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May 21, 2009

Sutapa das, BV Manor, UK : Learning Lessons for Life


On Monday, two of our senior monks visited the pioneering ‘Krishna Avanti School’ in North West London, so I decided to tag along. It’s the first ever state-funded Hindu School in the UK, and I must say one of the most spiritually dynamic projects I have come across. Children from the age of 4 will be taught spiritual principles of tolerance, compassion, respect and devotion to God, alongside the standard national curriculum. As we met some of the young children, something amazing dawned upon me. Spirituality really requires that we become childlike again.

Children are extremely enthusiastic, inquisitive, non-duplicitous and eager to build friendships with others. When one’s heart is decorated with such qualities, divine insight and inspiration will automatically manifest. Within those children I saw amazing potential to show the world what a successful, honorable, open-minded and spiritual citizen would be like. The impressions of spirituality within the childlike consciousness run very deep. They are definitely learning lessons for life.

So what about us who are getting on in our lives (it was my 28th birthday last week :)? Well, we may not be able to physically transform into the body of a child, but if we can atleast develop the childlike approach it may serve us well. Instead of simply following society’s norms or blindly engaging in religious ritual, let us become inquisitive like the child – eager to learn more and go deeper in our understandings of spiritual philosophy, culture and practice. Instead of descending into diplomacy, politics and backbiting, let us become straightforward and non duplicitous like the child – enthusiastic to break free of our own superficialities, and also relate to others on a deeper level. Instead of shutting out others, becoming intolerant and dogmatic in our approach, let us learn to build bridges and friendships like the child – earnestly searching for unity in diversity.

by Sutapa das (sutapa.kks@hotmail.com) at May 21, 2009 05:13 PM

Dandavats.com : A Soul’s Journey

Venkat: “Are you he or are you she?”, oh c’mon let it be, Don’t you surmise, don’t you guess, ‘cause I’m not what you see. (1) Once in a while I change my clothes, so you can’t recognize, We could’ve been friends or foes but now I’m in disguise. (2) I lived for very long once in eternal knowledge ‘n’ bliss, Until decided to leave home and explore this wretched abyss. (3) I wished to be like Him or above and imitate His nature, Not realizing that His love’s far greater than His stature.

by Administrator at May 21, 2009 04:39 PM

Dandavats.com : Baltimore Mayor Proclaims Hare Krishna Rathayatra Day

Now in it's seventh year, the annual Baltimore Rathayatra and Festival of India brings together devotees and friends of ISKCON from all the major Northern East Coast cities each year for ecstatic samkirtan, prasadam, preaching and transcendental bliss in the service of Srila Prabhupada and Lord Jagannatha right in the heart of downtown Baltimore's world famous Inner Harbor.

by Administrator at May 21, 2009 04:34 PM

Dandavats.com : BBT Art Seminar announcement

Pancharatna das: The BBT will be holding their third annual art seminar in Vrindavana, India, from October 20 to November 9, 2009.

by Administrator at May 21, 2009 04:33 PM

Dandavats.com : In need of car

Radhagovindadd: Hare Krsna , My name is Radha Govinda devi dasi and I live in Panama City Panama. I'll be visiting Alachua in the month of June for a month. I am in desperate need of a car.

by Administrator at May 21, 2009 04:31 PM

Dandavats.com : Room for rent in San Diego

Greg Bechtol: We have a room for rent in our bay view home. We are looking for a devotee man that likes to chant and be happy. Nonsmoker, veggi, and no girl friends over.

by Administrator at May 21, 2009 04:29 PM

Rupa Madhurya das, TX, USA : Lecture - Giriraj Swami - Sunday Feast - BG 3.10

Lecture on Srimad Bhagavad Gita by Giriraj Swami.

Dallas, TX
2009-03-29

TRANSLATION

In the beginning of creation, the Lord of all creatures sent forth generations of men and demigods, along with sacrifices for Vishnu, and blessed them by saying, "Be thou happy by this yajna [sacrifice] because its performance will bestow upon you everything desirable for living happily and achieving liberation."

PURPORT

The material creation by the Lord of creatures (Vishnu) is a chance offered to the conditioned souls to come back home -- back to Godhead. All living entities within the material creation are conditioned by material nature because of their forgetfulness of their relationship to Vishnu, or Krishna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead. The Vedic principles are to help us understand this eternal relation, as it is stated in the Bhagavad-gita: vedais ca sarvair aham eva vedyah. The Lord says that the purpose of the Vedas is to understand Him. In the Vedic hymns it is said: patim visvasyatmesvaram. Therefore, the Lord of the living entities is the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Vishnu. In the Srimad-Bhagavatam also (2.4.20) Srila Sukadeva Gosvami describes the Lord as pati in so many ways:

sriyah patir yajna-patih praja-patir
dhiyam patir loka-patir dhara-patih
patir gatis candhaka-vrishni-satvatam
prasidatam me bhagavan satam patih

The praja-pati is Lord Vishnu, and He is the Lord of all living creatures, all worlds, and all beauties, and the protector of everyone. The Lord created this material world to enable the conditioned souls to learn how to perform yajnas (sacrifices) for the satisfaction of Vishnu, so that while in the material world they can live very comfortably without anxiety and after finishing the present material body they can enter into the kingdom of God. That is the whole program for the conditioned soul. By performance of yajna, the conditioned souls gradually become Krishna conscious and become godly in all respects. In the Age of Kali, the sankirtana-yajna (the chanting of the names of God) is recommended by the Vedic scriptures, and this transcendental system was introduced by Lord Caitanya for the deliverance of all men in this age. Sankirtana-yajna and Krishna consciousness go well together. Lord Krishna in His devotional form (as Lord Caitanya) is mentioned in the Srimad-Bhagavatam (11.5.32) as follows, with special reference to the sankirtana-yajna:

krishna-varnam tvishakrishnam
sangopangastra-parshadam
yajnaih sankirtana-prayair
yajanti hi su-medhasah

"In this Age of Kali, people who are endowed with sufficient intelligence will worship the Lord, who is accompanied by His associates, by performance of sankirtana-yajna." Other yajnas prescribed in the Vedic literatures are not easy to perform in this Age of Kali, but the sankirtana-yajna is easy and sublime for all purposes, as recommended in Bhagavad-gita also (9.14).


Download: 2009-03-29 - Giriraj Swami - Sunday Feast - BG 3.10.mp3

by Rupa Schomaker (rupa@rupa.com) at May 21, 2009 03:05 PM

Sastra Dana, San Diego, USA : Dr. Shubhangi Rack

Advaita Candra Dasa and his wife Sita Thakurani Devi Dasi have planted another book rack. This one went to the medical office of Dr. Shubhangi S. Godbole, in La Mirada, a city southeast of Los Angeles and north of Long Beach. Here is the letter from Advaita and Sita:

Hare Krishna Prabhus,
Please accept our humble obeisances.
All glories to Srila Prabhupada!

With Srila Prabhupada’s and our Guru Maharaj’s (His Holiness Gopal Krishna Goswami) mercy we have placed our 9th book rack at Dr. Shubhangi Godbole’s Family Practice center in La Mirada. We placed 190 books in this rack. This is the 5th book rack that has a donation box.

Attached is a photo of the subject book rack. Amit Godbole, son of the owner Dr. Shubhangi Godbole, is in the picture. We met Amit, a young computer engineer, at a local Nama Hatta program. We gave him Srila Prabhupada’s books. He is very enthusiastic about Krishna consciousness. We mentioned to him that we are distributing Srila Prabhupada’s books by placing book racks in various business locations. He immediately mentioned that his mother has a medical office and he was very eager to have a book rack there. After consulting with his mother, Amit went with us to place the book rack. He really liked the rack and was so excited to see it in his mother’s office.

We are very much thankful to you for your help and encouragement in spreading Krishna consciousness. Thank you for the opportunity to serve.

Your servants,
Advaita Chandra Das & Sita Thakurani devi dasi

shubhangi-rack

Amit Godbole, son of the owner Dr. Shubhangi Godbole

advaita-sita

Advaita Candra Dasa & Sita Thakurani Devi Dasi

by Mahat at May 21, 2009 02:57 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1966 May 21:
"Dwitiya. In the afternoon there was Sanskrit class. The attendance was ten but the Collection was only $4.00. At 5/30 P.M. we started for Ananda Ashram. In the evening there was Keertan at Ashram. It was nice as usual. There was dance of Balirama."
Prabhupada Journal :: 1966

May 21, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1967 May 21: "We invite every one but when one comes into the confidence we initiate him in the process. Therefore our four principles of restriction must be adopted when one is serious about further enlightenment."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1967

May 21, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1967 May 21: "Your ardent call is responding from heart and I have decided to return. I have already received letter from Jayananda with thanks. I have received letter from all my spiritual children and I am very sorry that I could not reply."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1967

May 21, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1967 May 21: "So let the leaders take this movement more seriously. Before my arrival you may make some arrangement so that I can speak to the greatest number of people and I am sure they will appreciate my presentation."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1967

May 21, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1970 May 21: "So those who are strictly on the Bhagavat line or in Krsna consciousness actually they are living in Satya Yuga. And our London Temple is a replica of Vaikuntha. So live there peacefully."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1970

May 21, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 May 21: "You should develop your ability for writing. If we are engaged in writing and speaking on behalf of Krishna, this is the best process for advancing in Krishna Consciousness."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

May 21, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 May 21: "These literature are the big mrdanga which can be heard from a long distance, simply a few words can have a tremendous effect on millions of people if they are propagated widely. So it is our duty above all to print these words."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

May 21, 2009 02:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 May 21: "All these situations are meant for tribulation, but in Krishna consciousness, they are meant for advancement. So to accept any situation as Krishna's mercy is to advance in spiritual life."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

May 21, 2009 02:20 PM

Japa Group : Tulasi And Chanting Japa


Hare Krsna everyone. I hope your week has been nice and your rounds blessed with nectar and joy.
Just now I am listening to the voice of my spiritual master singing the maha mantra, and this reminded me that when we listen to a pure devotee singing, the holy names is different from someone else.....it comes in a different way. We can feel the nectar of bhakti coming from his lips, the desire to serve the Lord and also the merciful mood of giving the maha mantra to anyone who hankers for love of God.
It sounds sweet and joyful! That's why we can reach Krsna by the mercy of the spiritual master we are inspired through his service....his relationship with the Lord is exposed and we feel so proud of being a disciple and our wish is to attain such wonderful qualities coming from the pure association of Harinama. In the last email from my spiritual master he advised me to chant in front of Tulasi Devi - then I thought "How can I do that I live at home...impossible and also the temple is so far from home" so Uddhava my son said last week "When I come to Brazil don't forget to remind me before leaving to take you some Manjaris" - wow then I thought maybe the instruction needs to be followed and the Lord is saying that I do need Tulasi devi here. I don't feel prepared for sure, I do need more time to have the mercy of Tulasi devi...I am pretty afraid of commiting offenses, but Krsna knows everything and when He feels its right I will accept and try to do my best to care of Srimate Tulasi devi with love and devotion.
I have something to share with you about Tulasi devi and chanting japa:

"The process of chanting the Hare Krsna maha-mantra with a vow before the Tulasi plant has such strong spiritual potency, that simply by doing this one can become spiritually strong."
Chaitanya Caritamrita Madhya Lila Chapter 24 Verse 261

After planting the Tulasi tree before your house, you should daily circumambulate that Tulasi plant, serve Her by giving Her water and other things and continuously chant the Hare Krsna maha-mantra.
I wish I may be able to worship Tulasi Devi one day and receive all the blessings of a pure devotee of Krsna.

May Srimate Tulasi devi which can immediately vanquish volumes of sinful activities bless our chanting.

your servant,

Aruna devi

by Aruna (noreply@blogger.com) at May 21, 2009 02:15 PM

1966 May 21:
"Dwitiya. In the afternoon there was Sanskrit class. The attendance was ten but the Collection was only $4.00. At 5/30 P.M. we started for Ananda Ashram. In the evening there was Keertan at Ashram. It was nice as usual. There was dance of Balirama."
Prabhupada Journal :: 1966

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 21, 2009 02:04 PM

1967 May 21: "We invite every one but when one comes into the confidence we initiate him in the process. Therefore our four principles of restriction must be adopted when one is serious about further enlightenment."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1967

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 21, 2009 02:04 PM

1967 May 21: "Your ardent call is responding from heart and I have decided to return. I have already received letter from Jayananda with thanks. I have received letter from all my spiritual children and I am very sorry that I could not reply."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1967

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 21, 2009 02:04 PM

1967 May 21: "So let the leaders take this movement more seriously. Before my arrival you may make some arrangement so that I can speak to the greatest number of people and I am sure they will appreciate my presentation."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1967

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 21, 2009 02:03 PM

1970 May 21: "So those who are strictly on the Bhagavat line or in Krsna consciousness actually they are living in Satya Yuga. And our London Temple is a replica of Vaikuntha. So live there peacefully."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1970

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 21, 2009 02:01 PM

1972 May 21: "All these situations are meant for tribulation, but in Krishna consciousness, they are meant for advancement. So to accept any situation as Krishna's mercy is to advance in spiritual life."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 21, 2009 01:58 PM

1972 May 21: "These literature are the big mrdanga which can be heard from a long distance, simply a few words can have a tremendous effect on millions of people if they are propagated widely. So it is our duty above all to print these words."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 21, 2009 01:56 PM

1972 May 21: "You should develop your ability for writing. If we are engaged in writing and speaking on behalf of Krishna, this is the best process for advancing in Krishna Consciousness."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 21, 2009 01:53 PM

Kripamoya dasa, UK : Best Wishes for New Archbishop


My best wishes to Archbishop Vincent Nichols as he becomes the 11th Catholic Archbishop of Westminster this morning. As this picture of him speaking before the large throne at Westminster Cathedral seems to suggest, the position comes with enormous responsibilities.

He’ll have the job of helping the members of his church move forward in mutual understanding with the Church of England.

He’ll need to clarify and represent many theological issues that are at odds with conventional wisdom.

He’ll have to pray for a way through the crisis over priests wanting to marry and falling numbers wishing to take vocations.

He’ll need prayers said for him as he champions the cause of the unborn babies in a country which tops the abortion and teenage pregnancy lists.

He’ll need strength to preach strongly in a country where faith itself is often seen as a psychological weakness.

And he’ll need to cope with the vicissitudes of the Catholic Church as it collectively reels from the effects of the actions of some of it’s members.

I sympathise with all of the above and I wish him well. May our mutual God, who is praised with a thousand names, kindly give him strength.

by deshika at May 21, 2009 12:05 PM

Madhava Ghosh dasa, New Vrndavan, USA : Milk Offsets


From a recent email discussion group exchange:

“I understand, you think that the GBC should be more concerned about devotees NOT DRINKING MILK from cows that will be slaughtered because without putting cow protection first all else will go to hell as per the many references you have kindly posted in the past and reminded us all.

“I agree. Why don’t you formulate a proposal to the GBC that all ISKCON members should drink only milk from cows not ear-marked for slaughter? I’m all for it. I get my supply from a local farm.

