PRABHUPADA 50 CAMPAIGN | TOVP GRAND OPENING 2027
- TOVP.org

The TOVP Management is pleased to announce that the TOVP Grand Opening is now scheduled to open in coordination with the 50th disappearance anniversary of His Divine Grace Srila Prabhupada during a three-month-long celebration beginning on November 1, 2027.

In conjunction with this arrangement and to support the ongoing intense work required to achieve this historic goal and offer the TOVP to Srila Prabhupada as a worldwide offering from all of ISKCON, we have launched the Prabhupada 50 Campaign. This is a two-year marathon beginning on Srila Prabhupada’s disappearance day, October 25, 2025, until his 50th disappearance day on November 1, 2027, and is our most important fundraising campaign to date. Ambarisa prabhu has announced that he will match $10 million during this campaign!

A very special sponsorship gift has been created for donors: a replica of Srila Prabhupada’s personal KRISHNA ring representing our eternal engagement of seva to the Lord. It comes in a beautiful and ornate box, and can be displayed on your home altar.

Prabhupada 50 campaign Krishna Ring top right angle view Prabhupada 50 campaign Krishna Ring - top left angle view Prabhupada 50 campaign Krishna Ring on the finger Srila Prabhupada Replica Ring in a box - top view Srila Prabhupada Replica Ring in a box - side view

This is truly a remarkable, once-in-many-lifetimes opportunity to establish our seva to Srila Prabhupada and Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu, and also make a profound difference in the re-spiritualization of the entire humanity.

Visit the Prabhupada 50 Campaign page and sponsor a ring for yourself and all your family members without delay, and help push on TOVP construction so we all can offer Srila Prabhupada, our acharyas and Lord Caitanya this magnificent temple, the new home of our beloved Mayapur deities.

Sponsor the eternal seva engagement ring today!

 


 

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Month-Long Krishna Balaram Shobha Yatra Enlivens Karnal with Devotion
→ Dandavats

By Aseem Krishna Das A grand Sri Sri Krishna Balaram Shobha Yatra Festival was organized in the Karnal district of Haryana from 10th September to 5th October 2025. This year, the Shobha Yatra was held at three different locations across Karnal. The local congregation was fully engaged and absorbed throughout the entire month-long festival, spreading
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SB 4.12.1-3 – HH Prahladananda Swami – The Nature of Time – Iskcon NYC
→ Dandavats

The video features a lecture by HH Prahlādānanda Swami on Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam Canto 4, Chapter 12, Verses 1–3. The central theme revolves around the nature of time (kāla) as an aspect of the Supreme Lord and its role in creation and destruction. The Swami explains that all events—including death, anger, and even warfare—are ultimately orchestrated by
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Weakness of Heart – Crawley, UK – HH SB  Keshava Swami
→ Dandavats

HH Svayam Bhagavan Keshava Maharaja explores the concept of spiritual weakness, emphasizing how individuals often struggle with determination, consistency, and clarity in their spiritual lives. He draws from scriptural teachings and personal anecdotes to illustrate how weakness manifests—especially when one is alone or facing challenges. The talk centers on the importance of strength, which is
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Travel Journal#21.41: Stuyvesant Falls, Chatham, Supersoul Farm, Schenectady
→ Travel Adventures of a Krishna Monk

Diary of a Traveling Sadhaka, Vol. 21, No. 41
By Krishna Kripa Das
(Week 41: October 8–14, 2025)
Stuyvesant Falls, Chatham, Supersoul Farm, Schenectady
(Sent from Stuyvesant Falls on October 18, 2025)

Where I Went and What I Did

The forty-first week of 2025, I lived at Viraha Bhavan, the ashram of Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami, my Guru Maharaja, in Stuyvesant Falls, New York. I helped his caretakers with different services like cleaning the kitchen, waking up the deities and uploading dictation tapes. I also did some personal service for Guru Maharaja. On Wednesday evening I attended a Gita class and kirtan program in Chatham. On Saturday evening I attended a kirtan program at Raghunath Prabhu’s Supersoul Farm. 


On Sunday afternoon I attended the feast program at ISKCON Schenectady,
where I gave a lecture on Bhagavad-gita 4.9, and talked about evidence that Krishna’s body is transcendental and not material.

I share quotes from Srila Prabhupada’s Srimad-Bhagavatam and Krishna, The Supreme Personality of Godhead. I share quotes from Caitanya-bhagavata by Vrindavana Dasa Thakura and from its commentary by Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura. I share a quote from Mukunda Maharaja’s Miracle on Second Avenue.

Many thanks to Bhakta Henry of DC for his very generous donation. Thank again to Shreyakari Devi Dasi and ISKCON Schenectady for their kind donation and for the video of me chanting at their program and the photo of me speaking.

Itinerary

September 12–October 31: serve Satsvarupa Dasa Goswami
October 31–January 3, 2026: NYC Harinam
January 4, 2026: Miami Ratha-yatra?

Chanting Hare Krishna in Upstate New York

Patrick and Katie chant Hare Krishna at Chatham Wednesday program, and people dance (https://youtu.be/0rHjGI4oNQA):


Patrick chants Hare Krishna at Chatham Wednesday program, and women and kids dance in a circle (
https://youtu.be/a6o5cb5Dsu8):


Damodara Priya Devi Dasi chants Hare Krishna at the Chatham Wednesday program (https://youtube.com/shorts/SKW3SGUmtSY):


Patrick chants Hare Krishna in the final kirtan at the Chatham Wednesday program (
https://youtu.be/Bg0hK18Rf-s):


Raghunath Prabhu chants Hare Krishna to the “Damodarastaka” melody at his Supersoul Farm (https://youtu.be/VnV6gvLAapk):


Maya chants Hare Krishna at Supersoul Farm
(https://youtu.be/bNM46Jde5IY):


Cody chants Hare Krishna at Supersoul Farm (https://youtu.be/ZZ8eDRGKxvQ):


Seth and friends chant Hare Krishna at Supersoul Farm (
https://youtu.be/MZs7QJrSv3U):


By the end of Seth’s kirtan, almost everyone was dancing (
https://youtu.be/CVf88ByKR8Y):


I led the kirtan at the beginning of the Sunday feast program at ISKCON Schenectady (https://youtube.com/shorts/t615ngQz86U?feature=share):


Photos


The morning of October 10 was very cold, and when I went outside to pick a flower for the arati around 8:30 a.m. there was still frost on the marigolds, something I do not ever remember seeing before.


I love smoothies, but I am too cheap to buy them, or even to buy the ingredients. Even if I have the ingredients, I am too lazy to make them. At my guru’s ashram, however, I make them every day. After serving him and his deities breakfast, I just blend up the maha milk and the maha fruit, and in thirty seconds I have a smoothie!

Insights

Srila Prabhupada:

From Srimad-Bhagavatam 1.1.2, purport:

In the material world there is keen competition between animal and animal, man and man, community and community, nation and nation. But the devotees of the Lord rise above such competitions. They do not compete with the materialist because they are on the path back to Godhead, where life is eternal and blissful. Such transcendentalists are nonenvious and pure in heart. In the material world, everyone is envious of everyone else, and therefore there is competition. But the transcendental devotees of the Lord are not only free from material envy, but are well-wishers to everyone, and they strive to establish a competitionless society with God in the center.”

