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THE
LIFE OF ADI SHANKARA – A MANAGEMENT LESSON
- Radhakrishnan Pillai
(Director of Atma Darshan, Radhakrishnan
is a research Student at Chinmaya International
Foundation (CIF) in the subject of Kautilya’s Arthashastra)
Sankara is not an individual.
Sankara is an institution. No single person could ever have achieved
what he had achieved in his short span of life of 32 years. No master
or Prophet had ever achieved so much, for so many, in so short a
time. Very often this tempts us to consider he was an avatara.
Sankara is a Majestic entity
striding over the total achievements of ordinary folk; through a
quieter evaluation we shall find that Sankara’s work represents
the total turnover of a highly competent person, working intensively
every hour of the day, under conditions of the highest mental and
intellectual efficiency (Sw C, Frwd). Sankara, was indeed a true
leader of men, an organizer non parallel. His vision in establishing
the Matha-s, centers radiating
India’s ageless message of Sanatana-Dharma
at various strategic points, his unbelievably extensive travels,
in the bullock-cart age, from Kerala in the extreme south to Badrinatha,
in the extreme north, to Kamarupa,
in the East and Dvaraka,
in the West, meeting discussing and debating with scholars, princes,
pagans and people in all walks of life.
Personality of Sankara
Sankara’s life and
teachings portray a perfect man, highly competent and supremely
efficient. A brief profile of his personality has been summarized
by Swami Chinmayananda (Sw C, pg 55)
- He was distinguished in all sytems of Yoga.
- Foremost in the field of Jnana Yoga, the Perfect Jnani.
- Foremost in the field of Karma Yoga, the ideal of all Karma
Yogi-s.
- Foremost in the field of Bhakti Yoga, the noblest of Bhakta-s
worthy of emulation.
- Unsurpassed in the field of Hatha Yoga
- Master in both the knowledge and practice of the Tantrik system.
- Foremost among teachers, a ‘Mobile University’ sympathetic
yet relentless, the world teacher, Jagadguru.
- A perfect organizer who established the great institutions
in the four quarters of the country which remain, even today,
the beacons of spirituality
- A far-sighted statesman who integrated the country as a cultural
unit and laid firm foundation to it. (Even today, India is bound
together as one nation not by one political, economical or secular
programmes but one cultural foundation based on its spiritual
heritage)
- An exemplary Man of letters, his style has the mathematical
precision of a scientists, vividity of expression of a poet laureate
and unity of vision of a spiritual master, coupled with simplicity
and straightforwardness of presentation.
- Above all, a down to earth man whose heart throbbed with compassion
and sympathy for all men and beings irrespective of weather they
were rich or poor, learned or illiterate, Brahmana or a Chandala.
Studying the life of Sankara is a Management
education by itself
It was indeed a vast programme that Sankara
had to accomplish within the short span of about 20 effective years;
for at the age of thirty two he had finished his work and had folded
up his manifestation among the mortals of the world (Sw C, pg 2).Establishing
the matha-s, opening temples,
organizing halls of education, and even prescribing certain ecclesiastical
codes, this mighty Master left nothing undone in maintaining what
he achieved (Sw C, pg 3). Understanding how is did this and making
a deep study of it is an Education by itself. For Management Professionals
each event of his life will unfold great insights into his Management
style.
Education - Connecting with the wisdom of the ages
A highly educated conscience is much like any skilled sets of hands.
A great price has been paid to educate it. Sacrifices have been
made and obstacles overcome. In fact, it actually takes even more
discipline, sacrifice, and wisdom to develop an educated conscience
than it does to become a great sculptor, golfer, surgeon, Braille
reader, or concert pianist. But the rewards are far greater –
an educated conscience impacts every aspect of our lives. (Covey
S)
We can educate our conscience by Reading and pondering over the
wisdom literature of the ages to broaden our awareness of the true
north principles that run as common themes throughout time. (Covey
S).
Sankara was initiated into
the study of alphabets (aksarabhayasa) at the age of three; soon
he was able to read and understand the whole books (Sw C, pg 22).
The great Yogi, Guru Govindapada,
acceded to Sankara’s
request to initiate him into Brahma-vidya.
Sankara stayed there with
his Guru for full three years
and mastered all scriptures and Yogik techniques (Sw C, pg 28).
