Τετάρτη 20 Απριλίου 2011

Krishnamurti-Society

 Jiddu Krishnamurti (Teluguజిడ్డు కృష్ణ మూర్తి) or J. Krishnamurti (Teluguజే . కృష్ణ మూర్తి}), (12 May 1895 – 17 February 1986) was a writer and speaker on philosophical and spiritual issues including psychological revolution, the nature of the mind, meditation, human relationships, and bringing about positive social change. Maintaining that society is...
ultimately the product of the interactions of individuals, he held that fundamental change in society can emerge only through freely undertaken radical change in the individual. Krishnamurti stressed the need for a revolution in the psyche of every human being and posited that such revolution cannot be brought about by any external entity, be it religious, political, or social.

Born into a Telugu Brahmin family in what was then colonial India, Krishnamurti lived next to the Theosophical Society headquarters at Adyarin Madras in his early adolescence. At Adyar, he encountered prominent occultist and Theosophist Charles Webster Leadbeater. He was subsequently raised under the tutelage of Leadbeater and Annie Besant, leaders of the Theosophical Society at the time. Leadbeater and Besant believed Krishnamurti to be the likely vehicle for a messianic entity, the so-called World Teacher. As a young man, he disavowed this idea and dissolved the worldwide organization (the Order of the Star) established to support it.
Krishnamurti denounced the concept of saviorsspiritual leaders, or any other intermediaries to reality, and urged people to directly discover the underlying causes of the problems facing individuals and society. Such discovery he considered the natural outcome of unconditional, absolute psychological freedom, which he proclaimed to be within reach of everyone, irrespective of background, ability, or disposition. He vowed to work towards this goal of universal psychological freedom, and stated that understanding the actual relationships individuals have with themselves, society, and nature is of vital importance in attaining this objective.
He declared allegiance to no nationality, caste, religion, or philosophy, and spent the rest of his life traveling the world as an independent speaker. He authored several books, among them The First and Last Freedom (1954), The Only Revolution (1969), and Krishnamurti's Notebook (1976). A large collection of his talks and discussions have also been published. His last public talk was in Madras, India, in January 1986, a month before his death at his home in Ojai, California. Krishnamurti supporters, working through several non-profitfoundations, oversee a number of independent schools centered on his views on education – in India, the United Kingdom, and the United States – and continue to actively transcribe and distribute his spoken and written works.

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[edit]Biography

[edit]Family background and childhood

Jiddu[1] Krishnamurti came from a family of Telugu-speaking Brahmins.[2] His father, Jiddu Narainiah, was employed as an official of the then colonial British Administration. Krishnamurti was very fond of his mother Sanjeevamma, who died when he was ten.[3] His parents were second cousins, having a total of eleven children, only six of whom survived childhood.[4] They were strict vegetarians, shunning eggs, and throwing away any food that the "shadow of a European" had crossed.[5]
He was born on 12 May[6] 1895 in the small town of Madanapalle in Chittoor District in Andhra Pradesh. In accordance with common Hindu practice, as the eighth child who happened to be male, he was named after the Hindu deity Krishna.[7]
In 1903 the family settled in Cudappah, where Krishnamurti during a previous stay had contracted malaria, a disease with which he would suffer recurrent bouts over many years.[8] He was a sensitive and sickly child; "vague and dreamy", he was often taken to be mentally retarded, and was beaten regularly at school by his teachers and at home by his father.[9]Writing about his childhood and early adolescence in memoirs he composed when he was eighteen years old, Krishnamurti described psychic experiences such as "seeing" his sister, who had died in 1904, and also his mother, who had died in 1905.[10] Elsewhere he mentions another aspect of his childhood – a bond and closeness with nature – that apparently persisted throughout his life.[11] His biographers describe among his other childhood traits an innate generosity and a religious vein.[12]
Krishnamurti's father Narainiah retired at the end of 1907 and being of limited means wrote to Annie Besant,[13] then President of the Theosophical Society, seeking employment at its headquarters estate at Adyar. The Society, a quasi-mystical, religio-philosophical organization, had been founded 1875 in New York City. It had attracted disproportionate international media and public interest, and was then influential in Indian society;[14] in addition to being an observant orthodox Brahmin, Narainiah had been a Theosophist since 1882.[15] He was eventually hired by the Society as a clerk, and he and four sons (his remaining family) moved there in January 1909.[16] Narainiah and his sons were at first assigned a small dilapidated cottage which lacked adequate sanitation, and which was located just outside the Theosophical compound. The living arrangements exacerbated the boys' already "shocking physical condition", Krishnamurti and his brothers having arrived at Adyar undernourished, covered in mosquito bites, and infested with lice.[17]

[edit]His "discovery" and its consequences

It was in late April or early May[18] 1909, a few months after the last move, that Krishnamurti first met influential Theosophist Charles Webster Leadbeater.[19] During regular walks to the Theosophical estate's beach at the nearby Adyar river, Leadbeater, who claimed clairvoyance, had noticed Krishnamurti (who also frequented the beach with others) and was impressed by the "most wonderful aura he had ever seen, without a particle of selfishness in it."[20] In contrast, Krishnamurti's outward appearance was according to eyewitnesses pretty common, unimpressive, and unkempt. He was also considered "particularly dim-witted"; he often had "a vacant expression" that "gave him an almost moronic look". Leadbeater remained "unshaken" that the boy would become "a spiritual teacher and a great orator", and likely to be used as the "vehicle for the Lord Maitreya" – the latter, according to Theosophicaldoctrine, an advanced spiritual entity that periodically appears on earth as a World Teacher to guide the evolution of humankind. This would happen, Leadbeater added, "unless something went wrong".[21]
Pupul Jayakar, in her biography of Krishnamurti,[22] quotes him speaking of that period in his life some 75 years later: "The boy had always said, 'I will do whatever you want'. There was an element of subservience, obedience. The boy was vague, uncertain, woolly; he didn't seem to care what was happening. He was like a vessel, with a large hole in it, whatever was put in, went through, nothing remained."[23]
Following his "discovery"[24] Krishnamurti was taken under the wing of the leadership of the Theosophical Society in Adyar and their inner circle. Leadbeater and a small number of trusted associates undertook the task of educating, protecting, and in general preparing him as the likely "vehicle" of the expected World Teacher. Krishnamurti (or Krishnaji as he was often later called)[25] and his younger brother Nityananda ("Nitya", 1898–1925) were privately tutored at the Theosophical compound in Madras, and were later exposed to a comparatively opulent lifestyle among a segment of European high society, as they continued their education abroad. In spite of his history of problems with school work and concerns about his capacities and physical condition, the fourteen-year-old Krishnamurti within six months was able to speak and write competently in English.[26] He later came to view his "discovery" as a life-saving event: "Krishna [Krishnamurti] was often asked in later life what he thought would have happened to him if he had not been 'discovered' by Leadbeater. He would unhesitatingly reply, 'I would have died'."[27]
During this time Krishnamurti had developed a strong bond with Annie Besant and considered her a surrogate mother.[28] Following his early close relationship with his biological mother, this was the first of several important and intimate relationships that Krishnamurti established with women during his lifetime. His father, who had initially assented to Besant's legal guardianship of Krishnamurti,[29] was pushed into the background by the swirl of attention around his son and in 1912 sued Besant and the Theosophical Society to protect his parental interests. After a protracted legal battle, Besant took custody of Krishnamurti and Nitya.[30][31] As a result of this separation from his family and home, Krishnamurti and his brother (whose relationship had always been very close) became more dependent on each other, and in the following years they often traveled together.[32]
In 1911 the leadership of the Theosophical Society at Adyar established a new organization, called the Order of the Star in the East (OSE) to prepare the world for the expected appearance of the World Teacher. Krishnamurti was named as its head, while senior Theosophists were installed in its various other positions. Membership was open to anyone who accepted the doctrine of the Coming of the World Teacher – however, most of the early members were also members of the Theosophical Society.[33] The new organization and its mission received widespread publicity and worldwide press coverage; controversy erupted soon after, within the Theosophical Society and without, in Hindu circles, and in the Indian and international press.[30][34]