From Srimad-Bhagavatam 1.1.3, purport:

Every living entity, beginning from Brahmā, the first-born living being within the material world, down to the insignificant ant, desires to relish some sort of taste derived from sense perceptions. These sensual pleasures are technically called rasas. Such rasas are of different varieties. In the revealed scriptures the following twelve varieties of rasas are enumerated: (1) raudra (anger), (2) adbhuta (wonder), (3) srngara (conjugal love), (4) hasya (comedy), (5) vira (chivalry), (6) daya (mercy), (7) dasya (servitorship), (8) sakhya (fraternity), (9) bhayanaka (horror), (10) bibhatsa (shock), (11) santa (neutrality), (12) vatsalya (parenthood).”

The sum total of all these rasas is called affection or love.”

The rasas were originally exchanged between the spiritual living being and the spiritual whole, the Supreme Personality of Godhead. The spiritual exchange or rasa is fully exhibited in spiritual existence between living beings and the Supreme Lord.

The Supreme Personality of Godhead is therefore described in the sruti-mantras, Vedic hymns, as ‘the fountainhead of all rasas.’ When one associates with the Supreme Lord and exchanges one’s constitutional rasa with the Lord, then the living being is actually happy.

These sruti-mantras indicate that every living being has his constitutional position, which is endowed with a particular type of rasa to be exchanged with the Personality of Godhead. In the liberated condition only, this primary rasa is experienced in full. In the material existence, the rasa is experienced in the perverted form, which is temporary. And thus the rasas of the material world are exhibited in the material form of raudra (anger) and so on.

Therefore, one who attains full knowledge of these different rasas, which are the basic principles of activities, can understand the false representations of the original rasas which are reflected in the material world. The learned scholar seeks to relish the real rasa in the spiritual form. In the beginning he desires to become one with the Supreme. Thus, less intelligent transcendentalists cannot go beyond this conception of becoming one with the spirit whole, without knowing of the different rasas.

By submissively hearing this transcendental literature, one can attain the full pleasure of his heart’s desire.”

From Krishna, The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Chapter 25:

As usual, the gopis began to chant the glorious pastimes of Lord Krishna with great feeling, for they were chanting from the heart.”

From Krishna, The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Chapter 27:

The surabhi cows and all the demigods and their mothers joined the heavenly king, Indra, in worshiping Lord Krishna by bathing Him with Ganges water and the milk of the surabhis. Thus Govinda, Lord Krishna, was pleased with all of them. The residents of all higher planetary systems, such as Gandharvaloka, Vidyadharaloka, Siddhaloka and Caranaloka, all combined and glorified the Lord by chanting His holy name as their wives and damsels danced with great joy. They very much satisfied the Lord by incessantly pouring flowers from the sky. When everything was very nicely and joyfully settled, the cows overflooded the surface of the earth with their milk. The water of the rivers began to flow with various tasty liquids and give nourishment to the trees, producing fruits and flowers of different colors and tastes. The trees began to pour drops of honey. The hills and mountains began to produce potent medicinal plants and valuable stones. Because of Krishna’s presence, all these things happened very nicely, and the lower animals, who were generally envious of one another, were envious no longer. . . . This great incident is a powerful example of how Krishna consciousness can benefit the world. Even the lower animals forget their envious nature and become elevated to the qualities of the demigods.”

From Krishna, The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Chapter 33:

Krishna, the Supersoul of everyone, is already within the body of everyone; therefore if He sees someone or embraces someone there is no question of impropriety.”

Sukadeva Gosvami concludes this episode of the rasa-lila by pointing out that if a person hears from the right source about the pastimes of Krishna, who is Vishnu Himself, and the gopis, who are expansions of His energy, then he will be relieved of the most dangerous type of disease, namely lust. In other words, one who actually hears the rasa-lila will become completely freed from the lusty desire of sex life and elevated to the highest level of spiritual understanding.”

From Krishna, The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Chapter 56:

Although a scientist may be a creator of many wonderful things, Krishna is the creator of the scientist. He is the creator of not only one scientist but of millions and trillions, all over the universe. . . . Scientists utilize the physical elements or laws of material nature to do something wonderful, but actually such laws and elements are also the creation of Krishna. This is actual scientific understanding. Less intelligent men do not try to understand who created the brain of the scientist; they are satisfied simply to see the wonderful creation or invention of the scientist.”

From Krishna, The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Chapter 58:

The Lord can be pleased only by a humble attitude in the service spirit. The more we render service unto the Lord under the direction of the spiritual master, the more we make advancement on the path approaching the Lord. We cannot demand any grace or mercy from the Lord because of our service rendered to Him. He may accept or not accept our service, but the only means to satisfy the Lord is through the service attitude, and nothing else.”

From Krishna, The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Chapter 60:

[Queen Rukmini said to her husband, Lord Krishna:] “In the society of the servitors and served in Krishna consciousness, one is not subjected to the pains and pleasures of material society, which functions according to sex attraction. Therefore everyone, whether man or woman, should seek to be an associate in Your society of servitors and served. You are the Supreme Personality of Godhead; no one can excel You, nor can anyone come up to an equal level with You. The perfect social system is that in which You remain in the center, being served as the Supreme, and all others engage as Your servitors. In such a perfectly constructed society, everyone can remain eternally happy and blissful.”

Vrindavana Dasa Thakura:

From Sri Caitanya-bhagavata, Madhya 20.39:

I openly reveal to you that I am eternal, My servants are eternal, and the servants of My servants are eternal.”

From Sri Caitanya-bhagavata, Madhya 20.42–44:

Siva leaves aside his clothes while relishing My glories. Lord Ananta, the sustainer of the universe, personally sings My glories. Personalities like Sukadeva and Narada become intoxicated by hearing My glories. The greatness of My glories is described by the four Vedas. O Murari, anyone who disregards such auspicious glories can never understand My incarnation.”

From Sri Caitanya-bhagavata, Madhya 20.45:

By teaching Murari, the Supreme Lord taught everyone, “My form, servants, pastimes, and abodes are all eternal.”

From Sri Caitanya-bhagavata, Madhya 20.75:

Whoever the servants and maidservants of the Vaishnavas may be, the Vedas declare, ‘They are the best of all.’”

From Sri Caitanya-bhagavata, Madhya 20.105–127:

One day the most pure Murari thought about the position of the Lord’s incarnations. ‘While the Lord and His associates are still present in this world, I should think of my own welfare. I cannot understand the pastimes of Krishna or how He acts at a particular time. Sometimes He creates, and then He annihilates. Although He destroyed Ravana and his dynasty to bring back Sita, why did He then abandon her? Therefore I should give up my body while He is still present in this world. The proper time to give up my body is while that great personality is still present in this world.’

After contemplating in this way, Murari Gupta secretly brought one sharp chopper. As he brought that chopper and hid it inside the house, he thought, ‘Tonight I will happily give up my body.’

Lord Visvambhara resides in the heart of all living entities. He therefore understood Murari’s resolution. The Lord quickly came to Murari’s house, and Murari offered his respectful obeisances at the Lord’s feet. Feeling great compassion for Murari, the Lord sat on an asana and began to narrate topics of Krishna. The Lord then said, ‘O Murari, will you do what I say?’

