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May 03, 2009

Japa Group : Bhajan Kutir #58


My chanting was pretty good. I was able to keep a good pace, all under seven minutes. I was attentive to the syllables and did not wander onto other thoughts. My chanting was at a low whisper. I did not take the time to look at Radha and Govinda but purused the japa by sound. It was a mechanical session, without thoughts about the powers of the holy name but just the concentration on it. I took satisfaction in the accumulation of the rounds as they went quickly. My head remained clear. The best part of the session was the regularity of speed. The weakest part was the estrangement from Vrndavana and Radha-Krishna.

Taken from Bhajan Kutir #58

by Rasa Rasika (noreply@blogger.com) at May 03, 2009 06:09 PM

Bhaktin Jeanette, USA : Gaura-Nitai are so beautiful!


The new orange outfits I ordered just arrived from India so I just have to post pictures of my deities in their new clothes. Jai Gaura-Nitai!

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111cd8e917a9__1241068990000(I should be getting batteries for my digicam soon so no more blurry pics off my cell phone.)

Tagged: Gaura Nitai, pictures

by Jeannette at May 03, 2009 05:09 PM

Bhaktin Jeanette, USA : Vegan meals for people who can’t cook



America’s easiest and most popular convenience food is vegan.

You don’t have to be a great or creative cook in order to eat a vegan diet. It’s nice to know a few basics—how to bake a potato, simmer up some brown rice, and steam vegetables. But that’s no more or less than anyone—eating any type of diet—needs to know.

Most busy people don’t have the leisure to read a recipe and measure out ingredients for dinner every evening. A lot of cooking—for omnivores and vegans alike—involves dishes that are easy and familiar and that sometimes make use of convenience products. After all, how much cooking skill do you need to heat up a jar of spaghetti sauce?

Here are 10 vegan dinners that anyone can make:

o Baked potato topped with vegetarian baked beans and shredded soy cheese; frozen spinach sautéed in olive oil.

o Veggie burger on a roll, salad and prepared salad dressing.

o Pasta salad: Toss cooked pasta with chick peas, chopped raw vegetables, and vegan mayonnaise.

o Burritos: Used leftover beans, or canned vegetarian refried beans or bean flakes. Roll in warm tortillas and top with chopped tomatoes and cubes of avocado.

o Pasta with sauce from a jar (add some sautéed veggies or soy sausage for your own “homemade” touch).

o Chili beans with veggie burger crumbles served over rice; steamed carrots.

o Soup and salad. Progresso makes vegan lentil soup. Campbell’s Tomato Soup—very possibly the most famous soup in America—is vegan. Just add plain soymilk. Make it go a little farther with some healthful additions like pasta, rice or beans.

o Taco Salad: Toss together greens, chopped tomato, rinsed canned black beans, defrosted corn, and some cubes of avocado. Dress with olive oil and lime or lemon juice and top with a handful of crushed tortilla chips.

o Chunks of firm tofu and frozen vegetables marinated in peanut sauce or teriyaki sauce (find both in the ethnic foods section of the grocery store). Sauté in a little bit of canola oil and serve over rice or noodles.

o Whole grain main dish salad: A great way to use up leftover cooked grains. Toss brown rice, couscous, barley or whatever you have on hand, defrosted frozen peas and corn, sunflower seeds, and rinsed cooked beans. Dress with your favorite dressing or with olive oil and lemon juice.

Taken From:http://www.examiner.com/x-5670-Seattle-Vegan-Examiner~y2009m4d30-Vegan-meals-for-people-who-cant-cook

Tagged: cooking, vegan

by Jeannette at May 03, 2009 05:00 PM

Bhaktin Jeanette, USA : Improving Diabetes with a Low-Fat Vegan Diet


A new report from PCRM researchers, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, shows that a low-fat vegan diet helps people with diabetes lose weight and improve their blood sugars and cholesterol. Earlier publications had shown that the diet is effective over the short term. The new publication shows that benefits persisted for a year beyond the initial 22-week study period. Vegan group participants lost on average 9.7 pounds, compared to 6.6 pounds for people on a more conventional diabetes diet. Improvements in hemoglobin A1c levels (a measure of blood sugar over time) and total and LDL cholesterol were also greater in the vegan group. Recent reports from the same group showed that nutrition improvements were greater in the vegan group and that acceptability of the diet was comparable to seemingly more permissive diets.

Barnard ND, Cohen J, Jenkins DJ, Turner-McGrievy G, Gloede L, Green A, Ferdowsian H. A low-fat vegan diet and a conventional diabetes diet in the treatment of type 2 diabetes: a randomized, controlled, 74-week clinical trial. Am J Clin Nutr. 2009;89:1588S–1596S.

Turner-McGrievy GM, Barnard ND, Cohen J, Jenkins DJA, Gloede L, Green AA. Changes in nutrient intake and dietary quality among participants with type 2 diabetes following a low-fat vegan diet or a conventional diabetes diet for 22 weeks. J Am Diet Assoc. 2008;108:1636-1645.

Barnard ND, Gloede L, Cohen J, Jenkins DJA, Turner-McGrievy G, Green AA, Ferdowsian H. A low-fat vegan diet elicits greater macronutrient changes, but is comparable in adherence and acceptability, compared with a more conventional diabetes diet among individuals with type 2 diabetes. J Am Diet Assoc. 2009;109:263-272.

Subscribe to PCRM’s Breaking Medical News.

Breaking Medical News is a service of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, 5100 Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 400, Washington, DC 20016, 202-686-2210. Join PCRM and receive the quarterly magazine, Good Medicine.

Taken From:http://www.pcrm.org/news/archive090430a.html

Tagged: diabetes, low fat, vegan

by Jeannette at May 03, 2009 04:57 PM

Bhaktin Jeanette, USA : Vegan diets are best for vitamin A


An article in this month’s Clinical Nutrition Insight suggests that Americans may be getting too much vitamin A in their diets—and that it is best to get this nutrient from plant sources.

Preformed vitamin A, which is called retinol, is found only in animal foods. However, plant foods contain carotenoids which are converted in the body to vitamin A. The best known and most abundant vitamin A precursor is beta-carotene.

While preformed vitamin A from animal foods is toxic at high intakes, carotenoids are not. And too much preformed vitamin A—even at levels that aren’t toxic—has been linked to risk for bone fracture in some studies. High vitamin A intake might be especially harmful for people who have low intakes of vitamin D and for those who use retinol-rich supplemental products like cod liver oil.

In a recent editorial on the subject, Dr John Cannell noted that “The body uses these carotenoid substrates to make exactly the right amount of retinol. It is a closed, tightly regulated system, one designed to perfection by Nature.” He suggested that consuming animal-derived vitamin A bypasses the controls of this delicate balance.

Carotenoids, which are found in a wide variety of fruits and vegetables, have other health benefits in addition to their vitamin A activity. They have been linked to decreased cancer and heart disease risk and may protect vision in aging. It’s no surprise that vegetarians tend to have higher blood levels of carotenoids compared to people who eat meat. But, to get adequate vitamin A, everyone should consume one or two servings of beta-carotene superstars every day. These are sweet potatoes, carrots, spinach, kale, collards, cantaloupe, and dark yellow winter squash (like Hubbard and Butternut). Carotenoids need a little dietary fat for absorption and are better absorbed from foods that are lightly cooked.

Taken From:http://www.examiner.com/x-5670-Seattle-Vegan-Examiner~y2009m5d1-Vegan-diets-are-best-for-vitamin-A

Tagged: health, vegan, vitamin a

by Jeannette at May 03, 2009 04:54 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Book distribution seminar: Are we so sinful?

During book distribution in villages in India, we generally set up a stall by 7:30 am and after engaging the early morning shoppers, we move to the next village. Like this we cover 4-5 villages in a day.

One day we had good book distribution in a village. By 9am we were ready to leave. On the way to the next big village there was a smaller one, which I decide to skip. "Better spend more time in the bigger village," I thought. When we were crossing the small village we reached the road where the village people, under the guidance of their sarpanch (village head), were repairing the road. I was surprised to see the village was prosperous. As our bus reached closer everyone stopped work and began staring at us. Srila Prabhupada's kirtan tune was airing from the bus's public address system; the bus itself was brightly painted and inside was cheerful devotees enthusiastically having kirtan, everything was mesmerizing for simple village folk.

The sarpanch waved at us to stop. "What do you have?"

"We distribute Bhagvad Gita and Srimad Bhagvatam," I replied.

"Where will you set up your stall in our village?" the sarpanch asked.

"No, we are not setting up our stall here," I replied. "We are going to the next village. It is bigger."

"Are we so sinfull that you are not stopping in our village?" the sarpanch said. "Please stop here. I will personally come with you and help every one take the books."

