Remembering Swami Karpaatri Ji Maharaj, 🙏a spiritual giant from Bharatavarsha.
From Birth to Sanyasa
Pujy Swami Karpatri Ji 🙏was born as the third and youngest son of Pandit Sri Ramnidhi Ojha and Shrimati Shivarani in 1907 in village Bhatani of Pratapgarh district ( UP ). He was given the name HaranArAyana.
Swami Ji had a spiritual bent of mind from a very young age & frequently experienced deep feelings of Vairagya that caused him to run away from home many times. As this started happening often,his father decided to get him married, hoping that marriage would modify his behaviour.
Hence, he was married, at the age of 9, to Kumari Mahadevi Ji. However, nothing changed as HaranArAyana kept trying to escape home till one day his father, whom he deeply loved and respected, told him that he could leave once he had fathered a child.
The young vairagya grudgingly accepted the condition. At the age of 19, he became the father of a girl child. He reminded his father of the promise and despite all protests from his family, left his home forever.
Sometime after leaving home, he took Sanyasa Deeksha from Swami Brahmananda Saraswati (He became the Shankaracharya of Badrika Ashrama later). After Deeksha, he was renamed Harihar Chaitanya and sent to study in a gurukul in Narwar, Bulandshaar.
Harihar Chaitanya stayed there for two years studying VyAkarna, Vedanta and 6 Darshanas among other things. While studying, he also continued his sAdhana which included fasting and YogAbhyAsa.
In 1927, he left d Gurukula & walking along d Ganga river, reached Uttarakhand where he spent the next three years in Ekant Sadhana that ended with him attaining Atmagyana or self-realisation.He returned to his gurukul where he was welcomed as a Paramhansa (one who has Atmagyana)
It was during this period that he got his most popular name "Karpatri". He was so-called so because, as part of his austerities, he would eat only that food which he could receive, as BhikshA, on his hand (Kara).
From Narwar, Harihara Chaitanya left for India's religious capital Kashi, which was to become the base for all his future activities. Here, he met many prominent religious scholars and MahAtmAs who were very impressed by the scholarship and Tapasya of this young sanyasi.
His fame started to spread, and soon he was instructed by his guru Swami BrahmAnand Saraswati to become a Dandi Swami. KarpAtri Ji wasn't too keen, but out of respect for his Guru, he accepted the proposal.
Sometime during 1931-32, at the age of 24, he formally accepted the Danda from the hands BrahmAnanda Saraswati Ji near Durga Kund, Varanasi. The skies of Dharma Nagari Kashi were filled with cries of "Karpatri Swami HariharAnanda Saraswati ki Jai”.
It’s here that he was also hailed as “Abhinava Shankara”Here we note tht DandiSwamis r a special class of Sanyasis who carry a Danda wit them. Being an advaitin who followed d Dashanamitradition,Karpatri Ji was to carry a singleDanda just like d current PuriShankaracharya Ji does
The Organization builder: Dharma Sangha and Shiksha Mandala
He spent the first few years after becoming Dandi Swami in Tapasya but sometime during the mid-1930s he started to think about the issues facing the larger society.
As his gaze turned outward, he found the society to be in a state of moral and spiritual decadence. He concluded, after deep contemplation, that the root of all problems facing the society was the decline of Dharma. He saw Dharma Prachara as the only way to arrest this decline.
In pursuance of this objective, he brought together many Astikas involved in Japa and anushthan and established Dharma Sangha in 1940. He travelled extensively to promote the work of Dharma Sangha. Hundreds of branches of Dharma Sangha were established all over India.
In 1945, Dharma Veer Dal was established to streamline the organisation of Dharma Sangha. As the branches of Dharma Sangha expanded, it conducted a variety of yajnas in many cities of India. First of these was a “Rudra MahAyajana” in Sonipat.
This was followed by “Sahastrachandi yajnas” in Gadh Mukteshwara and Meerut. “ShatamukhakotihomAtmaka Mahayajna” was undertaken in Delhi and Kanpur. People enthusiastically attended these yajnas and many hailed this as the revival of yajnayuga.
Education was another priority area for Karpatri Ji as he believed that at the bottom of the moral and spiritual decline in the society was the lack of “Sadashiksha” or good education. He established Dharma Sangh Shiksha Mandal for providing such education.
Many schools, where education was imparted through the traditional guru-shishya parampara, were started in places such as Kashi, Delhi, Vrindavan, Hisar and Churu.
AntiHindu code bill agitation
This was a period of intenseactivity in Swami Karpatri’s life as he espoused a variety of causes related to DharmaRaksha.1 such early campaign was against d inheritance bill & Hindu marriage & divorcebill drafted by Hindu lawcommittee formed in 1941.
