Sri Aurobindo

A Freedom-fighter, Poet, Philosopher, Mahayogi

Sri Aurobindo was born in Calcutta on August 15, 1872. At the age of four he was sent, with his two elder brothers Benoybhushan (1867–1947) and Manmohan (1869–1924), to the Loreto Convent School at Darjeeling.

In 1879 Sri Aurobindo’s father, Dr Krishna Dhan Ghose (1844–1892), took his family to England and placed his sons with a clergyman in Manchester for a thoroughly English education; they were not to be allowed to make the acquaintance of any Indian or undergo any Indian influence or be given any religious instruction.

Considered too young to go to school, Sri Aurobindo was tutored at home in Latin, French, history, geography and arithmetic. Almost from the start he took up serious literature, devoting himself mainly to poetry: Shakespeare, Shelley, Keats, etc. The poet was the primary aspect of his personality; none of the other aspects that came later diminished the poet in him.

Sri Aurobindo (seated) with his elder brothers Benoybhushan and Manmohan in Darjeeling around 1877

St. Paul’s School, London

The Ghose family in England in 1879. Sri Aurobindo is seated.
As a schoolboy in London, England, 1884–1887

Baroda
Years of Self-Culture

Sri Aurobindo passed thirteen years, from 1893 to 1906, in the Baroda Service, first in the Revenue Department and in secretariate work for the Maharaja, afterwards as Professor of English and, finally, Vice-Principal in the Baroda College. These were years of self-culture, of literary activity—for much of the poetry afterwards published from Pondicherry was written at this time—and of preparation for his future work. – Sri Aurobindo

Written in the third person
CWSA Vol. 36, p. 4

*

In England, apart from English, French and his study of Greek and Latin, Sri Aurobindo also learned German and Italian sufficiently to read Goethe and Dante in the original tongues. He had learned Sanskrit for his ICS and upon his return to India he studied the Upanishads, the Gita and the Indian classical literature in the original. As an officer of state he learned Gujarati and Marathi which made it easier for him to pick up Hindi. He also perfected his Bengali which he began learning in Cambridge and wrote many articles later in his Bengali weekly Dharma.

With staff officers of the Maharaja of Baroda in Srinagar, Kashmir in 1903. Sri Aurobindo is seated on the right.
With his wife Mrinalini in 1901
With students of his English class at Baroda College in 1906
In Baroda, probably in 1906
In Calcutta, 23 August 1907
In Calcutta, probably in September 1907. Sri Aurobindo is holding a copy of Bande Mataram.
With Nationalist leaders at Surat at the time of the Surat Congress, 24–31 December 1907
Presiding over a meeting of Nationalists at Surat in December 1907. Lokamanya Tilak is addressing the gathering.

Sri Aurobindo was the first political leader in India to openly pen down the idea of complete independence in his newspaper Bande Mataram. His political involvement in the Indian national movement was short, but had a great impact over the nation. He was involved in drafting the fourfold objectives of the national movement: Swaraj [self-governance for India], Swadesh [the motherland], boycott [of British institutions], and national education.

In 1910, assured of the ultimate success of the freedom movement and in answer to a command from above, Sri Aurobindo withdrew from political activities and plunged into another tapasya, a revolution of inner dimension, that was aimed at freeing the entire human race from the clutches of ego and desire, ignorance, suffering and falsehood by the strength of True Knowledge.

British Govt realizing him as a threat to the empire termed him as the “Most dangerous man”. He was jailed under false charges by the British Government, but was later acquitted after one year. While in prison he had another spiritual experience ‘Vasudeva Sarvam Iti‘ – seeing the Divine in everything.

In 1910, assured of the ultimate success of the freedom movement and in answer to a command from above, Sri Aurobindo withdrew from political activities and plunged into another tapasya, a revolution of inner dimension, that was aimed at freeing the entire human race from the clutches of ego and desire, ignorance, suffering and falsehood by the strength of True Knowledge.

 In Pondicherry, with the help of The Mother (Mirra Alfassa), his spiritual collaborator, he founded Sri Aurobindo Ashram as a place to practice his Integral Yoga. After years of Tapasya, he declared that ‘mind is not final’, ‘man is an intermediate being’, a new race will appear on earth. Sri Aurobindo brought down the New Consciousness – Supramental Consciousness, on Earth. This New Consciousness will free humanity from ego, suffering and ignorance and will eventually manifest in the evolution of a new species – Superman.