Murari replied, ‘O Lord, this body belongs to You.’

The Lord asked, ‘Is that a fact?’

Murari replied, ‘Yes.’

The Lord then whispered in his ear, ‘Then give Me that chopper. You have kept a chopper inside the house with which you plan to kill yourself. Give it to Me.’

In great lamentation, Murari exclaimed, ‘Alas! Alas! Someone has told You a lie.’

The Lord said, ‘Murari, you are certainly naive. Are you saying that I will know something only if someone else tells Me? I know who made that chopper and where you have hidden it.’

The Lord is the omniscient Supersoul in the hearts of all, so He knows everything. He went inside the house and brought out the chopper.

The Lord said, ‘O Murari, this is how you behave! For what fault of Mine do you want to leave Me? If you leave, with whom will I enjoy pastimes? Who has given you such ideas? O Murari, give Me your word that you will never think of such things again.’ Lord Visvambhara then embraced Murari and placed His hand on Murari's head.”

From Sri Caitanya-bhagavata, Madhya 20.136:

If even a bird chants Lord Caitanya’s name, it will certainly attain Lord Caitanya’s abode.”

Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura:

From his commentary on Sri Caitanya-bhagavata, Madhya 20.137:

Those sannyasis who blaspheme Gaura are more abominable than thieves and plunderers.”

From his commentary on Sri Caitanya-bhagavata, Madhya 20.140:

In the Naradiya Purana it is stated:

prakatam patitahsreyan ya eko yaty adhah svayam

baka-vrttih svayam papah patayaty aparan api

A fallen person is superior to a sinful hypocrite because he goes to hell alone, whereas the hypocrite takes others to hell with him.’”

From his commentary on Sri Caitanya-bhagavata, Madhya 20.145:

Thieves suffer for only one lifetime, but blasphemers suffer continuously life after life.”

From his commentary on Sri Caitanya-bhagavata, Madhya 20.148:

One who renounces the blasphemy of saintly persons and then chants the name of Krishna even once can easily attain the mercy of the Lord.”

Mukunda Goswami:

From Miracle on Second Avenue, Chapter 26:

Soon forty revelers skipped and jumped to the pulse of the mrdanga, and the Swami’s words reverberated in my head: ‘Rhythm is the universal language.’”

-----

Sometimes our speaking gets us into trouble. If we follow Krishna’s guidelines for speech, we will get a better result.

anudvega-karam vakyam

satyam priya-hitam ca yat

svadhyayabhyasanam caiva

van-mayam tapa ucyate

Austerity of speech consists in speaking words that are truthful, pleasing, beneficial, and not agitating to others, and also in regularly reciting Vedic literature.” (Bhagavad-gita 17.15)

Diwali
→ Ramai Swami

The word Diwali (or Deepavali) literally means “row of lights”. At dusk rows of deepas, small earthenware lamps filled with oil, decorate houses inside and out and are dotted along the parapets of temples. Devotees also set them adrift on rivers and streams.

It was on the evening of this day that Lord Rama returned to His kingdom, Koshala. With his huge army headed by Hanuman the Lord triumphantly entered Ayodhya, His capital, having rescued His beloved wife, Sita, from the demon-king Ravana.

Although the night was dark, Rama’s overjoyed subjects illuminated the entire city with lamps to receive their Lord with great pomp, splendour and celebration.

Symbolically, the festival of Diwali represents the triumph of good over evil, light over darkness, and knowledge over ignorance. As Lord Krishna says in the Bhagavad Gita:

“One who does good, My friend, is never overcome by evil.”

Let Me Approach You Not as a Puzzle to Be Solved but as a Person to Be Loved
→ The Spiritual Scientist

tadīyeśita-jñeṣu bhaktair jitatvam

He showed the wise who knew his power,
That love alone wins his heart’s favor.
The Lord of all, by none subdued,
By devotees’ love his heart was wooed.

(Damodarashtakam — Verse 3, Line 3)

My dear Lord, though you are impartial and equal to all, you reciprocate personally according to what I offer and how I approach you.

If I approach you merely with my intellect, treating you as a puzzle to be solved, then that’s what you remain—an intellectual curiosity, perhaps even an intellectual perplexity. For you, O Almighty, can never be fully grasped by any intellect, however mighty.

Bless me, O supreme lover, to approach you as a person to be loved. Let me offer my whole heart to you in love, and in service of that love, let me use my head: not to figure you out, but to fit myself into your plan for me. May my head seek to understand how you love me, how deeply you love me, and how I can love you in return—and how incomparably and irresistibly wonderful a life of love with you truly is.

Bless me, O merciful Lord, with the revelation that moves me to offer my heart to you. May such an offering please you, that you may conquer my heart and reign upon its throne—now and forever.

The post Let Me Approach You Not as a Puzzle to Be Solved but as a Person to Be Loved appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Sri Rama-ekadasi
Giriraj Swami

We are gathered here in the auspicious month of Kartik, which is also known as Damodara. Srila Prabhupada wrote in The Nectar of Devotion that just as Lord Damodara is very dear to His devotees, so the month of Damodara is also dear to them. And in the month of Kartik, in Juhu, Bombay, in the year 1974, Srila Prabhupada completed his translation of Sri Caitanya-caritamrta.

When Srila Prabhupada was in Bombay, we used to go to his quarters every morning at six o’clock, when he would go for his morning walk on Juhu Beach. But this time we were surprised to find that the door was locked. In fact, both the door to his quarters and the door to his staff’s quarters were locked, and we could not understand why. We knocked, and eventually Srila Prabhupada’s secretary Harikesa Prabhu opened the staff’s door and told us that Srila Prabhupada had just completed his translation of Sri Caitanya-caritamrta, that he had written the most beautiful glorification of his guru maharaja at the end, that he was in a very jubilant mood, and that he said we should celebrate by having a feast.

So, sometime between the night of Ekadasi and the morning of Dvadasi marks the anniversary of Srila Prabhupada’s completion of the translation of Sri Caitanya-caritamrta.

Srila Prabhupada ki jaya! Sri Caitanya-caritamrta ki jaya!

At the end of Sri Caitanya-caritamrta, Srila Krishnadasa Kaviraja Gosvami concludes:

‘ami likhi’,—eha mithya kari anumana
amara sarira kastha-putali-samana

“I infer that ‘I have written’ is a false understanding, for my body is like a wooden doll.” (Cc Antya 20.92)

anipuna vani apane nacite na jane
yata nacaila, naci’ karila visrame

“My inexperienced words do not know how to dance by themselves. The mercy of the guru made them dance.” (Cc Antya 20.149)

Now we shall read from Srila Prabhupada’s Concluding Words at the end of Sri Caitanya-caritamrta:

“Today, Sunday, November 10, 1974—corresponding to the 10th of Kartika, Caitanya Era 488, the eleventh day of the dark fortnight, the Rama-ekadasi—we have now finished the English translation of Sri Krsnadasa Kaviraja Gosvami’s Sri Caitanya-caritamrta in accordance with the authorized order of His Divine Grace Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura Gosvami Maharaja, my beloved eternal spiritual master, guide, and friend. Although according to material vision His Divine Grace Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura Prabhupada passed away from this material world on the last day of December 1936, I still consider His Divine Grace to be always present with me by his vani, his words.”

