Quote of the Day

Saturday, May 07, 2011

My School - a lecture given in America by Rabindranath Tagore

Rabindranath TagoreImage by centralasian  
On his 150th birthday, I just stumbled upon this little piece of gem depicting glimpses of Noble laureate Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore's philosphy of education, which I would like to share with all of ya.


By Rabindranath Tagore 

Lecture delivered in America; published in Personality, 
London: MacMillan, 1917

I started a school in Bengal when I was nearing forty.
Certainly this was never expected of me, who had spent
the greater portion of my life in writing, chiefly verses. Therefore 
people naturally thought that as a school it might not be one of the best of its kind, but it was sure to be something outrageously new, being the product of daring inexperience.
 This is one of the reasons why I am often asked
what is the idea upon which my school is based. The question is a very embarrassing one for me,
because to satisfy the expectation of my questioners, I cannot afford to be commonplace in my answer. However, I shall resist the temptation to be original and shall be content with being merely truthful. 
In the first place, I must confess it is difficult for me to say what is the idea which 
underlies my institution. For the idea is not like a fixed foundation upon which a building 
is erected. It is more like a seed which cannot be separated and pointed out directly it 
begins to grow into a plant. And I know what it was to which this school owes its origin. 
It was not any new theory of education, but the memory of my school-days. 

That those days were unhappy ones for me I cannot altogether ascribe to my peculiar 
temperament or to any special demerit of the schools to which I was sent. It may be that 
if I had been a little less sensitive, I could gradually have accommodated myself to the 
pressure and survived long enough to earn my university degrees. But all the same, 
schools are schools, though some are better and some worse, according to their own 
standard. 

The provision has been made for infants to be fed upon their mother’s milk. They find 
their food and their mother at the same time. It is complete nourishment for them, body 
and soul. It is their first introduction to the great truth that man’s true relationship with 
the world is that of personal love and not that of the mechanical law of causation.
Therefore our childhood should be given its full measure of life’s draught, for which it
has an endless thirst. The young mind should be saturated with the idea that it has been 
born in a human world which is in harmony with the world around it. And this is what 
our regular type of school ignores with an air of superior wisdom, severe and disdainful. 
It forcibly snatches away children from a world full of the mystery of God’s own 
handiwork, full of the suggestiveness of personality. It is a mere method of discipline 
which refuses to take into account the individual. It is a manufactory specially designed 
for grinding out uniform results. It follows an imaginary straight line of the average in 
digging its channel of education. But life’s line is not the straight line, for it is fond of 
playing the see-saw with the line of the average, bringing upon its head the rebuke of the 
school. For according to the school, life is perfect when it allows itself to be treated as 
dead, to be cut into symmetrical conveniences. And this was the cause of my suffering 
when I was sent to school. For all of a sudden I found my world vanishing from around 
me, giving place to wooden benches and straight walls staring at me with the blank stare 
of the blind. 

The legend is that eating of the fruit of knowledge is not consonant with dwelling in 
paradise. Therefore men’s children have to be banished from their paradise into a realm 
of death, dominated by the decency of a tailoring department. So my mind had to accept 
the tight-fitting encasement of the school which, being like the shoes of a mandarin 
woman, pinched and bruised my nature on all sides and at every movement. I was 
fortunate enough in extricating myself before insensibility set in. 
Though I did not have to serve the full penal term which men of my position have to 
undergo to find their entrance into cultured society. I am glad that I did not altogether 
escape from its molestation. For it has given me knowledge of the wrong from which the 
children of men suffer. 

The cause of it is this, that man’s intention is going against God’s intention as to how 
children should grow into knowledge. How we should conduct our business is our own 
affair, and therefore in our offices we are free to create in the measure of our special 
purposes. But such office arrangement does not suit God’s creation. And children are 
God’s own creation. We have come to this world to accept it, not merely to know it.
We may become powerful by knowledge, but we attain fullness by sympathy.
The highest education is that which does not merely give us information but makes our life
in harmony with all existence. But we find that this education of sympathy is not only
systematically ignored in schools, but it is severely repressed. From our very childhood,
habits are formed and knowledge is imparted in such a manner that our life is weaned away
from nature, and our mind and the world are set in opposition from the beginning of our days.
Thus the greatest of educations for which we came prepared is neglected,
and we are made to lose our world to find a bagful of information instead.

We rob the child of his earth to teach him geography, of language to teach him grammar.
His hunger is for the Epic, but he is supplied with chronicles of facts and dates.
He was born in the human world, but is banished into the world of living gramophones, to expiate for the original sin of being born in ignorance. Child-nature protests against such calamity with all its power of 
suffering, subdued at last into silence by punishment.  

