the school was a part of the temple. In India the trust in the teacher was 
so great that the parents gave over their sons completely to him for 
many years, and teacher and students lived together as a family. 
Because this happy relation should be brought back again, I put Love 
first among the Qualifications which a teacher ought to have. If India is 
to become again the great nation which we all hope to see, this old 
happy relation must be re-established. 
 
I. LOVE 
My Master taught me that Love will enable a man to acquire all other 
qualities and that "all the rest without it would never be sufficient." 
Therefore no person ought to be a teacher--ought to be allowed to be a 
teacher--unless he has shown in his daily life that Love is the strongest 
quality of his nature. It may be asked: How are we to find out whether a 
person possesses Love to a sufficient degree to make him worthy to be 
a teacher? Just as a boy shows his natural capacities at an early age for 
one profession or another, so a particularly strong love-nature would 
mark a boy out as specially fitted to be an instructor. Such boys should 
be definitely trained for the office of the teacher just as boys are trained 
for other professions. 
Boys who are preparing for all careers live a common life in the same 
school, and they can only become useful to the nation as men, if their 
school life is happy. A young child is naturally happy, and if that 
happiness is allowed to go on and grow in the school, and at home, then 
he will become a man who will make others happy. A teacher full of 
love and sympathy will attract the boys and make their school life a 
pleasant one. My Master once said that "children are very eager to learn 
and if a teacher cannot interest them and make them love their lessons, 
he is not fit to be a teacher and should choose another profession." He
has said also: "Those who are mine love to teach and to serve. They 
long for an opportunity of service as a hungry man longs for food, and 
they are always watching for it. Their hearts are so full of the divine 
Love that it must be always overflowing in love for those around them. 
Only such are fit to be teachers--those to whom teaching is not only a 
holy and imperative duty, but also the greatest of pleasures." 
A sympathetic teacher draws out all the good qualities in his pupils, 
and his gentleness prevents them from being afraid of him. Each boy 
then shows himself just as he is, and the teacher is able to see the line 
best suited to him and to help him to follow it. To such a teacher a boy 
will come with all his difficulties, knowing that he will be met with 
sympathy and kindness, and, instead of hiding his weaknesses, he will 
be glad to tell everything to one of whose loving help he is sure. The 
good teacher remembers his own youth, and so can feel with the boy 
who comes to him. My Master said: "He who has forgotten his 
childhood and lost sympathy with the children is not a man who can 
teach them or help them." 
This love of the teacher for his pupil, protecting and helping him, will 
bring out love from the pupil in turn, and as he looks up to his teacher 
this love will take the form of reverence. Reverence, beginning in this 
way with the boy, will grow as he grows older, and will become the 
habit of seeing and reverencing greatness, and so perhaps in time may 
lead him to the Feet of the Master. The love of the boy to the teacher 
will make him docile and easy to guide, and so the question of 
punishment will never arise. Thus one great cause of fear which at 
present poisons all the relations between the teacher and his pupil will 
vanish. Those of us who have the happiness of being pupils of the true 
Masters know what this relation ought to be. We know the wonderful 
patience, gentleness and sympathy with which They always meet us, 
even when we may have made mistakes or have been weak. 
Yet there is much more difference between Them and us than between 
the ordinary teacher and his pupil. When the teacher has learned to look 
upon his office as dedicating him to the service of the nation, as the 
Master has dedicated Himself to the service of humanity, then he will
become part of the great Teaching Department of the world, to which 
belongs my own beloved Master--the Department    
    
		
	
	
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