In India, people usually concentrate more
on the teachings of saints and less on whether the dates of significant
events related to them are historically accurate. But in the case of
Ramakrishna, we have authentic accounts of his life and times. This was
possible because many of his disciples were well educated and had a strong
desire to present only the facts which could be verified from multiple
sources. The main credit for collecting and recording such facts goes to
Swami Saradananda, a disciple of the Master. He wrote an
authoritative biography to sift the facts from the legends and stories which
were growing around Ramakrishna. A new English translation of this by
Swami Chetanananda is available.However, the best known
record of Sri Ramakrishna's teachings is the Kathamrita (in Bengali),
written by Sri Mahendranath Gupta (Sri M.). Swami Nikhilananda's translation
of this into the English language, The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna, is the
most widely read.
Gadadhar’s parents, Khudiram and
Chandramani, were poor and made ends meet with great difficulty. Gadadhar
was the pet of the whole village. He was handsome and had a natural gift for
the fine arts. He, however, disliked going to school, not interested in
earning money only. He loved Nature and spent his time in fields and fruit
gardens outside the village with his friends. He was seen visiting monks who
stopped at his village on their way to Puri. He would serve them and listen
with rapt attention to the arguments they often had among themselves over
religious issues.
Gadadhar attained the age when he should
be invested with the sacred thread (Upanayana). When arrangements were
nearly complete for this, Gadadhar declared that he would have his first
alms as a Brahmin from a certain Sudra woman of the
village. This was something unheard of! Tradition required that it should be
a brahmin and not a sudra who would give him the first alms. This was
pointed out to him but he was adamant. He said he had given his word to the
lady and if he did not keep his word, what sort of brahmin would he be? No
argument, no appeal, no amount of tears could budge him from his position.
Finally, Ramkumar, his eldest brother and now the head of the family after
the passing away of their father, had to give in.
Meanwhile, the family's financial position
worsened every day. Ramkumar ran a Sanskrit school in Calcutta and also
served as purohit priest in some families. About this time, a rich woman of
Calcutta, Rani Rashmoni, founded a temple at Dakshineswar. She approached
Ramkumar to serve as priest at the temple of Kali and
Ramkumar agreed. After some persuasion, Gadadhar agreed to decorate the
deity. When Ramkumar retired, Gadadhar took his place as priest.
When Gadadhar started worshipping the
deity Bhavatarini, he began to ask himself if he was worshipping a piece of
stone or a living Goddess. If he was worshipping a living Goddess, why
should she not respond to his worship? This question nagged him day and
night. Then, he began to pray to Kali: "Mother, you've been gracious to many
devotees in the past and have revealed yourself to them. Why would you not
reveal yourself to me, also? Am I not also your son?"
He would weep bitterly and sometimes even
cry out loudly while worshipping. At night, he would go into a nearby jungle
and spend the whole night praying. One day, he was so impatient to see
Mother Kali that he decided to end his life. He seized a sword hanging on
the wall and was about to strike himself with it when he saw light issuing
from the deity in waves and he was soon overwhelmed by those waves. He then
fell down unconscious on the floor.
Gadadhar was not, however, content with
this. He prayed to Mother Kali for more religious experiences. He specially
wanted to know what truths other religious systems taught. Strangely enough,
teachers of those systems came to him when necessary as if directed by some
invisible power, and what is more surprising, he reached the goals of those
experiments in no time. Soon word spread about this remarkable man and
people of all denominations and all stations of life began to come to him.
When rumors spread to Kamarpukur that
Ramakrishna had turned mad as a result of over-taxing spiritual exercises at
Dakshineswar, alarmed, neighbors advised Ramakrishna’s mother that he could
be persuaded to marry, so that he might be more conscious of his
responsibilities to the family. Far from objecting to the marriage, he, in
fact, mentioned Jayrambati, three miles to the north-west of Kamarpukur, as
being the village where the bride could be found at the house of one
Ramchandra Mukherjee. The bride, six-year old and bearing the name, Sarada,
was found. The marriage was duly solemnised. Sarada Devi
was Ramakrishna's first disciple. He taught her everything he learnt from
his various Gurus. She mastered every religious secret as quickly as
Ramakrishna has done. Impressed by her great religious potential, he began
to treat her as the Universal Mother Herself and performed a Puja
considering Sarada as veritable Tripura Sundari
Devi. He said, 'I look upon
you as my own mother and the Mother who is in the temple'. Ramakrishna made
Sarada Devi feel as if she was not only the mother of his young disciples,
but also of the entire humanity. At first, Sarada Devi was shy about playing
this role, but slowly, she filled that role with courage.
But the most amazing thing about her was
her renunciation, a quality she shared with her husband in a measure equal
to, if not more than, his. The true nature of their relationship and kinship
was beyond the grasp of ordinary minds. Sri Ramakrishna was convinced that
her relationship and attitude toward him were firmly based on a divine
spiritual plane. He came to this conclusion after having constant and close
association with her. As they shared their lives, day and night, no other
thought, other than that of the divine presence arose in their minds. Such a
continued divine relationship between two souls of opposite gender is unique
in religious records, never known in any of the past hagiographies and a
source of inspiration for generations to come. After the passing away of
Ramakrishna she even became a religious teacher in her own rights.
From now on he came to be known as
Ramakrishna Paramahansa, and like a magnet he began to attract real seekers
of God. He taught ceaselessly for fifteen years or so
through parables, metaphors, songs and above all by his own life the basic
truths of religion. He had developed throat cancer and attained Mahasamadhi
at a Garden House in Cossipore on 18 August, 1886, leaving behind a devoted
band of 16 young disciples headed by the well-known saint-philosopher and
orator,
Swami Vivekananda and host of householder
disciples. Among his contemporaries, Keshab Chandra Sen and Pandit Ishwar
Chandra Vidyasagar, who were known to be against Hindu iconolatry, were his
admirers.
Ramakrishna's mystical realization,
classified by Hindu tradition as nirvikalpa samadhi
(literally, "constant
meditation", thought
to be absorption in the all-encompassing Consciousness), led him to believe
that the gods of the various religions are merely so many interpretations of
the Absolute, and that the Ultimate Reality could never be expressed in
human terms. This is in agreement with the Rigvedic proclamation that "Truth
is one but sages call it by many a name." As a result of this opinion,
Ramakrishna actually spent periods of his life practicing his own
understandings of Islam, Christianity and various other
Yogic
and Tantric sects within Hinduism.
Ramakrishna's realization of nirvikalpa
samadhi also led him to an understanding of the two sides of
maya
(illusion), to which he referred as avidyamaya and vidyamaya: He
explained that avidyamaya represents the dark forces of creation (eg
sensual desire, evil passions, greed, lust and cruelty), which keep the
world system on lower planes of consciousness. These forces are responsible
for human entrapment in the round of birth and death, and they must be
fought and vanquished. Vidyamaya, on the other hand, represents the
higher forces of creation (e.g. spiritual virtues, enlightening qualities,
kindness, purity, love, and devotion), which elevate human beings to the
higher planes of consciousness. With the help of vidyamaya, devotees can rid
themselves of avidyamaya and achieve the ultimate goal of becoming mayatita
- that is, free from maya.
The four key concepts in Ramakrishna's
teachings were the following: