Sri Sathya Sai Speaks, Vol 14 (1978 - 80)
49
The four brothers

Contents 
RAAMA is a Name sweeter than all the sweet things in Nature, when imbibed alone or together.
It can never cloy on the tongue or the mind.
It has mysterious mystic potentialities to elevate man.
So, one must endeavour, to keep the mind ever dwelling on it.
The story of Rama - The Ramayana - is but another version of the Vedas (ancient sacred revealed scriptures). In fact, it is said that the Vedas incarnated as the Ramayana, in order to help the destruction of evil and the revival of righteous living, tasks which the Lord took upon Himself during His career as Rama. Why! Rama and his three brothers are, from one point of view, the four Vedas in human form. The Yajur Veda lays down the rights and duties of man, the Dharma (righteousness) which ensures peace and prosperity for him, both here and hereafter. So, it is represented by Rama Himself. He put on the vesture of manhood in order to establish and exemplify Dharma.
"Ramah Vigrahavan Dharmah" is how the Ramayana describes Him - Rama, the embodied Dharma.
Mankind should follow Rama's life
Rig Veda enshrines manthras (potent sacred formulae). It elucidates them and elaborates their meanings, with the manthra "Rama" as their crown. Brother Lakshmana, who repeated it, recited it and relied on it, for everything in life and beyond, is indeed the embodiment of the Rig Veda. He teaches mankind that the Rama manthra confers on man the Constant Presence of the Lord. The Sama Veda contains songs in praise of Creation and the Creator and through adoration sublimated into song, the Lord yields Grace. Bharatha whose every thought, word and deed was an act of thanksgiving, a paen of praise dedicated to Rama, was the Sama Veda itself.
Then, we have the Atharvana Veda which is a collection of medical and ritual details, of charms and protective amulets to overcome internal and external foes. Shathrughna, whose very name means 'the destroyer of foes is therefore appropriately the avathar (incarnation) of the Atharvana Veda. This Veda enables man to conquer evil habits, attitudes and tendencies, so that he can listen to the Voice of God and gladly translate the words into daily life. Shathrughna demonstrated by his humility, loyalty and devotion the victory he had won over his ego, greed and anger.
Very often the mistake is committed, of forgetting that Rama came, in order to lay down the norms of life and that His life has to be observed and followed by mankind. He is the ideal Man, with qualities and virtues which every man can earn to elevate himself. Mere worship, empty adoration is not what the Avathar expects. Rama underwent trouble, disappointment and distress like any man, in order to show that joy was but an interval between two griefs, that grief was but a challenge, a rest, a lesson. He held forth the ideal relationship between son and father, husband and wife, brother and brother, friend and friend, ally and enemy and even man and beast. The Ramayana teaches also that, as a consequence of the individual's accumulated karma-consequence, children of the same mother may have opposite characters and careers. The waters of a pond breed leeches, as well as lotuses. Vali and Sugreeva were brothers! So were Ravana and Vibheeshana!
Four brothers represent four Purusharthas
From another point of view, Rama and the brothers can be understood as models of the four primal goals of Man, the Purusharthas. Of these Rama was Dharma (Righteousness); Lakshmana was Artha (prosperity); Bharatha was Kama (fulfilment of desires) and Shathrughna was moksha (liberation). These four are the progeny of every human being. Dasaratha (Ten-chariot leader) is Man, having five sense organs of perception and five senses of action, ruling over Ayodhya, the city that is impregnable (the heart wherein God resides). These four goals have to be reduced to two pairs - dharma-artha and kama-moksha. Man must struggle to attain prosperity only through righteous ways. The prosperity should be used to achieve and maintain dharma. This is the reason why Lakshmana follows in the footsteps of Rama and when Kabandha held Lakshmana in his deadly clasp, Lakshmana offered to stay in those arms, advising Rama to escape and live. This is the reason why when Lakshmana fell unconscious on the battlefield and could not be revived. Rama lamented, "Perhaps I may get another Seetha, if this Seetha passes away; but 0 Lakshmana, nowhere can I get another brother like you."
Rama's expression of His fraternal love
Rama also shared with Bharatha the love that Lakshmana poured on him so profusely. He told Bharatha who prayed to him, with tears in his eyes, to return to Ayodhya as its ruler, "No, Father has ordered Me to rule over the forests, helping and saving/he anchorites and hermits from the. inroads of demonic hordes. He has willed that you should rule over the Kingdom of Ayodhya. Let us both be loyal to him." That was the expression of His fraternal love.
The second pair of Purusharthas is Kama and Moksha; the only desire worth entertaining and pursuing is the desire for liberation. Bharatha had it and Shathrughna shared it. After the long pilgrimage to the shrines and holy spots of Bharatha, Rama had a few years, until he was aged fourteen, of apparent introspection and solitude. He disliked food and regal apparel. He was not interested in materials and men. He waved his fingers and palms for no clear reason; he wrote on the air only He knew what. He laughed without reason. In short, His actions and movements were exactly the same as when I was in my early teens. Vashishtha attempted to bring His mind back to normalcy, but that was only a stage which all Avathars are in, before they enter upon the task for which they have come down. Those years, the Avathar was designing His Master Plan. At the end of that period, the sage Vishwamithra arrived at the palace, asking Dasaratha to send Rama (and the inseparable Lakshmana) with him, to save the hermits from the demonic gang who desecrated Vedhic rites. The plan started unfolding.
The Vedas say, Mathru devo bhava. Revere your Mother as God. This applies to the country which gave birth to you, also. So, you must revere the country and follow its culture.
You must also revere your mother, who has brought you up with love, care and sacrifice. However famous a man may be, if he does not revere his mother, he does not deserve respect.
A person whose heart is so hard that it does not melt at the pleadings of the mother deserves nothing but ridicule.
– Sri Sathya Sai Baba
Selected Excerpts From This Discourse
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