Early Life
Morvi is a small town in the princely state of Kathiawar in modern day Gujarat. Born
Mulshankar, Dayanands (D) father worked for the local Government there, his family
were landowners, wealthy enough to become moneylenders. They are Brahmins of the highest
order, learned in Vedic lore and held in great respect because of that. D was born in
1824. In his 8th year he was invested with the sacred thread, began reading alphabets from
the age of 5. The thread ceremony in yr 8 is a sort of baptism, which is conferred, on
every Hindu child, born of twice-born parents. From thereon begins the life of a
Brahmachari which meant that the child moved to the teachers home but since Ds
father was a learned man he decided to teach his son at home.
Ds father worshipped Lord Shiva whose followers kept fasts during Shivarathri,
sometimes for 36 hours. On his fathers saying D at the age of 14 observed
Shivarathri fasts too. Father and son went to a temple on the outskirts of the village
where the rules to be observed were explained. One of them required the devotee to fast
the whole night saying prayers before the lord. While the others went to sleep D said his
prayers. While doing so he saw a mouse creep on the body of Shiva and began to nibble at
the offerings before the image. D was told that God was everywhere, then how was it that
God did not protect himself from a mouse. Not convinced he could no longer pay homage to
the idol. On being asked his father told him that the image was not God, merely
represented him for the purpose of worship.
Dissatisfied with the answer, D took permission to go home, broke his fast and went to
sleep. When the father saw his son asleep he was furious. Relations between father and son
got strained. The incident has been dwelt upon in some detail to furnish a forecast of the
developed mind of Dayanand, the reformer. Arya Samajists celebrate Shivarathri as the
anniversary of Ds enlightenment.
Although they were Sam-Vedi Brahmans ie knowers of the Sama-Veda, Ds education began
for some reason with the Yajur Veda. Before he was 14, D knew the Yajur-Veda by heart and
also portions of the other three Vedas. He also learnt other pieces of Sanskrit
literature, both prose and poetry. On these lines D made progress but he was in search for
something more, namely enlightenment. The death of a dear sister plunged him into
meditation on death as apart from life. He lost a beloved Uncle to the same disease.
Distracted he moved around asking friends how death could be overcome. The reply was
yogabhyas - contemplation. D realized that to learn yoga he would have to leave home.
When parents see that their son has ascetic lines of thought, the age-old solution is
marriage. Ds parents tried to get him married but failed! Around a week before the
d-day, D ran way. In less than three days he was robbed of all his valuables, became a
Sadhu and began to search for a Guru. He was traced and kept captive only to run away for
the last time in 1845.
From 1845 to 1860 D wandered across all parts of India. Rivers, plains, hills wherever he
met religious scholars from whom he could learn something. During his wanderings he
acquired the theory and practice of Yoga. It is a distinguishing feature of Hindu religion
that its holiest places are noted for their natural beauty, scenery and purity of waters.
For as short period after his flight from home he passed as a Brahmachari (student) but
within a few years life was formally initiated into the order of the Sannyasis. According
to Hindus, life has four stages, Bramhachari (studentship), Grihastha (life of a
householder), Banprastha (retirement from active life and of mediation) and fourth is
Sanyas (complete renunciation and life dedicated to service). Every individual has to go
through these four stages in a sequential order. However, the shastras permit entry into
the fourth stage from the first provided one or more members of the fraternity consider
the person suitable i.e.-another Sannyasi. D however, after lots of difficulty gained
admission into the highest order of Sannyasis.
We may summarize the notable aspects of SDSs life during the period of writing.
The religion which once permitted freedom of thought and
conscience to every individual, in which divergence of opinion was tolerated and
respected, which imposed on each the duty of reading and understanding of the Veda for
himself, which taught that everyone was the master of his soul, directly responsible for
his deeds to God and received inspiration through direct communion with God, this great
religion had been reduced to a soul-destroying system of blind faith in authority. D found
that light and knowledge had deserted the country. He was sad to see a land that was once
noted for its freshness and vigor of intellect was shallow, stale and feeble in its
intellectual products. He was sad to see that the elite of the Hindus had
cultivated a morbid and contemptible craving for peace, instead of fighting their way out,
were fleeing out of sheer cowardice. He wished to overcome death by vanquishing ignorance,
superstition and fear.
He had conferred with the Himalayas, Ganges, Narmada, and forests. They had imbibed him
with the desire of increasing activity, had infused him with an unshaken faith in duty,
service, and had added to the purity, loftiness and strength of his soul. His soul or must
I say the soil had been well prepared, needed a gardener - Guru to water it.
Virjananda Saraswati (VS) - at whose feet D completed his education, was
a Sannyasi of the order that D belonged to. Blinded at the age of five, ill treated by his
brothers wife VS left for Hardwar. The pious Hindus reasons for this
exaggerated notion of the rivers sanctity are partly based on his love of nature,
whose grandeur and beauty fills him with ecstatic love of, and boundless admiration for
his Creator. In a few years VS assimilated and learnt the best that Hardwar could teach
him. Later on he migrated to Mathura which is where D met him. VS had outgrown his
education. His hatred of image-worship, superstition, the pettiness of current Hindu life
kindled in him a consuming fire. By sheer dint of labor and constant concentration of mind
he had mastered Sanskrit language and literature. He analyzed everything by dissecting it,
could put his finger on the weak points of prevalent Hindu thought and religion. He was
fearless but short-tempered.
D had been studying for thirty years then and required finishing touches from the hands of
a master spirit. For two and a half years he waited on SV and learnt all there was to
learn from him. Knowing very well that D was a man of few means, VS asked him for his
customary fee. What VS asked his pupil was a pledge to devote his life to disseminating
the truth, to waging unremitting warfare against the falsehood of the then prevailing
Hindu faith and to establish the right method of education as in the pre-Buddhist times.