Discourse on Compromise
Question: Beloved Osho, Why do I always
compromise?
Osho: One compromises because one is not certain about
one's truth, one is not certain about one's own experience.
The moment you have
experienced something, it is impossible to compromise. There is no possibility
at all. You compromise only because your idea is only a mind thing, a borrowed
thought. You don't know whether it is right or wrong, so even if half
proves to be right, it is not a bad bargain.
There is an ancient story in Egypt. Two women
came to the court of the king with a small child. They contended -- both of them
-- that, "The child belongs to me, he is my child." And each woman was
persistent -- "The child is mine."
The king had to decide, and it was very
difficult -- how to decide? The husbands of both women had died in war, in the
service of the king.
Finally he asked his master, an old wise man.
The master came and he said, "It is very simple. Bring the child."
The child was brought to the master, who asked
the king to cut him in two, and give half to each woman. "What is the problem?
They both say the child is theirs. There being no other evidence, no witness,
justice demands that the child should be divided into two."
The king was shocked. He said, "What are you
saying?" But before the king could say anything more, the master drew the king's
sword out of its sheath. And one woman ran forward and said, "No! Give the child
to the other; he is not mine."
The master gave the child to the woman who had
run forward and said he was not hers. The king said, "What is happening? I don't
understand. The woman is saying the child is not hers."
The master said, "Only the mother couldn't stand
to see the child cut in two. The other woman is withstanding it perfectly well,
without any difficulty -- if the child is cut in two, it is cut, there is no
harm, it is not her child. She is ready to compromise, even if half a dead child
is given to her. But the other woman is not ready to compromise -- either the
whole child or no child."
When you have a truth, you are almost like a
mother -- you have given birth to an experience. Either you would like to have
it total, or you would not like to have it at all. But you cannot be ready to
cut it in two, because any living experience cut in two becomes dead. All
compromises are dead.
Nobody in the whole history of man who has known
anything about truth has ever compromised. Rather, he has been ready to die for
it. It happened with al-Hillaj Mansoor. His master Junnaid loved him very much
-- he was a man worthy to be loved -- and he tried to persuade him for years,
"In your room you can shout Ana'l hag -- `I am God' -- but don't do that in the
streets. You know that the people are fanatic, I also know the fact."
But al-Hillaj said, "You only know the fact. I
have experienced it. You have compromised with the society, you are a respected
teacher. I don't want any respectability, but I will not hide my truth. Truth is
like fire, you cannot hide it. I have to shout it from the
housetops."
And in a Mohammedan country -- where fanaticism
is the rule, not the exception -- he was immediately caught, and brought before
the caliph because "This is against our religion; there is only one God, and he
is in the heavens. You are just a mortal being. Even Mohammed has not said, `I
am God.' He simply says, `I am the messenger of God.' And you are saying that
you are God. Are you mad? Either stop it, or death is the only punishment for
it."
al-Hillaj said, "Death is accepted, but I cannot
compromise on this point. It is my experience, I am god. And I say you are also
god -- but your god is asleep and my god is awake."
Junnaid again came into the jail to persuade
him, "This is foolish. You are such a beautiful young man, with a great future.
You can become a great teacher. I know that what you are saying is right, but
can't you compromise?"
al-Hillaj said, "With all honor I want to say to
you, you don't know. That's why you have compromised. You have heard -- I have
seen. You have read -- I have been. Death does not matter, but compromise is
simply out of the question."
And the day he was crucified, thousands of
people came to throw stones, to condemn him. Junnaid also came; he loved him, he
was his student, and he knew that he had immense possibilities of growth. And he
had understood perfectly well that he himself was only knowledgeable, and
al-Hillaj had experienced. But this is how compromise works.
Everybody was throwing stones -- not to throw a
stone was to risk that people may think, "This man is in favor of al-Hillaj." So
he brought a roseflower so that when so many people in the crowd are throwing
stones he could throw the roseflower; people will see that he has thrown
something, but who knows that he has thrown the roseflower?
The mind of compromise... nobody should suspect
that he has not thrown a stone. So he is compromising on two grounds: one with
the people, that he has thrown a stone... and he is compromising with al-Hillaj
also. Because al-Hillaj must be looking out for Junnaid, to see whether he has
come or not, and it would be very cowardly not to go.
al-Hillaj was smiling when stones were showering
on him, hurting him, and blood was flowing all over the body. But when the
roseflower of Junnaid hit him, he started crying. Tears came to his
eyes.
Somebody asked, "What happened? So many stones
and you continued to smile, and somebody has thrown a roseflower and tears have
come to your eyes."
al-Hillaj said, "Yes, because the people who are
throwing stones don't know me. And the person who has thrown the roseflower
knows me, knows my truth. But he is a coward, and I am ashamed that I have been
a student of this man. Stones don't matter. But this roseflower has hit me
hard."
Compromise simply means you are on
uncertain ground. Rather than compromising, find grounding,
roots, individuality. Find a sincerity of feeling, the support of your heart.
Then whatever the consequence, it does not matter. The man who knows, knows
perfectly well that no harm is possible. You can kill him, but you cannot harm
him.
And the man who does not know is always
trembling, always worried. In that worrying and trembling, that anguish, he goes
on compromising with everybody -- just to be safe, not to be harmed. But what
are you trying to save? You don't have anything to save. Those who have
something to save don't compromise.
A man like Socrates is given an opportunity by
the judges, that if he leaves Athens... he can live outside of Athens and in
this way he can avoid the death penalty. Anybody would suggest that "This is a
simple compromise, you can just live outside the boundary lines of Athens" --
because in those days in Greece there were only city-states; every city was a
state. Just outside the boundary you were outside the state. He could have lived
almost in the suburbs.
But men like Socrates are impossible.He said, "I
would rather die than escape. And anyway, I am old. How long I am going to live?
And if the most cultured city of these days cannot tolerate me, who is going to
tolerate me? It is better to die in Athens than anywhere else -- at least I have
the consolation that I am being killed by the most cultured people."
The judges were really trying hard somehow to
save him, because he had not committed any crime. It was just that the mob
wanted him to be killed -- he was corrupting the youth.
Now, anybody who brings new thoughts to the
world can be blamed because he is corrupting the youth -- because he is bound to
be against the old ideas, he is bound to fight against the old. You can call it
corruption: "He is corrupting our tradition, our religion, our
culture."
The judges said, "We have another suggestion:
you can live in Athens, but stop talking about truth."
Socrates says, "You are asking me to do the
impossible. I will speak about truth and truth alone until my last breath. Do
you want me to start speaking lies? Do you want me not to speak at all? -- that
too is a lie, because I know the truth and I am not speaking it, and the lie is
spreading in people's minds. No, I will be here, and I will speak the truth. It
is up to you -- you can kill me. But no compromise on any ground."
Try to find your
individuality, your integrity, and make the effort of not compromising.
Because the more you compromise, the less you are an individual. You are
only a cog in the wheel, just a part in the vast mechanism, just a small part of
the mob -- not an individual in your own beauty, in your own right.
I am absolutely against compromise. Death is far
more beautiful than a life of compromise.
Source: from book “Beyond Enlightenment” by Osho
No comments:
Post a Comment