Insight: Bhagavad Githa
for Senior Leaders -
Bhagavad Githa is jewel of Vedic Knowledge. Lord
Krishna is leading Arjuna, at the battlefield. Arjuna has a duty to discharge;
to restore dharma, but encountered with a conflict of the vision and values.
Arjuna loses heart as he sees the enemy troops across the great field, made up
of friends, relatives, teachers and playmates, everyone he has loved and
admired. He sees in their steely and determined faces a mirror of himself: a
reflection of his own thoughts and action.
Until that moment, he never really questioned his
values; he came face to face with his belief system. He directly saw his likes
and dislikes clear for the first time - personal gain, personal glory, desire
for power - he realizes helplessness, desire and anger were what had been
motivating him throughout his entire life. Horrified, he was disarmed. Thinking
the only way to renounce his anger and desire was to drop his weapons, lead a
life of renunciation and refuse to fight, he cries out to Krishna, "Teach
me what is “Sreyas” for me"
In response to Arjuna in his anguish, Lord Krishna
with great compassion and smile imparts the Vedic teachings to Arjuna. Krishna saw
the shishya in Arjuna and proceeds to explain that leaders must take value
guided action to achieve higher goals, but the way that leaders conduct themselves and what they value are
critically important if the higher good or dharma is to be the outcome. In
short, the end will not justify the means.
Even more fundamental, Krishna makes a distinction between doing and being: the leader must be coming from
a place of living values, of right action itself, in order for "right choice" to triumph. In this case, for the war to be truly honorable Arjuna
must be in tune with his higher purpose; he can no longer use his helplessness
or ignorance as a fuel for action. He must put the good of the whole ahead of
any personal gain or glory. Likes and dislikes must not be his motive force.
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