He climbed on our bus, and the workers cleared heaps of mud from the road and made way for our bus. As we passed an eager crowd began to follow us. At the village market we stopped the bus and the sarpanch was the first person to take books. He took Srimad Bhagwatam.

I quoted, "Yad yad acharati shreshthas: Whatever action great men do common men follow."

The sarpanch then requested every one to buy the books. "If you don't have money," he declared, "I will lend you. You can return it tomorrow." He lent around two thousand rupees to the villagers, all of whom he knew personally.

In that village of around 100 people around 60% took books. For me it was a big lesson: never to prejudge a place because of its apparent material features. It was a small village-with a large heart.

ys murari gupta das

May 03, 2009 04:20 PM

Book Distribution News : Are we so sinful?

During book distribution in villages in India, we generally set up a stall by 7:30 am and after engaging the early morning shoppers, we move to the next village. Like this we cover 4-5 villages in a day.

One day we had good book distribution in a village. By 9am we were ready to leave. On the way to the next big village there was a smaller one, which I decide to skip. "Better spend more time in the bigger village," I thought. When we were crossing the small village we reached the road where the village people, under the guidance of their sarpanch (village head), were repairing the road. I was surprised to see the village was prosperous. As our bus reached closer everyone stopped work and began staring at us. Srila Prabhupada's kirtan tune was airing from the bus's public address system; the bus itself was brightly painted and inside was cheerful devotees enthusiastically having kirtan, everything was mesmerizing for simple village folk.

The sarpanch waved at us to stop. "What do you have?"

"We distribute Bhagvad Gita and Srimad Bhagvatam," I replied.

"Where will you set up your stall in our village?" the sarpanch asked.

"No, we are not setting up our stall here," I replied. "We are going to the next village. It is bigger."

"Are we so sinfull that you are not stopping in our village?" the sarpanch said. "Please stop here. I will personally come with you and help every one take the books."

He climbed on our bus, and the workers cleared heaps of mud from the road and made way for our bus. As we passed an eager crowd began to follow us. At the village market we stopped the bus and the sarpanch was the first person to take books. He took Srimad Bhagwatam.

I quoted, "Yad yad acharati shreshthas: Whatever action great men do common men follow."

The sarpanch then requested every one to buy the books. "If you don't have money," he declared, "I will lend you. You can return it tomorrow." He lent around two thousand rupees to the villagers, all of whom he knew personally.

In that village of around 100 people around 60% took books. For me it was a big lesson: never to prejudge a place because of its apparent material features. It was a small village-with a large heart.

ys murari gupta das

May 03, 2009 04:15 PM

Spirit Matters Newspaper, NY, USA : Conviction


Ravindra Svarupa Dasa (William H. Deadwyler) joined the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) in 1971 in Philadelphia, PA where he has served for most of his devotional career. He is an initiated disciple of ISKCON’s founder-acharya, His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada. Ravindra Svarupa dasa earned his B.A. in philosophy from the University of Pennsylvania, and his M.A. and Ph.D. in religion from Temple University. He has been a member of ISKCON’s ecclesiastical board, known as the Governing Body Commission, since 1987. He is an initiating guru for ISKCON and is the temple president of ISKCON of Philadelphia.

Check out more of his writings at his blog So It Happens

http://soithappens.com/

Doubt is the motor of the modern mentality, the indefatigable engine that drives the spirit of our age. Such doubt was honored with an early recognition in the essays of the Renaissance courtier Michel de Montaigne: “We are, I know not how, double within ourselves, with the result that we do not believe what we believe, and we cannot rid ourselves of what we condemn.”

During Montaigne’s time, religious wars of unbearable cruelty rent Europe. The absolute certainty of the raging antagonists began to taint conviction itself with bad odor. But Montaigne saw deeper. He descried the doubleness within the very certitude of the religious partisans. He recognized their zeal as a kind of cover up, overcompensation for a hidden, an unacknowledged, lack of faith: “We do not believe what we believe.”

In modern times, disbelief has so far entered into the essence of our existence, that both faithlessness and faith have become fundamentally two varieties of faithlessness.

It is the secret unbelief of true believers that energizes the armies of the night in Mathew Arnold’s poem of 1867:

The Sea of Faith
Was once, too, at the full, and round earth’s shore
Lay like the folds of a bright girdle furled.
But now I only hear
Its melancholy, long, withdrawing roar,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
And we are here as on a darkling plain
Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight,
Where ignorant armies clash by night.

William Butler Yeats delivers the ominous news in his prophetic, apocalyptic 1919 poem “The Second Coming”:

Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.

Others, of course, celebrated unbelief—it bestows liberation—and proselytized it. Leave it to Friedrich Nietzsche to push it as a jagged little pill: “Convictions are more dangerous enemies of truth than lies.” (Aphorism 483, Human, All Too Human: 1878 )

So it happened that, as a child of the times, and all too human, I swallowed the pill. I served at the altar of doubt. Unbelief became my credo.

It took half a dozen years in academia for me to recognize that unbelief—skepticism, relativism, nihilism—had itself become dogma. Departments of religion were pledging themselves en masse to the hermeneutics of suspicion. To confess any conviction other than mistrust of all convictions was to court anathema.

All joined in choir to hymn unwavering faith in faithlessness. This dogmatism began to rankle me. Something was wrong. I brooded, irritably.

And then, my breakthrough: We doubters were failing at doubt. We had failed to take our doubt far enough. If we are going to be thoroughly skeptical, then we must be also skeptical about our own skepticism. If all things are relative, then so must be our relativism itself.

I stated my case at an informal religion department gathering.

“You must feel like you’re walking a tightrope over an abyss,” responded a fellow grad student, only recently a nun.
“Yeah, but I’m not sure there’s a rope either,” I said. Everyone laughed.

Let us be bold enough to remove the very ground we stand on and miraculously levitate on nothing.

And so we come full circle. Doubting our own doubting, we find a surprise awaiting us: a tiny crack opens for the possibility of faith.

Just the possibility. Even less—just the openness to the possibility.

This turns out to be a crack even God can squeeze through.

One thing led to another. Several years after the manifestation of the crack, I joined—to my permanent amazement—a high-demand “organized religion.” A religion committed to preaching. Labeled by one academic as “evangelical Hinduism.” (For a systematically misleading expression, this is spot on.)

Then came a time, fifteen or twenty years later, that I realized that I was utterly and completely certain that, as they say, “God exists.” (For a systematically misleading expression, this is spot on.) I did not merely hold that a feasible case for divine existence could be made, that “God exists” can be reasonably affirmed, that the assertion is true with (of course) the possibility that it just might be false. Not at all. I was absolutely, totally certain.

This upset me.

I’m still a modern person. I assailed my own conviction: How could I be so sure? What right did I have to be so certain? How was it possible? How was I entitled to such a degree of certitude? What was wrong with me?

I attacked my own faith, and it repelled my assaults. I couldn’t shake it. It was as if it were simply there of its own accord, an irrevocable fact; it really didn’t depend upon me.

I put the matter before some judicious devotees. “It’s Kṛṣṇa’s causeless mercy,” said one. “It’s a gift,” said another. A Ph.D. who once taught Christian theology to divinity students, she cited the distinction between certainty and certitude.

These conversations relieved me of my anxiety and allowed me to accept the gift wholeheartedly.

Yet—not to look the gift horse in the mouth—I found myself still impelled to understand better what I had been given.

I began my inquiry with this question: Is there anything at all that every person can be absolutely certain of? The question, of course, summoned me back to the origins of modernity, to the very “father of modern philosophy,” Rene Descartes, who turned Montaigne’s doubt into a methodology. Sweeping away, in his Discourse on Method, everything dubitable, he was left with only his own indubitable existence as a cognizant being. He could doubt everything except that he was doubting. Cogito, ergo sum, he famously wrote: “I think, therefore I am.” Descartes explained that by “thought” he meant “what happens in me such that I am immediately conscious of it, insofar as I am conscious of it.” His own existence as a conscious subject was absolutely certain.

Here I got my own clue and cue: Start, like Descartes, with myself.

But in this, it seemed to me, I was able to be more clear that Descartes. To “start with myself” means, to be precise, to start with ātman, the conscious self.

We commonly use the English “soul” or “spirit soul” to denote the same entity, but without the same clear meaning. The Sanskrit word ātman (in the root form) or ātmā (in the nominative singular), is a noun meaning “the self.” (The same word also serves as the reflexive pronoun, the “-self” in words denoting myself, yourself, herself, etc.)

When I take note, as Descartes did, of my own consciousness, I understand that I am aware, at least to some degree, of the ātman, of myself as a conscious, experiencing living being, now bearing and animating a certain material body and mind.

For two decades preceding my own Cartesian investigation, I’d been engaged in spiritual practices amounting to researching of ātman. To try to understand my own certitude about God, I began to reflect upon those practices.

