Waiting for Wisdom: A Dharmic Reading of Beckett’s Waiting for Godot
Prof. Dilip Barad has tasked this blog with the task of examining Samuel Beckett's 'Waiting for Godot' from the perspective of the Indian Knowledge System, with a particular emphasis on the Bhagavad Gita.
Introduction
In the bleak landscape of the Theatre of the Absurd, Vladimir and Estragon stand as iconic figures of paralysis. For decades, Western criticism has viewed their plight through the lens of existentialism—two men abandoned in a godless universe, waiting for a meaning that never arrives. But what happens if we shift our gaze from the Western canon to the ancient wisdom of the Bhagavad Gita?
This blog attempts to bridge the gap between Samuel Beckett’s 20th-century void and the timeless philosophy of Kurukshetra. By reading Waiting for Godot through the concepts of Karma, Maya, and Kala, we discover that the tragedy of Didi and Gogo is not just that Godot doesn't come, but that they have forgotten how to act.
Section A: Conceptual Warm-Up
1. The Crisis of Inaction: Vishada vs. Ennui
In the opening chapter of the Gita, Arjuna suffers from Vishada (deep despondency). He casts aside his bow, paralyzed by the moral weight of the impending battle. Similarly, Vladimir and Estragon experience a crippling existential crisis. They consider parting ways, they consider hanging themselves, but ultimately, "They do not move."
However, the difference lies in the nature of their paralysis. Arjuna’s crisis is a spiritual turning point; his despondency leads him to question the nature of duty (Dharma) and seek enlightenment. Didi and Gogo’s crisis is one of Tamas (inertia). Their paralysis does not lead to inquiry; it leads to decay. They are trapped in a state of Ennui, fearful of action because they lack the spiritual clarity to define their purpose.
2. The Failure of Karma Yoga
Lord Krishna teaches Nishkama Karma—action performed without attachment to the fruit (Phala). This is the path to liberation. Beckett’s characters represent the exact inverse of this spiritual law. They are obsessed with the "fruit" (Godot’s arrival and the salvation he promises) but refuse to perform any meaningful "action" (Karma) to achieve it.
Their "waiting" is not a spiritual vigil; it is a stagnant non-action. Because they are attached to a result that never comes, their inaction becomes a source of suffering (Dukkha). They illustrate the Gita’s warning that inaction is not freedom; it is a bondage to one's own fears.
3. Cyclical Time (Kala)
The Gita presents time (Kala) as a cyclical, eternal wheel. In Waiting for Godot, we see a bleak parody of this cosmic cycle.
- The Repetitive Days: Act II is nearly identical to Act I. The tree has sprouted a few leaves, but the essential suffering remains unchanged. This mirrors the cycle of Samsara (birth and death) without the possibility of Moksha (liberation).
- The Loop: Vladimir’s song about the dog ("And dug a tomb and buried him...") is a recursive loop that has no beginning and no end. They are trapped in a time loop of their own making because they refuse to act within the present moment.
Section B: Guided Close Reading
1. Re-evaluating the Title
If Godot is an expectation rather than a person, the title Waiting for Godot shifts from a plot summary to a philosophical diagnosis. It implies that the characters are trapped in the act of projecting their hopes onto the future. They are "waiting for a result," violating the core tenet of the Gita: "You have a right to perform your prescribed duties, but you are not entitled to the fruits of your actions." By focusing entirely on the entitlement (Godot) rather than the duty (living), they render their existence meaningless.
2. Godot as Maya (Illusion)
Comparing Godot to the IKS concept of Maya (Illusion) reveals the tragic irony of the play. In Vedantic philosophy, Maya is the cosmic illusion that veils reality. Godot acts as Maya for Vladimir and Estragon; the promise of his arrival keeps them from engaging with the reality of their present moment.