“The likely resistance would be that Srila Prabhupada himself would drink such milk in the absence of any other choice. But you would state it is now time to upgrade, put cow-protection to the top of all issues because from successful implementation all other things will flourish.”

My reply:

Executive summary:

Milk offsets mean devotees who have to buy industrial milk offset the slaughter of the cow by contributing to cow protection programs. These donations would be the cash flow (capital) needed to establish varnaashram. No GBC approval is necessary as the decision rests with individuals and cow protection programs already exist.

Full reply:

That is the key point, given no other choice, but we also understand that he was quite keen to establish devotee farms.  He wasn’t content to coast on the concept of ajnata-sukrti, unknowing devotional service. That the cow whose milk is benefited when it is offered to Krishna therefore it is okay to drink industrial milk. That is a concept that falls flat when preaching to intelligent people in the West.  It comes across as cult thinking.

Yes, Prabhupada drank such milk as a field expedient measure. Just as when we have a flat tire, we use the little donut spare tire from the trunk to get us to the repair shop but if we continue to run with it eventually the differential burns out and the whole car becomes dysfunctional. That is the principle expressed in:

“Without protection of cows, brahminical culture cannot be maintained; and without brahminical culture, the aim of life cannot be fulfilled.”

Srimad Bhagavatam 8.24.5

As for drinking milk only from cows that will not be slaughtered, yes, that is the ideal, and we should strive for this. I was speaking to Devamrta Swami during the Festival of Inspiration and he said that when he goes to New Zealand he is a vegan because the devotees there are conditional vegans — they will not drink milk until it comes from protected cows. He accepts this because the quality devotees who are organizer types mostly come out of the animal rights movement and they are valuable to his preaching program.

That of course is a more principled and austere stand than we can reasonably expect from most devotees. As for formulating a proposal for the GBC, yes, that would be part of a broad campaign and when we do get more devotees on board with following Prabhupada’s instructions for the future direction in this matter that could be something someone in an urban environment with a desire to serve cows could pursue. My hands are full.

The NZ example is also instructive in that proposals aren’t the only way to influence the behavior of the GBC.

FYI,  Dev Swa shared with me that a man came and monitored their programs for a while and after observing silently for a week or two asked to see who was in charge. When DS came a week or so later, he told him he was impressed with the character of the devotees and asked DS what was his dream.

DS said that when Prabhupada first sent a devotee to NZ, he told him not to open a temple but to start a farm. DS told the man that he felt he was failing SP by not having a farm  in NZ. The guy dropped a half million dollars on him and bought ISKCON a 22 acre valuable property with both ocean and mountain views. Mostly it is a nature sanctuary, but with 3 tillable acres, and they are moving to having their own cows.

Not that we could expect this in every case, but sometimes when we take up the order of the spiritual master, the ocean can become as the water in the footprint of a calf.

I clearly have lacked that sort of potency in my own endeavors to promote cow protection, but hopefully as others get involved, their shakti will prove more fruitful.

While I am fully aware of what the pure goal should be, I am also crushingly aware of the pressures of the macro economy, the oil based world economy, and the difficulties in manifesting that goal. While we have bright spots like the Hungarian farm community, for most devotees it is currently an impossibility to find milk from protected cows.

My bridge proposal is to emulate the concept that has currency in the environmental movement, that of carbon offsets. Anyone in the environmental movement can explain this concept to you. It is basically that even though one is the end user of products that generate greenhouses gases one supports greenhouse gas reducing activities so one’s carbon footprint is reduced.

A common example is to pay a premium on one’s electric bill that the utility company uses to purchase higher priced energy from renewable sources, like wind mills.

My point is that we can use the concept and apply it to milk consumption. That one would continue to purchase industrial milk for the time being but offset it by contributing to projects that do protect cows. (I would call it blood milk, due to its low cost being subsidized by the blood of the cow and her calf when they are slaughtered, but I have been advised that is too inflammatory.)

Then, even though the literal cow one gets milk from would still be slaughtered, a different cow would be saved, ergo an offset.

There are already so many existing programs. The cow program in Vrindaban is up and running and as recent horror stories of gunmen rustling cows demonstrates, there is a clear need.

I can speak to New Vrindaban’s situation where we have excess barn space, pastures, sufficient labor and competent management to protect at least 50 more cows than we currently have, the lack being funding.

The idea is if devotees can’t perform the austerity of fasting from milk until getting it from protected cows, they would buy industrial milk and contribute to cow protection programs.

That money would be used to strengthen and increase cow protection programs and in the long term a supply of protected cows’ milk could be produced.

This requires no approval from the GBC or anyone. It is a decision that individual devotees can make on their own, no using the GBC as a scapegoat for personal inaction.  No cow programs need to be set up, no barrier there. While new programs could definitely be in the long term plan, everything to put this program into effect already exists.

The only lack is to wean the devotees off the teat of ajnata-sukrti and have them mature into taking greater responsibility for their actions. Where the GBC could be useful would be serving as examples and helping in an education program promoting milk offsets.

If the cows are protected then they will produce dung, a more valuable product than milk in Vedic, village based times. The dung is used to fertilize the fields and from that agricultural base can spring varna ashram.

Do it now. Here is one place to contribute immediately:

http://www.firstgiving.com/mgosh

Set up your own site to benefit any cow protection program you are drawn to.

Hare Krishna
Madhava Gosh

Posted in Cows and Environment

by Madhava Gosh at May 21, 2009 11:53 AM

H.H. Bhakticharu Swami : Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 7.9.25

The following is a Śrīmad Bhāgavatam class given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 20 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA.

To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either “Save link as” or “Save target as”

Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 7.9.25 - Chapter 9: Prahlāda Pacifies Lord Nṛsiḿhadeva with Prayers

The following is a Śrīmad Bhāgavatam class given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 20 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA. To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either ldquo;Save link asrdquo; or ldquo;Save target asrdquo; Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 7.9.25 - Chapter 9: Prahlāda Pacifies Lord Nṛsiḿhadeva with Prayers

by Vinod-bihari das at May 21, 2009 11:19 AM

H.H. Bhakticharu Swami : Relationship Seminar - Part 2

The following is the second part of a seminar given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 19 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA.

To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either “Save link as” or “Save target as”

The following is the second part of a seminar given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 19 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA. To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either ldquo;Save link asrdquo; or ldquo;Save target asrdquo;

by Vinod-bihari das at May 21, 2009 11:17 AM

New Vrndavan, USA : 24 Hour Kirtan June 20th 2009

June 20th 2009

The event we’ve all been waiting for. The third annual 24 Hour Kirtan in New Vrindaban. This year promises to be even bigger and better than before.

What is the 24 Hour Kirtan Festival?

The New Vrindaban 24 Hour Kirtan Festival started in 2007. The idea is to chant the Hare Krishna Mahamantra continuously for 24 hours, as is done in Vrindavan India 365 days a year. Featuring some of the world’s most respected Bhakti chanters, the festival is open to all.

Kirtans start at 8 AM Saturday the 20th and end 8 AM Sunday the 21st.

Who’s Singing?

Click here for the Who’s Who and info on registering plus recordings of previous years’ kirtans.

by mg at May 21, 2009 11:13 AM

Sita-pati dasa, AU : Every Town and Village Report: "Brisbane's Friendliest Suburb"

I nominate Fig Tree Pocket as Brisbane's friendliest suburb.

After doing harinam in 58 different suburbs of Brisbane we're starting to build up a picture of the city and its different environments. It amazing how distinct even neighbouring suburbs can be, what to speak of suburbs separated by distance and geographical features.

Fig Tree Pocket is perhaps unique. A 15 minute drive from downtown, it sits at the end of a long road through pastures housing horses and sheep. Bounded on three sides by the Brisbane River and on the fourth by the pastures it is completely geographically isolated from neighbouring suburbs.

The suburb is arranged around a huge central park. The houses are huge mansions. As we did harinam we passed many families walking or playing in the street. As well as the central park (Biambi Yumba Park), which you can see in the map below, there was another park with a playground (Mandalay Park), and also a fenced area for dogs to run off leash.


View Larger Map

I talked with one lady who passed us and asked: "What are you doing?" with genuine curiosity and none of the hostility or fear that we often encounter. I asked her why the suburb was so friendly. She didn't really seem to know.

I think it's because of the natural surroundings, the geographical isolation, the stable financial nature of the residents, and the ability to generate a small community with strong relationships, rather than the large pseudo-communities with weak or disconnected relationships that typify the endlessly merged suburbs of modern metropoli.

Here's the ultimate testament to the nature of the neighbourhood and the people who live there: not a single dog barked at us while we were there.

If you've done harinam through suburbs before you'll understand the incredible significance of that.


The local notice board as you drive into the suburb

Here's a video:


by sitapati at May 21, 2009 10:50 AM

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

HG Narasingha Gurudas (a.k.a Martin Lyons) was gracious enough to share with us a few excerpts from his upcoming book, in which he plans to establish the Krsna Conscious positions of evolution and creation in opposition to some of the fallacious dogmas of modern religion and science.

Here he shares his third and final article, on "The Dawkins Delusion"

Sixteenth Argument: The Dawkins Delusion

‘Natural Selection’ purports to explain that the reason for any species’ existence is that it has somehow been endowed with particular features that favor its survival. The immediate problem with advancing such an ‘explanation’ is that it takes for granted the urge for survival itself. This implies that some original self-aware something-or-other had an initial intention or commitment to survival along with the intelligence and ability to set into motion various processes to promote the same.

It matters little whether we believe such original self-awareness first arose in genetic material or is ever-present in a divine overseer. What matters is that evolutionary theory neither honestly acknowledges nor begins to account for the original consciousness that must precede any notion of survival. And herein lays the heart of the problem with this entire theory: it utterly fails to explain the basic nature of consciousness or of ‘self,’ and hence also such concepts as self-awareness, self-preservation and so on.

Evolutionists assume that somehow or other consciousness developed from matter, that it’s perhaps some kind of brain function. One problem with this idea is that there is nothing stable or constant about our material identities. What I mean by this is that the very nature of both our bodies and minds is that they are constantly changing, in every sense.

From the time of conception to the time of death, our bodies are changing in every detail. Physically speaking, we have so many bodies in this very life: consider how different the body of a newborn is from the body of a fully developed adult. Nor are the changes merely external, or in appearance only. The physical reality is that as time goes on every cell is being replaced. Not only are cells dying and being replaced, as for example with our skin cells; but during their lives they are constantly ingesting food, oxygen and so on in order to replenish their own substance and to fuel their activities, while simultaneously expelling or excreting old worn-out cellular material and waste. So on the one hand, our physical identities are constantly changing: as you read this, you might consider that the molecular make-up of your body today is entirely distinct from that of your body as a newborn. And yet, when a mother sees her fully adult child, she knows it is the same person as the one she gave birth to, even though that body has changed n every regard. The question is, what is it that has remained the same?

Let’s take this one step further. When a person dies, is the mother consoled because she can still see the body of her child? Or does she lament that now her baby has gone? If we say that consciousness, or sense of self, is simply a product of the material ingredients of the body, how do we explain death; and how do we explain this simple awareness that although the body is lying there in front of us, we know that the person we knew and loved is ‘gone.’

If we think about this, we can understand that our taking the body to be the source of consciousness is actually a conflation of two entirely distinct phenomena. The fundamental nature of the body is that it is in a constant state of flux; whereas the fundamental nature of consciousness, of our sense of individual self, is that it is unchanging.

It is true that whatever we may happen to identify ourselves with at any moment is always changing. At one moment I may feel like this, and then at the next I may feel like that. So that we say, “I am” cold or warm, happy or sad. Our moods, desires, activities and social roles are always shifting. At one point in our lives we may consider ourselves as young children who are looking forward to becoming vets or train-drivers or whatever, happy to know ourselves as the protected children of our parents; then at another we may experience ourselves as anxious parents and spouses concerned about our jobs or our own children; and perhaps later on we know ourselves as active widowed retirees … and so on. But behind all such changes in the scenery of our physical, emotional, mental and social circumstances, we retain the same sense of individual self-awareness.

I never become you or anyone else; hence the mother can recognize her child so many years later. I am always ‘me,’ whatever that may be. And it is this constant sense of self that serves as the link between all our experiences and memories and hopes. Our entire sense of identity can only exist by virtue of this fact: that our fundamental nature is to be unchanging. Yet everything we know is ever-shifting: this is the essential difference between matter and self.

We are mostly quite unaware of this, so that we are continually mis-identifying our essential self, which we refer to as “I,” with this ever-shifting external environment: with what we are in fact not. Throughout our entire lives we are confused about our actual identities as individual selves. We believe that we are the body and associated mind; so that whatever we say about ourselves refers simply to what race or gender or country or religious/political group we may have been born into, or to whatever our body-minds may be doing or feeling/thinking/wanting in the moment. Yet nearly every detail can change from one moment to the next. Even if we say, that may be so, but at the heart of it all, I am still a human being, i.e. I am still this body, the question remains: then which body am I? Because this life is a journey through so many changes of body, from birth through youth and adult-hood to old age. The fact is, as can be recognized by objective reasoning, that we have this body, this mind; but that is a very different state of affairs to actually being such. Actually, we don’t know who, or what, we fundamentally are.

As Nobel Prize-winning physiologist Albert Szent-Gyorgyi wrote in his ‘Personal Reminiscences’: “In my hunt for the secret of life, I started my research in histology. Unsatisfied by the information that cellular morphology could give me about life, I turned to physiology. Finding physiology too complicated I turned to bacteriology. But bacteria were even too complex, so I descended to the molecular level, studying chemistry and physical chemistry. After twenty years’ work, I was led to conclude that to understand life we have to descend to the electronic level, and to the world of wave mechanics. But electrons are just electrons, and have no life at all. Evidently along the way I lost life; it had run out between my fingers.”

In the words of Max Planck, the acclaimed physicist and founder of Quantum Theory: “It is a fact that there is a point, one single point in the immeasurable expanse of mind and matter, where science and therefore every causal method of research is inapplicable, not only on practical grounds, but also on logical grounds, and will always remain inapplicable. This is the point of (our) individual awareness” (from Where Is Science Going?). Indeed Thomas Huxley, Darwin’s celebrated ‘bulldog,’ had many years earlier admitted that There is a third thing in the universe, to wit, consciousness, which I cannot see to be matter or force.”


. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Consider the following. It goes without saying that evolutionary theory is meant as a way to explain and understand who we are and how and why we happen to be here. Yet it is predicated upon the fundamental misidentification of the self with the body. Evolutionary theory assumes that we are these bodies and that we are who we are because we (i.e. these human forms) have evolved from simpler or lower bodily forms. That is to say, the entire theory is based in ignorance, since the basic fact is that we are not these bodies.