Ātma-tattva, the science of the self, like any science, presents itself first as a theory, as kind of picture, or conceptual map, of spiritual reality. A theory, like a map, is the fruit of the experience of previous researchers, prepared as a guide for later explorers. The only purpose of theory is to guide practice, just as a road map is drawn up to facilitate a successful automobile journey.

Ātma-tattva also includes practical instructions on how to undertake the spiritual journey, how to use the map correctly. It is, in this way, an applied science dedicated to the clarification and expansion of consciousness.

We do not find any enterprise like this in modern Western philosophy. Modern philosophy certainly speculates endlessly about consciousness and experience, about knowledge and the knower and the known, but it has lost the applied element so prominent in the ancient classical traditions of Pythagoras, Parmenides, and Plato. There is now no distinctive “philosophical way of life.” It’s just another job.

I had taken up a tradition from India, yet it returned me to the very foundations of Western philosophy. When I recognized this, I felt that I’d come back home.

The applied knowledge, the spiritual way of life, requires a commitment to a relatively rigorous and demanding discipline. This is called yoga. The discipline is required to remove the material veil so that one can attain direct experience of spiritual reality: of the ātmā, the self, and of paramātmā, the superself or God.

The necessity for such a disciplined life is stated succinctly in Bhagavad-gītā (14.17): spiritual knowledge depends on goodness, on sattva. If our awareness is covered by the material modes of passion (raja-guṇa) and ignorance (tamo-guṇa) we will not be capable of direct perception of ātmā and paramātmā. Therefore, we who undertake this project live a regulated and radically simple life designed to minimize the demands of the senses, to decrease lust, anger, greed, and so on.

Modern materialistic culture fosters values and activities that expand the modes of passion and of ignorance, so it is necessary to insulate oneself from its influence. Spiritual culture has the contrary aim of developing goodness and reducing passion and ignorance.

After several decades of practice in ātma-tattva, the science of the self, my own consciousness had become somewhat clarified and expanded. I had gained at least some awareness of my own spiritual identity, and, along with that, of God.

A master of yoga named Kavi has stated (Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 11.2.42) that for one practicing properly, three things develop simultaneously: devotion, direct perception of God, and detachment from everything else. This happens in the same natural way that for a person who is eating, satisfaction, nourishment, and relief from hunger increase together with every bite.

In the yoga discipline, the practitioner realizes his or her own identity as ātmā and also encounters God initially as paramātmā, as the interior, guiding superself, the self of all selves. In this experience we find the Cartesian key. For knowing God, the paramātmā, is something like knowing our own self. Thus the experience engendered total certitude in the experiencer. As one cannot doubt one’s own consciousness, when that same consciousness has expanded somewhat, God becomes known as I know myself, for God is the very self of my self. Then I can no more doubt God’s existence than I can my own.

I can, of course, doubt my experience of objects perceived in this world. It is possible, Descartes noted, that one is being deceived by some evil demon. (Here he anticipated the premise of The Matrix by some four centuries.) Even so, one still cannot be deceived about one’s own consciousness.

Knowledge of God is not like knowledge of the external world, of this table I write on, of the garden outside my window, of the people relaxing in the garden. In this case, I am spirit knowing matter. There is a far more intimate connection between me and God: Not only are ātmā and paramātmā of the same spiritual nature, but ātmā is part and parcel of paramātmā. For this reason, once there is experience of paramātmā, doubting God becomes impossible. After that expansion of consciousness, God remains part of the content of every experience I have. I experience my own being as part of God’s being.

It is not that in this experience, I perceiving something novel, like a new next-door neighbor or the latest cool thing from Apple. Rather, with consciousness purified and expanded, I now perceive what had always be there, merely unnoticed, unrecognized, unacknowledged.

In this state of expanded consciousness, I am aware that I cannot see anything without God’s seeing it first, hear anything without God’s first hearing it, and so on. I cannot doubt God’s seeing and hearing anymore than I can my own.

The experience of ātmā-paramātmā, which renders doubting God’s existence as impossible as doubting one’s own, is evidently not exclusive to my own or historically related traditions. A natural and unwavering certitude concerning God has appeared in advanced practitioners in many theistic traditions. Those traditions may have various theories (theological doctrines) about God and the worshipper, but, so far as I can see, the simplest and soundest explanation for the experienced certitude of advanced practitioners everywhere is found in the understanding of ātmā-paramātmā.

We can also conclude that we are made for belief, for conviction. There is no way around it.

Herein lies the foundation, I propose, for authentic conviction, for conviction arising from the opening up of the self. Without that, we seem contemned to verify Montaigne’s observation: “We are, I know not how, double within ourselves.” Authentic conviction may serve as antidote to the current global wars between modes of doubleness: Militant belief born from despair at its own unbelief clashing with militant unbelief born in denial of its own belief.

by noreply@blogger.com (Club 108) at May 03, 2009 03:00 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1966 May 3:
"Chaturdasi. Today I delivered the keys of 72nd house to the Landlord at Riverside Drive. So the account of 100 West 72nd St. now closed. I also handed over to Dr. Mishra the keys of the Studio 501. He has invited me to dine with him."
Prabhupada Journal :: 1966

May 03, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1968 May 3: "There are two Rathayatra festivals; one going, and one returning. You can make a nice bed for Lord Jagannatha and Lord Balarama, and keep them nicely until I return."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968

May 03, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1968 May 3: "On the day of our departure I was expecting you in the airport, but you were tired. So you young men should not simply eulogize my hard working capacity, but I wish that you should also follow my example."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968

May 03, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1969 May 3: "On the engagement, after the speaking there will be kirtana. But if you so desire, Mr. Ginsberg can lead this last program and all the others shall respond. I think this will be nice program."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1969

May 03, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1970 May 3: "George Harrison has rendered some valuable service, so we are trying to do some good to him. This is our duty, anyone who has rendered a little service to Krsna should be given all facilities to take it up seriously."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1970

May 03, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1970 May 3: "So you recruit members, English boys and girls. Our Movement is a declaration of war against Maya, so we have to recruit many fighting soldiers - so do it vigorously."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1970

May 03, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 May 3: "We need a class of men purely brahmanas. The whole world is full of sudras. We have got such a nice process that even from the base sudras we can create brahmanas of highest calibre."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

May 03, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1974 May 3: "We are not concerned with other religions or yogas. Actual spiritual knowledge is to take the authoritative statements from the scriptures and from the great acaryas, spiritual masters in disciplic succession. Other's opinions are not important."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974

May 03, 2009 02:20 PM

HH Bhakti Madhava Puri Swami, Bhaktivedanta Institute : Sad-Darshan Part-6

Hare krishna

Dandvat Pranams

Please click below link to download recording.

download (Downloads 8)

Servant of Servants.

by akshay108 at May 03, 2009 02:16 PM

1966 May 3:
"Chaturdasi. Today I delivered the keys of 72nd house to the Landlord at Riverside Drive. So the account of 100 West 72nd St. now closed. I also handed over to Dr. Mishra the keys of the Studio 501. He has invited me to dine with him."
Prabhupada Journal :: 1966

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 03, 2009 02:13 PM

1968 May 3: "There are two Rathayatra festivals; one going, and one returning. You can make a nice bed for Lord Jagannatha and Lord Balarama, and keep them nicely until I return."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 03, 2009 02:13 PM

1968 May 3: "On the day of our departure I was expecting you in the airport, but you were tired. So you young men should not simply eulogize my hard working capacity, but I wish that you should also follow my example."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 03, 2009 02:13 PM

1969 May 3: "On the engagement, after the speaking there will be kirtana. But if you so desire, Mr. Ginsberg can lead this last program and all the others shall respond. I think this will be nice program."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1969

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 03, 2009 02:13 PM

1970 May 3: "George Harrison has rendered some valuable service, so we are trying to do some good to him. This is our duty, anyone who has rendered a little service to Krsna should be given all facilities to take it up seriously."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1970

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 03, 2009 02:13 PM

1970 May 3: "So you recruit members, English boys and girls. Our Movement is a declaration of war against Maya, so we have to recruit many fighting soldiers - so do it vigorously."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1970

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 03, 2009 02:13 PM

1972 May 3: "We need a class of men purely brahmanas. The whole world is full of sudras. We have got such a nice process that even from the base sudras we can create brahmanas of highest calibre."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 03, 2009 02:13 PM

1974 May 3: "We are not concerned with other religions or yogas. Actual spiritual knowledge is to take the authoritative statements from the scriptures and from the great acaryas, spiritual masters in disciplic succession. Other's opinions are not important."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 03, 2009 02:13 PM

On the Web : Reunion Festival in Sanctuary

Hare KrishnaBhakti Caru Swami: Yesterday, May 2, there was a "Reunion Festival" in Sanctuary, the ISKCON temple in Manhattan. Rameswar, Pradyumna, Yogeswar, Satyaraja, Laxmi-nrsimha Prabhus and many of our god-brothers were there. Radhanath Maharaja with Yajna-purusa Prabhu were the main organizers, and we had an extremely wonderful time together.

by Administrator at May 03, 2009 12:47 PM

New Vrndavan, USA : Invitation To The Festival Of Inspiration

The public at large is warmly invited to attend the 9th Annual “Festival of Inspiration” this coming Mother’s Day week-end at the Krishna Community-Palace of Gold beginning Friday, May 8th, Sat. May 9th, Sunday May 10th..

