SIDDHARTHA BY HERMAN HESSE
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Once, Samanas had
travelled through Siddhartha's town, ascetics on a pilgrimage, three skinny,
withered men, neither old nor young, with dusty and bloody shoulders, almost
naked, scorched by the sun, surrounded by loneliness, strangers and enemies to
the world, strangers and lank jackals in the realm of humans. Behind them blew
a hot scent of quiet passion, of destructive service, of merciless self-denial.
In the evening, after
the hour of contemplation, Siddhartha spoke to Govinda: "Early tomorrow
morning, my friend, Siddhartha will go to the Samanas. He will become a
Samana."
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INTRODUCTION
Siddhartha, the son of a Brahmin (a Hindu
Priest), and his best friend, Govinda, have grown up learning the ways of the
Brahmins. Everyone in their village loves Siddhartha. But although he brings
joy to everyone's life, Siddhartha feels little joy himself. He is troubled by
restless dreams and begins to wonder if he has learned all that his father and
the other Brahmins can teach him. As Hesse says, "...they had already
poured the sum total of their knowledge into his waiting vessel; and the vessel
was not full, his intellect was not satisfied, his soul was not at peace, his heart
was not still".
We are told that Siddhartha is exceptionally
skilled in the Brahmin's art. He knows how to meditate on the mantra, Om, the
most sacred, and recognizes the Atman
within himself. He has, we are told, learned all that the Brahmins can teach,
yet he still feels unsatisfied, the peace of Nirvana still alludes him. Moreover, he has never seen nor heard of
any Brahmin who has reached Nirvana.
If Nirvana is oneness with Brahman and Brahman is Atman, then the path to the Nirvana must proceed inward; all other
paths, all other activities, including the path of the Brahmin must be
distractions. It is for this reason that Siddhartha joins the Samanas, hoping
that their focus on self-purification will better direct him to Atman and to Nirvana.
It’s very pivotal at this point to
follow what the words Atman and Nirvana convey to the readers. These are two
key words in Hinduism with powerful meanings. Atman means the “self” and
derived from this is Atma which means the “soul”. As mentioned very early in
the book Siddhartha wanted to find “himself” thus he set out to do “soul
searching” which will eventually take him to Nirvana. I am excited to expound on
Siddhartha’s journey involving the Samanas. He had everything to live a royal
life. He was everything that defines a royal warrior prince but yet he wasn’t happy.
As this is so existent in real life. There are men who have accumulated every
luxury in life, happy family, beautiful children but yet not happy. Why?
Siddhartha was in the same predicament. His soul was not happy. He wanted to
attain Nirvana, the transcendent state in
which there is neither suffering, desire, nor sense of self, and the subject is
released from the effects of karma and the cycle of death and rebirth. It
represents the final goal of Buddhism.
Atman is discovered only after the ego
is negated and the conscious and the unconscious are resolved through
synthesis. References to the Hindu scriptures, the Vedas (specifically the Rig
Veda) and the Chandogya-Upanishads,
are made but they do not satisfy Siddhartha because they do not show him
the way, even though they contain learned material. In short, it is becoming
evident already that Siddhartha is a rebel; he must think for himself. He is
not a ready-made disciple. The life of the Samanas was attracting him.
When Siddhartha announces his intention
to join the Samanas, his father becomes very upset and forbids Siddhartha's
departure. In respectful defiance, Siddhartha does not move. His frustrated
father leaves him, gazing out of his window periodically to see if Siddhartha
has left. The obstinate youth, though, remains motionless. Night passes. In the
morning, Siddhartha's father returns to his intransigent son and realizes that
while Siddhartha's body remains is present, his mind had already departed.
Siddhartha's father acquiesces to his son's wishes and allows him to leave,
reminded him that he is welcome back should he find disillusionment with the
Samanas. Govinda joins Siddhartha as they disappear into the forest in search
of the Samanas.
WITH
THE SAMANAS
The two young men
catch up to the Samanas by nightfall and are
accepted into their group. Siddhartha gives up everything he
had before as the Brahmin's son, including his
clothes, his home and his daily habits. He begs for food and wears only a
loincloth and a cloak, shunning the townspeople and becoming a wretched figure
with unkempt hair and long fingernails. Everything that surrounds him seems to
be merely an illusion, including the people and the places he visits. The
secret he has sought is within, and he needs to learn merely to recognize it.
