Badnām-Gita’s Spoiler Slokas
Whatever, these
extremely divergent opinions about this antique work continue to persist to the
hurt of the Hindu polity what with some perceiving it as the ‘epitome of wisdom’
even as the others avoid it treating it as a ‘Brahmanical tome’ of social oppression.
Be that as it may, the irony of it all is that even its protagonists fail to benefit
from this ‘book of wisdom’ owing, in part, to its very postulations that keep
its skeptics away from it.
This endeavour is an ardent attempt to put the crooked
record straight for the public good.
It may be appreciated that there are no more than seven
spoiler slokas (verses) in the Gita’s seven-hundred (not counting the un-numbered
one in the thirteenth chapter) that rightly outrage the Mankars of the
non-Brahmanical world, which the favoured varnas (castes) downplay with winding
explanations that cut no logical ice though. Besides these, among the one-hundred-and-three
digressive verses in the in vogue Gita, there are many that advocate the very
ritualistic practices that it advises man to avoid in v42, v43 ‘n v53 of its
second, and arguably its defining, chapter! Needless to say, these confuse its devout
thereby failing them to grasp the art of practical living that the Gita teaches,
but yet, sticking to the traditional ground, they are apathetic to any rethink
of the obvious and the apparent alike. Let them be for they get what they
deserve, and our concern should be for those who keep away from the Gita, on
account of the seven as follows that seek to confine them to non-cerebral ways
in their ghettoized existence that is besides denigrating the feminine gender
as a whole.
Quote –
1) Ch 3, v35
shreyan swa-dharmo viguṇaḥ para-dharmat sv-anuṣhṭhitat
swa-dharme nidhanaṁ shreyaḥ para-dharmo bhayavahaḥ.
It is far better to perform one’s prescribed duty
(read caste duty) faultily than to perform another’s perfectly. In fact, it is
preferable to die in the discharge of one’s duty, than to follow the path of
another, which is fraught with danger.
2) Ch 4, v 13
chatur-varnyam maya srishtam guna-karma-vibhagashah
tasya kartaram api mam viddhyakartaram avyayam.
The four varnas (castes) have been created by Me,
based on the division of guna (nurture) and karma (action / duty). Even though
I created them, know Me as the non-doer and the imperishable.
3) Ch.9, v32
maam hi paartha vyapaasritya ye 'pi syuh paapa-yonayah,
striyo vaisyaas tathaa soodraas te 'pi yaanti paraam gatim.
Surely, O Paartha, even those who are born of
sinful origin – women, traders, and also labourers, they attain the supreme
state by taking refuge in Me.
4) Ch18, v41
braahmana-kshatriya-visaam soodraanaam cha parantapa,
karmaani pravibhaktaani svabhaava-prabhavair gunaih.
The duties of Brahmans, Kshatriyas, Vaishyas and Shudras,
O scorcher of foes, have been classified according to the gunaas, which have
born of (their) nature.
5) Ch 18, vs44
krushi-go-rakshya-vaanijyam vaisya-karma svabhaava-jam,
paricharyaatmakam karma soodrasyaapi svabhaava-jam.
Agriculture, cattle rearing and trade are natural
duties of the Vaishya while service oriented actions are the natural duties of
the Shudras.
6) Ch 18, v47
sreyaan sva-dharmo vigunah para-dharmaat sv-anusthitaat,
svabhaava-niyatam karma kurvan naapnoti kilbisham.
It is better to do one’s own duty, even though imperfectly,
than to do another’s duty, even
though perfectly. By doing one’s innate duties, a person does not incur sin.
7) Ch18, v48,
sahajam karma kaunteya sa-dosham api na tyajet,
sarvaarambhaa hi doshena dhoomenaagnir ivaavrutaah.
Natural duty (read caste duty), even though
fraught with defect, should not be abandoned. For, all undertakings are covered
with defect, like fire by smoke.
-Unquote.
Now the moot point is, were these indeed bhagvan uvaacha (the Lord’s utterances)
as the Gita-in-circulation would have us believe?
The key to the answer, so to say, lies in the Gita’s very
own assertion – this is the quintessence of the Upanishads, Brahmasutras, and
Yoga sastra – at the end of each of its eighteen chapters, which naturally leads
to the counter question – had God preached man from the man-made material for
Upanishads, Brahmasutras, and Yoga sastra are just that?
Well, the absurdity of its ever happening should
suffice to say that as popularly acknowledged, it was Vyasa, a Shudra, who
composed the Gita with Krishna, alike a Shudra, as its main protagonist, which
fact puts paid to these seven spoiler verses. So, it stands to reason that it
was the priestly interests that inserted these to suppress the other castes,
save Kshatriyas with whom they were in cohorts, and belittle the womenfolk in
general. What is no less galling, they sought to exalt their Brahmanical social
standing with self-serving insertions, and gave the bhagawan uvaacha twist to Vyasa’s work to boot for better effect.
So, it is for the Shudras to realize that in reality,
the Bhagvad-Gita was the pristine work of their progenitors that in time got
polluted by the others, and it is time for them to reclaim it albeit by ridding
it of its obnoxious insertions as was done by the author in his Bhagvad-Gita:
Treatise of Self-help sans 110 inane interpolations. In so far as the misconception
about Gita’s advocacy of violence is concerned, as and when the interpolative
issue is settled, rid of their own biases against it, its detractors would be able
to appreciate that it only exhorts man to take up cudgels for justness in its
fight against unjustness regardless.
All the same, the Gita eulogizers, in its present-form, must ponder over as to how these verses of inequality in the revered work jell with the much touted Hindu ethos of vasudhaika kutumbakam (world is one family). In so far as the Gita’s admirers among the Whites, it can be said that having internalized the Semitic religious ethos of the God’s alleged partiality towards certain races and also given the prevalence of slavery in their societies, they saw nothing perverse in the inequity of the castes in the Hindu religious fold that its interpolations espoused.
Ridden of the following 110 spoiler slokas, the Gita acquires the clarity of
expression and thought required for its comprehension and contemplation.
Ch. 3: s9 –s18, s24 and s35 (12 slokas); Ch.4: s11 - s 13, s24- s32 and s34 (13 slokas); Ch.5: s18 and
s27 -29 (4 slokas) ; Ch. 6: s10-s17 and s41 -s42 (10 slokas) ; Ch.7: s20 –s23 (4 slokas) ; ch.8: s5, s9- s14 and s23-s28 ( 13 slokas) ; Ch.9: s7,s15-s21, s23-s25, and
s32-s34 (14 slokas) ; Ch.11: s9- s14 and s29 (7 slokas) ; Ch.13: s10, s22 and s30 (3 slokas) ;Ch.14: s3 -s4 and s19(3 slokas)
; Ch.15: s9 and s12- s15 (5 slokas ); Ch.16: s19 (1 sloka) ; Ch.17:
s11- s14 and s23- 28 (10 slokas)
and Ch.18: s12, s41-48, s56 and s61(11 slokas ).
Academia.edi links to Bhagvad-Gita: Treatise of Self-help–
Ebook https://www.academia.edu/21433459/Bhagvad_Gita_Treatise_of_Self_help
Audio-book https://www.academia.edu/video/jKQ34l
Labels: Bhagvad-Gita, Caste biases, Caste discrimination, Caste oppression, Caste system, Hindu castes, Hindu philosophy, Indian studies, Indology, Interpolations in the Gita, Social studies, Sociology
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