May 30. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations. Satsvarupa…
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May 30. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations.
Satsvarupa dasa Goswami: Prabhupada’s Entrance.
The summer evening was warm, and in the storefront the back windows and front door were opened wide. Young men, several of them dressed in black denims and button-down sport shirts with broad, dull stripes, had left their worn sneakers by the front door and were now sitting on the floor. Most of them were from the Lower East Side; no one had to go to great trouble to come here. The little room was barren. No pictures, no furniture, no rug, not even a chair. Only a few plain straw mats. A single bulb hung from the ceiling in the center of the room. It was seven o’clock, and about a dozen people had gathered when the Swami suddenly opened the side door and entered the room.
He wasn’t wearing a shirt, and the saffron cloth that draped his torso left his arms and some of his chest bare. His complexion was smooth golden brown, and as they watched him, his head shaven, his ears long-lobed, and his aspect grave, he seemed like pictures they’d seen of the Buddha in meditation. He was old, yet erect in his posture, fresh and radiant. His forehead was decorated with the yellowish clay markings of the Vaisnavas. Prabhupada recognized big, bearded Howard and smiled. “You have brought your friends?”
“Yes,” Howard answered in his loud, resonant voice.
“Ah, very good.”
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ISKCON Scarborough – HG Kratu Prabhu will be giving a special class coming Friday
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Hare Krishna!
Please accept our humble obeisances!
All glories to Srila Prabhupada!
All glories to Sri Guru and Sri Gauranga!

His Grace Kratu Prabhu - a disciple of His Divine Grace A . C . Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada will be gracing us with his presence coming Friday - 3rd June 2016.
Program starts at 6.45 pm sharp!

Prabhu will also be taking part in a live radio program on Saturday - 4th June 2016 at the Geethavaani radio station from 10 am to 11 am.

Srimad Bhagavatam 4.30.34

Even a moment's association with a pure devotee cannot be compared to being transferred to heavenly planets or even merging into the Brahman effulgence in complete liberation. For living entities who are destined to give up the body and die, association with pure devotees is the highest benediction.



Bio data of HG Kratu prabhu:

Kratu Prabhu was born in aristocratic Gujarati Gaudiya Vasihnava family on July 5, 1944. His father was an ardent vaishnava and his mother persistently chanted 16 rounds of Hare Krishna maha-mantra. His wife Her Grace Amrita Devi Dasi is also initiated disciple of Srila Prabhupada.

During high schooling years, he became president of the students union and went on to receive a bachelor degree in engineering from the M.S. University, Baroda. He also achieved a Masters degree in Engineering from St. Louis University, Missouri USA.

His first exposure to ISKCON happened in 1970, at St. Louis. He later joined full-time in 1974, in Toronto. He met his Guru, His Divine Grace Srila Prabhupada in 1976, from whom he received a direct order for preaching Krishna consciousness. He and his wife were initiated by Srila Prabhupada in 1977 in Toronto, Canada.

While in West, he worked as professional engineer for five years in Toronto In Chicago he worked for Chicago temple as director of congregational preaching. He then become temple President of Vancouver temple in 1987. In 1993, he moved to Baroda, Gujarat and conducted college and school preaching. He also started a book distribution program by Bullock Cart for every town and village. In 1997, he became temple President of ISKCON, Delhi and continued house and pandal preaching programs.


In 2002, he became an initiating Spiritual Master in ISKCON and is ever since vigorously travelling and preaching all over the world.

A warm invitation goes out to you and your family to join us coming Friday

With best wishes from,


ISKCON Scarborough
3500 McNicoll Avenue, Unit #3,
Scarborough,Ontario,
Canada,M1V4C7


Email Address:
iskconscarborough@hotmail.com

website:
www.iskconscarborough.com

        

Top priority
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(Kadamba Kanana Swami, 22 December 2014, Cape Town, South Africa, Srimad Bhagavatam 9.19.19)

Radha_MadhavaThis human life is very short and we have to be very careful that we do not waste the opportunity to go back to Godhead. In whatever we do, do what you have to BUT, do not, in any way, jeopardize the opportunity for going back to Godhead. That is the first priority in life. Whatever we do, that should never, in anyway, come in the second place for a moment. And for the rest, do what you have to do; that is up to you!

Iskcon UK, Bath Rathayatra 2016 (Album with photos) Srila…
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Iskcon UK, Bath Rathayatra 2016 (Album with photos)
Srila Prabhupada: “The essence of all Vedic knowledge—comprehending the three kinds of Vedic activity, the Vedic hymns, and the processes for satisfying the demigods—is included in the eight syllables Hare Krishna Hare Krishna. This is the reality of all Vedanta. The chanting of the holy name is the only means to cross the ocean of nescience.” (Narada-pancharatra)
Find them here: https://goo.gl/PFZbUj

