What is the significance of the name, “Arya”?- Sri Aurobindo
ESSAYS
IN PHILOSOPHY AND YOGA- Sri Aurobindo
What is the significance of the name, “Arya”?
The question has been put from more than one point of
view. To most European readers the name figuring on our cover1 is likely to be a hieroglyph which attracts or
repels according to the temperament. Indians know the word, but it has lost for
them the significance which it bore to their forefathers. Western Philology has
converted it into a racial term, an unknown ethnological quantity on which
different speculations fix different values. Now, even among the philologists,
some are beginning to recognise that the word in its original use expressed not
a difference of race, but a difference of culture. For in the Veda the Aryan
peoples are those who had accepted a particular type of self-culture, of inward
and outward practice, of ideality, of aspiration. The Aryan gods were the
supraphysical powers who assisted the mortal in his struggle towards the nature
of the godhead. All the highest aspirations of the early human race, its
noblest religious temper, its most idealistic velleities of thought are summed
up in this single vocable.
In later times, the word Arya expressed a particular
ethical and social ideal, an ideal of well-governed life, candour, courtesy,
nobility, straight dealing, courage, gentleness, purity, humanity, compassion,
protection of the weak, liberality, observance of social duty, eagerness for
knowledge, respect for the wise and learned, the social accomplishments. It was
the combined ideal of the Brahmana and the Kshatriya. Everything that departed
from this ideal, everything that tended towards the ignoble, mean, obscure,
rude, cruel or false, was termed un-Aryan. There is no word in human speech
that has a nobler history.
In the early days of comparative Philology, when the scholars
sought in the history of words for the prehistoric history of peoples, it was
supposed that the word Arya came from the root ar, to plough, and that
the Vedic Aryans were so called when they separated from their kin in the
north-west who despised the pursuits of agriculture and remained shepherds and
hunters. This ingenious speculation has little or nothing to support it. But in
a sense we may accept the derivation. Whoever cultivates the field that the
Supreme Spirit has made for him, his earth of plenty within and without, does
not leave it barren or allow it to run to seed, but labours to exact from it
its full yield, is by that effort an Aryan.
If Arya were a purely racial term, a more probable
derivation would be ar, meaning strength or valour, from ar, to
fight, whence we have the name of the Greek war-god Ares, areios, brave
or warlike, perhaps even aretē, virtue, signifying,
like the Latin virtus, first, physical strength and courage and then
moral force and elevation. This sense of the word also we may accept. “We fight
to win sublime Wisdom, therefore men call us warriors.” For Wisdom implies the
choice as well as the knowledge of that which is best, noblest, most luminous,
most divine. Certainly, it means also the knowledge of all things and charity
and reverence for all things, even the most apparently mean, ugly or dark, for
the sake of the universal Deity who chooses to dwell equally in all. But, also,
the law of right action is a choice, the preference of that which expresses the
godhead to that which conceals it. And the choice entails a battle, a struggle.
It is not easily made, it is not easily enforced.
Whoever makes that choice, whoever seeks to climb from
level to level up the hill of the divine, fearing nothing, deterred by no retardation
or defeat, shrinking from no vastness because it is too vast for his
intelligence, no height because it is too high for his spirit, no greatness
because it is too great for his force and courage, he is the Aryan, the divine
fighter and victor, the noble man, aristos, best, the śreṣṭha of the Gita.
Intrinsically, in its most fundamental sense, Arya
means an effort or an uprising and overcoming. The Aryan is he who strives and
overcomes all outside him and within him that stands opposed to the human
advance. Self-conquest is the first law of his nature. He overcomes earth and
the body and does not consent like ordinary men to their dullness, inertia,
dead routine and tamasic limitations. He overcomes life and its energies and
refuses to be dominated by their hungers and cravings or enslaved by their
rajasic passions. He overcomes the mind and its habits, he does not live in a
shell of ignorance, inherited prejudices, customary ideas, pleasant opinions,
but knows how to seek and choose, to be large and flexible in intelligence even
as he is firm and strong in his will. For in everything he seeks truth, in
everything right, in everything height and freedom.
Self-perfection is the aim of his self-conquest.
Therefore what he conquers he does not destroy, but ennobles and fulfils. He
knows that the body, life and mind are given him in order to attain to
something higher than they; therefore they must be transcended and overcome,
their limitations denied, the absorption of their gratifications rejected. But he
knows also that the Highest is something which is no nullity in the world, but
increasingly expresses itself here,– a divine Will, Consciousness, Love,
Beatitude which pours itself out, when found, through the terms of the lower
life on the finder and on all in his environment that is capable of receiving
it. Of that he is the servant, lover and seeker. When it is attained, he pours
it forth in work, love, joy and knowledge upon mankind. For always the Aryan is
a worker and warrior. He spares himself no labour of mind or body whether to
seek the Highest or to serve it. He avoids no difficulty, he accepts no
cessation from fatigue. Always he fights for the coming of that kingdom within
himself and in the world.
The Aryan perfected is the Arhat. There is a
transcendent Consciousness which surpasses the universe and of which all these
worlds are only a side-issue and a by-play. To that consciousness he aspires
and attains. There is a Consciousness which, being transcendent, is yet the
universe and all that the universe contains. Into that consciousness he
enlarges his limited ego; he becomes one with all beings and all inanimate
objects in a single self-awareness, love, delight, all-embracing energy. There
is a consciousness which, being both transcendental and universal, yet accepts
the apparent limitations of individuality for work, for various standpoints of
knowledge, for the play of the Lord with His creations; for the ego is there
that it may finally convert itself into a free centre of the divine work and
the divine play. That consciousness too he has sufficient love, joy and
knowledge to accept; he is puissant enough to effect that conversion. To
embrace individuality after transcending it is the last and divine sacrifice.
The perfect Arhat is he who is able to live simultaneously in all these three
apparent states of existence, elevate the lower into the higher, receive the
higher into the lower, so that he may represent perfectly in the symbols of the
world that with which he is identified in all parts of his being,– the triple
and triune Brahman.
Arya. 09.1914
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