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June 18, 2009

Madhava Ghosh dasa, New Vrndavan, USA : “Names” by Peter Munro


If the sea is a cathedral, a tide pool
is a chapel. Sculpins dart under the wind
that blusters their cupped oceans.
Sculpted by wave on rock, their pockets of salt
grow thin from the rain, the suffocating
fresh water. Sculpin and hermit crab and limpet
endure the sea’s absence, the lost comfort
of constant temperature, while the unconceived
sky drums the roof over their pooled world
with litanies of unbreathable torrent.

Christ, I have no praise for you.
Beyond saying a vodka-wrecked troller
and shacks the color of the desire to die, beyond
saying predatory snails that glide on their bellies
like the penitent, flexing their borers,
beyond saying seraphim that bicker exactly like gulls,
the shells that are my ears
sing no psalms except I can name
many small creatures in the world of a tide pool.
Christ, have mercy on all things that drown in air,
I have no praise for you. I say the tide:
Tide!
Tide!
Tide!

I say: Ebb!
Flood!
Ebb!
Flood!

I always start with “Ebb!”
I always end with “Flood!”

Posted in Poetry

by Madhava Gosh at June 18, 2009 04:11 PM

Madhava Ghosh dasa, New Vrndavan, USA : Help! I Am Drowning!


We are plant people, and plants are probably more important to us than the house we live in.  When we were pressured by temple authorities to move out of our last house into this one 13 years ago, we wrote into our contract that we had two years to remove plant material from the old property (the house  Sankirtan lives in now).

So I am not sure if this Dwarf Alberta Spruce has been in its current location for 12 or 13 years. What I am sure of is that this is the first time we have had such unrelenting soil moisture saturation that it is showing symptoms of drowning.

drowning Dwarf Alberta Spruce

This quince was planted here after we moved in but it is at least 10 years old. This is also the first time it is showing excess moisture symptoms, the browning leaves.

drowning quince

It doesn’t seem to be affecting the fruit yet, which can be seen in the picture, but if we don’t get a chance for the soil to dry out soon who knows?

I am also losing newly planted berries to drowning, here is one of several raspberries that have succumbed.

drowned raspberry

This is unfortunate because several of them bloomed this year. I removed the blossoms because I want the plants to concentrate on forming roots, but it was a sure sign that I would have had raspberries next year. It is hard to imagine the survivors are setting much roots in the waterlogged soils.

All this has been to demonstrate how unusually wet it has been here this spring.

The berries are even planted in raised beds. Because the ground is sloped where I planted them, I made terraces, but even on the upper sides the paths are lower than the bed except in the last bed which is the raspberry one. Plus the slope lessened there so the bed was only a few inches above the lower side path.

All this damage had happened before we had another rain which produced an inch and 80/hundredths of rain (4.57 cm).

rain gauge

One problem is that all the runoff water from the front of the house flows around the side and into the the upper side of where the berries are. This will be  a good thing if it gets dry because I could  make little mini dams to catch that water and help them through dry spells. It is a bad thing when we have what is probably the wettest spring I have ever seen here in 35 years.

Plants can take being soaked in the root zone for a while but  do need to dry out once in a while.  I know certain plants like cattails or rice can handle the constant moisture, but not most of those which are regularly grown for food crops in our area.

Yesterday, the day after the 1.80″ rain I went out and dug  deeper trenches in the berry paths to assist drainage. I should have dug them deeper but I live in this cage of fatigue where what I know and want to do and what I can do are separated, but I did get them down some. As I was digging I saw this:

algae in the paths

That’s right, that is algae growing in the paths, and this on a sloped area where it is draining constantly.  There is basically a wet weather spring constantly flowing from the moisture in the front yard working its way down hill through the soil and surfacing in the berries. I can see every uneven place in the horizontal paths because there are puddles.

After doing the trenching I finished caging the tomatoes in my garden.  They are in a higher, better drained location and flourishing. The earliest planted ones are setting tomatoes and I have at least one the size of a quarter. They have been loving the rain, if anything could use a little more sunshine.

I was tired but still went to istaghosti at the temple. Afterward I came home and was treated to one of the most exciting thunderstorms with lots of lightning and rolling thunder that many devotees had ever seen, as was commented at breakfast this morning in the temple. It was beautiful but in my rain gauge this morning is another 1.85″ of rain.

Rain in the  forecast for each of the next three days.

Gurgle gurgle.

Posted in Cows and Environment

by Madhava Gosh at June 18, 2009 03:59 PM

Krishna-kripa das, Mayapura : Travel Journal#5.11: Harinama, Wroclaw Ratha, Feast in Park

Diary of a Traveling Sadhaka, Vol. 5, No. 11
By Krishna-kripa das 
(June 2009, part one)
Antwerp, Amsterdam, Wroclaw, and Leipzig
(Sent from Leipzig, Germany, on 6/18/09)


Highlights

A Prabhupada Story
Harinamas in Antwerp and Amsterdam
First Annual Wroclaw Ratha-yatra
Sunday Feast in Leipzig’s Mariannen Park
Spiritual Encounters
Insight from Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami, Kadamba Kanana Swami,
Dhananjaya Prabhu, and Others
Personal Reflections


Where I Am and What I Am Doing


I left France, with many nice harinama adventures behind me, and the blessings of the devotees to return. I went by bus to Antwerp, where I did the Sunday feast lecture, other lectures, and many harinamas, and then onward to Amsterdam, for another Sunday feast lecture and more harinamas. Next I went to Leipzig, and took a day trip six hours each way by train to Wroclaw, Poland’s first Ratha-yatra, and returned to Leipzig for great kirtana, prasadam, and the association of Kadamba Kanana Swami. 


A Prabhupada Story


In Amsterdam, Dhananjaya Prabhu told us that one time Srila Prabhupada, although he wasn’t feeling well, agreed to see George Harrison, who had a recording which he wanted Srila Prabhupada to hear. The song was entitled “Krishna, Where are You?” George had written the lyrics and arranged the music, and Ravi Shankar’s sister, Laksmi, was the singer. Prabhupada said it was in the mood of the Goswamis, and that if George Harrison continued writing songs like that he would quickly advance in spiritual life.


[Curious about the song, I did a search on the internet, finding a couple videos with pictures of Krishna accompanying the song:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGJCmAWdD18

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkYltwdtEYU ]


Harinama in Antwerp

My friend Janmastami Prabhu, a disciple of Lokanath Swami, makes Antwerp a happy place for me. He’s been playing accordion for years, even before he met the Hare Krishna devotees, and he loves harinama. Last year we chanted in Amsterdam, but now he is back in Belgium, his home. Also here is Amita Krishna Prabhu, who I met in Chowpatty and again in Tirupati, who is a native of Antwerp, and loves Krishna kirtana andkatha. We went chanting in Antwerp, which like many European cities, is blessed with an abundance of cafes with seating on the sidewalk. We passed out many invitations to their upcoming Ratha-yatra.


One day we came across two young Oriental men who are Christian by faith. One had an interesting T-shirt that said on it, “Say Your Prayers.” My camera was temporarily not working, and they emailed me a picture they took for our party.


Harinama in Amsterdam


Amsterdam is full of tourists and a great place for harinama. The devotees do harinama on Thursdays at 6:00 p.m. and Saturdays at 3:00 p.m. for two hours each day, and about ten or twelve show up. I tried to have additional harinamas Monday through Wednesday, but no one came except for a bhakta from Slovakia, also a guest, but he did book distribution most of the time. I made some halava with chick pea flour and rolled it into balls for distribution, and tried to go out each day for three hours, with invitations, sweets, and books.


First Annual Wroclaw Ratha-yatra


Although Indradyumna Swami’s festival tour has put on many Ratha-yatras in Poland, none of the three Polish temples had done a Ratha-yatra in their home towns until June 13, when the congregation of the Wroclaw temple put on their first Ratha-yatra. I heard about the festival last September and had been cultivating a desire to attend. As I was traveling the six hours by train from Leipzig to Wroclaw, I was thinking the journey to be an insignificant austerity to have the pleasure of once again dancing for Lord Jagannatha, Lord of the universe.


One boy on the train was favorably impressed by seeing the devotees at Woodstock in Zary, his home town, and recalled eating the rice and halava. I invited him to take a Polish book I brought for the occasion, but he declined saying he did not believe in God. I told him the story of what Ravinda Svarupa Prabhu once said to someone who did not believe in God, “Tell me about the God you do not believe in.” When the man described God as an angry person who takes pleasure in making people burn in hell forever for a finite number of a offenses, Ravinda Svarupa Prabhu replied, “I don’t believe in that God either!”


As I was trying find the location of the Ratha site, I met another young man who had seen the devotees at Woodstock. Since then, he became vegetarian and has been vegetarian for five years. Jananivasa KCS, one of my translators from the tour, told me that in the art school his friend attends in Wroclaw, half of the students are vegetarian, a high percentage, especially for Poland.


Both the  parade and festival were held in Rynek Square, a large rectangular area, surrounded by many cafes with outdoor seating. Because it was the first time the city gave permission, they were restrictive, and the Ratha-yatra could go round within the square several times for a couple of hours but not go into streets, however, since the square seemed to be the most happening place in town, that was not so much of a problem. Many of my friends from the Polish summer Festival of India tour were there, playing their characteristic roles as MCs, kirtana leaders, Jagannath pujaris, translators, chefs, and organizers. The whole festival seemed like a beautiful way to begin a summer of festivals in Poland, and both the devotees and the observers were very happy.

I saw one lady in a café holding her fork motionless in midair as she watched Lord Jagannatha and His associates pass by with their cart.

A friend saw two Polish men staring at the cart and the devotees from a café, leaving their ever present beer mugs idle, at least for some time. Officials did not let the devotees distribute invitations or books, but I did not learn that till the end so distributed about a dozen Polish Hare Krishna mantra cards to people whose smiles, glances, and photography, made their interest obvious, and all but two of the people accepted them. A few observers danced along to the kirtana at the stage show afterward, but not as many as sometimes.


The Deities were made just for this festival, being painted for the first time just three days before, and Krishna Ksetra Prabhu did their installation ceremony on their Ratha cart. I praised him later for demonstrating Deity worship as well as writing books about it. Consistent behavior of the leaders strengthens the faith of the people in general. For me it is interesting to see the variety of jolly smiles on the different Jagannatha Deities, expressing the varying realizations of those blessed to be allowed be vehicles for their appearance. I thank Madhai Jivana Dasa for the picture.


Siva, a resident of Bangalore, visiting Wroclaw for a few days for a Hewlett Packard convention, was very happy to come across Lord Krishna’s devotees and their Ratha-yatra procession. He is a worshiper of Balaji, the famed Krishna Deity, of Tirupati, Andhra Pradesh, and he stayed with us six hours for the whole Ratha-yatra and stage show. He said he had once heard in an ISKCON temple it is very important to chant the “Hare Krishna” part of the mantra first, and not “Hare Rama”, and he couldn’t understand why the devotee was so forceful about it as Krishna and Rama are the same. I answered the best I could and suggested the Krishna Ksetra Prabhu, who has studied Vaishnavism from the academic point of view as well as the devotional point of view may give a better answer. Krishna Ksetra Prabhu stressed the important principle is the Krishna and Rama are the same, so it does not really matter the order it is chanted in the mantra, and he told the story of how Lord Caitanya advised His devotee, Murari Gupta, the unalloyed Rama bhakta, to change his allegiance to Krishna. Not wanting to displease Lord Caitanya nor forsake Lord Rama, He stayed awake the whole night in a state of despair. When he revealed his mind to Lord Caitanya, Lord Caitanya accepted his devotion to Rama, saying it was just befitting him, as he was the incarnation of Hanuman. Siva was happy with Krishna Ksetra Prabhu’s answer, saying he could tell he was an elevated person by how he answered the questioned. We parted ways inviting him to the Wroclaw’s Sunday feast, and promising to keep in touch by email.


Sunday Feast in Leipzig’s Mariannen Park


I have heard that in the early history of ISKCON, sometimes the devotees would hold the Sunday feast in the park. In Leipzig, the devotees do that even now, on sunny days in the summer.


They bring an altar and Deities of Srila Prabhupada, Gaura Nitai, and Lord Jagannatha, Baladeva, and Subhadra, and well as Giri-Govardhan. They do the bhajana, kirtana, and lecture in the park, and if the weather remains good, the feast as well. One benefit of this is that passersby get a chance to see what a Hare Krishna Sunday feast program is like, and become attracted. The day I was there, at least five new people came for the feast.


In the picture above, you can see one onlooker watching from behind the pujari.


Another benefit of being in the park is there is more room to dance!


I thank Bhaktin Sasha for taking the above pictures. For more of her pictures of the Sunday feast in the park, go to:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/--iskcon--leipzig--/sets/72157619774882342/


Spiritual Encounters


David of Antwerp is doing a video on the spiritual search, and the local Hare Krishnas are featured in it. He explained that early in his life he was not interested in religion, but now it had become an important concern of his. In his search he has discovered one characteristic that religious people have which he appreciates. No matter what religion they are with they, be it Christianity, Buddhism, or Hare Krishna, they tend to keep their appointments, an admirable trait. Those who callously ignore promises to others frustrate him.

   A young man from Niagara Falls, Canada, noticed the Bhagavad-gita on display as I chanted in a square in Amsterdam. He told me he met the devotees in Antwerp and bought a small book because he didn’t have enough money for a big one. Now he came across Bhagavad-gita when he had enough money to buy it and so he did.

   A jolly middle-aged lady, who was accompanied by her sister of a similar age, did a few dance steps along with my singing. I gave them sweets and invitations which they accepted. They said they were Christians. After one of them commented on my happiness, we had a brief conversation in which I made the point that our real pleasure is to glorify God, which they also agreed with. They ended up praying for me and continuing in a happy mood.

   One young lady from Ukraine just enjoyed listening to our singing, and after ten minutes or so, we stopped and talked to her. She had enjoyed seeing the devotees in several places in Ukraine, such as Kiev and Dnepropotrovsk. I told her how I liked chanting in Ukraine, in both Kiev and Kharkov, because the people were so receptive, and how we have big festival every year near Simferopol, attended by four thousand people, and with three hours singing in the evening. Tomas introduced the Isopansad to her and she decided to buy it.

    One lady from Tennessee asked if she could take a picture of me. She was developing an interested in Hinduism and already had a copy of Bhagavad-gita. I mentioned how I appreciated from that tradition the idea that all creatures, even plants and animals of living souls, and deserving of respect. 

   On a flight from Cologne to Leipzig, the lady who had the seat in the same row as mine knew very little English. As she said she was from Cologne, I decided to show her the invitation to their temple’s Sunday feast, which tells a little about the philosophy on it. She asked if our group originated from India, and I said “Yes.” She took a book from her bag, and in the white space on the back of the back cover, she wrote down the details about our program and returned the invitation card to me. When leaving, I gave her my business card and asked her to write me if she attends the temple and to let me know what she thinks. Perhaps she will go and have a wonderful experience. The Deities are beautiful and the devotees are friendly, why not?


Insight from Lectures and Reading


Satsvarupa Dasa GoswamiYellow Submarine, #91: “There are so many valuable devotees who render their service to guru and Krishna without being heralded and given great attention. But Krishna loves them, and He has room for them in His heart. You don’t have to be a superstar to be appreciated by Radha and Krishna. Just render steady service, and you’ll be deeply appreciated.”


Kadamba Kanana Swami:


When we chant we feel something uplifting but not the full manifestation of what is there, Krishna Himself. So much mercy is there, but we do not all realize all of it. Vaishnavas meditate on all all-attractive, wonderful features of Krishna. When we serve Krishna, He reveals His attractiveness. Because Krishna manifests in the Deity, we can easily serve Him.


Many people are religious but not happy because they worship God out of fear. We do not spend our daily meditating on giving up bad qualities but rather meditate on positive activities in relationship with Krishna and find the bad qualities gradually disappear. Actually the greatest Vaishnavas, although thinking themselves fallen, glorify the greatness of the Lord’s mercy for He can easily deliver them. Bhaktivinoda Thakura talks about receiving an auspicious desire tree from our guru but not properly caring for it. By properly caring for it, we can make to bloom. Some punish themselves in the name of bhakti saying they have made the greatest blunder, and can never progress, but this is not a proper meditation. As we absorb ourselves more in Krishna’s service and pastimes, the more we experience the spiritual world.


Kadamba Kanana Swami asked his disciple to pose a question on the lecture and answer it himself, an interesting teaching strategy.


Dhananjaya Prabhu, Amsterdam temple president:


In Alalanatha, at a temple of Vishnu said to be millions of years old, there is an impression of Lord Caitanya in the floor, where the stone melted in ecstasy, when Lord Caitanya had offered prostrated obeisances before the Deity.


Narottama Dasa Thakura states that simply by accepting that the associates of Lord Caitanya are perfect, one can attain the service of Krishna in Vrindavana.


Shyamananda Pandita spoke Krishna-katha so nicely that atheists, agnostics, and blasphemers became moved by hearing his words, and became his followers.


Time is running out for all of us. Therefore, we should approach Krishna.


If we existed before this creation, and we will exist after the annihilation, that means that we have nothing to do with this cosmic manifestation.


Janmastami (LOK) Prabhu:


In “Suddha-bhakati,” Bhaktivinoda Thakura mentions observing Vaishnava holidays with care and attention. Similarly in “Guru Vadanam,” Narottama Dasa Thakura mentions one must bow down to the guru with great care and attention.


Direct smaranam is when we remember the form of the Lord, and indirect smaranam is when we remember Krishna as the taste of water.


In the beginning faith is the driving force in our spiritual life. When we reach the stage of ruci [taste], rati [attachment] is the driving force, and at prema [love] love itself is the driving force.


If we chant Hare Krishna, while trying to give up offenses, we will experience devotional service to be a happy experience.


Amita Krishna Prabhu:


Lord Caitanya is our only friend because He has the medicine to cure our disease.


The best service to help others is to give the holy name.


Lord Caitanya told Srivasa Thakura that by not disturbing my kirtana when your son died, you purchased Me, but still, next time you should tell Me.


Initially some people may reject the sankirtana, but if we persist, we will break through the resistance.


If your religion is for real, you can spread it by changing the people’s hearts. Other methods, such as politics, are bogus. 


If people come to understand that the Hare Krishna movement has relevant contributions to knowledge of religion, politics, medicine, and family relationships, they will appreciate us.


Mother Bhagavati:


When I prepare to give a lecture, I always listen to lectures by Srila Prabhupada’s disciples because they often illuminate aspects of the purport, which I completely miss.


Knowledge is to know the living entity, the material nature, and the Lord who controls the other two.


Chanting Hare Krishna offensively is like taking a shower with dirty water.


Q: How can we explain that Krishna’s quality of nirguna does not mean He has no qualities?

A: We have qualities and we emanate from Krishna, so Krishna must also have qualities.


Personal Reflections


I served out the Sunday feast in Amsterdam. After serving, I ate alone as the others were finished and on their way. It reminds me of long ago, before doing the book tables at the Alachua feast, when I would have the same experience—sitting, and eating alone. Now, as I did then, I pray to Krishna, who always remains when our other friends go, and who we can thus realize is our supreme friend—always ready to pay attention to us, as we pay attention to Him.


