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Reminiscences of Swami
Vivekananda
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REMINISCENCES OF SWAMI
VIVEKANANDA
K. S. RAMASWAMI SASTRI
IT was given to me to meet Swami Vivekananda and spend many days with him
at Trivandrum towards the close of 1892 before he went to Chicago to represent
Hinduism at the Parliament of Religions there in September 1893 and also at
Madras after he returned from Chicago and landed at Colombo on 15th January
1897 and reached Madras a few days later. My entire life was transformed by
those memorable and holy contacts. I shall briefly record my impressions here to
the best of my memory....

From Cochin he came to Trivandrum where my father (Prof. K. Sundararama


Iyer) and I were at that time. He brought with him a letter of introduction from
Cochin to my father at Trivandrum. My father was then the tutor to Prince
Martanda Varma of Travancore at Trivandrum. My father's services had been lent
by the Madras Government to the Travancore Government. I passed my
Matriculation in 1892 and joined the Maharaja's College, Trivandrum, for the
Intermediate class. It was at this juncture, towards the end of 1892, that fate
threw me into Swamiji's holy company.
Swamiji was then unknown to fame but felt a great urge to spread Hinduism and
spirituality all over the world, One morning while I was in my house he came
unexpectedly. I found a person with a beaming face and a tall, commanding
figure. He had an orange-coloured turban on his head and wore a flowing orange-
coloured coat which reached down to his feet and round which he wore a girdle
at the waist.

Swamiji asked me, "Is Professor Sundararaman here? I have brought a letter to be
delivered to him." His voice was rich and full and sounded like a bell. Well does
Romaini Rolland say about the voice, "He had a beautiful voice like a violoncello,
grave without violent contrasts, but with deep vibrations that filled both hall and
hearts. Once his audience was held he could make it sink to an intense piano
piercing his hearers to the soul." I looked up and saw him and somehow in my
boyishness and innocence (I was only fourteen years old at that time) I felt that
he was a Maharaja. I took the letter which he gave and ran up to my father who
was upstairs and told him, "A Maharaja has come and is waiting below. He gave
this letter to be given to you." My father laughed and said, "Ramaswami! What a
naive simple soul you are! Maharajas will not come to houses like ours." I replied,
"Please come. I have no doubt that he is a Maharaja." My father came down,
saluted Swamiji, and took him upstairs. After a pretty long conversation with
Swamiji, my father came down and said to me, "He is no doubt a Maharaja, but
not a king over a small extent or area of territory. He is a king of the boundless
and supreme domain of the soul."

Swamiji stayed in our house for nine days at that time. My father has described
his impressions of that period in an article entitled "My first Navaratri with
Swami Vivekananda". I shall set down here briefly the indelible impression left on
my mind by Swamiji's words to me during that memorable visit of his to our
house at Trivandrum.
One morning as I was reading Kalidasa's Kumarasambhavam, which was one of
my text-books in Sanskrit. Swamiji came in. He asked, "What is that book you are
studying?" I replied, "It is Kumarasambhavam, Canto I." He asked, "Can you
repeat the great poet's description of the Himalayas?" I repeated, in the usual
musical mode current in South India, the beautiful and sonorous verses which
constitute Kalidasa's description of the Himalayas. Swamiji smiled and looked
pleased. He said. "Do you know that I am coming after a long stay amidst the
sublimity of the Himalayan scenes and sights?" I felt elated and interested. He
asked me to repeat again the opening stanza. I did so. He asked, "Do you know its
meaning? Tell me." I did so. He said, "That is good, but not enough." He then
repeated the stanza in his marvellous, musical, measured tones:

He said, "The important words in this verse are devatatma


(ensouled by Divinity) and manadanda (measuring-rod).
The poet implies and suggests that the Himalaya is not a
mere wall accidentally constructed by nature. It is
ensouled by Divinity and is the protector of India and her civilization not only
from the chill icy blasts blowing from the arctic region but also from the deadly
and destructive incursions of invaders. The Himalaya further protects India by
sending the great rivers Sindhu, Ganga, and Brahmaputra perennially fed by
melted ice irrespective of the monsoon rains. Manadanda implies that the poet
affirms that the Indian civilization is the best of all human civilizations and forms
the standard by which all the other human civilizations, past, present, and future,
must be tested. Such was the poet's lofty conception of patriotism." I felt thrilled
by his words. I treasure them even to this day, and they shine in my heart even
now with an undimmed and undiminished splendour.