The theme of the Concluding Words of Sri Caitanya-caritamrta is Srila Prabhupada’s relationship with his spiritual master and his service to his spiritual master. But what he really discusses is service to the spiritual master in separation—vani-seva.

Sometimes people think that physical proximity to the spiritual master is an indication of special mercy or good fortune, and in one sense it may be. But the real essence of the relationship with the spiritual master is service to the instructions. And service to the instructions does not depend on physical presence. Srila Prabhupada explains how he translated Sri Caitanya-caritamrta following the order of his spiritual master. Even though Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura was no longer present from the material point of view, he was present by his instructions, and Srila Prabhupada was connected to him by following them.

“There are two ways of association—by vani and by vapuh. Vani means words, and vapuh means physical presence. Physical presence is sometimes appreciable and sometimes not, but vani continues to exist eternally. Therefore we must take advantage of the vani, not the physical presence. Bhagavad-gita, for example, is the vani of Lord Krsna. Although Krsna was personally present five thousand years ago and is no longer physically present from the materialistic point of view, Bhagavad-gita continues.”

Lord Krishna spoke the Bhagavad-gita to Arjuna five thousand years ago. He was personally present to speak the Bhagavad-gita, but even though from the material point of view Krishna is no longer physically present, His words—the Bhagavad-gita—continue to exist. And if we take advantage of His instructions in the Bhagavad-gita, we can experience His presence.

Still, we should not conclude that because Lord Krishna or Srila Prabhupada is present in the form of transcendental sound, we do not need a personal link to the previous acharyas and Krishna. By the direct instruction of the spiritual master, one gets one’s life’s mission. And after one gets one’s life’s mission, one dedicates one’s life and soul to following the instruction.

“In this connection, we may call to memory the time when I was fortunate enough to meet His Divine Grace Srila Prabhupada, sometime in the year 1922. Srila Prabhupada had come to Calcutta from Sridhama Mayapur to start the missionary activities of the Gaudiya Matha. He was sitting in a house at Ulta Danga when through the inducement of an intimate friend, the late Sriman Narendranatha Mallika, I had the opportunity to meet His Divine Grace for the first time. I do not remember the actual date of the meeting, but at that time I was one of the managers of Dr. Bose’s laboratory in Calcutta. I was a newly married young man, addicted to Gandhi’s movement and dressed in khadi. Fortunately, even at our first meeting, His Divine Grace advised me to preach the cult of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu in English in the Western countries. Because at that time I was a complete nationalist, a follower of Mahatma Gandhi’s, I submitted to His Divine Grace that unless our country were freed from foreign subjugation, no one would hear the message of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu seriously. Of course, we had some argument on this subject, but at last I was defeated and convinced that Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu’s message is the only panacea for suffering humanity.”

Srila Prabhupada told us that many sadhus used to visit his father’s home but that he was not satisfied with any of them. He knew one who used to don the dress of a sadhu in the morning just to go and beg. “What is the use of such sadhus?” Srila Prabhupada would ask. So, when Srila Prabhupada’s friend Narendranatha Mallika suggested that he meet Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura, Srila Prabhupada initially refused: “What is the use of meeting another sadhu? I have already seen enough of them.” But in the end, he agreed.

Even in his youth, Srila Prabhupada was the leader of his group of contemporaries, and they wouldn’t be satisfied until Srila Prabhupada met Srila Bhaktisiddhanta and gave his approval. Anyway, Srila Prabhupada agreed to meet him, and at their very first meeting Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura asked Srila Prabhupada to preach Lord Chaitanya’s message throughout the world. Srila Prabhupada argued that India was still dominated by foreign rule. Even less advanced countries like China were independent, but not India. Srila Prabhupada questioned, “Who will listen to us when we are still a dependent nation?” But Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura countered that the message of Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu was eternal and had nothing to do with relative material conditions like political dependence or independence. Somehow Srila Prabhupada was defeated, yet he was happy to have been defeated by his spiritual master.

“At last I was defeated and convinced that the message of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu is the only panacea for suffering humanity. I was also convinced that the message of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu was then in the hands of a very expert devotee and that surely the message of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu would spread all over the world. I could not, however, immediately take up his instructions to preach, but I took his words very seriously and was always thinking of how to execute his order, although I was quite unfit to do so.”

Srila Prabhupada got the instruction at their very first meeting, and although he was unable to take up the instruction at first, he always kept it in his heart. And he was always waiting for the time when he would be able to take it up. Again, vani-seva.

“In this way I passed my life as a householder until 1950, when I retired from family life as a vanaprastha. With no companion, I loitered here and there until 1958, when I took sannyasa. Then I was completely ready to discharge the order of my spiritual master. Previously, in 1936, just before His Divine Grace passed away at Jagannatha Puri, I wrote him a letter asking what I could do to serve him. In reply, he wrote me a letter, dated 13 December 1936, ordering me, in the same way, to preach in English the cult of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu as I had heard it from him.”

Srila Prabhupada had received the order at the first meeting, and he received the same order again just before his guru maharaja passed away. In other words, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura reconfirmed the instruction he had given to Srila Prabhupada at their first meeting. Srila Prabhupada knew for sure that this was his life’s work.

“After he passed away, I started the fortnightly magazine Back to Godhead sometime in 1944 and tried to spread the cult of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu through this magazine.”

It is also auspicious that Back to Godhead has begun again in India, in Bombay, to further Srila Prabhupada’s mission—to serve the order and fulfill the desires of his spiritual master.

“After I took sannyasa, a well-wishing friend suggested that I write books instead of magazines. Magazines, he said, might be thrown away, but books remain perpetually. Then I attempted to write Srimad-Bhagavatam. Before that, when I was a householder, I had written on Srimad Bhagavad-gita and had completed about eleven hundred pages, but somehow or other the manuscript was stolen. In any case, when I had published Srimad-Bhagavatam, First Canto, in three volumes in India, I thought of going to the U.S.A. By the mercy of His Divine Grace, I was able to come to New York on September 17, 1965. Since then, I have translated many books, including Srimad-Bhagavatam, Bhakti-rasamrta-sindhu, Teachings of Lord Caitanya (a summary), and many others.”

Srila Prabhupada received the instruction to preach the message of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu in English, so he was thinking how to execute the order and preach. He decided to start Back to Godhead magazine and, further, to translate books—Bhagavad-gita As It Is and other works.

“In the meantime, I was induced to translate Sri Caitanya-caritamrta and publish it in an elaborate version. In his leisure time in later life, His Divine Grace Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura would simply read Caitanya-caritamrta. It was his favorite book. He used to say that there would be a time when foreigners would learn the Bengali language to read Caitanya-caritamrta. The work on this translation began about eighteen months ago. Now, by the grace of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu and His Divine Grace Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura, it is finished. In this connection I have to thank my American disciples, especially Sriman Pradyumna dasa Adhikari, Sriman Nitai dasa Adhikari, Sriman Jayadvaita dasa Brahmacari, and many other boys and girls who are sincerely helping me in writing, editing and publishing all these literatures.