There will be food vending, locally produced and imported goods, T-shirts and entertainment on stage during the evening.

In addition, there are work-shops, seminars and other sessions featuring self-improvement, yoga, drum playing mrdanga (a special drum from India), kirtan and musical performances through out the three days.

There is no charge to take part in the out door portions.

There is a small charge for seminars, workshops, and for food. It’s family oriented (there’s a bouncy castle for the kids).

In addition, the entire grounds are looking fresh and beautiful.

You’ll see peacocks (including rare whites) and swans.

This is a rain or shine event, and right now, it looks like it might be closer to the rain…so, bring an umbrella and join us!

Call event organizers for further details: 304-845-9591

by mg at May 03, 2009 12:33 PM

Dandavats.com : Svarat

Jagadbandhu: Internet users face regular “brownouts” that will freeze their computers as capacity runs out in cyberspace, according to research to be published later this year.

by Administrator at May 03, 2009 11:52 AM

Dandavats.com : Beyond Birth & Debt

Jagadbandhu: First caught wind of this today in my casual browsing of alternative news + comments. Pretty scary stuff for US vegetarians who have learned how to sautee regular American rice (often because of dislike for talcum and/or utter abject poverty) to make it appear like Basmati (i.e. not clumped together like Uncle Ben's)

by Administrator at May 03, 2009 11:49 AM

Dandavats.com : An evening with Lord Krishna in Bombay

Pandava: The ISKON society has been instrumental all over the world in propogating the Message of Gita by Lord Krishna and the message of eradication of sinful activities by indulging in God.

by Administrator at May 03, 2009 11:45 AM

Dandavats.com : 9 Years and 200 Issues of Krishna Kathamrita Bindu

By Gopaljiukatha

Sri Krishna Kathamrita Bindu, the free e-magazine from ISKCON Gopaljiu Publications, has just entered its ninth year of circulation, and has reached 200 issues distributed to its ever-growing list of subscribers.

by Administrator at May 03, 2009 11:42 AM

Dandavats.com : Just A Sesame Seed Of Doubt

By Kesava Krsna Dasa

Our faith in our respective spiritual masters and in every word and deed of Srila Prabhupada has to be complete. Anything less, even by a measurement of a comfortable sesame seed results in partial happiness without which we cannot be truly peaceful at heart.

by Administrator at May 03, 2009 11:39 AM

Vrndavana Vinodini dd, Toronto, Canada : What Role Does Astrology Play In My Life?

What role does astrology play in a devotees' life? Well, it depends on who you ask. My personal opinion is that astrology can be very useful, IF you have a good astrologer. In fact in Srimad Bhagavatam it states:

Whether one has a short life or a long life, one must suffer the threefold
miseries of material life. Therefore any gentleman, dhira, must be
interested in jyotisa, astrology (Bhag. 10.8.5)

But that being said in the Bhagavad-gita it also states:

"If you become conscious of Me, you will pass over all the obstacles of conditioned
life by My grace. If, however, you do not work in such consciousness but act
through false ego, not hearing Me, *you* will be lost" (Bg. 18.58)

So how to reconcile these two statements? Well, I heard something very profound that made a lot of sense to me. Astrology gives you an idea of the environment that you have to work with. But it doesn't mean that something WILL happen because there is always that Krsna factor that can change everything.

That once again puts the responsibility on you. I think sometimes getting an astrological chart done makes someone feel that "Ok, this is what is going to happen. I don't need to do anything." That is such a fatalistic attitude that completely disempowers an individual.

We always have free will and the entire purpose of material existence is to become educated. Educated that we do not belong here. The planets are simply teachers that help us in our education. If however, we learn our lessons voluntarily, then we do not need those lessons and hence sometimes those things that are predicted in our charts do not come true. There is no point in teaching someone something they have already learned.

So yes astrology is useful, but more important than astrology is self reflection and dependence on Krsna. By self reflection and association with devotees, Krsna will give indications of those things we need to work on whether it be cultivating humility to becoming a compassionate individual. If we voluntarily start to work on our anarthas, while keeping Krsna in the centre, then Krsna will personally help us. If, however, we want to learn the hard way then the planets will happily teach us by arranging for us to learn our lessons.

by Vrndavana Vinodini dd (noreply@blogger.com) at May 03, 2009 09:17 AM

Club 108, New Vrndavan : The First Lady Rocks!

An encouraging sign at least from the White House Garden, as the First Lady Michelle Obama grows a fully organic garden, which is perturbing the agri-business monopolies to no end.

Click here to read more.

Let's hope and pray she continues to be a prominent example of down-home, GMO free living and loving of the land for young and old alike.

by Club 108 (noreply@blogger.com) at May 03, 2009 08:00 AM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : Like a Dream

The material world is like a dream (svapna). In dreams we sometimes cry out, laugh or cry, see things and perform many activities that are evidence of "reality." But what is reality? Vaisanva philosophy holds that everything in this present life is 'like a dream." It appears to be real, but like a dream it is temporary and will evaporate. It is less than an instant in the grand sweep of time. Some of you may remember part of a song that was popular in the sixties whose lyrics went like this: "There are places I remember all my life though some have changed -- some forever not for better.

read more

by Mukunda Goswami at May 03, 2009 07:00 AM

Madhavananda das, Orissa, IN : Bindu Hits 9 Years and 200 Issues




Here is the latest news with Bindu. My humble and sincere thanks to all of the kind vaishnavas who have supported this service over the years.


Sri Krishna Kathamrita Bindu, the free e-magazine from ISKCON Gopaljiu Publications, has just entered its ninth year of circulation, and has reached 200 issues distributed to its ever-growing list of subscribers.


Started in 2001 as a humble attempt to serve Srila Prabhupada and the preachers of the mission of Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, Sri Krishna Kathamrita Bindu is especially meant for devotees who were interested in going deep into the tradition and literature of Gaudiya Vaishnavism. Our policy from the beginning has been to simply focus on krishna-katha – no politics, exposes, revolutions, or institutional bashing or promotion. Tad-vag-visargo janatagha-viplavo – our conviction is that krishna-katha and krishna-nama automatically changes everything for the better. They are the ultimate solutions to all problems in this world. In the words of Srila Saraswati Thakur, “The person who determines that there is scope for reform of the world himself stands in need of reform. ... As soon as Krishna enters the listening ear, he clears up the vision of the listener so that he no longer has any ambition of ever acting the part of a reformer of any other person, because he finds that nobody is left without the very highest guidance. It is therefore his own reform that he is increasingly able to realize, by the eternally continuing mercy of the Supreme Lord.” [Read the complete article in Bindu 177]


Bindu has featured many first-time translations, including stories and songs from little-known works, such as Sri Tilak Ramdas’ “Abhiram Lilamrta”, Yadunandan Das’ “Karnananda”, Jagadbandhu Bhadra’s “Gaura-pada-tarangini”, Gopijanavallabha Das’ “Rasika Mangala”, Krishnadas’ “Syamananda Prakash”, Jiva Goswami’s “Gopal Campu” and Padma, Nrsimha, Brahma-vaivarta and other Puranas.


Bindu comes out twice a month, on every ekadasi. Each four-page issue begins with an inspiring article from His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, and nearly every issue includes something from Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Saraswati Thakur and Thakur Bhaktivinode. Articles by Sri Srimad Gour Govinda Swami are a common feature as well as contemporary articles by the Bindu editors.

Bindu is a free service. To subscribe, write to: minimag@gopaljiu.org


Below are some of the kind words of encouragement about Bindu received over the last 8 years:


I would like to subscribe to your publication. I looked at some back issues and enjoyed the contents very much. I have stopped looking at the ISKCON web sites except for our local site, because they are all obsessed with politics and nonsense. Your publication is very nice. We just need to chant together in a humble and loving frame of mind in order to solve all the problems. Thank you, prabhus.
-- Praharana Dasi, Toronto


Your publication is an invaluable source of inspiration and important sastric reference.

-- Vaisesika Das, San Francisco


Please include me in your subscribers' list for KK Bindu. I enjoyed the fourth issue very much. May all of your efforts be crowned with success, and may this meet you in the best of health and blissful spirits.

