Ask Osho!

Why is there a perceived preference for Westerners over Indians in the context of Sannyas?

Synthesized from Source definition

"The heart knows the way to sannyas, while the mind often needs a gentle nudge towards silence. In the dance of spirituality, some require words, while others simply need to be held in silence."

According to Osho, there’s no favoritism: Westerners require verbal, logical persuasion, so he talks to them more; Indians already resonate with sannyas through the heart and come for silent satsang, needing courage rather than arguments. To spectators, extended dialogue looks like special attention, but the silent ‘bridge’ with receptive Indians is deeper. He even discourages over‑intellectual Indians, focusing on heart-ready seekers while gradually guiding Westerners toward silence.
He talks more to Westerners because they need explanations, while Indians usually feel it in their hearts and just sit quietly—so it only looks like he prefers Westerners.
Why this matters practically
- Don’t mistake lots of talking for deeper care
- Match communication to head or heart; practice silence
- Build courage to act on inner knowing, not just ideas
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