このニュースを聞いてからまだ数時間しか経っていません。私の親友であり、インスピレーションの源でもあり、ある人から「愛の戦士」と呼ばれていた人が、昨夜アフマダーバード郊外で交通事故に遭い亡くなりました。ラグ・マクワナ、あるいは地元ではラグ・パラティという愛称で親しまれていた彼は、三輪バイクで親戚の家に向かう途中、29歳という若さでこの世を去りました。私を知っている方、あるいはこのブログに関わってくださった方のほとんどは、ラグの物語をご存知でしょう。彼はわずか1歳の時に両足にポリオを発症し、両手を使って地面を歩く生活を送るしかありませんでした。このような状況で、どのような精神状態になるのか想像するのは難しいでしょう。憤り、否定的な感情、そして諦めの気持ちが湧き上がるでしょう。あるいは、私たちがそうするように条件付けられているのかもしれません。しかし、ラグはそうではありませんでした。ラグーは異端児だった。マズローの理論や「与える」心構えを持つには「少なくともこれだけは必要」という会話が渦巻く中で、ラグーは異端児だった。ラグーが異端児だったのは、これらの理論のどれも考慮していないような何か――消えることのない、定義できない、そして時に非合理的な「信仰」という価値観――を軸に生きていたからだ。20歳でラグーは村を離れ、社会貢献の人生を送ることを決意した。ポケットにはたった300ルピーしかなかったが、その信仰は揺るぎない。様々な偶然の出会いを通して、彼はガンジー・アシュラムのエコシステムに身を置き、やがて
スラム街の女性や家庭に奉仕してきました。彼の歩みと寛大な行為に関する話は枚挙にいとまがありません。しかし、彼との最も大きな転機となった瞬間のいくつかは、些細な会話を通して訪れました。ここ数年、私はしばしば、自分が不足していると感じることがありました。友人や家族と話した後、どうやって自分を支えていけばいいのか自問自答していました。そんな時、必然的にラグー・バイに出会い、彼と腰を据えて話をしました。そのような交流の中で何が起こるのか、説明するのは難しいことです。私には銀行残高、知的資本、スキル、そして私を支えてくれる家族構造があり、すぐ隣には身体能力が限られ、数日しか持たない銀行残高しかなく、家族からの支援はほとんどない男性がいました。それでも、彼の輝く瞳と輝く歯からは、想像できる限りの最も美しい意図が伝わってきました。「シッダールタ・バイ[兄弟]、私たちはどのようにすればもっと友人に奉仕できるでしょうか?」
彼と知り合ってから3年間、私たちは信仰の冒険を共に経験してきました。親しい友人の中には、彼を動かす原動力を垣間見るために、何時間も彼と一緒にスラム街をドライブした人もいます。組織のリーダー、知識人、スラム街の溝に横たわる怪我をした犬、彼の後部座席で元気いっぱいの子供たち…誰もが彼の素晴らしいドライブに乗ったことがあるでしょう。「テクラ」と呼ばれるスラム街の狭い泥道を疾走する彼は、あらゆるものを受け入れていました。高齢の女性たちに配給する食べ物をバイクに積み込み、ガタガタと音を立てるたびに、人々は笑顔で手を振って彼を応援しました。時には、私が「ミニ巡礼」と呼ぶ、お金も電話も持たずに歩く旅に出かけました。ラグーは楽器を手に三輪車に乗り、私は歩きました。そんな散歩を通して、彼の人生の秘訣を見ることができました。床にしゃがみ込む彼は、常に見晴らしの良い場所にいました。まるで、彼はあらゆる状況や人々に謙虚に接することを強いられたかのようでした。そのおかげで、彼はすべての人の中に神性を見出すことができました。資金提供者から、日曜日に彼が奉仕した子供たちまで、誰もが神の顕現、あるいは「天上の存在」――彼が使った言葉は「ウパル・ワラ」でした。
かつて、彼の数々の講演会から帰る途中、二人ともお腹が空いていました。もうお昼を過ぎていて、その日はどこで食事をするか決めていませんでした。アシュラム通りのマクドナルドの外に車が停まっているのを見つけました。私はすぐに身震いしました。このゴールデンアーチは、私が認めない価値観のすべてを象徴しているように思えたからです。しかし、ラグーは違います。彼はそれを見て、無邪気に「このマクドナルドのことはよく聞いていたよ。ここで食べよう」と言いました。私は店に入り、ラグーは両手で後ろを歩きました。明らかに、マクドナルドのスタッフや客はこんな風には慣れていません。ラグーと私は、他に類を見ない組み合わせでした。平日の午後だったので、列に並んですぐに料理を受け取りました。テーブルに着くと、私は部屋を見回し、皆の注目が私たちに集まるのを見ました。しかし、ラグーはそれに慣れていました。人々が、彼の人生をどう生きているのかと、しばしば同情の視線を向けてくるのです。しかし彼は、まるで「君が僕を見て苦しんでいるのは分かるよ。でも正直に言うと、僕はとても幸せだよ :)」とでも言いたげに、優雅にそれを握りしめていた。すると、客の一人が勇気を振り絞って近づいてきた。彼が近づいてくるのを見て、僕は少しでも彼を安心させようとした。すぐにラグーを紹介し、彼の仕事について少し話した。私たちの会話に気づいた客たちが、次々と集まってきた。次第に、清掃員やマクドナルドの店員までもが私たちの輪に加わってきた。そして、様々な話が交わされた。
