Door to door book distribution in New Papatoetoe, New Zealand,…
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Door to door book distribution in New Papatoetoe, New Zealand, brought me to the home of an elderly Indian fellow who was all too enthusiastic to see me. After presenting the books he quickly ran into another room and came back with 51 dollars cash and explained that this money was in the pocket of his brother’s pants when he passed away some time ago. He was waiting for an opportunity to give it Krishna, so he eagerly gave it to me in exchange for some books. His friend, who was present during the conversation, was so moved by the exchange that she donated another 20 dollars, allowing them to take two Srimad Bhagavatams, two Bhagavad Gitas, two Isopanisads, one Searching for Vedic India, etc… even after I had left their home, she came back down the street with more money to buy some small books for her friends.

ISKCON 50 Expo: exhibition panels released for your local 50th anniversary celebrations
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Hare KrishnaBy ISKCON 50 Global Office

ISKCON’s 50th Anniversary Committee has released an important resource for the year long celebrations of temples around the world: colourful and informative exhibition panels that showcase ISKCON’s achievements in the last 50 years and can be printed and displayed by temples locally. The ISKCON 50 Expo consists of 16 panels which measure 2.5 feet by 4 feet, and can be downloaded in print quality from the ISKCON 50 website. The panels describe the legacy of the Hare Krishna movement, Srila Prabhupada’s journey to America, the expansion and explosion of the Hare Krishna movement worldwide, and the multifarious achievements of ISKCON in areas such as book distribution, temples, prasadam distribution, festivals, farm communities, academia and community work. Continue reading "ISKCON 50 Expo: exhibition panels released for your local 50th anniversary celebrations
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Prabhupada – Departing for the West Production Stills (Album…
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Prabhupada – Departing for the West Production Stills (Album with photos)
A true story that began 50 years ago, when a great scholar set out across the ocean on a mission, carrying nothing but a timeless message, which was to be the greatest change for humanity. He inspired an entire generation and against all odds, formed an unstoppable revolution.
Find them here: https://goo.gl/VTML3y

Doyal (Merciful) Nitai
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Hare KrishnaBy Dwaipayan De

The lotus feet of Lord Nityananda are a shelter where one will get the soothing moonlight not only of one,but of millions of moons. If the world wants to have real peace, it should take shelter of Lord Nityananda.Unless one takes shelter under the shade of the lotus feet of Lord Nityananda, Lord Nityananda,is none other than Lord Balaram, who advents in this age of Kali, as the most merciful incarnation (Dayara avadhi) to assist His elder brother Sri Krishna in His pastimes. Sri Krishna, however sacrifices His original blackish hue, and accepts the devotional mood and golden complexion of Sri Radha, to perform and relish the most amazing and beautiful pastimes as Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu (Gouranga). Continue reading "Doyal (Merciful) Nitai
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ISKCON Vancouver Participates in July 1st Canada Day Parade
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Hare KrishnaBy Jaya Govinda dasa

July 1st marked the 149th anniversary of the founding of the world's second largest country; Canada. Towns and villages across the nation celebrated its birthday with fireworks, parades and a host of other joyful events. The city of Vancouver's celebration was extra special as our ISKCON Hare Krishna temple was invited to participate in this year's Canada Day parade. An estimated 300,000 people lining the route, and millions more on main stream news coverage were benefited with the vibration of the holy names, seeing ecstatic devotees dancing and being made aware that this year marks the 50th anniversary of the founding of ISKCON and the Hare Krishna movement. Our participation was an offering to Srila Prabhupada on this special occasion. Wearing red & white saris, dhotis and kurtas, colours of the Canadian flag, the crowds smiled and waved at the enthusiastic dancing devotees who followed our main float. Continue reading "ISKCON Vancouver Participates in July 1st Canada Day Parade
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The Legend of Jagannath documentary on National Geographic…
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The Legend of Jagannath documentary on National Geographic channel (43 min video)
About an hour-long documentary titled “The Legend Of Jagannath” aired on National Geographic channel on July 4. It took a behind-the-scenes look at the Indian religious festival of Rath Yatra.
Actor Rajeev Khandelwal is host of the documentary, which showcased the colour and ceremonies associated with Rath Yatra, a festival in Odisha which involves moving deities Jagannath, Balabhadra, Subhadra and Sudarshana on wooden chariots.
Watch it here: http://goo.gl/oYjkC9

​Bhagavatam study 53 1.10.28-36 Krishna’s departure and travel are celebrations of love
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Podcast


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The post ​Bhagavatam study 53 1.10.28-36 Krishna’s departure and travel are celebrations of love appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Avatar – Digital, Christian, monistic and bhakti conceptions
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Central to the concept of avatar is the idea of crossing over from one realm to another. In its original Sanskrit philosophical context, avatar refers to the Absolute Truth descending from the spiritual world to the material world. The divine’s existence beyond this world is called transcendence, whereas his existence in this world is called immanence. The question of how the transcendent can become immanent has intrigued many thinkers throughout history. To get a sense of the question’s profundity, let’s look at the digital, Christian, monistic and bhakti conceptions of avatar.

Digital avatar

The Sanskrit word avatar has become mainstream in English due to both a Hollywood blockbuster and computer role-playing games. In contemporary usage, avatar refers to an icon representing a person in digital arenas such as video games and Internet forums. In such usage, the crossing over implicit in avatar is from the physical world to the digital world. Our digital avatar is a step-down from the reality of who we are. Even if our video game avatar is expert at doing many things, still it has no consciousness. Its apparent consciousness results from the projection of our consciousness into it through the game’s interfacing mechanism. So, when we refer to something unconscious as our avatar, we conceive ourselves in reduced terms. Such a reduction is revealing, for it points to two distinct thought-trains:

  1. A mechanistic conception of the self which makes us think that we can be represented by a digital profile that is as unconscious as the electrons that comprise the digital world.
  2. A longing for crossing over to some reality other than our present mundane reality with all its inanity.

