Sunday, September 21, 2025

Motto of Sanatana Dharma

 

In the 2004 film Troy, the character of the brave prince Hector uttered these memorable lines while exhorting his soldiers to fight against a much stronger army.

All my life I've lived by a code and the code is simple: honor the gods, love your woman and defend your country. Troy is mother to us all. Fight for her!

 In the same vein, in India we would say this, although somewhat differently: 

The code of our Sanatana dharma is 1. to follow our father and guru, obey their orders, 2. to love and adore our mother, motherland, 3. to respect all beings, all paths and 4. to seek refuge of, and surrender to God. Hope you have noted the subtleties of the difference in attitude.

 Couple of examples come to mind – one of the Rama with the bow (Śrī Rāma or Rāma Dāśarathi) and the other the Rama with the axe (Paraśurāma).

 Sri Rama obeyed the order of his father unquestioningly and accepted to go the forest and that too just before he was to be coronated as the crown prince. When he broke the news to his mother, she wept and ordered him not to go. But he didn’t relent as the orders of father and guru have to be followed. Yet he loved his mother. After killing Ravana, when Lanka lay at his mercy and he could have ruled a much richer kingdom – he told Lakshmana –

 I am not tempted by the rich allures of Lanka,

for mother and motherland are even above Svarga

 And we know that he returned back to Ayodhya. On the way when he met Rishi Bharadvāja, the only thing about his family that he wished to know about were whether Bharata was ruling well and whether his mothers were alive.

 When he was unexpectedly asked to go to the forest, such was the incredible twist of Fate – yet Rama accepted it with equanimity, for he believed in surrendering to Fate and following one’s dharma – here dharma was to obey his father and king’s orders. Rama was God incarnated himself, yet he unflinchingly followed the dictates of karma. He showed us that one should believe in a higher power and accept one’s fate without demur, yet not be depressed, rather strive to do one’s dharma. Your job is to act, not to worry about the fruit – to paraphrase the oft-quoted message from Bhagavad Gita.

 Paraśurāma too loved his mother Renuka a lot, yet when his father ordered to execute Renuka (we will not get into the reasons here), he followed that order unquestioningly and killed his beloved mother. In accepting the order, he both obeyed his father as well as surrendered to God’s will (though he too was God incarnated). But when his pleased father gave him a boon, Parasurama, unhesitatingly asked first for the life of his mother to be restored.

 As love for mother, so is love for motherland. India is a nation blessed with deshabhaktas ever willing to sacrifice their life for the sake of motherland. Almost every day we lose a fearless soldier or two in the line of duty. They too follow the orders of the government and army, they too love their motherland and they too surrender their lives to God. Hence we have battle cries like “Raja Ramachandra ki jai” or “Durga Mata ki jai” or “Dada Kishan ki jai” so on and so forth.

 So to sign off: Obey your father and guru, Love your mother and motherland, Respect every being and Surrender to God – that’s the motto of this land called Bhārata