Sri Sri Radhika Bansidhar in Nagar Untari – Garhwa,…
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Sri Sri Radhika Bansidhar in Nagar Untari - Garhwa, Jharkhand:
The beautiful murti of Sri Sri Radhika Bansidhar was established by a great devotee of Lord Krishna, the Queen of Garhwa (Jharkhand in India), Shivmaani Kunwar Dev in 1830s. The 32 Mann (1280 Kg) murti of Lord Bansidhar is made up of pure gold and was buried in Shiva Pahari of Garhwa for 120 years. The murti is found in Shubh Samvat 1885, when Dynasty of King Bhawani Singh. His wife Smt Shivmani Kunwar is devotee of the Lord Krishna. She was widow and not having any child. She was very kind and generous and devotee to the Lord Krishna. On the day of Janamashtmi (birth day of Lord Krishna) she was dreamed of the Lord and found him calling to come and get me to your place. When she woke up in the morning she called to the assistance and explain the whole story. A team of Karmakandi pundits, rajkarmachari and team of musical team proceeded to find the murti. When she reached that space, the same space appearing in the dream, digging work started taking place along with the citation of Vedic mantras. The head of the murti started appearing. After some time the whole murti came out. The murti is a symbol of artistic metal work of the era of Samvat 1761. Lord Krishna is situated on a lotus flower inbuilt on Sheshnag. In this murti He is appearing in a smiling face with flute. The height of the murti is 4 feet and weights approx. 1280 Kg. The other murti, besides Lord Krishna, His beloved Radha, is made of alloy of Astdhatu by the artists from Varanasi and is placed by Ms. Shivmani Kunwar
It is believed that this yellow metallic beautiful, attractive and artistic rare murti is not available anywhere else in this world.
The murti was earlier worshiped by the daughter of Aurangzeb and later by the daughter of the King of Singrauli. At that time, Srimati Radhika Ji was also present. During the reign of Ahmad Shah Durrani of Iran, Lord Krishna’s murti was separated from Srimati Radha Rani and hidden inside a hill (Shiva Pahari) in Garhwa district of Jharkhand by the followers of Shivaji. Radha Rani’s murti remained in Singrauli with the daughter of the King of Singrauli and later it was submerged with the fort in Rihand Dam. During summer, the part of the fort is still visible in Rihand Dam.
Presently, the murti of Sri Sri Bansidhar Radhika Ji is established in Nagar Untari of Garhwa district of Jharkhand and the murti of Radharani was created in Varanasi from the Asht Dhatu.
Yours Servant
Somendranatha Das (Disciple of HH Gopal Krishna Goswami)

Saint Cynic and modern cynics
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By Kasya das

Gradually he loses good faith, and finally stops to believe anyone and anything. Everywhere he sees only bad. No other choice is left for him, but to become a cynic, because he is not educated in the culture of Krishna consciousness. He knows not Bhagavad-gita. He does not know how to face such a load of badness. He at all does not know what to think about it. Therefore he joins the cynical attitude of a demon, "Everything is just bad and hopeless. Better I join the club of cynics and demons." Then he becomes full fledged demon too. But saintly person, devotee of Krishna sees same things, but puts no faith in them. He know that everything is wrong and temporary, and that positive option rests behind - the soul full of knowledge, unending spiritual bliss and almighty God with absolute will, tolerance and kindness. But cynic says something here too, "It is just your opinion." He does not see and does not waant to accept something better. He always leans towards worse. Vaisnava always chooses better option. Fly is always looking for stool and rotting, but bee is seeking nectar. That is about nature. There is the dividing line between cynic and skeptic. Cynic does not want to see anything first-rate. He lives out from doubting any good intentions and ultimately doubting motives of God and His very existence. Whereas skeptic is pessimistic about being happy in the material world. He has no faith for a slight enjoyment and happiness existing without God. Here is a short story and a piece of history to illustrate how the construct cynic came into terminology. In ancient Greece was one ascetic saint, who lived in the forest. Continue reading "Saint Cynic and modern cynics
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Putting on Tilaka In the Uttara-khanada of the Padma Purana,…
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Putting on Tilaka
In the Uttara-khanada of the Padma Purana, Lord Shiva says to Parvati that in the middle of the “V” of the Vaishnava tilaka mark there is a space and in that space reside Lakshmi and Narayana. Therefore, the body that is decorated with tilaka should be considered a temple of Lord Vishnu. The Padma Purana also states:
vama-parshve sthito brahma
dakshine cha sadashivaha
madhye vishnum vijaniyat
Tasman madhyam na lepayet
“On the left side of the tilaka Lord Brahma is situated, and on the right side is Sadashiva, but one should know that in the middle dwells Lord Vishnu. Therefore one should not smear the middle section.”
One should pour a little water into the palm of his left hand and rub gopi-chandana (mud from Dwaraka) into it. When making Tilaka the following mantra from the Uttara Khanda of the Padma Purana:
lalate keshavam dhyayen
narayanam athodare
vaksha-sthale madhavam tu
govindam kantha-kupake
vishnum cha dakshine kukshau
bahau cha madhusudanam
trivikramam kandare tu
vamanam vama-parshvake
shridharam vama-bahau tu
hrishikesham cha kandhare
pristhe tu padma-nabham cha
katyam damodaram nyaset
tat prakshalana-toyam tu
vasudeveti murdhani
In accordance with the above mentioned mantra one should apply the gopi-chandana with the ball of the middle finger tip to make the tilaka marks on the twelve parts of the body. According to the Brahmanda Purana, one should not use the fingernail to make the space in the middle of the tilaka. One should place a thin damp cloth over the finger and make the space with that. Thus, when the tilaka is applied, the following mantras should be chanted:
The forehead–om keshavaya namaha
The belly–om narayanaya namaha
The chest–om madhavaya namaha
The throat–om govindaya namaha
The right side of the waist–om vishnave namaha
The right upper arm–om madhusudanaya namaha
The right shoulder–om trivikramaya namaha
The left side of the waist–om vamanaya namaha
The left upper arm–om shridharaya namaha
The left shoulder–om hrishikeshaya namaha
The upper back–om padmanabhaya namaha
The lower back–om damodaraya namaha
Finally, after washing one’s had, whatever water is left should be wiped on the top of the head in the region of the shikha (tuft of hair) with the mantra: om vasudevaya namaha.
In the Padma Purana it is stated:
nasadi-kesha-paryantam
urdhva-pundram sushobhanam
madhye chidra-samayuktam
tad vidyad dhari-mandiram
“That marking (of tilaka), which begins from the root of the nose and extends up to the hairline, which has a space in it and is very beautiful, is known as urdhva-pundra (tilaka). One should know it to be a temple of Lord Hari [Vishnu].” The Padma Purana also mentions that the tilaka marking should only extend three quarters of the way down the nose from the root of the nose, which is located between the eyebrows. The space in the middle of the tilaka should begin from between the eyebrows and extend up to the hairline. The marking on the nose and forehead should be connected. That is a perfect tilaka marking.
Read more: http://goo.gl/XjhYPu

