Coimbatore 2016: Part 2
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Written by Nimai

The last week of Kadamba Kanana Swami’s stay at the AVP hospital passed by very quickly. The main treatment was over and the focus was on rebuilding Maharaj’s strength. By then, he was allowed to be in the sunlight again so we resumed our daily 5 km program and walked through the neighbourhood. We also got to speak to the main doctor of the hospital during the last days. He suggested that Maharaj should stay in one place for a year and forget all travelling, however Maharaj explained that it’s his duty as a sannyasi to preach so finally, they agreed to slow down the travelling for some time.

Coimbatore (9) Coimbatore (20)

Svayam Bhagavan Das, a disciple who is originally from South India, came all the way from his preaching center near Mumbai to visit Maharaj. He speaks the local language too which was very helpful sometimes. Maharaj gave one class at the temple where he spoke about “The storehouse of love of God”.
He explained how Vedic culture had decreased, using Srila Prabhupada’s analogy of the dead elephant – a dead elephant is still useful as we can make use of the tusks because they consist of ivory and we can make use of the hide, etc. Similarly, Vedic culture had become ritualistic and the love was lacking. But then, the Panca Tattva broke open the storehouse of love of God and drank the nectar. They became intoxicated and started spreading the mercy. They preached that kirtan will purify everything.

Coimbatore (21) Coimbatore (7)

Maharaj spoke about taste in spiritual life. He said that just knowledge is not enough. We can be the most determined person, but if we don’t have taste we will become weak sooner or later. So this taste comes by chanting the holy name and THEN material enjoyments start to look very shallow.

We got lots of Ayurvedic medicine to last for the next three months. From Coimbatore, before travelling to Amsterdam, we spent another few days in Vrindavan. Maharaj spoke to a few devotees who came to visit him but was still quite exhausted from the weeks of treatment that had just finished.

Vrindavan (22) Vrindavan (21)

One day, we went to Loi Bazar to do some shopping. Maharaj bought a whole stack of books in preparation for his scheduled one month of writing in Radhadesh. He gave a class too, which was in some ways a continuation of the class in Coimbatore. He spoke about Dadhīci Muni, who gave up his body so the demigods could make a weapon out of his bones. He was a very powerful yogi and completely free from material desires. Maharaj then explained that our position is not one of Dadhīci. We live in the age of Kali where our birthright is weakness. We are dependent on Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu’s mercy which is like a shield that blocks off maya. We should not worry about the temporary but look at the long term benefit that we get from singing and chanting the holy names of Krsna. Watch the video of the class on YouTube here.

After flying from Delhi (30 May), we stayed two nights in Amsterdam at Uddhava and Visakha’s house. Maharaj bought more books while in Amsterdam and got ready to start his writing. Then we travelled to Radhadesh where we will stay until the end of June.

Amsterdam (3) Amsterdam (5)

Visit Flickr to see all the photos.

The latest issue of Sri Krishna-kathamrita Bindu e-magazine was…
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The latest issue of Sri Krishna-kathamrita Bindu e-magazine was just released.
KK Bindu #377 includes: “The Necessity of Initiation”, A first time translation of a rare commentary from Caitanya-caritamrta.
This edition includes: * NEVER A SUDRA – His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada speaks about the position of devotees. * THE NECESSITY OF INITIATION – A first time translation done especially for this issue, of Virachandra Goswami’s (the son of Lord Nityananda) commentary on Caitanya-caritamrta, madhya 15.110. * HAPPY AS A MATERIALIST – A fresh translation from Srila Prabodhananda Saraswati’s Vrindavan-mahimamrtam (9.84). It can be downloaded here: https://archive.org/details/bindu377

An Evening with the Lord on Boat – Iskcon Kolkata (Album with…
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An Evening with the Lord on Boat - Iskcon Kolkata (Album with photos)
On 12th June, 2016, the Well-Wisher Department of ISKCON Kolkata arranged one of the most exquisite boat festivals in a cruise ship called Paramhansa of Vivada Cruise, Millenium Park, Kolkata, hosted by their MD Mr. Nath, in memory of his beloved late wife. Many renowned and successful leaders of the society, corporates and businessmen graced the occasion with their family and friends, along with the Temple Management members of ISKCON Kolkata. The ship left the shore at 5pm and the guests witnessed warm reception, lovely darshan, aratis and experienced devotional cultural programs led by devotees connected to the regular classes of the department. The festival ended at 8pm with dancing kirtan and dinner prasad. The hosts and guests promised to continue the festival every year with increased festivities.
PC: Souvic Sasvata Nimai das.
Find them here: https://goo.gl/Fnmvdh

LOVE, LEARN, PRAY, GIVE, ACCEPT, RELEASE, LET GO, and CELEBRATING and EMBODYING GRACE AND SHARING THAT WITH THE WORLD
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Author: 
Karnamrita Das

Prayer photo Praying_zpsc0u7ckg2.jpg
LOVE, LEARN, PRAY, GIVE, ACCEPT, RELEASE, LET GO, CELEBRATE: I often think about how to express the most important aspects of life that can most benefit us all. The following is one perspective and attempt to do this. We begin by sensing that love is our nature and that which we most hanker for. When we discover that our capacity to love in this world, and the capacity for others to accept the amount of love we are capable of giving, is limited and ultimately unsatisfying, we can begin our quest to realize our spiritual nature as beings of eternity, wisdom, and love.

