Padayatra was first launched by His Holiness Agrani Swami in Guyana in 1989 from the easternmost Village of Crabwood Creek, near the Suriname border, with a five mile walk daily followed by massive evening sankirtan and other Krishna consciousness presentations.
by course@ultimateselfrealization.com at January 23, 2009 01:24 PM
Places of pilgrimage are purified by pure devotees. Otherwise, they are
toxic waste dumps for contaminated consciousness. As King Yudhisthira
says to Vidura in the Srimad Bhagavatam (1.13.10): "My Lord, devotees
like your good self are verily holy places personified. Because you
carry the Personality of Godhead within your heart, you turn all places
into places of pilgrimage."
The Methodist circuit preacher on horseback, bent double against wind and rain, saddlebags filled with good books, is an icon of American history. Long before the saloons and general stores came to the American West, and certainly long before the railroads came, the Methodist preacher man was there. There’s an old American expression to describe how wild a place was: “Aint nothing out there but crows and Methodist preachers!”
In some cases there are recorded histories of mine workers and other settlers who had not been into a church or even heard the word of God for nearly 20 years. When the preacher came to their camp, his powerful oratory conjuring up vivid imagery of ‘the Wrath that awaits you after your death,’ his listeners would cry out in genuine fear and sometimes roll on the ground in remorse for a life ill-spent.
By being the first preachers, always on the frontier, the Methodists eventually became very numerous in America, even outnumbering their English counterparts across the Atlantic. By the first decade of the 1800s their frontier techniques of loud and enthusiastic camp meetings had reached England, causing no small consternation to the denomination’s now staid and middle class membership.
I have a diary on my bookshelf of just one such early frontier preacher, Lorenzo Dow by name. The pages of his 1805 text show a man utterly committed to travelling and preaching, sometimes several times a day. Like his forebear, John Wesley, Lorenzo Dow was burning with a sense of mission. Unlike John Wesley, it seems, Lorenzo was not a man of educated speech or polished habits. He stirred up the people with his oratory alright, but they sometimes stirred him right out of town. His diary is filled with his preaching failures as well as successes.
But the fact is that he who preaches wins. And he who regularly teaches those he has preached to, he wins. And of course, he who genuinely cares for those to whom he preaches and teaches: he wins. A preacher has two jobs: ‘To afflict the comfortable, and to comfort the afflicted.’ Exhorting all he meets to a higher awareness of God, and offering practical help to all, thus demonstrating God’s love.
It’s lonely work, no doubt; and sometimes a thankless task, but one that must be done. From Saint Paul’s wanderings through the travelling and preaching of Saint Dominic, and on to the tireless missionaries of today, being a preacher has always involved travelling to lonely places so that people can be given a higher message. A message that frees them from spiritual loneliness.
ISKCON’s early years involved great travelling, perfectly exemplified by His Divine Grace Srila Prabhupada, who moved constantly from city to city all over the world, taking the timeless message of the Vedas with him. He left behind him thousands of followers on each continent.
In the decades that followed, those followers often went to new countries with the message of their guru, opening up frontiers in Russia, South America, and many other places. As things became more established and settled, there was less tendency for disciples to travel and preach. For the married couples it was almost impossible, even if they wanted to.
But the young men and women of ISKCON went everywhere to distribute the Vedas, and by such travelling many thousands of people came to express their profound interest in the oldest religion of all. But those people numbered perhaps 10 in each city, or 5 in a smaller town.
As in the history of every religion’s growth, that created, once more, lonely outposts; places where small numbers of followers were reading the sacred books of the religion but needed further teaching, encouragement and practical guidance if they were to progress further. And that, as it’s always done, created the need for the travelling circuit preacher.
Here in Britain we recently created a ‘Travelling Preacher’s Circuit.’ Like the Methodists of old, we have a printed Circuit Plan, a chart with towns along the top, dates down the side, and the preacher’s initials in the boxes thus created.
We’ve started small, but at least it’s a start. And the travelling circuit preachers are not sannyasis, or even brahmacaris, they are mostly married men who volunteer their services three or four times a year to travel out to the smallest places on our lists, often to meet with just a handful of dedicated Vaishnavas.
Through 2008 our 16 volunteers clocked up 265 hours of preaching, teaching, and comforting time - not including the time it took to travel to their appointed spots. It’s not an enormous amount, but it’s respectable - and it is definitely a beginning, and a very welcome addition to all the other preaching that takes place in London and other major cities.
And to the devotees who heard about devotional service to Krishna from those preachers, it meant an awful lot. If you’d like to know more about the opportunities open for travelling and preaching (sorry, we have no horses) kindly write to me on: kmdasa@googlemail.com.

