August 20, 2008

Japa Group : Chanting is a Privilege

The days have been quite busy for the last month. Maha-cleaning of the
temple, festival management, distributing prasadam in the Etno Festival, cooking,
visiting sadhus, Ratha-Yatra, Millions of e-mails and phone-calls. Basically
everyday something new and unexpected appears, hardly any time for reading.

When I am not able to chant in the morning, my quality usually goes down.
When you have less time available, good chanting is a challenge but on the other
hand you become more appreciative for good time and a place for nice
chanting.
After a busy day, in the late evening when you can just sit down and chant
for 20 minutes, you immeadiately feel your mind becoming peaceful and
satisfied.

Chanting the Maha-mantra is the greatest blessing - chanting is a privilege.
If you have the time, please chant Hare Krishna.

Ys Mrd

by Muniraja dasa (muniraja108@gmail.com) at August 20, 2008 06:21 PM

1965 August 20 : "The ship is stranded on the Arabian Sea about four miles from the coast. Today the captain arranged for Janmastami and I spoke on the teachings of Lord Sri Krishna and there was distribution of Prasadam."
Prabhupada Journal :: 1965

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 04:19 PM

1970 August 20 : "Many young boys and girls in your country are now happy by taking to this Movement and similarly by going to India I hope the young communist boys and girls there will feel the same."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1970

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 04:19 PM

1971 August 20 : "The majority vote of GBC as well as my opinion should be taken. When the majority opinion is present, my opinion will be yes or no. In most cases it will be yes - unless it is grievously against our principles."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1971

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 04:19 PM

1971 August 20 : "The collection was Rs 21,000/ but the deposit was Rs 15,000/. If 25% of the collection is eaten up in this way then how to manage? Please give me your practical solution."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1971

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 04:19 PM

1973 August 20 : "On your recommendation I accept the following boys and girls named by you for first initiation. Hold a fire ceremoney, and distribute sumptuous prasadam to one and all."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1973

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 04:18 PM

1974 August 20: "Chanting offenselessly is the remedy for all of these diseases. Therefore I have established that the duty of each temple president and also the GBC is to see that each devotee remains spiritually fit."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 04:18 PM

1974 August 20: "This is your real success if you can convince the local men to become Krishna Conscious. This is preaching. I was able to convince you to become Krishna Conscious. Now you can convince others. This is Krishna Consciousness."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 04:18 PM

1974 August 20: "In teaching the children, you should refer very carefully to the qualities of a brahman as mentioned in Bhagavad-gita, chapter 18: sama dama tapasocam. These qualities will naturally come out, if you just give the process purely."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 04:18 PM

Kurma dasa : Burnt Milk, and How to Avoid It

boiling milk:

Yet another 'old-but-gold':

J from Jamaica asked:

"I just want to know why milk scorches and how to prevent it. I would be grateful for the info as it is for a project. Thank you."

I replied:

Milk scorches when the fat protein molecules sink to the bottom of the pot and stick because, although the cream floats on cold milk, when you heat it those fatty molecules sink and accumulate on the bottom.

A way to avoid the scorching, believe it or not, is to first add a little water in your saucepan - enough to just cover the base.

Bring the water to the boil, then add the milk on top and cook as required. That initial water will reduce the accumulation of those sticky molecules. Sounds silly, but it works.

Always choose a heavy-based pot to avoid scorching, especially one that conducts heat well. Stainless steel, by the way, is a poor conductor of heat, and is prone to hot spots.

And remember, while heating the milk, stir it continuously with a wooden spoon (a flat-edged variety is my favourite) until it boils. This will also help keep the bottom from burning.

Once the milk is boiling, and you need to keep cooking it (depending on the recipe) turn the heat down a little, because less stirring is needed since the milk (and all those fat/protein molecules) are now circulating.

And finally, if you add sugar to the milk (providing the recipe calls for it) this will reduce the tendency of the milk to burn.

by Kurma at August 20, 2008 03:28 PM

Krishna Camp : Where to Find Krishna Camp @ Burning Man

If you’re laying around at Burning Man wondering what to do, come find your long-lost buddies at Krishna Camp! We’re camped with Sacred Spaces and Entheon Village which are placed between 4:00 & 3:00 along ave. A Keep a lookout for our Harinama Chanting Party wandering around, as well as our Ratha Yatra Chariot moving along [...]

by Krishna Camp at August 20, 2008 01:54 PM

Japa Group : Applying The Philosophy

We already know how difficult is to apply the philosophy to our lives....like realising we are not these bodies, subdue our minds and acting in our constitutional position of eternal servants of Krsna. Srila Prabhupada says in the Bhagavad Gita As It Is in the introdution that we are meant to serve. We are always trying to serve someone - some people who are alone they serve their dogs, cats, cars, houses etc. We need to serve, cause unless we are not serving the Supreme we need to get our soul engaged in serving. But why we spend our precious time and don't realise our spiritual position. Maybe because Krsna hasn't revealed Himself to us, we haven't got the taste of serving the proprietor of everything, the one who lives in our hearts. We are still covered by all the dust of births and births thinking we can be in Krsna's place. The only way to encourage the position of eternal servant is through serious chanting - engaging the tongue in eating prasadam and chanting the Holy Names. We can see that described in the Nectar of Instruction 5:

"When one fully engages in chanting the Hare Kṛṣṇa mahā-mantra, he gradually realizes his own spiritual identity. Unless one faithfully chants the Hare Kṛṣṇa mantra, Kṛṣṇa does not reveal Himself: sevonmukhe hi jihvādau svayam eva sphuraty adaḥ. (Bhakti-rasāmṛta-sindhu 1.2.234) We cannot realize the Supreme Personality of Godhead by any artificial means. We must engage faithfully in the service of the Lord. Such service begins with the tongue (sevonmukhe hi jihvādau), which means that we should always chant the holy names of the Lord and accept kṛṣṇa-prasāda. We should not chant or accept anything else. When this process is faithfully followed, the Supreme Lord reveals Himself to the devotee."

Haribol

Aruna dd

by Aruna (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 01:04 PM

Bhakta Eric, USA : More Classic ISKCON Records coming soon (and help if you can!)

Right before moving out of my tiny little apartment in Lewisburg, I stopped posting what I had of the Classic ISKCON Records. It wasn’t because I ran out of records. Nope. I’ve got two more. One that I haven’t listened to yet (no turntable).

But now where I’m set up, I’ve got a turntable and I just purchased an Edirol UA-1EX. This little contraption allows you to hook up a turntable (or anything with RCA cables) up to your computer via a USB port.

But next Ekadasi, I’ll be posting a Srila Prabhupada double LP that I’ll be recording soon enough.

And then one more LP and we’re finished. That is, until I can find one LP that I’m sure exists, but have never been able to track down.

There’s also a 7″ (45rpm) of Visnujana Swami and the Dallas Gurukula that I’ve heard rumors of, but have never seen anywhere.

You can check out my Classic ISKCON Music site and let me know if I’m missing anything. I’m sure I am and really hope to find it someday. If devotees have any vinyl that I don’t have (Oh, and the two weird Hansadutta LPs don’t count, ok?), I’d be interested in hearing about it. Drop me a line.

by eric at August 20, 2008 01:00 PM

Madhava Ghosh dasa : Jarring Economy Spurs Rise In Home Canning


Home Canning Rises

By Holly Ramer

Associated Press Writer / August 15, 2008

To Amy Hobbs Harris, a dozen jars of strawberry preserves are worth $391 — the amount she estimates she’ll save in a year by canning the fruit herself.

Not that she normally would spend that much on jam. But the savings add up once she factors in other uses — giving them away as gifts, for example, or stirring the preserves into plain yogurt instead of buying pricier flavored cups.

Harris, 33, of Tipp City, Ohio, started canning for the first time last summer, putting her a bit ahead of a trend seen around the country: as food prices rise and the economy declines, more people are turning to home canning.

“I started canning to save money,” said Harris. “I really love the self-sufficiency of it, that I know where the produce started and what the process is.”

Harris, a literature professor who chronicles her efforts to pay off her credit card debt on her blog, “My Daily Dollars,” considers canning a frugal way to enjoy high quality ingredients. Though she has a garden, most of what Harris cans comes from her local farmers market.

“Especially in the winter, when I go down in the basement to get the jars, it’s a nice feeling,” she said. “So many things are unknown with the way food is produced that it feels really good to keep control of it.”

The trend is reflected in the sales of the popular Ball canning jars and supplies, said Chris Scherzinger, vice president of marketing for Jarden Home Brands, maker of Ball products. Retail sales of Ball canning products have increased nearly 30 percent this year, and sales of the company’s plastic freezing containers have doubled over last year, according to market data from Information Resources Inc.

“It fits with what we’ve seen historically from the 1970s and even before then: when people tighten their belts, they focus a little bit less on convenience items and convenience foods and focus a little bit more on staying home and making their own, whether you’re talking about food or fun,” Scherzinger said.

Louise Johnson of Auburn, Maine, grew up tending her parents’ garden and has planted her own for several years. But she didn’t start canning her produce until this summer, when she no longer could stomach the thought of paying higher prices for food packed with preservatives.

“The straw that broke the camel’s back was the economy,” said Johnson, a 33-year-old mother of three boys. “But the underlying reason is healthier food — we’re tired of food that has tons of sodium, preservatives and all the nasty stuff they put in food that you don’t have to be eating.”

Alice Mullen of the University of New Hampshire Cooperative Extension said the canning demonstrations she offers at farmers markets around the state have begun attracting larger crowds. In Florida, the Citrus County Canning Center has seen a steady increase in customers this year, said manager Cindy DeVries.

Customers bring their own produce and jars to the center, which has been open since 1935, and can use the kitchen’s community stoves and sinks.

(Gosh’s note: that is something temples could offer their congregations)

“What I hear is the words ‘the economy,’ and ‘We’ve started growing a garden because we don’t know what’s going to happen to the economy in the future,’” she said.

Kathy Savoie, who has been teaching canning classes through the University of Maine Cooperative Extension for 12 years, said she usually offers four to eight workshops in a typical summer. This year, she has 25 scheduled through the fall. She anticipated the demand back in the spring, when she heard from a huge number of people starting gardens for the first time.

“This year has been a real surge,” said Savoie, who attributes the explosion in interest to three factors: the economy, retiring baby boomers seeking a simpler life and people who want to extend their access to local food.

Paula Stotts, who runs a small farm with her husband in Mechanic Falls, Maine, began getting calls in February from customers interested in buying their produce through a community-supported agriculture program.

“If I had 1,000 acres, I don’t think I would have been able to accommodate all the phone calls I had,” she said. “And the next question I was frequently being asked was, ‘Do you teach canning?’”

She didn’t, but she arranged for a cooperative extension educator to offer a class in the area and has another planned for later this summer.

Johnson, who was one of 12 participants in the first class, came away impressed and determined to can the 14 different fruits and vegetables she has planted this year.

Cramming everything from tomatoes to zucchini into glass jars is part of her family’s overall plan to insulate themselves against economic uncertainty, Johnson said. They’ve also cut down on driving and are installing a wood stove.

“We’re working at more long-term solutions as opposed to being so dependent on oil and grocery stores, which seem to be whacking out right now,” she said.

by Madhava Gosh at August 20, 2008 12:58 PM

Mayapur Online : Jhulan Yatra Video!