Everything in the world outside of the Self is false. The only
truth for Siddhartha is Atman. By shutting himself
off from society, he wishes to destroy all attachment to anything, hoping that
"When all the Self was conquered and dead, when all passions and desires
were silent, then the last must awaken, the innermost of Being that is no longer
Self - the great secret!"
In this way he
begins to separate his mind and spirit from bodily sensation by not eating for
long periods of time, resisting the sun's heat or the cold rain and controlling
his heartbeat and breathing. He soon learns how to control the sensations in
his body by using his mind. With Govinda still following behind
him as his quiet shadow, Siddhartha hopes that by destroying his connection to
everything in the outside world he may recognize more of what is inside of
himself. As time passes, he learns from the elder Samanas how to extend his
mind into nature and into death and back into life again by connecting to the
natural world while meditating. Denying his Self and forgetting his own memory,
Siddhartha learns to understand and embrace the life cycle in the natural world
that surrounds him. In many ways, the Samanas live in self-exile, cut off from
the rest of society in favor of the forest and nature.
After living this
way for awhile, Siddhartha begins to grow restless again, just as he had after
hearing the teachings of the Brahmins in the village where he
had grown up. He realizes that, despite the many times he meditates and forgets
his Self, he is always forced to return to it, unchanged and as it had been
before, when his meditation ends. He cannot escape from his individual identity
as Siddhartha or forget his memories forever, for they always return to him.
The Samana explains this to his faithful companion, Govinda. He disdainfully
equates forgetting himself while meditating to the same escapism that is
practiced by drunkards, gamblers, and those who are lustful with prostitutes.
They, too, must always return to reality after the dice game is lost or the
alcoholic haze fades. Govinda replies that the drunkard does not progress when
he escapes from himself, yet he and Siddhartha do learn and get closer to the
answers that they seek. He thinks the Samanas' way of life makes them move
forward rather than stagnate.
Siddhartha does
not see himself as getting any closer to answers than "a child in the
womb," and begins a barrage of questions similar to those he had asked
himself about the Vedas before leaving the
Brahmins about the hypocrisy that he finds amongst the Samanas. He states
plainly that the Samanas shall always be seeking and merely escaping reality
without understanding it, until they die. Govinda becomes upset, declaring that
life would mean nothing if there was nothing to seek, for Siddhartha believes
that seeking knowledge is a "detour" away from recognizing the essence
of what life really means and understanding Atman. Govinda recites a lyric line
from the Upanishads for encouragement;
although "Siddhartha was silent. He dwelt long on the words which Govinda
had uttered. Yes, he thought, standing with a bowed head, what remains from all
that is holy to us? What remains? What is preserved? And he shook his head"
Chapter 2, pg. 16. He has more questions,
but there are no teachers to give him answers. The restlessness grows in his
breast.
Finally these two
Samanas hear mixed rumors about the teachings of an enlightened man called Buddha, also called names such
as Gotama, Sakyamuni, or the Illustrious One. India is in a bad condition due
to poverty and sickness, yet the beliefs of this man renew the people's faith
and hope, although others think he is filled with hypocrisy and corruption.
Govinda urges Siddhartha to go with him to hear the teachings of Buddha,
despite the fact that the other Samanas in their group do not trust the
Buddha's teachings. Siddhartha is surprised that his friend, usually so passive
and obedient, has actually made a decision for himself. For the sake of getting
away from the now-suffocating environment he finds amongst the Samanas,
Siddhartha agrees to join Govinda on a journey to see the Buddha, warning that
he has become distrustful of learning from teachers.
Before they depart
Siddhartha tells the eldest Samana that he and Govinda are leaving to hear the
teachings of Buddha, just as he had once told his father that he was leaving to
become a Samana. The old man becomes angry that they wish to leave, yet now instead
of waiting for a blessing to be given, as he did for the Brahmin, Siddhartha
uses his learned mental abilities to hypnotize the Samana and force him to
bless their journey. Govinda is stunned to see this, declaring that Siddhartha
could have become a great Samana, just as he could have become a great Brahmin
had he remained with his father. In spite of this great skill, Siddhartha does
not see its value, for it does not calm his restlessness to understand Atman,
or stop the thirst for knowledge that urges him to move onwards. The questions
must be answered somehow but not by learning others' teachings. The knowledge
is already inside of his Self. The two friends leave the forest and continue
towards the town of Savathi to see the Gotama,
Buddha.
