Twee dagen geleden was ik in China en sprak ik met een groep invloedrijke zakenleiders. Een van hen stelde me voor een uitdaging: "Je spreekt over Vinoba Bhave , de spirituele erfgenaam van Gandhi, en hoe hij 80.000 kilometer door India liep en mensen inspireerde om 5 miljoen hectare aan hun buren te schenken. Ja, het was misschien een ongekende prestatie in de geschiedenis van de mensheid, maar hoeveel mensen herinneren zich Vinoba vandaag de dag nog? Denk in plaats daarvan eens aan hoeveel mensen zich Steve Jobs en de erfenis die hij naliet nog herinneren." Vanuit het oogpunt van de impact op korte termijn is het een weloverwogen dilemma.
Forbes Magazine publiceerde zelfs een artikel dat een vergelijkbare vraag stelde: "Wie heeft de wereld meer veranderd: Bill Gates of Moeder Teresa?" En ze concludeerden: Bill Gates. Mijn antwoord aan deze industrieel was echter een waargebeurd verhaal dat zich een paar weken geleden afspeelde op een school in de buurt van Pune. Ik stelde hen dezelfde vraag: wie wil je worden als je groot bent – Bill Gates of Moeder Teresa? Normaal gesproken stemt zo'n 60-80% van hen op Bill Gates, maar hier zei een meerderheid Moeder Teresa. Dus vroeg ik verder. Waarom? Toen mensen hun hand opstaken, stak een verlegen jong meisje – misschien 11 jaar oud – haar hand op, aarzelde even en liet haar hand toen weer zakken. Toen ik dat zag, moedigde ik haar aan om te spreken, en haar reactie bracht me volledig van mijn stuk.
"Meneer, Bill Gates gebruikte de kracht van geld om de wereld te veranderen, en Moeder Teresa gebruikte de kracht van liefde om de wereld te veranderen. En ik denk dat liefde krachtiger is dan geld."
Einde verhaal. Het was zo simpel, duidelijk, elegant en perfect dat het geen verdere reacties van de klas vereiste.**
Het einde van dat verhaal is het begin van een gedurfde mogelijkheid. In lijn met het thema van onze bijeenkomst, is mijn onmogelijke droom, een droom die we ongetwijfeld allemaal delen, een wereld waarin we deze geest van liefde verheffen van de louter emotionele rangen van Bollywood naar de oneindig veel sterkere spirituele rangen van ons hart. Als mensheid hebben we het intellectuele quotiënt (IQ) en zelfs het emotionele quotiënt (EQ) begrepen, maar wat de wereld nu nodig heeft is CQ – Compassie Quotiënt. Het is een intelligentie van het hart. Meer dan tien jaar geleden ontdekten neurowetenschappers dat er fysiek gezien neuronen zijn, niet alleen in onze hersenen, maar ook in ons hart. Zoals Kabir en vele wijzen ons zo duidelijk vertellen: Open je hart en het kan het hele universum bevatten!
Onze grootste hoop om ons collectieve mededogen te ontwaken komt van - kinderen! Kinderen zoals die 11-jarige die intuïtief wist dat als je geraakt wordt door liefde, je bergen kunt verzetten. In gesprekken met Dr. Maria Montessori zei Gandhi het heel duidelijk: "Aan het begin van mijn leven ontdekte ik dat als ik de Waarheid wilde realiseren, ik de wet van de liefde moest gehoorzamen, zelfs ten koste van mijn leven. En omdat ik gezegend was met kinderen, ontdekte ik dat de wet van de liefde het beste via kleine kinderen geleerd kon worden."
Het bijzondere aan deze wet van liefde is dat ze een halfwaardetijd heeft die veel, veel langer is dan de wet van de materie. De impact ervan houdt generaties lang aan. Inspiratie van onze gadgets vervalt tot louter informatie, soms binnen enkele minuten. Maar wanneer diezelfde inspiratie ons wordt doorgegeven via iemand die diezelfde boodschap in daden omzet, activeert het de informatie in een context van vibrerende levendigheid. Het resoneert diep in ons bewustzijn. En daarom maakt de wet van de materie op de lange termijn geen schijn van kans tegen de wet van de liefde. Werk dat door liefde wordt gedreven, hoe klein en nederig ook, heeft een oneindig leven na de dood.
