J. Krishnamurti On Laddership
ServiceSpace
--Parag Shah
2 minute read
Sep 1, 2015

 

In his Saanen Talks of 1966, J. Krishnamurti offered a few thoughts, which seems to define our idea of Laddership ...
 

How can you live in this world and yet be innocent? First, be innocent and then you will live in this world, not the other way round. Be vulnerable, be tremendously vulnerable. You do not even understand what it means to be innocent; if you are innocent, you can live in this world, in another world, in any world. But if you are not innocent you try to compromise with this world and then all hell is let loose. But learn about this sense of innocency.

Don't try to get it. It is not the word. It is that state when you have no pretension's, no masks, no conflict. Be in that state and then you can live in this world. Then you can go to the office; you can do anything. If you know what love is, you can do what you will. There is no conflict, no sin, no pain. Then you will live in this world totally, differently.

This is indeed the mutation of the mind. This is the fundamental transformation of man. The state of innocence is the state of mutation. In mutation is the birth of a new being. He is a being who acts but never reacts, for, by living in the ground of inaction, he acts with charm and grace, a never-ending challenge for all — a challenge that is unexplained and therefore unanswered. Such one lives, just lives, but his very living awakens in others a sense of tremendous urgency. Strange though it may seem, the man of innocence becomes a potent nucleus for a total and a significant revolution in society.

It is not that first there must be the transformation of the individual and then that transformed individual would lead a social revolution. These are not two different processes. In the transformation of the human being there has already begun the movement for fundamental social change. There is no time interval between the two. The process of transformation is just one and integral. The transformed human being represents the beginning of a social revolution. Such a human being does not become a leader giving a call for social revolution. In such a call there is imitation and therefore an action which seeks to approximate itself to an idea. But in a man of total innocence -- in the very act of his living, the social revolution has already started. It is only when a timeinterval is given between the transformation of the human individual and the transformation of a society that the evil of leadership with all its ugly exploitation comes into being.
   
 

Posted by Parag Shah on Sep 1, 2015


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