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The Culture of Spirituality








           To save our own freedom, we have to tolerate the freedom
              of others. And to save our own spirituality, we have to
                    overlook the misuse of freedom by others.


            was born in a village in Uttar Pradesh, where, at an
          I  early age, I witnessed an incident so upsetting that I
          have never been able to get it out of my mind. Even
          today I have a vivid memory of it.
             Outside my village there was a mango tree, which was
          laden with fruit. One day I saw a village boy throwing
          stones at the tree till mangoes rained down on him.
          What shocked me was that the boy was giving the mango
          tree stones, while the tree was giving him fruit in return.

             I did not  react to this  incident, but  I learned  a
          positive lesson from it. I felt at that moment that I was
          in the school of nature, which was teaching me this: ‘If
          someone throws stones at you, even then you should give
          him fruits in return.’ This would epitomise the highest
          of values in life. Moreover, this is the greatest way to
          further one’s intellectual and spiritual development.
             In the present world, someone or the other is bound
          to ‘throw stones’ at you. If you react, you will get nothing
          but anger in return. But if you curb any reaction on
          your part, you will have demonstrated certain very great


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