We all know children are lovers of the dust; their whole body and mind thirst for sunlight 
and air as flowers do. They are never in a mood to refuse the constant invitations to 
establish direct communication which come to their senses from the universe. 
But unfortunately for children their parents, in the pursuit of their profession, in 
conformity to their social traditions, live in their own peculiar world of habits. Much of 
this cannot be helped. For men have to specialize, driven by circumstances and by need 
of social uniformity. 
But our childhood is the period when we have or ought to have more freedom-—freedom 
from the necessity of specialization into the narrow bounds of social and professional
conventionalism. 

I well remember the surprise and annoyance of an experienced headmaster, reputed to be 
a successful disciplinarian, when he saw one of the boys of my school climbing a tree and 
choosing a fork of the branches for settling down to his studies. I had to say to him in 
explanation that ‘childhood is the only period of life when a civilized man can exercise
his choice between the branches of a tree and his drawing-room chair, and should
I deprive this boy of that privilege because I, as a grown-up man, am barred from it?’

What is surprising is to notice the same headmaster’s approbation of the boys’ studying
Botany. He believes in an impersonal knowledge of the tree because that is science, but not in a
personal experience of it. This growth of experience leads to forming instinct, which is 
the result of nature’s own method of instruction. The boys of my school have acquired 
instinctive knowledge of the physiognomy of the tree. By the least touch they know 
where they can find a foothold upon an apparently inhospitable trunk; they know how far 
they can take liberty with the branches, how to distribute their bodies’ weight so as to 
make themselves least burdensome to branchlets. My boys are able to make the best
possible use of the tree in the matter of gathering fruits, taking rest and hiding from 
undesirable pursuers. I myself was brought up in a cultured home in a town, and as far as
my personal behaviour goes, I have been obliged to act all through my life as if I were 
born in a world where there are no trees. Therefore I consider it as a part of education for 
my boys to let them fully realize that they are in a scheme of existence where trees are a 
substantial fact, not merely as generating chlorophyll and taking carbon from the air, but 
as living trees. 

Naturally the soles of our feet are so made that they become the best instruments for us to 
stand upon the earth and to walk with. From the day we commenced to wear shoes we 
minimized the purpose of our feet. With the lessening of their responsibility they have 
lost their dignity, and now they lend themselves to be pampered with socks, slippers and 
shoes of all prices and shapes and misproportions. For us it amounts to a grievance 
against God for not giving us hooves instead of beautifully sensitive soles. 
I am not for banishing footgear altogether from men’s use. But I have no hesitation in 
asserting that the soles of children’s feet should not be deprived of their education, 
provided for them by nature, free of cost. Of all the limbs we have they are the best 
adapted for intimately knowing the earth by their touch. For the earth has her subtle 
modulations of contour which she only offers for the kiss of her true lovers—the feet. 
I have again to confess that I was brought up in a respectable household, and my feet 
from childhood have been carefully saved from all naked contact with the dust. When I 
try to emulate my boys in walking barefoot, I painfully realize what thickness of ignorance
about the earth I carry under my feet. I invariably choose the thorns to tread 
upon in such a manner as to make the thorns exult. My feet have not the instinct to follow 
the lines of least resistance. For even the flattest of earth-surface, has its dimples of 
diminutive hills and dales only discernible by educated feet. I have often wondered at the 
unreasonable zigzag of footpaths across perfectly plain fields. It becomes all the more 
perplexing when you consider that a footpath is not made by the caprice of one 
individual. Unless most of the walkers possessed exactly the same eccentricity such 
obviously inconvenient passages could not have been made. But the real cause lies in the 
subtle suggestions coming from the earth to which our feet unconsciously respond. Those 
for whom such communications have not been cut off can adjust the muscles of their feet 
with great rapidity at the least indication. Therefore, they can save themselves from the 
intrusion of thorns, even while treading upon them, and walk barefooted on a gravelly 
path without the least discomfort. I know that in the practical world shoes will be worn, 
roads will be metalled, cars will be used, but during their period of education, should 
children not be given to know that the world is not all drawing-room, that there is such a 
thing as nature to which their limbs are made beautifully to respond? 