We discover that the fulfillment we seek is only possible when our spiritual nature is gradually awakened, since this nature is who we truly are. There are many stages of this divine awakening which will be promoted by those who seek the goal their path offers. According to the bhakti Vedic scriptures, the highest stage is when our loving propensity and full consciousness is reposed on the Supreme Original Person, God, or Krishna.

When we love Krishna, then we always know what to do. This is true learning and practical wisdom. Krishna teaches in chapter 15 of his Bhagavad Gita, that when we know Krishna as the Supreme Original Person, without doubting, then we know everything that is necessary.

In our endeavor to learn to love Krishna (bhakti) we learn that prayer—through chanting the holy name, reciting prayers in the scripture and by great devotees, and our personal prayers—is our connection to God and leads us to serving and remembering him. We also learn that by serving, loving, and giving to others in the spirit of service to Krishna, we grow spiritually and help others as well (para-upakara). We can’t separate Krishna from his devotees.

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Ratha-Yatra Volunteer Opportunities!
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With summer in full swing, the excitement surrounding the 44th Annual Festival of India (Ratha-Yatra) is growing as each day passes!

The Festival of India has always relied on the power of volunteer efforts to make it the amazing success that it is today. Volunteering also means meeting incredible, new people while helping to make one of Toronto’s most astonishing summer events a reality. 

Whether doing truck loading/unloading or helping on the days of the festival itself, the heart and soul of the Festival of India are the volunteers who make it happen! 

Join our enthusiastic and energetic team and be part of the Festival of India family!

To sign up and register to be a volunteer, please click here and you will be directed to our online form. Once you have signed up, one of our friendly Volunteer Coordinators will be in touch. 

For all general questions and/or concerns, please feel free to contact: 
Volunteer Coordination Team
Festival of India (Toronto)
volunteers@festivalofindia.ca


Stay tuned for more exciting information about the festivities leading up to Festival of India!



June 15. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations. Satsvarupa…
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June 15. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations.
Satsvarupa dasa Goswami: Lunch With Swamiji.
At noon the front room became a dining hall and in the evenings a place of intimate worship. Prabhupada kept the room, with its twelve-foot-square hardwood parquet floor, clean and bare; the solitary coffee table against the wall between the two courtyard windows was the only furniture. Daily at noon a dozen men were now taking lunch here with him. The meal was cooked by Keith, who spent the whole morning in the kitchen.
At first Keith had cooked only for the Swami. He had mastered the art of cooking dal, rice, and sabji in the Swami’s three-tiered boiler, and usually there had been enough for one or two guests as well. But soon more guests had begun to gather, and Prabhupada told Keith to increase the quantity (abandoning the small three-tiered cooker) until he was cooking for a dozen hungry men. The boarders, Raphael and Don, though not so interested in the Swami’s talk, would arrive punctually each day for prasadam, usually with a friend or two who had wandered into the storefront. Steve would drop by from his job at the welfare office. The Mott Street group would come. And there were others.
To read the entire article click here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=20490&page=9

Donor Spotlight: Parthasarathi Prabhu & Lilavathi Vasudha Mataji
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20160613_095615Parents’ role in a school is usually limited to supporting their children’s education and showing up for conferences. If it’s a private school, they pay tuition as well. As required, they may also volunteer some of their time. We are so blessed and fortune that we have parents who volunteer to teach a weekly class; parents who coordinate Teachers’ Appreciation Day; parents who take responsibility to order uniforms; parents who help in fundraisers; parents who help in preparing materials.
Lilavathi Vasudha Mataji (Leelavati Malisetti) recently approached me and very nonchalantly handed me a check. It was a $2000 donation to the school. A gift.
The true gift, I told her, was her choosing to move closer to our school and enrolling her daughter, Vikasni at TKG Academy. Lilavathi Mataji and her husband, Parthasarathi Prabhu, lived with their daughter in Plano, TX. They had a nice house and Vikasni attended a nice Montessori private school. But Lilavathi Mataji felt that something was missing. She longed to be closer to the temple and the devotees. She desired for her daughter to have more Vaisnava association. Krsna heard her heart’s prayers and made all arrangements for them. Vikasni immediately fit right in and made many friends among her classmates.
It is indeed our blessing to have them join our growing TKG Academy family and we thank them deeply for their support, financial and otherwise.

To Be Politically Incorrect
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By Kesava Krsna Dasa

If we look back into Vedic history we will probably find many incidents that contravene modern-day standards of human rights and discrimination. If say, a liberal human rights monitor group were to go back 5,000 years, they would likely report negatively to the UN. Ekalavya, Romaharsana, Radheya, (How many of us felt sorry for him?) and many others like them, suffered, or benefited from their fair share of discrimination based on social standing, and other issues. There are some attempts to start varnashrama-dharma, which again, by modern-day values, falls into the category of discrimination according to ability and inclination, and being assigned higher or lower social positions. Even if these ideals were implemented without birthright status as is practiced widely in India, the equality seeking workers, socialists and feminists would predictably protest such social divisions. Who can blame them? The corruption of the monarchy, the exploitation by landlords and greedy capitalists, and the abuse of male domination had led to the formation of these rights organisations. In a modern world shifting towards a more human friendly and equal system, it is not surprising that certain Vedic ideals are deemed politically incorrect. Continue reading "To Be Politically Incorrect
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Harinama in Munich,Germany (Album with photos) Srila Prabhupada:…
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Harinama in Munich,Germany (Album with photos)
Srila Prabhupada: There is need of a clue as to how humanity can become one in peace, friendship and prosperity with a common cause. Srimad Bhagavatam will fill this need, for it is a cultural presentation for the re-spiritualization of the entire human society. Delhi, December 15, 1962.
Find them here: https://goo.gl/ZhhxbB