We thank all the devotees who had helped to celebrate Jhulan Yatra festival in a grand way in Sri Mayapur. Sudharshan das, co-ordinator for Jhulan festival along with his entire team of Vaisnava Youth in Mayapur has done a tremendous job of organising Jhulan festival for five days.Though on the Balarama Purnima, more than 7000 pilgrims were flowing in to pull the swing, crowd control was done efficiently and everyone had a chance to swing the Lord peacefully. Watch the Jhulan Yatra 2008 Video!

read more

by gopijana at August 20, 2008 12:36 PM

Srila Prabhupada QOTD : This is not a title, but you must actually come to this platform. This I want

4 August, 1975

Detroit

My Dear Madhudvisa Swami:

The GBC should all be the instructor gurus. I am in the initiator guru, and you should be the instructor guru by teaching what I am teaching and doing what I am doing. This is not a title, but you must actually come to this platform. This I want.

by bhaktivedantadas bhaktivedanta_das@bhaktispot.com at August 20, 2008 12:27 PM

Sita-pati dasa : Is He really God?

Here's a chance for you to examine the underpinnings of your faith, or not.

Here's the question:

There was this great spiritual personality who preached widely about love of God. He inspired many people to reawaken their dormant love of God, and explained that we are all servants of God. He always presented himself as a servant of God, and denied it whenever anyone claimed that he himself was God.

Later on, however, a follower who had never met him personally wrote a book about him that became a major lens through which he was viewed and interpreted by people in general. A doctrine developed that deified him, and people began to worship him as God Himself, although he himself always denied that while present, and never taught or instructed that he should be worshiped in that way.

Who am talking about? Did you guess Jesus Christ?

I'm talking about Caitanya Mahaprabhu.

The pattern of deification of Caitanya Mahaprabhu closely resembles the deification of Jesus Christ.

Think about all the philosophy and historical analysis that you have to deconstruct the deification of Jesus Christ. Now apply that same critical view to Caitanya Mahaprabhu. What happens?

Krishna tells us to worship Him as the Supreme. He says "I am the source of all material and spiritual worlds".

Caitanya Mahaprabhu says: "I know no-one but Krishna as my Lord."

So where does the idea that Caitanya Mahaprabhu is God come from?

I know that Krishna das Kaviraja claims it in Caitanya-caritamrita, and in there he also has Rupa and Sanatana Goswami's proclaim it.

However, do we find Rupa Goswami proclaiming this prior to this in his own voice, in one of his books, for example?

So I am thinking about Rupa Goswami. Krishna das Kaviraja claims that Rupa Goswami accepts Caitanya Mahaprabhu as the Godhead Himself. Is this true? And if so, what is the source of Rupa Goswami's conviction? I am going back to study the writings of Rupa Goswami in more detail to detect this.

This was the discussion between Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya and Gopinath Acarya. According to Caitanya-caritamrita, Sarvabhauma accepted Caitanya as a great devotee, but Gopinath insisted that he was the Godhead Himself.

Of course we have this whole philosophical argument or position that incarnations must be scheduled and foretold in scripture, which is why Hare Krishna's don't accept as God either Jesus (who they accept as a saktyavesa-avatara or empowered son of God) or Sai Baba (who they regard as a fraud).

Gopinath Acarya makes a weak argument around this, which essentially just establishes that the Gaudiya Vaisnavas are willing to put this idea aside when it suits them. Twisted and stretched interpretations of standard scriptures fail to convince Sarvabhauma, who points out that the Lord is known as "Tri Yuga", one who appears in three yugas. That precludes His appearance in this Kali Yuga.

How that meshes with the prediction of the Kalki-avatara I'm not sure...

Gopinath Acarya ends with: "Because you don't accept it, it is to be understood that you don't have His mercy".

Essentially this says that the very tenuous and indirect sastra-pramana ("what it really means is...") is secondary and post-facto to understanding Mahaprabhu as God. Gopinath Acarya is saying that it is his direct personal experience of Mahaprabhu that has convinced him that Mahaprabhu is the Godhead, and his scriptural arguments are an attempt to reconnect this direct mystical experience with an established exoteric tradition.

In Bhagavad-gita Krishna says that direct perception by realization is the perfection of religion (pratyaksavagamam dharmyam).

Whether this was actually going on (people proclaiming him as God in this way around him) while Mahaprabhu was present or became a later doctrinal development is not clear. The stories in the Caitanya-caritamrita are either selected or developed (or both) to support the doctrines of the author.

Even in the Caitanya-caritamrita it is recorded that Mahaprabhu would deny it and cover his ears if someone tried to proclaim Him as the Godhead.

Is he the Godhead or just a great devotee - a saktyavesa avatara?

Does it make a difference? Generally we are happy for people to understand Jesus as God, as long as they follow his instructions. Mahaprabhu's instructions are definitely beneficial for all people (and they don't include worshiping him as God).

Thinking deeply about that statement of Gopinath Acarya, that by the mercy of Caitanya Mahaprabhu one can understand that he is God, I am thinking now:

Suspended disbelief is no longer sufficient for me. Accepting an official doctrine, taking someone else's word, riding on someone's realization is not enough. I want to know for myself.

So now I am daily praying a prayer written by the great devotee Narottama das Thakura: "sri krishna caitanya prabhu, doya koro more"

"Sri Krishna Caitanya, please give me your mercy."

So if you made it this far, here's your chance: examine the underpinnings of your faith, and preach! Can you say something to help me out here?

by sitapati at August 20, 2008 12:23 PM

New Vrndavan, USA : This Week at the Farm Circle

Join the Earthlings of The Dham for our weekly gathering on all things natural, as we meet, discuss, and inspire each other to bring about Srila Prabhupada’s vision of self-sufficiency here at New Vrindaban.

This week we’ll meet Friday, August 22nd at The Teaching Garden, across the street from the RVC Temple at 630 pm. The topic will be Adventures in Alternative Housing, with Bhakta-Tom leading the workshop and discussion. Bhajans begin the program, and pot-luck prasad tops it all off.

If you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to ask Bhakta-Chris. You can also reach him by e-mail at nvclub108@gmail.com.

by bc at August 20, 2008 12:00 PM

Sita-pati dasa : Bikram Challenge: 21 days and counting...

I'm 21 days into the Bikram 30 day challenge.

Friday I'm flying down to Sydney. There I'll do a class with Darren Ma, two time Australian Yoga Champion, and then on Saturday I'm spending the day with Bikram Choudhary himself.

Sunday morning I'll go to mangalarati at the Sydney temple, then fly back to Brisbane at mid day to attend the evening festival here. My band is playing at 8 pm. I'll try to get a video for y'all.

The yoga is going good. I've modified my diet a lot over the past year since I last did it, and the difference is huge.Yoga Body Naturals is a yoga nutrition product that I discovered through an ad on facebook. I haven't tried it myself, but my observation of the effect of the radical dietary restructure I've done over the past year on my yoga bears out his premise that diet affects your flexibility.

I did a stint of body building about 15 years ago, and I've struggled with flexibility in my shoulders ever since. Now I'm really working into that.

Anyway, that's the news on the yoga. At work I'm recruiting three people to build out the team of writers. I have a new ad that I'll have HR run - I'll post a link to it later.

At Atma, I've been going over in my lunch hour and doing cleaning there, listening to Alvin Toffler's "Revolutionary Wealth" on the new 16GB iPod Touch I got from a work colleague.

The iPod Touch is great in that it boots up and plays within seconds. I don't have any spare time. I don't have time to wait for some slow player to boot up. When I have five minutes I can listen to something on the Touch.

I also have an eeePC. It has a 5 hour battery life. Currently I'm running Ubuntu 8.04 with the Netbook Remix on it. I have a lot of things to do, but little time at the moment. If I don't respond to your email don't take it personally.

With the Bikram challenge on and changing my role from writer to manager at work I'm at full capacity. It's good because I am developing my capability.

I have been thinking a lot of Caitanya Mahaprabhu and Rupa Goswami. I'll make another post about that.

by sitapati at August 20, 2008 11:52 AM

ISKCON Melbourne : Daily Class - Aniruddha Prabhu

Srimad Bhagavatam 10.90.21 - The five spectacular features of Krishna. Download to find out what they are!

by Nanda Mandira Dasa at August 20, 2008 11:22 AM

Jauvana Prabhu, ACBSP : Double Dealing

After a 60 year history marked by more than its share of coups, assassinations, military takeovers, executions of leaders and economic misery, Pakistan is not exactly an example of a successful nation.

So it is interesting to see the latest chapter unfold. Pervez Musharraf, the Pakistani Army general who engineered a bloodless coup to take over from the corrupt Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in October 1999, and then crowned himself President, has just resigned under pressure. This ended nine years of more-or-less dictatorship. This is normal in Pakistan's history, but what is exceptional is how Musharraf played both ends of the table. On one side, he ended Pakistan's support of the Taliban leadership in Afghanistan after the Twin Towers attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. He pledged to help the United States, becoming one of Washington's chief allies in its campaign against Al Qaeda, at least on the surface.

What many people do not know is that Pakistan's powerful military-controlled intelligence agency, the ISI (Inter-Services Intelligence), was the creator and main backer of the Taliban in Afghanistan, as well as the brains and resources behind the insurrection against India in Kashmir. Musharraf, as the head of the military, was intimately associated with the ISI. They created havoc and bloodshed both in Afghanistan and in Kashmir for over a decade. They were also probably behind an attack on the Indian parliament in December, 2001, that almost led to a nuclear war between India and Pakistan. I was in India at the time (early 2002) and personally saw huge missles being transported on flatbed railroad cars to the front lines.

While Musharraf was assuring George W. Bush of his determination to fight Al Qaeda, he was simultaneously winking at his ISI buddies who never servered ties with the Taliban. Pakistan is enormously envious of India, and they used the Taliban as their surrogates in Afghanistan and within India's own borders, in Kashmir. The strategy was to freeze India out of Afghanistan and eventually to wrest control of disputed Kashmir away from India. But geopolitical events such as 9/11 disrupted Pakistan's plans. That did not stop Musharraf from playing both sides.

The U.S. gave Pakistan more than $10 billion since 9/11 in so-called "anti-terrorism funds." No one knows where that money went. The Taliban are resurgent and threatening not just targets in Afghanistan but inside Pakistan as well. Today a suicide bomber killed 25 people in a hospital emergency room in northwest Pakistan, a Taliban operation. And the CIA recently presented evidence to Pakistan's new prime minister that the ISI, Pakistani's intelligence service, organized the July 7 terror attack against the Indian Embassy in Afghanistan's capital, Kabul.

Pakistan's leading nuclear scientist, A.Q. Khan, a national hero for creating their atomic bomb, has been under house arrest since 2004. He confessed to directing a clandestine network for sharing nuclear weapons technology with Libya, Iran and North Korea. He recently explained in an interview with ABC News that the Pakistani government and President Pervez Musharraf forced him to sign the confession to be a "scapegoat for the national interest." In other words, according to him, it was Musharraf and the Pakistani army that was engaging Khan in selling nuclear weapons secrets on the market.

It's a remarkable story of double dealing by General Musharraf, placating the gullible Americans and collecting their billions, while quietly continuing to do business as usual with the Taliban and selling nuclear secrets to countries that are sworn enemies of the US. Some would say, successful diplomacy. Others would call it: duplicity at its worst.

What's the lesson here?

Look around at the institutions and the leaders in your life. The ideals of a nation or an institution are compromised by duplicity. Duplicity distorts even the greatest good by turning it into a lie. Even those who claim to represent the unalloyed Absolute Truth can be tainted by duplicity. Duplicity corrupts. It turns truth and trust into suspicion and cynicism.

So look around at what you are embracing. And if you see duplicity there, speak out. Don't be cowed into submission by false teachers who use their power or the power of scripture to silence you out of fear of making offense. Silence itself can be an offense if you see abuse and do not react.