The body is comprised of inanimate matter that lacks any consciousness or reason of its own to then organize itself into complex co-ordinated structures. Just like a car has no reason of its own to drive, or even to exist. Its structure is not in fact given by the metal and rubber and so on of which it is composed, but by its designer and builder, who is possessed of life and consciousness. Nor does it drive itself, but it is driven by the living person at the wheel; and should such a person abandon it altogether, it has no consciousness of its own to care whether all there is for it to do now is to sit and rust.

The conclusion is that matter is given structure and purpose and meaning by consciousness – which is of course quite opposite to the conclusion of the materialistic scientists (i.e. those scientists who do not give credence to anything other than matter/energy) who claim that over time matter somehow or other produces or evolves consciousness. We have no experience of this anywhere, while we see over and over that matter is gathered and organized by conscious living beings. Think of how an orange tree takes in water and basic ingredients from the soil and then re-organizes those into all the very complex structures and chemicals that make up the orange. Similarly we might take some bricks and build a house – on their own the bricks have no inclination to arrange themselves so as to form such a thing. The overall function and information content of the house as a single total structure is far greater than that of all the bricks added together as single unrelated units. Matter does not organize itself into more complex unified structures: this is entirely in keeping with information theory, which tells us that something of low information content cannot produce something of higher information content. It is simply irrational to claim that ‘somehow or other, over time’ matter produced consciousness and life. Rather, it is consciousness and life that composes matter.

As the driver is to the car, so are we to these bodies: we are the animating presence that lends the body form and function and direction, just as a body lends shape and movement to the clothes it wears, which are otherwise just simply so much crumpled fabric on the floor. At the time of death, when we quit this body, it again returns to such a ‘crumpled,’ or inert, state. In the absence of the composer, de-composition sets in. The composer is the consciousness that gathers and holds so much complexity of structure and function that is otherwise alien (i.e. of vastly greater information content) to the material particles the bodily structure is composed of. The abandoned body, just like an abandoned house or car, simply decays and dissolves back into its simpler constituent elements.

The rational and objective conclusion is clear: it is the presence of consciousness, or life, that gives matter complexity of structure and function; and in the absence of such consciousness, the complex machinery integral to living bodies breaks down. It is not that complexity (i.e. life) ‘evolves’ from simple matter; but that consciousness (Huxley’s “third thing in the universe”), being superior to dull matter, organizes matter to suit its purposes.

The question ‘where did we come from?’ is not suitably asked or answered in terms of ‘the origin of the species.’ Rather, we need to ask what and who we are, as something entirely distinct from these bodies; and why our consciousness is seemingly obliged to identify with such temporary and flimsy structures, necessarily subject to old age, disease and death. These bodies are impermanent; but that is not natural to us – as long as we can remember, we have always been, and we have always been ourselves, unchanging in our fundamental sense of identity. We are timeless; we are now; we simply and purely are.

Aging and death are unnatural to us, and we are frustrated that such must befall us. Therefore we unconsciously project this inner hankering for our own nature onto our external material environments: we try to stem time’s inexorable wearing down and aging of all that we know by so many arrangements, like photograph albums and plastic surgery and insurance. We are hankering for security and permanence, for freedom from all the threats and anxieties that are intrinsic to everything that is material and thus temporary in nature. In the same way, a fish out of water hankers simply to return to its own atmosphere; no amount of luxury outside the water can satisfy it.

The driver of a car cannot be satisfied by any amount of attention and care given solely to his vehicle, for s/he has her/his own needs and desires. Similarly the indwelling life or consciousness within this bodily vehicle cannot be satisfied by any material situation; but because we are unaware that there is a self that is other than this body, we imagine that the reason for our dissatisfaction is that we have not yet achieved a fully suitable set of material circumstances, and all our energy is spent in trying to adjust those in this way and then in that.

Meanwhile, regardless of all our efforts to take nice care of this body and to secure our situation here, it must ultimately fail us, and we are forced to abandon it and to leave everything connected to it behind: all our property, our relatives and friends, our reputation, everything. And then what will we have and where will be? If we can understand that we are something other than this ever-changing bodily situation, something unchanging, that is able to observe all the changing experiences and thoughts that are occurring to this body and mind, and that is granting a sense of continuity to all those … then we can ask who am I, why am I here, where have I come from, where am I going to? If we are not these bodies, then what are birth and death? Instead of marking our coming into and then going out of existence, they but mark our taking possession of and then quitting this one temporary vehicle. This life is not the whole play; it is but a single scene, where we are walking out onto its stage at birth and then back off again at death. So what is going on off-stage? What is our existence outside of this single scene on the stage of this world? Where was I before this birth, where will I be after this death? These are suitable questions for the discriminating intelligence afforded by this human form of life: for we can distinguish between our bodies and our indwelling conscious selves, between mere physical energy and Huxley’s “third thing.”

Yet if we fail to make this most basic and essential distinction, then all our enquiries into our nature and origins and fulfillment are in fact misdirected, and all our answers deluded. On the very first page of the preface to his book, ‘The God Delusion,’ Professor Dawkins claims that his book “is intended to raise consciousness.” This is certainly the most noble and generous of goals; but if he is unaware of what the consciousness is, that it is something entirely distinct from its corporeal surroundings, then what actual substance is behind his claim? Rather, in the name of fostering enlightenment, he is but projecting his own delusions, his own unconscious misidentification of his unchanging self with his temporary bodily and mental circumstances.

He further declares that “Human thoughts and emotions emerge from exceedingly complex interconnections of physical entities within the brain,” and that there is “no soul that outlasts the body” (The God Delusion, p.14). In this way he is like a simple uneducated or uncivilized person who sees a television for the first time, and concludes that there must be a person trapped inside the television who is responsible for the sounds and images coming from it. He cannot understand that the television is not the source of such images, but is merely a lifeless receiver, and that they are coming from somewhere else entirely. The living self or soul is the actual source of consciousness, which is the signal of life; whereas the body/mind/brain is merely the receiver. So that, to again quote Nobel-laureate Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, who studied every pertinent scientific discipline to discover the secret of life: “along the way I lost life; it had run out between my fingers.” And Huxley, celebrated as Darwin’s bulldog for his powerful commitment to spreading the new doctrine of evolution: There is a third thing in the universe, to wit, consciousness, which I cannot see to be matter or force.” This Dawkins does not understand. Instead, he is quite deluded regarding his own most essential identity; and since all thoughts and ideas proceed outwards from the basic sense of self, then all of those are necessarily compromised by such basic self-ignorance, just as someone wearing pink lenses must, and erroneously, see and describe everything as being pink.

Thus for good reason the philosophers of old charged us to “First, know thyself.” For if we are ignorant in this, the very first line of all our observations, inquiries and speculations, then all our subsequent understandings are compromised by that very fundamental ignorance, however scientific-sounding they may be.

by Club 108 (noreply@blogger.com) at May 21, 2009 08:00 AM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : Greater Beings

Rationalists tend to think that human beings represent the pinnacle of life. Srila Prabhupada compares us to ants. (From a lecture on Srimad Bhagavatam, 1.3.16 on September 21, 1972 in Los Angeles):

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by Mukunda Goswami at May 21, 2009 07:00 AM

ISKCON Melbourne, AU : Lord Jagannath Rathayatra in Canberra, May 30

The devotees of ISKCON Canberra invite everyone to celebrate Lord Jagannatha Rathayatra on Saturday May 30th, starting at 10:30am. This year the festival will be blessed by the kind association of His Holiness Prabhavisnu Swami and outstation devotees, who will be participating in this Maha-Harinam for the pleasure of the Lord. A palanquin will carry Their Lordships Sri Sri Jagannatha, Baladeva and Subhadra through the streets of Canberra City.

09CanberraRath
Rathayatra Program


Start time: 10:30am. from Hare Krishna Temple, 1 Quick St, Ainslie.

Rathayatra route: Hare Krishna Temple, Quick St., Limestone Ave., Ainslie Ave., Glebe Park to City Walk, then return to Hare Krishna Temple

Expected finish time: 1.30pm. at the Temple

Prasadam: 1.30pm. at the temple

Contact: Hare Krishna Temple on 6262-6208 or 0404-486-746 or iskcon@harekrishnacanberra.com

by Rasanandini at May 21, 2009 06:28 AM

Manorama dasa : New Vrindaban videó 4

New Vrindaban egyik legkülönlegesebb látványossága a Prabhupada’s Palace of Gold, ami egy Srila Prabhupadanak állított emlékmű. Ez az egyetlen olyan emlékmű, amit Srila Prabhupadának állítottak és amit személyesen is látott. Akkor még zajlottak az építkezések, így a végső formájában személyesen már nem láthatta. Személyes utasításokat is adott az építkezés során.
Kellemes virtuális barangolást! :)

by Mrd at May 21, 2009 06:11 AM

HH. Satsvarupa das Goswami : SDGonline – Bhajana Kutir #77

Satsvarupa dasa Goswami - May 20, 2:32 A.M.

I woke up at 9:30 P.M. with a headache, took some medicine and got back to sleep. I arose from bed at 2:33 A.M. and called Narayana.

Early-morning japa log

I was drowsy while chanting, and I had trouble working my finger on the clicker. I chanted only five rounds. The chanting was mostly in the mind. Not a very good day.

Japa essay

A young man wrote me to ask a question about japa. His question was, “I have go to the office on a bike. It takes two hours, so can we chant on bicycle by counting on hands or beads?” I wrote him back that his question was a coincidence in my own life. I told him I had just fallen from a bicycle and broke my collarbone. My arm was in a sling, and I cannot write or eat with my right hand. My shoulder is painful. The healing period is indeterminate. So from my own subjective experience, I would never chant japa while riding a bicycle, either with beads or with hand. There are two reasons for this. One is that it requires concentration to ride a bicycle in traffic, and chanting while riding is dangerous. The second reason is that, because it requires concentration to ride a bicycle, it is not possible to properly pay attention to the holy names at the same time. He obviously finds it convenient to use the two hours for chanting, but that convenience is counterproductive because of the danger and the lack of attention to the holy name. So I recommended that he find another time to chant his sixteen rounds.

Sad sack, poor chanting.
When will I be delivered?
It’s not all my fault,
it’s medicines and sleeplessness.
Now I’ll have to make it up.
Be brave and forthright.
Take your shower, stay wide awake
and go to the beach. Chant rapid rounds.
I’m ashamed before our Lord,
I’m ashamed before the names,
but He is kind. He will give me
another chance.

6:30 A.M.

On our first lap in the parking lot, I told Narayana I had three things wrong with me: My lower back hurts, my ankle hurts, and my legs are rubbery below the knees. All this makes it very hard for me to walk. He suggested three remedies. For the lower back, I could wear a lumbar belt that he and Baladeva wear; for the rubbery legs, we can borrow Sastra’s stationary bicycle and exercise in the yellow submarine; and for the ankle, I could try an ankle brace. Narayana gave an ironic, not-unsympathetic laugh. “These bodies,” he muttered. I added, “And what to speak of my shoulder and headaches.” He said, “And still we try to enjoy them.” I only walked one lap and then got back into the car.

I am behind on my rounds. It looks like it is turning into a lovely day. The sun is burning bright, and the water is calm, although the morning is still chilly. The motel had a sign, “Summer Is Coming,” but they are definitely pushing it. It was forty-five degrees.

I want to keep my enthusiasm for the prose poems, even though they are far out. I don’t want to quit. Although the jazz element may raise eyebrows, I like the writing. I see a connection between improvisation and spontaneous Krishna consciousness. I like it better than the formal essays. And so I take a chance. I think my main bodily problem is lack of exercise, which I can’t do because almost any movement involves moving the right side, which I can’t do because of the fractured shoulder. I sit in the chair most of the day, and I can’t even dress myself. Writing the journal keeps me alive. My medicines make me sleepy. All this will be cleared up in a few months, when the broken collarbone fuses. I just have to be patient, and I think I am doing a pretty good job at it. Talks with Narayana and Dattatreya are refreshing, but most important is the solitary writing. My chanting is in a slump, but not so terrible. That too will improve when my shoulder heals. I have plenty to be thankful for, and maybe I should write a prayer of gratitude to Krishna today.

“Take Five.” Take a break. Take five. Paul Desmond wrote this with the Dave Brubeck Quartet. Take a little break from your regular work. In Vaikuntha, it’s one big break. There are no hierarchies. Everyone’s enjoying. You don’t have a five-minute coffee break and then go back to the slave mines. In jazz, he envisions a five-minute break as better than nothing. And it is very pleasant, too. Take five, then back to work. It’s very pleasant, this break around the water cooler, talking with your friends. It’s a great relief. But if you could have it without limit, just imagine how wonderful that would be. Take five, compared to take forever. Take five is nice for workers. Rich men’s sons don’t work. For them, even work is play. The cowherd boys never take five. They’re always with the cows, and they always love to be with them.But workers love to gather around Paul Desmond and hear his sweet melodies. It gives them great relief, so don’t put it down. It’s the best we’ve got in this world. A little vacation. A break from the grind.

“Blue Rondo a la Turk.” This is repetitious, the piano again and again, the horn again and again in a whirling dervish kind of dance. Round and round they dance. Getting blushed in their faces, boys and girls dancing hand in hand. Reminds you of the rasa dance. But it’s a short thing, not like Krishna’s dance, which takes place for a night of Brahma. Dave Brubeck doesn’t have such stamina, nor do the commercial powers allow him to play so long. Deepy dee deepy dee deepy dee deepy dee, again and again. The Turkish swirl, the Sufi swirl, the American jazz touch. They break out of the Sufi swirl for awhile and play it in regular 4/4 jazz time. That’s nice, too. Paul Desmond with wonderful improvisation, as only he can do. Miles Davis said to Dave Brubeck, “You swing, but your band is square.” What a nasty remark. How could anyone say that about Paul Desmond? Cannonball Adderly said he loved Paul Desmond and said his music was sublime. “Blue Rondo a la Turk.” If anyone was square, it was Brubeck, compared to Desmond, but they’re both fine. Brubeck with his classical touch, learned from a classical maestro from whom he took lessons. Dalias Mileau. After about four minutes of relaxed American jazz, they wind themselves up again into the “Blue Rondo a la Turk,” and the piano goes repetitious, and the wild dance in the marketplace. Quite a mixture, “Blue Rondo a la Turk.”

“Unsquare Dance.” The first time I went on a date with a girl, I was about eleven or twelve years old. Her name was Barbara Begley. It was in a town next to our town of Great Kills, a town called Eltingville. About forty very young kids assembled before a fiddler, who taught us how to go loop-de-loop and loop-de-la. It was a good learning experience. And although it wasn’t sexual, I admit it was a little exciting to be dancing with a girl all night. We danced in our jeans. My father drove me there in a car. Barbara Begley’s father drove her there in a car, too, and when it was over, our fathers drove us home. That was m first date. Krishna doesn’t dance square dances. He dances in a mandala, in a circle called the rasa dance. And it’s certainly not square. This dance is called “Unsquare Dance,” but I believe it’s a little square. Anyway, I like to remember my first date, which happened before I even reached puberty, when I sweated up and danced with Barbara Begley to the fiddler, who called out the dances, and we little kids went wild.

