Culture

Why We Need To Remember And Celebrate The Legacy Of Maharishi Dayanand Saraswati

  • It has become fashionable for some 'neo-traditionalists' to create posters and memes attacking Maharishi Dayananda.
  • However, the contributions of the Arya Samaj in defending and strengthening Hindu society remain second to none.

Aravindan NeelakandanFeb 17, 2023, 08:40 PM | Updated 08:40 PM IST
Swami Dayananda Saraswati

Swami Dayananda Saraswati


Twelfth of February is an important day because two hundred years ago, Swami Dayananda Saraswati, the founder of Arya Samaj, was born on that day.

And 15 years before him on that day, was born Charles Darwin. Darwin published his Origin of Species in 1859 and Maharishi Dayananda published his Satyartha Prakash in 1875 (and republished it revised in 1883).

In a way the two books are alike and in a way, no two books can be more different. While Dayananda Saraswati has been often criticised for trying create a monotheism out of a Vedic fundamentalism, Darwin whispered to his close circle that the Godless evolution was for him like ‘confessing to murder.’

That said, both the books liberated humanity from ignorance. It is now well established in scientific domain what we owe Charles Darwin. But more often than not we forget what we owe Maharishi Dayananda.


When the entire Vedic tradition seemed to be drowned in the chaotic ocean of social stagnation and hidden into obscurity of birth-based system, Swami Dayananda came, plunged into the cruelly roaring waves of social stagnation and brought out the Vedas. When Vedic grandeur of this civilisation was fossilised by some pseudo-traditionalists and when colonialists tried to justify themselves by using the same traditionalists, Swami Dayananda stood for reason and socio-spiritual upliftment of the downtrodden and women.

His rejection of the ‘idol’ wordship and Puranas should be seen in this context and in this context alone. The Arya Samaj spearheaded mass institutional education. It pioneered female education. British administrators keenly observing Arya Samaj movement were alarmed.

Herbert Butler was one such. As Lieutenant Governor of Oudh and North West Provinces, he had praised the Arya Samaj contribution to education and famine relief work in public; but in a private letter to Sir James Dunlop he cautioned and urged thus:

Butler had made the correct civilisational connection here and hence he understood the danger the movement posed to colonial presence.

This Rashtra and Dharma have always been protected by spiritual emancipators of the society and not by status-quoists.

Today there may be critics of Maharishi Dayanand who would judge him by the feminist of today. To them nothing can provide better perspective than what Yuval Noah Harari writes in Homo Deus about Maharishi Dayanand— that he‘often interpreted the Vedas in a surprisingly liberal way, supporting for example equal rights for women long before the idea became popular in the West’ while also pointing out that the views on women of his contemporary Pope Pius IX were much conservative compared to that of Maharishi.

Arya Samajists fought against caste injustice equally. And what a brave fight that was!

A case in point is the Dola-Palki resistance movement of Shilpakaras of Uttarakhand hills.

The question was for the right of the scheduled community of the region who were occupationally artisans. Islamists and ‘upper caste’ Hindus joined hands to attack the Shilpakar community, taking their bride and bridegroom during a marriage ceremonial procession.

The Arya Samaj took up the cause and proactively made a forward linkage of this local struggle for social justice with the larger national movement.

Arya workers got Gandhi involved. All these activities, with painful suffering on the part of Aryas nevertheless dragged the society out of its Tamasic adherence to birth-based social stratification. It also prevented conversion, (had it happened, it would be justifiable) to Christianity. And this was just one example.


Then through a fraction of the surplus of colonial resource piracy and with institutional support, the missionaries would 'harvest soul' using famine relief. It was in such a situation that Arya Samaj reached out to famine affected regions and did an extraordinary, almost superhuman service for humanity.

Modern-day criticism of Arya Samaj

Today, it has become fashionable for neo-traditionalists of the internet variety to create posters and memes attacking Maharishi Dayananda. But they would not even exist had there been no Arya Samaj.

Arya Samaj became the resistance movement and renaissance movement combined into one.

From the fiery womb of Arya Samaj came Lala Lajpat Rai, Bhai Paramanand and Swami Shradhanand. They played an important role in preventing conversions and bringing back the lost. The Shuddhi ritual Arya Samaj created has become an important shield and armour in the hands of the Hindu movement.

One may not agree with each and every word of Maharishi Dayanand, but he revitalised India.

Perhaps nothing can do more justice to the sacred living memory of this Vedic Maharishi of modern times than the words of Mahayogi Sri Aurobindo, which need to be quoted in length to bring out the greatness of Maharishi Dayanand:


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