Swami Vivekananda Ji: Un impacto vivo en la fortaleza, el servicio y la paz interior.

Swami Vivekananda Ji sigue siendo una de las voces modernas más luminosas de la India, no por ofrecer una filosofía reconfortante, sino porque exigió una valiente

Por Luis Miguel Gallardo, Hipnoterapeuta Certificado2 min de lectura405 palabras
Swami Vivekananda Ji: Un impacto vivo en la fortaleza, el servicio y la paz interior.

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Swami Vivekananda Ji: A Living Impact on Strength, Service, and Inner Peace—and How His Vision Echoes in Fundamental Peace, Nonviolence, and Hypnotherapy

Swami Vivekananda Ji remains one of India’s most luminous modern voices—not because he offered a comforting philosophy, but because he demanded a courageous transformation of the human being. His message was at once spiritual and fiercely practical: awaken the strength within, recognize the divinity in all, and translate inner realization into compassionate action. More than a century after his historic address at the World’s Parliament of Religions in Chicago (1893), Vivekananda’s impact continues to shape India’s intellectual and cultural confidence, global interest in Vedanta and Yoga, and the modern understanding that spirituality must serve humanity.

For me, his legacy is not only a chapter of history—it is a working framework. In my work on Fundamental Peace and nonviolence, and in my teachings on Hypnotherapy at Shoolini University in India, I find Vivekananda Ji’s ideas continually returning as a clarifying compass: peace is not passive, nonviolence is not weak, and lasting change begins in the inner architecture of the mind.

The Core of Vivekananda’s Impact: “Each Soul Is Potentially Divine”

At the heart of Vivekananda Ji’s teaching is an idea both simple and revolutionary: the human being is not fundamentally broken; the human being is fundamentally luminous. A line often paraphrased from his teachings— “Each soul is potentially divine”—captures his lifelong insistence that spiritual growth is not an escape from life, but the unveiling of our deepest nature through disciplined living, service, and self-mastery.

This shift in identity has enormous consequences. When a person internalizes the belief “I am weak, unworthy, and unsafe,” life becomes reactive—dominated by fear, aggression, or withdrawal. Vivekananda Ji countered this with a fierce spiritual psychology: strength is not arrogance; strength is alignment with truth. He repeatedly emphasized that spirituality should produce fearlessness, compassion, and character.

His impact can be seen across several dimensions:

  1. Global spiritual dialogue: He brought Vedanta’s universalism and the spirit of interfaith harmony to the world stage with clarity and dignity.
  2. Indian self-confidence and social uplift: He argued that national regeneration requires “man-making education”—education that builds character, confidence, and service-mindedness.
  3. Practical Vedanta: He insisted that spirituality must be lived as ethical action—especially through service to the poor and marginalized, which he described as serving the Divine in human form.

Peace as Strength: Vivekananda’s Uncompromising Spiritual Realism

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