Haribol prabhus,
Please accept my humble obeisances. All glories to Srila Prabhupada. Here is a little sankirtan story...
It was the very end of our day. One guy walked up to me to see what I had in my hands.
ÒYou guys are KrishnaÕs, right?Ó He had met devotees in Toronto, but he didnÕt seem very interested. He started asking if IÕd read this book or that book and seemed to be saying I should read more of other things so that I could be educated about them. He didnÕt seem to be doing anything except just killing time. Although a bit overbearing, he was quite likeable and friendly. However, it was cold and I didnÕt think he was interested in getting a book. We were just on our way home.
ÒSo, how did you guys become Hare Krishna,Ó he suddenly inquired.
ÒFrom chanting Hare Krishna,Ó I replied. It was a friendly, humorous exchange, but I was hoping it would end soon so I could go home.
ÒI chanted Hare Krishna before,Ó he said.
ÒThat means youÕre going to become a Hare Krishna,Ó I answered, before I realized what I was saying. I donÕt usually say things like that.
He went on, ÒYeah, I went to the Krishna temple in Toronto one time and I chanted it once so they would give me some food.Ó
ÒThat means youÕre going to become a Hare KrishnaÓ, I repeated. By this time the mood had changed and we were all smiling and laughing. He didnÕt really know what to say about becoming a Hare Krishna. Then, to our astonishment, he asked,
ÒWhat kind of books do you have there? I like to understand things.Ó
I couldnÕt believe it. After giving a donation, he walked away with the Nectar of Instruction. I couldnÕt help but feel used by Lord Caitanya, and it felt good.
Your servant,
Nitai Rama dasa (Text PAMHO:16775327) --------------------------------------
------- End of Forwarded Message ------
Haribol prabhus,
Please accept my humble obeisances. All glories to Srila Prabhupada. Here is a little sankirtan story...
It was the very end of our day. One guy walked up to me to see what I had in my hands.
ÒYou guys are KrishnaÕs, right?Ó He had met devotees in Toronto, but he didnÕt seem very interested. He started asking if IÕd read this book or that book and seemed to be saying I should read more of other things so that I could be educated about them. He didnÕt seem to be doing anything except just killing time. Although a bit overbearing, he was quite likeable and friendly. However, it was cold and I didnÕt think he was interested in getting a book. We were just on our way home.
ÒSo, how did you guys become Hare Krishna,Ó he suddenly inquired.
ÒFrom chanting Hare Krishna,Ó I replied. It was a friendly, humorous exchange, but I was hoping it would end soon so I could go home.
ÒI chanted Hare Krishna before,Ó he said.
ÒThat means youÕre going to become a Hare Krishna,Ó I answered, before I realized what I was saying. I donÕt usually say things like that.
He went on, ÒYeah, I went to the Krishna temple in Toronto one time and I chanted it once so they would give me some food.Ó
ÒThat means youÕre going to become a Hare KrishnaÓ, I repeated. By this time the mood had changed and we were all smiling and laughing. He didnÕt really know what to say about becoming a Hare Krishna. Then, to our astonishment, he asked,
ÒWhat kind of books do you have there? I like to understand things.Ó
I couldnÕt believe it. After giving a donation, he walked away with the Nectar of Instruction. I couldnÕt help but feel used by Lord Caitanya, and it felt good.
Your servant,
Nitai Rama dasa (Text PAMHO:16775327) --------------------------------------
------- End of Forwarded Message ------
Sukadeva Goswami to Parikhsit Maharaja,by Subuddhi Krishna das, Chicago (noreply@blogger.com) at January 23, 2009 07:40 AM
3 days of break !! The long weekend ! Australia is celebrating their “Australia Day” on 26th January, which marks the arrival of the first fleet in 1788, the start of British colonisation here. Since, 1818, the country has been holding this as an official event and these days about 7 million people attend the various acts of celebrations across the country.
As I was reading the national newspaper, THE AUSTRALIAN today, I chanced to see this piece which took my interest :
A PRAYER ON THE BARBIE
“………more than 2000 Christians are expected to pack Melbourne Town Hall to pray for the nation. The gathering, which will feature former treasurer Peter Costello giving a special greeting, is planning to pray for the federal government, the economy, the armed forces, farmers, indigenous people and for the stimulation for the business community.”
What do you think about the nature of the prayer being offered?
Suta Gosvami answers (SB 1.2.6): ‘The supreme occupation (dharma) for all humanity is that by which men can attain to loving devotional service unto the transcendent Lord. Such devotional service must be unmotivated and uninterrupted to completely satisfy the self.’

In this episode, Mahatma dasa gives us a very nice summary of what he has been discussing in his recent videos. He covers many important aspects including attentive Japa and hearing the Holy names.
by Rasa Rasika (noreply@blogger.com) at January 23, 2009 05:05 AM
People will criticize you no matter what you do, so better to be criticized for doing The Right Thing than for doing the expedient thing.
And the role of those in administration is to make The Right Thing the expedient thing to do. That's why we have fines, prison, and other punitive measures. They are meant to act as a deterrent to make it easier to Do The Right Thing than not.
by noreply@blogger.com (Devadeva Mirel) at January 23, 2009 03:20 AM
Yogas citta nivrtti virodhah
Yoga is the inhibition of the modifications of the mind.
- Patanjali Yoga-sutra I.2
The master strategist is not one who creates reality, but one who recognises reality.
Dharma is "what is" - things as they are. The universe exists, and it exists in a certain way.
Intuitively understanding this, superior generals do not win through tactical dexterity, but rather through strategic dominance. They read the map and win the battlefield through positioning before the battle even begins, rather than seeking to win a battle through maneuver.
Although others consider him skillful, the truly skillful man realises that in reality he does nothing except to understand and accept his destiny, rather than to work against it.
Many swimmers in a river may have great dexterity of stroke, but it is the one who reads the current and flows with it who achieves the superior result, effortlessly.
By aligning herself with dharma, "things as they are", the skillful person aligns herself with the structure of the universe and anchors herself in the fabric of existence that underlies it. Thus she becomes simultaneously immovable and unstoppable.
She is a "seer of the truth" (tattva-darsi), not a creator of truth.
The essence of leadership is to understand who you are and be more that, and help others to do the same.
In this way the movement of the mind is stopped, and although he appears to be doing so many things, while it happens the skillful person realises that he in fact does nothing.
A person in the divine consciousness, although engaged in seeing, hearing, touching, smelling, eating, moving about, sleeping and breathing, always knows within himself that he actually does nothing at all. Because while speaking, evacuating, receiving, or opening or closing his eyes, he always knows that only the material senses are engaged with their objects and that he is aloof from them.
- Bhagavad-gita 5.8
by ananda (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 09:19 PM
from Srila Prabhupada-lilamrta
by Devadeva Mirel (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 08:15 PM
by Bhaktimarga Swami (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 07:39 PM
by Bhaktimarga Swami (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 07:38 PM
by Bhaktimarga Swami (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 07:36 PM
by Bhaktimarga Swami (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 07:34 PM
by Bhaktimarga Swami (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 07:32 PM
by Bhaktimarga Swami (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 07:29 PM
by Bhaktimarga Swami (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 07:27 PM
While scanning devotees' blogs today, I came across this.
"What writing tips would you whisper to those who aren’t aspiring professionals, but would like to write better? If I asked you about losing weight and you said “Diet and Exercise” you’d be a) correct and b) ignored. So no ideas that take work. We want the quick fix!"
by noreply@blogger.com (Devadeva Mirel) at January 22, 2009 05:41 PM
Perhaps I should write about vegetables much more often. So many readers took the time to read about ‘Lost English Vegetables’ that I’m seriously considering it.
Today, however, I just wanted to say a few words about swearing an oath. Like you, along with millions of others, I watched Barack Hussein Obama swear the oath while laying his left hand on the Bible. Not just any Bible in this case, but the self same Bible that Abraham Lincoln used back in 1861. Its the most solemn vow anyone in public office in the USA can make, and swearing on the Bible means that the oath is taken in the presence of God. It also means that the person taking the oath asks for God’s help in upholding his oath.
The taking of an oath before giving a testimony in a court of law is almost universal. Some witnesses prefer simply to ‘affirm’ rather than ‘take the oath.’ The idea is that they promise to tell the truth according to the highest set of principles they hold.
Swearing upon the Bible is very common of course, especially in western countries. But what if the person is a Hindu? What holy book should be offered?
In India there are literally hundreds of books that swearers of oaths would deem holy and suitable for their highest promises. Which book should a court of law offer to witnesses. Is there any holy book that all Hindus would agree to? I don’t know what happens in India, but in Britain the holy book of choice offered to the majority of Hindu witnesses is the Bhagavad-gita, the record of God’s conversation with His devotee.
That has come about not only because the Bhagavad-gita is universally known and loved, it is because many of the law courts in Britain have been supplied with a copy of Bhagavad-gita by members of the Hare Krishna movement.
Just the other day I heard the strange case of a man from India, nominally Hindu but not observant, who was asked to testify in court. When offered the Gita to lay his hand on, he reflected that he did not know at all what the book contained. After giving evidence he decided that he would read the holy book from cover to cover.
As the months went by, he became dissatisfied with being a non-observant person and began to visit temples. He specially liked to visit the temple founded by the person who had written the extensive commentaries to the Bhagavad-gita he’d taken his oath on: His Divine Grace A.C.Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada.
By reading just a portion each morning he has now read the entire Bhagavad-gita three times. He also chants the Hare Krishna mantra as a meditation every morning on a string of 108 wooden beads. He chants nine times round the beads each day.
Everyone gets their day in court - and this man’s day was a turning point in his life.