“Out of Nowhere.” This is a famous jazz tune. Out of nowhere. What does it mean? You have to come from somewhere, don’t you? We all come out of our mother’s womb. We all come from our past karma. Life isn’t created from nothing. We’re eternal souls, and we take new bodies. But I’m willing to swing with the idea in a musical kind of way. The tune is out of nowhere. It just comes sailing in. And Paul Desmond definitely comes out of nowhere. He’s improvisations, his alto sax is heavenly and full of gay improvisations. He’s unique. I believe he felt a bit envious of getting second billing behind Dave Brubeck. He wrote a book called A Quartet Is Made of Four, or something like that. Certainly he shouldn’t have been made secondary to Brubeck. He’s as much a part of this quartet as Brubeck is. He often carries it himself. Does Krishna come out of nowhere? He comes from Himself. He has no origin. He’s svarat. He’s not created out of matter or out of anything. He exists eternally. Not only Krishna but all His parts and parcels come out of nowhere. They always exist. I don’t know what theological point the tune is trying to make. Nothing as profound as that, I suppose, just trying to say that the music is not regimented. It just comes out the closet door, beginning with improvisation. Dave Brubeck is playing his pseudo-classical, swinging jazz. It’s nice. He’s no Bud Powell, but he plays his own white man’s music and has millions of fans, and it’s genuine. Very popular. He lasted for many years. People kept coming to hear him. Out of nowhere, the duo plays together, weaving their music, Desmond and Brubeck. They came in the ‘50s out of nowhere, something unique.

“Somewhere.” This is the beautiful tune that ends West Side Story, written by Leonard Bernstein and Steven Sondheim. Somewhere there’s a place for us. It’s after the tragedy of Romeo and Juliet. It’s an epilogue song that says that there is a place for them somewhere. A place where they can go and live forever and be in love. And it’s true, there is such a place. So this tune has a touch of the spiritual, referring to the spiritual world. Somewhere there is a place where you and I can be together and not suffer. Come, take my hand and I’ll take you there. Somewhere, somehow, some place. Brubeck breaks the original sweet melody, and Desmond turns it into his sensitive improvisation off the tune, but with the same mood. There is a place somewhere, where there’s no tragedy of gang wars and West Side story, where there’s no clash between ethnic groups, the Puerto Ricans and the Italians. There is a place where everyone mixes and everyone is harmonious. Some cowherd boys are yellow, some are green. Sometimes they tease each other, but everything is actually harmonious. Even the elderly gopis sometimes complain about Krishna, but it’s all in love. Nobody can dislike Krishna when they look at His face, His innocent face. He can’t do anything wrong. Somewhere there’s a place like that. It’s called Vraja. Come with me, take my hand and I’ll take you there. Somewhere, some place with Krishna and Radha.

“They’ll Be Some Changes Made.” This is a quick song, two minutes long, with Jimmy Rushing singing. Nothing about me is going to be the same. He’s going to change his number. Nobody loves you when you’re old and gray, they’ll be some changes made today. They’ll be some changes made. He’s playing with Dave Brubeck. Unusual. But it’s an illusion. It’s just a good-time song. Desmond makes it not illusion but real improvisation, real music, but to think that they’ll be a change in the weather, a change in the sea. From now on they’ll be a change in me. My walk will be different, my talk and my name. Nothing about me’s going to be the same. I’m sorry, friends, it can’t be that way. The changes have to come from old age to death. They’ll be some changes made, indeed, into the next body

10:00 A.M.

My Dear Lord Krishna...

I wish to make a prayer of gratitude to You. I can try to enumerate the many things that I am thankful for, but it might be better to first make one big expression of gratitude for everything You have done for me. Despite the many sinful and offensive acts I have committed in innumerable lifetimes, You have now placed me in a human form of life, where I have the great advantage of comprehending God consciousness and acting to please You. This facility is not available in animal forms of life, so I thank You for placing me as a civilized human being. Moreover, I am a human being who is connected to a great spiritual master, His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada. Provided I do not commit the mad elephant offense of disobeying my spiritual master, I am well situated in Krishna’s eyes for advancement on the path back to Godhead. I know I have committed offenses to my spiritual master, but I feel I am now situated through remorse and through his forgiveness in a position where he accepts me again as his sisya or disciple, a human being with a loyal link to his spiritual master. I’m very grateful to You; I’m well provided for. I thank You for this from the bottom of my heart. I know it is my greatest fortune, and I thank You for it. Within this comprehensive gratitude comes my thanks for all the instructions and orders my guru has given me, such as the injunctions to follow the four rules to avoid sinful activity and the positive injunction to chant sixteen rounds a day of the the Hare Krishna mantra. By carrying these out I become better situated than any yogi or jnani or scholar. By following the orders of the spiritual master, I am saved from the greatest danger of repeated birth and death in the material world. I thank You for introducing me to the Bhagavad-gita, wherein You give instructions in all aspects of spiritual life, culminating in bhakti, or surrender to You. In the Srimad-Bhagavatam, You give me the nectar of Your pastimes in Your many incarnations in delightful narrations that I can read my whole life through without getting bored. By each new reading of Srimad-Bhagavatam, I can gain more insight and pleasure into this nectarean and authoritative information about You, the Personality of Godhead, and Your dear associates in the spiritual world. Just by hearing and enjoying Your pastimes, I can become qualified to join You in the spiritual world for eternal pastimes with Your dearmost associate.

These are not false promises but genuine gifts. I know these gifts to be true because You have spoken them to me through Your own words and through the words of Your authorized representatives. I realize these prayers of thanks are feeble and not offered with deep realization. But I beg You to accept them as sincere. I do recognize You as my greatest benefactor, and I can honestly say that I owe all gratitude to You. In reciprocation, I wish to offer You all my love and service. I realize, however, that I cannot do this unless You empower me to show my gratitude. And so I come before You today with a straw in my teeth, asking You to please accept my gratitude for all You have given me.

from the yellow submarine, my bhajana kutir #77→

by (SDG) at May 21, 2009 02:42 AM

H.G. Sankarshan das Adhikari, USA : Thursday 21 May 2009--Mr. Ehrman is an Err Man

A Christian fundamentalist named Bart Ehrman became an agnostic, one who maintains a continuing doubt about the existence of God, when he could not answer this question: How could there be a God when there is so much suffering in the world? It's too bad that he has not studied .......................... ================================================================== Thought...

by course@ultimateselfrealization.com at May 21, 2009 02:30 AM

Sita-pati dasa, AU : A hacker on the internal network

My Internet bandwidth usage has been going through the roof lately, with daily downloads frequently around 1GB and spiking at 3.5GB.

I've been trying to pin point the cause on my network.

At home we have three Linux machines, two running Fedora, one running Ubuntu. We have two Macs, an iPod, an iPhone, and a Windows machine. Not all of those are physical machines - the Windows and one of the Fedora machines is the same machine, dual-booting.

As well, on the network we have a wireless router, a VOIP box for our phone, and an Airport Express to provide music from iTunes during yoga and dinner. The whole thing is connected to the Internet via a cable modem.

The first thing I thought of was someone leeching our connection by connecting to our wireless access point. I had been running it with no security since Dave Stringer was here. It was just easier to switch it off to let him use it, and I hadn't reconfigured it.

So I checked to see what MAC addresses were associated to the AP, and turned hardware MAC filtering back on. I couldn't see any unknown or unexpected MACs, and turning the hardware MAC filter back on didn't change things. Someone impersonating the MAC address of one of our devices, for example pretending to by my phone while it's at work with me, is possible, but unlikely. The range of the wireless means that it would have to be one of our immediate neighbours too, which makes such a sophisticated attack even less likely.

I tried switching things off and watching my ISP's Daily Usage to figure out which of the devices was the cause. The recent addition to the network is the Airport Express, so I theorized that maybe the AirTunes (music played wirelessly from iTunes over speakers connected to the Airport Express) was routing out over the Internet to go from the studio to the dining room. Farfetched, but possible.

Fault tree diagnosis works by eliminating variables down to a single one that can be examined in isolation. This can lead to inability to reproduce the problem if it's caused by the interaction of several factors. If this is the case then you begin to construct scenarios systematically with all possible combinations of two factors, then three, and so on, until you can reliably reproduce the problem with the minimum number of factors, which then become your prime suspects.

It was hard to discern a pattern. It seemed to be something like a background process running or a misbehaving piece of hardware, because it was both novel and consistent, but whenever I tried to eliminate variables to isolate it, it would elude my net. By a gradual and frustrating process of elimination (turning everything off bar one thing each day) I thought it might be the VOIP box.

To confirm this before approaching the VOIP provider I configured my Ubuntu laptop as a router. In this scenario the wireless interface is associated with the house wireless AP and provides connection to the Internet. The ethernet interface is given a static address, the laptop runs a dhcp server which serves a private network on that port, kernel ip forwarding is enabled and iptables is configured to forward packets between the ethernet and wireless interfaces and masquerade the private network on the ethernet port, providing NAT.

[Getting this to work required some reading and experimentation, but it was quite a small number of steps to accomplish once I found the right ones. I'll do another post and link it to this one with specific steps.]

Plugging the VOIP box into the ethernet port on the Ubuntu machine then causes all traffic between the Internet and the VOIP box to flow through the Ubuntu machine, where it can be observed and analyzed. I used wireshark to troubleshoot it while I set it up, and then iftop to do the actual analysis.

After running this for a day the VOIP box had downloaded 2MB, which disproved this hypothesis.

I also noted that the ISP Daily Usage page updated semi-randomly, and not hourly as they claimed. This makes it a little more challenging.

With my Ubuntu laptop configured as a sniffing router I can interpose it between any of the machines with an ethernet interface and the internet. This means I can't use it to analyze the iPhone or iPod, or several machines at once. If it had two ethernet interfaces I could put it between the wireless router and the cable modem, in which case I could analyze all the network traffic of all devices at once.

A friend at work loaned me a USB ethernet adapter today, so I'm going to configure that tonight and put my analyzer on the whole network, using either bandwidthd or iptables to analyze the traffic by host.

In the meantime, last night I connected my analyzer to the ibook which Prahlad uses. He plays with Logic Pro on it and watches YouTube videos. I disallowed the ibook's MAC address on the wireless router, then restarted it connected to the analyzer, with the Airport disabled. This meant all traffic between the ibook and the Internet was going out the ibook ethernet, into the Ubuntu machine's ethernet, through the Ubuntu kernel, out the Ubuntu wireless interface, into the wireless AP, from there to the cable modem and thence to the youtube, and vice versa.

I watched Prahlad for a while as he watched Chip and Dale Rescue Rangers. After some time he had used 130MB. I went downstairs and did some work on Logic Pro, then came back up to check how it was going. Surprisingly, the analyzer read 136MB. For a second I was perplexed. Then I looked at the ibook and discovered that Prahlad had reconfigured it to route the traffic around the analyzer.

I checked the wireless router, and I had disabled the wrong MAC address, allowing Prahlad to reassociate the ibook and route his youtube traffic around my analyzer.

When I asked him if he had done that he first of all gave me a "who me?" look and said: "Noooo...". After a cocked eyebrow in his direction and a few seconds thought he realized that this story wasn't going to fly. "Yes, I did," he confessed. "Why did you do that?" I asked him. "Because I thought the Internet wasn't going to work," was his reply.

That was his story and he was sticking to it. After ten or fifteen minutes of cajoling I had him on the ropes. "Look, I know why you did it," I told him. "So why don't you just admit it? You're trying to stop me from analyzing your bandwidth usage."

After witnessing his technological savvy, resourcefulness, and cunning, I am left with the distinct impression that my hard to pin down bandwidth usage issue is actually due to a hacker on the internal network, adaptive and elusive, listening to me describe the problem I'm trying to track and the means I'm using to do it and changing his strategy to match.

Once I get the network analyzer between the wireless router and the cable modem I'll definitely know what's going on, but I think I just woke up to the fact that I'm actually in an arms race that will continue to escalate for a number of years...

Prahlad's 7th birthday is in three weeks. Every year in the month before his birthday he seems to go through some change to the next stage of his development, or I become aware of it.

by sitapati at May 21, 2009 01:14 AM

Sastra Dana, San Diego, USA : 16Rounds At Chronic Tattoo

Bhakta Marc Merchant tells us of the success of our 16Rounds newspaper at the Chronic Tattoo parlor, a place where he works as one of the artists.

marc-merchant

by Mahat at May 21, 2009 12:02 AM

May 20, 2009

Sita-pati dasa, AU : Brisbane Water Shortage Officially Over

24 hours of rain yesterday put 8 1/2 months supply of water into Brisbane's dams [Courier Mail], as well as causing the worst flooding since the epic 1974 megaflood.

Water shortage has characterized life in Brisbane for the past four years.

A man was killed at his desk in a high rise in nearby Surfers Paradise by a flying metal pole as debris, including barbecues, was flung from roofs and balconies by gusting 120km/hr winds [Courier Mail].

In other, less dramatic news, I got wet walking from the car to my office. Luckily we live in Red Hill (not by accident), so we are spared the flooding of the low lying areas near the Brisbane River, which runs through the center of Brisbane.

by sitapati at May 20, 2009 11:58 PM

1969 May 20: "I understand he has left and there is no grudge. I hope in the association of the devotees, he will feel jolly, and his moroseness will be cleared off. I do not think living alone will be very good for you."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1969

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 20, 2009 11:01 PM

1972 May 20: "So we must take every precaution. It is not good if small numbers of devotees open a center and then fall away. Association is the most important thing. In future at least ten or twelve men must open a center."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 20, 2009 10:59 PM

1972 May 20: "If children are allowed to play just like Krishna with his cowherd friends, then little ABC, then see deity, arati, and then take little prasadam. In this way our children should be trained."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 20, 2009 10:58 PM

1975 May 20: "I am very glad to hear that you are keeping yourself busy preaching. Don't become a dead man. Always preach."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1975

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 20, 2009 10:58 PM

1970 May 20: "Now take this opportunity to learn how to practically prosecute Krsna Consciousness Movement so that you may start new centers for expanding our program to every nook and corner, village and city. This is our business."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1970

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 20, 2009 10:55 PM

1972 May 20: "You are all very enthusiastic so when I come I shall give you some hints how to distribute books. But I do not like to stay in any hotel. I shall stay in my room above the temple on the first floor."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 20, 2009 10:46 PM

1973 May 20: "Please take this Krsna Consciousness Movement very seriously. It is a great opportunity to become free once and for all from the clutches of Maya. Maya is very strong, but by taking shelter of Krsna, Maya cannot reach us."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1973

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 20, 2009 10:43 PM

1975 May 20: "I received your Hindi newspaper, Vraja-Garima, but unfortunately, I don't see anything written about Brajendra-nandana, Krishna. So far we are concerned, we are preaching the glories of Krishna throughout the world, to glorify Brajendra-nandana Hari."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1975

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at May 20, 2009 10:41 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1973 May 20: "Please take this Krsna Consciousness Movement very seriously. It is a great opportunity to become free once and for all from the clutches of Maya. Maya is very strong, but by taking shelter of Krsna, Maya cannot reach us."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1973

May 20, 2009 10:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1975 May 20: "I am very glad to hear that you are keeping yourself busy preaching. Don't become a dead man. Always preach."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1975

May 20, 2009 10:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1975 May 20: "I received your Hindi newspaper, Vraja-Garima, but unfortunately, I don't see anything written about Brajendra-nandana, Krishna. So far we are concerned, we are preaching the glories of Krishna throughout the world, to glorify Brajendra-nandana Hari."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1975

May 20, 2009 10:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1969 May 20: "I understand he has left and there is no grudge. I hope in the association of the devotees, he will feel jolly, and his moroseness will be cleared off. I do not think living alone will be very good for you."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1969

May 20, 2009 10:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1970 May 20: "Now take this opportunity to learn how to practically prosecute Krsna Consciousness Movement so that you may start new centers for expanding our program to every nook and corner, village and city. This is our business."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1970

May 20, 2009 10:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 May 20: "You are all very enthusiastic so when I come I shall give you some hints how to distribute books. But I do not like to stay in any hotel. I shall stay in my room above the temple on the first floor."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

May 20, 2009 10:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 May 20: "So we must take every precaution. It is not good if small numbers of devotees open a center and then fall away. Association is the most important thing. In future at least ten or twelve men must open a center."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

May 20, 2009 10:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 May 20: "If children are allowed to play just like Krishna with his cowherd friends, then little ABC, then see deity, arati, and then take little prasadam. In this way our children should be trained."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

May 20, 2009 10:20 PM

Kurma dasa, AU : Trekking with Kurma

Can you imagine me in khaki shorts, knee-length army socks, hiking boots and a heavy backpack, sweat dripping off my brow as I clamber down rock faces?