The temple president in Antwerp invited me to give a series of lectures on the holy name, and I did four, but after that I decided I would rather hear the realizations of my friends, Amita Krishna and Janmastami Prabhus. You have to be really advanced to be able to give so many lectures to the same people without hearing them speak as well. For me it seems artificial.


When I chant japa while traveling, I tend to worry about my different travel connections. Noticing that I began preaching to myself , “Listen to the Krishna’s names, and He will made your travel connections work out.” I think that helped both my chanting and my traveling to go smoother.

As I took the train from Leipzig to Wroclaw, I noticed in the all small East German towns I passed, the tallest building was always the church, reminding us of a day when religion was given more importance.


-----


"If even a candāla [dog-eater], simply out of curiosity, sees the Lord on the cart, he becomes counted as one of the associates of Vishnu." (The Nectar of Devotion, Chapter 9)


by Krishna-kripa das (noreply@blogger.com) at June 18, 2009 03:03 PM

H.H. Bhakti Caitanya Swami : Vyasa puja of Indradyumna Swami Maharaja

Dear devotees and friends,

Please accept my best wishes. All glories to Srila Prabhupada.

I am now in the Altai Mountains, a 5 hour drive from Barnaul in south-central Siberia. We’re having the annual West Siberian summer festival in a beautiful holiday resort, right next to a major river, so everything is very picturesque and pleasant. The only problem is that the weather is cold and wet, and in many countries you’d think that it’s winter rather than almost midsummer.

I last wrote from Tomsk, at the end of May. We spent a few days there and had our usual preaching programmes, and one interesting thing we did was take part in the annual potato planting ritual. The devotees have acquired some land for developing a semi-rural community, about 15 minutes drive from
the city. It’s a very nice place, with good land, and already a number of devotee families are in the process of building houses there.

Every year in Russia, on the last weekend of May, people go to their farms or dachas and plant the season’s first potatoes, and the devotees were doing that also. They planted about a hectare of potatoes, and asked me to come and take part. I’m really from a city background, and I don’t know if I’ve ever planted anything before in my life, but here I went down the ploughed land, following a devotee who was digging holes for the potatoes, and I placed the seed potatoes in the ground. It was an interesting experience, and the devotees seemed to appreciate it.

There’s a photo of me and Carudesna prabhu, the Regional Secretary, in the photos section, and you’ll see that we’re both wearing karmi clothes, and you might wonder why. The reason is that the Russian Orthodox Church has started a campaign against the devotees living there, and we want to cause as little of a stir as we can whenever we go there. Therefore the devotees never go there in devotional clothes, and they asked me not to also. The blue track suit I’m wearing in the photo is actually my sleeping clothes which I wear every night, but on this day I had them washed especially so I could take part in the potato planting programme.

From Tomsk we moved on to Kemerovo, a city about 2 hours drive away, where ISKCON has been active for many years. There’s a small temple there, but this time the devotees rented a small holiday resort for our programmes, and we met morning and evening for kirtana and class in a beautiful hall in the main building. They have also got some land, further outside the town, for developing a rural type community.

While there we discussed with the main yatra leader, Laghu Hari prabhu, about having a japa retreat in January, in the same holiday resort. It will take place from the Russian Christmas Day, January 7th, till January 9th, and we will invite devotees from all over Siberia to come and take place.

Yes, in Russia they don’t accept December 25th to be Christmas Day. January 7th is the day for them, and it’s a national holiday for everyone, whereas December 25th for them is just another working day.

On June 2nd we drove to Novokuznetsk, which translates as “New Iron Worker”, and industrial town nearby. On the way we stopped in Leninz Kuznetsk at the house of my disciples Vasudeva and Devaki for a morning programme, and then June 3rd was going to be Pandava Nirjala Ekadasi.

The Ekadasi was nice. We had Guru Puja and Srimad Bhagavatam class in the morning, and then Gaura Arati and Bhagavad Gita class in the evening, plus I had to give some darshans, but otherwise we just chanted. Usually I have so many things to do during the day, but this day I had made up my mind to focus on the holy names, and if possible do 64 rounds. Due to the kirtanas and classes I had to give I wasn’t able to reach 64, but still it was nice to focus on the Hare Krishna without major distraction.

One devotee had written to me just before Pandava Nirjala Ekadasi, asking: “What was Srila Prabhupada’s view on Nirjala  Ekadasi, as He did not stress it to his disciples. How come we fast Nirjala if Prabhupada never stressed it? Please tell us the benefit of fasting for Nirjala and if it is necessary.”

This question comes up from time to time, and even I had written once to Giriraja Maharaja asking him of his personal experiences with Srila Prabhupada in this regard, and he confirmed that Srila Prabhupada didn’t
observe Pandava Nirjala Ekadasi any differently from how he observed other ekadasis. He said: “‘Example is more important than precept,’ and Srila Prabhupada never set the example for us to observe Nirjala Ekadasi. Further, when the Nectar of Devotion first came out, Mother Yamuna asked Srila Prabhupada if we should ‘remain fasting throughout the night and continuously chant the glories of the Lord,’ as stated in NOD. Srila
Prabhupada replied, ‘No. We have too much service.’”

I even remember myself when Pandava Nirjala Ekadasi was first practiced in England. It was in about 1979, and we found on that day that some of the devotees were fasting completely, and we were surprised by that. They explained that if one has broken ekadasi during the year then if one follows this ekadasi without eating or drinking, then it makes up for the broken ones.

We have seen in sastra that there are statements to that effect, in some of the so-called “Ekadasi” books, although often it seems that the sastric references quoted there are more on the karma kandiya side, telling of different material benefits that will be there if one follows the different ekadasis. When Srila Prabhupada was present there was no mention of these ideas, and rather it seems that if devotees broke ekadasi when he was present he expected that they observe it properly the next day, dvadasi.

On the other hand Srila Prabhupada did emphasize chanting and hearing more on ekadasi days, so personally I like to take the opportunity once in the year to do so, while at the same time being ready to do what I consider my main service, which is to speak the philosophy and Krishna katha in general. Otherwise as far as I can see it is not important to observe Pandava Nirjala Ekadasi in the way so many devotees do, particularly if other services are minimized for the day.

On June 5th we drove to Barnaul, which is perhaps the most developed of any yatra in West Siberia. There are perhaps 400 practising devotees there and they’re very active. We went on harinama with about 100 devotees on Saturday night, and apparently they do this every Saturday evening. They even have a police escort of about 3 or 4 men on foot, and a couple of cars which block the road when the party crosses it. In Russia sometimes devotees are quite frightened of coming out in public and wearing devotee clothes or openly
doing devotee activities, out of fear of the police and city officials, but in Barnaul ISKCON is accepted as a major religious/social organization, and given a number of important privileges.

On June 8th we drove to Biisk, as small city about 2 hours drive from Barnaul, and we did a programme with the devotees there in their small centre. There were about 35 devotees present, and we had kirtana and talked about Lord Caitanya’s sankirtana movement.

Then on June 9th I flew from Barnaul, first to Moscow and then to Riga in Latvia, to take part in a festival there with Indradyumna Maharaja. We held Rathayatra in Palanga, the main holiday resort town in neighbouring Lithuania, and observed Maharaja’s Vyasa Puja there.

Unfortunately Maharaja was sick, and was not able to lead any kirtana, but he gave two very nice classes.

I have always admired Maharaja very much, and he is kind enough to take an interest in my life in Krishna consciousness, so I wanted to express this in an offering to him on his Vyasa Puja day. Here is the offering:

Dear Indradyumna Swami Maharaja,

Please accept my humble obeisances. All glories to Srila Prabhupada.

I have been waiting for this occasion for a long time now, and it has finally come - the opportunity to express my gratitude to you for all the help and kindness you have given me over the years, and to also glorify you for your outstanding qualities and qualifications as a disciple of Srila Prabhupada, and as my senior Godbrother.

First of all I want to mention some things about our personal relationship. It began in mid-1973, when you came as the sankirtana leader of the French yatra to the London Rathayatra in July 1973. We were also doing some book distribution around London and the UK and we thought, what will these French devotees be able to do? They won’t be able to deal with the English people as well as we do.

But you and your team proved us completely wrong. You were distributing at least twice as many books as us and showed us another dimension of book distribution.

We met in person one evening in the Bury Place temple in London. I was the treasurer, and was in the process of counting some money, when I felt I needed to use the toilet. I quickly went out and was back within a couple of minutes, to find you standing in the office, looking at the money I had left sitting on the table.

You told me “Bhagavan prabhu (the then GBC of France) would be very angry if you left this laksmi lying around. Anyone could have stolen it.”

Of course it shocked me a little, but I understood that you were right, and took your instruction to heart to be more careful with Krishna’s Laksmi.

So from the beginning of our relationship you gave me guidance, and you’ve continued to do that over the years, directly and indirectly.

I remember when I was Temple President in the Sri Sri Radha Radhanatha temple in Durban, South Africa. One time I was feeling very frustrated with the situation there, and wanting a way to get out of the service. I was
walking around the temple moat chanting and thinking about the challenges I was facing, particularly with one very politically minded devotee, and you just walked up to me and asked if you could become the Temple President!

I immediately took it that you had been directly inspired by Lord Krishna to save me from my predicament, and accepted on the spot. Perhaps you saved my life!

While you were Temple President you developed the book distribution in amazing ways, getting devotees out on the streets every day who I thought would never go out to do books. Such is your potency.

Then at that time you began the Durban Rathayatra, which is one of the most successful Rathayatras outside India. Just see your transcendental vision and foresight!

You have given me many instructions over the years, and recently you’ve been encouraging me strongly to establish a web site with classes of mine on it. I kept getting emails from you about this every few days, and I was trying to get it organized, but it was coming slowly. I felt too embarrassed to tell you that it was “just now coming” and so hesitated to reply each time you wrote.

But the main thing I felt then, as I have felt many times before, is that you actually care for me, and want to help me become some proper type of servant of Srila Prabhupada.

I know many of our Godbrothers, and have nice relationships with many, but that type of personal concern and care is only there from a few, and you are one of them. I want you to know that I appreciate that very much, and I pray that you will continue to keep looking over me and guiding and correcting me forever.

Your qualities are many and are outstanding. Like Prahlada Maharaja you are very dear to Lord Nrsingadeva and He is always protecting you from difficulty and danger in your devotional service. Like Lord Nityananda you understand the mission of Lord Caitanya and are fully dedicated to giving His mercy to the fallen conditioned souls. Like Srila Prabhupada and our previous acaryas you are able to distill the essence of the Vedic scriptures and present the message perfectly for the benefit of the devotees. Like Laksmi devi you are always serving the lotus feet of the Lord with perfect care and attention. Like Srimati Radharani Herself you are willing to do anything for your beloved Krishna, and find no price too high to pay for His pleasure. Like Haridas Thakura you are constantly absorbed in chanting Hare Krishna and giving the holy names to everyone.

Another very merciful thing you have done recently is give me Giriraja. You always have Him with you, and in your heart, and now you have given Him to me. He is here with me witnessing this wonderful occasion directly today, and I’m sure He’s very happy that you are being worshipped and served so fittingly.

There are so many things to say, and not enough time, but today I pray at your lotus feet that you will keep giving your kind association to me, so that one day we can serve, with Giriraja Maharaja, together in Goloka
Vrindavana.

Your most fallen servant,

Bhakti Caitanya Swami

The Rathayatra was very nice, with about 200 devotees participating from all over the Baltics, including even Estonia. The next morning I drove to Riga airport and then flew back to Barnaul, and drove for 5 hours to where we are now, near a town named Gorno Altaisk, in a beautiful holiday resort.

The only problem is the resort is designed for summer use only (there are holes in the walls of the house I’m staying in), and the weather is wintery right now. This morning it was about 3 degrees, and at the most it is meant to be about 13, and the wind is howling outside and sometimes rain is falling. Today I have a cold so our devotee doctor Sudama Vipra prabhu a disciple of Bhakti Tirtha Maharaja, as ordered me to stay inside, so I won’t be continuing my seminar on the Demons in Krishna’s Vrindavana Pastimes.

However tomorrow I’m hoping to participate. I’ll let you know what happens shortly.

Hoping this meets you well.

Your servant,

Bhakti Caitanya Swami

June 18, 2009 02:07 PM

Dandavats.com : Andhra Pradesh Governor Releases New Book

Mahasrnga Das: Governor of Andhra Pradesh India, His Excellency N. D. Tiwari released a book titled 'End of Modern Civilization and Alternative Future' by Dr Sahadeva dasa at a function held in Hyderabad yesterday.

by Administrator at June 18, 2009 11:52 AM

Dandavats.com : Photos from RathaYatra in Poland 13.06.2009

Paravara das: Please see photos of first Polish RathaYatra in Wroclaw - one of the main cities in Poland. One of the Participants was Trivikrama Svami and Krsna Ksetra Dasa. The festival was wonderful and Lord Jagannath made the weather just perfect. We hope You will Enjoy the photos.

by Administrator at June 18, 2009 11:49 AM

Dandavats.com : International school in Mayapur now accepting enrolments for new year!

Hare KrishnaBy Anupama Devi Dasi

The Sri Mayapur International School's holistic approach to education engages the body, mind, intelligence and words of devotee children from all over the world. It prepares them to fulfill their life's purpose spiritually, at the same time providing internationally accepted skills, training and academic education

by Administrator at June 18, 2009 11:45 AM

Devadeva Mirel, Alachua, USA : Open Letter to BBT Art Calendar Peeps

Dear BBT--

I know you are not a person, but an organization that publishes stuff. Nevertheless, please hear my plea.

Please make the BBT art calendar, particularly the Ekadasi/variant date thing, more user friendly.

I have blown too many Ekadasis because of my own user error in reading the calendar. Here's a suggestion. How about highlighting the Ekadasi day and the variant date? Or how about marking the variant date right on the two boxes instead of some calendar small print footnote which, in my advanced age, find difficult to read.

Sure, there are online resources for finding out the correct date, but that would mean I would have to go on the computer...and anyone who knows me even a little bit knows I am hardly on this thing, what with being such a busy mom and all.

Who really likes the variant date thing? Pretty much no one who is subject to it's rule. I'm not asking you to change the phase of the moon for me but just the calendar layout.

Sincerely,
Fastingthewrongday V. Dasi

by Devadeva Mirel (noreply@blogger.com) at June 18, 2009 09:43 AM

Bhakta Chris, New York, USA : The Nectar Chronicles: Part 1

Inspired by the "Nectar of Devotion" lecture series given by His Divine Grace Srila Prabhupada from October 20-November 13, 1972 at the Radha-Damodara Temple in Vrndavana, India

All of these lectures are available for download at ISKCON Desire Tree.

Let me set the scene...

It is autumn in Vrndavana. The clouds have broken in the rainy season, a natural metaphor of the mercy of Caitanya Mahaprabhu that has broken through to the Western world.

Prabhupada describes it thusly in the "The Description of Autumn" chapter of Krsna book: "As clouds sometimes clear, even in the rainy season, and sometimes the moon, stars and sun become visible, so even in this Kali-yuga there are sometimes advantages. For example, sometimes Lord Caitanya’s Vedic movement of distributing the chanting of the Hare Krsna mantra is heard. People seriously eager to find real light should take advantage of this movement instead of looking toward the light of mental speculators and atheists."

Surrounded by a transcendental gaggle of his young, eager,confused, and very sincere disciples from the mleccha-lands, the acarya, the best friend, the magnificent personality that is Srila Prabhupada expounds on the basics of Krsna Consciousness, laying the literal foundation for the worldwide spreading of his mission for the benefit of all living entities.

Thanks to the minor miracles of modern recording technology, we, as his disciples and grand-disciples and so on, have the unique situation of having the sound of the acarya, the words of the acarya, and the presence of the acarya available freely at our fingertips and eardrums at any given moment.

These are my humble reflections on these timeless and priceless lectures, the words of Srila Prabhupada, the parampara passing through him and in him, to us now and forever.

Lecture #1
10-20-72


Srila Prabhupada knows that his young disciples, those his spiritual master has sent to him to help him fulfill his mission, are raw and prone to easy and heavy misjudgement and misunderstanding.

So, although he is speaking from the very exalted platform of the Bhakti-Rasamrta-Sindhu by Srila Rupa Goswami, which has been translated by Prabhupada, who like Srila Vyasadeva is very kind to the ignorant masses, into The Nectar of Devotion, we are really here in Krishna Consciousness 101, and we should relish every moment.

This is our chance to stand on the firmest ground, to build the strongest foundation, simply by our attentive and respectful hearing.

Rupanugas
...Who is the personality behind this foundation? It is Srila Rupa Goswami. Prabhupada says our aim of life must be to serve the mission of the acaryas. By this service, in its many dynamic forms and expressions, we actually associate with Rupa Goswami and all the acaryas personally

Another brick in the transcendental wall of our foundation is the association of the devotees, the cypher and medium through which we gain the opportunity for loving service exchanges wherein this personal association of the acaryas lies, waiting to bear its fruit.

Siddhanta...the conclusions of the acaryas are the lighthouse of clarity in the dark sea of the Kali-Yuga. Prabhupada says to the assembled Vaisnavas:

"Those who are advanced devotee, they know siddhänta, the conclusion. In the Caitanya-caritämåta, therefore, it has been advised, siddhänta baliyä citte nä kara alasa ihä haite krsna läge sudrdha mänasa [Ädi 2.117]

If you neglect siddhänta, conclusion, given by the äcäryas, then you will misunderstand Krsna. Krsna, therefore Narottama däsa Thäkura says... These are the evidences.
Narottama däsa Thäkura, such an exalted äcärya, he's teaching us, "Don't try to understand yugala-piriti, the love affairs between Rädhä and Krsna, concoctedly, by your own concoction." No.

You should first of all try to serve the Six Gosvämis, rüpa-raghunätha-pade haibe äkuti, how they are directing. Just like this Bhakti-rasämåta-sindhu. Srila Rüpa Gosvämi is not teaching in the beginning the loving affairs of Rädhä-Krsna. No. He's training, first of all, the reader, the devotee, how to become first of all pure devotee."


If we jump, we shall fall...fall right off the cliff. Prabhupada warns his young disciples, he warns us, that we shouldn't take off the training wheels until we know how to balance ourselves, until we know how to ride the bike of Vaisnava etiquette, until we have real, honest, active faith in the siddhanta of the acaryas.

We cannot re-establish our relationship with Krsna artificially, or as Prabhupada reveals by metaphor, we cannot force the sun to rise. It is revealed gradually, with proper training. Svarup-siddhi, our natural position, is revealed gradually.

Prabhupada also knows that some of his young disciples are still impressionable to the impersonalist gobbly-gook they discovered in their psychedelic journey to the promised land.

Similar to the "stay high forever" rhetoric of the 2nd Avenue days, Prabhupada relates that the impersonalist may shoot into the effulgence like a rocket, buoyed by his austerities, but like the rocket, unless it finds a planet to land on and engage, one cannot float forever. One must come back down.

Whether its psychedelic seasoning or millions of lifetimes of cold-cave austerities, without Krsna in the center, the results are not permanent. The fruits eventually become dry, spoiled, and rotten.

Prabhupada is very careful to make clear that artificial bhajan invariably leads back to sense pleasure. It does not lead to Krsna. If we jump, we will fall down.

***

Our training ground is our preachings. Our college classrooms. Our bhakti-vrksa gatherings. Our festival delights. Our subway book distributions. Every inch of the globe stands ready to be used to rescue our faltering excuse of an civilization to the feet of the acaryas.

