In memory of
Jiddu Krishnamurti (1895 - 1986)

"Is
it possible to be responsible for the whole of mankind, and therefore responsible
for nature? That is, is it possible to answer adequately, totally to your
children, to your neighbour, for all the movement that man has created
in his endeavour to live rightly. And to feel that immense responsibility,
not only intellectually, verbally, but very deeply, to be able to answer
to the whole human struggle of pain, brutality, violence and despair? To
respond totally to that, one must know what it means to love.
That word love has been so misused, so spoilt, so trodden upon, but we will have to use that word and give to it a totally different kind of meaning. To be able to answer to the whole there must be love. And to understand that quality, that compassion, that extraordinary sense of energy, which is not created by thought, we must understand suffering. When we use the word understand, it is not a verbal or intellectual communication of words, but the communication or communion that lies behind the word. We must understand and be able to go beyond suffering, otherwise we cannot possibly understand the responsibility for the whole, which is real love.
So, to understand this responsibility for the whole, and therefore that strange quality of love, one must go beyond suffering. What is suffering? Why do human beings suffer? This has been one of the great problems of life for millions of years. Apparently very few have gone beyond suffering, and they become either heroes or saviours, or some kind of neurotic leaders, and there they remain. But ordinary human beings like you and me never seem to go beyond it. We seem to be caught in it. And we are asking now whether it is possible for you to be really free of suffering."
This
is a qoutation of Jiddu Krishnamurti´s "Talks in Saanen", 1974
Biographical notes:
J.K.
was born in Madanapalle, South India on May 12, 1895. For more than sixty
years he traveled the world giving public talks and private interviews
to millions of people of all ages and backgrounds, saying that only through
a complete change in the hearts and minds of individuals can there come
about a change in society and peace in the world. He died on February 17,
1986 in Ojai, California, at the age of ninety and his talks, dialogues,
journals and letters have been preserved in seventy books and in hundreds
of audio and video recordings.