Blessed Granny
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Hare KrishnaBy Sivarama Swami

About a week later I overheard a conversation between my mother and grandmother. Granny was saying that this was not some ordinary book. She said that what Prabhupada was saying is what Jesus Christ said and that Krsna is God. I was very surprised. She said we should listen to what Prabhupada said and chant Hare Krsna because that was the religion for this age. There was a lot of talk about how Christianity was no more and no one was following the Bible but what Prabhupada said was pure and perfect. Things really took a turn from there. One day my grandmother visited the nama-hatta [local Krsna center] here and began to chant on beads. She also began to buy Prabhupada's books one by one. She was spending all her pension buying what she called the "beautiful holy Bhagavatam." Sometimes she could only afford to eat potatoes, but she kept buying the books. The devotees even came to her flat and helped her set up an altar. When I went upstairs, there were Krsna pictures everywhere. Continue reading "Blessed Granny
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5th Annual Sadhu Sanga Kirtan Retreat (video) Srila Prabhupada:…
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5th Annual Sadhu Sanga Kirtan Retreat (video)
Srila Prabhupada: “The essence of all Vedic knowledge—comprehending the three kinds of Vedic activity, the Vedic hymns, and the processes for satisfying the demigods—is included in the eight syllables Hare Krishna Hare Krishna. This is the reality of all Vedanta. The chanting of the holy name is the only means to cross the ocean of nescience.” (Narada-pancharatra)
Watch it here: https://goo.gl/PLelBz

The demon within. Kadamba Kanana Swami: It is true that there…
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The demon within.
Kadamba Kanana Swami: It is true that there is that inner animal within us. The animal that we hide. The animal that lives behind the saintly expressions on our faces. There is this animal and we have chained him up in regulative principles by Srila Prabhupada’s mercy but he wants to break loose. That inner animal which lives within and he OR SHE wants to break loose and waits for opportunities!
I like this theme. I found it somewhere in a magazine, a lady writer picked up on it. She had this bag of special chips and she was like really lusting over the chips in her mind for a long time, and was waiting for an opportunity to sort of like get into it and stuff them in her mouth. So when no one was around, she attacked it, ripped it open and just like packed it in… and then someone came!
Now we can easily translate that into a mangal aarti sweet. You know, you get caught just as you secretly stuff it in your face. For a moment, you give some room to lusty desires by taking shelter of prasadam. It is good to take shelter of prasadam but you feel embarrassed when you get caught with a mouthful and you try to inconspicuously swallow it, as if everybody does not know what you doing since everybody you know does it too!
The point I am making is that it shows that we are indeed a combination of the modes of material nature and that indeed all these pushings of the senses are within us and we are controlling them with good behaviour. We say the right words, “Jaya… nectar… bliss.” Whatever words are there in the jargon, we say them and we dress in a particular sort of way… We are experts in projecting an image but internally it is still raging – there is still a volcano. There are still so many influences pulling us in so many directions. And therefore there is still a little bit of Kamsa in us… still a little bit of Putana and still a little bit of all these demoniac personalities.
(Kadamba Kanana Swami, 04 February 2016, Bhaktivedanta Manor, United Kingdom, Srimad Bhagavatam 10.2.21)

A House of Harmony: A College Student’s Hare Krishna Experience
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By Bhakta Patrick

My first encounter of the devotees was an unexpected one. I’d heard about the Hare Krishnas before (most notably from when they were mentioned by Kermit the Frog in that seminal classic, The Muppet Movie), and only thought them as funny looking but probably good natured people in orange robes singing and dancing in the street, and this is the extent to which I suspect most college students know ISKCON. At my university, the students may talk to the devotees when they see them on their bi-weekly campus harinam, maybe sit and listen to the kirtan, maybe even take a book, but they seldom, in my experience, tried to understand why they were there beyond playing cool music and distributing tasty cookies and ginger-ade.

I, however, a curious freshman English major, decided to go further one day when I saw the friendly neighborhood representatives of Lord Caitanya’s Sankirtan army chanting under a tree outside the humanities building; a curious sight for a Thursday afternoon.

Now, I am not a socially adept person. Since I’ve been making coherent sentences I have yet to master the treacherous art of small talk. Still, my interest overcame my social anxiety, I suppose, and I approached one of the devotees. “Um… hi there!”

“Hey!” she said, smiling. Her sari was rippling violently in the wind, but she didn’t seem to mind.

“Are you guys Hare Krishnas?” I asked. What a stupid question. Who else could they be?

“Yes! You’ve heard about us?”

I proceeded to summarize to her my experience with Hindu scriptures and my geeky love of Sanskrit literature. I’d studied the Bhagavad Gita in school, and had also read versions of the Mahabharata and Ramayana, as well as some of Kalidasa’s plays, the Upanishads, and the Panchatantra.

“That’s wonderful!” she beamed.

“You should come to our center!” piped a shiny-headed devotee with a melodious Indian accent, “We have kirtan every night, and we serve free food afterwards!” He handed me a floral printed card that read “HARMONY COLLECTIVE: Learning Love through Cooperation”

I decided to go. They had me at “free food”.

The Harmony Collective is located, aptly, at 108 North Adams St. near Downtown Ypsilanti, in an old Victorian looking house that sports chipping chartreuse paint and dusky orange windowsills. Upon entering, I tried to make small talk with the devotees but was distracted by the walls, which sported small pictures and tapestries featuring stories from the scriptures; the epic Battle at Kurukshetra, the Gopis in the midst of their blissful Rasa Dance, and Krishna himself, the divine, sky-blue toddler, eating butter straight from the churn.