[edit]Growing up

Mary Lutyens, in her biography of Krishnamurti, states that there was a time when he fully believed that he was to become the World Teacher after correct spiritual and secular guidance and education.[35] Another biographer describes the daily program imposed on him by Leadbeater and his associates, which included rigorous exercise and sports, tutoring in a variety of school subjects, Theosophical and religious lessons, yoga and meditation, as well as instruction in proper hygiene and in the ways of British society and culture.[36] At the same time, Leadbeater personally assumed the role of guide in a parallel, mystical instruction of young Krishnamurti; the existence and progress of this instruction was at the time known only to the leadership of the Society and a close-knit circle of associates.[37]
Unlike sports, in which he showed natural aptitude, Krishnamurti always had problems with formal schooling and was not academically inclined. He eventually gave up university education after several attempts at admission. He did take to foreign languages, in time speaking several (French and Italian among them) with some fluency. In this period he apparently enjoyed reading parts of the Old Testament, and was impressed by some of the Western classics, especially works by ShelleyDostoyevsky and Nietzsche.[38] He also had, since childhood, considerable observational and mechanical skills, being able to correctly disassemble and reassemble complicated machinery.[39]
His public image as originally cultivated by the Theosophists "was to be characterized by a well-polished exterior, a sobriety of purpose, a cosmopolitan outlook and an otherworldly, almost beatific detachment in his demeanor."[40] And in fact, "all of these can be said to have characterized Krishnamurti's public image to the end of his life."[40] It was apparently clear early on that he "possessed an innate personal magnetism, not of a warm physical variety, but nonetheless emotive in its austerity, and inclined to inspire veneration."[41] However, as he was growing up, Krishnamurti showed signs of adolescent rebellion and emotional instability, chafing at the regimen imposed on him, being highly uncomfortable with the publicity surrounding him, and occasionally having doubts about the future prescribed him.[42]

Krishnamurti in England in 1911 with his brother Nitya and the Theosophists Annie Besant and George Arundale
Krishnamurti and Nitya were taken to England for the first time in April 1911. Two of the people they initially encountered there were Mary Lutyens, Krishnamurti's future biographer and lifelong friend, and her mother Emily – who was to become another surrogate mother for Krishnamurti, forming a strong and intimate bond with him.[43] During this trip Krishnamurti gave his first public speech, to young members of the OSE in London.[44] The first writings of his had also started to appear, published in booklets by the Theosophical Society and in Theosophical and OSE-affiliated magazines.[45] Between 1911 and the start ofWorld War I in 1914, the brothers visited several other European countries, always accompanied by Theosophist chaperones.[46]Meanwhile Krishnamurti had for the first time acquired a measure of personal financial independence, thanks to a lifetime annuityprovided by a wealthy benefactress.[47]
After the war, Krishnamurti (again accompanied by Nitya, by then the "Organizing Secretary" of the Order)[48] embarked on a series of lectures, meetings and discussions around the world related to his duties as the head of the OSE, and also continued writing.[49] Like most of his contemporary writings, the content of his talks revolved around the work of the Order and of its members in preparation for the Coming, while his vocabulary reflected the prevailing Theosophical concepts and terminology. In the beginning he was described as a halting, hesitant, and repetitive speaker, but there was steady improvement in his delivery and confidence, and he gradually took command of the meetings.[50]
In early 1921 he became ill with bronchitis while in France, a condition that "almost became chronic."[51] He also fell in love for the first time – in September 1921 with Helen Knothe, a seventeen-year-old American whose family was involved in the Theosophical Society. The experience was tempered by the realization that his work and expected life-mission precluded what would otherwise be considered normal relationships, and by the mid-1920s the two of them had "drifted apart".[52]

