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Story by Swami Vivekananda about religions, but now suits the divided Caste system.


CherryGaru

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This was told by Swami Vivekananda in the famous World Religion Congress in Chicago in 1893, when people at that time were fighting saying their religion is better.. But now after 120 years, the story suits well for narrow minded caste fanatics of AP.

Moral stories like these are there for a reason. 

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We have all heard the story about a frog in the well. In our ancient texts, it is called Kupamanduka, where kupa means a well and manduka means a frog. In Bangla, it’s called 'kuo bang', where kuo means well and bang means frog. The story is also found in Chinese folk tales.

In Malay language, there is a phrase 'katak di bawah tempurong', which means ‘frogs under a coconut shell’. In 1893, a Parliament of World Religions was held at Chicago, USA. Here, Swami Vivekananda represented India and Hinduism. He narrated this story to illustrate why there were so many differences among religions.

The story goes like this: A frog lived in a well. He was born and brought up there. It was a very old well filled with shallow water at the bottom. The walls of the well were all covered with wet moss. When the little frog was thirsty, he drank a little bit of the well water, and when he was hungry, he ate some insects. When he was tired, he lay on a little rock at the bottom of the well and looked up at the sky above him. Sometimes he saw passing clouds. He was very happy and satisfied. One day, another frog that lived in the ocean came and fell into the well.

'Where are you from?'

'I am from the ocean.'

'The ocean! How big is that?'

The well frog took a small leap.

'Is it this big?'

The ocean frog laughed and said, 'No, it is bigger.'

The well frog took a bigger leap and asked, 'This big?'

'No.'

The well frog took a mighty leap from one side of the well to the other.

'Is it as big as my well?'

'What nonsense you speak, to compare the sea with your well!'

'Well, then,’ said the frog of the well, ‘nothing can be bigger than my well; you are a liar, get out of my well.'

Let's not laugh too much on the frog in the well because we are all like him in some way or the other. We, too often, discount things that lie outside our own experience. We think that we have seen all there is to see and we know all there is to know.

We all have our wells; whether we can recognize them or not. Remember, we can be a happy frog even at the bottom of a well but we can be a much happier frog out in the big wide world. We must recognize our well and come out of it. The only way to expand our knowledge is to shun our narrow-mindedness and broaden our horizons

 

 

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  • CherryGaru changed the title to Story by Swami Vivekananda about religions, but now suits the divided Caste system.

This moral of the story is not only true with the various differences and disputes that happens in the religious and social sphere, but also in the evolution and development in many professional fields also. In the field of mediation also, we find this. Many frogs in the well think that nothing can be bigger than their well and rule out developments in the field and take along with them other frogs too who believe it! I am sure it is not just a phenomenon in India, but such frogs would be there in other countries as well!

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