When I went upstairs to the altar room, kirtan was in full swing. Sitting down on cushions was Sidha (the Indian devotee who handed me the card). He greeted me with an enthusiastic “Ayeeeee!” and bade me sit down. At first, I was somewhat, if not extremely uncomfortable. Interacting with strangers is always uncomfortable. But, I decided to just close my eyes and roll with the tide.

Sooner or later, things got really, really, fun. I found that I loved making music with these people, reveling in the funky, driving rhythms, the sudden tempo changes. As with many college musicians going into a non-musical field, with the load of classes, homework, and social life, one barely has time to sing or play. I found that I really missed this.

After kirtan, I chatted up the founder of the Harmony Collective, the mellow yet piercingly intelligent Deva Madhava Das, and his wife, the equally remarkable Phalguni Radhika Devi Dasi, who was the woman who was leading kirtan that evening. I quickly struck up a friendship with her in particular, and on my subsequent visits we would discuss philosophy, scripture, literature, and our love of BBC comedy quiz-panel shows with equal enthusiasm.

I found myself being drawn to this place; no matter how hectic things got with school I always found ways to come back and visit, and I was always greeted with smiles and “how are you”s from all. It felt like things were slower there, less apprehensive, less worried than the fast-paced atmosphere of campus. No matter what was going on with my mammoth homework load or my social life or my dank existential anxiety about careers and the future, I knew I could always come to the Harmony Collective for a place to breathe and re-assess.

As I got more familiar with the HC’s devotee community, I inevitably got more familiar with Krishna Conscious philosophy. Prabhupad’s Gita, given to me by Sidha Hari on our first meeting, was different than the thin, more academic Gitas I’d read in the past. Upon diving in, I found Prabhupad’s commentary much more elaborate and distinct from interpretations I’d studied, but the process of cultivating sincere devotion and an emphasis on one’s personal relationship with God described in Prabhupad’s purports attracted me greatly.

Soon I was setting up a small altar in my room and chanting semi-regularly on beads given to me by Phalguni. By the end of the semester, I knew how to play the harmonium, how to do the swami step, and who the heck Hiranyakashipu is. Visiting devotees started referring to me happily as “Bhakta Patrick”. I liked that. It rang.

My parents, however were not so congenial. When I first mentioned to them that I went to the devotees for dinner one night, they responded with two resounding words: “STAY AWAY.” Do not pass Go. Do not collect $200. I chalked this up to anxiety about me being away for the year, so I waited for a while and tried to drop subtle hints, saying things like “oh if I run out of meal plans I could always go to the Hare Krishnas”, and “I was at this Interfaith thing and the Hare Krishnas brought free food”, but alas they never warmed up to the idea, and remain decidedly cool to this day. It’s why I often find myself coming up with explanations like, “I’m going to this event put on my friend who runs a Yoga Center. It’s also why I didn’t use my full name to submit this article.

I brought this up to Phalguni one night as we hung out and watched everyone’s favorite T.V show featuring a magical azure flautist, Little Krishna.

“Parents are always like that”. She told me, “Mine totally were. It’ll take some time.”

“I have to tell them sooner or later, though” I said.

“You should invite them over” said Phalguni, sipping her hot mug of ginger tea, a Harmony Collective specialty. “Have them sit down and talk with us. Once they realize what we actually do here, they’ll be less freaked out. One time this kid documented us for his photography project and thought it was going to be exposing some weird cult thing, but all we really do is cook and play music.”

“I suppose so…” I imagined my parents meeting the devotees, a bizarre thought. I’ve always been the adventurous one in the family, so they’ve always been worried that my curiosity would get the better of me. Me joining a cult was, apparently, one of the worries on their list.

“Deva’s great with parents. There hasn’t been a parent he’s talked to that hasn’t liked him” she smiled, “Besides, he’s always willing to wear pants instead of a dhoti if he has to.” It was comforting to hear, but I don’t think I’ll take Phalguni up on her offer quite yet. Someday, but not today.

At the beginning of the winter semester, I arranged to stay at the Harmony Collective for a few days before classes started, and boy was I excited. I couldn’t wait to jump into doing all kinds of service and hang out with some of my favorite friends. What could be better than three days of spiritual renewal before being thrust headlong into that cyclone of schoolwork and extra curriculars?

It turned out to be less renewing than I expected.

Transitioning from reading and watching Netflix on the couch at home to being in an environment where everything is all Krishna all the time proved to be a heck of an adjustment, and not a comfortable one. I was glad to have the company of my friends, but as we settled into the daily routine, doubts about my bhakti practice began to surface, and I quickly began to feel overwhelmed and ill at ease. During Bhagavatam class, I’d listen to lessons that I did not understand, and, in some cases, didn’t agree with, but somehow I felt obligated to readily accept. As a few of us ventured out into the frozen wasteland of Ann Arbor for a bone-chillingly cold sankirtan , all the while eyed suspiciously by passersby, I found myself thinking, “Why am I even doing this?”. I quickly realized that I was in too deep, and, I feared that the devotees perceived me as more Hare Krishna than I actually was.

I decided not to take part in the 10 hour Kirtan that Sidha Hari had spontaneously scheduled on my final evening at the house. Phalguni and I stayed in the kitchen, busying ourselves with salad dressing and Ekadasi pakoras. As we were finishing up, I asked for a word.

“If I ever decided… like… not to be a devotee” the words caught in my throat, “would you be disappointed?”

She sighed and took my hand. Whenever I ask someone a hard or difficult question my mind always goes through a rolodex of potential responses, most of them bad ones. The rolodex was going full speed on this one.

“You shouldn’t let me influence what direction you take your spiritual life” she said, “You need to do what you feel is right, regardless of what anyone might think”. The thing about Phalguni is she has these wide, compassionate eyes that can stare directly into your soul, but in a reassuring way, not a creepy one.