A vaisnava should tolerate everything except duplicity. Honest dealings between devotees is the currency of spiritual association. And according to the Bhagavatam, truth is the only good quality left in this age. (The four legs of the dharma bull are Mercy, Cleanliness, Austerity and Truth. Only the leg of Truth remains standing in Kali yuga.)

Don't deal with double dealers or you'll be dealt a losing hand. And lose the only leg you have left to stand on.

by jauvana (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 10:47 AM

David Haslam, UK : Good Association

This is an amazing clip available on youtube about association, well edited and put together, it’s a must to be checked out

Good association

August 20, 2008 10:42 AM

David Haslam, UK : Sunday feast ISKCON Brighton

This is a compilation of video clip from ISKCON Brighton taken during the Sunday feast.

I\'m so dizzy

ISKCON Brighton 17-8-08

Jaya Radha-Madhava

As always I hope you all enjoy these simple clips.

August 20, 2008 10:30 AM

Gaura Vani, USA : The 25th Hour - Remarks from the 24 Hour Kirtan

Hot off the editing table, become inspired by these realizations and recaps from the 24 Hour Kirtan Festival 2008. Immediately following the completion of the 24 hours, we went and asked the participants to share any realizations that came to them. Here’s what followed.

On a side note, we have changed over our YouTube account name to user name: GauraVanicom. This account has all the videos we have on the old account plus some new ones. If you have a subscription to our channel, make sure you subscribe to this new one: www.youtube.com/gauravanicom.

by rasa.acharya at August 20, 2008 08:45 AM

H.H. Bhakticharu Swami : Seminar 5 - From Vaikuntha to Vrindavan

This is a recording done by Rupeswar Gauranga Prabhu at the Orlando Retreat 2008.

This is a recording done by Rupeswar Gauranga Prabhu at the Orlando Retreat 2008.

by Vinod-bihari das at August 20, 2008 07:46 AM

Nitai das & Rasikananda das, USA : The Journey To The Burn 08/20/08

Reporting live from Ames, Iowa

Bacok on the road, back on the riot trail...incing closer to dropping the transcendental bomb on Burning Man.

Yesterday we traveled just over 1100 miles, taking 13 hours, going from Salem, Ohio to the warm home of Ananda Prabhu and his good wife and Jagannatha and Baladeva and Subhadra! in Ames, Iowa.  To all we offer our eternal gratitude.

The day's drive featured each individual participating in their favorite ecstatic activity: Soma was driving a truck's load of sublime Rath cart, Rasikananda was chanting the Lord's holy names, and Chris was sleeping and sleeping.

Too bad we are only getting 11 miles per gallon hauling this fare.  (Don't tell Tapah!)

Today, off to ISKCON Spanish Fork, Utah.  Hoping to get darshan of the Rocky Mountains along the way.

Here's the visual proof... 

by Club 108 (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 07:19 AM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : Who’s in Charge?

Krsna is ultimately ALWAYS in charge of everything!

by Mukunda Goswami at August 20, 2008 07:00 AM

Bhakti Lata, Alachua, USA : Serendipity

On Balaram's Appearance Day in Nueva Vrajamandala, Spain, I entered the quiet templeroom to sing bhajans. So would the stirrings of serendipity begin.

Deva joined me on the mridanga soon after, and people began to filter in after taking prasadam from the feast. The bhajans were amazing. Afterwards, a man approached me and said, "Have you ever recorded? You need to record. With Deva."

I had only one day before I returned to Barcelona. And so the next day, we drove to Madrid. Straight up, I have experienced that level of intensity - to record in a studio - maybe 5 times in my life. My bones were exhausted by the time I returned to Nueva Vrajamandala. I think what got me through was Deva's encouragement.

Travel is like this, though. You just ride the waves of serendipity, making a plan but never quite knowing how it's going to turn out. Never in a million years would I have imagined I would record for the first time in a foreign country, working in a foreign language, with complete strangers.

On another note, I'd like to reflect on something with you. I haven't been writing in here very often, but it's not for lack of computer access. I simply find myself at a loss of what to share with the public. I have ridden the waves of many deep experiences and come to many deep realizations, but to share them seems premature. So pardon the infrequency and curtness. This blog and all of its readers mean very much to me.

Thank you for your patience. I still invite you to continue to accompany me on my travels on these waves of serendipity. We've just gotten started.

by Bhakti lata (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 06:56 AM

Dandavats.com : New Mayapur Website

Jaya Govinda Caran Das: English is my second lenguage, therefore, I humbly request some devotee to volunteer for editing these short news articles. I will be very grateful.

by Administrator at August 20, 2008 06:28 AM

Dandavats.com : Vraja Mandala Parikrama Schedule

Hare KrishnaBy Gaura Krishna das

Hare Krishna dear devotees. Here you can see the schedule for the 2008 Vraja Mandala Parikrama. If you have any further questions you can contact me

by Administrator at August 20, 2008 06:25 AM

Dandavats.com : Tasting a drop of true joy

Hare KrishnaBy Chitrangada Devi Dasi

These deities are so exquisite and Their faces are so expressive and sweet. Hundreds of people would come into the Temple hall to swing Them. It was almost like They were enjoying the festivity of the occasion.

by Administrator at August 20, 2008 06:10 AM

Raivata das, Christchurch, NZ : Padayatra NZ update 1

Here's the culprit. Sripad Bhakti Shakti Swami. Me and Him are gonna walk all over New Zealand. After ironing out a few technical issues we'll be away. One issue is that he is not trained. Another one is that I am not trained. Another one is that we don't have any money. Another one is... who cares?

Champions don't care for impediments. They want results! And results we shall get. It's all mind set. I think. Or maybe the mercy of Krishna. In any case we have to push on.

Here's a success. It's us in the middle of town in Christchurch, NZ. No one was killed. The police didn't arrest us. It was all good.

Here's a failure.
Later that day he escaped from the temple and ran off down the road. That was embarrassing. It took the wind out of my sails a bit. We looked bad. It was potentially very dangerous and it was amazing no one was hurt (mercy of Krishna).

It's been almost a year since then. I am only now getting my enthusiasm back for the old bullock training. Here's some recent footage of the old boy





He comes when he is called.
He goes when I say Chello.
Stops when I say Woe
And he will follow me anywhere when he is on a lead.

He still has to learn not to get crazy when he is around new people or when he is in new situations. He has to learn to pull a cart as well.
We'll see how he goes. We will be reporting all progress (and failures) as we make it.
Om Tat Sat
raivata dasa

by raivata dasa (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 03:13 AM

1965 August 19 : "The next morning I informed my situation to Captain Pandia and he was very kind to take me to the shore in a motor launch. He arranged for me a good car to go round the city. The city appeared to be nice and clean."
Prabhupada Journal :: 1965

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 03:10 AM

1968 August 19 : "It is true, by service you are not only in connection with me, but you are connected with the whole posterity. It is so nice thing. By service, you are not only in touch with me, but my Predecessors, the Acaryas, up to Krishna."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 03:09 AM

1968 August 19 : "The chanting Hare Krishna is our main business, that is real initiation. And as you are all following my instruction, in that matter, the initiator is already there. Please go on chanting sincerely and I may be coming to you very soon."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 03:09 AM

1968 August 19 : "I have felt the pulse of the whole western world, and younger generation, they are in need of this Krishna Consciousness movement. So if you organize the students to attract them, it will be great service to your country."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 03:09 AM

1968 August 19 : "Printing of Bhagavatam and other Vaisnava literature is my life and soul, so press is the biggest mrdanga, recognized by my Guru Maharaja, so I shall request you to qualify yourself for such work as soon as possible. "
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 03:09 AM

1969 August 19 : "In ordinary administration the presidents may consult amongst themselves and make certain procedures by mutual agreement. But when there is some more important factor, that must be referred to me."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1969

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 03:09 AM

1971 August 19 : "There is no objection for you living together, but it is better that you live as brahmacarini. There is no question of your falldown. Chant sixteen rounds regularly and no power in all three worlds will make you fall down."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1971

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 03:09 AM

1973 August 19 : "Regarding your Problem; you should know by now that if you break one of the four regulative principles then you cannot advance. Advancement is possible only by sincere chanting of the Holy Name."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1973

by letters (noreply@blogger.com) at August 20, 2008 03:08 AM

Kurma dasa : Kurma's Travel Diary

Kurma in Machu Picchu:

I've finishing archiving all my overseas travels. You can read my updated Travel Diary here.

Cocina Vegetariana de Bolivia:

My travels take in:

Bolivia, Brazil, Argentina, Santiago de Chile, Belgium, London, Poland, South Africa, Slovenia, Turkey, Croatia, Greece and India.

Jagannatha Cafe:

by Kurma at August 20, 2008 03:06 AM

Devadeva Mirel, Alachua, USA : Uh...Didn't I Used to Make Jam?

I did, didn't I?

These days there isn't a lot of jam making to write about. I am still filling online orders and this Sunday will be setting up at a big festival in Alachua. But as far as my time in the jam kitchen, I'm clocking zeros.

But that doesn't mean Sabjimata is not cooking. No. Sabjimata is cooking. Let me tell you about this cooking Sabjimata.

Oh god! Did I just refer to myself in third person? By golly, I did. Isn't this a sign of schizophrenia? Thankfully, there is medication for that. But conflating myself with my brand name seems a little more pathological. Must consult DSM-IV about that one. I will surely add that to my to-do list-- which is quickly becoming a to-do notebook.

Cooking, cooking. Try to stay on topic.

So after my last posting I was happily surprised with an email in my inbox from a man in the Alachua area interested in hiring me to prepare (not cook) meals for him. He is a raw foodist looking for a little food preparation relief. Although I was friends with a raw foodie back in our Tucson days, sampling rawvioli and French silk pie (raw carob powder blended with avocado), my raw food experience is very limited.

Thankfully, there is the internet.

Truth be told, I have been reading up about raw food eating over the years, since it obviously is very pure and nourishing. I say obviously because everyone who eats this way happens to look at least 20 years younger than their actual physical age. I remember a few years back talking to Raghunatha (aka The Raw Yogi aka Ray from Shelter/Youth of Today) at a festival in Washington Square Park. He was with his wife and another woman, who I thought was his mother. Yikes! Turns out the lovely lady was his sister. It wasn't that she looked old--she looked very good in an edgy, cosmopolitan kind of way. Just Raghunatha looks so damn young!

Myself being vata highest, I quickly decided raw food wasn't for me. Not that I have anything against looking 20 years younger. If I could look 13 again, I would...wait a minute....no I wouldn't. But if anyone knows a good eye cream, please let me know.

Talk about vata highest. I am kind of all over the place here.

I now have a short-term cooking gig for the raw foodie and I am pretty excited about it. He seems like a pretty chill guy and is full of suggestions and feedback. I thought I wouldn't be able to do it because I don't have a dehydrator (I really was looking forward to doing all kinds of uncooked breads and Italian dishes) but ordered a spiralizer online. This is an inexpensive plastic grater/chopper which turns veggies into thin, noodle-like strings, allowing raw zucchini to mimic cooked spaghetti squash.

I found a lot of interesting recipes at goneraw.com and will work on a shopping list tonite. Tomorrow I will do the shopping and hopefully get started on some stuff tomorrow nite. The ingredients for my other cooking gig should arrive tomorrow nite and Thursday will be my first official cook day for that. Friday I am also slated to work on 5-10 gallons of granola and a few dozen canneli bean burgers for that same client.

In the meantime I am trying to have some things on hand for my family to eat. Which brings me to this picture:



Tahini butter cookies are what my family will be served for breakfast as well as in between meal snack. I tripled the recipe, but here it is, in singular.