Though the word avatar traditionally refers to the Absolute Truth’s descent to this world, the word’s contemporary usage refers to the self, not the Absolute. Still, the problems of crossing over associated with the notion of avatar surface when applied to the self too.

 

Christian incarnation

Avatar is frequently translated in English as incarnation. This English word is intricately associated with Abrahamic conceptions about how the divine manifests in this world. In Christianity, the word “incarnation” refers usually to Jesus, who is conceived of as God descended in flesh as a human being. Jesus was born in a Jewish tradition that was heavily messianic, driven by the longing for a future messiah who would deliver people from their various problems. Based on Jesus’s teachings and miracles, his followers thought of him as the messiah. This notion was falsified for some by his crucifixion, but it was reinforced for others by his claimed resurrection. For nearly four centuries thereafter, the identity of Jesus was a matter of vigorous, even acrimonious, debate in the Christian community. Eventually, the Nicene Creed elevated Jesus from messiah to Incarnation. The Creed resolved that the divinity of Christ had manifested in the humanity of Jesus, who was therefore both fully human and fully divine. But the ascription of full divinity to him was problematic, given the relatively recent and undeniable historical memory of Jesus’ life as a human. The Bible itself compounded the problem through statements such as “My Father is greater than I.” (John 14:2) While some quotes support the oneness of the Father and the Son, the Bible also indicates implies that his “oneness” with God is not exclusive to him – it can be achieved by others too: “As You and I are one, let them also be one in Us.” (John 17:21)

This blurring of the human-divine boundaries in conceiving the identity of Jesus reflects a larger blurring of the material-spiritual boundaries in Christian philosophy. The Bible refers to the soul, but doesn’t clearly describe it or categorically differentiate it from the body – it is frequently used as a metaphorical reference to our non-material essence. With such ontological ambiguity about the soul, the notion emerged that all faithful believers would receive bodily resurrection, as had Jesus. Here again we see how conceptions of the divine are intertwined with conceptions of the self.

 

Monistic avatar

Monists hold that reality comprises ultimately only one substance. Technically, materialists who hold that matter is all that exists are also monists – they are materialist monists. But conventionally, monist refers to spiritualists who hold that one spiritual substance is all that exists. For such monists, the material world with all its variety is ultimately an illusion. They also hold that our self-conception as individual beings is also an illusion. They believe that liberation means merging into the non-differentiated oneness of the Absolute.

For monists, matter is just an illusion; spirit is all that exists, and it is a non-differentiated oneness. So, in the monistic worldview, there exists no material world to cross over to and no supreme spiritual being to cross over.

Monists try to resolve such problems in their philosophy by granting provisional reality to matter – matter is seen as real as long as people are in material consciousness or, in other words, in illusion. They hold that avatar too is such a provisional reality – the impersonal absolute temporarily becomes personal during the period of descent. Avatar is thus treated as a helpful illusion that can aid us in resisting the harmful illusions of material existence: the many sense objects that allure us towards worldly pleasures. When we focus our consciousness on the avatar, we can become detached from sense objects and situated in the relatively elevated mode of goodness. Still, no matter how helpful, avatar is deemed ultimately an illusion – an illusion that needs to be transcended for attaining liberation. Thus, monism treats avatar not as a spiritual truth, but as a convenient fiction useful for spiritual growth.

 

Bhakti avatar

Whereas Christianity holds that the incarnation is somehow both material and spiritual, and monism holds that the avatar is material, bhakti explains that the avatar remains spiritual even while being in the material world.

To grasp how this is possible, we need to first understand how bhakti envisions the relationship between matter and spirit. The Bhagavad-gita in its second chapter outlines a radical matter-spirit duality. Spirit is said to have none of the attributes of matter – the soul is neither born nor dies (02.20) and is immutable, being beyond fragmentation, incineration, dissolution and desiccation (02.24-25). Yet the Gita balances this radical duality with an organic unity in its seventh chapter, where it declares that both matter and spirit are energies of the same one Absolute Truth (07.04-05). That spirit is the energy of the Absolute implies that the Absolute is situated not just on the spiritual side of the material-spiritual divide, but is situated at the summit of spiritual reality. The Gita (10.12) reveals this Absolute Truth to be Krishna, declaring that he is not just brahma (spirit) but param brahma (supreme spirit). Srimad-Bhagavatam (8.3.4), another prominent bhakti text, reiterates this position of the Absolute by declaring him as parat parah, which the pre-eminent modern bhakti teacher, Srila Prabhupada glosses as “he is transcendental to transcendental, or above all transcendence.” With this metaphysical background, we are better prepared to understand how the avatar remains spiritual even in the material world.

To illustrate, Srila Prabhupada would sometimes give the example of electricity: it is one energy that can manifest through a room heater as heat and through an air conditioner as cold. Consider a device that can, by the flip of a switch, heat and, by another flip, cool. The controller of that device can, at will, get the same electrical energy to heat or cool. If all of existence is like a device, Krishna is like its controller. By operating the switch of his omnipotence, he can prevent the material energy from acting materially on him even when he manifests in the material world.

Though the Bhagavad-gita doesn’t use the specific word avatar, it talks about the descent of the divine in its fourth chapter (04.06-10). The Gita begins this discussion (04.06) by asserting that Krishna remains the imperishable Lord of all living beings even when he enters into his material nature. This declaration implies that he doesn’t come under the control of material nature, which sentences all embodied beings through time’s inexorable flow to bodily deterioration and destruction.

The eternal transcendence of avatar underscores a subtle difference between avatar and its common English translation incarnation. Etymologically, “incarnation” means “to come in flesh”; the root “carna” is seen in words such as carnivorous animals (flesh-eating animals) and carnal desires (desires to enjoy the flesh). Krishna, however, doesn’t descend in a form of flesh; he remains transcendental.

Nonetheless, bhakti teachers frequently introduce contemporary audiences to the concept of avatara with the English rendition “incarnation”. In so doing, they avoid burdening us with a double unfamiliarity: both an unfamiliar term and an unfamiliar concept. Terms are verbal handles for mental concepts. By first giving us a familiar handle to grasp an unfamiliar concept and then explaining the concept’s unfamiliar dimensions, they help us move towards comprehension, one step at a time.

