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ॐ असतो मा सद्गमय।
तमसो मा ज्योतिर्गमय।  
मृत्योर्मामृतं गमय ॥
ॐ शान्ति शान्ति शान्तिः ॥  

Education is for gaining Knowledge. The intellect is a gift of God to the human being, given to him in trust that he will wisely employ it for his own development as well as for the good of all God's creation. And therefore the thoughts that go into the intellect should bring fulfilment, peace and harmony to man. Education was undertaken as worship to the God of Knowledge "अमृतं तु विद्या"  Knowledge is the nectar of God. Education should not be just to teach one how to make a living, but to teach one-about life. Spencer, a great thinker in Education, says that no man has ever become great by education. Those who have become great have become so because of the culture they received.  

OMNIFY EDUCATION (The gurukul of new era)

Gurukuls were schools of learning where all children, whether they were girls or boys, Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Vaishyas or Shudras, were sent to receive education. Each Gurukul was headed by the Guru and his wife, and students lived in the Gurukul for many years. The Guru and his wife gave the same love to the students that they would have received from their own parents.  

THE CHILD

There was a psychological reason behind the establishment of this system of education. A child develops understanding when he becomes 7 or 8 years old. He would be sent to the Gurukul, where he would live in an atmosphere conducive to learning, and the parents on the other hand could live freely without worrying about creating harmful impressions on the child. Life is one of the greatest forms of wealth. This wealth of life has been classified into 4 stages:
1) the time to gain
2) the time to enjoy
3) the time to give and
4) the time to renounce.
Brahmacharya-ashram is the time to gain - gain intellectual and physical strength.  

THE ENVIRONMENT

Ease of Learning: Education was given easily and naturally. Tolstoy has said that a child learns only during the first seven years of his life. He automatically absorbs everything the mother says and how she says it and the learning thus received is true education. The Gurukul system stressed that learning should not be felt to be a punishment, it should be undertaken with joy and enthusiasm. It was undertaken for self-development. People went with pleasure to the Gurukuls. Thereafter came a time when they studied because they considered it their duty, and today, many children consider going to school a punishment. It has become a burden children must bear. When learning becomes a pleasure, it makes a great difference in the attitude toward the work that has to be undertaken in learning. Then learning will not become a matter of fulfilling a quota of classes necessary for the completion of the school year. The Guru took personal interest in every individual child who came to him for education. The impersonal attitude of the present system of education leaves each student to grasp whatever he can according to his intellectual power. Whereas the Guru would, for the student's good, keep on repeating the lesson to be taught until the student had grasped it completely and satisfactorily. Parents give the child physical life. The Guru gives him spiritual and ethical life. By giving him knowledge of the minutest atom, he takes him intellectually into the world of God. Because the Guru is a fountain of knowledge and brilliance, his attitude is loving and benevolent. Rich and poor students in the Gurukul were treated alike. To the Guru, each child was the representative of the entire human race. If one child was spoilt, the whole race could fall. Therefore, part of his teaching would be in the form of worship of God. And because of this pious environment in the Gurukuls, cultured and well-behaved citizens - were created. In everyone, qualities befitting the human being were developed, and bad qualities shorn away. Grateful, knowledgeable, youths of good character emerged from the Gurukuls.  

THE GURU

The Guru was the student's whole world. It is only when the teacher means everything to the student that the student will absorb everything that the teacher says. The Upanishads tell us “आचार्य देवो भवः”- Think of your teacher as God. This is for the student's good. There should be gratitude towards the teacher, as well as the feeling that he means the whole world to the student, then only will the teachings of the Teacher affect the student. If the student thinks the teacher is a fool, he will never learn anything from him. Therefore our culture teaches an attitude of reverence for the teacher:

“गुरुर्ब्रह्मा गुरुर्विष्णु र्गुरुर्देवो महेश्वरः
गुरु साक्षात परब्रह्मा तस्मै श्रीगुरवे नमः”


The Guru was God to the student. He instilled hope and solace in the student, understanding the fears and difficulties of the student, guiding him toward spiritual development. Only those who were distinguished by certain qualities were deemed Gurus, not as today, when someone who performs miracles and claims to be God's messenger instantly attains the status of Guru. The qualities necessary to be a Guru were:

1. Life touched by divinity.
2. An intellect full of knowledge
3. A heart filled with love
4. Broad view of life
5. Generosity of spirit
6. Noble, brilliant life,
7. Wealth of heart.  

Physical development: Students
should exercise to develop healthy bodies. The children in the Gurukul regularly did Surya-namaskar. That is, even physical exercise was undertaken with devotion. Mental development: One must know how one is to live with others. The student has to be educated on how to live in the family, in society. There is no use of the knowledge that does not increase the love between man and man, man and nature, man and God. This loving attitude is received in temples, from the Geeta and the Upanishads, at the feet of the Lord and from his scriptures. Today thoughts have become lifeless, and life has become thoughtless and that is why man is lost. He does not know in which direction he is going, and what he is doing. Education has become divorced from life. The education by which man's intellect blossoms, that is, which increases Smruti (memory), Medha (the faculty of reasoning) and Pragna (the mind's power of discrimination), and which contains the culture and values of the parents, is Internal education. This education begins from the time the child is in the womb and continues for the 7-8 years that he lives at home with his parents. And that is why it has been logically explained in the Indian Culture what a woman should read and do or not do during her pregnancy.