As we connect with the wisdom of the ages and the wisdom of the
heart, we become less a function of the social mirror and more a
person of character and conscience. Our security doesn’t come
form the way people treat us or in comparing ourselves to others.
It comes form our basic integrity. (Covey S)
Stephen Covey puts these steps to find our purpose in life
- Standing apart form and learning from our own experience
- Carefully observing the experience of others.
- Taking time to be still and listen to that deep inner voice
- Responding to that voice.
Set aside some time to be alone, away from interruptions. Close
your eyes and visualize yourself in some circumstance that would
normally create discomfort or pain. Something pushes your button.
Your boss yells at you. Your teenage daughter complains that you
never buy her any clothes. Your co-worker starts a vicious rumor
about you.
Use your self awareness to separate yourself from your normal thoughts
and feelings the situation would create. In your mind’s eye,
instead of seeing yourself react as you might normally do, see yourself
act based on the principles you are convinced will create quality-of-life
courage and consideration. The value of this exercise multiplies
when you use it to internalize the principles and values in a powerful
mission statement. It’s not enough just to listen to conscience,
we must also respond. Sankara
responded to his inner call to teach the ideologies of Advaita
which was the need of the hour. When we fail to act in harmony with
our inner vice, we begin to build a wall around the conscience that
blocks its sensitivity and receptivity. As C.S. Lewis observed,
“disobedience to conscience makes conscience blind”.
Thus we find that we become amazingly productive once we work in
lines with our inner call as in the case of Sankara.
Working towards your purpose
But pen alone would not have won the war of culture for our country.
Sankara, showed himself
to be a great organizer, a far sighted diplomat, a courageous hero
and a tireless servant of the country. Selfless and unassuming,
this mighty angel strode up and down the length and breadth of the
country serving his motherland and teaching his country-me to live
up to the dignity and glory of Bharat.
Such a vast programme can neither be accomplished by an individual
nor sustained without institutions of great discipline and perfect
organization (Inscrp).
In order that the great wisdom of the
Rsi-s, may not be lost to posterity, Sri Sankara, decided
to establish the four ‘seats of wisdom’ (matha-s),
in the four pars of the country ie Jagannath
Puri (the eastern Matha),
Sringeri (the southern Matha),
Dvaraka (the western
Matha) and Jyotirdharma
(the Northern Matha), now
known as Josimath. Historical
and literary evidences are said to be available to prove that Kamakoti
Matha, situated at Kanchipuram,
a small town situated in Tamil Nadu was also found by Adi Sankaracharya.
It was envisaged that the spiritual welfare of the whole country
would be looked after by these four Matha-s
10. In India, the wisdom of the Rsi-s, has been perpetuated through
the unbroken chain of Guru-sisya
parampara. It was a unique blessing for Hinduism, that not only
had illustrious teachers but also equally competent and brilliant
disciples who carried the torch of knowledge down through the centuries
to the present times, each one not only well versed in the scriptures
but also well established in their subjective realization of the
Supreme Reality (Srotriyam, Brahmanishtam).
It was not a ‘rely-race’ where the buck was simply passed
on to the next in line, but a consistent effort at every stage to
master the essential discipline in the hierarchy. Thus everyone
turned out to be a Master, a Rsi, in the link. Sankara
had a number of disciples, among them the four outstanding persons
were Padmapada, Suresvaracarya, Hastamalaka
and Totakacarya. They
took charge of the four Matha-s established by the Master to look
after the spiritual welfare of the entire country (Sw C, Pg 85).
Sanakara’s Organisation - Based on Values
Work for your values and Value your work (Sw Tejomayanada).The
two questions of ethics – what makes things or acts good and
wherein value ultimately consists cannot be discussed without knowing
what supreme good or value is. This is because ethics being a system
of values, the existence of a number of values such as bodily, spiritual
etc. makes it necessary to arrange them in a proper order as lower
and higher. In his process we have to find out what is the ultimate
or lasting value (Elayath K, pg 6). The philosophy of Sankara is
derived from his unique theory of identity, the Upanisadic
doctrine of tattvamasi. Apart
from striving to realize, this fact, there are a number of practical
lessons to be drawn from this doctrine. It is this doctrine which
actually compels one to love one’s neighbour as oneself. It
forces one to treat not only human beings but all living beings
as equal and love them as one loves oneself (Elayath K, pg 11).