When Krishna descends and performs his pastimes in this world, he transforms this world from a stage for the display of illusion to a stage for the display of the highest spiritual reality: the loving pastimes between him and his devotees. The Gita (04.09) states that those who become attracted to Krishna’s appearance and activities, understanding his transcendental position, don’t take rebirth – they attain his eternal abode.

 

Trailer and trail

The pastimes that the avatar performs serve an extraordinary double role: as a trailer and a trail.

Trailer: Love is our deepest aspiration; we all desire to love and be loved. However, due to the temporary nature of things in this world, our longing for love is frustrated – inevitably and repeatedly.

Krishna’s pastimes are enactments of the love that is never frustrated – pure spiritual love between the all-attractive Supreme and his devotees that goes on eternally in the spiritual world. When Krishna descends to this world, he performs some of those pastimes here, giving us tantalizing glimpses of an arena where our longing for love can be eternally and perfectly fulfilled. Thus, his pastimes serve as trailers meant to attract us to his abode.

Trail: Those with superficial understanding of Krishna’s pastimes think of them as stories meant for entertainment. But those who understand these pastimes in truth know that they are not meant to entertain; they are meant to be entered into – they occur in that eternal spiritual reality to which we as souls, parts of Krishna, belong.

To enter that reality, we need to redirect our heart from the world to Krishna. For this redirection, his pastimes provide charming and purifying subject matter that we can contemplate, churn, recollect and relish. The more we thus think about Krishna, the more our heart becomes attracted to him and the more we progress on the path towards him. By providing us substance for turning our heart to him, Krishna’s pastimes comprise the trail that leads to him.

Overall, avatar demonstrates the centrality of love in spiritual growth. It is Krishna’s love for us that inspires the transcendent to become immanent, and it is our love for him that enables us to cross over from matter to spirit, to realize our trans-material identity and become situated in spiritual reality.

 

The post Avatar – Digital, Christian, monistic and bhakti conceptions appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

July 6. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations. Satsvarupa…
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July 6. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations.
Satsvarupa dasa Goswami: Empowered by His Glance.
According to the Vedic sastras, a pure devotee can impart Krishna consciousness to others through his words, his good wishes, and by his glance. “Simply by seeing such empowered individuals, people from different villages would become like them by the mercy of their glance.” (Cc. Madhya 7.104)
In the confidential exchanges between Radha and Krishna, much is accomplished by the lover’s glances. The gopis are thrilled to receive the direct or side-long glance of Sri Krishna, and Lord Krishna is especially anxious to receive the glance of Srimati Radharani. One time while Krishna was searching for Radharani in the groves of Vrindavana, He spoke in this way to a female deer: “O doe, the walking young vine that is the beautiful girl Radha must have passed through this forest because, O friend, I see you have accepted Me as your guru and taken initiation from Her in the art of playful, sweet restless glances.” (Lalita-Madhava, Act 9.62)
In the loving exchanges between the spiritual master and disciple, Srila Prabhupada’s glances were certainly treasured by his devotees.
I doubt that we fully understand how much those glances went into us and how they stayed with us. The Krishna conscious siddhanta asserts that words are able to convey the Absolute Truth, yet we also think that there are certain things which cannot be conveyed fully in words: for example, what it feels like to receive Prabhupada’s glance.
Sometimes the glances were loving, and sometimes they reprimanded. If King Mucukunda could reduce a person to fiery ashes just by his gaze, Krishna’s pure devotee could “knock over” a misbehaving disciple.
Srila Prabhupada’s looks clued us in on his emotions. His eyes sparkled with humor. Tears came to his eyes while talking about the cruelty of cow slaughter. Sometimes, though, his glance excluded us. In a memoir by a Zen student about her guru, she said that when you looked into his eyes you saw “total zero for 10,000 miles.” Prabhupada never conveyed blank to us, but his gaze did convince us that he was experiencing something we could not. Prabhupada would glance at a painting or Indian print in his room and say, “Here is Krishna.” Yet when we looked at that picture of Lord Krishna, so many relative thoughts and impressions registered in our hearts and minds. We knew that Prabhupada saw Him differently. We saw the difference when we looked into his eyes.
In Raghunatha dasa Gosvami’s Sri Stavavali, one of the poems ends with the refrain, “When will Saci’s son again walk on the pathway of my eyes?” We pray to know when we may be able to see Prabhupada – and when he will again bestow his glance upon us.
To read the entire article click here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=20490&page=10

PRAYING FOR BETTER RELATIONSHIPS AND HEALING OUR HEART and IF YOU WANT A FRIEND, BE A FRIEND
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Author: 
Karnamrita Das

The Ulimate Relationship photo DSCN4461_zpsuppjqxyu.jpg
PRAYING FOR BETTER RELATIONSHIPS AND HEALING OUR HEART: Yesterday we celebrated the disappearance of Shrila Bhaktivinoda Thakur and Gadadhara Pandita and honored our relationship with them, and as we contemplated our independence (July 4th) from the material modes of nature, we contemplated the subject of relationships in general, since life is about relationships. There is nothing like relationships to severely test our ideals and demonstrate the spiritual work we have to do with ourselves.

We hunger for those who love and understand us, who nurture us, bringing out our best qualities, but also allow us to be ourselves, imperfections and all. However, if we are to have good relationships with others, we are required to have a good relationship with ourselves. For those of us who are theists, self-acceptance is greatly helped by our acceptance and positive relationship with our Source, or God, to me, Krishna. Self-acceptance and positive self-esteem are intertwined with our loving relationship with God, who we are part of.

Relationships open a door to reveal who are and what we are made of, being compared in the past to a threshing floor for separating the wheat from the chaff. Love and acceptance have been compared to the wheat, whereas our self-centered fears and criticism are like the chaff. By our endeavor aided by prayer we can crack the protective husk of our fears and release the delicious, nourishing essence. We could also think of relationships to be like a laboratory which can produce both useful and harmful chemicals.