“I think that His Divine Grace Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura is always seeing my activities and guiding me within my heart by his words. As it is said in Srimad-Bhagavatam, tene brahma hrda ya adi-kavaye. Spiritual inspiration comes from within the heart, wherein the Supreme Personality of Godhead, in His Paramatma feature, is always sitting with all His devotees and associates.”

Here Srila Prabhupada explains further how he received direction from his spiritual master. Of course, he received direction from his spiritual master in their personal meetings—beginning with their first meeting, when Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura instructed him to preach the message of Lord Chaitanya in the English language. And the same instruction was reconfirmed in his last letter, when Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura again said to preach the message of Lord Chaitanya in English. But here Srila Prabhupada gives more insight into how the disciple can receive guidance from the spiritual master: from within the heart.

We think of Uddhava’s prayer to Lord Krishna:

naivopayanty apacitim kavayas tavesa
  brahmayusapi krtam rddha-mudah smarantah
yo ’ntar bahis tanu-bhrtam asubham vidhunvann
  acarya-caittya-vapusa sva-gatim vyanakti

 “O my Lord! Transcendental poets and experts in spiritual science could not fully express their indebtedness to You, even if they were endowed with the prolonged lifetime of Brahma, for You appear in two features—externally as the acarya and internally as the Supersoul—to deliver the embodied living being by directing him how to come to You.” (SB 11.29.6)

Srila Prabhupada explains that not only is the Lord sitting within the heart as Paramatma, but the Lord is not alone; He is sitting there with His associates and servants. The implication is that the Lord in the heart is sitting there with the spiritual master and that therefore one can get inspiration from the spiritual master within the heart. Of course, there are some conditions; it is not that everyone can get inspiration or direction from the spiritual master in the heart. The main qualification is that one should be free from material desires. One should have no desire except to serve the order of the spiritual master. And one should feel that if he cannot execute the order of the spiritual master, he should rather die. In other words, one should be prepared to lay down one’s life to execute the order of the spiritual master.

“It is to be admitted that whatever translation work I have done is through the inspiration of my spiritual master because personally I am most insignificant and incompetent to do this materially impossible work.”

Basically, Srila Prabhupada is saying that he was not capable of translating Sri Caitanya-caritamrta personally but that he was inspired and guided by his spiritual master within the heart.

When a reporter came to interview him in Los Angeles, Srila Prabhupada explained that actually he was not writing his books but that Krishna was writing them. One disciple wanted to make the idea easier for the reporter, so he offered that what Srila Prabhupada meant was that Krishna was giving Prabhupada the intelligence to write the books. But Srila Prabhupada said, “No. Krishna personally writes them.”

Here Srila Prabhupada is giving further insight into his statement: “Yes, the Lord within the heart is there to give direction, but the Lord is not alone; He is accompanied by His devotees, and among the devotees is the spiritual master.” Srila Prabhupada feels that his spiritual master guided him in his translation of Sri Caitanya-caritamrta.

“I do not think myself a very learned scholar, but I have full faith in the service of my spiritual master, His Divine Grace Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura. If there is any credit to my activities of translating, it is all due to His Divine Grace.”

Srila Prabhupada said, “If we try to do some service and take the credit for ourselves, there will be so many problems. But if we give the credit to Krishna, things will go nicely.”

“Certainly if His Divine Grace were physically present at this time, it would have been a great occasion for jubilation, but even though he is not physically present, I am confident that he is very pleased by this work of translation.”

Srila Prabhupada was envisioning that if his guru maharaja were physically present, it would have been a great occasion for jubilation that Sri Caitanya-caritamrta had been rendered into English. But Srila Prabhupada felt confident that although his guru maharaja was not physically present, still he was pleased. In other words, even though his guru maharaja was not physically present, he was spiritually present and was aware of Srila Prabhupada’s activities. Earlier, Srila Prabhupada had said that his guru maharaja was always seeing his activities, and now he says that he feels that his guru maharaja was pleased with his service of translating Sri Caitanya-caritamrta. The connection is alive and dynamic.

But then, Srila Prabhupada may fear that if we hear about his intimate relationship with his spiritual master in separation, we may start to imagine that we have the same relationship with Srila Prabhupada and begin to speculate, “Srila Prabhupada wants this, and Srila Prabhupada is pleased.” But maybe Srila Prabhupada does not want this, and maybe Srila Prabhupada is not pleased. So, Srila Prabhupada brings us back to the practical platform, where the spiritual master directly says what he wants and shows when he is pleased—not that we imagine that we are on the same platform as Srila Prabhupada and speculate, “Oh, my guru maharaja wants me to do this. My guru maharaja is very pleased with me.”

Srila Prabhupada continues, “He was very fond of seeing many books published to spread the Krishna consciousness movement.”

Prabhupada saw it, and everyone knew it. He was not speculating or imagining; he was acting on what he saw and heard. Srila Bhaktisiddhanta was pleased to see books published to spread Krishna consciousness.

“Therefore our society, the International Society for Krishna consciousness, has formed to execute the order of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu and His Divine Grace Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura.”

Once, in Calcutta, Srila Prabhupada asked us, “What is the duty of the spiritual master, and what is the duty of the disciple?” Then he himself gave the answer: “The duty of the spiritual master is to serve Krishna, and the duty of the disciple is to assist the spiritual master.” He gave the example that the spiritual master has to serve Krishna and that part of the service is to clean the temple floor. And when the disciple is washing the floor, he should think, “I am assisting my spiritual master in his service to Krishna.”

Then again, we never serve Krishna directly. We always serve through our spiritual master. So, when we assist Srila Prabhupada in his service to Krishna, we are more directly assisting him in his service to his spiritual master, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura, and through disciplic succession, in service to Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, to Krishna. Thus, the International Society for Krishna Consciousness has been formed to execute the order of Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati and Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, specifically in the matter of publishing and distributing transcendental knowledge.

“It is my wish that devotees of Lord Caitanya all over the world enjoy this translation, and I am glad to express my gratitude to the learned men in the Western countries who are so pleased with my work that they are ordering in advance all my books that will be published in the future.”

Professors and librarians placed standing orders for all of Srila Prabhupada’s books. As Srila Prabhupada’s books were published, people wanted them all and would pay, but here too Srila Prabhupada says that he wants us to relish his books, not just sell them.

“On this occasion, therefore, I request my disciples who are determined to help me in this work to continue their cooperation fully, so that philosophers, scholars, religionists, and people in general all over the world will benefit by reading our transcendental literatures such as Srimad-Bhagavatam and Sri Caitanya-caritamrta.”

Srila Prabhupada is requesting us to help him in his work of publication and distribution of transcendental literatures all over the world. And he mentions different categories of readers: philosophers and religionists (in other words, leaders and scholars) and people in general—everyone, all over the world. He is asking us to help. Therefore, we should preach. And as Srila Prabhupada indicated, there should be some result. Either people should chant Hare Krishna and change their lives, or they should give some money and take a book. When there are results, Srila Prabhupada is pleased in two ways: He is pleased that people are taking to Krishna consciousness, giving some money and taking some literature, chanting Hare Krishna and becoming devotees. And he is pleased that his servants are becoming purified, because one’s preaching will not have effect unless one is purified.