There are men who think that by the simplicity of living, introduced in my school, I 
preach the idealization of poverty which prevailed in the mediaeval age. From the point 
of view of education, should we not admit that poverty is the school in which man had his 
first lessons and his best training? Even a millionaire’s son has to be born helplessly poor 
and to begin his lesson of life from the beginning. He has to learn to walk like the poorest 
of children, though he has means to afford to be without the appendage of legs. Poverty 
brings us into complete touch with life and the world, for living richly is living mostly by 
proxy, and thus living in a world of lesser reality. This may be good for one’s pleasure 
and pride, but not for one’s education. Wealth is a golden cage in which the children of 
the rich are bred into artificial deadening of their powers. Therefore in my school, much 
to the disgust of the people of expensive habits, I had to provide for this great teacher — 
this bareness of furniture and materials — not because it is poverty, but because it leads 
to personal experience of the world. 

What tortured me in my school-days was the fact that the school had not the 
completeness of the world. It was a special arrangement for giving lessons.
It could only be suitable for grown-up people who were conscious of the special need of
such places and therefore ready to accept their teaching at the cost of dissociation from life. But 
children are in love with life, and it is their first love. All its colour and movement attract 
their eager attention. And are we quite sure of our wisdom in stifling this love? Children 
are not born ascetics, fit to enter at once into the monastic discipline of acquiring
knowledge. At first they must gather knowledge through their life, and then they will 
renounce their lives to gain knowledge, and then again they will come back to their fuller 
lives with ripened wisdom. 

But society has made its own arrangements for manipulating men’s minds to fit its 
special patterns. These arrangements are so closely organized that it is difficult to find 
gaps through which to bring in nature. There is a serial adjustment of penalties which 
follows to the end one who ventures to take liberty with some part of the arrangements, 
even to save his soul. Therefore it is one thing to realize truth and another to bring it into 
practice where the whole current of the prevailing system goes against you. This is why, 
when I had to face the problem of my own son’s education, I was at a loss to give it a 
practical solution. The first thing that I did was to take him away from the town 
surroundings into a village and allow him the freedom of primeval nature as far as it is 
available in modern days. He had a river, noted for its danger, where he swam and rowed 
without check from the anxiety of his elders. He spent his time in the fields and on the 
trackless sand-banks, coming late for his meals without being questioned. He had none of 
those luxuries that are not only customary but are held as proper for boys of his 
circumstance. For which privations, I am sure, he was pitied and his parents blamed by 
the people for whom society has blotted out the whole world. But I was certain that 
luxuries are burdens to boys. They are the burdens of other people’s habits, the burdens 
of the vicarious pride and pleasure which parents enjoy through their children. 
Yet, being an individual of limited resources, I could do very little for my son in the way 
of educating him according to my plan. But he had freedom of movement: he had very 
few of the screens of wealth and respectability between himself and the world of nature. 
Thus he had a better opportunity for a real experience of this universe than I ever had. 
But one thing exercised my mind as more important than anything else.
The object of education is to give man the unity of truth. Formerly, when life was simple, 
all the different elements of man were in complete harmony. But when there came the 
separation of the intellect from the spiritual and the physical, the school education put 
entire emphasis on the intellect and the physical side of man. We devote our sole 
attention to giving children information, not knowing that by this emphasis we are 
accentuating a break between the intellectual, physical and the spiritual life. 

I believe in a spiritual world, not as anything separate from this world, but as its 
innermost truth. With the breath we draw, we must always feel this truth, that we are 
living in God. Born in this great world, full of the mystery of the infinite, we cannot 
accept our existence as a momentary outburst of chance, drifting on the current of matter 
towards an eternal nowhere. We cannot look upon our lives as dreams of a dreamer who 
has no awakening in all time. We have a personality to which matter and force are
unmeaning unless related to something infinitely personal, whose nature we have 
discovered, in some measure, in human love, in the greatness of the good, in the 
martyrdom of heroic souls, in the ineffable beauty of nature, which can never be a mere 
physical fact, nor anything but an expression of personality. 

Experience of this spiritual world, whose reality we miss by our incessant habit of 
ignoring it from childhood, has to be gained by children by fully living in it and not 
through the medium of theological instruction. But how this is to be done is a problem 
difficult of solution in the present age. For nowadays men have managed so fully to 
occupy their time that they do not find leisure to know that their activities have only
movement but very little truth, that their soul has not found its world. 