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ISKCON50 offering: ISKCON Studio, Kolkata (Album with photos)…
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ISKCON50 offering: ISKCON Studio, Kolkata (Album with photos)
Cutting the ribbon today to inaugurate the new studio in ISKCON Kolkata. On the auspicious occasion of the 50th Anniversary of ISKCON, Netrotsava and Gundica Marjanam, where Lord Jagannatha is revealing Himself for the first time after two weeks, in the association of H.G. Pankajangri Prabhu, H.G. Acaryaratna Prabhu and assembled devotees of ISKCON Kolkata, today, after three years of construction and renovation, we inaugurated the ISKCON studio, which we hope and pray will be like a highly effective printing press to create multimedia, audio, video, animation, etc to offer the message of Krishna consciousness to the society at large. As Pankajangri Prabhu explained, “The studio will help us fulfill the mission of Lord Caitanya to spread the chanting of Hare Krishna to every town, village, and even everyone’s pocket (their cell phones). Prabhu gave the benediction, "May the studio never be silent.” My deepest gratitude to all the devotees who have generously given donations over the past three years to fund ISKCON Studio, Kolkata. May Lord Krishna bless you with eternal service to His lotus feet.
Find them here: https://goo.gl/T4mWIk

Affirmation, repetition, contagion
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By Anandini Padayachee

For centuries man has been growing deluded by wealth and the material, but the disintegration and degeneration of society caused by this materiality is reaching a turning point. The plague of natural disasters, the growing numbers of civil wars, the increase in refugees, the global recession, inabilities of governments to provide basic amenities to the poor and security to nations are signs of the effects of how through the propagation and promulgation of greed and aspiration for material greatness, society greatly suffers. But what goes down must come up at some point. Life is such, the changing of the seasons, the rise and fall of the tide, the rising and setting of the sun, the escalation and contraction of the heart are but mere examples of nature’s course. Continue reading "Affirmation, repetition, contagion
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Is everything really happening for the good?
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I have heard this phrase that whatever happens is for our good. Honestly, at least in the past could not find meaning to this phrase till I came in contact with Bhagavad Gita.

According to Bhagavad Gita (8.16), nothing in this material creation is actually good. We have a choice to accept what Krishna says or we can accept our own idea of good. But from Krishna’s perspective, this place is a place of misery and it is temporary. Even if we accept this place as good it is still temporary. Regardless, both misery and good is temporary according to Bhagavad Gita.

Having said that, if we re-define good as spiritual good and not material good, then everything is indeed happening for the good. By spiritual good, I mean good for the atma or soul and not deha or body. The body will deteriorate and die no matter what but the atma is eternal and hence real goodness can only mean spiritual good or good for the soul.

In our vision of one life time, it is difficult to evaluate how “all” souls are benefiting. But from Krishna’s position of past, present and future, “all” infinite souls in this material creation will eventually go back to Krishna. Krishna repeatedly sends His messengers or comes Himself to redeem these lost souls. So in that long standing sense of past, present and future, everything is slowly but surely churning towards Krishna and because Krishna is all good, everything indeed is good.

As they say “the mills of God grind slowly but surely”. We simply have to practice patience and tolerance in the face of dualities of life and meditate on our soul and Supersoul Krishna and as we make our journey towards Krishna, everything is good.

It is this journey towards Krishna which is all good, everything else is washed away by the waves of time anyways!

Hare Krishna

Radhadesh, June 2016: Recordings
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Read about Kadamba Kanana Swami’s stay in Radhadesh here. Please find recordings of the lectures below.

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KKS_Radhadesh_05June2016_CC_Madhya_25.57

KKS_Radhadesh_12June2016_CC_Madhya_25.58

KKS_Radhadesh_19June2016_CC_Madhya_25.66

KKS_Radhadesh_26June2016_CC_Madhya_25.73

ISKCON Punjabi Bagh – Festival Of Purification (Album with…
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ISKCON Punjabi Bagh - Festival Of Purification (Album with photos)
Gundicha Temple Cleaning Festival 5th July, 2016
Srila Prabhupada: We are not afraid of maya because Krishna is there. Krishna says, “My devotee will never be vanquished by maya.” Maya cannot do anything if we become strong. And what is that strength? Chant Hare Krishna, Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare loudly. (Lecture on Bhagavad-gita, 3.6.10, Los Angeles 1968).
Find them here: https://goo.gl/c3aW9a

New law in Russia threatens the Sankirtan movement in that country
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Hare KrishnaBy various media

Lawmakers are eager to place new restrictions on Russia's religious sphere, amending the legal definition of “missionary activity” as defined under the Constitution's article on the freedom of conscience and religion. Yarovaya's legislation defines as “missionary activity” any kind of religious practice that takes place outside special establishments, cemeteries, houses of worship, or religious schools. This applies to acts of worship, ceremonies, the distribution of literature, and preaching. “The dissemination of beliefs and religious convictions” through the mass media and the Internet is also considered to be “missionary activity.” Continue reading "New law in Russia threatens the Sankirtan movement in that country
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GOOGLE DOODLE for ISKCON50 Jaya Srila Prabhupada! *Jaya ISKCON*…
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GOOGLE DOODLE for ISKCON50
Jaya Srila Prabhupada!
*Jaya ISKCON*
If you wish that our ISKCON should celebrate the 50th Anniversary worldwide and simultaneously include in this celebration every human being on earth (at least those who use internet), then here is a *‘ONCE IN A LIFETIME’* chance:
Google has a service called GOOGLE DOODLE (http://www.google.com/doodles), which helps people in celebrating their important days. So if you wish that they should create a GOOGLE DOODLE for us on 13th July 2016, the appearance day of ISKCON, please write a short and a simple email to them in your own words, with a request to do so. Here is the email address: *proposals@google.com*
Please take out some time from your important schedule and send this email. If you are in doubt about what to write, just say: *“Please create a Doodle for ISKCON’s 50th Anniversary Celebration on 13th July 2016.”* That’s it.
Thanking you in anticipation,
Your servant,
Daamodara Dhananjaya Das

Radhadesh, June 2016
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Written by Nimai

Radhadesh_June2016 (39)After a month in India, Kadamba Kanana Swami returned to Europe. He spent two nights in Amsterdam and then travelled to Radhadesh where he also stayed for a month and dedicated most of his time to writing. He was still recovering from the Ayurvedic treatment he had recently undergone in Coimbatore. Nevertheless, he decided to give a class every Sunday. Every week, Maharaj read from the Caitanya Caritamrta, each time continuing where he stopped the previous week.

