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Chapter 1 - This matter of culture
J. Krishnamurti
I wonder if we have ever asked
ourselves what education means. Why do we go to school,
why do we learn various subjects, why do we pass examinations
and compete with each other for better grades?
What does this so-called education mean, and what is
it all about? This is really a very important question,
not only for the students, but also for the parents,
for the teachers, and for everyone who loves this earth.
Why do we go through the struggle to be educated? Is
it merely in order to pass some examinations and get
a job? Or is it the function of education to prepare
us while we are young to understand the whole process
of life? Having a job and earning one's livelihood is
necessary - but is that all? Are we being educated only
for that? Surely, life is not merely a job, an occupation;
life is something extraordinarily wide and profound,
it is a great mystery, a vast realm in which we function
as human beings. If we merely prepare ourselves to earn
a livelihood, we shall miss the whole point of life;
and to understand life is much more important than merely
to prepare for examinations and become very proficient
in mathematics, physics, or what you will.
So, whether we are teachers or
students, is it not important to ask ourselves why we
are educating or being educated? And what does life
mean? Is not life an extraordinary thing? The birds,
the flowers, the flourishing trees, the heavens, the
stars, the rivers and the fish therein - all this is
life. Life is the poor and the rich; life is the constant
battle between groups, races and nations; life is meditation;
life is what we call religion, and it is also the subtle,
hidden things of the mind - the envies, the ambitions,
the passions, the fears, fulfilments and anxieties.
All this and much more is life. But we generally prepare
ourselves to understand only one small corner of it.
We pass certain examinations, find a job, get married,
have children, and then become more and more like machines.
We remain fearful, anxious, frightened of life. So,
is it the function of education to help us understand
the whole process of life, or is it merely to prepare
us for a vocation, for the best job we can get?
What is going to happen to all
of us when we grow to be men and women? Have you ever
asked yourselves what you are going to do when you grow
up? In all likelihood you will get married, and before
you know where you are you will be mothers and fathers;
and you will then be tied to a job, or to the kitchen,
in which you will gradually
wither away. Is that all that your life is going to
be? Have you ever asked yourselves this question? Should
you not ask it? If your family is wealthy you may have
a fairly good position already assured, your father
may give you a comfortable job, or you may get richly
married; but there also you will decay, deteriorate.
Do you see?
Surely, education has no
meaning unless it helps you to understand the vast expanse
of life with all its subtleties, with its extraordinary
beauty, its sorrows and joys. You may earn degrees,
you may have a series of letters after your name and
land a very good job; but then what? What is the point
of it all if in the process your mind becomes dull,
weary, stupid? So, while you are young, must you not
seek to find out what life is all about? And is it not
the true function of education to cultivate in you the
intelligence which will try to find the answer to all
these problems? Do you know what intelligence is? It
is the capacity, surely, to think freely without fear,
without a formula, so that you begin to discover for
yourself what is real, what is true; but if you are
frightened you will never be intelligent. Any form of
ambition, spiritual or mundane, breeds anxiety, fear;
therefore ambition does not help to bring about a mind
that is clear, simple, direct, and hence intelligent.
You know, it is really very important
while you are young to live in an environment in which
there is no fear. Most of us, as we grow older, become
frightened; we are afraid of living, afraid of losing
a job, afraid of tradition, afraid of what the neighbours,
or what the wife or husband would say, afraid of death.
Most of us have fear in one form or another; and where
there is fear there is no intelligence. And is it not
possible for all of us, while we are young, to be in
an environment where there is no fear but rather an
atmosphere of freedom - freedom, not just to do what
we like, but to understand the whole process of living?
Life is really very beautiful, it is not this ugly thing
that we have made of it; and you can appreciate its
richness, its depth, its extraordinary loveliness only
when you revolt against everything - against organized
religion, against tradition, against the present rotten
society - so that you as a human being find out for
yourself what is true. Not to imitate but to discover
- that is education, is it not?