Waterfall, Berkley River North Kimberley:

No, me neither. So why the trekking topic? Read this interesting tale of a rehydrated vegetarian adventure in the West Australian desert, along with photos.

Remember, these photos are not vying for the pages of "Gourmet Traveler". Dehydrated food is meant for survival, not looking good.

"Hi Kurma.   I've recently returned from six weeks of trekking in the North Kimberley Coast (see above). It's a magnificent part of Australia.

Part of my preparation included cooking and dehydrating 6 weeks' supply of food for 2 people (myself and wife). Every morning we had your toasted/baked Granola for breakfast - utterly delicious, and boy did it give me energy to burn!

Trekking Rajma:

Lunch was a choice of Sambar dal with vegetables (below, yet to be rehydrated, from Yamuna Devi's book "Lord Krishna's cuisine), your Rajma (without the panir, above, re-hydrated), Mexican refried beans (with Vita-Wheat crackers) and your Cauliflower Korma (my all time favourite).

Desert Sambar:

We also had dehydrated hummus, a beetroot/yoghurt dip and pumpkin risotto and a few other extras...

The food kept really well - no spoilage - and was delicious and reconstituted very easily - about 3 hours' happily soaking in a container in my pack while I was enjoying the view.

I also cooked and dehydrated some Basmati rice and mixed it with the Dal, Rajma and Cauliflower. Next time I'll keep the rice separate as the Toor dal took longer to reconstitute than the rice and vegetables. The Rajma and Cauliflower reconstituted in the same time frame as the rice.   Good vegetarian food + a dehydrator + Hiking = Bliss!

Regards, Nick"

by Kurma at May 20, 2009 10:11 PM

Kurma dasa, AU : Afiyet Olsun!

spice bazaar:

My old friend S from Turkey fondly remembers my cookery adventures in Istanbul.

He offered to translate some of my recipes into Turkish. We tried installing Turkish fonts, but it was incompatible with this blog, so he kindly transliterated the text.

I appreciate that this will have little appeal for those unable to actually speak Turkish, but if there any Turkish readers out there, I wish you Afiyet Olsun!

Mayapur stili Sebzeli Hamurlar (Samosa)

Bir defasinda birisi soyle demisti: “gokyuzundeki yildizlarin sayisi kadar bircok sebzeli samosa varyasyonu vardir” ve ben buna katiliyorum. Yillar boyunca bircok samosa cesidi yedim, fakat en lezzetli ve citir olanlarina Bati Bengal’deki kutsal hac sehri olan Sri Mayapur’un Mayapur Chandrodaya Tapinagi’ndaki mutfaklarinda rastladim.

kurma's flakey samosas:

Bu altin sarisi, ucgenimsi hamurlar ince, hafif ve citirdir. Hamurlarin ici tereyagli patates, azicik kizarmis karnabahar ve bezelyeler ile doldurulup, aci, tatli, eksi ve cesnili lezzetlerin hos bir kombinasyonuyla desteklenmektedir. Samosalar genellikle servisten hemen once bir aperatif ya da meze olarak kizartilir. Ayni zamanda oda sicakliginda bir ogle yemegi ya da piknik kutusunda lezzetlidirler. Samosalar firinda basarili bir sekilde tekrardan isitilabilir ya da parca parca kizartilabilir; ucte ikisi pismis sekilde kizartilip sogutularak dondurulabilir ve sonrasinda tekrar nefis sonuclarla kizartilabilir.

Ic malzeme:

2 kap 0,5 cmlik kupler halinde dogranmis patates 1 kap taze bezelye ici 1 cay kasigi kimyon tohumu 1 cay kasigi rezene tohumu 1 cay kasigi cemenotu tohumu 1 adet 3.75cm boyunda cubuk tarcin 1 cay kasigi kisnis 3 corba kasigi ghee ya da yag 1 cay kasigi zerdecal 2 kap ince karnabahar cicekleri 2 corba kasigi tohumlari alinmis, guzelce dogranmis yesil biber 2 cay kasigi rendelenmis taze zencefil 2 corba kasigi rendelenmis hindistan cevizi ½ cay kasigi sari asafetida tozu (seytan tersi) ½ cay kasigi arnavut biberi tozu 1 cay kasigi garam masala 1 cay kasigi chat masala 2 cay kasigi tuz 1 corba kasigi limon suyu 2 corba kasigi guzelce dovulmus, kavrulmus tuzsuz fistik 2–3 corba kasigi dogranmis taze kisnis yapragi Derin kizartma icin ghee ya da sivi yag

Hamur:

3 kap un 2 cay kasigi tuz ½ kap eritilmis ghee ya da tereyagi ¾ kap kadar ilik su

Ici hazirlamak icin:

Patatesler ve bezelyeleri farkli kucuk tencerelerde yumusayincaya kadar haslayin. Suyu suzun ve sebzeleri bir kenara alin.

Kimyon, rezene, cemenotu tohumlari ve cubuk tarcini bir baharat ya da kahve ogutucuye koyun ve toz haline gelene kadar cekin. Bu cekilmis baharatlara toz kisnisi ekleyin ve bir kenara alin.

1/3 kap gheeyi 3250 ml’lik bir tavaya, ya da derin bir kizartma tavasina orta ateste koyun. Yag kizinca zerdecal tozunun ve karnabahar ciceklerinin yarisini tavaya koyun. Karnabahri bir iki kere cevirerek hafif bir altin sarisi rengine gelene kadar kizartin.

Delikli bir kepce yardimiyla karnabaharlari tavadan alip kucuk bir kaba koyun. Sonrasinda kalan karnabaharlari da kizartin.

Sicak ghee hala tavadayken isiyi dusurun. Tavaya biber ve zencefili koyun ve bir iki dakika aromasini verene kadar soteleyin. Rendelenmis hindistan cevizini ekleyin ve hafif altin sarisi rengini alana kadar karistirarak kizartin. Sari asefatida tozunu da ekleyin ve hemen tavayi atesten alin. Bir yere ayirdiginiz baharatlar ve ilave olarak arnavut biberi tozu, kalan zerdecal tozu, garam masala, chat masala, tuz, seker, limon suyu, fistik, ve taze kisnis yapraklarini tavaya serpin.

Guzlece karistirin, sonrasinda dikkatlice bezelyeler, patatesler ve kizarmis karnabahar ciceklerini ekleyin. Herseyi iyice karisana kadar dikkatlice kombine edin. Hazir olan samosa icini sogumak uzere bir kenara koyun.

Hamuru hazirlamak icin:

Un ve tuzu buyukce bir karistirma kabinda birlestirin. Erimis ghee ya da tereyagini ekleyin ve parmak uclarinizla karisim tamamen birlesene ve karisim ekmek kirintilarina benzeyene kadar ovalayin.

3250 ml ilik suyu ekleyin ve yogurmaya baslayin. Kalan suyu azar azar hamur yapismaz, yogrulabilir ve orta yumusaklikta bir hale gelene kadar ekleyin. 8 dakika boyunca ya da hamur ipeksi yumusakliga ve esneklige gelene kadar yogurun, bir kumas parcasi ile uzerini ortun ve 30-60 dakika bir kenara dinlenmeye birakin. Samosalari hazirlamak ve pisirmek:

Samosa icini 24 corba kasigi boyutunda parcalara bolun.

Hamuru bri elden gecirip yogurun ve 40 cm boyunda bir halat boyutunda rulo hale getirin. 8 esit parcaya kesin. Her bir hamuru duzgun bir topa sekillendirin. Her seferinde bir parca hamur uzerinde calisarak toplari yassilastirin, sonrasinda hafifce unlanmis bir yuzey uzerinde 16,5 cmlik ince birer disk elde edin.

Yuvarlak sekillenen hamurlari esit buyuklukte ucgenimsi dilimler elde etmek icin uc parcaya kesin (ucgenlerin bir tarafi yuvarlanacak). Bir parmaginizi suya batirin ve hamurun tum kenarlarini islatin. Hamurun bir bolumunu havaya kaldirin ve diger iki kenari bir koniye sekillenecek gibi birlestirin. Hamurun kapanmasinin cok guvenli olmasi sarttir, aksi takdirde samosa ici kizartma suresince bosalacaktir.

Bir porsiyon ici hamurun dortte ucunu kaplayacak sekilde koni icine doldurun. Hamurun iki acik kenarini bir araya getirin ve cok guvenli bir sekilde birlestirin. Piramit sekilli bir hamur elde etmeniz gerekiyor. 24 tane samosayi ayni sekilde doldurun.

6.5–7.5cm yuksekliginde ghee ya da yagi 185 C’de derin bir tavada yuksek isida kizartin. Bir seferde 4 ya da 6 (veya tavanizin buyuklugu elverdigince) samosayi yaga atin ve 4-5 dakika altin sarisi rengini alana kadar kizartin.

Samosalari yagdan alin ve kagit havlu serilmis bir yuzeye koyun. Bu islemi tum samosalar icin tekrar edin ve sicak ya da ilik servis yapin.

Afiyet Olsun! (Bon Appetit!)

by Kurma at May 20, 2009 10:09 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Bhakti Vikasa Swami: Srila Vrndavana dasa Thakura's kicking

Srila Vrndavana dasa Thakura wrote (in Caitanya-bhagavata 1.9.225), eta parihare o ye papi ninda kare/ tabe lathi maron ta'ra sirera upare: "I kick on the head any sinful person who disregards the glories of Lord Nityananda and dares criticize Him."

Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati, in his commentaries on Sri Caitanya-bhagavata 1.17.154-58 and 1.9.225, discussed such seemingly unsaintly statements of Srila Vrndavana dasa Thakura:

The community of arrogant persons will take millions and millions of births to understand Vrndavana dasa Thakura's causeless mercy. Until their offenses are exhausted they will never have the opportunity to receive a kick on the head from the sanctified all-auspicious feet of a pure Vaisnava. Even the genuine desire for receiving the non-duplicitious mercy of a pure Vaisnava is a rare commodity for ignorant or sinful persons, pious fruitive workers, or mental speculators. Jivas who are averse to Hari-guru-Vaisnavas have not accumulated sufficient piety in previous lifetimes, nor have thousands of their forefathers accumulated sufficient piety, to qualify to receive all-auspicious kicks from the ultimate-benefit-awarding, pure, extramundane lotus feet of Thakura Vrndavana. Should dust from a pure Vaisnava's lotus feet fall on the head of a sinful person, at that very moment he will be freed from all material contamination and deceit and thus become a proprietor of the bonanza of bhakti.

While Srila Thakura Vrndavana, who is a Vaisnava acarya, the direct avatar of Vyasa and servant of Sri Nityananda, enacts his pastime of transcendentally kicking offenders, if even one particle of dust falls on the head of a fortunate blasphemer he will positively achieve auspiciousness, in other words, his anartha-nivrtti is guaranteed. The exhibition of such great compassion by Sri Visnu or Vaisnavas is beyond the imagination or intelligence of foolish nondevotees, who cannot discriminate between what is favorable or unfavorable for their own welfare. The all-auspicious endeavors and behavior of preachers and practitioners of suddha-bhakti to Gaura-Krsna who follow in the footsteps of Thakura Sri Vrndavana, the direct avatar of Sri Vyasa, display, on one hand, gross punishment of the fallen averse living entities, and on the other, subtle unlimited compassion for them.

(Tomorrow, 21 May, in Navadvipa-dhama, the appearance place of Srila Vrndavana dasa Thakura, is his appearance anniversary)

May 20, 2009 08:11 PM

David Haslam, UK : Is it Krishna’s or ours

The other day I was read a small article found on the internet, making a direct correlation between ISKCON and the ongoing controversy over MP’s pay, accusing them of underhanded dealings and profiteering at the expense of the congregation. There is a difficulty in making such accusations as devotee pay and that of MP’s is quantifiably [...]

by David at May 20, 2009 08:05 PM

Parama Karuna dasa : Travels Calling (Again)

I thought I was settled but up in the air again. Travels are calling, perhaps it’s in my blood, at least says so on my palm. But not aimless wandering as I am truly looking for a home. A place to do some service and also help change the world. Where that place will be remains to be seen, but this summer we will try to find out. Hope to meet you there.

May 20, 2009 06:23 PM

Gauranga Kishore das,USA : Athiesm Psychoanalyzed

This a response to the first part of Harsh's comment, "First of all its wrong to point out that the idea of atheism is to stop worrying and to enjoy life. you say you believe in the existence of god because you want to and atheists dont believe cuz they dont want to. Fine, nothing wrong with that. however, it doesn't necessarily mean atheists do so for "enjoying" life and to go have sex or to go around committing crimes. I'm an atheist and i believe in the well being of others(whether humans or animals) in this world as much as anyone else. yes, there is no fear of god in me, but still there is a fear of my very own morals, my own beliefs, and my own personality."


Atheism is not a rational doctrine. This is because the question of God or a transcendent source or creation is not a rational question.

That is not what Ditchkins or their predecessors like Freud would have us believe. We've been told that religion is fantasy, a fantasy motivated by wish fulfillment and childish ways of thinking. The foolish fantasy of humanity in its infancy. And yes much of what is contained in the cultural traditions of religion is based on naive ideas about the world. And yes science does offer us a better way explanation of the natural phenomenon of the world, but it is a total non-sequitur, it does not follow, that science has disproved the existence of God.

