Guest guest Posted July 4, 2003 Report Share Posted July 4, 2003 TWO UNMET VEDIC FRIENDS By Brigadier Chitranjan Sawant, VSM The Vedas were the common bond of friendship between the two. Both contributed to the 19th century Indian Renaissance by opening doors of Vedic studies to commoners. The non-priestly classes carried the word of god to all and sundry beyond the hallowed precinct of pathshalas. The Ved was the new household word. Swami Dayanand Saraswati, the friend-philosopher and guide of both the urban and rural folks in India and the German-Aryan Friedrich Max Muller, who brought the Rig Veda from cloistered closets to libraries and studies of English speaking intellentisia were both contemporaries. Swami Dayanand Saraswati was born in 1824 at Tankara in Gujarat in a Brahmin family. F. Max Muller was born in 1823 at Dessau in Germany in a scholar's house. The former revolted against his father's orthodoxy, renounced the world in his youth voluntarily and pursued the Vedic studies the hard way till he was 39. He took to teaching the Vedas to those who cared to learn. He was drawn to the masses. The latter lost his father at the age of four, lived in penury but went to college in Leipzig, fought duels but earned a Ph.D at 20. The Vedic Sanskrit was his first love. In pursuit of Vedic knowledge Max Muller traveled to Berlin, Paris and London before finally settling down at Oxford. Swami Dayanand Saraswati and Friedrich. Max Muller never met each other face to face. And yet they were friends. Their mission was a common one: make man a good human being. ``back to the Vedas,'' was the clarion call given by Swami Dayanand Saraswati. Max Muller regarded Vedanta as ``acme of human thought. Of his 77 years of life Max Muller had devoted almost a quarter of a century to the editing and publication of the Rig veda. Swami Dayanand Saraswati devoted almost all his 59 years in this world to the study, interpretation and writing of a commentary on the Vedas. Both were devoted souls. Swami Dayanand Saraswati devoted his entire time and energy to upliftment of the downtrodden, both the dalits and the women. He was both a religious reformer and a social reformer. The impact of his reforms was felt far and wide, even beyond boundaries of India. But the Rishi-Sanyasi never left the shores of his motherland. He encouraged his followers of the Arya Samaj to travel far and wide to achieve the aim, of universal brotherhood as enunciated by the Vedas. His disciple Shyamji Krishna Verma – a revolutionary and a freedom fighter – propagated the Vedic philosophy of life all over Europe in the late 19th century. Max Muller heard of and read about Swami Dayanand Saraswati just about that time. In his book, ``my Indian friends,'' Max Muller devoted an entire chapter to the Swami. Max Muller had not met most of his Indian friends but only heard of them. In some cases like that of Swami Dayanand Saraswati ,Ved was the common factor of friendship. In other cases it was Christianity which drew Max Muller to his Indian friends. Many a time Max Muller saw himself as an evangelist and a crusader charged with the mission with converting Indians to Christianity lock, stock and barrel. In his boyhood days Max Muller's imagination was fired by a picture portraying the Ganges lapping Varanasi ghats. He longed to see the real scene himself. How sad, his wish was never fulfilled. In his younger fays he had no money to defray travel expenses and when he became a man of means, he was too old to travel to India around the Cape of Good Hope as the Suez Canal had not been dug then. Max Muller started learning language in his early student days. He was thrilled that his compatriots and classmates knew nothing about the alphabets of the language he was mastering obviously it is a fallacy to think that Germans are past masters of Vedas and Sanskrit. Swami Dayanand Saraswati has written in his treatise ``Satyarth Prakash,'' that a German principal who was in correspondence with him found it difficult to get the Sanskrit letters translated into German language. No wonder Max Muller had to move to Berlin, Paris and London looking for original Sanskrit texts and teachers before finally settling down in the oxford university where he realized his dream. Notwithstanding major differences of opinion in the interpretation of Vedic mantras (Ved Bhashya) between the two Vedic scholars, Swami Dayanand Saraswati held F. Max Muller in high esteem. The India ascetic gave the German Indologist an honorific name in Sanskrit, ``Moksha Mooler.'' One may recall that the ultimate goal of a soul as per the Vedic philosophy of life is `Moksha.' `Moksha' means freedom from the cycle of birth, death and rebirth and the soul lives in that blessed state of pristine joy. The Moksha of a soul depends on the quality of karma, that is action or inaction in the worldly life. One wonders whether Max Muller really realized the importance of his Sanskrit name given by Swami Dayanand Saraswati. As per historical evidence available in India, the two Vedic giants were never in correspondence. Even ``My Indian Friends'' by Max Muller gives no indication to the exchange of letters, if any, between the two scholars. The long distance friendship cultivated in absentia did not deter Swami Dayanand Saraswati from pointing out major mistakes (minor ones could be overlooked) in Max Muller edited six volumes of the Rig Veda, both text and commentary. Understandably Max Muller relied on the Vedic commentary of Sayancharya on grounds of availability. When he, however, ventured on his own, he went wrong. In a major work, ``Rigvedadi Bhashya Bhumika,'' (chapter 8) Swami Dayanand Saraswati writes in Hindi which is translated as under:-`' ``…the eminent scholar Moksha Muller and others(Europeans) have not interpreted mantras correctly…In this context Dr Moksha Muller saheb has written in his Sanskrit Sahitya that Aryans realized the existence of GOD much later and that there is no proof that the Vedas are very ancient…That the mantra was evolved 200 years after the Chhand part…But the interpretation of Dr Moksha Muller Saheb is not correct…``Chhand,'' ``Mantra,'' and ``Nigam,'' - these are three names of Vedas only. Those who differentiate among them are not trustworthy.'' It is worth noting that even while criticizing erroneous interpretation of the Vedas by Max Muller, Swami Dayanand Saraswati was correct in etiquettes, courteous and generous. The address was polite, viz. Dr Moksha Muller sahib.'' During a seminar on Max Muller, a German scholar was quizzed on the ``how and why,''of the eminent German Indologist of the 19th century wishing to baptize all Indians. Was it an antidote to Swami Dayanand Saraswati's Arya Samaj which was committed to converting one and all to the Vedic Dharma. The 21st century German scholar laid the blame at the door of those Indians who came in direct contact with Max Muller in France and England. They, being the Brahma Samajists, had leanings towards Christianity and led Max Muller up the garden path. The Evangelist in Max Muller had the better of the Vedic interpreter and the Indologist par excellence. Two eminent Arya Samajists admired the extra-ordinary writings and speeches of Max Muller eulogizing the Vedic religion, culture and above all the ``Truthful character of the Hindus.'' Swami Dayanand Saraswati's hear must have been gladdened by F. Max Muller's seven lectures delivered in 1882 at the Cambridge University for the candidates of the elite Indian Civil Service. In 1883, before Swami Dayanand Saraswati's demise, the seven lectures were published by Longman in a book form titled ``INDIA: What can it teach us?'' The book was a great morale booster for the Indians and obviously a set back for racist-imperialists. Swami Vivekanand, after meeting F. Max Muller in Oxford was appreciative of the German scholar's unadulterated love for India and said:``…And what love he bears towards India. I wish I had hundredth part of that love for my own motherland.'' Swami Dayanand Saraswati and F. Max Muller shared one more love, shared one more passion, name SANSKRIT. Both were great scholars of Sanskrit and also protagonist par excellence. Both encouraged the youth to learn Sanskrit in different parts of the world. In the first flush of his Vedic preachings the great Arya Sanyasi himself founded Sanskrit pathshalas and exhorted people to donate generously for their upkeep. On his part, Max Muller advised the young Englishmen who were ICS candidates to learn Sanskrit, to delve deep into the rich oriental heritage. The German Indologiast admired: ``the antique state of preservation in which that Aryan language has been handed down to us.'' Exhorting the British administrators not to lose sight to ``our nearest intellectual relatives,'' that is Aryas of India, Max Muller recalled their contribution to developing the man's mind, thus:``…the Aryas of India, the framers of the most wonderful language, the Sanskrit, the fellow workers in the construction of our fundamental concepts, the fathers of the most natural of natural religions, the makers of the most transparent of mythologies, the inventors of the most subtle philosophy and the givers of the most elaborate laws.'' 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