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Krishnamurti on Non-violence
You see, we realize that we must change. Let us take as an example violence
and brutality - those are facts. Human beings are brutal and violent; they
have built a society which is violent in spite of all that the religions
have said about loving your neighbor and loving God. All these things are
just ideas, they have no value whatsoever, because man remains brutal,
violent and selfish. And being violent, he invents the opposite, which is
non-violence. Please go into this with me. Man is trying all the time to
become non-violent. So there is conflict between what is, which is violence,
and what should be, which is nonviolence. There is conflict between the two.
That is the very essence of wastage of energy.
As long as there is duality between what is and what
should be - man trying to become something else, making an effort to achieve
what `should be' - that conflict is waste of energy. As long as there is
conflict between the opposites, man has not enough energy to change. Why
should I have the opposite at all, as nonviolence, as the ideal? The ideal
is not real, it has no meaning, it only leads to various forms of hypocrisy;
being violent and pretending not to be violent. Or if you say you are an
idealist and will eventually become peaceful, that is a great pretence, an
excuse, because it will take many years for you to be without violence -
indeed it may never happen. In the meantime you are a hypocrite and still
violent. So if we can, not in abstraction but actually, put aside completely
all ideals and only deal with the fact - which is violence - then there is
no wastage of energy. This is really very important to understand, it isn't
a particular theory of the speaker.
As long as man lives in the corridor of opposites he must
waste energy and therefore he can never change. So with one breath you could
wipe away all ideologies, all opposites. Please go into it and understand
this; it is really quite extraordinary what takes place. If a man who is
angry pretends or tries not to be angry, in that there is conflict. But if
he says, `I will observe what anger is, not try to escape or
rationalize it,' then there is energy to understand and put an end to anger.
If we merely develop an idea that the mind must be free from conditioning,
there will remain a duality between the fact and what `should be.' Therefore
it is a waste of energy. Whereas if you say, `I will find out in what manner
the mind is conditioned,' it is like going to the surgeon when one has
cancer. The surgeon is concerned with operating and removing the disease.
But if the patient is thinking about what a marvellous time he is going to
have afterward, or is frightened about the operation, that is waste of
energy.
The Flight of the Eagle Chapter 4 1st Public Talk Amsterdam 1969
When we use time as a means of acquiring a quality, a virtue, or a
state of being, we are merely postponing or avoiding what is; and I think it
is important to understand this point. Greed or violence causes pain,
disturbance, in the world of our relationship with another, which is
society; and being conscious of this state of disturbance, which we term
greed or violence, we say to ourselves, "I will get out of it in time. I
will practise non-violence, I will practise non-envy, I will practise
peace". Now, you want to practise non-violence because violence is a state
of disturbance, conflict, and you think that in time you will gain nonviolence and overcome the conflict. So, what is actually happening? Being
in a state of conflict, you want to achieve a state in which there is no
conflict.
Now, is that state of no-conflict the result of time, of a duration?
Obviously not. Because, while you are achieving a state of nonviolence, you
are still being violent and are therefore still in conflict. So, our problem
is, can a conflict, a disturbance, be overcome in a period of time, whether
it be days, years, or lives? What happens when you say, "I am going to
practise nonviolence during a certain period of time"? The very practice
indicates that you are in conflict, does it not? You would not practise if
you were not resisting conflict; and you say the resistance to conflict is
necessary in order to overcome conflict and for that resistance you must
have time. But the very resistance to conflict is itself a form of conflict.
You are spending your energy in resisting conflict in the form of what you
call greed, envy, or violence, but your mind is still in conflict. So, it is
important to see the falseness of the process of depending on time as a
means of overcoming violence, and thereby be free of that process. Then you
are able to be what you are: a psychological disturbance which is violence
itself.
1948 6th Public Talk, Bangalore, India
Krishnamurti: The problem is: by nature, in my thoughts, in the way
I live, I am a violent human being, aggressive, competitive, brutal and all
the rest of it - I am that. And I say to myself, `How am I to live
differently,' because violence breeds tremendous antagonism and destruction
in the world. I want to understand it and be free of it, live differently.
So I ask myself, `What is this violence in me?' Is it frustration, because I
want to be famous and I know I can't be, therefore I hate people who are
famous?' I am jealous and I want to be non-jealous and I hate this state of
jealousy with all its anxiety and fear and annoyance, therefore I suppress
it. I do all this and I realize it is a way of violence.
Now I want to find out if that is inevitable; or if there is a way of
understanding it, looking at it, coming to grips with it so that I shall
live differently. So I must find out what violence is. Questioner: It's a
reaction. Krishnamurti: You are too quick. Does that help me to under: stand
the nature of my violence? I want to go into it, I want to find out. I see
that as long as there is a duality - that is, violence and nonviolence -
there must be conflict and therefore more violence. As long as I impose on
the fact that I am stupid the idea that I must be clever, there is the
beginning of violence. When I compare myself with you, who are much more
that I am, that's also violence. Comparison, suppression, control - all
those indicate a form of violence. I am made like that. I compare, I
suppress, I am ambitious. Realizing that, how am I to live nonviolently? I
want to find a way of living without all this strife.
Questioner: Isn't it the `me' and the self that is against the fact?
Krishnamurti: We'll come to that. See the fact, see what is happening first.
My whole life, from when I was educated till now, has been a form of
violence. The society in which I live is a form of violence. Society tells
me to conform, accept, do this, not do that, and I follow it. That is a form
of violence. And when I revolt against society, that also is a form of
violence (revolt in the sense that I don't accept the values which society
has laid down). I revolt against it and then create my own values, which
become the pattern; and that pattern is imposed on others or on myself,
which becomes another form of violence. I live that kind of life. That is: I
am violent. Now what shall I do?
Questioner: First, you should ask yourself why you don't want to be violent
anymore. Krishnamurti: Because I see what violence has done in the world as
it is; wars outwardly, conflict within, conflict in relationship.
Objectively and inwardly I see this battle going on and I say, `Surely there
must be a different way of living.'
The Flight of the Eagle Chapter 9 1st Public Dialogue Saanen
1969
A man who is pursuing an ideal can never know a new mind, and that
is the curse on this land. We are all idealists wanting to conform to
nonviolence, to this, or to that. We are all imitators. That is why we have
never a fresh mind, a mind which is completely, totally new, which is yours,
not Sankara's, not of Marx, not of somebody else. That total newness, that
complete state of mind, can only come into being when there is no
experiencer and no experience; that state is there only when you can die
totally to each day, to everything that you have gathered psychologically.
Then only is
there a possibility of a complete regeneration. That is not an
impossibility, that is not a rhetoric statement. It is possible if you think
it out, go into it deeply; that is why it is important to know, to listen to
what is truth. But you cannot listen to what is truth when your mind is not
silent. If your mind is continually asking, demanding, begging, wanting this
or that, putting this away and gathering that, such a mind is not a quiet
mind.
Just be quiet, be still. Look at the trees, the birds, the sky, the beauty,
the rich qualities of human existence. Just watch silently and be aware.
Into that silence comes that something which is not measurable, which is not
of time.
1954 1st Public Talk, Bombay
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