In the first class (05 June), Maharaj started reading about Sankaracharya and how he defeated many Buddhists in India during Caitanya Mahaprabhu’s time. In another class, Maharaj especially made the point that “the eyes are never satisfied”, meaning that our material desires can never truly bring us happiness and we will always want more. Maharaj said that the soul goes unconscious when the mind steals the soul’s features of thinking, feeling and willing. However, once we take to Krsna Consciousness, these features will be controlled again by the soul. Impersonalism was a strong theme throughout Maharaj’s lectures. Maharaj pointed out that impersonalism does not exist only in India but is in fact very present in Europe as well for example.

Apart from giving classes and writing, Maharaj kept his daily walk going. Every day we went up the hill, most of the time carrying our umbrellas. One day, while going up the steepest part of the hill, Maharaj commented, “This is like in our spiritual life, you fix yourself and then you just just keep going!”

On another day while walking, Maharaj told me a story that he had just thought about: how Satadanva killed Satyabhama’s father in order to steal the Syamantaka jewel which was famous for producing a mountain of gold every day! During another walk, Maharaj told me the story of Hridaya Caitanya.

HG Kurma Prabhu was in Radhadesh for about one week. He shared some of his memories of Prabhupada in the lectures he gave. He described the first Ratha Yatra in Melbourne where they had a very big Caitanya Mahaprabhu murti in front of the chariots. He also described how they had to stay at the site overnight so nobody would burn the chariots!

Radhadesh_June2016 (13)During our stay in Radhadesh, a senior devotee named Janaki Mataji passed away. Before her departure, Maharaj visited her at the hospital and did some kirtan for her.

Ananda Vrindavan Dasi who cooked for Maharaj while we were in Radhdesh organized a Bhakti Tirtha Swami memorial program to celebrate his disappearance day on 27 June. Special guests like HH Sacinandana Swami and HG Mahatma Prabhu and of course Kadamba Kanana Swami attended. A video of Bhakti Tirtha Swami was shown, where he was dancing and we listened to his famous “dying before dying” lecture. Devotees who knew Bhakti Tirtha Swami personally spoke a few words. They glorified him not only for his dancing skills but also for his amazing preaching in Africa, his ability to involve everyone in dancing and the personal relationships and deep love he had for devotees. Some of Bhakti Tirtha Swami’s favourite dishes, calzone and cake, were served afterwards.

Along with Sacinandana Swami, lots of devotees arrived in Radhadesh. Many of them came for the kirtan course which was about to begin.

During our last week in Radhadesh, many disciples came to see Kadamba Kanana Swami. From Radhadesh, we travelled to the Summer Camp in Czech (01-04 July) and after that, we will travel via Berlin to Italy and spend a week there.

Radhadesh_June2016 (3) Radhadesh_June2016 (36) Radhadesh_June2016 (49) 12June2016

Visit Flickr to see all the photos.

Help Rebuild the Hare Krsna Centre in Christchurch after Earthquake
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Hare KrishnaBy Mandira mani dasi

You might remember hearing about the Christchurch earthquakes in the news. What you might not know is that there were more earthquakes after the first big one—no fewer than 10,000 of them. There were sometimes seven or eight earthquakes a day. Everybody living in Christchurch was scared all the time because each earthquake had the potential to bring major destruction. Eventually one of them did: our temple survived the first earthquake, but the biggest of those 10,000 aftershocks brought it down. Five years later, the rebuild has finally begun. We have been very lucky to get an insurance payout--lucky because the insurance company went bankrupt after the earthquake. Continue reading "Help Rebuild the Hare Krsna Centre in Christchurch after Earthquake
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Prabhupada – Departing for the West (Highlights) (5 min…
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Prabhupada – Departing for the West (Highlights) (5 min video)
From ISKCON Pandava Sena UK.
Highlights from Something Spiritual’s first show, Prabhupada – Departing for the West at Harrow Arts Centre, London.
A true story that began 50 years ago, when a great scholar set out across the ocean on a mission, carrying nothing but a timeless message, which was to be the greatest change for humanity. He inspired an entire generation and against all odds, formed an unstoppable revolution.
Watch it here: https://goo.gl/bAmgJt

​Bhagavatam study 52 1.10.21-27 The Supreme appears human – and still remains Supreme
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The Confidential Meaning of Ratha-Yatra A lecture delivered by…
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The Confidential Meaning of Ratha-Yatra
A lecture delivered by Gour Govinda Swami on 11th July 1994, Bhubaneswar, India.
“By Vedic calculations one can determine when the Jagannatha Temple was first built, when the Temple was inaugurated and when the Deities were installed (on Their simhasana). According to the authority of Skanda Purana, this period is fifteen crores and thirty-four lakhs (more than 150 million) years ago. From this it is clear that Ratha-yātrā began in the time of Svarocisa Manu.”
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Gundica Marjana
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Gundica marjana means cleaning of the temple Gundica, which is non-different to Vrindavan. On the day prior to the Ratha yatra festival, the temple is cleansed and decorated nicely to welcome the Lord of the Universe the next day. This practice is going on in Puri since the time of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu. The Chaitanya – Bhagavata beautifully describes […]