Een paar jaar geleden gingen mijn vrouw en ik op een wandelpelgrimstocht . We begonnen bij de Gandhi Ashram in Gujarat en liepen naar het zuiden; we aten wat er ook werd aangeboden en sliepen waar er ook maar een plek werd aangeboden. Het was een experiment dat ons leven radicaal veranderde. Onderweg kwamen we herhaaldelijk de rimpelingen van de wet van de liefde tegen, vooral van Gandhi en Vinoba, die vaak dezelfde paden hadden bewandeld. Tijdens een bezoek aan een klein dorpje in de buurt realiseerde Gandhi zich dat het zes uur 's avonds was – zijn gebedstijd. Hij maakte een wandeling op de boerderij, met een paar ouderen, maar hij ging daar meteen zitten om te bidden. Een beetje van zijn stuk gebracht verzamelden de ouderen een paar mensen die toevallig in de buurt waren.
Govardhan Patel was er zo een. Hij zat toen in groep 7, zijn moeder was overleden toen hij 2 was en zijn vader had polio; hij was niet zo geïnteresseerd in Gandhi. Maar het toeval wilde dat hij daar in stilte zat tijdens Gandhi's gebed. En er veranderde iets. Hij was aanwezig bij Gandhi's avondlezing en diezelfde dag besloot hij zijn hele leven aan de dienst te wijden. Toen we hem ontmoetten, was hij een rijpe 82 jaar jong en nog steeds springlevend. Hij had niet alleen zijn dorp, maar tientallen andere veranderd.
Er zijn veel verhalen zoals die van hem, bijvoorbeeld dat van Nagardas Shrimali. Op een treinstation, terwijl Gandhi net voorbijloopt, te midden van de mensenmassa, roept hij: "Bapu, wat moet ik met mijn leven doen?" Bapu zegt: "Ga jij je waarden maar aan andere kinderen zoals jij overbrengen." Shrimali was toen 16 jaar oud, en vanaf die dag tot aan zijn laatste ademtocht wijdde Nagardas – die "onaanraakbaar" was – zijn leven aan het onderwijs voor kinderen.
Authentieke inspiratie heeft inderdaad een lang leven na de dood. En, beste vrienden, we moeten deze wet van liefde in onszelf en in onze grootste hoop – onze kinderen, de volgende generatie – nieuw leven inblazen.
Ik wil eindigen met een waargebeurd verhaal.
Vele jaren geleden gaf mijn dierbare vriend Jacob Needleman les aan de San Francisco State University en stelde hij een vraag aan zijn klas van dertig studenten. "Hoe kunnen we goed zijn?" Een student stak zijn hand op en zei: "Ik heb goedheid geleerd van mijn vijfjarige zoon." Hij legt verder uit: "Mijn zoon en ik vierden Kerstmis in Mexico, terwijl hij enthousiast speelde met het speelgoed dat hij de avond ervoor had gekregen. Een kind uit de naburige sloppenwijk kwam langs en ik zei tegen mijn zoon dat hij hem een van zijn speelgoed moest geven. Na wat smeekbeden en tranen stemde hij uiteindelijk toe en pakte een speeltje. Zijn minst favoriete speeltje!" In een typisch Mufasa-Simba-moment uit De Leeuwenkoning kijkt de vader zijn vijfjarige in de ogen en zegt: "Nee, zoon, niet dat speeltje. Geef hem je favoriete speeltje."
Op dat moment protesteert de zoon instinctief, maar dan, kijkend naar de strenge maar meelevende blik van zijn vader, loopt hij met tegenzin naar de deur om zijn favoriete speeltje weg te geven. Natuurlijk bedacht de vader dat hij zijn zoon moest troosten als hij terugkwam; zie daar, tot zijn grote verbazing, komt de zoon met een sprongetje terug. Met een onschuld die een vijfjarige betaamt, kijkt hij zijn vader in de ogen en zegt: "Papa, dat was geweldig. Mag ik het nog een keer doen?"
Dit is de wet van de liefde en mogen we dit allemaal steeds opnieuw doen.
** Sinds het schrijven van dat artikel heeft Bill Gates zijn energie gestoken in het onderzoeken van andere dimensies van impact.