Prabhupada's encouragement is simple but completely rock-solid. We should just try to preach this message, and the more strength we will get to go on further and further, reaching more and more people, entering into newer and uncharted territories.

This is the best welfare activity for everyone. Better than political rallies, petitions, and seditions. The welfare it gives is free and real.

It hits the soul, like a Trane refrain, and brings the love so lacking, filled in its void by a hatred, a collection of aparadhas, that sears the very idea of our actual identity, of the peace and self-realization that is our eternal birthright.

Anyone who is preaching the message of Lord Caitanya is most, most dear to Krsna. It is His desire, His will, and His greatest pleasure that we preach the siddhanta of the acaryas to our fellow uncovered devotees and covered-over devotees, whomever we know and whomever we will meet.

And preaching is not difficult. We are simply to establish that Krsna is the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Isvarah paramah krsna. We must become sincerely convinced and then we can also convince others.

Prabhupada says the test of advancement of our sincerity as we build our foundations in Krsna Consciousness, is to experience oneself as different in mood, thoughts, and actions from the karmis, jnanis, etc.

If we walk down the street, and we feel different from those around us, if we don't desire the mundane that surrounds us, then we are pushing through. The rainy season is beginning to clear, and the sunlight of the Supreme Lord is beginning to shine through

(Of course, if we walk down the street, and we feel different from others, yet don't feel proud or superior because of it, then that is a further, higher level of advancement)

Another example is our willingness to give up the non-essential comforts in our life (Speaking from the brahmacari side is the clear realization that we don't require furniture) to find the better engagement.

Letting go of our lesser tastes makes room for the higher tastes. It makes room for the real bricks, the real spiritual cement we have to have in place to survive and thrive as the servants, the personal associates of the acaryas.

by Club 108 (noreply@blogger.com) at June 18, 2009 08:59 AM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : Caitanya Mahaprabhu Trashed 100 Verses Praising Him

Lecturing from the Caitanya Caritamrita in Maypura on 25 March 1975, Srila Prabhupada said this:

vande gurun isa-bhaktan
isam isavatarakan
tat-prakasams ca tac-chaktih
krsna-caitanya-samjnakam

[Cc. Adi 1.1]

read more

by Mukunda Goswami at June 18, 2009 07:00 AM

Gouranga TV : New Vrindaban 1

2009. májusában Radha Krisna prabhu és Manorama das részt vett az amerikai West Virginiában található New Vrindabani Festival of Inspiration rendezvényen. Az ittlétünk alatt videók is készültek. E…

by uploader at June 18, 2009 06:00 AM

Kurma dasa, AU : Changing Bodies

Connaught Waters, Essex, 1964:

Connaught Waters, Epping Forest, Essex, England, 18 June 1964 (my mother's birthday). Young Kurma, aged 11 (yes, I once had hair).

Step aside, Harry Potter.

by Kurma at June 18, 2009 05:28 AM

Japa Group : Best Time For Spiritual Duties


"It is so much better to chant early in the morning, when the mind is calm and the atmosphere is quiet. It’s the best time of the day to chant. You’re usually alert and awake for an early-morning burst. The mind is willing to go along with attentive chanting for a stretch. It seems the later the morning gets, the less your potency. The brahma-muhurta hour is recommended as the best time for spiritual duties."

From Bhajana Kutir #105

by Rasa Rasika (noreply@blogger.com) at June 18, 2009 04:18 AM

H.G. Sankarshan das Adhikari, USA : Thursday 18 June 2009--Make a Revolution Now

Enough is enough. It is time now to take a strong stand against the material civilization which will, if it continues unabated in its program of deluding the entire humanity by promoting the false bodily conception of existence, continue transforming this planet into an ever-increasingly disordered and nightmarish disaster area. We must speak out strongly...

by course@ultimateselfrealization.com at June 18, 2009 02:30 AM

H.H. Bhaktimarg Swami : Monday, June 15th, 2009

Professor and Friend

Toronto, Ontario

While I moved southbound on Yonge St. on foot, a young couple stepped out of the shop just in front of me, now also going south. the man of about thirty and of south east Asian origin noticed me, gave a 'hello' and whispered something in his 'woman's' ear. they both smiled and carried on walking. Minutes later, he turned around and told me, "You did my mundana when I was one" ('mundana' is a head shaving ceremony done in the Hindu tradition as a rite of passage when one enters into childhood and sheds babyhood).

"Are you sure I was the priest that cut your hair?" I questioned.
"Yes, I'm sure. My father told me much later on," he said.
"Well, I see that it all worked out well. You have a good crop of hair on your head (laughter). When did I do this? Do you recall?"
"It was supposed to be in '81", he said.
"When you have children, you know where to go", I said.

We parted with additional laughter. Moving on to Union Station where subway, commuter and regular trains all meet I coincidentally bumped into Professor Joseph T. O'Connel and wife, Catherine. Prof. O'Connell asked if I'm on any walking marathons these days. He had just come from New York and while on 5th Avenue, accidentally ran into the Chariot Festival which is quite the electrifying event.

I do hold him in great honour. During our great struggle in earlier times to establish the authenticity of Krishna Consciousness in the west, as a scholar of religious studies, Prof. O'Connell would speak eloquently on behalf of the Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition in the '70's', when the public became curious and often times suspicious of surging religions like ours.

Prof. O'Connell once wrote, "In my judgement, it is indeed fortunate for these individuals (followers) and for the society in which they live that there has been available this outwardly exotic but inwardly authentic and well-rounded way of communal life."

10 KM

by Bhaktimarga Swami (noreply@blogger.com) at June 18, 2009 12:34 AM

H.H. Bhaktimarg Swami : Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Amazing Grace

Toronto, Ontario

Shyam accompanies me in early dawn walks. Being from Israel, he finds it cool here. He's all bundled up. For me, it's perfect. With the sun out, I was thrown a thought, "do we deserve it this good? This perfect weather?"

I recall a comment made by a monk senior to me when I had just made that bold decision to try life in the ashram (monastery). He said, "You get what you desire and what you deserve, you get two D's."

I had to think about that. An individual has aspirations for the future. They could be healthy or harmful aspirations. Then, karmically, we receive punishments or rewards based on our behaviour from the past. The current and the past impact us to the point where the future becomes determined.

So we have a situation where we are reeling back and forth from negative to positive 'karma' and then there is another principle called 'grace'. It's something we have not deserved nor perhaps desired. It appears to be an unearned favour. It's grace or mercy that gets many of us through this nasty whirlpool of good and bad.

Sometimes we must beg for this grace. Let me correct myself. It might be a good idea to always beg for grace.

7 KM

by Bhaktimarga Swami (noreply@blogger.com) at June 18, 2009 12:34 AM

ISKCON Education : International School in Mayapur Now Accepting Enrolments For New School Year!

The Sri Mayapur International School\'s holistic approach to education engages the body, mind, intelligence and words of devotee children from all over the world. It prepares them to fulfill their life\'s purpose spiritually, at the same time providing internationally accepted skills, training and academic education. SMIS immerses students in an alternative educational system that balances traditional, eternal spiritual values and contemporary international academics. This equips students to follow a Krishna Conscious lifestyle whilst pursuing a career in commerce, science, academia and other disciplines.

June 18, 2009 12:00 AM

ISKCON Education : Position Vacant for Hare Krishna School in Auckland

by Prana dasa Hare Krishna School in Auckland has a position vacant for a qualified and motivated devotee educator. Our school is a Primary school catering for students up to 12 years of age. We have a current school roll of 86 students and is rapidly increasing in size. The successful applicant will have experience in teaching primary level students up to twelve years of age. Personal specifications include dependability, flexibility and adaptability. You must be able to demonstrate comprehensive knowledge of primary school curriculum and how to meet the needs of the learner

June 18, 2009 12:00 AM

June 17, 2009

ISKCON Melbourne, AU : Daily Class - Sankarshan Prabhu

Srimad Bhagavatam 11.9.30-31 - One should approach a bona fide Guru to achieve the highest perfection in life.

by jayendra at June 17, 2009 11:53 PM

Nitya Navina dd, New Jersey, USA : Seeing through another's eyes.

As we were studying about Chapter 6: How to Discharge Devotional Service in the Nectar of Devotion, the class reached a discussion on the worshippable rivers like Mother Ganga and Yamuna. The discussion found its way to the topic on being able to see the dham. Seeing the dham requires the mercy of Gopisvara Mahadev who is the gatekeeper of the dham and also that of the Vrajavasis. The question

by noreply@blogger.com (kinkari) at June 17, 2009 11:42 PM

Balabhadra dasa : ISKCON Farms 2009

The ISKCON Farm power point presentation presented to the Governing Body Commission of ISKCON at their Mayapur meetings in February 2009 can be viewed HERE

by Balabhadra das (noreply@blogger.com) at June 17, 2009 10:01 PM

Sutapa das, BV Manor, UK : The Logic of Reincarnation


The notion of eternal damnation always baffled me. One shot to decide your destiny forever? What if you make a mistake? What if you get influenced by bad company? What if you die early trying to have a good time at university? I guess you could say in each of those situations you did have a choice, but the punishment still seems extremely disproportionate. In this world of unlimited distractions, temptations and allurements, every spiritual practitioner knows it’s a minefield – wouldn’t God be a bit more understanding?

It’s difficult to picture the Perfect Being, subjecting His own dear creation to extreme torture and suffering for eternity. The most incredible thing about this persecution is that it has nothing positive or progressive coming from it – He just tortures you again and again and again. Forever... it doesn’t stop. You can understand why people would be put off. Furthermore, there are so many unanswered questions and loose ends. What happens to a baby who is born and then dies without making any conscious decisions or actions: heaven or hell? What about someone who is mentally ill and cannot make rational choices: heaven or hell? If it’s a one life game, it definitely looks as though God has stacked the deck in favor of some.

The Bhagavad-gita explains that through the process of reincarnation, the spiritual being is given repeated chances to evolve his consciousness to perfection over time. Whatever good or bad the soul experiences in this world is ultimately an educational program aimed at refining his understanding about the self and the real purpose in life. In this way, the concepts of Karma & Reincarnation help one understand the unlimited compassion of the Perfect Being, in the midst of whatever life situations one may be currently experiencing.

by Sutapa das (sutapa.kks@hotmail.com) at June 17, 2009 09:14 PM

HH. Satsvarupa das Goswami : SDGonline – Bhajana Kutir #105

Satsvarupa dasa Goswami - June 17, 3:41 A.M.

I woke up at 3:30 A.M. with my head a little foggy. I radioed for Narayana and began my chanting.

4:45 A.M.

Early-morning japa log

I took two meds for my headache. Narayana suggested I lie down and not chant and let the meds kick in. But I was stubborn and insisted on chanting my eight rounds. I chanted in the mind, with my mouth moving. Despite the inconvenience, I kept my mind fixed on the syllables of the names without diverting much to other thoughts. I kept a good speed, mostly under seven minutes per round. I even chanted a couple of rounds in under six minutes. My whole attention was fixed on the accumulation of the rounds and the speed. It was a kind of call to Krishna to help me chant my rounds without being affected by the headache. I wished for the headache to go down. It didn’t increase, it just remained. We’ll have to see whether I’m good enough to go to the beach, but I’ve chanted my eight rounds, with time left for more chanting before Narayana comes up at 5:30 A.M. I was a chanting man and did not lament over my pain.

Japa essay

You have to make your decision when to lay back and not chant because of pain and when to go ahead and take the chance. Today I risked it and went ahead because of the importance of the early-morning rounds. It is so much better to chant early in the morning, when the mind is calm and the atmosphere is quiet. It’s the best time of the day to chant. You’re usually alert and awake for an early-morning burst. The mind is willing to go along with attentive chanting for a stretch. It seems the later the morning gets, the less your potency. The brahma-muhurta hour is recommended as the best time for spiritual duties. Devotees who have fulltime jobs should try to make the sacrifice of going to bed early at night so they can get up early. But it may be that they cannot do it because they get tired later on the job. Still, the earlier, the better. Little children and the wife may still be asleep, and you have a clear stretch to be alone with Nama Prabhu. Or husband and wife can both make a pact and be up early for the sacred yajna. A temple room in your house and deities are helpful, or at least an altar with pictures as an aid for concentration. Srila Prabhupada used to chant rounds after his very early morning translation of Srimad-Bhagavatam. He would chant before his morning walk. Before the sun rises, before the birds start chirping and the car engines start revving, in the still of predawn, chant the holy names.

In my bhajana-kutir
before Radha-Govinda
I start my daily japa.

There’s no one stirring in the house,
the only sound, my own vibration.
I reciprocate with Nama.

My head is clear
or almost clear,
I pray for clarity
and push on with the beads.

The numbers rise,
a headstart feeling.
Your heart is calm,
your mind is clean.

6:40 A.M.

I’m in the yellow submarine. We didn’t go to the beach because of my headache.

Yesterday I heard Prabhupada lecture about the combination of Maharaja Pariksit and Sukadeva Goswami. He said if the disciple is foolish and/or the spiritual master is foolish, then their coming together is useless. But if the disciple is fit and the spiritual master is fit, then there can be spiritual progress. Maharaja Pariksit was cursed to die within seven days, and the sages advised him to sit at the Ganga and hear from Srimad-Bhagavatam. Sukadeva Goswami was selected to speak to him. Maharaja Pariksit attained perfection by hearing. He also asked relevant questions. Sukadeva Goswami attained perfection by speaking. Prabhupada advised that we not hear from a cheap speaker. Nowadays, there are so many bogus Bhagavatam speakers who hold imitation bhagavata saptahas, or seven-day recitations of the Srimad-Bhagavatam in imitation of Maharaja Pariksit’s seven days. The professional speakers go at once to the rasa lila, which they are unqualified to speak on. The audience is also unqualified and wants to hear about Krishna’s dancing with the gopis. They think that Krishna is an ordinary lover, and His activities support their own mundane exploits. They don’t like to hear the pastimes of Krishna killing Kamsa because it’s too close to their own position of being a demon killed by Krishna. So they jump to the rasa dance.

But we should hear the Bhagavatam seriously from a bona fide speaker. The defect is that we think we have seven million years to live. Sukadeva Goswami at least was given notice that he had seven days, but we may not even have seven minutes to hear. We don’t know. So we should take our hearing very seriously.

People don’t know that they have to die or where they will go in their next life. This education is missing. But Maharaja Pariksit was aware of his predicament. He said to the assembled sages, “Let the snakebird or whatever magical thing is coming come and kill me. But you go on chanting the glories of Lord Vishnu. If I have to take birth in my next life, let me be a devotee of Krishna. Let me be kind to all living entities.” Maharaja Pariksit’s hearing from Sukadeva Goswami was successful, and he went back to Godhead within seven days. But the modern-day professional speakers and their motivated audiences can go on hearing Srimad-Bhagavatam for seven months or seven years without making any change in their life. Prabhupada said he knew of a famous Bhagavatam speaker in Bombay who told his audiences that they could just go on living peacefully in household life without making any changes, and things would be all right. They didn’t know that nobody can actually live peacefully in the material world. They had to give up their material lives, like Maharaja Pariksit did. But the people like to be flattered that they can go on living in family life without any change, so they support the big Bhagavatam speakers by giving them donations and honoring them as if they were great sages. Devotees in the Krishna consciousness movement should hear Srimad-Bhagavatam in the mood of Maharaja Pariksit and be prepared to change their lives and become servants of Krishna, being aware that their lives could end at any minute.

8:30 A.M.

1
A little poem is all
I ask, a fellow from Staten Island.

A little verse I could
offer to Krishna without
embarrassment.

He’d take it as a simple
sonnet? No, a humble,
more colloquial thing
from a man who loves
colloquial verse

but who wants to please
his Lord. Is it possible
that we can reach Him
with less than Bach
or Handel or Bengali
bhajanas?

I just want to say I love
You in a simple way
like blowing a single trumpet.

I just want to be myself.

2
“My Old Flame” is a torch song
with no place in the Vedic
pantheon.

We turn to our own song in
our heart, a poem-song
made of words, not melody

but we borrow from the world
where worldly emotions pour
forth. We borrow and hope
to transform them into
transcendental forms.

Krishna’s the judge if He’ll
accept it. It’s all we
know to offer. A sad
song, a love song,
a word-lament of
our own embracing.

3
A mild morning with a headache.
You can still sing to Krishna
in a fifteen-line poem.

We’re meant for that and wouldn’t
give it up for the world.

Our chance to praise the
cowherd boy with oft-
used words.
Try again to avoid cliche
because, after all, His pastimes
are repeated again and again.

So why can’t we say we love Him
and mean it, at least in
small measaure from a
small heart, say, “Govinda,
You’re the lover of the gopis.
Be with us today”?

10:30 A.M.

Free write

I’ve had a headache ever since I woke up this morning at 3:15 A.M. For pain, it’s number 2 on a scale of 1 to 5. I have continued to write through it. I can’t just leave my pages blank. It prevents me from reading Under Dark Stars, which just came from the printer. I read fifty-seven pages so far. It’s a “crazy” book, but I like it. I announced in the Introduction that it’s a novel with no plot but with lots of characters. The prose keeps grabbing you and leadng you along to turn the pages, and there are plenty of interesting poems. I don’t know how it will be received by the conventional ISKCON readers, but I don’t regret publishing it. It’s a trip. It received peer-approval by a respectable, broad-minded devotee. I’d like to read more of it, but I can’t right now.

About all I can do is sit back in my chair and be patient. I’ve already taken medicine. Dhanurdhara Swami is at Sastra’s for a week and said he’d visit me regularly. But I had to ask him to come over only once every few days because I can’t take more than that. He’s very interesting, but I get strained.

Free writing is permissible, but you have to be Krishna conscious. That includes a lot of territory. I don’t cover much territory in my life, but I can always think of Krishna. “Always remember Vishnu; never forget Him.” These two orders form the basis for all human behavior. How can you always remember Krishna? One way is by chanting His names. Another way is to be always rendering Him some service. Even if that service involves financial or managerial or legal or family duties, if it’s actually service to Krishna, it counts as remembering Him. Dhanurdhara Maharaja is often lecturing on the instructions of Krishna, remembering Him. He also writes. I also write but sometimes say something that’s not exactly Krishna conscious. It’s a reflection on my life or something that’s happening, and I try to soon connect it to Krishna. Talking about Krishna should come naturally to a devotee, not forced or “artificial.” You should actually be thinking of Him. That’s the meaning of the saying, “Always think of Vishnu; never forget Him.” It means you live in Krishna, and your thoughts are always directed in that way. It means one is a pure devotee, and his beloved is always on his or her mind.

Under Dark Stars appears to contain thoughts that are not strictly Krishna conscious. But they are written by a devotee having fun. He’s not far from Krishna, and in the next paragraph he hits the target of Krishna bullseye. You have to give it slack when you read it.

As I write this, heavy motorized lawn equipment starts up in the backyard. Just what I needed. It will probably continue for hours. My head pressure mounts. I can’t free write what I want. What do I want? A pastime of Krishna? His personal pastiems are confidential, and you have to read nine cantos of Srimad-Bhagavatam before you reach them in the Tenth Canto. And in the middle of the Tenth Canto are His pastimes with the gopis, the most confidential of all. One should be interested in all twelve cantos of the Bhagavatam and not reject a chapter. But Prabhupada wrote Krishna Book early in his career so his readers would have Tenth Canto pastimes without delay. One of my Godbrothers told me that his favorite pastime was Krishna subduing Kaliya. Most of the rasika acharyas favor the rasa dance chapter.