On another of the nine days, he said to me and my father, "Practical patriotism


means not a mere sentiment or even emotion of love of the motherland but a
passion to serve our fellow-countrymen. I have gone all over India on foot and
have seen with my own eyes the ignorance, misery, and squalor of our people. My
whole soul is afire and I am burning with a fierce desire to change such evil
conditions. Let no one talk of karma. If it was their karma to suffer; it is our
karma to relieve the suffering. If you want to find God, serve Man. To reach
Narayana you must serve the daridranarayanas — the starving millions of India."
That was the root from which came the great tree of the Ramakrishna Mission
later on. His words melted our hearts and kindled in our souls the flame of social
service. Thus service was as dear to him as spirituality. In his later life, in a
memorable letter (to Mary Hale, July 9th 1897.) he exclaimed, "May I be born
again and again and suffer thousands of miseries so that I may worship the only
God that exists, the only God I believe in, the sum total of all souls: and, above
all, my God the wicked, my God the miserable, my God the poor of all races, of all
species, is the special object of my worship." We seem to hear in these passionate
words the voice of Rantideva himself.

On yet another day Swamiji told me, "You are still a voung boy. I hope and wish
that some day you will reverentially study the Upanishads, the Brahma-Sutras,
and the Bhagavad-Gita which are known as the prasthana-traya (the three
supreme sources of Truth), as also the itihasas, the puranas, and the agamas. You
will not find the like of all these anywhere else in the world. Man alone, out of all
living beings, has a hunger in his heart to know the whence and whither, the whys
and wherefores of things. There are four key words which you must remember,
viz abhaya (fearlessness), ahimsa (non-injury), asanga (non-attachment), and
ananda (bliss). These words really sum up the essence of all our sacred books.
Remember them. Their implication will become clear to you later on," I was too
young then to grasp all these ideas in full. But I gladly laid those lessons to my
heart and have tried all my life since then to learn them in their fullness.

During the nine days (in 1892) when Swamiji was in our house, I was near him
often as he was gracious to me and also because something in him, like a magnet,
drew me towards him. My father had many a discussion with Swamiji on
recondite questions of philosophy and religion which were above and beyond my
comprehension. But Swamiji's eyes were so magnetic — though full of kindness
and love, his voice had such an unusual combination of sweetness and strength,
and his gait was so majestic, that it was a great joy to me to be in his presence and
bask in the sunshine of his smiles. He told me many other things, briefly, now
and then. But at this distance of time — over sixty years since that event — the
memorable utterances narrated above are the ones which stand out most
prominently from among the memory-pictures of the past....

...Swamiji reached Madras in the beginning of February 1897. Remain Rolland's


description of the grand public reception accorded to Swamiji at Madras is
perfectly accurate and I can vouch for it as I myself was an eyewitness. He says,
"Madras had been expecting him for weeks in a kind of passionate delirium. She
erected for him seventeen triumphal arches, presented him with twenty-four
Addresses in various languages of Hindusthan, and suspended her whole public
life at his coming — nine days of roaring fetes.

"He replied to the frenzied expectancy of the people by his Message to India, a
conch sounding the resurrection of the land of Rama, of Shiva, of Krishna, and
calling the heroic Spirit, the immortal atman, to march to war. He was a general,
explaining his 'Plan of Campaign' and calling his people to rise en masse."

I was one of the delirious hearers and admirers of Swamiji. I had by that time
passed the B.A. Degree examination from the Kumbakonam College and had
joined the Law College at Madras. At that time studies in the Law College were
not heavy, the classes being held for two hours every evening, between 5 p.m. and
7 p.m., in the premises of the Presidency College, Madras. The Law students and
the Medicos have always been a keen and valiant group. I and my friends went to
the railway station at Egmore on the day Swami Vivekananda was expected to
reach Madras. A carriage, to which two horses had been yoked, was kept waiting
for the Swami. He was to be taken in procession to the Castle Kernan on the
beach, where Swamiji stayed for nine days. We saw at the station a sea of human
faces. Shouts of "Jai" rent the air when the train carrying Swamiji was sighted. He
got down from the train and made his way slowly to the carriage. When the
procession had wended its way for some time, I and some others insisted on
unyoking the horses and dragging the carriage ourselves. The horses were
unharnessed, and many of us started pulling Swamiji's carriage, and, walking
slowly, we covered a long distance before reaching the destination. We were
perfectly happy as we had achieved our hearts' desire. To us Swami Vivekananda
was "India incarnate" and God's holy messenger.