That issue is by definition beyond the realm of science.

Now, if we admit, and we must, that the issue of God is not a scientific or purely rational issue then we must admit that there are other components to belief or non-belief in God.

Turning the powerful tool of Freudian analysis on atheism will help to illuminate the issue.

Freud's basic insight was that all behavior has some causes and that these causes lie deep within the unconsciousness. The unconscious constitutes most of our consciousness, but it is hidden from view, like the ninety percent of a glacier submerged underwater with only the peak visible above. To the untrained eye, an action or belief might look random, but the Freudian psychologist is trained to understand the deep underlying factors in any situation.

My contention is the arguments given for rejecting atheism are only the tip of the iceberg, but the real cause is hidden below, submerged in the frigid waters of the depths of the mind.

Of course that is fairly standard stuff these days and we can say that about most everything. Any idea that is to be taken seriously has to be analyzed in this way.

On the surface atheism is all rational, all science but what lies below?

Well why not let a few atheists speak for themselves?

Here is a quote from Thomas Nagel admitting that he not only doesn't believe in God but he doesn't God to exist;

"In speaking of the fear of religion, I don’t mean to refer to the entirely reasonable hostility toward certain established religions and religious institutions, in virtue of their objectionable moral doctrines, social policies, and political influence. Nor am I referring to the association of many religious beliefs with superstition and the acceptance of evident empirical falsehoods. I am talking about something much deeper–namely, the fear of religion itself. I speak from experience, being strongly subject to this fear myself: I want atheism to be true and am made uneasy by the fact that some of the most intelligent and well-informed people I know are religious believers. It isn’t just that I don’t believe in God and, naturally, hope that I’m right in my belief. It’s that I hope there is no God! I don’t want there to be a God; I don’t want the universe to be like that." (The Last Word Oxford Univ. Press, 1997), 130-131.

It is clear from this quote that the atheist not only doesn't believe in God, but doesn't want to believe in God. Of course this is pretty obvious when you hear most atheists talk, Ditchkins are perfect examples of this.

Here more directly to the point Aldus Huxley speaks about why he chose to disbelieve in God:

“For myself, as no doubt for most of my friends, the philosphy of meaninglessness was essentially an instrument of liberation from a certain system of morality. We objected to the morality because it interfered with our sexual freedom. The supporters of this system claimed that it embodied the meaning-the christian meaning, they insisted – of the world. There was one admirably simple method of confuting these people and justifying ourselves in our erotic revolt: we would deny that the world had any meaning whatever.” (Confessions of a Professed Atheist)

For Ditchkins, the issue of God and religion is obviously very emotionally charged, they are not like scientist in a lab who have discovered some fact about the universe, their zeal and emotional intensity is much more like that of a religious preacher, it is is full of emotion.

And in Dawkin's ad campaign we finally come to the essence of his whole book,


Atheism is not an intellectual rebellion but a moral rebellion. This does not mean that all atheist are rapists and serial killers. What it means is that an atheist is someone who doesn't like the idea of God, the idea of being subordinate to someone else, the idea of being ultimately accountable for everything they think, say and do, the idea of being a servant, the idea that they have to grow old, suffer and die, the idea that everything is ultimately meant for God's pleasure and service, not for their own.

Harsh, in summary this is my response,

I didn't say that atheism is about enjoying life Richard Dawkins did. His ad campaign is a big Freudian slip, and as with all Freudian slips they reveal much more than what is explicitly said.

by Gauranga Kishore Das (gaurangakishore@gmail.com) at May 20, 2009 05:01 PM

Akrura das, Gita Coaching : FACEBOOK

I am now on Facebook as Akrura Dasa. You may find more texts there on my Wall and under Notes.

by Akrura@pamho.net (akrura@pamho.net) at May 20, 2009 04:56 PM

Akrura das, Gita Coaching : ANGER

Akrodha means to check anger. Even if there is provocation one should be tolerant, for once one becomes angry his whole body becomes polluted. Anger is a product of the mode of passion and lust, so one who is transcendentally situated should check himself from anger.

BG 16.1-3 Purport

by Akrura@pamho.net (akrura@pamho.net) at May 20, 2009 04:43 PM

H.H. Bhakticharu Swami : Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 7.9.19

The following is a Śrīmad Bhāgavatam class given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 19 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA.

To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either “Save link as” or “Save target as”

Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 7.9.19 - Chapter 9: Prahlāda Pacifies Lord Nṛsiḿhadeva with Prayers

The following is a Śrīmad Bhāgavatam class given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 19 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA. To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either ldquo;Save link asrdquo; or ldquo;Save target asrdquo; Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 7.9.19 - Chapter 9: Prahlāda Pacifies Lord Nṛsiḿhadeva with Prayers

by Vinod-bihari das at May 20, 2009 04:42 PM

H.H. Bhakticharu Swami : Relationship Seminar - Part 1

The following is the first part of a seminar given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 18 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA.

To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either “Save link as” or “Save target as”

The following is the first part of a seminar given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 18 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA. To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either ldquo;Save link asrdquo; or ldquo;Save target asrdquo;

by Vinod-bihari das at May 20, 2009 04:40 PM

Japa Group : Deliberately Hearing The Sound


"By deliberately hearing the sound of each syllable, your mind will be occupied, and if you do this vigorously, there will be no chance for the mind to wander to other realms of thought. This method is so simple that chanters may overlook it, but if you apply it, it is very effective. There are further stages in chanting, in which one thinks of the pastimes of Krishna, meditates on His qualities, and even comes to see His form, but they all follow from the basic practice of attentive hearing. The reason this works so effectively is that the holy name is Krishna, and the Hare Krishna mantra is invested with all His potencies. Anyone who practices the “just hear” method will find great improvement in his or her chanting."

From Bhajana Kutir #75

by Rasa Rasika (noreply@blogger.com) at May 20, 2009 01:58 PM

Madhava Ghosh dasa, New Vrndavan, USA : Couldn’t Hook A Cant Hook


My neighbor out the end of the lane that goes through my property, about a half mile (1 km) past Balabhadra (ISCOWP) sold his farm and is moving out to a place that is easier to maintain. He had a 270 acre farm we couldn’t get any devotees interested in buying which was a sad thing. I haven’t met the new owner yet but speculation is someone bought it for hunting purposes, a not uncommon occurrence in West Virginia.

Gorsky,  the former owner, never married and  spent his life on the place with his mother until she died, and then lived alone until about 10 years after he retired from his union job as a machinist when he has decided to move.

The first time I met him I had been sent out with a truck to pick up corn that was being handpicked and bagged by devotees. The field was adjacent to Gorsky’s property but  no one bothered to tell me there was no place to turn around at the field. So I, the naive young farm kid from North Dakota where people are generally pretty open and friendly, drove into his property to execute  a turn.

He came out with a shotgun and held me for a while until he had communicated  clearly that he didn’t care for trespassers.

After a couple of decades we did manage to get on speaking terms and would occasionally have some conversations and business dealings, though he wasn’t  prone to them, preferring to work his farm and drink solitarily.

He recently had an auction. I did end up buying over 60 pounds  (30 kg)  of bolts for a dollar ( salvage value is about $2) and a light 5/16″ (8 mm) (regular logging chain is 3/8″ (9.5 mm)) short (10′(3 m) chain for 3 dollars but didn’t get two things I wanted.

In the section they were, things were going in the $1-5 dollar range (including a scythe that went for $1 (about $100 new at Lehmans). One of them was a set of log dogs which is a short piece of 1/2″ (13 mm) chain with heavy duty right angle hooks on each end that one hammers into the side of a log and then hooks a regular chain into it for the purposes of pulling it. This is easier than trying to get a chain wrapped around a log which often times involves digging a hole under it. I bid to $15  but it ended up going for $32.50.

The other thing I wanted was a cant hook. This is used to turn logs.  Again I bid up to $15 but it went for $25. I was whining to a neighbor who was at the auction about this relative discrepancy between the bidding on what I wanted and other items and he said it showed I had good taste.

FYI,  I was just looking for a description of a cant hook and it turns out what I was really looking at is called a peavey, not a cant hook, but I was young and stupid back then (three weeks ago) so thought it was a cant hook.

The Monday after the Festival of Inspiration Gopish drove the two devotees from Hungary, Manorama and Radha Krishna dases, and myself up into Amish country to take a pilgrimage to Lehman’s Hardware store, the Mecca of all things nonelectric.  They had a wish list and an open mind. They were interested in Amish culture to see if any aspects of their lives would have elements they could adapt for New Vraja Dhama, their Eco Village in Hungary.

They got some things and also a lot of DVDs about Amish culture which are probably pretty authentic, being sold in the heart of Amish country and all.

I checked out what I was at that time calling a cant hook and immediately had realization of why I didn’t get it for $15 at the auction. It was going for $115 new.

As we were going through the huge store we came to the clearance section where there was an actual cant hook.  It was a discontinued style that was on sale for $10. It was metal so much heavier than a regular cant hook,  the hook slides on the handle instead of being rigidly fixed, and the hook pivots in two places instead of one.  Plus it had the blunt end (being a true cant hook)  instead of the pointed end like a peavey, which was what I thought I wanted,  so I was a little wierded out.

Ochsenkopf Ox-head cant hook

As it wasn’t what I expected, my mind was going into rejection mode even as my intelligence was going no, wait, this might do the needful for the smaller logs I usually cut for firewood.  I am not dealing with timber logs. Plus it was only $10.

I asked Gopish for counsel and he looked at it and shook his head, saying it wouldn’t work very well and advised me not to buy it so I walked away.

A couple of minutes later I looked back at him and he was carrying it. When I asked why, he said he was going to buy it. I was a little shocked. When I asked if he had talked me out of buying it so he could buy it himself, he said yes.  I was a little stunned, which helped me resist the immediate reaction to excoriate him verbally.

When I said that it wasn’t a very godbrotherly thing to do, he said that it was payback for what I had done to his son.

The back story on that is that at Lord Nrshimadev’s appearance celebration a few nights before, I was talking to him when his son walked up. Gopish had leaned over and lifted his son’s T shirt sleeve and showed me that he had gotten a new tatto0 of Lord Nrsimhadev on his bicep just the day before.

Gopish had just recently talked him out of dropping out of college to join the Navy  and trying out to be a  SEAL.  Gopish’s reasoning was that he should finish college so when he does go into the Navy if he doesn’t make the cut into the SEALs, and only 3 out of 100 do, he would have something to fall back on instead of having to spend the rest of his time in the Navy scrubbing decks.

Since he is a tough kid and looking to take on a tough career, I asked him if his day old tatto still hurt. He said it did some so I punched him in the tattoo. Not enough to move him but enough to really hurt if the tattoo was tender.  I figured if he was going to be a SEAL he might as well start toughening up right there. Gopish immediately said, “You are going to pay for that!”

A little sidebar — afterwards I realized I had just punched a tattoo representation of Lord Nrshimhadev and maybe that wasn’t the most devotional thing to do but, in my defense, my consciousness wasn’t that of striking the Lord, it was of helping a kid on his path to being a SEAL by inuring him to pain by hitting his sore new tattoo so hopefully I was in a state of grace.

Bearing the incident with his kid in mind, I cut my protest of his tricking me out of the cant hook short. Still, I couldn’t totally let it go and did bring it up again a couple of times. Once saying that it wasn’t right what  he was doing, which he merely smiled at, and another time saying he really should let me have it but he said that no, he was going to buy it. I replied that a lot of things could happen between there and the cash register and gave him the evileyeI’mnotkidding stare but he remained unmoved.

It may even have came up on the trip home, me still feeling cheated despite the guilt trip about his son.

When we got home and were unloading the car for me to take the Hungarian devotees back up to the temple he got a big s*** eating grin on his face and handed me the cant hook. I was bewildered but he said that it was mine. He started laughing and said it was worth the $10 just to mess with me. He had payed for it and was giving it to me as a gift.

He had totally punked  me.  We both immediately cracked up and started laughing almost hysterically, me at how completely he had fooled me and him at how successful he had been at doing so.

So I ended up with a cant hook after all.

Posted in News, Ramblings or Whatever

by Madhava Gosh at May 20, 2009 01:09 PM

Sita-pati dasa, AU : Gettin' the T-Pain effect in Logic Pro

Because kirtan in 2009 so needs it...

  • Add Pitch/Pitch Correction as an insert effect on a channel containing a vocal track. In my case I'm going to use Daya-maya's vocal from Krishnapada's Saturday night track. It was recorded with an SM57, so it has the greatest isolation of all the vocal tracks from the night.
  • Select the appropriate scale and note. In the case of Krishnapada's track it's natural minor and A#.
  • Dial the Response Time down to 0.00ms.

  • Set the Response Time to 0

  • Done. [Listen to an mp3]
  • For extra fun, add a Vocal Transformer as an insert after the Pitch Corrector, and dial it up +12 semitones, 100% wet mix to get an octave above. [Listen to an mp3]
  • Or you can set the Vocal Transformer to +7 semitones, ~50% wet mix to get a perfect fifth harmony - Daft Punk in da house! [Listen to an mp3]

These effected vocals don't "work" so well with this particular track, but it's all I have to experiment with at the moment. Stay tuned for more...

Next thing on the list: Turn that mantra into an Apple Loop, speed it up (maintaining the pitch) and put a pumping house beat behind it)

by sitapati at May 20, 2009 11:57 AM

Sita-pati dasa, AU : Playing for Change

This is great!

If these recordings are actually done in these conditions, outside, then the sound they are getting is amazing!

by sitapati at May 20, 2009 10:49 AM

ISKCON Melbourne, AU : Daily Class - Nandamandir Prabhu

Srimad Bhagavatam 11.8.32 - One and only medicine for all the diseases is Harinam.

by jayendra at May 20, 2009 09:43 AM

H.H. Bhakti Caitanya Swami : I swam in it, and almost froze completely

Dear devotees and friends,

Please accept my blessings. All glories to Srila Prabhupada.

I last wrote from Irkutsk, near the southern end of Lake Baikal (look at the map I have provided to see where it is), on May 11th. We stayed there for a few days, doing morning and evening programmes in the nice temple the devotees built there (you can also see a photo of the temple in the photos section), under the shelter of their beautiful Deities, Sri Sri Nitai Gauranga.

One of the days I went for the annual rest pilrimage to Baikal itself. Every year I go there for some hours to sit by the peaceful, pure waters, and chant. Baikal is one of the wonders of the world, about 750 kms long and about 50 kms wide. In its deepest parts it’s 1500 metres deep, and it contains 20% of the world’s unsalted water - more than 5 times the water in all the Great Lakes of USA/Canada put together.

The only problem is that it’s freezing cold. We flew over it on the way to Irkutsk from Ulan Ude, and on the eastern side I could see that there was still a lot of unmelted ice along the shores, and that was in May, coming close to mid-summer. Once, in July, mid-summer, I swam in it, and almost froze completely. It was amazingly cold. One good thing though is that this keeps it from becoming a big holiday resort place and being overrun with people.