We often hear or say that we should practice what we preach. If we don’t practice what we preach, who will follow us? Srila Prabhupada said, “If you are smoking a cigarette and you tell someone, ‘Don’t smoke,’ how will he hear you?” And Srila Prabhupada specifically instructed that if we carefully chant at least sixteen rounds of the Hare Krishna maha-mantra daily and follow the four regulative principles, we will get sufficient strength to preach. But if we don’t chant sixteen rounds and follow the four regulative principles, we cannot expect to have the potency to impress the hearts of the audience. So, we should do both—practice and preach. We don’t have to be very learned scholars or big tapasvis. Our little austerity is to chant sixteen rounds and follow the regulative principles—not much. But that will give us sufficient strength and purity to preach and actually touch and move people.

Hare Krishna.

[A talk by Giriraj Swami on Sri Rama-ekadasi, November 6, 1996, Pune, India]

Report on Bharat Sankirtan Leaders Sanga – 23rd & 24th September 2025
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By Nitai Madhav Das

The ICC Book Distribution Committee successfully organized the Bharat Sankirtan Leaders Sanga on the 23rd and 24th of September 2025 at ISKCON NVCC, Pune. Around 150 devotees — temple sankirtan leaders, senior book distributors, and preachers — gathered from all over India. The atmosphere was filled with devotion, enthusiasm, and gratitude as devotees came together with one purpose: to strengthen Śrīla Prabhupāda’s book distribution mission and keep the sankirtan spirit alive in every temple. Continue reading "Report on Bharat Sankirtan Leaders Sanga – 23rd & 24th September 2025
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Sri Mayapur Panchakrosha Parikrama
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By Nandan Das

A new digital initiative now enables devotees around the world to experience the Sri Mayapur Pañca-krośa Parikrama, a sacred 16-kilometer pilgrimage traditionally performed on foot in Sri Mayapur-dhama. Drawing on scriptural references and guided by the vision of previous Acharyas, the virtual parikrama offers immersive spiritual content, an interactive Google-integrated map, a guided YouTube video tour, and multilingual access—allowing pilgrims to connect with the sacred pastimes of Lord Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu wherever they may be. Continue reading "Sri Mayapur Panchakrosha Parikrama
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Prayers inspired by Damodarāṣṭakam: Kartik special
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As the sacred month of Kartik begins, I’m embarking on a new offering — a series of prayers inspired by the Damodarāṣṭakam, the beautiful song we sing daily during this month.

Each prayer will be based on one line from this poetic classic, drawing out its timeless emotions and spiritual insights in a contemporary voice. Over the next few weeks, I’ll be sharing thirty-two prayers — reflections meant to help us all enter more into the universe of divine love revealed through the Damodar-lila, where the infinite Lord is bound by the love of his devotee.

I hope and pray that these prayers help us open our hearts more fully to the Lord who lets himself be bound — not by ropes, but by affection.

May this Kartik become a journey to a deeper, richer, sweeter devotion.

Your beauty supreme, O Lord, let me cherish

Make my life a part of your symphony of beauty

Draw me to the love that inverts all hierarchy

Let my heart learn the love that can catch the uncaught

Your tears don’t diminish your glory—they deepen it

You become endearingly vulnerable to show how love is endlessly valuable

In You, O Lord, Even the Negative Becomes Positive

Your purpose is successful even when my service isn’t

Carry me from drops of fleeting pleasure to the ocean of your ever-blissful love

Lift me from making you a part of my life to making me a part of your life

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Lift me from making you a part of my life to making me a part of your life
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sva-ghoṣaṁ nimajjantam ākhyāpayantam

He drowned his kin in waves of cheer,
Their hearts rejoiced when he drew near.
By every act, both sweet and grand,
He spread his joy through Vraja’s land.

(Damodarashtakam — Verse 3, Line 2)

My dear Lord, through your loving pastimes you reveal the luminous life of love and joy that you offer to all who choose to love you and live with you. The topmost among such souls are the residents of Vrindavan, and when you manifest your ecstatic pastimes with them, you reveal your desire: you want me to be a part of your family. Actually, I am eternally a part of you, though I have forgotten this timeless truth. I, being fallible, have neglected you for many lifetimes; yet you, being infallible, have never neglected me.

O beloved Lord, when I begin my spiritual journey, I make you a part of my life—by praying to you, seeking your strength, and turning to you for guidance as I face life’s challenges. Yet my overall life still runs on the tracks of my own desires, often disconnected from your divine plan and purpose for me.

Please, O merciful Lord, lift me from the threshold of devotion to its higher sanctum, where you become not just a part of my life but its very essence and purpose. When my life becomes wholly dedicated to loving and serving you, you will mercifully grant me entrance into your divine life—so that, by your mercy, I too may one day delight in the boundless ocean of ever-blissful pastimes.

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Carry me from drops of fleeting pleasure to the ocean of your ever-blissful love
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itīdṛk sva-līlābhir ānanda-kuṇḍe

By such pastimes in joy’s pure sea,
He bathed the world in ecstasy.
Each act revealed his love profound,
Where bliss and beauty both abound.

(Damodarashtakam — Verse 3, Line 1)

My dear Lord, you offer an ocean of bliss in your realm of spiritual love, whereas in this world I chase mundane things that offer mere drops of pleasure. What’s worse, many of those drops soon swell into oceans of trouble.

O merciful Lord, please strengthen my head with your wisdom so I may turn away from this desperate, doomed pursuit of worldly pleasure and turn toward you. Grant me the conviction that you can and will provide all the joy I need—indeed, far more than I can ever seek.

O infallible Lord, knowing what is right with my head yet failing to do it due to weakness of heart has been my predicament for years, decades—perhaps lifetimes. Please, therefore, complement the strengthening of my head with the enriching of my heart. Grant me the devotional realization that the sweetness in your pastimes is oceanic. Let me become curious about your delightful pastimes, thus opening my heart for a trickle of your joyous love to flow in. Let me go further and learn to cherish those pastimes as having the potential to fulfill my heart’s highest aspiration for love. Then that trickle will—by your mercy—become a mighty flow that fills and floods my heart.

With my head and heart thus fixed in you, O all-attractive Lord, may the joy of such absorption in you render all material temptations pale and stale.

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Your purpose is successful even when my service isn’t
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sthitāgraivaṁ dāmodaraṁ bhakti-baddham

There unfolded the wondrous sight,
Behold the Lord of love and light.
He could not be by rope confined,
Yet bound by love and hands so kind.

(Damodarashtakam — Verse 2, Line 4)

My dear Lord, you are always acting successfully at some level—even when I feel you are not helping me succeed in serving you.

You, O supreme lover, illustrated this truth when you churned mother Yashoda’s heart and led her emotions on an ecstatic journey as she tried to tie you, which she saw as her service to you. Being your mother, she felt duty-bound—indeed, love-bound—to discipline you.

O Lord of all emotion (rasa), first came annoyance at your mischievousness, then anger at its extent, followed by alertness to ensure that once she had caught you, her angry actions neither scared you too much nor scarred you permanently. Then, resolving to tie you instead of using a stick, she felt amazement at her inability to bind you—no matter how much she extended the rope—and finally admiration for how wonderful you truly were.

