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THE
BEGINNING
Auroville,
which means the 'City of Dawn', was founded by Sri Aurobindo's
mother on February 28, 1968. The disciple and spiritual
collaborator of Sri Aurobindo, she had built up the
Ashram into a multi-faceted, spiritual community and
had established the Sri Aurobindo International Center
for Education earlier.
Auroville
is meant to be "a universal town where men and
women of all countries are able to live in peace and
progressive harmony above all creeds, all politics and
all nationalities. The purpose of Auroville is to realize
human unity," said the Mother in 1965. Three years
later at the inauguration ceremony of Auroville on February
28, 1968 young boys and girls representing 121 nations
and 23 Indian states placed a handful of earth from
their part of the world in a lotus-shaped urn, symbolizing
the creation of a city dedicated to peace, international
understanding and a hopeful future for humanity. That
was the beginning.
THE
SOUL OF AUROVILLE
At the center of Auroville is the Matri Mandir described
as 'the soul of Auroville'. The main building is a flattened
sphere, 36 meters in diameter, within which is located
the 'Inner Room' visualized by the Mother. It is a place
"for concentration and
for trying to find
one's consciousness." In the hall with the crystal
globe-the largest single crystal in the world-everything
is in white. There are no flowers, no incense and no
music because the Mother did not wish it to be a typically
religious place: "there must be absolutely no dogmas,
nor rules, nor rituals". Here amidst total silence,
people are free to sit anywhere for quiet meditation.
It is open to visitors (who have to obtain a pass) between
4 p.m. and 5 p.m. every day.
MATRI
MANDIR
The Matri Mandir is surrounded by four zones: the
cultural, international, industrial, and residential.
The Cultural Zone has educational, cultural and sports
activities as its focus. It consists of schools, a sports
complex, and a youth center. A centralized structure
(Sri Aurobindo International Institute of Educational
Research), which is involved in research on new teaching
methods while recognizing traditional educational levels,
coordinates the whole system of education in Auroville.
The sports complex provides facilities for tennis, football,
handball, and riding. Cultural activities include drama,
musical and dance programs. The International Zone in
meant to be like an international campus, a place for
events, and a meeting place for compatriots.
The
Industrial Zone has money-generating units for Auroville,
which aims to be a self-supporting city. It has several
industries such as food processing units and concerns
such as jam and pickle making, bakeries, manufacturing
readymade garments, assembling electronic components,
and so on. The Residential Zone includes structures,
which range from huts to individual houses and apartments.
However, the individuals do not own the houses. They
belong to Auroville. A central community kitchen caters
for all Aurovilians though there are some separate community
kitchens as well. Auroville is now an expanding community
of nearly 2,000 people from Indian and some 30 countries
around the world. The Auroville residents have created
a basic infrastructure of roads, water, electricity
and telecommunications, including an electronic communication
network.
GREEN
DRIVE
The site of Auroville was once a backward and impoverished
rural area, surrounded by 13 villages with a population
of over 40,000 people. Bare and eroded, it was mainly
wasteland. A number of Aurovilians took up the task
of 'bringing this land back to life' with the help of
these villagers. After twenty years of hard work, they
have succeeded in regenerating the soil on a long-term
basis through biological farming methods without using
any artificial fertilizers or chemical products. The
two million trees planted by them on 2,800 acres of
once-arid land have successfully created a lush green
belt, which is beautiful to behold.
NATURAL
ENERGY
At Auroville, one can find an increasing utilization
of natural energy. Out of 400 houses, over 85 are run
entirely on electricity produced by photovoltaic panels
while others combine solar power with the state grid.
Thirty windmills and two wind turbines pump water in
addition to 100 solar photovoltaic pumps and a 36-KW
photovoltaic power plant that provides electricity for
the Matri Mandir. More than 70 solar cookers and a dozen
solar heaters are used by the community while 15 biogas
tanks produce methane for domestic use. The recently
opened Auroville kitchen has been designed to use a
15-meter diameter solar bowl-the biggest in India-for
cooking.
VOCATIONAL
TRAINING
Auroville has several education centers for the
Tamil villagers. New Creation is a primary school for
180 village children, 20 of whom are boarders. There
are training centers for young people in pottery, woodwork,
painting, weaving, metalwork, and stonecutting. There
are kindergartens and night schools for adults, which
conduct regular training programs in organic agriculture,
watershed management and environmental education.
ASHRAM
AND AUROVILLE
Outsiders often wonder how the Sri Aurobindo Ashram
and Auroville are related. While the Mother founded
both on the ideals of Sri Aurobindo, the two are separate
legal entities that have been evolving independently.