I proceeded to vomit forth my concerns about Krishna Consciousness in an incoherent, anxiety driven babble. Phalguni squeezed my hand and said, “Don’t worry about it. This place is meant to be a shelter; somewhere where you can come to rest and plug in, not where you have to worry about living up to expectations. We’re not here to make you into a devotee. We love you, and we care about you, and we just want to help you have the best spiritual life you possibly can.”

And then I cried. All over her shoulder. Seldom in my life have I felt so loved and unconditionally accepted by anyone, and the reassurance and comfort was just as overwhelming as my anxiety had been, if not infinitely more so. After pulling myself together, we chatted for a bit, took some Prasad, and then went upstairs for the last leg of the kirtan. As we jammed together late into the night, I couldn’t help but think about how lucky I was to experience a community like this; not a lot of people get to. But, I suppose that is precisely what Deva and the gang are trying to do, to give community to anyone who needs it.

I have gone on to make many great memories with the devotees, including packing inside a huge auditorium to hear Radanath Swami speak, going on a 14 mile, ten hour sankirtan extravaganza across Detroit, and I plan to go Michigan YogaFest with them later this year. I love these people so much that how could I not? I’m not a Krishna devotee, and I doubt that I will ever be, but at the Harmony Collective that doesn’t matter. It never really did. It’s the mark of a genuinely loving spiritual community that one can feel loved and accepted. No conditions. No expectations. Just mutual compassion and respect, and everyone needs that, Krishna or no Krishna.

The Harmony Collective is a place where you can come to grow, connect, and feel welcome. It’s just as beneficial for people who wish to dive deep into Krishna Consciousness as for people who just want to enjoy nice music enlightening conversation, and good food. For me, whatever happens to me on my journey, at the Harmony Collective I always feel at home.

I think everyone need something like that; a spiritual home away from home. People seek it out in different ways and find it in surprising places. I can’t speak for anyone else, but there’s one thing I know for sure.

I’ve found mine.

Harinama in the Czech Republic (Album with photos) Srila…
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Harinama in the Czech Republic (Album with photos)
Srila Prabhupada: In the material world, everything is full of anxiety (kuntha), whereas in the spiritual world (Vaikuntha) everything is free from anxiety. Therefore, those who are afflicted by a combination of anxieties cannot understand the Hare Krishna mantra, which is free from all anxiety. (Sri-Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi-lila, 7.74 Purport)
Find them here: https://goo.gl/O8fuUh

5th Annual Sadhu Sanga Kirtan Retreat (Album with…
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5th Annual Sadhu Sanga Kirtan Retreat (Album with photos)
Ecstatic kirtans, inspiring classes and delicious prasadam in the amazing association of exalted devotees of Sri Sri Radha and Krishna in Boone, North Carolina, USA.
Srila Prabhupada: Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu’s transcendental mission is to distribute love of Godhead to everyone. Anyone who accepts God as the Supreme can take to the process of chanting Hare Krishna and become a lover of God. (Sri Caitanya-caritamrta, Adi-lila, 4.41 Purport)
Find them here: https://goo.gl/vZtZN5

May 29. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations. Satsvarupa…
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May 29. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations.
Satsvarupa dasa Goswami: Howard Wheeler Meets Swamiji.
Howard Wheeler was hurrying from his apartment on Mott Street to a friend’s apartment on Fifth Street, a quiet place where he hoped to find some peace. He walked up Mott Street to Houston, turned left and began to walk east, across Bowery, past the rushing traffic and stumbling derelicts, and toward Second Avenue.
Howard: After crossing Bowery, just before Second Avenue, I saw Swamiji jauntily strolling down the sidewalk, his head held high in the air, his hand in the bead bag. He struck me like a famous actor in a very familiar movie. He seemed ageless. He was wearing the traditional saffron-colored robes of a sannyasi and quaint white shoes with points. Coming down Houston, he looked like the genie that popped out of Aladdin’s lamp.
Howard, age twenty-six, was a tall, large-bodied man with long, dark hair, a profuse beard, and black-framed eyeglasses. He was an instructor in English at Ohio State University and was fresh from a trip to India, where he had been looking for a true guru.
Prabhupada noticed Howard, and they both stopped simultaneously. Howard asked the first question that popped into his mind: “Are you from India?”
Prabhupada smiled. “Oh, yes, and you?”
Howard: I told him no, but that I had just returned from India and was very interested in his country and the Hindu philosophy. He told me he had come from Calcutta and had been in New York almost ten months. His eyes were as fresh and cordial as a child’s, and even standing before the trucks that roared and rumbled their way down Houston Street, he emanated a cool tranquility that was unshakably established in something far beyond the great metropolis that roared around us.
To read the entire article click here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=20490&page=8

Happily Be, Give, Love, and Serve
→ Karnamrita's blog

Author: 
Karnamrita Das

The Joy and Effort in Marriage photo Marriage ceremony_zpstxaeao9v.jpg
Today, how shall we give
and whom shall we love?
Count the ways to be thankful.
First, decide to be happy.
Think of the reasons why not,
remembering that happiness
is a moment by moment choice
just as sadness is a question of focus.

Why give more reasons
to be unhappy than happy?
Why wait to be happy
till achieving some goal,
or lament what you don’t have
when you can happily achieve
or even fail temporarily
learning valuable lessons?
Tomorrow we get to try again!

The above reflection is for anyone,
but if you are a bhakti practitioner
we can add to the mix, the goal of Krishna.

read more

Gopals Melbourne
→ Ramai Swami

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Gopal’s restaurant in Melbourne was renovated at the end of last year when the owners of the building put in a new elevator.

Unfortunately, it had to be closed for a couple of months while work was going on but since reopening business has increased by 20%.

It seems customers like the new decor and slightly revamped menu.