Siddhartha hopes the Samanas’ asceticism will help him break free of the
cycle of time that was so binding in his father’s world, but asceticism
succeeds only in revealing the second of Buddha’s Four Noble Truths: The cause
of suffering is the craving for something that can never be satisfied. The
Samanas believe that enlightenment can be found only through the denial of
flesh and worldly desires. Siddhartha tries to escape from time, to become a
void, and in so doing create an empty space that only the unified power of the
universe will be able to fill. Hard as Siddhartha tries to escape from himself and
his reality, however, he always returns to a Self that is restricted by time,
and he realizes that asceticism will not bring salvation. He cannot escape the
problem of time just because he wills himself to. His attempts to escape from
suffering lead only to further suffering, and the denial of time roots him even
more firmly in the cycle of time. He has learned that timelessness cannot be
found apart from the Self, rendering the Samanas’ teaching useless for him.
The Samanas’ teachings aim to enable the seeker of knowledge to escape the
physical world, but Siddhartha discovers that true enlightenment cannot come
from ignoring the world around him. He explains to Govinda that what the
Samanas do is no different from what a drunkard does: They escape the Self
temporarily. Just as the drunkard continues to suffer and does not find
enlightenment even though he continually escapes the body, the Samanas are
trapped on a path that offers temporary escape from suffering but does not lead
to enlightenment. As soon as the Samanas cease their spiritual practices, the
real world comes rushing back, and whatever enlightenment has been achieved
dissipates. Since Siddhartha is searching for a permanent answer, he cannot
follow the Samanas. He understands that true enlightenment can come only when
the approach used to reach it takes into account the world itself.
The confrontation between Siddhartha and the elder Samana suggests that
enlightenment cannot come from teachers but must be realized within, a fact
Siddhartha will discover repeatedly on his quest. Siddhartha leaves the
Hinduism of his father because of its flaws, just as he leaves the teachings of
the Samanas because they do not lead him to enlightenment. Siddhartha
encounters resistance when he tries to leave both his father and the Samanas,
but in both cases he leaves with their blessings, which suggests that these
elders are in error and that Siddhartha’s path is justified. Teachers may not
be able to give Siddhartha enlightenment, but they do, in their own ways, set
him on a path that will help him find enlightenment for himself. Although
Siddhartha looked to both instructors for knowledge of enlightenment, both fail
to give him what he needs, and Siddhartha realizes that these paths will not
lead him to the enlightenment he seeks.
Despite the flaws Siddhartha finds with the Samanas’ teachings, his
interaction with them is essential to his quest for enlightenment, since
through them he realizes that enlightenment must not discount the physical
world. Siddhartha’s Brahmin upbringing led him to search for an enlightenment
based purely in spiritual knowledge, specifically the idea of a universal
force, Om. With the Samanas, Siddhartha experiences his most purely
spiritual existence to date, but his failure to achieve enlightenment suggests
to him that enlightenment cannot be a purely spiritual. The material world
consistently intrudes, and Siddhartha must take it into account as he continues
his search. Though the Samanas’ path does not lead to the enlightenment Siddhartha
seeks, it does lead to an essential revelation that enables him to eventually
find enlightenment. Without the Samanas, Siddhartha may have continued in his
purely spiritual pursuits, perpetually removing himself from the physical world
and failing to reach his goal. Though the Samanas don’t lead him to
enlightenment, they help him eliminate the purely spiritual path, thereby
leading him closer to finding a path to success.
The mesmerizing gaze Siddhartha gives the Samana elder is never explained
in the text, but the fact that Siddhartha apparently has a certain power over
the Samana suggests that he is already spiritually superior. Not only did the
Samanas not lead Siddhartha to enlightenment, but Siddhartha is closer to it
than they are, even if neither he nor the Samanas realize it yet. Siddhartha’s
gaze renders the Samana speechless, which facilitates Siddhartha’s departure.
Just as he steadfastly waited in his father’s room when he wanted to leave the
Brahmins, he gazes steadily here to obtain his goal. This gaze seems magical,
but it also suggests something very real and human: Siddhartha’s astonishing
strength of will and unwavering determination to reach enlightenment.
