In India, in Ancient India, the young aspirant, the neophyte, the brahmachari went to the masters, the Rishis, seeking not wealth, not health, not position, but pure and unconditioned freedom. And this pure, unconditioned, unbound freedom is called moksha or mukti.
Sri M said...
In India, in Ancient India, the young aspirant, the neophyte, the brahmachari went to the masters, the Rishis, seeking not wealth, not health, not position, but pure and unconditioned freedom. And this pure, unconditioned, unbound freedom is called moksha or mukti.
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Biju
• April 29, 2018 at 03:50 AMSri M was mentioning about ancient India not current India Mr Roy
Subroto Roy
• April 27, 2018 at 05:34 AMRevered Shri M; while I have an abiding love for the Gurukula system, all Rishis did not teach the path to Mukti in the sense of Moksha.
Again, many students (neophytes) did not go their guru to get the knowledge of Moksha. The intentionality was naturally missing due to age.
They, as kids, were supposed to learn the Vedas and serve them. Yet it was more out of a traditional practice rather than a well thought out choice.
It is another thing that most of ancient Indian knowledge systems ultimately are aimed at Moksha.
I think that yours was a sweeping statement and Utopian.
Joyjit Banerjee
• April 27, 2018 at 02:09 AMGurudev I unconditionally at your LOTUS FEET for good
My wife and daughter need material to live on there fore
I pray that all my and my wife's hard work gives them all that they desire along with SADBUDDHI