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Fragment ID: 6514

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Sri Aurobindo — Shah, Punamchand Mohanlal

Undated

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To Punamchand M. Shah [11]1

Re Punamchand.

(1) To give up his Bombay work and stay here.

(2) To return to Bombay. If so, for what work and in what conditions?

. . . . . . . . . . . .

For (1) –

I doubt whether he will be able, after the very different conditions to which he has been accustomed in Bombay, to settle down to the discipline of the Asram which itself is very different from what it was when he was last here. And where to put them, if they stay?

. . . . . . . . . . . .

For (2)

On the other hand, if he goes back, how is he to live? It is out of the question for us to send him money and he must not even think of it. In future also we cannot make ourselves responsible for any loans he may contract; that too must be understood clearly.

If he collects money and spends all or most of what he gets on his own expenses, that is about the worst thing that can be done. It discredits him in people’s eyes and discredits the collection and the Asram. As soon as it is known people cease to give money. Moreover, what is the meaning of a collection in which all the money realised goes to collection expenses and nothing goes to the fund for which the collection is made.

There is therefore only one possible solution, for him to fix a maximum amount for his expenses and find someone (now that Vithaldas is no more) who will give him that sum monthly. All other amounts must be strictly sent here. And on no account must his expenses exceed the sum fixed. This seems to me the only solution if he goes back to Bombay.

For the work –

It seems no longer possible for him to collect money in the way he and Dixit first did – approaching anybody and everybody for contributions. The one thing he might possibly do is what he has done with Narainji and Ramnarayan,– to make the acquaintance of people, get them interested in the Asram and its work, and prepare them for coming over here for us to see what can be done with them; if he can get them meanwhile to contribute, so much the better. But they must be men who can give assistance, either in a large sum or as a substantial assistance to the monthly expenses.

Sri Aurobindo

How can he expect me to protect him if constantly he is going out of my protection?

The Mother

 

 

1 Punamchand Mohanlal Shah (born 1898), of Patan, Gujarat, met Sri Aurobindo in Pondicherry in 1919. Four years later he became a member of his household. Between 1927 and 1931, he spent much of his time in Gujarat trying to collect money for the newly founded Ashram. In August 1927 Sri Aurobindo wrote three letters to Punamchand on fearlessness, work and money, which were published in 1928 as chapters 3, 4 and 5 of The Mother. Here thirteen other letters to Punamchand on fund-raising and other subjects are reproduced.

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2 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: on

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3 Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.: coming here

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4 This sentence restored from Champaklal’s Treasures, 2008 ed.

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