The Complete Works of Swami Vivekananda/Volume 5/Epistles - First Series/LII Alasinga
LII
Paris,
9th September, 1895.
Dear Alasinga,
. . . I am surprised you take so seriously the missionaries' nonsense. . . .
If the people in India want me to keep strictly to my Hindu diet, please
tell them to send me a cook and money enough to keep him. This silly bossism
without a mite of real help makes me laugh. On the other hand, if the
missionaries tell you that I have ever broken the two great vows of the
Sannyâsin — chastity and poverty — tell them that they are big liars. Please
write to the missionary Hume asking him categorically to write you what
misdemeanour he saw in me, or give you the names of his informants, and
whether the information was first-hand or not; that will settle the question
and expose the whole thing. . . .
As for me, mind you, I stand at nobody's dictation. I know my mission in
life, and no chauvinism about me; I belong as much to India as to the world,
no humbug about that. I have helped you all I could. You must now help
yourselves. What country has any special claim on me? Am I any nation's
slave? Don't talk any more silly nonsense, you faithless atheists.
I have worked hard and sent all the money I got to Calcutta and Madras, and
then after doing all this, stand their silly dictation! Are you not ashamed?
What do I owe to them? Do I care a fig for their praise or fear their blame?
I am a singular man, my son, not even you can understand me yet. Do your
work; if you cannot, stop; but do not try to "boss" me with your nonsense.
I see a greater Power than man, or God, or devil at my back. I require
nobody's help. I have been all my life helping others. . . . They cannot
raise a few rupees to help the work of the greatest man their country ever
produced — Ramakrishna Paramahamsa; and they talk nonsense and want to
dictate to the man for whom they did nothing, find who did everything he
could for them! Such is the ungrateful world!
Do you mean to say I am born to live and die one of those caste-ridden,
superstitious, merciless, hypocritical, atheistic cowards that you find only
amongst the educated Hindus? I hate cowardice; I will have nothing to do
with cowards or political nonsense. I do not believe in any politics. God
and truth are the only politics in the world, everything else is trash.
I am going to London tomorrow. . . .
Yours with blessings,
Vivekananda.