3:00 P.M.

My Dear Lord Krishna...

I’m writing to You after finally subduing a day-long headache. One might say I should pray to You for relief from headaches because then I could become an active lecturer and traveling preacher, and that would increase my service to You. But I don’t want to do it. You have sent me these headaches for Your reasons, and I don’t want to interfere with Your providential arrangement. I want to endure what You have sent and make the best of it, even if it makes me inactive and an invalid.

Given this situation of being outwardly inactive, what is it that I ask of You? I ask to become a better servant and devotee. I don’t think I can realistically ignore my pains and go out and travel and lecture. So I have to internally develop my devotion to You by my stay-at-home bhajana. This entails better japa, reading, writing, hearing lectures and contemplating, praying. I need to improve my sadhana in ways like these. I need to work at this and find taste in it. When I don’t have headaches, I should be doing these things.

They are not lightweight things but heavy yajnas (sacrifices). Take japa, for example. It requires concentration and stamina. If you’re going to do extra rounds beyond the minimum quota, it requires determination. It requires care to do them attentively and with nonmechanical devotion. Reading requires keeping awake and maintaining intellectual rigor. You have to keep bringing your mind back to the subject matter, like a good university student. Writing, for me, requires letting yourself be free and also going deep into personal and philosophical/devotional issues. All these activities can only be done when I am headache-free, so I must use my time efficiently when I am clear.

I pray to You to give me the strength and direction to perform this sadhana. That is my prayer. Let me not regard these activities as unimportant or inactive, but let me value them and pursue them as all I have to offer You.

When I do get a break in health, let me take the opportunity to travel and lecture, and let me dare to do it sometimes even when there is no break in health. But mostly I will be content to live within my limits. Even as I write this prayer, I am feeling the return of my head pressure, so I have to rest and live in a way that I take care of my body as a priority. I cannot push it beyond its limits. This stay-at-home sadhana can be a full, satisfying life if I pursue it according to my capacity and with Your blessings. I can please You in this way.

I ask You for the will power to perform my duties in the time allotted me and to be thankful for whatever time You give me. You are kind to accept my offerings of study and chanting, and I pray I may continue them without diminishing or weakheartedness. Let me be lionhearted like Maharaja Pariksit in his last seven days; let me be ecstatic like Raghunatha dasa Goswami despite his severe bodily austerities. Let me be myself and serve You to Your satisfaction.

from #105→

by Satsvarupa dasa Goswami at June 17, 2009 08:54 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1966 June 17: "Chaturdasi. In the evening Mr. Goldsmith hanged the notice on the door to be so remained for 15 day in terms of the Law. It is expected that the incorporation will take place sometimes after the 6th July 1966."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1966

June 17, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1968 June 17: "We want some facilities for presenting our formulas to the different nations of the world. If the United Nations hear the basic principles of our Movement, they will feel obliged to get this enlightenment."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968

June 17, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1970 June 17: "I am simply an instrument in the hands of my Spiritual Master. I do not know how far I have got the capacity to carry His order, but I may say that I have a sincere desire to do it."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1970

June 17, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1971 June 17: "Try especially to distribute our literatures. These books are so much potent that anyone who reads them is sure to become Krishna Conscious. So we want to make propaganda in that way."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1971

June 17, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 June 17: "Now you all leaders must become very much responsible and do the work that I am doing to the same standard. If there is any forgetfulness everything will be spoiled in time."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

June 17, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1973 June 17: "There is nothing that can stop the Sankirtana Movement because it is the will of God Himself, Lord Caitanya. We should just be determined to carry out our mission against all opposition, demons, nuclear war, whatever."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1973

June 17, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1973 June 17: "Preach all over the world that the only way to be saved from collective and individual devastation is to take to the chanting of Hare Krsna. Always chant Hare Krsna and seek Krsna's protection."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1973

June 17, 2009 08:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1975 June 17: "Any position we remain in, we must have full dependence on our spiritual life. This will maintain our spiritual strength. And if we maintain our spiritual strength, then anywhere we live, we live under the protection of Krishna."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1975

June 17, 2009 08:20 PM

H.H. Jayadvaita Swami : Techie devotees: Help build the BBT digital repository

The BBT has a lot of valuable stuff—books, manuscripts, letters, photos, paintings, audio, videos, and more, some of it in the Bhaktivedanta Archives, some of it elsewhere. A lot of it is in digital form, some of it not.

Following the model for an Open Archival Information System, the BBT has begun a “Digital Repository” project.

Among its purposes:

  • To put all the BBT’s stuff (as far as possible) into an up-to-date digital form, with suitable “metatags” to help in finding things.

read more

by jswami at June 17, 2009 08:19 PM

Dandavats.com : 37th Annual Festival of India (Ratha-Yatra) - Toronto - July 18-19, 2009

Yashoda Singh: New Remuna Dhama, ISKCON Toronto, would like to extend a warm invitation to devotees around the world to experience our 37th Annual Festival of India (Ratha-Yatra) on July 18-19, 2009!

by Administrator at June 17, 2009 07:49 PM

Dandavats.com : Bhaktivedanta College Radhadesh - Bhakti Sastri 2009

Dina Dayala dasa: The Bhakti Shastri course encourages students not only to memorize the contents of Srila Prabhupada’s books but also to digest the philosophy and practically apply it.

by Administrator at June 17, 2009 07:48 PM

Dandavats.com : Iskconlife.tv broadcasts this Thurs/Fri/Sat

Antardwip das: Spiritual Overload! Try to catch these super live broadcasts coming up on www.iskconlife.tv!

by Administrator at June 17, 2009 07:46 PM

Dandavats.com : Pastimes of Lord Caitanya in Antardwipa

Hare KrishnaBy Chandan Bhatia

Antardwipa: “Antar” means ‘secret’ and ‘dwipa’ means ‘island’, and this island is where Lord Krishna revealed His internal secret feelings about His future appearance as Lord Caitanya

by Administrator at June 17, 2009 07:44 PM

1966 June 17: "Chaturdasi. In the evening Mr. Goldsmith hanged the notice on the door to be so remained for 15 day in terms of the Law. It is expected that the incorporation will take place sometimes after the 6th July 1966."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1966

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 17, 2009 07:14 PM

1968 June 17: "We want some facilities for presenting our formulas to the different nations of the world. If the United Nations hear the basic principles of our Movement, they will feel obliged to get this enlightenment."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 17, 2009 07:14 PM

1970 June 17: "I am simply an instrument in the hands of my Spiritual Master. I do not know how far I have got the capacity to carry His order, but I may say that I have a sincere desire to do it."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1970

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 17, 2009 07:14 PM

1971 June 17: "Try especially to distribute our literatures. These books are so much potent that anyone who reads them is sure to become Krishna Conscious. So we want to make propaganda in that way."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1971

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 17, 2009 07:14 PM

1972 June 17: "Now you all leaders must become very much responsible and do the work that I am doing to the same standard. If there is any forgetfulness everything will be spoiled in time."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 17, 2009 07:14 PM

1973 June 17: "There is nothing that can stop the Sankirtana Movement because it is the will of God Himself, Lord Caitanya. We should just be determined to carry out our mission against all opposition, demons, nuclear war, whatever."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1973

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 17, 2009 07:14 PM

1973 June 17: "Preach all over the world that the only way to be saved from collective and individual devastation is to take to the chanting of Hare Krsna. Always chant Hare Krsna and seek Krsna's protection."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1973

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 17, 2009 07:14 PM

1975 June 17: "Any position we remain in, we must have full dependence on our spiritual life. This will maintain our spiritual strength. And if we maintain our spiritual strength, then anywhere we live, we live under the protection of Krishna."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1975

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 17, 2009 07:14 PM

Madhava Ghosh dasa, New Vrndavan, USA : Is the Future of Biofuels in Algae?


by Jamie Donovan and Ned Stowe, EESI
Washington, DC, United States [RenewableEnergyWorld.com]

As America tries to wean itself off of fossil fuels, it is turning to renewable sources of energy such as wind, solar, hydroelectric and biomass. The transportation industry relies almost entirely on petroleum, and it accounted for almost 30 percent of all U.S. greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in 2006. Transportation is the fastest growing source of GHG emissions, according to the U.S. EPA.

Alarmed by high fuel prices, a costly dependence on imported oil and rising GHG emissions, Congress passed the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) in 2005 and strengthened it in 2007, under the Energy Security and Independence Act. The law requires biofuel production to climb from 9 billion gallons in 2008 to 36 billion gallons in 2022. Of the 36 billion gallons, no more than 15 billion gallons can be corn-based ethanol, the remainder being advanced biofuels that meet at least a 50 percent GHG reduction requirement.

Algae has emerged as a promising feedstock for future biofuels due to its high energy content, energy yield per acre, fast growth and ability to grow in water of varying quality. Algae’s potential, at least in theory, is remarkable. According to the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), algae may be able to produce 100 times more oil per acre than soybeans—currently the leading source of U.S. biodiesel—or any other terrestrial oil-producing crop. Because of its high energy content, oil from algae can be refined into biodiesel, green gasoline, jet fuel or ethanol. Lastly, algae need only water, sunlight and CO2 to grow. And, it grows rapidly.

That said, cultivating algae on a commercial scale is no easy task. The industry is still testing a wide variety of methods for growing algae — open ponds, closed bioreactors or other processes…

Read whole article here.

Posted in Cows and Environment

by Madhava Gosh at June 17, 2009 06:14 PM

New Vrndavan, USA : From The Temple Lobby Hostess

Hare Krishna! My name is Rita, and I am a new resident of New Vrindaban Dham. My service is to be the Temple Lobby Hostess. I enjoy this service very much. I greet guests when they arrive and give informal tours of the temple room. I point out some of the beautiful features of the temple room, such as the stained glass ceiling and hand-woven tapestries. I then introduce guests to the Deities, and tell some of the lilas that have taken place right here in New Vrindaban. My goal is to make the guests excited about and interested in Krishna Consciousness.

I also escort guests around the property, especially in the afternoon, when the altars are closed. I take guests to see the peacocks, Prabhupada’s Palace of Gold, etc.

I always try to get the guests to fill out a “Community Guest Book” form, so that they will be added to our mailing list. People on our mailing list receive regular e-mails regarding New Vrindaban news, festivals, and other events.

I also encourage guests to take home Prabhupada’s books. If guests promise to chant every day, I give them a free set of japa beads –- their promise is the payment.

When necessary, I also sweep the temple lobby and re-stock the temple book display.

I enjoy this service very much. I meet so many interesting people! I intend to write regular reports about who I am meeting. Here is the first edition.

I met a couple from Ohio this week, and the husband and wife were both absolutely delightful. He had met a devotee at his college in 1970. He made a small donation — fifty cents was all he had. In return, the devotee gave him a card with the Maha Mantra. He took the card home and chanted for about five minutes, but then started giggling and stopped.

He told me that although he never chanted again, it was always in the back of his mind. Recently, he decided to pursue Krishna Consciousness again. He purchased a copy of KRSNA Book. He said he had to read it three or four times to “get straight who is who and get all the relationships right. That was the hardest part.” During our conversations, I was very impressed with how much he had understood from KRSNA Book.

KRSNA Book awakened his interest in spirituality. By Krishna’s arrangement, he purchased and read multiple books by Prabhupada’s disciples, without realizing the authors are associated with Prabhupada’s movement. When I asked him what interested him about these books, he said confidently, “I am interested in transcendence.”

Recently, he purchased japa beads and has been chanting at home. His wife asked him how he knows the Maha Mantra works. He told her, “Because I can feel it working. The first time I chanted, it was very intense. It was like Krishna was welcoming me back — like if you take one step toward Krishna, he will take ten steps toward you. That is the only intense experience I have had. Now the chanting is more steady.” I felt very blessed by Krishna to hear this pastime.

His wife was absolutely wonderful. She is a devout Catholic, so I had the opportunity to share with her the non-sectarianism of Krishna consciousness. She was extremely respectful toward Krishna consciousness, even though she is very happily situated in the Catholic Church. In fact, she was wonderful.

I explained to them Vrindavan and New Vrindavan are non-different, and that all the spiritual benefits that can be gained from doing pilgrimage to Vrindavan can be gained from doing pilgrimage to New Vrindavan. The husband looked thoughtful. He said, “I hadn’t thought of this as a pilgrimage before.”

She chastised him mildly, saying, “You didn’t think of it as a pilgrimage? I thought of it that way.”

Thank you for reading this report. Hare Krishna!

by mg at June 17, 2009 05:36 PM

Bhakti Lata, Alachua, USA : Patience

For many weeks now, I have been battling writer's block. I have been whirling through many adventures, but I find myself at a loss for how to convey the movements of my heart to the public.

Please, dear readers, bear with me as I go through this phase, which may persist for only a couple more days, or maybe for several more months.

But please trust that I will return when I am ready.

by Bhakti lata (noreply@blogger.com) at June 17, 2009 05:33 PM

Japa Group : Commitment Should Not Waver


"Such a basic commitment should not waver, even though one does not feel he is making progress spiritually by his daily chanting. We realize that we have a mountain of dirty things to chip away at, so it is no surprise that a lifetime can go by of steadily chanting and still unwanted things remain in the heart. That is not a reason to abandon the only chance one has for eradicating the dirt."

Bhajana Kutir #104

by Rasa Rasika (noreply@blogger.com) at June 17, 2009 03:11 PM

Sanatana Goswami das, UK : Fearless Yoga


jnana-vairagya-yuktena
bhakti-yogena yoginau
ksemaya pada-mulam me
pravisanty akuto-bhayam
The yogis, equipped with transcendental knowledge and renunciation and engaged in devotional service for their eternal benefit, take shelter of My lotus feet, and since I am the Lord, they are thus eligible to enter into the kingdom of Godhead without fear.

One who actually wants to be liberated from the entanglement of this material world and go back home, back to Godhead, is actually a mystic yogi. The words explicitly used here are yuktena bhakti-yogena. Those yogis, or mystics, who engage in devotional service are the first-class yogis. The first-class yogis, as described in Bhagavad Gita, are those who are constantly thinking of the Lord, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Krishna (link). These yogis are not without knowledge and renunciation. To become a bhakti-yogi means to automatically attain knowledge and renunciation. That is the consequent result of bhakti-yoga. In the Bhagavatam, First Canto, Second Chapter (link), it is also confirmed that one who engages in the devotional service of Vasudeva, Krishna, has complete transcendental knowledge and renunciation, and there is no explanation for these attainments. Ahaituki—without reason, they come. Even if a person is completely illiterate, the transcendental knowledge of the scriptures is revealed unto him simply because of his engagement in devotional service. That is also stated in the Vedic literature. To anyone who has full faith in the Supreme Personality of Godhead and the spiritual master, all the import of the Vedic literatures is revealed. He does not have to seek separately; the yogis who engage in devotional service are full in knowledge and renunciation. If there is a lack of knowledge and renunciation, it is to be understood that one is not in full devotional service. The conclusion is that one cannot be sure of entrance into the spiritual realm—in either the impersonal brahmajyoti effulgence of the Lord or the Vaikuntha planets within that Brahman effulgence—unless he is surrendered unto the lotus feet of the Supreme Lord. The surrendered souls are called akuto-bhaya. They are doubtless and fearless, and their entrance into the spiritual kingdom is guaranteed.

Srimad Bhagavatam 3.25.43 (link)

by sgd1008@gmail.com (Sanatana Goswami das) at June 17, 2009 02:56 PM

Bhakti Lata, Alachua, USA : Never Stop Singing



Six years ago, my friend Karuna and I had a discussion about dancing in kirtan. One could say that for one who has grown up in Krishna Consciousness, dancing in kirtan especially is the highlight of our religion.

Karuna said, “I love to dance, but I think I get carried away with the dancing - fancy moves, who's there, whatever - and forget about the essence of kirtan. So I asked Sacinandana Swami about his thoughts on this issue.

“He told me: Never dance so hard, or dance so complicated, that you stop singing. Never stop singing. Or rather, always sing in kirtan. With this as a foundation, dance your heart out!”

From this one conversation with my friend, and this one instruction of Sacinandana Swami, I decided to live every kirtan by this standard. When I sing in kirtan, I remember to look to the deities of Krishna, or the altar. I remember to look up and look around at the amazing devotees who surround me, and smile. I remember why I'm even dancing.

To always remember to sing in kirtan has transformed my experience of Krishna Consciousness… and my experience of the holy name.

Try it. Let it transform you.





by Bhakti lata (noreply@blogger.com) at June 17, 2009 10:42 AM

H.H. Bhaktimarg Swami : Sunday, June 14th, 2009

Rural Output

Brampton, Ont.

Our visiting Sanyasi (monk) has been Bhakti Ragahva Swami, perhaps one of our very best examples as an ascetic. He is extraordinarily passionate about the need for establishing economic stability through agrarian living. The swami spends considerable time in Cambodia, not far from tourist attraction Ankor Wat. I understand he is planting seeds in the hearts of those who would consider planting seeds in the ground. Most of the congregation are immigrants from India working in business or professional capacities. But they were listening. It was not a case for deaf ears. What does filter trough their minds is, “how can I possibly think of becoming a farmer, or even a gardener?”

It is a fact that few people think of becoming or leading a life in rural glory and giving themselves a good physical exercise with the earth, wind, fire, water, snow, space. As a statistic 1% of Canadians are found to be operating farms.

So what is the use in talking up the “Ghandi, Weave your own cloth”, way of life? Bhakti Ragavha swami is trying to set us up for disaster preparedness. Sustainable communities is a daring and bold step into progressive life. Chances are that when we see a wholesale breakdown of modern society’s system then people will spring into action as you may not survive otherwise.

While walking with an Isralie companion through usual bustling art gallery district of Toronto I wondered, “what if it all crumbles due to a retardation of economic flow?”

As a monastic person you have little to lose but in a more philanthropic mode what will happen to everything else?

10 KM

by Bhaktimarga Swami (noreply@blogger.com) at June 17, 2009 09:18 AM

H.H. Bhaktimarg Swami : Saturday, June 13th, 2009

So Natural!

Caledon, Ontario

On the previous night a program for Bhakti-yoga was cancelled. Our new following in Scarborough (east Toronto) was renting a space with another spiritual organization but the group became somewhat jealous when they saw members of their group gravitating to our sessions. The end result, our going there weekly is no more.

Everyone Likes Bhakti!

What was original today was a retreat at the Hart House farm where Devadatta was an instructor for a yoga class while I taught a workshop in Bhakti-yoga. Our twenty registered guests had a great time. They especially scored well in their composing prayer and poetry. They also had an incredible knack towards remembering details of friends newly-made and relaying those details before our group. Where it went really awesome was during Kirtan time. Chanting and dancing were activities that were relished beyond description.

The food rated high. To our surprise our cook, Shyama Mohini came up with a Kheer made from Soy milk mixed with vermicelli noodles. It became our dessert. The only stumbling block was a nature walk when the mosquitos forced our group to change direction. Otherwise, yes, everyone loves Bhakti. It comes so natural.