During this period of his Yoga spanning 40 years, Sri Aurobindo always kept an eye on India’s freedom movement and major developments around the world and applied silent spiritual force where necessary. One such example was Cripps Mission. Sri Aurobindo had sent an emissary to the then Congress Working Committee to accept the Cripps proposal. Unfortunately, his proposal was not accepted. Had they listened to him, our nation would have remained united.

Sri Aurobindo wrote exhaustively on the realisation of oneness of humanity, transformation of nature, and the discovery of the Supreme Divine Reality present within us. His work is a revolution in the inner dimension. Some of his major works are Life Divine, Savitri, Synthesis of Yoga, Human Cycle and Ideal of Human Unity, etc. These books give us his insights for bringing a permanent solution to man’s existential crisis of death, disease and old-age – bringing the ultimate perfection in man.

Sri Aurobindo left his physical body on December 5th, 1950.

The complete works of Sri Aurobindo can be found at: https://incarnateword.in/cwsa

Sri Aurobindo

Sri Aurobindo was born in Kolkata on 15 August 1872. From his childhood, he was given education in England as his father wanted his children to be brought up in a Western way. During his 14 years in England, he gained a deep insight into the culture of ancient and modern Europe. Through his father’s letters he came to know about the British atrocities in India and resolved to free India. To serve his Motherland, he deliberately disqualified himself from the ICS exam, despite securing a top rank.

In 1893, Sri Aurobindo returned to India with a completely occidental education. He now turned his attention towards the wisdom and truth of India, learned Sanskrit and several modern Indian languages, and assimilated the spirit of Indian civilization. He took active part in Indian freedom movement, wrote nationalistic articles in magazines and newspapers to ignite the sleeping nation, which caused mass uprising. British Govt realizing him as a threat to the empire termed him as the “Most dangerous man”. He was the the first person to demand Purna Swaraj (complete independence) in 1906.

Sri Aurobindo took up Yoga to free his motherland and in 1908 had his first spiritual experience of the ‘Silent Brahman’. He was jailed under false charges by the British Government, but was later acquitted after one year. While in prison he had another spiritual experience ‘Vasudeva Sarvam Iti‘ – seeing the Divine in everything.

In 1910, assured of the ultimate success of the freedom movement and in answer to a command from above, Sri Aurobindo withdrew from political activities and plunged into another tapasya, a revolution of inner dimension, that was aimed at freeing the entire human race from the clutches of ego and desire, ignorance, suffering and falsehood by the strength of True Knowledge. In Pondicherry, with the help of The Mother (Mirra Alfassa), his spiritual collaborator, he founded Sri Aurobindo Ashram as a place to practice his Integral Yoga. After years of Tapasya, he declared that ‘mind is not final’, ‘man is an intermediate being’, a new race will appear on earth. Sri Aurobindo brought down the New Consciousness – Supramental Consciousness, on Earth. This New Consciousness will free humanity from ego, suffering and ignorance and will eventually manifest in the evolution of a new species – Superman. During this period of his Yoga spanning 40 years, Sri Aurobindo always kept an eye on India’s freedom movement and major developments around the world and applied silent spiritual force where necessary. One such example was Cripps Mission. Sri Aurobindo had sent an emissary to the then Congress Working Committee to accept the Cripps proposal. Unfortunately, his proposal was not accepted. Had they listened to him, our nation would have remained united. Sri Aurobindo wrote exhaustively on the realisation of oneness of humanity, transformation of nature, and the discovery of the Supreme Divine Reality present within us. His work is a revolution in the inner dimension. Some of his major works are Life Divine, Savitri, Synthesis of Yoga, Human Cycle and Ideal of Human Unity, etc. These books give us his insights for bringing a permanent solution to man’s existential crisis of death, disease and old-age – bringing the ultimate perfection in man.

Sri Aurobindo left his physical body on December 5th, 1950.

Complete works of Sri Aurobindo can be found at: https://www.sriaurobindoashram.org/sriaurobindo/writings.php

Support the Ashram’s Work

Help preserve and share the teachings of Sri Aurobindo & The Mother. Your contribution supports educational programs, library archives, and community activities.