It was a fairly nice day. The weather is warming up a little now. Some days before in Krasnoyarsk there had been a little snow, and when we landed in Irkutsk it was minus 4 degrees, but this day it was maybe plus 20, which is fine.

When you fly around here and there, they staff on the plane usually announce the temperature on the ground where you’re going to land. Usually they don’t say whether it’s minus or plus, but in Russia they always say whether it’s minus or plus, as it’s minus most of the time. There’s a saying in Siberia: “In Siberia the weather is cold 9 months of the year. The other 3 months it’s very cold.”

Every year different groups of devotees go to Baikal to rest for a few days, and Krishna Smaranam prabhu, the leader in Irkutsk, asked me to come with him and about 100 devotees next year from July 5th to 10th, so I agreed. We’ll have seminars there and chant japa and so on. If any of you want to come, please do! But please note it’s 2010, and not this year.

On the 15th morning we drove to Bratsk, an 8 hour plus drive to the north. I just sat in the car and chanted the whole way, sometimes watching the Russian countryside go by. You can also see where Bratsk is on one of the maps I’ve provided. In the Communist days sometimes the villages would get unusual names, connected with the Revolution and the hoped-for prosperity after it through industrial and agricultural development. We drove through one such little village on the way. Traktovaya. It means “The Place of Tractors”. Unfortunately it seemed that all the tractors had moved on to greener fields, and all we saw around the village were the usual black izbars (old Russian village houses), some of which had rusty satellite
dishes attached to  them.

Bratsk was nice, and we did programmes in the temple and in a hall. In the small hall programme there were maybe 20 new people, and everyone seemed to enjoy the programme.

We drove back to Irkutsk on the 16th, and then on Sunday the 17th we had a 3 hour mahakirtana programme in a rented hall in the town. About 200 devotees came and we had nice kirtana. The devotees in Russian, particularly in East Siberia, are very conservative when it comes to wearing devotee clothes, and this was no exception, with most of the men particularly wearing karmi clothes.

Last year, for the first time in many years, or maybe the first time ever, they started doing some harinamas in the streets during the summer, although many devotees would not go, out of fear of being persecuted by the police, but when they went out they found there was no persecution, but rather generally people like it, so now they’re going to develop the programme further. I urged them to take shelter of Lord Caitanya and Lord Nityananda and take the chanting to the people more, and many agreed that this would be a good idea.

Subala and I then flew on Monday the 18th to Krasnoyarsk again. That evening Dharmananda prabhu took my passport to the Post Office to register me there, but when the people saw that I had been registering in Post Offices around the country they became angry and told him “it’s illegal! You can’t do this”.

Administratively Russia is an extremely inconsistent country, and no government authorities seem to know what the laws are, or rather they have different ideas what they are. Normally you’re meant to register in a place if you’ve been there three days, but some devotees have been arrested on the second day they’ve been in a place and fined with no explanations.

Usually the police are looking for bribes for themselves, as they’re not well paid, the same as in South Africa. When I was being driven from Johannesburg to Newcastle in South Africa a few weeks ago we were stopped by one African policeman, who told the driver, my disciple Namacarya prabhu, that for speeding he was going to be fined a of money. Namacarya got the feeling the man was looking for a bribe, so he took a chance and asked him “I don’t think I can pay a big fine, but do you accept donations?”

The man said “well, it’s all right with you.” Namacarya gave him 100 Rands ($10), and the man was happy.

So we didn’t know what to think. The Post Office people told Dharmananda he would have to go to the Immigration Services office the next morning, and made a big fuss about how it’s illegal to keep registering in Post Offices, and I was afraid I was going to be arrested and then thrown out of the country.

Fortunately when Dharmananda went to the Immigration office the next day they immediately registered me, and everything was ok for the time being.

Then on the 19th we drove south from Krasnoyarsk to Abakan, which is also shown on one of our maps, and that is where we are right now. Tonight there’s a public programme in a fancy hotel, so let us see how things go there.

Hoping this meets you well.

Your ever well wisher,

Bhakti Caitanya Swami

May 20, 2009 07:09 AM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : "What Do 'Lines' Reminds Us Of?"

Geometry? Boxes? Cubes? Graphics? Air Travel? Sight? Try this: "They [the gopis] began to draw lines on the ground with their toes, ," (Nectar of Devotion, Chapter 30, Further Features of Ecstatic Love for Krsna; Anxiety.)

by Mukunda Goswami at May 20, 2009 07:00 AM

Manorama dasa : New Vrindaban videó 3.

Ebben a részben, a New Vrindabani mezőgazdaságról láthattok képeket. Ellátogattunk egy farmer boltba, ahol különlegesebbnél különlegesebb eszközöket lehet megnézni és, ami a legfontosabb megvenni. Pennsylvániában található az egyik legnagyobb amish közösség, akik az önfenntartásukról híresek. Látogatásunk közben őket is láttuk.

by Mrd at May 20, 2009 06:00 AM

Mayapur Online : Launch of new Mayapur HarinamFFL website

By the grace and mercy of Sri Sri Radha-Madhava, Lord Nrsimhadeva and Sri Pancha-Tattva, we are launching the new Mayapur Harinama and Food For Life Website.This website aims to promote the congregational chanting of the Holy Name across the nine islands, as instructed by Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu Himself:“The Lord ordered all the citizens of Navadvipa to chant the Hare Krishna mantra, and in each and every home they began performing sankirtana regularly.[All the devotees sang this popular song along with the Hare Krishna maha-mantra.]“Haraye namah, krishna yadavaya namah/ gopala govinda rama sri-madhusudana.”

read more

by Ila Devi Dasi at May 20, 2009 05:51 AM

David Haslam, UK : quickvoice pro

For all those who have an iPhone this is one of the best applications to have, easy to use (yes even I can grasp it with no help); with easy sinc to the computer. I have tried other recorders for the iPhone and to be truthful they are poor quality and problems have been experienced when [...]

by David at May 20, 2009 05:10 AM

HH. Satsvarupa das Goswami : SDGonline – Bhajana Kutir #76

May 19, 10:00 A.M.

My Dear Lord Krishna...

Your abode is the most desirable place in all the worlds. It is rare for a living entity to attain it, but all aspiring devotees hope to go there. I may not hope to go there in this lifetime, but in future lifetimes. But Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura used to advise his disciples to go in this lifetime. He told them that it was the goal, and so why should they wait for many lifetimes? They should make the effort and go at once. Then we hear the alternative viewpoint that a devotee does not even desire to go to Your abode but desires to serve You life after life. That second choice seems very risky to me because who knows what will actually happen? There may be so many obstacles on our path to serving You life after life. We may fall down. We may have to suffer miserably as Kali Yuga advances. Nevertheless, the great devotees think like that—na dhanam na janam na sundarim, I don’t wish for fame, a beautiful wife, wealth or other success. All I want is Your causeless devotional service in my life, birth after birth. If I had my choice, I would go back to Godhead as soon as possible, at the end of this very lifetime. But it seems an outrageous desire, because one has to be so qualified to attain it. It almost seems brazen to wish for it. But how can I deny that that is what I want? My problem is that I cannot assume that I deserve to go back to Godhead at the end of this life. It would take some extraordinary intervention from my spiritual master for it to come about. I have not served him so brilliantly that he should do that for me. Would he do it out of sheer compassion?

One might say it does not matter so much because the lives go by so quickly. If you can’t make it this lifetime, then you will make it soon enough, even if it takes many lifetimes. Many lifetimes will pass by quickly. Mukunda Datta, the great devotee of Lord Caitanya, was told by Lord Caitanya that He would not let him come back to Godhead for millions of years. But when Mukunda Datta heard that, he was very delighted and danced, because the Lord had said that he would come back eventually. But I am impatient and frightened. I know I barely made it in this lifetime to become qualified to be a disciple of Srila Prabhupada. I almost died before I met him. How could I expect such good luck in my next lifetime that it would be straight progress?

The Bhagavad-gita says that if one is a yoga-brasta, a devotee who fails to make it in this lifetime, then he will be born in a family of devotees in his next lifetime and have good opportunity for further progress. I already have the good opportunity, but I am frightened that I would not take advantage of it in my next life or that some calamity will happen, some Kali Yuga disaster, which will delay us all. Besides that, I do not like to suffer the pains that are inherent to living in a material body, even if I am making progress. And what if I fall into bad association in my next lifetime, meet up with some bad character who leads me astray, as happened in this lifetime before I met Prabhupada?

Coming back to another life means being packed up in the airtight womb of the mother and suffering the pains of her pregnancy and the risk of death before birth. It involves being caught in the crossfire of a 9/11 disaster or an earthquake in my childhood that buries me alive before I even meet my spiritual master. All of these risks point us in the direction of working very hard in our remaining days to qualify.

I have a memory of a time just before I entered the navy. I dreaded going into the navy and was only convinced to do so by my father. I looked ahead to two years of active service as a hellish experience and was afraid I might not even be able to do it. But I recall as I was walking down the steps of the train station one day shortly before entering the navy having a feeling of confidence that I had the resources to make it through. Something spoke within me and said, “Don’t worry, you have the inner strength to get through, even though it will be dreadful.” I think of that now. I want to hear that inner voice that tells me I have the inner strength to qualify to go back to Godhead at the end of this life. My feeling about the navy was not bravado but a humble confidence that somehow I could do it. I think that I was turning to God at that time, calling upon Him to help me and feeling that He would help me. How could I fail if He was beside me? And so I wish to feel that way again, that Prabhupada and You will give me the inner strength so that before I die, You will bring me through to qualify. Comparing myself to the requirements that I know are necessary as outlined in books like Madhurya Kadambini, I see that I have little chance of reaching krsna-prema. But I maintain that asabandhu, hope against hope, as expressed by Rupa Goswami. In The Nectar of Devotion, he states that he has no qualification by birth or by education or by piety or by love of You, but somehow, he maintains a hope against hope that he will go back to Godhead, and that hope is causing him to be disturbed. Ultimately, I have to leave it up to Your hands, my Lord. You will do what You will do. I will be ruled by Providence, not my own wishes. But I maintain the hope against hope that I will meet with You soon in the eternal abode of Vraja despite the odds against my doing so.

from the yellow submarine, my bhajana kutir #76→

by (SDG) at May 20, 2009 04:21 AM

ISKCON Toronto, Canada : Food for Life in Action!

This past Saturday, devotees from Toronto and Montreal hit the streets to distribute hot vegetarian meals (prasadam) to the homeless of the city.  In typical jubilant Hare Krishna fashion, they sang and danced as well!  Check out the video of the Food for Life program in action!

(Video Courtesy of Tara and Radha Voskoboynik)

by Keshav (noreply@blogger.com) at May 20, 2009 03:37 AM

H.G. Sankarshan das Adhikari, USA : Wednesday 20 May 2009--Krishna Consciousness is Not a Religion

================================================================== Thought for the Day--Wednesday 20 May 2009 ================================================================== Our purpose is to help everyone awaken their original Krishna consciousness, which is eternal, full of knowledge and full of bliss. Such a global awakening will, in one stroke,...

by course@ultimateselfrealization.com at May 20, 2009 02:30 AM

May 19, 2009

Sita-pati dasa, AU : Kirtan recording: Janmastami 1999, Christchurch, NZ

This is one of the first kirtan recordings that I did. It's the Gaura Arati kirtan from Christchurch, NZ's Janmastami festival in 1999.

It was recorded using a single mic, the Sony ECM-MS957, a stereo condenser, running into the Sony MZ-R50. At the time this was pretty much the cutting edge of "prosumer" recording technology [read an analysis on minidisc.com]. The unit is so well made that I am still using it today to make recordings, as the source of the stereo room signal.

Back then mp3 players were limited to 64MB of memory and didn't have the grunt to encode on the fly (record). At the same time Sony had their minidisc technology, which could record 74 minutes of effectively CD quality (using their proprietary ATRAC 4 compression, which is excellent) in stereo, or twice that in mono (great for classes).

I put the MS957 at the front of the temple and just left it running for the duration of the kirtan.

Compression

The strength of this setup is the compressor in the MZ-R50. As a result SPL (sound pressure level - "volume") never becomes an issue that causes clipping or distortion. You can hear the compressor kick in at the beginning of the track. The first whomper hit is quite loud and in your face. The compressor picks up this spike, and by the next whomper hit, when it is joined by a chorus of cartals, the compressor has reduced the gain so that although there is more metal in the kirtan, the volume is less than the first single whomper.

Anti-skip

The R50 has 40 seconds of anti-skip memory in it - in other words it can record 40 seconds of audio without writing it to the disc, if the unit is shaking too much for the laser to get a fix on the medium. You will hear at some points the unit skip, this is because the devotees were jumping so much that the unit skipped continuously for more than 40 seconds. It's a testament to both the intensity of the dancing that was going on, as well as the robustness of Sony's unit. Sony's gear is awesome. The only problem is the incompatibility their proprietary model always introduces.

Compatibility with other mediums

The get the audio off the MZ-R50 I had to stream it out of the line-out into the line-in on a computer. This means a D/A - A/D conversion, which introduces noise. Sony never really made the unit useful for high quality recording. Remember that Sony also makes a lot of income from their record label, so making a unit that can make unlimited perfect copies of their music is not in their best interests (in their current business model). As a result of this tension they hurt the functionality of the unit. Even when they released the "NetMD" which had USB connectivity, you couldn't get music off the unit digitally. This was presumably to stop people sharing digital copies of Sony and music label's recordings. Unfortunately it meant you couldn't get your own recorded kirtans off fast and at high quality. You were reduced to spending at least 20 minutes streaming a 20 minute kirtan, an hour streaming an hour class, via analog inputs and outputs. Bummer.

This particular recording was burned to a CD after being streamed into a computer. I rented a CD burner in 1998 and experimented with the technology, before buying a burner when they became more accessible to the general public. I ripped this track last night using iTunes. The CD is 10 years old, and the technology was still quite new back then. The first track has survived, but the later tracks (there were 4 in total) have been ruined by deterioration of the medium. The subtle crackling distortion you can hear later in this kirtan (during the Hare Krishna part) is caused by this deterioriation of the medium.

The other weakness of the setup is the lack of bass in the recording. The MS957 has a pronounced bass deficiency. You can't EQ it up, because there is practically nothing under 100Hz.

Overall this is a good recording that captures the mood of a kirtan 10 years ago. It has the usual ISKCON cartal overdrive happening, but I'll write more about that in a following post.

Ariel is leading

Leading and playing mrdanga is Christchurch kirtaniya Ariel, who is very proficient in both of those tasks. The structure of the kirtan is a good study in leading Gaura Arati.

Here's the track:

by sitapati at May 19, 2009 11:49 PM

Ravindra Svarupa das, USA : Scenes From Life—West Virginia Springtime

Last weekend I visited New Vrindavan for a meeting of the ISKCON North American leaders. I got away once and a while to check out the local flora and fauna . . . Says It All . . . Almost Two Guardians and An Entrance Passive Water Feature Gathering of Local Residents Wise, Ancient Catfish with Tilaka Serving Prasadam to Local [...]

by rsdasa at May 19, 2009 11:29 PM

Sita-pati dasa, AU : Miking the Harmonium 2

[Read Part 1 here]

For the recording on Saturday night (see this post and this post for the mp3s) I used a microphone technique similar to the one below to mic up the harmonium:

That photo was taken when I did some microphone technique experiments a couple of weeks ago (see that post here).