10 KM

by Bhaktimarga Swami (noreply@blogger.com) at June 17, 2009 09:13 AM

H.H. Bhaktimarg Swami : Friday, June 12th, 2009

Canada / U.S.

Toronto, Ontario

After a flight from Columbus to La Guardia, then a cab to the John F. Kennedy airport in New York catching a flight to Toronto and waiting in line at Canada customs. I was ready for my legs to hit the ground. Whew! The sun shone. Great! I asked my pick up person, Devadatta to drop me off for a break from machines so eastward bound I go on St. Claire Avenue.

A road construction crew was busy at re-enforcing the street car rail lines. The city has several street car lines especially running east-west. As a toddler our guru, Srila Prabhupada., living in Kolkata and looking at the tram car system got the idea to stand on the tram rail line, hold a stick that would reach up to the perambulator power line and then be able to move him just like the street car. So it is recorded in his biography. It gave me a laugh.

There is a marked difference between the two countries, Canada and the U.S. The U.S., a determined free way shopper culture leaves Canada lagging a bit behind in this area. Canada is a preserved multi-cultural experience whereas the U.S. is more of a national melting pot. The U.S. is louder and says what’s on it’s mind where as Canada is a bit more reserved and conservative. These are just obvious observations.

Deep down inside we are all spirits. To our detriment we rubber-stamp our souls as American, Canadian, Hindhu, Christian, man, woman, etc. But we are none of these identities, we are spirits!

10 KM

by Bhaktimarga Swami (noreply@blogger.com) at June 17, 2009 09:10 AM

Club 108, New Vrndavan : The Vision of New Vraja Dham



From a recent presentation by HG Radha-Krsna Prabhu at New Vrindaban Dham

This is a excellent and very detailed of the specific wonders and efforts that have made New Vraja Dham a real fulfillment of Prabhupada's vision for Vedic village life.

Istagosthi Notes - May 12, 2009


The visiting devotees from New Vraja Dhama (NVD) in Hungary presented a lot of information about their community, what it does, and how it works.

A total of 25 devotees attended the Istagosthi. There were a number of other options also scheduled at the same timing (a pizza "party" for all the festival workers), so attendance was down a little.


New Vraja Dhama (NVD) is also known as Eco Valley or Krsna Valley and is tucked in Hungary in the middle of Austria , Croatia , Romania and more. Hungary is a very small country about ½ the size of Mumbai. There are 2 temple, 1 in the capital and the farm project (New Vraja Dhama). There are 10 other centers around Hungary . There are about 1000 congregational members.


In Hungary there are 11 Eco villages (according to the standards set by the University there). Of these 11 villages only 2 are sustainable in the 3 areas of Environmentally, Socially, and Economically, one of which is New Vraja Dhama (NVD).


In NVD the temple building is in the center of all the other buildings. And Radhe Shyam are the Center of the Center. Everything in NVD is considered to be the abode of Radhe Shyam, so everything is kept up to a very high standard of cleanliness - the buildings, the surroundings, the grass, the trees, the cow barn are considered like the altar. Even the cow barn looks like you could eat off the floor. The devotees express their love and devotion through offering opulent flower garlands, more than just jewelry.


NVD has 550 acres, 800 different types of trees in the forest. The housing area is made up of apartment buildings with 6 flats in each building.

The temple is in the middle and there is a road called "The Milky Way" which leads to the goshala. There are 130 devotees living directly on the property and these devotees are all fed from the vegetable garden and the orchard. They have 150 beehives and sell a lot of honey. The Missionary Grhastra Community is to establish Varnashrama.


The land was purchased in 1993 and the main building constructed from 1993 to 1996. The Housing Area was developed next and The development of agriculture began in 1995 with $15,000.

About 130 devotees live on the temple property itself (40 couples, 20 children and 30 bramacaris) and another forty live in the nearby village. There are 11 Divisions of Activities with 44 different Departments. The 11 Divisions are: Education, Book Distribution, Social Care, Devotee Supplies, Eco Valley , Tourism, NVD Controlling (Administration - book keeping and preaching), Agriculture, Temple , Development (construction) and Business.


They use fructose and honey and no sugar. They do have to buy their butter to make ghee. But they cook only their own vegetables for the Deities (Radhe Shyam) and they use wood to cook.

There is a handicraft studio. The Social Care and Health Care is especially for the children, elders, mothers, and those will long term diseases.

When babies are born, they are offered to the Deities on the altar. Everything belongs to Radhe Shyam.

Each and everyone is engaged from the youngest to the oldest. There are only 4 children in the gurukula right now.


They have severe winters (almost like at New Vrindaban), they get snow for about 5 to 6 weeks. And their frost average is from the Beginning of November to the beginning of May. There do not have so much rain there

One of the biggest festivals is the Harvest Festival and also the Killing of Ravana. The children go collecting bhoga from the householders to bring to the Deities for Their Feast.

When visitors first see the goshalla they think it is a temple. It is called the Palace of the cows. The goshalla is pristine clean. Even the temple lawyer said he wanted to be born as a cow in that barn. Srila Sridhara Swami came and chanted his rounds with the cows.


The cows are milked by hand. There are cows with no babies that have been giving milk for 2 or 3 years before they even had a baby (about 2 to 3 liters per day). Every wedding ceremony includes feeding the cows chapattis, carrots and apples. The cows give over 3500 gallons of milk (per year?)

The Harvest Festival is the biggest festival of the year and they harvest the grain and grind the grain and offer the first chapatti to Govardhana. Everyone helps.

They produce 8 different kinds of grains, mostly for bread and chapattis.

They have 2 tractors and produce 10 times more grain than they need. There are 8 acres put aside just to cultivate with the oxen which provides enough for the entire community for the whole year. They also produce the grains for the animals.


All the houses are very colorful. They have rabbits, fox, 11 deer and some ground hogs. They deal with some animals by putting bottles in the soil with the top part sticking out. (Cruelty free animal control).

They do not produce anything for the outside market. They just try to produce enough for the devotees.

They grow more than 50 types of vegetables. They began by producing 80 to 100 differently types, including 40 different types of tomatoes. The cooks and pujari department gives a list to the garden about which vegetables are the best for cutting, peeling and storing for the winter and then the garden department tries to grow these things. They now only produce 5 different types of tomatoes that fit these qualifications. They grow cooperatively. They are working to provide for other temples.

The produce for the festivals are separate. They get 30,000 tourists and they are paying $6 - $7 to enter and go on a guided tour.


There are two separate types of tours - a 45 minute tour of the temple. Group tours last from 1.5 to 2.5 hours and care cultural programs for 100 - 120 guests. AT the end of the program everyone passes by the altar and they explain who is there and how their life is centered around the Deities. There is a peacock fan and they ask everyone to make a wish and fan Radhe Shyam (karma kanda).

Also in their website they ask tourists to bring some fruits and or flowers and they have a huge plate on the altar. Everyone sits down for a bhajan, then a pantomime or Bharanatium dance, a short 5 - 10 minute class. Then the guests are invited to dress up (as devotees) if they like or they can pray. So, they give them dhotis and saris and some play kartalas or whompers and at the very end they stand up and even dance.


For this they pay $15 - 20 per person, not including prasadam. Everyone is charged for prasadam. This is one set meal for prasadam, and 1 plate is usually enough. They don't feel preached to.

The "Bucsu" Festival for non-devotees - 6 to 8,0000 people. It is a 3 day Festival. They pay to come and spend 2 to 3 days. In the main tent 500 people with many different programs. There is a handicraft village at the Goshalla.


The Reality Show where guests get to experience "being" a devotee. The 1st room they go into is they are dressed in devotee clothes with Tilak and bindi and they are explain the importance of wearing these clothing. 2nd room - what is mantra meditation, ½ to 1 round together. 3rd room - give them ready made dough and they make a puri and they fry it. 4th room - Guests offer the puri and then told they can eat their puri.

They make sure they give everyone a receipt because the government agency sends representatives to check (in incognito).

They hire a train so people can go around the whole farm easily. Tourists are not allowed to visit the housing area.

They make a prasadam tent which is 1000 square feet.


There are 3 levels of Eco - Consciousness:

Preach to the scientists

The Indians - Living in harmony with the body - pure veg food - do not use any chemicals, yoga, mantra meditation

The Society

The Environment - Develop Eco - Ethics culture can be sustainable.

Living in a way that is in harmony by understanding our own Nature.

Scientific, Educational, Cooperative, representation and lobbying and communication

Scientific level - all fields of activity - Societal - (2 ministries), preventative, environmental protection, nature conservation, agriculture, Land Management, Water Management, Waste Management.


3 Main Results

1. International and cooperation - between Hungary and India (Ministries) on the governmental level.

2. Conferences for Ecological Sustainability. Signed cooperation with 6 universities. We can tutor students on the farm. Universities sending students to farm. They spend 2 to 3 months at the farm for practicum.

3. Ecological Workshops in Universities. They set the up and devotees give the lecture.

They have a Botanical garden with 800 types of trees and 1000 different plants, 109 species of birds.

There is a rain water collecting lake.


Lord Shiva's temple is in the Dhama. Also Srila Prabhupada's Samadhi. There are 650-700 Holy places all around the Farm (Varsana, Nandagram, Brahma ghat and Kaliya ghat.

- little hills and lakes), How Vrindaban manifests in NVD. They will be holding their first International Parikram.

Plans for the future

  1. To expand the housing area and standardize the houses using straw bale on the outside.

  2. Eco Portal - They applied for a grant to construct a research and educational center a conference room for 50 people which can be divided into smaller rooms. It will also have a library and offices.

  3. Ayurvedic Clinic for everyone. Health care. Indian doctors to come for 6 months to volunteer and train up others.

  4. Sewage system - the roots of reeds break down the waster water. A reep plantation which doesn't smell. Everything works by gravity.

  5. Bamboo plantation and Energy plantation.

Questions and Answers: They use 8 acres of crops to feed 150 people year round. They need to have proper storage, a root cellar. Their root cellar is 3 times larger than the prasadam room and is divided into 3. The 1st part is the Root vegetables, the middle section is for the canned fruits, and the 3rd section is all the other fruits. (Cannot mix everything because certain gases make the other food spoil.


How do they can? They made 4,500 (5 liter - 1.5 gallon) bottles of canned fruits and veggies.

The canning arrangement is from the 1st of April until October 31st. Two times per week each devotees on the farm (except those with very specific services) goes into the garden for 1.5 hours in the morning. Currently there are about 60 devotees doing this. The matajis stay in the temple room and listen to a Prabhupada lecture which they are cutting vegetables.


By the main kitchen there are huge vats where everything is cooked. There are gas stoves and woks. Huge pots fit into one wok. They boil the empty bottles and then keep them hot, then add the cooked fruits and veggies and turn the bottle upside down and a vacuum is created, which keep the supplies fresh. They make fruits and jams and vegetable preserves.

There are certain grains that cannot be grown. They cannot grow rice. So for self-sufficiency that have investigated what grains people used during the World Wars and that is what they are planting. They are changing their rice eating habit. Rice acts to cool the body. The hung grains will heat the body. The breed house has spinach and leafy greens in April.


Due to the climate, they start the first veggies in mid June until October. Later on there are some pumpkins and squash.

According to research the grains that will works are Kasha (t) Barley, Amaranth.

No one lies in the temple, everyone lives around the temple Everyone goes to Mangal Arotik and yet there are different stages - pregnant matajis or diseased persons and those with different services sometimes dont' for 2 to 3 days. Just making sure there is an effort, but sometimes cannot come because of children. But the effort is there.


Eco - ethics - social part - there is a whole slide show (1.5 hours), just on this aspect of the community. The rules and regulations of the community are much more than just 4 regulations and 16 rounds and reading SP books. The eco-ethics is a mutually accepted shared ethics and morals that both individuals and the Community accept. This is the basis of everything working together as a whole unit

There is a value system - devotees through these morals and ethics - which is what your life is based on. If your value system is different than this community may not be for you. It is not for everyone. Not everyone can be a missionary or doctor.


Some Grhastra devotees work outside - the Bramacaris all live at the temple.

The main principles of not forcing anyone express to stay. People are encourages to leave if they don't fit in. Joining into a system - Joining a temple community or a village. Who do we want to join????

A place for everyone and everyone in their place. They came together to work on this. Joining the system. How to join ISKCON Hungary. Membership. There are many opportunities even for "nondevotees." : Supporter, sponsor, volunteer, and missionary. The last two can stay in the temple''To join the temple there is a 6 weeks Bhakta program which guests pay for which teaches the culture of how to behave. If they can't afford to pay they can stay for 3 months to work for free stay. This is based on Sri Upadeshamrta.


After this you can apply for a 1 year course. If accepted you can do missionary work - sankirtan, etc for 6 months. Here they get training on the Bhagavad-gita. After 1 year training, the encourage people to go out and start their own lives.

Next there is a 4 year course which is a correspondance course - An approved BA in Vaisnava Theology..


You figure out the nature of a person and engage them accordingly. Bhakta Astrix, music, Sanskrit, Astrology, and Sad dharsha. After the 7th year is over, they have been in the movement for years. They can get initiation anytime in that time period if they are interested, or not. They understand what they are doing and why they are there.

There is a personal Interview with each candidate and 90% of them are encouraged to go outside. They are the supporters, sponsors and congregation. ISKCON was good at making enemies with their own people.

With this system everyone knows the expectations in the beginning. They want to give their lives. They reconfirm their commitments over and over and re-apply. We always try to convert the bad experiences into good learning.

Two times per week in the morning for 1.5 hours, devotees go out to the garden. 80 % are coming from the cities and everyone is encouraged to go out in the garden. This is not so easy but it is emphasized. V


There is an internal education system - the Istagosthis are compulsory to attend.

There is a policy for Grhastras that each can apply to the Administration - head of the farm apply for a grant to expand or start a garden in their own home. The farm is giving the money to the grhastras and they promise to give 10% of the crops to the devotees for free.

Devotees experiencing that they are saving money by growing their own food.


This grant money is for developing, not for maintenance. The grhastras are eager to develop. In the very beginning theywere given some seeds, some greed beans, which grow extremely easily. And then they all became fired up in gardening. Wh didn't want to have a garden.

There is also a financial pushing that if a department does not send someone to the garden (because they have a specific other service), that Department is then responsible to pay to the temple for their employees that have not gardened. This is an incentive for the Department heads to send everyone.


When we look at New Vrindaban we see that you have everything. You have a Holy Tirtha where SP graced this place by his personal presence. You have many devotees who heard SO personally. You all just need to come together. These Istagosthis are great to come together and to figure it out together. You need to figure it out inside our your community.

You have the biggest potential - there are many parts working you just need to figure out what are your next steps.

You have everything. You have much more opulence than you can measure. You have Land, cows, devotees, community.

AND you have lots of bad experience. You have the experiences and the solutions among all of you. Please do not wait for anyone to come to tell you what to do.


Keep having Istagosthis and start working on cooperation. That cooperation will resolve everything here. You will be the most flourishing in the whole world.

You have everything. We would like to encourage you to come together as much as possible. Do the brainstorming work. List all that Srila Prabhupada told you personally. List all the facilities you have. You will see that nothing is missing.

What is going on here?? We never had Srila Prabhupada's personal association in Hungary . Someone brought him a watermelon from Hungary . That is our only direct contact with Srila Prabhupada.

You have all the knowledge. Just don't wait. Sit down maybe for 12 days or 2 weeks straight. You could have a whole structure and plans to go forward and very soon you could have more that we have.


Most Srila Prabhupada disciples are old. You can do it right now in your lifetime. Just start doing it.

Siva Ram Swami has encouraged you all not to depend on him. But he is the driving force and all the success is because of his strong and firm commitment to fulfill Srila Prabhupada's desire. He also tried in UK and moved to Hungary . Poverty was so high that it could work. There are 12 centers in Hungary - what will happen after Siva Ram leaves. He is trying to address that issue right now.


One Yatra President fulfills Srila Prabhupada

S mission. WE have many center leaders, but we have One Mission and One Goal. Cooperation. His vision is so broad that SPM is always asking for advice. He is training us up.

Start having One Vision - not 2 or 3. Come together and work together and just do it.

Don't wait for someone to come new and say follow me. Just do it.

We are going in that direction.

It is a matter of respect. The basis of our success is that we respect the Individual, the environment and have all respect towards Krsna. If respect is there you can make it. If is is not - you won't make it.


Encouraging for me to see that an entire group of people are coming together. None of the managers are there???

How old is the oldest child in Hungary ? 21 who moved with the mother when she was 5 and went to the gurukula and got married and has a daughter.

The Amish people are doing this. They send their children away if they back in 2 year, they are welcome, if not they do not come back. Some Amish do this (not all).

So many communities that can learn from New Vrindaban's mistakes. Try to see the elements that would be proper to apply in our Vaisnava culture.

How many independent people come together???

No private agreements. When someone builds a house - that is considered to be a loan to the community. They are paid back to them if they ever leave the community. If the value has increased, they are paid back. Not like an investment - But they never own the land, it is just given to them for use but it belongs to ISKCON.

  1. Rural lifestyle

  1. Pilgrimage - tourism.

How to balance these two. Challenge how the 2 can work together.





by Club 108 (noreply@blogger.com) at June 17, 2009 08:00 AM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : The Meaning of Sannyasa

On the 12th of June, 1968, Srila Prabhupada nicely explained the word 'sannyasa' by breaking the word into sanskrit syllables: "This is Sanskrit word, sat-nyasa. This is sannyasa. Sat means the Supreme, the Absolute Truth. And nyasa means renounced. One who has renounced everything for the service of the Supreme, he is called a sannyasa. Sannyasa does not mean a particular type of dress or particular type of beard. Sannyasa means you can become a sannyasi even with your, this coat-pant. It doesn't matter, provided you have dedicated your life for the service of God.

read more

by Mukunda Goswami at June 17, 2009 07:00 AM

Kurma dasa, AU : Allspice

pimento berries:

Marjorie from Texas writes:

"What is the difference between Allspice and Mixed Spice?"

My reply:

This is a good question Marjorie. Mixed spice is a sweet spice combination, usually containing cinnamon, nutmeg, maybe some cloves and maybe mace and allspice.

Allspice is also known as pimento. Pimento is also a name for the small red chilies, also called pimiento, that are commonly pickled and stuffed inside olives. So there is sometimes a confusion. Allspice berries (also known as pimento) are what we are talking of here.

Pimento is an essential ingredient of Jamaican cooking and the essential ingredient in jerk sauce. The wood was first used to smoke jerk in Jamaica to produce the characteristic flavour. Nowadays the berries serve as a good substitute.

Dried pimento berries look like larger, browner versions of whole black pepper, but have a very different, unique flavour. Pimento is also a good home remedy for upset stomach in which case it is either chewed or crushed up and used to make tea. It is used in the preparation of bean dishes, not only because of its excellent flavour but because it is believed to reduce the flatulence caused by beans.

allspice seeds:

Pimento was discovered in Jamaica by Spanish explorers in 1509. The name originates from the Spanish 'pimenta' (pepper or peppercorn). Most people call the tree 'pimento' and the berries 'allspice'. Because the pimento berry has the flavour and aroma characteristic of cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon and pepper all combined in one spice, it is called allspice.

Pimento is used in sauces, pickling, cakes and curry powders.