Swami Karpatri Ji argued that the implementation of inheritance bill would destroy Hindu families by increasing the strife and conflict with them. He attacked the marriage bill saying that it promoted licentiousness.
Most importantly, he said, these proposals were in violation of Hindu Dharmashastras and no government had the right to interfere in the religious matters of Hindus. He toured the country and conducted many meetings to gather support against these bills.
Many telegrams and letters were sent to the government. These activities had their impact as the Hindu law committee found that nearly 80% of people opposed the proposals. These bills had to be dropped. Karpatri ji's opposition to Hindu code continued even after independence.
After Ambedkar's first draft of Hindu code in 1948, Karpatri Ji conducted " Code Virodhi Yatra" all over d country. He played an important role in mobilising public opinion against the Hindu code. He also formed d "Mahila Sangha" to bring together women who were against the code.
As a result of these activities, the government was forced to amend many parts of the code.
Akhand Bharat: Opposing Pakistan
Karpatri Ji was also one of the earliest people to oppose the demand for Pakistan strongly.
Right after the Muslim League passed the Pakistan resolution in 1940, Karpatri Ji made opposition of Pakistan an integral item of Dharma Sangha meetings. He raised the slogan of "Akhand Bharat" and organised hundreds of meetings to oppose the demand for Pakistan.
Here, it should be mentioned that he had predicted as early as 1940 that Congress would ultimately accept the demand for Pakistan.
In the build-up to the partition of India, widespread violence was unleashed by Muslim league on Direct Action Day in August 1946.
In Noakhali, Bengal brutal violence against Hindus was observed. Many temples were destroyed, sacred Tirthas were defiled, and many Hindus were forcibly converted to Islam.
Disturbed by these events, Karpatri Ji toured extensively in the riot-affected areas of Noakhali.
He consoled and inspired the Hindus with "Ram Nama" mantra. He also arranged for blankets, clothes and food grains for the victims of violence. A 5000 bigha land was purchased to establish a colony where Hindu riot victims were given houses.
Karpatri Ji was full of sympathy for those Hindus who had been forcibly converted. He said that forcible conversion was illegitimate and the Hindus who had been converted in this manner should still be considered Hindus. Shuddhi was organised for such people.
These views of Karpatri Ji filled the poor Hindus of Noakhali with hope and enthusiasm. Many rich Hindus of Bengal and members of Dharma Sangha came forward and generously contributed to the efforts of Karpatri Ji🙏.
Dharma Yuddha
India neared independence as an interim government led by J Nehru was formed. However, Karpatri Ji noticed that anti-Hindu legislations were becoming even more frequent than before with d govt presenting bills such as Intra Gotra marriage bill & d Divorce bill.
He decided to take steps for combating anti-Hindu attitude of the Government.
In January 1947, Karpatri Ji declared that if the government didn't accept Hindu demands such as cow slaughter ban, he would start a “Dharma Yuddha” against the government.
After this announcement, he started to travel for spreading the message of Dharma Yuddha. Many delegations and memorandums were sent to the government. However, there was no change in its stance.
Finally, in April 1947 he presented 5 demands in the assembly.
These were:
1. भारत अखंड हो - India should not be partitioned
2. गोवध बंद हो - Stop cow slaughter
3. अधार्मिक बिल रद्द हों - Discard Adharmika bills
4. मंदिरों की मर्यादा सुरक्षित रहे - Maintain dignity of temples
5. विधान शास्त्रीय हो - Law should be based on Shastras.
Soon, Karpatri Ji was arrested and sent to the Lahore jail, but the Dharma Yuddha continued for nine months. More than 5000 people were arrested, and many prominent leaders lost their lives. Despite widespread agitation, there was no change in the government's stance.
However, seeing the anger of the public, Karpatri Ji was released soon.
Cow slaughter ban movement
We next come to the issue that Karpatri Ji was most intimately involved with and most well-known for: Cow slaughter ban.
He argued that the cow was not only the symbol of Dharma and Sanskriti but also the mainstay of India's economy. From milk to gomutra and cow dung, each of the products derived from the cow was immensely useful.
Using these arguments, Karpatri Ji demanded a complete and immediate ban on cow slaughter by the passing of a central law. He was actively involved in many campaigns, before and after independence, for the fulfilment of this objective.
As mentioned earlier, Gauhatya ban was an integral part of the Dharma Yuddha. However, due to partition related violence, Dharma Yuddha had to be suspended in many vital areas. He, therefore, decided to focus solely on Mathura.
He started a satyagraha demanding that the 14 slaughterhouses in Mathura be shut down. Soon, he was arrested and put in Agra jail for six months, but the agitation continued, and finally, the Mathura municipality agreed to shut down these slaughterhouses.