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Service beyond our lifetime
→ KKSBlog

(Kadamba Kanana Swami, 22 June 2014, Bhaktivedanta Manor, London, Caitanya Caritamrta Adi-Lila 8.63-66)

Manor

It is mentioned in the Hari Bhakti Vilasa that if one accepts the worship of a deity then, not only should one worship that deity very nicely during his lifetime, but one is also responsible to make sure that the seva puja goes on after one’s lifetime! So we see that it is a major responsibility to worship a deity.

Krsna is very kind when he manifests himself in his deity form. Krsna descends from the spiritual world in that particular form and manifests himself here. When Krsna manifests himself in the deity form, the spiritual world is also manifest. Therefore in a way, one can say that our temples are non-different from Vrindavan because wherever Krsna is, the entire spiritual world is also manifest! That is the nature of Krsna.

In this way, we can appreciate the mercy that is manifest through the deity of the Lord. Just like here at the Bhaktivedanta Manor, it would have no meaning without the deity. It is a beautiful Manor but the deity is the centre of the entire property. Srila Prabhupada, as the principle servant, is leading all of us in service to the deity. Everything is going on very nicely. Whatever is here is an asset of the deity and whatever we develop, is offered to the deity. In that way, wherever the deity is manifest, automatically life begins to centre around Krsna. Therefore, deity worship is a very important and powerful element of the bhakti process.

Sunday Love Feast – May 29th,2016 – Vedic Discourse by His Grace Subhavilas prabhu
→ ISKCON Brampton

About His Grace Subhavilas Dasa
It has been over 40 years since he joined ISKCON. He saw devotees chanting on the streets in Toronto and was immediately attracted. He started going to the temple, which at that time in the late 60's was in a small house.He met Srila Prabhupada first time in Chicago.

Srila Prabhupada instructed him and Visvakarma Dasa to secure the current ISKCON Toronto temple and had the great fortune to assist Srila Prabhupada's mission in this manner.He used him as his instrument again to help secure the ISKCON Chicago temple where Sri Kishor Kishori reside today. There were many temple openings and festivals that he has been blessed to coordinate and be a part of in the early days of ISKCON.

After his brahminical initiation by Srila Prabhupada, he had the privilege to serve ISKCON in many ways including:
Vice President of ISKCON Toronto in the 70's;
 President of ISKCON Chicago in the early 80's;
 Zonal Secretary for USA mid-west in the 80's; and
 GBC(Governing Body Commission) appointed him as Global  Coordinator for Community Relations in the 90.

  Japathon-Congregational Mantra Meditation
Next meeting on June 4 ,2016(5.30am-9.30am) at ISKCON Brampton

The chanting is a spiritual call for the Lord and His Energy to give protection to the conditioned soul.japa, when performed with focus and attention, can subdue the agitating effects of one’s mind and senses. The senses, of which the mind is also one, are constantly being stimulated by the external world  - by gross and subtle matter.
If you have not chanted before, and would like to participate in this program, we will be very happy to show how you can do this.
All welcome. We’ll loan you a set of Beads!



Monthly sankirtan Festival(MSF)

“One who has life can preach, and one who preaches gets life.”(Previous Acaryas)

Every member of ISKCON should have the opportunity to make advancement in Krishna consciousness by preaching.We encourage everyone to come out and participate and make Srila Prabhupada happy.

Please contact:
Rasaraj Dasa-rajrushika@yahoo.com/ 647.887.5736(Mississauga and Brampton regions)
Narahari Dev Dasa- naraharidev@gmail.com (Etobicoke
 region)


COMING UP AHEAD

Celebrampton-Flower City Parade
Saturday, June 11, 2016,11 am - 4 pm in Down Town Brampton

This free event attracts more than 35,000 Brampton residents and visitors with a variety of activities and fun for the entire family.We would like to encourage our members and their families to come out to sing and dance with us during the parade and represent ISKCON Brampton. You may dress up traditionally in colourful outfits on a flower theme.You are requested to assemble in temple at 1 pm

Find more details of Celebrampton here or contact Amoghalila Dasa.


Fasting For Apara Ekadasi

Fasting.....................on Wed June 1st,2016
Breakfast.................on Thu June 2nd,2016 b/w 5.38am-9.11am


Every fortnight, we observe Ekadasi, a day of prayer and meditation. On this day we fast (or simplify our meals and abstain from grains and beans), and spend extra time reading the scriptures and chanting the auspicious Hare Krishna mantra.By constantly ‘exercising’ our minds through regular japa we can train our senses to push the threshold of contentment.
English audio glorification of all Ekadasis is available here 
 


 

ONGOING EVERY SUNDAY


Sunday School

To register,contact us
Email:sundayschool108@gmail.com
Call:647.893.9363

The Sunday School provides fun filled strategies through the medium of music, drama, debates, quizzes and games that present Vedic Culture to children. However the syllabus is also designed to simultaneously teach them to always remember Krishna and never forget Him. School
The Sunday School follows the curriculum provided by the Bhaktivedanta College of Education and Culture (BCEC).


Gift Shop

Our boutique is stocked with an excellent range of products, perfect for gifts or as souvenirs of your visit. It offers textiles, jewellery, incense, devotional articles, musical instruments, books, and CDs inspired by Indian culture.We're open on all Sundays and celebrations marked in our annual calendar.
 

Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare
Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
Chant and Be happy

Congregational Member or True Devotee?
→ simple thoughts

Share

There is a strange term which has often puzzled me we speak about devotee’s then the term congregational member; do we actually have congregational members?

It appears to be more divisive than it initially appears, however I have found that those labeled congregational members are actually inspirational devotee’s in disguise.

Given that I’ve been going to the same temple for over seven years you would have thought may be not going since the beginning of the year someone would notice, may be those who have come into Wales either for the annual retreat or visiting would swing by.