スラム街でのラグーのこと、彼が奉仕した女性たち、そして彼がトゥルシーの苗木を贈った家々について。彼がいかに奉仕の精神で生き、彼の「ウパール・ワラ」が常に彼を気遣っていたか。私は一歩下がって驚きました。そこはマクドナルドだったのです!ラグーの存在が、そこを一種の寺院に変えていました。周りを見渡すと、彼の生き方に感銘を受けた人々の姿が目に入りました。これこそがラグーの真の働きでした。それは、地域の老婦人に提供した食事や、スラム街の家に何百本ものトゥルシーの苗木を贈ったことだけにとどまりませんでした。彼の精神に触れた何千人もの人々に及んでいたのです。世界中からメールやFacebookの投稿が殺到するにつれ、彼の真の影響力がどのようなものであったのかが垣間見えてきます。
これを書いている今も、彼の死を受け止めきれずに苦しんでいます。私の心は、最も明白な疑問へと向かわずにはいられません。「なぜ善良な人々に悪いことが起こるのか?」「なぜ人生の多くを他者の苦しみを和らげるために捧げた魂が、こんなふうに死んでしまったのか?」「なぜ彼はあの日、高速道路で自転車に乗らなければならなかったのか?」。私たちを攻撃しようとする敵意に満ちた世界を想像し始めると、混乱の渦に巻き込まれる自分がいるのが分かります。するとすぐに、ラグーの声が内から聞こえてきました。彼の目は輝き、微笑みながら言いました。「シッダールタ兄さん、すべての答えを知ることはできません。ただ、『ウパール・ワラ』が私たちのために何か美しいものを用意してくれていると信じなければなりません。私たちはただ、人生という美しい舞台で、自分の役割を演じ続けるだけです。」
ジャイ・ジャガット(大地に栄光あれ)。
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I am honored..that my quotation is part of this beautiful man's life... it gladdens me to know that such wonderful people exist.. and his love has transformed me...
Some remembrances…
Belaben & Mia shared a poem by Ellen Brenneman:
“His journey's just begun
Don't think of him as gone away
his journey's just begun,
life holds so many facets
this earth is only one.
Just think of him as resting
from the sorrows and the tears
in a place of warmth and comfort
where there are no days and years.
Think how he must be wishing
that we could know today
how nothing but our sadness
can really pass away.
And think of him as living
in the hearts of those he touched...
for nothing loved is ever lost
and he was loved so much.”
And, I thought I’d share:
To Raghubhai, my Ahmedabadi brother, a brother like
no other,
I'll miss your smiles, Good Morning!s, Namaste!s,
Kemcho?s, Mazama?s, Aap kese ho?s, Aap kaha par ho?s...I know these are all
from the outer senses, and, to some extent, selfish, as you're likely in a
higher, free-er, lighter place now...your spirit, hugs, love, care, compassion,
empathy, friendship and brotherhood lives on.
You allowed me to play the role of Didi, even
though I'm the youngest of my siblings. And many times, you were like an older
brother to me, even though younger in age, showing me the ropes in Ahmedabad
and supporting me...even though you're the youngest of your siblings (if I
remember correctly).