Vidyabhusana Project Update and the Reappearance of Prabodhananda Sarasvati’s Caitanyastakam
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by Dr. Demian Martins

The latest expeditions of the Baladeva Vidyabhusana Project were very fruitful and one of the highlights among the unpublished Gaudiya manuscripts discovered and digitized is the “Caitanyastakam,” eight verses composed by Srila Prabodhananda Sarasvati in praise of Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu. The astaka genre has been very common among Sanskrit poets for centuries and it is well known that several of Lord Caitanya’s personal associates composed astakas to glorify Him, the most famous being those by Srila Sarvabhauma Bhattacarya, Srila Raghunatha dasa Gosvami, Srila Narahari Sarakara and Srila Rupa Gosvami, who actually composed three different collections of eight verses. The recovery of Prabodhananda Sarasvati’s “Caitanyastakam” brings our attention to the fact that there might be more of such lost compositions, which are so important for sharing the impressions the authors obtained from the association of Lord Caitanya. The text and its English translation will soon be published together with the same author’s “Viveka-shatakam.”

In a humble attempt to serve the worshipable Deities of Srila Baladeva Vidyabhusana and the Shyamananda-parivara, I have recently translated “The Glories of Sri Sri Radha-Shyamsundar,” which narrate the pastimes of Their appearance, the history of Their temple, Their different festivals and outfits, etc., and also “Prabhu Shyamananda,” a short narration of the amazing pastimes of one of the greatest preachers of the Gaudiya sampradaya. Both booklets and many of the works of Srila Baladeva Vidyabhusana in PDF can be downloaded for free in the following page:

www.archive.org/details/@baladeva_vidyabhusana_project

The technical philosophical terminology employed by Srila Baladeva Vidyabhusana in his “Tattva-dipika” is being carefully glossed, after which the work will be published without delay.

Although the number of manuscripts being located and digitized is gradually increasing, there are a few stumbling blocks on the way. The major one has been the outrageous anti-research, anti-publication policy maintained by certain libraries, which although relatively few in number, contain thousands and thousands of Gaudiya texts. These libraries are mostly under the Indian government and are run by staff who think that manuscripts are like museum pieces, not to be touched or copied at any cost. One of the largest manuscript libraries in West Bengal, for example, is run by communists who allegedly damage unpublished religious manuscripts to make sure that they will never be published. This is pushing me to appeal to high government authorities and, if necessary, to start a legal battle that will be very time consuming and was not at all in my plans.

The increasing number of unsorted collections I am finding in all directions also gives me mixed feelings: joy for what we may occasionally find there, and sadness for the little chance of seeing them being classified in the near future. This is so mostly because of the lack of funds and interest on the part of the owners and the limited resources and lack of interest on the part of the government. Despite these difficulties, the Baladeva Vidyabhusana Project is going on to accomplish its objectives:

1. Search for lost manuscripts. (Such as the commentaries on nine Upanisads, Srimad Bhagavatam, etc.)

2. Digitally preserve manuscripts currently existing in different libraries.

3. Digitally preserve all editions of Vidyabhusana’s books.

4. Digitally preserve articles written about Vidyabhusana.

5. Type all the original texts in digital unicode system, which can be converted into Devanagari, Bengali and Oriyan characters.

6. Prepare a critical edition for each work.

7. Translate all the works into English.

8. Publish all translations with the original Devanagari text.

9. Investigate and verify existent biographical data of Vidyabhusana, including historical evidences of the conflict between the Gaudiyas and the Ramanandis of Rajasthan.

10. Publish a comprehensive biographical work.

To see samples of the discovered manuscripts, and for inquiries and donations, please visit:

www.vidyabhusanaproject.blogspot.com

The Root of Anger
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Hare KrishnaBy Arcana Siddhi Devi Dasi

THE HOSPITAL ROOM SMELLS strongly of antiseptic as I walk in. Chris sits on his bed, immersed in rapidly pushing buttons with his thumbs. "Nintendo?" I ask nonchalantly, breaking his concentration. "Play Station," he replies, continuing to madly push buttons. I sit in a chair next to his bed, observing his strategy for blowing things up. After a couple of minutes, Chris slams the game paddle to the floor. "I hate this game," he snarls, with a few expletives thrown in. Instinctively I reply, "Hmm, sounds like you're really angry." My statement of the obvious sounds ludicrous to both of us. Chris ignores me. He covers his head with the bed sheet and mumbles to himself. I feel uncomfortable and don't know what to say to draw him out. Chris is an eleven-year-old boy I've been working with in mental-health therapy for the past year. He has a history of explosive, raging outbursts. Recently he kicked a brick wall so hard he broke the femur in his right leg. Now he's confined to a hospital bed with pins in his leg. I make another feeble attempt to connect to him. "Anger is a powerful feeling. Looks like we need to explore new ways for you to control it, rather than it control you." After enduring a few more minutes of silence, I decide to try a different approach. " I brought you some cookies," I say with as much enthusiasm as I can muster. At this, he peers out from under the sheet and asks, "What kind?" Relieved to hear some response, I reply "Peanut butter." He puts his hand out, and I place the cookies in it. Both he and the cookies disappear under the sheet. The muted sound of his munching fills the sterile room. Continue reading "The Root of Anger
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Srila Prabhupada: Just do it!
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Srutakirti Prabhu, a disciple and former personal servant of Srila Prabhupada, recounts Prabhupada’s practical instructions regarding chanting rounds.“It was easy to understand that Srila Prabhupada enjoyed chanting japa. He always stressed the importance of chanting our 16 rounds. He once told me that as a householder, he used a simple process for completing 16 rounds that we could apply.
‘When I was a householder,’ Srila Prabhupada said, 'I would chant four rounds before each meal and four rounds before retiring in the evening. In this way 16 rounds could be chanted without difficulty.’ He laughed and said, 'If you don’t take prasadam before chanting your four rounds then you will be sure to get them chanted.