During all the nine days of his stay at Madras I was with Swamiji for most of the
time. Throughout all the days there was a never-ending stream of visitors. Many
silently sat near him and listened to his words. Some discussed momentous
matters with him. A few intimate persons, among whom were some of Swamiji's
friends and admirers, discussed with him his plans for future Vedanta work in
South India. I was constantly with Swamiji, who had recognized me and recalled
his visit to our house at Trivandrum in 1892. I can never forget his eyes which
brightened up with a new light and his mobile lips which shone with a divine
smile whenever he saw me sitting just in from of him. My father, Professor K.
Sundararama Iyer, was also in Madras at that time and met Swamiji several times.
He has left on record his memories of Swamiji, during the latter's stay for nine
days at Madras, in a lengthy article entitled "My second Navaratri with Swamiji".

The difference that I noticed between Vivekananda of 1892 and Vivekananda of


1897 was what struck me most. In 1892 he looked like one who had a tryst with
destiny and was not quite sure when or where or how he was to keep that tryst.
But in 1897 he looked like one who had kept that tryst with destiny, who clearly
knew his mission, and who was confident about its fulfilment. He walked with
steady and unfaltering steps and went along his predestined path, issuing
commands and being sure of loyal obedience.
One other experience which I had in 1897 was my hearing the songs sung by
Swami Vivekananda. That he had a musical voice was already experienced by me
in 1892. That his songs had the power of transporting Shri Rarnakrishna
Paramahamsa into ecstasy became known to me much later only. During the nine
days of his stay at Castle Kernan we heard him sing a few of the Ashtapadi songs
of Jayadeva, from the famous devotional lyric poem Gita-Govinda. The mode of
singing these lyrics in Bengal was evidently different from that adopted in South
India. Vivekananda's melodious voice left a lasting impression on my mind.

One evening a somewhat curious and unusual incident took place. An orthodox
Pandit, who was one among the visitors, suddenly got up and asked Swamiji a
direct and unexpected question in Sanskrit, "I learn that you are not a Brahmin
and that according to the shastras (scriptures) you have no right to take to
sannyasa. How then does it happen that you have donned ochre-coloured robes
and entered into the holy order of sannyasins?" Not wishing to discuss at length
with such a person, Swami Vivekananda cut short the Pandit's argument by
pointedly saying, "I belong to the line of Chitragupta to whom every Brahmin
prays during his sandhya worship. So, if Brahmins are entitled to sannyasa, much
more so am I entitled." Swamiji then turned the tables on the questioner by
telling him, "In your Sanskrit question there was an unpardonable
mispronunciation. Panini denounces such mispronunciation — (one should not
degrade or mispronounce words). So you have no right to
carry on ihis debate." The Pandit was nonplussed and went away, especially when
he understood that the audience revered Swamiji and resented the irrelevant
question ....

Swami Vivekananda's first public lecture in Madras was on "My plan of


campaign" and made a profound and indelible impression on me .... I felt thrilled
to the innermost core of my being by his words and my eyes were wet with tears.
Many others who heard the speech were in the aame predicament. Then and
there some of us look a vow to do what we could to relieve the ignorance,
poverty, and misery of the masses of India to the extent possible for each one of
us.

I attended also Swamiji's lecture (at Madras) on "Vedanta in its application to


Indian life"....

Yet another lecture by Swamiji was on "The Sages of India". It also made a deep
impression on my mind.

In conclusion, I wish to refer to the unique experience which I had in May 1952. I
was then on a pilgrimage to holy places in North India. It was my privilege and
happiness to spend some hours in the Ramakrishna Math at Belur, near Calcutta.
The kind Swami who took me round the Belur Math led me eventually into the
room where Swami Vivekananda spent his last days. Ordinarily no visitors are
allowed inside the room. But the Swami who took me there said: "In your case we
gladly made an exception as you contacted Swamiji early in your life and have
been like your honoured father, an admirer and follower of the Ramakrishna
Mission all your life." I entered the holy room with deep devotion and bated
breath. It overlooks the river Ganga (Hooghly). The room throbs with an
atmosphere that is sacred, solemn, and serene. I drank with brimming eyes the
beauty of the grand view from the room and deeply felt the holiness of the place.
I sat there in meditation for a while, thinking of Swami Vivekananda and of his
peerless services to India, to Hinduism, and to the cause of spirituality all over
the world. While inside that room where Swami Vivekananda once lived, I felt
that the divine flame of spiritual knowledge (jnana-dipa, as referred to by Shri
Krishna in the Gita), was lighted in my heart.

http://www.ramakrishnavivekananda.info/reminiscences/
098_ksrs.htm
(Prabuddha Bharata, September & October 1953)

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