Divine Living

Neha Jain Posted: Nov 17, 2007 at 0000 hrs
Spirituality has caught on in a big way,” says spiritual leader Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, holding forth on a subject close to his heart. In town on Thursday evening at the JOTC grounds, Yerawada for a Mahasatsang, followed by a pranayamdhyan shibir, the founder guru of the Art of Living movement was at his eloquent best. “Ultimately, every individual is in quest of happiness, even as he/she tackles the inevitable problems and issues that life throws up. There are various thoughts going on in our mind simultaneously, which need to be thus channelised, that we may follow the right path,” says he.

Keeping in mind that these days spiritual gurus seem to spring up ever so frequently, there are many who believe this commercialisation will not help them —and prefer to go it alone. What is his take ? “As you know every lock needs a key, likewise every question needs to be answered, more so when negative thoughts become barriers in the progress and upliftment of the human mind. That is where a guru comes in,” says the man whose spiritual discources have taken him to over 128 countries.

If one conceptualizes meditation and spirituality, they appear to be are two different theories, but Sri Sri stresses: “Though the concepts are different they are definitely connected and one can realise spirituality in the aura of meditation.”

Commenting on the hi-pace lifestyle of today’s youngsters Sri Sri adopts a holistic approach. “One cannot say that the youth today are not spiritual. It’s just that their definition of happiness and terms of having fun have changed, and these exactly are the concepts which need to be redefined. At The Art of Living, we have lots of fun but the ideology is well-defined.”

Considering that Gen X believes in de-stessing through active partying and socialising, where do meditation and quietude come in ? “Socialising is fine. But meditation is necessary to lend a measure of stability, and help erase negative emotions like impatience and violence,” he says.

Recently, he’s been in news for supporting a Chennai-based NGO that claims to have found concerete evidence with regard to Lord Rams existence, as also his birth date. “I’m an educated man, who goes by the evidence presented to me. When I studied the research of the archeologists there, it was difficult for me to not believe that Lord Ram was a real person who existed seven thousand years back.”