I hope your spirit touches as many, if not more,
lives as you inspired when in the body of Raghubhai. My best of love and
blessings to you, wherever you are.
You taught me about love, from the Bada Dil (Big
Heart) you have-- more than the mere romantic type, a love that knows no
boundaries, goes beyond judgments and preferences, likes and dislikes, a love
that simply is and exists (in, and around, all of us).
It's probably the best lesson and person I could have
learned this from. You’re one of the best teachers I had, of how to live and
serve selflessly. I keep thinking unconditionally
giving can be a complete spiritual path by itself.
You'll always be my Ahmedabadi brother and always
live in my heart. I love you bhaiya.
And this is dedicated to you (my love for you may
be about the same as the love you shared in nearly every interaction I noticed
you had with the world):
http://www.servicespace.org...
Another poem:
“Kindness
Before you know what kindness
really is
you must lose things,
feel the future dissolve in a moment
like salt in a weakened broth.
What you held in your hand,
what you counted and carefully saved,
all this must go so you know
how desolate the landscape can be
between the regions of kindness.
How you ride and ride
thinking the bus will never stop,
the passengers eating maize and chicken
will stare out the window forever.
Before you learn the tender gravity of kindness,
you must travel where the
Indian in a white poncho lies dead
by the side of the road.
You must see how this could be you,
how he too was someone
who journeyed through the night
with plans and the simple breath
that kept him alive.
Before you know kindness
as the deepest thing inside,
you must know sorrow
as the other deepest thing.
You must wake up with sorrow.
You must speak to it till your voice
catches the thread of all sorrows
and you see the size of the cloth.
Then it is only kindness
that makes sense anymore,
only kindness that ties your shoes
and sends you out into the day
to mail letters and purchase bread,
only kindness that raises its head
from the crowd of the world to say
it is I you have been looking for,
and then goes with you every where
like a shadow or a friend.”
--Naomi Shihab Nye
And some quotes that describe how you lived:
“The fragrance always remains on the hand that
gives the rose.” –Gandhi
"Never doubt that a small
[Hide Full Comment]group of inspired volunteers can change the world. In fact, it’s the only thing
that ever has.” --Margaret Mead
I was blessed to spend Christmas Day in December 2013 riding around with Raghubhai as he delivered meals to the slum community in Ahmedebad. Everyone loved him, and it was obvious why--he had perhaps the purest heart of anyone I have ever met. I could tell he was working so hard, delivering two meals a day to the community, so I asked him if he ever took a day off on the weekends or any vacation time. He looked at my as though my question were strange and said, "The people I feed can't take a vacation from eating, so I can't take a vacation from serving them." He was so sincere and selfless in his response. Raghubai was a living example of Gandhi's message.I will always remember him and I am deeply saddened by his passing. --Heidi
My dear Brother, such good people are not actually taken away from us but it is that God (Uparwalla) realizes that his mission to awaken people like you and me have been fulfilled and that now it's our turn to continue what had been left undone. Don't grief his loss! His presence will be there forever in your beautiful heart.!
I did not know of this young man; yet I am weeping and grieving for his friends, those he served, and the whole world at his loss. May God fill the void left by his passing and move all who read of his life to emulate his love in their own corners of the world.
I am sorry for the loss of your friend (and teacher.) You are right, his legacy will not die. Wishing you peace as you grieve.
I cant believe this, Im crying as I type having only posted this on facebook yesterday and finding out how I could help financially to the organisations that helped Raghu. One can only hope that his food distribtuion work will be continued somehow . I even bought a Tulsi basil online last night o add to my garden.:( Bless you Raghu and may you now have the run of the heavens.
I tired controlling the trickle but just couldn't ... I let it pass down my cheek ... No words to say ... Thanks for sharing this ... May his soul Rest in Peace ... May his Light dwell among us who read his efforts to make this world a beautiful place for the poor and the needy ...