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It is NOT fair to say Bill Gates used ONLY the power of money to change the world. Love is what moves money to the right and human direction. How many rich people this world have? Where are they from what the Gates are doing?
Mother Theresa was once asked by a reporter why she didn't try to change the political system in India rather than perpetuate it with her charity. Her answer was so simple and I never forgot it. "That's not my job." I think each of us has a role. We can't do it all but whatever we are personally suppose to do may we each do it with the most Love we can spare...
Javed Akhtar has a lovely poem where he expresses the sentiment that he dare not ask Mother Teresa the question of why she never questions the system that keeps perpetuating the poverty when she accepts the donations from the leaders (such as Bill Gates) of the system that condemns so much of humanity for so long to such abject and inhumane poverty. The poet concludes that he dare not ask such a question for by asking it he will have to assume responsibility for his own role in the system. To walk and trample others or to not walk and be trampled..... such are the choices that so many of our modern systems confine us to.
Nice article. But, I don't understand the human need to compare, judge, classify, analyze and finally try and reduce down to a factoid or truth that is then expected to be unassailable.How do you measure impact objectively that every living being, atleast sentient beings can all sign off. Therefore, celebrate everything and be inspired by all those unknown, unsung heroes each of us encounter in our lives- if we only learn to look and learn.
If we dig deeper, we can find many negative points to worry about both Gates and yes Mother Theresa as well (Christopher Hitchens et al). I like Ana's views on this as well.
Both r great in my eyes&mind, but it is in different way, one was mainly for religious site, also so kind hearted her contribution for each person of the world, Another one is richest one also mankind oriented, i appreciate him in this regard, i m from bangladesh in asia, i m a social worker, i m sending him my web links, i m asking him for share with my little works, also m asking him to pay a visit my country, my works,http://www.helpingothers.cl...,
https://secure.avaaz.org/en...
Please see this
http://www.activistpost.com...
Bill Gates is a firm believer in eugenics. This is why he is pushing toxic vaccines in third world countries... he is no humanitarian. Sorry for the not-so-positive comment, but I don't like giving credit to people who mean the entire globe harm. I've read some horror stories about Mother Theresa, as well. But, I agree. We should all strive to make the world a better place. Thanks for sharing!
We are encouraged to leave this world just a little bit better than we found it. We are taught to leave the wood pile just a little bit bigger than we found it. I thank Bill and his wife for caring enough to share and leave this world just a little bit better.
Here's a good article that puts some balance into the Mother Teresa myth. I've spent some time in Calcutta and also found she is not a popular figure there.
http://mukto-mona.net/Artic...
I'm sure Bill Gates is no saint either, but at least some of the benefits of his work are visible among the criticisms. But the main point is that the author's walking pilgrimage across India is a great story! Always best to stick to what you know.
I read the walking pilgrimage and found it quite inspiring. But I think the mention of Mother Teresa is seriously misplaced. Her idea of love was that the people at her centres would find Jesus through suffering. Although they have changed since her death, she didn't even give them anti-malarials, and the vast donations were spent either on opening new centres that worked the same way at negligible cost or filling the coffers of Rome. When people offered to donate stuff that wasn't hard cash, they were generally refused. This has been documented in a number of books (for instance,
The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice), and admittedly some of them are anti-Catholic, but the data and reference material available as proof is mostly incontrovertible. With regards Bill Gates, I am sure his philanthropy started to improve his image (which was very poor at the time) and he was maybe tiring of Microsoft. But love him or hate him, the protocols he has set up for dispensing funds are carefully data-led. This means that charities are held very accountable (most charities in the world are not) and that funds - for instance to fight aids - are not hedged with religious paraphernalia such as GW Bush's disastrous funds-with-strings that prevented countries accepting help unless they promoted abstinence over condom use.
I am a great fan of dailygood.org, but tossing 'feelgood' names in the mix without first knowing the facts could considerably erode its credibility and effectiveness.
[Hide Full Comment]Truly, it's not an either or.
both of them did a great job in transforming the world. The inventions of Bill Gates help us cope with the world today and the compassion of Mother Teresa help us treat each other fairly. We need to emulate both of them instead of taking sides.
