Dr. Rajesh Bhola
India
Aug 17, 2012
India
Aug 17, 2012
Nobody can aim to live forever, howsoever great and spiritually
enlightened he/she may be. Death comes at its ‘proper’ time. Even the
most enlightened beings are awake to this causality, and accept that the
body will die. As per traditional Hindu thought, life includes birth,
ageing and death.
But
great enlightened persons did not die immediately after their
enlightenment; they lived on for years, decades. One idea, which is
widely accepted, is that these great beings went on living, to use up
the last vestiges of karmic imperfection that still hung around them
from their former existences. So, despite enlightenment—which ends
craving, and so affliction—did these enlightened people continue to
experience all those years of affliction after their awakening? Is the fruit of enlightenment then only really experienced after death?
The idea that craving creates affliction, and the end of craving
eliminates affliction—and that this effectively terminates the basis of
life—has become an established doctrine in most schools of Hinduism,
through the teaching on rebirth.
If
we go through the Hindu scriptures, it is very difficult to avoid the
conclusion that birth in this life must be the result of craving in a
previous life; and that the craving in this life will be cause of
rebirth in a future life. If birth is affliction, and affliction is
caused by craving, then the craving must have occurred before birth.
This standard interpretation, is thus indissolubly linked to the idea of
rebirth. These thoughts culminate in the view that the end of
craving leads to the end of the circle of rebirths. ‘Karmas’ are the
basis for a metaphysical doctrine about cycles of life; and when
enlightenment is achieved, there is emancipation, liberation, freedom
from suffering, from the continuity of pain and affliction – and the
attainment of a state of sublime reward (after death).
In
traditional Hinduism cosmology, we are going round through life after
life. A strong belief is also held that lives after birth can be in any
of a large number of states of being – including the human, any kind of
animal, and several types of supernatural beings. Rebirth is
conditioned by the ‘Karmas’ (actions of body, speech and mind) of
previous lives. The eternalists postulate an eternally existent self or
soul: the ‘atman’ survives death, and reincarnates as another living
being, based on its ‘karmic’ inheritance. This is the idea that has
become dominant in modern Hinduism. Some religions feel that rebirth is
immediate, while others hold to the notion of a limbo (intermediate
state), that can last up to forty-nine days. In some religions there is
the belief that the time lag between two incarnations can be variable –
from 50 years to 400 years; and may be even extended up to 1000 years,
in case the subtle body is relegated to a negative existence. The subtle
bodies stay in their respective planes, enabling them to undergo merits
and demerits, in accordance with the law of ‘karma’.
It
may be difficult to find a way out of this labyrinth, of bringing an
end to a succession of circlings through many incarnations. And our real
concern should be how to live happily in the midst of this very life,
just as it is. Our ‘karmas’ will then take us...wherever.
Dr. Rajesh Bhola
is President of Spastic Society of Gurgaon and is working for the cause
of children with autism, cerebral palsy, mental retardation and
multiple disabilities for more than 20 years.
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