by Devadeva Mirel (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 04:33 PM
Amala Kirtan das singing a Hare Krishna bhajan.
2008-12-31
Dallas, TX
by Rupa Schomaker (rupa@rupa.com) at January 22, 2009 03:37 PM
by noreply@blogger.com (Devadeva Mirel) at January 22, 2009 02:57 PM
by Rasa Rasika (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 01:02 PM
South Africa Retreat - Day 2
South Africa Retreat - Day 2This phenomenon is something that materialists would like to put on the
back burner. Yet thousands have already been displaced and dispossessed
due to flooding from global warming.
As we wrote in the 1998
edition of DIVINE NATURE, "United Nations studies show that a warming
climate could raise sea levels, which are already rising, by 1.5 to 6.5
feet over the next century. If sea levels rise 3 feet, this could
submerge 1 million square miles of lowlands. These lowlands are
inhabited by one billion people and include one third of the world's
cropland"
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:by Rasa Rasika (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 11:37 AM
These are the High Quality lectures and the Low Quality lectures of the South Africa Retreat - Day 1.
These are the High Quality lectures and the Low Quality lectures of the South Africa Retreat - Day 1.The following are some informal Questions and Answers of H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami about his experiences in Krsna consciousness.
The following are some informal Questions and Answers of H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami about his experiences in Krsna consciousness.
A major annual pilgrimage event in India, like Kumbhamela, millions of pilgrims assemble at Ganga Sagar, the place of confluence of mother Ganges with the ocean. Lord Kapila deva’s ashram is located here where He instructed His mother Devahuti on the absolute truth.
by ananda (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 08:51 AM
by Subuddhi Krishna das, Chicago (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 07:22 AM
by course@ultimateselfrealization.com at January 22, 2009 03:29 AM

by Vrndavana Vinodini dd (noreply@blogger.com) at January 22, 2009 01:55 AM
Prahladananda Swami has been a practitioner and teacher of yoga, Ayurveda and self-realisation for thirty seven years. Maharaja will lead a Yoga and Ayurvedic Retreat at Hare Krishna Valley on Saturday January 31st. and Sunday February 1st. This is an introduction to spiritual life especially meant for people unfamiliar with Krishna consciousness. Please direct anyone you know who may be interested to Vraja Nari dasi (0424-441-534).
Since so many of you asked me to take some more shots of their progress, here we are 2 weeks later.
No sign of fruits yet.
What do you cook when your teenager turns vegetarian?
Paula Goodyer, THE AGE, Melbourne Wednesday, January 21, 2009
"No one knows how many Australian teenagers turn to their parents one day and announce that - like Lisa from The Simpsons - they're now vegetarian. But the guess is that it's no rare event - especially among girls.
But in the US they've crunched some numbers and, based on interviews with 9000 parents, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that around one in 200 American teenagers has taken a pledge to veg.
Anecdotally, teenage vegetarianism seems to be an increasing trend, often driven by animal welfare concerns and often sparked by animal slaughter videos on YouTube, The Washington Post reported last week". More...
(Don't forget to read the comments - there's a lot. k)
by Keshav (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 09:55 PM
Last Sunday, we had a special presentation as a "Year in Review" of 2008. This upcoming Sunday, we have another special presentation for our community!by Keshav (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 09:55 PM
>>> Ref. VedaBase => SB 7.9.43
The above four rules were made to be broken (case in point: this post is 506 words), but this one is the holy grail:
by Bhakti lata (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 08:43 PM
Thanks to all of you that wrote me on my email address regarding the chakki recipe. The comments option was/is temporarily out of order.
The reason I had not heard of the recipe is that chakki is not the real spelling. These delicious, crunchy savoury spirals are known as chakli, chaakli in the Marathi language (or chakkuli) and chakri in Gujarati
Throughout India they are known by a whole lot of other different names as well, acccording to the region, like muruku, murukku, or murkoo in Tamil and Telugu, for instance. When stored in a sealed container they last for a long time.
Ok, I still haven't got a recipe to share with you, but I am sure there will be one coming my way soon. And a request to Steve, my blog facilitator: please remove the bar on comments. Thank you.
Besides being an unnecessary expense, disposal of container (which also applies to bottled water) and taking the place of other beneficial liquids like fruit juices or water, soda sucks for health reasons as well.
Source: Still Spooked by High-Fructose Corn Syrup
By now most everyone has seen ads from the Corn Refiners Association, claiming that our fears about high-fructose corn syrup are misplaced. Since our kids will soon be loading up on Halloween treats laden with the substance, it’s a good time to consider why so many people find corn sweeteners so scary.
Just this month, researchers from Loyola University’s Stritch School of
Medicine in Chicago took a look at the link between kidney disease and
high-fructose corn syrup. Using data from nearly 9,400 adults in the
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 1999 to 2004, they tracked consumption of sugary soft drinks, a major source of high-fructose corn syrup in the United States, and protein in the urine, a sensitive marker for kidney disease. They found that overall, people who drank two or more sugary sodas a day were at 40 percent higher risk for kidney damage, while the risk for women soda drinkers nearly doubled.
In June, the Journal of Hepatology suggested a link between consumption of high-fructose corn syrup in sodas and fatty liver disease.
And this summer, a small study published in The Journal of Nutrition
suggested that fructose may make people fatter by bypassing the body’s
regulation of sugars, which means it gets more quickly converted to fat than do other sugars.
Many scientists hypothesize that high-fructose corn syrup has contributed to rising obesity rates, although others say there is no solid evidence to support the theory. The corn refiners agree, dedicating a Web site to the “sweet surprise” of high-fructose corn syrup.
But we do know that foods made with high-fructose corn syrup are heavily processed and typically lack any meaningful nutritional value. And while the jury is out on the real effect high-fructose corn syrup has on obesity, we do know it’s a threat to the health of the planet.
As writer Michael Pollan told The Washington Post earlier this year,
high-fructose corn syrup “may be cheap in the supermarket, but in the environment it could not be more expensive.”
Most corn is grown as a monoculture, meaning that the land is used solely for corn, not rotated among crops. This maximizes yields, but at a price: It depletes soil nutrients, requiring more pesticides and fertilizer while weakening topsoil.
“The environmental footprint of high-fructose corn syrup is deep and wide,” writes Pollan, a prominent critic of industrial agriculture. “Look no farther than the dead zone in the Gulf [of Mexico], an area the size of New Jersey where virtually nothing will live because it has been starved of oxygen by the fertilizer runoff coming down the Mississippi from the Corn Belt. Then there is the atrazine in the water in farm country — a nasty herbicide that, at concentrations as little as 0.1 part per billion, has been shown to turn male frogs into hermaphrodites.”
Posted in Cows and Environment, Health