Here's loads more information...

by Kurma at June 17, 2009 06:31 AM

Gouranga TV : Srila Prabhupada Appearance Day 2008

H H Sri Giriraja Swami Maharaj Performed Guru Puja To Srila Prabhupada. Sura Dasa Prabhu and Naikatma Dasa Prabhu lead ecsatic kirtans at New Dwarka Temple, Los Angeles, CA USA on August 24, 2008

by uploader at June 17, 2009 06:00 AM

H.G. Sankarshan das Adhikari, USA : Wednesday 17 June 2009--Beyond the Bursting Bubble

This material existence is a bewildering quagmire for those who have not realized the source and purpose of their existence. If we do not know why we exist, how can we have a meaningful existence? We cannot. All we will be able to do is invent a so-called meaning and try to live happily in the bubble of our dream world. But all bubbles eventually burst................... ================================================================== Thought...

by course@ultimateselfrealization.com at June 17, 2009 02:30 AM

Sastra Dana, San Diego, USA : Second Issue Is Printed!

The second issue of the 16Rounds to Samadhi newspaper is printed! 20,000 copies are waiting to be distributed all over the San Diego and Los Angeles areas.

The printing cost was $1,983.10. To make a contribution towards covering this cost click the “contribute” button:

by Mahat at June 17, 2009 01:51 AM

Sastra Dana, San Diego, USA : Sinai Gets Her First Two Books From Sastra Dana

Sinai is a new devotee from San Diego.

Sinai: My boyfriend and I went to buy groceries at People’s in Ocean Beach and he picked up a book from the Sastra Dana book rack there. He said I should read that book. I guess he had read a book before so he told me I should read this one and that it is very interesting. So my first book was The Higher Taste. I read it and thought it to be pretty cool. I let one of my friends borrow it. After he read it he said that he now understood why I became a vegetarian.

I needed some kind of support as at that time my family was against me being vegetarian. They were telling me that I needed to eat meat. I told them that I didn’t and told them to read this book. I also let my sister borrow The Higher Taste and she became vegetarian.

I kept going to People’s and eventually picked up another book from the same rack. It was a different book. I don’t remember the name of it. It was pretty much talking about reincarnation…

Sastra Dana: …Beyond Birth and Death?

Sinai: …yes, Beyond Birth and Death. Yes. So I read that one too and thought it to be some pretty crazy stuff. I kept reading the books.

One day I went to Fashion Valley. There I met Balarama. He gave me a copy of The Journey of Self Discovery. I always keep it with me, just to remember how I got started with Krishna consciousness. Balarama was excepting donations for the book and I gave him five bucks. Later on I found out its cost was nine dollars so I put a few more dollars in the donation box as I felt kind of bad. Balarama invited me to come to the Krishna Lounge and I liked it. I thought it was a pretty cool environment. He then gave me another little flyer to come over to the temple. I came and I really liked it. Then I just kind of got hooked on it and ever since I’ve been coming to the classes and keep reading the Bhagavad-gita. I also try to help around the temple a little bit, whatever I can do to try to help.

sinai1

Sinai (right) & her boyfriend Dario (middle) at the Ratha Yatra festival in San Diego.

Bhaktin Sinai on Harinam in Downtown San Diego

Bhaktin Sinai on Harinam in Downtown San Diego

  • A few pictures of our rack at People’s Coop in Ocean Beach:

by Mahat at June 17, 2009 01:19 AM

ISKCON Melbourne, AU : Daily Class - Sankarshan Prabhu

Srimad Bhagavatam 11.9.29 - Human life enables one to understand the Absolute Truth.

by jayendra at June 17, 2009 01:05 AM

June 16, 2009

Ravindra Svarupa das, USA : Contented, Tormented, Demented—The Economy in Three Modes

“The Economy Is Still at the Brink,” warns Sandy Lewis and William Cohan in a full-page op-ed piece in the Sunday Times of June 7. With the coverage and mayhem of a shotgun blast, the authors let loose at the President’s remedial programs and advance their own remedies. Periodically the text balloons into sections of [...]

by rsdasa at June 16, 2009 11:18 PM

HH. Satsvarupa das Goswami : SDGonline – Bhajana Kutir #104

"Losing faith in the chanting is another thing. Such a basic commitment should not waver, even though one does not feel he is making progress spiritually by his daily chanting. We realize that we have a mountain of dirty things to chip away at, so it is no surprise that a lifetime can go by of steadily chanting and still unwanted things remain in the heart. That is not a reason to abandon the only chance one has for eradicating the dirt. It is important to keep the other parts of the vow made at initiation, the promise to follow the four rules—no intoxication, no meat eating, no gambling, and no illicit sex. If these promises gradually drop away, then it will be hard to cling to the one promise of chanting in isolation in a life that has become totally materialistic. But even if all that remains is the chanting, one should cling to it like a lifesaver in the ocean and not drop it, thinking that one is too offensive or too sinful to chant."

Satsvarupa dasa Goswami - June 16, 3:09 A.M.

I had a peaceful night and woke a quarter to three with a clear head. I’ve just radioed Narayana and started my japa.

4:21 A.M.

Early-morning japa log

I did eight rounds in under six minutes per round. I chanted mostly in my mind, with a slight whisper. I read in Caitanya Bhagavata that Haridasa Thakura chanted a section of his three hundred thousand rounds silently. When he chanted loudly, the people outside his cave could hear the chanting and benefit. Also, the trees and grass could hear. But he did chant a section of his rounds just in his own mind. So I have that precedent. I chant in a whisper because it’s easier on my body, and it enables me to go faster. My mind didn’t wander to other topics but kept fixed on the sound vibration of the mantra. That much I can honestly say. As for tears in the eyes and standing of hair on end, there is none of that. So my heart must still be steel-framed. But I enjoy the chanting and feel that I am doing it with devotion. I believe that Krishna and Radha must be hearing my whispered cries, because I am chanting for Their pleasure as well as my own benefit. The timing was very efficient, and I did it without any special effort. It just came out that way.

Japa essay

On winning the NBA championship, basketball star Kobe Bryant said, “I feel as if a huge monkey has been lifted off my back.” When I finish my daily quota of japa, I feel as if a monkey has been lifted off my back. Of course, it is a guaranteed thing that I will finish my vow every day. But until it is completed, I am not relieved. Prabhupada has given us the sixteen-round quota, and it must be done. It is a pleasure to be able to complete the quota and keep that bond with him every day. It makes you feel successful in your personal commitment to him. Sometimes some of the later rounds are not done as well as the beginning rounds. There is a touch of getting them out of the way. But sometimes that doesn’t happen, and you go strong through the whole quota. That is best. The concept of completing a solemn vow every day is very good for one’s sadhana. And chanting some extra makes you feel good. You feel clean and honest, and you wouldn’t have it any other way. It must be done, even if you have a headache and some of the last rounds are of poor quality.

Initiated devotees who don’t complete their sixteen rounds are missing out on spiritual life. Krishna forgives them, but they have let themselves down in a basic way. Once a devotee who was not chanting anymore told me that he took the vow when he was only nineteen years old, and he did not feel responsible for a decision made at such a young age. But that is not the right attitude. There may have been a risk involved in taking a lifelong vow at a young age, but one should feel responsible for it and not take it as an immature decision. You came before Krishna with an innocent and open heart and made the promise, and He accepted it. Life is short enough, and not that much changes in growing from nineteen to twenty-nine to thirty-nine and so on. At least not that much changes in a vow made to God, although much may change externally in one’s worldly affairs.

Losing faith in the chanting is another thing. Such a basic commitment should not waver, even though one does not feel he is making progress spiritually by his daily chanting. We realize that we have a mountain of dirty things to chip away at, so it is no surprise that a lifetime can go by of steadily chanting and still unwanted things remain in the heart. That is not a reason to abandon the only chance one has for eradicating the dirt. It is important to keep the other parts of the vow made at initiation, the promise to follow the four rules—no intoxication, no meat eating, no gambling, and no illicit sex. If these promises gradually drop away, then it will be hard to cling to the one promise of chanting in isolation in a life that has become totally materialistic. But even if all that remains is the chanting, one should cling to it like a lifesaver in the ocean and not drop it, thinking that one is too offensive or too sinful to chant.

I chant my rounds
as daily vow.
It’s not so hard to
find two hours
when you have decided
it’s a must.

Two hours out of twenty-four
as a promise made
long ago to the spiritual master.
“I can do it, I will do it,” is the required resolution
to complete a task
of sustaining holy utterance.

I may not be doing
much else in my spiritual life,
but I keep this vow
with faith. It’s Kali Yuga’s
antidote to hopelessness.

7:01 A.M.

It’s always cloudy at the beach, never a sunrise. I didn’t listen to a lecture by Prabhupada yesterday. I hunger for his latest speeches so I can repeat them. He has been lecturing that worship of Krishna should be taken up by everyone, regardless of motive. In the Brhad-bhagavatamrta, the bhakti-sastras are completing their condemnation of the impersonalists. They say there are thousands of statements in the sastras that prove the Supreme is a person and that the jivas are His eternal fragmental parts. There is no substantiation that after liberation, a jiva merges with the Supreme and becomes equal in all respects with the one impersonal Brahman. The Bhagavatam states that those who merge with the brahmajyoti eventually fall down from that position and have to take birth again in the material world. They become bored in the brahmajyoti because there is no personal relationship or activities. On a morning walk in Mayapur, Prabhupada said that if we had to choose between standing alone in the agricultural field or going to Calcutta, we would finally go to Calcutta, because we seek activity. The bhakti-sastras state that even demons attain liberation, so how can it be more exalted than bhakti? Only bhakti brings us real liberation, which is to join with Krishna and His entourage in the spiritual world and never come back to the material world of repeated birth and death. This is stated in the Bhagavad-gita: “One who knows the nature of My appearance and activities does not at the time of death come back to this material world but joins Me in My eternal abode” (Bg. 4.9.). The bhakti-sastras soundly defeat the impersonal scriptures, and Gopa-kumara gives up the desire for liberation and aspires to be a bhakta. He has met up with many different opinions in his traveling through the universe, but by steadily chanting his Gopala mantra, given to him by his spiritual master, he remains steady in his resolve to worship Madana-gopal in Vraja. By steadily chanting the Hare Krishna mantra, we will also weather the storms of differing opinions, and even survive falldowns to maya. Chanting Hare Krishna purifies us of all misconceptions and sinful activities.

9:00 A.M.

1

Poetry is real,
it’s sport and special,
like a treat.

We saw a sunrise weeks
ago, since then it’s been
foggy, but poems grow
on trees in the fog, too.

Krishna is the object of the
best poetry, when He is
praised by His devotees in
uttama-sloka.

Devotees can even please Him
from positions without
great skill if they put aside
other works and desire only
to serve Him.

Best poems capture love of
the Supreme in a simple
way straight from the heart.
Krishna says He lives only in the hearts
of His devotees, and they live only
in His heart—even devotees
of His devotees are dear to Him.

So poems have to hit the mark
of pure bhakti without
jnana and karma to be
appreciated by the Lord, and
that’s not easy.

2
I sit in silence, wondering
if I’ll ever reach pure
devotion for Bhagavan.
It’s very rare, and you have to
work at it many years and lifetimes,
ecstatic symptoms manifest on
the body.

I work on my japa in a
mechanical way, praying for something
better. It may come, I don’t know.
If I could sacrifice my comforts for
His service and celebrate His
victories in sastras, I might
have a chance.

I sit in silence, wondering if I’ll
ever reach Him. He knows me
through His pure devotee. I have
a chance there if I can please
him. I’ll try to finish my life
in his service, following his basic
commands and living up to them
and remembering his sweetness
in gratitude.

Oh Prabhupada, please don’t
leave me, accept my little efforts
and give me strength to
please you.

11:00 A.M.

Free write

Dhanurdhara Swami is coming to lunch today. Friendly hugs, friendly talks. You write what comes to your mind. Free writing becomes a chance for something new. I’m reading the old EJWs, where there is much writing from what’s happening in a quiet life. No hesitation in having something to say. Being in the yellow submarine seems harder. I turn on the television, then turn it off. I read a few pages in EJW Vol. 56, Does It Give You Peace of Mind? Why did I give it that title? A big legal case on abuse in gurukula was just getting started. Who knew how long it would drag out and what changes it would mean and how much money it would cost ISKCON? Worries reach even me in Wicklow. The legal world reaches its long arm into the cult. Summer life goes on quietly.

Tell your truth. Your little secrets. “If you could see me now.” The world of sports. The great athletic heroes. The ordinary people struggling to get by. The Hare Krishna people, trying to have an influence. I received a letter from a lady devotee who reads what I write about japa. She writes about japa too and wants me to read it. Nama Prabhu generates interest among devotees. They want to chant better, share their experiences. This is boiling the milk, preaching to those who are already practicing. It’s needed.

A headache has begun, but I want to keep writing. There’s a pain in the front of my head, and I’ve taken a med. Krishna is alive and well in the spiritual world and in every atom of the material world. Baladeva Vidyabhusana dasa is in Vrndavana and loving every moment of it. I asked him yesterday, “What shall I pray for?” He said, “Pray for me.” I said, “I already prayed for you.” He asked that I pray he could go beyond following his schedule in Vrndavana, which was scratching the surface. He wants to go deep. Greedy fellow. He’ll get what he wants. I wrote yesterday that I wanted to experience Vrndavana while staying in the yellow submarine. Is it possible? You’d get headaches wherever you go. A correspondent recommends I take a vitamin supplement, eight pills a day. It sounds like too much. I’ll handle them with fewer, yet I don’t get complete reflief. You should say your gayatri now. The phone is ringing.

4:00 P.M.

My Dear Lord Krishna...

I’m writing to You with a clear head. I thank You for giving me this day my daily bread. By that I mean literally the fine breakfast and lunch prepared by Narayana-kavaca and the clear, cognitive consciousness to face the world. Dhanurdhara Swami approved of my style of life, living quietly in one place and writing my journal, which is posted on the website. I’m pleased that he approved. It hints that maybe You approve, too, if Your devotee approves.

I’m praying to You another thanksgiving. I thank You for the just-published Under Dark Stars. It’s wild but good, I think. I hope You like it. I thank You for my evening snack and for Dattatreya reading to me while I honor the prasadam. I thank You for the medication that quells my headaches.

I thank You for the training I’ve received, mainly from Prabhupada’s books and lectures, training in Krishna consciousness. This knowledge of bhakti is the most important thing in the world, but it is rare that people come in contact with it and accept it. You have brought me in contact with my spiritual master and given me the faith to accept him as my guru and accept his orders as my vocation. I’m very grateful for this. I’m thankful that I’ve imbibed the basic instructions of the bhakti-sastras, coming as guru, sadhu and sastra.

I thank You for being who You are, Govinda, the cowherd boy, the lover of the gopis, especially Srimati Radharani. You are lovable and beautiful in Your all-attractive spiritual form. You are also the most powerful person and can subdue any army of enemies. You possess the six qualifications of Bhagavan—fame, beauty, wisdom, strength, riches, and renunciation—and You possess them to an unlimited degree. I am proud to have such a supreme, all-attractive person as my Lord.

I thank You for accepting the services I have rendered in ISKCON and for forgiving me for my wrongs. You have been very kind to me in protecting my relationship with Srila Prabhupada.

I thank You for generating, maintaining and destroying the universes according to Your divine plan. You are the supreme controller, and everything that happens is willed by You as providence. I am thankful that all things are working under Your control and that not a blade of grass moves but that You make it happen. I feel secure that You are at the helm.

I am thankful for the little and big things You do in this world. I do not understand Your workings, but I have faith in them. Your works are not to be understood but accepted; You are the supreme great, the supreme mystic, and my position is to worship You and serve You.

Please accept my gratitude and make it strong and sincere. I never want to second guess You or doubt Your behavior. Please let me be a steady servant of Your servant and always be grateful to You for what You do for all of us, Your parts and parcels, and especially Your devotees.

from #104→

by Satsvarupa dasa Goswami at June 16, 2009 10:51 PM

Partha-sarathi das, ISKCON Iraq : Travel Schedule

Updated Travel Schedule

June 18-22 Boston

July 1-6 Youth Bustour (youth sankirtan marathon anyone interested in these areas in participating contact me)

1-2 Philly

3-4 DC

5th NJ

6th Boston

17-21st Toronto Ratha Yatra/ Yoga Meltdown

22-27 Pandava Sena Youth retreat Prabhupada Village, NC

29 July to 4 August: South America, Costa Rica-Peru-Uruguay-Paraguay

4 August to 13 August: Santiago, Chile

13 August to 21 Oct South Africa

22 Oct. Chile Ratha Yatra

by Partha-sarathi dasa at June 16, 2009 10:01 PM

1972 June 16: "All my senior disciples and leaders now you must become very, very much aware of your grave responsibility to the human society and utilize every moment in the best manner possible."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 16, 2009 07:07 PM

1972 June 16: "As GBC man you shall be my personal secretary for maintaining the highest level of Krishna Consciousness amongst the devotees in your zone."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 16, 2009 07:06 PM

1968 June 16: "What is the difficulty of enforcing these rules? They are rules, and they are simple rules, and must be followed. One must be prepared to follow the rules for Krishna. Otherwise where is the proof that he loves Krishna?"
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 16, 2009 07:03 PM

1969 June 16: "Visala Das will be your name eternally. Eternally you are the servant. It is not very important. It is sufficient for you to know that you are always the servant of Visala, or Krishna."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1969

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 16, 2009 07:03 PM

1969 June 16: "Whatever is offered goes through the Spiritual Master. The Spiritual Master offers it to Krishna then Radha Krishna eats, then Caitanya Mahaprabhu eats, then the Spiritual Master eats, and it becomes Mahaprasadam."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1969

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 16, 2009 07:02 PM

1971 June 16: "One who goes against the rules and regulations of scriptures is causing pain to the supersoul. Parching the body means parching the supersoul. Remembrance of Krishna's lila should come automatically, not that you are remembering artificially."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1971

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 16, 2009 07:01 PM

1972 June 16: "I am very much concerned that the devotees should be given all good instruction. That is the duty of the GBC man. If the devotees, especially the responsible officers, do not have any knowledge, how can they preach?"
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 16, 2009 07:01 PM

1975 June 16: "Regarding these sannyasis, I have never approved of this action. You can tell them. Everyone is concocting something of their own. It must be checked."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1975

by letters (wmdean@btopenworld.com) at June 16, 2009 06:59 PM

Japa Group : An Offering To Krsna


Hare Krsna my dear devotees. I hope your week has been blessed with many nice realisations. My week has been very blessed since I can have nice association of devotees and also be engaged in service, it's a blessing for anyone and I feel like that.
I don't live in the temple so I need to take advantage of any situation and spare time I have to practice devotional service by reading, chanting, worshiping the Deities and being in devotee's association....these are things that makes me feel closer to the Lord and identify me as a devotee. I am very grateful to have this life and I pray so I can get attached to the chanting of the holy names so my faith increases and I can chant without offenses.
This weekend devotees were making their own prayers in the Japa Room, some of us were showing what we would like to include in our prayers and others were just taking advantage of the association. We could notice that the mood of prayer does increase our faith, mood of surrender and the strength our relationship with the Lord. The main thing is that we may do with our hearts opened, must be something we feel and meditate on from within....we need to have our japa improved and more devoted.
Surrender is a word that means we are completely in the Lord's hands, we don't care about anything else that would disturb us but we remain firm and fixed on what we should be doing...our sadhana and Krsna protects us in every situation. I got a quote that shows this:

"Even there may be some problems, always try to remain in Krishna Consciousness. Do not give up chanting simply due to some external difficulties. Under all circumstance you should always chant Hare Krishna."
Prabhupada Letters 1975

I take shelter of the Holy names and my desire is to have complete faith that just by chanting these names I can be completely protected in any situation, this needs to come from the heart and it arises when we chant with attention and by engaging our senses....specially the tongue and ear to chanting and hearing the sound can come straight to the heart.