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A young monk and transcendental teamwork. Damodara Krsna dasa:…
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A young monk and transcendental teamwork.
Damodara Krsna dasa: Here is some nectar about traveling book distribution in New Zealand.
I was in Hastings-in-Taranaki, around 6 or 7 in the evening. There were only a few people walking on the street, and one of them was an elderly lady. I approached her. When I said I was a monk, to my surprise she became very delighted and took in her hand the soft Gita I was presenting. After less than a minute of my telling her about the Gita, she said “Can I buy this book?” I said yes, and she gave $10 and sincerely said, “You have just made a young boy very happy.”
I asked her, “Who is he?” and the lady replied, “He’s my grandson. It is his eleventh birthday and he wants to be a monk.”
I thought, “Wow, an eleven-year-old boy who wants to be a monk gets a ‘Bhagavad Gita As It Is’ from his grandmother for a birthday present. Nice.”
Another day, I and two other devotees (Sriman Krishna Prabhu and Bhakta Chi, a practicing medical doctor) visited two small towns called Hawera- and Stratford-in-Taranaki. Two went to one place, and one to the other.
On the second day I was in Stratford and stopped a lady. She was very favorable. The day before she had gotten an “Easy Journey to Other Planets” from Bhakta Chi and read the whole book that night. So she happily gave $20 and took a Bhagavad Gita. That is what I call teamwork. I took her details and plan to get in touch.
The same day in Stratford I approached a lady with children and told her I was a monk. She asked, “Are you from Cambridge?” (Cambridge is a small town outside Hamilton.) I told her I wasn’t, but after speaking to her for awhile I learned that six years ago in Cambridge she’d met Mahavana Prabhu, a devotee who now runs a Brahmacari ashram in Wellington, and had had such a positive impression of him and the prasadam he gave her that she now happily gave me $20 and took a Bhagavad Gita.
My realization is that book distribution is really a team effort, especially in a small place like New Zealand. Each devotee is responsible for leaving every person they meet with a good impression. A person may not get a book from the first devotee they meet, but because they are left with a good impression, the next devotee they meet can distribute a book to them.
Your Servant,
Damodara Krsna dasa

TUESDAY JUNE 14th – Disappearance of Baladeva…
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TUESDAY JUNE 14th - Disappearance of Baladeva Vidyabusana
Baladeva Vidyabhusana, The Gaudiya Vedantist.
“The Gaudiyas should not worship Radha and Krsna together,” the Ramanandis told him.“Radha and Krsna are not married. There is no precedent for Their being worshiped together! Sita and Rama are together, and Laksmi and Narayana, because they are married. But Radha and Krsna are not married.”
Now the Ramanandis were escalating the quarrel. They not only criticised the Gaudiyas’ lineage but also found fault with the Gaudiya method of worship.
The Ramanandis demanded that Radha be removed from the main altar and be placed in another room, to be worshiped separately.
Jai Singh sent word to the mahantas (religious authorities) of the Gaudiya temples. “You must prepare a response to the criticisms voiced by the Ramanandis of Galta Valley. I am sympathetic to your philosophy and practice, but your response must be adequate to silence the Ramanandi panditas, or I shall be forced to separate Radharani from Krsna.”
The mahantas of the four major Gaudiya temples of Amber submitted their response in writing.
They explained that Rupa, Sanatana, and Jiva Gosvamis shared the same opinion about Radha and Krsna:
They could be worshiped either as married (svakiya rasa) or unmarried (parakiya rasa), since both these pastimes (lila) are eternal.
Worship of Krsna in either lila is adequate to establish a devotee’s eternal relationship with the Supreme.
The Ramanandis rejected these arguments. Fighting for their religious and political power, they again approached Jai Singh.
Because Radha and Krsna were not married, the Ramanandis complained, worshiping Them together condoned Their questionable relationship.
The Ramanandis also criticised the Gaudiyas for worshiping Krsna without first worshiping Narayana.
To appease the Ramanandis, Jai Singh told them he would ask the Gaudiyas to place the Deity of Radharani in a separate room.
He would also ask them to explain their breach of Vaisnava etiquette in neglecting Narayana worship, and he would ask them to prove their link with the Madhva sampradaya.
To read the entire article click here: http://goo.gl/1lMCzi