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

Combine:

1/2 c softened butter
1/2 c tahini
1 c sucanat
1/2 tspn baking soda
1/2 tspn baking powder
1 tablespoon ground flax seed mixed with 3 tablespoons water. Let sit and get gloppy before adding.
1 1/4 c whole wheat flour or 1 1/2 cup spelt flour

Roll into balls, (press into turbinado sugar--optional) flatten, press with potato masher. Bake 7 to 9 minutes.

There it is. An actual recipe. See, I like to share!

by noreply@blogger.com (Devadeva Mirel) at August 20, 2008 01:16 AM

August 19, 2008

Kurma dasa : Why Not Every Scientist Worships at Darwin's Feet

the origins of Charles Darwin:

Why not every scientist worships at Darwin's feet John Lennox, The Age August 18, 2008

Next year marks the 150th anniversary of the publication of Charles Darwin's 'On The Origin Of Species'. The momentous occasion will be celebrated with new books, articles, documentaries and editorials. One commentator has called for a public holiday in Britain to honour Darwin - the "humble Shrewsbury family man who changed the world forever".

Scattered among the world's top scientists are those who do believe in a conscious intention behind nature's processes. I think of people such as Francis Collins, director of the Human Genome Project, and Professor Bill Phillips, winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1997.

The presence of such people poses awkward questions for the view that evolutionary theory and a sophisticated scientific brain lead inexorably towards atheism. There must be more to the so-called "science versus God" story than this.

Indeed, the fact that there are brilliant scientists who believe in God and brilliant scientists who don't makes it clear that the conflict is not a simplistic one between science and religion, but between opposing world views - naturalism and theism.

Read whole article...

by Kurma at August 19, 2008 10:45 PM

Devadeva Mirel, Alachua, USA : Jiva Jago!!!


Ahhh. Finally. I am in the very homestretch of unpacking. Tonite I broke Gaura Nitai out of Their "travel case," which sounds a lot better than Their "tackle box." They have been resting for a really long time and couldn't imagine Them being very pleased with the situation (although Their mattresses are rather soft and comfy looking).

My husband, the transcendental go-getter, was ready to bring Them on to the altar the first day we moved in. But I couldn't handle it. Now that the kitchen is pretty much put away and organized (except for the muddle of spices), I feel it is time. And despite the fact that it is technically the middle of the night, I decided the time was now.

I sort of felt like I should have waited for Janmastami, but Gaura Nitai always get kind of neglected on festival days as we head to the temple and tend to our Venumadhava and Madhumati deities. But I wanted to polish Them and that takes time. And the middle of the nite seems the most peaceful time around here with the kids sleeping.

Gaura Nitai are polished and dressed, given fresh water, a plate full of cookies as a little midnite snack and New V 24 hr. kirtan is playing. I know my husband will be really happy when he sees Them in the morning and the kids will be over the moon, which it being morning and all, really means something.

Actually, I was inspired to get Them up and worship-able by my friend, Gopi, who's house I was at today. She moved here a week and a half after us and her altar looks beautiful and her Gaura Nitai are *shiny*!!! Our Gaura Nitai are freshly shiny now, too. And I just love how They look in Their new outfits, which were sewn by Mother Maharha. Mother Maharha was a bit skeptical of my vision, which was simply 3 raw silk rectangles per Deity, but once she saw them dressed in Their simple cloth, her heart was won over.

When we first saw our Deities in the Denver gift shop (that's right, Their from Denver...you got a problem with that??!?), They looked really, really cute in these sort of simple, sort of kooky outfits that a devotee must have sewn. The outfit was basically a Jagannatha style skirt made from some multi-colored silk print. And They had saffron raw silk rectangles for Their chaddars. Those chaddars have served as their turbans and lungis also. For a while I was sewing outfits for GN (I am a horrible sewer) and They never looked natural in those outfits (mostly skirts and chaddars). I really felt They would look better following the 'less is more paradigm.'

I have some glass beads to make necklaces but haven't gotten to that yet. I think Their simple dress is okay, though, since They eat pretty well (considering we are melecha yavanas and all). Actually, when I was dressing Them, I was admiring Lord Caitanya's form. He is much more meatier in the legs than Lord Nityananda.

Haribol!!!

by Devadeva Mirel (noreply@blogger.com) at August 19, 2008 10:00 PM

Kurma dasa : There is No Death

Singer:

"There is no death. How can there be death if everything is part of the Godhead? The soul never dies and the body is never really alive."

- Isaac Bashevis Singer, Nobel laureate, 'Stories from Behind the Stove.'

by Kurma at August 19, 2008 06:44 PM

Kurma dasa : Culture Club

yogurt:

I've been cataloguing my blog archives. Enormous amount of good stuff there. Here's another oft-asked entry:

S. from Adelaide, South Australia asked how to make homemade yogurt. Here's my recipe.

Home-made Yogurt

Yogurt is an indispensable ingredient in vegetarian cuisine, being nutritious, tasty, and easily digestible.

It is a source of calcium, protein, fat, carbohydrates, phosphorus, vitamin A, the B-complex vitamins, and vitamin D. The lactic acid content of yogurt aids in the digestion of calcium. Yogurt encourages the growth of "friendly" bacteria in the intestines that help destroy harmful strains. And yogurt is quickly assimilated into the body.

Yogurt is made by adding a small amount of 'starter' (which can be either previously prepared homemade yogurt or commercial plain yogurt) to warm milk. Under certain temperature conditions, and after some hours, the live bacteria in the starter will transform the milk into yogurt, which can then be refrigerated and used as needed. If you prefer a slightly thicker, firm yogurt, you can add milk powder at the beginning.

PREPARATION TIME: 20 minutes SETTING TIME: 4 - 10 hours YIELD: 4 cups (1 litre)

1/3 cup fresh milk (optional) 1/2 cup full-cream milk powder (optional) 4 cups (1 litre) fresh milk 3 tablespoons fresh plain yogurt

If you prefer thicker yogurt, combine the 1/3 cup of milk with the milk powder, whisk until smooth, and set aside.

Bring the milk to the boil in a heavy, 3-litre/quart saucepan, stirring constantly. Remove milk from the heat and whisk in the optional powdered-milk thickener. Transfer the milk into a sterilized container and set aside to cool.

When the temperature of the milk has reached 46°C/115°F, add the yogurt starter and whisk until smooth. The milk temperature should not exceed 44°C/111°F, which is the ideal culturing temperature.

Place the container of warm milk in a warm place for 4 - 6 hours. You can place the container inside a sealed plastic bucket of warm water or wrap it in a towel or heavy blanket. The container may also be placed in an oven with the pilot light on, in a preheated electric oven which has been turned off, or in a wide-mouthed thermos flask.

Check the yogurt after 5 hours. It should be thick and firm (it will become thicker after refrigeration). Refrigerate, covered, and use within 3 days. After three days, the yogurt makes an ideal curdling agent for production of Home-made Curd Cheese (Panir).

Note: If your home-made yogurt does not taste as nice as expected or is something other than yogurt, consider the following points:

Over-boiling the milk without proper stirring can cause the milk to scorch or burn. This will give the yogurt an unpleasant taste.

If the milk does not sufficiently cool before you add the starter culture, it will curdle.

If the milk cools too much before adding the starter culture, it will remain milk.

If you do not ensure continuous warmth during incubation, the yogurt might fall to a less-than-desired temperature. Over warming during incubation causes spoilage.

Over-incubation (allowing the milk and yogurt to sit for longer than required) will produce a strong-tasting, tart yogurt.

Non-sterile containers may introduce foreign bacteria into your yogurt, causing bad tastes. Do not disturb the yogurt while it is culturing.

by Kurma at August 19, 2008 06:39 PM

Dandavats.com : Prabhupada disciple accommodation

Surabhi dasi: Dear Prabhu's, please if anyone is an owner off an apartment in Mayapur and would like to help accommadate Prabhupada's disciple's during the mayapur festival next year please could you write to me, as there is a real need for this for them to be comfortable while they are there.

by Administrator at August 19, 2008 05:56 PM

Dandavats.com : Vancouver Ratha Yatra

Jaygo: View pictures from Bhartnatyam Dances, Live Theatre and Music Yoga & Meditation, Puppet Theatre, Balloon Artists, Gift Shop & Books, Mendhi Hand Tattoos, Face Painting, Palmistry, Children’s Fun Tents and much more.

by Administrator at August 19, 2008 05:53 PM

Japa Group : Please Join the Japa Group

Please share your realisations with other devotees from around the world....simply send me an introduction email and I will be happy to make you a member:

rasa108@gmail.com

ys

Rasa Rasika das

by Rasa Rasika (noreply@blogger.com) at August 19, 2008 05:00 PM

Devadeva Mirel, Alachua, USA : It Gets Better

A while back my father-in-law looked into getting my logo trademarked for me. The lawyers at his firm were going to do it free of lawyering fees, but the paperwork itself would cost $350. Or so we were told.

I just went to the Florida Department of State page and saw that the filing fees for trademarking is about $87 per class. I will file just for my wearables, since they are the only thing with the logo actually on it and I have to provide 3 samples of how the logo is used.

I applied online last nite to become an LLC. Step by step things are falling into place.

by noreply@blogger.com (Devadeva Mirel) at August 19, 2008 03:55 PM

Pandu das : Colleges: Drinking age ‘not working’

Here’s the article:
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-te.md.drink19aug19,0,7237773.story

It’s a fact that for many students, the college experience has a lot to do with intoxication, so-called “partying.” I had my share, but I was very fortunate to have the intelligence to stay away from alcohol.

I’m always surprised to see that people consider this a good argument for allowing young people to drink:

“How many times must we relearn the lessons of prohibition?” the statement says. “Adults under 21 are deemed capable of voting, signing contracts, serving on juries and enlisting in the military, but are told they are not mature enough to have a beer.”

I sometimes watched Sesame Street as a child, and I recall their frequent game, “One of these things is not like the other.” Kids too young to read are taught to recognize differences and similarities. The game applies nicely to that argument.

Voting is an act of responsibility, so is signing a contract, serving on a jury, and enlisting in the military. These are things that can help develop a person’s maturity. In general, they contribute to society. (Personally I’m not very fond of the military, but I’m thoroughly impressed by the spiritual strength of the Hare Krishna devotees in the military.)

Drinking alcohol is practically the opposite of what the college presidents have used to justify drinking. It is an act of irresponsibility, it does nothing to develop a person’s maturity, and it makes no contribution to society. It’s known for its impairment of a person’s judgement. I can’t help but wonder how much the college presidents have been drinking. These are the college presidents; what good are they if they can’t even teach the kids the value of sobriety?! Allowing kids (and yes, we’re talking about college kids) to drink will not help.

by Pandu das at August 19, 2008 03:01 PM

Krishna Camp : On the Road!

Hey everyone! Krishna Camp is now in full swing! All our people are on the move towards Black Rock City and 6 days of Burning Man Bliss! Check out updates from us at: http://www.seekingspiritualadventure.blogspot.com/ Jaya Jagannatha!

by Krishna Camp at August 19, 2008 02:55 PM

Nitai das & Rasikananda das, USA : Stay Tuned














We are going to have loads of good entertainment
coming out everyday!!!

Stay with us.

by Nitai das (noreply@blogger.com) at August 19, 2008 02:16 PM

Pandu das : Cooperation for Krishna’s sake.