It is very easy to conform to what your society or your
parents and teachers tell you. That is a safe and easy
way of existing; but that is not living, because in
it there is fear, decay, death. To live is to find out
for yourself what is true, and you can do this only
when there is freedom, when there is continuous revolution
inwardly, within yourself.
But you are not encouraged to
do this; no one tells you to question, to find out for
yourself what God is, because if you were to rebel you
would become a danger to all that is false. Your parents
and society want you to live safely, and you also want
to live safely. Living safely generally means living
in imitation and therefore in fear. Surely, the function
of education is to help each one of us to live freely
and without fear, is it not? And to create an atmosphere
in which there is no fear requires a great deal of thinking
on your part as well as on the part of the teacher,
the educator.
Do you know what this means -
what an extraordinary thing it would be to create an
atmosphere in which there is no fear? And we must create
it, because we see that the world is caught up in endless
wars; it is guided by politicians who are always seeking
power; it is a world of lawyers, policemen and soldiers,
of ambitious men and women all wanting position and
all fighting each other to get it.
Then there are the so-called saints, the religious gurus
with their followers; they also want power, position,
here or in the next life. It is a mad world, completely
confused, in which the communist is fighting the capitalist,
the socialist is resisting both, and everybody is against
somebody, struggling to arrive at a safe place, a position
of power or comfort. The world is torn by conflicting
beliefs, by caste and class distinctions, by separative
nationalities, by every form of stupidity and cruelty
- and this is the world you are being educated to fit
into. You are encouraged to fit into the framework of
this disastrous society; your parents want you to do
that, and you also want to fit in.
Now, is it the function of education
merely to help you to conform to the pattern of this
rotten social order, or is it to give you freedom -
complete freedom to grow and create a different society,
a new world? We want to have this freedom, not in the
future, but now, otherwise we may all be destroyed.
We must create immediately an atmosphere of freedom
so that you can live and find out for yourselves what
is true, so that you become intelligent, so that you
are able to face the world and understand it, not just
conform to it, so that inwardly, deeply, psychologically
you are in constant revolt; because it is only those
who are in constant revolt that discover what is true,
not the man who conforms, who follows some tradition.
It is only when you are constantly inquiring, constantly
observing, constantly learning, that you find truth,
God, or love; and you cannot inquire, observe, learn,
you cannot be deeply aware, if you are afraid. So the
function of education, surely, is to eradicate, inwardly
as well as outwardly, this fear that destroys human
thought, human relationship and love.
Questioner: If all individuals
were in revolt, don't you think there would be chaos
in the world?
Krishnamurti: Listen to the question
first, because it is very important to understand the
question and not just wait for an answer.
The question is: if all individuals were in revolt,
would not the world be in chaos? But is the present
society in such perfect order that chaos would result
if everyone revolted against it? Is there not chaos
now? is everything beautiful, uncorrupted? Is everyone
living happily, fully, richly? Is man not against man?
Is there not ambition, ruthless competition? So the
world is already in chaos, that is the first thing to
realize. Don't take it for granted that this is an orderly
society; don't mesmerize yourself with words. Whether
here in Europe, in America or Russia, the world is in
a process of decay. If you see the decay, you have a
challenge: you are challenged to find a way of solving
this urgent problem. And how you respond to the challenge
is important, is it not? If you respond as a Hindu or
a Buddhist, a Christian or a communist, then your response
is very limited - which is no response at all. You can
respond fully, adequately only if there is no fear in
you, only if you don't think as a Hindu, a communist
or a capitalist, but as a total human being who is trying
to solve this problem; and you cannot solve it unless
you yourself are in revolt against the whole thing,
against the ambitious acquisitiveness on which society
is based. When you yourself are not ambitious, not acquisitive,
not clinging to your own security - only then can you
respond to the challenge and create a new world.
Questioner: To revolt, to learn,
to love - are these three separate processes, or are
they simultaneous?