Indeed over the past seven years I’ve had to learn about the retreats close to my home after the event and every year the same reply, ow next year but next year never comes; to senior devotees who say they need to talk to me then are within 10 minutes from my home but no visit.

Now can I make a small humble contrast with those ladled congregational members Interestingly they not only noticed my absence but contacted to make sure everything was alright, sent inspirational quotes and links to amazing videos.

The same congregational members have taken the time to travel just to assist with a community Diwali celebration and even participated and made some amazing cakes.

And I remain humbled by their concern and assistance during a hospital stay making sure I had all my needs both spiritually and materially; even offering to make sure myself and my vehicle returned safely to Wales.

And over the years I’ve seen a deep and amazing love and appreciation of Sri Krishna and Srila Prabhupada, and how they extol this in how they demonstrate this in their lives, not by words but by their actions.

For me it’s not in the label we place on individual’s or that we use a term that appears incompatible with the teaching and spoken word from Srila Prabhupada who simply looked on everyone as spirit soul and those who have taken up the spiritual path of bhakti (devotee)

When you speak to those who not only met but spent time with Srila Prabhupada noted that he had great concern and was less concerned about forms, exams, courses but on the individual how to inspire them and angage in devotional service; most describe it as a pure love.

For love is the inspiration.

Love means we care.

And what I’ve noticed is that those who have ladled congregational member show the greatest love and this inspires one to remain in devotional circles, and inspire one to do more seva.

Love is all you need

And the mistake we make is ladling some congregational member when their deep love demonstrates that they are indeed devotee

So could I humbly suggest we stop using this label and describe everyone as devotee

HARE KRISHNA

The Seven Wonders of the Word
→ Dandavats

Hare KrishnaBy Sivarama Swami

In the Vedanta-sutra it is said that sabda liberates us. When we say Hare Krishna, all the potency of Godhead is there. It is like being in the presence of the Lord, like reading all the Vedas, like seeing the spiritual world, like hearing all of Krishna’s pastimes, like understanding the philosophy if you know how to connect with the sound. That is the challenge: connecting with the sabda. because with any kind of relationship there has to be more than transmission; there has to be reception. If the other person isn’t receiving, then the relationship is not working. If the receiver is no good, you don’t get the message. All our modern media communication is based on information coming from one side and being received on the other. If the receiver is faulty, the whole thing fails. When someone sends a kirtana to your computer, the file appears as a bunch of squiggles if you don’t have the right program to receive it. Similarly, the effects of spiritual sound will be impeded if we’re not tuned in. Continue reading "The Seven Wonders of the Word
→ Dandavats"

Family Fortune
→ Dandavats

Hare KrishnaBy Sukhada Devi Dasi

One day Charles suffered a great deal and was afraid. Visnupriya gave him a Back to Godhead magazine, and he was pleased to recognize the picture of Nagaraja Dasa, whom he had met. "Oh, I know him!" Charles said, "I think I'll read this magazine." Reading Back to Godhead helped calm him down. Godruma and Visnupriya read to him as much as they could from the Bhagvad-gita and Krishna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Charles listened to the reading intensely. "I don't understand everything you read," he told them, "but please continue. I love to listen." In September the nurses said they saw a difference in Charles. He seemed peaceful, even though his physical deterioration continued unabated. One evening Visnupriya was sitting at his side when she noticed he was smiling. "There's someone standing at the foot of my bed," he told her. "Who is it, Dad?" she asked. Charles pointed to the picture of Srila Prabhupada near his bed. "It's him." Incredulous, Visnupriya grabbed Charles's hand. "Are you sure?" "Yes." Charles smiled. "Dad, you're going to be O.K.," Visnupriya said in wonder. "You have the shelter of Srila Prabhupada." When this happened several more times, Visnupriya let go of her own fear and worry. Obviously, her father-in-law was under much greater care than her own. Continue reading "Family Fortune
→ Dandavats"

Rasa Mandala – Chandan Yatra Day 20
→ Mayapur.com

The gopis responded wholeheartedly to Krishna’s singing and dancing with joined palms. They said “o Lord! Keeping up with your dancing has made us thirsty but the Yamuna is so far away. Your duty is to protect us. So, please fetch us some drinking water. Otherwise how can we continue?” Krishna smiled at their request. […]

The post Rasa Mandala – Chandan Yatra Day 20 appeared first on Mayapur.com.

Narasimhadeva Appearance Day Festivities Roar with Enthusiasm in Toronto’s Hare Krishna Temple!
→ Dandavats

By Kevala Bhakti das

On Friday, May 20, 2016, Toronto’s Hare Krishna Community celebrated the appearance day of Lord Narasimhadeva – Lord Krishna’s half-man, half-lion incarnation.

Lord Narasimhadeva descended to protect his young devotee Sri Prahlada Maharaja from his torturous father, King Hiranyakashipu. There are many prayers to Lord Narasimha that invoke powerful mantras for protection, appealing to the Lord’s half-lion incarnation and His weapons. These are for protection from such things as malevolent spirits and material desires, as well as increased devotion and a peaceful world.

The festival kicked off with a lively kirtan and was followed by an enthralling class by Vaisesika Prabhu. The class focused on this most munificent form of the Lord and devotees were hanging off every word of our guest speaker.

Following the class, Lord Narasimha made a divine appearance, much to the delight of the crowd (and likely to the terror of some children… sorry!). As Lord Narasimha exited stage left, a beautiful abhisheka (bathing ceremony) took place wherein a small form of Lord Narasimha was bathed with various items. This was done amidst thumping kirtan!