In the next stage, Karpatri Ji encouraged people to pressurise local boards and municipalities to shut down slaughterhouses. As a result of public pressure, 32 districts passed such proposals. In 1954, Dharma Sangha organised a Virat Gau Raksha Sammelan.
Karpatri Ji also met the UP Chief Minister GV Pant to demand cow slaughter ban. Soon, anti-cow slaughter legislations were passed by UP and Bihar. However, the central government, led by J L Nehru obstinately kept ignoring such demands.
Karpatri Ji severely criticised Nehru, saying that he not only didn't allow the passing of a central legislation but also created obstacles when state governments tried to make such laws.
He pointed out how the Central Agriculture Ministry, in 1950, had instructed all state governments not to implement a complete ban on cow slaughter. Similarly, in a 1953 lecture, Nehru told agriculture ministers of states not to have a ban on cow slaughter.
Despite such hostility, Karpatri Ji kept working tirelessly and travelled to many parts of India to create public support for cow slaughter ban. He also met many prominent leaders such as Lal Bahadur Shastri Ji and Gulzarilal Nanda in this period.
However, the goal of a central cow slaughter ban law remained elusive. As a result, it was decided in 1966, in a vast Gau Raksha sammelan in Prayag that the time for petitions was over and it was time for BalidAn (Sacrifice) for the sacred cause if Gau Raksha.
The demand for Gau Raksha was presented before the Home minister in September 1966. It was also decided to hold a massive protest in front of the parliament on 7th November 1966.
This turned out to be the biggest ever protest against cow slaughter.
More than a million Gau Rakshaks assembled, in front of the parliament, to demand a ban on Gauhatya. It was a peaceful and nonviolent protest. Karapatri Ji declared from the stage,
"We have nothing against a particular political party.
The people of the ruling party are our people. We want their welfare. We have only come to demand Gau Raksha."
( Translated from Hindi)
Despite this, the government came down slowly on the protestors.
The Police started a lathi charge & then bullets were fired on the crowd that included many prominent Sadhus. A curfew was imposed in Delhi. As per official estimates, 11 people were killed. However, other sources indicate that this figure was much higher and ran into hundreds.
Karpatri Ji was arrested the next day and sent to Tihar jail where some inmates attacked him. It was a violent attack in which he received head injuries and lost vision in one eye.
Govt relented aftr d brutal assault on GauRakshaks & formed a committee to find ways to implement a cow-slaughter ban.However, this was just a delaying tactic & a cowslaughter ban remains as elusive as ever. Here,we pause for a moment to ask wt happened since tht massive protest.
Why haven't we seen another protest like the one in 1966?
- Why couldn’t we take forward the enthusiasm created by Karapatri Ji to its logical culmination?
- From demanding a ban on cow slaughter to justifying beef consumption, we have come far.
What changed? In Politics
We now turn to Karpatri ji's involvement in electoral politics. His decision to participate in electoral politics was triggered by the realisation that various governments were repeatedly violating d HinduDharma Shastras through a variety of legislations
It was not possible to stop this without influencing the political domain. For Karpatri Ji politics or Neeti was just another means of Dharma Seva.
He used to say,
" Dharma is the husband of Neeti.
Separated from Dharma, Neeti becomes a widow, and a widow doesn't have the capacity to bear fruits (फलोत्पादन) "
(Translated from Hindi)
He repeatedly stressed the need for political consciousness among Dharmika people for survival of Dharma.
He used to ask,
" Of what use is freedom if Dharma is destroyed ?"
" If you alter and deform the brain of a person through chloroform and then remove the shackles from his hands and legs, would that person be called free? "
When elections were declared in 1945, he appealed to all Dharmika people to join politics. In September 1945, Akhil Bhartiya Sanatani dal was formed by him to provide a platform for such people.
Many other organisations such as Dharma Sangha, Pandit Sabha and Sanatan Dharma Sabha were associated with it. They also had an understanding with Hindu Mahasabha. It was decided that only those people be voted who sign the pledges of Sanatani dal.
After independence, Karapatri Ji established the Ram Rajya Parishad(RRP) in 1948. Cow slaughter ban, the opposition of the Hindu code bill along with the preservation of VarnAshrama vyavastha were among the key objectives of the party.
The party also defended the property rights of princes and landowning classes and as a result, found support from these groups in Rajasthan and Central India even though they didn't have much belief in the overall philosophy of Karpatri Ji.
In 1952 General elections, the party got 2% of the national vote. Its share was 14.2% of votes in Madhya Bharat and 9.3% in Rajasthan. It won 3 Lok Sabha seats, all in Rajasthan and 32 assembly seats. It was a promising start for a fledgeling party.