Hearing our local GBC, Ravindra Swarupa Prabhu, a few weeks ago describe the rtviks and followers of Narayana Maharaj as “enemies of ISKCON,” I couldn’t help but wonder if that was an appropriate characterization. As I said before, I don’t know much about Narayana Maharaj, but one thing I know is that a group his followers are supporters of Gita-nagari and contribute a great deal of money to Gita-nagari projects. I wonder if they know that our GBC considers them an enemy, and what Gita-nagari would do without their support. After Gita-nagari has had its boiler buildings burn down twice in the past few years (I heard the new building was wired by an amateur, and was neither permitted, inspected, or insured), the temple complex is without a safe heating unit. I heard one rough estimate of $30,000 for a new boiler. I wonder if Gita-nagari will solicit donations from it’s supposed enemies again. It seems inappropriate to beg money from people, call them your enemy (and treat them as such with the new bylaws), and then continue to beg from them. This isn’t the kind of stuff that inspires me, but I also don’t feel comfortable ignoring it.

I also decided to look into the rtvik arguments to see if they’re unreasonable or if they have some basis. Until recently I was just taking for granted that I’m not spiritually qualified enough to fully understand the issue (which perhaps is still the case), so I just accepted the GBC view based on trust. Now that I’m looking again, I’m finding the rtvik proponents’ arguments seeming better than the GBC’s view, although I’ve seen strong and weak arguments from both sides. My main reservation against accepting the rtviks’ view is that I don’t want to be blacklisted or cut off from ISKCON, or seen as an “enemy” by any of its members. I have friends who are in ISKCON, friends among Narayana Maharaj’s followers, and friends who are rtvik proponents; and they’re all devotees. Which devotee should I consider my enemy? I’d like it to be none.

I cannot believe that Krishna is pleased by persistent fighting between devotee groups. If we’re really a society of Vaishnavas and aspiring Vaishnavas, it should not be very difficult to put an end to our enmity with other devotees. If the GBC is actually right, and if they’re a brahminical Vaishnava group, I would think that they could meet their goals in relation to the other groups by excellent preaching rather than by taking legal action or other political maneuvers. I fail to see why anyone who accepts Srila Prabhupada’s teachings should not be welcome in ISKCON, even if there’s a little variation in understanding. We can sort out any disagreements better as friends than as enemies. Anyone who appreciates Srila Prabhupada’s teachings should be considered Krishna’s devotee at some stage of development, and I very much doubt that the first offense against the Lord’s holy name considers whether a devotee belongs to one camp or another. Devotees should not let disagreements over details get in the way of our friendship and cooperation for advancing Lord Caitanya’s mission. Hare Krishna.

by Pandu das at August 19, 2008 02:06 PM

Carana Renu dd, Brazil : JIVA - a bhakti training course.

In July I spent a week at Pandavas Paradise, a retreat centre/nature reserve/temple in the most beautiful surroundings at Chapada dos Veadeiros, Goias, Brazil. I was helping to teach the JIVA course (Jornada Intensiva de Vaisnavismo), a one-week intensive training course for people who want to learn more about Krishna consciousness and how to practice it at home.

jiva_group.JPG

The topics covered included basic philosophy from the Bhagavad-gita and Srimad Bhagavatam; how to prepare, offer and honour prasadam; Vaisnava etiquette; temple songs; deity worship etc. The course was the first of its kind here in Brazil.

The participants came from various parts of Brazil, from the very North to the very South, and they were of various ages, from fourteen to almost fifty. They were extremely grateful for the opportunity to learn, and the transformation in them was clear by the end of the week.

Some had not chanted even one round before the course, but, during the week we were there, they chanted 16 rounds every day. Some were eating meat before the course, but they went home not only as vegetarians but as prasadatarians. One of the students had been around devotees, attending Sunday Feast etc., for over 20 years, but somehow had not taken the next step. By the end of the course, she too felt transformed and expressed that she now felt that she was able to practice Krishna consciousness fully.

Click here to see the course photos, including some shots of the beautiful natural environment and wildlife at Pandavas Paradise.

Here is a video (in Portuguese) with some testimonials from the participants, filmed on the final day of the course.

Sign up for next year´s course here (in Portuguese).

by carana renu dasi at August 19, 2008 01:34 PM

Ravindra Svarupa das, USA : The Nature of the Self: A Gaudiya Vaisnava Understanding


Presented at the Vaisnava-Christian Conference on January 20-21, 1996 at Buckland Hall, Powys, Wales.

The Sparks of God

The soul, or self (atma), is described as a separated, minute fragment of God, the Supersoul (paramatma). God is like a fire; the individual souls, sparks of the fire. As the analogy suggests, the self and the Superself are simultaneously one with and different from each other. They are the same in quality, for both the soul and the Supersoul are brahman, spirit. Yet they differ in quantity, since the Superself (param brahman—“supreme brahman”—in Bhagavad-gita 10.12) is infinitely great while the individual selves are infinitesimally small.

In the Upanisads some texts assert the identity between the individual soul and the Supreme Soul, while others speak of the difference between them. The way the Vaisnava Vedanta resolves this apparent contradiction recognises identity and difference as equally real.

Such a reconciliation is conveyed in the Katha Upanisad (2.2.13) in the words nityo nityanam cetannas cetananam eko bahunam yo vidadhati kaman. (“There is one eternal being out of many eternals, one conscious being out of many conscious beings. It is the one who provides for the needs of the many.”) This text states, in effect, that there is a class division in transcendence. It says that there are two categorically different types of eternal, conscious—hence, spiritual—beings. One category is singular in number (nityo), a set with only one member. This, then, is the category of God, who is one without a second. The other class is plural (nityanam), containing innumerable members. This is the category of the souls. The members of both classes are brahman, spirit. Yet one of them is unique, peerless, in a class by Himself, for He is the singular, independent self-sustaining sustainer of all others. Each of the others possesses a multitude of peers, and all of them alike are intrinsically dependent upon the one. The one is the absolute, the many are relative.

The Energies of the Absolute

Fundamental to the Vaisnava Vedanta is the doctrine that the Absolute Truth possesses energies. (The impersonalistic Advaita Vedanta, in contrast, denies the reality of the energies.) The energies are divided into different categories; one of them is comprised of the innumerable individual souls.

The “Absolute Truth” denotes that from which everything emanates, by which it is sustained, and to which it finally returns. The products of the Absolute are thought of as its sakti, its energy or potency. Heat and light, for example, are considered the “energies” of fire. Just as the sun projects itself everywhere by its radiation yet remains apart, so the Absolute expands its own energies to produce (and, in a fashion, to become) the world while remaining separate from it. Unlike the sun, the Absolute can emanate unlimited energy and remain undiminished. (The arithmetic of the Absolute: One minus one equals one.) In short, while nothing is different from God, God is different from everything.

The host of souls makes up the category of divine energy called the tatastha-sakti. Tata means “bank,” as of a river or lake. Tatastha means “situated on the bank.” The souls are characterised as marginal or borderline energy because they are, as it were, between two worlds. They can dwell within either of the other two major energies, the internal (antaranga-sakti) and the external (bahiranga-sakti). The internal potency is also known as the spiritual energy (cit-sakti), and the external potency is also called the material energy (maya-sakti). The internal potency expands as the transcendental realm, the eternal Kingdom of God. The external potency expands as the material world, which is sometimes manifest and sometimes unmanifest.

Because souls are spiritual, their original home is the spiritual kingdom. Almost all souls dwell there. These are called eternally liberated souls. Only a tiny minority of souls inhabit this material world. These are called fallen, or conditioned, souls.

Souls are small samples of God. Hence they possess a minute quantity of that freedom which God possesses in full. Although they are eternal, full of knowledge and bliss, and although their dharma, or essential nature, is to serve God, they may still, in the exercise of that freedom, wilfully turn away from divine service. Thereupon these souls fall into the inhospitable realm of the external, material energy.

Because souls are constitutionally servants, even the rebellious souls remain under God’s control, but that control is now exercised indirectly and unfavourably through the agency of material nature. Souls do not have the freedom not to be controlled by God, but they do choose freely how they wish to be controlled. Those who will not voluntarily be controlled by the Lord are controlled involuntarily by material nature. For this reason, spiritual souls become incarcerated within matter. Under the superintendence of the Lord, there is a confluence of the marginal and the external energies, and the creation arises.

Spirits in the Material World

The presence of spirit within the material world is disclosed immediately to us by consciousness. Consciousness is the symptom of the soul. It is the current or the energy of the soul. Consciousness does not arise as a by-product of the material energy. A material object like a table or chair is entirely an object and in no way a subject. It does not undergo experiences. It has no significance for itself. An embodied soul, a living being, on the other hand, is a subject; it has significance for itself as well as for others; it undergoes experiences. The claim that the soul is a “metaphysical entity” beyond all possible experience is simply false. Not only do we experience the soul; the soul is the very condition for our having any experiences at all.

Thus, souls are fundamental, irreducible entities in the world. Each living, conscious being is of a different category from the material energy which embodies and surrounds it. The Upanisads declare: aham brahmasmi, I am brahman, I am spirit. The corollary is: I am not matter. And further: I am not this body. Human beings achieve their full potential when they realise this.

The material elements, of which living bodies are made, are traditionally given as eight: earth, water, fire, air, ether, mind, intelligence, and false ego. They are arranged in sequence from the grossest to the subtlest, that is, from the most apparent to our senses to the least. The first five are the gross elements (maha-bhuta-s); the last three, the subtle elements (suksma-bhuta-s). The gross elements become more intelligible to us when translated as: solids, liquids, gases, radiant energy, and space. The subtle elements, taken together, make up what we in the West generally call the “mind.” The subtle element manas, or mind, is the locus of habit, of normal thinking, feeling, and willing according to one’s established mind-set. Buddhi, or intelligence, is the higher faculty of discrimination and judgement; it determines mind-sets and comes to the fore when we undergo conversions or paradigm shifts. Ahamkara, or the sense of self, is the faculty by which the embodied soul assumes a false or illusory identity in the material world.

Conditioned souls attain human form after transmigrating upward through the scale of beings; thereupon they become capable of self-realisation and liberation. Liberation means giving up the false identification of the self with the gross and subtle material coils and regaining one’s original spiritual form as a servant of God.

Even in the conditioned state, the soul always remains a spiritual being. Like a dreamer who projects his identity onto an illusory, dream-self, the conditioned soul acquires a false self of matter. Although the self is by nature eternal, full of knowledge and full of bliss, this nature becomes covered by illusion. Identifying with the material body, the soul is plunged into the nightmare of history, trapped in the revolutions of repeated birth and death (mrtyu-samsara). This false identification by the embodied souls with their psychophysical coverings is the cause of all their suffering.

The quest by conditioned souls for happiness in this world inevitably fails. The eternal souls naturally seek eternal happiness, yet they seek it where all happiness is temporary. The fulfillment of the most common and basic desire, that of self-preservation, has not once met with success. Indeed, the deluded souls do not know that matters are just the opposite of the way they seem. Gratification of the senses is in fact the generator of suffering, not happiness. This is because each act of sense gratification intensifies the soul’s false identification with the body. Consequently, when the body undergoes disease, senescence, and death, the materially absorbed living beings experience all these as happening to themselves. Death is an illusion they have imposed upon themselves owing to their desire to enjoy in this world. So enjoying, their agony continues unabated. A mind brimming with unfulfilled yearnings propels them, at the time of death, into new material bodies, to begin yet another round.

Recovering the Authentic Self

Fallen souls have been granted a false material identity because they reject their authentic spiritual identity. The traces of that rejection are found everywhere. We see that all organisms, from microbes on up, are driven by the mechanism of desire and hate, by “approach” and “avoidance.” This duality is the reverberation of the original sinful will that propelled them into this world. The original sinful desire is: “Why can’t I be God?” And the original sinful hate, “Why should Krishna be God?”

