrating the anniversaries of both events with various programmes since 2002.
At Sri Aurobindo Ashram, a large number of devotees and followers of The Mother and Sri Aurobindo thronged the premises to commemorate the occasion of The Mother’s first arrival in Puducherry.
Cultural events
Various cultural and spiritual activities were also held at the Ashram school to celebrate the occasion. The Hindu
Web India 123 Puducherry | Tuesday, Mar 29 2016
Mass meditation by the Sri Aurobindo Ashram inmates and silent prayers marked the 102nd anniversary celebration of the Mother (Mirra Alfassa) of ...
Mass meditation by the Sri Aurobindo Ashram inmates and silent prayers marked the 102nd anniversary celebration of the Mother (Mirra Alfassa) of the Ashram here today. The world peace trust and Bangavani trust of Nabadwip Dham ,West Bengal held a special function at the Puducherry Railway station to commemorate the occasion.
It was in 1914, at the age of 36, that Mirra, accompanied by her spouse Paul Richard, embarked on two different journeys; one an exacting trip stretching over three weeks by ship, boat and train to this city, the other one of life-changing self-discovery and enlightenment that would follow her momentous meeting with Sri Aurobindo in this city.
"The Mother arrived at Puducherry Railway station on the morning of March 29, 1914. While approaching Puducherry, the Mother had a vision of a huge column of light and the intensity of the light became greater when she arrived in the city. She met Sri Aurobindo at his Ashram and recognised him as her guru or Krishna," Dibyendu Goswami, convenor of the Bangavani Trust said. Though The Mother returned home after her first arrival in Pondicherry in 1914 she came back to settle here permanently in 1920 and took charge of the Ashram, Mr. Goswami said.
While the centenaries of both the events were celebrated on a grand scale in 2010 and 2014, the World Peace Trust here and the Bangavani Trust based in Nabadwip Dham, West Bengal, have been celebrating the anniversaries of the both events with various programmes since 2002. At Sri Aurobindo Ashram, a large number of devotees and followers of The Mother and Sri Aurobindo thronged the premises to commemorate the occasion of The Mother's first arrival in Puducherry. Various cultural and spiritual activities were also held at the Ashram school to celebrate the occasion. UNI PAB KVV AK 2115 -- (UNI) -- C-1-1-DL0414-659234.Xml
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March 30, 2016 - Many have started restricting the Indian worldview to some cultural/moral aspects only. For politico-economic aspects, they rely on systems that derive from schools of thought belonging to the Left-Right spectrum. This is creating identity crisis among Indians.
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"Thus, Sri Aurobindo, Vivekananda, Rabindranath Tagore, Gandhi and Dayananda have presented Neo-Vedanta. Philosophy according to contemporary conditions in India and development of thought in the West and East. All these philosophies, with minor differences among them, have maintained what can be called integral humanism. This integral humanism is the philosophy of our age. It alone can supply the philosophical framework for the understanding the problems of our society" (Sharma, G.R, Trends in Contemporary Philosophy of Education: A Critical Evaluation)
Sri Aurobindo presented a more elegant model of this ancient theory and divided the human into physical, emotional, mental, intellectual and spiritual, since this model has gained currency in contemporary humanistic psychology, and now it is common place to to look at a human being as an integral being who has physical needs, emotional needs, spiritual needs etc. This is the basis behind Deen Dayal's IH. IH is a political theory that says that the state need to cater to all the needs of a human being, and not just look at one in exclusion. In Marxist humanism, for example, only physical needs are important; in secular humanism spiritual needs are ignored.
Also humanism and dharma are not mutually exclusive, in fact Krishna in the Gita says manavata dharma or humanist dharma is the highest dharma. When we say India is "dharmic" we actually mean it is humanist, and the type of humanism we are talking about is integrally humanist.
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