-- Tamal Krishna Goswami


Your magazine is the best on the earth.

-- Jayatam Jaya Sila Das


It is my great happiness to see that instead of joining the revolting political debates and fights continuously taking place amongst the vaishnavas of different groups, the sisyas of Gour Govinda Maharaja are peacefully engaged in distributing pure, universal hari-katha without propagating any institution in a sectarian way. You are doing a wonderful job for the pleasure of Sri Guru and Gauranga. I wish you all success in your service.

-- Peter Erdody, Budapest


My sincere congratulations and gratitude for putting together a fine Gaudiya Vaisnava online publication that we can all feel proud of.
-- Vicaru Das, Editor, "Sanga"


Thanks for all this nectar.
-- Indradyumna Swami


Your Bindus are WONDERFUL!

-- Mahavegavati Dasi


With great happiness I received your wonderful e-mail and devoured it immediately. The Krishna Kathamrita Bindu is simply ecstatic. Short, concise, thick with nectar, and fully authorized and in line with our glorious sampradaya as revealed by Srila Prabhupada. It is just what a preacher needs who wishes to inspire people. Please keep the good stream of nectar flowing!

-- Sacinandana Swami


Thanks for the latest KK Bindu. As usual, it was nectarean and a pleasant ekadasi surprise for my wicked mind. I especially appreciate the non-partisan spirit of the publication. I can hardly read anything on the internet these days that isn't trying to promote, argue pro or con, or solicit. There is a place for that I admit. I have my opinions, too. But it's easy to forget our real business in life. At least I am reminded, by your kindness, on a bi-monthly basis. Thank you.

-- Sarva-drk Das, Denver


Aapko bahut dhanyavaada!!!

-- Dasarath Suta Das, Georgia


I always look forward to receiving Krishna Kathamrita Bindu. It's just the right size and just the right substance -- so short that I can easily devote the time to it yet so juicy that a few drops go a long way. A newsletter with nothing but pure Krishna-katha -- so refreshing! This is the real need of the day. Thank you so much!

-- Jayadvaita Swami


Many thanks for a copy of the book, "Sri Krishna Kathamrita Bindu, Issues 1-17" which I have just finished reading. In fact, I was not able to take up any of my other works until I finished this book. I am happy to tell you that one can really have a taste of sindhu reading the said issues of the Bindu.

One small suggestion: Can you start incorporating in each issue translation of a portion of a Vaishnava Sanskrit text not yet translated? Wishing you success in your venture.

-- Yours affectionately, Professor Samaresh Bandyopadhyaya, Head of the Department of Ancient Indian History and Culture, University of Calcutta


Your wonderful writings have been so inspiring to devotees all around the world. I can truly say I have always looked forward to every new presentation. My own copies have been marked many times. I have shared them with so many other devotees. Somehow each time they have appeared it has been so timely.

-- Bhakti Tirtha Swami


Someone recently directed me to your site and it is encouraging to see this kind of preaching continuing some years now after Sri Gour Govinda Maharaja has departed.

-- Swami B.V. Tripurari


I heartily approve the spirit of this message.

-- Jagadananda Das (Jan Brzezinski), Toronto


I’m a journalist from the “Economic Times”, Bangalore edition, trying to be a vaishnavi. I have always loved “Krishna Kathamrita Bindu” and the excellent books you publish. “Krishna Kathamrita Bindu” and “Mathura Meets Vrindavan” are so good. I repeatedly tell stories to people from them while preaching.

-- Chandni Raj, Bangalore

by Madhavananda Das (madhavananda.BBSR@gmail.com) at May 03, 2009 05:38 AM

H.G. Sankarshan das Adhikari, USA : Sunday 3 May 2009--Just Say "No!"

When our senses scream at us begging for gratification, we should just say "No!" If we take this simple approach to sense control, we will find it very easy to become goswamis, masters of the senses. But if we start thinking that maybe we should compromise with our senses by giving them a little bit of over indulgence, we are paving our royal road to.................................. ================================================================== Thought...

by course@ultimateselfrealization.com at May 03, 2009 02:30 AM

May 02, 2009

ISKCON Melbourne, AU : Daily Class - Nrsimha Kavaca Prabhu

Srimad Bhagavatam 11.8.8 - Intelligence required to understand Krsna covered over by unrestricted sex life.

by Timothy Mcleod at May 02, 2009 11:26 PM

Japa Group : Inspiration To Chant


Hare Krsna my dear devotees, its nice to be here with you again. I am writing this article and receiving the darshan of Sri Sri Gaura Nitai Deities - they are here blessing the whole house, giving me strength to chant better and engaging me more in service.
It's very peaceful to worship the Deities and chant japa, our hearts become soft and opened to receive the names,....when we are more opened we can concentrate more and feel the effects of japa.
Proper association of devotees also gives us enthusiasm and determination to improve in spiritual life....sometimes we look at the vaisnavas and there is always someone we admire more - we would like to be and is our inspiration....when we are eager to serve and chant we remember that vaisnavas who is the one we aim to be like....following the footsteps and observing the qualities this person has achieved and that we would like to as well.
I can say that we tend to limit our advancement....actually I think this is the minds job, always put us down saying we can't chant properly or we are not advanced enough to feel the effects of chanting....that we don't live in the temple so we can't follow spiritual life or that if we can't chant with a high standartd we'd rather stop chanting.
This is everything the mind keep on preaching to us, every single day but we as vaisnavas seeing the example of our founder acharya we know that for spiritual life and to achieve Krsna prema we just need to follow his instructions - if we look at our spiritual master or other vaisnavas we admire we will see that they achieved their goals or they were inspired by someone and became advanced because they served and associated with the devotees who were merciful and gave them Krsna.
There will always be someone...a devotee that will tell you to carry on and that in the beginning the process may sound difficult and hard, but as we are getting in contact with the holy names we are cleansing the heart and we start understanding and feeling the bliss....so we compare our lives with and without chanting and we see that chanting does have an effect and can change us as the sun changes the whole world shining and making every place visible. The same way Krsna appears to us, starts coming in the form of His holy names and then speaks in our hearts, leading our lives and taking care of our thoughts.
These are the effects that heart chanting can produce so I beg that I may be able to one day chant purely and open my heart to the Lord and feel him through the sound vibration, making my life brighter and shining.
May your japa be focused and heart deep, may you feel Krsna talking to you through the heart.

your servant,

Aruna devi

by Aruna (noreply@blogger.com) at May 02, 2009 10:56 PM

HH. Satsvarupa das Goswami : SDGonline - Bhajana Kutir #59

[...] Please let me see things in this right order. Let me see Your happy smile and become happy. Let me realize my happy condition as Your servant and throw off my unhappiness, which is due to trying to lord it over in this material world. We are victims of so many evil persons in this material world, and they make us suffer. But a pure devotee knows that they cannot touch him in his essence, and he does not suffer, even in the grips of evil people. When we are in the intermediate stage, we may become very sober thinking these things over. When we transcend, we become happy. Our unhappiness is due to our breaking our connection to You. Prabhupada has described that we are like little infants, and we feel fully protected under the shelter of our father and mother. As long as we retain this position of taking shelter, we will not feel distressed, even in the storm that may come in the material world. The solution to unhappiness, therefore, is to always take shelter of You and know that nothing can harm us. I therefore pray for this real happiness. You may take away my health, my wealth and my security, but if I cling to Your lotus feet, chant Your holy names, and hear about You, then I will not suffer from unhappiness. This has always been true throughout the history of the world. Devotees who take shelter of You do not suffer material pangs. What I am saying is beyond me at present, but I pray for the faith to believe it and to live in it. We all want to be happy, and happiness is ours. Once we realize this, we should help others to be happy too by telling them that they can live with You, the source of all bliss. Oh Lord, please give me the sense to take shelter of You. Please make me happy. Help me to realize that there is no other happiness, and that when I try for that happiness, it only keeps me from reaching the true happiness. True happiness is akincana. That means the state of not desiring anything else in this material world but Your devotional service. When we give up other attempts at happiness and just wish to serve You, then true happiness is ours.