Broadly speaking, while the Ashram focuses on the inner
development and transformation of individuals, Auroville's
focus is the creation of a new society and city, which
is global and universal, belonging to humanity as a
whole.
THE
AUROVILLE CHARTER
The Auroville Charter of February 28, 1969 states
that Auroville belongs to nobody in particular. Auroville
belongs to humanity as a whole. But to live in Auroville
one must be a willing servitor of the Divine Consciousness.
Auroville will be the place of an unending education,
of constant progress and a youth that never ages.
Auroville wants to be the bridge between the past and
the future. Taking advantage of all discoveries from
without and from within, Auroville will boldly spring
towards future realization.
Auroville will be a site of material and spiritual researches
for a living embodiment of an actual Human Unity.
SRI AUROBINDO AND HIS PHILOSOPHY
Sri Aurobindo was born in Calcutta on August 15,
1872. He was sent to England for his education and graduated
from King's College, Cambridge. He also qualified for
the Indian Civil Service. Returning to India in 1893,
he worked for the princely State of Baroda for the next
13 years. He was also a professor in Baroda College
during the time. It is during this period that he got
involved in the Freedom Movement. He returned to Calcutta
in 1905 and soon became one of the leaders in the movement.
He was the first to express openly the concept of total
independence for the country in his journal Bande Mataram.
He was prosecuted twice for sedition and once for conspiracy.
He
had already started the practice of Yoga while in Baroda.
In 1910, he withdrew from politics and went to Pondicherry
in order to devote himself exclusively to his spiritual
life and work. During the next 40 years he evolved a
new method of spiritual practice (he called it Integral
Yoga), which aims at a realization that not only liberates
man's consciousness but with the possibility of acquiring
a new consciousness, the truth consciousness, and capable
of living a life perfectly harmonious, good and beautiful,
happy and fully conscious. He gave all his time to establish
in himself this consciousness, which he called 'supramental'
and helped those around him to realize it. He founded
Sri Aurobindo Ashram in 1926 with the help of the Mother,
his disciple and spiritual collaborator. A prolific
writer, Sri Aurobindo's work includes The Life Divine,
The Synthesis of Yoga, and Savitri. He passed away on
December 5, 1950.
THE
ASHRAM
The Ashram, which originally comprised a small group
of two-dozen disciples, has now grown into a large community
with over 1,200 members, around 400 students belonging
to the Center of Education and hundreds of devotees
who live nearby. Sri Aurobindo had said, "This
Ashram has been created
not for the renunciation
of the world but as a center and a field of practice
for another kind and form of life which would, in the
end, be moved by a higher spiritual consciousness and
embody a greater life of the spirit". In keeping
with his words, the Ashram is not a quiet place of retreat
secluded from the world but a vibrant center of life
in a busy, urban setting. Work here is essentially karma
yoga-an offering to the Divine. There is no obligatory
practices, no rituals, no compulsory meditations, or
systematic instructions in yoga. Each devotee is free
to determine the kind and pace of his/her sadhana and
decide what work he or she wants to do.
DUTIES
OF DEVOTEES
Everyone does some useful service everyday in the
various departments as part of their sadhana (devotion).
There are many fields to choose from. Those interested
in teaching work at the International Center for Education.
Other departments include the library, various art galleries,
photo section, publication department, art houses, weaving
department, travel agencies, furniture and leatherwork,
agarbattis, Ayurvedic section, batik works, cottage
industries, restaurants, perfumery, Hablik hand weaving,
handmade paper factory, woodwork unit, marbling unit
and the embroidery department, among others. However,
the general principle is the same for all-it is work
offered to the Divine; hence there should be a total
surrender to God in whatever they choose to do.
MIRRA
ALFASSA, THE MOTHER
Mirra Alfassa (later known as the Mother) was born
in Paris on February 21, 1878. A pupil of the Academia
Julian, she was a talented artist, pianist and writer.
However, her primary interest was in spiritual life.
She visited Pondicherry for the first time in 1914 to
meet Sri Aurobindo, her spiritual mentor and guide,
and returned finally in 1920. When the Sri Aurobindo
Ashram was founded in 1926, Sri Aurobindo entrusted
her with its entire responsibility. Under her guidance,
covering a span of nearly five decades, the Ashram grew
to be a large, multi-faceted spiritual community. She
also established the Sri Aurobindo International Center
of Education in 1952 and Auroville, an international
township, in 1968. The Mother passed away on November
17, 1973.
GETTING
THERE
Auroville is 160 km south of Chennai, and 10 kilometers
from Pondicherry. There are buses plying regularly from
Madras, Bangalore, Ooty, Madurai, Kanchipuram and Mahabalipuram.
The best way to get around is by bicycle, which can
be hired in Pondicherry.
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