Failing To Succeed. Mahatma das: There is No Failure on the…
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Failing To Succeed.
Mahatma das: There is No Failure on the Spiritual Platform. Spiritual success means to please Krsna and guru, and can sometimes have nothing to do with measurable external results. Since devotional service is absolute, you can even successfully serve Krsna in your mind.
In the Nectar of Devotion there is a story of a devotee who wanted to offer sweet rice (khir) to his Deities, but couldn’t afford the ingredients. So he cooked the sweet rice in his mind. While in this meditation he touched the sweet rice and actually burnt his finger. Even though he only offered it in his mind, Krsna appreciated and accepted that offering.
I suggest that you visualize what kind of devotee you would like to be and what kind of service you would like to render. That is also devotional service. Don’t you think Krsna will be pleased if you think how you can be a better devotee and offer Him better service – even if you can’t realize those goals right away?
Just the fact that you make a goal to be a better devotee or do a particular service is itself devotional service. And, if we always think about doing something there’s a good chance we will do it someday.
Prabhupada thought about preaching in the west for 42 years before he was able and ready to do it. Show Your Heart to Krsna Making goals reveals your heart and desires to Krsna.
The acaryas pray, “When oh when will that day be mine…” in the mood of hankering for a level of Krsna consciousness they presently don’t have. So having clear devotional goals expresses the hankering of your heart to Krsna. And since we are not pure devotees, we can express simple desires, like praying “when oh when will that day be mine when I think of Krsna once and awhile at work.”
Later on you can worry about praying for the day when you will be running along the Yamuna half mad in ecstatic love. Also, research has shown that you are more likely to follow through on a goal if you write it down. Try it.
Even if you think you can’t achieve the goal or won’t follow through, write it down anyway. You’ll be surprised at what happens. I once wrote down some goals and then forgot about them. But a week or so later I found myself pursuing some of those goals even though I hadn’t reviewed my list. So, for example, if you want to wake up an hour earlier every day, just write that goal on a piece of paper and see what happens.
Often, the process of writing down a goal puts that goal into your subconscious and then you start acting on it.
A Devotee Can’t Fail.
Because devotional service is absolute, the effort is spiritual and perfect despite the outcome. Srila Prabhupada’s spiritual master would appreciate a devotee if he sold even one magazine for a few paisa (cents). Prabhupada said there is no question of success or failure in devotional service because our position is like a soldier who has a duty to fight. We simple do our duty. Therefore, the only failure is to not make the effort.
Read more: https://goo.gl/8QtbDU

Bhakti Day Retreat at Bhaktivedanta Manor (Album with photos)…
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Bhakti Day Retreat at Bhaktivedanta Manor (Album with photos)
Thank you to everyone who came this weekend to our day retreat at Bhaktivedanta Manor (Saturday 11th June 2016).
Here are some photos from the first half of the day where we had a vegetarian lunch, a tour through the gardens, took the Bhagavad Gita walk, a talk on Srila Prabhupada and the origins of kirtan in the west (this year is the 50th anniversary!), a visit to see the cows, seminars and Mantra Meditation Q&A, followed by free time to wander before kirtan in the evening.
Find them here: https://goo.gl/BM8dZj

June 14. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations. Satsvarupa…
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June 14. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations.
Satsvarupa dasa Goswami: Prabhupada Talks of His Childhood.
He talked of his childhood at the turn of the century, when street lamps were gas-lit, and carriages and horse-drawn trams were the only vehicles on Calcutta’s dusty streets. These talks charmed the boys even more than the transcendental philosophy of Bhagavad-gita and drew them affectionately to him. He told about his father, Gour Mohan De, a pure Vaisnava. His father had been a cloth merchant, and his family had been intimately related with the aristocratic Mulliks of Calcutta. The Mulliks had a deity of Krishna, and Prabhupada’s father had given him a deity to worship as a child. He used to imitate the worship of the Govinda deity in the Mulliks’ temple. As a boy, he had held his own Ratha-yatra festivals each year, imitating in miniature the gigantic festival at Jagannatha Puri, and his father’s friends used to jest: “Oh, the Ratha-yatra ceremony is going on at your home, and you do not invite us? What is this?” His father would reply, “This is a child’s play, that’s all.” But the neighbors said, “Oh, child’s play? You are avoiding us by saying it’s for children?”
Prabhupada fondly remembered his father, who had never wanted him to be a worldly man, who had given him lessons in mrdanga, and who had prayed to visiting sadhus that one day the boy would grow up to be a devotee of Radharani.
To read the entire article click here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=20490&page=9

Lessons from Coimbatore: Part 4
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(Kadamba Kanana Swami, May 2016, Coimbatore, India, Hospital Conversations)

Coimbatore (3)

The spiritual world is where we should be. Residents of the spiritual world descend to the material world to preach. As long as we are in material consciousness, there is struggle with the senses so we have to take responsibility of preaching like how Haridasa Thakur did.

In distress, still we remain dedicated to Krsna. Our service may be checked by suffering but we accept the suffering if Krsna desires it. Our life belongs to Krsna’s mission – we must directly support the mission; we must find a way to do something even when in distress. We must accept fate. Krsna’s potencies are unlimited, so happiness is unlimited. Krsna consciousness is blissful because it naturally brings human beings to Godhead. Therefore, the topmost devotees see no problem in suffering in devotional service. In the state of bhava, due to vaisnava aparadha, some obstacles may occur but in prema, there are no obstacles!

The body is a jail, other than by Krsna’s mercy we cannot get out of it. This is the nature of the material world. Relation with material energy is false but material energy is not false.

