Swami Vivekananda
By, Chaturvedi, Badrinath
Publisher: Penguin Books
Class No.: 294.52 BAD
Accession No.: 018930
Year: 2006
Pages: 452 p.
In the course of a short life of thirty-nine years, Swami Vivekananda came to be
regarded as the patriot–saint of modern India. Despite all that has been written
about his life and his epoch-making address at the Parliament of Religions in
Chicago, 1893, Swami Vivekananda remains a paradox: much is known about him, but
very little is understood about the man and his relevance to our own troubled
times.
In Swami Vivekananda: The Living Vedanta, Chaturvedi Badrinath looks
behind the iconic façade, seeking to liberate Vivekananda from the confines of
the worship room. He examines the various facets of a man who was as much at
ease with philosophical discourse as he was with cooking; whose childlike love
for ice cream went hand in hand with his stature as a prophet. The author also
throws light on the various relationships that shaped Swamiji’s philosophy of
Vedanta and formed the core of his teaching—with his spiritual guru Sri
Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, his mother Bhubaneswari Devi, and his many followers in
the West, mostly women, who became central to his life and work.
Well researched and brimming with a wealth of detail, Swami
Vivekananda: The Living Vedanta offers an unforgettable insight into the life
and times of this renaissance figure—a one who was the very embodiment of the
Vedanta that he preached.