Q. You have often said that when you talk of Rama you refer to the Ruler of the
Universe and not to Rama, the son of Dasharatha. But we find that your Ramadhun
calls on 'Sita-Rama', 'Raja Rama' and it ends with 'Victory to Rama, the Lord of
Sita'. Who is this Rama if not the son of the King Dasharatha?
A. In Ramadhun 'Raja Rama', 'Sita-Rama' are undoubtedly repealed. But more potent than
Rama is the Name. Hindu dharma is like a boundless ocean teeming with
priceless gems. The deeper you dive the more treasures you find. In Hindu
religion, God is known by various names. Thousands of people look doubtless upon
Rama and Krishna as historical figures and literally believe that God came down
in person on earth in the form of Rama, the son of Dasharatha and by worshipping
him one can attain salvation. The same thing holds good about Krishna. History,
imagination and truth have got so inextricably mixed up. It is next to
impossible to disentangle them. I have accepted all the names and forms
attributed to God as symbols connoting one formless, omnipresent Rama. To me,
therefore, Rama described as the Lord of Sita, son of Dasharatha, is the
all-powerful essence whose name inscribed in the heart removes all suffering —
mental, moral and physical.