However, its performance dropped sharply in 1957 elections as it got only 0.38% of the votes and no Lok Sabha seats. Still, it managed to win 22 assembly seats. In the 1962 elections, the party faced a setback in Rajasthan with many of its supporters switching
Loyalty to the newly formed Swatantra party. The party managed to win 2 Lok Sabha seats, but after elections, its member from Madhya Pradesh joined Jana Sangha while the one from Rajasthan joined Swatantra.
After the 1962 election, the party didn’t win any Lok Sabha, or assembly seats as the party's organisational structure weakened considerably, and most of its members switched to Jana Sangha and Swatantra.
Over the entire course of RRP’s existence, there were continual talks regarding a merger with other Hindutva parties such as Jana Sangha and Hindu Mahasabha. However, Karpari ji's refusal to accommodate progressive items at the cost of Dharma made such a merger impossible
And even though these parties sometimes cooperated, they were necessarily rivals targeting the same Hindu vote. As is well known, RRP finished last in this race among Hindutva parties. The reason, more than anything else, was its staunch conservatism.
Kashi Vishwanath incident
Here, it would be appropriate to go to an episode that underlines Karpatri ji's uncompromisingly conservative beliefs. We are referring to the Kashi Vishwanath episode of 1957.
As per the rules of Kashi Vishvanatha temple, no one was allowed to touch the Shivalinga. Even the king of Kashi used to pray from afar. Everyone was allowed inside the temple, but no one was allowed inside the Garbhagriha.
However, controversy erupted in December 1957, when a group of Harijans forcibly entered there with the help of the city magistrate. While most will see this is as an act in tune with egalitarian principles, Karpatri Ji saw this as an attack on religious freedom.
Sri Karpatri Ji said
" Followers of Sanatan Dharma should have the freedom to worship in temples as per the rules in Vedas and ShAstras."
" There should be no violation of Shastra based methods of Murti Pooja."
Sri Karpatri Ji was very angered by this forcible entry and viciously attacked the government saying,
" In terms of religious oppression, the Congress govt. is worse than Aurangzeb. Religious freedom granted by the constitution has been reduced to a joke."
He was so infuriated that he announced the construction of a new Vishvanath temple. This temple was constructed in Meerpur, Kashi. As per the rules of this new Vishvanath temple, no one except the priest was allowed to touch the Shivalinga.
This incident displays the essence of Sri Karpatri ji's thinking. He was a hardcore paramparAwaadi who followed the shaastric injunctions to the T. Going against the fashion of the day, he also unabashedly defended the birth-based varna vyavastha.
He opposed the popular reform programs such as inter-caste marriages and dining. His defence of varna vyavastha was based on the slippery slope reasoning where loosening of Jati boundaries would lead to the breaking of more barriers.
He argued that acceptance of inter-caste marriages today would lead to demands for inter-religion marriages and even inter-species marriages in the future. Such unending reform, he believed, would lead us to anarchy.
Therefore, he reasoned, it was more prudent to stay within the bounds of the time tested varnAshrama vyavastha that had provided continuity and stability to Hindu society.
He didn't see the four-fold classification as an oppression enabling hierarchy but as a coming together of complementary parts which formed and sustained the whole.
Conclusion
It's true that for the majority, such views are unpalatable today. However, it can't be denied that there is a strong correlation between the decline of varna vyavastha and societal ills such as loss of cultural pride, breakdown of families and a general moral decline.
We need to investigate if this correlation is also accompanied by causation. If yes, we'll have to take a fresh look at varna vyavastha to know if the very fashionable "oppression" view of varna vyavastha hasn't blinded us to the functionalities associated with it.
Secondly, it would be very unfair to limit discussions about Sri Karpatri Ji to his views on caste alone. He was a renowned scholar and thinker who expressed his sights on a variety of issues and should be studied in totality.
Finally, whether you agree with him or not, Karpatri ji's was the most influential voice for every cause that he espoused. He remained true to his convictions even if it meant losing popularity and political power.
It has been 38 years since he left his body, but many of the causes he fought for such as government interference in temples and banning of cow slaughter are still at the centre of Hindutva concerns. There is a lot that reformist Hindus can gain from Karpatri Ji's wisdom.
He was d among d very best representatives of BharatiyaSanskriti. As DharmaSamrat, d king of Dharma,he was d very embodiment of Dharma for millions of ppl across d country. To discard him wud be to make a break wit our ancient Bharata. To forget him wud be to forget Dharma itself
Information source: http://Pragyata.com  and P.S: Sri Karpatri FB page and google.
You can follow @kumar856.
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