"Vedanta is not philosophy" — this is one of Swami Dayananda's most important assertions. Philosophy is human speculation. Vedanta is revelation (sruti) — an independent means of knowledge.

Who was Swami Dayananda
Born Natarajan in Tamil Nadu, India, Swami Dayananda dedicated over 50 years to teaching Vedanta. His numbers are impressive:
- Over 200 teachers trained in 3-year residential courses
- Hundreds of thousands of students around the world
- Fundamental books on Bhagavad Gita, Upanisads, and teaching methodology
- AIM for Seva — a social organization serving underprivileged communities
But numbers don't tell the whole story. What made Swami Dayananda unique was his impeccable clarity and his insistence that Vedanta is a means of knowledge — not philosophy, not experience, not belief.
The method
Swami Dayananda taught that Vedanta is not interpretation — it is unfolding of the text. The teacher does not offer their opinion. They unfold the word of the text (sabda) so that the student sees for themselves what the text reveals.
This method (sampradaya) ensures that the teaching arrives intact — from teacher to student, for thousands of years.

The legacy in Brazil
Vedanta arrived in Brazil systematically through Jonas Masetti, a disciple in the lineage of Swami Dayananda. Vishva Vidya is the organization that preserves and transmits this teaching in Portuguese.
A phrase that sums it all up
"You don't need to become free. You need to discover that you already are free." — Swami Dayananda Saraswati
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