After an exuberant kirtan, a delightful vegetarian feast (prasadam) was served to one and all!
Festival Pictures: Mathuraprasada das

Iskcon Youth Bus Tour (13 min video) We are SO excited to…
→ Dandavats



Iskcon Youth Bus Tour (13 min video)
We are SO excited to finally unveil our 2016 Australian Bus Tour video, on the same day that our US Kirtan Tour begins :). It’s wonderful to know that the bus tour revolution is still growing globally!
We hope you get just as inspired after watching this film, and please like, comment and share with others. And we hope you get inspired enough to join us on our upcoming second annual Australian Bus Tour!
Watch it here: https://goo.gl/9EORLy

The Bonds of Love. My name is Nadia. I am 13yrs old, live in…
→ Dandavats



The Bonds of Love.
My name is Nadia. I am 13yrs old, live in Zurich, Switzerland, and love cows!
My earliest and happiest memories are of coming to Kurma Rupa Prabhu’s Care for Cows with my mother Mahapuri dasi when we visited Vrindavan and the Krsna Balaram Temple, usually twice a year.
Once in the month of Kartik 2009, along with my mother and some friends, I was at Care for Cows with Kurma Rupa prabhu. We were petting the sick and injured cows, when a poor elderly lady walked into the ghosala carrying a tiny calf. She asked if he could take her calf as she was poor and unable to look after her. Kurma Rupa prabhu agreed. One of our friends decided to adopt her and named her Champaka Lata. Since that time we have taken over her sponsorship.
When I first saw Champaka Lata I felt such love and just wanted to hold and cuddle this sweet little calf. Every day I would beg my mother to bring me to the Care for Cows to spend hours embracing Champi (my name for her). She would lay her head on my chest while I petted and brushed her. Years passed and our bond grew and grew.
In September, 2012 Champi gave birth to a beautiful calf, Sarika. Upon our arrival back in Vrindavan we caught a rickshaw over to Care for Cows, Kiki Nagla. Champi ran to my mother and started pushing and licking her. Champi placed her head on my mother’s lap when she sat down and tears were flowing from Champi’s eyes. Soon all of us including, Keshi Nisudan and our friends were crying tears of affection. Keshi prabhu said she was crying with the joy at becoming a mother. Now she is a mother of a second child, a bull called Kurma Rupa.
Champi gives me so much warmth and love that every second spent with her is filled with great happiness and strength. When I grow up I want to be a Veterinarian and serve the holy cows of Vrindavan. I know I have to study very hard.
Thank you to all the staff of Care For Cows for always making us so welcome and for taking such good care of Champi and all her friends.

Govindas street kirtana in Sydney, Australia (Album with photos)…
→ Dandavats



Govindas street kirtana in Sydney, Australia (Album with photos)
Kalasamvara Das: As part of the 50th year incorporation of Srila Prabhupada’s ISKCON celebration Govindas street kirtana is taking part in the world famous vivid light spectacular for the next 3 weeks which is transforming Sydney into a wonderland of light art and sculptures, like the famous Sydney opera house, the Sydney harbour bridge and other iconic landmark buildings.
Find them here: https://goo.gl/B4gVJb

In Memoriam 2016 – new video by Siddhanta prabhu about the…
→ Dandavats



In Memoriam 2016 - new video by Siddhanta prabhu about the departed sons and daughters of His Divine Grace. (20 min video)
Srila Prabhupada: You have asked if it is true that the Spiritual Master remains in the material universe until all of His disciples are transferred to the Spiritual Sky. The answer is yes, this is the rule. Therefore, every student should be very much careful not to commit any offense that will be detrimental to this promotion to the Spiritual Kingdom, and thereby the Spiritual Master has to incarnate again to deliver him. This sort of mentality will be a kind of offense to the Spiritual Master. Anyone who defies and therefore disconnects the relationship with the Spiritual Master can hardly expect the assistance of the Spiritual Master life after life. Letter to Jayapataka, July 11, 1969.
Watch it here: https://goo.gl/tw9ID7

May 28. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations. Satsvarupa…
→ Dandavats



May 28. ISKCON 50 – S.Prabhupada Daily Meditations.
Satsvarupa dasa Goswami: Even a Paragraph, A Sentence, A Word.
We want to remember what Prabhupada has written and repeat it to audiences wherever we go. His teachings are memorable truths. Other writers may dazzle us with their presentations, but we don’t want to memorize them. Their so-called truths are not worth repeating. Srila Prabhupada’s writing is powerful truth, and because it is powerful, he can utter it with calmness, restraint, and simplicity. Srila Prabhupada himself is a modest person, but he carries the mantle of the pure devotee of Krishna.
Even one paragraph of Srila Prabhupada’s writing is worth studying and restudying. Often just a small section of a paragraph will expose the complicated waste and misuse of energy that the non-devotees engage in. His writing cannot be read with complacency if one wants to get the full effect of his preaching. Srila Prabhupada is too dynamic a writer to read him in a casual way:
The material scientists – the quasi-priests who invoke such material activities – invent many objects to gratify the material senses, including the eye, ear, nose, skin, tongue, and ultimately the mind, and in this way the scientists create a field of unnecessary competition for enhancement of material happiness, which leads the whole world into the whirlpool of uncalled-for clashes. The net result is scarcity all over the world, so much so that even the bare necessities of life, namely, food, shelter and clothing, become objects of contention and control. And so there arise all sorts of obstacles to the traditional, God-given life of plain living and high thinking.
To read the entire article click here: http://www.dandavats.com/?p=20490&page=8

​Gita 10.17 – Recollection and participation are reconciled by understanding God’s immanence
→ The Spiritual Scientist

Gita verse-by-verse podcast


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The post ​Gita 10.17 – Recollection and participation are reconciled by understanding God’s immanence appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.

Bhagavatam study 46 1.9.25-30 Bhishma’s departure is glorious in every way
→ The Spiritual Scientist

Podcast


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The post Bhagavatam study 46 1.9.25-30 Bhishma’s departure is glorious in every way appeared first on The Spiritual Scientist.