When her emotions thus turned from agitation to adoration, you reciprocated by allowing yourself to be bound. Though Yashoda struggled and faltered again and again in her attempts, even during that apparent failure, you were leading her toward an ever-deepening, emotionally multihued absorption in you.

Bless me, my well-wishing Lord, to remember that even when my service seems to falter, you are still churning my heart and drawing me, through my emotions, closer to you. Let me not be consumed by what I do or fail to do in the outer world; let me remain open and receptive to what you are doing within my heart.

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In You, O Lord, Even the Negative Becomes Positive
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muhuḥ svāsa-kampa-tri-rekhāṅka-kaṇṭha

His gentle neck in tremors slight,
Three lines adorned his form of light.
His breath came quick in quivering flow,
Revealing love through fear’s soft glow.

(Damodarashtakam — Verse 2, Line 3)

My dear Lord, your beauty is enhanced by your fear, not diminished by it. We, with our temporary conditioned bodies, go out of our way to look attractive—and only when we are in a positive mood do we appear even slightly attractive. A person who is scared or crying doesn’t look attractive. Such a person may evoke tender, protective emotions in others, but not because they look beautiful—rather because they seem vulnerable.

You, my beloved Lord, are so extraordinarily and transcendentally beautiful that even while you are in a state of fear—indeed, even terror—as when you are crying fervently, your beauty becomes enhanced. The three lines formed on your neck as you breathe heavily in fear only add to your charm.

O inconceivable Lord, just as the fearful becomes beautiful in you, grant me the conviction that if I stay within you—acting in harmony with your will and living in the light of your words—then you can turn even the fearful things that happen to me into something meaningful, perhaps even something beautiful.
Help me understand that my present experience is not destined to be my permanent one; you will lead me from this passing darkness into the eternal light of your unfailing love.

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You become endearingly vulnerable to show how love is endlessly valuable
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karāmbhoja-yugmena sātaṅka-netraṁ

Wiping his eyes with tender lotus hands,
Tears flowing down in shining strands.
The Lord whom all seek through prayer,
Now trembled at his mother’s glare.

(Damodarashtakam — Verse 2, Line 2)

My dear Lord, you display endearing human emotions such as fear, though you are the supreme superhuman being. When you, who are indestructible, invincible, and infinite, reveal vulnerability, that softness flows from your overflowing love. Your love eclipses your omnipotence and allows your devotees to experience a deeper, more intimate connection with you.

O all-embracing Lord, you desire that every soul feel accepted by you—and not just accepted, but also valued and cherished. For your most intimate devotees, you draw them into your innermost circle of affection, where they even feel needed by you. Though you are complete and need no one, you play the role of a delicate child—a tiny, tender toddler needing protection, discipline, and care from your devoted mother. Thus you create a sublimely sweet stage for the overflowing of her maternal love toward you and your divine love toward her. The mutual outpouring of affection between your heart and hers creates a flood of ecstasy that nourishes not only those present in that divine moment but also all who contemplate it later through prayerful remembrance.

O merciful Lord, grant me a deeper appreciation of your loving pastimes. Let the memory of your boundless love guide my choices in this illusion-filled world, so that I may march toward you—steadily and swiftly.

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Your tears don’t diminish your glory—they deepen it
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rudantam muhur netra-yugmaṁ mṛjantam

He wept and rubbed his tear-filled eyes,
His cries rose loud with aching sighs.
The Lord who wipes everyone’s tears,
Now cried, his heart filled with fears.

(Damodarashtakam — Verse 2, Line 1)

My dear Lord, you have the power to remove the tears of everyone. Indeed, when life brings me to tears and takes away my power to remove them, that’s when I turn to you—not merely as a cultural custom or religious ritual, but as an existential necessity.

O all-good Lord, you can do what I cannot—wipe away my present tears. Beyond that, with your glance, you can destroy all the desires that impel me to actions that end in distress. With your gentle smile, you can infuse my heart with such joy that whatever distress remains becomes weightless.

O omnipotent Lord who can remove the tears of all beings, how can you be moved to tears by the fear of your mother’s chastisement? Help me, my Lord, to appreciate this wondrous mystery that reveals how much you seek and savor love. Indeed, to facilitate loving pastimes with your devotees such as mother Yashoda, you readily conceal your supremacy so that love can reign supreme. When you cry, your tears do not diminish your greatness; they magnify your glory, for they reveal the supreme power of love—the love that subordinates divinity to elevate intimacy.

O infinitely loving Lord, please bless me to take pleasure in and taste that divine love above everything else in this world.

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Let my heart learn the love that can catch the uncaught
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paramṛṣṭam atyantato drutya gopyā

She chased him round the courtyard square,
With teasing smile and loving glare.
The Lord no yogi’s mind could meet,
Was caught by her with tender feet.

(Damodarashtakam — Verse 1, Line 4)

My dear Lord, when you ran in fear of Mother Yashoda, it is supremely astonishing that she caught you—for catching you, even with one’s thoughts, let alone with one’s hands, is well-nigh impossible. Yogis renounce the world with all its temptations and train their thoughts to focus single-mindedly on the ultimate reality. Yet even the strongest and swiftest of their thoughts cannot reach you. Even if they come to know of you, they fail to understand how the all-powerful, all-pervading supreme truth could manifest in a human-like form—let alone as a child who ran away from his mother and was caught by her.

Indeed, O all-attractive Lord, while you cannot be reached by the strongest austerity or the sharpest analytical acumen, you can be reached through love. Mother Yashoda caught you by running toward you, though she was neither austere nor intellectually astute. What is astonishing is not just that she caught you externally, but that she had already caught you internally: you were residing in her heart, perennially and joyfully.

O supremely loving Lord, if you are caught, it is only because you allow yourself to be caught—and because you delight in being caught, not by hands and legs but by the heart: by love itself.

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Draw me to the love that inverts all hierarchy
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yaśodābhiyolūkhalād dhāvamānam

From the mortar he fled in fear,
As mother Yaśodā drew near.
Her call of love still filled the air,
As he ran—here, there, everywhere.

(Damodarashtakam — Verse 1, Line 3)

My dear Lord, please bless me to appreciate the wondrous nature of your love, as demonstrated in the pastime where you run in fear from your mother.

O beloved Lord, in this world I sometimes glimpse love’s power to invert normal hierarchies—where an extremely wealthy, powerful, or popular person, under the spell of love, risks it all or even renounces it all to be with someone they love, who may possess none of those attributes. While such worldly love often turns out to be mere infatuation, it still contains a grain of truth—it points to the heart’s innate conviction that love is the truth that transcends all other truths.

That conviction is realized, O all-attractive Lord, in your own love, revealed in your astonishingly affectionate pastimes. In them, the normal hierarchy of you being the supreme, feared by all creation, is wondrously inverted—when you, O ultimate creator, appear to fear one of your own creations. Of course, it is not just any creation—it is your intimate devotee, who manifests the pinnacle of maternal love for you.

O supreme lover, please bless me with ever-deepening conviction in the supreme reality of your love, and thus guide me on the path that leads into that world of divine affection with you—in this life and forever beyond.