May your week be blessed by the Lords names and that your mind just listen to the holy names and become fixed in this japa meditation. This is our everyday offering to guru and Krsna.

your servant,

Aruna devi

by Aruna (noreply@blogger.com) at June 16, 2009 06:56 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1969 June 16: "Visala Das will be your name eternally. Eternally you are the servant. It is not very important. It is sufficient for you to know that you are always the servant of Visala, or Krishna."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1969

June 16, 2009 06:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1969 June 16: "Whatever is offered goes through the Spiritual Master. The Spiritual Master offers it to Krishna then Radha Krishna eats, then Caitanya Mahaprabhu eats, then the Spiritual Master eats, and it becomes Mahaprasadam."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1969

June 16, 2009 06:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1971 June 16: "One who goes against the rules and regulations of scriptures is causing pain to the supersoul. Parching the body means parching the supersoul. Remembrance of Krishna's lila should come automatically, not that you are remembering artificially."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1971

June 16, 2009 06:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 June 16: "All my senior disciples and leaders now you must become very, very much aware of your grave responsibility to the human society and utilize every moment in the best manner possible."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

June 16, 2009 06:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 June 16: "As GBC man you shall be my personal secretary for maintaining the highest level of Krishna Consciousness amongst the devotees in your zone."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

June 16, 2009 06:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1972 June 16: "I am very much concerned that the devotees should be given all good instruction. That is the duty of the GBC man. If the devotees, especially the responsible officers, do not have any knowledge, how can they preach?"
Prabhupada Letters :: 1972

June 16, 2009 06:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1975 June 16: "Regarding these sannyasis, I have never approved of this action. You can tell them. Everyone is concocting something of their own. It must be checked."
Prabhupada Letters :: 1975

June 16, 2009 06:20 PM

Bharatavarsa.net : Prabhupada letters

1968 June 16: "What is the difficulty of enforcing these rules? They are rules, and they are simple rules, and must be followed. One must be prepared to follow the rules for Krishna. Otherwise where is the proof that he loves Krishna?"
Prabhupada Letters :: 1968

June 16, 2009 06:20 PM

Omkara das, LA : Coachella

This last weekend we went to the Coachella music festival. Bhrigupati Prabhu headed the party that included myself, Nama Kirtana Prabhu, Bhakta Bronson, Dvarakesh Prabhu, Paratpara Prabhu, Jaya Govinda Prabhu, Paramesvara Prabhu, Murti Prabhu, and Bhakta Avatara Prabhu, with Jaya Gauranga Prabhu and Radha Kripa Kataksa Prabhu as the cooks. We arrived on Thursday afternoon at Yudhisthira Prabhu's house. Yudhisthira has been letting us use his house for the past four or five years for this event and he and his family stay in a hotel for the weekend.
Paramaevara and Murti decided to give the campers a try Thursday evening while the rest of us waited until Friday to start. Paramesvara and Murti had good success with the people parking in the camping lot and they worked from around 6pm until midnight.
On Friday the whole crew (except the cooks) went out for distribution. We arrived at the lot at 9:15 in the morning and it was very slow. Bronson decided to read a little and I took a little extra rest. By 10:30 it was still really slow in that lot, but I figured I might as well give it a try. After talking to people for around ten minutes, and a few books going out, I knew that they were parking another lot. I asked the parkers to confirm and then headed to lot three with Bronson. Paramasvara and Murti went to the campground to work the tents and the rest of the boys went to lot six. Lot three is a large lot that we worked for the rest of the day. By the mercy of my gurudeva I had a nice time there. I was able to distribute sixty six books from 11:30am to 7:00pm, with an hour break for lunch and a quick nap. At seven the sun went behind the mountains, so we kept to the Vedic standard and called it a day. We went back for dinner at the house. Bronson and I decided to go back out for the blowout and Dvarakesh, Paratpara, Jaya Govinda, and Nama Kirtana joined us. We got there around 10pm, just in time to catch the fist few people leaving the show. Bronson and I stayed until 12:30 in the morning, but the others called it quits around 11pm. Friday was the nicest day for me, with a total of 100 big books distributed.
On saturday I woke up at 8am because I did not get to sleep until 2:30am. I was not tired, but felt a little sluggish mentally all day. This was also the hottest day, being well over 100 degrees. Everyone had a tough time on this day. The next day, Sunday, was nice. It was a bit cooler than the day before and I was able to chant nicer japa. On Saturday I decided that if I did well during the day on Sunday, then I would stay for the blowout. I did well on Sunday, so Bronson, Bhakta Avatara, and I stayed until around 1am. Murti decided he would stay later at the last minute also. The blowout was nice this evening as well. During the blowout on Friday I found the best thing that worked was to hold out a big book in each hand and chant the Hare Krishna maha mantra out loud. In that way people would come and take books (34 big books that night). But, the Sunday blowout was a little more trying. I tried all the different approaches I knew, but nothing was that successful. After about two hours and only eight books distributed, I remembered Lord Nrsimhadeva. Yudhisthira has beautiful Sri Sri Laksmi Nrsimha Deities, so I was meditating on them as the proprietor of this area. I held out the books again, but started chanting Lord Nrsimhadeva's prayers. Even before I could finish saying "Namaste Narasim..." then someone came up to me: "What do you have here, what kind of books are these?" Within the next half of an hour twenty six more books were distributed! It was ecstatic. We never know how Krishna will do things, but his reciprocation is always wonderful, unexpected, and very much appreciated.
After the blowout I drove the four of us an hour away to Bhakta Avatara's house. Since it was already 5am, I stayed up to chant my rounds and then took rest at 6:30am. We woke up at noon and then showered and had breakfast (or would that be lunch?) By the time Bronson was done with his rounds it was 3:30pm. We headed out to UC Riverside for a couple of hours more of distribution. We finished at 6pm and then returned to New Dvaraka. By the mercy of my spiritual master, I was allowed to distribute 2 maha-big, 218 big, and 219 medium books.

by Oṁkāra dāsa (noreply@blogger.com) at June 16, 2009 05:31 PM

Omkara das, LA : The Agony and Ecstacy

Last week Bhṛgupati Prabhu, Parameśvara Prabhu, Bhakta Mike, Bhakta Vasillios, and I flew out to Tennessee for a wonderful opportunity for book distribution. I checked the weather report ahead of time and it showed scattered thundershowers for the whole week. Rāya Nitāi Prabhu and Ārya-siddhānta Prabhu picked us up from the airport in Nashville, TN. It was nice to see them again and to have the association of so many nice devotees.
When we arrived in Manchester the foreboding sky was dark with ominous clouds. The locals told us that the sky had been threatening rain for over a week while not yielding even a drop. As Thursday rolled around and the kids began filling up the camping areas for the concert, the clouds finally unleashed their pent up fury. Rain, lightning, and thunder resounded across the land as the clouds sweep past us in their cyclic motion. A few hours later the rain stoped and I began distributing Śrīla Prabhupāda's books.
The people eagerly took the books and gave donations while sprinkles of rain punctuated the day. After Bhṛgupati and I finished our first bag we went back to reload and take a little prasādam. By the time we went out again the sky was sunny and clear and the sun stirred up a great deal of humidity with its heat. We had assigned areas to work for the day and the next area was a thirty minute brisk walk away. By the time we got there my body was overheating and I had to sit down for a minute. Bhṛgupati began distributing and I tried to stop the inevitable onslaught of heatstroke.
First came the pounding headaches, then the nausea and dizziness. Shortly after I vomited twice and I was forced to lay down in a shady place for about two hours and slowly sip on water. Some nice person came by and offered ice, which I used to ice my body down with as I desperately tried to regulate my temperature. Fortunately I began feeling better toward the evening while dark clouds covered the sky again. By the time I met up with Bhṛgupati again there was only a half of an hour of distribution time left. I was feeling frustrated that my body is so unfit for the service of Lord Caitanya.
The next three days though went much better. By Kṛṣṇa's mercy I was able to taste the nectar of book distribution, completely forgetting the bag of bones I have to drag around. We met so many nice people out there, just waiting for the opportunity to hear about Kṛṣṇa. One group I met was eagerly waiting for us to come by their camp this year. I arrived in the evening and introduced myself when they said, "Oh, we have been waiting for you guys with the Indian books!" They had received Śrīla Prabhupāda's books last year and wanted more. I brought different books this year, so they all took a Journey of Self-Discovery, Science of Self-Realization, and Bhagavad-gītā As It Is.
When I was going through an area that Parameśvara had gone through the previous day, I met one kid who had seen the Bhagavad-gītā the day before. I showed the books to him all over again and he took quite an interest. He wanted all three of the bigger books and asked how much of a donation to give. I never like telling people how much to give. I prefer to let people give according to the inspiration they receive from Kṛṣṇa, that way they never feel like they were hustled out of their money. So, I explained that it is a donation from the heart and to give as he feels inspired. He liked that very much and gave a generous donation. He continued asking nice questions and then he asked how much the books cost again. I could tell that he wanted to give more, so I explained to him how I refuse to degrade this priceless transcendental literature by putting a price on it. Rather, he should give as he feels inspired according to his means. So, he pulled out his wallet again and doubled what he gave earlier. Both satisfied, I bade him farewell and went on to meet more nice people.
I was talking to a group of three kids when a fourth came out from the tent. The fourth said that he already had the Gītā. I could tell he was trying to break up the conversation and disrupt his friends from getting any books. Two of his friends lost interest when he said this, but the first kid I showed the books to reached for his wallet. As he did this the fourth said, "Dude, I have these at home. I can give mine to you." The first kid rebutted, "Yeah, but I want to get these books from this monk and I want to give him a donation also!" So he gave a generous donation and took the books.
I met countless people who were very nice and eager to get the mercy of Śrīla Prabhupāda. The whole time I was out there I was meditating on a purport in the seventh canto where Śrīla Prabhupāda stresses the importance of sharing Kṛṣṇa:
"For a devotee, being situated in the heavenly planets and being in the hellish planets are equal, for a devotee lives neither in heaven nor in hell but with Kṛṣṇa in the spiritual world. The secret of success for the devotee is not understood by the karmīs and jñānīs. Karmīs therefore try to be happy by material adjustment, and jñānīs want to be happy by becoming one with the Supreme. The devotee has no such interest. He is not interested in so-called meditation in the Himalayas or the forest. Rather, his interest is in the busiest part of the world, where he teaches people Kṛṣṇa consciousness. The Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement was started for this purpose. We do not teach one to meditate in a secluded place just so that one may show that he has become very much advanced and may be proud of his so-called transcendental meditation, although he engages in all sorts of foolish materialistic activity. A Vaiṣṇava like Prahlāda Mahārāja is not interested in such a bluff of spiritual advancement. Rather, he is interested in enlightening people in Kṛṣṇa consciousness because that is the only way for them to become happy. Prahlāda Mahārāja says clearly, nānyaṁ tvad asya śaraṇaṁ bhramato 'nupaśye: "I know that without Kṛṣṇa consciousness, without taking shelter of Your lotus feet, one cannot be happy." One wanders within the universe, life after life, but by the grace of a devotee, a servant of Śrī Caitanya Mahāprabhu, one can get the clue to Kṛṣṇa consciousness and then not only become happy in this world but also return home, back to Godhead. That is the real target in life. The members of the Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement are not at all interested in so-called meditation in the Himalayas or the forest, where one will only make a show of meditation, nor are they interested in opening many schools for yoga and meditation in the cities. Rather, every member of the Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement is interested in going door to door to try to convince people about the teachings of Bhagavad-gītā As It Is, the teachings of Lord Caitanya. That is the purpose of the Hare Kṛṣṇa movement. The members of the Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement must be fully convinced that without Kṛṣṇa one cannot be happy." (Srimad-bhagavatam 7.9.44)
Nānyaṁ tvad asya śaraṇaṁ bhramato 'nupaśye: "I know that without Kṛṣṇa consciousness, without taking shelter of Your lotus feet, one cannot be happy." This is the point. We have to be fully convinced that without Kṛṣṇa one cannot be happy. If we experience the happiness of Kṛṣṇa consciousness, then we must be liberal and generous with this most divine elixir. We must distribute it without any material distinction for the benefit of all the suffering conditioned souls. We must canvass door to door, person to person, begging everyone we meet to take to this Kṛṣṇa consciousness movement for their own well-being. We must entreat them with all humility to seriously imbibe the Bhagavad-gītā As It Is, the teachings of Lord Caitanya, and thus become happy. Our happiness comes from seeing others becoming happy in Kṛṣṇa consciousness.

by Oṁkāra dāsa (noreply@blogger.com) at June 16, 2009 05:31 PM

David Haslam, UK : Are women just sexual?

Are women just sexual? Why raise or take time to ponder the subject? Over the past few weeks whilst reading the news in Australia I noticed something; I’ve noticed it before but for some reason this time it’s made more of an impact. One of the articles focused on an interview with Rachel Ward who stated that she [...]

by David at June 16, 2009 05:25 PM

ISKCON Toronto, Canada : Experience the Bliss-Sankitan Saturday on June 27, 2009

We would like to officially invite you to the first ever Greater Toronto Area Monthly Sankirtan Festival (GTA-MSF). The inspiration behind this initiative is HG Vaisesika das who took Toronto by storm a few weeks back with his wonderful kirtan, soul-stirring lectures and practical seminar on sankirtan.

Sankirtan is a Sanskrit term which means the congregational chanting and sharing of the names and glories of Krishna, which is the reccomended process for spiritual success. In the Hare Krishna tradition, sankirtan is associated with sharing our spiritual culture with the public via the timeless books, translated by Srila Prabhupada.

We know that some of you regretfully were not able to make it out for the seminar and/or get to hit the streets when HG Vaisesika das was here, but regret no further! On Saturday June 27, 2009 you’ll get another opportunity to experience the bliss yourself! Part of the MSF initiative is to bring everyone together, and so in that spirit the MSF will begin with the morning program at the Toronto Hare Krishna temple at 4:30am on June 27, 2009. The program will include a morning worship ceremony, some time for mantra mediation and will include a discourse that will discuss the benefits of sankirtan. A short seminar on the practicalities of how to distribute books will follow, and by 11am we should hit the streets and stay out until 2pm.
Being part of the MSF is not simply restricted to coming out on book distribution. There are various avenues where you can help contribute to make this event a success! Whether it be helping to prepare prasadam (sanctified vegetarian food), spreading the word about the event, helping out with logistics, being part of the harinama team (who will sing the Lord's names) or just being a friendly face who wants to watch everyone else, we encourage everyone to please come out!


Please sign up on the form below and don't hesitate to contact us with any comments or questions at toronto.sankirtan@gmail.com.



by madhavi (noreply@blogger.com) at June 16, 2009 05:19 PM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : Srila Prabhupada Pokes Fun at Indians "learning" from America

Here is an exchange that took place in Mauritius on the 4th of October, 1975:

Indian man: I want to know one thing, Prabhupada. You have just said that in the moon there is a cold atmosphere and there is still a living entity there? You see? But what the Americans have said... Of course, they have sent man there, different rockets there, satellites...
Prabhupada: So I understand. Your authority is America, and my authority is sastra. That is the difference.
Indian man: But they...

read more

by Mukunda Goswami at June 16, 2009 03:46 PM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : Population Growth is not Outstripping Food Supplies

In our book"Divine Nature," Drutakarma and I have argued that the theories begun with British economist Thomas Robert Malthus (1766 1834) that "overpopulation" was a big problem have been proven false. Statistics show many post-Malthusian predictions have been wrong. These predictions would show that we'd be falling off the planet by now due to overcrowding. One thing such dire predictions didn't reckon was the demoniac principle of 'birth control.' In fact population experts now tell us that by the year 2020, earth's population will slip into a precipitous decline.

read more

by Mukunda Goswami at June 16, 2009 03:44 PM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : The downside of 'computerization/globalization

On 27, 1972 Srila Prabhupada was lecturing in America. He did not want computerization to stop but he wanted to show that they don't actually solve the problem of societal unrest, although we know they can be used to good advantage. Here is what he said: "Just like I gave you one example: the computer machine. It can work for thousands of men. So thousands of men means the thousands of men must be unemployed. And especially in your country, they are taking advantage of this machine because the salary is.. If you want to pay to the worker, a big, big salary. So they want to save.

read more

by Mukunda Goswami at June 16, 2009 03:43 PM

H.H. Mukunda Goswami : 100% 'conversion' not required

We have often heard that Srila Prabhupada said that even if one percent of the world's people becomes Krsna conscious, the present world situation would change for the better. Here is one such quote from a lecture delivered in London on 8th of September 1971: "Therefore this Krishna consciousness movement... Even a certain little percentage of people become Krishna conscious, the whole face of the world will change. It is so nice." (SB7.5.22.30)

by Mukunda Goswami at June 16, 2009 03:42 PM

Sutapa das, BV Manor, UK : River of Names

A few days ago I unexpectedly bumped into a university friend whom I hadn’t spoken to for nearly ten years. He is getting married in two weeks and has achieved many things in his career since leaving university. In certain ways our respective paths in life turned out quite different, but in other ways I discovered that we share many of the same spiritual principles. It would definitely be interesting to have a university reunion after twenty years and see where everyone ended up. Life has its interesting twists and turns.

The ancient scriptures explain that this world is like a river of names where some strands of straw join for some time, but downstream they all separate and go their own ways. You could say the world is just like an airport transit lounge. We all come from different backgrounds, catching planes to different destinations, and in the meantime we establish relationships amongst each other. Who can deny temporal relationships of this world? Even if two people stay committed to each other for life, the inevitable reality of death will separate them. So does that mean all relationships are meaningless and simply a waste of time?

While we relate to others on a bodily level, the relationships will only endure the length of this body. We may talk of having a connection with someone after they leave, but the strength of that connection is based on how much we have related to them as a spirit soul, part of the Supreme Spirit. So in this river of names, where we take on certain roles, responsibilities, positions and personas, the real challenge is to get beyond all the superficiality and temporary designations and get to the essence of the person. We are not human beings on a spiritual journey – rather we are spiritual beings on a human journey. This human journey affords an amazing opportunity to establish spiritual relationships which last for eternity.

by Sutapa das (sutapa.kks@hotmail.com) at June 16, 2009 03:27 PM

Clemens Both, Germany : What an intense weekend!!