Transcribed by Man Beharini dd from Pune

Chaitanya Mahaprabhu: Scientific Revolutionary in the Field of Consciousness
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By Josh Hawley

This topic is more relevant at this point in time than any other in modern history. We stand at a crossroads of mankind. If the enlightened leadership of mankind can catch a clue from Bhagavatam, and take note of the cause of the "pinprick through out the social body at large, wherein large scale quarrels take place over even less important issues," then there is hope. The problems arising from gross mis-identification with matter is what is unfortunately being perpetuated by the current broad form -slaughter house of the mind psuedo education system- as the goal of life. According to Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, this mis-identification (what is known in the Vedic scientific language as jiva bhuta sanatan) of consciousness with matter is the root cause of all the problems of our existance. It is not the sympton, but the root cause. This negative identification or ahankara conception, which is essentially false mis-identification of our original jiva shakti consciousness with fallible matter as its source. Opposed to the positive conception of (jiva shakti) self consciousness as part and parcel of the infallible Absolute Consciousness or Param Brahma consciousness. This ahankara, self mis-identification, is the beginning of all of our subsequent problems of existence.This is confirmed by the Vedic Scientific Treatise Sri Brahma Samhita: ahankara atmakam vishvam, tasmad etad vyajata. It behooves the atheistic class to promote and disseminate nescience amongst the general masses in order to maintain the illusion of themselves being god. For without nescience as the popular world view, they cannot continue to perpetrate their criminal acts upon humanity and life in general. Continue reading "Chaitanya Mahaprabhu: Scientific Revolutionary in the Field of Consciousness
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On the theory of evolution – Science and Religion
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By Dr. J. Chakrabarty

The concept of evolution of species, generally attributed to Charles Darwin, actually had its origin thousands of years ago in ancient India, and formed the basis of the illuminating philosophy of the Vedas. Since Darwin lived at a time when the profundity of the Indian wisdom already made an indelible impression on the minds of the western savants, it is hard to imagine how Darwin could possibly have escaped the compelling influence of the Indian thoughts while formulating his theory of evolution. Darwin differed, however, from the Indian views on evolution in several respects, all of which made his theory an intellectually unacceptable proposition. Three of the most conspicuous lines of difference between the two theories will be discussed in what follows. Continue reading "On the theory of evolution – Science and Religion
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Duty—with Krishna Consciousness
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By Giriraj Swami

All of us—husbands, wives, mothers, fathers, children, students, and teachers—have duties, and sometimes we begrudge the performance of our duties because we think their execution will impede our personal happiness. But duty is duty, and duty must be done. Even in the cold of winter, one must bathe. And even in the heat of summer, one must cook. " Continue reading "Duty—with Krishna Consciousness
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Kirtan Preaching program in Mayapur (Album with photos) Amazing…
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Kirtan Preaching program in Mayapur (Album with photos)
Amazing photos from our Kirtan preaching program which happened yesterday.
Srila Prabhupada: Chanting of the Hare Krishna mantra is more powerful than Deity worship. Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu set a practical example in that He did not establish any temples or Deities, but He profusely introduced the sankirtana movement. (Srimad-Bhagavatam, 7.14.39 Purport)
Find them here: https://goo.gl/hrDdR4

Friday, June 10th, 2016
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Friday, June 10th, 2016
West of South Bend, Indiana

In Around South Bend

Dave is a teacher from Buchanan, Michigan.  He teaches science in middle school.  We met while he was on his run, and me on my walk.

“Tell me about Hare Krishna.  I remember you guys in the movies at airports.”

“Well, we’re on the road now,” I said jokingly.

Motorists were responding to today’s article in the South Bend Tribune.  Under the heading “Monk Crossing USA on Foot” and sub-heading, “He touts meditative lifestyle by walking.”

The article is by Selena Ponio, and here we have it:

A distance of about 3,000 miles lies between New York City and San Francisco. People tackle this distance daily with planes or cars, but one man's goal is to savor every mile and meticulously chip away at it by using a different method of transportation — his Crocs.

Bhaktimarga Swami, fondly known as "The Walking Monk," passed through Mishawaka and South Bend on Thursday on his journey from New York City to San Francisco. Swami is completing this trip over two summers and is currently in its second phase. He walks 20 miles a day, all with the purpose of promoting a more introspective and ecologically friendly lifestyle.

Garnered in bright orange robes, Swami, a Hare Krishna monk, was anything but subtle as he walked west along Jefferson Boulevard, having departed from Elkhart earlier in the day. He said he believes walking solves a multitude of problems related to both physical and mental health and provides vital down-time dedicated to introspection.

"Your appreciation is enhanced and you're humbled by what you see because you're going through the elements," Swami said. "You develop a tougher skin when you're walking and at the same time your heart softens."

Born in Ontario, Canada, Swami has walked the entire length of Canada four times. He has also walked through other countries such as Ireland, Trinidad and Israel.

Swami occasionally has a support person with him or followers who join him briefly, but for the most part he walks alone. However, he said, from a spiritual perspective he never feels alone.

Swami said walking is important for its meditative qualities and also to allow time for an individual to reprocess a day's information. Speaking in front of the Basilica of the Sacred Heart at the University of Notre Dame, he related his advice to students, and said that learning should not just be an absorption of information, but a reiteration of it.

"Take a little time for exhalation, and that comes best in the form of walk," Swami said. "Before you're put in the world of action, before you lay it all before you ... reiterate what you've learned."