[edit]Start of the "process" and the death of Nitya

In 1922 Krishnamurti and Nitya travelled from Sydney to California on their way to Switzerland. While in California, they stayed at a cottage in the relatively secluded Ojai Valley, offered to them for the occasion by an American member of the Order. It was thought that the area's unique climate would be beneficial to Nitya, who had been diagnosed with tuberculosis; Nitya's often ailing health would become a near-constant source of worry for Krishnamurti.[53] At Ojai they met Rosalind Williams, a young American who became close to them both, and who was to later have a significant role in Krishnamurti's life.[54] For the first time the brothers were without immediate supervision by their Theosophical Society minders; they spent their time in nature hikes and picnics with friends, spiritual contemplation, and planning their course within the World Teacher Project.[55] Krishnamurti and Nitya found the Ojai Valley to be very agreeable, and eventually a trust formed by supporters purchased for them the cottage and surrounding property, which henceforth became Krishnamurti's official place of residence.[56]
It was in August–September 1922, during the initial stay at Ojai, that Krishnamurti went through an intense, "life-changing" experience.[57] It has been simultaneously and invariably characterised as a spiritual awakening, a psychological transformation, and a physical conditioning. The initial events happened in two distinct phases: first a three-day spiritual experience which was followed, two weeks later, by a longer-lasting condition that Krishnamurti and those around him would refer to as the process; this condition would recur, at frequent intervals and with varying intensity, until his death.[58]
According to witnesses it all started on 17 August 1922, with Krishnamurti complaining of extraordinary pain at the nape of his neck and a hard, ball-like swelling. Over the next couple of days the symptoms worsened, with increasing pain, extreme physical discomfort and sensitivity, total loss of appetite and occasional delirious ramblings. Then, he seemed to lapse into unconsciousness; instead he recounted that he was very much aware of his surroundings, and that while in that state he had an experience of mystical union.[59] The following day the symptoms and the experience intensified, climaxing with a sense of "immense peace".[60]
Following – and apparently related to – these events,[61] in early September a strange condition, which came to be known as the process, started as an almost nightly, regular, occurrence. These new incidents continued with short intermissions until October; later, the process would resume intermittently. As in the separate three-day experience of August, theprocess involved varying degrees of pain, physical discomfort and sensitivity, occasionally a lapse into a childlike state, and sometimes an apparent fading out of consciousness explained – by Krishnamurti or those attending him – as either his body giving in to pain, or as him "going off".[62]
These experiences were accompanied, or followed, by what was interchangeably described as presencebenedictionimmensity, and sacredness, a state distinct from the process. This state – said to have been often felt by others present – would later, and increasingly, often reoccur independently of the process. Krishnamurti regularly substituted the other or the otherness as shorthand description for this particular experience; also as a way of conveying the sense of impenetrability regarding this otherness, the strange sensibility it effected, and the unusual state of consciousness it precipitated, as described in his diaries and elsewhere.[63]
The above events, and subsequent occurrences of the process, were not revealed publicly until 1975, while Krishnamurti's descriptions of both the process and of the other were first published a year later, in 1976.[64] Since the initial occurrences of 1922, several explanations have been proposed for these events and for the process in general.[65] Leadbeater and other Theosophists expected the "vehicle" to have certain paranormal experiences, but were nevertheless mystified by these developments, and unable to explain the whole thing.[66]During Krishnamurti's later years the continuing process often came up as a subject in private discussions between himself and his closest associates; these discussions shed some light on the subject, but were ultimately inconclusive regarding its nature and provenance.[67] Whatever the case, the process, and the inability of Leadbeater to explain it satisfactorily, if at all, had other consequences according to biographer Roland Vernon:
The process at Ojai, whatever its cause or validity, was a cataclysmic milestone for Krishna. Up until this time his spiritual progress, chequered though it might have been, had been planned with solemn deliberation by Theosophy's grandees. ... Something new had now occurred for which Krishna's training had not entirely prepared him. ... A burden was lifted from his conscience and he took his first step towards becoming an individual. ... In terms of his future role as a teacher, the process was his bedrock. ... It had come to him alone and had not been planted in him by his mentors ... it provided Krishna with the soil in which his newfound spirit of confidence and independence could take root.[68]
In the meantime the rumors concerning the messianic status of Krishnamurti had reached fever pitch as the 1925 Theosophical Society Convention was planned, on the 50th anniversary of its founding, with high expectations – among Theosophists and OSE members – of significant happenings.[69] Paralleling the increasing adulation was Krishnamurti's growing discomfort with it. In related developments, prominent Theosophists and their factions within the Society were trying to favorably position themselves relative to the Coming, widely rumoured to be approaching; "extraordinary" pronouncements of spiritual advancement were made by various parties, disputed by others, and the internal Theosophical politics further alienated Krishnamurti.[70]
Nitya's persistent health problems had periodically resurfaced throughout this time and were a continuing cause for concern; on 13 November 1925, at age 27, he died in Ojai from complications of influenza and tuberculosis.[71] Despite Nitya's poor health, his death was completely unexpected by Krishnamurti, and fundamentally shook his belief in Theosophy and his faith in the leaders of the Theosophical Society. He had received their assurances regarding Nitya's health, and had come to believe that "Nitya was essential for [his] life-mission and therefore he would not be allowed to die", a belief shared by Annie Besant and Krishnamurti's circle.[72] Jayakar wrote that "his belief in the Masters and the hierarchy had undergone a total revolution."[73][74] Moreover, Nitya had been the "last surviving link to his family and childhood. ... The only person to whom he could talk openly, his best friend and companion".[75]According to eyewitness accounts the news "broke him completely".[76] He struggled for days to overcome his sorrow: "Day after day we watched him heart-broken, disillusioned. Day after day he seemed to change, gripping himself together to face life .... He was going through an inner revolution, finding new strength."[76] Jayakar stated that in later years "Krishnamurti accepted that perhaps the intensity of sorrow had triggered a vast, wordless perception"[73] while Vernon suggests that in the end, "[Krishnamurti] discovered, at the root of sorrow, an emptiness that could be not be touched by hurt".[75] Twelve days after Nitya's death he was "immensely quiet, radiant, and free of all sentiment and emotion";[73] "there was not a shadow ... to show what he had been through."[77] The experience of his brother's death seems to have shattered any remaining illusions, and a "new vision" was now "coming into being".[78]