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July 5. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations. Satsvarupa…
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July 5. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations.
Satsvarupa dasa Goswami: Swamiji, My True Father.
In 1966, Acyutananda dasa’s mother wrote a paper for a New York University psychology course describing the relationship of Prabhupada and his disciples. Her theory was that the young boys who had joined the Hare Krishna movement were from broken families, and that is why they were taking to Krishna consciousness and seeing Prabhupada as their spiritual father. When Acyutananda told this to the devotees we saw it as a joke. His mother hadn’t done any interviewing, but based it all on knowledge of her own son. Perhaps it was a fact that some devotees came from broken homes, yet others came from strong family units, as I did. This was the first time I heard anyone theorizing that the relationship a devotee has with his material father has implications in his relationship with his spiritual father.
Atheist psychologists say that a belief in God is based on a person’s insecurity in his relationship with his seminal father. This theory can also be used to explain why one is attracted to a spiritual father.
However, according to Vedic sastra, God is the Father and the spiritual master is also the father. As stated in the Vedas, “In every species of life one is born with a mother and father, but only in the human life can one obtain a relationship with guru and Krishna.”
The theory put forward by Acyutananda’s mother, or by Freud and company, has nothing to do with the fact of God’s existence. The Supreme Lord is independent. He rules all creatures, regardless of our family situations. If some persons seek God partly because of the unhappiness they find in family life, that unhappiness may turn out to be their good fortune. Conversely, if one thinks that because he has a good family life he does not need to seek God, then he is in illusion.
God consciousness is the goal of human life. If a person is born of a mother and father who can give the child love, as well as a God conscious education, then he is very blessed. According to Bhagavad-gita, if one is born into a family of transcendentalists, that is the result of good karma.
Even one who has a pure devotee as a father still must approach a spiritual master for initiation. It is not true that only someone who has an unhappy relationship with his material father seeks out God or guru.
In my case, I was very much under the domination of my father until about my eighteenth year, and then I gradually began to resent him. I thought he misunderstood me and stifled my individual spirit. I had already broken from my father’s influence as much as was possible, and was living alone when I met Srila Prabhupada. I can recall a specific incident in which I transferred myself as the son of Stephen Guarino, Sr. to become the son of A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada. I had informed my father and mother by phone calls and by sending them an ISKCON “Prospectus” of my interest in Krishna consciousness and the Swami. To my surprise, my parents strongly rejected it. My father said, “If you keep going to the Swami, we won’t have anything to do with you.” After that phone call, I went and told Prabhupada what had happened, and that is when the feeling of transfer occurred. Prabhupada saw my dilemma and assured me that he was my father. Through him, I could connect with Lord Krishna.
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The Real Subject of Gayatri
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What is a “Gāyatrī”?

The Veda is mostly poetry, meant to be sung. Chandaḥ — the metrics of poetic rhythm — is therefore one of the six essential subjects of traditional Vedic study, vedāṅga. Gāyatrī is a poetic-meter that has 24 syllables in total, divided into three lines with eight syllables in each.

The word gāyatrī is very similar to the word mantra. Mantra means “the tool (-tra) by which the mind (man-)”[i] can be saved (trayate).” Gāyatrī means, “the tool (-tra) by which a song (gāya-) can rescue us.”[ii]

What is “the Gāyatrī”?

There are a plethora of “gāyatrī mantra.” The most famous is Ṛg 3.62.10. It is so famous that saying, “gāyatrī” is practically the same as saying, “Ṛg 3.62.10.” This particular gāyatrī can also be addressed more directly and explicitly as the brahma gāyatrī – signifying that it represents the essence of all Vedic wisdom (brahma), or as the sāvitrī gāyatrī – signifying that it describes the ultimate origin of life and creation (savitṛ), or as sārasvatī gāyatrī, because the mantra is the epitome of verbal communication (sārasatī / vāk) and is therefore integral to the Vedic educational process, blessed by the Goddess of Learning (sarasvatī).

Agni Purāṇa (216.1-2):

It is called Gāyatrī because it sings (gāyati) about mantra, consciousness, perception, and the supreme.  It is called Sāvitrī because it reveals the ultimate life-giver (savitā). It is called Sārasvatī because it is the essence of all words.

This gāyatrī is:

tat savitur vareṇiyaṁ
bharga devasya dhīmahī
dhiyo yo naḥ prachodayat

You may notice that I have spelled the third word on the first line vareṇiyaṁ (giving it four syllables), although it is often spelled vareṇyam (with three syllables). The spelling I use fulfills the rule of gātatrī having eight syllables per line.[iii]

When used as mantra — a tool for thought, contemplation, and meditation — Vedic statements are prefixed by a sacred syllable. Taittiriya Aranyaka (2.11.1-8) specifies the prefixes to use for this particular gāyatrī: the sacred syllable  auṁ, followed by three vyāhṛti (invocational words): bhur, bhuvaḥ, and svaḥ.

The complete form of this gāyatrī, used as a mantra, is therefore:

auṁ

bhur bhuvaḥ svaḥ

tat savitur vareṇiyaṁ
bharga devasya dhīmahī
dhiyo yo naḥ pracodayat

Uses of Gāyatrī

Historically, India used gāyatrī primarily in the upayana ceremony initiating a student into study of the Vedas. It was used by the student for a meditation done three times a day, at sunrise, noon, and sunset.[iv] Since brāḥmanas undergo the most extensive education, gāyatrī has come to be a mantra associated with that caste, but originally everyone who received formal education (which includes kṣatriya, vaiṣya, and some śūdra) received the mantra in the upayana ceremony at their commencement. Similarly it has also come to be a mantra associated with men, but was originally given to both men and women at the beginning of their education. Defense of these points is outside the scope of this article about the meaning of gāyatrī, but for further exploration of these points please explore my references.[v]

Gauḍīya Vaiṣṇava’s did not use the mantra as part of their sādhana until relatively modern times, when visionary Bhaktisiddhānta Sarasvatī (1874 – 1937) introduced it in the dīkṣā ceremony, probably as part of his effort to impress upon the public that Vaiṣṇavas are automatically as good as brāḥmanas. Instead, they used the kāma-gāyatrī – a different gāyatrī with the same meter and structure as brahma-gāyatrī, but specifically dedicated to meditation upon Bhagavān as the original erotic principle, Kāmadeva. This is why Gauḍīya lineages not connected to Bhaktisiddhānta’s Gauḍīya Maṭha do not meditate on brahma-gāyatrī as part of their bhakti-sādhana, nor is the brahma-gāyatrī included in Gauḍīya meditation handbooks (smaraṇa-paddhati). Instead the kāma-gāyatrī is prominent, and has prominent explanations by important Gauḍīya ācāryas like Prabhodānanda Sārasvatī (Kāma-Gāyatrī-Vyākhyā) and Visvanātha Cakravarti (Mantrārtha-Dīpikā).