May the Source be with you!

21 miles


Thursday, June 9th, 2016
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Thursday, June 9th, 2016
Mishawaka, Indiana

Johnny, the Mechanic and Others

We met Johnny, the mechanic.  I couldn’t hear what he was saying over the traffic noise.  He was definitely addressing myself so I and Gopal decided to cross the street in order to make things audible.  While working on a vehicle he repeated himself, “That’s an interesting dress you got on!”

“They’re actually robes.  I’m a monk.”

“Oh, yeah!?  Are you on your way to the monastery?”

“Not really,” and then we explained.  He broke away from his work and we shook hands as best as we could through a meshed metal gate.  Uttama was near.  He parked the van and came over with two publications, one of them was “Chant and Be Happy,” he passed them over the fence to Johnny. Elated to receive them, he gave a $20 bill and said, “Get some water with that!”  He chuckled.

At the university campus of Notre Dame we paid a visit to the Basilica if the Sacred Heart.  The interior is awe-inspiring.  There we arranged to meet Selena Ponio of the “South Bend Tribune” for an interview.  She asked for the purpose behind the walk and that opened up to a deeper explanation than we presented to Johnny.  We had the time to do so.

“I’m doing this to encourage introspective walking and, when the opportunity arises, to speak about the secret combat,” the battle within-- with the demons inside: lust, anger, and greed.

Gopal and I ventured on for the last leg of today’s trek.  We left the sidewalk to enter a pub, but only to get some fluid-- water-- and to discharge. Otherwise I have no business being there.  Sure enough, we made friends.  Sitting at the bar was Dave.  He knew the protocol.

“Namaste!”  He said and put together his palms spontaneously.

May the Source be with you!

21 miles

Wednesday, June 8th, 2016
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Wednesday, June 8th, 2016
Bristol, Indiana

Slow Down!

The theme of the day was like the lines from Simon and Garfunkel's song which goes, "Slow down, you move too fast.  You've got to make the mornin' last...Hello, lamp-post, whatcha knowin'..."

As Uttama and I approached the area of Bristol we witnessed quite the frenzy and frequency of cars zipping by.  The sudden drench of rain didn't slow down traffic, nor did it slow me down.  Uttama vied for standing under a tree but I know from experience that you're better to keep going because that means keeping warm.  Fortunately Gopal came with the van to fetch Uttama.  I stayed on and I witnessed, once again, the fast pace of life.

One man, with that corporate appearance, pulled over and asked if I could share some wisdom.  My response, "We're human and we're meant for walking and being spiritual."

The fellow said, "In this area, where there are the Amish, they insist on a slower pace of life."  And that is so because in the madness of traffic the Amish of the old order passed by me with horse and buggy.  It is totally accepted by the big truck people and the young guys in Cameros - they slow down.  I might also add, that the Amish ride in style.

Later I met a sweet young woman in her middle-age who was walking, and we converged at the same juncture on highway 120.  She spoke about her philosophy, "I walk every day because I want to be fit to serve the Lord and others."

"Good girl!" I thought.  She hit it, spot on.  She was going at the speed of 3 miles per hour - my speed.  It is a pace that’s more calm than all the traffic.  Keep singin' it, Simon and Garfunkel.

May the Source be with you!

20 miles

Tuesday, June 7th, 2016
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Tuesday, June 7th, 2016
Howe, Indiana

We Were Proud

We were proud of the fact that Uttama and I, with Gopal's driving help, were able to kickstart today's trek before 4 AM.  A chill set in overnight, but that's what compels one to walk faster.  We moved at a desirable clip.  When there is a cool snap throughout the day, your bodily intake changes.  You get hungry, as opposed to thirsty.

Lightly salted peanuts has always been a favourite snack on these long treks.  They are cheap, delicious, protein-powered, and they make you feel grounded.  If organic – that’s the best.

I share delectable items with those who travel with me.  For lunch it is left-over items - today we had avocado/olive sandwiches.  I gave Uttama my thumbs-up on his creation.  It goes down so well in as much as the spaghetti did at supper-time, prepared by the same chef. 

It is Chandrashekar, 64, my godbrother from the area that gave us a family summer cottage for three days as our rendezvous and rest stop at night.  We relax at this Harrison Lake State Park; read, write, check emails, and take a leg massage.

Massage, stretch, rest, and swim (or shower) are what the legs and feet crave after a full day on the road.  Walking is a rhythmic routine, whose glamour has been obscured by machinery.

Ah, yes, the machinery.  Gopal and I trekked along the 120 and were dwarfed by the irrigation machines.  We might criticize farmers for being too high-tech and letting machines do everything for them, but I see they are not lazy in the least.

Come to think of it, Krishna grew up on a farm.  Life was more simple then.

May the Source be with you!

20 miles


Monday, June 6th, 2016
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Monday, June 6th, 2016
Orland, Indiana

I Don't Have To Go To The Gym

Ben, at age 77, told me-- as he was hauling and tossing the last of his firewood into the back of his pick-up-- "I do these physical things and I don't have to go to the gym."  He said it jovially after our mutual, short introduction while traffic was passing by.  The location was at a cemetery, west of Fremont, along Hwy. 120.  It was a maple tree that was chain-sawed down and Ben was called on to collect it.

He didn't expect to see a pedestrian coming.  We hit it off good and shared farm-pastimes (I was raised on one).

