THE LINK
Issue No. 22

PDF Version

The Newletter

Editorial
by Javier Gómez Rodríguez

Dear Friends
by Friedrich Grohe

Letter From A Mother
by Shoo Shoo

Dependence And Emptiness
Krishnamurti

Letters to the Editor

The First Step is the Last Step
Krishnamurti


Articles

Talking about Krishnamurti
by Michael Butt

Was K Simplistic in his Approach?
by Carol Brandt

Mind and Brain
by Nick Short

On Transformation
Krishnamurti

Breaking New Ground in a Krishnamurti Committee
by Bernd Hollstein

How would you Teach about Fear?
Krishnamurti

Self-Concern and the Environment
by J. Pablo Vega Rodríguez

The Magical Garden
Suprabha Seshan


On Education

Editor's Note

Exploring K's Holistic Education
by Javier Gómez Rodríguez

Education for the Art of Living
by Bill Taylor

In Loco Parentis: Reflections on Caring for Teenagers
by Toon Zweers

The New Generaion
Krishnamurti


International Network

Announcements

Places Availble at Brockwood Park School

New Book and DVD

Theme Dialogue Meetings

Asia Commitee Meetings

Annual Winter Gathering
Thailand - 2002

Gathering in Australia

KFA Monograph Series

New Website on the Teachings

The New Generation
Krishnamurti

I am sure you have often heard from politicians, from educators, from your parents and from the public that you are the coming generation. But when they talk about you as a new generation, they really do not mean it because they make sure that you conform to the older pattern of society. They really do not want you to be a new, different kind of human being. They want you to be mechanical, to fit in with tradition, to conform, to believe, to accept authority. In spite of this, if you can actually free yourself from fear, not theoretically, not ideally, not merely outwardly but actually, inwardly, deeply, then you can be a different human being. Then you can become the coming generation. The older people are ridden with fear — fear of death, fear of losing jobs, fear of public opinion. They are completely held in the grip of fear. So their gods, their scriptures, their pujas are all within the field of fear and therefore the mind is curiously warped, perverted. Such a mind cannot think straight, cannot reason logically, sanely, healthily, because it is rooted in fear. Watch the older generation and you will see how fearful it is of everything — of death, of disease, of going against the current of tradition, of being different, of being new.

from On Education, pp.40
©1991 by Krishnamurti Foundation Trust Ltd.