I pray for the realization of all these truths I have just stated. I wish that the world can become happy by Your grace, oh You, the most happy one [...]

from the yellow submarine, my bhajana kutir #59→

by (SDG) at May 02, 2009 09:14 PM

1964 May: "I am seeking your help for getting some addresses of the thoughtful men of your country who are leading the public opinion and to whom I may be able to send this important paper for consideration."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1947-64

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 02, 2009 08:23 PM

1974 May 2: "Sometimes in the year 1950 or 51 I first met you in Jhansi and since then we were very intimately connected and you took Hare Nama from me and I also expected in the future both of us would preach the Krsna Consciousness movement all over the world."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 02, 2009 08:22 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1964 May: "I am seeking your help for getting some addresses of the thoughtful men of your country who are leading the public opinion and to whom I may be able to send this important paper for consideration."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1947-64

May 02, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1966 May 2:
"Trayodasi. Today I did not go out the whole day I was engaged with my typewriter. In the evening there was meeting only five gentlemen attended. Mr. Carl brought his Tape recorder the appearance gorgeous but action is very poor."
Prabhupada Journal :: 1966

May 02, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1969 May 2: "I think Krishna desires to have this machine. You negotiate for the IBM Composer suitable for all of our purposes, books and magazines, and I shall ask Brahmananda to pay $600.00 when the negotiation is complete."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1969

May 02, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 May 2: "I wanted the GBC to see how the students are learning and reporting to me as my secretaries. I do not know how you could have missed these points, as they are clearly spelled out in my original constitution."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

May 02, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 May 2: "So just see how much money you have wasted. No one followed my instructions in this matter, as I repeatedly advised and now so much money has been lost."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

May 02, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 May 2: "My blessings to Visnujan, Silavati and all others. I am very much pleased with all these activities. This is carrying out the order of Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu. One thing, is prasadam being distributed profusely on this travelling party?"
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

May 02, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1974 May 2: "Everyone was expecting me to arrive there but this was dependent on his sending tickets. He has now refused. Either he has no money or he has withdrawn his promise. In both cases the dealing is not very happy."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974

May 02, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1974 May 2: "Sometimes in the year 1950 or 51 I first met you in Jhansi and since then we were very intimately connected and you took Hare Nama from me and I also expected in the future both of us would preach the Krsna Consciousness movement all over the world."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974

May 02, 2009 08:20 PM

1966 May 2:
"Trayodasi. Today I did not go out the whole day I was engaged with my typewriter. In the evening there was meeting only five gentlemen attended. Mr. Carl brought his Tape recorder the appearance gorgeous but action is very poor."
Prabhupada Journal :: 1966

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 02, 2009 08:15 PM

1969 May 2: "I think Krishna desires to have this machine. You negotiate for the IBM Composer suitable for all of our purposes, books and magazines, and I shall ask Brahmananda to pay $600.00 when the negotiation is complete."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1969

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 02, 2009 08:13 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Bhakti Vikasa Swami: Qualities of Sitadevi

The Lord [Ramacandra] achieved the hand of mother Sita, who was equally as endowed with transcendental qualities of form, beauty, behavior, age and nature. Indeed, she was the goddess of fortune who constantly rests on the chest of the Lord.

>>> Ref. VedaBase => SB 9.10.6-7

3 May 2009 is Srimati Sita Devi's Appearance Day anniversary

May 02, 2009 08:11 PM

1972 May 2: "I wanted the GBC to see how the students are learning and reporting to me as my secretaries. I do not know how you could have missed these points, as they are clearly spelled out in my original constitution."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 02, 2009 08:08 PM

1972 May 2: "So just see how much money you have wasted. No one followed my instructions in this matter, as I repeatedly advised and now so much money has been lost."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 02, 2009 08:05 PM

1972 May 2: "My blessings to Visnujan, Silavati and all others. I am very much pleased with all these activities. This is carrying out the order of Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu. One thing, is prasadam being distributed profusely on this travelling party?"
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 02, 2009 08:03 PM

1974 May 2: "Everyone was expecting me to arrive there but this was dependent on his sending tickets. He has now refused. Either he has no money or he has withdrawn his promise. In both cases the dealing is not very happy."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1974

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 02, 2009 08:00 PM

David Haslam, UK : Buddhiyogi

The other week I got to talk to a very humble devotee who told me about a blog he was writing on, it is amazing, well thought out and inspirational. Go check it out you can find it here: buddhiyogi Ow just incase your wondering it’s written by Sanatana Goswami das I’m also going to put on a link [...]

by David at May 02, 2009 04:31 PM

Club 108, New Vrndavan : Darwin Is Dead!-The Darwin Delusion

If you would like to contribute to our year-long "celebration" of Darwin's 200th birthday, please send your articles, editorials, or any other creative and informative pieces to nvclub108@gmail.com

The Darwin Delusion
is a new book by Lailitanatha Dasa, scheduled for release this summer.

Click here to check out a recent interview on ISKCON News with Lailtanatha as he details his motivations and inspirations for writing this book. It should be a heck of a read!

by Club 108 (noreply@blogger.com) at May 02, 2009 04:14 PM

H.G. Sankarshan das Adhikari, USA : Corrected Version--Saturday 2 May 2009--Expecting the Lord's Mercy

Lord Krishna is bestowing showers of unlimited mercy upon each and every one of living entities throughout the totality of existence at every minute. Those who understand, appreciate, and reciprocate with this mercy are His devotees. Those who do not are the non-devotees. Being a......................................... ================================================================== Thought...

by course@ultimateselfrealization.com at May 02, 2009 02:23 PM

ISKCON News.com : The Nrsimhadeva Chaitanya Connection

By Madhava Smullen on 2 May 2009

What does Lord Nrsimhadeva, whose appearance day Vaishnavas around the world will be celebrating this week, have in common with Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, the fourteenth century founder of Gaudiya Vaishnavism?

In Vaishnava theology, Nrsimhadeva is one of the ten main incarnations of Lord Krishna, who, as is explained in the Bhagavad-gita, descends to this world to annihilate the miscreants and please his devotees. However Lord Chaitanya does not fit into this categorization, although he is Krishna himself, because he comes disguised as a devotee.


by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 01:18 PM

ISKCON News.com : Fire Ravages Polish ISKCON Farm Community

By Madhava Smullen on 2 May 2009

Poland, Czarnow – It was 10:30pm on Friday April 17. Prema Bhakti Dasa, his wife Mayamari Dasi, and their two young sons were returning to their home at ISKCON’s New Shantipur farm after a spiritual get-together in the city.

Home was a flat above the barn where Prema Bhakti and his family cared for the community’s cows full-time. And as their car neared it, they saw huge flames leaping from it, angry and orange in the night.


by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 01:05 PM

Syamesvari dd : Syamasundara, a deity of the heart

The deities of Syamananda Pandita in Vrindavana, Sri Sri Radha Syamasundara, are among my favourite deities in Vraja. This deity is said to be manifested from Srimati Radharanis own heart. Krsna has the most enchanting smile and He is always, always beautifully and opulently adorned.
The last time I was in Vrindavana during Kartik I would make a trip everyday to this temple after the morning program at the Krsna-Balarama mandir ended. Here I would spend an hour or two chanting extra rounds or reading, before heading off to the Radha-Damodara temple just a short walk away.
It's special being there on any ordinary day, but during Kartik, its extra-special. Radha-Shyamasundara, specifically Shyamasundara, is dressed according to His different pastimes - one day He is dressed as a female bangle seller, fully equipped with a basket of sparkly bangles on His head, another day He is dressed as a mendicant devotee of Shiva, with snakes around His neck and arms, and yet another He is disguised as a gopi or demigoddess. There were some days when I wasn't sure what the pastime was exactly (my understanding of Hindi is sketchy at best), but still, it was sweet to have Their darshan.
The devotees have done a great job with the temple website , where you can read about the history of the deities and have Their darshan. Below is a photo of Shyamasundara taken during Candana yatra.
"Dear Lord, when You appear in Your different incarnations, You take different names and forms according to different situations. Lord Krsna is Your name because You are all attractive; You are called Syamasundara because of Your transcendental beauty. Syama means blackish, yet they say that You are more beautiful than thousands of Cupids. Kandarpa-koti-kamaniya. Although You appear in a color which is compared to the blackish cloud, because You are transcendental Absolute, Your beauty is many many times more attractive than the delicate body of Cupid"
~Krsna Book

by Syamesvari (noreply@blogger.com) at May 02, 2009 01:01 PM

ISKCON News.com : Vrindavana Cows Kidnapped by Armed Thieves

By Antony Brennan on 2 May 2009

Subhangi Devi Dasi lives in Vrindavan, India. Recently she was awoken early in the morning to witness a site none of us would even dream could be happening. Krishna’s cows are being violently kidnapped in the night. It is believed the cows are killed and sold for their flesh and leather products.

“I was sleeping,” Subhangi Devi Dasi says. “At 2.00 am I hear cows crying, people screaming and yelling. I run out to my balcony and see a truck backing away and cows franticly running in all directions down the lanes, all crying. I have never seen that in Vrindavan.”


by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 12:52 PM

New Vrndavan, USA : Sriman Jayananda Prabhu’s Festival Schedule

Haribol! All glories to His Divine Grace AC Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada!