[edit]Break with the past

Over the next few years Krishnamurti's new vision and consciousness continued to develop. New concepts appeared in his talks, discussions, and correspondence, together with an evolving vocabulary that was progressively free of Theosophical terminology.[79] The main themes in his meetings started to diverge from the well-defined tenets of Theosophy and from the concrete steps the members of the Order of the Star had to undertake, and into more abstract and flexible concepts, which would be Happiness one year, Questioning Authority the next, and Liberation the following; he had also started to publicly disagree with senior Theosophists and Theosophical doctrine.[80] His new direction reached a climax in 1929, when he rebuffed attempts by Leadbeater and Besant to continue with the Order of the Star.
Krishnamurti dissolved the Order during the annual Star Camp at Ommen, the Netherlands, on 3 August 1929[81] in front of Annie Besant, three thousand members, and a radio audience.[82] In the so-called Dissolution Speech, he stated that he had made his decision after "careful consideration" during the previous two years, and said among other things:
I maintain that truth is a pathless land, and you cannot approach it by any path whatsoever, by any religion, by any sect. That is my point of view, and I adhere to that absolutely and unconditionally. Truth, being limitless, unconditioned, unapproachable by any path whatsoever, cannot be organized; nor should any organization be formed to lead or coerce people along a particular path. ... This is no magnificent deed, because I do not want followers, and I mean this. The moment you follow someone you cease to follow Truth. I am not concerned whether you pay attention to what I say or not. I want to do a certain thing in the world and I am going to do it with unwavering concentration. I am concerning myself with only one essential thing: to set man free. I desire to free him from all cages, from all fears, and not to found religions, new sects, nor to establish new theories and new philosophies.[83]
Following the dissolution prominent Theosophists turned against Krishnamurti, including Leadbeater who reputedly stated, "the Coming had gone wrong".[84] Krishnamurti had denounced all organized belief, the notion of gurus, and the whole teacher-follower relationship, vowing instead to work in setting people "absolutely, unconditionally free".[83] There is no record of him explicitly denying he was the World Teacher;[85] whenever he was asked to clarify his position, he either asserted the matter was irrelevant,[86] or gave answers that, as he stated, were vague on purpose.[87] In reflection of the ongoing changes in his outlook, he had started doing so before the dissolution of the Order of the Star.[88] The subtlety of the new distinctions on the World Teacher issue was lost on many of his admirers, who were already bewildered or distraught because of the changes in Krishnamurti’s outlook, vocabulary and pronouncements – among them Annie Besant and Mary Lutyens' mother Emily.[89] He eventually disassociated himself from the Theosophical Society and its teachings and practices,[90] yet he remained on cordial terms with some of its members and ex-members throughout his life.
Krishnamurti would often refer to the totality of his work as "the" teachings and not as "my" teachings.[91] His concern was always about "the teachings"; the teacher had no importance, and all authority, especially psychological authority, was denounced:
All authority of any kind, especially in the field of thought and understanding, is the most destructive, evil thing. Leaders destroy the followers and followers destroy the leaders. You have to be your own teacher and your own disciple. You have to question everything that man has accepted as valuable, as necessary.[92]
This includes inward authority:
Having realized that we can depend on no outside authority ... there is the immensely greater difficulty of rejecting our own inward authority, the authority of our own particular little experiences and accumulated opinions, knowledge, ideas and ideals.[93]
However such pronouncements were not endorsements of social or personal disorder; on the contrary, the total freedom he advocated would in his view result in complete order:
Order is necessary, complete, absolute, inward order and that is not possible if there is no virtue, and virtue is the natural outcome of freedom. But freedom is not doing what you want to do nor is it revolting against the established order, adopting a laissez faire attitude to life or becoming a hippy. Freedom comes into being only when we understand, not intellectually but actually, our every day life, our activity, our way of thought, the fact of our brutality, our callousness and indifference; it is to be actually in contact with our colossal selfishness.[94]
He furthermore declared that such understanding on the part of individuals, if genuine, should produce an impact on society as a whole by default:
That is the only way to judge: in what way are you freer, greater, more dangerous to every Society which is based on the false and the unessential? ... Those who really desire to understand, ... will be a danger to everything that is unessential, to unrealities, to shadows.[83]
Krishnamurti resigned from the various trusts and other organizations that were affiliated with the defunct Order of the Star, including the Theosophical Society. He returned the monies and properties donated to the Order, among them a castle in the Netherlands and 5,000 acres (20 km2) of land,[95] to their donors.[96] He spent the rest of his life holding dialogues and giving public talks around the world on the nature of belief, truth, sorrow, freedom, death, and the quest for a spiritually fulfilled life. He accepted neither followers nor worshipers, regarding the relationship between disciple and guru as encouraging dependency and exploitation. He accepted gifts and financial support freely offered to him by people inspired by his work, and continued with lecture tours and the publication of books and talk transcripts for more than half a century.[97] He constantly urged people to think independently and clearly. He invited them to "easily, affably" explore and discuss specific topics together with him, "as two friends"[98] who, in a break with the past, make a fresh start towards a "journey of discovery".[99]