When souls evince the desire to become the Lord, the Lord responds by granting them the illusion of independent lordship. They enter the material kingdom, to be provided with a sequence of false identities—costumes fabricated out of material energy—along with an inventory of objects which they think they can dominate and enjoy. Even so, the Lord accompanies them in their wanderings, dwelling in their hearts as He works to bring about their eventual rectification and return from exile. When the soul in the depth of his being again turns to God, the Lord makes all arrangements for his inauthentic, illusory life to end.

The renovation of real life is called bhakti-yoga—reconnecting the soul with the Supersoul (yoga) by loving devotional service (bhakti). Bhakti rests upon the principle that desire and activity are not in themselves bad. The soul itself is the source of desire and activity. The original, pure desire of the soul is to satisfy the senses of the Lord. This is called prema, or love. When souls contact matter, their love becomes transformed into lust (kama), which is the desire to satisfy one’s own senses. The practice of bhakti-yoga reconverts lust into love. Desire is not suppressed or repressed; it is purified. One may call this “sublimation,” but it should be understood that when desire is thus sublimated it returns to its own natural and aboriginal state.

The world, the body with its senses, the sense objects are not to be enjoyed, but neither are they to be renounced. The world is God’s energy, and it should not be decried as false or evil. Rather, the elements of this world are to be engaged in divine service. When that is done, the veil of illusion is lifted, and everything and everyone are seen in their true identity: in relationship to God. The way to see divinity everywhere and in everything is to utilise everything in the Lord’s service. God is the first of fact, but our materially contaminated senses cannot perceive Him. When, however, the senses become purified by being engaged in the Lord’s service, they regain their capacity to perceive God directly.

Such purified souls are fully joyful. They neither hanker nor lament. Their happiness does not depend upon the course of circumstance. They see all living beings as the same. They see that all the agony and hopelessness of the world is exorcised when the illusion that has rendered us oblivious to our own identity is dispelled, and they engage themselves in the highest welfare work of rousing sleeping souls from their nightmare. For themselves, they take no mind of what becomes of the future of their lives.

Because they have no material desires, there is no further birth for them in this world. Instead, they attain their original spiritual forms in the kingdom of God, spiritual bodies suitable for pastimes of love with the Lord.

Spirits in the Spiritual World

The Absolute Truth has both an impersonal and a personal feature, but the personal feature is the last word in Godhead. To say the Absolute is a person is to say that it has senses (indriya-s). Traditionally, the senses are ten: those through which the world acts upon us (instruments of hearing, touching, seeing, tasting, and smelling), and those through which we act upon the world (instruments of manipulation, locomotion, sound production, reproduction, and evacuation). The mind is often considered the eleventh sense. A body, accordingly, may be thought of as an array of senses organised around a centre of consciousness. Thus, to say that the Absolute is a person is to say that the Absolute has body or form.

The body of God is not material. It is a spiritual or transcendental form—sad-cit-ananda-vigraha, an eternal form of bliss and knowledge. Though differentiated by limbs or parts, a spiritual body is nevertheless completely unified and identical with its own possessor. Therefore, in God, there is no difference between body and soul, mind and body, soul and mind. Every limb or part of that body can perform all functions of every other limb.

Because the Absolute is a person, the souls, the offspring of God, are also persons, and they fully manifest their authentic identity only in relationship with the Supreme Person. When conditioned souls act under the impetus of sense gratification, their bodies evolve materially. But when the souls act in their constitutional position, their love toward God displays itself as the soul’s proper spiritual bodies. Thus, the selves achieve their full personal identity and self-expression as lovers of God.

All relationships in this world are dim and perverted reflections of their real prototypes in the kingdom of God. The taste or flavour of a relationship is called rasa (literally, “juice”). It is said that there are five primary rasa-s a soul can have toward the Lord. In order of increasing intimacy, they are passive adoration, servitorship, fraternal, parental, and conjugal.

God and His devotees engage in eternal pastimes of loving exchanges in spiritual forms that are sheer embodiments of rasa. Such bodies are the unmediated concrete expressions of spiritual ecstasies. These unceasing, uninterrupted, ever-increasing variegated ecstasies are nondifferent from the souls and from the spiritual bodies that bear them. The forms and activities of the Lord and His devotees all possess transcendental specificity and variegatedness. The forms of love are not abstractions and their relations are not allegories. In the kingdom of God life is infinitely more full, vivid, and real than anything of the thin shadows that flicker here, on and off. Here, we are not what we are. There, we are truly ourselves again because we are truly God’s.

by rsdasa at August 19, 2008 01:29 PM

Krishna-kripa das, Mayapura : travel journal#4.15: Polish Woodstock 2008

Diary of a Traveling Sadhaka, Vol. 4, No. 15
By Krishna-kripa das
(August 2008, part one)
Polish Woodstock 2008
(Sent from near Kolobrzeg, Poland on 8/17/08)

Where I Am and What I Am Doing

We assisted Indradyumna Swami and his team at a spiritual cultural festival at the site of Przystanek Woodstock, the largest European outdoor rock concert, during the period from July 30 to August 3. Here I share some impressions from this year's event and do not attempt to describe it completely. My web pages from previous years, 2001, 2002, and 2003, give an overall impression the whole event. I also advise reading Indradyumna Swami's journal on Woodstock when it comes out at http://www.traveling-preacher.com/ for it is more comprehensive. I only participate in a small part of the festivities, and I only have time to describe some of what I experienced.

Ratha-yatra



We had Ratha-yatra every day at the Poland Woodstock festival.

Some punks were very eager to sweep the street before Lord Jagannatha and successfully competed with the devotees for the service. When they got the chance, they were so enthusiastic the nearby devotees became covered with dust. Some pulled the ropes of the cart with full strength, minimizing the contribution of the devotees in comparison. Some continued for three hours, from beginning to end. They were less in number but were actually doing the job of pulling the cart.


Many people smiled to view Lord Jagannatha, Lord Baladeva, and
Lady Subhadra, on Their carts and their dancing devotees in front.

Govinda Dasa from Scotland and Hare Krishna Dasa from Italy, seen here playing accordions, were among the visiting kirtana leaders.

The devotee musicians, like Jagannatha Misra Prabhu on the whompers, Syama Rasa Prabhu on the djembe, and Bhakta Tom on the gong, were really fired up.

The dancing in front of the Ratha-yatra was a great joy for the devotees and the Woodstock attendees, and to see it as an observer was a joy as well.


Many, many people danced with us.


Indradyumna Swami himself was one of the liveliest dancers.


Just see the people smiling and dancing!


Indradyumna Swami and B. B. Govinda Swami dance with the Woodstock folks, some quite outlandishly dressed, like the guy with the mask looking at B. B. Govinda Swami.
The young ladies also delighted in dancing with the devotees before Lord Jagannatha's cart.
One girl with dredlocks, wearing a long, shining, golden dress, danced with upraised arms with great pleasure before Lord Jagannatha. She came up to me, in the middle of our first Ratha-yatra, saying she remembered me from my chanting at the train station after Woodstock last year. I dredged my memory and then it occurred to me. One of the hundred or two hundred people, either lining the platform or sitting on the train, and hearing our mini harinama was one girl, who I recalled because as she danced with us, she twirled her longest dredlock, which was so long it touched the ground behind her. Like our martial artist, Dina Dayal Prabhu, who twirls his sword, to the front, the left, the right, and back, she did the same with her longest dredlock. This year, that girl, conspicuous by her long, shining, golden dress, danced in every single Ratha-yatra for at least half an hour, smiling brightly the whole time. After the last Ratha-yatra, I asked the town of her residence, and gave her our invitation to our center in the nearby city of Wroclaw, telling her she can come there and dance with us every week. Perhaps she will for she seemed to have gotten a higher taste.
The participation of the both devotees and the Woodstock attendees in the Ratha-yatra has great spiritual value. Srila Prabhupada writes in The Nectar of Devotion, "In the Brahmanda Purana it is said, 'A person who sees the Lord's Ratha-yatra car festival and then stands up to receive the Lord can purge all kinds of sinful results from his body.' . . . A similar statement is there in the Bhavishya Purana, in which it is said, 'Even if born of a lowly family, a person who follows the Ratha-yatra car when the Deities pass in front or from behind will surely be elevated to the position of achieving equal opulence with Vishnu [the Supreme Lord].'" Elsewhere in the book it is stated: "In the Bhavishya Purana it is said, 'In such a ceremony, if even a candala [dog-eater], simply out of curiosity, sees the Lord on the cart, he becomes counted as one of the associates of Vishnu.'"
Many videos on You Tube show scenes from the Krishna presence at Woodstock, and by searching for "Woodstock 2008 Krishna" you will encounter them. Just after two or so minutes into it, this particular video shows a lot of the lively dancing at the Ratha-yatra.
Bhakti Marg Swami's Spontaneous Kirtana
With the Woodstock Folk


The last two days of the Woodstock, Bhakti Marg Swami decided to do kirtana in the evening in the interior of our village, on the opposite side from our stage. Without arrangement of stage or amplication, he just sat with them, reminding us of Srila Prabhupada chanting under the tree in Tompkins Square Park in the early days, surrounded by the hippies. Some people around Bhakti Marg Swami were sitting eating, some resting, and some intoxicated. The first day he engaged Bhakta Tom as a djembe player, but the second he started just clapping his hands and chanting and gradually attendees and some devotees gathered to participate, some of both groups bringing instruments. The Woodstock attendees really got into the down home kirtana, and jumped up and down, dancing with great enthusiasm. He chose simple tunes that made it easy to learn and chant along with the mantra, and they responded. I as well as others passed many mantra cards to the people, who were in many ways more lively than those dancing in our kirtana tent. The inspired people would drag their friends into the middle and encourage them to participate as well to their mutual delight. That Bhakti Marg Swami was willing to sit down in the midst of the people really won their hearts and inspired them to participate. When Indradyumna Swami and B. B. Govinda Swami began their chanting on the stage, Bhakti Marg Swami slowly walked in that direction, surrounded by his group, and upon arriving at the main tent, humbly requested those following him to dance in front of the stage to the kirtana of the Maharajas, and thus ended his kirtana.

Bhakti Marg Swami also produced a Bhagavad-gita drama that was shown on our stage, both at the Woodstock and the rest of the summer tour, and which makes many of Krishna's main teachings in that book come alive. The devotees all hope he can return next year, and share his enthusiasm with us.

Notable Impressions

For me, what made Woodstock most rewarding this year was connecting interested people with Krishna programs in their local areas. Trisama Prabhu, who has been involved in nama-hatta for many years, gave me a list of all temples and nama-hatta contacts in Poland. I was able to connect about thirteen people, in five regions in Poland, with local groups, so they can continue their devotional association, most essential for spiritual progress, if they are ambitious enough to do so.

The Polish devotees who know English are engaged in many important services, and so none were on hand in the kirtana tent to translate Adi Karta Prabhu’s brief talk about the chanting. Thus he asked for a translator from the audience, and one young lady volunteered. She spoke quite confidently and accurately as far as I could tell. Eager to indentify someone who knew English, and thus someone who I could talk to, I spoke with her afterward. She is majoring in linguistics and had recently taken a course on interpretation. By Krishna's grace, she was just a suitable person to play the role of a translator! She is from Krakow, the city in Poland famous for its university and student population. I told her we have periodic programs there, with singing, food, and philosophy, and she took down the contact information of our local nama-hatta devotee.