For Saturday's recording I used the "over the clasp hole" position as above, with the microphone oriented to point directly at the hole, and I used a technique known as "chasing the flame" to set the distance from the harmonium, which was greater that the distance shown in the photo above.

"Chasing the flame" comes from Stav's book "Mixing with Your Mind".

Stav uses the metaphor of a flame to describe the sound that comes from an instrument. The audio wave in space has similar characteristics to a flame, and you have to find the hottest part and place the mic there.

This a particularly powerful metaphor for me, because I remember well a chemistry experiment I did in school 22 years ago. Using a bunsen burner we investigated where the hottest part of the flame was. First we established a hypothesis - many of us believed the hottest part of the flame would be at the top of the visible portion. Then we did the experiment.

We lit the bunsen burner up, then place a sheet of paper vertically into, slicing it in half. We removed the paper quickly as it singed, but did not burn. Looking at the paper we were able to see where it was most singed, and thus where the hottest part of the flame was.

The result was this:

To "chase the flame" with a microphone you can do the following:

  • Hook your mic up to a channel in the mixer
  • Put your headphones on and crank the mix so that the signal in your headphones is louder than any sound from the room (isolation headphones are a must for this kind of thing)
  • Now move the mic back and forth and around and get a feel for the "flame of sound" emanating from the instrument.
  • Find the hottest point, and lock the microphone off there

I started with the "over the clasp" position due to practicality. There are other locations that I like to mic up on the harmonium but there are two other factors in a live recording like Saturday's:

1. I need to use a position that gives me a high relative volume, because otherwise I will get a lot of spillage and little harmonium in the mic.

2. I need to use a position that isn't inconvenient for the performer, especially given the other mics in the room.

If it is a recording where just harmonium is being played there are more possibilities open to you. In any case, however, you should chase the flame. Let your ears be the guide.

by sitapati at May 19, 2009 10:08 PM

HH Bhakti Madhava Puri Swami, Bhaktivedanta Institute : Srimadbhagavatam Class 1.1.22-23

http://srimadbhagavatam.com/1/1/22/en

Maharaj begins by discussing the ship and captain analogy where the ship represents the message of Gita and Bhagavatam, and the captain represents Gurudeva.  With these two one can easily cross the ocean of material existence.  Otherwise, one who is drowning in the ocean cannot possibly save himself or others by his own efforts without getting help from someone who is already safely situated in the ship.

Our situation is not improved by pursuit of conventional education because the entire system is directed toward sense gratification rather than self-realization.  Nor is it improved by going to church or temple one day out of the week and then pursuing material enjoyment during the rest of the week.  Only by Krsna’s grace can we encounter the direction of Gurudeva and by his grace aspire to achieve loving service to the Lord — Krsna prema, the highest form of love.

Maharaj finishes with a brief discussion of the religious codes prescribed in the Bhagavatam — truthfulness, austerity, cleanliness, and mercy.  These are connected with the four regulative principles that are also prescribed there — no gambling, no intoxication, no elicit sex, and no eating meat.

Here is the recording of 19 May 2009 satsanga.

Please click below links….

Download (Downloads 28)

Servant of Servants.

by akshay108 at May 19, 2009 10:00 PM

Kurma dasa, AU : Veggiedag!

veggiedag:

Belgian city plans 'veggie' days

Tuesday, 12 May 2009 BBC News, Ghent

"The Belgian city of Ghent is about to become the first in the world to go vegetarian at least once a week.

Starting this week there will be a regular weekly meatless day, in which civil servants and elected councillors will opt for vegetarian meals." More...

by Kurma at May 19, 2009 09:59 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Bhakti Vikasa Swami: A cat died -- "good"

In San Francisco, when Janaki's cat somehow died and Srila Prabhupada was informed of this, he said simply: "Good". When asked about this, Srila Prabhupada told us that now Janaki can place her full love on Krsna, and factually we saw that Janaki became then more focused on Srila Prabhupada and Krsna.

>From Govinda dasi's memories

May 19, 2009 08:11 PM

Manorama dasa : Twitter frissítések - 2009-05-19

  • Megérkeztem New Yorkból. Végre újra itthon. Csak ez a jetleg ne lenne… #

by Mrd at May 19, 2009 06:00 PM

Dandavats.com : Lord Jagannath Rathayatra in Canberra on 30th May

Ranganath das: By the mercy of Lord Jagannatha, ISKCON Canberra temple will be celebrating Lord Jagannatha Rathayatra in Canberra on Saturday, 30th May starting at 10:30AM. This year, we will be blessed by the kind association of His Holiness Prabhavisnu Swami

by Administrator at May 19, 2009 05:41 PM

Dandavats.com : Melting Pot of Differences- Vyasa Puja Celebrations of HH Bhakti Raghava Swami

Vrndavanlila Devi Dasi: The auspicious occasion of HH Bhakti Raghava Swami’s Vyasa Puja day gave the Secunderabad VRT - Varnasrama Research Team (HH Bhakti Raghava Swami’s brainchild to encourage and spread the message of varnasrama dharma across the planet) another reason to celebrate Srila Prabhupada's gift to mankind...

by Administrator at May 19, 2009 05:39 PM

H.H. Bhakticharu Swami : Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 7.9.18

The following is a Śrīmad Bhāgavatam class given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 18 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA.

To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either “Save link as” or “Save target as”

Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 7.9.18 - Chapter 9: Prahlāda Pacifies Lord Nṛsiḿhadeva with Prayers

The following is a Śrīmad Bhāgavatam class given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 18 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA. To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either ldquo;Save link asrdquo; or ldquo;Save target asrdquo; Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 7.9.18 - Chapter 9: Prahlāda Pacifies Lord Nṛsiḿhadeva with Prayers

by Vinod-bihari das at May 19, 2009 05:36 PM

Dandavats.com : Hearing Navadvipa Sataka with the Swamis

Payonidhi das: Today I was remembering this Navadvipa Sataka and looked it up. Srila Prabhodananda Sarasvati has written this sweet book to help us meditate on Sri Navadvipa. Who is he?

by Administrator at May 19, 2009 05:35 PM

H.H. Bhakticharu Swami : Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 4.3.17

The following is a Śrīmad Bhāgavatam class given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 17 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA.

To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either “Save link as” or “Save target as”

Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 4.3.17 - Chapter 3: Talks Between Lord Śiva and Satī

The following is a Śrīmad Bhāgavatam class given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 17 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA. To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either ldquo;Save link asrdquo; or ldquo;Save target asrdquo; Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 4.3.17 - Chapter 3: Talks Between Lord Śiva and Satī

by Vinod-bihari das at May 19, 2009 05:34 PM

H.H. Bhakticharu Swami : Gopis Song of Separation

The following is a bhajan, ‘The Gopis Song of Separation’ and purport given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 17 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA.

To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either “Save link as” or “Save target as”

The following is a bhajan, 'The Gopis Song of Separation' and purport given by H.H. Bhakti Charu Swami on 17 May 2009 at Hillsborough, USA. To download the lecture, right click on the download link and choose either ldquo;Save link asrdquo; or ldquo;Save target asrdquo;

by Vinod-bihari das at May 19, 2009 05:34 PM

Gaura Vani, USA : Kirtan with Radhanath Swami at Radha Govinda Mandir

Sri Sri Radha Govinda in Brooklyn NY Sri Sri Radha Govinda

Sunday nights in NYC are usually reserved for the weekly evening service at Radha Govinda Mandir in Brooklyn. This night, however, was special because His Holiness Radhanath Swami was visiting. Radhanath Swami is Gaura, Acyuta, Janaki and Ananta’s guru (spiritual teacher). He shared some Rama lila with everyone, and then lead a heartfelt and sincere kirtan with Gaura.  Acyuta, Srikanta Prabhu and others lead more kirtan late into the night, until everyone was finally convinced to go home and get some rest. Who needs sleep when they have kirtan and the association of friends and family, anyway?

Nama Rasa leads the first kirtan. HH Radhanath Swami signing his newly published book, The Journey Home

HH Radhanath Swami leading Kirtan Dancing

Dancing Gaura Vani, the hype man :)

HH Radhanath Swami and Gaura Vani lead together. Raise your arms.

HH Radhanath Swami The final moments of HH Radhanath Swami's Kirtan

Acyuta Gopi takes over. Ananta Govinda, Acyuta's older brother.

HG Srikanta Prabhu HG Srikanta Prabhu

Gaura Vani and Acyuta Gopi Late into the night the kirtan goes on.

Vishaka leads the final kirtan.

Listen to the entire Kirtan!

To listen, click on the links below then press play. To download, Right Click on the word “Download” and select “Save As…” from the menu. Having trouble downloading? Read our Help Section.

by gaura.vani at May 19, 2009 04:53 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Book distribution seminar: Battlefield Bhajans Vol. 38

Pretoria to Durban, South Africa

I waited to check in for my flight to Durban and a young man was staring at me. He finally approached me, and asked me if I was a monk. I replied yes, I am a Hare Krishna. He went to say that he works at a new age yoga studio, and he had some questions for me. I sat next to him and just listened to what he had to say. He opened his heart to me; he started describing how he started practicing yoga to escape the pain in his heart from failed relationships, from the pain of disappointing his family. He expressed that he thought of suicide once. He was in tears as he was revealing this to me. He wanted to know if yoga is such a peaceful way of using your energy, then why does he feel that something is missing. He has been practicing for over six years and feels no difference in his heart.

I sat back and just listened, I could understand that this mans heart was heavy with the burdon of material life. When he finished, I asked him what does he want from life. He looked off into the distant lights and just shook his head. He said man; I just want to become happy. Can you help me please, can you show me happiness. I said Of course, that is my duty to help you. The reason your yoga has not worked is because you are missing the key ingredient, that ingredient being God. The object of yoga is to reconnect to Krsna. But better than practicing hatha yoga is to practice bhakti yoga, bhakti meaning serving Krsna with all your heart, with all the love you can muster.

The man just looked on, with tears swelling in his eyes, by now some others gathered around, and someone made a comment about this gentlemen being too emotional. I corrected the one who made the statement and said " he is only revealing what is in all of your hearts, because all your hearts are sad because you have forgotten your original relationship with Krsna. You should thank this boy for making you realize how sad your lives are without Krsna. The person just looked down. Everyone else nodded. For the next twenty minutes I answered questions and exchanged email addresses. When everyone walked away, I left alone with this man, and he said how could I thank you for your help, how can I thank you for your time. I pulled out Perfection of Yoga. Please take this book, read this knowledge and apply this into your life. If you ever need help please give me a call. With a big smile on his face, he thanked me and gave a donation.

"Go on spreading the sankirtana movement more and more. I am only one person, but because all of you have kindly cooperated with me, this movement has now become a success all over the world. Be assured that there is no more direct way to preach than to distribute Krsna conscious books. Whoever gets a book is benefitted. If he reads the book he is benefitted still more, or if he gives the book to someone else for reading, both he and the other person is benefitted. Even if one does not read the book but simply holds if and sees it, he is benefitted. If he simply gives small donation towards the work of Krsna consciousness he is benefitted. And anyone who distributes these transcendental literatures, he is also benefitted. Therefore sankirtana is the prime benediction for the age: krsna varnam tvisa krsna sango vangastra parsadam yajnaih sankirtana prayair yajanti sumedhasah [SB 11.5.32] - SP Letter May '77

"The living entity is the cause of his own suffering, but he can also be the cause of his eternal happiness. When he wants to engage in Krsna consciousness, a suitable body is offered to him by the internal potency, the spiritual energy of the Lord, and when he wants to satisfy his senses, a material body is offered." (Purport SB-3-26-8)

Partha Sarathi dasa

May 19, 2009 04:20 PM

Book Distribution News : Battlefield Bhajans Vol. 38

Pretoria to Durban, South Africa

I waited to check in for my flight to Durban and a young man was staring at me. He finally approached me, and asked me if I was a monk. I replied yes, I am a Hare Krishna. He went to say that he works at a new age yoga studio, and he had some questions for me. I sat next to him and just listened to what he had to say. He opened his heart to me; he started describing how he started practicing yoga to escape the pain in his heart from failed relationships, from the pain of disappointing his family. He expressed that he thought of suicide once. He was in tears as he was revealing this to me. He wanted to know if yoga is such a peaceful way of using your energy, then why does he feel that something is missing. He has been practicing for over six years and feels no difference in his heart.

I sat back and just listened, I could understand that this mans heart was heavy with the burdon of material life. When he finished, I asked him what does he want from life. He looked off into the distant lights and just shook his head. He said man; I just want to become happy. Can you help me please, can you show me happiness. I said Of course, that is my duty to help you. The reason your yoga has not worked is because you are missing the key ingredient, that ingredient being God. The object of yoga is to reconnect to Krsna. But better than practicing hatha yoga is to practice bhakti yoga, bhakti meaning serving Krsna with all your heart, with all the love you can muster.

The man just looked on, with tears swelling in his eyes, by now some others gathered around, and someone made a comment about this gentlemen being too emotional. I corrected the one who made the statement and said " he is only revealing what is in all of your hearts, because all your hearts are sad because you have forgotten your original relationship with Krsna. You should thank this boy for making you realize how sad your lives are without Krsna. The person just looked down. Everyone else nodded. For the next twenty minutes I answered questions and exchanged email addresses. When everyone walked away, I left alone with this man, and he said how could I thank you for your help, how can I thank you for your time. I pulled out Perfection of Yoga. Please take this book, read this knowledge and apply this into your life. If you ever need help please give me a call. With a big smile on his face, he thanked me and gave a donation.

"Go on spreading the sankirtana movement more and more. I am only one person, but because all of you have kindly cooperated with me, this movement has now become a success all over the world. Be assured that there is no more direct way to preach than to distribute Krsna conscious books. Whoever gets a book is benefitted. If he reads the book he is benefitted still more, or if he gives the book to someone else for reading, both he and the other person is benefitted. Even if one does not read the book but simply holds if and sees it, he is benefitted. If he simply gives small donation towards the work of Krsna consciousness he is benefitted. And anyone who distributes these transcendental literatures, he is also benefitted. Therefore sankirtana is the prime benediction for the age: krsna varnam tvisa krsna sango vangastra parsadam yajnaih sankirtana prayair yajanti sumedhasah [SB 11.5.32] - SP Letter May '77

"The living entity is the cause of his own suffering, but he can also be the cause of his eternal happiness. When he wants to engage in Krsna consciousness, a suitable body is offered to him by the internal potency, the spiritual energy of the Lord, and when he wants to satisfy his senses, a material body is offered." (Purport SB-3-26-8)

Partha Sarathi dasa

May 19, 2009 03:15 PM