[edit]Middle years

From 1930 through 1944 Krishnamurti engaged in speaking tours and in the issue of publications under the auspice of the Star Publishing Trust (SPT), in which he was involved with Rajagopalacharya Desikacharya (commonly D. Rajagopal or "Raja"), a close associate and friend from the Order of the Star.[100] The base of operations for the new enterprise was in California, where Krishnamurti, D. Rajagopal, and Rosalind Williams (by then the wife of D. Rajagopal), lived in close proximity at the Ojai property that was Krishnamurti's official residence.[101] Materially, not much had changed after the dissolution of the Order; Krishnamurti "lacked for nothing, and his lifestyle remained as affluent as before" yet "there is no evidence to suggest that he was in any way dependent on material comfort."[102] The business and organizational aspects of the SPT were administered chiefly by D. Rajagopal, as Krishnamurti devoted his time to speaking and meditation, "content to leave all practical matters, which bored him, especially financial matters, in Rajagopal's undoubtebly capable hands."[103] The Rajagopals' marriage was not a happy one, and the two became physically estranged following the birth of their daughter Radha in 1931.[104] Shortly afterwards, in the relative seclusion of Ojai, Krishnamurti's close friendship with Rosalind deepened into a love affair that continued for many years, a fact not made public until 1991.[105][106]
During this period of time the Rishi Valley School, the first of several schools based on Krishnamurti's educational ideas, opened in India.[107] This school and others in India and elsewhere continue to operate under the auspices of the Krishnamurti Foundations.[108] Proper education, incorporating a holistic approach and the rearing of children into sane, whole individuals free of conflict, had been a major, continuing concern of his.[109] Instead of specific methods or techniques, he emphasized the role of educators and secondly, the overall school environment, and spoke of the need to "educate the educator" into a teacher who is teaching "not for profit, not along a certain line, a teacher who is giving, growing and cultivating intelligence, because he himself is cultivating intelligence in himself."[110] However as of 1980 Krishnamurti's concerns regarding right education[111] remained unsatisfied. When asked about the result of – by that time – nearly 50 years of educational work at the various Krishnamurti Schools around the world, he answered that "not a single new mind" had been created.[112]
After the dissolution of the Order of the Star and the break with Theosophy there was no falling off of the audiences attending the talks, with new people taking the place of those that abandoned him, as several of the old devotees "were unable to follow him in what seemed to them mists of abstraction."[113] New people also joined the camps, which were by then open to the general public, and Krishnamurti was invited to many new parts of the world. Mary Lutyens states that "his audiences were to become, increasingly, of a different calibre, people interested in what he had to say, not in what they had been told he was."[114]
Throughout the 1930s Krishnamurti spoke in EuropeLatin America, India, Australia and the United States, garnering favorable interest, although in a few occasions he encountered hostility or opposition during this period of growing global turmoil.[115] Another matter was the audiences' apparent inability to grasp his post-Theosophical message; he expressed exasperation over this both privately and publicly, and one of the reasons for his shifting vocabulary was the lifelong[116] effort to convey the teaching in a way that was both precise and easy to understand. He was repeatedly asking his audiences to consider his message in a spirit of open inquiry, carefully and neutrally, while warning them against mistaking verbalizations for actualities.[117] He wrote to Emily Lutyens that the meetings had "quantity without quality"[118] and he was vexed by the refusal of ex-Order of the Star and Theosophical Society members to let go of the past. He acknowledged that what he was articulating could seem just like another hard-to-understand theory; he asked his audiences to act on it instead:
To awaken that intelligence there must be the deep urge to know but not to speculate. Please bear in mind that what to me is a certainty, a fact, must be to you a theory, and the mere repetition of my words does not constitute your knowledge and actuality; it can be but a hypothesis, nothing more. Only through experimentation and action can you discern for yourself its reality. Then it is of no person, neither yours nor mine.[119]
In California Krishnamurti found himself, during the 1930s and 1940s, in relative isolation and in extended stretches of solitude, a situation he apparently enjoyed and took advantage of. He engaged in long sessions of meditation, communing with nature (especially in daily walks) and in unfettered introspection and observation. Throughout this period he was often writing about these experiences in letters to friends, describing his newly realized awareness and his desire to "build a bridge" to it for others.[120] A longtime friend who spent a week alone with him in Ojai in the early 1930s remembered a "powerful force concentrated there", an energy he thought was emanating from Krishnamurti, which "was almost physically palpable".[121]Radha Rajagopal, who grew up around Krishnamurti, wrote about her impression of him at Ojai in 1946–47, during her teenage years: "We all felt his quiet observation of us and in part returned it ... to have had the opportunity to experience that directly was worth a hundred of his lectures."[122] Biographers consider these activities and experiences as catalysts for the new directions and concepts in his message, and as the raw material for future talks and writings.[123] In another development, around the same time Krishnamurti reputedly "lost his memory of the past almost entirely"; until his death he would occasionally refer to this as an ongoing condition, though one with a distinct aspect: it overwhelmingly affected memory with psychological rather than practical significance.[124]
Krishnamurti had started talking about right meditation, by which he meant something entirely different from the practice of any system or method to control the mind or body, or to consciously achieve a specific goal or state.[125] He would touch on this subject in practically every subsequent talk or discussion.[126] He also introduced several new concepts and terms which became recurrent themes in later talks and discussions.[127] One such was the idea of choiceless awareness, a type of awareness that is from moment to moment, and without the implicit or explicit choices that accompany biases or judgments.[128] Another new concept was his challenge of the existence of division between the conscious and theunconscious mind, maintaining that such division is artificial, and that in reality there is only a single consciousness.[129]
In 1938 he made the acquaintance of the English author Aldous Huxley,[130] who had arrived from Europe during 1937.[131] The two began a close friendship which endured for many years, until Huxley's death.[132] They held common concerns about the imminent conflict in Europe which they viewed as the outcome of the pernicious influence of nationalism.[133]Krishnamurti's stance on World War II was often construed as pacifism or even subversion during a time of patriotic fervor in the United States, and for a time he came under surveillance by the FBI.[134] He did not speak publicly for a period of about four years (between 1940 and 1944).[135] During this time he lived and worked quietly at the Ojai property, which during the war operated as a largely self-sustaining farm, its surplus goods donated for relief efforts in Europe.[136] Of the years spent in Ojai during the war he was later to say: "I think it was a period of no challenge, no demand, no outgoing. I think it was a kind of everything held in; and when I left Ojai it all burst."[137]
Krishnamurti broke the hiatus from public speaking in May 1944 with a series of talks in Ojai, which would again become a regular venue for his talks and discussions.[138] These talks and subsequent material were published by Krishnamurti Writings Inc (KWINC), the successor organization to the Star Publishing Trust. This was to be the new central Krishnamurti-related entity worldwide, whose purposes were the dissemination of the teaching and the administration of his itinerary.[139] Meanwhile, he continued to introduce new concepts and concerns that were to become constants in his later talks. He asserted that psychologically, we are constantly shaping and are being shaped by our environment – just as we are constantly shaping and are being shaped by our thinking. This constant, dynamic interdependence, makes our psychological makeup inseparable and indistinguishable from the object of our inquiry: the observer is the observed and the thinker is the thought.[140] Related to the newly introduced concepts was the notion of seeing what actually is. He stated that this requires a non-self-centered perception of reality and the avoidance of all escapes from it, such as the escape into ideas of "what should be". Such "pure" seeing, he insisted, overcomes or bypasses the made-up thinker-thought edifice and "reveals extraordinary depths, in which is reality, happiness and joy."[141] Krishnamurti often attached a special meaning to "seeing", implying not just physical vision or intellectual understanding, but a total perception that is inseparable from action.[142] Following this line of thinking, the nature and qualities of the enquiring mind would become another favorite subject of his:
It seems to me that the real problem is the mind itself and not the problem which the mind has created and tries to solve. If the mind is petty, small, narrow, limited, however great and complex the problem may be, the mind approaches that problem in terms of its own pettiness. ... Though it has extraordinary capacities and is capable of invention, of subtle, cunning thought, the mind is still petty. It may be able to quote Marx, or the Gita, or some other religious book, but it is still a small mind, and a small mind confronted with a complex problem can only translate that problem in terms of itself, and therefore the problem, the misery increases. So the question is: Can the mind that is small, petty, be transformed into something which is not bound by its own limitations?[143]
While in Ojai in 1946, he suffered a serious kidney infection that incapacitated him for months, and at times caused those around him to fear for his life; he refused medical treatment, allowing only Rosalind Rajagopal to attend to him. The infection reappeared in later years, and he eventually agreed to be hospitalized in order for it to be treated.[144]
Krishnamurti had remained in contact with associates from India, and in October 1947 embarked upon a speaking tour there, attracting a new following of young intellectuals.[145] It was on this trip that he first encountered the sisters Pupul Jayakar and Nandini Mehta, who became lifelong associates and confidantes. The sisters subsequently attended Krishnamurti throughout a recurrence of the process that took place during a 1948 stay in Ootacamund.[146][147]
In several of these talks and discussions in India he introduced another future favorite subject and integral part of his message: the proper place of thought in daily life and the necessity, meaning, and consequence of its ceasing. He considered the importance of the ending of thought vital in understanding reality, and in discovering the new.[148]
In addition to such inward-looking themes, there was a social subtext in Krishnamurti's message which he was commenting on with increasing frequency. Addressing "the evils of civil and religious power, the futility of existing social structures, the inertia of conformity, and the failure of temporizing reform ... Krishnamurti had developed notions ... not found in his earlier discources. The teacher was also learning – not only answering the questions of others, but extending his own questions."[149] As he considered society to be the result of the interactions of its individuals members, he viewed all responses to the ever-present world crises as ineffective unless accompanied by the voluntary acceptance, on the part of each individual, of their equal responsibility for the state of the world as a whole.[150]
At the urging of Huxley he had started to write prose again after a gap of many years.[151] In 1953, the first book of his to be published by a mainstream, commercial publisher was released;[152] practically all subsequent books of his would follow the same route thanks to interest his works generated within their publishing category. At the same time, mostly positive reviews by respected reviewers started appearing in well-regarded publications.[153] One of the elements of his contemporary and future writings were meditative, unsentimental, and succinct observations of people and nature; another, his avoidance of the first-person-singular. The majority of his writings would be in third-person, a mode that since the late 1930s he had been increasingly using in his talks and dialogues. He remarked that this was done in a deliberate attempt to divert attention from the messenger to the message,[154] in accord with his often declared view that only the teaching – and not the personality of the teacher – mattered.[155]
Krishnamurti continued to attract audiences in public lectures and individuals in personal interviews.[156] He had remained popular in India, where there had been a long tradition of wandering "holy" men, hermits, and independent religious teachers; a number of contemporary ones met with Krishnamurti, or otherwise regarded him favorably.[157] Krishnamurti had a "special tenderness for the true sannyasi or Buddhist monk", yet he consistently and unequivocally criticized their "rituals, disciplines, and practices".[158] He became friendly and in the following decades had a number of discussions with well known Hindu and Buddhist scholars and leaders; several of these discussions were later published in print and other formats.[159] He also met with other prominent personalities in India, including the then young Lhamo Dondrub (Tenzin Gyatsothe 14th Dalai Lama)[160] and Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru.[161]