In India we still cherish in our memory the tradition of the forest colonies of great
teachers. These places were neither schools nor monasteries in the modern sense of the 
word. They consisted of homes where with their families lived men whose object was to 
see the world in God and to realize their own life in Him. Though they lived outside 
society, yet they were to society what the sun is to the planets, the centre from which it 
received its life and light. And here boys grew up in an intimate vision of eternal life 
before they were thought fit to enter the state of the householder. Thus in the ancient
India the school was there where was the life itself. There the students 
were brought up, not in the academic atmosphere of scholarship and learning, or in the 
maimed life of monastic seclusion, but in the atmosphere of living aspiration. They took 
the cattle to pasture, collected firewood, gathered fruit, cultivated kindness to all 
creatures, and grew in their spirit with their own teachers’ spiritual growth. This was 
possible because the primary object of these places was not teaching but giving shelter to 
those who lived their life in God. 

That this traditional relationship of the masters and disciples is not a mere romantic 
fiction is proved by the relic we still possess of the indigenous system of education. 
These chaluspathis, which is the Sanskrit name for the university, have not the savour of 
the school about them. The students live in their master’s home like the children of the 
house, without having to pay for their board and lodging or tuition. The teacher 
prosecutes his own study, living a life of simplicity, and helping the students in their 
lessons as a part of his life and not of his profession. This ideal of education through 
sharing a life of high aspiration with one’s master took possession of my mind. Those 
who in other countries are favoured with unlimited expectations of worldly prospects can
fix their purposes of education on those objects. But for us to maintain the self-respect
which we owe to ourselves and to our creator, we must make the purpose of education 
nothing short of the highest purpose of man, the fullest growth and freedom of soul. It is 
pitiful to have to scramble for small pittances of fortune. Only let us have access to the 
life that goes beyond death and rises above all circumstances; let us find our God, let us 
live for that ultimate truth which emancipates us from the bondage of the dust and gives 
us the wealth, not of things but of inner light, not of power but of love. Such 
emancipation of soul we have witnessed in our country among men devoid of book-learning
and living in absolute poverty. In India we have the inheritance of this treasure 
of spiritual wisdom. Let the object of our education be to open it out before us and to give 
us the power to make the true use of it in our life, and offer it to the rest of the world 
when the time comes, as our contribution to its eternal welfare. 
I had been immersed in literary activities when this thought struck my mind with painful 
intensity. I suddenly felt like one groaning under the suffocation of nightmare. It was not 
only my own soul, but the soul of my country that seemed to be struggling for its breath through me.
I felt clearly that what was needed was not any particular material object, not 
wealth or comfort or power, but our awakening to full consciousness in soul freedom, the 
freedom of the life in God, where we have no enmity with those who must fight, no 
competition with those who must make money, where we are beyond all attacks and 
above all insults. 
  * * * * *
In conclusion, I warn my hearers not to carry away with them any false or exaggerated 
picture of this ashram. When ideas are stated in a paper, they appear too simple and 
complete. But in reality their manifestation through the materials that are living and 
varied and ever changing is not so clear and perfect. We have obstacles in human nature
and in outer circumstances. Some of us have a feeble faith in boys’ minds as living 
organisms, and some have the natural propensity of doing good by force. On the other 
hand, the boys have their different degrees of receptivity, and there are a good number of 
inevitable failures. Delinquencies make their appearance unexpectedly, making us 
suspicious as to the efficacy of our own ideals. We pass through dark periods of doubt 
and reaction. But these conflicts and waverings belong to the true aspects of reality. 
Living ideals can never be set into a clockwork arrangement, giving accurate account of 
its every second. And those who have firm faith in their idea have to test its truth in 
discords and failures that are sure to come to tempt them from their path.  
I for my part believe in the principle of life, in the soul of man, more than in methods. I 
believe that the object of education is the freedom of mind which can only be achieved 
through the path of freedom--though freedom has its risk and responsibility as life itself 
has. I know it for certain, though most people seem to have forgotten it, that children are 
living beings -- more living than grown-up people, who have built their shells of habit 
around them. Therefore it is absolutely necessary for their mental health and development 
that they should not have mere schools for their lessons, but a world whose guiding spirit 
is personal love. It must be an ashram where men have gathered for the highest end of 
life, in the peace of nature; where life is not merely meditative, but fully awake in its 
activities; where boys’ minds are not being perpetually drilled into believing that the 
ideal of the self-idolatry of the nation is the truest ideal for them to accept; where they
are bidden to realize man’s world as God’s Kingdom, to whose citizenship they have to 
aspire; where the sunrise and sunset and the silent glory of stars are not daily ignored; 
where nature’s festivities of flowers and fruit have their joyous recognition from man; 
and where the young and the old, the teacher and the student, sit at the same table to 
partake of their daily food and the food of their eternal life.

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