From Radhanath Swami at the Huffington Post
     
         
             
 
   
  
 
 
     
A crippled economy and a polluted environment plague our social 
body. Both largely stem from the same core disease -- pollution of 
hearts. Blinded by distractions one can forget how to invest in what 
awards a meaningful, fulfilling life. 
Parallel to our vast strides in technology, there is a dangerous rise
 in unemployment, foreclosures and degrading education. Millions of 
people are stricken with hopelessness and strife. Sadly, in the name of 
progress we have polluted the air, water, soil and the food we eat. What
 can we do? The following is a story about an encounter I had with 
someone who cared.
It was winter in New Delhi when the days are mild and the nights are 
biting cold. New Delhi's wide roads are lined with massive government 
buildings, the older ones built by the British perhaps a century back 
with stone pillars, ornate statues and vast lawns. Others built after 
independence in 1947 are adorned with Indian style arches and domes. I 
rode toward the airport. Monkeys appeared everywhere, scampering along 
the boundary walls.
At the crossroads on the way to the airport we passed circular 
islands of grass and trees surrounding memorials for the country's 
freedom fighters. The streets were congested with cars, trucks and 
motorcycle rickshaws spewing out trails of exhaust fumes. Overhead a 
murky cloud of smog hung in the sky and reduced the sun to a gray 
lifeless ball. The fumes were thick, the smells toxic, and they sat on 
our tongues like sour lozenges. On the roadside an elderly man squatted 
cross-legged with back erect performing pranayama, a yogic breathing 
exercise. He vigorously inhaled and exhaled. I wondered if it did him 
more harm than good.  
We crossed a bridge over the Yamuna River. I looked down and 
remembered 30 years before, when I had first come to India, that under 
the same bridge the Yamuna flowed in her full glory. Now, she looked 
plundered and crippled. What was once a pristine river had now become a 
thick blackish liquid, foaming bubbles, and a current so lame she barely
 flowed. 
When I reached the airport and was waiting at the gate for my flight,
 a lady informed me that sitting close by was the Union Minister for 
Environment and Forests. She wanted to talk to me. I obliged.
The minister stood up and greeted me, "Namaste Swamiji." After a pleasant exchange she suddenly challenged me with a passion. 
"What are you spiritual leaders doing about the ecology?" She was very serious. 
"Every second the air is being saturated with cancerous smog," she 
said. "Tons of raw sewage and toxic waste are dumped hourly into rivers 
where millions of people bathe and drink. The earth is being stripped of
 its forest and has become a dumping ground for deadly waste. The world 
is on the brink of ecological disaster while all of you spiritualists 
are praying, meditating or chanting. What is all your devotion doing to 
save the ecology?"
Her concern was real and impassioned. It was exciting to see that 
depth of concern from a powerful leader over an issue that affects us 
all. 
"Yes, the environment is everyone's responsibility," I responded, 
"and I sincerely admire your tireless commitment. The spiritual leaders I
 know believe that along with passing laws and doing the cleaning work 
we need to address the root cause of the problem. If a person is covered
 with boils, the symptoms must be treated, but unless the cause of the 
problem is addressed, the boils will recur. In the case of boils, the 
cause may be a disease in the blood. The root of cause of pollution in 
the world is pollution in the heart. 
"Toxic greed has contaminated the minds of human society. The 
environment is simply an external manifestation of the ecology of the 
mind. Greed is an obsession, an addiction. It can never be quenched. The
 more it gets, the more it needs. Greed hardens the heart and fools us 
into rationalizing cruelty and justifying crime. Greed induces envy, 
divides families, provokes wars and blinds us to our real self-interest.
 Greed for money, power, fame, sex -- the world is ravaged by greed. It 
is practically an exercise in futility to attempt to clean the 
environment when politicians are corrupted by bribes, industrialists 
pollute rivers to maximize profits and scientists put aside their ethics
 for funding. 
"The Bhagavad Gita states that greed is a symptom of avidya 
or ignorance that covers the natural virtues of the true self within us.
 I'm sure you would agree with me that most people are not bad spirited,
 but due to a lack of awareness they may be destroying the environment, 
not understanding that what may seem convenient, like dumping industrial
 waste into a river, is actually killing fish, animals and people. So 
along with the pollution of our rivers, we must give attention to the 
pollution in our hearts. If you successfully clean the air, the sky, 
every river and every ocean, it is for certain that people will pollute 
them again unless they reform the ecology of their hearts. 
"Spiritual life is the science of cleansing the heart and tasting the
 joy of living in harmony with God, each other and nature. It begins 
with cultivating good character, the willingness to make personal 
sacrifices for a higher cause, to make the right choices even in the 
face of temptation and fear, and put concern for the well being of 
others as a priority. 
"How to do that? All of these virtues can spring from Bhakti or 
spiritual love. The Bible teaches that 'the first and great commandment 
is to love God with all one's heart, mind and soul.' And the natural 
result of that is, 'to love your neighbor as yourself.' Nature is also 
our neighbor, she is alive with rights like everyone else, but too many 
people don't see nature that way. The Vedic scriptures tell that the 
most simple and powerful method of cleansing the ecology of the heart 
and awakening this dormant love within us is to chant God's names. In my
 tradition we chant the names of Krishna."
"God has empowered all of us in different ways and if we agree on 
what the real problem is, then we can all contribute our part of the 
solution. The well being of Mother Earth is everyone's problem. It is 
crucial for leaders in all fields to serve cooperatively."
At that point the minister was called to board her flight. She 
thought for a moment, then stood up and smiled saying, "Yes Swamiji, 
What you say is true. We all need to work together." 
She was right to take me to task. Religious and spiritual leaders 
should be held accountable for environmental activism, not only because 
they have access to large communities and can influence votes but 
because service is integral to religious and spiritual life. Reducing 
carbon emissions is important, but it is shortsighted if not coupled 
with reducing the toxic emissions from our heart; and that is something 
spiritual leaders are supposed to teach and something all thinking 
people, regardless of their beliefs, should practice.
We should honor Mother Earth with gratitude; otherwise our 
spirituality may become hypocritical.
The earth nourishes us with every 
necessity for a prosperous life. When, on a massive worldwide scale we 
plunder her oil, destroy her forests, pollute her resources, torture and
 kill her animals, soak her with the blood of her children, exploit one 
another and trample her with immorality, there will naturally be 
devastating consequences.
We should honor our mother and respect all of her children as our 
brothers and sisters. Otherwise, we may force her to react.  Humanity 
has reached a critical crossroads. We have made monumental progress in 
technology, medicine, science, academics and globalization but if we do 
not use them with compassion what will be our fate? The dire need is at 
hand to take responsibility as caretakers of the helpless and live as 
dedicated instruments of God's love.
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