[edit]Later years

Krishnamurti continued speaking around the world in public lectures, group discussions, and with concerned individuals.[162] His inner life was also active, with continuing occurrences of the process throughout 1961, first while in Great Britain and then in Switzerland.[163] In the early 1960s he made the acquaintance of physicist David Bohm,[164] whose philosophical and scientific concerns regarding the essence of the physical world and the psychological and sociological state of humankind found parallels in Krishnamurti's philosophy. The two men soon became close friends, and started a common inquiry in the form of personal dialogues – and in group discussions with other participants – that periodically continued over nearly two decades.[165] Several of these discussions were later published in a variety of formats and introduced a wider audience (among scientists) to Krishnamurti's ideas than was previously the case.[166] Also through Bohm, Krishnamurti met and engaged in discussion with several other members of the scientific community.[167] Their long friendship went through a rocky interval in later years, and although they overcame their differences and remained friends until Krishnamurti's death, the relationship did not reattain its previous intensity.[168] However one result of Krishnamurti's contact with Bohm and the scientific community was the introduction of greater precision in his vocabulary and the carefully defined use of terms such asconsciousness.[169]
In the early 1960s his associates again started noticing deep changes in Krishnamurti. Jayakar wrote that "he would never be the same again. The Krishnaji who had laughed with us, walked with us ... this Krishnaji would vanish. A new Krishnaji would emerge – stern, impatient, questioning. ... He would be compassionate, but he would also be the teacher, demanding answers to fundamental questions. All great laughter and play had ended."[170] His audience was also changing: reflecting the cultural changes of the 1960s, which included an intensified search for alternative lifestyles and experiences, there was a noticeable influx of young people in his talks and discussions, while his books, both new titles and older, generated renewed and wider interest.[171] Krishnamurti’s evolving philosophy apparently proved too austere and rigorous for many of the new young participants; however new regular gatherings, such as the ones at Saanen, Switzerland, eventually became a focus for "serious ... people concerned with the enormous challenges to humankind".[172] His discource on observation now included the idea and possible implications of observation without the observer, the latter being the (psychological) "me" that according to Krishnamurti is put together by experience, knowledge, memory, tradition and enculturation; all of which he considered byproducts of thinking and thought.[173] Meanwhile, noting the unceasing global turmoil, he continued to tackle societal issues and to emphasize the effects of individual transformation on society and the world as a whole:
I think it is important ... that we should understand ourselves totally and completely, because ... we are the world, and the world is us. ... I condemn, judge, evaluate, and say, 'this is right, wrong, this is good, this is bad' according to the culture, the tradition, the knowledge, the experience which the observer has gathered. Therefore it prevents the observation of the living thing, which is the 'me'. ... When the Muslim says he is a Muslim, he is the past, conditioned by the culture in which he has been brought up. Or the Catholic, Communist. You follow? ... So when we talk about living we are talking about living in the past. And therefore there is conflict between the past and the present, because I am conditioned as a Muslim, or god knows what, and I cannot meet the living present, which demands that I break down my conditioning. ... And in the past there is security. Right? My house, my wife, my belief, my status, my position, my fame, my blasted little self – in that there is great safety, security. And I am asking, can the mind observe without any of that? ... Therefore the mind is totally free. And you say, what is the point of that being free? The point is: such a mind has no conflict. And such a mind is completely quiet and peaceful, not violent. And such a mind can create a new culture – a new culture, not a counter-culture of the old, but a totally different thing altogether, where we shall have no conflict at all.[174]
Along with his changing audience and outlook, Krishnamurti's subject matter had evolved to encompass several new and different concepts: the idea that the ground out of which consciousness operates is common to all humankind, concluding that individuality is illusory and superficial;[175] the notion that true love, beauty, peace, and goodness, have no opposites – such duality being only a construct of thought;[176] and the need for a radical, uncoerced, self-undertaken, and instantaneous psychosomatic mutation – a reordering of the brain and of its processes.[177] In the early 1970s he mentioned that the new approach represented an "unfolding ... the teaching is in the same direction", but "it is holistic rather than an examination of detail."[169] As far as he was concerned the fundamental message remained unchanged. He denied that there had been any inner change in himself or any evolution in the teaching "since the beginning". The only changes he admitted were in "expression, vocabulary, language, and gesture."[178] This was in line with one of Krishnamurti's later themes, thenon-existence of psychological time, by which he refuted any psychological, inward, evolution or becoming. He considered the (in his view erroneous) belief in the existence of psychological time, as well as the theories resulting from this belief as having a uniformly negative influence in human affairs.[179]
In late 1980, he took the opportunity to reaffirm the basic elements of his message in a written statement that came to be known as the Core of the Teaching. An excerpt follows:
The core of Krishnamurti's teaching is contained in the statement he made in 1929 when he said: "Truth is a pathless land". Man cannot come to it through any organization, through any creed, through any dogma, priest or ritual, nor through any philosophical knowledge or psychological technique. He has to find it through the mirror of relationship, through the understanding of the contents of his own mind, through observation, and not through intellectual analysis or introspective dissection. Man has built in himself images as a sense of security – religious, political, personal. These manifest as symbols, ideas, beliefs. The burden of these dominates man's thinking, relationships and his daily life. These are the causes of our problems for they divide man from man in every relationship.[180]
In the 1970s Krishnamurti met several times with then Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, with whom he had far ranging, and apparently serious discussions. His true impact on Indian political life is unknown; however Jayakar considers his attitude and message in these meetings as a possible influence in the lifting of certain emergency measures Gandhi had imposed during periods of political turmoil.[181]
During the late 1960s and early 1970s Krishnamurti and his associates reorganized previous institutions into four geographically dispersed non-profit Krishnamurti Foundations, designated the Official bodies responsible for preserving and disseminating the teachings, and for sponsoring the schools.[182] Meanwhile, Krishnamurti's once close relationship with the Rajagopals had deteriorated to the point where Krishnamurti took D. Rajagopal to court in order to recover donated property and funds, publication rights for his works, manuscripts, and personal correspondence, that were in D. Rajagopal's possession. The personal and subsequent legal conflicts eventually directly involved, on opposing sides, various Krishnamurti-related entities (and their officers and trustees), and were at times acrimonious. The litigation which formally began 1971, and ensuing cross-complaints, continued for many years. A substantial portion of materials and property was returned to Krishnamurti during his lifetime; the parties to this litigation finally settled all other matters in 1986, shortly after his death.[183][184]
Beginning in the late 1960s and continuing until his death, Krishnamurti and close associates engaged in private discussions – some of which have been at least partially made public[185] – regarding himself, his "discovery", his later development, the meaning of the continuing process,[186] and the source of the teaching. It seemed that Krishnamurti "in later life begun to delve into the mystery of his background in an attempt to come to terms with his own uniqueness."[187] The discussions also broached subjects that Krishnamurti would not usually approach in public, such as the existence of evil,[188] a feeling of protection he had,[189] or the nature of the otherness – the non-personified presence that he, and sometimes others around him, felt.[190] The discussions did not reach any conclusions; Krishnamurti several times stated that he did not know what the truth was relative to these inquiries, and whether he could, or should, find it out. He nevertheless examined several approaches, some of which he considered more likely than others.[191] He insisted that he did not want to make a mystery out of all this; Mary Lutyens comments, "yet ... a mystery remains."[192]
In early 1980 he reported that his continuing, "uninvited and unsought" inner experiences, in addition to increasing in intensity, had taken a qualitative leap into a "totally different and new" stage. He described it by saying that "the movement had reached the source of all energy". In language reminiscent of his account of the events that first occurred in August–September 1922 he added, "There is only a sense of incredible vastness and immense beauty".[193]
The same year longtime Theosophist Radha Burnier, a friend and associate of Krishnamurti, was elected President of the Theosophical Society Adyar.[194] This event set the stage for a "historic" occasion: Krishnamurti's visit to the Theosophical Society headquarters at Adyar in November 1980 – the first such visit in almost half a century – where he encountered a respectful and moving reception. He was to become a frequent visitor at the Society estate during his remaining trips to India.[195]
In 1981 he suffered a bad attack of influenza, becoming "very ill for over a fortnight"; he told associates that he could have easily "slipped away", mentioning that it was "harder for him to stay alive than to die."[196] In the last few years of his life death and dying, subjects he had been addressing through the years, appeared more frequently in his writings, talks, and public and private discussions.[197]
In 1984 and again in 1985 he spoke to invited audiences at the United Nations in New York City.[198] In late October 1985 he visited India for the last time, holding a number of what came to be known as farewell talks and discussions between then and January 1986.[199] These last talks included the fundamental questions he had been asking through the years as well as newer concerns related to then recent advances in science, technology, and the way they affected humankind. Increasingly, Krishnamurti's physical and intellectual resilience and vigor was showing signs of abating – after lifelong, almost constant travel[200] and a lifetime of frail physical health.[201] He had commented to friends that he "did not want to invite Death, but he was not sure how long his body would carry on"[199] as he had already lost considerable weight, and had stated on several occasions that once he could no longer talk, he would have no further purpose.[202] His final talk was delivered in Madras, on 4 January 1986.[203] In this last public appearance, he again invited the audience to examine with him the nature ofinquiry, the effects of technology, the nature of life and meditation, and the nature of creation.[204]