Giving out mantra cards to those watching and participating in the kirtanas was a great joy for me. Some people showed their happiness in receiving the cards by smiles, gestures, and with exclamations, and some by eagering showing them to their friends, who then also wanted them. Some exclaimed "Text!" as if a long cherished desire had been fulfilled. A few were so happy they wanted to embrace us. I thank Indradyumna Swami who kindly had the forsight to print 17,000 such cards of which we may have distributed 4,000, and to Jayatam Jaya Sila Prabhu who designed them. We are primarily distributing the holy name in this Hare Krishna movement, and I was happy to assist in this.

Giving out invitations for our festival of spiritual food and entertainment was also rewarding. It is nice to promote an event you believe in and which others appreciate. Practically 90% of the people would take the invitations. Even the final evening, when there were only four hours remaining, still 70% of the people would take the invitations, one time seven people in a row did. I passed out the invitations in a very graceful way with a smile and often a hearty "Zapraszamy" ("We invite you"). And people reciprocated accepting them sometimes gracefully, sometimes with folded hands, and often with a smile. Sometimes they would have a grim or neutral expression on their faces, which would break out in a smile, and they would reach out and take one.

I have corresponded with one girl, Paulina, since she came to our festival in Kolobrzeg in 2006. She visited our Krishna village this Woodstock on the first full day. Later she came by the kirtana tent when I was leading kirtana, and more competent lead singers had deserted to the Ratha-yatra. I was happy to see that she sang along, smiling. I kept the same tune going as I know you can lose people by leaving a gap between tunes or singers, and the crowd built up from two or three to twenty or thirty, including a few dancers. When a couple good lead singers arrived, I ended and asked Paulina to translate a few words for me about the mantra. I knew she was not confident of her English, and would be reluctant, but I thought it would be a good thing anyway. I explained how the mantra was composed of God’s names, and God is not different from His names. God is full of happiness, and by associating with Him in the form of the holy name, you can become happy. She is from near Wroclaw, and I gave her an invitation to that temple which I obtained from our book tent. She promised to come.

For me, Woodstock meant meeting old friends and making new ones.

Besides those I spoke of, on our first harinama, I met a boy I spoke to in the bus from the Ukraine border when I had taken Gour Mohan to Lvov in the beginning of July. He had told me he knew us from Woodstock and said he would see us there, which he did. Had he not shown me the train station, I would not have made the train, scheduled to leave two minutes after I boarded it.

I saw also Izabela, a resident of Kostrzyn, who I also knew from 2006. She was eager to come again for Krishna prasadam.

One girl from near Wroclaw spoke to me during the Ananda Maya (the successor of Village of Peace and 18 Days) concert. We talked about the spiritual Village of Peace songs we both liked. She bought a book from our Wroclaw center a month ago. I told her of our four-day nama-hatta Janmastami festival near Jelenie Gora, and she wondered if she could set her tent up there at our farm, and I promised to send her information about it.

I met a couple girls from north Germany. One knew English well, having lived in Canada three months. She had done charitable work in Tamil Nadu for three months, enjoyed India, and had spiritual aspirations. I told her about our temples in Vrindavana and Mayapur, and gave her the web page addresses for our German and English web sites.

Many people liked the prasadam, which was better than previous years. Even the day after, we served out the leftovers to some very grateful people. I invited one boy from Berlin to next weekend’s Ratha-yatra there.

I thanked the ambassador to India for his great lecture in Kolobrzeg. I mentioned the translation of the Gita verse he spoke on. I said I liked the fact than he showed how the Gita can practically benefit our lives. He says he will retire in a year, although his term lasts three. I reminded him that Vedic culture teaches retirement for the purpose of spiritual development.

 
The kirtana tent was special this year because the dancing had reached another level. The kind of dance where the people form a chain and go up and around and back, in and out, and all around, abounded. It seemed there were fifty or even seventy people in the one, two, or occasionally three, such winding chains of people. Half were devotees and half were on the way. To see the happy smiles of all involved was joyous. Some of the people happily chanted as well. This kind of dancing went on for three hours nonstop, and I could not believe the endurance of the people.

Credit goes to B. B. Govinda Swami, and his traveling musicians, and Indradyumna Swami for the lively chanting, all motivating the late night dancing. B. B. Govinda would start very slow and bring the kirtana to a lively speed, and then start slow once again. Once eleven-year-old Mallika, Indradyumna Swami’s brother’s step daughter, lead the tune B. B. Govinda Swami and his excellent female singer had been chanting. Her chanting there, standing on the stage, with a microphone, was charming, and people loved it.
Sometimes people would watch from the outside, then start moving with the music, and finally rush into the tent and join in. Others, with previously generated enthusiasm, would come running from a distance. Sometimes mothers would dance with their children, or they would encourage their children to dance.

People of all ages took the mantra cards, with few indifferent to them. One girl claimed I offered her a card five times, but it was very hard to remember the faces, and some people I thought I may have given them to, took them like it was the first time.
I saw one boy on several occasions at our different functions. Towards the end of the festival he had a Bhagavad-gita and a blue bead bag. He lamented during our final kirtana that he would be separated from us. I encouraged him that we have periodic programs in many areas, and he said that the devotees told him about the one near him. I asked if his school or work would prevent him from coming, and he said no but his parents would. Still he is fortunate to get Gita and the holy name, and I tried to encourage him as best I could.

B. B. Govinda Swami and Indradyumna Swami did kirtana on our main stage the final night.


The dancing was especially wonderful.

While I helped clean up the festival the day after, a middle-aged woman questioned me in Polish. I referred her to a Polish devotee who often does questions and answers. I noticed a hour later, they were still talking. Some people like that lady were quite inquisitive.

All in all, many, many tens of thousands of people came in touch with Krishna in a favorable way those four days, thus they progressed spiritually. We thank Indradyumna Swami and the selfless devotees working under his directions for their tireless service to make it all possible, and Srila Prabhupada for engaging us all in these auspicious activities.

Bliss at the Train Station the Day After

Remembering our last year’s harinama at the train station, and seeing how the one girl with the dredlocks who had seen us then, participated in all our Ratha-yatras this year, I tried to get a few friends to chant at the train station where a few hundred people would be waiting for trains back home. Everyone was too busy taking down the festival or too tired. One said he would come if I arranged a car, which I failed to do—the fifteen-minute walk being unthinkable. I decided at 9:00 p.m. to go myself with some karatalas and mantra cards. On the way out I found a huge bucket of halava in the parking lot, and recalled how one devotee distributed some at the train station after our harinama last year. When I went into the kitchen to get a smaller bucket it to transfer it to, I saw Radhe Govinda Prabhu. "O great, a surrendered soul!" I thought. I was in bliss because I knew Radhe Govinda liked adventure, sharing Krishna consciousness, and wasn’t afraid to stay up late. I explained that I wanted to distribute some halava at the train station. He said it was a one-man job, and I could do it alone. I replied that that was true, but I did not have the mental strength to deal with the groups of people, some of whom are drunk and some of whom tease you and make life difficult, and I wanted the association of another devotee. He could appreciate that, so we went together, getting there around 10:00 p.m. There were groups of people there, and some were quite eager to get the free halava and most accepted the complimentary mantra cards as well.

One person taking the halava, Dorian Dec, who spoke English, said he had come to our camp and really appreciated our kitchen. He also asked about the mantra, and we explained the meaning of each word. He wanted to hear it, and I took out my karatalas and we all chanted together briefly. He asked about many things and he talked with us, especially with Radhe Govinda, for two hours, until his train left. Sometimes while he was talking with Radhe Govinda, I would chant and distribute halava to others. Dorian said he had come to one of our Baltic coast festivals in 1999 and seen a drama. He thought for a few seconds, and then exclaimed "Ramacandro!" a line from the play, saying it with the same intonation and feeling that the actor does. He then remembered the evil multiheaded Ravana. Radhe Govinda smiled and said, "That was me. I was there in 1999, and I played Ravana." Dorian also remembered the demoness who lost her ears and nose. I was amazed that someone would recall so many details from a play he saw nine years before, beginning with the all-auspicious name of Lord Ramacandra. Dorian also had me write his name in Sanskrit, and he took another cup of halava for his several-hour journey home, as did a couple other people. Dorian lives in Opole, about an hour from Wroclaw by train. I gave him an invitation for our Wroclaw temple. He and we were very happy about our meeting.

While we were talking with Dorian, a boy with a djembe came up to us, introducing himself as the person Indradyumna Swami had danced with on Ratha-yatra two years ago. He had also come and danced in this year’s Ratha-yatra, and devotees told me he was much improved in appearance. He mentioned he lost his meditation beads, but we did not have any extras. Had I been less spaced out, I could have got his address so we could send him some. It is nice how Krishna keeps sending us people with previous relationships with devotees when we go out.

To go from spending fifteen hours a day sharing Krishna consciousness with people, as we had for four days, down to none was too much. Our little two-hour outing helped fill the void. I recall how Srila Prabhupada said in a letter to his press workers, that he liked all the devotees, even those involved in his most sacred book production, to go out on sankirtana at least an hour a day and share Krishna consciousness with others.

Woodstock Impact


One evening as our summer tour drew to a close, I congratulated one new mataji, Isvari Dasi, on her initiation by Kavicandra Swami. To inspire her I told her how Kavicandra Swami once suddenly told me as I entered the temple room in San Diego fifteen years ago, "We must desire that these people become Krishna conscious. So many people became Krishna conscious simply because Srila Prabhupada desired it so." It was such a powerful point it stuck in my mind for so many years.

She told me she first met the devotees a year or so ago when she had come to Woodstock. She saw me in our questions and answers tent. She recalled how I said I wore devotional clothes even while going to the post office and the bank and that it was not a problem. She remembered I showed my bead bag and beads and demonstrated how to chant. After the Woodstock, she got some cloth and made bead bags for her and her husband, bought some beads at a store, and took up chanting Hare Krishna. This year her family spent a lot of time helping out on the tour, and she ultimately took initiation. We always wonder about the results of all our endeavor in putting on the Woodstock and the summer tour. When we see people, like Isvari and her husband, taking Krishna consciousness seriously. We realize it is all worth it.

tava kathamritam tapta-jivanam
kavibhir iditam kalmasapaham
sravana-mangalam srimad atatam
bhuvi grnanti ye bhuri-da janah

"[The gopis said to Krishna:] The nectar of Your words and the descriptions of Your activities are the life and soul of those suffering in this material world. These narrations, transmitted by learned sages, eradicate one's sinful reactions and bestow good fortune upon whoever hears them.These narrations are broadcast all over the world and are filled with spiritual power. Certainly those who spread the message of Godhead are most munificent." (SB 10.31.9)

by Krishna-kripa das (noreply@blogger.com) at August 19, 2008 12:57 PM

Gauranga Kishore das - USA : Woodstock: A New Direction

Diary of a Traveling Preacher - Volume 9, Chapter 11 - August 1 - 3, 2008

By Indradyumna Swami

Woodstock: A New Direction

As always, we arrived in Kostrzyn a week before the Woodstock Festival. When I went to look at the enormous field where the event would take place, I was surprised to see that the main stage had already been set up. Hours later our boys arrived and began putting up our large village, including a 60-meter tent and our trademark 3,600-liter, one-ton cooking pot.

It would take five days to assemble the half-acre village. As soon as the boys had put up the big prasadam tent, another group unloaded two tons each of rice, sugar, oil, butter, semolina, and dhal. Nearby they offloaded six thousand liters of oil and 120 thousand papadams.

“It’s going to be a huge yajna,” I thought.

A young couple passed by wearing backpacks. “Early birds,” I said with a wink to Amritananda das.