Although the Gauḍīyas did not use brahma-gāyatī they did respect the mantra immensely. In the founding document of the Gauḍīya school,  Bhāgavata-Sandarbha (aka Ṣaḍ-Sandarbha), Śrī Jīva Goswāmī recognizes the brahma-gāyatrī as the essence of the Veda, and therefore the foundation of the Śrīmad Bhāgavatam — the Gauḍīya’s primary text. He explains the mantra’s meaning in the Tattva and Paramātmā sections of the Sandarbha.

Meaning of Gāyatrī

Before exploring Śrī Jīva’s exposition of it’s meaning, we should become familiar with the words themselves.

The syllable auṁ is the mystic seed of everything. The beginning, middle, and end of existence. The three invocational words — bhur, bhuvaḥ, and svaḥ — describe the earth, sky and heavens respectively: three planes of existence.

Tat literally means “that.” Here, the pronoun refers to jyoti, “illumination.” Savitur means “life-giver.” Vareṇiyaṁ means “ultimate.” Bharga means “splendor.” Devasya means “divinity.” Dhīmahī means “contemplate.” Dhiyā means “by contemplation.” Pracodayat means “become known.”

The mantra therefore means:

Auṁ

We contemplate the ultimate source of life:
the splendor of divinity
illuminating earth, sky, and heavens.

May we realize the truth of this contemplation.

In one sense, this refers to the sun, deified here as the “splendor of God.” In a far more important sense, however, it refers to consciousness. The mysteries of gāyatrī cannot be unlocked without knowing that this “splendor” is the illuminating power of consciousness. Indeed, sun/soul and illumination/consciousness analogies are ubiquitous in the Veda and in many other cultures, as well.

Gāyatri identifies consciousness as the ultimate root of all life. It describes the illuminating power of consciousness as the splendor of divinity itself, with the divine capacity to illuminate and thus perceive everything it encounters, whether on earth, in the sky or in the heavens.

By describing consciousness as the “splendor of divinity” gāyatrī indicates that our individual consciousness is a splendor (bharga) of some original light-source (deva); The original light-source is the root-consciousness, paramātmā, and the splendid emanation is the individual consciousness, ātmā.

Thus gāyatrī has several valid levels of meaning, which culminate as a meditation on the original consciousness, Paramātmā, and its relationship to the chanter’s own individual consciousness.

Gayatri and Bhāgavatam

In the 19th and 22nd sections of Tattva Sandarbha, Śrī Jiva introduces the Gāyatrī and its relationship to Śrīmad Bhāgavatam. In the 105th section of Paramātmā Sandarbha, he returns to the same topic. The references below beginning with 19 or 22 refer to Tattva Sandarbha, and those beginning with 105 refer to Paramātmā Sandarbha.

Śrī Jīva explains the meaning and subject of gāyatrī and makes the points that Bhāgavatam elucidates that meaning and subject. Here are key points he makes showing the link between Bhāgavatam and gāyatrī.

He quotes Viṣṇu-dharmottara Purāṇa (prathama-khaṇḍa 165), which explains gāyatrī as a mediation on Bhagavān. He then says that this is one reason Śrīmad Bhāgavatam is described as an elaboration on gāyatrī: for it is the Veda’s most elaborate and intimate revelation of Bhagavān.

In 19.1 he states that the gāyatrī summarizes the essential message of all the Veda and thus it is fitting that Śrīmad Bhāgavatam, which reconciles all the Veda, should begin with reference to the gāyatrī and be described as an elucidation upon gāyatrī.

In 19.2 he quotes Matsya Purāṇa (53.20-22) defining Śrīmad Bhāgavatam as: “the purāṇa that begins with gāyatrī, to explain the topmost dharma.”

In 19.3 he explains that the word dhīmahī in Śrīmad Bhāgavatam’s first verse stands for the entire mantra, and that the phrases in this opening verse explain the gāyatrī’s meaning. The phrase, “Cause of the causes and effects of creation” (janmādy asya yataḥ) expresses gāyatrī’s identification of the supreme consciousness as the origin of everything, the original live-giver. In 105.117 he adds that this same phrase also elaborates on the gāyatrī’s seed auṁ, which he defines as denoting the beginning, middle, and end of all things.

In 19.3 and 105.120 he states that the Bhāgavatam’s phrase, “Manifesting knowledge within the heart” (tene bhrama hṛdā) expresses the purpose of gāyatrī, as voiced in gāyatrī’s third line: “may we realize the truth of this contemplation.”

In 105.119 he says that the gāyatrī’s invocation, “bhur bhuvaḥ svaḥ,” refers to the three planes of existence that Bhāgavatam introduces with the phrase, “From whom three planes of existence attain their semblance of reality” (yatra tri-sargo ‘mrṣā).

In 105.120 he says the “sunlike illumination” spoken of in gāyatrī is discussed at length in Śrīmad Bhāgavatam, beginning from the first verse with the word “shining” (svarat).

The Real Subject of Gāyatrī

The mainstay of Śrī Jīva’s presentation on gāyatrī in both the Tattva and Paramātmā Sandarbha is quotation from Agni Purāṇa’s own explanation of gāyatrī, found in the first 16 texts of its 216th chapter. The question being addressed in this part of Agni Purāṇa is, “Who or what is the subject of gāyatrī?”