[edit]Death

Krishnamurti was concerned about his legacy, about being unwittingly turned into some personage whose teachings had been handed down to special individuals or groups rather than to the world as a whole. He did not want anyone to pose as an interpreter of the teaching.[205] He warned his associates on several occasions that they were not to present themselves as spokesmen on his behalf, or as his successors after his death.[206] In his last formal meetings with trustees of the Krishnamurti Foundation India in January 1986, the future of the institutions was discussed; their dissolution and liquidation was considered in order to prevent them from becoming, after Krishnamurti's death, authorities (de facto or otherwise) on him and his philosophy. It was decided the institutions would not be dissolved (among other concerns, the legal complexity of such action was noted) however at his request an amendment was inserted in the rules and regulations, in effect reaffirming the Foundations' limited mission – it being solely the preservation and distribution of the teaching as he delivered it.[199][207]During the same meetings "[Krishnamurti] 'had insisted that the houses where he had lived should not become places of pilgrimage, that no cult should grow around him'."[208]
A few days before his death, in a final statement from his sickbed[209] at home in Ojai, he emphatically declared that "nobody" – among his associates or the general public – had understood what had happened to him (as the conduit of the teaching) nor had they understood the teaching itself. He added that the "immense energy" operating in his lifetime would be gone with his death, again implying the impossibility of successors. However he offered hope by stating that people could approach that energy and gain a measure of understanding, "if they live the teachings".[210] In prior discussions he had compared himself with Thomas Edison, meaning by it that he had done the hard work, and now all that was needed by others was a flick of the switch.[211] In another instance he talked of Columbus going through an arduous journey to discover the New World whereas now it could easily be reached by jet; the ultimate implication being that even if Krishnamurti was in some way special,[212] in order to arrive at his level of understanding, others did not need to be.[211]
Jiddu Krishnamurti died at home in Ojai, California on 17 February 1986 at age 90, from pancreatic cancer. His remains were cremated and scattered by friends and former associates in the three countries where he had spent most of his life: India, England, and the United States.[213]