They do not fix their boots effectively, they do not part ways to find better lives, and they do not help Lucky and Pozzo meaningfully—all because they are mesmerized by the illusion that Godot will solve their problems. Just as Maya distracts the soul from the Self (Atman), Godot distracts the tramps from their own agency.
Section C: Comparative Thinking (IKS + Absurdism)
Here, we map the bleak landscape of the Absurd against the framework of the Gita:
| Concept in Gita | Explanation | Parallel in Godot |
|---|---|---|
| Karma (Action) | Performing one's duty is essential for existence; inaction is impossible. | The Paralysis: The tramps' inability to leave or act ("We're waiting for Godot") represents a violation of the law of Karma. |
| Nishkama Karma | Action performed without desire for the reward. | The Antithesis: The tramps are entirely driven by the desire for the reward (Godot's salvation). |
| Maya (Illusion) | The veil that hides the true nature of reality. | Godot: The entity that may not exist but dictates their entire reality. The "appointment" is the illusion. |
| Kala (Time) | Cyclical, destructive, and eternal. | The Static Sunset: Time is a loop that degrades them physically but offers no spiritual progress. |
| Moksha (Liberation) | Release from the cycle of rebirth/suffering. | Suicide: The only "release" they contemplate is hanging themselves, but even this fails. |
Section D: Creative-Critical Task
Reflection through the Lens of Swadharma
Beckett’s void is terrifying because it lacks Dharma. In the Bhagavad Gita, meaning is not something one waits for; it is something one enacts through Swadharma (one's own prescribed duty). Krishna tells Arjuna that it is better to perform one's own duty imperfectly than to master the duty of another.
Vladimir and Estragon have no Swadharma. They are stripped of social roles, context, and history. Because they have no duty to perform, they have no vehicle to create meaning. They act as beggars waiting for a king to bestow value upon them. From an IKS perspective, their suffering stems from Ajnana (ignorance) of their own agency. They believe meaning is extrinsic (coming from Godot), whereas the Gita teaches that meaning is intrinsic (coming from right action).
Section E: Critical Reflection (Metacognition)
How does using Indian Knowledge Systems change your reading of a Western modernist text?
Using IKS transforms Waiting for Godot from a play about "nothingness" into a play about "spiritual negligence." Through a Western existentialist lens, the universe is inherently meaningless, and the characters are victims of a cruel silence.
However, through the lens of the Gita, the universe is governed by Rita (cosmic order), and the characters are culpable for their own suffering because they choose Tamas (inertia) over Karma (action). IKS provides a diagnostic tool: it explains why they are suffering (attachment to fruits, lack of duty) rather than just accepting the suffering as a default state of existence. It makes the Absurd seem less like a universal truth and more like a spiritual warning: that waiting without working is the ultimate tragedy.
Conclusion
Reading Waiting for Godot through the lens of the Bhagavad Gita offers a startling revelation: the Absurd is not merely a condition of the universe, but a consequence of spiritual negligence. Vladimir and Estragon are not tragic heroes fighting a cruel fate; they are souls trapped in Tamas (inertia), paralyzed by their attachment to a future fruit that never ripens.
Where Western existentialism sees their waiting as a brave endurance of the meaningless, IKS reveals it to be a failure of Dharma. The Gita teaches that "one who performs their duty without attachment ... attains the Supreme." The tramps fail not because Godot doesn't come, but because they never truly start living. They are waiting for a Savior, while the Gita insists that the only savior is the Self acting in accordance with the Divine Law. Ultimately, to wait for Godot is to deny the Karma of the present moment.
References
Barad, Dilip. "Understanding 'Waiting for Godot' Through the Bhagavad Gita." IKS in English Classroom Worksheet, Maharaja Krishnakumarsinhji Bhavnagar University, 2026. DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.25436.04480.
Beckett, Samuel. Waiting for Godot: A Tragicomedy in Two Acts. Faber and Faber, 1956.
The Bhagavad Gita. Translated by Eknath Easwaran, Nilgiri Press, 2007.





