Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Places of Supreme Spiritual Importance and Spiritual Tourism


Recently, there was a news about plans to build a helipad in Sabarimala. We already have everything that a man who lives a “material” life needs available in Sabarimala, except women which is due to the sole reason that women are not allowed there. Transportation is available up to Pamba and there is a man-made walkway up to the sannidhanam. There are sufficient number of eateries where you can get your favorite food and hotels and lodges where you can have a comfortable night’s stay. The only hardship people go through is when there is overcrowding - when the infrastructure and the systems become incapable of accommodating the crowd.

The very idea of temples is to bring man out of material life and bring him to the path of spirituality. It is a way to remind him of the supreme reality called God - in whatever form that one is comfortable with - and of the futility of the materialistic living and the importance and benefits of spiritual living. For an ordinary man, the sense of peacefulness experienced in the temple is temporary: it lingers for some time before he completely falls back to his mundane activities. Frequent visits to the temple helps in experiencing this sense of peacefulness more often.

There are places of supreme spiritual importance such as Sabarimala in Kerala and Amarnath in the Himalayas. These places have different histories but one fact that runs common in all is that they are hard to access. These are the places where people seeking spiritual realisation went and meditated. For them these places were the ultimate stage in the path of spiritual journey and self realization. At that stage, their minds were pure and were filled with with eternal love towards everything - living and non-living - around them. In this state of mind, there was no fear of death - leave alone hardships. Their minds were focussed on the supreme goal of self realization which made anything they faced on the way as part of the journey. One set off on this journey when he had already achieved this state of mind that neither saw nor recognized any hardships or adversities.

Now, what has happened to these places of supreme spiritual importance? Do they provide the atmosphere that the spiritual seekers wanted to experience? Majority of people who visit these places are “spiritual tourists”. The Government is facilitating spiritual tourism by organizing everything the tourists need and making their journey “comfortable”. Instead, what the Government should do is to keep these places as sacred and pure as they had been by restricting access only by the spiritual seekers. Once all the “facilities” and “comforts” are removed, the “spiritual tourists” will automatically stop coming. Let the forests grow. Let the man-made roads be gradually taken over by the nature. Let a walkway be formed by the footsteps of the real seekers.

The real seekers won’t complain. Nobody needs to facilitate anything for them. Allow women in Sabarimala. Men won’t get distracted by women. Women won’t worry about any hardships or discomfort. Let these seekers inspire the lesser mortals and lead them in the path of spirituality. Let more and more people be inspired to take up spiritual living. This will eventually create a  happy society. This is the essence of Hindu philosophy. This is what Vedanta prescribes. Let the places of supreme spiritual importance serve their purpose.