[edit]Afterword

Interest in Krishnamurti and his work has persisted in the years since his death.[214] Many of his books as well as audio, video, and computer materials, remain available and are carried by major online and traditional retailers. The official Foundations continue with the maintenance of archives, dissemination of the teachings in an increasing number of languages, new conversions to digital and other media, development of websites, sponsoring of television programs, and with organizing meetings and dialogues of interested persons around the world.[215] According to communications and press releases from the Foundations, their mailing lists, and individuals' inquiries, continue to grow.[216] The Foundation-affiliated schools and educational institutions have reported continuing growth, with new projects added in support of their declared goal of holistic education.[217] There are also unofficial Krishnamurti Committees operating in several countries,[218] as well as independent educational institutions[219] based on his ideas. Biographies, reminiscences, research papers, critical examinations, and book-length studies of Krishnamurti and his philosophy have continued to appear. Cursory (and necessarily incomplete) examination of internet search traffic and group discussion forums indicates that among similar topics, interest in Krishnamurti remains high.[220][221]
Despite his almost constant presence on the public stage, few details of Krishnamurti's personal life were known; he rarely wrote, or spoke in public about himself, and his friends and associates consistently and actively safeguarded his privacy.[222] The private side of Krishnamurti was eventually addressed in authorized and unauthorized biographies and memoirs by people who knew him, the majority of which treated him sympathetically. However the 1991 publication of the autobiography Lives in the Shadow with J. Krishnamurti by Radha Rajagopal Sloss[223] was the cause of adverse publicity and controversy regarding Krishnamurti.[224] The controversy was centered on the author's depiction of his relationship with her parents, primarily (though not exclusively) as it concerned the secret extramarital affair between Krishnamurti and her mother Rosalind Rajagopal that had lasted many years. In addition, the book contains a number of allegations, and presents an assessment of Krishnamurti's personality and life that often differs sharply from those offered by other biographers. The allegations and other statements regarding Krishnamurti as well as the ambivalent, often negative portrayal of him by Sloss provoked rebuttal publications, including a "personal response" by Mary Lutyens.[225]
A number of people who knew him personally were of the opinion that he had a "dichotomous personality", that there were two (or more) people in Krishnamurti: a strong, confident, uncompromising and charismatic teacher who, when not in teaching mode, appeared vulnerable and helpless, who could be childlike, fascinated by novelties and inventions, liked to tell irreverent jokes, and could be fussy and impetuous. Further, the shifts between these opposing aspects could often appear to be sudden and deep-seated, and would surprise even his closest associates. For many he was a sincere, inspiring, invaluable friend and guide; to others he appeared inconsistent, cold and tactless.[226] Ex-academic and self-proclaimed spiritual seeker Ravi Ravindra, who participated in discussions with Krishnamurti over many years wrote, "It was as if he had two distinct parts. His deep spiritual essence could soar without an effort like an angel in the clear skies of Truth. ... Then there was the relatively superficial personality .... This part was born of conditioning and not of insight. When it took over it was like the discordant note ..."[227] Some thought that he was easily influenced by those around him; others disagreed, maintaining that such influence had always been "entirely superficial", or otherwise comparing him to a "whirling fire, [that] would scorch all those close to him."[228] Friends and associates would occasionally be stunned by what they perceived as unexpected disfavor and criticism which in some cases presaged their total abandonment by Krishnamurti; at other times they would be equally stunned by his humility and forthrightness.[229] Yet others, such as Helen Nearing, who had known Krishnamurti in his youth, questioned whether his attitudes were conditioned by privilege, as he was supported – and in Nearing's opinion often pampered – by devoted followers starting as far back as his "discovery" by the Theosophists.[230]
Biographers and associates of Krishnamurti acknowledge other complaints, relating to his demeanor during talks and discussions: that Krishnamurti often comes across as too vague or too assertive, or both; critics perceive obtuseness as a result. Academic and philosopher Jacob Needleman, after noting that Krishnamurti demands of his audience to directly, "there and then", experience the issues he is addressing as "objects for impersonal, ongoing self-observation", adds in Krishnamurti's defense, "Without this constantly renewed effort of immediate verification, one cannot well follow the processes of his thought. It becomes merely elegant, or on the other hand, discontinuous, full of unwarranted leaps and unorthodox juxtapositions of ideas." Other commentators have suggested that Krishnamurti's perceived assertiveness was related to his reputed unusual inner experiences.[231]
David Skitt, who edited several Krishnamurti books, also attempted to deal with the complaints of vagueness and over-assertiveness in the "Editor's Introduction" of the book To Be Human.[232] Skitt discusses another point that Krishnamurti often made, one that he admits could at first glance be thought of as condescending or arrogant: that before considering any of the questions Krishnamurti was concerned with, there was a need to understand "the nature of a mind capable of going into" such questions.[233] Krishnamurti often linked this issue with another recurrent theme, his contention that the human brain is deeply conditioned by evolution, experience, tradition, and culture.[234] Echoing Krishnamurti, Skitt adds that clarity requires going past any perceived striking, original, or controversial aspects of Krishnamurti's statements, and into the rigorous examination and understanding of the statements' reasoning and implications.[235] He places the above described and other similar utterances by Krishnamurti in the context of recurring statements that Krishnamurti made in talks and dialogues: The proclamation (usually near the beginning of each talk) that his message should not be taken at face value, but that it should be shared critically, and be appraised by each listener; and also, the accompanying additional proclamation that he did not consider himself an authority of any kind.[236]
The fact that Krishnamurti was – and conceivably, after his death may continue to be – looked upon as a world teacher or guru despite his aversion or denials, has been considered ironic by associates, detractors and biographers.[237] In the opinion of some observers there has been a tendency among Krishnamurti adherents to put him on a pedestal, to otherwise focus excessively on the person, or to examine his work and life in a selective manner; according to one view, this attitude has on occasion also been found among, or tolerated by, the official Krishnamurti-related entities.[238] In a different direction, people who knew Krishnamurti in his youth found his eventual transformation into a well-regarded, original thinker, difficult to fathom.[239]
The perceived originality of Krishnamurti's message has been a subject of discussion by a wide variety of commentators. His teaching has been compared to diverse traditions and disciplines, of both the East and the West, and its uniqueness has been questioned.[240] Krishnamurti sometimes fielded such questions from his audience. During a talk in 1956, when asked, "Is there anything new in your teaching?" he replied:
To find out for yourself is much more important than my asserting yes or no. It is your problem, not my problem. To me, all this is totally new because it has to be discovered from moment to moment; it cannot be stored up after discovery; it is not something to be experienced and then retained as memory – which would be putting new wine in old bottles. It must be discovered as one lives from day to day, and it is new to the person who so discovers it. But you are always comparing what is being said with what has been said by some saint, or by Shankara, Buddha, or Christ. You say, "All these people have said this before, and you are only giving it another twist, a modern expression" – so naturally it is nothing new to you. It is only when you have ceased to compare, when you have put away Shankara, Buddha, Christ, with all their knowledge, information, so that your mind is alone, clear, no longer influenced, controlled, compelled, either by modern psychology or by the ancient sanctions and edicts – it is only then that you will find out whether or not there is something new, everlasting. But that requires vigor, not indolence; it demands a drastic cutting away of all the things that one has read or been told about truth and God. That which is eternal, new, is a living thing; therefore, it cannot be made permanent, and a mind that wants to make it permanent will never find it.[241]
Because of his ideas and his era, Krishnamurti has come to be seen as an exemplar of those spiritual teachers who disavow formal rituals and dogma. His conception of Truth as apathless land, with the possibility of immediate liberation,[242] has been mirrored, or has been claimed as an influence, in the work of diverse movements and personalities.[243] However his very emphasis on the uselessness – if not detriment – of outside help and guidance gave rise to complaints, as such emphasis was sometimes perceived as lack of compassion.[244]Among others, Mary Lutyens cautioned against approaching Krishnamurti's message in the hope of finding psychological support, emotional indulgence, or any ready-made solutions: "[Krishnamurti's] uncompromising refusal to offer comfort is one of the things that distinguishes him .... He refuses to be our guru; he will not tell us what to do; he merely holds up a mirror to us and points out the causes of ... all the ... miseries that affect mankind, and says: 'Take it or leave it.' ... Our problems can be solved by no one but ourselves."[245]
Similarly, Krishnamurti's own indication of success remained the same throughout: the attainment of complete psychological freedom, with its attendant implication that individuals had truly understood, and therefore "lived and breathed", the teaching.[246] Such understanding requires "hard, arduous work" and the highest level of personal commitment; yet it "must be instantaneous, without thought, quicker than thought"; it calls for a "meditation which is absolutely no effort"; and it presupposes the realization that asking fundamental questions may be more important than seeking the answers.[247] Another prerequisite for understanding is a seriousness that in his view, is not necessarily devoid of fun.[248] He had remarked in 1929, at the Dissolution of the Order of the Star, that he was not interested in numbers, stating: "If there are only five people who will listen, who will live, who have their faces turned towards eternity, it will be sufficient."[83] In his later years he was sometimes asked why he kept on teaching, what motivated him after all these decades, as by his own admission, so few, if any, had changed.[249] He answered one such question in 1980:
I think when one sees something true and beautiful, one wants to tell people about it, out of affection, out of compassion, out of love. ... Can you ask the flower why it grows, why it has perfume? It is for the same reason the speaker talks.[250]

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