For the pleasure of Sri Sri Radha-Vrndaban-Candras’ and all the devotees, we are having a festival in honor of His Grace Sriman Jayananda Prabhu, one of Srila Prabhupada’s dear-most disciples.

WHEN: Wednesday, May the 6th, at 5:15 pm,

WHERE: Main Temple Room.

The schedule for the celebration is as follows:

5:15 pm to 7:00 pm Recollections by Vaisnavas who had association with Jayananda Prabhu or who have heard from those who did.

7:00 pm to 7:30 pm Gaura arotika.

7:30 pm Feast for all devotees in prasadam hall.

Please attend if you can!

Hari bol! Y.S., Mathura dasa

by mg at May 02, 2009 12:36 PM

ISKCON News.com : New ISKCON Restaurant Opens in Australia

By Mukunda Goswami on 2 May 2009

Another ISKCON restaurant opened in Burleigh Heads, Queensland Australia on the 27th of April, 2009. The seating capacity of the new facility, located at 20 James Street, is 30.

The ground-level café appeals to what Australians would call an ‘up-market’ clientele.


by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 12:33 PM

ISKCON News.com : Food For Life Ecuador Feeds Dying Patients

By ISKCON News Weekly Staff on 2 May 2009

ISKCON’s Food for Life branch in Ecuador, South America braved the rainy season’s flooded roads to visit a nursing home in the city of Guayaquil late this March. Known as “The House of the Dying Man,” the home’s numerous assistants care for 60 elderly people with terminal diseases.


by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 12:30 PM

ISKCON News.com : The Hare Krishna Movement’s Unknown Soldier

By Sesa Dasa on 2 May 2009

Although I was born the eldest son to a career US Army officer who served during two wars, and attended a well known military academy with over two centuries of tradition, I never really understood all the pomp and circumstance evoked by the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. That is…until now.


by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 11:46 AM

ISKCON News.com : Looking Good

By Ravindra Svarupa Dasa for So It Happens on 2 May 2009

I was studying religion in graduate school. I was into the counterculture; I owned a real pea coat; my hair was, well, longish; my friends were, by and large, hippies. Most of the religion department took me for a real hippie. But my friends didn’t mistake me for one of them: I was, after all, in graduate school.

It was one of my “hippie” buddies who took me to a Hare Krishna temple, and that led, to my everlasting surprise, to my next fashion change. I joined the Hare Krishnas: I wrapped myself in a dhotī; shaved my head, leaving the tuft of hair called a śikhā on the back, and showed up one day like that at the Department of Religion.


by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 11:19 AM

ISKCON News.com : Fresh Ginger Chutney

By on 2 May 2009

Ginger is a very important and versatile culinary spice of wide acclaim, but did you know that it is also an extremely powerful healing herb? Ginger is the most popular of hundreds of members of the Zingiberacea family. To be botanically correct, ginger is a rhizome and not a root. It is available in many varieties, from mild to spicy, and requires tropical conditions and fertile soil for optimum growth.

Over millenia, millions of people have enjoyed the benefits of ginger. For spiritual upliftment, digestive comfort and strength, stimulation and relief from infirmity, ginger has been heralded as the herb of choice, and has been included in most traditional Eastern formulas. Ginger is aptly described in the traditional language of Sanskrit as “vishwabhesaj”, the universal medicine.

Ginger has been used historically for wound healing, as an analgesic, anti-arthritic, anti-ulcer, as a stimulant, as well as a powerful treatment for a variety of respiratory, reproductive, and digestive complaints. Ginger also shows great therapeutic potential in the treatment of arthritis and cardiovascular disorders, and as a probiotic support.

The anti-nausea effect of ginger is well documented. Although I didn’t know it at the time, ginger was one of the main ingredients in the carsickness medicine I occasionally took as a young lad.

My first culinary experience of ginger was in 1974 in steamy West Bengal, while visiting the holy city of Sridham Mayapur. On the first morning, about one hundred others and I sat side by side, cross-legged and expectant, along the cool marble-tiled verandahs of the Chandrodaya Temple. Cool breezes wafted in from the serpentine Mother Ganges that slithered majestically through nearby rice fields This was to be our first meal in India – a multi-course breakfast feast, in fact.

While memories of the exact menu have faded, I distinctly recall the elegant yet simple entree – buttery chickpeas, served with wafer-thin slices of tender young ginger with paper-thin pinkish skin and greenish-ivory flesh, drenched in fresh lime juice and sprinkled with salt. It was a sublime and tantalising experience that the subsequent quarter century of eating experiences has not erased.

Ginger still remains one of my well-loved kitchen favourites. I relish its spicy, sweet aroma, its invigoratingly clean, hot sharp taste, its digestive properties, and its cleansing effect on the body.

by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 10:11 AM

Ekendra dasa, AU : You may be a Hare Krishna fanatic if ...

You may be a Hare Krishna fanatic if ... you refuse to eat your kid's birthday cake because he blew out the candles and may have muchified the top layer with tiny kiddie spittles.

On the other hand ...

You may be a Hare Krishna fanatic if ... you'd fight with someone over who gets to swallow the leftover pit of a date, apricot or other stonefruit eaten by someone who you don't actually know but is institutionally recognized as a 'senior devotee'.

Heaps more of these here

by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 08:55 AM

Ekendra dasa, AU : My Realization About Smiling

Your body may be ugly as sin, but if you smile you look attractive.

Your body may be a perfect 10, but if you don't smile you look unattractive.

Perhaps this isn't so profound of a realization, but it's something I've been thinking of lately.

by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 08:47 AM

Utah Krishnas, USA : Fourth Om Shanti Retreat Reviewed

Last weekend (April 23-25) we hosted the 4th Om Shanti Retreat and the first of 2009. Alan came from Orange County, as he has to teach the yoga at all the previous retreats. Keshavacharya gave a wonderful kirtan on Friday evening, and Jai Krishna with Troy chanted Saturday evening. The weather was chilly and rainy, so plans for the hikes were curtailed. Nevertheless everyone seemed to have a great time

May 02, 2009 08:45 AM

ISKCON News.com : Mayapur Narasimha



If the selection above is hosted by YouTube then after the video plays there will be several links presented to other videos. ISKCON News Weekly has no control over the selections presented and is not responsible for their contents.

by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 08:27 AM

ISKCON News.com : Narasimha Saligram



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by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 08:24 AM

ISKCON News.com : Brussels Harinam



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by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 08:11 AM

ISKCON News.com : Florida's Krishna Lunch



If the selection above is hosted by YouTube then after the video plays there will be several links presented to other videos. ISKCON News Weekly has no control over the selections presented and is not responsible for their contents.

by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 08:05 AM

ISKCON News.com : East London Ratha Yatra



If the selection above is hosted by YouTube then after the video plays there will be several links presented to other videos. ISKCON News Weekly has no control over the selections presented and is not responsible for their contents.

by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 08:01 AM

Syamesvari dd : Will you make Krsna smile today?


My new mantra is "Love and Devotion." I chant it as I cook, begin my japa, dress the deities or offer an arati. "Love and devotion Syamesvari, love and devotion," I chant in my head as I heat the oil or ghee, as I pick out turban pieces or set the arati tray. There are so many things I try to do for Krsna everyday, big and little, quick or time-consuming, but how many of them do I do in the right mood? How many things do I do with a loving 'This is for Your pleasure Krsna, not for my benefit' attitude? Hardly anything, I'm ashamed to admit. I do things out of habit, out of obligation, or for the selfish reason of getting rid of bad karma and hopefully ending my time in the material world. But without those two all-important ingredients - love and devotion - really, what benefit am I gaining anyway? Inattentive chanting is not nearly as potent or beneficial as attentive chanting is, so similarly, devotional service without the devotion is not nearly as sweet or as meaningful to me, or to Krsna.
If it weren't for seeing first-hand what real devotional service is, I wouldn't be aspiring after it myself. There are some amazing vaisnavas who are eagerly and purely serving the Lord, their hearts full of surrender and genuine affection for Krsna. These devotees are my role-models and their association makes me want to be a better devotee.
Of course simply chanting 'love and devotion' does not bring about those feelings. Like Srila Prabhupada once said, 'Chanting water, water, water does not quench your thirst.' But just as chanting 'water, water, water' reminds you of water, makes you meditate on it and possibly hanker after it, my 'love and devotion' mantra reminds me of what the real point of rendering any service to the Lord is.
Sivarama Swami gave a class some time ago entitled "Will you make Krsna smile today?" The introduction to that class reads : Srila Prabhupada explains that making the Lord smile by our pure devotion is the conclusion of all spiritual practices and the essence of Vrndavana life.