I hate the fact that they're comparing how good two fantastic people are...why! They both serve as icons for people of different positions in life that serve others in their own way. Mother Theresa gave all of herself to care for others. She was awesome. Bill Gates and his wife are fantastic people...how many rich guys genuinely care and spend so much time helping others and such a massive scale? Even if it were true that Gates had some agenda to push GMOs, vaccines, and Monsanto, many people don't consider this immoral. It's not like he is supporting Hitler and the genocide of the Children of Israel...so back off and grow up.
Actually its debatable over whether Mother Teresa actually did that much good, check out these two articles: http://www.patheos.com/blog...
[Hide Full Comment]http://motherteresawasafrau... As for the Bill Gates argument, the only thing he has ever said in regards to population control (as far as I'm aware) is that “The world today has 6.8 billion people. That’s heading up to about nine billion. Now if we do a really great job on new vaccines, health care, reproductive health services, we could lower that by perhaps 10 or 15 percent.” To me this simply suggests that naturally, as health care and reproductive services improve, the birth rate will decrease. I don't see it as a reason for mass hysteria and a reason to call him evil. I was once a believer in conspiracy theories and I would like to stress the importance of checking out both sides of an argument before you come to any conclusions. If you really want to know if Gates is a good person or not, read both the good and the bad things people have to say about him, then make up your mind.
I prefer to think that Bill Gates has both love and money.
Inspiring Article. One of my favorite quote I read in an elevator in the hospital many years ago is "Smile, it does not cost you anything, but you might get one back." Power of Love can grow exponentially.
Bill Melinda Gates foundation is following the footsteps of Rockfeller foundation (promoters of CGIAR & Syngenta - which controls - world's agriculture in many ways; Syngenta - GM seed co.). Bill Melinda Gates foundation has alloted significant portions of their so called "philanthropy" funds towards GM/GE propagation in Africa along with Rockefeller foundation and their Agriculture lending banks in Kenya and thru CGIAR arms also with Syngenta (a GM Seeds co.)
After 75 years of so called "philanthropy" the funds of Rockefeller foundation has not decreased a bit and ensured a luxury life and government patronage for the entire John-D familytree for many generations. Bill Gates' idea of "philanthropy" is no wonder similar - people simply got carried away by few peanuts given by him for Malaria, poverty aliviation - actual agenda is something else. The foundation invests heavily into the stocks of Bio-Technology firms...
I'm an Organic farmer for the past 4 years - formally I was a Wealth mangement technology guy - thus I have a good inside view of both.
[Hide Full Comment]Thank you for this Wonderful and inspiring article. May we all strive to be of service and to share whatever gift we have been given. Compassion Quotient is Imperative. Live by LOVE, indeed; it has positively impacted my life in ways beyond expressing. In 2005, I sold my home and possessions to create/facilitate a volunteer literacy project in Belize, I've donated programs for 33,340 students & trained 800 teachers to use their own indigenous stories in schools. This year the program is invited to Kenya, Ghana and India, I will go. I'm working hard to raise the funds, I am not sure How it will work out, but I have faith it Will because my goal is to build bridges between cultures, foster understanding and Compassion through our stories. I work often with children, they teach me more than I've ever taught them. We would do well to listen to children more for solutions to world problems and to see REAL compassion.
I also share FREE HUGS worldwide, the connections that occur in moment of embrace are powerful, deep and life altering. Thank you for remind us how important LOVE and Compassion are. HUG and <3, Kristin
[Hide Full Comment]Both charitable giving and loving are good. indeed, sharing money is a form of love. Jesus spoke about it a lot. 2nd only to describing the empire of God, money (and our relationship to it) was the subject that Jesus spoke about most!
Another worthy dynamic to consider is the alleged "justice vs. charity" matter. See: http://www.patheos.com/blog...
I wholeheartedly agree with Lisa, bad spelling or not. Bill Gates is handing out Monsanto nonreproductive genetically modified seeds (Frankinseeds) to millions around the world in the name of charity. Next planting season there will be no seeds to plant from this year's crop.
This is not coming from a place of love.
