Aims of My Great Teacher.
One of the great Indian savants that India, my country has produced in
this century, MahAmahopAdhyAya Dr. Gopinath Kaviraj was a unique
personality. He was deeply revered by all coming in contact with him
for his profound scholarship combined with his penetrating insight into
the spirit of the ancient Indian philosophy. He did not specialise in
one particular branch of learning as he was equally at home in all the
branches of the Indian philosophical thought: epigraphy, ancient Indian
history, Indian and European literature, Buddhism, Jainism, and so on.
He was a veritable living encyclopedia who had the knowledge of all the
sAstras on his fingertips. He possessed a rich library of his own
containing about 1,500 books dealing mainly with philosophy and
religion. He always sat on a bamboo mat on the floor sorrounded by all
his books and papers. However, he was not interested in mere
accumulating knowledge for academic purpose because he was a "born-
seeker of Truth". He himself disclosed to one of his admirers that he
was "merely an explorer of the realms of consciousness", and,
therefore, he had studied all religions of the world leaning on the
side of mysticism in search of spiritual Truth. He never had any
pretension for scholarship, nor for teaching and guiding research. He
studied texts because he believed that the Supreme Truth is even hidden
behind the veils of words. Only if the word chooses to reveal the Truth
in its pure and pristine form, which is called pazyantI, the "seeing or
revealing word", the Reality can be truly seen and intellectually
apprehended. At the same time, he also believed that mere acquiring
intellectual knowledge of Reality was not enough; it should be
supplemented by its realization. Therefore, he pursued his search for
Truth or Reality simultaneously on the intellectual and the spiritual
planes of realization. He possessed illumined mind, which saw this
Truth in flashes of intuition that came to him unaskedand without
premeditation. He narrated many of such instances to me: when the Truth
revealed itself, when he had spiritual realisation. He took notes of
all this immediately afterwards, before they vanished from his memory.
He was indeed such a rare and unique person who combined in himslef a
wonderful scholarship with a deep spiritual realisation, and, for this
reason, he was regarded people as a "living VizvanAtha" in the holy
town of VArA-NAsI, the abode of the Lord VizvanAtha.
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