paá¸uyÄ sahasra yÄhÄá¹… paá¸e eka-á¹hÄñi
prabhura vá¹›ttÄnta dvija kahe tÄhÄá¹… yÄi
paá¸uyÄ - students; sahasra - a thousand; yÄhÄá¹… - where; paá¸e - they study; eka-thÄñi - in one place; prabhura - of the Lord; vá¹›ttÄnta - incident; dvija - the brÄhmaṇa; kahe - says; tÄhÄá¹… - there; yÄi - he goes.
In this verse we find the word dvija, indicating that the student was a brÄhmaṇa. Actually, in those days, only members of the brÄhmaṇa class became students of Vedic literature. Schooling is meant especially for brÄhmaṇas; previously there was no question of schooling for ká¹£atriyas, vaiÅ›yas or śūdras. Ká¹£atriyas used to learn the technology of warfare, and vaiÅ›yas learned business from their fathers or other businessmen; they were not meant to study the Vedas. At present, however, everyone goes to school, and everyone is given the same type of education, although no one knows what the result will be. The result, however, is most unsatisfactory, as we have seen in the Western countries especially. The United States has vast educational institutions where everyone is allowed to receive an education, but the result is that most students become like hippies.
Higher education is not meant for everyone. Only selected individuals trained in brahminical culture should be allowed to pursue a higher education. Educational institutions should not aim to teach technology, for a technologist cannot properly be called educated. A technologist is a śūdra; only one who studies the Vedas may properly be called a learned man (paṇá¸ita). The duty of a brÄhmaṇa is to become learned in the Vedic literature and teach the Vedic knowledge to other brÄhmaṇas. In our Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement we are simply teaching our students to become fit brÄhmaṇas and Vaiṣṇavas. In our school at Dallas, the students are learning English and Sanskrit, and through these two languages they are studying all our books, such as ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam, Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ As It Is and The Nectar of Devotion. It is a mistake to educate every student as a technologist. There must be a group of students who become brÄhmaṇas. Without brÄhmaṇas who study the Vedic literature, human society will be entirely chaotic.