So now I realise that the aim is not merely to do something devotionally related to get it done - it is to make Krsna happy and make Him smile. And with no other motivation than bringing a sweet smile to Krsna's lips, performing even the simplest of tasks, like peeling potatoes or washing puja items can become our most devotion-filled tasks and we will gain the greatest benefit and satisfaction.
Will you make Krsna smile today?

by Syamesvari (noreply@blogger.com) at May 02, 2009 07:58 AM

Dandavats.com : Bhakti Raghava Swami comes to Murari for Narasimha’s Festival

Rama Vigraha das: Maharaja is well known all over the world for his dedication to Srila Prabhupada’s varnasrama mission. Maharaja will be our main speaker. He will also be giving Harinam initiation to Varadraj Prabhu, ISKCON coordinator for Alabama.

by Administrator at May 02, 2009 07:00 AM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : Creating 'Taste'

Srila Prabhupada CREATED a taste. He said this on 19 August 1973 in Los Angeles, while lecturing on Srimad Bhagavatam 1.2.16: "Because at the present moment there are sudras, they are lacking taste. But our propaganda is, by some way or other, even they are sudras, EVEN THEY'RE DEMONS (emphasis mine), we are creating the taste. That is our Krsna consciousness movement. Even there is..., there is no taste for vasudeva-katha-rucih, still, our process is so nice that we create the taste. Nobody was interested in Krsna consciousness, but there are thousand now. How?

read more

by Mukunda Goswami at May 02, 2009 07:00 AM

Dandavats.com : Kenyan prime minister recives a copy of srila prabhupads bhagavad gita

Govinda prem: ...the Prime minister would be coming to open it, I was very happy in my mind I thought & prayed i wish i would give him a bhagavad gita...

by Administrator at May 02, 2009 06:57 AM

Dandavats.com : Care for Cows Newsletter May 2009

Kurma Rupa dasa: Our May 2009 Care for Cows Newsletter has been posted. Please review it at your earliest convenience.

by Administrator at May 02, 2009 06:54 AM

Dandavats.com : Search for New Director of ISKCON Child Protection Office

Tamohara das: Due to Tamohara das assuming additional GBC duties, it is necessary to appoint a new Executive Director of the ISKCON Central Office of Child Protection (CPO). The search process will begin immediately and will be open until the position is filled.

by Administrator at May 02, 2009 06:52 AM

Dandavats.com : Online Merciful Nrsimhadeva Show

Amogha das: Dear Devotees of Srila Prabhupada, Please accept my humble obeisances. All Glories to Srila Prabhupada! Merciful Lord Nrsimhadev Show is now downloadable from the internet.

by Administrator at May 02, 2009 06:49 AM

Dandavats.com : Sri Sri Radha-Madhava Boat Festival- LIVE from Mayapur

Hare KrishnaBy Gopijan ballab das

We are happy to announce that now you can take darshan of Sri Sri Radha-Madhava boat festival –LIVE from Srila Prabhupada Pushpa Samadhi Mandir everyday from 5.30 p.m. (IST) onwards at www.mayapur.tv

by Administrator at May 02, 2009 06:45 AM

Dandavats.com : I Never Saw This On The Vedabase

Palaka das: I came across this letter sent on behalf of His Divine Grace Srila Prabhupada to ALL CENTERS. Perhaps we should all take a moment to hear what Srila Prabhupada has ordered.

by Administrator at May 02, 2009 06:37 AM

Dandavats.com : Srilanka Issue

Nirmala Krishna Das: I am from Srilanka and now living in India with my wife who is Indian and 2 sons practicing Krishna consciousness. Hearing the atrocities happening in Srilanka really makes me think how this material world is a terrible place to live.

by Administrator at May 02, 2009 06:33 AM

ISKCON News.com : Reflections on the Environmental Impact of Meat Eating

By Kathy Freston for The Huffington Post (USA) on '22 Apr 2009' ''

My first post on the effect of eating meat on the environment provoked quite a bit of discussion, so in honor of Earth Day, I thought I should follow up with more information about how our natural resources (e.g., air, water, and soil) are depleted and devastated by animal agriculture.

Of course, Earth Day is also a good time to remember that animal agriculture only exists at these levels because people are purchasing vast quantities of chicken, beef, pork, and fish.


by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 06:06 AM

Gouranga TV : Bhajan - Anish - Hare Krishna

Anish singing a Hare Krishna Bhajan. This was during the annual temple presidents meeting in Houston. Houston, TX 2009-01-18

by uploader at May 02, 2009 06:00 AM

ISKCON News.com : Former First Lady Wants Yoga in Every Russian Home

The Hindu (India) on '23 Apr 2009' ''

Moscow (PTI): Russia's former First Lady Naina Yeltsina wants every home in the country to practice yoga for a healthy lifestyle.

"I have been practicing yoga for last two years. I think it is indispensable for people above 50. It would be good if it was practiced in every Russian home," Naina Yeltsin, 77, said at a reception hosted here by the Indian Ambassador P P Shukla in honour of Yogacharya BKS Iyengar.


by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 05:45 AM

ISKCON News.com : Travelers' Laptops May Be Detained At US Border

By Ellen Nakashima for The Washington Post (USA) on 2 May 2009

Federal agents may take a traveler's laptop or other electronic device to an off-site location for an unspecified period of time without any suspicion of wrongdoing, as part of border search policies the Department of Homeland Security recently disclosed.


by Ekendra Dasa at May 02, 2009 04:31 AM

ISKCON Melbourne, AU : Daily Class - Aniruddha Prabhu

Srimad Bhagavatam 11.8.7 - Devotees positively engage their senses for Krishna's service.

by jayendra at May 02, 2009 12:52 AM

May 01, 2009

ISKCON News.com : Faith in Flux: Religious Conversion Statistics in the U.S.

The Pew Forum (USA) on '27 Apr 2009' ''

Americans change religious affiliation early and often. In total, about half of American adults have changed religious affiliation at least once during their lives. Most people who change their religion leave their childhood faith before age 24, and many of those who change religion do so more than once. These are among the key findings of a new survey conducted by the Pew Research Center's Forum on Religion & Public Life. The survey documents the fluidity of religious affiliation in the U.S. and describes in detail the patterns and reasons for change.


by Ekendra Dasa at May 01, 2009 11:37 PM

ISKCON News.com : Popular New Book Genre: Celibate Romance Novels

By Andrea Sachs for Time Magazine (USA) on '16 Apr 2009' ''

Put aside that titillating vampire lit. Author Beverly Lewis has come up with a new magic formula for producing best-selling romance novels: humility, plainness and no sex. Lewis' G-rated books, set among the Old Order Amish in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, have sold more than 12 million copies, as bodice rippers make room for "bonnet books," chaste romances that chronicle the lives and loves of America's Amish.


by Ekendra Dasa at May 01, 2009 11:32 PM

ISKCON News.com : Hindus Ask for 'Kirtan' Grammy

By Rajan Zed on 1 May 2009

Hindus have called for introduction of “kirtan” as new field of awards at famed Grammys to be held at Los Angeles’ Staples Center on January 31 next.

Last Grammys were awarded in 110 music categories, covering 32 fields, including Pop, Rock, Rap, Country, New Age, Gospel, Jazz, Folk, World Music, Latin, Reggae, Blues, etc., for outstanding achievements.


by Ekendra Dasa at May 01, 2009 11:19 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Bhakti Vikasa Swami: You do not know what is Christianity

"Jesus had to speak to rascals and fools like you. Therefore he did not speak [about Krsna]." This is the argument. "Because you are such a fool that Jesus said, 'Thou shall not kill' -- your first business was to kill him. So you are so nice, advanced men. Now, what he'll speak to you? He knew that you are all rascals. Even the one word you cannot understand, 'Thou shall not kill.' So what you will understand? Therefore Jesus Christ did not say." Give them this answer. Jesus Christ was perfect, but because you are rascals, he did not say, because you could not understand even his one word. You are so intelligent. His commandment is "Thou shall not kill," but your business is to kill him first. How far you are advanced and civilized, just imagine. And you want perfect instruction. You cannot follow even one instruction. That is your position. In this way try to understand. "Jesus had to deal with rascals like you. Therefore he...

Even ordinary moral principles, you could not, what to speak of other things." Actually that is the fact. Actually that is the fact. He had to deal with rascals and fools. Is that civilization, that first of all argue, "Thou shall not kill"? That means you were all rascals engaged in killing business. Is that civilized men? Why he said like that? Is that very good philosophy? Mean they were so low class that they had to be stopped first of all, these sinful activities. That also, they could not. This is their position.

And for the last two thousand years they could not. Such nice brain. They could not understand even one instruction of Jesus Christ. And you are proud of becoming Christian, rascals. "You do not know what is Christianity, what is Jesus Christ. You are all rascals." Tell them like that. What do you think?

>>> Ref. VedaBase => Conversation on Train to Allahabad -- January 11, 1977, India

May 01, 2009 08:11 PM