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Weaving the Inward Thread to Awakening: The Perennial Appeal of Ramana Maharshi

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 September 2014

Thomas A. Forsthoefel
Affiliation:
Mercyhurst College

Abstract

This article considers the “perennial” appeal of Ramana Maharshi, the twentieth-century Hindu saint from South India (1879–1950). While not as well-known in the West as either Ramakrishna or Ramana's contemporary, Sri Aurobindo, Ramana's life and teaching have evoked a surprisingly strong positive reaction from Indians and Westerners alike. The reason for this, first of all, is to be located in the perennial philosophy which his life and teaching implicate, and the use made of that philosophy by neo-Hindu apologists or Western scholars and spiritual figures interested in “mysticism” across cultures or interfaith dialogue. Second, the appeal of Ramana can also be located in the compelling attraction of holiness, a phenomenon which raises the fundamental question of what it means to be human. In the case of Ramana, the compelling example of human “being” provokes inquiry into the depth dimension of human existence, where, in the non-dualistic tradition which he represents, one discovers divinity.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The College Theology Society 2002

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References

1 This essay extends and revises a paper that was delivered as part of a panel on “Mahagurus and Their Movements” at the 2002 annual meeting of the American Academy of Religion. I am grateful to Cynthia Humes for her inspiration for and organization of that session, the fruit of which one day will be an edited volume of essays. Some material in this essay first appeared in a brief article, “The Sage of Pure Experience” Hindu-Christian Studies Bulletin 14 (2001): 31–36. I revised, developed, and extended the trajectory of that article for the AAR session on mahagurus; the essay here marks my continued reflection on the impact and importance of the life and teaching of Ramana Maharshi, a project that will be further extended into a cross-cultural exploration of the meaning and value of saints and saintliness. I wish to thank two anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments on the essay and also my colleagues in the Religious Studies Department at Mercyhurst for their continued kindness and support. Special thanks in this regard go to Mary H. Snyder, an extraordinary Chair and a great friend.

2 The literature here is vast, but see, e.g., Inden, Ron, Imagining India (Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 1990), chap. 3Google Scholar, and Halbfass, Wilhelm, India and Europe: An Essay in Philosophical Understanding (Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1990), chaps. 5–9.Google Scholar

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4 The work of Francis X. Clooney stands out in this regard; he epitomized the work of comparative theology as finally having as its ultimate horizon “nothing less than knowledge of the divine, the transcendent” in “The Emerging Field of Comparative Theology: A Bibliographical Review,” Theological Studies 56/3 (1995): 521. See also his Theology After Vedanta (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1993), Seeing Through Texts (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1997), and Hindu God, Christian God (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001). See also the work of Malkovsky, Bradley J., esp. his recent book, The Role of Divine Grace in the Soteriology of Samkaracarya (Leiden: Brill, 2001).Google Scholar In terms of the constructive engagement with Indian philosophy in general, the work of Paul Griffiths, Eliot Deutsch, Karl Potter, Karel Werner, Klaus Klostermaier all stand out. Constructive engagement of Western philosophy by contemporary Indian thinkers is perhaps no better represented than by Jitendra Mohanty and Arvind Sharma.

5 See Halbfass, India and Europe, chap. 21, and Rambachand, Accomplishing the Accomplished.

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11 A paper, “The Communion of Saints: Models of Holiness in a World of Conflict,” which I delivered at the University of Massachusetts (Dartmouth) as part of the World Association of Vedic Studies Biennial Conference (July 2002), establishes the rationale and trajectory of this study. The paper is part of a book project of the same title.

12 Maharshi, Ramana, Vicarasangraham (Tiruvannamalai: Ramanasramam, 1994), 14.Google Scholar

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14 Ibid., 96.

15 I say “initially,” since issues of control and authority of the ashram periodically surfaced in the years following his death.

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41 Merton, Thomas, The Asian Journal of Thomas Merton, ed. Burton, Naomi, Hart, Patrick and Laughlin, James (New York: New Directions, 1968), 233–36.Google Scholar Klostermaier cites excerpts from these passages as a side-bar titled, “Thomas Merton's Enlightenment” in his book, Buddhism: A Short Introduction (Oxford: One World, 1999), 186.

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47 Ibid., chap. 3.

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52 As a contribution to this project, see my Knowing Beyond Knowledge.