I have to admit I almost didn't open the article because Bill Gates name was in the heading, but I did and am so elated about the opportunity to embrace the amazing stories highlighted in the piece. I am also in total agreement with Lisa and her sentiments, and my perspective is that the Gates Foundation is in constant conflict with and embraces degrading reform and 'grant' practices toward public education teachers and our efforts to address the needs of all children in our care. And, his GMO ideas have made their way into the foods that are sacred to many of the indigenous peoples around the world, threatening the health of these precious bodies and souls, all in the name of 'progress' by inserting genetics for increased 'nutritional value' and implied 'increased yield'-in essence polluting an entire way of life.
This is a great article. It opens our eyes to possibility. It's unfortunate that we are compelled to judge and condem the efforts of others when they do not line up with our own beliefs. So many people are helped by efforts we do not agree with. There will never be a time when we get it perfect so we should always be thankful that people at least try.
Very touching. All this leaves us with a sense of confidence and hope for Humanity.
Nipun, I enjoyed your article today. It reminded me of how, in their later years, Mother Theresa and John D. Rockefeller looked very much alike, with deep lines in their weathered faces. The difference was that JDR's eyes were the eyes of a dead man: the richest man on earth had eyes with no life or vitality, only cold calculation. MT's eyes were alive and engaging, even tho she'd seen enough human suffering to drive anyone else mad. Who died richer?
Where I would give a tip of the hat to Gates, tho, is that he is looking for root causes of poverty, while MT would never touch that area. She would treat the poor, but never concerned herself with the structural causes of poverty.
And a final thought, the irony and the tragedy of so many institutional religions is that while the founders taught the law of love, in time the institutions are often taken over by lawyers and bureaucrats who practice a love of the law.
Too
much credence is given to the relevance of that initial question posed
by the Indian industrialist. Taken to it's logical extreme, the
question could well be "Who has changed the world more: Adolf Hitler, or
Mother Teresa?"
It's absurd, of COURSE. The question to be contemplated by our
children /youth (or at least suggested for consideration by us) is WHAT
do you want to change. How MUCH is irrelevant, and as you see can
become quite absurd.
Too much credence is given to the relevance of that initial question posed by the indian industrialist. Taken to it's logical extreme, the question could well be "Who has changed the world more: Adolf Hitler, or Mother Teresa?"
It's absurd, of COURSE. The question to be contemplated by our children /youth (or at least suggested for consideration by us) is WHAT do you want to change. How MUCH is irrelevant, and as you see can become quite absurd.
Each of us has the opportunity to make a difference. Thank you for the article, Nipun. I enjoy reading your articles.
I agree with Lisa. Gates is into population control, not saving or helping humanity. Do the research and see.
Jobs had tumor in shape of his ear piece when he died..that is legacy they leave as accumulating wealth without accepting accountability is trashing planet, health, well being...Gates and Allen, Jobs are known because they supplied energy to the old paradigm of wealth making over all ...and the trajectory becomes nihilistic (M Meade) so too their legacy. Think about the press and who sponsors it, governments etc...waking to real values before there is nothing to save is the most important thing we can do, now before we really blow it as a species we can be so much more...how sad if we let the old paradigm define us.
Mother Teresa experienced 40 years
of darkness and doubt, yet she unwaveringly carried on her mission.
I am sorry to say this but Bill Gates promotes things that are distroying our invironment and the health of us and our children. GMO's, toxic vacines....Monsanto. He is saving alot of taxes on his giving indeavors yet human life should be at the front of his motivation that would be in the love of giving.
To understand the greatness of Mister gates, simply Google " YouTube gates vaccines".
If
Bill and Melinda Gates were not inspired by compassion they might be like so many
other billionaires, including many in India who do not use their resources to
make a difference in this world. Compassion and thoughtful allocation of
resources can do enormous good. The world should be grateful that enormous
generosity of spirit and compassion are prompting Bill and Melinda Gates to use
their resources for the betterment of the people of our world.
Beautiful - and let's give Bill Gates credit - he is giving his money and energies from a place of love.
I disagree that Bill Gates doesn't use love too. His methods may differ, he combined heart and mind using the resources he understands to achieve far reaching results. God creates diversity, wouldn't the world be better served by avoiding the polarizing views this article uses to make a point. They each gave in a way that was amazing, I am grateful that these great souls came to serve life.
Thank you for sharing , Mr Mehta , that was inspirational , The Power of Love .