journal d'une transition
1321
not able to recognise that Matrimandir is the place where this work will be perfectly expressed in matter? There is again something to understand here. For there is a psychological stance that can allow one to arrive at the above attitude – and it is rooted in the occident’s cyclic social evolution.
2. Of city centres versus spiritual power sources.
Observing the physical location, the manner of disposition and the purposes of buildings, one can discern the true centre of a city – where is its heart. In even a slightly organised city, nothing ever finds itself placed where it is by mere chance. Each thing and its particular location is a symbol in itself. If you look at today’ western cities, almost always the most important ‘centre’ is the economic (not by chance were the World Trade Centre buildings the tallest in New York, and they were targeted last year precisely because they did symbolise the US’s economic power). Often very close to the economic centre one may find the symbols and sources of military or political might. For these remain the outer symbols by which the West measures its power. This was not so in medieval times when Western cathedrals were the real city centres and sources of radiating energy. But the European Reformation downgraded such power sources – shifted the energy to ‘secular’ spaces. Humanism and the seeking for rational knowledge progressed through the cycle of triumphant outer sciences to end upon the rocks of Utilitarian philosophy (a philosophy Mother called a ‘disease’ with no place in the Ashram, so antithetical is it to Their Work). Today, after a hundred years of utilitarianism, it is normally the economic and the political/military symbols which represent the power centres of collective life in the West. India’s temple cities present another picture – the spiritual centre was the true source of life and action. And even in the present day messes which are today’ Indian cities, the spiritual centres remain the sovereign sources of a unique and radiating power. Political and civic authorities hesitate greatly before choosing to intervene in such centres. For all her problems, India always remains open to perennial Truths; she never quite gives herself over to mere outward ways of being. The differing truth of the East and West must be understood for it holds one major key that may help to explain the present situation around Matrimandir. If one looks deeper, it may also reveal why so many people have appeared to support what is by any standards an inexcusable, adharmic action. One reason certainly is that the dominant force and the dominant manner of action in Auroville yet remains inspired by Western models. India and Indian ways have had little place here in spite of all the pious lip service that is paid to Auroville’s host country.
The question before Auroville is: is the Matrimandir a city centre (as the present Master Plan conceives it), or will it be allowed to be a sovereign soul space?
3. The Town Hall and Matrimandir.
From the time that the architect placed the town hall where he did and (in an overnight commando action) Aurofuture felled the trees to create an ‘unobstructed view’ of the Matrimandir ‘monument’, it has been clear that the final denouement between these opposing Forces was approaching. The recent ‘resolutions’ to
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