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We remember M. Gandhi (10/2/1869 – 01/30/1948) and his legacy…

Posted by ElJay Arem (IMC OnAir) on January 30, 2013

“Be the change you wish to see in the world”
(Mahatma Gandhi)

Gandhi on music & art

Mahatma-Gandhi-1
(Original Source: Mahadev Desai’s Diary)
.
Mahadev Desai (1892-1942) joined Mahatma Gandhi in 1917 and remained with him till Desai’s death in 1942. I came upon a very interesting account, inMahadev Desai’s diary, of a discussion between Mahatma Gandhi and Dilip Kumar Roy, in the end of January 1924. I reproduce that below.

Dilip, son of the well-known dramatist of Bengal, Dwijendralal Roy, visited Gandhi one evening. He had already earned abroad the reputation of a distinguished Indian singer. He had come in the morning and promised to return in the evening to sing some hymns to Bapu.

It was about 8 p.m. when he came. Dilip had brought his sitar. A good number of listeners had collected in the room. Sitting on a sofa opposite to Gandhiji’s bed he began singing a song of hymn to Krishna.

“O Lord! O Hari! Gopal! my Love!
Call me I pray to Thee above …

The moving sentiment in the hymn, the charming voice of the singer and the listners’ receptive mood filled the place for a while with the earnest loving entreaty made in the song. Everyone was, as it were, wafted to that blissful place and humming the following lines :

“Of hunger, thirst, I won’t complain.
Content with fruit I will remain”.

But even before vibrations of that son had died in our ears, the friend began the well-known song of Meerabai (Hindi Film, 1933), Chakar rakhoji, which thrills with the same ethereal air:

.
“Make me Thy servant – the last stain efface
Of selfhood; be my life an offering
In song’s own bliss and bloom’s own loveliness.
For beauty holds a mirror to Thee, O King,
Of Beauty’s ultimate home – Thy Brindaban!
Whose glory in her bowers will I sing.
And accost Thee daily in Thy golden dawn
In every flower, every purlingst realm
In changing forms deciphering the One.
Here, in Thy happy hunt, where dreamers dream
And Yogis strive through Yoga Thee to meet
And all who visit hail Thy summit gleam,
Thy Meera treads but one way Thee to greet:
She prays: “Besiege my heart at midnight hush
And on banks of Love’s blue rill Thy dance repeat.” 
.

All of us felt as if we ourselves were ‘dancing on Love’s blue rill’ – that was the effect the performance produced. Profound silence prevailed for a while. Dilip then touched a topic and raised a dialogue.

“I feel, Mahatmaji”, he said, “that our beautiful music has been sadly neglected in our schools and colleges.”

“It has – unfortunately”, Bapu agreed, “I have always said so.”

“I am very glad to hear this, Mahatmaji, because, to be frank, I was under the impression that art has no place in the gospel of your austere life. I had often pictured you as a dread saint who was positively against music.”

“Against music – I”! exclaimed Mahatmaji, as though stung. “Well, I know, I know,” he added resignedly, “there are so many superstitions rife about me that it has now become almost impossible for me to overtake those who have been spreading them. As a result, my friends’ only reaction is almost invariably a smile when I claim I am an artist myself.”

“I feel so relieved, Mahatmaji” I laughed, “but may not your asceticism be somewhat responsible for such popular misconceptions? The people would find it difficult to reconcile asceticism with art”.

“But I do maintain that asceticism is the greatest of all arts. And to think that I should be dubbed an enemy to an art like music because I favour asceticism! I, who cannot even conceive of the evolution of India’s religious life without her music! But, indeed, I fail to see anything in much that passes for art in these days. What is needed for the appreciation of any art is to have the heart for it, not any ntimate knowledge of technique or training. Why must my walls be overlaid with pictures, for instance, when they are meant only for sheltering us? I do not need pictures. Nature suffices for my inspiration. Have I not gazed and gazed at the marvellous mystery of the starry vault, hardly ever tiring of that great panorama? Could one conceive of any painting comparable in inspiration to that of the star-tudded sky, the majestic sea, the noble mountains? Beside God’s handiwork does not man’s fade into insignificance?’

Dilip agreed: “Yes, what man in his senses will claim that the artist’s handiwork is even greater than life’s?”

Bapu then rushed on and changing the Gita’s aphorism, “Yoga is skill in action”, he said in effect that skill in action was itself the highest art. “Life must immensely exceed all the arts put together. To me the greatest artist is surely he who lives the finest life. For what is this hot-house art-plant of yours without the life-soul and background of a steady worthy life? What after all does that art amount to which ll the time stultifies life instead of elevating it? No. Art has a place in life, but art is not life. Life, on the contrary, is Art. Art should be subservient to life. It should act as its handmaid, not master. It should be alive to life and the universe.”

(Source: 7th July 2007 – Cuckoo’s call (Blog) | Rama)

GandhiTour.newlogo.us1x1

Gandhi Tour TV Global live Broadcast celebrating Mahatma Gandhi’s Birthday

 The Gandhi Tour is a global music festival created with the intent to arise social change by uniting people through the Universal language of music. This global music events are creating a platform for cultural dialogue relating to all cultures and religions inspired by the life of Mahatma Gandhi with the support of Dr. Arun Gandhi, Mahatma Gandhi’s grandson.

Bookmark:  October 2nd and 3rd, 2013 – World wide Europe broadcast 8:00 PM – 11:59 PM (London Time) on Oct 2nd, 2013 / United States broadcast 8:00 PM – 11:59 PM (New York Time) on Oct 2nd, 2013

Tobias Huber, founder of the Gandhi Tour lived in India for more than seven years. Inspired by his vision of a huge music event touring around the globe in cause of peace and non-violence, generating the consciousness to enable us to stop global hunger. Tobias with Dr. Arun Gandhi’s blessing created this dynamic musical event to inspire people on the choice of peace and non-violence in life.

The first of many events the Gandhi Tour celebrated Gandhi’s 100 years of Non-violence with Dr. Arun Gandhi at Earthdance 2006. It is there that the Gandhi Tour began its journey in the cultural peace movement of the 21st century.

Documentary about The Gandhi Tour…

(Source: 01/2013 – The Gandhi Tour – http://gandhi-tour.org)

3 Responses to “We remember M. Gandhi (10/2/1869 – 01/30/1948) and his legacy…”

  1. Prem said

    That was wonderful!

    Like

    • Tks… we even re-named last year a water channel bridge in 1.8 million metropole Hanseatic City Hamburg (North Germany) into M. Gandhi Bridge on 2nd October. Some pics here: http://bit.ly/Tbk2X5

      It shall remember visitors (Hamburg has annually 10 million tourists) and inhabitants that Gandhi was a “bridge builder” and to connect between different nations in a peacfully way as we do since May 2012 with the “Days of India in Germany” to celebrate 60 years of Indo-German diplomacy – http://www.imcradio.net/daysofindiaingermany
      +++

      Like

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