In a successful organization values are the real boss. Values are
to guide your behavior, not for you to guide others. You’re
a leader, not the police. At the same time, though, you have to
ensure the organization is internally aligned – everyone singing
from the same hymn book. You can’t impose agreement to values
any more than you can to goals, but you can, and must, impose conformity.
If people don’t respect your values, then they work elsewhere.
Goals are for the future – Values are now. Goals are set –
Values are lived. Goals change – Values are rocks you can
count on. Goals get people going. Values sustain the effort. (Blanchard
and Bowles)
Sankara not only found a value in the work he was doing but also
made his disciples feel the value of their work. The most successful
organizations are the ones in which all the team members work with
common values.
Documenting your work and let your subordinates take over
“Managers keep control by pretending information is sensitive
and withholding it. It’s great for power trips but it doesn’t
lead to trust. If you want your team to Gung Ho, you have to tell
the whole truth, and that means information belongs to everyone
(Blanchard and Bowles).
Adi Sankara, not only kept
an open door policy to teach his disciples but documented his works
for the sake of generations to come. The Master par excellence that
Sankara was, he did not stop at culturing the intellect of this
students, but carefully developed their hearts as well through the
vast amount of devotional literature which streamed out of his bosom
(Sw C, pg 60). Sankara’s compositions can be broadly divided
into three sections, Bhasya-s (commentaries), Prakriya
or Prakarna Grantha-s
(Books dealing with the fundamental concepts of Vedanta) and Stotra-s
(Hyms and meditation verses) (Sw C, pg 57). A total of 113 compositions
of Sankara, have been discovered (Sw C, Pg 125-128).
A lot of research in unearthing his works is going in various institutes
across India.
By setting the key goals and values, you define the playing field
and the rules of the game. You decide who plays what position. Then
you have to get off the field and let the players move the ball……”
(Blanchard and Bowles)
At the age of thirty two Sankara
wished to give up his body at the sacred place of Kedaranath. His
disciples were asked to pass down the eternal wisdom of the scriptures
through the Guru-sisya parampara,
for the generations to come. The disciples requested the Acharya
(the teacher) to give instructions in this regard so that the wisdom
of the Ris-s would not be lost to future generations. He then dictated
a book, Mahanusasanam, setting out rules and disciplines to be followed
in the administration and working of the Matha-s. He then gave out
the ten verses (Dasa Sloki),
the essence of the Vedantic
teaching, and the particular points for special contemplation. The
master then disappeared into the Himalayan
Valleys. The disciples came down to the plains to fulfill the work,
so lovingly entrusted to them by their incomparable master (Sw C
Pg 53-54).
Conclusion
Today, there is throughout the country a great enthusiasm in Sankara,
the signs of revival are everywhere around us. On Sri Sankara Jayanti
day, we find celebrations everywhere. Unfortunately, none of these
thundering platforms successfully brings out the personality of
this great Master. A lot is known about Adi Sankara, but very few
know of the ‘Sankara’.
The more we learn to adore him, not as a divine incarnation but
as a sincere man inspired to serve the country and reconquer the
nation from its slavery to alien ideologies, the more we shall successfully
pay our tribute to our culture (Sw C Pg4),
As we study the life of Adi Sankara we start understanding Management
not just as a mere academic subject but as a ‘mindset’
that is developed through education, vision, dedication and selfless
activity performed for a higher and noble cause.
References
(Sw C) Swami Chinmayananda, Sankara the Missionary, Central Chinmaya
Mission Trust, 1978
(Elayath K) Dr. K.N.N. Elayath, The Ethics of Sankara, Department
of Sanskrit University of Calicut, 1990
(Covey S) First Things First, Stephen Covey with Roger Merrill &
Rebecca Merrill
(Covey S) The Seven habits of highly effective people, Stephen R.
Covey
(Blanchard and Bowles) Gung Ho!, Ken Blanchard / Sheldon Bowles
(Inscrp) The inscriptions at ‘Adi Shankara Nilayam’,
Chinmaya International Foundation (CIF),Kerala
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