On the boy’s backpack was scribbled, “Punk’s Not Dead.” He sported a Mohawk haircut dyed blue, yellow, and green. The girl’s hair was purple, and she wore a T-shirt with huge letters saying, “Sex, Drugs, and Rock and Roll.”

“That’s not the message the organizers are sending out this year,” said Amritananda, “Woodstock has moved on.”

It was true. This year Jurek Owsiak, the inspiration behind Woodstock and the main organizer of the event, had decided to put up two large circus tents on the grounds. He had invited a number of renowned personalities to speak to the young people about achieving positive goals.

Included in the list were Professor Leszek Balcerowicz, an economist who had served as Poland’s finance minister for a number of years; Wieslaw Ochman, a well-known opera singer; and Kamil Durczok, a respected anchor from Polish network news.

We had followed suit and decided to make cultural exchange the focus of Krishna’s Village of Peace this year. We decreased the number of devotee rock bands to play on our own stage and were scheduling devotees to speak about spiritual science, Ayurvedic medicine, devotional yoga, and solutions to environmental problems.

When the Indian Ambassador to Poland, His Excellency Chandra Mohan Bhandari, heard about the new direction Woodstock was taking, he asked if we could arrange a meeting with him and Jurek. At the meeting the ambassador, eager to promote India’s culture among the youth of Poland, suggested that this year’s festival emphasize the theme of Indian culture.

The ambassador offered to help by bringing several prominent entertainers and Ayurvedic physicians along with displays of Indian handicraft to the festival. Jurek agreed and suggested a title, Mala Indie, or Little India. The ambassador decided to spend the entire three days of Woodstock participating in the Village of Peace, and we booked a hotel room for him and his family.

Woodstock was being billed as Europe’s largest open-air music event with 52 rock bands plus Warsaw’s Philharmonic Orchestra to add a touch of culture. The Woodstock field soon filled to capacity with an ocean of tents and more than 300 thousand young people.

The day before Woodstock began, we opened the Village of Peace. As always, kids flooded onto our site, eager for everything we had to offer. A large tent erected especially for kirtan was packed as Bhakti Bringa Govinda Maharaja charmed the audience with his kirtans and got hundreds to chant and dance along with him into the wee hours. The tons of foodstuffs we had stockpiled soon turned into thousands of plates of delicious prasadam, much appreciated by the crowds. As always, Krishna’s Village of Peace became the place to eat.

The next day, the Woodstock Festival officially opened. Our large Ratha-yatra chariot began moving along the main thoroughfare of the festival, accompanied by hundreds of devotees and tumultuous chanting of the holy names.

At the same time, Jurek held a media conference near the main stage. His theme of using Woodstock to enlighten the kids about the higher values of life struck a chord with the media. Representatives of every prominent television station, radio station, and newspaper came, and they were intrigued by the presence of the Indian Ambassador and the iconic Professor Balcerowicz, who is credited with having established a robust economy in the
1990’s after decades of communism.

After an hour of questions and answers, Jurek glorified us during his closing words: “I have been trying to impress upon all of you for years that the Hare Krishna Movement is not a cult but an ancient spiritual tradition with much to offer Polish society. The presence of the Indian Ambassador in their village this year obviously confirms this. Please acknowledge this in your reports.”

At the opening ceremony on the main stage before a crowd of 150 thousand kids, Jurek invited everyone to enjoy the music and attend the numerous seminars in the circus tents. While touching on the theme of Little India, he called the ambassador and me to the front of the stage. The crowd cheered, and we waved back.

That evening our Ratha-yatra parade was featured on Poland’s main television news channel. The whole country saw the Lord’s smiling face and His enthusiastic devotees loudly chanting His holy names.

The next day, as the kids poured into our village to take prasadam, visit our tents and exhibits, and join in our kirtans and seminars, I took out our second Ratha-yatra parade. The huge cart rumbled down the road, towering high over people’s heads on the crowded street, and many joined us in pulling on the ropes. Not long after we began, a large group of Christians came from the opposite direction, pulling a large boat made of cloth on a float displaying the words “Noah’s Ark.” They were also singing and dancing, and some kids left us to join them pulling the float.

“They were singing last year,” a devotee said, “but they’ve added the boat, an idea they got from us.”

I noted a touch of pride in his voice. “That’s true,” I said, “but we can learn from them as well. They’ve been successfully preaching in this country for almost 15 hundred years. We arrived only 30 years ago and are struggling to maintain a few small temples.”

When we returned to our village several hours later, we saw long lines of people waiting to get prasadam. On our stage Nandini was translating the ambassador’s lecture about self-realization to a crowd of 400. I went in to listen and was pleasantly surprised to hear that his philosophy was in line with our understanding of Bhagavad-gita. “The goal of life is not material enjoyment,” he concluded, “but bhakti, or the awakening of our love for God, Sri Krishna Bhagavan.” Respecting his position as the ambassador, many people listened attentively.

When I walked over to the book tent, it was so packed I could barely walk in. “I just sold several books to an interesting person,” said Radha Caran das. “He came with a long list of titles, but somehow I could sense he wasn’t so interested, and when I asked why he was buying so many books, he said, ‘They’re not for me. They’re for my cousin. He’s a priest in a local village. He’s interested in your understanding of God, but he’s afraid to come here and buy the books himself.’ ”

Then I headed to the astrology tent, where Prahlad Nrsimha das was concluding a seminar. Several hundred kids were listening carefully. When he finished he came over to speak to me.

“You see the gentleman over there?” he said, pointing to a man reading Bhagavad-gita. “He’s come for the past two days and has been asking many interesting questions. But he always sits in front, off to the side. I noticed he never turns around to look at the rest of the audience. I asked him why. He blushed and said he’s the local priest. He’s fascinated by our philosophy and wants to learn more. He’s been coming in normal clothes and keeping a low profile so his congregation won’t notice.”

As I left the tent I remembered a passage from the writings of Srila Bhaktivinoda Thakur:

“The dharma preached by Caitanya Mahaprabhu is universal and not exclusive … The principle of kirtan as the future church of the world invites all classes of men, without distinction of caste or clan, to the highest cultivation of the spirit. This church, it appears, will spread worldwide and replace all sectarian churches, which exclude outsiders from the precincts of the mosque, church, or temple.”

[Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu: His Life and Precepts, pages 68-69]

At the questions-and-answers tent I was surprised to see the ambassador and Nandini. He was answering questions about karma, reincarnation, and vegetarianism. “Not your typical modern-day statesman,” I said to Amritananda.

Passing by our stage, I saw Bhakti Marg Swami encouraging the devotees he had trained for his drama about Bhagavad-gita. After the play the kids gave him and the other devotees a big round of applause.

That night in our kirtan tent, BB Govinda Maharaja and I kept more than 100 kids chanting Hare Krishna and dancing until 2:00 am. When we finished, many of them hurried to the food tent, where devotees were still distributing prasadam. Rasikendra das, the devotee in charge of cooking, was smiling. “We’ll easily surpass 120 thousand plates this year,” he told me.

On the final day of Woodstock, all 500 of our devotees rose as early as possible to begin their duties. By noon I was taking the Ratha-yatra cart through the site for one last parade. Many kids joined our ranks and chanted alongside us, and the ambassador also joined us for an hour, pulling on the ropes and chanting along with everyone else. After the parade many kids came back and sat in our clean field, taking shelter from the loud music on the main stage some distance away.

As I walked around our site, I noticed a few priests in their black robes preaching to some kids eating prasadam. A devotee came up to me. “Maharaja,” he said, “should we ask the priests to leave?”

“Why?” I said. “They’re not saying anything different from us. If they criticize us, you can politely ask them to leave, but otherwise they are welcome.”

I also noticed many families from local towns. During the first few years of Woodstock the local people stayed away from the festival out of fear, but because it had now taken a cultural direction they seemed to feel more comfortable. I smiled seeing many of them wearing Woodstock T-shirts they’d purchased in stands around the site. Some even had their hair temporarily dyed different colors to match the mood.

As I sat watching thousands of people wander through our village, a girl wearing a sari and tilaka came up to me and offered obeisances.

“Hare Krishna,” she said. “My name is Ania. I’m 13 years old.”

“Hare Krishna,” I said. “Did you come with the devotees on one of the buses from Ukraine or Croatia?”

“No,” she said. “I live here in Kostrzyn. I’ve been coming to Krishna’s Village of Peace every year since I was nine years old. I wait all year for you to come. Throughout the year I read your books and chant Hare Krishna. My Mom encourages me. She’s Catholic, but she says you are worshiping the same God and I can become a Hare Krishna if I want.”

“That’s very nice,” I said.

She paused for a moment. “Actually,” she said, “I came to ask you a special question.”

“Feel free to ask anything you like,” I said.

She hesitated. “Would you please be my spiritual master and accept me as your disciple?” she said. “In the books it says many times that a devotee should learn about Krishna from a spiritual master.”

“But there’s a whole process …,” I began and then stopped. “How do you know me?”

Her face lit up. “I listen to your lectures every time you are here,” she said. “And I sing Hare Krishna with you well into the night throughout Woodstock. I know you very well.”

Her eyes filled with tears. “Please,” she continued. “I’m lost in this world. I want to go back to Krishna.”

“Well, first you have to …,” I started to say but again stopped.

“I’ve been praying to God every day for an entire year that you would accept me as your disciple,” she said. “Even on Sundays in church. And I follow all the rules.”

I nodded. “Yes,” I said. “I’ll happily accept you as an aspiring disciple.”

That night at the final kirtan on our stage, with the ambassador present, BB Govinda Maharaja led what I considered one of the best kirtans of his life. All the young people who had become attracted to Krishna consciousness during Woodstock danced with us for hours. At one point I looked into the huge crowd and saw Ania standing with palms joined, tears streaming down her face as she chanted along with us.

We continued chanting long after the music on Woodstock’s main stage had finished. Late that night, as the kids finally started to go to sleep, all one could hear across the huge field was the chanting of Krishna’s holy names.

When we finally finished the kirtan, I sat for a moment watching as everyone slowly left our village. “I wish it could be like this all the time,” I thought, “so many hundreds of thousands of people getting so much mercy.”

As I walked back to my van with a group of devotees, a woman reporter came up to me. “I know you’re very tired,” she said, “but may I ask you one or two questions?”

“Of course,” I said.

“I’ve been watching all of you since the first day,” she said. “You’re working so hard. But why do you do all of this? It’s such a big operation - so many tents, so many programs, and so much food. And most of it’s free. You can’t be making much money.”

I smiled. “We just want to share our good fortune with others,” I said.

She hesitated before copying that into her notebook. “But there must be other reasons,” she said.

I looked back at the field where the great yajna had taken place. “Actually,” I said, “there is another reason.”

I paused, waiting for the right words to come. “We’re hoping to attract the attention of the Lord,” I said, “praying that one day we can serve Him again in the spiritual world.”

“You mean, like angels?” she said.

“Something like angels,” I said. The devotees smiled.

jaya subha lila mrta rasa lila maya bhavad ali parijana palim anugananayam aham apiyayam iti bhava pasa vrta matir asam api racayeyam phalatu mameyam natha

“O all-auspicious Krishna! May You be victorious! You perform all kinds of sweet pastimes. Let my name also be there when You count Sri Radha’s associates. This is my prayer. Although I am covered by material consciousness I can still aspire for this. O Lord, may my prayer be fulfilled.”

[Visvanath Cakravarti Thakur: Sri Nikunja Keli Virudavali, verse 67]

Indradyumna.swami@pamho.net www. traveling-preacher. com Audio lectures: www. narottam. com

by Gauranga Kishore Das (noreply@blogger.com) at August 19, 2008 11:48 AM