By Harsh Thakor*
On February 17, the world marked the 40th death anniversary of Jiddu Krishnamurti. His passing chronicled the conclusion of a life unwaveringly devoted to exploring the mysteries of human existence. To understand the significance of his death, it is imperative to evaluate not only the physical reality of his deteriorating health but also the distinctive qualities that characterized his approach to life and death.
On February 17, the world marked the 40th death anniversary of Jiddu Krishnamurti. His passing chronicled the conclusion of a life unwaveringly devoted to exploring the mysteries of human existence. To understand the significance of his death, it is imperative to evaluate not only the physical reality of his deteriorating health but also the distinctive qualities that characterized his approach to life and death.
From his earliest lectures to his final days, he underlined the necessity of examining death—not as a separate entity but as an integral aspect of living. His death on February 17, 1986, in Ojai, California, marked the end of his physical journey but not the dissolution of his teachings. His final moments, including his last recorded words, signified not a culmination but a continuation of the radical inquiry that defined his life.
Unlike many spiritual leaders, he left behind no successor and appointed no spiritual authority to perpetuate his legacy. Although foundations were established to preserve his talks and writings, he consistently rejected the idea of a guru-disciple hierarchy or any prescribed path for followers. This absence of spiritual authority compelled those inspired by him to depend solely on their own inquiry rather than on external guidance.
By the time Krishnamurti reached his nineties, his body was frail, yet his mind remained remarkably sharp. His relentless schedule of travel and teaching, spanning decades across continents, had taken a toll on his health. Despite physical decline, he continued to captivate audiences with incisive insights into the nature of thought, fear, and freedom. In his final year, his health deteriorated significantly, and those close to him observed in him a sense of readiness to step into the unknown—an unknown he had so often spoken about.
Those present at his death described the moment as deeply moving, not because of any outward display, but because of the sense of stillness and simplicity that surrounded it. His passing, like his life, illuminated what it means to live and die with awareness, free from the psychological burdens of time and self. Krishnamurti often remarked that death was not something to be postponed or feared, but something to be understood directly. He did not perceive death as a contradiction to life but as its natural movement. This perspective allowed him to face his final moments as an embodiment of the teachings he had articulated for decades—that freedom lies not in evading mortality but in understanding it fully.
As he lay on his deathbed, surrounded by a few trusted companions, his final utterances conveyed humility and a quiet acknowledgment of the inevitable. According to accounts from those present, his last words were: “I am not sure the body can take any more.” In many ways, these words encapsulated the principles he had spent a lifetime expressing. They conveyed acceptance of the body’s limitations and a readiness to face reality without denial or resistance. This aligns with his teaching that freedom comes from perceiving things as they are, not as we wish them to be.
Those at his bedside described a subtle stillness that seemed to transcend the physical event of death. This silence was not merely the absence of sound; it was seen as a living testament to the depth of his inquiry. Krishnamurti often said that silence was the true language of understanding—the space in which the mind could encounter the immeasurable. In his final moments, that silence enveloped him and those around him, echoing the timeless dimension he had explored throughout his life.
Krishnamurti insisted that to understand life one must understand death. For him, the two were not opposites but movements of the same reality. He believed that humanity’s fear of death reflected a deeper misunderstanding of life itself. His reflections on mortality were not speculative metaphysics but invitations to observe the workings of attachment, fear, and thought.
He frequently stated, “To understand death, you have to understand life.” He urged listeners to perceive death not as a distant termination but as an inseparable element of existence. According to him, psychological continuity—the constant clinging to memory, identity, and experience—created fragmentation and fear. To live fully, he suggested, was to accept the inevitability of death not merely as an intellectual abstraction but as a living fact.
For Krishnamurti, the deeper meaning of death lay not in the physical event but in the ending of attachment. He argued that much of human suffering arises from our identification with possessions, beliefs, relationships, and images of ourselves. Death represents the ultimate ending of these attachments. Hence his often-posed question: can one “die” to the past each day? To die while living, in his vocabulary, meant freeing oneself from the psychological burden of accumulated memory and conditioning.
He also maintained that the root of fear lies in thought. Fear of death, he argued, is not about the actual event but about the projections of the mind. He repeatedly asked whether one could look at death without escape, rationalization, or belief. In directly observing fear without resistance or judgment, he suggested, there comes an understanding that dissolves fear—not through effort or willpower, but through awareness itself.
Krishnamurti’s reflections on mortality also touched upon what he described as the timeless. By this he did not refer to a theological promise of afterlife, but to a dimension of consciousness free from psychological time. The “self,” as he defined it, was a bundle of memories, desires, and fears. The ending of this psychological self, he suggested, opens the possibility of encountering something immeasurable. Whether one interprets this philosophically or experientially, it remained central to his inquiry.
He offered no definitive answers about what happens after death and discouraged any search for comforting conclusions. Instead, he emphasized sustained observation. “To understand death,” he said, “you must live with it.” This meant looking at endings—of relationships, of experiences, of ideas—without resistance. In that ending, he suggested, there is renewal.
Krishnamurti’s exploration of death remains relevant in a world that often avoids confronting mortality. In times marked by global crises and existential vulnerability, his perspective invites a deeper examination of what it means to live fully. His call to “die to the past” each moment—to release attachments and illusions—was not a doctrine but an appeal for inward clarity.
Yet his philosophy is not without criticism. Krishnamurti largely rejected ideological frameworks, placing systems such as Marxism, communism, socialism, and capitalism on the same psychological plane. Critics argue that this stance sidelines the material realities of class struggle and social oppression. By emphasizing inner transformation over structural change, he is seen by some as neglecting the historical impact of revolutionary movements such as the Russian and Chinese Revolutions. In an era shaped by anti-imperialist struggles and mass movements, his reluctance to align with political causes—including opposition to the Vietnam War or solidarity with Black struggles in the United States—has been viewed as a limitation.
There is also concern that, despite his rejection of spiritual authority, his teachings risk institutionalization through foundations and organized study circles across India, England, and the United States. Some argue that this tendency may inadvertently promote personality over inquiry, intellectualizing his message rather than preserving its spirit of direct perception.
Finally, many have found his language demanding and abstract, making his teachings difficult to grasp. Unlike figures such as Osho or Ramana Maharshi, whose styles some consider more devotional or experiential, Krishnamurti’s approach was rigorous, analytical, and often uncompromising. For some seekers, this depth was liberating; for others, it felt inaccessible.
Even so, his death, like his life, reflected an unwavering commitment to inquiry. It did not present closure, but continuity—a reminder that understanding life and death requires not belief, but sustained attention.
---
*Freelance journalist

Comments