Jaskaran Singh
Divosūnupriyaḥ
Apart from your mention of the story of satyakAma jAbAla (which could be interpreted in many ways, I may add), you haven't stated anything from shruti which could be viewed as going against birth-based varNa. That makes it kind of a baseless claim; the neo-Hindu part comes from the fact that this view is often peddled by neo-Hindus (you yourself said you wanted to "update Hinduism") and conjecture part pertains to the fact that it's an assumption. I hope that cleared up your doubts.And how does it become baseless neo-Hindu conjecture !!
Yet neither of them believed that shUdra-s should listen to the veda recition, much less learn it and recite it themselves:Shankara himself had uplifted many lower castes to higher castes during his travels all over India.
This was also practiced by Ramanuja.
From rAmAnuja's shrIbhAShyam:
"The Sûdra is specially forbidden to hear and study the Veda and to perform the things enjoined in it. 'For a Sûdra is like a cemetery, therefore the Veda must not be read in the vicinity of a Sûdra;' 'Therefore the Sûdra is like a beast, unfit for sacrifices.' And he who does not hear the Veda recited cannot learn it so as to understand and perform what the Veda enjoins. The prohibition of hearing thus implies the prohibition of understanding and whatever depends on it."
Source:http://www.bharatadesam.com/spiritu...nuja/vedanta_sutra_commentary_ramanuja136.php
From Adisha~NkarAchArya's brahmasUtrabhAShyam:
"The Sûdras are not qualified for that reason also that Smriti prohibits their hearing the Veda, their studying the Veda, and their understanding and performing Vedic matters. The prohibition of hearing the Veda is conveyed by the following passages: 'The ears of him who hears the Veda are to be filled with (molten) lead and lac,' and 'For a Sûdra is (like) a cemetery, therefore (the Veda) is not to be read in the vicinity of a Sûdra.' From this latter passage the prohibition of studying the Veda results at once; for how should he study Scripture in whose vicinity it is not even to be read? There is, moreover, an express prohibition (of the Sûdras studying the Veda). 'His tongue is to be slit if he pronounces it; his body is to be cut through if he preserves it.' The prohibitions of hearing and studying the Veda already imply the prohibition of the knowledge and performance of Vedic matters; there are, however, express prohibitions also, such as 'he is not to impart knowledge to the Sûdra,' and 'to the twice-born belong study, sacrifice, and the bestowal of gifts.'--From those Sûdras, however, who, like Vidura and 'the religious hunter,' acquire knowledge in consequence of the after effects of former deeds, the fruit of their knowledge cannot be withheld, since knowledge in all cases brings about its fruit. Smriti, moreover, declares that all the four castes are qualified for acquiring the knowledge of the itihâsas and purânas; compare the passage, 'He is to teach the four castes' (Mahâbh.).--It remains, however, a settled point that they do not possess any such qualification with regard to the Veda."
Source:http://www.bharatadesam.com/spiritual/brahma_sutra/brahma_sutra_sankara_34107.php
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