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Make my life a part of your symphony of beauty
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lasat-kuṇḍalaṁ gokule bhrājamanam

Adorned with earrings swinging free,
He shines in Gokul’s ecstasy.
Their golden glow on cheeks divine,
Outglasses the stars that softly shine.

(Damodarashtakam — Verse 1, Line 2)

My dear Lord, your beauty is not generic—it is exquisitely specific. When you descend into this world and enact your pastimes, you reveal your captivating charm in delightful detail. Each limb, each gesture, each ornament—every feature of your divine being—joins together in a symphony of radiant enchantment.

Here, O all-attractive Lord, your earrings shine stunningly as you run from your mother through the courtyards of Vṛndāvana. They sway and dance in delight, seizing the chance to caress your tender cheeks—their gentle touch heightened by the rhythm of your movement.

O ocean of all beauty, your ornaments form an ecstatic ensemble that enhances your radiant splendor—categorically distinct from and infinitely superior to all other beauty. Others wear ornaments to become beautiful, but your beauty is self-contained and self-sufficient. When you wear ornaments, it is not to adorn yourself but to adorn them. You grant them the supreme privilege of service, perfecting their existence by letting them decorate your divine form.

O my beloved Lord, I too am meant to be an ornament—more precisely, an instrument of your will—a small yet purposeful part of your grand divine plan. I have no beauty or worth of my own, yet bless me to find meaning and joy in being used as you desire—in your service, for your glory, within your eternal symphony of beauty and love.

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Your beauty supreme, O Lord, let me cherish
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namāmīśvaram sac-cid-ānanda-rūpaṁ

I bow to the Lord of truth and grace,
Whose form all time cannot erase.
Eternal joy, pure, ever bright,
The boundless bliss, the soul’s delight.

My dear Lord, please help me realize and relish the supreme reality—your supremely beautiful, all-attractive form. Your form is unlike any I have ever known.

O inconceivable Lord, all forms I know are temporary; yours is eternal. All forms I know subject their possessors to ignorance and illusion, whereas your form is the pinnacle and source of enlightenment for all who are drawn to it. All forms I know become causes of distress; but your form is the very embodiment of bliss. Its peerless, timeless beauty bestows joy upon all who are either blessed to be drawn to it or wise enough to cultivate attraction toward it.

O Lord, please free me from attachment to the fleeting forms of this world, however appealing they may seem. Let me remember that such infatuation leads only to lamentation. More importantly, my beloved Lord, bless me to be irresistibly drawn to you. Through that sacred attraction, open for me the gates to a life and love that are glorious—imperishably, inexhaustibly, infinitely glorious.

The post Your beauty supreme, O Lord, let me cherish appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Highest Radha-kunda consciousness
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By Srila Prabhupada

"There is no difference between Rādhā-kuṇḍa and Rādhārāṇī. So how you can jump over Rādhārāṇī? Rādhā-kuṇḍa and Rādhārāṇī nondifferent. How you can enjoy Rādhā-kuṇḍa by swimming? You cannot touch with your feet even Rādhā-kuṇḍa. You can take little water and keep it on the head. That is respectful to Rādhā-kuṇḍa. Of course, things are going on like that, but strictly speaking, Rādhā-kuṇḍa should be respected as Rādhārāṇī herself. That is Rādhā-kuṇḍa consciousness. Highest Rādhā-kuṇḍa consciousness." Continue reading "Highest Radha-kunda consciousness
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Visit to Yavat & Kokilavan (photos)
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By Deena Bandhu Das

Yavat is the village where Radharani resides with Her so-called husband, Abhimanyu, Her mother-in-law, Jatila, and Her sister-in-law, Kutila. Our first stop was the main temple, where we had the joy of darshan of the enchanting Deities of Radha Radhakanta. Afterward, we walked through the village, chanting Harinam, and made our way to Kishori Kunda, where the charming temple of Radha Brajkishorji stands. There, we peacefully delighted in hearing the pastimes of Javat, as narrated in Chamatkar Chandrika by Srila Visvanath Chakravarti Thakur. Continue reading "Visit to Yavat & Kokilavan (photos)
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Arabic book distribution!
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By Satyanarayana Bbt Feme

Have you ever seen such beautiful transcendental smiles? It simply does not get better than this! As Krishna Kumar Prabhu put it: "Hare Krishna! This devotee came with me on books and he got the mercy. They were flying out. And people were giving donations. He could feel the special purification of this Arabic book distribution and was so fired up. We became spiritual brothers by the mercy of this service!" Continue reading "Arabic book distribution!
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Dandavats 2025-10-16 06:47:53
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By Indradyumna Swami

Today we visited Katwa, one of the most sacred and historic places in Gauḍīya Vaiṣṇava tradition – the very place that Lord Caitanya took sannyāsa from Keśava Bhāratī Mahārāja. We spent hours immersed in recounting the details of that profound pastime and rejoicing in ecstatic kirtan. To be present in that very courtyard was truly our inconceivable good fortune making today a special highlight of this month’s parikramas. Continue reading "Dandavats 2025-10-16 06:47:53
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Virabhadra Goswami Appearance
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Posted by Ramai Swami Sri Viracandra or Virabhadra Prabhu appeared on the ninth day of the dark fortnight of the month of Kartik. Krsna dasa Kaviraja Gosvami has given this description of Him in the C.c. Adi 11.8-12: “After Nityananda Prabhu, the greatest branch is Virabhadra Gosani, who also has innumerable branches and sub-branches. It
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Virabhadra Goswami Appearance
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Sri Viracandra or Virabhadra Prabhu appeared on the ninth day of the dark fortnight of the month of Kartik. Krsna dasa Kaviraja Gosvami has given this description of Him in the C.c. Adi 11.8-12:

“After Nityananda Prabhu, the greatest branch is Virabhadra Gosani, who also has innumerable branches and sub-branches. It is not possible to describe them all. Although Virabhadra Gosani was the Supreme Personality of Godhead, He presented Himself as a great devotee. And although the Supreme Godhead is transcendental to all Vedic injunctions, He strictly followed the Vedic rituals. He is the main pillar in the hall of devotional service erected by Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu.

He knew within himself that He acted as the Supreme Lord Visnu, but externally He was pride-less. It is by the mercy of Sri Virabhadra Gosani that people all over the world now have the chance to chant the names of Caitanya and Nityananda. I there take shelter of the lotus feet of Virabhadra Gosani so that by His mercy my great desire to write Sri Caitanya-Charitamrta will be properly guided.”

Sri Virabhadra Gosvami is the son of Sri Nityananda Prabhu and the disciple of Sri Jahnava Mata. His mother is Srimati Vasudha Devi. In the Gaura-ganoddesa-dipika it is described that Sri Viracandra Prabhu is an incarnation of Ksirodakasayi Visnu – one of the expansions of Sri Sankarsana. He is thus not different from Lord Caitanya Himself.

Indradyumna Swami: Parikrama party visits Shantipur (photos) 
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This morning our parikrama party visited Shantipur, the sacred residence of Advaita Ācārya. There I spoke on the glories of this great personality who fervently prayed for the Lord to descend in the age of Kali. Later we journeyed to Birnagar, the birthplace of Śrīla Bhaktivinoda Ṭhākura, the visionary pioneer of the Krishna Consciousness movement.
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