Krishnamurti: Of course they are
not three separate processes; it is a unitary process.
You see, it is very important to find out what the question
means. This question is based on theory, not on experience;
it is merely verbal, intellectual, therefore it has
no validity. A man who is fearless, who is really in
revolt, struggling to find out what it means to learn,
to love - such a man does not ask if it is one process
or three. We are so clever with words, and we think
that by offering explanations we have solved the problem.
Do you know what it means to learn?
When you are really learning you are learning throughout
your life and there is no one special teacher to learn
from. Then everything teaches you - a dead leaf, a bird
in flight, a smell, a tear, the rich and the poor, those
who are crying, the smile of a woman, the haughtiness
of a man. You learn from everything, therefore there
is no guide, no philosopher, no guru. Life itself is
your teacher, and you are in a state of constant learning.
Questioner: It is true that society
is based on acquisitiveness and ambition; but if we
had no ambition would we not decay?
Krishnamurti: This is really a
very important question, and it needs great attention.
Do you know what attention is?
Let us find out. In a class room, when you stare out
of the window or pull somebody's hair, the teacher tells
you to pay attention. Which means what? That you are
not interested in what you are studying and so the teacher
compels you to pay attention - which is not attention
at all. Attention comes when you are deeply interested
in something, for then you love to find out all about
it; then your whole mind, your whole being is there.
Similarly, the moment you see that this question - if
we had no ambition, would we not decay? - is really
very important, you are interested and want to find
out the truth of the matter.
Now, is not the ambitious man
destroying himself? That is the first thing to find
out, not to ask whether ambition is right or wrong.
Look around you, observe all the people who are ambitious.
What happens when you are ambitious? You are thinking
about yourself, are you not? You are cruel, you push
other people aside because you are trying to fulfil
your ambition, trying to become a big man, thereby creating
in society the conflict between those who are succeeding
and those who are falling behind. There is a constant
battle between you and the others who are also after
what you want; and is this conflict productive of creative
living? Do you understand, or is this too difficult?
Are you ambitious when you love
to do something for its own sake? When you are doing
something with your whole being, not because you want
to get somewhere, or have more profit, or greater results,
but simply because you love to do it - in that there
is no ambition, is there? In that there is no competition;
you are not struggling with anyone for first place.
And should not education help you to find out what you
really love to do so that from the beginning to the
end of your life you are working at something which
you feel is worth while and which for you has deep significance?
Otherwise, for the rest of your days, you will be miserable.
Not knowing what you really want to do, your mind falls
into a routine in which there is only boredom, decay
and death. That is why it is very important to find
out while you are young what it is you really love to
do; and this is the only way to create a new society.
Questioner: In India, as in most
other countries, education is being controlled by the
government. Under such circumstances is it possible
to carry out an experiment of the kind you describe?
Krishnamurti: If there were no
government help, would it be possible for a school of
this kind to survive? That is what this gentleman is
asking. He sees everything throughout the world becoming
more and more controlled by governments, by politicians,
by people in authority who want to shape our minds and
hearts, who want us to think in a certain way. Whether
in Russia or in any other country, the tendency is towards
government control of education; and this gentleman
asks whether it is possible for a school of the kind
I am talking about to come into being without government
aid.
Now, what do you say? You know,
if you think something is important, really worth while,
you give your heart to it irrespective of governments
and the edicts of society - and then it will succeed.
But most of us do not give our hearts to anything, and
that it why we put this sort of question. If you and
I feel vitally that a new world can be brought into
being, when each one of us is in complete revolt inwardly,
psychologically, spiritually - then we shall give our
hearts, our minds, our bodies towards creating a school
where there is no such thing as fear with all its implications.
Sir, anything truly revolutionary
is created by a few who see what is true and are willing
to live according to that truth; but to discover what
is true demands freedom from tradition, which means
freedom from all fears.
Published by Harper & Row,
1964, ISBN 0-06-091609-5
© Krishnamurti Foundation Trust
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