A  Devotee: "Sir, if a wicked man is about to do harm, or actually does so,  should we keep quiet then?"
Sri Ramakrishna:  "A man living in society should make a show of tamas to protect himself  from evil-minded people. But he should not harm anybody in anticipation of harm  likely to be done him.
Parable of the snake:
"Listen to a story. Some  cowherd boys used to tend their cows in a meadow where a terrible poisonous  snake lived. Everyone was on the alert for fear of it. One day a brahmachari was  going along the meadow. The boys ran to him and said 'Revered sir, please don't  go that way. A venomous snake lives over there.' 'What of it, my good children?'  said the brahmachari. 'I am not afraid of the snake. I know some mantras.' So  saying, he continued on his way along the meadow. 
But the cowherd boys,  being afraid, did not accompany him. In the mean time the snake moved swiftly  toward him with upraised hood. As soon as it came near, he recited a mantra, and  the snake lay at his feet like an earthworm. The brahmachari said: 'Look here.  Why do you go about doing harm? Come, I will give you a holy word. By repeating  it you will learn to love God. Ultimately you will realize Him and so get rid of  your violent nature.' 
Saying this, he taught the snake a holy word and  initiated him into spiritual life. The snake bowed before the teacher and said,  'Revered sir, how shall I practise spiritual discipline?' 'Repeat that sacred  word', said the teacher, 'and do no harm to anybody'. As he was about to depart,  the brahmachari said, 'I shall see you again.'
"Some days passed and the  cowherd boys noticed that the snake would not bite.
They threw stones at  it. Still it showed no anger; it behaved as if it were an earthworm. One day one  of the boys came close to it, caught it by the tail, and, whirling it round and  round, dashed it again and again on the ground and threw it away. The snake  vomited blood and became unconscious. It was stunned. It could not move. So,  thinking it dead, the boys went their way.
"Late at night the snake  regained consciousness. Slowly and with great difficulty it dragged itself into  its hole; its bones were broken and it could scarcely move. Many days passed.  The snake became a mere skeleton covered with a skin. Now and then, at night, it  would come out in search of food. For fear of the boys it would not
leave its  hole during the day-time. Since receiving the sacred word from the teacher, it  had given up doing harm to others. It maintained its life on dirt, leaves, or  the fruit that dropped from the trees.
"About a year later the  brahmachari came that way again and asked after the snake. The cowherd boys told  him that it was dead. But he couldn't believe them. He knew that the snake would  not die before attaining the fruit of the holy word with which it had been  initiated. He found his way to the place and, searching here and there, called  it by the name he had given it. Hearing the teacher's voice, it came out of its  hole and bowed before him with great reverence. 
'How are you?' asked the  brahmachari. 'I am well, sir', replied the snake. 'But', the teacher asked, 'why  are you so thin?' The snake replied: 'Revered sir, you ordered me not to harm  any body. So I have been living only on leaves and fruit. Perhaps that has made  me thinner.' "The snake had developed the quality of sattva; it could not be  angry with anyone. It had totally forgotten that the cowherd boys had almost  killed it.
"The brahmachari said: 'It can't be mere want of food that has  reduced you to this state. There must be some other reason. Think a little.'  Then the snake remembered that the boys had dashed it against the ground. It  said: 'Yes, revered sir, now I remember. The boys one day dashed me violently  against the ground. They
are ignorant, after all. They didn't realize what a  great change had come over me.'
The brahmachari exclaimed: 'What a shame!  You are such a fool! You don't know how to protect yourself. I asked you not to  bite, but I didn't forbid you to hiss. Why didn't you scare them by hissing?'  "So you must hiss at wicked people. You must frighten them lest they should do  you harm. But never inject your venom into them. One must not injure  others.
"In this creation of God there is a variety of things: men,  animals, trees, plants. Among the animals some are good, some bad. There are  ferocious animals like the tiger. Some trees bear fruit sweet as nectar, and  others bear fruit that is poisonous. Likewise, among human beings, there are the  good and the wicked, the holy and the unholy. There are some who are devoted to  God, and others who are attached to the world.
Source: from book "Gospel  of Sri Ramakrishna" 
-- With Regards and Prayers (D. Bhanudas) 89035 36440 Visit: www.vkendra.org See : http://dbhanudas.wordpress.com See :Not I, But Thou
 
 
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