It didn't seem possible at first. I read the news of Raghubhai's passing late last night. I'd just gotten up from meditation, and the words I was reading on the screen made no sense. How could he be gone, just like that? Raghu whose flashing smile I can still see so clearly when I close my eyes. Raghu who made a playful game of sneaking up next to us to touch our feet, before darting away, so quick and graceful on his hands, his incapacitated legs folded neatly beneath him. Raghu who could sing to God with a voice strong-winged as a bird, Raghu who found wholeness in broken places and learned to serve with a love that defied physical limitations. In the brief time I spent with him, he made me want to be a better human being. And now, though I didn't know him nearly as well as many others did, like all his brothers and sisters in service I feel a gaping Raghu-shaped hole in the universe.
After reading the news I sat down in tears, on the cushion I'd just risen from. And as I began to meditate a small voice inside said quietly, "He knew he was here to love and serve. He loved. He served. He lived a full life. Who are you crying for?" And I realized that I was crying for me and all the many of us who simply wish we'd had more time in a world that had him in it. And in that moment there was no grief only a wordless sense of awe and gratitude for the life he'd lived.
One of my favorite memories of Raghu is from several years ago. And it has nothing to do with his countless acts of compassion or his heroic generosity. It was a moment that gave me a glimpse of his whimsical side and his sense for the poetic. We were a big group meditating at Sughad, sitting together under the night sky. At the end of the hour we opened our eyes and went around in a circle sharing reflections. When it was his turn Raghu spoke in Gujarati and his voice was full of laughter. He said before closing his eyes he'd looked up at the sky and seen the crescent moon with a single star below it. "And all through the meditation I was thinking how perfect it would be if the star had been positioned just a little higher. Then at the end when I opened my eyes there it was right where I'd wanted it." We all looked up then, at the beautiful sight of a bright single star cradled in the silver curve of the moon. "I really need to learn how to focus better when I'm meditating," Raghu said smiling sheepishly. And I remember thinking then that he must have the soul of an artist or a poet. Because who else imagines rearranging the stars like that? There are other memories of course. Of sitting down to a meal with him and hearing from someone else how that very morning he'd stopped a woman from committing suicide simply by stopping and listening to her tell her story and giving her a cup of chai. There's the memory of weaving through the slums riding triples with my sister on his scooter laden with gleaming tiffin-boxes. The way I remember it, it was like riding with royalty. Children and puppies and grandmothers and schoolteachers and shopkeepers in tumbledown shacks all seemed to know him -- they came running out of their homes, lifted their hands in greeting, or shouted out his name like he was one of their own. And he was. I remember marveling at how well he knew the lives he served. How he stopped to touch the feet of one, and to check on the health of another, how he delighted the kids and how he never just dropped off food at someone's doorstep, but always went inside and sat down as if this one person was the only person on earth that he needed to be with.
He had such humor and dignity. I think of his straight-backed poise, and his way of looking directly at people when he talked to them. I think of his ready smile and the nobility of his heart. Noble. The word fits him well. He was truly a Noble Friend to all of us who knew him. He was one of those rare people who truly understood that in helping others we help ourselves, and in healing others it is we who heal.
He was such a luminous star in our lives. And I can't help thinking that now maybe he's just changed his position a little -- to find that perfect place in the sky.
[Hide Full Comment]I feel a heaviness and moist tenderness around my eyes reading about Raghu's approach to life. May my life and his cross paths in future incarnations so that I can learn more from him.
Thank you for sharing another beautiful story of giving and kindness. Raghu's memory & his legacy will live for a very long time. Hugs to you all. If anyone wants to join this Friday/Saturday it's our 4th Annual Worldwide Free Hugs (celebrate Valentine's Day and <3) Here's the link on FB:
https://www.facebook.com/ev...
Thank you Raghu! I intend that I serve in unconditional love for the Highest Good of All. So be it and so it is!
he gave all he had to give and now he is being taken care of...so touched to hear his story and sad for the loss as well...
I, too, worry about my future... especially as an old woman. Will I have enough money, will I be weak, ill and dependent, will I have chronic pain, will I be alone and lonely?..I struggle with my faith in the One Above. Superhero Raghu instructs me and reassures me that all will be as it should. Simply serve and practice gratitude.
I'll do my best to remember him. Thank you for introducing him to me.
Thank you . Truly inspirational to see how Raghu lived his life and left a legacy behind for others to follow . Love & service in it's purest form .
As I read this I see that Raghu loved life. Life loved him right back. He was young at his death but did more for his world than many people who live what we call "lucky long lives". What was missing for him, or in him? Can we ask, not "How long can I live?", but just "How can I live?"