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Sarvodaya

 

Sri Lanka based reform movement that emphasizes a return to traditional village life based on Buddhist principles as the cure for the corruption and materialism of modern urban societies. It is often known by the name Sarvodaya Shramadana. Sarvodaya means ‘the welfare of all’, and shramadana means ‘donation of work’, in the sense of mutual collaboration and assistance with practical projects. Typical projects include digging wells, building roads, founding schools, providing medical facilities, and teaching new techniques of farming and animal husbandry to villagers. A lay Buddhist movement in which monks may participate, Sarvodaya was founded by A. T. Ariyaratne in 1958. Although centred on Sri Lanka it has been influential in promoting Engaged Buddhism in both the developed and developing world. Around one-third of Sri Lankan villages (some 8,000 or so) are affiliated, but the movement has remained decentralized working through Village Awakening Councils (samhiti) which take their own financial and policy decisions. The movement is a response to the charge that Buddhism lacks a ‘social gospel’, and marks a return to the traditional symbiotic relationship between the village and the monastery (vihāra) in which the secular and religious domains go hand in hand.

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Sarvodaya (Devanagari: सर्वोदय, Gujarati: સર્વોદય) is a term meaning 'universal uplift' or 'progress of all'. The term was first coined by Mohandas Gandhi as the title of his 1908 translation of John Ruskin's tract on political economy, Unto This Last, and Gandhi came to use the term for the ideal of his own political philosophy.[1] Later Gandhians, like the Indian nonviolence activist Vinoba Bhave, embraced the term as a name for the social movement in post-independence India which strove to ensure that self-determination and equality reached all strata of India society.

Contents

Origins and Gandhi's political ideal

Gandhi received a copy of Ruskin's Unto This Last from a British friend, Mr.Henry Polak, while working as a lawyer in South Africa in 1904. In his Autobiography, Gandhi remembers the twenty-four hour train ride to Durban(from when he first read the book, being so in the grip of Ruskin's ideas that he could not sleep at all: "I determined to change my life in accordance with the ideals of the book."[2] As Gandhi construed it, Ruskin's outlook on political-economic life extended from three central tenets:

  1. That the good of the individual is contained in the good of all.
  2. That a lawyer's work has the same value as the barber's in as much as all have the same right of earning their livelihood from their work.
  3. That a life of labour, i.e., the life of the tiller of the soil and the handicraftsman is the life worth living.

The first of these I knew. The second I had dimly realized. The third had never occurred to me. Unto This Last made it clear as daylight for me that the second and third were contained in the first. I arose with the dawn, ready to reduce these principles to practice.[3]

Four years later, in 1908, Gandhi rendered a paraphrased translation of Ruskin's book into his native tongue of Gujarati. He entitled the book Sarvodaya, a compound (sandhi) he invented from two Sanskrit roots: sarva (all) and udaya (uplift) -- "the uplift of all" (or as Gandhi glossed it in his autobiography, "the welfare of all").

Although inspired by Ruskin, the term would for Gandhi come to stand for a political ideal of his own stamp. (Indeed Gandhi was keen to distance himself from Ruskin's more conservative ideas.[4]) The ideal which Gandhi strove to put into practice in his ashrams was, he hoped, one that he could persuade the whole of India to embrace, becoming a light to the other nations of the world. The Gandhian social ideal encompassed the dignity of labor, an equitable distribution of wealth, communal self-sufficiency and individual freedom.[5]

Sarvodaya movement

Gandhi's ideals have lasted well beyond the achievement of one of his chief projects, Indian independence (swaraj). His followers in India (notably, Vinoba Bhave) continued working to promote the kind of society that he envisioned, and their efforts have come to be known as the Sarvodaya Movement. Anima Bose has referred to the movement's philosophy as "a fuller and richer concept of people's democracy than any we have yet known." Sarvodaya workers associated with Vinoba, J. P. Narayan, Dada Dharmadhikari, Dhirendra Mazumdaar, Shankarrao Deo, K. G. Mashruwala undertook various projects aimed at encouraging popular self-organisation during the 1950s and 1960s, including Bhoodan and Gramdan movements. Many groups descended from these networks continue to function locally in India today.

Further reading

  • The Sarvodaya Movement : Gandhian Approach to Peace and Non Violence, by S. Narayanasamy. New Delhi, Mittal Publications, 2003. ISBN 81-7099-877-8.

See also

References

  1. ^ Bondurant, Joan. Conquest of Violence: The Gandhian Philosophy of Conflict. (Princeton, 1958) p 156.
  2. ^ Autobiography, part IV, chapter xviii.
  3. ^ Ibid.
  4. ^ See Bondurant (1958), pp. 156-159.
  5. ^ Bondurant (1958), chapter 5.

External links


 
 
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Buddhism Dictionary. A Dictionary of Buddhism. Copyright © 2003, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sarvodaya" Read more