Hare - O Radha, please capture my inner heart and deliver me from the bondage of material lifeand so on....
Krsna - O Krsna, please pull my heart to you
Hare - O Radha, please steal my heart with your sweetness
Krsna - O Krsna, please purify my heart by giving me, trough Your pure devotees, knowledge how to worship You
Krsna - O Krsna, please make me steady in devotion to Your name, form, qualities, pastimes and such
Krsna - O Krsna please may I develope taste for You
Hare - O Radha, please make me qualified for serving You
Hare - O Radha, please show me how to serve You
by muniraja dasa (muniraja108@gmail.com) at January 21, 2009 12:39 PM
Hi folks… I wrote this little nugget a few days ago. But, as often happens, I’m now wondering if I am being too hard on devotees. Mostly, I was poking fun and giving some a good natured ribbing. But do I rib too much? I’m not at all an angry person. But, as pointed out by Ryan, I’m a cynical, skeptical and suspicious 90 year old man. That’s true in a lot of ways. I mean, I’m not actually 90 years old. I only act like it.
So I ask, am I going too far? Like I said, a lot of it is in jest. But a whole lot of it comes from my growing dislike of bullshit, personality cults and justification disguised as dovetailing.
Mostly, however, this should be taken as a bit of satire. Sort of like The Hing II: This Time It’s Personal! (except not really as likable… sort of like The Hing 2: Electric Bugaloo…. Any thoughts?
Sometimes I really question my commitment to being a good devotee. I mean, even though I’m completely convinced of Vedanta philosophy, I know that I am totally fallen and unable to truly be a real vaisnava.
First off, I don’t really like the Beatles or George Harrison. Sure, they had a few songs that I like and yeah, I respect them for being pretty amazing musicians, but I just don’t care. I just don’t think George Harrison was some great devotee - I know that pretty much disqualifies me from going back to Godhead, but I can’t even pretend to think that Dark Horse and Extra Texture were good albums.
I don’t care about aligning my chakras. I just don’t. I don’t like silent meditation or crystals. Any mention of “chi” or of “light” and “energy” makes me gag. I guess I’m not into the whole New Age thing. Actually, I think most of it is just plain silliness. I don’t care about the mind-body-spirit connection. Or collective consciousness. Or the healing power of magnets.
I have only seen a few Bollywood movies, and to be honest, they kinda sucked. I don’t really even care for the philosophically bizarre “devotional” movies that India cranked out through the 50’s and 60’s. And while I liked some aspects of the Mahabharata TV show, mostly it was weird and long-winded. And devotee-produced plays where the voices and sound effects are all pre-recorded is lame. Admit it.
I don’t have a special diet. Or a personal cook.
My head doesn’t wobble and I don’t have a fake Bengali accent, even when speaking about Krishna consciousness. I realize it makes it difficult to convey any sort of spiritual idea while talking in my normal voice, but that’s the burden I’ve been cursed to carry.
Phrases like “spaced out,” “stool room” and “fried” rarely, if ever, pass my lips. This probably means that I’m not at all situated in my spiritual life. I know that each time I say “I’m going to bed” instead of “I am going to take rest” I acquire many thousands of lifetimes on the hellish planets. I know this, and still I can’t bring myself to do like that. It must be my rascal mind. I am not “veddy much” anything, except “veddy much” going to burn in hell for a very long time. Oh, and there is no such word as “literatures.”
I don’t really care about yoga. I think it’s neat to see someone who is really good at it performing all the bendy things, but I have no desire at all to attempt it myself. I know it comes from India and that automatically qualifies it as mode of goodness/transcendental, but I just don’t like it.
I don’t even use Vicco tooth paste. Can you believe that? I just don’t think it works. I don’t wear a wool chadar when I’m cold - I have sweaters for that. I have no real desire to even visit India. It costs a lot of money and seems to be a pretty nasty, dirty place. Sort of like Detroit, but with slightly more shit on the ground.
And speaking of money, I don’t think that spending $108 to hear some guru talk is a bargain. 800 bucks to learn how to chant japa? No sorry, that’s cheating. Call me a hippie, but spiritual knowledge should be free. Again, I realize this totally blows all possibility of devotion, but what can I do?
However, I do care about the philosophy taught by Lord Krishna, Caitanya Mahaprabhu and Srila Prabhupada. I like chanting Hare Krishna, worshiping the deities and associating with the devotees, but I know it’s not enough. I know that I need to put on the All Things Must Pass album and meditate on light and love.
Empowerment seminars and hokey self help books haven’t replaced Bhagavatam classes and Prabhupada’s books. That I like traditional bhajans instead of mantra rock and crappy New Age music in the guise of sacred sound and movement (whatever that means) does indeed put my name on Yamaraja’s hit list, but I think I’ll just chant Hare Krishna instead.
Love has to be proved. In the fourth verse of Rupa Goswami's
Upadesamrta, he emphasizes the revelation of one's mind and the giving
of gifts and prasadam. Srila Prabhupada's translates the verse thus:
"Offering gifts in charity, accepting charitable gifts, revealing one's
mind in confidence, inquiring confidentially, accepting prasada and
offering prasada are the six symptoms of love shared by one devotee and
another."
In daily affairs, love - between family members, lover
and beloved - has to be demonstrated, activated and re-activated, on an
by ananda (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 11:48 AM
By Bhakti - vedanta ManorOn Sunday 18th January saw the arrival of a cow-in-calf to the Temple, a gift by the RSPCA representing a symbol of reconciliation.
The world is embroiled in a recession. Banks are failing, jobs are disappearing, wealth attached to property and stocks is evaporating. The hopes of so many that rest upon saving for the future is now destroyed.
by Kirtaniya (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 10:26 AM
This jovial cartoon was designed for Chant4Change. Chant4Change, an intrepid group of chanters in Washington DC, have organised a prestigious kirtan event for the inauguration of the new president, next week. You can read about it and even buy a tee-shirt here. If any of our readers live in Washington, there are still some tickets left. And Mr Obama, if you are reading this - why not go along too! All proceeds to charity.
by Kirtaniya (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 10:25 AM
We have some new signs put up, to help those new comers from getting lost within the temple compound.

