| Script :
Dolly Rizvi
Illustrator : Umesh
Burande
ISBN : 81-7508-020-5
Vol. No : 623
'Be not the slaves of tradition;
fear not to walk upon new paths, if these bring you nearer to God who is
the Truth.” So said Kabir, a great Indian mystic, teachers and poet of
the fifteenth century.Popular belief has it that Kabir was born of a Brahmin
widow who cast him away near Laher Tank at Varanasi. The followers of Kabir
hold that he descended from heaven and was found in a lotus in Laher Tank
by a Muslim couple. Kabir has proclaimed himself in his poems to be a waver’s
son.There are many legends woven around Kabir’s life. We have taken those
which are most popularly known and accepted.Kabir’s intense dislike for
religious customs, the caste system, idol worship and orthodoxy made him
many enemies; he was a ‘revolutionary’ saint believing in one God and in
his hundred and odd years of life, he tried to bring Hindus and Muslims
together in his own way.His songs had simplicity and rhythmic charm. They
contained truths which had universal appeal. They are sung, to this day,
throughout the country.Sayings of Kabir:· If worshipping a stone,
enables me to see God, I would rather worship a big mountain. And why go
to the mountain? I may as well worship this grinding stone, which nurtures
mankind. · Why ask a Sadhu, to what caste he belongs? Ask what he
knows. When you buy a sword do you test the edge of the sword or the scabbard,
in which it is kept?· A man may read many books before he dies.
But will they make him a pandit? He who understands the word ‘love’ alone
is a pandit.· Why do you search for me, my devotee? I am always
near you. Why go in search of me to a temple or a mosque, Kailas ot Qaba?
I am everywhere.· In the beginning, there was no Turk, or Hindu
– no race, nor caste.
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