Jīva establishes that many different things and beings can be the subject of gāyatrī. He quotes Agni Purāna:

By chanting gāyatrī one meditates upon illumination, life-breath, the goddess of creation Savtṛ, the life-giving sun-god Savitur, and on Sārasvatī, the goddess of knowledge who is embodied in words.

Jīva Goswāmī continues by explaining that all of these persons and things are related manifestations of one primary subject: “illumination.” The quotation continues to show that this primary subject should be the primary meditation when chanting gāyatrī:

One should meditate on “that illumination,” the supreme resplendence of consciousness.

Next, Agni Purāṇa begins to explain that the primary subject of gāyatrī is not merely consciousness (bharga devasya), but “supreme consciousness” (vareṇiyaṁ bharga devasya):

One should meditate on the “ultimate illumination” the source of all light, the supreme substance, which is superior to all that can be attained, even liberation.

Now, Agni Purāṇa addresses the question, “Who or what is the ultimate and supreme consciousness”?

That “ultimate” illumination, the highest goal, is pure consciousness beyond its lesser manifestations in sleep, dreams, and wakefulness. “Constant, pure, transcendent consciousness is the eternal luster of the Supreme Master. I am that luminous transcendent consciousness.” By meditating on this, I shall become liberated.

Thus gāyatrī includes a meditation upon the supreme form of ones own individual consciousness. In 105.141 Śrī Jīva explains that the supremacy of one’s consciousness and its equality with the Supreme Master is not meant to inspire self-worship. In Tattva Sandarbha (22.8) he explains its purpose: We must know ourselves to be of the same substance as the Supreme – consciousness. Knowing this equality and similarity is essential, because without equality and similarity it is impossible to forge an intimate relationship. Śrī Jīva explores this point elsewhere in Tattva Sandarbha as well (52 – 53.1). Here (in 22.8) he quotes the unattributed phrase “the non-divine is not fit to worship the divine” (nādevo devam arcayet) to demonstrate that one must know oneself to be divine, like the Supreme, or else one will not consider oneself fit to approach the Supreme and forge an intimate loving relationship.

Finally, after saying that gāyatrī is a meditation on all-illuminating consciousness present both in the Supreme Master and the individual meditator, the Agni Purāṇa then addresses the question, “What is the identity of the Supreme Master Consciousness”?

In 22.9 Śrī Jīva explains that gāyatrī likens the Supreme Master Consciousness to the sun, known as Sūrya, Savitur, and so on, and the individual consciousness is like the resplendent sun ray emanated from that sun. The object of worship in the gāyatrī, he says, is the origin of all luminous beings, epitomized by the sun. In 22.10 he says, “We shouldn’t think gāyatrī is merely about ordinary luminous objects like the sun. It is about the ultimate illumination, vareṇiyaṁ bharga: consciousness, which is the inherent potency of the Supreme Being.

Śrī Jīva finishes his quotation from Agni Purāṇa to conclusively answer the question of who or what is the ultimate source of consciousness.

“That illumination” is Bhagavān Viṣṇu, the cause of all causes and effects of creation. Some describe it as Śiva, some as Śakti, some as Sūrya, some as Agni, some as other gods, or as the sacred fire. But Viṣṇu is the source of luminosity in all of them.

We must meditate upon the Supreme Person, the origin of consciousness, Viṣṇu, who is the true Sadā-Śiva empowering the Sun-disc to radiate illumination.

Thus, the subject of gāyatrī is illumination. The ultimate illuminator is consciousness, the essence of sight and all other perceptions, facilitated to the tangible world through the conduit of prāṇa. Consciousness manifests in words and knowledge, represented by goddess Sārasvatī. It is the essence of life and creation, and is therefore Savitṛ and Savitur. It is the source of all light, like fire (Agni) and like the Sun (Sūrya and Sadā-Śiva). But the ultimate source of the light radiating from the self, ātmā, is the paramātmā, Bhagavān Viṣṇu. Thus the ultimate subject of gāyatrī is the relationship between Viṣṇu and the individual.

Bibliography

Satyanārāyaṇa dāsa, Kuṇḍalī dāsa, Śrī Tattva Sandarbha (Jiva Institute for Vaisnava Studies, 1st Edition, 1995)

Macdonell, Arthur A., A Sanskrit Grammar for Students (Oxford University Press, 3rd edition, 1927).

B. van Nooten and G. Holland, Rig Veda. A metrically restored text. Cambridge: Harvard Oriental Series (1994).

Rinehart, Robin (1 January 2004). Contemporary Hinduism: Ritual, Culture, and Practice. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-905-8.

Lipner, Julius J. (1994). Hindus: Their Religious Beliefs and Practices. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-415-05181-1.

Heather Elgood (2000), Hinduism and the religious arts, ISBN 978-0304707393, Bloomsbury Academic.

Mookerji, Radha Kumud (1998). Ancient Indian Education: Brahmanical and Buddhist. Motilal Banarsidass Publ. ISBN 978-81-208-0423-4.

Hartmut Scharfe (2007), Handbook of Oriental Studies, Brill Academic, ISBN 978-9004125568

PV Kane, Samskara, Chapter VII, History of Dharmasastras, Vol II, Part I, Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute.

Tripathi (2005), The Evolution of Ideals of Womenhood in Indian Society, ISBN 978-8178354255

Notes

[i] Macdonell, 1927 § 182.1.b, p. 162
[ii] Viśvanātha, Mantrātha-dīpikā: gāyantaṁ trāyate tasmāt gāyatrītvaṁ
[iii] Nooten and Holland, 1994
[iv] Rinehart, 2004, p. 127; Lipner ,1994, p. 53
[v] Cross-caste gāyatrī use: Mookerji 1998, p. 174. Elgood, 2000, pages 32-134. Scharfe, 2007, pages 102-103, 197-198, 263-276. Cross-gender gāyatrī use: Kane, pages 293-295. Tripathi, 2005, p. 94

This article originally appeared as Vraja Kishor, The Real Subject of Gayatri, Journal of Vaishnava Studies, Volume 23, issue Number 3, Summer 2016. Used with permission.


Tagged: Consciousness, gayatri, Mantra, Veda