A second installment of dialogue happened with him and his wife, Judy, also 77, where by chance we had chosen - as our team's picnic site - the field right next to their home.  Judy introduced herself as being delightfully 'nosey.'  At this time we talked more along the lines of morality and spiritual things.

What a lovely, amiable couple they were!  I would have liked for them to join me, but that would not be realistic.

The Herald-Republic News sent a rep. and we met at the main juncture of highways 20 and 327-- in the heart of the town, Orland.  Patrick Redmonds had many questions about my routine, about life as a monk and what all that entails.  Some curious young folks came by in the middle of our talk and shot us (with a camera).  They were coming down the sidewalk as Patrick and I chatted.

"How do young people respond to you?"

"Let's see!  Try me out!"

And so I shared some points of Vedic truth, about identity-crisis and how we may view the physical body as a shell and the real person being the spirit within.

The day went by with the speed of lightening.  It can be an overwhelming experience.  Walking cuts time.

May the Source be with you!

19 miles


Sunday, June 5th, 2016
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Sunday, June 5th, 2016
Indiana State Line

Feel Like Narada

I do feel like Narada Muni, the sage of ancient India who travelled on foot though flatlands and valleys, by mountains and through forests.  He eventually met God.  As a young man he felt quite displeased, but in a positive way, when his mother passed, so he took to travel.

I also went the way of the pilgrim and just today encountered an array of terrain through lower Michigan on Territorial Road, where land is rather horizontal and then starts transforming into rolling hills, becoming more lake-like with trees.

I saw my first fair-sized turtle.  There was God in the form of much life, big and small, as many entities both domestic and wild, revealing themselves by the side of the road.  Possums and raccoons have a tough time with vehicles.  They are lucky if they can cross the line.

Speaking of which, my team and I reached a milestone by crossing the Indiana State Line.  Shortly thereafter authorities came in response to a call that someone was walking on the side of the road and was exposing himself.  Of course there was nothing of the sort taking place, although in the ancient tradition of India, some sages, like Shukadev, were known to wander with the elements as their wear.

To highlight the day Kathleen and Mike Connell had us over for light lunch at their summer home, at Lake Diane.  She is a public relations person and Mike teaches business at a Toledo university.  They were a pleasant couple, as pleasant as could be, and we will not forget them.

Walking in and about neighbourliness gives a reminder of the Great Spirit.

May the Source be with you!

20 miles

Lord Jagannath’s cart in Puri is getting ready! (Album…
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Lord Jagannath’s cart in Puri is getting ready! (Album with photos)
Srila Prabhupada: Our relationship with Krishna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, is eternal. Nitya-siddha Krishna-prema. The pure souls are eternally in love with Krishna. Simply by chanting the Hare Krishna mantra one revives his original relationship with God and thus becomes so happy that he does not want anything material. (Srimad-Bhagavatam, 7.7.39 Purport)
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After 9 months of courses at ISKCON Leicester from the 60…
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After 9 months of courses at ISKCON Leicester from the 60 students, 15 remained. Completing the Explore, Gita Life and Bhakti Life they are the latest members of Prabhupada’s family all who have now taken up the chanting of the Holy names and following the regulative principles.
200 gallons of blood is what Bhaktisiddhanta said. I have finally realised what this means.
In September we enroll even more students with the hope of leading as many more souls to the lotus feet of Sri Caitanya as we can.
Consistency is what’s needed then let the Lord work his magic.
Great group effort and I am sure Prabhupada is happy with everyone. Kiran Tailor Sachi-Tanaya Das jay
Ps. thanks to Gurudas and Sutapa for coming and doing a session for the new sanga of graduates.

Saving a life! Caitanya Candra Dasa: I was distributing…
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Saving a life!
Caitanya Candra Dasa: I was distributing SrilaPrabhupada’s books in the same spot in Gothenburg, Sweden for the whole month of the 2016 Prabhupada Marathon, except for one half-hour of the last day, when, for some reason, I decided to try the other side of the walkway. There I stopped a well-dressed man, aged 36. I told him who we are and what our books are about and said that these books help with everyday problems like stress and depression.
He looked at me with a shocked look, and then he told me, “Believe me or not, but I am just on the way to go and kill myself by jumping off a bridge. I have had enough. I just can’t take it anymore. I want to end it all. But I see this as a divine intervention that you have stopped me. I believe in karma, so somehow it is our fate to meet, and to meet right now.”
It turned that the man, Sun, has three children, a well-paid job, and a good relationship with his wife. But on weekends (this was a Saturday), he goes crazy and drinks and takes drugs and is therefore a bad husband and father. And he’s had enough of that.
We spoke for about forty minutes, and I explained to him the benefits of chanting and finding inner contentment and unlocking the happiness within. We spoke about his kids, and he began to feel enlivened. He basically found hope by our meeting and getting a Chant and be Happy. He clutched the book like someone holding a lifeline and mentioned over and over again that this is no coincidence that we met and this was a life-changing event. He then gave a nice donation and left.
As he was leaving I asked him, “You’re not going to jump off the bridge?”
“No, I’m going to go and read this book. You just changed my life.”
Sadly, I was unable to get his contact info. Somehow, Krishna guided me to go on the other side of the walkway for that short time to meet him. Right after that meeting I went back to my old spot and continued.
Your aspiring servant,
Caitanya Candra Dasa
Hungary