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Home > Books > Bhagavad Gita by Stephen Mitchell
Bhagavad Gita by Stephen Mitchell
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On the list of the greatest spiritual books of all time, the Bhagavad Gita
resides permanently in the top echelon. This poem of patently Indian
genius sprouted an immense tree of devotional, artistic, and
philosophical elaboration in the subcontinent. The scene is a
battlefield with the prince Arjuna pitted against his own family, but
no sooner does the poem begin than the action reverts inward. Krishna,
Arjuna's avatar and spiritual guide, points the way to the supreme
wisdom and perfect freedom that lie within everyone's reach. Worship
and be faithful, meditate and know reality--these make up the secret of
life and lead eventually to the realization that the self is the root
of the world. In this titular translation, Stephen Mitchell's rhythms
are faultless, making music of this ancient "Song of the Blessed One."
Savor his rendition, but nibble around the edges of his introduction.
In a bizarre mixture of praise and condescension, Mitchell disregards
two millennia of Indian commentary, seeking illumination on the text
from Daoism and Zen, with the Gita coming up just shy of full
spiritual merit. Perhaps we should take it from Gandhi, who used the
Gita as a handbook for life, that it nourishes on many levels. --Brian Bruya
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