Namahatta meeting at my place with Sadbhuja Prabhu from Leipzig, Dvarakadisa Prabhu and Gauranga Prabhu! A very esoteric and interesting class and lots of wonderful Prasadam...My first Harinama in Hannover with Mahadyuti Prabhu... It is always so purifying that I become really melancholic when it is over.strawberry cake for ever ki - jaya! ;)Having fun on the Masala street festival, playing

by Clemens (noreply@blogger.com) at June 16, 2009 02:18 PM

Manoj, Melbourne, AU : 143. Part 5 – Weekend away with HG Bhurijan Prabhu


Part 5 – The early hours with His Grace Bhurijan Prabhu

My first trip to Sri Vrindhavan Dham was in August 2007. I was new to ISKCON and this made the trip even more special. One of the highlights of that trip was the Sri Goverdhan parikrama. I had organized a taxi to pick me up from Krishna – Balaram mandir at about 4:30am, after the mangal aroti. Alone in the car with only a silent driver, we drove away, covered all around by the morning night before I finally reached the outside of a closed shop. I could remember seeing a handful of pilgrims walking on the road. There was a fence on the far right side blocking some wild bush and trees. The driver said that I can start my parikrama from where the car had stopped. I stayed in the car. I was scared. Nervous. Where do I go now? What route would I take? What if I get lost? Will it be safe? Can I complete and get back to my room in time?

Before I left the Krishna- Balaram temple, I offered, probably my most sincere prayers to Srila Prabhupada. At his samadhi. Basically I said, “Please, I beg you to help me today to complete the Goverdhan Parikrama without any difficulties. I am very scared.” Once again, this time in the taxi, I closed my eyes, folded my hands in prayer, the driver still sat silently in the car and I re-submitted the same request to Srila Prabhupada. Only this time, my eyes were shut even more tightly. Then I opened. And you won’t believe this but at that exact moment, a person passed by my car. I noticed that he was wearing a saffron kurta. And he had a shaved head !

I said, “Thank you Prabhupada ! Yes! “and I immediately moved from the left to the right side of the car, opened the door, jumped out and called out to the devotee. As he turned, I noticed the tulasi neck beads and a tilaka. He had a saffron dhoti. Our style ! He is one of us ! Same team ! I was elated.

Me : Hare Krishna
Him : Hari Bol
Me : Are you going on the Goverdhan parikrama?
Him : Yes
Me : That’s great !! Can I join you please? I haven’t done this before and I don’t know where I am going…
Him : Sure, follow me

With that, he became my guide. He asked me to pay obeisances to Goverdhan right then and there…on the road, which I did, pointing towards the fence. The holy Hill was on the other side of that fence! I noticed that he was chanting as he walked. And I followed. He then led the way and I followed behind. As we entered the inner path of the parikrama, which he recommended, he turned to me and introduced himself. I can’t remember but I think he said he was from Latvia and that his dad was based in South America. I introduced myself too.

Me : Are you here for Krishna Janmasthami?
Him : No…I live here…for atleast 6 months of the year
Me : Oh wow…do you work? Study? travel?
Him : I am learning Srimad Bhagavatam here…from my guru
Me : Oh…who is your guru?
Him : His Grace Bhurijan prabhu

The cold Saturday morning at the New Nandagram farm, miles away from Melbourne, was turning out to be a beautiful day by the time we completed honouring our morning prasadam. Everybody were finishing their various tasks to get the best seats in the hall to listen to HG Bhurijan prabhu’s class. I was excited as well. It’s been 2 years and since then I have heard his name at the Melbourne temple every now and then, when he visited here for lectures. But somehow or another, I always missed it, due to work and distance of travel. And finally here it is. Don’t know how he looks, don’t know he sounds. I like surprises.

There was a nice melodious kirtan in the room by Krishna Gaja prabhu who easily has the best voice in our temple. As I sat there next to the heater, 4 rows back, in a fully packed room which was now warming up, I suddenly noticed the guests quickly shift from their seated position to one of paying obeisances. I turned and looked at  the door to see his arrival. No one was there. He had already made his way to the altar and was observing it carefully. Then he turned, paid his obeisances, looked at the altar again and walked over to his seat.

At that point, I remembered that I had received a book from 2 kids at the temple during the book marathon last year (27/12 to be exact), titled, “My Glorious Master – Remembrances of Prabhupada’s Mercy On a Fallen Soul by Bhurijana Dasa“. “I should ‘ve got that book“, I thought, “I could have collected his autograph!”

He seemed very pleased to be in the room, had a gentle smile, was shorter than I expected, wore a jacket and carried a shoulder bag. As soon as he sat, a tumbler of warm water reached the side table. He looked at us all, Smiled. He, then passed on a warm greeting to Krishna gaja prabhu with a huge smile. Over the days, we would see how much he appreciated this young devotee from our temple. He would keep encouraging him to sing and he would just sit and listen to his kirtan. Other times, he would ask Krishna gaja to continue his part of the kirtan.  It was so nice to see this admiration for a younger devotee. 

His Grace Bhurijan prabhu

His Grace Bhurijan prabhu

When Bhurijan prabhu’s takes the mrndanga for his kirtan, he would immediately appear very grave. It would have a slow start and then take up a very melodious tune and then slow again. The entire room was in full participation throughout this session. He was like a seasoned music conductor. With a motion of his hand, he would ask one batch of seated guests to sing while others sat silently and listened. Then he would motion the silent batch to sing while others followed. In this way, the leading of the kirtan would move to different groups around the room. It was so nice. Different voices each time. Sometimes, you heard the voices of children leading the kirtan, another time of old devotee men, another time those of matajis and another time of young male devotees.

We, Buffalo devotees taped one of our kirtanas and sent it to Prabhupada with a letter. The mrdanga and karatalas were soft and the melody sweet. Then devotee men sang first as a group and the women responded. Then kirtana began slow, sped up, and again slowed. A guitar accompanied us. Prabhupada replied to my letter.

My Dear Bhurijana,

Please accept my blessings. I am in due receipt of your letter of January 13, 1969 along with the kirtan tapes and pictures of the Buffalo temple. I cannot tell you how very much I enjoyed listening to this wonderful tape recording. All of the super excellent qualities of kirtan were present on this tape and it was thus a great joy to hear it. On this tape, Rupanuga has set an example for all householders because there was singing on this of Hare Krishna by all of his family members. It was all sounding very nicely, and I am going to show this tape to the Sankirtan Party here in Los Angeles so they may take example from such nice kirtan……

Your ever well-wisher,
A.C Bhaktivedanta Swami

A part of the letter from the book, “My Glorious Master – Remembrances of Prabhupada’s Mercy On a Fallen Soul by Bhurijana Dasa”

by 9days8nights at June 16, 2009 02:10 PM

Japa Group : Please Join The Japa Group

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

rasa108@gmail.com

ys

Rasa Rasika dasa

by Rasa Rasika (noreply@blogger.com) at June 16, 2009 01:56 PM

ISKCON Dallas, USA : Texas Faith 5: How does a faith adapt without losing its meaning?


Dallas Morning News,
Each week we will post a question to a panel of about two dozen clergy, laity and theologians, all of whom are based in Texas or are from Texas. They will chime in with their responses to the question of the week. And you, readers, will be able to respond to their answers through the comment box.
This weeks question:In his new book, "God's Continent, Christianity, Islam and Europe's Religious Crisis," Philip Jenkins argues that Europe is really not being Islamized, that Christians from Africa and Asia also are pouring into Europe. And both Muslims and Third World Christians are running full-square into Europe's secular culture, says Jenkins, who also has written the acclaimed Next Christendom and New Faces of Christianity books.

What's interesting, the Penn State professor reports, is that the great faiths aren't fading away. Instead, Islam and Christianity are adapting to the culture around them.

This leads me to this week's question, which we have discussed in various ways over the last few weeks:

How does a faith adapt without losing its essential meaning?

See what our panelists have to say about this topic, which mirrors the larger discussion about how Sonia Sotomayor or any Supreme Court justice interprets the Constitution. Like the Constitution, faith has to apply to the times in which it lives. But, also like the Constitution, a religion loses its meaning when it becomes too malleable.


and here was the response:

NITYANANDA CHANDRA DAS, minister of ISKCON (International Society for Krishna Consciousness), Dallas

Every religion must adapt according to time, place, circumstance and individual. The principle of religion -- to develop love for God -- must always remain the same. Strategies, or details, may change but the principle must remain the same.

For example: Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura (1874 -1937) was one of the first sannyasis (a renounced monk) in India to use an automobile. One of the primary principles of religion is simplicity and therefore the sannyasis used to travel only by foot.

As an educator in the principle of developing Love of God, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura saw that the automobile was a useful instrument to serve that ultimate purpose. He could visit people over long distances and thus expand his efforts. Thus, despite criticisms, he adopted the use of the automobile.

Adaptations can be properly applied when one considers or consults the authority of Guru, Sastra, and Sanga. Guru is the exemplary teacher, Sastra are the revealed scriptures, and Sanga refers to the association of saintly practitioners. Adaptations should be validated by this three-point check system. If the scriptures, the exemplary teacher, and the saintly practitioners all support the adaptation, then it can be accepted as a good course of action.

Hare Krishna :)
Your humble servant,
Nityananda Chandra Das
To see all the responses from the Texas Faith Panel click here

by Nityananda Chandra Das (noreply@blogger.com) at June 16, 2009 01:27 PM

Rupa Madhurya das, TX, USA : Lecture - Guruprasad Swami - SB 8.6.24-25

Lecture on Srimad Bhagavatam, Canto 8, Chapter 6, Texts 24-25 by Guruprasad Swami.

Dallas, TX
2009-04-20

24 - TRANSLATION

My dear demigods, with patience and peace everything can be done, but if one is agitated by anger, the goal is not achieved. Therefore, whatever the demons ask, agree to their proposal.

25 - TRANSLATION

A poison known as kalakuta will be generated from the ocean of milk, but you should not fear it. And when various products are churned from the ocean, you should not be greedy for them or anxious to obtain them, nor should you be angry.

PURPORT

It appears that by the churning process many things would be generated from the ocean of milk, including poison, valuable gems, nectar and many beautiful women. The demigods were advised, however, not to be greedy for the gems or beautiful women, but to wait patiently for the nectar. The real purpose was to get the nectar.


Download: 2009-04-20 - Guruprasad Swami - SB 8.6.24-25.mp3

by Rupa Schomaker (rupa@rupa.com) at June 16, 2009 01:13 PM

Madhava Ghosh dasa, New Vrndavan, USA : Monoculture Versus Polyculture


From Feral Scholar:

We’re all familiar with the myth: we learned it in school. It goes something like this:

Once Upon a Time, in the 1960’s, a crew of brilliant whitefellas in lab coats Saved the World by revolutionising farming and eliminating world hunger. Their new, advanced mechanical/chemical farming methods — vast areas of monocrop, heavy tractors, giant combines, tonnes of artificial pesticides and fertilisers — and their new, improved, superior hybridised crops increased yields tenfold and more. Without industrial farming, billions would starve, even though other billions would be re-sentenced to the short lives of brutal, backbreaking toil from which they were rescued by industrial/mechanised farming. Therefore, anyone who advocates organic or “sustainable” farming practise is some kind of heartless elitist who wants billions to starve and the rest to live as dawn-to-dusk field slaves — for this is what will happen if we do not continue and expand the highly successful [and highly profitable, for everyone except farmers and eaters] model of industrial/corporate farming. There is no other way to feed ourselves. If there are “external costs” of the industrial farming system, we will just have to accept them.

That’s what I was taught in school — and probably you were too, if the subject of agriculture was even mentioned during your school years.

The real story — slowly emerging now into public discourse, in bits and pieces, in a mosaic of books, documentary films, research, nationalist and peasant movements, grassroots efforts — is a lot more ambiguous and complicated. Did agricultural productivity really rise as a result of industrial farming methods? Well, yes and no; it depends how you measure productivity. Was hunger really eliminated by the so-called Green Revolution of the 1960’s? Obviously not, since billions are going hungry worldwide today. How effective were the new artificial pesticides and fertilisers really? And what are the long-term consequences of their use?

On what theories was this shift in agriculture based, and who benefited most, and what other agendas were on the table (or under it) at the time? And most urgently perhaps — as we measure the annual loss of topsoil, the reduced nutritional value of industrially-farmed food, and the many risks to food security posed by massively centralised and fossil-fuel-dependent food production — is there any other way to feed ourselves? If the answer is Yes, and any other approach to farming and food is capable of feeding us, then these two (or more) competing models of farming which should be examined and evaluated. But if the answer is No, then we are indeed the captives of an irrevocable choice made sometime in the 1930’s and 1940’s, with no way out.

So let us talk first of all about productivity: the productivity of land, that is, land producing food that we can eat.

First of all, when we consider climax ecosystems (maximally productive ecosystems, those which sustain the highest levels and diversity of life per hectare/acre), we find that they are never monocrops…

Read the rest of an extensive analysis of fossil fuel powered monoculture compared to smaller scale polyculture agriculture here.

Posted in Cows and Environment

by Madhava Gosh at June 16, 2009 12:09 PM

Sita-pati dasa, AU : This Year's News Echoes Last Year's Analysis

[A recent news article (May 21, 2009) also reinforced my conviction in my analysis. I've reproduced a portion of it below, embedded in excerpts from last year's post "There's Always One" (May 23, 2008)]

My call to nuke the Chinese is an ironic device. Unfortunately, it is actually the most sane thing to do given our current situation, which is an indication of how insane our current situation is. With the consumption of the Chinese rising to meet Australian standards the global economic and environmental situation is untenable. The only result of this can be the inevitable clash of the Americans and the Australians with the Chinese, and the Indians, and the Russians, and the Africans, and every other group who wants to live like we do.

Unless the Australians and Americans reduce their consumption and model a more responsible sustainable lifestyle, war with the Chinese, eventually an overt military one, caused by an economic one over the dwindling resources, is the near future of the human race.

- There's Always One, atmayogi.com, May 23, 2008

THE US has declared it "is not ceding the Pacific to anyone" in a forceful response to the rise of China and the Rudd Government's defence white paper, which last month flagged the possibility of US dominance fading in the Asia-Pacific region in the decades ahead.

Asked by The Australian in a briefing with foreign journalists about Washington's response to Canberra's defence blueprint, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was emphatic that Washington was looking to deepen its ties in the region and wanted to do more with allies such as Australia.

She made it clear the US, which has a huge naval presence in the Asia-Pacific based in Hawaii, was not going anywhere.

"We want Australia as well as other nations to know the United States is not ceding the Pacific to anyone," Ms Clinton said.

She stressed that Washington was also "sending a clear message that the United States will be engaged - we are a trans-Pacific power and a trans-Atlantic power."

- Hillary Clinton firmly commits the US to Asia-Pacific security, The Australian, May 21, 2009

Being lukewarm is a cop out. Why stop at killing millions of animals? If you are going to be a killer, then you should be logical about it and kill the Chinese before they kill you. Otherwise, if you do find that idea abhorrent, then take a look at the logical consequences of where this meat-eating is taking us. The Mahabharata tells us: "There is not enough gold, grains, or women in the world to satisfy the desire of one man" - what to speak of one billion Chinese, plus 400 million Americans, plus 20 million Australians plus the rest of the world.

Our irresponsibility in failing to set an example of responsible, sustainable consumption is leading the world to war over dwindling resources, and ecological and environmental disaster. Face up to it. If we don't become vegetarian now, we should drop a nuke on China. It's the only way to make our current diet and lifestyle sustainable.

So stop being so irresponsible: either push the red button, or give up the red meat.

- There's Always One, atmayogi.com, May 23, 2008

by sitapati at June 16, 2009 12:07 PM

Kirtans in Oxford, UK : June Kirtan


Our June kirtaniyas, Rasasthali (pictured above) and Gopal-hari complimented each other well; Rasasthali with upbeat, lively melodies and Gopal-hari with a mellower approach.

We were surrounded by roses, beautifully arranged by Shyama, and it was a warm, sunny day - a delightful setting for our chanting.

Here's a slideshow of the event - the kirtaniyas in various kirtan poses!

Sorry about the lack of podcasts - hope to have it all back in order soon.

by Kirtaniya (noreply@blogger.com) at June 16, 2009 12:00 PM

Sita-pati dasa, AU : Repost: Sprouting Seeds, Spiralling Violence

[This is a repost of a post from May 22, 2008. I just can't shake this. I am more convinced than I was then that this is the simple arithmetic of the situation, and that we are living in a post-WW II fantasy world of post-industrial consumer equality for all. We can't "have our iPods" and "let the Chinese have theirs" (that's a figure of speech - I would point to meat consumption as a more immediate threat). There isn't enough.
Please also see my follow-up to this post from last year "There's Always One" for further elaboration.
]

With food prices rising, the dollar falling, and the economy reeling, it is becoming increasing important that we learn how to grow a portion of our own food. The first steps are obtaining and sprouting seeds, so we'll explore those topics here.

Winning the War on Food: Sprouting Seeds and Saving Seeds is a great article today from Natural News.com.

The glories of sprouted pumpkin seeds were extolled on Krpamoya Prabhu's blog a short while ago.

At Atma Yoga we've been sprouting seeds and using them in the salads.

This morning on the way to work Param and I were talking about the rising cost of food. Luckily we only eat a few grains and vegetables. It must be really hard for people who eat a lot of processed foods and especially meat.

Spiraling Food Prices Result in Deadly Violence Around the World, another story today on NaturalNews.com, was the topic at the dinner table the other night at Atma. We ended up discussing the relative merits of the HK416 assault rifle (can be fired after being submerged in water or sand - not sure about both) versus the Barrett M468 (fires the 6.8mm round - more accurate than the AK-47, more powerful than the M16; which is exactly what you need to stop a zombie or a feral human), and how the Australian Government should stockpile a million of them to arm the Australia populace to repel 300 million feral Indonesians after their country gets submerged by rising sea levels.

Either that, or it should be encouraging people to reduce their consumption, not allowing the unrestrained inflammation of their material desires.

World-wide, meat consumption is increasing at the rate of 4.7 million tons per year [source].

In China, annual meat consumption has jumped from 16 kilograms per person in 1983, to 53 kilograms per person today [source].

Check out this data table that I generated over at Earth Trends:

World meat consumption is going up, and the Chinese are contributing a huge amount to that.

These people want to live like you.

The conclusion is staggeringly obvious: we need to nuke the Chinese now.

The longer we wait, the stronger they grow. The more meat they eat, the more aggressive and strong they become. The more time they have, the more they build their industrial capacity and their war machine.

It is us or them - the world is not big enough for both. In fact, the world is not big enough just for them, if they live like us.

There are only two things that a responsible leadership can do: waste them, or reduce our consumption.

If you think that nuking the Chinese is a ridiculous proposition, then think of the alternative. Continuing the way we are now the world will very, very quickly run out of resources. It's not just the current rate of consumption: the Chinese are increasing their meat consumption at 12% per annum. There are a billion of them.

Every pound of beef requires 16 pounds of grain. It requires land to be cleared to graze cattle. It produces methane. It uses and contaminates water in processing.

If you think that the idea of reducing your consumption is ridiculous then you have to consider the alternatives:

  • Option 1: nuke the Chinese now.
  • Option 2: get a whole lot of assault rifles and lots of ammunition for when it all goes down.
  • Option 3: reduce consumption and model a more globally responsible, sustainable lifestyle.

Which one do you feel like choosing? Oh, by the way, if you don't want to choose we will arrange one of Option 1 or Option 2 for you, automatically.

The most revolutionary thing that you can do to combat global warming, resource depletion and the eventual war between the Chinese and America / Australia is to become a vegetarian.

It's probably the best thing you can do for your health and your emotional wellbeing as well.

It's certainly the best thing you can do for the health and well being of 270 million tons of animals per year, and climbing.

by sitapati at June 16, 2009 11:54 AM