What's happening when?
How many times have we had someone come up and ask, “When will the temple open again for darshan?”. Now, they can see a nice display of all the temple services and darshan times. Also, its better placed, right next to the entrance rather than the one we had before, which was next to the deity room entrance, away from people’s immediate glance.

even with a distance calculator
Visitors can now time their presence in the prasadam collection line, if they were to make a quick visit to the toilet. It takes about 15 seconds to get to the toilet from the temple door, somewhat the midpoint of the long line on a sunday feast day. The well known school equation states that Speed = Distance/Time, which means you would need to move at a speed of 7.12 km/hr (about 2 meters/second). This is possible. I have seen it.

"Where can I buy a Krishna photo?"
2 weeks ago, I had a visitor from Canberra ask, where he can buy some original Melbourne incense sticks? I think he meant Indian ones. Anyways, I proudly pointed him to the new signboard and said, “…and there’s much more!”. Last weekend, we had someone enquire, if they can buy some tulasi seeds for their garden. This item will not be in the temple store…but there’s much, much more !!

Oh no !!
What’s that under the “Please place your shoes on racks” sign? No surprises for guessing - Shoes ! If you were to come to the temple during an important festival day or perhaps the weekend feasts, you will need to cross over the ocean of foot wear before you can enter the temple ! And no, you can’t cover it as quickly as crossing a water collected in a calf’s footprint ! You will find them all over the path leading to the temple door. Sometime last year, I took the initiative of collecting all the shoes and placing them neatly onto the racks. It looked neat. But people just won’t take the effort to follow the above instruction. And it doesn’t look good, when a guru maharaj has to step over these shoes to enter the temple. The path to Krishna should be clear of devotee and neophyte shoes !! Perhaps, we need a new sign that says, ”Please don’t place shoes under the - Please place your shoes on racks - sign!”

"Are we getting a sign too?"
Ooops. Please forward all queries to the temple president.
Thanks.

Thanks to Ramvijay Prabhu we have now the unedited audio material. We are in the process of editing and converting. These are the lectures that will be posted later today.
1 Arrival day lecture
2 Day 1 – Srimad Bhagvatam class
3 Day 1 - Bhagavad Gita class
4 Day 2 – Srimad Bhagavatam class
5 Day 2 – Bhagavad Gita class
6 Day 3 – Srimad Bhagavatam class
7 Day 3 – Bhagavad Gita class
8 Day 3 – Informal Questions and Answers of Maharaja about his experiences in Krsna consciousness
9 Day 4 – Srimad Bhagavatam class
10 Day 4 – Bhagavad Gita class
11 Day 5 – Srimad Bhagavatam class
12 Day 5 – Bhagavad Gita class
We are posting the Arrival day lecture, Day 1 of Srimad Bhagavatam and Bhagavad Gita. The high quality versions will be added later today.
Inspired by my reading of "Vaisnava Compassion" by HH Satsvarupa Maharajaby Club 108 (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 08:00 AM


