. . . The need for recapturing
the Rishi Vision is paramount for Bharat poised on the threshold of
the 21st century. Unfortunately a notion had been created and been
uncritically propogated that the Rishi was against the world, was
otherworldy, and was indifferent to the woes and evils of the world
like poverty, disease, squalor,cruelty, suffering and injustice. This
was a canard spread by the vile colonizers to despiritualise Bharat.
In fact there were great Rishis who fought against injustice, inequality,
oppression and against all forms of cruelty. Sage Visvamitra, Sage
Parasurama and Sage Yajnavalkya were shining examples of Rishis taking
up issues of the day and fighting for injustice. . .
.
. .Nor did the Rishi justify poverty and suffering in the name of
karma. The theory of karma was just another logical proposition based
on the law that every effect must have a cause. Cause modified is
effect. Thus every action produces an appropriate result. It only
establishes the fact that the individual by his thoughts and actions
creates his destiny. Karma theory futuristically understood becomes
a liberating, revolutionary concept. It empowers human beings, enabling
them to choose their responses and actions and their destiny. But
during those fateful thousand years a shackled society interpreted
the same karma theory to justify its fate and pathetic conditions
in terms of the past. Thus rationalising its inability to mould its
present by choice of appropriate actions to become
master of its destiny. . .