
Someone from Japan once sent Mahatma Gandhi
three statues of monkeys.
Gandhi lived his whole life
without understanding their meaning.
Or whatever he understood
was misunderstood.
He even asked those who had sent them—
they too did not know.
You have seen those three monkeys.
In pictures, in statues.
One monkey sits with hands over the eyes.
One with hands over the ears.
One with hands over the mouth.
Gandhi interpreted them
as only Gandhi could.
He said:
The monkey covering the ears means—
do not listen to bad things.
The monkey covering the mouth means—
do not speak bad things.
The monkey covering the eyes means—
do not see bad things.
But a more wrong interpretation
is impossible.
Because the one who decides
not to see bad things
will first have to see them—
otherwise how will he know
that they are bad?
By the time you close your eyes,
you have already seen.
And there is a danger with seeing—
if the eyes see even a little
and then close,
the image begins to appear inside.
That poor monkey
will be in great trouble.
The same with hearing.
To decide not to listen to bad things,
you must first listen.
And once heard,
closing the ears will not help—
the sound will begin to echo within.
No.
This is not the meaning.
The meaning is this:
click here to read the entire story
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