My son Nitai, who fancies himself as a budding chef, is living with me at the moment. He'll enjoy his last weekend of freedom (school starts next week) as my assistant at the classes.
Saturday's class has long been filled, but there are still some vacancies in Sunday's class.
This is our menu:
'Classics from the Subcontinent'
Fragrant, Tomato-laced Karnataka Hot & Sour Masoor Dal Soup (Rasam) South Indian Lemon Rice with Fresh Coconut & Cashews Grilled Homemade Panir Cheese with Cream and Spinach (Palak Panir) Crispy Battered Potato Puffs (Aloo Vadas) Fresh Mint Chutney Hot & Sweet Eggplant Pickles Mild Karnataka-style Poriyal of Cauliflower, Potato and Peas Creamy Cardamom-infused Condensed Yogurt Dessert with Pistachios and Saffron Syrup (Shrikhand)
Here's details of how you can enrol for this exciting day of culinary education, camaraderie, feasting and fun. Please come and join me at the class!
Sticky Rice Cooking School Stirling, Adelaide Hills, South Australia Sun 25 January 2009, Cookery Workshop online bookings or call 08 8339 1314
by course@ultimateselfrealization.com at January 21, 2009 03:30 AM
Writing helps me to clarify and collate my thinking. In writing about the reasoning behind our decision to close the Albert St studio (not yet published) I wrote that our mission is not "to maintain a yoga studio", but rather to "help people to develop uplifting relationships".
That's a key insight.
Four Spaces where Relationships take place
Human beings need relationships in four distinct relational "spaces" in order to be psychologically balanced and healthy.
The four relational spaces are: Public, Social, Personal, and Intimate.
A strategic approach to sharing Krishna consciousness should provide opportunities for uplifting relationships in all of these spaces.
Public Space
The Public space is where you are essentially "alone in a crowd". You are surrounded by people, but there are too many for you to interact personally. You are as much spectator as participant.
Examples of the Public space would be a Sunday Feast program at a Hare Krishna temple or doing a yoga class in the Atma studio.
Social Space
The Social space is 6-15 people. It gives you an opportunity to interact with people and assess them. Essentially you are looking for persons with whom you are interested in pursuing a further relationship.
Examples of the social space would be a group of people talking at a party or sitting at the table talking over dinner at Atma after the class.
Personal Space
The Personal space is typically 3-5 people. It's a much smaller group where the conversation can turn more specific and closer to shared core values of the participants.
Examples of the Personal space would be the kitchen of a home, or a group of friends sitting down for a drink in a cafe.
Intimate Space
The Intimate space is inhabited by 2-3 people. In this space the participants are very closely bonded.
Examples of intimate space might include a heart-to-heart talk between two people, asking advice, talking confidentially or specifically. The dynamic of the interaction will change when someone else enters the space.
The Foyer, Living Room, Kitchen Analogy
In the book "Creating Community: Five Keys to Creating a Small Group Culture" Andy Stanley and Bill Willlits use the analogy of a house to describe these different spaces.
The Public space is the "foyer" or perhaps the porch of the house. If you imagine a party, people who are hanging around on the edges, sizing things up, hang outside. There they have the opportunity to spectate, without the pressure to participate.
The Living Room is the Social space, where people head once they decide that they want to get involved.
The Kitchen is the Personal space, the heart of the party, where people are more deeply engaged, and the deep and meaningful conversations happen.
The Albert St Studio and the Four Spaces
In Creating Community Stanley and Willits explain the process of deepening relationship as one of traversing these spaces, from Foyer to Living Room to Kitchen, or from Public to Social to Personal.
In the Albert St studio we have a Public space, the yoga room, we have a social space, the dining area, but we are really lacking the personal space. At our previous facilities it was literally a kitchen, a place where people could spend time with a two or three people and talk on a more personal level, while helping to cook or do dishes.
We have had an informal saying amongst the atma crew: "I came for the yoga, I came back for the food, I stayed for the company". This describes the transition from public to social to personal.
So not having a kitchen as part of our facility at the Albert St studio has constrained the fulfilment of our mission (though not thwarted it), and now I can articulate precisely how it has done so.
The Spaces and the Strategic Approach to Facilitating Uplifting Relationships
A strategic approach to sharing Krishna Consciousness, helping people to develop relationships that are uplifting and beneficial, should provide opportunities for uplifting relationships in all of these relational spaces.
To have a huge program once a week where people can be "alone in a crowd" fulfils the need of Public space, and is necessary. People need to feel that they are part of something bigger than themselves.
However, it must be accompanied by social, personal, and intimate spaces.
The seating arrangement at the Sunday Feast program in Brisbane was counter-productive to this, with guests sitting in lines. It made for easy serving out, but it failed to provide the correct setting to facilitate other spaces and other types of relationships.
Recently the serving out arrangement of the Saturday night feast at the Graceville temple has changed. With up to 300 people coming it's no longer feasible to serve out in lines. Instead guests go to a continuously serving buffet and then find somewhere to sit.
With the requirement to sit in lines no longer imposed on them people have begun to sit in circles and create social spaces. These social spaces offer the opportunity to manifest relationships in social space.
Social space and Small Groups
In "Activate: An Entirely New Approach to Small Groups Nelson Searcy and Kerrick Thomas make the argument that small groups fulfil the need for a safe social space for participants.
Relationships in a small group are not meant to be personal or intimate, they are meant to be in the social space.
Certainly we see that atma fulfils this social and psychological need of people. Where do you go if you don't drink or smoke, to hang out and meet like-minded people?
In an overall strategy small groups can fulfill the role of a social space.
In my post "Thoughts on Small Groups 1" I explained that Bhakti-vriksha (small groups) fulfill social and psychological needs of the participants. It's important to recognise this and structure things around it.
People need relationships in all four relational spaces. A small group, and the small group program, exists to provide a venue for uplifting relationships in social space. This is an important insight.
by Vrndavana Vinodini dd (noreply@blogger.com) at January 21, 2009 01:21 AM
I was in a small town named Yambol, Bulgaria. I was running all day with a big bag a and big stock of books in my hands, the whole day I distributed 1 or 2 books. My mind was very disturbed because it was soo difficult. Then I had a realization: "The problem is in my consciousness."
At the end of the day I was completely exhausted, standing before a restaurant in the center of the town I prayed to Krsna to forgive me for my lack of proper consciousness and help me to be the instrument He would like me to be in this restaurant.
The bodyguards were very compassionate upon looking at my stock of books, and they purchased one." But they said, "Here, no one will take any book, they are not very philosophical."
I said, "Let's see, I will try."
On the first table an old couple took 2 Srimad Bhagavatams, the second table a group people took the whole set of all books (13)!!! Then going around in a new state of ecstacy due to the mercy of Krsna, table 3 took three books. After few minutes around 30 books were distributed. Everyone was speaking about the books with the beautiful pictures, it become a Vaikuntha restaurant !!!
I had the last 1 set of 13 books in my hands and approach one strange man who said that he is a magician, he offered me a place to sit and some herbal tea. Then he asked me to explain the books. I quickly explained every one of the books. Then he began to think a little bit and said, "These books are very dangerous and you must stop distributing them!"
I said, "I appreciate very much the tea you've given to me but I must go on with this service. Good bye." I quickly moved, remembering some verses from 16 chapter of Gita about demoniac nature.
There was one more table left but the people had no interest. Just as I was leaving the magician came up to me and asked, "Hey boy, how much do all the books cost?
I stopped and gave him the price. To my surprise he paid the price, took the books and said, "I will make a war with you guys, so I want to study the enemy."
I was very happy and said, "Good luck." And left.
This happened 15 years ago, and we never heard from him, there was no war against our movement, I think Krsna tricked him.
Surely Prabhupada books are working perfectly!!!
Krishna is amazing!!! We just have to surrender and allow him to use us as an instrument, "nimmita-matram bhava savya-sacin" (BG 11.33)
Your servant, Sthanu das
I was in a small town named Yambol, Bulgaria. I was running all day with a big bag a and big stock of books in my hands, the whole day I distributed 1 or 2 books. My mind was very disturbed because it was soo difficult. Then I had a realization: "The problem is in my consciousness."
At the end of the day I was completely exhausted, standing before a restaurant in the center of the town I prayed to Krsna to forgive me for my lack of proper consciousness and help me to be the instrument He would like me to be in this restaurant.
The bodyguards were very compassionate upon looking at my stock of books, and they purchased one." But they said, "Here, no one will take any book, they are not very philosophical."
I said, "Let's see, I will try."
On the first table an old couple took 2 Srimad Bhagavatams, the second table a group people took the whole set of all books (13)!!! Then going around in a new state of ecstacy due to the mercy of Krsna, table 3 took three books. After few minutes around 30 books were distributed. Everyone was speaking about the books with the beautiful pictures, it become a Vaikuntha restaurant !!!
I had the last 1 set of 13 books in my hands and approach one strange man who said that he is a magician, he offered me a place to sit and some herbal tea. Then he asked me to explain the books. I quickly explained every one of the books. Then he began to think a little bit and said, "These books are very dangerous and you must stop distributing them!"
I said, "I appreciate very much the tea you've given to me but I must go on with this service. Good bye." I quickly moved, remembering some verses from 16 chapter of Gita about demoniac nature.
There was one more table left but the people had no interest. Just as I was leaving the magician came up to me and asked, "Hey boy, how much do all the books cost?
I stopped and gave him the price. To my surprise he paid the price, took the books and said, "I will make a war with you guys, so I want to study the enemy."
I was very happy and said, "Good luck." And left.
This happened 15 years ago, and we never heard from him, there was no war against our movement, I think Krsna tricked him.
Surely Prabhupada books are working perfectly!!!
Krishna is amazing!!! We just have to surrender and allow him to use us as an instrument, "nimmita-matram bhava savya-sacin" (BG 11.33)
Your servant, Sthanu das

