Individual and the ideal
By J.Krishna Murti
OUR LIFE HERE in India is more or less shattered; we want to make
something of it again, but we don't know where to begin. I can see the
importance of mass action, and also its dangers. I have pursued the
ideal of non-violence, but there has been bloodshed and misery. Since
the Partition, this country has had blood on its hands, and now we are
building up the armed forces. We talk of non-violence and yet prepare
for war. I am as confused as the political leaders. In prison I used to
read a great deal, but it has not helped me to clarify my own position."
"Can we take one thing at a time and somewhat go into it? First, you
lay a great deal of emphasis on the individual; but is not collective
action necessary?"
The individual is essentially the collective, and society is the
creation of the individual. The individual and society are interrelated,
are they not? They are not separate. The individual builds the
structure of society, and society or environment shapes the individual.
Though environment conditions the individual, he can always free
himself, break away from his background. The individual is the maker of
the very environment to which he becomes a slave; but he has also the
power to break away from it and create an environment that will not dull
his mind or spirit. The individual is important only in the sense that
he has the capacity to free himself from his conditioning and understand
reality. Individuality that is merely ruthless in its own conditioning
builds a society whose foundations are based on violence and antagonism.
The individual exists only in relationship, otherwise he is not; and it
is the lack of understanding of this relationship that is breeding
conflict and confusion. If the individual does not understand his
relationship to people, to property, and to ideas or beliefs, merely to
impose upon him a collective or any other pattern only defeats its own
end. To bring about the imposition of a new pattern will require
so-called mass action; but the new pattern is the invention of a few
individuals, and the mass is mesmerized by the latest slogans, the
promises of a new Utopia. The mass is the same as before, only now it
has new rulers, new phrases, new priests, new doctrines. This mass is
made up of you and me, it is composed of individuals; the mass is
fictitious, it is a convenient term for the exploiter and the politician
to play with. The many are pushed into action, into war, and so on, by
the few; and the few represent the desires and urges of the many. It is
the transformation of the individual that is of the highest importance,
but not in terms of any pattern. Patterns always condition, and a
conditioned entity is always in conflict within himself and so with
society. It is comparatively easy to substitute a new pattern of
conditioning for the old; but for the individual to free himself from
all conditioning is quite another matter.
"This requires careful and detailed thought, but I think I am
beginning to understand it. You lay emphasis on the individual, but not
as a separate and antagonistic force within society.
....contd
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