CONCLUSION
During his encounter with the Samanas, Siddhartha
meditates by attempting to reproduce the life-cycles of all things. He is
attempting to capture the general archetypes of life itself in the same way as
we can sometimes understand someone's personality when we are suddenly put in
exactly the position that they are in. How is it that we can become more
broadminded? How do we recognize what are the common characteristics of all
persons?
We see how other persons act. We could study other people
as a psychologist or a novelist would. However, this process doesn't
capture the "soul" or "spirit" of other people. In addition,
we understand ourselves by understanding other people by recognition or
intuition, not formal study. John Gardner once said that
if you want to know what other people are thinking, try using their gestures.
The behaviorists often say "what we think" follows "how we
act." (E.g., if you want to be happy, smile more. If you want
not to be depressed take a walk, wash the dishes—do something; do anything.)
Siddhartha and Govinda attempt to gain
salvation through asceticism. Using as a premise the ascetic idea that the
sensual world is transitory and illusory, Siddhartha attempts to void his self
and thus void with it all the torments of the senses. He resolves that if he
can let the self die, then something deeper than the self will surface — that is,
Being. Siddhartha, however, finds the process of trying to void the self a
vicious circle because even though the ascetic meditation of which the aim is
emptying the self involves the assuming of different forms, it inevitably leads
him back to self again. All the paths leading away from self eventually lead
back to it and are particularly tormenting because, like the life cycle, they
are imbued with a sense of time. Thus Siddhartha regards this as just another
form of escapism, in this case through self-denial, just as drinking is
escapism through self-indulgence. Even though Govinda states that he is still
learning, Siddhartha asserts that he himself is far from knowledge and wisdom.
After the imperceptible passage of
three years with the Samanas, Siddhartha resolves to leave them. Not only does
Siddhartha again object to discipleship and assert the impossibility of
learning things second-hand, he asserts that learning impedes knowledge.
Govinda is, of course, troubled by Siddhartha's lecture. At this point, we
learn of the arrival of Gotama Buddha, who has conquered sorrow and brought the
cycle of rebirth to a standstill. He has attained Nirvana; he remembers former
lives and will never return to the cycle. Govinda enjoins Siddhartha to go and
hear the teachings of Buddha. Siddhartha is amazed that Govinda (heretofore
always Siddhartha's shadow) is initiating a course of action, and since
Siddhartha desires to go, they both decide to leave the Samanas. Here we have
another time expansion, a kind of enlargement of a particular day when a
specific allusion is made to "the same day," and Siddhartha draws the
angry Samana teacher into the same hypnotic spell that the teacher himself had
taught.
Important in this section is the fact
that living among the ascetics dissatisfies Siddhartha for the same reason that
Brahmism never really satisfied his father. As the rules and rituals of the
Brahmin priests did not provide knowledge through experience, likewise the
Samana rules and ascetic observances do not either. Instead, they are merely a
kind of escapism. Supremely important is the fact of Gotama Buddha's having
attained Nirvana, transcending and suspending the transmigratory life cycle and
the agony of time.
Really great post on Siddhartha! The encounter with the Buddha is probably the most pivotal part of the book and sets up Siddhartha for everything that follows. His analysis of Buddha is interesting to me because he does not doubt the Buddha's enlightenment but what he doubts is the ability to pass it on as teaching, and here maybe he finds a flaw with Buddha. For Siddhartha, the path to enlightenment for every individual is singular and defies any attempt to formulate a dogma. This seems to echo the earlier conflict he has with his father's way of life and with the Samanas in that they are content to substitute formulas and rituals for the "real thing" so to speak--enlightenment. From this point on, Siddhartha is after unique, lived experiences and this leads him to embracing the sensual side of life, which he later rejects as well.
ReplyDeleteWhat about the first assignment? I know you had some problems and you e-mailed me about it. You should have three paintings or works that you analyze also. You can relate it to Siddhartha if you like which again was really great. So three works from expressionist or dadaist artists.
ReplyDeleteHi Professor, thanks for your encouraging comments. I did my three paintings interpretation but I did it as posts, which I thought you probably saw. Nevertheless, I will post it in my blog. I still have my work stored.
ReplyDelete