by Kirtaniya (noreply@blogger.com) at January 20, 2009 10:12 PM
by Kirtaniya (noreply@blogger.com) at January 20, 2009 10:08 PM
>>> Ref. VedaBase => Madhya 7.148
What the punctuation in the title indicates:
Quotation marks: Draping the word God in quotation marks indicates that we are first concerned with the signifier, not the signified. (Compare these two sentences: I am interested in God. I am interested in “God.”)
Question mark: The mark of interrogation backstopping “God” points us next to questions concerning the concept or idea of God. What does it mean? Aren’t there many different meanings? Isn’t the meaning often vague or ambiguous?
The mark directs us further to questions concerning the existence of God. Is there any real entity denoted by the word God? Is there any way to conclusively answer this question?
A Lesson in Vedānta
The conception of God and the conception of Absolute Truth are not on the same level. The Śrīmad Bhāgavatam hits on the target of the Absolute Truth. The conception of God indicates the controller, whereas the conception of the Absolute Truth indicates the summum bonum or the ultimate source of all energies. There is no difference of opinion about the personal feature of God as the controller because a controller cannot be impersonal. . . . Because there are different controllers for different managerial positions, there may be many small gods . . . with various specific powers, but the Absolute Truth is one without a second. This Śrīmad Bhāgavatam designates the Absolute Truth or the summum bonum as the param satyam.
The author of Śrīmad Bhāgavatam, Śrīla Vyāsadeva, first offers his respectful obeisances unto the param satyam (Absolute Truth), and because the param satyam is the ultimate source of all energies, the param satyam is the Supreme Person. The gods or the controllers are undoubtedly persons, but the param satyam from whom the gods derive powers of control is the Supreme Person. The Sanskrit word īśvara (controller) conveys the import of God, but the Supreme Person is called the parameśvara, or the supreme īśvara. The Supreme Person, or parameśvara, is the supreme conscious personality, and because He does not derive any power from any other source, He is supremely independent.
—Śrīla Prabhupāda, Introduction to Śrīmad Bhāgavatam
Where does everything come from?
Everything comes either from something or from nothing.
When the answer is nothing, it sometimes turns out to be a very special, hyper-potent kind of nothing. Not just nothing but Nothing. In other words, a unique kind of something (after all).
When the answer is nothing, it sometimes turns out to be a special inscrutable something, beyond all possible modes of understanding or investigation. Nothing is really a “No Trespassing” sign. (Or: “You don’t belong in the physics department; you should go to the religion department.”)
When the answer is nothing, it sometimes turns out that the “everything” that (seemingly) comes from it is really nothing also. Nothing makes no things: No problem!
Vedānta settles for something. A special unique something: param satyam or brahman “the ultimate source of all energies.”janmādyasya yataḥ (Vedānta-sūtra 1.1.2)
In the Upaniṣads, this ultimate source is described as so complete or full (purṇam) that however much is taken away from it, it remains complete.
By contrast, I am not purṇa. I am a dependent, contingent being. I require regular supplies—each day so much food, water, air, light, heat, and so on. If I trace back the supply chain I will reach (according to the Vedas) the empowered universal supply agents, the devas—lords of the sun, moon, wind, rain, soil, and so on. As they distribute, their own stores becomes depleted, and they themselves need resupply. Following back the chain of dependence, we reach finally a singular and unique being who produces endless supplies and who never needs resupply, remaining full. This the self-sustaining sustainer of all others is the param satyam.
(Think of the param satyam as something like a hotel with infinite rooms, all occupied—purṇa, “No Vacancy.” At noon, the guest occupying Room 1 checks out. As he leaves, the bellboy blows a whistle. All the rooms’ doors open: The guest in Room 2 moves into Room 1, the guest in Room 3 moves to Room 2, and so on, ad infinitum. Thus, even though a guest checked out, the hotel remains full. It will remain full if ten, a hundred, a thousand , a million, or even an infinite number of guests check out.)
This is the “concept of the Absolute Truth,” that from which everything comes. It differs from the concept of īśvara or “god.” Īśvara means a controller. In that sense, even local controllers—the CEOs of SEPTA, PECO and Comcast, the president of the University of Pennsylvania, the mayor of Philadelphia, the governor of Pennsylvania, and so on—are all minor īśvaras, teeny gods with miniscule controlling power. And, according to the Vedas, there are superior gods who administer the universe—not petty bureaucrats but mighty cosmocrats.
Whatever we see here, in the effect, must also be there, in the ultimate cause. The param satyam has produced myriad personal controllers. Therefore the ultimate personal controller, the parameśvara, is in the Absolute Truth itself. The Upaniṣads describe the param satyam as simultaneously personal and impersonal.
Prabhupāda coined the phrase “Supreme Personality of Godhead” to express more accurately the concept of Kṛṣṇa. The word “god” by itself is, strictly speaking, inadequate. A “god” is a being that may or may not exist. “Godhead” however, denotes the Absolute Truth, param brahman, the uncreated, self-sustaining origin of everything. “Personality of Godhead” denotes the personal feature of the unlimited Godhead. The one Personality of Godhead exists simultaneously in many transcendent forms—Kṛṣṇa, Rāma, Nṛsimha, Nārayaṇa, Vāmaṇa and so on.
Some argue that the limitless nature of the Absoute Truth precludes personhood, since personhood or individuality entails limits and boundaries. They forget to consider that it would also be a limitation to exclude personhood. There must be somehow pesonality without limitation. For this reason, Vedic thought understands the one Personality of Godhead to be ananta rūpam, expanded in unlimited forms simultaneously.
Among all these forms, Kṛṣṇa is particularly denoted “the Supreme Personality of Godhead.”
One last consideration: Should I find myself wondering whether the Personality of Godhead exists or not, then I should understand that I do not grasp the concept of the Absoute Truth. I am thinking of Godhead as if it were simply one more contingent, dependent being: like me, or my laptop, or my city. My Dell laptop exists, but it might not; Ravīndra Svarūpa dāsa exists, but might very well not; this City of Brotherly Love exists but might not have. My current controllers—Mayor Nutter, Governor Rendell, President Obama, Lord Indra, Lord Brahmā—are all there, but might not have been. But the final controller, the Personality of Godhead, the ultimate source of all energies, exists in a different way from all these other beings. He exists so fully or truly that he has not even the possibility of not existing.
If we simply understand the concept of the Absolute Truth, we must recognize that its mode of existence—existing without even the possibility of not existing—is different from ours.
(Perhaps some readers have recognized in the last paragraphs a version of “the ontological argument for the existence of God.” This argument has generated much controversy, yet it seems to me that Prabhupāda’s distinction between the concepts of God and of the Absolute Truth clairfies the argument and helps resolve some of the controversy. When one understands the argument as dealing with the concept of Godhead or Absolute Truth, rather than the concept of God, its particular force becomes more evident, at least to me. To me, there are sound and persuasive arguments that there must be an Absoute Truth, and that the Absolute Truth must be a person. I’ve outlined them above. That the person is blue-complexioned, flute-playing, peacock-feather-wearing Kṛṣṇa—or any expansions—cannot be shown by reason and logic. Only pareśānubhava, direct perception of the Lord, will disclose these concrete particulars. On the other hand, if one studies the Supreme Personality of Godhead as encountered by Nārada, Vyāsa, Uddhava, Caitanya, and so on, one can say: “This is our idea of the supreme person. Can anyone offer a description of any greater?”)

” Abandon all varieties of religion and just surrender unto Me. I shall deliver you from all sinful reactions. Do not fear.”
Bg 18.66
How would religiosity be a problem? The following illustrates one possible answer.
Once upon a time in a certain village in India there lived a guru. Every evening the guru would sit on his seat and deliver a lecture to the public. It so happened that the guru had a cat, and just at the time of giving the lecture the cat would create a big disturbance.
Being greatly annoyed by the cat, the guru decided to tie the cat to a tree before starting his lecture. So doing, the guru then delivered the lecture without disturbance. It worked so well that the guru regularly tied the cat to the tree before beginning his discourse.
After some years the guru died. His disciples carried on the guru’s program. They also continued tying the cat to the tree. When the cat died, they bought another cat and thus the ritual of tying a cat to a tree continued generation after generation.
In the fifth generation that followed the guru, one of the renowned followers wrote an elaborate treatise on the spiritual significance of tying a cat to a tree before beginning one’s studies of the scriptures.
“For the current of our spiritual life creeds, rituals and channels that may thwart or help, according to their fixity or openness. When a symbol or spiritual idea becomes rigidly elaborate in its construction, it supplants the idea which it should support.” Rabindranath Tagore
Posted in News, Ramblings or Whatever
Anish singing a Hare Krishna bhajan.
2008-12-31
Dallas, TX
by Rupa Schomaker (rupa@rupa.com) at January 20, 2009 03:41 PM
by noreply@blogger.com (Devadeva Mirel) at January 20, 2009 02:16 PM
This entry depicts living entity stuggling to glorify Krishna through his blog and all the obstacles Maya can put in front of you if you try.
TRANSLATION
O Kṛṣṇa, O friend of Arjuna, O chief amongst the descendants of Vṛṣṇi, You are the destroyer of those political parties which are disturbing elements on this earth. Your prowess never deteriorates. You are the proprietor of the transcendental abode, and You descend to relieve the distresses of the cows, the brāhmaṇas and the devotees. You possess all mystic powers, and You are the preceptor of the entire universe. You are the almighty God, and I offer You my respectful obeisances.
PURPORT
A summary of the Supreme Lord Śrī Kṛṣṇa is made herein by Śrīmatī Kuntīdevī. The almighty Lord has His eternal transcendental abode where He is engaged in keeping surabhi cows. He is served by hundreds and thousands of goddesses of fortune. He descends on the material world to reclaim His devotees and to annihilate the disturbing elements in groups of political parties and kings who are supposed to be in charge of administration work. He creates, maintains and annihilates by His unlimited energies, and still He is always full with prowess and does not deteriorate in potency. The cows, the brāhmaṇas and the devotees of the Lord are all objects of His special attention because they are very important factors for the general welfare of living beings.
by noreply@blogger.com (Hanuman das) at January 20, 2009 02:13 PM

by Syamesvari (noreply@blogger.com) at January 20, 2009 01:16 PM

*Sigh* Oh to be under the African sun again, at the lotus feet of Sri Sri Radha Radhanath.
Distance and separation have a funny way of making you more absorbed in and attached to that which you are away from.
I'm looking forward to the next time I get to have Their darshan - when next I do see Them, I plan on savoring every single precious moment.
by Syamesvari (noreply@blogger.com) at January 20, 2009 01:05 PM
I was reading some archived news, when I came across this blog maintained by a leading Australian journalist, Andrew Bolt. For my reader’s outside of Australia, here is a description of him from his blog - Andrew Bolt started his column in 1998, after working as a foreign correspondent. He also writes for Brisbane’s Sunday Mail, and is a regular commentator on Channel 9’s Today show, ABC TV’s Insiders, Channel 10’s Nine AM, Melbourne’s 3AW, Adelaide’s ABC, Perth’s 6PR and Brisbane’s 4BC. Andrew’s book ‘Still Not Sorry’ was released last year.
Anyways, as I was reading a few articles, this particular article and 2 comments took my interest. Thought, I would share it with you…
————————————————————————-
Saturday, September 22, 2007 at 08:07am
http://blogs.news.com.au/heraldsun/andrewbolt/
HERALD SUN
The most interesting people read this blog. MareeS, for example, has a family that is remarkable for being so exotically diverse… and numerous:
Andrew, further information about my siblings…
brother 1 is a military commander
brother 2 is a physicist
I’m a writer
Here goes the next…
sister next is a university lecturer
sister next is a radiologist
sister next is a neonatal nursing unit chief
sister next is an environmental scientist
brother next is a hare krishna
brother next is a master seaman (who crewed that boat to Nome)
brother next is a carpenter
sister next is a schoolteacher
Can any reader match it?
COMMENTS
I also don’t have the family numbers to match Maree’s impressive list (The Hare Krishna jumped out at me! Not often you see that!)
Danielle of Vic (Reply)
Sat 22 Sep 07 (11:31am)
The hare krishna in the family is a former smackhead with five kids who lives off your and my taxes. He’s the only failure in our line-up, but he cooks a great veggie curry, composes good music and we love him and his kids despite some bad times with him in the past.
mareeS (Reply)
Sat 22 Sep 07 (12:10pm)
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Srila Prabhupada: "Our only request is that every one of you, you try
to understand God, love Him and be happy. The final conclusion in the
Bhagavad-gita is that if you want to be peaceful, if you want the peace
of your mind, you should understand three things. That three things are
that to understand that God is the supreme enjoyer. This is one. He is the proprietor of everything, and He is friend of everyone.
If you learn these three things only, very scientifically, that God is
by ananda (noreply@blogger.com) at January 20, 2009 08:47 AM
From the latest Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies newletter, Winter 2009 (http://www.ochs.org.uk)
Hindu studies in China
The Department of Cultural and Religious Studies (CRS), at The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), - the oldest department of religious studies in the Chinese speaking world - has raised funding for a professorship in Indian Religions and Culture. This post was held by OCHS Fellow, Dr Kenneth Valpey in its inaugural year.
Students taking Dr Valpey's courses were from different academic and cultural backgrounds (from Hong Kong, Mainland China, and overseas). In addition to formal teaching, Dr. Valpey also organised several film appreciation meetings for students and staff to introduce the Hindu traditions in an enjoyable way.